The history of the antimalarial drug chloroquine has many lessons about the power — and geopolitics — of medicine.
Seventy-five years ago this week, the world was turned upside down when Hitler and Stalin signed a pact of alliance. Within days Hitler invaded Poland, starting World War II. Roger Moorhouse, a historian, has a new book out on the momentous but often-forgotten "Devils' Alliance."
Adolf Hitler believed his life was spared in World War One by a British soldier who had him in his sights. He believed that man was Henry Tandey.
The extreme right has found a great deal of support as Europe's economies lurch toward economic recovery. They're typically anti-immigrant and often anti-European government. In Greece they've risen to national positions, but in Spain, unique circumstances are holding them back.
Adolf Hitler's infamous ideological tome, Mein Kampf, is soon to be published in Germany for the first time since 1945. The World's Gerry Hadden reports from Munich.
Ozzie Guillen, the newly minted Miami Marlins manager, has been given a five-game suspension for comments about how much he loves and respects Cuban dictator Fidel Castro. Miami's Cuban refugee community is outraged through and wants him fired outright.
Hess's grave in Wunsiedel, which had become a shrine for neo-Nazis, was destroyed.
The NAACP believes the Tea Party movement is responsible for the racist remarks of their followers, but with a lack of central organization in the political party, who's really to blame?
Anchor Lisa Mullins speaks with Lone Bech, spokeswoman for the Admiral Palast theater in Berlin, Germany. Next month, the theater will stage a production of the Mel Brooks musical "The Producers." It will be the first time the musical -- which pokes fun at Hitler and Nazi Germany -- will be staged in Germany itself.
The Vatican demanded bishop Williamson retract his remarks about the Holocaust -- he has repeatedly denied the existence of Nazi gas chambers.