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Pro-Romney super PAC to launch ads in Pa.

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Senin, 29 Oktober 2012 | 23.17

US Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney listens as US band The Oak Ridge Boys perform, during a rally at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Marion, Ohio, October 28, 2012. (EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/Getty Images)

(USA Today) -- The pro-Romney super PAC is adding Pennsylvania to the presidential campaign's ad war.

Restore Our Future is spending $2.1 million to air ads in every major Keystone State market, reports Politico. The group's first commercial, "New Normal," slams President Obama on his handling of the economy.

Pennsylvania, normally a hotly contested key swing state in presidential elections, has not been deluged with campaign ads this year like Ohio, Colorado and other battlegrounds.

Obama's lead in Pennsylvania polls has tightened recently. He now has an edge of about 5 percentage points, according to the average of recent polls compiled by RealClearPolitics. Vice President Biden, who was born and raised in Scranton, will campaign in Pennsylvania on Thursday.

In recent weeks, Restore Our Future has been spending heavily in the competitive swing states. The independent group, however, has also been investing in Michigan, where polls show Obama has an advantage. Restore Our Future's ads will start running Tuesday and go through the final week of the presidential campaign.

(USA Today)


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VIDEO | Atlanta IBM building imploded

ATLANTA -- It's out with the old and in with the new.

Saturday morning Atlanta Demolition took down one of the two buildings at the old IBM Campus on Northside Parkway.

PHOTOS | Northside IBM building imploded

At about 7:45 a.m. Saturday, the controlled implosion brought the old office building down with a loud roar and a cloud of dust.

The site will be the home of the new North Atlanta High School.


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11Alive morning team faces fears

Chesley was spooked at Netherworld, but he's more afraid of tightly enclosed spaces.

ATLANTA -- With Halloween around the corner, Karyn, Ted and Chesley decided to face their fears and try to overcome them.

PHOTOS | What your favorite stars fear

Chesley realized he had claustrophobia, the fear of enclosed or restrictive situations, after going in for an MRI in 2007. 

RELATED | Claustrophobia symptoms
MORE | Exaggerated sense of personal space may lead to claustrophobia

"I was so afraid, I couldn't go through with the procedure," he said.

Emory University Psychology professor Dr. Barbara Rothbaum said Chesley is likely on the low end of the claustrophobia spectrum.

"I have had people who couldn't go to the restroom with the door closed because they didn't want to be closed in that way," she said. "They also couldn't go to public restrooms unless they had the space at the bottom, so they can crawl out."

MORE | Claustrophobia tips

Fortunately, she said claustrophobia is treatable. Treatments range from exposure therapy to sedation.  


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Early voting expands Monday

ATLANTA -- Early voting in metro Atlanta expands Monday, with a whole new set of polling places open to accommodate voters.

Over the weekend, some voters waited as long as six hours to cast their ballots.

RELATED | Where to vote early in your county
MORE | Complete Decision 2012 Coverage

This Friday is the last day to vote early before Election Day.


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LIVE | Hurricane Sandy bears down on East Coast

A road sign warns drivers of weather conditions in downtown Washington, DC October 28, 2012 ahead of Hurricane Sandy's landfall. (EVA HAMBACH/AFP/Getty Images)

NEW YORK -- Hurricane Sandy bore down on the Eastern Seaboard's largest cities Monday, forcing the shutdown of mass transit, schools and financial markets, sending coastal residents fleeing, and threatening a dangerous mix of high winds, soaking rain and a surging wall of water up to 11 feet tall.

PHOTOS | Hurricane Sandy
RELATED | Track Sandy's Path

The massive storm's impact on some 50 million residents was fueling both apprehension and urgency. 

Sandy strengthened before dawn and stayed on a predicted path toward Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York - putting it on a collision course with two other weather systems that would create a superstorm with the potential for havoc over 800 miles from the East Coast to the Great Lakes. About 2 to 3 feet of snow were even forecast for mountainous parts of West Virginia. 

The center of the storm was positioned to come ashore Monday night in New Jersey, meaning the worst of the surge could be in the northern part of that state and in New York City and on Long Island. Higher tides brought by a full moon compounded the threat to the metropolitan area of about 20 million people. 

"This is the worst-case scenario," said Louis Uccellini, environmental prediction chief for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. 

Early Monday the Coast Guard was responding to a distressed vessel with 17 people aboard approximately 90 miles southeast of Hatteras N.C. The replica of the tall ship made famous in the film "Mutiny on the Bounty" was taking on water, officials said.

Responsible for at least 66 deaths in Cuba, Haiti and the Bahamas, Sandy - with a 520-mile diameter - is one of the largest ever potential storms to hit the U.S. according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The storm was churning north Monday morning at 14 mph, still about 280 miles east of North Carolina's coast at 2 a.m. ET. 

