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Huffington Post
In the single largest day of climate action in history, people around the world mobilized Sunday to demonstrate the urgency of combating climate change. In New York City alone,...
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Yahoo Daily News
In some parts of Africa, myths that Ebola was brought to the regions by health care workers have hurt the ability of workers to respond to the outbreak. But where did Ebola really...
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The Daily Beast
A presidential administration expected to be more open and transparent than preceding ones has become focused on keeping secrets, and preventing legitimate public inquiry. Having...

A worker is busy at the UPS distribution center at the International Cargo Airport in Cologne, western Germany, Monday Nov. 1, 2010. After intercepting two mail bombs addressed to Chicago-area synagogues, investigators found out that packages that terrorists in Yemen attempted to smuggle onto an aircraft in a brazen al-Qaida terror plot were moved through Cologne.
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Three people are confirmed dead following a shooting at a UPS Center in Birmingham, Alabama Tuesday morning. At 9:21 a.m., police received calls about an active shooter. At...
photo: AP / Martin Meissner
In this courtroom drawing, Osama bin Laden's son-in-law, Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, leans forward as he is handcuffed in U.S. federal court in Manhattan, after a hearing where he pleaded not guilty Friday, March 8, 2013, to plotting against Americans in his role as al-Qaida's top spokesman.
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The son-in-law of Osama bin Laden was sentenced to life in prison Tuesday by U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan. A Manhattan federal jury found Suleiman Abu Ghaith, 48,...
photo: AP / Elizabeth Williams
A Palestinians return to their homes, which witnesses said was destroyed by an Israeli air strike in the east of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip.
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VOA News Talks between Israel and the Palestinians to cement the Gaza cease-fire agreement signed last month resumed Tuesday in Cairo . The Egyptian-mediated deal was delayed...
photo: WN / Ahmed Deeb
People participate in an anti-abortion rally in Madrid, Spain, on Sunday, March 7, 2010.
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Spain has dropped plans to enact one of Europe's strictest abortion laws. Legislation passed in January would have made abortions in Spain illegal in all cases except when...
photo: AP / Arturo Rodriguez
Malala Yousafzai (at lectern), the young education rights campaigner from Pakistan, speaks at the “Malala Day” UN Youth Assembly. Taking place on her sixteenth birthday, the event brought together the young campaigner and hundreds of students from over 80 countries to call for quality education for every girl and boy in the world. It was also addressed by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon (fourth from left); General Assembly President Vuk Jeremić (fifth from right); and UN Special Envoy for Global Education, Gordon Brown.
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Mariama Diallo WASHINGTON, DC— Hollywood stars Alicia Keys, Jennifer Garner and 30 others have voiced their support for a U.S.-backed initiative called Let Girls Learn. The $231 million program, funded by the U.S. Agency for International...
photo: UN / Rick Bajornas
Apple iPhone
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The iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus certainly got the support of Apple’s fanbase. They turned out in droves to pick up their new phones on Friday, helping the new devices sell 10 million in just three days. Apple says that the new number sets a record for...
photo: AP / Julie Jacobson
Dilma Rousseff, presidential candidate for the governing Workers Party, gestures to photographers after voting in Brazil's presidential election runoff in Porto Alegre, Brazil, Sunday Oct. 31, 2010.
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Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff will maintain economic stimulus including the use of public banks in a possible second term as the global crisis could hurt jobs, wages and investment in the country, she said. “Doubts” about growth in China and...
photo: AP / Felipe Dana