NORTHERN IRELAND - Professor Richard Lynn, emeritus professor of psychology at Ulster University, said many more members of the "intellectual elite" considered themselves atheists than the national average.
LONDON - The health of America's banks continues to worsen, with lending to real estate developers an emerging threat and more failures in the offing.
BEIJING, CHINA - Foreigners attending the Beijing Olympics better behave - or else.
WASHINGTON - The House has voted to send articles of impeachment against President Bush to a committee that is not likely to hold hearings before the end of his term.
VANCOUVER, CANADA - A couple of years ago, a Canadian magazine published an article arguing that the rise of Islam threatened Western values.
NEW YORK - A top Italian real estate investor has nabbed a crown piece of New York property, a sale that echoes the Japanese purchase of Rockefeller Center in 1989. Valter Mainetti has confirmed to TIME that his company, the Sorgente Group, has acquired a majority share of Manhattan's historic Flatiron building.
NEW YORK - The latest Big Apple trophy being coveted by oil-rich sovereign wealth funds is the landmark Chrysler Building.
AUSTRALIA - The world's largest cattle ranch has been forced to sell off its livestock and mothball operations because of the severe drought gripping much of Australia.
VATICAN - The Vatican has created an anti-terrorist unit in order to guard the Holy See and the pope from a possible attack.
MADRID - Protests over rising fuel prices have spread across the globe. Spanish authorities got tough as the trucker strike entered its third day, deploying riot police to lift blockades at the border with France and clear roads around the capital.
DETROIT - Airlines are scrutinizing every step of their operations, from the tarmac to the sky, and from the nose to the tail of their planes, searching for new ways to cut their soaring fuel bills.
BRUSSELS - The European Commission is to start disciplinary proceedings against the UK for breaching its economic rules. It says Britain's budget deficit, the gap between what it spends and what it borrows, is growing too large.
LONDON - The ICM opinion poll for Global Vision, the Eurosceptic campaign group, found that among people who want to remain in the EU, a majority would like Britain to opt out of political and economic union, and restrict itself to links based on trade and co-operation.
NEW YORK - Fresh off of the 2008 Bilderberg Meeting, it looks as if New York Federal Reserve president Timothy Geithner is set to push a new agenda in the world of central banking that was likely decided upon at Bilderberg.
INDIANA, USA - In a year when global harvests need to be excellent to ease the threat of pervasive food shortages, evidence is mounting that they will be average at best. Some farmers are starting to fear disaster.