With students headed back to school, a coalition of students and activists are coming together to change how universities handle sexual assault
Jury Deliberations Enter Second Day for Mobster ‘Whitey’ Bulger
Court watchers say the 83-year-old gangster will spend the rest of his life in prison. They are bracing for the accused killer to speak when he faces sentencing
The Hidden Hand Squeezing Texas’ Supply of Execution Drugs
After lobbying by human-rights groups, European drug companies are increasingly unwilling to supply U.S. states with lethal medicine
A Newspaperman’s Nostalgia
TIME’s Michael Grunwald remembers life at his two former homes, The Washington Post and The Boston Globe, both sold this week. Their challenge: How do you get people to pay for stuff they can read for free?
Behind in the Polls, Weiner Plays on New Yorkers’ Sympathies
The scandal-plagued mayoral candidate is making a defiant appeal to voters to save his flagging campaign
Scams, Fraud Among Obamacare Concerns
The health care overhaul could create an opening for unscrupulous businesses
Trial of Nidal Hasan, Accused Fort Hood Shooter, Begins
Representing himself, the former army psychiatrist will cross-examine his own victims. The trial, held four years after the attack, gives the major a chance to air radical views
Alex Rodriguez Returns in Fighting Form
A-Rod rejoined the Yankees the same day baseball sought to keep him off the field
A New Age for the Washington Post
Iconic paper’s sale to Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos cements the end of our monopoly-media era
The Faulty Logic of the Russian-Vodka Boycott
Corporate ties and political fighting complicate the protest of Russia’s LGBT crackdown
Thank Republicans for Gay Marriage in Minnesota
A GOP effort to ban same-sex marriage led to a gay rights milestone
The Surveillance Society
Secrets are so 20th century now that we have the ability to collect and store billions of pieces of data forever