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  • Also: The U.S. Marines' website is reportedly hacked; the fire in Yosemite National Park is California's fourth largest ever; Vodafone may sell a wireless company for billions of dollars; and endurance swimmer Diana Nyad is close to reaching Key West after starting a swim from Cuba on Saturday.
  • Also: Former New York governor Eliot Spitzer loses his bid for election; several September 11th memorials will soon begin; two Colorado state senators are recalled over their support for tighter gun restrictions; and the U.S. men's soccer team clinched a berth in next year's World Cup.
  • Also: It's the eighth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina's landfall; fast food workers plan to strike for higher wages in several states; India arrests an alleged terrorist mastermind; and Vodafone may sell its stake in Verizon Wireless.
  • Also: Edward Snowden says his mission has been accomplished; Target says the Justice Department is investigating its data breach; and the execution of the North Korean leader's uncle is tied to a business dispute.
  • Also: The Senate approves the nomination of Jeh Johnson as Homeland Security Secretary; Angela Merkel is re-elected to her third term as Germany's Chancellor; wintry weather continues in the Plains and Northeast; and University of Illinois students sing for Dial-A-Carol.
  • Also: Some West Virginia residents are being told to flush their homes and resume water use; embattled New Jersey Governor Chris Christie will give his state of the state address; the creator of Beanie Babies will be sentenced for tax fraud; and a movie theatre patron is shot to death over texting.
  • Also: Tens of thousands of customers still lack power in the U.S. and Canada from an ice storm days ago; Turkey's leader changes his cabinet after three ministers resign in a corruption scandal; a ship is still stuck in Antarctic ice; and a reenactment of Washington crossing the Delaware.
  • Also: Ford names Mark Fields as its next CEO; a Sinn Fein leader is questioned in a 1972 slaying of a Belfast woman; and Mad Magazine's influential former editor Al Feinstein dies.
  • Also: Anti-World Cup protests erupt in Brazilian cities; a report says Donald Sterling will fight to keep the Los Angeles Clippers; and a London skyscraper whose glass walls melted cars gets shades.
  • Also: a California man is charged with deliberately driving his car into a crowd of people; closing arguments are set for accused mobster James "Whitey" Bulger; pro baseball is apparently ready to sanction players for performance enhancing drug use; and the next Doctor Who is announced!
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