Yahoo! News: World News
Yahoo! News: World News |
- Japan fights to avert nuclear meltdown after quake (Reuters)
- Gaddafi troops take oil town, France pushes no-fly zone (Reuters)
- Bahrain protesters block roads, royals push for talks (Reuters)
- Japanese inspired and angered; resigned to more quakes (Reuters)
- Two die, 14 wounded in Iraq prison riot: police (Reuters)
- Slaughter of the Fogels: After the West Bank Killings (Time.com)
- India world's biggest arms importer 2006-10: think tank (AFP)
- Yemen clashes and Bahrain chaos as protests deepen (AP)
- Outspoken Muslim cleric killed in northern Nigeria (AFP)
- 180K flee as Japan's nuke-plant crisis intensifies (AP)
- New Democrats pessimistic over budget (Reuters)
- Qaddafi rout of Libya rebels pulls morale to a new low (The Christian Science Monitor)
- A New Biofuel Shakes Germany's Eco Cred (Time.com)
- Once lauded, foreign journalists now threatened in eastern Libya (The Christian Science Monitor)
Japan fights to avert nuclear meltdown after quake (Reuters) Posted: 13 Mar 2011 05:21 PM PDT |
Gaddafi troops take oil town, France pushes no-fly zone (Reuters) Posted: 13 Mar 2011 05:02 PM PDT Reuters - Muammar Gaddafi's troops battled rebel fighters for control of the strategic Libyan oil town of Brega on Sunday, as France promised to push harder for a U.N.-backed no-fly zone over the country. |
Bahrain protesters block roads, royals push for talks (Reuters) Posted: 13 Mar 2011 01:01 PM PDT |
Japanese inspired and angered; resigned to more quakes (Reuters) Posted: 13 Mar 2011 11:13 AM PDT Reuters - While images of brutal destruction wreaked by a devastating earthquake and tsunami have stunned the nation and the world, Japanese are finding both inspiration and reasons to vent in the aftermath of the disaster. |
Two die, 14 wounded in Iraq prison riot: police (Reuters) Posted: 13 Mar 2011 02:26 PM PDT Reuters - Two inmates were killed and 14 people were wounded in a prison riot Sunday in Tikrit, the home city of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, a police source said. |
Slaughter of the Fogels: After the West Bank Killings (Time.com) Posted: 13 Mar 2011 07:45 AM PDT Time.com - In the wake of a horrific multiple murder in an Israeli settlement on the West Bank, Netanyahu approves the construction of 500 new homes |
India world's biggest arms importer 2006-10: think tank (AFP) Posted: 13 Mar 2011 04:08 PM PDT |
Yemen clashes and Bahrain chaos as protests deepen (AP) Posted: 13 Mar 2011 01:45 PM PDT |
Outspoken Muslim cleric killed in northern Nigeria (AFP) Posted: 13 Mar 2011 05:02 PM PDT |
180K flee as Japan's nuke-plant crisis intensifies (AP) Posted: 13 Mar 2011 05:20 PM PDT AP - Japanese officials warned of a possible second explosion at a nuclear plant crippled by the earthquake and tsunami as they raced to stave off multiple reactor meltdowns, but they provided few details about whether they were making progress. More than 180,000 people have evacuated the area, and up to 160 may have been exposed to radiation. |
New Democrats pessimistic over budget (Reuters) Posted: 13 Mar 2011 01:51 PM PDT Reuters - The head of Canada's opposition New Democrats expressed doubt on Sunday that the country will be able to avoid an election over a budget set to be unveiled by the Conservative government. |
Qaddafi rout of Libya rebels pulls morale to a new low (The Christian Science Monitor) Posted: 13 Mar 2011 11:55 AM PDT The Christian Science Monitor - The chaotic collapse of rebel positions in eastern Libya in the past week is sapping the morale out of the rag-tag rebel troops that had been rapidly driving west just days ago. |
A New Biofuel Shakes Germany's Eco Cred (Time.com) Posted: 13 Mar 2011 07:45 AM PDT Time.com - The German government insists that a new biofuel called E10 could cut the nation's carbon emissions and reduce its dependency on foreign oil -- but it's got motorists fuming |
Once lauded, foreign journalists now threatened in eastern Libya (The Christian Science Monitor) Posted: 13 Mar 2011 11:31 AM PDT The Christian Science Monitor - The murder of an Al Jazeera cameraman outside of the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi on Saturday is sending a chill throughout the foreign press corps in this city, the de facto capital of the uprising against Col. Muammar Qaddafi. |
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