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Congress temporarily avoided a partial shutdown of the Homeland Security Department Friday night, approving a one-week extension of the agency’s funding as its midnight deadline approached.
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Wage growth is breaking out in an unexpected corner of the U.S. economy: the nation’s restaurants and bars. Food-service employment has surged since the recession ended six years ago.
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Russian opposition leader Boris Nemtsov was gunned down on a bridge next to the Kremlin, in what authorities said appeared to be a contract killing.
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A U.K. woman who told police her son had joined a militant group in Syria now regrets her decision.
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Blackstone Group co-founder and CEO Stephen Schwarzman took home about $690 million in dividends, compensation and fund payouts for 2014, a nearly 50% increase from 2013.
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Federal Reserve officials fanned out to drive home the message that they are likely to start raising short-term interest rates later this year, reinforcing Chairwoman Janet Yellen’s remarks to Congress during this past week.
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Athletic-gear maker Under Armour has been investing in fitness apps, while looking ahead to a time when clothes themselves become a means to track movement and biorhythms.
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The U.S. economy returned to its sluggish trajectory late last year, though underlying signs of strength suggest growth will pick up in 2015.
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A botched announcement by the FDIC culminated years of turmoil that cost investors, including Goldman Sachs Group and Marathon Asset Management, hundreds of millions of dollars.
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Chattanooga is seeing a burst of very small apartments as a push by younger workers to sacrifice space moves beyond the biggest and most expensive cities.
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The U.S. is providing spy-satellite imagery to Ukraine to help in its fight against Russia-backed rebels, but with a catch: the images are degraded to avoid provoking Russia or compromising U.S. secrets.
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The Intelligent Investor: If only finding a good financial adviser were as easy as counting the trophies in his display case.
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Leonard Nimoy, the actor known and loved by generations of “Star Trek” fans as the pointy-eared, purely logical science officer Mr. Spock, has died.
How can two people look at a photograph of the same object and see different colors? Science has an explanation.
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Some of President Barack Obama’s most senior aides are finding their next jobs in the upper ranks of the technology industry, a departure from traditional post-government paths.
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The Great Enrichment that America rode to economic power was hardly slowed by the spoils system.
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Most people are blissfully unaware of how they come across in the office. And it can cost them, Daniel R. Ames and Abbie S. Wazlawek write.
THE EXPERTS: A management researcher lays out the risks of perpetual fatigue in the workplace.
In photos selected Friday by Wall Street Journal editors, a man participates in a competition at a cigar festival in Cuba, wild horses escape from a trap in Utah, and more.
Leonard Nimoy, most famous as Star Trek’s Mr. Spock, died in Los Angeles on Friday at age 83. However, to paraphrase the Vulcan farewell, his memory and career will always live long and prosper.
Prince William arrived in Tokyo on Thursday for a four day visit to Japan.
A look inside luxury condos that gained extra square footage after the owners combined two units into one.