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Giant peach tested, ready to go

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Senin, 31 Desember 2012 | 23.17

ATLANTA -- On New Year's Eve at Underground Atlanta, nearly 200,000 people will be counting down at the same time. They'll all be following the same giant peach as it drops, so it better be timed correctly.

"It's a lot of pressure, it all comes down to that peach right there, and if it's late or doesn't come down that's a problem," said Entertainment Design Group's Gary Seputis. He's been responsible for the peach timing for the last 15 years. "We test it and test it and test it again; and make sure the timing is right and everything works perfectly."

The peach is wired to the permanent metal tower at Underground Atlanta. It takes 35 workers about three days to rig the stages, sound systems, graffiti and peach. Seputis said it's an honor to help with the setup.

"Thousands and thousands of people come here to fill the area," Seputis said. "The energy is incredible."

Driving near Underground starts being restricted by police at around 4:00 p.m. Monday. Those who have been to the Peach Drop a few times have one tip in particular: Don't wait until right before the drop to make it down to Underground.

"There's going to be a lot of people and it's going to be packed up and down the street," said Jessica White. "So your best bet is to get here before 8 p.m."

The main stage show begins at 6 p.m.


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New Year welcomed worldwide

An Indian reveller in Amritsar on December 31, 2012. (NARINDER NANU/AFP/Getty Images)

CANBERRA, Australia -- Fiscal cliff? Recession? Not in Australia or Asia, where the first countries to see 2013 are enthusiastically welcoming the new year.

Increasingly democratic Myanmar is having a public countdown for the first time. Jakarta plans a huge street party befitting Indonesia's powering economy.

In Sydney, eager revelers camped Sunday night on the shores of the harbor to get the best vantage points as 1.5 million were expected to gather to watch the fireworks show centered on the Sydney Harbor Bridge.

The shores were packed when an eight-minute preliminary show for young children exploded over the harbor three hours before the main event in Sydney and as the clock struck midnight in Samoa and other South Pacific islands to the east, ushering in the new year there.

In Hong Kong, this year's 12.5 million Hong Kong dollar ($1.6 million) fireworks display is billed by organizers as the biggest ever in the southern Chinese city. Police expected as many as 100,000 people to watch, local news reports said.

The buoyant economies of the Asia-Pacific are prepared to party with renewed optimism despite the so-called fiscal cliff threatening to reverberate globally from the United States and the tattered economies of Europe.

Celebrations were planned around the world, with hundreds of thousands expected to fill Times Square in New York City to watch the drop of a Waterford crystal-studded ball.

One day after dancing in the snow to celebrate the first anniversary of leader Kim Jong Un's ascension to supreme commander, North Koreans were preparing to mark the arrival of the new year, marked as "Juche 102" on North Korean calendars. Juche means self-reliance, the North Korean ideology of independence promoted by national founder Kim Il Sung, who was born 102 years ago. His grandson now rules North Korea.

In New Delhi, the festive mood was marred by the death Saturday of a young rape victim.

Hotels, clubs and residents' associations in the Indian capital decided to cancel planned festivities and asked people to light candles to express their solidarity with the victim whose plight sparked public rallies for women's safety.

"Let there be no New Year celebrations across the country. It will be a major tribute to the departed soul," said Praveen Khandelwal, secretary-general of the Confederation of All India Traders, an umbrella group of operators of shops and businesses across the country.

In a field in Myanmar's largest city, Yangon, workers were testing a giant digital countdown screen with the backdrop of the revered Shwedagon pagoda.

Arranged by local Forever Media group and Index Creative Village, a Thai event organizer, the celebration is the first public New Year countdown in Myanmar, a country ruled for almost five decades by military regimes that discouraged or banned big public gatherings.

"We are planning this public New Year event because we want residents of Yangon to enjoy the public countdown like in other countries," said Win Thura Hlaing, managing director of Forever Blossom company, a subsidiary of Forever Media.

With live music performances by celebrities, light shows, food stalls, fireworks and other activities, the countdown is expected to draw 50,000 people, Win Thura Hlaing said.

Jakarta's street party centers on a 7-kilometer (4-mile) main thoroughfare closed to all traffic from nightfall until after midnight. Workers erected 16 large stages along the normally car-clogged, eight-lane highway through the heart of the city. Indonesia's booming economy is a rare bright spot amid global gloom and is bringing prosperity - or the hope of it - to Indonesians.

Spirits in the capital have been further raised by the election of a new, populist governor who is pledging to tackle the city's massive infrastructure problems.

In Sydney, Lord Mayor Clover Moore said about 1.5 million spectators were expected to line the harbor to watch the 6.6 million Australian dollar ($6.9 million) fireworks display, while another 2 million Australians among a population of 22 million would watch on television.

"This is really putting Australia on the map in terms of welcoming people to the new year," Moore told reporters before the event.

Thousands lined the harbor shore in festive crowds under a blue summer sky by late afternoon, their number undiminished by Australian government warnings that the Washington deadlock on the U.S. debt crisis was partly to blame for a slowing Australian economy.

Australian pop singer Kylie Minogue was hosting the event.

Florida tourist Melissa Sjostedt was among the thousands gathered near a southern pylon of the bridge. She said seeing the fireworks would fulfill an ambition that began a decade ago when she read about them in National Geographic magazine.

"Ever since that, I've always wanted to see this for real, live, in person," she said.

New Yorker Mathieu Herman said he had flown to Australia specifically for the New Year celebrations on the harbor.

"I saw it last year on TV and it looked fabulous. I said to myself it's something I've just got to do," Herman said.

Despite a somber mood in the Philippines due to devastation from a recent typhoon, a key problem for authorities remained how to prevent revelers from setting off huge illegal firecrackers - including some nicknamed "Goodbye Philippines" and "Bin Laden" - that maim and injure hundreds of Filipinos each year, including many children.

A government scare tactic involving doctors displaying brutal-looking scalpels used for amputations for firecracker victims has not fully worked in the past so health officials came up with a novel idea: Go Gangnam style.

A government health official, Eric Tayag, donned the splashy outfit of South Korean star PSY and danced to his Youtube hit "Gangnam Style" video while preaching against the use of illegal firecrackers on TV, in schools and in public arenas.

"The campaign has become viral," Tayag said. "We've asked kids and adults to stay away from big firecrackers and just dance the Gangnam and they're doing it."

