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    Latest from WKU Public Radio
    
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                        Gov. Andy Beshear has declared a state of emergency and pledged state funds to support Kentucky food banks.
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                        A work-in-progress housing development near Bowling Green plans to offer survivors of the 2021 tornado outbreak a unique homebuying opportunity.
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                        As SNAP recipients prepare to possibly lose benefits on Saturday, Kentucky Gov. AndyBeshear says while he’s looking at all options, he’s not sure a special session of the General Assembly is needed.
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                        Republican Congressman Brett Guthrie of Kentucky says Democrats must vote for agovernment reopening before his party will negotiate Affordable Care Act tax credits.Guthrie held a round table discussion in Radcliff on Wednesday with members of the Ft. Knox community.
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                        Two prominent Kentucky Democrats are warning of sticker shock when open enrollment begins Saturday for those purchasing health insurance on the individual market.
 
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                Like many Americans, Scott Adams had insurance problems. But unlike most people he has powerful friends on social media, and when he asked President Trump for help, he got the cancer drug he needed.
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                Dozens of leaders in medicine, criminal justice and more issued an urgent call for collective action to tackle the gun violence crisis in the U.S.
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                Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan sworn in for a second term amid disputed 98% win, deadly protests, and an information blackout.
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                About 1 in 8 U.S. residents get an average of $187 a month per person in the food assistance known as SNAP. For the first time, the Trump administration stopped the payments due at the beginning of the month.
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                On Monday, International Criminal Court prosecutors at The Hague said they are collecting evidence of alleged mass killings and rapes in Sudan.
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                A new lawsuit argues the latest changes to Public Service Loan Forgiveness could exclude public servants whose organizations have resisted President Trump's policies.
 
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