Cybercrime masterminds busted
Three arrests are made in connection to one of the world's biggest computer virus networks.
Three arrests are made in connection to one of the world's biggest computer virus networks.
repugican Jim Bunning will now permit a vote to extend unemployment benefits.
California Couple Face Court Date For Removing Lawn
Massachusetts newlywed couple spend first night in jail
A student sparked a forest fire that caused 30 million in damages in a Croatian park after he set fire to a thorny bush that kept pricking him on his way to college.
Full storyTopeka, Kansas, is a relatively well-known city name-wise, yet it has no qualms about renaming itself Google, KS.
Once called a "great vampire squid," the embattled bank admits its business faces a new, serious risk.
Wesley Brown began working at age 10 and still shows up at the courthouse every day.
These tested strategies can help cut calories and burn fat in 60 seconds or less.
The Romeikes' historic case raises immigration alarms and puts the U.S. in a politically awkward position.
The U.S. debt will soon top $13 trillion, but that doesn't account for what's not on the books.
Researchers may have found a reason for the stark rise in childhood obesity.
A shorter week is just the start of major changes proposed to slash the agency's debt and stave off crisis.
Gross domestic product contracted 0.6 percent in the fourth quarter from the third, against forecasts for a 0.3 percent increase.
The third-quarter GDP figure was revised to show a 0.1 percent quarterly decline from an original 0.2 percent gain, the statistics office said. This meant the economy fell back into recession, based on a widely held definition of the term.
Wisconsin state Rep. Kim Hixson drafted a bill in his state shortly after hearing from Terry Becker, an auto mechanic who struggled to find work.
Becker said it all started with medical bills that piled up when his now 10-year-old son began having seizures as a toddler. In the first year alone, Becker ran up $25,000 in medical debt.
Over 4 1/2 months, he was turned down for at least eight positions for which he had authorized the employer to conduct a credit check, Becker said. He said one potential employer told him, "If your credit is bad, then you'll steal from me."
"I was in a deep depression. I had lost a business, I was behind on my bills and I was unable to get a job," he said.
With O.J. Simpson giving his agreement from prison, a judge approved a plan Monday to donate the suit the former NFL star was wearing when he was acquitted of murder to the Smithsonian Institution.
The Monteverde golden toad went extinct in 1989. Photo: Wikipedia.
This probably won't be the last word on the demise of the Monteverde golden toad, but a new paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences says that normal El Niño conditions, not climate change, lead to the spread of the deadly chytrid fungus and caused the iconic Costa Rican species to go extinct.
Jon Kyl of Arizona, the repugican whip, argued that unemployment benefits dissuade people from job-hunting "Because people are being paid even though they're not working."
Unemployment insurance "doesn't create new jobs. in fact, if anything, continuing to pay people unemployment compensation is a disincentive for them to seek new work," Kyl said during debate over whether unemployment insurance and other benefits that expired amid repugican objections Sunday should be extended.
From - Huffington Post
Well, Kyl it's time to find yourself unemployed.
Become one of the "arrogant laboring class" that you and your vile, hate-mongering ilk are so terrified by.
Let the bastard know!
Washington, DC office
Phone: (202) 224-4521
Fax: (202) 224-2207
Phoenix office
Phone: (602) 840-1891
Fax: (602) 957-6838
Tuscon office
Phone: (520) 575-8633
Fax: (520) 797-3232
While scientists sound the alarm about melting ice, some are quietly looking for ways to cash in.
Communities across the U.S. teeter on the edge of losing their last jobs and residents.
“The length of the day should have gotten shorter by 1.26 microseconds (millionths of a second),” Gross, said today in an e-mailed reply to questions. “The axis about which the Earth’s mass is balanced should have moved by 2.7 milliarcseconds (about 8 centimeters or 3 inches).”