Hong Kong feng shui master Raymond Lo predicted 2013 would be less turbulent than 2012 because the Chinese New Year in February will usher in the year of the snake, bringing an end to the year of the dragon, which was associated with water. Water is one of the five elements in feng shui theory, the Chinese practice of arranging objects and choosing dates to improve luck.

"Water is fear. So that's why we have had so much turbulence especially in the winter months," such as doomsday prophecies, school shootings and concerns about the fiscal cliff, said Lo.

"But the good news is that the coming year of the snake is the first time that fire has come back since 2007. Fire actually is the opposite to water, fire is happiness. So therefore the year of the snake is a much more optimistic year. So you can see signs of economic recovery now," he added.

"The positive thing is that people are very optimistic, therefore it will have a very strong drive on the economic recovery. We expect the stock market will do well, the property market will do well," Lo said.


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Smyrna Police investigating shooting death

SMYRNA, Ga. -- Police are investigating a shooting death at a Smyrna home.

The shooting happened at a Kennesaw Way address at around 10:15 p.m. Sunday.

Smyrna Police Ofc. Mike Smith said the victim, 48-year-old Kenneth Anderson, was found dead of a gunshot wound at the home.

Investigators believe the shooting was drug-related, but do not have any additional details, Smith said.


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Help Desk: New Year's Holiday Safe Ride Programs

Count down to the end of 2012 safely this year. A variety of metro Atlanta safe ride services are available for you and your friends as you head out to ring in the New Year.

The 11Alive Help Desk compiled a variety of safe ride programs to help you arrive at your destination safely. Be sure to confirm specific zoning information for each service before you head out.

RELATED | New Year's Eve safe ride Resource Page

Want to hit the town in style? Uber, an on-demand private driver, is available to users by downloading the iPhone or Android "Uber" app. The nearest driver to your pickup location will be dispatched, and you will receive a text with an estimated time of arrival. Once the vehicle has arrived, users will receive another text.

SafeRide America is a non-profit organization that staffs drivers to provide a variety of services for users. SafeRide Services, SafeChauffer Services, and SafeParty Service, are all available for your safe driving needs. SafeRide works in teams of two to drive you and your party in the comfort of your own vehicle. Due to the busy New Years holiday weekend, SafeRide has advised the Help Desk that wait times could near 1 1/2 - 2 hours. SafeRide will be accepting reservations on the days leading up to New Years Eve, but rides on December 31 are first come, first serve.

Designated Driver Alternative (DDA) also offers safe ride services within the comfort of your own vehicle. Rides can be requested online or through a text message. DDA advises users to request a ride 30 - 60 minutes in advance of your desired pick-up time.

For a comprehensive list of safe ride programs, be sure to visit the New Years Safe Ride resource page.


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Man arrested for killing ex's boyfriend

(Cobb County Sheriff's Office)

MARIETTA, Ga. -- A Marietta man is behind bars for shooting and killing a man he believed was seeing his ex-girlfriend.

Patrick Lamar Burr, 40, is accused of shooting the man outside a home on Griggs Street in Marietta at around 2:30 p.m. Sunday.

Marietta Police spokesman David Baldwin said the victim, 24-year-old Arthur Moses Jr., and the ex-girlfriend were sitting in a car in the house's driveway when Burr approached and fired a pistol into the car.

The girlfriend, who was not identified, escaped unharmed. Moses was killed as he tried to run away, Baldwin said.

Burr was arrested on the scene and charged with murder and aggravated assault. He is being held without bond in the Cobb County Adult Detention Center.


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11Alive's most-viewed news stories of 2012

(File photo by ROMEO GACAD/AFP/Getty Images)

(WXIA) -- 2012 was an incredible year, with many milestones and many news stories that affected everyone here in Metro Atlanta, across the nation and around the world.

We have compiled the most viewed stories from 11Alive.com -- the stories that captured your imagination and made you want to know more.

We start our list with the most-viewed story of the year.

By the way, what's your favorite story of the year? You can vote here through January 7.


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Congress waits on closed door fiscal cliff talks

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) leaves the Senate Chamber and heads to a meeting with Senate Democrats on Capitol Hill December 30, 2012 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON -- The House reconvened for a rare New Year's Eve session Monday and the Senate was set to follow suit, but all the action on a possible "fiscal cliff" deal remained behind closed doors as Vice President Joe Biden and top Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell continued urgent talks to avoid a midnight deadline for the start of a series of tax hikes and spending cuts.

McConnell, R-Ky., and Biden "continued their discussion late into the evening (Sunday) and will continue to work toward a solution," said McConnell spokesman Don Stewart, pledging "more information as it becomes available."

Senate Majority leader Harry Reid, D-Nev, who was also heavily involved in the talks, was expected to speak at 11 a.m. ET with an update on talks.

Optimism rose and fell throughout Sunday as officials from Capitol Hill to the White House dickered over budget details, worked the phones, spoke with reporters - and generally blamed each other for the impasse over a deal to avert higher taxes on all Americans, massive cuts to major programs and a possible recession as a result.

From Capitol Hill on Monday morning, Sen. Tom Coburn, (R-Okla.) told MSNBC's Morning Joe program that most lawmakers, who are not among the small group of negotiators, were sitting around the Capitol building listening to pundits on television.

"Something has gone terribly wrong when the biggest threat to our American economy is the American Congress," said Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va.

After Senators failed Sunday to come up with a bipartisan proposal on a deal, the White House served notice it may push its own plan and dare Republicans to oppose it.

The pared-down plan would include a renewal of unemployment insurance and an extension of the George W. Bush tax cuts for middle-class Americans who make less than $250,000 a year.

"Republicans will have to decide if they're going to block it, which will mean that middle-class taxes do go up," President Obama said on NBC's Meet The Press.

Sunday began with the Obama's interview on NBC in which he said he remained hopeful of a deal, but made it clear he would hold Republicans responsible if the nation goes over the fiscal cliff.

"The way they're behaving is that their only priority is making sure that tax breaks for the wealthiest Americans are protected," Obama said.

Republicans pointed the finger right back at Obama.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said Obama has always emphasized tax hikes ahead of spending cuts, especially when it comes to the fast-rising entitlement programs of Social Security and Medicare.

"Americans elected President Obama to lead, not cast blame," Boehner said in a statement.

On the Senate floor, McConnell said he called Vice President Biden "to see if he could help jump-start negotiations on his side." The Republican leader noted that he and Biden have worked well together during previous budget battles.

The two "continued their discussion late into the evening (Sunday) and will continue to work toward a solution," said McConnell spokesman Don Stewart, pledging "more information as it becomes available."

