Updated: 10:37 AM There will only be two candidates going head-to-head in this Sunday's televised gubernatorial debate. In a last-ditch effort, independent candidate for Virginia governor Russ Potts filed a lawsuit trying to force the debate's sponsors to include him.
Updated: 8:40 AM Cloning barnyard animals to produce juicier steaks and tastier chops; that's what Viagen, Inc. said it's more than ready to efficiently do.
Updated: 10:25 AM After months of anticipation, rolling stones fans finally got their satisfaction. But the concert wasn't without a hitch. A bomb threat brought the concert to a halt.
Updated: 6:42 PM It is the biggest condominium conversion boom in two decades, some said. Condo developers are swarming to transform rental properties into condos. But what about the displaced renters?
Updated: 6:31 PM There's been a break in the case of a missing Virginia Commonwealth University freshman. Police have now positively identified the body recovered outside of Richmond as that of Taylor Behl. She disappeared one month ago.
Updated: 8:40 AM Anyone looking to buy a used car might want to do some extra research. Thanks to Hurricane Katrina, thousands of water-damaged vehicles will be flooding the used car market.
Updated: 5:24 PM Beware of your heating bills this winter. Heating oil prices in Charlottesville are up 35% and natural gas prices have doubled since last year.
Updated: 10:09 PM The Food and Drug Administration is warning consumers not to eat a certain prepackaged salad for fear of a deadly infection. This popular side dish caused an outbreak of E. Coli.
Updated: 2:35 PM Brandon Shifflett was sentenced to nine months in jail after pleading guilty to two misdemeanor counts of hit and run and street racing.
Updated: 3:04 PM Dr. Barry J. Marshall, Professor of Research in the School of Medicine at UVa has been awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Updated: 1:45 PM Dozens of families are displaced after an overnight fire at the Abbington Crossing apartment complex rips through his building. CBS19/ABC16 spoke to one man affected.
Updated: 11:14 AM They're sticky and for many a hassle, but pretty soon they may be obsolete. Charlottesville city councilors are considering whether to make those little blue registration stickers a thing of the past.