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City of Mandeville approves 2011 budget

The Mandeville City Council approved a $28 million budget for the 2011 fiscal year that includes $44,000 for car expenses and $50,000 for a new cultural development director.

Labor secretary: Obama doing good job on economy (AP)

AP - Labor Secretary Hilda Solis is defending President Barack Obama's efforts to combat the recession and unemployment, saying his focus has been on helping the jobless and underemployed.

Obama to launch political offensive on economy (AFP)

US President Barack Obama -- seen here on September 5 -- is to travel to the Midwestern US state of Wisconsin as part of a broad effort to stem ebbing political support over the slowing economic recovery.(AFP/Saul Loeb)AFP - US President Barack Obama will travel to the Midwestern US state of Wisconsin Monday as part of a broad effort to stem ebbing political support over the slowing economic recovery.


City seeks input on new general plan

Redwood City planning commissioners are ready to wind up several years of effort to shape a new general plan but are first asking the public for final thoughts on current aspects like zoning and future possibilities such as high-speed rail and street cars.

China Inc gets new chairman as state-owned firms' clout grows (Reuters)

Reuters - Wang Yong, a name little heard on the global business stage, has become boss of the world's biggest mobile telecom carrier, the most valuable coal producer and Asia's top oil refiner.

Olympia, 2-war naval veteran, battles for survival (AP)

An Aug. 30, 2010 photo shows the USS Olympia, which served as flagship of the Asiatic Squadron in the Spanish-American War, in Philadelphia, Monday, Aug. 30, 2010. Without a major refurbishment to its aging steel skin, the Olympia either will sink at its moorings on the Delaware River, be sold for scrap, or be scuttled for an artificial reef 90 miles south. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)AP - The USS Olympia, a one-of-a-kind steel cruiser that returned home to a hero's welcome after a history-changing victory in the Spanish-American War, is a proud veteran fighting what may be its final battle.


Officials: Obama to back infrastructure spending (AP)

President Barack Obama waves to media as he walks across the South Lawn of the White House after stepping off of Marine One in Washington, Sunday, Sept. 5, 2010. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)AP - Vowing to find new ways to stimulate the sputtering economy, President Barack Obama will call for long-term investments in the nation's roads, railways and airports that would cost at least $50 billion, administration officials said.


Va. woman devours 181 chicken wings in NY contest (AP)

In this photo provided by National Buffalo Wing Festival, Joey Chestnut, left, competes with  Sonya Thomas, center, at 2010 Wing Fest in Buffalo, N.Y., Sunday, Sept. 5, 2010. Thomas, The Black Widow of eating contests gobbled up nearly 181 chicken wings in 12 minutes, devouring the national championship record. (AP Photo/National Buffalo Wing Festival, Brian Kahle)AP - The Black Widow of eating contests gobbled up nearly 181 chicken wings in 12 minutes, devouring the national championship record in Buffalo on Sunday.


Tropical Storm Hermine forms in the Gulf of Mexico (AP)

A fisherman stands on the rocks in rough surf off the Montauk lighthouse on September 3 in Montauk, New York. Downgraded to a post-tropical storm, Earl whimpered away from the Canadian coast on Sunday but still managed to knock out power to nearly one million people in the northeast of the country.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Spencer Platt)AP - Tropical Storm Hermine has formed in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Texas.


City wins award for irrigation work

The City of Lone Tree will be recognized by the City-County Communications and Marketing Association at the organization’s annual conference in September in Atlanta.

City of Moscow plans talks with Porsche AG on cooperation

The city of Moscow, a core shareholder in ZIL automaker, will hold negotiations on cooperation this week with European luxury car manufacturer Porsche AG, a source at the city's administration said on Monday.

Oil hovers above $74 as traders eye US economy (AP)

An engineer works at the Barjisiya oil fields in Zubair One south west of the city of Basra, Iraq. Global dependency on the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries for crude oil will rise in the next five to 10 years as output by non-OPEC nations falls, the head of the International Energy Agency (IEA) has said.(AFP/File/Essam -al-Sudani)AP - Oil prices slipped to near $74 a barrel Monday in Asia as traders weighed whether growing Chinese demand can offset weak U.S. fuel consumption amid high unemployment.


Aftershocks rattle quake-hit NZ city (Reuters)

A resident walks past damaged shops from yesterday's major earthquake in Christchurch September 5, 2010. Strong aftershocks and gale-force winds buffeted a clean-up of New Zealand's second biggest city on Sunday following the country's most damaging earthquake in 80 years. REUTERS/Iain McGregor/The PressReuters - Aftershocks rocked New Zealand's second-biggest city on Monday causing further damage and forcing authorities to extend a state of emergency after the country's most damaging earthquake in 80 years.