It began its turn towards the north after midnight, driving towards coastal areas after battering popular tourist spots with heavy winds and rains. The storm is expected to bring 50 to 75 mph winds, up to 10 inches of rain and potential snowfall of up to two feet over 14 states beginning late Monday afternoon or early evening, when its expected to hit land somewhere between Delaware and New York's Long Island. 

Craig Fugate, administrator for the federal Emergency Management Agency, said Monday the agency has stationed teams from North Carolina to Maine and in states as far inland as West Virginia. 

"We've been moving generators, basic supplies, we would need after the storm," he said. 

Fugate said he was worried about people evacuating ahead of storm surges. 

First there will be the coastal impact, then the wind knocking out power and then heavy rain and flash flooding, he said, adding "we don't want people to think it's not that bad when it comes ashore." 

Storm surges of up to 11 feet prompted mandatory weekend evacuations in low-lying parts of New York, New Jersey, Maryland and Delaware. High-wind watches and flood warnings are in effect for all the Mid-Atlantic states and southern New England, where Sandy was expected to barrel through Wednesday. 

The New York Stock Exchange reversed course and dropped its plan to have electronic trading Monday as Hurricane Sandy churned closer to New York City. Exchange officials also said the market might also close on Tuesday. 

"We support the consensus of the markets and the regulatory community that the dangerous conditions developing as a result of Hurricane Sandy will make it extremely difficult to ensure the safety of our people and communities, and safety must be our first priority" the stock exchange said in a formal announcement. "We will work with the industry to determine the next steps in restoring trading as soon as the situation permits." 

Airlines at five major East Coast airports canceled more than 7,000 flights, schools across the region canceled classes and mass transit systems shut down, with scuttled train, bus and light-rail service adding to a potential commuter nightmare. 

Two cold fronts to the west and north were on a collision course with Sandy, threatening to turn the massive storm system into a nor'easter, ushering in freezing temperatures in some regions and blanketing areas of West Virginia and other states with knee-deep snow. 

President Obama, following a meeting with Federal Emergency Management Agency officials, approved New York state's request for federal emergency status, freeing up federal resources for disaster relief. The state is in the cross-hairs of Sandy's path.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg ordered evacuations for an estimated 375,000 people in some low lying areas starting Sunday at 7 p.m. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo ordered the city's transit service to suspend bus, subway and commuter rail service. The city's mass transit system is the nation's largest - the subway alone has a daily ridership of more than 5 million. 

Obama warned residents of the region to the storm "very seriously." The visit to FEMA included a conference call with governors and mayors of vulnerable states and cities. "Anything they need, we will be there," Obama said. "And we're going to cut through red tape." 

Governors from North Carolina to Connecticut declared states of emergency. 

- In Virginia, where several colleges and school districts canceled classes through Tuesday, Gov. Bob McDonnell authorized up to 750 National Guard members to assist with the storm. In Delaware, Gov. Jack Markell ordered mandatory evacuations for an estimated 50,000 residents of coastal communities. Collin O'Mara, secretary of the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, said Sandy could unleash record waves and tidal flooding along the coast."The potential on this is greater than the defenses that we have in most places," O'Mara said. 

- New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie declared a state of emergency and ordered Atlantic City casinos evacuated - just the fourth time the city's 12 casinos had been shut since legalized gambling began 34 years ago. Christie warned state residents to be prepared for several days without electricity. 

- Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy warned that storm surges could be the worst the state has seen in almost 75 years and urged residents along the shorelines of several cities and towns to heed evacuation orders.

Most airlines planned to cancel all flights into and out of the three major New York City area airports Sunday night and not resume service until Tuesday. Most carriers were also suspending all flights into and out of Philadelphia as well as Washington D.C's Reagan National and Dulles International airports Sunday evening. Amtrak was canceling train service to parts of the East Coast, including between Washington, D.C., and New York.

The storm's landfall along the Mid-Atlantic coast "would likely be a billion-dollar disaster," Weather Underground meteorologist Jeff Masters said. He also noted that the full moon will occur Monday, which means astronomical tides will be at their peak for the month, increasing potential storm surge flooding. 

With just a few days left in what's shaped up as a tight election, Sandy was forcing Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney to adjust campaign plans. In battleground states where the hurricane is likely to collide with a cold front to form a freak hybrid storm, Sandy "will throw havoc into the race, said Virginia Sen. Mark Warner.

Obama canceled campaign stops Monday in Virginia and Tuesday in Colorado to monitor the storm but planned to go forward with other events Monday in Florida and Ohio. Romney canceled three scheduled Sunday stops in Virginia on Sunday, opting instead to campaign in Ohio before heading Monday to Wisconsin. 

Vexing both candidates: bad weather that could hinder early voting. efforts throughout the East Coast. "Obviously, we want unfettered access the polls, because we think the more people that come out, the better we're going to do," said Obama adviser David Axelrod. "To the extent that it makes it harder, that's a source of concern."

