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Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 10 November 2012 | 20.41

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Are Smartphones Making Us Dumb?

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Smartphones are designed to make life easier, giving users instant access both to the world around them and the world at large, but experts warn that they could also negatively affect our brains.

"When people ask me the question, you know, 'What is our technology, our phones, doing? Are they making us smarter or dumber?' I say, 'Yes, they are. They're making us smarter, and they're making us dumber,'" said Dr. Sandy Chapman, chief director for the Center for Brain Health in Dallas.

Chapman, who has studied the effects of technology on the brain, said she believes smartphones help our brains work differently and are valuable tools. For instance, people don't have to remember phone numbers if they're stored in a contact list -- and that's a good thing.

"The more phone numbers you store in your brain, the less likely you are to really think deeper thoughts, so that's when I say more isn't always better. This is very superficial information," said Chapman, adding that less phone-number memorization frees the brain to think deeper.

But, on the flip side, the unrelenting pings, buzzes and beeps may throw the brain into overdrive.

"It's making us dumber because, what it is impacting, it's really keeping us at this distracted level, so everything that we're thinking about tends to be more quick, more minute, less synthesized, and that's what's making us dumber," Chapman said.

According to Nielsen research, 55.5 percent of mobile phone subscribers in the United States own smartphones. Adults ages 25 to 34 lead the pack at 74 percent. Teens ages 13 to 17 show the most dramatic increase in smartphone adoption, at 58 percent.

But the lure of technology on the brain can be most devastating in the teen years, Chapman said.

Southern Methodist University freshman Kyle Waldrep is of the smartphone generation. He got his first one when he was 14, for Christmas.

"Immediately, I was addicted," he said.

Like other college students, Waldrep uses his phone to text and email friends, take photos, keep his busy social calendar in check and look at headlines, stocks and sports statistics.

"I'm a big sports guy, so I am on my phone looking at tennis match updates or the Mavericks, the Rangers, the Cowboys," he said. "I've now set my phone to get alerts, so it goes off even more when a game is going on. It's kind of become a part of me."

Learning to manage usage of his smartphone became a necessity. This summer, when he was rigorously training to make the university's tennis team, he contracted West Nile virus and encephalitis, or swelling of the brain.

"I wasn't able to think," he said. "I wasn't able to memorize anything or remember what was going on."

Little things, such as where he parked his car, became difficult. Studying grew impossible, and he slept most of the day.

Desperate to get focused and keep up in school, Waldrep had to change his relationship with his phone, putting it away for periods of time and turning it off while studying or in class.

"I need all the focus I can get," he said.

Most people can learn from his lesson, Chapman said.

"If you will let your brain quiet down, it actually rejuvenates and works harder for you to solve problems that you didn't even know you could solve," she said. "If you keep it in this constant state of interruption -- 'any moment now' -- it never goes deep."

Chapman advises Center for Brain Health clients to train themselves to put their phones away -- even if it's only for a few minutes at a time. She tells people to turn their phone off at night and use it as a tool when appropriate, but not to multitask with it.

"Our technology tricks us into thinking that we're doing two things at once, but our brain quickly toggles back and forth between one or the other, and it's doing one," she said. "And it's doing everything at a worse level -- more errors, more risks, more shallow thinking."

Waldrep said he realized that he was more productive when he was mindful of his smartphone usage and that his world was still waiting for him when he reconnected to his phone."

"I do feel like an exception," he said. "But I feel like I'm an exception because of West Nile, almost because I have to have this extra focus. I can't get away with the outside interruption at all. It would severely affect my, you know, grades and my performance and schoolwork."

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Police Seek Help Finding Car in Moore Case

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Still No Arrest in Alicia Moore Case, Tributes Planned

No arrests have been made in the murder of 16-year-old Alicia Moore but a $15,000 reward for information leading to an arrest. Meanwhile memorials are planned Friday and Saturday in Greenville.

Police Remain Tight-Lipped in Alicia Moore Murder Case

Right now, two men with ties to a murdered Greenville teenager are in jail, but neither has been charged with her death.

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Greenville police have released photos taken when a slain 16-year-old was getting off her school bus last week.

Alicia Moore was last seen leaving her bus last Friday afternoon. Her body was found in a trunk beside a rural Van Zandt County road on Tuesday.

Surveillance video from the school bus shows a dark-colored Chrysler or Dodge vehicle, possibly a minivan, directly behind the bus when Moore stepped off. Police said they would like to speak with the people in the vehicle as potential witnesses.

The city also released paperwork relating to Moore's disappearance. According to the missing persons report, police first treated the case as a runaway. The report says that Moore's mother told police she thought her daughter may have run away and was in the company of an older man.

With no arrests in the case, the town of Greenville remains on edge.

"I usually walk a lot, but here, lately, I've been getting a car ride," Greenville High School student Cielo Reyes said. "Everybody is pretty scared right now to even walk anywhere."

Students wore purple -- Moore's favorite color -- on Friday.

Reyes made a special shirt for the occasion and bought purple shoelaces.

"She was always on time," he said. "She was dedicated to school, and she was just really sweet. There was no reason."

Police refused to take questions about the case Friday.

City spokeswoman Lori Philyaw said the entire force was busy working the murder case and could not be disturbed.

The Greenville Independent School District sent letters home with students to parents Friday, urging them to be vigilant with the chance that a killer is still on the loose.

"I guess we're all probably a little jumpy on that, but I'd rather err on the side of safety and caution than have something like this happen again," Superintendent Don Jefferies said.

A man accused of sexually assaulting Moore was arrested in August, but he was in jail at the time she was killed.

NBC 5 generally does not identify victims of alleged sexual assault, but Moore's identity was made public before NBC 5 learned of the allegations.

Another Greenville man was arrested Thursday on unrelated family violence charges. His family said investigators spoke about the Moore case.

But as of Friday, no one had been charged with her killing.

Greenville area businesses pitched in to offer a $15,000 reward for an arrest in the case.

Moore's family spent the day making funeral arrangements with help from community contributions.

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North Texas Soldier Surprised with New Home

Amanda Guerra, NBC 5 News

A veteran who was injured in Afghanistan and his family have received a new, mortgage-free home.

Veteran Surprised With Mortgage-Free Home

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Veterans Day came early for one North Texas soldier -- in the form of a new home.

Sgt. Bryan Ball was injured in Afghanistan in 2009 when he was hit with an improvised explosive device, taking shrapnel throughout his body.

Ball lost his right middle finger and most of the feeling in his right hand. Doctors also had to remove approximately half of his large intestine.

He was awarded the Purple Heart for his service and will medically retire from the Army at the end of 2012.

Since returning to the United States, Ball and his wife, Jessica, have been struggling to buy a new home. The couple also have a 4-month-old daughter.

Goodwill and other sponsors surprised Ball with a new, mortgage-free home before Colleyville Heritage High School's varsity football game on Friday night.

Ball graduated from Colleyville Heritage.

"You go from living in a hospital to living in a hotel room ... now we're in a rental house right now and, once I'm out of the Army, where do you go?" he said. "So this obviously has given us a place to go."

Their new home is located in Cedar Hill.

"We've been in limbo for over three years now, and now we have answers, so we know where we're going to be living," his wife said. "It's great. It's a great feeling."

The couple said they wanted to move to North Texas to be closer to family.

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APA, AA Reach Agreement in Principle

Kevin Cokely, NBC 5 News

Allied Pilots Association leaders will vote whether to send a tentative agreement with American Airlines to its members for approval.

