HOUSTON (AP) - A stark new Hillary Rodham Clinton ad portrays her as the leader voters want on the phone when crisis occurs in the middle of the night, "while your children are safely asleep."
Stark Clinton ad sparks debate with Obama over who's got the judgment to be commander in chief Polls: Clinton leads Obama modestly in Ohio; both are even in Texas McCain: Desire to renegotiate NAFTA would jeopardize Canadian military support Clinton campaign concerns on caucus rules prompts warning from state party about legal action Bill Clinton says wife is only candidate
"What time is it?" asks Diane Schuur during a recent interview from her home in Orange County, Calif. It's noon her time, and she's still asleep. Still, the next thing she says is, "Call me 'Deedles' -- everyone else does. It's the name my mother gave me when I was very young."
Physicist Brian Cox played in a band that recorded what became the anthem of Britain's Labour Party. Now he's about to simulate the big bang at CERN's super collider. A Wired.com Q&A from the TED conference in Monterey, California.
(AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster) Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., greets supporters as she makes a campaign stop at the Greater Houston Partnership Conference at the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston, Thursday, Feb. 28, 2008.