You might use Google Translate to read a hard-to-find Manga comic book or to decipher an obscure recipe for authentic Polish blintzes. Or, like Phillip and Niki Smith in rural Mississippi, you could use it to rescue a Chinese orphan and fall in love at the same time.
Irene Rosenfeld, left, sparked fury when, as head of American processed cheese firm Kraft, she took over the much-loved British company in a £11.6billion deal.
Schoolgirls are growing up in a world where it is normal for women’s bodies to be seen as sex objects, the National Union of Teachers is expected to say at its annual conference in Liverpool today.
[AFTER THE TRIBULATION] DVD The Pre-Tribulation Rapture Fraud Exposed http://www.infowarsshop.com/After-The… Satan is working behind the scenes to set up a one world government [START GETTING HEALTHY …
I was getting ready for work on the morning of 3-27, and a really nice looking sunrise started to come up so I decided to take a few photos. Normally when I want to take a picture of something I snap off a bunch of photographs in a row. Typically this gets me at least […]
The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits rose last week, but not enough to suggest the labor market recovery was taking a step back. Other data on Thursday showed the economy …
Over the past 13 years there has been a 40 percent rise in the number of elementary-school students in Israel's state religious system whose classes are segregated by gender. The claim is made in a recent study by Ariel Finkelshtain, a researcher for …
In just five years, the number of callouts to infestation experts has gone up by 75 per cent as fashion-conscious Britons spend £40million on outfits from the sixties and seventies.
The warning comes after French car-maker Renault launched its long-awaited electric car Zoe this month at a price on a par with petrol models, making it the first electric vehicle with mass-market potential.
On Sunday morning, Eddie Mair asked a very flustered Boris about a number of notorious incidents from his past. Originally, Johnson arrogantly assumed that Mair would be a walkover. He could not have been more wrong, writes ANDREW PIERCE.