Friday, January 17, 2014
Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:
Changes to the NSA's operations would not be happening had Edward Snowden not thrust the secret programs out into the open.
Tea party critics chastened by October's partial shutdown mount only a faint protest to the $1.1 trillion spending plan.
The condemned inmate took almost 25 minutes to die after the injection of a two-drug cocktail that had never before been used in an execution in the U.S.
The measure has sparked a debate about freedom of speech in a state that was founded out of the ashes of the Holocaust.
Wholesale looting of vehicles, equipment and supplies belonging to aid groups is crippling their ability to help.
A San Diego traffic court rules that her citation -- believed to be the first of its kind in the U.S. -- requires proof that the device was in operation.
Fares have risen nearly 12 percent since their low during the Great Recession in 2009, an AP analysis shows.
At least 76 countries still retain laws criminalizing gay sex, including five where it's punishable by death.
Russell Johnson was a little-known character actor when he was cast in the 1960s comedy about seven people marooned on an uncharted Pacific island.
Owners, players and umpires approve a huge expansion of instant replay in hopes of eliminating blown calls.