City, county debate plan to replace dam

Charlottesville City Council met Thursday to discuss a 50-year water plan for the city and Albemarle County, which includes the construction of a new dam ...

Search for missing boater comes to end

PORTSMOUTH — U.S. Coast Guard crews officially ended their search for a mariner who was reported missing Friday after his boat was found abandoned near White Island in Portsmouth Harbor.

City officers' complaints on flagger law disappointing

The city's efforts to reduce its costs related to paid police details took an unfortunate twist recently when the city's patrol officers filed a complaint with the Public Employee Labor Relations Board. Officers also filed a grievance with the city over...

City moves to dismiss claims by pot shop

The City of Littleton has filed a response to one of the two lawsuits from medical marijuana centers facing the city.

City seeks way to pay forester

Denton city leaders are struggling to find a way to pay the city's urban forester amid slumping tax revenues and budget cuts. The latest proposal would have Denton Municipal Electric, the city's electric utility, pay for most of the forester's salary to reduce the burden on the general fund. Urban forester E.J. Cochrum's position and salary currently fall under the planning department.

City preps for preparedness event

The city of Mesquite Office Of Emergency Management is hosting a Preparedness at the Park event to educate people about being prepared in the event of an emergency.

Obama to propose 100 billion tax credit (AFP)

US President Barack Obama waves after arriving aboard Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington on September 5, 2010. Obama will call for a 100-billion-dollar business tax credit this week to boost the sagging US economic recovery, The Washington Post reported.(AFP/Saul Loeb)AFP - President Barack Obama will call for a 100-billion-dollar business tax credit this week to boost the sagging US economic recovery, The Washington Post reported.


Local golf: hole in one

GOLF LOCAL HOLES IN ONE Gary Thomson on 170-yard second hole at Meadowbrook CC with a 6-iron, playing with

City Receives Grant to Boost Downtown

The city of Tullahoma is getting a sizable grant to revitalize their downtown.

Search for sailors missing in Laptev Sea suspended

A search for six sailors who are missing following the sinking of a tugboat in the Laptev Sea has been suspended because of heavy fog.

Local Collector Discovers Ultra Rare Pace Car

Car collectors all over the country search estate sales for old car parts and junkers to restore but sometimes they find a hidden gem. Jeff Stolowski of Lake Ann had a picker friend of his, buy the first Oldsmobile convertible he found.

Diverse water sources key to food security: report (Reuters)

Cattle Egrets are seen as Egyptian farmers work in a field in a village near Alexandria, around 220 km (137 miles) northwest of Cairo, May 18, 2009. REUTERS/Asmaa WaguihReuters - Increasingly erratic rainfall patterns related to climate change pose a major threat to food security and economic growth, water experts said on Monday, arguing for greater investment in water storage.


Backyard volunteers helping track firefly numbers (AP)

AP - The yellow-green streaks of fireflies that bring a magical air to summer nights, inspire camp songs and often end up in jars in children's bedrooms may be flickering out in the nation's backyards as suburban sprawl encroaches on their habitats.

1 'censored' bar won't stop online prostitution (AP)

Craigslist founder Craig Newmark stands in front of the Craigslist office in San Francisco, California in 2006. Online classifieds website Craigslist has blocked US access to its AP - Craiglist's "adult services" section has been shut down in the U.S., but prostitution on the Internet is alive and well — even, quite possibly, on Craigslist.


Major search for suicidal man

A MAJOR search was launched last night after a suicidal man rang police and told them he had taken pills and was going to walk into the sea.

Want cheapskates to spend? Hawk gizmos that save (AP)

This photo taken Aug. 9, 2010, shows the Squeezeit product on a toothpaste tube in New York. Demand is rising for kitchen and bath gadgets that squeeze out that last blob of toothpaste and help get the suds out of tiny slivers of soap. Cheapskate gadgets may be a sign of the times, but they're also a sign of how product makers and retailers are trying to get people back in the spending habit. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)AP - How do you get penny pinchers to spend these days? Pitch products that promise to save them money.


Attorney: JetBlue attendant in NYC flap resigned (AP)

FILE - In this Aug. 10, 2010 file photo, JetBlue flight attendant Steven Slater leaves a correctional facility in the Bronx after posting bail in New York.  JetBlue Airways says that there will be no second exits for Slater, who captured the nation's imagination with his profanity-laced loudspeaker tirade and jump down a plane's emergency chute, beer in hand. Spokeswoman Jenny Dervin said Saturday, Sept. 4, 2010 that Slater is no longer employed by the airline.   (AP Photo/Louis Lanzano, File)AP - A flight attendant who captured America's attention when he told off a plane full of passengers and then slid down an emergency chute resigned from his job last week and wasn't fired, his lawyer said Sunday.