AA, Pilots Tentative Agreement

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APA, AA Reach Agreement in Principle

The pilots union for American Airlines says it and the company have reached an agreement in principle for a new contract. If approved by the pilots in three weeks, the contract would help pave the way for the Fort Worth-based airline to exit bankruptcy.

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The Allied Pilots Association and American Airlines have an agreement in principle.

NBC 5 has learned that the APA has put together their last, best offer  that includes specifics with regard to no more furloughs and regional jets only having 76 passenger seats.

The APA Board of Directors presented the deal to the airline Friday afternoon and management with the company agreed to the proposal.

"APA designed our comprehensive counter-proposal to provide our pilots with an industry-standard contract while enabling American Airlines to complete a successful restructuring and compete on a level playing field with its network-carrier peers. The Board's vote on the motion to present the comprehensive counter-proposal was 13 for, two against and one absent," the APA said in a news release.

"The proposal we prepared was comprehensive and will level the playing field for American Airlines to compete successfully with/against United and Delta airlines and also recognizes the value that the profession brings to the corporation," said APA President Keith Wilson said.

"We are pleased to have reached an agreement-in-principle with the Allied Pilots Association. We worked hard with the APA's negotiating committee to structure an agreement that addresses the priorities identified as most important to our pilots, while staying within the economic framework supported by the Unsecured Creditors' Committee to ensure American's successful restructuring. As the APA communicated, the APA Board of Directors will proceed in compliance with policy-manual requirements and vote to send the agreement-in-principle to the membership as a tentative agreement for a ratification vote," American Airlines spokesman Bruce Hicks said in a statement.

APA members could possibly vote on the tentative agreement in early December. The APA Board of Directors has seven days to review the agreement before voting whether to send it to members.

NBC 5's Kevin Cokely contributed to this report.

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Two Brothers Shot Outside Fort Worth Club

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 09 November 2012 | 20.41

Ben Russell, NBC 5 News

Fort Worth police are searching for the man who shot two brothers outside of a south Fort Worth nightclub early Friday morning.

Brothers Shot Outside Fort Worth Club

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Fort Worth police are searching for the man who shot two brothers outside of a south Fort Worth nightclub early Friday morning.

The shooting happened shortly before 1 a.m. Friday, investigators said.

The two victims, both in their 20s, were shot while in the parking lot of the Soft Shoulder Club, along the 4500-block of Miller Avenue, according to police.

Police officers on the scene told NBC 5 that there was an argument of some kind in the parking lot, and that the suspect pulled out a gun and shot the two men.

Both victims were shot in the side, one of them was shot once and the other twice, police said.

The victim who with two gunshot wounds as rushed by ambulance to John Peter Smith Hospital where he was reportedly listed in serious condition, according to police.

After the shooting, the suspect ran away. 

Detectives have not yet been able to provide a description of who they are looking for.

Stay with NBC 5 News for updates.

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Fire Destroys Grapevine Home, Classic Cars

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A large Grapevine home is a total loss after a huge fire ripped through it Thursday night.

Investigators said they believe the fire started in the garage of the home in the 2900 block of Lakeside Circle. The fire quickly spread from the garage to the attic and the rest of the house.

Three classic cars that were Inside the garage were all burned.

It took more than 60 fire fighters from eight different cities to finally get the flames under control.

The husband and wife who own the house were home at the time of the fire but safely made it out, firefighters said.

The cause of the fire is under investigation.

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Fort Worth Police Ban Typing While Driving

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The Fort Worth Police Department now has a tough policy aimed at preventing crashes caused by police officers typing messages on their dashboard computers while driving.

An NBC 5 investigation has uncovered that distractions lead to frequent police crashes across North Texas.

Fort Worth's new policy says in part: "Officers shall not type on the MDC (mobile data computer) when the vehicle is in motion unless an exigent circumstance exists requiring immediate action."

"They're going to get the message that, when they are driving that vehicle, their focus is on arriving at their destination," Police Chief Jeffrey Halstead said. "This is an information source -- and it will be working as they're commuting -- but they cannot distract vision to this operational piece of technology."

The policy still gives officers some flexibility. Officers can still key in a one-touch response showing that they are in route to a call, arriving on the scene or have an emergency. But if they need to type anything more than that, they have to pull over.

The key was balancing the benefits of the computers with the risks, Halstead said.

Fort Worth police training has always encouraged officers to avoid typing and driving, but the department didn't have a written policy to back it up until now.

Halstead said he believes it's very important to have a policy in place that reflects what officers are told in training.

"We go to a class or a safety class or something, we are very, very good students immediately after the class, and then we slowly get back in our habits," he said.

According to new records obtained by the NBC 5 Investigates team, Fort Worth police had 15 crashes caused by all kinds of distractions inside police cars in the last three years.

Halstead said he personally has seen computers causing distractions.

"I saw officers that I know were distracted -- because they don't know who I am sitting next to them at a traffic light -- and they're in the police car that I'm the chief of," he said.

Arlington Police Changing Driving Policy Following NBC 5 Investigation

An open records request filed by NBC 5 Investigates has revealed even more crashes involving Arlington Police officers using dashboard mounted computers while driving.

FW, Dallas Officers Can Type While Driving

Local departments do not prohibit driving distractions that have caused police crashes.

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The chief said he wishes the policy had been ready this summer when NBC 5 broadcast the first part of its investigation in July.

"I was a little frustrated in myself, because we weren't done with our policy and I was really proud of staff work on that and, if it had come out a few weeks later, we would have had it done," he said. "But it actually reminded us how important this issue is."

In July, NBC 5 Investigates discovered that a number of cities -- including Fort Worth -- did not have a policy in place to prevent officers from typing and driving, despite crashes across the state. NBC 5 Investigates had requested an interview with the Fort Worth Police Department, but it declined talk on camera at the time, saying in a statement that it was reviewing its policy on computers and driving.

Fort Worth Mayor Betsy Price told NBC 5 Investigates in July that said she planned to raise the issue with the police chief.

"We will ask not only the chief, but we will ask everybody to take a look and at least be aware that there have been areas of concern in other parts of the state [and] to a look at where they are and see if they're still comfortable with it," she said.

Today, the mayor said she is happy with the chief's decision to tighten the rules.

"It's a pretty hard-hitting policy," she said. "It's all about safety for our citizens and for our officers both. We want them to not be distracted, and we want them to be as safe as possible on the streets."

In recent weeks, Fort Worth police hosted a training called "Beyond the Cones" that focused on avoiding distractions in police cars, including typing and driving.

"And just because you've done it once, twice, maybe a hundred times, doesn't mean you can do it with any success," said Keith Wenzel, of LifeLine, the national organization that conducted the training. "It just means you've been lucky so far."

Fort Worth hopes its policy can be a model for other cities.

"There's many agencies across the country that may see this story, and I compliment you do doing it, because now they can turn to us and ask, 'Can we look at your police? Can we find out how you did this?' And we're happy to assist them," Halstead said.

NBC 5's Eva Parks, Peter Hull and Shane Allen contributed to this report.

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Two in Custody Tied to Slain Teen

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Two in Custody Tied to Slain Teenager Alicia Moore

NBC 5 has learned two men are in custody that have a connection to slain teen Alicia Moore.

Quest for Answers in Death of Alicia Moore

16-year-old Alicia Moore's body was found in a trunk by the side of the road in Van Zandt County Tuesday, her family wants to know why when she was reported missing on Friday investigators didn't put information out about her until Monday.

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Two men in custody have a connection to a Greenville teenager who was killed and found inside a tool trunk, including a man accused this summer of sexually assaulting her, NBC 5 has learned.

