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Apple’s First Developer Academy in the US Welcomes Inaugural Class in Detroit  

Apple Academy students get to work on projects and getting to know their classmates through group assignments Thursday, October 7 in Detroit.   Photo provided by...

Apple joins Facebook and Microsoft in revealing US surveillance requests

  Tech giant promises that iMessage, FaceTime, location details and Siri requests remain private in effort to reassure customers. Apple has...

Time to restart U.S.-Venezuela relations

Last week, President Obama sent a small delegation — featuring U.S. Reps. Gregory Meeks and William Delahunt — to attend the funeral of...

U.S., South Korea begin military exercises as North ends armistice

(CNN) -- A new joint military exercise between South Korea and the United States began Monday amid heightened tensions across the region. In...

8 celebrities who think the midwest is best

We all know that most of our favorite stars live on either the western or eastern coasts (many even own properties...

Richest 1% is mobilizing to protect its privilege

"Corporations are people, my friends,” said Mitt Romney. And in Citizens United, the conservative justices of the Supreme Court agreed, ruling that corporations,...

U.S. Census: Economy Has Finally Stabilized

WASHINGTON — The U.S. economy is showing signs of finally bottoming out: Americans are on the move again after record numbers had stayed put, more young adults are leaving their parents’ homes to take a chance with college or the job market, once-sharp declines in births are leveling off, and poverty is slowing. New 2011 census data being released Thursday offer glimmers of hope in an economic recovery that technically began in mid-2009. The annual survey, supplemented with unpublished government figures as of March 2012, covers a year in which unemployment fell modestly from 9.6 percent to 8.9 percent. Not all is well. The jobless rate remains high at 8.1 percent. Home ownership dropped for a fifth straight year to 64.6 percent, the lowest in more than a decade, hurt by more stringent financing rules and a shift to renting. More Americans than ever are turning to food stamps, while residents in housing that is considered “crowded” held steady at 1 percent, tied for the highest since 200 ...

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