10 Things

10 Things to Know Today

by The Associated Press

Copyright infringement case could change the music business; SAE has a long history of race issues; military copter crashes in Florida and more national and international news for Wednesday, March 11, 2015.

1. CLINTON'S EMAIL DEFENSE COMES DOWN TO TRUST

The prospective presidential candidate says she handed over all her work communications to the State Department. But her no-apology explanation will do little to placate critics.

2. ELEVEN MISSING IN MILITARY CHOPPER CRASH IN FLORIDA

Fate of seven Marines and four soldiers unknown after an Army helicopter crashed during a night training exercise between Pensacola and Destin.

3. FRATERNITY'S HISTORY TRACED BACK TO ANTEBELLUM SOUTH

Sigma Alpha Epsilon, whose members chanted racial slurs at the University of Oklahoma, struggled with race issues long before the latest video surfaced.

4. WHO IS KEEPING DETRACTORS IN HER REAR-VIEW MIRROR

Afghanistan's only woman taxi driver got behind the wheel after the fall of the Taliban, challenging conservative views--and ignoring death threats--in her native country.

5. WHAT MIGHT HAVE CAUSED HELICOPTER CRASH IN ARGENTINA

Afternoon sun and strong winds could have been a factor in the tragedy that took the lives of several prominent French athletes, an official says.

6. KERRY, ASHTON AND DEMPSEY TO TESTIFY ON CAPITOL HILL

The three top national security officials will tackle the Islamic State's extremist threat, Iran's sphere of influence and Mideast hotspots before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

7. CITY MANAGER OUT IN FERGUSON, MISSOURI

The change comes as the town's council holds its first public meeting since the U.S. Justice Department accused the police force and municipal court system of racial bias.

8. 'BLURRED LINES' DISPUTE COULD ALTER MUSIC BUSINESS

The $7.4 million verdict that hit Pharrell Williams and Robin Thicke has the potential to change artists' concepts of what constitutes copyright infringement.

9. WHICH CAPITAL PUNISHMENT METHOD UTAH IS BRINGING BACK

If the governor signs the bill, Utah would become the only state allowing firing squads to carry out the death penalty.

10. NUT RAGE FLIGHT ATTENDANT SUES COMPANY, FORMER EXEC

The Korean Air employee says her career was ruined after she was verbally and physically attacked by the executive who has been sentenced to one year in prison.