Start your day with a quick digest of today's top Central Florida headlines.
A flight from Cuba headed to Toronto had to make an emergency landing at Orlando International Airport Saturday afternoon because of an engine failure, officials said. | | |
Why doesn't Daunte Culpepper come around UCF anymore and why did he skip state Hall of Fame induction ceremony? | | |
Officers were called around 12:45 p.m. to the Summerfield Apartments, 4581 S. Kirkman Rd., after a man shot at a juvenile victim, said Lt. Diego Toruno. | | |
The driver told Orlando police that after dropping off Deputy Troy Heyer at his home, he was writing a report to Lyft when Heyer came out and pointed a gun at him, saying "what are you doing here," an arrest affidavit said. The driver said he was in fear for his life and went to the intersection of Narcoosee Road and Lake Nona Club Drive where he called police. | | |
A 25-year-old man was arrested early Saturday morning when he rammed Orange County Sheriff's deputies while fleeing in a stolen car, according to a press release. | | |
As riot police moved in from all sides, some protesters retreated inside Hong Kong Polytechnic University while others set fires on bridges leading to it. | | |
Magic star Aaron Gordon works tirelessly on his shooting, sometimes putting shots up for 30 minutes after games and working like he is the 14th man on the team. | | |
More than 1,000 people began lining up at different stations around the courtyard in front of Walt Disney Amphitheater at Lake Eola Park, where volunteers offered food, clothes, backpacks, haircuts and a place to pray to the homeless and poor who live around Orlando. | | |
The Orlando Magic look forward to facing off with superstar LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers. | | |
It's often easy to take for granted what's right in your own backyard. The Morse Museum in Winter Park, at 445 N. Park Ave., may be a relatively small museum compared with the behemoths in New York or Paris, but it looms large in quality and beauty. It houses the world's most comprehensive collection of works by Louis Comfort Tiffany, including the chapel interior that Tiffany designed for the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. | | |
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