U.S. Republican presidential candidates U.S. Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) (L) and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney (R) look on as former U.S. Senator Rick Santorum speaks during the Republican presidential candidates debate in Mesa, Arizona, February 22, 2012.  REUTERS/Joshua Lott (UNITED STATES  - Tags: POLITICS ELECTIONS TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)

GOP rivals attack Santorum in crucial Arizona debate

MESA, Arizona -Rivals heaped criticism on surprise front-runner Rick Santorum in a debate among Republican presidential candidates on Wednesday, hoping to stall his surge at a pivotal period in the 2012 campaign.  Full Article 

U.S. advisers back experimental obesity pill 7:23pm EST

SILVER SPRING, Maryland - Experimental obesity drug Qnexa won the backing of U.S. health advisors on Wednesday, raising hopes for approval of the first prescription weight-loss pill in 13 years.

U.S. President Barack Obama delivers a statement pushing Congress to extend the payroll tax cut and unemployment insurance to the end of 2012, in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building in Washington, February 14, 2012.   REUTERS/Jason Reed

Obama urges corporate tax cut

WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama made an opening offer in what could be a long negotiation with corporate America on Wednesday, putting forward his first detailed plan to cut the corporate tax rate.  Full Article | Video 

A pharmacist looks through shelving to fill a prescription while working at a pharmacy in New York, December 23, 2009. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson

Judge strikes down contraception mandate

A federal judge ruled that Washington state cannot require pharmacists to dispense emergency contraceptives if to do so violates their religious beliefs.  Full Article 

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei attends a meeting with Iranian nuclear scientists and managers in Tehran February 22, 2012. REUTERS/Khamenei.ir/Handout

Iran defiant as U.N. nuclear talks fail

VIENNA/TEHRAN - The U.N. nuclear watchdog ended its latest mission to Iran after talks on Tehran's suspected secret atomic weapons research failed, a setback likely to increase the risk of confrontation with the West.  Full Article 

Smoke is seen rising from Bab Amro near Homs February 15, 2012.  Credit: Reuters/Handout

Assad forces renew barrage on Syria's Homs

AMMAN/BEIRUT - Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces rained rockets and bombs down on opposition-held neighborhoods of the city of Homs, reducing buildings to rubble and killing more than 80 people, including two Western journalists.  Full Article 

LAN cables are pictured on the Internet server at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (EPFL) in Ecublens, near Lausanne May 9, 2011. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

A brief window of opportunity for tech IPOs

NEW YORK - A series of technology companies, including security software maker Palo Alto Networks, are preparing to go public on the heels of Facebook's $5 billion filing, sensing a window of opportunity as the stock market rallies.  Full Article 

A painter gives the final touches to a mural depicting Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez in Caracas February 21, 2012. REUTERS/Jorge Silva

Chavez surgery weighs on Venezuela election

CARACAS - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's imminent departure for more cancer surgery in Cuba has thrown his re-election campaign into uncertainty and once again shaken the socialist leader's passionate supporters.  Full Article 

Protesters from the communist-affiliated trade union PAME shout slogans during a demonstration against anti-austerity measures in Athens, February 22, 2012. REUTERS/John Kolesidis

Greece races to pass bailout laws amid protests

ATHENS - Thousands of protesters angry at punishing spending cuts poured into Athens' central Syntagma Square as Greek lawmakers rushed to pass laws needed to secure payment of a second bailout for the debt-laden country.  Full Article | Video 

Elusive turnaround at HP

Feb 22 - Summary of business headlines: Hewlett-Packard has yet to staunch the bleeding as computer and printer sales to consumers fall; Toll Brothers posts surprise loss; Existing home sales hit 1-1/2 year high; White House wants to cut corporate taxes; Wall Street sees modest decline. Conway G. Gittens reports.

Jack Shafer

What made Deep Throat leak?

A new book makes the persuasive case that Mark Felt’s Watergate leaks, which demonstrated his classic counterintelligence training, were only meant to push Richard Nixon into making him FBI director. Patriotism wasn’t really part of it.  Commentary 

Maureen Tkacik

The book of jobs

As the title of his definitive biography reminds, "Steve Jobs" speaks for itself. The book is very much a product of its time, which is to say, a product of its subject’s fastidious narcissism and the broader culture’s limitless capacity for nurturing it.   Commentary 

Edward Hadas

Don’t obsess about GDP measures

Gross domestic product, as a measure of prosperity, suffers from what might be called the fallacy of precision. The human meaning of prosperity simply cannot be reduced to numbers. Supposedly exact measures generally confuse more than they illuminate.  Commentary  

John C. Abell

Google’s unhealthy cookie habit

By intentionally bypassing the default privacy settings of Apple’s Safari browser, Google has decided for all of us that our Web activity will be more closely tracked. They opted us in, without asking, and now they have some explaining to do.   Commentary 

David Cay Johnston

You’re not paying the tax rate you think you are

The portion of your income that you pay in taxes is your “effective tax rate,” but for most of us – the middle class and above – that rate is often lower than politicians say because of an incomplete measure for income. The cost of civilization is not as high as you’ve been told.  Commentary 

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