WASHINGTON - Congress sent President Bush a bill Thursday forbidding employers and insurance companies from using genetic tests showing people are at risk of developing cancer, heart disease or other ailments to reject their job applications, promotions or health care coverage, or in setting premiums.
USA - TWO WORLDS HAVE COLLIDED: the one most of us live in and the separate reality long nurtured in remote enclaves by sects of Mormon fundamentalists.
USA - It's prime planting season in the U.S. corn belt, but farmers are sitting on the sidelines because weather conditions have been anything but ideal.
CHILE - A volcano has erupted in southern Chile, scattering ash over the surrounding area and forcing more than 1,000 people to leave their homes.
CALIFORNIA - Salmon fishing was banned along the West Coast for the first time in 160 years Thursday, a decision that is expected to have a devastating economic impact on fishermen, dozens of businesses, tourism and boating.
CALIFORNIA - Two parched years - punctuated by the driest spring in at least 150 years - could force districts across California to ration water this summer as policymakers and scientists grow increasingly concerned that the state is on the verge of a long-term drought.
NEW YORK - In the 1950s and 1960s, bunkers were a feature of many American suburban homes, populated by families fearful of the prospect of nuclear war. That threat has subsided, but now many reasonable people are stocking up on essential supplies in preparation for a new cataclysm.
WASHINGTON - The recipe for record US gasoline prices goes like this: Take a tight oil supply and growing world demand. Add a falling dollar and lots of investment money flowing into oil and other commodities.
NEW YORK - Vast amounts of money are flooding the world's commodities markets, driving up prices of staple foods like wheat and rice. Biofuels and droughts can't fully explain the recent food crisis - HEDGE FUNDS AND SMALL INVESTORS BEAR SOME RESPONSIBILITY FOR GLOBAL HUNGER.
GERMANY - May 1 is a traditional day of workers' unity rallies in Europe, but in Germany the day often brings clashes, particularly between anti-fascist leftists and neo-Nazis.
REDWOOD, MISSISSIPPI - Farmers here are experiencing water torture as they wait for the flooded Mississippi River to recede and give them a chance to salvage what's left of what might have been the best season in memory.
TEHRAN - Iran, OPEC's second-largest producer, has stopped conducting oil transactions in U.S. dollars, a top Oil Ministry official said Wednesday, in a concerted attempt to reduce reliance on Washington at a time of tension over Tehran's nuclear program and suspected involvement in Iraq.
JERUSALEM - President Shimon Peres did not invite Syrian President Bashar Assad to "Facing Tomorrow," the mega-conference he is organizing, which will be held in Jerusalem from May 13-15 in celebration of Israel's 60th anniversary - despite his belief in dialogue with adversaries.
BEIJING - China Thursday inaugurated one of the world's longest bridges, which will provide an important new route into Shanghai, state press said.
BEIJING - The new Terminal 3 at the airport in Beijing is twice the size of the Pentagon.