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So, Is Dimock’s Water Really Safe to Drink?

Preliminary test data appears to complicate the Environmental Protection Agency’s assurances that the water is safe to drink in a Pennsylvania town (EPA said nothing about cause).

Introducing StateFace

Today we released a font that you can use to include small state map shapes as a design element in a web application. It’s called StateFace.

We’re Experimenting with Pinterest. What Do You Think?

Everybody’s pinning. We want to know if you use the photo-sharing social network – and what you think of it.

Afghan Soldier Likely Took a Brain Test Riddled with Problems

Critics say the test Robert Bales likely took before deployment fails to screen for the invisible wounds of war.

Could Corporations Take Tax Breaks on Political 'Dark Money'?

Businesses may be able to use undisclosed, unlimited donations to save on their taxes.

The Perils and Promise of Fracking

Breaking Down the Mortgage Settlement: How Far Does $26 Billion Go?

How much will homeowners be helped by the settlement? We do the numbers.

Top MuckReads: School Cheating and Dubious Debt Collection

The best accountability journalism of the past week.

Senate Bill Could Roll Back Consumers’ Health Insurance Savings

A recently introduced Senate bill could limit rebates insurers are slated to pay to consumers.

ProPublica Wins Scripps Howard Award

Four Whistleblowers Who Sounded the Alarm on Banks' Mortgage Shenanigans

Whistleblower suits settled as part of the government's $25 billion settlement offer a glimpse at the kinds of behavior that ran rampant in big banks' mortgage operations.

Bulls, Bears, and Bailouts: The Top 10 Questions From Our Wall Street Q&A

Yesterday, our Pulitzer-winning Wall Street reporter Jesse Eisinger fielded reader’s questions. Here are 10 of the best. 

Our Super Fly, Super PACs Song

We explain how super PACs are influencing elections.

13 Reasons Goldman's Quitting Exec May Have a Point

A timeline of SEC charges against Goldman and employees over the past decade.

Congress's Genius Jobs Plan — for Fraudsters, Shills, and Wall St. Analysts

The so-called JOBS Act, which has support from the White House and Republicans, could help stock market scammers get their mojo back.

How to Win Facebook Friends and Influence People

A new anti-foreclosure ad campaign on Facebook targets employees of Freddie Mac and JPMorgan Chase.

Aftershock: The Blast That Shook Psycho Platoon

Five soldiers injured in the same 2009 bomb blast are a case study in a new epidemic among America's troops, who are grappling with a combination of concussion and post-traumatic stress disorder.

Ask Jesse Eisinger Your Questions on Financial Reporting

ProPublica reporter <a href="http://www.propublica.org/site/author/jesse_eisinger">Jesse Eisinger</a>, who won a 2011 Pulitzer Prize for reporting on Wall Street, will be answering reader questions on <a href="http://www.reddit.com">Reddit</a> from 3 to 5 p.m. Wednesday.

Some Thoughts on Timelines

Three different approaches to presenting stories over time.

Feds Let BP Off Probation Despite Pending Safety Violations

A Justice Department spokesman said BP had addressed 270 serious violations at the Texas City refinery where 15 workers died in an explosion, but the company is still negotiating with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration over hundreds more.

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