Proponents of Yes and No are pulling out all the stops to secure a winning slice of Scotland's undecided voters.
Presidential candidates in 2016 will want to run against Congress, and having their party in the majority might not help.
Scotland's vote on independence Thursday has been hard to predict. One reason? Tons of people are going to show up.
"Unity with maximum self-determination sends a powerful message to a world ..."
The trio of laws comes as California farmers and city dwellers are pumping the ground for water at a record pace.
The doves remain in solid control of the U.S. central bank, meaning more cheap money for Wall Street.
A British magazine has accused the Telegraph of paying its Scottish editor to help secure a 'No' vote Thursday.
The EPA extended the rule's public comment period until December amid complaints that state agencies need more time for review.
Observers have speculated that the CLIO satellite's secret mission has to do with communication.
A Scottish police group says Scots are behaving in the days leading up to the most important vote of their lives.
The Ebola outbreak in West Africa has killed about 2,400 people and is expected to infect thousands more.
Rebels loyal to Abdel Malik al-Houthi now control a suburb of the capital after the fighting.
Companies and agencies operating out of South Sudan will now have to justify to the labor ministry their decisions to hire foreign staff.
Last week, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry had called on Russia to help the U.S. counter the rise of the Islamic State.
The polls found 8 percent to 14 percent of Scotland voters were still undecided before polls opened at 2 a.m. EDT on Thursday.
Around a dozen fighters and multiple rebel commanders were also confirmed killed in the bombardment.
A new 52-second-long propaganda video was released late Tuesday by the Al Hayat Media Center, the Islamic State's media arm.
With the latest pledge, Australia's total contribution to fight off the deadliest Ebola outbreak in history stands at more than $7 million.
South Korean soldiers have arrested a man who attempted to swim to the North to meet leader Kim Jong Un, according to Yonhap news agency.
A U.N. envoy said that the conflict had left entire neighborhoods in Gaza in “total ruin” and that nearly 100,000 had been left homeless.
Iowa will hold the first contest in the 2016 Democratic nominating campaign.
Protesters interrupted a St. Louis County council meeting to demand the removal of the prosecutor in the Michael Brown shooting case.
Mufid Elfgeeh, who lived and worked in New York, was an ISIS recruiter with plans for an attack on U.S. soil.
Islamist fighters tried to advance on Libya's Benghazi airport, killing nine soldiers and wounding at least 30.
The Syrian rebel group with ties to al Qaeda seized U.N. weapons, uniforms and vehicles in the Golan Heights.
President Obama will send U.S. troops as part of the international response to combat Ebola in West Africa, he said in a televised statement.
Only two-thirds of Americans have any retirement savings and many aren't saving enough.
Verkhovna Rada deputy Vitaliy Zhuravskiy was dragged and thrown into the trash right outside the Ukrainian Parliament.
Researchers found in recent weeks, 34,000 pro-Democrat Senate race ads aired compared to about 29,000 pro-Republican ads.
Facebook has tallied more than 10 million "interactions" as Scots prepare to vote on independence.