Latest worldwide news
Leak prompts al Qaeda change | | Officials say al Qaeda is changing its communication methods after learning the U.S. intercepted some of its messages. |
Terrifying road rage video goes viral | | A terrifying road rage incident involving a gang of bikers on Manhattan's west side has gone viral on the web after video of the incident surfaced online. |
China shows off 14 baby pandas | | Sept. 24 - Fourteen baby pandas born in a southwest China breeding centre are shown to the public for the first time. Elly Park reports. |
Movie CEO inspired by China | | CNN's Monita Rajpal meets Jeffrey Katzenberg, the man behind the multimillion dollar "Kung Fu Panda" franchise. |
Elie Saab's spring garden | | Oct. 01 - The Lebanese designer creates a lace and floral landscape for Spring/Summer 2014. Rough Cut (no reporter narration) |
Athletics Marathon record tumbles | | Moments after crossing the line, the new marathon world record holder Wilson Kipsang had just one thought on his mind -- "I can run faster". |
Bankers warn of long crisis as rich seek comfort | | LONDON (Reuters) - Private banks are telling their clients financial volatility surrounding Europe's debt crisis will continue for at least a year as more of the continent's rich seek the comfort of... |
Making luxury affordable | | CNN's Rosie Tomkins explores the concept of "fractional ownership" in the luxury yacht and private jet industries. |
Iran Staggers as Sanctions Hit Economy | | A currency shortage, created by Western sanctions, appears worse than previously thought, increasing pressure on leaders seeking to negotiate a nuclear deal. |
Lotus explains why Raikkonen was not paid | | Kimi Raikkonen is leaving Lotus because he has not been paid his salary -- and the Formula One team now admits its philosophy is to prioritize spending on the car not its star drivers. |
Tokyo Electric sees profit without rate hike paper | | TOKYO (Reuters) - Tokyo Electric Power Co, the operator of the crippled Fukushima plant, will likely turn a profit for the first time in three years in the current business year, without raising electricity rates or restarting reactors, its president was quoted as saying on Sunday. |
U.S. FHA to tap $1.7 billion in taxpayer funds | | WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Housing Administration said on Friday it will draw $1.7 billion in cash from the U.S. Treasury to help cover losses from troubled loans, marking the first time... |
Venture-backed IPOs and MA activity decline in value | | SAN FRANCISCO, Oct 1 (Reuters) - Average sizes of both initial public offerings and acquisition prices dropped for venture-backed companies last quarter as some companies battled a tough environment in their sector and others faced outsized comparisons from a year earlier. |
U.S. Supreme Court takes no action on climate change cases | | WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court took no action on Tuesday on petitions that could have it undertake a potentially wide-ranging legal review of the Obama administration's first wave of regulations aimed at battling climate change. |
Obamacare push accelerates as government shutdown nears | | (Reuters) - The Obama administration accelerated its push to persuade individual Americans to sign up for the most extensive overhaul of the U.S. healthcare system in 50 years, even as the program's foes in Congress fought to delay its launch with the threat of a federal government shutdown. |
First floating turbine seeks winds of change in US | | Sept. 29 - North America's first floating wind turbine, launched in May, is being hailed as a prototype for a future US offshore energy industry. While the small "pilot phase" unit, sitting off the Maine coast, produces only enough electricity to power four homes, it represents the first stage of a far more ambitious project. Tara Cleary reports. |
Interns Resist Working Free | | A backlash against unpaid internships in the United States, manifested in a spate of lawsuits this year, is spreading to Europe. |
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