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Pakistan’s politics may be at a turning point, too. There is still broad public support for Imran Khan, the jailed former prime minister (and one-time cricketer) who was barred from parliamentary ...
The WWE has entered a new era with a new CEO after Vince McMahon built a billion-dollar empire, leaving the company and not ...
Union Home Minister Amit Shah is likely to deliver the concluding speech in Parliament. According to the source, EAM ...
Gujarat High Court held that departmental officers who issued summons or arrest memo are not required to be cross-examined by the petitioner. Accordingly, non-granting cross-examination to that extent ...
Signed on the back of his domestic success as head coach of Madhya Pradesh, Pandit was with KKR for three seasons. The ...
President Donald Trump on Monday used his luxury golf course on Scotland's southeastern coast to host British Prime Minister ...
Israeli rights groups B'Tselem and Physicians for Human Rights Israel have said that they had concluded the war in Gaza ...
The Foreword says “The salient events of the campaign for Guadalcanal were originally dealt with in two Battle Summaries issued in 1944, viz: B.S. No. 21 “Naval Operations at the Landings in the ...
Tejay Van Garderen and Brent Bookwalter preview the final stage of the Tour de France, where the ride into Paris is a little rougher than in years past.
GENTLE READER: Why go through the parents? Miss Manners suggests you go straight to the source, quietly telling the child that you are sorry, but you do not allow electronics at the dinner table.
DEAR MISS MANNERS: When we have a large family dinner, between 10 and 21 people, there is one child whose parents allow her to be on her tablet, with volume on high.
In today's Miss Manners column, advice columnist Judith Martin responds to a host question of whether to ban tablets at family dinners.
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