A tiny personal computer that is worn on the ear and can be controlled with the blink of an eye or the click of a tongue is being tested in Japan.
Major steps to reform State-owned enterprises will be taken after the four-day Third Plenum of the Communist Party of China's 18th Central Committee, which started on Saturday.
Three carriages of a train carrying hazardous chemical adiponitrile ran off the rails on Monday morning in Hefei, East China's Anhui province.
China on Tuesday issued a white paper on Tibet, detailing its comprehensive development and rapid progress in the past 60-odd years.
China's riot police squad, as part of 140 policemen sent by the Chinese government, will leave for Liberia to take part in the United Nations peacekeeping mission for eight months.
The chance of making Li Na's first semi-final appearance at the WTA Championships worked out to be decent.
A teacher was shot dead and two students were wounded when a student opened fire at a middle school in the northern Nevada city of Sparks on Monday before taking his own life.
A proposed draft amendment to the Environmental Protection Law would make it easier for agencies to file public interest lawsuits against polluters.
A plan to reform gaokao, or China's college entrance examination, in Beijing has divided experts, who disagree on whether placing less emphasis on English-language skills is a good idea.
A live-fire military drill called Mission Action-2013B was staged on the east coast, characterized by new power such as electronic warfare, network attacks and defense.
Police in South China's Dongguan city are looking into the case of the Beijing airport bomber, allegedly beaten by security officers.
Premier Li assured Monday that China's economy will have "a good ending" in 2013, which will enable it to have "a promising beginning" for 2014.
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