As Reid adjourned the Senate early Sunday evening, he said, "We are apart on some pretty big issues."

During the negotiations, McConnell said, "I'm concerned with the lack of urgency here. There's far too much at stake.

"There is no single issue that remains an impossible sticking point," he said. "The sticking point appears to be a willingness, an interest or courage to close the deal."

In one sign of movement, Republicans dropped a demand to slow the growth of Social Security and other benefits by changing how those payments are increased each year to allow for inflation.

Once again, the conflict between the Democratic president and the Republican House has shadowed a budget dispute.

It happened during the near-government shutdown in the spring of 2011. It happened again that same year when the government nearly defaulted during a dispute over the debt ceiling.

As in those previous disputes, the fiscal cliff talks revolve around taxes and spending cuts that could help reduce a federal debt that exceeds $16 trillion.

Obama and the Democrats have emphasized higher tax rates on the wealthiest Americans. Republicans have balked at tax hikes and emphasize spending cuts instead.

Despite their opposition, Republicans pretty much expect that taxes on wealthier Americans are going to rise.

"The president won. The president campaigned on raising rates, and he's going to get a rate increase," Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., told ABC. But "this deal won't affect the debt situation."

In his NBC interview, taped Saturday, Obama said he has offered Republicans a concession that would reduce Social Security spending by changing the way cost-of-living increases are calculated.

Obama's aides proposed an agreement that would reduce the deficit by $2.4 trillion over 10 years, about half in spending cuts.

"The offers that I've made to them have been so fair that a lot of Democrats get mad at me," Obama said.

Managing the fiscal cliff is essential to improving the economy, the president said. The nation is poised to improve economic growth in 2013, he said, "but what's been holding us back is the dysfunction here in Washington."

Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., said, "We're stuck because many in Congress want to move toward Clinton-era tax rates but not Clinton-era spending."

The president did not make a public appearance Sunday, instead monitoring events from inside the White House.

He did sign one bill: a five-year extension of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.


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Holiday greetings, galleries and giving

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Senin, 24 Desember 2012 | 23.17

Latest Headlines

Affiliates include Athens, Atlanta, Brunswick, Columbus, Covington, Dalton, Dooly County, Forsyth County, Harlem, Macon, Milledgeville, Savannah, Statesboro, Wayne County and Thomas County.

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Hands On Atlanta helps individuals, families, corporate and community groups ...

A Clayton County man decides to do something good for his community, and provides eight Christmas dinners to single parent families.

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Your holiday guide: military greetings, photo galleries, ways to give and ...


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Neighbor arrested in death of 9-yr-old Skylar Dials

SPALDING COUNTY, Ga. -- The Spalding County Sheriff's Department  has made an arrest in the murder death of 9-year-old  Skylar Dials.

According to Sheriff Wendell Beam, Shane Clifton Collett, 40, of Griffin, was arrested and charged with murder, kidnapping and concealing a death. Collett is being held in the Spalding County jail without bond.  He was taken in for questioning a few hours after Dials' body was found in the woods around 2 am Saturday.  She was only a few hundred yeards from her own house. 

"It's a tragedy," Beam said. "It makes it worse here at Christmas but it would be sad anytime. We just ask that all of the citizens keep the family in their prayers, and keep your own kids close."

Collett lives next door to the Dials in the home of his girlfriend's father.  The GBI said his girlfriend has a daughter the same age as Dials, and the two were playmates. 

Deputies say the child left her house Friday afternoon to visit the playmate's house.  A few hours later, the family went to the neighbor's house, but Skylar wasn't there.  That kicked off a search involving law enforcement, neighbors and volunteers.

Sheriff Beam says the investigation is ongoing. The GBI said Dials had contact with Collett Friday.  An autopsy to determine the cause of death was performed Saturday with results to be released in the coming weeks. 


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Ex-husband wanted in murder of Cobb woman

MARIETTA, Ga-- Cobb County Police investigators are searching for a man they say murdered his ex-wife in the Marietta home they used to share at 3960 Tall Pine Drive.

Police say Saturday around 11am authorities resonded to a 911 call and found  Donna Nations Kristofak, 48, unresponsive. She was transported to Wellstar Kennestone Hospital, where she died a short time later.

According to Officer Mike Bowman, the victim's ex- husband, John Stephen Kristofak, 58, is facing charges of aggravated assault and  His whereabouts remain unknown. He was last seen driving a late-model, brown Chevrolet Equinox with the Georgia tag BUV 2635.

According to neighbors the couple divorced about a year ago.

Laurie Marks has a son who was involved in sports along with the Kristofaks' older son.

"They were a great couple.  We had them and their two sons over numerous times.  We don't know what happened," said Laurie Marks.

Marks' son, Shane, reached out to his friend after the murder.

"My friend was actually home asleep. He said he heard his mom screaming and ran down to the garage.  That's when he saw his dad stabbing his mom," said Shane Marks.

11Alive News has learned John Kristofaks was recently released from jail after serving time on a felony conviction of stalking.

Family friends say the person he was accused of stalking was his ex-wife. 

Cobb County police say Krisofak is considered armed and dangerous. Anyone with information is asked to call 9-1-1.


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Track Santa with NORAD

PETERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Colo. -- Volunteers are pulling on their Santa hats, phone lines are set, and tracking screens are ready.  NORAD Tracks Santa is primed for its 57th annual goodwill mission.

Santa trackers start taking calls today, telling children - and some adults - when Santa is due at their house.  The last shift won't end until nearly 24 hours later.

The number is 877-HI-NORAD or 877-446-6723.

Updates will be posted online on Facebook and Twitter (https://twitter.com/NoradSanta).

The operation is based at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, Colo., home of the North American Aerospace Defense Command.

NORAD Tracks Santa began in 1955 when a newspaper ad listed the wrong phone number for kids to call Santa. They wound up calling the Continental Air Defense Command, NORAD's predecessor.

Click here to track Santa


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Atlanta 31, Detroit 18: Falcons get home field - Johnson gets record

Detroit Lions Calvin Johnson with Atlanta Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan after Johnson's record setting game in Detroit on Saturday, Dec 22, 2012. Julian H. Gonzalez/DFP

Calvin Johnson can do anything he wants on a football field, except will his team to wins.

Johnson put on another spell-binding performance, shredding double- and triple-teams to break Jerry Rice's single-season receiving record, but the Lions lost their NFL-worst seventh straight game Saturday, 31-18, to the Atlanta Falcons at Ford Field.

