Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's abrupt and unscripted holiday resignation is an odd way to launch a potential presidential bid and certainly no help for a party battered by scandal and fighting for relevancy.
There's a new building in town, and it isn't a military barracks or a hospital. It's a Tourist Information Center.
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's abrupt and unscripted holiday resignation is an odd way to launch a potential presidential bid and certainly no help for a party battered by scandal and fighting for relevancy.
Serena Williams fell to her knees on the grass, eyes closed, arms raised, and threw back her head.
North Korea launched seven ballistic missiles Saturday into waters off its east coast in a show of military firepower that defied U.N. resolutions and drew global expressions of condemnation and concern.
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's abrupt and unscripted holiday resignation is an odd way to launch a potential presidential bid and certainly no help for a party battered by scandal and fighting for relevancy.
The Organization of American States is meeting in Washington to consider suspending Honduras' membership because of the military coup that ousted President Manuel Zelaya.
As President Barack Obama pushes to overhaul the American health care system, the role of government is at the heart of the debate. In Europe, free, state-run health care is a given.
Seven-time champion Lance Armstrong went out early and put up a solid time in the opening stage of the Tour de France on Saturday, then was upstaged by Fabian Cancellara of Switzerland.
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's abrupt and unscripted holiday resignation is an odd way to launch a potential presidential bid and certainly no help a party battered by scandal and fighting for relevancy.
Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe pledged to work for the abolition of nuclear weapons Monday, as the city of Hiroshima made its annual observance of of the city’s bombing by the first atomic weapon used in war.
Mr. Abe spoke to a gathering of citizens, survivors of the blast, politicians and foreign dignitaries in Hiroshima’s Peace Memorial Park. At 8:15 a.m. those in attendance shared a moment of silence to reflect on the instant – 62 years ago – when a U.S. atomic bomb detonated above the city.
The bombing of Hiroshima killed more than 240,000 people, some from the blast and others from illnesses caused by exposure to radiation.
Hiroshima’s Mayor Tadatoshi Akiba urged the government of Japan to do what it takes to eliminate nuclear weapons.
On Sunday, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe apologized for his former defense minister’s suggestion that the U.S. atomic attacks of 1945 were justified. Mr. Abe offered the apology to a group of atomic survivors.
Defense Minister Fumio Kyuma resigned in July because of the public outrcy after he suggested that the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were justified since they brought the end of World War II.
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