The Democratic National Committee (DNC) has unveiled a campaign to help voters surmount restrictive state voting laws that have been enacted by Republican legislatures across the country.
Brazilian-born beauty Angel Adriana Lima is one of the world's most celebrated supermodels and is best known as a Victoria's Secret Angel.
Facebook is holding a media event Friday afternoon with Facebook's CMO, U.S. Senator Charles Schumer and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Coca Cola has discontinued the white Coke cans for the holiday season after customers voiced outrage over the switch.
Hilary Clinton is in Burma (Myanmar) meeting with ruling and opposition leaders in an effort to promote democracy.
Research in Motion warned on Friday it would fall short of its financial targets after taking a huge charge to write down the value of its PlayBook tablet, and the BlackBerry maker's shares tumbled.
American pop star, Lady Gaga, has released her latest music video, Marry the Night. This is also her directorial debut.
Three prominent United States senators wrote a letter to numerous drug makers Thursday, inquiring about Pfizer Inc.'s deals with insurers and pharmacy benefit managers that might limit the market for the selling of generic versions of the company's Lipitor cholesterol drug.
Makers of apple and grape juice targeted in a Consumer Reports investigation into juice arsenic levels pushed back against the report Thursday, saying their juices are safe for the plethora of American children who drink it each day.
Insider trading by members of Congress is a clear problem, but fixing it may prove difficult.
Officials from major New York property owners said 2011 office leasing activity was strong, despite broader economic concerns, in a panel at the Goldman Sachs Commercial Real Estate Symposium in Lower Manhattan on Thursday.
Team Edward and Team Jacob fans have something to look forward to: Robert Pattinson just got another wax figure at Madame Tussauds, and one of Taylor Lautner is on the way.
According to a report in the New York Post, Apple's Grand Central Terminal store may a better deal for the computer giant than the MTA, and State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli has begun an investigation into its overly generous terms.
The original Manhattan is surging back to life ten years after the terror attacks of 9/11, and trends are showing the square-mile tip of the island south of Chambers Street is quickly surpassing its past glory.
Looks like more trouble for American Airlines. Just days after the company announced it will file for bankruptcy, a family sued American Airlines after their relative died from eating an in-flight meal.
Bush is scheduled to tour through Ethiopia, Tanzania and Zambia, where he is planning to raise awareness about AIDS, cervical and breast cancers.
A Florida judge has said that country singer Mindy McCready has violated a custody order and he now wants her 5-year-old son back in the state, The Associated Press reported.
Dominique Strauss-Kahn biographer Michel Taubmann has written a book he claims gives the French politician's side of the story.
A Suffolk Superior Court judge on Thursday has said that Occupy Boston protesters may remain in the city's Dewey Square while a state court ponders whether it will lift a court order that bars their eviction.
Shares of Barnes & Noble fell more than 16 percent as the New York-based company posted a $6.6 million loss in the fiscal second quarter due to sagging book sales, resulting in a loss of 17 cents a share.
Herman Cain, who said on Tuesday that he was reassessing whether to stay in the presidential race before saying on Wednesday that there was no chance he would drop out, is now changing course again and saying he may decide to drop out after all -- but not until he talks to his wife.
A state judge is allowing a conservative group in New York to proceed with a lawsuit to overturn New York's new law legalizing gay marriage.