On a bittersweet night, Johnson finished with 11 catches for 225 yards and passed Rice, the game's all-time greatest receiver, with a 26-yard catch across the middle with 2:57 to play.

He trotted to the sideline after his record-setting grab and handed the ball to his father, Calvin Johnson Sr., as fans serenaded him with a standing ovation.

Johnson needed 182 yards to pass Rice's 17-year-old mark coming into the game, had 117 by halftime and set a slew of other franchise and league records Saturday.

With one game to play Dec. 30 against the Chicago Bears, Johnson has 1,892 yards receiving and now owns NFL marks for most consecutive 100-yard games (eight), most consecutive games with 10 or more catches (four) and is tied for most 100-yard games in a season (11).

He broke Herman Moore's single-season franchise record of 1,686 receiving yards with his second catch of the game, a 49-yard drag when he beat single coverage across the middle of the field and ran free down the Lions' sideline.

While Johnson mostly starred -- he lost a second-quarter fumble just before halftime to set up a Falcons touchdown -- the Lions (4-11) fell apart in familiar fashion, committing three turnovers to hand Atlanta 17 points.

Roddy White, who nearly matched Johnson's big day, scored on touchdown catches of 44 and 39 yards, and Julio Jones had a beautiful 16-yard catch when he got his left foot down and tapped his right toe just inside the end zone late in the second quarter.

White opened the scoring on the Falcons' second possession, a four-play, 69-yard drive, when he beat Chris Houston with a double move down the Atlanta sideline. The Falcons took possession two plays after Johnson's 49-yard catch, when Corey Peters stripped Mikel Leshoure and Peria Jerry recovered the fumble in Atlanta territory.

The Lions settled for a field goal on the ensuing possession and Matt Ryan answered with a nine-play, 80-yard drive in which he dug the Falcons out of a first-and-20 situation with three short passes.

White turned a short bubble screen into his second touchdown, following blocks from Tony Gonzalez (on Jonte Green) and Sam Baker (on Louis Delmas) to the end zone.

Jones' touchdown came seven plays after Johnson fumbled near midfield while fighting for extra yards, and the Lions had to settle for a Hanson field goal on their final possession of the first half after wasting an early time-out.

The Lions called their first time-out on the second play of the game after Gosder Cherilus ran off the field late with what appeared to be an equipment issue. With just one time-out left in the final minute of the first half, a time-out they needed for a field goal, the Lions let 24 seconds tick off between plays on the Atlanta side of the field.

The Lions cut their deficit to 21-16 when they opted for a 20-yard Jason Hanson field goal on fourth-and-goal from the 2 with 13:26 to play, and Ryan answered with a near-perfect 11-play, 78-yard drive to seal the game.

Matthew Stafford was intercepted on the next play when he tried forcing a pass to Johnson and threw behind him over the middle of the field.

Despite the pick, Stafford played one of his best games of the season. He completed 37 of 56 passes for 443 yards and passed Bobby Layne to set a franchise record for most career completions (1,090). He needs 305 yards next week to reach 5,000 for a second straight year.

Ryan completed his first 12 passes and finished 25 of 32 for 279 and four touchdowns. White caught eight passes for 153 for the Falcons, who improved to 13-2 and clinched home-field advantage throughout the NFC playoffs with the win.

Contact Dave Birkett: 313-222-8831 or dbirkett@freepress.com. Follow him on Twitter @davebirkett.


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Elf on the Shelf calls GA home

COBB COUNTY, Ga. -- Have you looked at the best-seller lists lately?  One of the best selling books is called Elf on the Shelf.

It's being sold around the world in more than 10,000 stores.

GALLERY | Send your pictures of fun with Elf on the Shelf

Did you know the Elf has two headquarters?  The North Pole and its birthplace, Cobb County.

Ted Hall has more on this phenomenon.

MORE | Your Holiday Photos


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Firefighters shot; Press conference now

Crews working near the fire scene in the Rochester suburb of Chester, NY (Democrat & Chronicle)

WEBSTER, NY -- At least two Webster firefighters are dead, and three houses on Lake Road continue to burn after one or more gunmen open fired on firefighters who responded to an early morning fire, officials said.

Two other firefighters are in guarded condition at Strong Memorial Hospital with gunshot wounds, according to a hospital spokeswoman.

There are no active shooters at the scene and firefighters have resumed battling the blazes, according to a news conference held at 9:40 a.m. by Sheriff Patrick O'Flynn.

The fire broke out at 5:45 a.m. at 191 Lake Road on the Irondequoit Bay side of the street.

Webster Police Chief Gerald Pickering said shots were fired at West Webster firefighters when they arrived on the scene. Four firefighters were hit, two fatally.

"I'm not aware of anything like this happening in Webster, obviously not a firefighter being fired upon," Webster Fire Marshal Rob Boutillier said.

One firefighter who was shot managed to get away from the scene and over the outlet bridge to his car.

Authorities are on the scene evacuating residents. Residents are being evacuated from the Webster side of the bay to the Irondequoit side. They are being searched by New York state police and other authorities before being taken to a Regional Transit Service bus.

Webster resident Michael Damico was among those neighbors who were evacuated.

"The whole strip's been evacuated," Damico said. "They're evacuating all of the houses and going through them."

Damico's son woke him up around 8 a.m. to tell him about the fire that was burning down the street.

"We looked out the window and we saw the SWAT team and everyone around," he said.

"Some people on this bus already watched their houses burn," Damico said. "They're not happy."

U.S. border patrol and New York state police helicopters circled the scene much of the morning.

There is no information whether the homes that are on fire were occupied.

Boutillier advised that residents who feel safe in their homes could stay, but advised them to stay away from windows and doors. A SWAT team is also on the scene escorting residents to RTS buses that are taking them out of the neighborhood.

Roads, including part of Culver Road and a section of Lake Road, including the outlet bridge, have been closed.

Police have set up a staging area for media on Bay Road in Webster as part of the investigation.

(Democrat & Chronicle)


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SACS to hold press conference on DeKalb Schools

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Senin, 17 Desember 2012 | 23.17

DECATUR, Ga. -- Dekalb County Schools will learn results of an investigation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) this afternoon.

The accrediting agency plans a news conference at noon.

In October, a SACS team of investigators spent more than 40 hours interviewing school principals, board members - staff, even people in the community.

RELATED | DeKalb Schools respond to SACS criticism
MORE | SACS to investigate DeKalb County Schools

Parents have vented anger at the DeKalb School board in the past year over everything from failing to get a handle on budget issues, to layoffs and furloughs and the dismantling of the beloved Fernbank Science Center.

