Yahoo! News: India Top Stories - Reuters
Yahoo! News: India Top Stories - Reuters |
- Study warns of worldwide cancer surge
- 'Science Guy' Bill Nye defends evolution in live public debate
- Photos: Heavy winter storm marches across the U.S.
- Weather service: Storm to hit two-thirds of U.S.
- Video spotlights anti-gay violence in Russia
- McDonald's Canada addresses 'pink goop' claims
- Anti-abortion groups boycotting Girl Scout cookies
- Senate sends long-overdue farm bill to Obama
- Olympic hosts try to shake outcry over fate of stray dogs
- Libya: Gadhafi's chemical weapons cache 100 percent gone
- Lawmakers seek redo on Endangered Species Act
- An expensive tip: Gratuity leads to job loss for NYC sanitation worker
- U.S. ambassador to Russia stepping down
- Target takes steps to protect customer data
- Blast in Pakistan kills nine near Shiite mosque
- Kidnapping, carjacking charges filed against escaped Mich. killer
- 'SNL' alum Victoria Jackson files for political office
- Budget deficit drops to $514 billion
- Microsoft hopes new, old leaders can rekindle magic
- Sea survivor's Salvadoran family thought he died
- Broad coalition backs Keystone XL oil pipeline
- Long winter brings salt shortage, steeper prices
- NY police: Hoffman's heroin didn't have additive
- Flea: Red Hot Chili Peppers mimed Super Bowl song
- More than half Americans plan to follow Olympics
- Lawmakers seek Endangered Species Act overhaul
- APNewsBreak: Police say teacher acknowledged sex
- Facebook barrels ahead on 10th anniversary
- Bill Clinton was Leno's top 'Tonight' target
- A look back at the allegations against Woody Allen
- Microsoft names cloud computing chief as next CEO
- U.K. admits to role in deadly 1984 India raid
- Afghanistan's Karzai in secret talks with Taliban
- Britain admits role in deadly 1984 Golden Temple attack in India
Study warns of worldwide cancer surge Posted: 04 Feb 2014 01:40 PM PST |
'Science Guy' Bill Nye defends evolution in live public debate Posted: 04 Feb 2014 04:35 PM PST |
Photos: Heavy winter storm marches across the U.S. Posted: 03 Feb 2014 06:08 AM PST A bicyclist crosses Douglas Avenue in downtown Wichita, Kan., during a heavy snowstorm on Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2014. South-central Kansas is expecting up to seven inches of snow as a winter storm passes through. (AP Photo/The Wichita Eagle, Travis Heying) LOCAL TV OUT; MAGS OUT; LOCAL RADIO OUT; LOCAL INTERNET OUT |
Weather service: Storm to hit two-thirds of U.S. Posted: 04 Feb 2014 03:07 PM PST |
Video spotlights anti-gay violence in Russia Posted: 04 Feb 2014 01:17 PM PST |
McDonald's Canada addresses 'pink goop' claims Posted: 04 Feb 2014 10:12 AM PST |
Anti-abortion groups boycotting Girl Scout cookies Posted: 04 Feb 2014 12:56 PM PST |
Senate sends long-overdue farm bill to Obama Posted: 04 Feb 2014 01:40 PM PST |
Olympic hosts try to shake outcry over fate of stray dogs Posted: 04 Feb 2014 10:13 AM PST SOCHI, Russia, Feb 4 (Reuters) - An outcry over the fate of stray animals being rounded up in Sochi is the latest problem to dog Russia's preparations for the Winter Olympics. Already scrambling to get hotels ready on time, make the Games safe and convince the world Russians are not homophobic, the host nation is now trying to shake off accusations that it is killing stray dogs. It is hardly the showcase for modern Russia that President Vladimir Putin had hoped for at the Olympics. Residents say thousands of dogs have disappeared from the streets of Sochi since a local business won a contract to catch stray animals before the Games, which open on Friday. |
Libya: Gadhafi's chemical weapons cache 100 percent gone Posted: 04 Feb 2014 12:33 PM PST |
Lawmakers seek redo on Endangered Species Act Posted: 04 Feb 2014 09:36 AM PST |
An expensive tip: Gratuity leads to job loss for NYC sanitation worker Posted: 04 Feb 2014 07:31 AM PST |
U.S. ambassador to Russia stepping down Posted: 04 Feb 2014 08:38 AM PST |
Target takes steps to protect customer data Posted: 04 Feb 2014 02:19 PM PST |
Blast in Pakistan kills nine near Shiite mosque Posted: 04 Feb 2014 07:53 AM PST |
Kidnapping, carjacking charges filed against escaped Mich. killer Posted: 04 Feb 2014 11:52 AM PST |
'SNL' alum Victoria Jackson files for political office Posted: 04 Feb 2014 06:47 AM PST |
Budget deficit drops to $514 billion Posted: 04 Feb 2014 07:19 AM PST |
