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MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (Reuters) - Republican Mitt Romney launched his general election campaign against President Barack Obama after sweeping five primaries on Tuesday, condemning the president for false promises and weak leadership and declaring "a better America begins tonight."
(Reuters) - Boeing Co, the world's largest aerospace and defense company, posted a higher quarterly net profit on Wednesday, helped by an increase in commercial airplane deliveries, and raised its earnings forecast for the year.
SpaceX is pushing back its bid to become the first private company to attempt to launch a spacecraft to the International Space Station on an unmanned cargo mission.
California voters are to vote on whether to repeal the death penalty, after activists collected the more than 500,000 signatures needed to put the measure on the ballot.
BEIJING (Reuters) - North Korea has almost completed preparations for a third nuclear test and has the capacity to carry it out "soon," a source with close ties to Pyongyang and Beijing told Reuters. "Soon. Preparations are almost complete," the source said when asked whether North Korea was planning to undertake a nuclear test. The source has correctly predicted events in the past, telling Reute
(Reuters) - French President Nicolas Sarkozy appealed directly to far right voters on Monday with pledges to get tough on immigration and security, after a record showing in a first round election by the National Front made them potential kingmakers. Polls show centre-right leader Sarkozy on course to become the first French president to lose a bid for re-election in more than 30 years, trailing
A Japanese schoolboy will have his football returned to him all the way from Alaska, where it drifted following last year's tsunami.
What could it have been about the millionaire aristocrat and former model Carla Bruni-Sarkozy that didn't convince voters she was just an ordinary girl, asks Cristina Odone.
SANFORD, Florida (Reuters) - George Zimmerman, the former neighborhood watch volunteer charged with second-degree murder in the killing of unarmed black teenager Trayvon Martin, was released early on Monday from a Florida county jail on $150,000 bail.
(Reuters) - Allegations that Wal-Mart Stores Inc stymied an internal investigation into extensive bribery at its Mexican subsidiary are likely to lead to years of regulatory scrutiny and could eventually cost some executives their jobs.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States believes a Chinese firm sold North Korea components for a missile transporter showcased in a recent military parade and will press Beijing to tighten enforcement of a U.N. ban on such military sales, a U.S. official said on Saturday.
UNITED NATIONS/BEIRUT (Reuters) - The U.N. Security Council unanimously adopted a Russia-European drafted resolution on Saturday that authorizes an initial deployment of up to 300 unarmed military observers to Syria for three months to help bolster a fragile week-old ceasefire. But the 15-nation council's move to condition deployment of observers on a U.N. assessment of compliance with the truce
MANAMA (Reuters) - Formula One drivers will race in Bahrain on Sunday while rage boils on the streets outside, among protesters who denounce the Grand Prix as a gaudy spectacle by a ruling family that crushed Arab Spring demonstrations last year.
Two trains have collided head-on in Amsterdam, injuring more than 100, 51 of those "seriously or very seriously".
A photograph has emerged purportedly showing George Zimmerman with a bloody scalp, a piece of evidence that may give some credibility to his claim that he was attacked by Trayvon Martin and only opened fire on the unarmed teen in self-defence.
Three more US Secret Service agents quit Friday over a sex scandal in Colombia, as President Barack Obama got his first briefing on the notorious incident by the agency's director.
A convicted black killer has been ordered off death row after a judge in North Carolina decided racial bias played a role in his sentence, in the first case heard under a new law.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Leading world economies on Friday pledged $430 billion in new funding for the International Monetary Fund, more than doubling its lending power in a bid to protect the global economy from the euro-zone debt crisis.
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