Christian Science Monitor
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Berliners welcome Obama as they did JFK

Thu Jul 24, 5:00 AM ET

Berlin - The centerpiece of Barack Obama's overseas tour comes Thursday in Berlin when the Democratic presidential candidate gives the only public foreign policy speech of his trip to an Obama-mad crowd of Germans who see him as another John F. Kennedy. He's in a country and a continent making no secret it is ready for change.

  • Why women now lead the dissident fight in Cuba Thu Jul 24, 5:00 AM ET

    Campo de Florido, Cuba - In the past year, Nereida Rodriguez Rivero says she has been punched in the mouth, almost thrown from a moving bus, and stabbed on the street in her otherwise sleepy rural hometown.

  • A man steps under power lines outside his home that was destroyed by high winds July 23 in Port Isabel, Texas. One person was killed as storm Dolly dumped rain over Texas and Mexico after pummeling the coast as a hurricane and threatening to trigger more floods even as it weakened into a tropical depression.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Dave Einsel)
    Hurricane season: big start Fri Jul 25, 4:00 AM ET

    As the remnant of hurricane Dolly creeps toward far northern Mexico, the 2008 Atlantic hurricane season already is generating buzz as hurricane specialists look at July's unusually high level of activity.

  • Finding a welcome home for used books Fri Jul 25, 4:00 AM ET

    Amherst, Mass. - It all started with a stack of books that needed a home.

  • An oil rig south of town extracts crude on July 21, 2008 in Taft, California.(AFP/Getty Images/File/David Mcnew)
    Fuel cost now driving up electric bills Fri Jul 25, 4:00 AM ET

    New York - Rising energy prices are now squeezing consumers from a different direction: their utility bills.

  • Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., greets audience members seated on the stage during a campaign stop at the F.M. Kirby Center in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Wednesday, July 23, 2008. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
    McCain camp cries foul Thu Jul 24, 4:00 AM ET

    Washington - In a campaign week dominated by Barack Obama's trip abroad, the pro-John McCain camp has made headlines by complaining about coverage of Senator Obama's trip abroad.

  • In this May 2, 2007 file photo, the Fannie Mae building in Washington is seen. Rescue legislation sailed through the House Wednesday, July 23, 2008, aimed at helping 400,000 strapped homeowners avoid foreclosure and to prevent troubled mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from collapsing. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, file)
    Rising costs of financial turmoil Thu Jul 24, 4:00 AM ET

    Accountants for Congress this week put a $25 billion price tag on the federal rescue of two companies that anchor US mortgage markets, but that's just the tip of a potential iceberg of taxpayer costs for America's banking mess.

  • Etc. Thu Jul 24, 4:00 AM ET

    We're delighted you chose usFrom Wales comes word that the Coray family is back home again from their vacation trip.

  • USA Thu Jul 24, 4:00 AM ET

    California wildfires, which once numbered 2,000 in the past month, are down to 33, according to state officials, who cautioned that fire danger remains high in some rural areas. Meanwhile, the Union Pacific Railroad Co. agreed to pay $102 million for damages that occurred from a fire in 2000 sparked by a company welder who was repairing track.

  • Cuba under Raúl: Creeping toward capitalism? Wed Jul 23, 5:00 AM ET

    Havana - A handful of Cubans are taking turns doing bicep curls and pedaling on stationary bikes. At first glance, there's nothing extraordinary about this nameless gym in the basement of a Havana apartment complex.

  • Karadzic arrest boosts Balkans, international justice Wed Jul 23, 4:00 AM ET

    Paris - The arrest in Belgrade of Radovan Karadzic, political mastermind of the Bosnian genocide, is a clear indication of new Serb president Boris Tadic's intent to integrate his state with Europe, stabilizing an isolated and difficult country and a fragile region, experts say.

  • How one vet's persistence paid off Wed Jul 23, 4:00 AM ET

    It was an average-looking letter that landed in Paul Weaver's mailbox. But bearing news that his veteran's disability benefits had been stopped, it felt more like a ton of crashing bricks.

  • A city locked out of its own data network Wed Jul 23, 4:00 AM ET

    Oakland, Calif. - It sounds like a plot from Hollywood: A team of techies is busily trying to crack passwords to get access to parts of San Francisco's computer network. They are doing so at the direction of city officials, who have discovered that they are locked out of parts of their new multimillion-dollar system.

  • Holy man, secular plan: clean up the River Ganges Tue Jul 22, 5:00 AM ET

    VARANASI, INDIA - Most mornings, as the sun steals over the Ganges, Veer Bhadra Mishra takes a dip in India's holiest river. As high priest of a Hindu temple, it is his solemn duty. But as a scientist, the ritual is profoundly discomforting.

  • In this July 16, 2008 file photo, Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., speaks to panelists at a roundtable discussion on nuclear non-proliferation at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind. When Barack Obama brings his road show to Israel and the Palestinian territories this week, he'll find starstruck admirers, but also plenty of skeptical locals wondering whether this political neophyte has what it takes to finally nail down a solution to the Mideast's longest-running conflict. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)
    Barack who? Arabs weigh in Tue Jul 22, 4:00 AM ET

    Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - Several copies of Barack Obama's "The Audacity of Hope" are prominently displayed in Jarir Bookstore here. They have not moved in weeks.