Alicia Moore's body was found Tuesday off a highway along rural Van Zandt County. Moore, who disappeared Friday afternoon, was last seen at a school bus stop about a block away from her home.

Greenville police said Moore's mother filed a criminal complaint over the summer saying 49-year-old Terry Ramsire sexually assaulted the 16-year-old. He was arrested Aug. 23 and charged with sexual assault of a child and indecency with a child by sexual contact.

NBC 5 generally does not identify victims of alleged sexual assault, but Moore's identity was made public before NBC 5 learned of the allegations.

Ramsire has been held in the Hunt County Jail since his arrest on a $70,000 bond.

Although he was in jail at the time of Moore's disappearance, investigators are working to determine if there is a connection between his arrest and her killing.

Separately, NBC 5 has also learned that a man arrested Thursday in Hunt County on family violence warrants was questioned about Moore's disappearance prior to his arrest.

Friends of Tobias Whetstone told NBC 5 that police officers used a stun gun and restraints to subdue him after a struggle. Witnesses to the arrest also told NBC 5 that at least five police vehicles, including unmarked cars, were involved in Whetstone's apprehension.

Police confirmed Whetstone's arrest but wouldn't provide any information on the Moore slaying investigation or on any connection Whetstone may have to the case.

Whetstone's mother, Tracy Whetstone, said police searched their home Monday after Moore's disappearance was first reported. She said they were looking for evidence that would tie her son to Moore.

Police didn't find anything and didn't remove anything from her home, she said.

Tracy Whetstone went on to say that her son has an alibi, saying he was at her aunt's home all day Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

"It makes me feel real bad," she said. "I'm actually hurt about it, because I know my son would do nothing like that. We got witnesses where he was, and I know my son. I have faith in God, and I know he didn't do this."

When asked if there was any connection between Whetstone and the Moore case, Greenville police replied: "No comment."

Moore's body was found Tuesday inside a tool trunk along Farm-to-Market Road 47 in Van Zandt County. She was reported missing Friday after she never returned home from school. She was last seen exiting her school bus about a block from her home.

NBC 5's Randy McIlwain and Shane Allen contributed to this report.

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Electronic Ranges Recalled Due to Burn Hazard

Consumer Product Safety Commission

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LG Electronics and the Consumer Product Safety Commission has recalled electric ranges due to a burn and fire hazard.

About 161,000 burners have been recalled. The burners on the ranges can fail to turn off after being switched off and the temperature setting can increase unexpectedly during use.

LG has received 80 reports of incidents.

No fires or injuries have been reported.

The South Korean-based manufacturer said five models are involved in the recall. The recalled ranges involve models LRE30451, LRE30453, LRE30755, LRE30757 and LRE30955ST.

The electronic ranges were sold at Best Buy, Home Depot, Sears, and regional appliance retailers nationwide from January 2006 to June 2010 for between $800 and $1999.

If you have one of these electronic ranges, contact LG Electronics to schedule a free in-home repair at 855-400-4638, or check out www.CPSC.gov for more information.
 

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Three City Chase Ends at DFW Airport

Kendra Lyn, NBC 5 News

Ramiro Cano, 19, is under arrest, accused of leading Grand Prairie police on a 40-minute chase across three cities Thursday night.

Police Chase Ends at DFW Airport,...

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A man is under arrest, accused of leading Grand Prairie police on a 40-minute chase across three cities Thursday night. 

Grand Prairie police say Ramiro Cano, 19, refused to pull over for speeding around Interstate 20 and Great Southwest Parkway around 11 p.m. and the chase began. 

Cano led officers north on state Highway 360 toward the airport, according to police. He tried to cross through the grassy median when he lost control of his pickup, according to police. His truck came face-to-face with the officers' squad cars. Police say that is when Cano started smashing into the police vehicles. 

The officers pinned Cano's truck and insist they noticed Cano reaching down to the floorboard where they found a gun. No one fired shots, but officers say the outcome could have been much worse.

"It could have been extremely different had he been reaching for the firearm," says Lyle Gensler from the Grand Prairie Police Department. "We're not sure what he was going to do with it, but considering he just rammed a police vehicle, we can only assume that he was getting ready to use that firearm on that police officer."

There was also a woman inside of the truck during the chase. She's cooperating with officers and won't be charged.

Police say Cano endangered his life and officers' lives.

Records show that Cano has never been arrested. Instead of facing a speeding ticket, he's charged with evading arrest and unlawfully carrying a firearm.

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Death of Teen Found in Trunk a Homicide: Police

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 08 November 2012 | 20.41

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Quest for Answers in Death of Alicia Moore

16-year-old Alicia Moore's body was found in a trunk by the side of the road in Van Zandt County Tuesday, her family wants to know why when she was reported missing on Friday investigators didn't put information out about her until Monday.

Body Found in Trunk on Side of Highway

A construction worker found a body inside a trunk off the side of Farm-to-Market 47 near the town of Wills Point.

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The Dallas medical examiner has identified the body discovered in a trunk in Van Zandt County on Tuesday as a missing Greenville teenager.

Greenville Police Chief Dan Busken said during a news conference Wednesday that 16-year-old Alicia Chanta Moore sustained trauma. Greenville police, Texas Rangers and the Van Zandt Sheriff's Office is investigating her death as a homicide, he said.

Loved ones and Greenville residents remembered Moore during a candlelight vigil Wednesday night at the bus stop where she was last seen.

Busken said the medical examiner has not yet ruled on Moore's cause of death. Further details were not disclosed, and no motive or suspect was revealed.

Moore was last seen getting off her school bus at about 3:30 p.m. Friday. Cameras onboard the bus recorded Moore getting on at the high school and exiting at a bus stop near the corner of Bourland and Walnut streets -- about a block from her home.

What happened to Moore after she exited the bus is a mystery.  Moore's family notified police of her disappearance Friday evening.

Question are being raised about how police handled her disappearance. Police initially treated the case as a potential runway.

"I've been the one trying to get the word out -- fliers and stuff," said her aunt, Jessica Byrd. "They (police) didn't really fully get involved until Monday."

Busken said an Amber Alert was not issued because none of the circumstances related to Moore's disappearance met the criteria necessary to issue the alert -- including knowing for certain at the time that she was abducted.

"Early on, we had a very limited amount of information that we had to deal with," he said. "As we went throughout this weekend, we compiled more information."

Greenville Independent School District Superintendent Don Jefferies said the school learned Moore was missing on Saturday.  It attempted to trace her school-issued iPad but determined it had been reset and its tracking was disabled.

At about noon on Tuesday, a construction worker found Moore's body in a trunk that had been dumped along Farm-to-Market 47 near a bridge railing four miles north of Wills Point.

"We have a lot of work ahead of us with this investigation," Busken said. "We have received many tips from the community, and we hope those tips continue to come in. ... We must have cooperation from the community to do our jobs."

Greenville ISD said counselors would be on hand to comfort students.

Moore was last seen wearing a white shirt, black undershirt, green jacket, pink headband and black glasses. She was carrying a black backpack and was also wearing earrings and a necklace. She was 5 feet 1 inches tall and weighed 97 lbs.

Anyone with information on her disappearance is asked to call the Greenville Police Department at 903-457-2900 or Crime Stoppers at 903-457-2929.

NBC 5's Greg Janda, Randy McIlwain and Ray Villeda contributed to this report.

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Enforce Pooper-Scooper Rules With DNA Testing?

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Pet Owners Pooh-Pooh DNA Testing of Dog Droppings

Dallas dog owners don't like the proposed idea of using DNA testing to enforce the city's pooper-scooper rules.

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A company called Poo Prints claims Dallas and other cities can cash in on dog waste through DNA tracking.

