The story of Prince Harry's secret deployment to Afghanistan was covered extensively last week but none of the stories had an Afghan perspective. This was not surprising since Harry was deployed, in his own words, to a "no-man's land."
New dates for Emerson Drive , New Model Army and Shelby Lynne , plus items about Zeppelin , EMI, Paula Abdul and winking for iPods make up your last update of the day!
After 13 years away from the screen, Mirza seems ready to dive back into direction with renewed hope of peddling lost memories. For 15 years he has been missing in action, traversing the inner roads of the country acquainting himself with the faces of India and their ordinary lives.
Oh, boy. Baseball is breaking out all over San Diego County. It's the hopeful season of Little League renewal, when thousands of boys and girls learn valuable life lessons while running the base paths, chasing pop flies and rooting from the dugout. Sadly, the peach-fuzz pastime can teach less Rockwellian lessons to the adults on the sidelines.
Starting on the edge of the Bering Strait and ending in Kaliningrad nearly 24 hours later, Russian voters will tomorrow play a tightly scripted supporting role in a presidential election with four candidates but only one conceivable winner.
FORMER Zimbabwe captain Tatenda Taibu has proved his iconic standing in world cricket following a dream signing with the inaugural Indian Cricket League, in a US$723.59million auction involving some of the biggest names in the global game.
Only Ireland stand between Wales and the Grand Slam. An away win in Dublin and Welsh supporters can begin their protracted celebrations because, as sure as wine follows grape, France will fold in Cardiff.
As we look back over the twentieth century we see that it was one of history's most brutal: it generated two world wars; it invented genocide and the Holocaust; it saw dictatorial regimes set up repressive systems unprecedented in their scale and their victims.
It all started before independence when the British stole the land from Africans. Then the Africans who stepped into their shoes did nothing about it, reports Special Correspondent KALUNDI SERUMAGA