Air France's transatlantic A380 service features comfy seats, six bars and an art gallery. But is the Airbus jumbo now a white elephant? Bringing the party back to the skies
At the annual Eurovision contest for 10- to 15-year-olds, Europe's power roles are reversed the former Soviet republics are the top dogs and the West finds itself totally upstaged
The name of the place was, if anything, a synonym for bad luck but now it is on the trade highway between Peru and Brazil, between the Pacific and the Atlantic
Britain has always had a slightly uncomfortable relationship with sex. But you wouldn't know it by the thousands of visitors at the annual sex expo in London
Islamic communities nationwide are struggling to deal with the aftermath of the Fort Hood massacre. In America's most Muslim city, fears of a backlash
Former insurgents leading parties of local and foreign tourists around their old battlegrounds help a nation confront its dark past
The latest cultural obsession in Japan is Nobuyuki Tsujii, a 21-year-old blind piano prodigy and the first Japanese winner of the Van Cliburn International Competition in June
Budding fashion designers capitalize on Iceland's ailing economy to set up shop. How the financial meltdown has helped creativity flourish
In a pioneering Minnesota charter school, you don't have to be Chinese to get a head start in Mandarin. Saying ni hao to language immersion in the heartland
With a jumble of grizzly and wide-eyed allies from left, right and center, the novelist Carolyn Chute thinks of leading Maine out of the Union
Czech President Vaclav Klaus remains the lone holdout on the European Union's Lisbon Treaty. He's intent on shoring up support among German-wary voters first
With a police force decimated by budget woes, the Motor City's middle-class enclaves are hiring their own to fight rising crime. Where security is a booming business