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Slowing growth in China is taking a brutal economic toll on Appalachian coal mines, which have rich deposits of high-grade coal used to make steel.
Israel's Netanyahu said Iran was on track to build an atomic bomb by next summer and called for a "red line" on fuel production that would trigger military strikes.
Sergey Aleynikov, his federal conviction for stealing computer code from Goldman Sachs overturned, now faces a New York state trial on similar charges.
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An analysis by The Wall Street Journal shows that banks' submissions used to calculate the London interbank offered rate often are slow to change and sometimes fail to track the market's view of the credit risk posed by each firm.
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Spain unveiled a series of regulatory overhauls and $16.7 billion of spending cuts and tax increases, as mounting political turmoil heightened investor concerns over Prime Minister Rajoy's ability to stabilize the economy.
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RIM posted its third straight quarterly loss. but the BlackBerry maker's revenue and operating loss came in significantly better than expectations.
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A proposed outlay of $200 million in retention bonuses appears to be threatening the $70 billion proposed combination of natural-resource giants Glencore International and Xstrata.
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The EU asked the WTO for permission to slap $12 billion in trade penalties on U.S. companies, saying the U.S. government hasn't ended subsidies to Boeing that violated trade rules.
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Romney and Obama are running neck and neck in North Carolina and Nevada, according to a new WSJ/NBC News/Marist Poll, while Romney faces an uphill battle to win New Hampshire.
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Federal authorities in Los Angeles on Thursday arrested a man they believe was behind a video clip insulting to Muslims, Nakoula B. Nakoula, alleging he violated terms of his probation on an earlier federal charge.
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Some Americans have given up their cellphones to cut back on living expenses, while others have traded in their high-cost wireless contracts for more-affordable prepaid service plans.
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This French-château-style house, with a marble entrance, two greenhouses and a gold-leaf ceiling in the ballroom, sits in California's high-tech capital.
Jason Gay imagines the maligned zebras, on their way out the door to football ignominy, sending the real referees an exit letter.
Ace director Rian Johnson keeps the chronological cartwheels on track. Meanwhile, "The Other Dream Team" is a fine hoops documentary.
Tens of thousands of state-owned enterprises dominate half of China's economic output and are heavily subsidized and protected by the government, writes John Bussey.
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Intel rallied hardware partners to prepare another assault on the tablet market. The efforts are based around a new set of Intel chips that are designed to match features of tablets sold by Apple and others—and will power hardware using Microsoft's coming Windows 8 software.
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Click here for AllThingsD's live coverage of the company's earnings conference call, which is due to start around 2 pm PT.
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A top British regulator is calling for a sweeping overhaul of Libor, including removing it from control of a banking-industry group.
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Munnell: Fixes that could protect investors from high fees -- and their own mistakes.
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Treasury Secretary Geithner has come out swinging against the money-market mutual fund industry.
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ECB President Mario Draghi's campaign to save the euro has had little or no immediate impact on the region's shrinking economy, figures showed.
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P&G Chief Executive Robert McDonald, under pressure from a hedge-fund manager, has to deliver on cost-cutting and product-refocus plans.
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Sears Holdings and Darden Restaurants are planning a radical change in the way they provide health benefits to their workers, giving employees a fixed sum of money and allowing them to choose their medical coverage and insurer from an online marketplace.
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To woo workday commuters, Cleveland and select cities across the U.S. are trying to replace the image of the gritty, crowded bus by sending sleeker, more spacious and trainlike buses onto certain commuter routes.
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DECLARATIONS
How Romney can make the most of his face-off with Obama.
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New York may not have the world’s tallest skyscraper, but it wants the world’s biggest Ferris Wheel.
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The National Football League and its referees union agreed late Wednesday night to end their labor dispute and close one of the most bizarre stretches in league history.
CEOs are under pressure to appear accessible and "authentic," but social media, with its demands for quick, unscripted updates that can quickly go viral, poses risks for the executives and their firms.
When it comes to overhauling mortgage-finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, both parties seem to have reached the same position: We’ll tell you later.
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The Journal's third annual ranking of the top 50 venture-capital-backed companies shows a crop of contenders that overall are focused less on online consumers than in years' past.
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More than 90 professional BASE jumpers from 18 countries leapt off the 1,381-feet Kuala Lumpur Tower Wednesday, as part of an annual jumping event in the Malaysian capital.
In today's pictures, a girl gets her teeth cleaned in Los Angeles, visitors pack a tent at Oktoberfest in Munich, a kite flies high in India, and more.
NASA's rover Curiosity continues to send back photographs from Mars.
For about an hour each year, the tide usually drops low enough to expose a small triangle of sand in the English Channel. This sticky wicket, in the middle of a hectic shipping lane, is the scene for the annual Brambles cricket match.
Right next to the podium of the U.N. General Assembly in New York City is a white leather chair reserved for the presidents, prime ministers and monarchs waiting to speak at the annual meeting.