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  • Also: The Senate wades into the complicated budget battle; Chrysler files for an initial public offering; and the man who won last week's $400 million Powerball wants to remain anonymous.
  • Also: Some senators continue talks ahead of the looming federal debt ceiling crisis; South Dakota ranchers lose thousands of cattle to this month's blizzard; two tropical storms churn just off Mexico's Pacific coast; and the Nobel Prize in Economics goes to three Americans.
  • Also: A Congressional staffer takes the rostrum for a bizarre rant; Caroline Kennedy is confirmed as the next U.S. Ambassador to Japan; a trial on Michigan's ban on gay marriage is set for next February; and it's earthquake drill day.
  • Also: Heavy smog blankets Singapore; Islamists threaten another deadly attack in Mogadishu; a fast moving fire spreads southwest of Denver; and a religious group apologizes to homosexuals and closes its controversial "reparative cure" ministry.
  • Also: Texas executes its 500th prisoner, a woman; thousands of Brazilians turn out for fresh anti-government protests; proposals are released for nutritional standards in school snacks; and veteran National Geographic photojournalist Bob Gilka dies.
  • Also: there's deadly flash flooding in Colorado; fewer homes entered foreclosure in August; and more than a million people form a human chain in Spain to demand independence in Catalonia.
  • Also: A train with crude oil derails in a fiery explosion in North Dakota; Israel releases several Palestinian prisoners; arrest warrants are issued for the owners of a Bangladeshi building that collapsed, killing hundreds; and a same sex wedding planned for a Rose Bowl float draws protests.
  • Also: The Senate reaches a deal to move presidential nominations forward; Russian financier Mikhail Khodorkovsky is freed after Putin's pardon; a credit rating agency cuts the European Union's rating; and a truck spills thousands of roasts on a Georgia highway, triggering a "ham jam".
  • Also: The CDC continues to test West Virginia water; the family of a man whose execution was prolonged will sue Ohio; intense heat affects players at the Australian Open; and a "slightly haunted" house is for sale in Pennsylvania.
  • Also: An Egyptian judge sentences hundreds to death in a mass trial; Israel holds Holocaust Remembrance Day; and players for the NBA's Los Angeles Clippers stage a protest against racism.
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