President Barack Obama, Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande (L to R) face the media as the G8 leaders gather for a family photo at the G8 Summit at Camp David, Maryland, May 19, 2012. REUTERS/Andrew Winning

World leaders back Greece, vow to fight financial unrest

CAMP DAVID, Maryland - World leaders backed keeping Greece in the euro zone and vowed to take all steps necessary to combat financial turmoil while revitalizing their economies, which are increasingly threatened by Europe's debt crisis.  Full Article 

Syria bomb kills 9, Damascus blames foreign plot 3:53pm EDT

BEIRUT - A car bomb killed nine people at a Syrian military post in the eastern city of Deir al-Zor on Saturday, an attack the government said was the latest proof that an uprising against President Bashar al-Assad was a foreign plot. | Video

A handout photo from the U.S. Embassy Beijing Press Office shows blind activist Chen Guangcheng in Beijing, May 2, 2012. REUTERS/US Embassy Beijing Press Office/Handout

Blind Chinese activist leaves Beijing for U.S.

BEIJING - China allowed a blind legal activist, Chen Guangcheng, to leave a hospital in Beijing and board a plane bound for the United States, a move that could signal the end of a diplomatic standoff between the two countries.  Full Article 

Shoppers walk along Michigan Avenue as police officers patrol the streets in preparation for demonstrators ahead of the NATO meeting in Chicago, May 19, 2012.  REUTERS/Darren Hauck

Anti-NATO activists weighed Obama HQ attack

CHICAGO - Three protesters arrested on terrorism-related charges ahead of the NATO summit considered targeting President Barack Obama's campaign headquarters and the home of Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, according to court documents  Full Article 

People exit the lobby of JPMorgan Chase & Co. headquarters in New York, May 17, 2012. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

Risk model change likely to haunt JPMorgan

JPMorgan Chase's decision to radically alter the way risk was measured in its Chief Investment Office will likely dog the bank in the developing crisis over its massive trading losses.  Full Article 

President Barack Obama walks to welcome guests at the G8 summit in Camp David, May 18, 2012. REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer

Obama pledges to enforce Wall Street reforms

WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama called on Congress to back his efforts for new financial industry oversight, saying JPMorgan's $2 billion trading loss underscored the need for regulation.  Full Article 

A general view of the complex that houses the tomb of the 15th-century Sufi scholar Abdel Salam al-Asmar, a school and a mosque in the city of Zlitan, about 90 miles west of the Libyan capital, May 15, 2012. Reuters/Ismail Zitouny

With state weak, Libyans look to God for help

ZLITAN, Libya - Since last year's revolt ended Muammar Gaddafi's 42-year rule over Libya, people have grown used to looking to their own resources or to God for help rather than their government.  Full Article 

Pedestrians walk near the NASDAQ Marketsite at the start of the listing for Facebook in New York, May 18, 2012. REUTERS/Keith Bedford

Morgan Stanley made big bet on Facebook

NEW YORK - Lead Facebook underwriter Morgan Stanley took a bet earlier this week when it increased the size of the firm's $16 billion initial public offering and it boosted the price. A rocky first day of trading has raised questions about whether it paid off.  Full Article 

Shakila Naderi teaches a girl how to drive a car, in Kabul May 15, 2012. REUTERS/Mohammad Ismail

Afghan woman seeks rights behind the wheel

KABUL - After the Taliban fell, Shakila Naderi shed her head-to-toe burqa and asked her husband to teach her how to drive. Now Kabul's only female driving instructor teaches women a rare skill that confronts harsh opposition in Muslim Afghanistan.  Full Article 

Nuns blow a conch from the balcony of the Druk Amitabh Mountain monastery, locally known as White Monastery, in the outskirts of Kathmandu February 11, 2011. REUTERS/Navesh Chitrakar

Bhutan struggles to maintain happiness

THIMPHU, Bhutan - A tiny, mostly-Buddhist Himalayan kingdom won a world voice for adopting a happiness index to measure its economy, but its prime minister says it promptly forgot its own lesson and let a sudden rush of prosperity go to its head.  Full Article 

Ben Leombruno gathers tapped maple tree sap from a bucket to be made into maple syrup at Hollis Hills Farm in Lunenburg, Massachusetts February 19, 2012.  REUTERS/Brian Snyder

Blame that yucky maple syrup on the weather

LITTLETON, New Hampshire - Historic warmth in March slashed this year's U.S. maple syrup output as much as 40 percent, as sugar maple trees dried up early or largely produced bad-tasting syrup that will be used to flavor chewing tobacco or salad dressing.  Full Article 

Cellphone video from Italian bomb blast

May 19 - Cellphone video shows rescue teams tending to injured students after a bomb went off outside an Italian school. Rough Cut ( no reporter narration)

Jack Shafer

So Warren Buffett likes newspapers again?

Just because Warren Buffett blew $142 million in cash on 63 daily and weekly Media General newspaper titles yesterday doesn’t mean that newspapers are back or that Buffett's become a romantic about the business.  Commentary 

Daniel Serwer

Here’s how to handle Syria

Unilateral American action on Syria is not in the cards. Europe is preoccupied with its own financial crisis and is unable to act without American help. Qatari and Saudi weapons entering Syria are likely to increase violence and worsen sectarian tensions. Here is what needs to be done.  Commentary 

Chrystia Freeland

Equal rights and the U.S. economy

There is a powerful economic argument for equal rights. If you believe that talent isn’t determined by gender or race but is instead a roll of the genetic dice, then the most productive society will be the fair one. But is it? A draft paper by four economists makes the strong empirical case that it is.  Full Article 

David Rohde

Ending NATO's double standard

Outside the U.S. and Europe, there is a growing sense of a two-tiered system of international justice. The West puts others on trial for war crimes, the argument goes, while exempting its own forces from scrutiny.  Full Article 

Jack Shafer

So Warren Buffett likes newspapers again?

Just because Warren Buffett blew $142 million in cash on 63 daily and weekly Media General newspaper titles yesterday doesn’t mean that newspapers are back.   Full Article 

Don Tapscott

How to resist Big Brother 2.0

As the Net becomes the basis for commerce, work, learning, and much human discourse, each of us is leaving a trail of digital crumbs as we spend a growing portion of our day touching networks. We have little idea what governments are doing with this flood of personal information.  Commentary 

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