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Creditors skeptical of Greece...No sign of progress at Iran talks...Manhunt in missing baby case


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BRUSSELS (AP) — Greece will have another, possibly last, chance Sunday to convince skeptical European creditors it can be trusted to enact wide-ranging economic reforms that would safeguard its future in the euro. The eurozone's top official Jeroen Dijsselbloem (YER'-oon DY'-sel-bloom) says the parties "had an in-depth discussion of the Greek proposals" on Saturday, but adds "the issue of credibility and trust was discussed." Talks will resume just a few hours before the European Union's 28 leaders are scheduled to arrive in Brussels for a summit.

VIENNA (AP) — Negotiations over Iran's nuclear program continue in Vienna with no indications of major progress. Both Iran and the U.S. have threatened to walk away unless the other side makes concessions. Meanwhile, Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (hah-meh-neh-EE') told university students in Tehran Saturday to be "prepared to continue the struggle against arrogant powers."

ONO, Calif. (AP) — A father considered a person of interest in the disappearance of his 6-month-old daughter in Northern California has become the subject of a manhunt. The Shasta County Sheriff says Matthew Graham skipped a meeting with his probation officer and stole a semi-automatic pistol from his mother after learning new information about the probe. Sheriff's deputies had spoken to Graham's mother and the baby's mother about a pacifier found in the sparsely populated area Friday.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — Officials do not know what caused a blast that knocked a Rhode Island beachgoer to the ground Saturday but they've concluded there is no public threat and no reason to keep the beach closed. The Rhode Island State Police say the investigation found no evidence that an explosive device caused the loud boom at Salty Brine beach in Narragansett. The beach will reopen Sunday.

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Ash and cinders have been spewing from the Colima Volcano in western Mexico. Authorities have closed the airport in the state capital of Colima because of falling ash and ordered the evacuation of a half dozen hamlets on the flanks of the peak. The Interior Department reports that 2 inches of ash had fallen on Yerbabuena, the first hamlet evacuated. The volcano sits near the border of the western states of Colima and Jalisco. It is known as the Volcano of Fire.

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