10 things to know for Thursday

The Associated Press

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about Thursday:

1. DEATH TOLL CONTINUES TO RISE IN TURKEY MINE

The relentless task of carrying bodies from a coal mine goes on as more than 270 bodies are recovered with 150 miners still missing in the country’s deadliest-ever mining accident.

2. WHY TURKEY’S MINES ARE SO DANGEROUS

Researchers say that cultural attitudes toward workplace safety and poor oversight contribute to problems in mining in the country, where 100 deaths a year were reported from 2001-2012.

3. THOUSANDS EVACUATE AS CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES SPREAD

Strong winds and dry conditions fuel several fires in San Diego County, including one in Carlsbad that has burned at least 30 homes.

4. WHERE CHILD LABOR IS BEING SCRUTINIZED

A rights group is pushing the government to protect children on U.S. tobacco farms, claiming they work long hours under hazardous conditions.

5. KENTUCKY SUES FEDERAL GOVERNMENT OVER HEMP SEEDS

Saying it needs to plant its crop, the state’s agriculture department sues for the release of 250 pounds of seeds that have been held by customs officials for over a week.

6. ARKANSAS COURT: JUDGE WENT TOO FAR ON VOTER ID LAW

The state’s supreme court tossed out a ruling striking down the law, but stopped short of ruling on the constitutionality of the measure.

7. WHAT THE SEPT. 11 MUSEUM SYMBOLIZES

It took nearly 13 years to reach fruition, but as it prepares to open the struggle to build it is trumped by the unity that it took to make it a reality.

8. NO SAME-SEX MARRIAGES IN ARKANSAS

The state’s supreme court refused to put on hold a ruling that overturned the ban on gay marriage, but same-sex weddings still came to a halt amid confusion about what’s next.

9. TODDLER SURVIVES 11-STORY FALL

A 15-month-old boy in Minneapolis who survived a fall from an 11-story high-rise balcony has been dubbed “the miracle baby.”

10. MASTHEAD CHANGES AT THE NEW YORK TIMES

The newspaper gave no reason why executive editor Jill Abramson is being replaced by managing editor Dean Baquet after two and a half years on the job.

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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