UK Foreign Secretary William Hague says the coalition behind the Libya air strikes has "widened and deepened" after a meeting of allied leaders in London.
A man who died at the London G20 protest appeared "very drunk" - but not angry - shortly before he was pushed to the ground, an ex-police officer says.
Hollywood star George Clooney is among 78 possible witnesses named for Italian PM Silvio Berlusconi's trial on charges of sex with an under-age prostitute.
A bakery owner in the infamous 'City of God' slum in Rio de Janeiro coincidentally named his shop after President Obama only months before Obama's visit.
Creationists say Utah petroglyphs of a dinosaur drawn by humans 6,000 years ago prove their case. Paleontologists say dinosaur "legs" are stains on the rock, not man-made drawings.
The UK and US seem to spend money as if there were a limitless supply. But Germany and most US states have laws to keep the government budget balanced.
The secrecy around Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s selection of Cathleen P. Black to run the city’s schools highlighted his faith in business leaders and dislike of public debate.
Starting Thursday, Wal-Mart plans to offer free shipping on its Web site, a move that may create an expectation among consumers and a threat to smaller retailers.
AP - World powers agreed Tuesday to consider further sanctions on Moammar Gadhafi's regime but did not discuss arming the rebels who are seeking to oust him, a top British diplomat said.
AP - Syria's Cabinet resigned Tuesday to help quell a wave of popular fury that erupted more than a week ago, threatening President Bashar Assad's 11-year rule in one of the most authoritarian nations in the Middle East.
AP - A man convicted of killing two people in a 1989 Phoenix convenience store robbery was executed Tuesday despite last-minute arguments by his attorneys who raised questions over one of the lethal injection drugs and said they had raised "substantial doubt" about his guilt.
Workers inside Japan's damaged nuclear power plant sleep in stairwells, eat twice a day and bathe with wet wipes. Still, one official says, spirits are not flagging.
Military action against Libya's Moammar Gadhafi will continue until he ends attacks on civilians, pulls back from areas forcibly entered and allows humanitarian aid, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton vowed today.