Members of the Chicago Teachers Union's House of Delegates celebrate after the delegates voted to suspend the strike against the school district Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2012, in Chicago. The city's teachers agreed to return to the classroom after more than a week on the picket lines, ending a spiteful stalemate with Mayor Rahm Emanuel that put teacher evaluations and job security at the center of a national debate about the future of public education. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)
Members of the Chicago Teachers Union's House of Delegates celebrate after the delegates voted to suspend the strike against the school district Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2012, in Chicago. The city's teachers agreed to return to the classroom after more than a week on the picket lines, ending a spiteful stalemate with Mayor Rahm Emanuel that put teacher evaluations and job security at the center of a national debate about the future of public education. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)
Miners sing and dance whilst holding South African bank notes in Lonmin Platinum Mine near Rustenburg, South Africa, Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2012. Striking miners have accepted a company offer of a 22% overall pay increase to end more than five weeks of crippling and bloody industrial action. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
This Sept. 5, 2012 photo released by Harvard University shows a fourth century fragment of papyrus that divinity professor Karen L. King says is the only existing ancient text that quotes Jesus explicitly referring to having a wife. King, an expert in the history of Christianity, says the text contains a dialogue in which Jesus refers to "my wife," whom he identified as Mary. King says the fragment of Coptic script is a copy of a gospel, probably written in Greek in the second century. (AP Photo/Harvard University, Karen L. King)
Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about Wednesday:
1. BACK TO SCHOOL WEDNESDAY FOR CHICAGO KIDS
Teachers and the mayor hail the proposed pact, reached after a dispute focusing on evaluations and job security.
2. AND BACK TO THE MINES IN SOUTH AFRICA
It's the end of a bloody, five-week walkout that spotlighted massive unemployment and poverty.
3. HOW GOP INSIDERS ARE FEELING THESE DAYS
Some tell AP they're worried after Romney sticks with his "victims" comments, on the heels of his misstep-filled trip abroad and the Eastwood-empty chair convention moments.
4. WHO TURNED UP THE ROMNEY VIDEO
Jimmy Carter's grandson found it in an Internet search aimed at helping Democrats ? and at pushing back against the GOP nominee's mockery of his grandfather.
5. PA. VOTER ID LAW UNDER MORE REVIEW
Court justices noted difficulties in getting a secure, non-driver photo identification card to any registered voter who needs one.
6. SCHOLAR: PAPYRUS QUOTES JESUS REFERRING TO HIS 'WIFE'
She says the tiny fragment doesn't prove Jesus was married but speaks to issues of family and marriage that faced Christians.
7. WHAT MAY DELAY CIVILIAN DRONES IN U.S. SKIES
A government watchdog says the FAA is facing hard-to-resolve safety and security obstacles.
8. BLUE JAYS' ESCOBAR SUSPENDED THREE GAMES FOR SLUR
The shortstop says he didn't mean offense by a homophobic comment on his eye-black.
9. WHY PANDA CUB BIRTH HAS ZOOKEEPERS ANXIOUS
Newborns like the one at Washington's National Zoo sometimes get accidentally crushed by their moms, and they're at risk for infections.
10. ALASKANS' ANNUAL DIVIDEND THIS YEAR: $878
That will get you nearly 11 days' worth of kibble, meat and fat supplement for 46 sled dogs.
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