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People gather during a "One Thousand Hoodies March for Trayvon Martin" event Thursday, March 29, 2012 at the University of Minnesota campus in Minneapolis. Martin, a Florida teenager, was wearing a hoodie when he was shot and killed by a neighborhood watch volunteer. (AP Photo/The Star Tribune, Renee Jones Schneider)

City backs off threats to arrest reporters covering Trayvon Martin case

SANFORD, Fla. -- The city of Sanford Thursday night decided that reporters won't be arrested for pursuing the Trayvon Martin story after normal business hours.

Photo courtesy Utah State University Press
Utah State University Press staff Kelly Nuemann, Michael Spooner and Dan Miller will stay in Logan to do their jobs with the announcement of a merger with University of Colorado Press. “The agreement allows the USU Press publishing legacy to continue while achieving savings to the USU budget,” Stan Albrecht, Utah State University president, said.

USU Press announces merger with University Press of Colorado

LOGAN -- After several months of negotiations, the Utah State University Press has merged with the University Press of Colorado.

FILE -- Rebekah Brooks, chief executive of News International, arrives at the Conservative Party Conference in Manchester, England, in this Tuesday Oct. 6, 2009 file photo. Britain's long-running phone hacking scandal took a a sickening twist, Tuesday July 5, 2011,with claims that a tabloid newspaper hacked into the phone mail of an abducted teenage girl and may have hampered the police investigation into her disappearance. Brooks, chief executive of News International, which publishes the News of the World tabloid, said in an email to her staff that the "strongest possible" actions would be taken if the charges were found to be true. Brooks said in the email that she had no knowledge of the alleged hacking and said she would not resign. (AP Photo/Jon Super, file)

UK phone hacking targets more slain schoolgirls

LONDON -- Britain's tabloid phone hacking scandal dominated the airways Wednesday as it swelled to allegedly involve more missing schoolgirls and the families of London terror victims. Lawmakers held an emergency debate, companies hastily pulled their ads and the prime minister demanded two new inquiries.

British tabloid phone hacker says 'sorry'

LONDON -- A private detective at the center of a widening British tabloid phone hacking scandal has issued an apology to all those "hurt or upset" by his activity.

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