Afghan Offers Bounty for Anti-Islam Filmmaker
Posted: 10:54 AM A religious figure in western Afghanistan is offering a $300,000 bounty to anyone who kills the maker of an anti-Islam film that has angered Muslims around the world.
Posted: 10:54 AM A religious figure in western Afghanistan is offering a $300,000 bounty to anyone who kills the maker of an anti-Islam film that has angered Muslims around the world.
Posted: 10:22 AM Sarah Brightman, the world's biggest selling soprano, says she has booked a trip to the International Space Station.
Updated: 10:00 AM Since it's breast cancer awareness month, Dr. Edith A. Perez discusses several myths regarding breast cancer and explains the truth behind them.
Posted: 9:42 AM The United Nations now says its 2009 headline-grabbing announcement that 1 billion people in the world were hungry was off-target and that the number is actually more like 870 million.
Posted: 9:22 AM Edward Archbold was willing to do anything to win an exotic python — even eating bugs both crunchy and slimy.
Posted: 9:39 AM A new $10 million study in Charleston is investigating if omega-3 fatty acids - the substance found in fish oil - can reduce the suicide risk among the nation's veterans.
Updated: 9:46 AM As criticism over sugary sodas intensifies, the beverage industry is rolling new vending machines that display just how many calories are in its drinks.
Posted: 9:10 AM President Barack Obama has a new critic of his debate performance — himself.
Updated: 9:10 AM A newspaper said Monday that Joran van der Sloot, a Dutch man who is serving a 28-year-sentence for murdering a young Peruvian woman, has impregnated a woman while imprisoned in Lima.
Updated: 1:11 PM Bryan/College Station based non-profit Mercy Project just returned to Texas after having successfully rescued 24 trafficked children from a small fishing village in Ghana, Africa.
Posted: 3:00 PM The number of people who have contracted fungal meningitis linked to contaminated steroid injections soared to 91 on Sunday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.
Posted: 2:48 PM Munich's famed celebration of beer, the Oktoberfest, is drawing to a close after some 6.4 million visitors downed an estimated 6.9 million liter mugs of Bavarian brew - some 14.6 million pints.
Posted: 11:11 AM This weekend, the Aggies are away to face Ole Miss in Oxford. For most of us, that means one glorious thing: a great freshman-sophomore exodus from Aggieland.
Posted: 10:20 AM A film dramatizing the death of Osama bin Laden is set to debut next month on the National Geographic Channel, two days before the presidential election.
Posted: 3:49 PM Chick-fil-A President Dan Cathy has voiced his support for "Biblical families" in one of his first interviews since his earlier comments caused controversy regarding gay marriage.
Posted: 2:36 PM Big Bird has never been so hot
Posted: 10:47 AM Custom-mixed medicines like the steroid shots suspected in a meningitis outbreak have long been a source of concern, and their use is far wider than many people realize.
Posted: 10:16 AM The last native speaker of the Cromarty dialect has died, taking with him a way of speaking unique to a small seaside town at the tip of Scotland's Black Isle.
Posted: 10:02 AM Early Tuesday evening, University of Texas at Austin students and community members gathered under the shadow of the campus's iconic Martin Luther King Jr. statue.
Posted: 10:16 AM Honda says it is recalling more than 820,000 Civic compact cars and Pilot SUVs because the headlights can fail.
Posted: 3:45 PM Dozens of weight loss and immune system supplements on the market are illegally labeled and lack the recommended type of scientific evidence to back up their purported health claims, government investigators warn in a new review of the $20 billion supplement industry.
Updated: 3:35 PM Health officials say a rare meningitis outbreak has sickened 26 people in five states who received steroid injections for back pain. Four people have died.
Posted: 3:25 PM A new rapid way to decode the DNA of sick newborns may help doctors diagnose genetic diseases faster in their tiniest patients - in roughly two days instead of weeks.