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Frustrated Sheriff Warns Citizens to Carry Concealed Weapons
---'Don't get mace. Get a firearm' - SPARTANBURG COUNTY, S.C. -- The Spartanburg County Sheriff is known for speaking his mind, and at a news conference on Monday, he didn't hold back his anger and frustration after a woman was attacked in a park over the weekend.
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REPORT: Chinese scientists make blood from rice
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Second Energy Department-backed company goes bankrupt
----Likely Among the 10 Biggest Bankruptcies Ever
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Home prices heading for triple-dip
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Greek Vote Threatens Bailout in Europe
---European Banks Sink on Bombshell
-------Gov't 'On Verge of Imploding'
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ISRAEL AUTHORIZES 'GROUND OPERATION' TO STOP GAZA ROCKETS
---Washington fears unilateral Israeli strike on Iran
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Siberians 'share DNA with extinct human species'
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MF Global collapses under euro zone bets
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US Treasury Estimates It Will Have to Borrow More
The U.S. Treasury Department said on Monday it will sharply increase its estimated borrowing over the next two quarters due to expected lower receipts and higher outlays. Treasury said it expects to issue $305 billion in net marketable debt for the October-December quarter, an increase of about $21 billion from estimates issued on Aug. 1. Treasury said it expected to issue $541 billion in net marketable debt securities in the January-March 2012 quarter, marking the second-highest quarter on record. The highest was the October-December quarter...
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Honda production is disrupted by another natural disaster
Just as Honda Motor Co. was recovering from a production disruption and inventory shortage caused by the Japanese earthquake, it has been hit with another natural disaster: flooding in Thailand that is causing a parts shortage. Honda said it will slash production at its U.S. factories by half through Nov. 10 and close its factories for a day Nov. 11. It also has cut all overtime production for November. About 87% of the Honda and Acura automobiles that the automaker sells in the U.S. are assembled here. Most of the parts come from North American...
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Elderly man rescued from 8-ft.-deep sinkhole
(CBS News) OCEANSIDE, N.Y. - Firefighters rescued an 80-year-old Long Island man who had fallen into a sinkhole on his front lawn. Michael Ciron had stepped onto his lawn Sunday morning to retrieve his newspaper when he fell into an 8-foot-deep sinkhole, reports CBS Station WCBS. "I picked up the paper, before you know it, I fell into this here hole," Ciron told WINS Newsradio's Mona Rivera. His daughter, Maria Ciron, was awakened by his screams. "I run to his room first thinking that maybe he fell down or something," she said.
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