[00:00.00]The Cleveland man accused of holding three women captive for a decade will face hundreds of new charges. [00:05.80]An indictment running to 977 counts was filed today against Ariel Castro. [00:10.93]The charges range from aggravated murder to kidnapping to rape. Castro pleaded not guilty to an earlier indictment. [00:16.75]Prosecutors say they have not yet decided whether to seek the death penalty. [00:20.80]anet Napolitano is stepping down as U.S. secretary of homeland security. [00:24.58]She announced today she will resign to become president of the University of California system. [00:28.89]During her four years as secretary, Napolitano has been a leading proponent of immigration reform. [00:34.37]In a statement, President Obama praised her and said, because of her work, the country is more secure against terror attacks. [00:41.01]In Egypt today, thousands of Muslim Brotherhood supporters protested against the military ouster of President Mohammed Morsi. [00:47.16]But this time, there was no violence. Crowds massed in several cities after Friday prayers, waving flags and chanting slogans. [00:54.39]At the same time, a popular Muslim cleric insisted Morsi's followers will never accept the country's interim leadership. [01:01.56]The prime minister is not legitimate and he doesn't have any authority. From our point of view, as revolutionaries, he betrayed this revolution. [01:11.60]Anyone who supports the coup is a traitor to this revolution. We don't recognize this government. [01:16.76]Any party which becomes part of this government, we will consider it part of the coup. [01:20.96]The U.S. called today for Morsi's release. [01:23.51]A State Department spokeswoman said the Obama administration is concerned about all politically motivated detentions involving members of the Muslim Brotherhood. [01:31.97]A bomb ripped through a busy coffee shop in Northern Iraq late today, killing at least 31 people. [01:37.54]More than two dozen others were wounded. The bomb went off just after diners had finished sunset meals, breaking a daylong fast during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. [01:47.41]There's been new trouble in Syria between rival rebel factions. [01:51.57]Gunmen linked to al-Qaida killed a top commander of the Free Syrian Army, a militia force backed by the U.S. and other Western powers. [01:58.92]A spokeswoman for the FSA said it happened last -- late last night near a checkpoint in Latakia province, close to the Turkish border. [02:07.58]The group called it an act of war and vowed to retaliate. [02:11.14]A train derailment in France today was the country's deadliest in years. [02:15.34]At least six people died and dozens were injured when the train jumped the tracks and crashed into a station outside Paris. [02:20.92]It was loaded with passengers leaving for summer holidays and the upcoming Bastille Day. There was no word on the cause, but the French president promised a thorough investigation. [02:30.31]A Pakistani teenager addressed the United Nations today, nine months after she was shot by the Taliban. Malala Yousafzai made a plea for the cause of educating girls. [02:39.98]We have a report from Robert Moore of Independent Television News. [02:43.82]I'm here to speak up for the right of education of every child [02:52.84]She spoke before a special youth session of the U.N., her parents and brother watching, telling delegates she felt more passionate than ever about her cause. [03:02.76]The Taliban shot me on the left side of my forehead. They shot my friends too. [03:11.84]They thought that the bullet would silence us, but they failed. [03:21.81]And out of that silence came thousands of voices. The terrorists thought that they would change my aims and stop my ambitions. [03:32.63]But nothing changed in my life, except this. Weakness, fear, and hopelessness died. Strength, power, and courage was born. [03:47.48]She was introduced by Gordon Brown, who is the U.N.'s special envoy on education. [03:52.50]He knows that in, Malala, the campaign has an exceptional advocate who is speaking on a special day. [03:59.59]Never before, I believe, has a 16th birthday been celebrated in this way. But never before either have we had a teenager that has shown such courage. [04:11.00]The U.N. sets many worthy goals that are never achieved. [04:14.85]So the question is whether Malala's power both as an activist and as a symbol can really make a difference [04:21.23]and get tens of millions of the most disadvantaged children into primary school education. [04:28.16]Malala's message has resonated here and, it's hoped, far beyond. [04:33.38]The U.N. also reported that in countries torn by conflict, the number of children attending primary school rose from 42 percent in 2008 to 50 percent in 2011. [04:42.86]The abortion drama in the Texas legislature headed into its final acts this evening. [04:47.33]Republicans in the state Senate moved to pass some of the toughest restrictions in the nation. They include a ban on abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy. [04:54.92]The state's Republican lieutenant governor, presiding over the debate, warned he will not let Democrats and protesters kill the bill, as they did in a previous special session. [05:04.49]The U.S. Justice Department is revising its rules for investigating news leaks. [05:09.36]That follows criticism that investigators collected phone records involving Associated Press employees, as well as e-mails of a FOX News reporter. [05:17.45]Under the new guidelines, it will be harder to obtain search warrants for reporters' e-mails. [05:22.49]And the department will notify news organizations in advance, in most cases, if it seeks a subpoena of phone records. [05:30.41]On Wall Street today, the Dow Jones industrial average gained three points to close at 15,464. [05:35.18]The Nasdaq rose 21 points to close at 3,600. For the week, the Dow gained 2 percent; the Nasdaq rose 3.5 percent. [05:41.61]Those are some of the day's major stories.