Microsoft hopes new, old leaders can rekindle magic Posted: 04 Feb 2014 03:34 PM PST By Bill Rigby SEATTLE (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp is betting a mix of old and young blood will revive the aging technology pioneer, but new Chief Executive Officer Satya Nadella may find it tough to push change with co-founder Bill Gates and former CEO Steve Ballmer breathing down his neck. The 46-year-old India native and former enterprise business chief takes on the monumental task of exploring new directions - but with Gates as his consigliere, and on a strategy that Ballmer orchestrated with the board. That uphill endeavor helped sour other candidates on the job, including proven change agent Alan Mulally at Ford Motor Co, sources have said. Gates is giving up the board chairmanship to fellow director John Thompson. |
Sea survivor's Salvadoran family thought he died Posted: 04 Feb 2014 03:01 PM PST |
Broad coalition backs Keystone XL oil pipeline Posted: 04 Feb 2014 03:21 PM PST |
Long winter brings salt shortage, steeper prices Posted: 04 Feb 2014 02:57 PM PST |
NY police: Hoffman's heroin didn't have additive Posted: 04 Feb 2014 05:09 PM PST |
Flea: Red Hot Chili Peppers mimed Super Bowl song Posted: 04 Feb 2014 04:56 PM PST |
More than half Americans plan to follow Olympics Posted: 04 Feb 2014 02:24 PM PST |
Lawmakers seek Endangered Species Act overhaul Posted: 04 Feb 2014 04:42 PM PST BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — Republicans in Congress on Tuesday called for an overhaul to the Endangered Species Act to curtail environmentalists' lawsuits and give more power to states, but experts say broad changes to one of the nation's cornerstone environmental laws are unlikely given the pervasive partisan divide in Washington, D.C. |
APNewsBreak: Police say teacher acknowledged sex Posted: 04 Feb 2014 05:06 PM PST |
Facebook barrels ahead on 10th anniversary Posted: 04 Feb 2014 03:10 PM PST |
Bill Clinton was Leno's top 'Tonight' target Posted: 04 Feb 2014 02:23 PM PST |
A look back at the allegations against Woody Allen Posted: 04 Feb 2014 03:16 PM PST NEW YORK (AP) — "Cries and Whispers: The Ugly Explosion of an Unconventional Family," announced the Aug. 31, 1992, cover of Time magazine, which bore Woody Allen's bespectacled face. The sordid saga involving Allen and erstwhile romantic partner Mia Farrow had indeed exploded into the public consciousness days earlier. The most sensational part: an allegation that the celebrated director had taken their adopted daughter Dylan, 7, into an attic-like space at Farrow's Connecticut home and molested her. |
Microsoft names cloud computing chief as next CEO Posted: 04 Feb 2014 04:20 PM PST |
U.K. admits to role in deadly 1984 India raid Posted: 04 Feb 2014 05:45 AM PST |
Afghanistan's Karzai in secret talks with Taliban Posted: 04 Feb 2014 06:56 AM PST By Hamid Shalizi KABUL (Reuters) - Afghan President Hamid Karzai has been holding secret talks with Taliban officials in the hope of persuading them to make peace with his government, his spokesman told Reuters on Tuesday, confirming a New York Times report. "I can confirm that ... Taliban are willing more than ever to join the peace process," Aimal Faizi said. "Contacts have been made and we are also in touch with them." A member of Afghanistan's High Peace Council also confirmed that talks had taken place, but was measured in his assessment of their success. "Talks took place in Dubai three weeks ago between government officials and Taliban who flew from Doha, but we are still waiting to see the result," he told Reuters. |
Britain admits role in deadly 1984 Golden Temple attack in India Posted: 04 Feb 2014 08:55 AM PST By Andrew Osborn LONDON (Reuters) - Britain secretly helped India plan a deadly assault on Sikh separatists holed up in the Golden Temple at Amritsar in 1984, the government said on Tuesday, saying London's influence was limited and there was therefore no need for an apology. Prime Minister David Cameron ordered a review into the matter last month after the government inadvertently released official papers suggesting that Margaret Thatcher, then prime minister, had sent an officer from the elite SAS special air service to advise India on the raid. The unplanned release upset British Sikhs, whom Cameron is courting ahead of a national election in 2015, and in India it triggered nationalist criticism of the dynastic ruling Congress party, which faces an uphill struggle to be re-elected in a national vote due by May. Congress, under then-prime minister Indira Gandhi, was in power at the time of the raid on the Golden Temple, Sikhism's holiest shrine. |
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