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  • By Brad KellarCommerce – Accounts have been set up for a Commerce resident and law enforcement officer who was injured in an accident. Kevin Winfield was…
  • By Brad KellarQuinlan – A Hunt County man is recovering for injuries received from an accident on Friday. Quinlan resident Tanner Guyton is recovering in…
  • The Bush administration proposes two new types of savings accounts with higher contribution limits than current IRAs. The White House says the plan will help Americans save more, but critics say the plan is just a tax shelter for the rich. NPR's Elaine Korry reports.
  • Not long ago, Manon Martin was an accountant in Seattle, balancing books and analyzing financial data. But those days are over for Martin, who decided to exchange that career for a new one -- in belly dancing.
  • Donations are being sought in support of family members of a man, woman and infant child killed Tuesday afternoon in a two-vehicle accident on U.S.…
  • By Scott Harvey – Despite revised rules by the Texas Education Agency, area school districts fared pretty well following Friday's release of the 2011…
  • Anyone who knew of resigned Rep. Mark Foley's improper conduct should resign and face prosecution, a coalition of conservative groups says in a letter released Tuesday. But after speaking with Hastert, one author of the letter says he has changed his mind.
  • In the #MeToo era, what does accountability look like for politicians accused of misconduct? NPR's Michel Martin takes that up in the Barbershop with Emma Coleman Jordan, Monica Hesse and Paul Butler.
  • On Capitol Hill, unanswered questions abound regarding harsh interrogation techniques used on terrorism suspects. Congress is trying to answer some of them, the first being: Who's accountable?
  • After the first manuscript of Thomas Carlyle's French Revolution was accidentally burned, he began again with renewed fervor. Historian H.W. Brands explains why Carlyle's book remains fresh as ever. Have you ever lost your magnum opus to fire or flash drive? Tell us in the comments.
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