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Analysis: Lawmakers Praise Capitol Police Response To Shooting Incident

We're learning more about the woman authorities say drove into a barrier at the White House yesterday before leading police on a chase through downtown Washington. Two law enforcement officials identified the driver as 34-year-old Miriam Carey, of Stamford, Conn. Her mother tells ABC news Carey was suffering from Postpartum Depression. Lawmakers inside were talking of course about the ongoing government shutdown. David Hawkings, writer of the Hawkings Here column for Roll Call, talks about some of the details.

On the Capitol Police's response to yesterday's shooting incident in D.C., and how they are not being paid:

"They [Capitol Police] are considered essential. Before the incident happened, I was in the Capital right before this [the shooting] happened, talking about the pay situation, which I checked with other officials later. As I understand it, they are being treated like other government employees, which is to say they have been promised they will be paid, but no paycheck has been written until the government is reopened."

On lawmakers' praise for Capitol police yesterday:

"There was a standing ovation on the House floor, after this incident was over. At least one senator said this is a national disgrace, and they should be paid immediately. There was some rumbling at the Capitol yesterday that maybe another one of these mini bills might be reopened for the Capitol police."

On when the shutdown might end:

"With each passing day, the likelihood that the debt ceiling debate and the "reopen the government" debate become one debate... and that debt limit deadline, as the Treasury says, is two weeks from now -- on October 17... with each passing day, it looks likelier that that will be the one deadline, which means essentially the shutdown will stay in effect until mid-October."

NPR

In 'Egghead,' A New Shel: Burnham Takes On Silverstein

Bo Burnham got his start in comedy on the internet, rather than in clubs. He found fame on YouTube and parlayed millions of views into a thriving career. Now, he's turned to the printed page with Egghead: or, You Can't Survive On Ideas Alone, a collection of comedic poetry modeled on Shel Silverstein.
NPR

School Pulls All-Beef Burgers From Menu, Citing Complaints

Students in a Virginia school system are now eating hamburgers with additives in them, after officials heeded their complaints about the appearance and taste of all-beef burgers it had been serving. The burgers that are now being served include a reported 26 ingredients.
NPR

What's The Cost Of Budget Gridlock?

Renee Montagne talks to David Wessel, economics editor of The Wall Street Journal, about the cost of the government shutdown, and the dangers of the threatened government default.
NPR

Wanted: A New Generation of High-Tech Aviation Workers

Millions of U.S. factory jobs have been lost in the past decade. Now, in North Carolina, high school students are being encouraged to think about taking manufacturing jobs. But this isn't the furniture-making or textile labor of generations past — it's a new kind of highly technical work in aviation.

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