Broadcast: Apr 01, 2003 U.S troops entered a major city south of Baghdad Tuesday as coalition warplanes 1) blasted new targets in and around the Iraqi capital, including elements of the Republican Gua
Broadcast: Apr 01, 2003 At the height of the U.S. military operation in Afghanistan, defense officials 1) bristled when reporters would ask about the 2) whereabouts of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden
Broadcast: Apr 08, 2003 The World Health Organization has intensified efforts to eliminate the crippling disease polio in India following a dramatic increase in cases during the past year. Health offi
Broadcast: Apr 08, 2003 The U.S. Central Command said it regrets that three journalists were killed in Baghdad Tuesday as U.S. warplanes bombed the city and U.S. and Iraqi units fought near a downtown
Broadcast: Apr 05, 2003 The British military is encouraging militant supporters of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to surrender in the southern city of Basra. British military officials say leaders of
Broadcast: Apr 05, 2003 At least 60 people were killed in Bangladesh when a ferry 2) capsized, and about a dozen are still missing. The ferry was packed with more than 150 passengers when it 3) co
Broadcast: Apr 04 2003 Officials at the coalition command center in 2) Qatar say more than 2,000 soldiers of Iraq's Republican Guard have surrendered to U.S. forces. Coalition spokesman Captain Frank
Broadcast: Apr 04, 2003 Iraqi President Saddam Hussein appeared on state television Friday, calling on Iraqis to be strong to defeat coalition forces. Mr. Hussein 's speech came a short while after an
Broadcast: Apr 04, 2003 Top defense officials at the Pentagon say they are still concerned that Iraqi troops may use weapons of mass destruction, even though coalition soldiers have seized Baghdad's i
Broadcast: Apr 04, 2003 U.S. military officials say they now control Baghdad's international airport but caution that more fighting lies ahead in the battle for the Iraqi capital. U.S. armored units b
Broadcast: Apr 03, 2003 U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld is urging Iraqi soldiers to turn against the government of President Saddam Hussein. Mr. Rumsfeld says there is no way for Iraq's senior
Broadcast: Apr 05, 2003 The White House says the U.S.-led coalition will play the lead role in immediate post-war Iraq. Bush administration officials insist, however, there is a place for the U.N. in
Broadcast: Jan 18 2003 While you may not recognize his name, Jim Lauderdale is one of the best-selling songwriters in Nashville. Those hits he's written for artists George Strait, Patty Loveless and T
Broadcast: Mar 29,2003 As U.S. and British forces advance toward Baghdad, television pictures show a land that seems to offer nothing but desert. But for officials of the United Nations Educational, S
Broadcast: Jan 11 2003 U.S. and African officials meet next week (13-17 January) in 1) Mauritius for a conference on expanding U.S.-African trade. AIDS activists say the meeting will be meaningless wi
Broadcast: Jan 17 2003 The United States expressed deep concern Friday about the firing of U.S. businessman Boris Jordan as head of the media wing of the state-dominated Russian energy corporation, Ga
Broadcast: Jan 14, 2003 Cricket officials in London have decided that the England team will play as scheduled in 1) the World Cup tournament in Zimbabwe next month, despite calls from the British gove
Broadcast: Jan 12, 2003 The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries has agreed to increase production to 24.5 million barrels per day to cover a shortfall of oil from Venezuela, where a six week
Broadcast: Jan 11 2003 It's a Thursday night at the McDonough Gymnasium on Georgetown University's campus in Washington, D.C. About 200 fans have gathered to see Georgetown's women's basketball team t
Broadcast: Jan 24 2003 The Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Oakland Raiders are in San Diego, California this week preparing for the National Football League's Super Bowl 37 Sunday at Qualcomm Stadium. Th
- UN Completes Mission in Angola
- Iraq Rejects President Bush's 1)Ultimatum
- No World Oil Shortage, Says Saudi Minister
- Former Astronauts Say Space Exploration Must Continue
- US Expects Saddam Hussein to Order Destruction of Oil Fields
- 3 US Agencies Involved in 1)Probe of Columbia Disaster
- US Commerce Secretary Expresses Optimism to 1)World Economic
- 45th Grammy Award 1)Nominees Announced in New York
- At Look at the Grammy Award Nominees
- Singer in Popular Vocal Group Bee Gees Dies of Heart Attack
- Some Iraqi Troops Showing Signs of Not Wanting to Fight
- Musical 1)Tribute Honors Martin Luther King Jr
- 7 Astronauts Killed as Space Shuttle Columbia Breaks Up on R
- US Issues Stamp Honoring Nation's First Black 1)Supreme Cour
- New Book Geeks and Geezers Compares Young, Old 1)Entrepreneu
- Oil Prices Rebound in New York Trading Friday
- Americans 1)Captivated by 'Reality Television'
- Musicians, Record Companies Ponder Future of Music
- Modern Technology Changes Art of Protest
- US Environmentalists Fear Bush Budget Plan
- UN Completes Mission in Angola
- Iraq Rejects President Bush's 1)Ultimatum
- No World Oil Shortage, Says Saudi Minister
- Former Astronauts Say Space Exploration Must Continue
- US Expects Saddam Hussein to Order Destruction of Oil Fields
- 3 US Agencies Involved in 1)Probe of Columbia Disaster
- US Commerce Secretary Expresses Optimism to 1)World Economic
- 45th Grammy Award 1)Nominees Announced in New York
- At Look at the Grammy Award Nominees
- Singer in Popular Vocal Group Bee Gees Dies of Heart Attack
- Some Iraqi Troops Showing Signs of Not Wanting to Fight
- Musical 1)Tribute Honors Martin Luther King Jr
- 7 Astronauts Killed as Space Shuttle Columbia Breaks Up on R
- US Issues Stamp Honoring Nation's First Black 1)Supreme Cour
- New Book Geeks and Geezers Compares Young, Old 1)Entrepreneu
- Oil Prices Rebound in New York Trading Friday
- Americans 1)Captivated by 'Reality Television'
- Musicians, Record Companies Ponder Future of Music
- Modern Technology Changes Art of Protest
- US Environmentalists Fear Bush Budget Plan