The president of AdvancED/SACS, Mark Elgart, has said the DeKalb School Board "isn't a board anymore. It's actually nine political leaders who have their own alliances and allegiances."

"They pursue their own interests, in spite of what the system needs. It's their interests that are in charge of what happens," Elgart said in an interview last week.


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Man shot to death at car wash

CARTERSVILLE, Ga. -- A man was shot to death during an apparent robbery at a Cartersville car wash Sunday night.

The body of 28-year-old Randall Statler Jr. was found shortly after 11 p.m. at the Sun-Glo Car Wash on Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, according to Cartersville Police Capt. Mark Camp.

Statler had been shot once. Camp said investigators believe he was robbed before he was killed.

According to the investigation, Statler had spent the day mudding with friends and was washing the mud off his pickup truck when he was killed.

Police have not yet named any suspects.

"We have had several officers and investigators working on this unfortunate incident throughout the night," Cartersville Police Chief Thomas Culpepper said in a statement.


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Falcons shut out Giants

Written by
The Sports Network

ATLANTA -- The Atlanta Falcons got their revenge, and made quite a statement as well in doing so.

PHOTOS | Falcons 34, Giants 0

Matt Ryan threw three touchdown passes, including a pair to Julio Jones, and the Falcons dealt the New York Giants their first regular-season shutout in 16 years with an authoritative 34-0 victory at the Georgia Dome.

Atlanta (12-2) got its payback for a 24-2 throttling by the Giants during last season's NFC Wild Card Playoffs behind a near-flawless performance from Ryan, with the standout quarterback completing a sharp 23-of-28 passes for 270 yards without a turnover.

The Falcons' defense did its part as well, intercepting New York's Eli Manning twice in the first half and stopping the Giants on downs three times over the course of the game.

Manning managed just 161 yards on an off-target 14-of-26 efficiency as New York (8-6) was held scoreless in a non-playoff setting for the first time since a 24-0 setback at Philadelphia on Dec. 1, 1996.

Jones ended with 74 yards on six catches and Tony Gonzalez added a touchdown grab for the NFC South champion Falcons, who can clinch a first-round playoff bye if San Francisco loses to New England on Sunday night.

The result could be considerably more costly for the Giants, now 2-4 over their last six outings. New York would relinquish its one-game lead over Dallas and Washington in the NFC East if either the Cowboys or Redskins win their Week 15 matchups.

The Sports Network


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Ga. launches new effort to protect military bases

SAVANNAH, Ga. -- Georgia is launching an initiative to protect its military bases in the coming years as the Pentagon cuts its budget and possibly closes some bases.

The Governor's Defense Initiative, announced by Gov. Nathan Deal last month, will try to strengthen its lobbying of defense policymakers in Washington while also working to recruit private industry to military communities.

The initiative will be led by a Washington consultant who's familiar with both Georgia and the Pentagon. Will Ball worked as chief of staff to former Georgia Sen. Herman Talmadge and as Navy secretary under President Ronald Reagan.

Ball says Georgia's nine military bases are in a "tremendous period of uncertainty." The so-called fiscal cliff could trigger steep military cuts, and a new round of base closings is likely in 2015.


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Christmas tree tribute to shooting victims

Anyone who wants to comfort the victims of the Newtown tragedy can sign an ornament with a message.

MARIETTA, Ga. -- While he was at school on Friday, Charlie Wyman got a text from his mother saying she loved him.  The 13-year-old Marietta high school student said he didn't understand why she sent it out of the blue, until he learned what had happened in Newtown, Connecticut, where he was born.

PHOTOS | Sandy Hook ES shooting victims

He and his mother decided to put up a Christmas tree in their front yard.  They invited anyone who wanted to comfort the victims of the tragedy to sign an ornament with a message.  They plan to send the ornaments up to Newtown. They had several on the tree Sunday morning.

"We want them to know that those of us all the way down here in Georgia are here for them," Wyman said. "Knowing their pain and trying to help them get through this."

His mother Caroline Wyman said she and her husband chose Newtown as the place to start their family because it seemed so quaint and safe.  It's been 10 years since the family moved, but she said it's still that way, and her relatives are learning they knew people who were mourning.  She said the tree helped her cope as well, even though it's a small gesture. 

"It may be a small gesture and not anything big and grand, but it's something," Caroline Wyman said.  "It's something."

Charlie is planning to continue collecting the ornaments. Send his mom a Facebook message if you'd like their address to sign one.


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Schools step up security after Conn. shooting

GWINNETT COUNTY, Ga. -- The Gwinnett County Police Department will have extra patrols at schools beginning Monday morning.

The decision follows the mass shooting Friday at an elementary school in Connecticut that left 20 children and 6 adults dead.  The majority of victims were children ages 6 and 7.

According to Sgt. Brian Doan, an officer will be staffed at all 102 school campuses.

"We want to calm students and let them know that they are safe.  This is a proactive step and something we do to make sure that there are no copy cat incidents and that the schools are secure," said Doan.

PHOTOS | Sandy Hook ES shooting victims

In DeKalb County, resource officers are used in all high schools and middle schools.  Some pull double duty when they're called to elementary schools if needed.

According to spokesperson Lillian Govus, there are no immediate plans to change or alter individual security plans but said discussions are likely in the coming weeks.

"We feel that our schools are pretty secure now with resource officers, locked doors between the pick up and drop off times and security cameras to see who is asking to be let in," said Govus.

In a letter sent to parents, Superintendent of Decatur City Schools, Dr. Phyllis Edwards, said:

"Principals and I will meet together to review several safety topics this Monday, and adjust any plans as needed. We will also ask that you help us by following the procedures and ensuring that others do as well. In times like these, it is important that we follow our normal routines as this will convey as sense of calm and security to the children."


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Christmas lights may be blamed for house fire

A father and his teen daughter were forced to jump for their lives early Monday.

EAST POINT, Ga. -- Fire investigators say Christmas lights may have caused a fire that forced an East Point father and daughter to jump for their lives Monday.

According to East Point Fire Chief Michael Webb, the lights on the family's Christmas tree were left on all night, plugged into an extension cord.

Firefighters reported heavy smoke and flames by the time they arrived on the 400 block of Gus Thornhill Jr. Drive., at around 3 a.m.

Fire officials said a fire alarm woke the man and his 16-year-old daughter up. They jumped out of a second story window to safety.

The father was not hurt, but his daughter was taken to Children's Healthcare of Atlanta Egleston after complaining of arm pain.