Meanwhile, the American Red Cross was readying shelters, volunteers and supplies to help coastal areas from Virginia to New England. "We want to make sure we're ready to spring into action as soon as we're needed," spokeswoman Anne Marie Borrego says.

FEMA also sent liaison officers to emergency-operations centers in Maryland, Virginia, Washington, D.C., Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey. 

The Defense Department has sent officers to deploy with the FEMA teams to coordinate possible search-and-rescue missions.

Storm surge remains one of the biggest threats from the storm: Data from CoreLogic show that more than 261,000 homes are at risk. 

"This will be a long-lasting event, with two to three days of impact," says James Franklin, branch chief of the National Hurricane Center. "Wind damage, widespread power outages, inland flooding and storm surge are all likely."

In an alert reminiscent of an ominous one that came out ahead of Hurricane Katrina's landfall on the Gulf Coast, the National Weather Service issued a statement that said, "If you are reluctant (to evacuate), think about your loved ones. Think about the emergency responders who will be unable to reach you when you make the panicked phone call to be rescued. Think about the rescue/recovery teams who will rescue you if you are injured or recover your remains if you do not survive."


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PHOTOS | Hurricane Sandy along East Coast

A man sits on a railing at Rockaway Beach Boulevard ahead of Hurricane Sandy on October 29, 2012 in the Queens borough of New York City. The storm, which threatens 50 million people in the eastern third of the U.S., is expected to bring days of rain, high winds and possibly heavy snow. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced the closure of all New York City's bus, subway and commuter rail service as of Sunday evening. (Photo by Allison Joyce/Getty Images)
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Obama takes 'offense' at Benghazi claims

President Obama steps off of Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews Monday morning. (Getty Images)

(USA Today) -- President Obama says his administration is still investigating the attack on U.S. Consulate in Libya, and is offended at suggestions that it did not do enough to protect American targets there.

"Anytime a U.S. ambassador and three other Americans who were serving our country get killed, we have to figure out what happened and fix it," Obama said in a taped interview with MSNBC's Morning Joe.

"But," he added, "I do take offense with some suggestion that in any way, we haven't tried to make sure that the American people knew as the information was coming in what we believed."

Republicans and other critics have questioned security at the consulate in Benghazi, the shifting stories about what led to the attack, and whether the U.S. government could have provided more help to the embassy employees under siege.

The Sept. 11 attack killed U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans. Officials initially attributed the violence to a protest of an anti-Islam film that got out of hand, but later called it a planned terrorist operation.

In his Morning Joe interview -- taped Saturday -- Obama pledged accountability if his aides mishandled the response to Benghazi.

"If we find out we that there was a big breakdown, and somebody didn't do their job, they'll be held accountable," Obama said.

"Ultimately," he said, "as commander in chief, I'm responsible, and I don't shy away from that responsibility. My No. 1 responsibility is to go after the folks who did this, and we're going to make sure we get them."

Also from MSNBC:

"The president laid out a plan to manage the debt and deficit, particularly through health care changes.

"'There's no doubt that our first order of business is going to be to get our deficits and debt under control,' he said. 'There's a forcing mechanism. You know, the Bush tax cuts end at the end of the year. We know that we've got the sequester looming.'

"The sequester -- which the president frankly said 'will not happen' in the last debate last week -- would indiscriminately implement cuts of $109 billion to be divided equally between defense and non-defense spending. Speaking on Morning Joe, Obama likened the trigger mechanism to 'taking a machete to something, as opposed to a scalpel,' but said it would motivate Congress to compromise.

"In addition to raising revenue through tax hikes on the wealthy, the president said that further health care reform, particularly with Medicaid and Medicare, is key to reducing the deficit.

"'If we're spending 17% of our GDP on health care, and every other country is spending 11%, and their outcomes are better, that difference is 6%, that's our deficit and our debt,' he said. 'Now, I stole a whole bunch of ideas from a Massachusetts governor that I think over time is going to save us money, and you know, part -- the $716 billion that Governor Romney suggests that I stole from Medicare is actually money that we are saving in the system, and extending the life of Medicare.'"

"Obama suggested that once the debt is dealt with, he would be able to shrink government and create jobs through infrastructure projects, like building roads.

"'I truly believe that if we can get the deficit and debt issue solved, which I believe we can get done in the lame duck, or in the immediate aftermath, of the lame duck, then that clears away a lot of the ideological underbrush," he said."

(USA Today)


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5 things to watch in final presidential debate

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Senin, 22 Oktober 2012 | 23.17

U.S. President Barack Obama (R) speaks during his debate with Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney (L), who greets the audience at the conclusion in Denver, Colorado, on October 3, 2012. (STF/AFP/GettyImages)

BOCA RATON, Fla. -- It's the third and final round.