Dallas City Council members chuckled Wednesday when they heard about the plan, but the company is dead serious about the opportunity to find irresponsible dog owners by lab testing turds.

"This waste does run off into the Trinity River, and it does affect our ecosystem," Poo Prints spokesman Chris Taylor said. "And we do want to keep our parks clean. We want to keep them healthy. This is a very easy way to do it."

The company sells $29.95 DNA kits that come with a swab to take an oral sample from a pet that is then recorded in a world pet registry. Poo Prints sells $49.95 testing kits to sample dog waste, which can be matched to pets recorded in the registry.

The Ilume apartment complex on Cedar Springs Road in Dallas is using the program to enforce responsible pet ownership on its property. Residents are required to record their pet's DNA. They're fined $250 if waste on the property is tracked to that pet, and the resident can be evicted for a second offense.

"We've gone from picking up maybe an hour a day of poop, to picking up maybe one or two a month," manager Joshuah Welch said.

The complex has about 300 pets, and residents pay the entire cost of the enforcement program, Welch said.

"We're serious, and we're not playing around here at Ilume," he said.

Cedric Moses with Poo Prints also said the DNA samples benefit pet owners because they also replace implants used to help return lost pets. Medical records can also be stored in the registry, and owners can receive alerts for veterinary care.

"There's a ton of benefits that come behind this as well," Moses said.

The city of Dallas already has a "pooper-scooper" law, but owners and pets must be caught in the act of leaving waste behind, and that rarely happens.

Poo Prints wants the city of Dallas to adopt the DNA program, and some council members are interested.

"I think that's a great idea," Councilwoman Angela Hunt said. "I think we do need enforcement, especially in some of our denser areas where you have a lot of folks living with dogs and, if they're not picking up. It creates a problem."

The city would pay the cost of pet-waste testing, but Moses said it could be passed along to the pet owner. The company claims the city could earn millions of dollars in fines.

Hunt called the company's financial claims "completely out of the realm of possibility," but she told the company to provide more information about how such a plan might work for the city.

The program may be effective at the Ilume apartment complex, but some pet owners at Klyde Warren Park who heard about the idea questioned whether it would be possible to get enough pets in the registry to make sampling dog turds a practical solution citywide.

"It is a problem, but I'm not sure fining people and registering dog's DNA is maybe the right way to go," dog owner Nancy Perry said.

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Nor'easter Slams Sandy-Battered States

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A nor'easter blustered into New York and New Jersey on Wednesday with rain and wet snow, plunging homes right back into darkness, stopping commuter trains again and inflicting another round of misery on thousands of people still reeling from Superstorm Sandy's blow more than a week ago.

Under ordinary circumstances, a storm of this sort wouldn't be a big deal, but large swaths of the landscape were still an open wound, with the electrical system highly fragile and many of Sandy's victims still mucking out their homes and cars and shivering in the deepening cold.

Exactly as authorities feared, the nor'easter brought down tree limbs and electrical wires, and utilities in New York and New Jersey reported that nearly 60,000 customers who lost power because of Sandy lost it all over again as a result of the nor'easter.

"I know everyone's patience is wearing thin," said John Miksad, senior vice president of electric operations at Consolidated Edison, the chief utility in New York City.

As the nor'easter closed in, thousands of people in low-lying neighborhoods staggered by the superstorm just over a week ago were urged to clear out. Authorities warned that rain and 60 mph gusts in the evening and overnight could topple trees wrenched loose by Sandy and erase some of the hard-won progress made in restoring power to millions of customers.

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"I am waiting for the locusts and pestilence next," New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said. "We may take a setback in the next 24 hours."

Ahead of the storm, public works crews in New Jersey built up dunes to protect the stripped and battered coast, and new evacuations were ordered in a number of communities already emptied by Sandy. New shelters opened.

In New York City, police went to low-lying neighborhoods with loudspeakers, urging residents to leave. But Mayor Michael Bloomberg didn't issue mandatory evacuations, and many people stayed behind, some because they feared looting, others because they figured whatever happens couldn't be any worse than what they have gone through already.

"We're petrified," said James Alexander, a resident of the hard-hit Rockaways section of Queens. "It's like a sequel to a horror movie."

All construction in New York City was halted — a precaution that needed no explanation after a crane collapsed last week in Sandy's high winds and dangled menacingly over the streets of Manhattan. Parks were closed because of the danger of falling trees. A section of the Long Island Expressway was closed in both directions because of icy conditions.

Airlines canceled at least 1,300 U.S. flights in and out of the New York metropolitan area, causing a new round of disruptions that rippled across the country.

The city manager in Long Beach, N.Y., urged the roughly 21,000 people who ignored previous mandatory evacuation orders in the badly damaged barrier-island city to get out.

Forecasters said the nor'easter would bring moderate coastal flooding, with storm surges of about 3 feet possible Wednesday into Thursday — far less than the 8 to 14 feet Sandy hurled at the region. The storm's winds were expected to be well below Sandy's, which gusted to 90 mph.

 

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By evening, the storm had created a slushy mess in the streets in the metropolitan area. Eight-foot waves crashed on the beaches in New Jersey, which was lashed with a wintry mix of rain, sleet and snow. The Long Island Rail Road, one of the nation's biggest commuter train systems, suspended all service again after struggling over the past several days to get up and running in Sandy's wake.

The early-afternoon high tide came and went without any reports of serious flooding in New York City, the mayor said. The next high tide was early Thursday. But forecasters said the moment of maximum flood danger may have passed.

Con Ed said that by early evening, the nor'easter knocked out power to at least 11,000 customers, some of whom had just gotten it back. Tens of thousands more were expected to lose power overnight. The Long Island Power Authority said by evening that the number of customers in the dark had risen from 150,000 to more than 198,000.

Similarly, New Jersey utilities reported a few thousand more scattered outages, with some customers complaining that they had just gotten their electricity back in the past two day or two, only to lose it again.

On New York's Staten Island, workers and residents on a washed-out block in Midland Beach continued to pull debris — old lawn chairs, stuffed animals, a basketball hoop — from their homes, even as the bad weather blew in.

Jane Murphy, a nurse, wondered "How much worse can it get?" as she cleaned the inside of her flooded-out car.

Sandy killed more than 100 people in 10 states, with most of the victims in New York and New Jersey. On Tuesday, the death toll inched higher when a 78-year-old man died of a head injury, suffered when he fell down a wet, sandy stairwell in the dark, authorities said. Long lines persisted at gas stations but were shorter than they were days ago.

At the peak of the outages from Sandy, more than 8.5 million customers lost power. Before the nor'easter hit, that number was down to 675,000, nearly all of them in New Jersey and New York.

The storm could bring repairs to a standstill because of federal safety regulations that prohibit linemen from working in bucket trucks when wind gusts reach 40 mph.

Authorities warned also that trees and limbs broken or weakened by Sandy could fall and that even where repairs have been made, the electrical system is fragile, with some substations fed by only a single power line instead of several.

The nor'easter cut a feed to a substation briefly Wednesday night, knocking out power to 8,000 customers around East Brunswick, N.J.

On Wednesday, a state official said New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo fired his emergency management director for diverting crews to remove a tree from his driveway during Superstorm Sandy.

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Nor'easter Dumps Record Snow on Sandy-Weary Northeast

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The nor'easter, as promised, brought gusting winds, rain, snow and the threat of flooding. It menaced travelers with icy roads, snarled the Long Island Rail Road and knocked out power to people who had only recently gotten it back after Superstorm Sandy.