  • A sign advertising a reduced price is seen in front of a home for sale in Richmond, California. Large-scale government intervention in the US housing crisis would be counterproductive and prevent a "necessary" correction in home prices, according to a Federal Reserve study released Monday.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Justin Sullivan)
    A housing rescue nears – but for whom? Tue Jul 22, 4:00 AM ET

    Washington - As Congress heads into a critical week of votes on how to relieve America's home-foreclosure crisis, one of the toughest issues will be how to deal with the racial and ethnic dimensions of the problem.

  • A combination photo shows presidential candidate Senator John McCain (L) during a speech in Las Vegas, Nevada, June 25, 2008 and presidential candidate Barack Obama (R) during a town hall-style meeting in Detroit June 2, 2008. REUTERS/Steve Marcus/Jason Reed
    Picking a No. 2 in the glare of the Internet age Tue Jul 22, 4:00 AM ET

    Washington - Time was when a presumptive presidential nominee could sit back and quietly ponder his options for a running mate without a daily deluge of media speculation and reports of suspected preening by vice presidential wannabes.

  • Obama and McCain diverge on Israeli-Palestinian conflict Mon Jul 21, 5:00 AM ET

    WASHINGTON - When Barack Obama stops in Jerusalem and Ramallah this week – as part of an overseas trip designed to reassure the American electorate about the presumptive Democratic nominee's national security credentials – he'll be wading into the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

  • How a feisty Florida town fends off malls Mon Jul 21, 5:00 AM ET

    EVERGLADES CITY, Fla. - A fisherman turned drug smuggler turned retired old salt, Floyd Brown claims he can find his way back here – one of the last Florida frontiers – without a compass from anywhere in the Gulf of Mexico. It's a skill, he says, he put to use more than once when he ferried bales of marijuana from Latin America to the Shark River in the 1970s.

  • The 2008 economic stimulus checks are printed at the Kansas City Regional Financial Center in Kansas City, Missouri, May 8, 2008. (Dave Kaup/Reuters)
    Economic stimulus, Part 2? Mon Jul 21, 4:00 AM ET

    No one can remember the last time Congress enacted two major economic stimulus packages in one year. But 2008 may see a sequel to the $100 billion worth of checks that started filling individuals' bank accounts in early spring.

  • The spread of bans on driving while texting Mon Jul 21, 4:00 AM ET

    Los Angeles - The California legislator who championed the state's ban on using hand-held cellphones while driving has a new target: text messaging at the wheel.

  • Historic first terror trial opens at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba Mon Jul 21, 4:00 AM ET

    Osama bin Laden's former driver is scheduled to stand trial on Monday in the first war crimes tribunal at America's terrorist prison camp at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.

  • From noses to hips, Rwandans start to redefine beauty Fri Jul 18, 4:00 AM ET

    Butare, Rwanda - Sandra Uwimbabazi knows runways – she's modeled for years – but she stumbled on a recent Saturday here.

  • How much federal help for housing? Fri Jul 18, 4:00 AM ET

    Trouble at two linchpin mortgage companies is forcing Congress to consider a quick rescue package and in the process reviving an ideological debate about the US government's role in the housing market.

  • Fuel costs strain U.S. mass transit, too Fri Jul 18, 4:00 AM ET

    Los Angeles - At 8:34 a.m. the sleek Metrolink train from Oceanside, Calif., swept into Los Angeles's historic Union Station, disgorging a rush of commuters. Some pulled briefcases on wheels, others hefted backpacks, blending seamlessly with bus and subway passengers pressing through the terminal's sunlit corridor.

  • Judge allows Hamdan military trial to go forward Fri Jul 18, 4:00 AM ET

    A federal judge in Washington has refused to halt the war crimes trial of Osama bin Laden's former driver.

  • Does new S.A.T. help with admissions decisions? Thu Jul 17, 5:00 AM ET

    For the past three years, when high school students have hit the SAT prep books, that's included a tuneup for a writing section. For colleges trying to predict student performance, the new test has been: (a) helpful, (b) not helpful, (c) both of the above, or d) don't know.

  • Guantánamo video, deserter case draw Canadian criticism of U.S. ties Thu Jul 17, 4:00 AM ET

    Toronto - At a glance, they look like unrelated events unfolding thousands of miles apart and yet, they're both windows into Canada's passive partnership with the US in the war on terror.

  • Palestinian mourners gather around the bodies of five Hamas militants and and a six year-old girl during their funeral at the Al Omare Mosque in Gaza City,Saturday, July 26, 2008. A powerful explosion ripped through a car on a busy Gaza City beach Friday night, killing five Hamas militants and Safady and injuring 20, Hamas security officials said. It was the third mysterious blast of the day in Gaza after a relatively calm period that has followed a cease-fire between Israel and the territory's Islamic Hamas rulers. Hamas security arrested dozens of supporters of the rival Fatah group Saturday, and hurled grenades at the home of one Fatah leader and set up checkpoints across Gaza, Palestinian sources said. (AP Photo / Hatem Moussa)
    Israelis uneasy over prisoner release Thu Jul 17, 4:00 AM ET

    JERUSALEM and NAHARIYA, ISRAEL - Israel received two black coffins on Wednesday containing the remains of the soldiers abducted in a Hezbollah raid at Israel's northern border two summers ago – a surprise attack whose aftereffects are still reverberating.