Rag & Bone designers David Neville and Marcus Wainwright put their cool, modern twist on clothes that are classic in the truest sense of the word for their fall collection that debuted Friday at New York Fashion Week. (Feb. 10)
Barbie threw open the sparkly, pink doors of her dream closet to rock a party she threw for her fellow fashionistas at New York Fashion Week. Everyone can have a chance to virtually rummage through her closet at BarbieWow.com. (Feb. 11)
Jason Wu showed his latest collection Friday at New York Fashion Week. His dramatic show featured a collection inspired partly by his Chinese roots. (Feb. 10)
Police in Washington state who searched a storage unit rented by Josh Powell found a stained comforter that tested positive for blood in initial exams, according to documents filed in court Friday. (Feb. 10)
A woman who snatched a newborn baby from a New York City hospital in 1987, then raised the child as her own for more than two decades, pleaded guilty to a kidnapping charge Friday as the girl's true mother wept in the courtroom. (Feb. 10)
A man from Uzbekistan who pleaded guilty Friday to plotting to kill President Barack Obama with an automatic rifle claimed he was acting at the direction of an Islamic terror group in his home country. (Feb. 10)
Pres. Obama has unveiled a birth control compromise that he says will protect religious liberties and ensure that women have access to free contraception. Some are applauding the move, but the Catholic League calls it a 'slap in the face'. (Feb. 10)
Jason Wu showed his latest collection Friday at New York Fashion Week. His dramatic show featured a collection inspired partly by his Chinese roots. (Feb. 10)
GOP presidential candidate Newt Gingrich told a crowd at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington that the Obama administration is "waging war on religion", a comment directed at President Obama's policy on contraception. (Feb. 10)
In an abrupt reversal, President Obama has dumped his controversial plan to make religious-run institutions offer insurance coverage for birth control, but he's insisting instead that insurance companies provide it to women employees directly. (Feb. 10)
Authorities say five people were killed when a driver going the wrong way crashed into another vehicle on Interstate 10 outside New Orleans, closing the westbound lanes for nearly five hours. (Feb. 10)
Here's the latest news for Friday, February 10: Obama adjusts contraceptive plan;Islamic extremist sentenced to life; GOP hopefuls address CPAC; Spitting contest in Israel.
The Navy has named a ship for Gabrielle Giffords, the recently retired congresswoman from Arizona who is recovering from a gunshot wound to the head received in January 2011. The littoral combat ship is among the Navy's most versatile. (Feb. 10)
U.S. stocks fell sharply Friday, interrupting the Dow Jones industrial average's steady climb toward 13,000, after Greece hit a roadblock on its way to a critical international bailout. (Feb. 10)
Speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington Friday, Mitt Romney said that President Barack Obama is the 'poster child for the arrogance of government.' (Feb. 10)
President Barack Obama declared Friday he's found a solution that will protect religious liberty but also ensure that women have access to free birth control. (Feb. 10)
Former Penn State football coach Jerry Sandusky spoke to reporters following a hearing on pretrial issues, including whether Sandusky should be confined inside of his home. He faces 52 criminal counts of alleged sexual misconduct involving boys. (Feb. 10)
Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum took on President Obama and his policies toward health care and contraception Friday at a conference for conservative political activists. (Feb. 10)
An Islamic extremist who admitted killing two U.S. airmen bound for Afghanistan at Frankfurt airport last year was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison on Friday. Arid Uka's face is blurred in line with German law. (Feb. 10)
Video conferencing has quickly evolved into a technology that's everywhere, from Facebook feeds to corporate boardrooms. Its value as a communications tool is profound. But so too is its vulnerability to hackers. (Feb. 10)
Recently discharged U.S. Marine Jason Braddock says after years in Afghanistan the biggest challenge many veterans face is trying to figure out how to market the skills they used on the battlefield to civilian employers. (Feb. 9)