Local Baluch girls lean on the walls of a man-made cave in Tiss village in the suburb of the port city of Chabahar 1,452 km (902 miles) southeast of Tehran, near Strait of Hormuz January 16, 2012. REUTERS/Raheb Homavandi

Iranians bemoan sanctions hardship as vote nears

Deteriorating economic conditions have taken hold across Iran in the wake of new sanctions over the country's nuclear program. This struggle is likely to play a key role in an upcoming election between President Ahmadinejad and hardline opponents.  Full Article 

Euro zone insists no Greek rescue without reforms 9:16am EST

BRUSSELS - Euro zone finance ministers told Greece it could not go ahead with an agreed deal to restructure privately held debt until it guaranteed to implement reforms to secure a second financing package from the euro zone and the IMF.

U.S. Republican presidential candidate and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney shakes hands with supporters while giving a speech at his Nevada caucus night rally in Las Vegas, Nevada, February 4, 2012.  REUTERS/Brian Snyder

Romney sails to easy win in Nevada caucuses

LAS VEGAS - Republican front-runner Mitt Romney cruised to an easy victory in Nevada, crushing his three remaining rivals and taking firm command of the party's volatile presidential nominating race.  Full Article | Video 

A masked protester in military outfit holds up Syrian revolution flags in front of the Russian embassy in Beirut February 5, 2012, during a demonstration against the vetoing by Russia and China of a U.N. resolution and in solidarity with Syria's anti-government protesters. REUTERS/Stringer

Russia, China elicit outrage with U.N. Syria veto

BEIRUT/UNITED NATIONS - Western and Arab countries responded with anger after Russia and China vetoed a U.N. Security Council resolution that would have urged Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to give up power in an effort to quell months of violence.  Full Article 

News Corporation Chairman and CEO Rupert Murdoch listens to remarks while participating in the Wall St. Journal CEO Council on Rebuilding Global Prosperity in Washington November 16, 2009.   REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

Inside Murdoch's UK newspaper clean-up

LONDON - The center of Rupert Murdoch's British newspaper clean-up operation is a set of unimposing offices in east London. It is here that the scarred reputation and the future of Murdoch's UK publications may be rescued or broken for good.  Full Article 

Egyptians prevent a protester from throwing stones during clashes with security forces near the Interior Ministry in Cairo February 4, 2012. REUTERS/Suhaib Salem

Egypt's military rulers face calls for earlier vote

CAIRO - An Egyptian government building was set on fire as protests disrupted the heart of Cairo for a fourth day and public figures demanded a faster transition to civilian rule.  Full Article 

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg presents the Fiscal Year 2013 preliminary budget in New York February 2, 2012. REUTERS/Mary Altaffer/Pool

Bloomberg reloads in push for gun control

NEW YORK - Though gun control advocacy draws fire from the Second Amendment's powerful supporters, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg is leading a strong activist campaign to close gun ownership loopholes and secure the movement's gains.  Full Article 

Migrants workers from Tajikistan relax on the roof of their shelter after working at local market outside Moscow, July 18 2011. REUTERS/Denis Sinyakov

Russia's untouchables

Muscovites have got used to living with them, used to regarding them as low qualified workers, as street sweepers and truck loaders, cheap muscle on building sites. People are used to calling them “churki” and “sheep” and not finding those words in any way offensive.  Full Article 

Chairman of the Federal Reserve Ben Bernanke talks at a news conference at the William McChesney Martin Federal Reserve Board Building in Washington, January 25, 2012. REUTERS/Larry Downing

Week Ahead: Bernanke to tackle housing woes

This week Ben Bernanke will address his concerns for housing before an industry meeting, and News Corp and other key corporate earnings reports will be released along with key economic data.  Video 

An inscribed copy of Charles Dickens' ''Oliver Twist'' is displayed at Christie's auction house in New York, March 28, 2008. Credit: Reuters/Shannon Stapleton

Fans celebrate big day for Charles Dickens

LONDON - Fans around the world are uniting to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens' birth, with Queen Elizabeth throwing him a fete at Buckingham Palace and cultural figures in Buenos Aires gathering in an old orphanage to read from his works.  Full Article 

European snowstorms continue

Feb 5 - Paris is covered by snow, while the white stuff blankets Rome for the first time in almost three decades. Andrew Raven reports.

Suzy and Jack Welch

Mitt Romney's Kodak moment

Kodak, which once upon a time held a mighty 90 percent market share, has declared bankruptcy. Business leaders, take heed. Figure out what’s going to blow you apart before the competition does. Stare into the future – and be very afraid. Hello, Mitt Romney, are you listening?  Commentary | Video 

David Cay Johnston

Newt and the NEWT Act

The Narrowing Exceptions for Withholding Taxes (or NEWT) Act, proposed by U.S. congressman Pete Stark shortly after Newt Gingrich released his 2010 tax return, would be a good addition to our tax laws, closing a significant Medicare tax loophole of which Gingrich took advantage.  Commentary 

David Rohde

Mitt and the middle class

With astonishing speed, the 2012 presidential election is becoming a referendum on how best to help the American middle class. So far, Romney's solutions are likely to be far more pleasing to the Republican base than the general electorate.  Commentary 

Chrystia Freeland

The economy’s ‘China Syndrome’

We are no longer living in “one nation under God”; we are living in one world under God. Globalization is working — the world overall is getting richer. But a lot of the costs of that transition are being borne by specific groups of workers in the developed West.  Commentary 

Paul Smalera

Facebook.coop

If Mark Zuckerberg really wants to accomplish his social mission with Facebook, he should share the company’s ownership with the people who helped him create it. Facebook should be a user-owned, user-managed company, run for the benefit of users. The company should be a cooperative.  Commentary 

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    Alex Leo

    Introducing Reuters Social Pulse

    Today we launched Social Pulse, our new social media hub on Reuters.com designed to show you the most talked-about news, companies and influencers across the Web.  See what people are talking about