THE NEW YORK TIMES
Two rivals clash on Foreign Affairs and Security.
Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.and Representative Paul D. Ryan fiercely quarreled at the vice-presidential debate here on Thursday night, with Mr. Biden using the cutting attack lines against the Republican ticket that Mr. Obama did not and Mr. Ryan delivering a spirited case for conservative policies that Mr. Romney had soft-pedaled.
- Panetta wars of dire threat of cyberattack.
- In Haiti, little can be found of a Hip-Hop artist’s charity.
- The fire this time.
- After past fury for peace prize, China embraces nobel choice.
- Saying ‘it’s miraculous for me’, Levine wil conduct again at met.
THE WASHINGTON POST
Biden and Ryan pull no punches.
Vice President Biden and Rep. Paul Ryan (Wis.) tangled fiercely and noisily here Thursday night over the economy and foreign policy in a spirited debate that underscored the vast differences between the Democratic and Republican tickets on virtually every issue in the presidential campaign.
- Nats rise to the occasion.
- Officials: Murky rules harmed meningitis case.
- Justice Department silent on marijuana iniciatives.
- Damage control after Obama’s stumble.
LOS ANGELES TIMES
Feds target gang born in L.A.
In a novel action, the U.S. calls MS-13 a criminal organization, allowing restrictions and seizure of assets.
- Obama, Romney share much on schools.
- A shocking hire.
- China’s nobel prize author: Muted voice or deftly subversive?
- Buoyant memories.
EL PAÍS
El FMI pide el fin de la austeridad a ultranza en países como España.
El Fondo ha admitido que los recortes tienen un fuerte efecto sobre el crecimiento. Lagarde considera que es mejor dar más tiempo a países como España, Portugal o Grecia. El ministro de Finanzas alemán cree que "cuando hay un objetivo" de déficit, no se debe recular. Standard & Poor’s deja la deuda de España al borde del ‘bono basura’.