Poll shows even Germans have softened on Greece, while the U.K. and France showed the most support.
The U.S. women’s national soccer team rode their floats in a Manhattan parade Friday to celebrate winning the 2015 World Cup.
“It’s delaying the inevitable -- things have deteriorated too far.”
German millennials are part of the first generation to grow up in the single currency eurozone — and they are reacting with solidarity and anger towards Greece's debt problem.
Talk about a head-scratcher: Former Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis once reportedly characterized Greece's creditors as "terrorists."
Greeks who support a pro-European stance are often met with harsh insults and accused of betraying their country.
A stalemate has exposed deep divisions within the European Union, as southern nations urge their northern neighbors to accept asylum seeker quotas.
After Sunday's "no" vote, Greece is back to the negotiating table, but history may provide useful lessons for the future of the eurozone.
The mayor of Paris wants the river to be clean enough to swim in by that time in a bid to increase Paris’ chances of being named the host city.
A rising number of Americans are arguing that flying the Confederate flag is akin to Germans displaying swastikas.
As Greece returns to the negotiating table with eurozone finance chiefs, the prospect of more austerity brings back painful memories.
As Iran and six major world powers work to finalize a deal by Friday, Russia expressed hope of a "comprehensive agreement."
The German government had apologized for the systematic extermination of the Herero people, but has not officially used the genocide label.
“Sophocles taught us that the greatest of all human laws is justice … and I think that is something we have to remember,” Tsipras told the European Parliament.
As the Greek debt crisis wears on, a critical pressure point has emerged: pensions. And while Greeks work longer hours than their northern neighbors, they also retire years earlier.
The negotiators had set Tuesday as a deadline when it became clear last week that a June 30 deadline would not be met.
European leaders are anxious to see a proposal that will prevent the implosion of the nation’s economy and the departure of Greece from the eurozone.
While Greece contends with its increasingly fragile economic circumstances, Russia is circling to pick up the pieces.
Right-wing leaders across Europe are heralding the Greek vote as the first victory in a battle against European institutions.
President Obama voiced strong hopes for the negotiations and called for a solution that allows Greece to continue to use the euro.
The lesson of the crisis was "never again to look away when a country doesn't keep the rules in Europe," said Sigmar Gabriel, vice chancellor of Germany.
As eurozone leaders gather in Brussels for back-to-back meetings on the Greek crisis, hopes of an immediate breakthrough are far from certain.