President Obama speaks in the White House Rose Garden to discuss the death of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.
President Obama said Moammar Gadhafi's death marks the end of a long and painful chapter for the Libyan people. The seven-month military campaign that toppled the Libyan leader also marks a high point for the kind of international cooperation that Obama has championed.
The White House was careful Thursday not to claim vindication for the president's policies, but the Libyan exercise does offer an example of what an "Obama Doctrine" might look like.
Venezuela's Hugo Chavez says he is free of cancer
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has said he is free of cancer after returning from Cuba for health checks following four cycles of chemotherapy.
He travelled to the island four months ago to have surgery for cancer there.
"Everything went perfectly. I got top marks, 20 out of 20," he told reporters.
Mr Chavez had previously described his treatment as successful. But secrecy about his illness fuelled speculation it may be worse than officially stated.
The 57-year-old leader, who has been in power since 1999, says his illness will not stop him from standing for re-election next year.
Herman Cain on abortion: "I'm 100% pro-life. End of story," he tweeted.
GOP presidential hopeful Herman Cain is trying to tamp down controversy over his comments about abortion.
"I'm 100% pro-life. End of story," he tweeted.
Cain's comment in a CNN interview that decisions about abortion should be left to women and their families raised eyebrows and drew a rebuke from rival Rick Santorum.
Expert says Michael Jackson was too heavily drugged to self-administer the drug propofol
LOS ANGELES — Michael Jackson was so heavily drugged in the hours before his death that he would have been incapable of self-administering the massive dose of propofol that killed him, a medical expert testified Thursday at the trial of Jackson’s doctor.
Dr. Steven Shafer, who presented a number of possible scenarios for Jackson’s overdose, said one posed by Dr. Conrad Murray’s defense — that the star gave himself the powerful anesthetic — is “crazy.”
Libya’s Gaddafi Reportedly Killed in Sirte
Moamer Kadhafi was captured as his hometown of Sirte was falling on Thursday, a National Transitional council Commander said, adding that the ousted Libyan strongman was badly wounded.
Je has been captured. He is badly wounded but he s still breathing,” Mohamed Leith told AFP, adding that he has seen Kadhafi himself and that he was wearing a kaki uniform and turban.
Libyan TV channel “Libya lil Ahrar” also said that he was in custody.
In Sirte, medics said the defense minister in Kadhafi’s ousted regime, Abu Bakr Yunis, has been killed in the final battle for the strongman’s hometown.
Computers Rig Elections: Programmer Under-Oath
In a sworn-oath deposition, a software programmer testifies that US elections are rigged and that US Representatives tried to pay him to rig their election vote counts.
Fishburne narrates film on black Southern workers
Laurence Fishburne is the narrator for an upcoming PBS documentary on black workers in the post-slavery South.
The film, titled "Slavery by Another Name," is based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning book by Douglas A. Blackmon.
PBS on Thursday announced Fishburne's role as narrator of the documentary that will debut Feb. 13, 2012, on public TV stations nationwide.
"Slavery by Another Name" examines the labor practices and laws "that effectively created new forms of slavery" after emancipation, subjecting blacks to brutal forced work, according to the filmmakers.
'King Corn' - Extended Clip from Independent Documentary
If you live in the United States long enough, most of the
carbon atoms in your body will be derived from corn, as
demonstrated in the first scene of this clip.
As University of Virginia professor, Steve Macko explains,
this carbon doesn’t come from eating corn-on-the-cob, it comes
mostly from the many chemically-engineered, corn-based


