JERUSALEM, ISRAEL - On her first visit to Jerusalem, the former Alaska governor lamented that Jews can't pray openly at the Temple Mount. "Why are you apologizing all the time?" Palin asked the Israelis who took her and husband Todd on a tour of the sacred site, the Jerusalem Post reported.
UK - A little bit of inflation is a good thing, right? Well, that's one way of looking at it, and if you were being charitable, it might even provide a decent explanation of why the Bank of England appears to have given up on the inflation target.
USA - Warren Buffett told CNBC Thursday that the collapse of the euro zone's single currency is far from "unthinkable." "I know some people think it's unthinkable... I don't think it's unthinkable," Buffett said in an interview.
JORDAN - A group of nearly 50 loyalists hurled stones at Jordanian students in a protest camp set up in Amman Thursday night, leaving several injured, as security forces stood by, witnesses told AFP. Around 500 young people from different movements, including the powerful Islamist opposition, had braved rain and cold weather to to call for "regime" reforms and putting the corrupt on trial.
USA/MIDDLE EAST - Syria should follow Egypt's lead and the Syrian army should "empower a revolution", Robert Gates, US secretary of defence, argued as thousands marched in a southern city. Mr Gates made his comments - some of the toughest remarks to date by a US official about the rule of Bashar al-Assad, Syria's president - on a day of further upheaval in the Middle East and beyond.
ISRAEL - As missile fire from the Gaza Strip escalated on Thursday, the IDF is preparing for the possible deployment of the Iron Dome counter-rocket defense system along Israel's border with Gaza. In late February, the Israeli Air Force held a test of the counter-rocket defense system, Iron Dome, which was supposed to serve as the final stage before declaring the system operational.
BURMA - More than 50 people have died in a magnitude 6.8 earthquake in Burma which struck near the Lao and Thai borders.
CONCORD, NEW HAMPSHIRE, USA - The New Hampshire Supreme Court upheld a lower court order Wednesday that sided with the father of a homeschooled student and forced her into a government-run school against her Christian mother's wishes. The court made clear that it was not addressing larger religious liberty and homeschooling concerns and was basing its ruling only on the narrow and specific facts of the case.
BURMA/MYANMAR - An earthquake measuring 6.8 on the Richter scale struck Burma today, killing one woman and shaking buildings hundreds of miles away in Bangkok. The quake hit along Burma's borders with Thailand and Laos, about 70 miles from Chiang Rai, and was followed by two smaller aftershocks, 4.8 and 5.4 in magnitude.
TEXAS, USA - The worst Texas drought in 44 years is damaging the state's wheat crop and forcing ranchers to reduce cattle herds, as rising demand for US food sends grain and meat prices higher. Texas, the biggest US cattle producer and second-largest winter-wheat grower, got just 4.7 inches (12 centimeters) of rain on average in the five months through February, the least for the period since 1967, State Climatologist John Nielsen-Gammon said.
YANGON, MYANMAR - Two strong quakes of magnitude 7.0 struck northeast Myanmar, close to the Thai and Laotian borders, the US Geological Survey reported on Thursday.
UK - British taxpayers could be forced to pay 3 billion pounds to rescue the Portuguese economy after the collapse of austerity talks in Lisbon last night. A massive bail-out from the European Union now looks like the only option - with the UK unable to abstain despite not being in the eurozone, according to the Open Europe think-tank.
UK - Chancellor George Osborne said on Thursday that the European situation was unstable because of debts and deficits, but Britain had a credible plan to help keep interest rates down. "The European situation is unstable as you can see with what is happening in Portugal, and this is because of debts and deficits," he told Sky News television.
PORTUGAL - Portuguese Prime Minister Jose Socrates submitted his resignation Wednesday after parliament rejected his minority Socialist government's latest austerity measures. The rejection "had taken away from the government all conditions to govern," Socrates said in a televised statement. He said his government would remain in power in a caretaker capacity.
USA - Two years ago, George Soros said he wanted to reorganize the entire global economic system. In two short weeks, he is going to start - and no one seems to have noticed. The left-wing billionaire's own experts dominate quiet push for 'a grand bargain that rearranges the entire financial order.'