AP - Doris Smith went downtown early Monday to see about getting tickets to Barack Obama's rally. Advance seats were sold out, she said, and the only option was to stand in line for up two hours or more and hope for the best.
AP - Tiger Woods is chipping and putting again, and he hopes to play in the Memorial in two weeks. But even if he can't compete until the U.S. Open, he doesn't expect the same result as his last layoff during a season.
AP - Jimmy Fallon's eighth-grade yearbook at St. Mary of the Snow in Saugerties, N.Y., listed him as "most likely to take over for David Letterman." Letterman's not going anywhere, but close enough: Fallon is succeeding Conan O'Brien as the host of NBC's "Late Night" sometime in the middle of next year.
Reuters - An earthquake devastated
southwestern China, killing close to 10,000 people and trapping
hundreds of others under schools, factories and houses while
the worst-hit area was still cut off from rescuers on Tuesday.
Reuters - Iran's judiciary said on Monday it would
file international lawsuits against the United States and
Britain, accusing them of providing financial support to those
behind a blast in a mosque that killed 14 people.
Reuters - Cablevision Systems Corp has
sealed a $650 million deal to buy the Long Island daily
newspaper Newsday from Tribune Co, but analysts doubt the cable
company can achieve cost savings to justify its investment.
AFP - Fierce fighting erupted in northern Lebanon on Monday, further exacerbating tensions after days of deadly sectarian battles that have driven the nation to the brink of full-blown civil war.
Reuters - Lebanon's army said it will use force
from Tuesday to stop fighting in the country between pro- and
anti-government forces that has recalled the 1975-90 civil war.
Reuters - Iraq's prime minister said on Monday a
crackdown on Shi'ite militias proved his government was not
sectarian, in the face of persistent accusations by Sunni Arabs
that he has favored Shi'ites since taking office.
AP - Andrei Kirilenko blocked Kobe Bryant twice in overtime and converted a three-point play with 35 seconds remaining as the Utah Jazz beat the Los Angeles Lakers 123-115 on Sunday, tying the Western Conference semifinals at 2-2.
AP - Search crews combed debris-strewn fields for possible tornado victims Sunday as residents picked through the remains of homes demolished by storms that smashed through the Plains and South, killing at least 21 people in three states.
AP - Serbia's pro-Western president declared victory in Sunday's parliamentary elections — a stunning upset over ultranationalists who tried to exploit anger over Kosovo's independence. But his rivals vowed to fight on, and it was unclear if he could stave off their challenge.
AP - A person with knowledge of the situation says cable TV provider Cablevision Systems Corp. is close to buying the Long Island newspaper Newsday from Tribune Co. for $650 million.
Reuters - Serbia's pro-European Union president,
Boris Tadic, claimed victory over his nationalist rivals in a
parliamentary election on Sunday but fell short of a majority
and faced an immediate challenge.
Reuters - Hezbollah gunmen battled supporters of
the government on Sunday on the fifth day of a campaign by the
Iranian-backed group that has dealt a severe blow to
Washington's allies in Lebanon.
AP - President Bush spent months joking about being a father of the bride, but on Sunday he was downright wistful about giving his daughter Jenna away to her longtime beau.
Reuters - Democrat Barack Obama's campaign
chief predicted on Sunday his long battle against Hillary
Clinton for the party's presidential nomination would soon be
over, saying "we're coming to the end of the process."
AFP - Aid groups said Sunday that supplies trickling into cyclone-hit Myanmar were far less than was needed, as the faltering relief effort suffered a new blow with the sinking of a Red Cross boat.
AP - Documents that Colombia says it recovered from a slain guerrilla leader give the clearest indication yet that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez sought to arm and finance insurgents across the border.
AP - Myanmar's monumental task of feeding and sheltering 1.5 million cyclone survivors suffered yet another blow Sunday when a boat laden with relief supplies — one of the first international shipments — sank on its way to the disaster zone.
Reuters - Sudan cut diplomatic relations with
Chad on Sunday after an attack on the capital Khartoum by
Darfur rebels which it said was supported by Chadian President
Idriss Deby.
AP - Increasing numbers of U.S. troops have left the military with damaged bodies and minds, an ever-larger pool of disabled veterans that will cost the nation billions for decades to come — even as the total population of America's vets shrinks.
AFP - The army deployed across much of Lebanon on Sunday after Hezbollah ceded control of west Beirut but clashes raged on in the north and in the Druze mountains as Arab foreign ministers held crisis talks.
Reuters - Iran and the U.N. nuclear agency
watchdog will resume talks on Tehran's disputed nuclear program
in the Iranian capital on Monday, an Iranian official was
quoted as saying on Sunday.
Reuters - Desperate survivors of Cyclone Nargis
headed out of Myanmar's Irrawaddy delta in search of food,
water and medicine, but aid workers said on Sunday that
thousands will die if emergency supplies don't get through
soon.
Reuters - President George W. Bush's
daughter Jenna was married on Saturday evening to Henry Hager,
the son of the Virginia Republican Party chairman, in front of
more than 200 family members and close friends.
AP - Mike D'Antoni has agreed to coach the New York Knicks, bringing his entertaining offensive style from the Phoenix Suns to a team coming off one of the worst seasons in franchise history.
AP - Jenna Bush couldn't see herself getting married at the White House surrounded by antique furniture and oil portraits of presidents. She and Henry Hager opted to say "I do" Saturday at President Bush's ranch in Crawford where the corn is thigh-high, roads are named Cattle Drive and the Texas flag is painted on the rooftops of barns.
AP - Hundreds of rebels from war-ravaged Darfur clashed with Sudanese security forces on the doorstep of the capital Saturday in a dramatic widening of the five-year-old conflict.
Reuters - Zimbabwe's opposition leader said on
Saturday he would return home within two days to contest a
run-off election against President Robert Mugabe and deal him a
"final knock-out" after almost three decades in power.