Luring Teenagers in Oil Country, Google's App Factory, and Indian TV

Luring Teenagers in Oil Country, Google's App Factory, and Indian TV

Behind the New York Times pay wall, you only get 10 free clicks a month. For those worried about hitting their limit, we're taking a look through the paper each morning to find the stories that can make your clicks count.

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Top Stories: In Montana teenagers are choosing going to work in the oil industry over universities.

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World: In Israel a conflict over women's participation in prayer at the Western Wall has "deepened a divide between the Jewish state and Jews around the world at a time when Israel is battling international isolation over its settlement policy."

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U.S.: The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives has roadblocks in its path to curbing gun violence.

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New York: The shooter of firefighters in Webster, New York, left a note describing his enthusiasm for killing.

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Business: G.M. is upping production in Russia, which is "becoming a bright spot for G.M. and much of the rest of the automotive industry."

Technology: Google is competing with Microsoft for business in the business world with Google Apps.

Science: Farmers are trying oregano as a substitute for antibiotics in the diets of their livestock.

Sports: Though Christmas has become a day for basketball as Thanksgiving has become a day for football, some take issue with playing on December 25 because of the religious nature of the holiday.

Opinion: Paul Steinberg on treatment of schizophrenia, writing "takes a village to stop a rampage."

Television: Alessandra Stanley assesses Indian TV, which is full of soap opera plots, but also maintains a strict traditional attitude.

Dining & Wine: Pete Wells chronicles his 12 favorite restaurants he reviewed this year, they are arranged "more like a cardiogram, with each spike in the chart denoting a restaurant that made my heart race this year."