What might make the Fed flinch? (Reuters)

Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke makes his way through the Dirkson building hallway after a Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission hearing on Reuters - The U.S. economy appears to be trudging along, neither booming nor busting, growing steadily enough to diminish double-dip recession fears but not quickly enough to bring down unemployment.


Search called off for missing Durango man

The search has been called off for a 41-year-old Durango man who vanished after flashing a knife at a Colorado Division of Wildlife officer.

Putting 5 cheapskate accessories to the test (AP)

AP - Companies are unleashing lots of gadgets to help consumers be more frugal, but are they worth the money?

Greenest state behind the waste-to-energy race (AP)

In this photo taken on Aug. 24, 2010, in Long Beach, Calif., South East Reserve Recovery Facility (SERRF) manager, Charlie Trip, right, checks the operation with trash crane operator Becky Davis. The plant can process some 13,000 tons per day of solid waste, with a gross electrical generating capacity of 36 megawatts. Twenty five years ago California was at the forefront of the trash-to-energy conversion technology and, now, we're not only behind Europe and Asia, but we're also behind the rest of the country. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)AP - Government officials from around the world used to come to this port city to catch a glimpse of the future: Two-story piles of trash would disappear into a furnace and eventually be transformed into electricity to power thousands of homes.


Key oil spill evidence raised to Gulf's surface (AP)

In this Sept. 4, 2010 picture, the Helix Q4000, bottom, the vessel responsible for lifting the Deepwater Horizon blowout preventer stack from the sea floor, is seen on the Gulf of Mexico near the coast of Louisiana. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)AP - Investigators looking into what went wrong in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill are a step closer to answers now that a key piece of evidence is secure aboard a ship.


Racial violence changes student — and school (AP)

This Wednesday, June 23, 2010 photo shows Duong Nghe Ly in Philadelphia. A day of violence at South Philadelphia High School last year changed his life, and as he heads into his senior year, he wants to learn if his school has been transformed as well. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)AP - Duong Nghe Ly can't wait to begin his senior year at South Philadelphia High School. A day of violence there last year changed his life, and he wants to learn if his school has been transformed as well.


Endangered or not, wolf killings set to expand (AP)

This 2004 photograph provided by Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks shows an adult male wolf from the Lazy Creek pack north of Whitefish, Mont.  Government agencies are ramping up killings and removals of gray wolves in the Northern Rockies and Great Lakes, despite two recent court actions that restored the animal's endangered status in every state except Alaska and Minnesota. (AP Photo/Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks)AP - Government agencies are seeking broad new authority to ramp up killings and removals of gray wolves in the Northern Rockies and Great Lakes, despite two recent court actions that restored the animal's endangered status in every state except Alaska and Minnesota.


9 years gone, everyone's a ground zero stakeholder (AP)

In this Sept. 1, 2010 picture, construction continues at the World Trade Center site in New York. Two additional high rise towers and a transportation hub are planned for the pit under excavation, center. One World Trade Center is at left. Traffic moves north along Church St., lower right. September 11 will mark the ninth anniversary of the attacks on the World Trade Center. Ground zero - depending on whom you talk to, it's a scar on this city where horror still lingers, a bustling hive symbolizing the resilience of a nation, or simply, for those who live and work nearby, a place where life goes on. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)AP - It is a place of sacrifice. A place of mourning. A place people pass by on their way to grab lunch. It's a place where tourists crane their necks to snatch a glimpse around barriers walling off an enormous construction site — which is also what it is.


Official: Obama backing research tax credits (AP)

US President Barack Obama -- seen here on September 5 -- is to travel to the Midwestern US state of Wisconsin as part of a broad effort to stem ebbing political support over the slowing economic recovery.(AFP/Saul Loeb)AP - Seeking ways to spur economic growth ahead of the November elections, President Barack Obama will ask Congress to increase and permanently extend research and development tax credits for businesses, a White House official said Sunday.


