About 400 elementary- and middle-school students taking part in the Shenendehowa Inventors program will display their inventions at the former Cotton Market store at Clifton Park Center from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday.
In this image made from Associated Press Television video, emergency personnel take a wounded person on a stretcher to an awaiting ambulance at the scene at the U.S. Army base in Fort Hood Texas on Thursday.
Soldiers move into the Soldier Readiness Center at Fort Hood, Texas, on Thursday as they secure the area where Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan shot and killed at least 13 soldiers during a shooting spree. It took over 7 hours to clear the scene.
U.S. Army soldiers are seen at rear as Jamie Casteel, left, front, and her husband Scotty, right, of Duncan, Okla., stand outside the emergency room at Scott & White hospital in Temple, Texas, Thursday. They were waiting to hear news of their son-in-law, U.S. Army soldier Matthew Cooke, who was injured in the shooting at Fort Hood.
The sun rises over the Scott & White hospital in Temple, Texas, Friday. Several of the Fort Hood shooting victims were brought to this level one trauma center for treatment.
Amber Bahr's military photo is provided courtesy of the family. A native of Random Lake, Wisc., Bahr, 19, was shot in the stomach but was in stable condition.
W. Roy Smythe M.D., chief of the Department of Surgery at at Scott & White hospital in Temple, Texas, responds to reporters questions today. Dr. Smythe said in regard to some injured victims of yesterday's shooting rampage, they are "absolutely not out of the woods yet."