Top Stories
- Should CEO of Boys Girls Club Make $1M?
The Boys Girls Club of America, a nationwide charity that receives millions of dollars in taxpayer aid, is under fire for paying out high salaries to executives such as CEO Roxanne Spillett at a time when the organization is closing clubs around the country. - The Conversation: Health Reform in Sight?
ABCs John Berman takes a look President Obamas decision to delay his trip to Indonesia to focus on health care. We talk to ABCs Rick Klein. - NYC to Pay $657M to Ground Zero Workers
First responders will split as much as $657 million according to the severity of their illnesses. - Where Are They Now? Life After The Bachelor
After 19 combined seasons of The Bachelor and its sister spin-off, The Bachelorette, only two couples have found true love. For many of the shows stars and contestants, the quest for true love and eternal happiness hasnt been easy since The Bachelor. - 13-Year-Old Prodigy Cries Discrimination
He may be young but Colin Carlson is no stranger to discrimination. At 12, Carlson was turned away from his dream school, Connecticut College, amid concerns that he was too young for a dormitory, even though he agreed to live off campus with his mother. Now, more than a year later, 13-year-old Carlson said he has faced trouble again because the University of Connecticut barred his entry into an African field ecology class that required a three-week trip to South Africa.
National News
- 13-Year-Old Prodigy Cries Discrimination
He may be young but Colin Carlson is no stranger to discrimination. At 12, Carlson was turned away from his dream school, Connecticut College, amid concerns that he was too young for a dormitory, even though he agreed to live off campus with his mother. Now, more than a year later, 13-year-old Carlson said he has faced trouble again because the University of Connecticut barred his entry into an African field ecology class that required a three-week trip to South Africa. - Lawyers Urge WTC Workers to Take $657M Settlement
City, lawyers predict success of $657M settlement for 9/11 workers suing over illnesses - Silver Star Winners Career Threatened, Why?
Three Army officers have received letters of reprimand for failing to prepare adequate defenses for a combat outpost in Wanat, Afghanistan, where a mass Taliban attack in July 2008 resulted in the deaths of nine soldiers and 27 people wounded, a Defense Department official confirmed to ABC News. - Cloudy With a Chance of Misery: East Coast Storm
Windswept rain is forecast to bring flooding to much of the eastern U.S. this weekend, as a slow-moving storm comes up from the South. Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, New York and other eastern cities can all expect 2-4 inches of rain -- which, combined with melting snow left from winter storms -- has led the National Weather Service to post flood watches from North Carolina to Connecticut. - Staying Put: Obama Delays Trip as Dems Wrangle Votes
President Obamas decision to delay his trip to Indonesia and Australia speaks volumes about how Democrats lack the votes to pass health care legislation. - Paranoid Schizophrenic Girl Has Urges to Kill
Rebecca Stancil often seems like a typical 9-year-old girl, playing a sweet childs game of rock, paper, scissors with friends and attending pool parties in her Simi Valley, Calif., neighborhood. But at her darkest moments, shell deliver a chilling discourse on how to acquire a power tool to kill her mother, who has at times had to lock herself in her bedroom to protect herself from her own daughter. In December 2008, after attempting suicide, Rebecca was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, a chronic, severe, and disabling brain disorder. - Birth Control Pills May Help Ward Off Cancer
Taking the pill wont increase a womans risk of death -- in fact, oral contraceptive users may live longer, researchers say. - Coming Back? Tiger Likely to Play at Masters
Tiger Woods is likely to make his return to golf during the Masters Tournament in Augusta, Georgia, next month, sources say, but they insist Woods has not made his final decision yet. - Dead Toddlers Identity Stolen for Tax Return
Jessica Struthers and Matt Bock have been forced to prove their deceased daughter was really theirs after someone else stole her identity and claimed her on a tax return. - Health Care Bill: Obama Delays Trip as Dems Wrangle Votes
Speaking volumes about how Democrats lack the votes to pass health care overhaul legislation, President Obama has decided to delay next weeks trip to Indonesia and Australia. - Senates $149 Billion Jobs Bill: Good For You?
President Barack Obama says the bill will help small businesses and jobless workers. - Exclusive: Jihad Janes Ex-Husband Says She Was a Good Person
The former husband of Colleen LaRose, the Pennsylvania woman who has been arrested for allegedly plotting with Islamic radicals to kill a Swedish cartoonist, said LaRose used to carry a Bible and attended church regularly. He doesnt understand how her life could have changed so much. - Experts Say US Doctors Overtesting, Overtreating
Less is more: Rash of reports says too many Americans get too many medical tests despite risks - Advertisement:

- Senates $149 Billion Jobs Bill: Good For You?
President Barack Obama says the bill will help small businesses and jobless workers. - Gay Teen Files Lawsuit Over Canceled Prom
Openly gay Mississippi high school senior Constance McMillen has filed a lawsuit with the help of the local ACLU chapter after her school canceled prom for all students following her request to attend with her girlfriend and wear a tuxedo. - Friend: Suspected US Al-Qaida Member Grew Radical
Suspected al-Qaida member to friend: Get the hell away from me, you Muslim killer - Dead Toddlers Identity Stolen for Tax Return
Jessica Struthers and Matt Bock have been forced to prove their deceased daughter was really theirs after someone else stole her identity and claimed her on a tax return. - Brew-Haha Frothing Over After Philly Bar Raids
Beer lovers frothing over after police seize unlicensed beers in raids on 3 Philly bars - N.Y. May Pay $657M for 9/11 Health Claims
City agrees to payments to settle health lawsuits filed by Ground Zero workers.