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BEIRUT (AP) -- Hundreds of residents left a formerly rebel-controlled suburb of the Syrian capital of Damascus Wednesday, as government and Russian forces prepared to open corridors out of the contested city of Aleppo in the hopes of facilitating an exodus from its rebel-held quarters....
KHAZER, Iraq (AP) -- Iraqi special forces joined the Mosul offensive on Thursday with a pre-dawn advance on a nearby town held by the Islamic State group, encountering heavy fire....
LAS VEGAS (AP) -- Trailing in the polls, Donald Trump had little to lose in his final debate against Hillary Clinton. He still managed to send shock waves, refusing to say he would accept the results of the 2016 election if he loses....
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sometimes, the answer to a debate question seems obvious....
LAS VEGAS (AP) -- Threatening to upend a fundamental pillar of American democracy, Donald Trump refused to say Wednesday night that he will accept the results of next month's election if he loses to Hillary Clinton. The Democratic nominee declared Trump's resistance "horrifying."...
When a new leader arrives on the scene, you can bet that things are....
Kansas City, Kan., Oct 19, 2016 / 04:54 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Vice presidential candidate Sen. Tim Kaine’s stand in favor of legal abortion shuns consistency in reason and faith and ignores the pain abortion causes, Archbishop Joseph Naumann of Kansas City in Kansas has said.“It was painful to listen to Senator Kaine repeat the same tired and contorted reasoning to profess his personal opposition to abortion while justifying his commitment to keep it legal,” the archbishop said, reflecting on Kaine's abortion comments in the Oct. 4 vice presidential debate. He characterized the senator’s remarks as “the usual made-for-modern-media sound bites.”Writing in the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas' newspaper The Leaven Oct. 14, Archbishop Naumann critiqued the senator's “sound bite” comment that “it is not proper to impose his religious beliefs upon all Americans.”"With regard to the imposition of religious bel...
IMAGE: CNS photo/Chaz MuthBy Chaz MuthGATLINBURG,Tenn. (CNS) -- When Huntsville, Alabama, resident Patrick Eads prepared to takehis family on a trip to the Great Smoky Mountain National Park last August, hemade sure to pack necessary vacation items, which included the address to thenearest Catholic church.Eadsand his wife, Rachael, made the 250-mile drive to Gatlinburg with their1-year-old son to experience nature's glory.Rachael,noticeably pregnant, eagerly joined her husband and son on the long hikes alongthe Appalachian Trail to find the best views of the mountains and said themajestic vistas, the sounds of the summer insects, the feel of the warm sun onher face and the scent of the wildflowers growing along their route, energizedher.Aftera day of navigating the Smokies, Patrick was feeling the need for spiritualnourishment, so the lanky, bearded redhead packed up his family and headed toSt. Mary's Catholic Church in Gatlinburg for the 7 p.m. Saturday Mass.AGoogle search before ...
QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is finding himself in open conflict with his Ecuadorean protectors as the group's latest dump targeting Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign runs afoul of the South American government's goal of warming up to Washington....
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- California's attorney general is conducting a criminal investigation into whether employees at San Francisco-based Wells Fargo bank falsely identified themselves and stole identities in the sales practices scandal that rocked the bank and cost its CEO his job, documents released Wednesday show....