“Look at that face!” Donald Trump told Rolling Stone magazine. “Would anyone vote for that? Can you imagine that, the face of our next president?!”
The Freedom and Justice Party blamed Egyptian security forces for the death.
Rebel leader Rieck Machar and President Salva Kiir signed the accord under international pressure, and Kiir said he still has "serious reservations."
"The summer of silliness will come to an end," the campaign said Wednesday. "Then it's time to get serious."
Wall Street lobbyists are upping the ante in the fight over conflicts of interests for brokers, but some fiduciary financial planners worry that push could backfire.
"Where are you going to get a juror in this city that hasn't been tainted by this settlement and the media coverage?"
The Department of Justice, responding to years of criticism over its failure to prosecute high-level individuals, will change course to target the C-suite.
Ole Johan Grimsgaard-Ofstad is one of two foreigners who recently appeared in ISIS posters advertising them as “for sale.”
On average, participants gave correct answers to two-thirds of the questions in the Pew Research Center's science survey.
A new generation of Indian women are combining the power of videos and the reach of the Internet to work for societal changes.
Saudi Arabia, which has offered to pay for the structures, has accepted a fraction of the refugees that European nations have.
Former Congressman Anthony Weiner's former sexting scandal could be a distraction for Hillary Clinton's campaign.
The alerts come after highly publicized police officer gunfire deaths in California, Texas and Illinois in recent weeks.
Bernie Sanders took a slight lead over Hillary Clinton in a recent Iowa poll, but the former secretary of state still appears to be the front-runner on the national scene.
The Vladivostok moved from the port of Saint Nazaire in the south to the small town of Concarneau in the north over the last 24 hours.
A new measure gives California prosecutors more power in dealing with revenge porn cases.
As the U.S. marks the 14th anniversary of the tragedy Friday, educators said they are still grappling with how to teach students about the terror attacks.
Last weekend, 22,000 people arrived in Germany by train, but less than a third will gain official refugee status and be allowed to stay.
“As I am speaking to you, all the terrorists’ camps have completely been wiped out," Nigerian Defense spokesman Col. Rabe Abubakar said Wednesday.
“It’s our moral and legal duty to take those people to safety -- which means north, not south,” said one diplomat.
Al Qaeda's notorious "Inspire" magazine has called for assassinations against top American businessmen, including Michael Bloomberg and Bill Gates.
A combination of spiraling inflation and falling wages have pushed millions of Russians into poverty this year.
Hundreds of refugees overwhelmed a small Hungarian children's home. Now the children have gone missing and it's unlikely they will ever be accounted for.
Ohioans will vote to legalize marijuana this November. Why do many cannabis activists say that's not a good thing?
Adem Karadag, who was arrested last month during a police raid, reportedly paid $600 at the Thai border to cross into the country.
The British government has backed deregulation of safety measures for fracking, lobbied by the oil and gas industry, according to a Guardian report.
Justice Minister Frances Fitzgerald said Dublin had agreed to accept up to 2,900 more refugees than currently planned.
Torrential rain inundated parts of Japan and sent radiation-tainted waters from a nuclear power plant into the ocean.
The incident occurred late Tuesday when Inderjit Singh Mukker was on his way to a grocery store and a man yelled racial slur at him.
Seattle's public school teachers held their first strike in 30 years after negotiations over pay hikes, teacher evaluations and working hours broke down.