TT2 News
Morning update: Back to work (Quad-City Times)
Good Tuesday morning, Quad-Cities. It’s back to work after our last holiday of the summer. Next up: Autumn. At 6 a.m. it’s 76 degrees under fair skies in the Quad-Cities. Today you can expect patchy fog before 9 a.m. Otherwise it will be mostly sunny with a high near 89 degrees. The National Weather Service is forecasting a 70 percent of evening and overnight showers.
Morning update: Back to work (Quad-City Times)
Good Tuesday morning, Quad-Cities. It’s back to work after our last holiday of the summer. Next up: Autumn. At 6 a.m. it’s 76 degrees under fair skies in the Quad-Cities. Today you can expect patchy fog before 9 a.m. Otherwise it will be mostly sunny with a high near 89 degrees. The National Weather Service is forecasting a 70 percent of evening and overnight showers.
Hesitant Wisconsin conservatives now embrace McCain (Wisconsin State Journal)
In 2004, Wisconsin Right to Life sued the federal government over the campaign finance law co-authored by Sen. John McCain that restricted their election-year advertising. The group later endorsed one of McCain's Republican presidential opponents, former Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson, who dropped out before Wisconsin's Feb. 19 primary. But by April, with McCain the last Republican candidate ...
Voting By Numbers (The Lakeland Ledger)
Imagine, if you can, a magical instrument that could probe your mind and in just a few minutes tell you precisely how your political views correspond with those of the people running for president.
Voting By Numbers At SelectSmart.com (The Lakeland Ledger)
Anderson operates the Web site SelectSmart.com, which offers surveys purporting to determine which dog breed fits for your personality, which running shoe is best for you and even which religion matches your world view.
The Candidates on Immigration (Foreign Relations)
Click here for this candidate's position on other top foreign policy issues.
We're growing, but it was births, not moves, that kept NH from shrinking (New Hampshire Union Leader)
For the first time this decade, more people are moving out of New Hampshire than moving in -- a shift some blame on the twin problems of a housing slump and credit crunch facing the country.