11Alive News


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APS Board to decide superintendent's fate

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Senin, 10 Desember 2012 | 23.17

ATLANTA -- The fate of Atlanta Public School district's superintendent rests in the hands of the school board. The board will meet Monday to discuss whether to extend Erroll Davis' contract.

Davis took over as the interim superintendent on the heels of the CRCT cheating scandal. While many applauded his efforts to keep accused educators out of the classroom, Davis recently came under fire after replacing the principal and five administrators at North Atlanta High School. Davis became APS superintendent in 2010, in the wake of the Criterion-Referenced Competency Test, or CRCT scandal in which nearly 200 educators were accused of changing answers on the exams.

Since arriving, Davis has worked to keep accreditation for the district and led a massive redistricting process.

Davis supporters and opponents have become quite vocal in recent weeks.

"He had 71 meetings in one month and that was after this process started in 2009," said Shawnna Hayes-Tavares, a parent who supports Davis. "As a parent, I've been involved in every one of those meetings since 2009, and I think he listened to the demographers, he listened to the public based on the options they changed. He listened and got input from board members and others. He came into this school system right on the heals of the CRTC scandal."

But others say Davis has poorly handled several big challenges, such as the cheating scandal at North Atlanta High School. Six administrators, including the principal, were fired in October.

"I think he did do a lot of destruction because he didn't communicate with the people who are involved with these school systems. The people who really know how to make it work," said Molly Read Woo, a parent who opposes keeping Davis. "The people who've dedicated their lives to seeing a lot of success for our students. For example when he pretty much gutted the administration at North Atlanta. He didn't communicate with Nancy Meister the board member who's in charge of that district before he just beheaded it."


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Tripp Halstead undergoing surgery

WINDER, Ga. -- People across the globe are sending prayers to Tripp Halstead's family, as the Winder boy prepares to undergo surgery Monday morning.

According to posts on the family's Facebook page, during the procedure, doctors will be replacing part of the boy's skull. They will also remove a feeding tube from his nose and put a g-tube in his stomach. The surgery is expected to last about four hours.

The two-year-old has been in the hospital since October, when a tree branch fell on him. Since then, he's earned a spot in many people's hearts, with more than 105,000 people following his progress on Facebook.


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Stockbridge mayor's future uncertain

STOCKBRIDGE, Ga. -- Stockbridge Mayor Lee Stuart is coming under fire, as several city council members try to force him out.

Council members hired attorney Chris Balch to look into allegations Stuart was misusing funds, releasing sensitive information, and creating a hostile work environment. Balch says after interviewing witnesses and reviewing 2,000 documents, he found seven violations of the city's charter.

The findings of the investigation are expected to be discussed in a special called meeting Monday morning. The council could then vote to remove Stuart from office during a regular council meeting later that night.

Stuart took office three years ago and has butted heads with the council over how to run the town of 25,000. One of the biggest clashes was over his suggestion to keep a couple dozen goats year round to eat the city's kudzu, instead of using city workers to remove it.

11Alive contacted Lee on Sunday, but he declined to comment. However, his attorney says his client has not broken the law, and he has no intention of stepping down.


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Obama-Boehner fiscal cliff meeting: Is silence golden?

U.S. Speaker of the House Rep. John Boehner (R-OH) and President Barack Obama(File photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON -- President Obama and John Boehner met Sunday at the White House, and aides are saying little about it.

That is probably good news for the fiscal cliff negotiations.

As the White House and Congress approach an end-of-the-year deadline, the near-silence from Obama and Boehner about their talks may well be a sign they are getting close to a new debt reduction deal -- though that is only the first step.

Whatever the president and Speaker of the House agree to, the Republican-run House and Democratic Senate must vote to approve it.

That may not easy politically, and will definitely take time. Both chambers must develop specific legislation and call members back to Washington for votes.

Both parties have incentive, however. The "fiscal cliff" is a series of tax hikes and budget cuts that kick in next year if the White House and Congress are unable to reach a debt reduction agreement. That prospect affects every American, and could ring down a new recession.

There's also the holiday incentive. Many members of both parties would like to get something done by Christmas. For that to happen, given the congressional calender, the president and the Speaker will probably need to put up something by the end of this week.

At their meeting on Sunday, Obama and Boehner presumably discussed the major sticking points.

Obama and the Democrats say the government, in order to reduce its $16 trillion-plus debt, needs more revenue from higher tax rates on the wealthy. Boehner and the Republicans want more spending cuts, including the entitlement programs of Social Security and Medicare.

After the confab at the White House, both sides issues identical statements saying that "we're not reading out details of the conversation, but the lines of communication remain open."

Obama -- and presumably Boehner -- aren't remaining totally silent, however.

This afternoon, Obama travels to Redford, Michigan, where he will promote his fiscal cliff plan at Daimler Detroit Diesel.


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Piedmont Hospital starts cord blood donation program

Essie Williams and baby Yale are among the first to take part in Piedmont Hospital's new cord blood donation program.

ATLANTA -- Yale Williams is three days old and full of potential.

So is his blood. That's why his mom agreed to donate blood from his umbilical cord to a public cord blood bank.

"What's important to me is that it will be used to help someone else," said Essie Williams. 

The Williams are among the first to take part in a new program at Piedmont Hospital that allows new moms to donate their cord blood to the Cleveland Cord Blood Center.

The public bank uses it for the treatment of blood disorders like lymphoma and leukemia.

"The majority of cord bloods in the world are discarded as medical waste," said Marcie Finney with the Cleveland Cord Blood Center. "So this program allows us to keep the cord blood and possibly use it for treatment to possibly save someone's life."

It only takes a small amount that's collected after the baby is born.

Because the immune cells aren't trained yet, cord blood is easier to match than bone marrow for stem cell transplants.

"It's basically extending opportunities for people to have medical treatment," Essie Williams said.

Private banks can be expensive, but this program is free.

It's like giving life twice.

Piedmont Hospital received a $1.3 million grant from the Katz Foundation to pay for the cord blood donation program for the next three years.


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New stadium deal terms released

ATLANTA -- The Georgia World Congress Center Authority unanimously approved terms for a new Falcons stadium Monday morning.

Ask your questions about the new stadium here. We'll get them answered on 11Alive News Tonight.

Several key questions remain, including the stadium's location. Two sites are still under consideration. The design of stadium and its surroundings would depend on which location is picked.

The cost is also up in the air. Monday's terms projected a price tag just under $973 million, based on the costs of other retractable roof stadiums. The actual cost could end up being higher. Previous estimates were as high as $1.2 billion.