President Obama and Mitt Romney meet for their last debate Monday night, a 90-minute session devoted to foreign policy. It takes place in the swing state of Florida, at Lynn University in Boca Raton. The moderator is Bob Schieffer of CBS News.

USA TODAY will have full coverage across all of its platforms. Check local listings for telecasts of the debate,which starts at 9 p.m. ET.

Here are five things to look for in this final Obama-Romney clash:

Obama touts his record. Expect to hear the president talk about winding down wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the multinational operation that toppled Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi. And how many times will Obama cite the 2011 raid that killed Osama bin Laden? The president is also expected to emphasize Romney's lack of foreign policy experience.

Romney disputes Obama's record. Like running mate Paul Ryan at the Oct. 11 vice presidential debate, Romney may well cite anti-U.S. protest in a string of Middle East nations. Also look for Romney to question the Obama administration's handling of the recent attack on a U.S. consulate in Libya, the rebellion in Syria, and the prospect of a nuclear-armed Iran.

Libya. The shifting stories about the cause of the Sept. 11 attack that killed the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three other Americans also came up during the second debate last week. Obama officials first attributed the violence to the protest of an anti-Islam film, then days later called it a pre-planned terrorist attack. But Romney also flubbed the issue in that last debate, forgetting that Obama had used the term "acts of terror" the day after the killings.

Iran. The last Obama-Romney battle takes place amid reports that the Obama administration may soon enter into one-on-one talks with Iran, seeking to dissuade it from pursuing the means to make nuclear weapons. Obama says economic sanctions have pressured Iran to reconsider its nuclear ambitions. Romney says Obama has done little to slow Iran's drive toward nuclear weapons, and has left long-time ally Israel in the lurch over the Iranian threat.

How much talk about the economy? Yes, it's a debate about foreign affairs, but don't be surprised if the U.S. economy pops up -- either candidate can argue that it has a direct effect on global affairs. Romney has criticized Obama over the $16 trillion-plus national debt, and will likely challenge the president over the prospect of major Pentagon cuts. Obama says Republicans have not cooperated on a debt reduction plan, and that the United States is recovering from the severe recession he inherited from predecessor George W. Bush.

(USA TODAY)


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Lance Armstrong stripped of Tour titles

This series compiled on June 14, 2012 shows seven file pictures of Lance Armstrong posing on the podium on the Champs-Elysees in Paris after winning the Tour de France cycling race. (Javier Soriano,Franck Fife, Patrick Kovarik, Martin Bureau/AFP/Getty Images)

The Lance Armstrong doping case finally appears to be over.

His seven titles in the Tour de France will be stripped and vacated.

The famed cyclist also will be banned for life in sanctioned Olympic sports.

Case closed.

After receiving the massive evidence file compiled against Armstrong on Oct. 10, the International Cycling Union (UCI) announced Monday that it would not appeal the sanctions imposed upon the cyclist in August by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency.

By rule, UCI had the right to appeal those sanctions to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, even though Armstrong himself had declined to go to arbitration to fight the charges. But on Monday, UCI said it was declining to do so -- a decision that is likely the final official word on the subject after years of accusations and investigations.

"Lance Armstrong has no place in cycling," UCI president Pat McQuaid said at a press conference.

The World Anti-Doping Agency also holds the right to appeal the sanctions but that is not expected as WADA has been a staunch supporter of USADA's actions to date.

The Tour de France is a sanctioned event of UCI, the sport's international governing body, meaning it is now bound by rule to strip Armstrong's seven titles from 1999 to 2005. Tour officials previously said they would do so barring an appeal by UCI, but also said no replacement winner will be named for those years.

One likely reason? Doping was so rampant throughout the Armstrong era that most of the other top finishers also have been implicated or confessed to doping.

UCI's decision is not surprising, given the scope of the evidence in the USADA case file, but the news still marks another blow for Armstrong, whose last realistic shot at keeping his titles was an appeal fought by a group he has maintained close ties to over the years. Indeed, in his unsuccessful efforts in federal court to challenge USADA''s jurisdiction, Armstrong argued that it was UCI that had the authority to review the evidence against him.

USADA and UCI also have not seen eye-to-eye on the Armstrong case. UCI previously has been critical of USADA's actions, questioning the fairness of its process -- repeating an argument Armstrong has made relentlessly -- and even trying to take over the investigation at one point.

USADA said in July that such a take-over would be like "the fox guarding the hen house."

In a testy exchange of letters last summer, USADA noted UCI's history of lax oversight when it was in charge of anti-doping enforcement, an era now viewed as dominated by doping. USADA also accused UCI of being overly friendly with Armstrong, pointing out that the cyclist previously had given donations to UCI of as much as $200,000.

Included in the evidence file is the sworn statement of former cycling teammate Tyler Hamilton, who testified that Armstrong tested positive for EPO at the 2001 Tour of Switzerland but that Armstrong told him he was going to have a meeting with UCI "and everything was going to be OK" -- an alleged cover-up that the UCI has denied.

