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Obama shift seeks to defuse birth-control fight

6:25pm EST

- President Barack Obama, in an abrupt policy shift aimed at quelling an election-year firestorm, announced on Friday that religious employers would not be required to offer free birth control to workers and the onus would instead be put on insurers. | Video

Anger in Greece as parliament to vote on bailout

8:56pm EST

ATHENS - Greek lawmakers will vote this weekend on a controversial austerity bill that Athens needs to avoid a messy default but which is fuelling a domestic political and social crisis that has brought thousands of Greeks out on the streets in protest. | Video

Syrian boys walk shoulder to shoulder in the rain at the Boynuyogun refugee camp on the Turkish-Syrian border in Hatay province February 8, 2012. REUTERS/Murad Sezer

As Syria bleeds, neighbors brace for refugees

BEKAA VALLEY, Lebanon - Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan have registered around 20,000 Syrian refugees, but with thousands more not registered and the pace of flight increasing, Syria's neighbors are bracing for a refugee crisis of epic proportions.  Full Article 

The sun rises behind the cupola of the Reichstag building, the seat of the German lower house of parliament, on a sunny cold day  in Berlin, February 1, 2012.  REUTERS/Thomas Peter

Germany in two minds over leadership role

MUNICH - Germany looks increasingly confident in the role of economic superpower as it pushes its model of fiscal discipline on the EU, but matching its new-found dominance with bolder leadership in foreign and security policy is another matter.  Full Article 

Tesla CEO and co-founder Elon Musk unveils the Tesla Motors Model X electric vehicle at the Tesla Design Studio in Hawthorne, California February 9, 2012.   REUTERS/David McNew

Tesla unveils "falcon-winged" electric SUV

HAWTHORNE, California - Tesla Motors Inc on Thursday showed off a prototype of its Model X, a battery-powered SUV that represents the company's bet that consumers will buy a range of electric vehicles spun from a common platform.  Full Article 

A man, who declined to be named, loads his Glock 9 mm pistol before firing at the Maryland Small Arms Range in Upper Marlboro, Maryland near Washington, April 17, 2007. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas

The business and politics of handguns

In the latest installment of The Exchange, Rob Cox talks to Paul Barrett about his new book "Glock: The Rise of America's Gun" and the growing firepower of the gun lobby during this election season.  Video 

A South Korean construction worker stands atop an apartment construction site in Seoul November 30, 2004. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

South Korea needs to step on economic gas

SEOUL - South Korea cannot afford to keep its economic policy on auto pilot and will need more than just a weak currency to avert a possible recession as exports slide and domestic demand crumbles.  Full Article 

A man holds his envelopes as he waits in line to mail his family's income tax returns at a mobile post office near the Internal Revenue Service building in downtown Washington, April 15, 2010.    REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Expiring tax breaks: Use them while they're hot

Every year, dozens of little bits of the tax code fall by the wayside or, more typically, get ritually renewed by Congress. Learn which ones will soon expire, and which will survive.  Full Article 

Northern Lights shine above earth

Feb. 10 - An International Space Station camera captures images of the Northern Lights above earth. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).

Chrystia Freeland

Rise of the machines

Futurists and fantasists have been dreaming about the rise of intelligent machines for centuries. Now it is actually starting to happen. I’m not afraid our smart machines will try to exterminate us, but I do worry that the second economy may be a jobless one.   Full Article 

David Rohde

The university as job laboratory

As high-paying jobs have flowed overseas, universities are increasingly seen as economic engines as well as sources of intellectual activity. One prestigious state university is building an incubator for academic entrepreneurs that offers a lifeline to the middle class.   Commentary 

Suzy and Jack Welch

Facebook's IPO hangover

Coming up any day now, there’s going to be one helluva party at Facebook. Champagne, confetti, speechifying, really loud music — you name the hoopla. Just beware the day after. Actually, beware the year after and the year after that.  Commentary  

Ian Bremmer

The truth about Israel’s rumored strike on Iran

An attack on Iran by Israel probably won't happen. At least not anytime soon. So why are the Israelis telegraphing that an attack could come before very long?   Commentary 

Edward Hadas

The great race for jobs

The current shortage of jobs in most rich countries is the latest leg of a long race between technological forces that lead to job destruction and socio-economic forces which provide new kinds of employment.  Commentary 

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