document.write('
| KUER Local News |
| Book Review: Family Album |
| In keeping with the Thanksgiving themes of family dynamics and how complicated going home can sometimes be, bookseller Betsy Burton has this review of "Family Album," the latest novel by British author -- and Booker Prize winner -- Penelope Lively. |
| Study: What You Eat May Determine What You Buy |
| New research from two University of Utah marketing professors shows there may be a correlation between what you eat and what you buy. Husband-and-wife researchers Arul Mishra and Himanshu Mishra wanted to find out if diet affects impulse shopping. As Arul Mishra tells KUER\'s Jennifer Napier-Pearce, it made perfect sense to conduct a survey about Black Friday retail deals right after Thanksgiving dinner. |
| A Geological Chronology of Our Ancestors |
| As part of the Frontier of Science Lecture Series, Dean Francis Brown will deliver a talk tonight about his paleoanthropology field of study at the Skaggs Biology Building. Brown is the University of Utah\'s dean of the college of mines and earth sciences. KUER\'s Tasha Cook has this interview. |
| That\'s My Room |
| What does it take to hang onto a small business in this recession? For the owners of a children\'s furniture store in Salt Lake City - a chilly home, bag lunches, and a really positive attitude. KUER\'s Jenny Brundin reports. |
| Dan Nailen: Holiday Gallery Stroll |
| Dan Nailen\'s always a fan of Salt Lake City\'s gallery stroll, but the approaching holidays make him even more enthusiastic. |
| US |
| Uninvited guests crash White House dinner |
| WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Secret Service is investigating how an uninvited couple was admitted to U.S. President Barack Obama\'s White House state dinner, penetrating layers of security, a spokesman said on Wednesday. |
| Adam Lambert furor spreads to gay community |
| LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "American Idol" runner-up Adam Lambert on Wednesday admitted he got carried away during his racy American Music Awards performance, as furor over his singing and dancing stoked a wider controversy in the U.S. gay community. |
| Uninvited guests crash White House dinner: report |
| WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Secret Service is investigating how an uninvited couple was admitted to U.S. President Barack Obama\'s White House state dinner, penetrating layers of security and mingling with VIP guests. |
| A U.S. mine debate centers on water, jobs |
| BIG BAY, Michigan (Reuters) - Standing on the marshy ground at Eagle Rock in the remote woods of Michigan\'s Upper Peninsula, it\'s hard to imagine that beneath one\'s feet is a lump of nickel worth billions of dollars. |
| Los Angeles\' budget gaps may force dramatic change |
| SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Los Angeles must take dramatic steps in coming months to bring its budget back into balance, including measures to slim the size of its government and reduce how much it spends on pensions for retired employees, the city\'s top budget official said on Wednesday. |
| World |
| Fear of low China target casts cloud over climate talks |
| BEIJING (Reuters) - China is preparing to unveil a target to curb carbon emissions ahead of a major climate summit in Copenhagen next month, but experts and negotiators worry Beijing\'s much-anticipated figure may disappoint. |
| Khmer Rouge torturer had to "kill or be killed" |
| PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - The Khmer Rouge\'s chief torturer and jailer had to "kill or be killed" and operate like an "obedient machine," his lawyer said on Thursday in defending the first member of Cambodia\'s murderous regime to face justice. |
| A year after, India remembers Mumbai attacks |
| MUMBAI (Reuters) - Mumbai\'s police paraded past some of the city\'s landmarks in a show of strength as India\'s financial hub marked the first anniversary of militant raids that killed 166 people and ratched up tensions with Pakistan. |
| Main suspect in Philippine massacre surrenders |
| MANILA (Reuters) - A member of a powerful political family in the southern Philippines, suspected to be behind the massacre of 57 people in an election-related feud, surrendered to police Thursday, an army official said. |
| Honduras Supreme Court backs Zelaya ouster |
| TEGUCIGALPA (Reuters) - Honduras\' Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday that ousted President Manuel Zelaya cannot legally return to office, dimming the possibility of his reinstatement after a June coup, court sources said. |