In the end, UCI couldn't ignore the amount of evidence, especially the 26 witnesses who told investigators that Armstrong was a leader and key figure in a long-running team doping conspiracy. On Oct. 10, USADA released more than a 1,000 pages of details that told how Armstrong and his teammates used banned drugs and blood transfusions to boost performance while also using sophisticated means to avoid testing positive.

The evidence persuaded almost all of Armstrong's sponsors to terminate their relationship with him, including Nike and Trek, which made the bikes Armstrong rode to his seven Tour victories. One holdout sponsor, sunglasses company Oakley, said last week it was awaiting UCI's decision before determining if it would continue its sponsorship of Armstrong.

Armstrong also announced Wednesday he would step down as chairman of Livestrong, the cancer-fighting charity he founded, but said he would remain active in the group and appear at its events.

He did that over the weekend at Livestrong's 15th anniversary celebration in his hometown of Austin, Texas, but Armstrong avoided discussing the USADA evidence and loss of his sponsors.

Instead, he encouraged attendees to keep up their work in support of Livestrong and allowed that, for him, it had been a "difficult couple of weeks."

(USA TODAY)


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FedEx expects record shipping this holiday season

A FedEx worker loads a cart with packages to be delivered on September 18, 2012 in San Francisco. (Getty Images)

NEW YORK (AP) - FedEx expects to ship 280 million packages between Thanksgiving and Christmas, up 13 percent from a year ago, thanks to consumers' growing fondness for shopping online.

FedEx moves a bulk of its cheaper, lighter weight shipments from online and catalog retailers through its SmartPost service, a partnership with the U.S. Postal Service.

The forecast comes against a background of lackluster growth in the global economy.

The Memphis, Tenn., expects Dec. 10 to be its busiest day with 19 million shipments, up 10 percent from 2011.

Rival UPS, based in Atlanta, hasn't yet released a holiday forecast.

The National Retail Federation expects holiday sales to increase 4.1 percent. That would be the smallest increase since 2009. Research firm eMarketer forecasts online holiday sales will grow 16.8 percent, excluding travel purchases.

(Copyright © 2012, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)


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TD 18 forms in Caribbean, could become TS Sandy

Expected storm track of Tropical Depression 18 (NOAA/NHC)

MIAMI -- The National Hurricane Center says Tropical Depression 18 formed Monday morning in the southwestern Caribbean, to the south of Jamaica.

A Tropical Storm Watch has been issued for Jamaica. Strong storms with torrential rains and flash flooding is expected on the island as well as on Cuba and Hispanola over the next few days.

MORE | 11Alive Weather Information Zone

As of 11 a.m. Monday, TD 18 has maximum sustained winds of 30 mph, and is located 320 miles to the south-southwest of Kingston, Jamaica. The storm is presently moving toward the southwest at 5 mph.

The storm is expected to make an about face and heat toward Jamaica, and likely becoming Tropical Storm Sandy later in the day on Monday before approaching hurricane strength as it nears Jamaica on Wednesday.

It is expected to cross Jamaica and Cuba before moving through the Bahamas later in the week. Presently, it is not expected to hit the U.S. mainland, but it is close enough that forecasters said interests along the Eastern Seaboard should keep a close eye on the tropical system.


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Halloween costumes NOT to wear to the office

Free Pussy Riot Protesters (Getty Images)

WXIA -- Some of the most popular Halloween costumes are the ones where the people or events were in the news lately.

But we looked around and found some of the ones you may want to stay away from this year, if you plan on dressing up at the office.

RELATED | Poll: What is your favorite Halloween Candy?

View the list in the gallery above.

We want to know which of these you find most offensive.

Vote in our poll here:


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POLL | What to watch tonight: Debate, football, baseball?

WXIA -- With the final presidential debate set for Monday night, television viewers may find themselves at odds with what they plan to watch.

While NBC, CBS, PBS, ABC, CNN, Fox News and MSNBC will all carry live debate coverage, viewers on Fox will have Game 7 of the NLCS between the St. Louis Cardinals and the San Francisco Giants to contend with - the winner of that game goes on to host Game 1 of the World Series versus the American League champion Detroit Tigers Wednesday evening.

Football fans will have a classic NFC North matchup to watch as the Detroit Lions head to Soldier Field in Chicago to face the Chicago Bears on Monday Night Football on ESPN.

Other television fare for Monday night includes Law & Order SVU on MyAtlTV, Diners, Drive-Ins & Dives on Food Network, Love It or List It on HGTV, WWE Raw on USA, Breaking Amish on TLC, Hoarders on A&E and Real Housewives of New York City on Bravo.

11Alive.com will stream coverage of the debate, complete with a running live chat and Twitter coverage for those who won't be watching on television.

So what will you watch tonight? The debate, baseball, football, or something completely different? Vote in our poll below!


