A U.S. pediatrician found a link between a chemical in baby wipes and certain rashes often mistaken for other, more serious skin conditions.
Science
The MTV shows "16 and Pregnant" and "Teen Mom" have contributed to a 5.7 percent decline in teen births, a new study suggests.
The Android 4.4 KitKat has officially begun rolling out onto the Samsung Galaxy Note 3.
Branching out from aircraft engineering, Boeing has developed a new signal that could revolutionize intra-military communication.
New York City's East Village neighborhood will soon be the home of the first ATM for the controversial, digital currency.
Which American coffee chain is being acquired by the Chinese company?
Weapons experts concluded that destroying the weapons cache in Syria itself would be too dangerous.
Sony announced that it has sold a truly impressive number of PS4 games.
The annual gun trade show is closed to the public.
Boeing better not look back: Another global commercial aviation company may be gaining on it.
Polar ice melting has opened new sea lanes, prompting the U.S. to focus more resources and attention on the strategic region.
South Korea says it will push for a South Korea-China free trade agreement over joining the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) this year.
The beastly FT-1 could become Toyota's next important sports car and allow the automaker to become "cool" again.
Venezuelans have an almost pathological obsession with physical beauty.
The hazards of the perpetual campaign continue to place the public, our policies, and some of the nations’ leading politicians at risk.
The Ford F-series is the best-selling truck in the U.S. for 37 consecutive years -- how does Ford aim to improve the truck this year?
In November, the bank agreed to pay a $13 billion settlement, the largest in U.S. history. That was just one of several in the last quarter.
A young woman’s death in a Texas hotel room has sparked a debate on the difficulties of reaching 911 on complex phone systems.
One in 200 infections leads to irreversible paralysis, usually in the legs, according to the World Health Organization.
Over the next six months, Iran will destroy its stockpile of 20-percent-enriched uranium, which can be used to make nuclear weapons.
Frozen or not, Niagara Falls captured people's imagination this past week. But can it capture their tourism dollars too?