The survey of 1,002 Greeks for Sunday's Eleftheros Typos newspaper was conducted on Dec. 29 to 30.
An attorney says FBI personnel with foreign ties have no idea how they get put into an internal surveillance program.
Brooke, 95, was elected to Congress in 1966.
The president will travel to three different states this week to preview the jobs, housing and higher-education portions of his State of the Union address.
Attendees gather in Atlanta to worship and help the needy.
"A hero's funeral is about grieving, not grievance," New York City police commissioner Bill Bratton wrote.
“The danger of contagion is limited because Portugal and Ireland are considered rehabilitated,” one government source says.
Israeli officials vowed "offensive" action in retaliation over the Palestinian bid to join the International Criminal Court.
The move is a step toward rapprochement between the Arab neighbors after a quarter-century of rocky relations.
Questions about what really happened and journalistic ethics continue to surround the New Year's Eve stampede that left 36 people dead.
More than 3.2 million registered refugees have fled war-torn Syria to live in neighboring countries, such as Lebanon.
Forces loyal to Libya’s internationally recognized government staged airstrikes on the commercial port of Misrata Saturday.
The five who crucified themselves in the labor dispute centered on the Itaipu Dam say they will be joined by 20 more people.
A Lithuanian military official says one detainee was embedded among his own officers.
US Embassy In Indonesia Issues Security alert For City Of Surabaya
Israel is looking at ways to prosecute senior Palestinians for war crimes in the U.S. and elsewhere.
Abu Anas al-Libi was indicted in 2000 for the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, which killed 224 people.
The health care worker will be kept under isolation for 21 days in a special unit at Berlin’s Charite Hospital.
New York Police Commissioner William Bratton urged officers not to make political statements at the memorial for Officer Wenjian Liu.
Attempts by U.S. forces to rescue a the pilot shot down over ISIS territory last month, reportedly failed after helicopters came under heavy fire.
In the wake of a wave of attacks on mosques, Swedish authorities will seek ways to fight anti-Muslim prejudice.
A rough agreement is expected by March, but experts doubt whether a final settlement will be reached before a June deadline.
The woman, who was arrested at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport, was planning to travel to Syria to join the ISIS fighter.
The human-rights attorney says she was threatened with arrest because of a report critical of Egypt's judiciary that she authored.
At least five Pakistani troops and one Indian soldier have been killed in border clashes since Tuesday, leading to heightened tensions.
Conditions have worsened in the country's dangerous and overcrowded prisons, despite a pledge from the president to clean up the system.
American prosecutors have asked a federal judge to sentence Abu Hamza al-Masri to life in prison for terrorism charges.
Armed gunmen kidnapped 40 youths from the remote Nigerian village of Malari.
Gay marriage is already legal in Idaho. But state officials are still attempting to get the U.S. Supreme Court to turn back the clock.
Federal prosecutors will not try John Hinckley Jr. for James Brady's death -- 30-plus years after the Ronald Reagan assassination attempt.