31-year-old hurdler to find out if she makes the bobsled team Sunday.
Floridians have been trying since the 1960s to build their own railway.
The cyberattacks against Target may be just the tip of an iceberg, the size of which security analysts are still struggling to grasp.
The Jan. 9 test of the hypersonic glide vehicle was confirmed Thursday by China.
Here's one way to get your son's attention.
In the most-anticipated development, Obama announced he will end the telephone metadata collection program “as it currently exists.”
The company is considered a bellwether for the U.S. and global economy. Here's why.
It's the 50th anniversary of the War on Poverty, and poverty rates remain relatively unchanged. Why?
The situation along the Line of Control in Kashmir deteriorated significantly in 2013.
Nineteen workers represented by the NLRB claim that Wal-Mart Stores violated labor law by firing them while on strike.
Unemployment is down, growth is steady: Colombia may not be an exciting economy right now, but it's chugging along just fine.
Recent oil-by-rail explosions caused by derailments have made local officials nervous about increased oil shipments passing through their towns.
Morgan Stanley and General Electric Company reported fiscal fourth-quarter earnings results on Friday.
Kadyrov had previously claimed that Umarov had died, an assertion that was later disproved.
Industry sources say the Chinese central bank bought over 1,600 tons of gold since its last official announcement on the topic in 2009.
A November agreement between Iran and major powers will allow Iran to draw $4.2 billion in the next six months.
This chart shows just why UPS got slammed with much more delivery traffic than it expected over the holiday season.
Internet service providers will be legally able to throttle your connection speed if you use a large amount of bandwidth.
The holiday-shortened week is chock-full of market-moving earnings reports.
The United Arab Emirates may have welcomed 10 new skyscrapers in 2013, but another nation completed three times as many.
Congress gave its final go-ahead to the spending bill Thursday but not before some last-minute drama held up the decision.
The 2014 team is just two men, whittled down because of logistical and financial difficulties.