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  1. The University of Southern California hired a for-profit firm to help use the school's prestige to woo thousands to its online social-work program. Now, many are stuck with six-figure debt they can't pay off.

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  2. Electric-vehicle startup Rivian priced its IPO at $78 a share, a person familiar with the matter said, valuing the company at more than $77 billion in a sign of strong demand

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  3. Take an early look at the front page of The Wall Street Journal

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  4. GE has been shrinking for years. Its split into three companies draws the curtain on a business era dominated by industrial conglomerates.

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  5. Facebook has policies against plagiarized and recycled content, but the site is rife with it. About 40% of traffic to pages in 2018 went to those with stolen content, its researchers said.

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  6. NASA has pushed a planned moon return to 2025: The “Trump administration target of 2024 human landing was not grounded in technical feasibility."

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  7. Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers returned to the radio on Tuesday to partially backtrack on his stance that he hadn’t lied about being vaccinated

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  8. Few big structures need more site-specific engineering than bridges. That’s where 3-D printing comes in.

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  9. Can a condemned inmate have his pastor lay hands on him in his final moments in the Texas execution chamber? The Supreme Court is weighing the decision.

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  10. A judge has rejected Apple’s attempt to delay an injunction that would loosen some App Store rules for software developers

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  11. Citing public interest in studying the assault on the Capitol, a federal judge said the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 riot can have access to Trump White House records

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  12. Plenty of questions remain about the deadly crowd surge at Travis Scott's Astroworld Festival as the Houston Police Department's investigation gets under way

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  13. MSNBC anchor Brian Williams said he plans to leave the network when his contract expires in December, after a 28-year run at NBC’s news division

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  14. From : Republicans have been where the Democrats are headed—with absolute power comes absolute overreach, write and . Eventually the young purists cannibalize the majorities they need to govern.

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  15. New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu said he won’t run against incumbent Sen. Maggie Hassan, dealing a setback to Republicans' hopes of reclaiming the Senate

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  16. Buried in medical bills? You may be able to slash the amount you owe by questioning your bills, negotiating with hospitals and pressing for aid.

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  17. Single-family homes built to rent are emerging as the hottest corner of the U.S. property market, as investors respond to booming demand from home-seekers priced out of housing for sale

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  18. U.S. ports snarled with supply-chain problems will be able to redirect money from other federally funded projects to help ease the logjams, under a plan outlined by the Biden administration

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  19. For a century, General Electric was a symbol of U.S. industrial might. Its breakup marks the close of an era.

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  20. With the U.S. land border now open, Canada’s snowbirds are again driving south to escape a harsh winter, with Florida and other states eager to welcome them

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