But for the weary, relief is on the way. Joey Picca, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service, says the unwelcome snow and high winds are slowly moving out of the New York City area. Commuters, though, may have to brave some lingering snowfall Thursday morning.

Faced with more bad weather, some in the storm-ravaged Northeast just shrugged, dug in and stayed put.

Elena McDonnell didn't waste energy worrying about the newest storm, not after living through Sandy last week and still without power in her Staten Island home.

"It isn't scary at all," the 42-year-old said. "This is nothing."

Under ordinary circumstances, a storm of this sort wouldn't be a big deal. But large swaths of the landscape were still an open wound, with the electrical system highly fragile and many of Sandy's victims still mucking out their homes and cars and shivering in the deepening cold. As the storm picked up in intensity Wednesday evening, lights started flickering off again.

Mark L. Fendrick, of Staten Island, shared his frustration with others on Twitter Wednesday night, saying, "My son had just got his power back 2 days ago now along comes this nor'easter and it's out again."

Residents from Connecticut to Rhode Island generally got slammed with 3 to 6 inches of snow on Wednesday. Worcester, Mass., had a whopping 8 inches of snow, although a number of other communities threatened to exceed that accumulation.

Meteorologist Frank Nocera says all is not lost: temperatures over the next couple of days will be in the 50s in southern New England, and on Sunday it could edge into the 60s.

In New York and New Jersey, rain and 60 mph wind gusts Wednesday evening and overnight carried the potential to swamp homes again, topple trees wrenched loose by Sandy, and erase some of the hard-won progress made in restoring power to millions of customers.

"I am waiting for the locusts and pestilence next," New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said. "We may take a setback in the next 24 hours."

Ahead of the storm, public works crews in New Jersey built up dunes to protect the stripped and battered coast, and new evacuations were ordered in a number of communities already emptied by Sandy. New shelters opened.

Not everybody was hunkering down.

Katie Wilford was leaving her Brick Township home near Barnegat Bay as the nor'easter approached. She bundled her sons Nick, 14, and Matthew, 10, into the minivan in search of an open motel.

"It's a little overwhelming," she said. "I can't believe we're doing this again. We're going on Day 10 with no power. That's a long time. I just want the sun to come out and things to be normal again."

In New York City, police went to low-lying neighborhoods with loudspeakers, urging residents to leave. But Mayor Michael Bloomberg didn't issue mandatory evacuations, and many people stayed behind, some because they feared looting, others because they figured whatever happens couldn't be any worse than what they have gone through already.

"I'm staying," said 61-year-old Staten Islander Iliay Bardash. "Nothing can compare to what happened."

Still, authorities urged caution. The city manager in Long Beach, N.Y., urged the roughly 21,000 people who ignored previous mandatory evacuation orders in the badly damaged barrier-island city to get out.

All construction in New York City was halted, a precaution that needed no explanation after a crane collapsed last week in Sandy's high winds and dangled menacingly over the streets of Manhattan. Parks were closed because of the danger of falling trees. Drivers were advised to stay off the road after 5 p.m. and part of the busy Long Island Expressway was shut down in both directions because of icing.

About 6:30 p.m., the Long Island Rail Road suspended service in and out of Penn Station.

Airlines canceled at least 1,300 U.S. flights in and out of the New York metropolitan area, causing a new round of disruptions that rippled across the country.

By the afternoon, the storm was bringing rain and wet snow to New York, New Jersey and the Philadelphia area. Huge waves pounded the beaches in New Jersey. Firefighters in New York City responded to reports of tree branches falling into buildings, blocking streets and knocking down electrical wires.

Forecasters said the nor'easter would bring moderate coastal flooding, with storm surges of about 3 feet possible Wednesday into Thursday — far less than the 8 to 14 feet Sandy hurled at the region. The storm's winds were expected to be well below Sandy's, which gusted to 90 mph.

Sandy killed more than 100 people in 10 states, with most of the victims in New York and New Jersey. Long lines persisted at gas stations but were shorter than they were days ago. By early Thursday, more than 292,700 homes and business in New York state were without power, and another 403,000 in New Jersey lacked electricity. In some areas, the numbers began climbing again Wednesday evening.

The storm could bring repairs to a standstill because of federal safety regulations that prohibit linemen from working in bucket trucks when wind gusts reach 40 mph.

Authorities warned also that trees and limbs broken or weakened by Sandy could fall and that even where repairs have been made, the electrical system is fragile, with some substations fed by only a single power line instead of several.

"We are expecting there will be outages created by the new storm, and it's possible people who have just been restored from Sandy will lose power again," said Mike Clendenin, a spokesman for Consolidated Edison, the main utility in New York City.

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Flight Cancellations Continue in Northeast

AFP/Getty Images

An unidentified man reviews the arrival flights at Dulles International Airport (IAD) October 30, 2012, as the end of Hurricane Sandy rolls through the Washington, DC area. Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and North Carolina reported 15 dead from the massive storm system, and Toronto police said a Canadian woman was killed by flying debris. AFP PHOTO/Paul J. Richards (Photo credit should read PAUL J. RICHARDS/AFP/Getty Images)

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The storm in the Northeast has forced airlines to cancel more than a thousand flights this week.

American Airlines is one airline keeping an eye on the storm, after grounding hundreds of flights on Wednesday.

Flights out of many airports on the East Coast destined for North Texas have been canceled. Flights from Dallas-Fort Worth traveling to the East Coast all appear to be on time.

As many as 1,700 flights were canceled Wednesday, according to FlightAware.com, an airline tracking website, including more than 40 flights in and out of DFW International Airport.

Other estimates of cancellations were less at about 880 flights. The difference depends on the flight's departing airport and destination.
 
For travelers heading to the airport, check your flight status before leaving your home.

NBC 5's Ben Russell contributed to this report.

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Tarrant Co. Reports 11th WNV Death

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 07 November 2012 | 20.41

Kevin Cokely, NBC 5 News

A North Richland Hills woman in her 30s with underlying medical conditions who contracted the neuroinvasive form of West Nile virus has died, Tarrant County health officials say.

North Richland Hills Woman With WNV Dies

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The Tarrant County health department said Tuesday that a North Richland Hills woman with West Nile virus has died.

The victim was a woman in her 30s with underlying medical conditions, Tarrant County Public Health said. Her case of the neuroinvasive form of West Nile virus was first reported two months ago.

In North Texas, a total of 39 people have died after contracting the disease.

More than 1,000 human cases of the disease have been reported in the North Texas area this year.

West Nile Virus Facts

Most people bitten by a West Nile virus-infected mosquito will not show any symptoms. Symptoms, if they appear, are fever, headache, nausea, body aches, swollen lymph nodes and skin rashes.

Fewer than 1 percent of those infected with West Nile virus experience the serious form of the illness. Serious symptoms include high fever, severe headache, neck stiffness, disorientation, tremors or convulsions, vision loss, muscle weakness and numbness or paralysis.

North Texas health officials are urging residents to:

  • Drain standing water around their homes to reduce mosquito breeding grounds.
  • Dress in pants and long sleeves when outside, but avoid becoming too hot.
  • Apply an insect repellent that contains DEET to exposed skin and to clothing when outdoors.
  • Stay indoors at dusk and dawn, when mosquitoes are most active.

NBC 5's Kevin Cokely contributed to this report.

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Elizabeth Warren Wins Mass. Senate Race

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Elizabeth Warren is poised to notch another U.S. Senate seat for Democrats after beating Republican Scott Brown in Massachusetts, according to NBC News projections.

With 36 percent of the vote in, the Harvard law professor and consumer advocate had 52 percent of the vote compared to 48 percent for Brown.

