Account
Published June 26, 2009
The King of Pop may be dead but a long-lived legal battle over the custody of Michael Jackson's three kids could be in the works
Published June 24, 2009
With Veterans Affairs hospitals giving botched radiation treatments to nearly 100 vets and exposing 10,000 to HIV and hepatitis viruses, veterans advocates and lawmakers say the VA health system is in dire need of proper oversight and funding.
Published June 16, 2009
PBS board members have decided to enforce a rule barring religious broadcasts in a move that spells the beginning of the end for most spiritual shows like Catholic Masses and Mormon devotionals on public television.
Published June 02, 2009
The suspect in the deadly shooting at a military recruiting center in Arkansas is the latest in a series of Muslim converts accused of planning or launching violent attacks in the U.S., part of what security experts call an alarming domestic trend.
Published June 02, 2009
Microsoft's Bing search engine went live in the U.S. this weekend, but bloggers and Internet safety experts have found that it only takes a few clicks for anyone — of any age — to view explicit pornographic videos without even leaving the site.
Published May 27, 2009
Author Harry Stein has prepared a primer for people who are locked in political exile in their very own homes in his new book, "I Can't Believe I'm Sitting Next to a Republican."
Published May 22, 2009
The four men charged in a plot to blow up military planes and New York synagogues converted to Islam while behind bars, where terror experts say they were ripe targets in the furnace of Islamic radicalism.
Published May 20, 2009
The National Institutes of Health is funding a study to investigate the personal and cultural pressures on female and transgender prostitutes in Thailand, a study that began on April 15, Tax Day.
Published May 11, 2009
Human rights advocates say the U.S. may not gain much traction when it joins the U.N. Human Rights Council, which includes some of the world's most brutal violators of the very rights it is meant to protect.
Published April 29, 2009
Sen. Kit Bond calls the Obama administration's plan for closing Guantanamo Bay a "ready, fire, aim" approach, because costs in dollars and security have not yet been identified.