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What to expect from Tuesday's Apple iPad event

Apple's invite was sent to members of the media. (CNN/Apple)

(NBC) -- The rumors surrounding Apple's press event, scheduled for Oct. 23, are deafening. Will the Cupertino-based company announce a smaller iPad? (It had better.) Will the company offer up a 13-inch MacBook Pro with a Retina display? (Very likely!) How about an Apple-branded coffee maker? (No.)

We'll find out for certain which rumors are true at 10 a.m. PT/1 p.m. ET on Tuesday, when NBC News' tech/sci editor Wilson Rothman will be inside the event, covering it live here (and tweeting at @wjrothman). For now, let's sort through the latest gossip and making our best guesses. Here's what Apple might announce:

iPad Mini (or is that "iPad Air"?)
We suspect that the smaller iPad will be a 7.85-inch device. This particular size has been floating around for over half a year, since a report in the Wall Street Journal suggested that Apple is testing a device about eight inches in size. Since that time, we've heard various other outlets cite their own anonymous sources in order to back up these measurements and narrow them down to the 7.85-inch point.

Odds are high that the smaller iPad will not have a high-resolution Retina display like the iPhone 5 or the third-generation iPad. A Bloomberg report suggests it will use a slightly lower resolution display and be priced to compete with Google's Nexus 7 tablet (and other lower-cost tablets such as those made by Amazon or Barnes & Noble).

According to Apple watcher John Gruber, the smaller iPad may look a lot like a large iPod Touch, rather than any other current Apple device, and have a somewhat smaller bezel. Simple logic suggests that the device will have a Lightning connector, just like the iPhone 5 and the latest iPod touch devices. Rumors regarding the guts of the so-called "iPad Mini" - or "iPad Air," as some rumors suggest it will be called - have been scattered and leave us hesitant to hazard many guesses about that aspect of the device. (Most of the noise is around an A5 processor and 512MB of RAM, for what it's worth - about the same specs as an iPad 2.)

As far as the price goes though, it's all about educated guesswork. As our own Wilson Rothman pointed out, $249 would be the magic price tag for this tablet. "I think that $249 is the 'all other tablets are dead' price, and $299 is the 'Apple keeps its market share while making a comfortable profit' price. Anywhere over $300 is a "not good" price," Rothman concludes. "Not in today's market, not with a full-sized iPad 2 selling for $400 and a Retina-display iPad selling for $500."

That pricing logic may not win out, however. As 9to5Mac reported, Apple's smaller iPad may be priced at $329, in order to sit somewhere between the $299 iPod Touch and the $399 iPad 2.

13-inch MacBook Pro with Retina display
According to multiple reports, both from purportedly "reliable sources" cited by 9to5 Mac's Mark Gurman and analysts cited by CNET's Brooke Crothers, Apple will show off a 13-inch version of the MacBook Pro with Retina display. This laptop will supposedly be "sold in two configurations, with differing processors and storage, and will be available for purchase soon after introduction," Gurman explains.

A report by the 9to5 Mac staff additionally suggests that the new laptops will start at around $1699. This price tag would belong to the base-model, according to the report, and a higher end version of the laptopwould cost about $200 or $300 more.

This new laptop is expected to co-exist with its larger siblings, so don't worry that the current MacBook Pro with Retina display models will disappear from shelves.

A new-new iPad
The folks at 9to5 Mac call attention to a photo allegedly showing a device which appears identical to the third-generation iPad, except for one small change: It has a Lightning connector instead of a 30-pin connector. One could speculate that the device will see a minor refresh, though it's questionable what sort of other changes might be made, beyond the connector.

Would Apple be crazy enough to refresh the third-generation iPad after just seven months? It would be unprecedented, but not totally outside the realm of possibility.

The other little things
It wouldn't be surprising if Apple were to announce some minor refreshes to its iMac and Mac Mini lines. According to MacRumor's handy-dandy buyer's guide, both of the product lines are certainly due for some changes. While the New York Times' David Pogue, citing an Apple exec, did peg a Mac Pro refresh for 2013, there seems to be wiggle room on the arrival date of a new iMac.

As a French Apple blogger discovered, there's also a chance that we'll also see some news related to ibooks, Apple's ebook software. After all, there appear to be apps referencing iBooks 3.0 already.

Oh, and let's not forget about the obligatory iTunes update. What would an Apple event be without one of those?

(NBC News)


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CDC scientists fight to halt a deadly outbreak

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Senin, 15 Oktober 2012 | 23.17

CDC Headquarters (Courtesy CDC)

ATLANTA -- At the main campus of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, dozens of people are working day and night to bring a meningitis outbreak under control.

RELATED | 189 Ga. patients treated with steroids tied to deadly meningitis

Dr. John Jernigan is a medical epidemiologist at the CDC leading the clinical investigation team for the outbreak response. He says this infection, which is caused by a fungus, is very unusual.