"For every family that has been chipped and squeezed and hammered, we're going to fight for you," Warren said in a victory speech Tuesday night. "We're going to fight for a level playing field and we're going to put people back to work."

Warren's projected victory comes after a tough, contentious battle against the incumbent, who stunned the political establishment in 2010 when he won the seat held for 47 years by the late Sen. Ted Kennedy. She becomes the first woman to represent Massachusetts in the Senate.

Warren, 63, had the backing of the president, who tapped her to create the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and gave her a prime speaking spot at the Democratic National Convention this fall. She cast herself as a champion for consumers, the middle class and women, who overwhelmingly supported her bid, according to The New York Times.

Brown, 53, portrayed himself as a moderate everyman in a state dominated by Democrats.

"You've got no business in politics unless you respect the judgment of people," Brown said in a concession speech Tuesday. "And if you run for office, you've got to be able to take it either way, winning or losing, and I accept the decision of voters."

The race drew national attention for the amount of money poured into it—$68 million, according to The Associated Press—and for several flaps that came out of the months-long contest.

It was Warren's speech about the role of government in private sector success that morphed into the "you didn't build that" line Republicans used against the president.

"There is nobody in this country who got rich on his own, nobody," Warren said last August, according to the L.A. Times. "You built a factory out there? Good for you. But I want to be clear: You moved your good to market on the roads the rest of us paid for, you hired workers the rest of us paid to educate..."

President Obama riffed on that speech with his own, which became fodder for the Mitt Romney campaign and led to accusations that he was anti-business.

Warren also came under scrutiny after admitting that she had identified herself as a minority, citing Native American ancestry, which she was not able to prove.

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North Texas Election Highlights

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In addition to the presidential election, North Texans voted in more than 125 additional races that not only determined representatives and senators at both the state and national level, but dozens of local races and propositions as well.

Highlights of some of those races are below, while the latest results for every race can be found here. 

U.S. President  - Mitt Romney (R), (i)Barack Obama (D), Jill Stein (G), Gary Johnson (L)

U.S. Senate - Ted Cruz (R), Paul Salder (D), John Myers (L), David Collins (G)

Other Popular Local Race Results (All Races)

Collin County - Frisco Beer and Wine
Collin County - Frisco Mixed Beverage
Collin County - Prosper Alcoholic Beverages

Dallas County - Balch Springs Alcoholic Beverages
Dallas County - Sheriff
Dallas County - Tax Assessor/Collector
Dallas County - Cedar Hill Beer and Wine
Dallas County - Richardson Mayor Direct Election
Dallas County - Seagoville Beer and Wine

Denton County - Aubrey Alcoholic Beverages
Denton County - Prosper Alcoholic Beverages
Denton County - Sanger Alcoholic Beverages
Denton County - Tax Assessor/Collector

Tarrant County - Sheriff
Tarrant County - Tax Assessor/Collector

See a complete list of all statewide and local races covered by NBC 5 for Decision 2012 here.

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Obama: "The Best is Yet to Come"

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President Barack Obama won a second term on Tuesday, emerging from a long, punishing, and exorbitant campaign with a new mandate to lead a divided and anxious nation.

"Tonight in this election, you, the American people, reminded us that while our road has been hard, while our journey has been long, we have picked ourselves up," Obama said in a victory speech in his hometown of Chicago. "We have fought our way back and we know in our hearts for the United States of America, the best is yet to come."

Obama's victory speech included a heartfelt thank you to First Lady Michelle Obama and daughters Sasha and Malia.

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For full Decision 2012 coverage, visit NBCNews.com.

Obama said he was determined, inspired and still full of hope.

"Our economy is recovering. A decade of war is ending. A long campaign is now over," Obama said. "And whether I earned your vote or not, I have listened to you. I have learned from you. And you've made me a better president. And with your stories and your struggles, I return to the White House more determined and more inspired than ever about the work there is to do and about the future and life ahead."

But the cold reality is that when he arrives back in Washington, the president will face the same obstacles he did before the election. With Republicans maintaining control of the House of Representatives, the era of divisive partisanship will likely continue.

That challenge was articulated by one of his most outspoken opponents, Mitch McConnell, leader of Senate Republicans.

"Now it's time for the president to propose solutions that actually have a chance of passing the Republican-controlled House of Representatives and a closely-divided Senate, step up to the plate on the challenges of the moment, and deliver in a way that he did not in his first four years in office," McConnell said. "To the extent he wants to move to the political center, which is where the work gets done in a divided government, we'll be there to meet him half way."

Obama's triumph unfolded incrementally Tuesday night, as he racked up a string of victories in crucial battlegrounds. One after another, states that had been deemed toss-ups before Election Day fell into the president's hands.

Pennsylvania. Wisconsin. New Hampshire. Iowa. Virginia. With each Obama win, the path to victory for his opponent, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, got narrower.

Finally, just after 11 p.m. ET, NBC News projected Obama to win Ohio, his so-called "firewall" and the one state that has sided with the winning presidential candidate in every election since 1960. Obama's win there, thanks in large part to the state's support of his bailout of the auto industry, handed him the Electoral College swing votes he needed.

 

Romney conceded the race in a phone call to the president just before 1 a.m. ET. He then took the stage at the Westin Boston Waterfront Hotel, telling supporters that he wished the president well.

"This is a time of great challenges for America, and I pray that the president will be successful in guiding our nation," Romney said.

Obama's battleground victories were so authoritative that Florida, which was considered the biggest  prize, wasn't even a factor.

Florida was the only state that remained too close to call as of 6:00 a.m. ET. Its results won't be known until after the start of business Wednesday.

 

So many people turned out to vote Tuesday that Ohio, Florida and Virginia kept polls open after closing to accommodate the people who waited in long lines that snaked from the doors of polling places.

Exit polls indicated that Obama was favored among women, young adults, singles and Latinos - the last group by wider margin than in 2008.

"Today is the clearest proof yet that, against the odds, ordinary Americans can overcome powerful interests," Obama wrote in an email to supporters.

The first person Obama called after getting the concession call from Romney was Bill Clinton, a campaign official told NBC News.

The former president was one of Obama's top surrogates, and his speech at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte was credited for a "Clinton bump" in the polls.

Obama, Romney and their proxies spent nearly $2 billion, a record amount for a presidential campaign.

In his concession speech, Romney said he had no regrets, and that he hoped that the country would move past its partisan differences to solve the nation's problems.

"I so wish that I had been able to fulfill your hopes to lead the country in a different direction," he said. "But the nation chose another leader."

Less than an hour later, at about 1:45 a.m. ET, Obama appeared before a roaring crowd at the McCormick Place convention center in Chicago. His wife, Michelle, and their two daughters accompanied him on stage while Stevie Wonder's "Signed, Sealed, Delivered" blasted. Then they left him to deliver his victory speech.

Obama congratulated Romney "on a hard-fought campaign."

"We may have battled fiercely, but it's only because we love this country, we care so strongly about its future," he said.

The president went on to say that the rancor and rift that characterized the campaign was understandable, given the nation's challenges.

"That won't change after tonight. And it shouldn't. These arguments we have are a mark of our liberty, and we can never forget that as we speak, people in distant nations are risking their lives right now just for a chance to argue about the issues that matter, the chance to cast their ballots like we did today."

Obama, 51, the country's first black president, won election in 2008 on a promise of hope and change, but he triumphed this time with a starkly different message: asking voters to stick with him as he continues trying to fix the economy and improve America's standing in the world.

