May the 4th: Scotland’s Railway hides fun message for Star Wars fans
May the 4th: Scotland’s Railway hides fun message for Star Wars fans
SWIMMERS and beachgoers are being reminded what yellow buoys along the BCP beach fronts mean ahead of a busy weekend.
Sainsbury’s set for court battle after refusing access to man’s assistance cat
Johnny Depp lawyer says Heard’s domestic abuse claims are ‘act of cruelty to true survivors’
Award-winning author and cook Deborah Madison, chef and Native American foods educator Freddie Bitsoie and other fascinating guests led a day of discussion around food and farming
A planned strike at two London Underground stations over the Jubilee weekend has been suspended. Members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT) at Green Park and Euston Tube stations had planned to walk out on 3 June in a row over allegations of bullying. RMT added if no immediate improvements are seen and the review does not lead to a just settlement, the strike action will take place on a different day instead.
‘Twenty years ago, when we were trying to sell the show, no one thought that this would work’
The Isle of Wight Council this week told the County Press they may have to move homeless families to the mainland.
THOUSANDS of people basked in the sun and had a ‘gouda’ time as the popular Cheese & Chilli Festival made its long-awaited return.
They bring more sporty driving dynamics and a high specification.
Shetland Islands Council is advertising for a head to work on the primary school on the island of Foula.
An Algerian military officer-turned-democracy activist has been deported from Spain and charged in Algeria in a case that human rights groups see as another sign of an ever-expanding crackdown on dissent
HAMPSHIRE police seized almost 250 knives and bladed articles during a week-long crackdown on violent crime.
Depeche Mode accept award in one of Andrew Fletcher's latest appearances
Unseen Queen documentary captures young Elizabeth playing for the cameras
‘The GC’ had to pull out of the UK tour due to a pre-existing knee injury
Seven’s Mark Riley catches Covid just in time to miss plane to Quad summit. Plus: the West Australian prints Noongar edition for Reconciliation Week
Books about the late Philippine dictator Ferdinand Marcos and his brutal era of martial law are flying off the shelves, spurred by "panic buying" after his son and namesake won a May 9 presidential election. Ferdinand "Bongbong" Marcos Jr.'s presidency, set to begin on June 30, has many people worried about losing access to books and other accounts of his father's rule, given his family's decades-long effort to rehabilitate its name through what critics describe as a campaign of historical revisionism. "They are panic buying," Alexine Parreno said of her customers, many them parents buying books about martial law aimed at children.
Glee star said he is no longer able to ‘judge the competition fairly’ after breaking protocol
The actor landed his breakthrough role in Stranger Things after turning 40.
Prices of building materials increased by 16% in the first quarter compared to the previous year