Retired professor Chen Chongyu and his wife Liu Zhenjuan dreamed of coming back to China from their daughter's home in France, but until last year the couple had nowhere to go.
Apple Inc enters 2011 on a roll, a cash-generating machine with surging sales across its product lines, even as it confronts a sea of restive rivals determined to halt its stunning run of success.
Pakistan could lose their Dutch national team hockey coach Michel van den Heuvel who said on Thursday he was not keen to return because of security concerns.
Broadway's most expensive and much maligned show "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark" became its best-selling production last week, beating out audience favorite "Wicked" by USD 58 dollars.
More than 40,000 people, some from as far away as Singapore, London and Switzerland, auditioned for a coveted guest role on TV musical comedy "Glee" in a talent search so popular it has been turned into a reality show of its own.
Three in 10 Americans commit "financial infidelity" by lying to their spouses about money, sometimes suffering consequences such as separation or divorce, according to a new survey.
Rapper Eminem and pop diva Lady Gaga are among the acts who will perform at next month's Grammy Awards in Los Angeles.
State-run lender Punjab National Bank restructured its insurance and mutual fund joint ventures by buying out its partners' stake from the insurance venture and selling its entire stake in the mutual fund joint venture, the bank said in a release on Thursday.
French Prime Minister Francois Fillon said on Thursday that eurozone members would do "absolutely everything" for the bloc's economic stability, but stressed no additional bail out funding was currently required.
The eurozone faces short-term price pressures which could linger, the European Central Bank said on Thursday, showing it could raise interest rates to contain inflation even while the bloc is gripped by a debt crisis.
Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc said it will take longer than expected to win approval of its bankruptcy reorganization plan as it tries to settle differences with creditors, who are owed well over USD 300 billion.
A US judge approved a USD 7.2 billion settlement on Thursday to pay former customers of the Madoff firm, the largest yet in the worldwide search for money lost in Bernard Madoff's multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme.
Starbucks Corp unveiled a deal that sets the stage for the world's largest coffee company to bring its iconic cafes to India, where Western-style coffee shops are increasingly popular.
Microsoft Corp notched its best ever month for the Xbox in December, selling 1.9 million of the game consoles, helped by its new Kinect hands-free system and the latest in the blockbuster 'Fable' and 'Halo' game series.
Rafa Nadal faces Brazilian world number 96 Marcos Daniel in his first round of the Australian Open but faces a rocky path in his bid to become the first man to hold all four grand slam crowns simultaneously in more than four decades.
New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori has echoed coach John Wright and asked his batsmen to back up their bowlers if the home side have any chance of squaring the series against Pakistan when the second test begins at the Basin Reserve on Saturday.
Shares of Research In Motion jumped as much as 4% to near an eight-month high on Thursday after it reached a deal with India that appeared to protect its secure corporate email service.
Japan's Nikkei average is expected to open higher on Friday on rises in tech shares thanks to brisk earnings results from Intel Corp, but gains may be limited by weak earnings results from domestic retailer Fast Retailing.
Real Madrid are on the look out for a striker to help them through to the end of the season, club director general Jorge Valdano told Spanish television on Thursday.
Mel Gibson's new movie "The Beaver," which saw its release postponed last year following the release of audio tapes that damaged the actor's reputation, will finally receive a premiere in March at a Texas festival.
US stocks edged lower on Thursday, hurt by a slide in drugmaker Merck and as falling commodities prices hit shares of natural resource companies.
Intel Corp cheered investors with a strong quarterly revenue forecast and better-than-expected fourth-quarter earnings as sales to corporations grew.
The outlook for the US economy has brightened, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Thursday, though he warned that growth this year won't be strong enough to bring down the jobless rate as speedily as policy makers would like.
France's parliament gave final approval on Thursday to a law forcing large companies to reserve at least 40% of their boardroom positions for women within six years.
US Commerce Secretary Gary Locke complained that China often fails to keep promises to open its markets and called for a "more equitable commercial relationship," days before China's president visits Washington.