He defeated Romney, 65, a wealthy venture capitalist who'd been running for president for the better part of a decade. A win for Romney would have been vindication, of sorts, for his family; his father, George, ran unsuccessfully for the Republican presidential nomination in 1968.

The 2012 race highlighted two contrasting visions of the country. Where Romney emphasized the need to lower taxes, relax federal regulations and cut government spending, Obama promised to raise taxes on the wealthiest Americans and deploy government's help in pulling the country out of the economic doldrums.

Despite his image as stiff and disinterested in the plight of the middle class, Romney managed to make the race close by appealing to many voters' disappointment in Obama, and widespread anxiety about the economy. Romney promised to bring a businessman's sensibility to the job, a point he drove home in his first presidential debate, which he dominated. That performance sparked a surge in the polls that made the race tight right up until Election Day.

But Romney, in the end, was not able to fully convince an edgy public that he could do a better job than Obama. Nor was Romney able to overcome Obama's image as a more likable guy.

Now Romney may well have run his last race for public office.

Obama will begin his second term no longer a symbol of political catharsis, but as a flawed but adaptive leader who took a lot of lumps and learned from them.

The president's re-election means there will likely be no overturning of his signature domestic policy achievement, a health care reform law known as Obamacare. Obama has also promised to raise taxes on those earning more than $250,000 a year.

Obama must also make good on his campaign promises to finally correct America's economic path by finding ways to add a million more manufacturing jobs; boost domestic energy production, including a doubling the use of wind, solar, "clean coal " and natural gas; take money saved from troop withdrawals in Iraq and Afghanistan to invest in infrastructure back home; drastically reduce the county's carbon footprint; save Medicare; cut college loan costs; and slash the national deficit by $4 trillion.

When he returns to the White House, he won't have much time to savor his victory, because, he'll have to negotiate out of a year-end "fiscal cliff," when a series of tax cuts expire and massive government spending cuts go into effect.

As he noted in his email to supporters Tuesday night: "There's a lot more work to do."

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Woman Escapes House Fire With Minor Burns

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A woman who just returned home from a trip overseas is now trying to find a place to live after her home went up in flames Wednesday morning.

It happened on the 2800-block of Proctor in Irving at about 2 a.m.

Tara Smith was sleeping when the flames started shooting from a vent in the living room floor. Smith tried to put out the fire, but it spread quickly.

Smith had just flown in from Africa at about 10 p.m. Tuesday and brought thousands of dollars worth of lingerie with her, handmade by villagers.

Through her nonprofit and fair trade business, the money would have helped seamstresses in Cameroon.

Smith is grateful she managed to escape from the home with minor burns.

"It's one of those moments I have to kind of put my hands up and thank God I'm still alive," Smith said. I woke up, my dogs okay, so I'm just holding on to my faith right now."

Investigators say that an electrical problem with the thermostat is to blame.

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Arlington Residents Look to Reclaim Neighborhoods

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 06 November 2012 | 20.41

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City leaders and residents fed up with worn-down areas of North Arlington are hoping to reclaim their neighborhoods.

Residents said areas just north of Interstate 30, Cowboys Stadium and Rangers Ballpark in Arlington breed crime.

"We want to reverse the deterioration and basically reclaim them," Councilman Charlie Parker said.

Parker said that reclaiming the troubled spots, mostly older apartment complexes, require a face-lift.

"Those are 30- and 40-year-old apartments and, consequently, they are deteriorating pretty rapidly, and so we want to make sure that the individuals that are living in these apartments are good neighbors," he said.

"That'll be a good thing to do," said Andrew Strickland, who lives in one of the older apartment developments. "It would give the area a nice look and bring some life back to the neighborhood."

Marci Ybarra agreed.

"[North Arlington] is nice. It has good potential but, right now, it's not that great," she said.

Ybarra, who has lived in another of the North Arlington apartment complex for two years with her husband and young son, said that while she likes the area, she is often concerned about safety.

"It's me being a mom, being a first-time mom," she said. "I don't want to put my son in jeopardy for anything."

Crime has followed the deterioration of some of the neighborhoods. Parker said Arlington police have recently stepped up patrols, with an emphasis on the troubled apartments.

But it's not just up to police. Parker said property owners should reinvest in their developments.

"In the event that there are those individuals who feel as though these are cash cows and they don't want to reinvest in their properties, then I think they'll find out our code enforcement officers are going to be knocking on their door," he said.

Strickland said that what begins with a face-lift could be just the beginning.

"It might mean jobs or something," he said. "There's no telling what it might turn out to be. It might bring a better value of people around; no telling."

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Woman Challenges FW Dog Ordinance

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Owner Says Seized Dogs Not Aggressive

A North Fort Worth woman whose dogs were seized by the city says they are not dangerous and that her neighbors are targeting her because she is Muslim. Her neighbors say the dogs are aggressive and have gotten out several times.

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A Fort Worth woman is challenging a city law in an unusual and emotionally charged court case that pits the city's right to seize dangerous dogs against an animal owner's right to appeal.

Rana Soluri's two pit bulls, Lilo and Stitch, were seized last month after a neighbor complained they had escaped their yard and threatened her.

A municipal judge ordered the dogs seized and euthanized -- after Soluri refused to comply with a list of restrictions.

Soluri claims she and her neighbor have had a long feud, in part over Soluri's Muslim religion.

Soluri filed suit in Tarrant County District Court, claiming the city's ordinance allows dog owners to appeal an order to seize animals -- but there is no appeals court to hear such cases.

The city acted after the neighbor signed a sworn statement saying the dogs were menacing.

"It could be anybody's dog," Soluri said. "Somebody could file an affidavit who didn't like you any way, shape or form. Guess what? They come take your dog and euthanize it."

Fort Worth officials say they would return the dogs if Soluri agreed to a list of restrictions, such as keeping them inside and using a leash and a muzzle in public. Soluri denies the dogs are vicious.

City attorneys acknowledge that dog owners have nowhere to appeal seizures but defend the law and the municipal judge's decision.

"We defend the process, but we'd like to see resolution to this -- and a good resolution," Assistant City Attorney Gerald Pruitt said.

Pruitt said while the city ordinance gives dog owners the right to appeal the city's decision, the Texas Legislature never established an appeals court to hear such cases.

Soluri said she's now caught in the middle.

If she agrees to the restrictions, she can get her dogs back. But then she would give up any right to challenge the process, because the case would be considered closed.

"What they're trying to say is, 'Drop your case, don't go after your constitutional rights; you might be able to save your dogs,'" she said. "Guess what? We're holding your dogs. [It's] your choice."

The hearing before Judge Melody Wilkinson is set to resume Tuesday morning.

The city will carry out the municipal judge's order to euthanize the dogs but not as long as the hearing in Tarrant County continues.

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Lost Pet Services: Helpful or Waste of Money?

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Losing a pet can be gut-wrenching, but is it worth it to hire a search service?

Garland resident Kathy McCulloch hired New York-based Pet Amber Alert when her escape artist dog, Kalli, got loose from her backyard last month and ran away.

McCulloch and her grandchildren canvassed the neighborhood looking for Kalli, a Catahoula leopard mix with crystal blue eyes, black spots and a playful spirit.

Pet Amber Alert notifies residents and local animal-related businesses via phone, social media and fax that a pet is missing.

McCulloch enlisted the company's help for about $150. She paid for 500 calls to be made to residents in her area and for 50 faxes to be sent to local pet-related businesses.

"I thought, you know, how can you go wrong?" she said. "It's worth every dime you spend if it'll get your pet back."

But McCulloch grew suspicious when she started asking neighbors if they had gotten a call, and some told her they had not.

"I did not get a call, and I'm right across the street," Patty Arnold said.

