Nanomaterials are found in dozens of foods.
The Brooklyn-born rapper, who now goes by the name Yasiin Bey, canceled his U.S. tour dates after being denied entry into the country.
Jennifer Lawrence told her Miley Cyrus barfing anecdote during an interview with Seth Meyers.
The federal government announced it would spend billions to extend the L.A. subway line that runs below Wilshire.
The same day the social network touted a privacy overhaul, it also told IBTimes it plans to save data captured by smartphone microphones.
Thailand's economy has a reputation for surviving political tensions, but maybe not this time.
In a gaming genre dominated by perennial reruns of Call of Duty, Wolfenstein: The New Order dares to be a bit different.
The use of the word "terrorism" by the White House to describe the attack in Urumqi marks a switch for the administration.
NBC News' Brian Williams interviewed Snowden for a long interview in Moscow that will air next week.
The source said around 10 more people had been wounded in Wednesday's attack on Chukku Nguddoa.
"City growth may be bottoming out," a Brookings Institution researcher says
The United Launch Alliance had a successful launch of the classified NROL-33 mission on Thursday.
Paul McCartney was forced to cancel shows in Osaka and Seoul after being hospitalized with a viral infection.
The Japanese automaker said on Thursday it is recalling 466,000 minivans and cars globally for possible faulty brakes and loss of a spare tire.
A U.S. Department of Justice memo calls on federal law enforcement to electronically record interviews with suspects.
Despite past overthrows, the looming royal succession makes the latest military takeover even more fraught with danger.
Shares of Sears fell 2.4 percent on Thursday.
Vietnam is considering legal action to reverse China's installation of a huge oil-drilling rig in disputed waters within the South China Sea.
The violence broke out about 12 miles south of Donetsk at an army checkpoint controlled by pro-Russian separatists.
Conservatives are urging the burger chain to re-embrace its family-friendly roots, but health advocates aren't 'Lovin' It.'
"Stop killing our innocent people and we will stop," Dzhokhar Tsarnaev wrote, according to court documents.
Last year, Chinese officials began investigating the business practices of many pharmaceutical companies, and arrested several executives.