Morsi's Anti-Semitism, Newtown Parents, and 'The Real Husbands of Hollywood'

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.

RELATED: Lance Armstrong, The 'Steroid Era,' and Public Art

Top Stories: As Congress prepares to vote on another round of federal aid today, towns that suffered from Hurricane Sandy are in a "kind of paralysis" with heavy restrictions still imposed on many key areas. 

RELATED: Election Night, the Campaign Semester, and the Porn Industry

World: Video has emerged of Mohamed Morsi in 2010 speaking "virulent" "anti-Semitic and anti-Western" rhetoric, putting his status as a moderate into question. 

RELATED: On-Time Holiday Flights, Blue Laws, and Rihanna-Trolling

U.S.: Violence is up in San Bernadino, which fell into bankruptcy, though the city was once praised for its falling crime. 

RELATED: The Next Four Years, Ballot Initiatives, and Downtown Restaurants

New York: Parents and relatives of Sandy Hook victims gathered to start a campaign to prevent any future instances like the massacre at their elementary school. 

RELATED: The F.B.I., MSNBC, and the National Book Awards

Technology: San Jose State University is teaming with an online course start-up in a move that could "open the door to teaching hundreds of thousands of California students at a lower cost via the Internet." Analysts say Facebook needs to get better at search

Science: A team from America that set out to study lakes under Antarctic ice has the chance to ID "long-hidden microbes before the weather on the frigid continent puts an end to drilling in about a month." 

Sports: Lance Armstrong admits doping to Oprah and has plans to testify against those who facilitated him. 

Opinion: Vicki Huddleston on Mali.

Television: The Real Husbands of Hollywood, intended as a satire on reality television, is "actually a far more subtle commentary on the death of the black male romantic lead, a reminder of the limited options for black actors on television."