The report did not name a specific school in a city that has more than two dozen higher education institutions.
A survey conducted by the firm Bankrate found that the average cost of using an "out of network" ATM is now more than $4.50.
In an hourlong interview with an Iranian television station, Bashar Assad blamed Western powers for destroying his country's infrastructure.
In a crucial real-world road test, a Mercedes-Benz Actros truck outfitted with Daimler's "Highway Pilot" system traveled about 9 miles in real traffic.
Extreme floods have forced people to abandon their cars in the street, and one neighborhood even saw a dangerous sinkhole form.
With upcoming elections in the U.S., Canada, Peru, and Japan, several countries have a vested interest in ensuring that the deal concludes Sunday.
The Middle East would be more stable with Moammar Gadhafi and Saddam Hussein still in power in Libya and Iraq, respectively, Donald Trump says, adding it's "not even a contest."
When the U.S. housing market was booming in the early 2000s, many young Americans chose to pursue immediate paydays rather than degrees, a new study shows.
"Our immigration system is completely broken and in desperate need of reform," says the U.S. congressman who has represented Utah since 2008.
The financial institution's new strategy would lead to fewer jobs in Zurich and new jobs in both Hong Kong and Singapore.
Doctors Without Borders is demanding an independent investigation into the deadly attack amid rumors that the hospital was being used by the Taliban as a human shield.
The U.S. Supreme Court in its new term will hear cases centered on divisive social matters, such as affirmative action, union powers and voting rights.
"It's like with phone chargers, it's a bit all over the place," one Chinese official says. "Now we're trying to improve things, moving towards unifying and standardizing."
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan makes a long-awaited trip to Brussels on Sunday, officially a two-day state visit to Belgium, that will be dominated by EU meetings over Europe's migration crisis and the fight against Islamic State militants in Syria.
Bangladesh stepped up security for foreign diplomats and citizens on Sunday after the killing of two foreigners within a week in attacks claimed by Islamic State, which has vowed similar further assaults in the Muslim-majority nation.
The U.S. National Weather Service issued flash-flood warnings for areas in South Carolina, as President Barack Obama declared a state of emergency there.
The Australian government's focus on national security and the war on terror to tackle Islamic extremism, rather than social cohesion and inclusion, has helped create an environment for radicalized Muslim youth to emerge in disproportionate numbers, experts say.
Doctors Without Borders is withdrawing from the Afghan city after its hospital there was hit by what may have been U.S.-led airstrikes.
Sales of formerly popular electric cars are generally plummeting in the U.S., but rich buyers are not shying away from Tesla Motors' Model S.
“How I would like a church that is poor and that is for the poor.”
"I'm tired of the government telling me what to do all the time," said Don Sheldon, 52, a police officer in the town of Winston.
Negotiators attempting to broker a deal on the 12-country Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreed to talk in Atlanta for another 24 hours.