Don’t blame the Nazis for a Tallahassee, Fla. museum losing a famed piece of artwork last week. Blame a Frenchman — though he was possibly working with the Nazis.
Either way, U.S. government agents seized the 500-year-old …
Don’t blame the Nazis for a Tallahassee, Fla. museum losing a famed piece of artwork last week. Blame a Frenchman — though he was possibly working with the Nazis.
Either way, U.S. government agents seized the 500-year-old …
At least one positive may have emerged from the recent global financial turmoil: Silvio Berlusconi has decided to delay the release of his latest offering of sentimental love songs.
The Italian prime minister had planned to …
George Clooney, star of the upcoming film The Ides of March, sat down with our managing editor, Rick Stengel, on Wednesday for TIME’s 10 Questions.
An Italian court freed Amanda Knox from prison, and newspapers from Perugia to Seattle warmed up the presses.
Amanda Knox dreamed of going home. Now she’s there. She touched down in Seattle late Tuesday and was greeted by family, friends and a whole lot of reporters.
Amanda Knox sobbed uncontrollably as a judge read out her acquittal. Several rows behind her, the family of Meredith Kercher stared ahead in silence.
There was an audible gasp outside a courthouse in Perugia, Italy on Monday evening — and then a media frenzy.
In a final effort to overturn a conviction in the murder of British student Meredith Kercher, Amanda Knox and her former boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito appeared before an Italian appeals court Monday.
Prosecutors described Amanda Knox as a “witch of deception” and a “lying, sex-loving she-devil” during her murder appeal. Now Knox’s legal team is fighting to erase that image by proving Knox is a victim, too.
As the closing arguments begin in the contentious legal battle, NewsFeed presents the names and faces you need to know.
If that 1980’s movie Crocodile Dundee had been about the planning of weddings, the most famous line would surely have been changed to the following, “That’s not a wedding. THAT’s a wedding.” And Petra Ecclestone would have uttered it.
He said he did it as an act of patriotism. But a new documentary reveals that the man who swiped the Mona Lisa from the Louvre exactly a century ago was really motivated by — you guessed it — money.