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Princess Diana is the deceased celebrity many Americans would want to bring back to life while most men would prefer to die before their spouses, according to a new survey about...
The New York Times
The rising tide of high-end bartending is lifting every type of spirit, but whiskey seems to be riding a slightly higher crest. A quick scan of the names of New York’s new and...
Huffington Post
Americans remain widely opposed to U.S. military airstrikes in Syria, two new polls show, with voters skeptical of President Barack Obama's case for intervention. In a Pew Research...

Egyptian interior minister Mohammed Ibrahim moments before the military funeral of two policemen killed in the Port Said violence on Saturday, in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Jan. 27, 2013. Several policemen grieving for two colleagues heckled Interior Minister Mohammed Ibrahim, who is in charge of the force, when he arrived for their funeral, according to witnesses.
CAIRO (AP) -- An explosion on Thursday targeted the convoy of Egypt's interior minister in Cairo's eastern Nasr City district, security officials and state television said. The minister, Mohammed Ibrahim, survived the attack. The officials said it...
photo: AP / Amr Nabil
Japanese Trade Minister Toshimitsu Motegi, second right, in protective gear is explained how the radiation-contaminated water leaks are dealt by workers at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant during his inspection tour in Okuma in Fukushima prefecture, northern Japan, Monday, Aug. 26, 2013.
Tweet Tokyo, Sep 5 (IANS) The Japanese government will soon begin a test to surround the leaking Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant with an 'ice wall' to arrest the flow of contaminated groundwater, government officials confirmed Thursday. The...
photo: AP / Kyodo News, Pool) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDI
President Barack Obama gestures as he answers questions during a joint news conference with Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt, Wednesday, Sept. 4, 2013, at the Rosenbad Building in Stockholm, Sweden.
Vladimir Putin welcomes President Barack Obama and the other heads of the world’s leading and emerging nations to a G20 summit in St Petersburg tomorrow morning. The event will crackle with tensions over the case for punitive strikes against Syria...
photo: AP / Martinez Monsivais
Secretary of State John Kerry testifies before the Senate with Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin Dempsey at the Senate Hart Office Building in Washington D.C. Sept. 3, 2013. Kerry and Dempsey testified to the Senate on the upcoming decision by congress for U.S. Military intervention in Syria. Photo by Erin A. Kirk-Cuomo (Released)
Secretary of State John Kerry says that when chemical weapons were used in Syria last spring, President Obama did not have a "compelling" enough case to push for a U.S. military response. Testifying to the House Foreign Affairs Committee today, Kerry...
photo: US DoD / A. Kirk-Cuomo
A Malian soldier walks in the street as Malian troops work with French forces to battle radical Islamic rebels in Gao, Mali, Thursday, Feb. 21, 2013.
Mali’s newly sworn in leader Ibrahim Boubacar Keita pledged on Wednesday (03.09.2013) to unite the deeply divided West African nation. Keita's inauguration marks a return to civilian rule following a coup in March, 2012. ‘IBK’ as he is popularly...
photo: AP
A man inspects the aftermath of a car bomb attack at the Karrada neighborhood of Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, Sept. 4, 2013.
BAGHDAD (AP) — Bombings and shootings targeting security forces across Iraq killed at least 12 people Wednesday, officials said, as authorities found the bodies of 16 people killed in an attack overnight on two Shiite families south of Baghdad. The...
photo: AP / Hadi Mizban
Egypt's chief justice Adly Mansour, center, is applauded by by chiefs of the constitutional court after he is sworn in as the nation's interim president Thursday, July 4, 2013. The chief justice of Egypt's Supreme Constitutional Court was sworn in Thursday as the nation's interim president, taking over hours after the military ousted the Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.
CAIRO - Egypt's interim president Adly Mansour on Tuesday vowed his government will stick to a timetable for elections next year and hoped to lift a state of emergency in mid-September. Mansour, in his first television interview since the military...
photo: AP / Amr Nabil