Secretary of State George P.
The Reagan Administration projected Monday that the sputtering economy would pick up steam and grow at the robust rate of 4% a year through 1988 after adjustment for inflation.
The stock market celebrated Columbus Day with a broad rally Monday that carried the Dow Jones industrial average to a 2 1/2-month high.
Exclusive Deals & Coupons. We value our customers, so offering lucrative discounts to them! Save 10
Zulu Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi, one of South Africa's most powerful black moderates, said today that the slaying of a supporter's wife shows that a civil war has begun among blacks.
Is Hollywood milking the same cow too many times?
President Reagan asserted today that his bid to provide $100 million in aid to Nicaraguan rebels is a test of whether Congress "is as committed to democracy in Nicaragua . . . as it was in the Philippines."
The Los Angeles Games are long gone, but there is still an Olympic flame burning inside Tom Hicks.
The already rocky road to success for young classical musicians is about to get rockier.
Soviet leader Mikhail S.
An Energy Department official said today he does not expect fallout from the Soviet nuclear accident to be a serious concern to Americans when it reaches the United States.
The growing shortage of priests in the United States will force Roman Catholic parishes to merge or use more lay people, the president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops said Tuesday.
President Reagan today branded Iran, Libya, North Korea, Cuba and Nicaragua as partners in a terrorist network "now engaged in acts of war" against the United States, and declared that America "has the right to defend itself."
Saying "I do not know my fate tomorrow," South Korean opposition leader Kim Dae Jung warned today of possible anti-government disturbances if the government tries to put him under house arrest upon his return to Seoul.
Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi told the Indian Parliament on Monday that there is a foreign link to the wave of Sikh terrorist bombings in India that killed more than 75 people over the weekend.
By the time pay-TV czar Michael Fuchs had finished his luncheon speech Tuesday, it seemed that the otherwise unidentifiable fowl on his luncheon plate might have been a healthy portion of crow.
In a white-washed building that once housed offices of Germany's World War II Luftwaffe, Defense Secretary Caspar W.
Muffed volleys and dimly lit indoor courts didn't alert Martina Navratilova that she needed glasses.
White House reporters, some of whom are experienced at making President Reagan see red, used the color to catch his eye--and attention--at his news conference Thursday night.
A strip of greenery along the city's main street mobilized citizens who donated money for its planting to demand that the City Council do something to prevent its death.