Thirty life-sized insects invaded an art gallery in Payne City, but they weren't there to sting or bite. The pesky bugs were sculptures of junk and scrap, designed to promote recycling programs.
For more than 60 years, a Confederate uniform that belonged to an ancestor of former President Jimmy Carter has languished in a cardboard box because of an unusual will.
Bob Oneschuk crossed the border from Canada to take a shot at winning Tuesday night's $153 million Big Game lottery jackpot -- and he bought 226 of the one-dollar tickets in Detroit.
Charles Howell The Third has been dreaming about playing in the Masters since he first picked up a club. What makes him different from other rookies at Augusta National is that he never dreamed of anything else.
Executives of one of Kmart Corp.'s business partners say the financially troubled retailer may close as many as 700 more stores nationwide on top of the nearly 300 closings announced last month, according to court papers made public Monday.
Christian leaders called on Israel to leave this biblical city after a gunbattle and fire erupted Monday around the Church of the Nativity, site of a weeklong standoff between Israeli soldiers and armed Palestinians that appeared to be straining delciate
The United States and Yemen have reached a deal to allow U.S. warships to resume refueling in the Yemeni port where the USS Cole was attacked nearly 19 months ago, officials said Monday.
Alaska Airlines was the highest-ranked of 11 airlines in 2001, according to a study by Brent Bowen of the University of Nebraska at Omaha and Dean Headley of Wichita State University.
Staggered by a rapid loss of business from the Enron scandal, Arthur Andersen LLP announced Monday it is laying off about 7,000 employees or more than a quarter of its U.S. work force.