Meningitis is typically caused by a virus or bacteria. The fungus linked to this outbreak is common in dirt and grasses, but it is making people sick because it found its way into a steroid injected into people with back pain.

That steroid was distributed by a Massachusetts pharmacy that is currently under investigation. Nearly 200 people in more than a dozen states have been sickened, including 15 who have died.


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Pedestrian hit by car in Cartersville

CARTERSVILLE, Ga. -- A pedestrian was hit by a car and killed outside a McDonald's on Joe Frank Harris Parkway in Cartersville early Monday morning.

The man, whose name has not been released pending notification of his family, was trying to cross Joe Frank Harris Parkway near Martin Luther King Drive when he was hit at around 1:35 a.m., according to Cartersville Police Chief Thomas Culpepper.

The driver who hit the pedestrian stayed on the scene. Culpepper said the driver was on his way to work at the McDonald's before the accident.

Culpepper said the pedestrian appeared to be improperly crossing the highway. He was wearing dark clothing and it was raining, so the driver probably did not see him before hitting him.

The pedestrian was pronounced dead at WellStar Kennestone Hospital.

Culpepper said the driver does not face any charges.


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Early voting begins in Georgia

Clayton County residents wait in line to cast early votes.

ATLANTA -- Voting for the presidential election kicked off in Georgia Monday.

It runs from Oct. 15 and goes through Nov. 2.

This is an opportunity for people to vote who may not be able to go to the polls on election day.

Voters can request a ballot by mail or vote in person.


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Polls: Obama, Romney in tight race

U.S. President Barack Obama (R) speaks during his debate with Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney (L), who greets the audience at the conclusion in Denver, Colorado, on October 3, 2012. (STF/AFP/GettyImages)

WASHINGTON -- Another poll, another close result between President Obama and Mitt Romney.

President Obama leads by a single point -- 49%-48% -- in the latest POLITICO/George Washington University Battleground Poll released Monday morning, well within the margin of error.

On the other hand, former Gov. Romney leads 50%-48% in the poll's 10 top "battleground states:" Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Virginia and Wisconsin.

A Washington Post-ABC News poll gives Obama a 49%-46% lead among likely voters.

Various polls also show a toss-up race in the Electoral College.

Obama once led most polls, but things have tightened in recent days for one major reason: The first debate on Oct. 3, perceived by many as a Romney victory.

Obama and Romney debate again Tuesday night in New York, and a third time a week from tonight in Boca Raton, Fla.

Some other highlights of the POLITICO-George Washington University Battleground Poll:

-- Of the 86% of voters who watched the first presidential debate, three in four declared Romney the winner; only 16% thought Obama prevailed.

-- Romney leads with independents by 8 points, 49%-41%.

-- Obama still leads with women, 54%-43%.

-- Regardless of who they're supporting, only 53% of voters now believe Obama will win the election (down from 61% before the first presidential debate).


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SEC holds 4 of top 7 BCS ranking slots

(USA Today) -- Regardless of whether the Southeastern Conference can put two teams in the BCS championship game for a second consecutive year, it is poised to dominate the conversation once again in the second half of the season.

The SEC held four of the top seven spots in the initial BCS standings Sunday, led by defending national champion Alabama at No. 1 and Florida at No. 2. It's the third time in the last four years SEC teams have debuted 1-2.

Though that may not seem significant, only twice since the BCS was conceived -- in 1998 and 2008 -- did at least one of the top two teams in the first release of the standings fail to make the championship game. On two other occasions, including last year with LSU and Alabama, the teams that started 1-2 also finished there.

It's unlikely Florida and Alabama would meet in the title game this year because, assuming they stay unbeaten, they would meet in the SEC Championship game on Dec. 1. The final BCS standings are released the next day. Last year, Alabama and LSU played earlier in the season, and the Tide, despite losing, had time to work its way back to No. 2 in the final standings.

Alabama coach Nick Saban preferred to tone down the expectations and keep his players mentally into the challenges ahead.

"The big thing is you have to get them to focus on the next game, the next play, the next practice so you can continue to improve as a team," he said on ESPN after the standings were released. "Mindset is so important in this day and age in this game.

"We have a young team and I think the most important thing for our team to do is to continue to develop the kind of chemistry that will help us play with consistency."

Though the Crimson Tide (6-0) ranked just third in the aggregate of six computer polls that make up the BCS formula, its near-unanimous hold on the No. 1 spot in the human polls, including the USA TODAY Sports coaches poll, lifted it to a significant edge over Florida (.9761 to .9092 out of 1.000) in the BCS average. Florida and Notre Dame, which came out No. 5 overall in the BCS standings, were ranked as the top two teams by the computers.

Oregon, ranked No. 2 in the coaches poll, edged out Kansas State for No. 3 in the BCS standings. Oregon is sixth in the computer ratings.