Army studies concussions' effects on bomb techs (AP)

In this June 3, 2010 photo, 1st  Lt. Timothy Dwyer performs a cognitive test which requires him to press a small light as it becomes illuminated while at the same time counting backwards from 100 by sevens, as occupational therapist Jenny Owens takes notes at the Fort Campbell Army base in Fort Campbell, Ky.  Soldiers from the Army's 52nd Ordnance Group based at Fort Campbell have undergone hours of exhaustive cognitive testing in the military's first-of-its-kind study of mild traumatic brain injury. This focus on the soldiers who find and destroy the powerful and deadly weapons is part of a larger effort by the military this year to better track and treat mild brain injuries. (AP Photo/Josh Anderson)AP - Motivated by the deaths of two friends in war-zone explosions, 1st Lt. Timothy Dwyer decided to become a bomb hunter.


Expiring tax cuts pose dilemma for US lawmakers (AFP)

The U.S. Capitol building. US lawmakers returning from summer recess face a conundrum on tax cuts set to expire at the end of this year, with the economy seemingly sputtering ahead of looming congressional elections.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Brendan Smialowski)AFP - US lawmakers returning from summer recess face a conundrum on tax cuts set to expire at the end of this year, with the economy seemingly sputtering ahead of looming congressional elections.


Police search for teen

HUDSON - Local police are assisting in the search for a 13-year-old Pepperell, Mass., girl missing from her home since Friday morning, police and the girl’s mother said. Lt. Kevin DiNapoli said late Saturday that Pepperell police asked the Hudson department to be on the lookout for the girl, who he said used to live in Hudson and may still have ties to the town. He declined to identify the girl ...

Pulitzer-winning cartoonist Paul Conrad dies at 86 (AP)

FILE - This undated file photo provided by the Huntington Library/Independent Television Service shows cartoonist Paul Conrad at his drawing board. Conrad, the political cartoonist who won three Pulitzer Prizes and used his pencil to poke at politicians for more than 50 years, died Saturday Sept. 4, 2010 of natural causes at his home in Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif.  (AP Photo/Huntington Library/Independent Television Service, File) NO SALESAP - For more than half a century, Pulitzer Prize winning cartoonist Paul Conrad poked fun at politicians, taking on presidents from Harry S. Truman to George W. Bush.


For US Muslims, a 9/11 anniversary like no other (AP)

FILE - In this Sept. 1, 2010 file photo, demonstrators hold up signs during a news conference on the step of New York's City Hall. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File)AP - American Muslims are boosting security at mosques, seeking help from leaders of other faiths and airing ads underscoring their loyalty to the United States — all ahead of a 9/11 anniversary they fear could bring more trouble for their communities.


Earl's biggest damage in Northeast: business (AP)

Traffic backs up on the Bonner Bridge near Nags Head, N.C., Saturday, Sept. 4, 2010 as people return to Hatteras Island following mandatory evacuations of the barrier island for Hurricane Earl. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)AP - In the end, Earl's worst damage in New England was to seasonal businesses hoping to end their summer on a high note.


Authorities suspend search for local man

Search and rescue efforts for Kevin Haugen were suspended Saturday, eight days after the 41-year-old Durango resident went missing. "This is not someone who went hiking and got lost," Dan Bender, spokesman for the La Plata County Sheriff's Office, said Saturday.

IMF's Lipsky says moderate world recovery underway (Reuters)

John Lipsky, the International Monetary Fund's first deputy managing director, answers a reporter's question after the meeting of G20 finance and central bank deputies in Gwangju, south of Seoul, September 5, 2010. REUTERS/Lee Jae-WonReuters - The world economy is recovering moderately but still faces challenges such as the need for medium-term fiscal consolidation, the IMF's First Managing Director, John Lipsky, said on Sunday.


Race complicates reservation crime fight (AP)

In this Sept. 3, 2010 photo, Swift Sanchez, a sergeant with the Suquamish Tribal Police, returns to her vehicle while on patrol on the Suquamish Reservation in Washington state. Across the country, police, prosecutors and judges have been wrestling with the vexing question for decades: Who qualifies as an Indian when it comes to meting out justice for crimes on reservations? (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)AP - For more than two hours on the night of May 16, 2007, Shane Maggi terrorized a Native American couple at their home on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation in Montana, pistol whipping them and firing bullets above the husband's head.


2 babies killed after semi hits vehicles in Ariz. (AP)

AP - Two babies have been killed in a three-vehicle collision involving a gas tanker in Phoenix.

Obama says his economic policies halted "bleeding" (Reuters)

President Barack Obama (L) delivers remarks on the latest employment statistics released on Friday, alongside Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner in the Rose Garden of the White House, September 3, 2010. REUTERS/Jason ReedReuters - President Barack Obama, previewing a big push on the U.S. economy next week, on Saturday defended policies that he said "have stopped the bleeding" and put the middle class on the road to recovery.


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