Pepperdine Coach Jim Harrick doesn't think his team's 90-65 drubbing by DePaul last week was all bad.
Defense Secretary Caspar W.
The center-right New Democracy Party of Constantine Mitsotakis ended its campaign Friday with a surprising display of strength and what appeared to be an even chance of toppling Greece's Socialist Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou in Sunday's election.
National security adviser Robert C.
U.S. business leaders voiced gloom Saturday over the nation's huge trade deficit.
Relatives of four of the six kidnaped Americans missing in Lebanon met for the first time with President Reagan on Monday and were assured that the United States would be willing to talk, but not negotiate, with those holding the captives.
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, in a television interview broadcast Sunday, accused the United States and Tunisia of colluding to have an Egyptian plane carrying the Achille Lauro hijackers forced down in Italy.
Are the Chicago Bears on the verge of becoming one of the NFL's elite or are they one-year wonders?
In a confusing round of budget rhetoric, Budget Director David A.
Saying that the Soviet Union "has not come clean" on the Chernobyl nuclear power plant disaster, Vice President George Bush said Monday that the Soviets' "stonewall" response has seriously damaged them in the eyes of the world.
Despite a massive restructuring last year and higher revenues this year, Fluor Corp. reported Friday that it continued to lose money in the second quarter and first six months of its fiscal year.
Concern that tourism to Britain this year would collapse because of fears of terrorism has been dwindling, and American tourism there could match last year's record levels, Assistant Employment Minister David Trippier said Tuesday.
President Hosni Mubarak met in Amman on Thursday with Jordan's King Hussein and strongly indicated that both Egypt and Jordan are anxious to revive the stalled efforts for peace in the Middle East.
The Soviet news agency Tass accused the United States on Tuesday of kidnaping and torturing KGB officer Vitaly Yurchenko in an "act of terrorism."
He has emerged like a sleeping vagrant from beneath a decorative mound of crumpled newspapers.
In an optimistic world report, Secretary of State George P.
Officials from the two state agencies required to license a proposed San Diego-to-Coronado ferry service indicated Wednesday that such approvals should be virtually automatic.
Gateway Communications Inc. on Monday reported net earnings of $251,957 during the first quarter, a quadruple increase from net earnings of $44,262 during the like period of 1985.
A South African official Saturday condemned as "protectionism dressed in morality" the sanctions approved Friday night by the U.S.
General Automation Inc., which has struggled for years to reverse its sliding fortunes, Tuesday confirmed Wall Street projections that it will post a profit of $540,000 to $810,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30--the company's first operating earnings in eight years.