Facebook's share prices are seen inside the NASDAQ Marketsite in New York May 18, 2012.  REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

Facebook goes public

Facebook shares gained 18 percent before dropping to its IPO price in frenzied trading. The online social network raised as much as $18.4 billion in one of the biggest initial public offerings in U.S. history.   Full Article | Full Coverage 

G8 leaders look to head off euro zone crisis 1:20pm EDT

WASHINGTON - Leaders of major industrial economies meet this weekend to try to tackle a full-blown crisis in Europe where fears are growing that Greece could leave the euro zone bloc, threatening the future of the common currency. | Video

Local residents sit outside of the town's hospital in the town of Thebes, about 88 km (55 miles) northwest of Athens, June 20, 2011.  REUTERS/John Kolesidis

Drugmakers weigh emergency plans for Greece

LONDON - International drugmakers are working with European authorities on emergency plans to keep medicines flowing into Greece and avert a health catastrophe if the country crashes out of the euro.  Full Article 

Jamie Dimon, chairman and chief executive of JP Morgan Chase and Co, speaks at the 2012 Simon Graduate School of Business' New York City Conference in New York May 3, 2012. REUTERS/Keith Bedford

Dimon gets crisis marks but war isn't over

NEW YORK - Shooting from the hip may have got Jamie Dimon into deep trouble - shooting straight may help to get him out of it. Getting out in front of the news has made it more difficult for his critics to paint him as a banker-villain.  Full Article 

The White House is seen from the South Lawn in Washington, May 15, 2012. REUTERS/Larry Downing

Did White House "spin" tip a covert operation?

WASHINGTON - White House efforts to mitigate the fallout from a new "underwear bomb" plot emanating from Yemen may have inadvertently disclosed the secret at the heart of a joint U.S.-British-Saudi undercover counter-terrorism operation.  Full Article 

Employees carry solar panels at a solar power plant in Aksu, Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region May 18, 2012. REUTERS/Stringer

China cries foul after U.S. sets solar panel tariffs

The United States imposed punitive tariffs on solar panel imports from China, the latest in a series of trade disputes between the world's two biggest economies and sparking accusations by Beijing of protectionism.  Full Article 

A woman stands beside an automated teller machine (ATM) outside a branch of Spain's Bankia in Madrid May 17, 2012.  REUTERS/Sergio Perez

Banks' rising bad loans add to Spanish troubles

MADRID - Spanish bank bad loans have risen to their highest in 18 years, figures from the Bank of Spain showed on Friday, underscoring the problems facing the government as it attempts to clean up the sector and get its economy back on track.  Full Article 

A Palestinian protester jumps during clashes between Palestinian stone-throwers and Israeli security forces outside Ofer prison near the West Bank city of Ramallah May 15, 2012. REUTERS/Mohamad Torokman

Palestinians see settlements thwarting state

JERUSALEM - All across the West Bank, sprawling new communities perched on hilltops that dominate the landscape are testament to a shifting political geography and a reminder of the winners and losers in a 64-year-old conflict.  Full Article 

Actors Kenan Thompson (L), Will Forte (C) and Will Arnett of "Sit Down, Shut Up" arrive at the Fox Upfront after-party at Wollman Rink in Central Park in New York City, May 15, 2008. REUTERS/Joshua Lott

And the winner is? Sitcoms, TV networks hope

The big four broadcast networks - CBS, ABC, NBC and Fox - are betting on sitcoms to win their share of an estimated $9.2 billion in upfront advertising money for the 2012-13 television season. Sixteen of the 36 new scripted shows were comedies.  Full Article 

Trading at Noon: Facebook Makes its Debut

May 18 - Facebook shares open 13 percent higher at $42.05, after the social network site raised as much as $18.4 billion in one of the biggest IPOs in U.S. history.

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 

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 

John Lloyd

Beppe Grillo: The anti-politics politician

For some three decades, this Italian comedian has satirized the corruption of Italian politics. Last week, he won the honor of being a part of the very thing he mocks. But whether he can sustain a movement that now has some purchase on power is a large question.   Commentary 

Jack Shafer

Candidate press relations are about as "sour" as usual

There is nothing new about presidents and presidential candidates having bad feelings for the press. Does nobody recall John McCain’s low regard for the New York Times coverage of his 2008 campaign? Or George W. Bush’s attitude toward the press?  Commentary 

John C Abell

Facebook’s passive-aggressive friendship

While Facebook is very successful, the question is: at what? It needs to be good as an advertising medium to be worth anything to the institutions falling all over themselves to get in on the ground floor of its stock.  Full Article