An Afghan National Army soldier keeps watch near the Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) as a NATO helicopter flies over the site of an attack in Jalalabad province April 15, 2012. REUTERS/Parwiz

Multiple attacks hit Kabul in Taliban "spring offensive"

KABUL - Gunmen launched multiple attacks in the Afghan capital Kabul, assaulting Western embassies in the heavily guarded, central diplomatic area and at the parliament in the west.  Full Article 

Clashes in Syria as U.N. ceasefire monitors due 9:34am EDT

BEIRUT - Syrian government forces shelled the city of Homs on Sunday, resident opposition activists and a rights activist said, as a six-person advance party of U.N. observers is due to arrive in Syria to monitor a ceasefire meant to start four days ago. | Video

This "blue marble” image is the most detailed true-color image of the entire Earth to date, March 30, 2007. REUTERS/NASA Goddard Space Flight Center/Handout

Law could boost creationism, climate denial

A new Tennessee law protects teachers who explore the "scientific weaknesses" of evolution and climate change, a move science education advocates say could make it easier for creationism and global warming denial to enter classrooms.  Full Article 

A general view of the dock in East Belfast where the Titanic was built. January 17, 2012. REUTERS/Cathal McNaughton

Belfast embraces Titanic as symbol of revival

BELFAST - For much of the century since the Titanic sank, the doomed liner has been taboo in Belfast, a reminder of industrial failure and sectarian division in the city where it was built. Now Northern Ireland sees the ship as a symbol of one-time industrial might.  Full Article 

Palestinians wait to fill containers with fuel outside a petrol station in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, April 10, 2012. REUTERS/ Ibraheem Abu Mustafa

Palestinian Authority blames Gaza for deficit

RAMALLAH, West Bank - The deficit-racked Palestinian Authority says it has poured around $7 billion into the Gaza Strip since its political rival Hamas seized control in 2007, but complains that the Islamist group is stymieing its efforts to balance its books.  Full Article 

Women work in the Kim Jong-suk Pyongyang Silk Mill in Pyongyang April 9, 2012. REUTERS/Bobby Yip

Slideshow: Inside North Korea

A group of journalists was allowed into North Korea to report on celebrations for the country's founding president, Kim Il-sung. Here are some rare scenes from within the reclusive state.  Slideshow | Slideshow 

David Rohde

How Obama and Romney can up their middle-class game

A deeply shaken American middle class is yearning for honest debate and realistic approaches to the country's economic and fiscal dilemmas. Both campaigns can – and must – do better.   Full Article 

John Lloyd

As elections approach, France contemplates a bonfire

From the results of the French election, we should see something of central interest and concern to our times, with an import far beyond France. We’ll see how mad people are, and how deeply (or not) they feel they should accept their current struggles.  Commentary 

Chrystia Freeland

The rise of lousy and lovely jobs

A new study concludes that when the economy recovers, jobs in the middle won’t. This jobs polarization isn’t a slow, evolutionary process. Instead, it happens in short, sharp bursts.  Commentary 

Joanne Doroshow

The secretive corporate outfit behind ‘Stand Your Ground’

The shooting of Trayvon Martin has put a spotlight on the American Legislative Exchange Council, a powerful but little-known lobby group. We shouldn’t lose sight of the breadth of ALEC’s damage around the country.  Commentary 

Deval Patrick

Romney should be proud of Massachusetts health law

Six years after its passage, our experiment in universal healthcare is working, expanding coverage while helping to control costs. Mitt Romney should be proud of the law he signed. As the one responsible for implementing it, I know I am.   Commentary 

Douglas S. Massey

America loses as many illegal immigrants as it gains

Illegal migration from Mexico has fallen to a net zero, and the undocumented population is no longer growing – though this does not likely have anything to do with border enforcement. The issue is what to do with the well-rooted 11 million already here.  Commentary 

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