Veterinary Referral Center of East Dallas, a 24-hour-per-day, seven-day-per-week emergency animal clinic that keeps a log of all lost pets, said it didn't get a fax from Pet Amber Alert.

"If we're right down the street, I would think they would contact us," Dr. Travis Dennett said. "But we do not have any record of their attempting to contact us or provide any information regarding that pet that was lost."

The NBC 5 Investigates Consumer Unit did some digging and called Pet Amber Alert's 27-year-old owner Mark Jakubczak.

The company is not his primary job but is set up to help grief-stricken pet owners, he said.

"This is the way our service works," he said. "We send out all the calls and faxes and then, if you read our disclaimer that the lawyer drafted up, it explains that, you know, some places might ... just throw the poster in the trash or some neighbors might not, you know, even want to pick up the call or participate."

Jakubczak provided NBC 5 Investigates with a list of all the calls and faxes that went out. The Consumer Unit called 50 of the numbers. Half did not pick up. A quarter were not working numbers. Of the quarter the Consumer Unit actually reached, two said they remembered getting a call. Of the faxes, five of the animal clinics closest to McCulloch's home to a fax from Pet Amber Alert, but other pet-related businesses close by, such as the 24-hour vet clinic, were not on the list.

Pet Amber Alert also sent NBC 5 Investigates a list of satisfied customers, including Keller resident Jayne Davis, whose six-pound Russian Blue cat named Priia escaped in May.

In Davis' case, a watchful neighbor who got a call from Pet Amber Alert called Davis to tell her that she had spotted the cat four days after she ran away from home.

"This lady said, 'I think your cat went into the culvert under your driveway,'" Davis said.

The reunion was an emotional one, with Davis bursting into tears. She credits Pet Amber Alert with her happy ending.

On its website's frequently asked question section, Pet Amber Alert said its average success rate using phones, faxes and social media is 77 percent.

But according to a recent American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals national study, the overall recovery rate is higher. Eighty-five percent of lost dogs and cats are recovered, according to the study.

"The majority of cat owners, the way that they found their pet was that their cat returned home on its own," said Dr. Emily Weiss, ASPCA vice president of shelter research and development. "Those who owned dogs, the way that they were most likely to recover their pet was by searching the neighborhood."

Weiss said that having an identification microchip implanted in a cat or dog and making sure they wear tags are two of the best ways to find a lost pet.

And the most crucial time to begin the search is within the first hours, she said. The longer pets are missing, the more the chances of finding them diminish. Dennett added that securing a pets' environment is also key.

McCulloch is still searching for her Kalli, optimistic that one day she will be reunited with her furry friend.

"She's part of my family," McCulloch said. "I just want to get her back."

She adopted the dog sight unseen last year. Once they met, it was love at first sight.

"She's a beautiful dog," McCulloch said. "Kalli is probably one of the sweetest dogs that I've ever had. She's very friendly. She's very likeable. She loves kids. She slept right beside me every night."

Typically when Kalli escaped her yard, she would head straight down the street to neighbor Arnold's house. But that day, Arnold was working late.

"I'm sure she came, but I wasn't there to let her in," she said.

For now, Kalli's bed sits empty outside McCulloch's home in hopes that the scent will lure her home.

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I-35E NB Lanes Reopen After Crash

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A fiery crash closed the northbound lanes of Interstate 35 Tuesday morning.

Dallas firefighters responded to I-35 at Woodall Rodgers at about 4:45 a.m. where there was a three-car crash with one car fully engulfed in flames.

No one was seriously injured. 

Lanes reopened at about 6 a.m.

Check back for updates.

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Model Shift Downgrades Looming Nor'Easter Punch

Chris Cimino's early morning forecast for Tuesday, November 6.

Early Morning Forecast for Tuesday, Novembe...

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Another Cold Night on Staten Island

A non-profit organization called Fuel Relief Fund delivered free gas to residents on Staten Island Sunday. News 4's Chris Glorioso reports.

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Forecasters say the looming coastal storm that threatened ongoing cleanup and recovery efforts in New York and New Jersey after the devastation of Sandy is no longer expected to be as powerful as initially feared.

Computer models shifted east with the path of the nor'easter, predicting the storm would miss a good part of far northwest New Jersey, the Catskills and the Poconos and carry far less forceful wind gusts than first forecast.

Meteorologists say coastal flooding is still possible with the system at times of high tide, but wind gusts will level off in the 50 mph range, not the 60 mph to 70 mph range, and waves are not expected to tower as high over already eroded beaches and waterfront properties pummeled by Sandy.

Forecasters say waves up to 10 feet high could still cause minor to moderate flooding along the coast, where dunes decimated by Sandy have left the already water-logged shore more vulnerable.

TRACK THE STORM WITH REAL-TIME RADAR

Meanwhile, temperatures have dropped in the region. Temperatures on Tuesday night are expected to dip into the 20s in suburban areas. Forecasters expect temperatures to linger in the 30s Wednesday.

Several inches of wet snow may accumulate in central and northern New Jersey, New York City and the lower Hudson Valley late Wednesday afternoon into the evening, making for a potentially sloppy evening commute.

The snowy mix is expected to change to rain Thursday night as temperatures rise into the mid-30s. The weather begins to improve by Friday, with sunny skies and temperatures in the mid-50s. The situation looks even better by the weekend, with forecasters predicting mild, sunny weather with a high of 55 degrees for Saturday and even warmer temperatures for Sunday.

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Plane Hits Car at Roanoke Airport

Sara Story, NBC 5 Denton County Reporter

At least two people are injured when a plane hits a car on the runway and comes to a stop in a field.

Plane Hits Car At Roanoke Airport

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Plane Hits Car At Roanoke Airport

Sara Story reports on a plane hitting a car while trying to land at NW Regional Airport. DPS spokesman Lonny Haschel explains what happened.

RAW VIDEO: Plane Hits Car At Roanoke Airport

RAW VIDEO of SUV and plane that lost its landing gear after collision at NW Regional Airport.

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A plane attempting to land at the Northwest Regional Airport in Roanoke hit a car on the runway Saturday afternoon.

Two people inside the car were hurt. This is the fourth recent incident involving an aircraft at the Roanoke airport in the last two months.

The Department of Public Safety told NBC 5 the plane was trying to land when it hit a Volvo SUV. 

"A 2005 Cessna Skyhawk was landing south on the runway," said DPS spokesman Lonny Haschel. "[The SUV] vehicle was on the airport property, what they call the perimeter road, and crossed in front of the aircraft. The aircraft landing gear hit the top portion of the SUV that was traveling on that perimeter road. The aircraft lost its landing gear and crashed here on the runway."

The Federal Aviation Administration is on scene and taking over the investigation.

The pilot, William Davis of Flower Mound, was not injured.  DPS identified the two people inside the car as Frank and Heather Laudo of Flower Mound. They were taken to a hospital with non-life threatening injuries. It's unclear why the car was on the runway.

Roanoke is about 25 miles northwest of Dallas in Denton County.

This is the fourth incident involving a plane from the airport in the past two months. On Oct. 12, pilot Phillip Witt suffered minor cuts and bruises when his biplane crashed into a pasture near the airport.

On Oct. 6, four members of a Southlake family died in a crash. The plane carrying Leonard Ledet, his brother Greg and sons Paul and Mason originated from Northwest Regional Airport. It crashed in Van Zandt County.

On Sept. 23, a pilot and flight instructor died when their plane crashed shortly after takeoff from Northwest Regional Airport. The incident killed flight instructor Charlie Yates and pilot Christopher Pratt.

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