Somewhere between $270 million and $313 million of that would be covered by taxpayers, through the hotel/motel tax; 39.3 percent of hotel/motel tax revenues would be dedicated to the new stadium.

The entire deal hinges on legislative approval of increasing the GWCCA's borrowing cap to cover costs up front instead of waiting for hotel/motel dollars to come in. Without that approval, the whole stadium could be scratched.


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Severe Weather possible this afternoon

All weather eyes will be watching as another cold front moves into the area today. Wide spread showers are expected. We could also see isolated strong to severe thunderstorms. The Storm Prediction Center has places the metro area and our western most counties under a slight risk for severe thunderstorms. The main threats will be damaging wind, and hail. Can't rule out an isolated weak tornado. The chance for showers will last through the afternoon, then settle down this evening as the front moves south of the area. Highs will be rather warm this afternoon ahead of the front (near 68 degrees), but will fall back into the 50s by Tuesday.

MORE | Interactive Radar

MORE | Watching and Warnings


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Atlanta City Council to vote on its own pay hike

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Senin, 03 Desember 2012 | 23.17

Atlanta City Council (file photo)

ATLANTA -- Atlanta City Council members are expected to consider whether to give themselves a 52% pay raise during a meeting on Monday.

Three Atlanta city council members have expressed support for proposed pay raises that have drawn fire from taxpayers and some city employees.

More than 500 people voiced their opinions on 11Alive's Facebook page concerning a proposal to give a significant boost to Atlanta's Mayor and members of the city council.

The overwhelming majority of the comments voiced opposition to the recommended 25 percent pay raise for Atlanta's Mayor, and 52 percent pay increases for members of the council.

"The noble thing to do is not pay yourself before you pay the people who support you and put you in those seats," city employee Gina Pagnotta-Murphy told council members during a Tuesday meeting.

Pagnotta-Murphy, the head of Atlanta's Professional Association of City Employees, says many city workers haven't had a raise in ten years.

In November, 11Alive's Jerry Carnes delivered public comments to council members attending a fall retreat at Zoo Atlanta. He asked them to reveal their stand on the pay increase proposal.

Most indicated they had not decided or would not reveal their stance.

Councilman Ivory Young said he believes he deserves a 52 percent pay hike.

"Absolutely," said Young. "I have no problem telling you, absolutely, and I don't have any problem sharing the reasons why."

The city's charter doesn't specify if the position of city council is a full-time or part-time position. Since Young and other council members hold full-time jobs, many consider council work to be part-time.

Young says the work he does for the city is full-time.

"On average, we get 40 to 50 complaints a day, constituent concerns that our office is actively engaged in helping to address," said Young.

The councilman also pointed to the report of the city's Elected Officials Compensation Commission that compares the pay of Atlanta's elected to other cities like Denver, Boston, Dallas, Seattle, Jacksonville, Memphis, and Washington D.C. The commission reports that pay for Atlanta's Mayor and council is toward the bottom.

The commission has recommended increasing the Mayor's pay from $147,500 a year to $184,300 a year.

Mayor Kasim Reed's spokesperson said the Mayor will not accept a pay increase as long as he's in office.

The commission is recommending elevating the pay of city council members from $39,473 to $60,300 annually. If approved, the council president's pay would jump from $41,000 a year to $62,000.

The raises would not go into effect until 2014, after next year's city council election.

Ceasar Mitchell is the current council president who would vote only to break a tie. He's leaning toward supporting the pay raises.

"Can you see this happening before city employees get a raise?" Carnes asked Mitchell.

"I don't know," the council president answered. "I think that's a conversation for the council. We will not make this decision in a vacuum and not consider employees of the city."

City councilman Kwanza Hall is the only contacted by 11Alive News on Thursday who says he's leaning toward a "no" vote on the pay increase.

"My gut feeling was not to be inclined to do anything like this in this economic climate, as well as looking at the fact we have to consider our employees as well," said Hall.

Council member Felicia Moore told 11Alive News she could support a pay raise.


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Alpharetta 8-year-old bitten by dolphin at SeaWorld

ALPHARETTA, Ga. -- An Alpharetta girl suffered minor injuries when she was bitten by a dolphin at SeaWorld in Orlando.
The incident happened on Nov. 21 when 8-year-old Jillian Thomas was feeding dolphins with her younger brother at the Dolphin Cove attraction.

Amy Thomas told 11Alive News her daughter was nearly pulled into the pool when a dolphin jumped up and clamped down on the child's hand. She suffered three small puncture wounds.

The family is upset because they said there were no warnings that such a thing could happen when they paid $7 per person to feed the dolphins, nor did they feel the incident was treated with a sense of urgency.

"When it happened, a SeaWorld attendant quickly came up and said 'Let's take the kids to a positive dolphin experience,' and we told her our daughter needs first aid," Amy said.

The family is speaking out in hopes of preventing others kids from having a similar experience.

In response, SeaWorld issued the following statement:

"Nothing is more important to us than the health and safety of our guests, employees and animals. Educators and animal care staff are always on-site at this area, monitoring all interactions and are committed to guest safety. Educators and animal care staff were at the attraction when this happened and immediately connected with the family. In addition, a member of our health services team was in the area at Dolphin Cove and quickly responded and treated the young girl. The video had not been previously shared with us and we have not had a chance to assess it but certainly take the situation seriously." 


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SACS to address Clayton Co. accreditation concerns

CLAYTON COUNTY, Ga -- SACS is expected to give the Clayton County Board of Education an update Monday on the district's accreditation status. The agency sent the board a letter in September, warning that continued conflict among the members was putting the system in jeopardy in again.

The district lost its accreditation a few years back amid the same type of bickering. In the fallout, thousands of students and hundreds of teachers ended up leaving the school system.

Monday's meeting will take place at 5:30 p.m. During that time, the board will also discuss its search for a new superintendent.


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Sports radio host ruffles Richt's feathers

Georgia Bulldogs head coach Mark Richt reacts to a reporter during the post game press conference after being defeated by the Alabama Crimson Tide 32-28 in the 2012 SEC Championship game at the Georgia Dome. (Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports)

ATLANTA -- A question that has dogged the Bulldogs on and off all season sparked a feisty exchange at Saturday's SEC Championship post game press conference.

VIDEO | Georgia fans heartbroken but faithful
PHOTOS | Show us your SEC spirit

680 The Fan's Chuck Oliver asked University of Georgia Head Coach Mark Richt about his and quarterback Aaron Murray's ability to perform in big games.

