It seemed too good to be true: An old wooden desk carved with the initials "JFK" from the private school in Connecticut where John F. Kennedy studied as a boy.
Puppies bark and wag their tails as they follow a gray-haired woman through a hillside compound that shelters more than 200 dogs.
Police in Australia investigating threatening phone calls that led to the evacuation of more than 30 schools in recent days said on Wednesday they suspected the hoax calls originated overseas and were part of a sophisticated hacking system.
The first known case of Zika virus transmission in the United States has been reported in Texas by local health officials, who said it likely was contracted through sex and not a mosquito bite, after the World Health Organization declared an international public health emergency.
A small Australian maker of bug sprays became an unlikely beneficiary of the mosquito-borne Zika virus outbreak this week when the country's Olympic team signed it up as its first official insect repellent sponsor.
US Air Force officials and Boeing engineers have started the yearslong process of replacing Air Force One, the legendary aircraft that whisks the president of the United States and his entourage around the world.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe confirmed on Wednesday his intentions to amend a key clause of Japan's Constitution that would further broaden the operational scope of the nation's Self-Defense Forces, following the passage of controversial legislation last year.
Comedian Bill Cosby on Tuesday sought to derail Pennsylvania prosecutors' effort to make him stand trial on sexual assault charges, contending that a deal reached over a decade ago gave him immunity from prosecution.
Concern over the Zika virus linked to birth defects in the Americas widened across the world on Tuesday, as several nations identified new cases or announced a state of emergency in the wake of the World Health Organization's declaration of a global health crisis over the virus' explosive spread.
One hundred more South Koreans who claim they were duped into forced labor by Japanese companies during World War II joined a pending class action lawsuit against those companies on Tuesday. The initial suit by 1,004 individuals was filed in April.
Phillip Yin, a Bellevue, Washington, resident and Yakima native, is running for lieutenant governor of Washington state as a Republican.
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