USA - Married couples are in the minority in America for the first time. In last year's US census, married couples represented 48 per cent of all households, down from 52 per cent a decade earlier. Experts attributed the change to a fast-growing older population who are more likely to be divorced or widowed, and young people delaying marriage amid fears of not being able to hang on to a job and a shift away from having children at a young age.
EUROPE - Why is the euro in crisis? Because it was fundamentally flawed at its inception. Only good luck, strong economic growth and enlightened economic management could keep it together. In fact, the eurozone has had to suffer the opposite of all three.
MONTPELIER, VERMONT, USA - Violent weather swept across the Eastern seaboard overnight, dropping heavy rains that flooded towns from New England to Georgia, knocking out power and killing at least three people in the Atlanta area. Intense thunderstorms stalled over central Vermont, pushing rivers over their banks and ripping up streets. About 200 people were forced from their homes.
ATHENS, GREECE - European leaders are negotiating a deal that would lead to unprecedented outside intervention in the Greek economy, including international involvement in tax collection and privatisation of state assets, in exchange for new bail-out loans for Athens.
USA - The forecast for the summer driving season: Hit the road early. Not to beat the traffic, but to beat the higher gas prices expected in mid-July. Goldman Sachs' crystal ball is proclaiming that oil will soon soar to $135 a barrel, and likely have service stations jacking up fuel prices to $5 a gallon in New York just like the summer of 2008 that preceded the recession.
CATARINA, TEXAS, USA - Until last year, the 17-mile stretch of road between this forsaken South Texas village and the county seat of Carrizo Springs was a patchwork of derelict gasoline stations and rusting warehouses. Now the region is in the hottest new oil play in the country, with giant oil terminals and sprawling RV parks replacing fields of mesquite. More than a dozen companies plan to drill up to 3,000 wells around here in the next 12 months.
GERMANY - The death toll in Germany from an outbreak of E.coli caused by infected cucumbers has risen to at least 10. The cucumbers, believed to have been imported from Spain, were contaminated with E.coli which left people ill with hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS). Hundreds of people are said to have fallen sick.
USA - Some consumers are concerned that such foods may pose health risks and say manufacturers should be required to identify them for consumers. When a team of activists wearing white hazmat suits showed up at a Chicago grocery store to protest the sale of genetically modified foods, they picked an unlikely target: Whole Foods Market.
USA - A day is coming when the rest of the world will decide that it no longer has faith in US dollars or in US debt. When that day arrives, the game will be over. Traditionally, two of the biggest things that the US economy has had going for it were the US dollar and US Treasuries. The US dollar has been the default reserve currency of the world for decades.
WORLD - Miriam Gonzales, partner at the world's largest law firm, DLA Piper, and former European Union negotiator at the World Trade Organisation (WTO) for the then trade commissioner, Leon Brittan, told The Telegraph that the drawn-out negotiations were in danger of running into the sand.
UK - Britain faces a bleak time for the next two years as a result of feeble economic growth, one of the Bank of England's most senior officials warned on Friday night. Spencer Dale, the Bank's chief economist, said households would need to consume less and he indicated that interest rates would rise this year.
SAUDI ARABIA - Britain is training Saudi Arabia's national guard - the elite security force deployed during the recent protests in Bahrain - in public order enforcement measures and the use of sniper rifles. The revelation has outraged human rights groups, which point out that the Foreign Office recognises that the kingdom's human rights record is "a major concern".
UK - Human rights are a threat to free speech. This has never been clearer, since the breathtaking attempt by the judges to gag the reporting of Parliament. What sort of mind comes up with this tyrannical idea, and sees it as an acceptable price to pay for covering up the misdeeds of nauseatingly rich celebrities?
AFRICA - Lavish aid to Africa is turning the continent into a 'spoilt child', according to the head of a charity backed by Nelson Mandela. Mike Kendrick, founder of the respected Mineseeker Foundation, warned that aid often increased the hardship faced by the world's poorest people.
USA - Congress has defied the law to approve a federal budget since 2009, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is in no hurry to prepare one again, he says. "There's no need to have a Democratic budget, in my opinion," Reid told the Los Angeles Times. "It would be foolish for us to do a budget at this stage."