Richt: I don't know what you're saying. Why don't you just say straight up what you're trying to say?

Oliver: There are people who say that you and Aaron Murray specifically come up short on the biggest stage against the biggest opponents. Do you have any response to that?

Richt: Is that what you're saying or you're trying to say everybody else? If that's what you're saying. Are you saying that?

Oliver: No... No, I'm saying that's what I hear every day on the radio.

Richt: Well that's for you to worry about then. If that's what you say, then I'll answer the question. If you think other people are saying that, I'm not worried about that.

Oliver has openly criticized Richt and Murray's performance on the radio before, but did not insert himself into Saturday night's exchange.

The press conference moderator moved on, opening the floor to other questions.

Hearing none, Richt thanked reporters and got up to leave, but then stopped to defend his team.

"I want to say something," Richt said. "If anybody thinks our guys didn't play their tail off, that Aaron Murray didn't play his tail off, they're crazy. I mean that's just, that's unbelievable somebody would even bring that up."

The Bulldogs were within five yards and a few seconds of beating Alabama for the SEC Championship and a spot in the BCS National title game.

Instead, Georgia will play Nebraska in the Capital One Bowl on New Year's Day.


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Georgia Tech accepts Hyundai Sun Bowl bid

ATLANTA -- Georgia Tech has accepted a bid to play the University of Southern California in the 79th annual Hyundai Sun Bowl Dec. 31 in El Paso, Texas. The game will kick off at noon (MST) and will be televised by CBS.

The Yellow Jackets will make their 16th consecutive postseason bowl appearance, tying for the fourth-longest current streak nationally. Tech will also make its second straight trip to El Paso, where last season the Jackets lost to Utah, 30-27, in overtime.

Georgia Tech, 6-7 overall, is coming off a hard-fought 21-15 loss to 13th-ranked Florida State in the Dr Pepper ACC Championship Game Saturday night in Charlotte, N.C. The Yellow Jackets overcame a 2-4 start (1-3 in the ACC) to win four straight conference games and finish 5-3 in the ACC.

Southern California, 7-5 overall and 5-4 in the Pac 12, won six of its first seven games after being ranked No. 1 in many preseason polls.

"Our players and coaches are excited about earning another bowl bid and for the opportunity to play a traditionally powerful team in Southern California," Georgia Tech head coach Paul Johnson said. "The hospitality shown to us last year by the Sun Bowl and the people of El Paso was fantastic.

"We know we will face a huge challenge in the game. USC has talented players across the board and Coach (Lane) Kiffin will have his team well-prepared, I'm sure."

Georgia Tech will make its 41st bowl appearance overall, tying for the 12th-most appearances nationally. The Yellow Jackets are 22-18 all-time in bowl games. Only nine schools have won more bowl games than Tech.

USC, 32-16 in 48 bowl appearances, has the highest winning percentage in bowl games (.667) in the nation. Only Alabama (34 bowl wins) has won more bowl games, and only Alabama (59) and Texas (50) have appeared in more bowl games.

The Yellow Jackets will play in the same bowl game two years in a row for the third time in school history. Tech played in the Gator Bowl on Jan. 1, 1999 and on Jan. 1, 2000. The Jackets also played in the Sugar Bowl following the 1951 and 1952 seasons.

Tech will be making its third all-time appearance in the Hyundai Sun Bowl. The Jackets beat Texas Tech, 17-9, in the 1970 game, and lost in overtime to Utah last season.

The Yellow Jackets and Trojans will meet on the football field for the fourth time and for the first time since Sept. 22, 1973 when then-No. 1-ranked USC beat Georgia Tech 23-6 in Bobby Dodd Stadium/Grant Field. The other two meetings came in 1969, a 28-19 Trojan victory in Los Angeles, and in 1961, a 27-7 Georgia Tech win over 7th-ranked USC in Los Angeles.

Georgia Tech is 6-10 all-time against teams currently in the Pac 12.

Georgia Tech


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Fiscal cliff talks likely to last all month (at least)

WASHINGTON -- As we've reported before, we fully expect the fiscal cliff negotiations to go all the way to the end of the year, and perhaps beyond.

Nothing that happened over the weekend alters that view.

While House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and other Republicans criticize President Obama's debt reduction plan -- the same program he campaigned on in the fall -- the White House said it's up to the GOP to make the next move.

The Obama administration says the Republicans have to accept higher taxes rates on the wealthy as part of any budget agreement; Republicans say the White House has to be more specific about spending cuts, including entitlement programs like Social Security and Medicare.

After Dec. 31, the parties face the "fiscal cliff," a series of tax hikes and budget cuts that would affect all Americans, and perhaps tip the economy back into recession.

Mike Allen of Politico, citing unnamed sources, writes that "top officials in both parties says chances are increasing that Congress may have to return in the days after Christmas to finish work on a cliff-hanger deal."

Adds Allen: "Christmas is on a Tuesday, and Congress may bring back its city-within-a-city for the last few days of that week -- ahead of the cliff deadline, Mon.., Dec. 31. We had been predicting a deal would pass on Sun., Dec. 23, getting everyone home for vacation.

"But both sides hardened their positions last week, and we're hearing the Republican inclination to cave has lessened, or at least been postponed."

To be continued.


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LIVE: 31 overcome by carbon monoxide fumes at Atlanta school

ATLANTA -- Police and rescue crews rushed to Finch Elementary School in Southwest Atlanta Monday morning, where at least 31 people were overcome by carbon monoxide fumes.

The reports came in to 911 at about 8:35 a.m. Monday. The school is located at 1114 Avon Avenue in the Oakland City area.

Fire crews said when they arrived, at least six people had been overcome by the fumes. Three had regained conciousness. Officials said most of the people overcome were from a single classroom at Finch.

Atlanta Public School officials said two teachers were transported to Atlanta Medical Center, and 29 students were taken to Children's Health Care of Atlanta at Hughes Spalding.

School officials said they were evacuating the entire school building as a precaution. Atlanta Public Schools officials said the remaining students from Finch were being bussed to Brown Middle School for the remainder of the school day, but that they are available for release right now.

Atlanta Fire Department Batallion Chief Todd Edwards said that when crews entered the building at Finch Elementary, the carbon monoxide levels -- at 1,700 PPM -- were the highest that they had ever recorded inside a building.

Lieutenant Marian McDaniel, speaking on 11Alive News Monday morning, said Finch is a relatively new school.


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