General rebuked after tempers flare over rebuilding Notre-Dame
Poland's governing right-wing populist party won a weekend election, full official results showed on Monday, retaining a parliamentary majority that could allow it to pursue a judicial reform agenda that has put it at loggerheads with the EU.
Thousands of protesters began walking towards Barcelona's El Prat airport in the hope of blocking it following the verdict
Changes in diagnostic practices, which have led to a false increase in prevalence, are what's fueling theories that autism doesn't really exist.
A couple fell to their deaths after a sharing a romantic kiss on a bridge in Peru.
Protests have engulfed Hong Kong for over two months
US manufacturers traditionally have been wary of a strong American currency because makes exports more expensive
Rasheem Ikey Bodiford was sentenced to 10 years in state prison and five years of probation for three felony counts of having sexual contact with a person without notifying he was diagnosed with AIDS-causing HIV.
"Brahms: The Boy II" has been delayed from summer to winter, and it may end up being a smart move.
It can be hard to tell whether what’s in the box will encourage development or just be a waste of time.
Who makes more money in the NBA, Steph Curry or Lebron James?
The prices of cryptocurrencies like bitcoin, XRP and ether all skyrocketed this week. Coinbase said the rush of traffic and trading caused outages across its bitcoin exchange.
The move represents a significant shift in the Philippines’ political relations with the U.S., which had been the country’s main defense ally in the past.
A rise in default rates has led some experts to point to historical precedent, which suggests a recession ahead.
Claudio Borio of the Bank of International Settlements noted that the end of market “turbulence” should not be understood as total economic stability.
Vendors in the border town of Ciudad del Este, Paraguay, said sales are dropping as Brazilian shoppers disappear from the city's sprawling markets.
The EU extended restrictions placed in 2013 on Chinese solar panel manufacturers due to complaints of "dumping" by local companies.
Global M&A activity rose as companies looked for tax havens and took advantage of cheap interest rates, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing a research report.
However, SunTrust analyst Robert Peck says the board may hold off on any decision because of the complexity of some of the options.
EU-wide debt crises and the meltdown of Greek relations have made holdouts like Poland and Sweden wary of adopting the euro.
From the Book of Exodus to the "miracle" that followed a massacre.
Financial firms hoping to remain successful will need to focus more closely on a new generation of tech-savvy customers.
Buoyed by films like the China-connected "Furious 7" and "Monster Hunt," annual movie-ticket sales in the country for the first time have crossed the $6 billion mark this year.
The paper's Saturday edition will carry a front-page editorial on gun control, calling on government to take action against pervasive violence.
If the UAW victory survives an appeal by Volkswagen, the affected workers will be the first such employees to gain collective bargaining rights in the U.S. South.
Fear of reprisal and an unwillingness to judge others rank among reasons why people often fail to alert authorities.
The Envision-from-China announcement comes two weeks after GM's U.S. unionized plant workers ratified a new labor contract.
Friday’s robust jobs report has cleared they way for the Fed to begin raising interest rates later this month. The pace of those rate hikes is key.
The latest jobs report suggests the economy is robust enough for the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates this month for the first time in nearly a decade.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations is bracing for yet another backlash as it tries to defend its community from Islamophobic attacks.