LSU and South Carolina lead the group of one-loss teams at No. 6 and No. 7, respectively. Other undefeated teams include Mississippi State at No. 12, Rutgers at No. 15, Louisville at No. 16 and Cincinnati at No. 21.

Georgia sits at No. 11 on the list.

Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly, whose team beat Stanford 20-13 in overtime on Saturday, said he wouldn't specifically address the standings with his team, but took pride in being part of the championship conversation again. Though Notre Dame still has to pass three teams to get one of the coveted top-two spots, it will have a huge opportunity to impress voters on Oct. 27 at Oklahoma.

"I don't normally gauge the interest of these things with our football team, but they watch TV. They see that," Kelly said. "I just have to make sure they understand with that pride comes a greater obligation to do the thing the right way."

This will be the second-to-last year college football has BCS standings to debate in mid-October. Though the exact process for the four-team playoff is still being worked out for its debut in the 2014 season, conference commissioners have agreed that the selection committee will not release weekly standings.

BCS Standings for week of October 14:

  1. Alabama
  2. Florida
  3. Oregon
  4. Kansas State
  5. Notre Dame
  6. LSU
  7. South Carolina
  8. Oregon State
  9. Oklahoma
  10. USC
  11. Georgia
  12. Mississippi State
  13. West Virginia
  14. Florida State
  15. Rutgers
  16. Louisville
  17. Texas Tech
  18. Texas A&M
  19. Clemson
  20. Stanford
  21. Cincinnati
  22. Boise State
  23. TCU
  24. Iowa State
  25. Texas

(USA Today)


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Apple expected to unveil new iPad next week

No. 1: Apple (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

SAN FRANCISCO -- There's another new iPad in the works, and it's expected to be unveiled by Apple next week.

The iPad Mini, as analysts refer to it, will have a smaller screen, similar to competing tablets from Samsung and Amazon, and a lower price as well.

RELATED | Would an iPad mini be worth buying?

Gene Munster, an analyst with Piper Jaffray, predicts the new iPad will sell for $299, have a screen between 7 and 8 inches (down from 9.8 inches for the full-size iPad) and be available in a Wi-Fi only version. Other iPads have Wi-Fi and cellular service plans available.

The new iPad comes at a time when many companies are dramatically increasing their portfolio of smaller tablets to try and take on Apple. Amazon just unleashed several new Kindle tablets including a beefed up $199 Kindle Fire; Google and Samsung have the $199 Nexus 7. Both have 7-inch screens.

Microsoft will launch its answer to the iPad, Surface, at a splashy event in New York on October 26th. No price has been announced for the Surface, which has a larger screen.

By not having a 7-inch model, "Apple is ceding 20% of the market to competitors," says Munster.

Apple in the past has insisted that consumers prefer the large screen of its iPad, but now, says Munster, "There are some people who just naturally prefer having a smaller tablet," and Apple can satisfy them.

Munster projects that Apple will sell 5-10 million of the smaller iPads by the end of the year, depending on whether it can get its production issues in order. "If things so smoothly, it's 10 million, if things don't go well, it's 5 million," he says.

The new iPhone5, which burst out of the gate three weeks ago with sales of 5 million phones, has been plagued by supply issues. Apple could sell way more phones if it had them, Munster says.

Apple puts its next-day supply available as pre-orders online only, at 10 p.m. ET. Munster checked every night last week at 100 stores, and all were sold out quickly. "There wasn't a store anywhere where a phone was available after 11 p.m."

Apple introduced a new iPad in March, the successor to the iPad 2, with a brighter, sharper screen and an improved video camera. Nearly 75 million iPads have sold since the tablet was first introduced in 2010. Apple has sold nearly 250 million iPhones.


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Musician in Jerry Lee Lewis' band killed in Memphis shooting

Bassist B.B. Cunningham was shot to death at an East Memphis apartment complex where he was working as a security guard on Oct. 14, 2012. (WMC-TV)

MEMPHIS -- A member of music legend Jerry Lee Lewis' band was shot and killed in a Memphis shootout on Sunday morning, police told WMCTV.com. An unidentified 16-year-old was killed at the same time.

B.B. Cunningham, 70, was moonlighting as a security guard at an apartment complex when he heard a shot and went to investigate, police told The Commercial Appeal newspaper. Both Cunningham and the teen were dead by the time police arrived on the scene.

PHOTOS | Notable deaths in 2012

"I don't know much about him but he was always nice to me we always talked a lot and sometimes he helped me out when I was having trouble with my vehicle," apartment complex resident Judy Baladez told WMCTV.com about Cunningham.

Cunningham most recently toured with Sweden's The Cadillac Band in July.

He was a member of the Memphis group "The Hombres" in the mid-1960s and co-wrote the group's hit song in 1967, "Let It Out, Let it All Hang Out." He joined Lewis' band in 1997.

(NBC News)


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