|
Most popular news on 10 June 2009 |
Long-lost World War II sub found off Swedish coast Lighthouse keeper J.A. Eckerman was the last person to see World War II Soviet submarine S-2 before it sank in January 1940 between Sweden and Finland.
2 dead, 1 missing after Slim Jim plant explosion Two people were found dead and a third person is still believed missing in a North Carolina food plant heavily damaged in a morning explosion, police said Tuesday night.
Obama proposes making 'pay-as-you-go' the law President Obama on Tuesday proposed making "pay-as-you-go" rules for federal spending into law.
Adam Lambert: I'm 'proud of my sexuality' "American Idol" runner-up Adam Lambert confirmed publicly what he assumed everyone already knew: He is gay.
Total of 41 bodies recovered from Air France 447 crash Forty-one bodies have been recovered from the crash of Air France Flight 447, the Brazilian Navy Command and Aeronautical Command said Tuesday.
Owners of day care that burned quit government jobs Two of the owners of the day-care center that burned Friday, killing 44 children, have resigned jobs they had with the government, they told reporters Tuesday.
Picasso sketchbook vanishes from locked case in Paris A Pablo Picasso sketchbook with 33 pencil drawings disappeared from a locked glass case in a museum in Paris overnight, the French Ministry of Culture announced Tuesday.
Hariri 'will not shy away' from Lebanese PM post Saad Hariri is poised to follow in his father's footsteps and become Lebanon's next prime minister, a position he said he "will not shy away from."
'Unabomber' fights plans to auction his possessions Convicted "Unabomber" Ted Kaczynski, who terrorized the country with a series of mail bombs over nearly two decades, is fighting to stop a public auction of his diaries and other personal possessions.
English getting its millionth word Wednesday? English contains more words than any other language on the planet and will add its millionth word early Wednesday, according to the Global Language Monitor, a Web site that uses a math formula to estimate how often words are created.
|