The New York Times
National Briefing | Education: Georgia Tech Will Offer a Master’s Degree Online
The Georgia Institute of Technology will offer a master’s degree in computer science that can be earned entirely through so-called massive open online courses, or MOOCs.
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National Briefing | Education: Virginia Tech President to Retire
Charles Steger, the Virginia Tech University president who led the college during the 2007 mass shooting, this week announced plans to retire as soon as a successor is found.
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National Briefing | Midwest: Iowa: Judge Cuts Settlement for Mentally Disabled Workers
A judge has reduced a landmark $240 million verdict to $1.6 million against Henry’s Turkey Service of Goldthwaite, Tex for 32 mentally disabled workers who suffered years of abuse.
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National Briefing | South: South Carolina: Sex Surgery Unnecessary, Lawsuit Alleges
A Southern legal advocacy group has claimed in a lawsuit that the State of South Carolina should not have surgically altered a 16-month-old child in its custody.
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Abortion Doctor Gets Life in Prison
Dr. Kermit Gosnell, who was convicted of killing three babies born alive at his Philadelphia clinic, was spared a possible death sentence Tuesday in a deal with prosecutors.
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Billie Sol Estes, Texas Con Man, Dies at 88
Mr. Estes’s life captured America’s imagination, with its tales of business scams, political payoffs, covered-up killings and White House conspiracies.
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The Choice Blog: ‘Thrilling and Maddening’ Senior Year Was an Adventure Worth Taking
This Friday, I will be the third person in my entire family to graduate from high school. This is so important to me, and it’s so strange that my senior year is coming to an end.
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California Budget Holds Down Spending
The spending plan released by Gov. Jerry Brown disappointed Democratic lawmakers who had hoped that rising revenues would finance social programs.
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Detainee’s Release in Doubt, Lawyers Seek Order by Judge
The possibility that the detainee, a Sudanese man, may not be released from the Guantánamo Bay prison threatens to undermine the ability of prosecutors to persuade other detainees to plead guilty.
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Media Decoder: Snooping and the News Media: It’s a 2-Way Street
Lines are being crossed in all directions, with the government seizing journalists’ phone records, and Bloomberg reporters monitoring the actions of their clients.
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N.T.S.B. Endorses Lower Legal Alcohol Limit for Drivers
A federal panel on Tuesday recommended that states reduce the allowable blood-alcohol content to 0.05 percent from 0.08 percent.
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3 Americans Killed in Southern Afghan Bombing
The attack hit in a district of Kandahar Province that was a showcase for the American troop surge — and the birthplace of the Taliban.
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For G.O.P., Incentives for Budget Deal With Obama
Delaying steps to rein in Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid means delaying significant attempts to curb the size of the government.
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For Skeptical Lawmaker, Doubts on Attack Were Sown in Whirlwind Trip to Libya
By the time Representative Jason Chaffetz of Utah left Tripoli, eight hours after he arrived, the lines were drawn between the State Department and House Republicans on Benghazi.
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Report Finds Americans Are Driving Less, Led by Youth
In the middle of the last decade, the number of miles driven — both over all and per capita — began to drop, notes a report to be published on Tuesday by a nonprofit advocacy organization.
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Uneven I.R.S. Scrutiny Seen in Political Spending by Big Tax-Exempt Groups
An agency that is supposed to stay as far away from partisan politics as possible has been left in charge — almost by accident — of regulating a huge amount of election spending.
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Lawyers Say DNA Clears Florida Inmate in Killings
The evidence in the Seminole County case of Clemente Javier Aguirre points to a family member of the victims, lawyers say.
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General Says U.S. Not to Blame in Death of Afghan Civilians
Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr. said that neither the United States nor NATO was at fault in the deaths of civilians after airstrikes in April.
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Phone Records of Journalists of The Associated Press Seized by U.S.
The Associated Press reported that the Justice Department had secretly obtained the phone records of its offices and journalists, calling it a “massive and unprecedented intrusion.”
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