Venice This article is more than 3 months oldAt least 21 dead after coach veers off overpass near VeniceThis article is more than 3 months oldTourist coach catches fire after coming off the road and falling near railway lines in Mestre, northern Italy
At least 21 people have died and 15 were injured after a tourist coach crashed off an overpass near Venice in northern Italy.
The coach was carrying a group of tourists who were returning to a campsite in Marghera after spending the day in Venice, according to reports in the Italian media.
Reality TVPresenter Johnny Vaughan, producers and participants remember the Channel 4 series that pretended to send participants into orbit from a Russian bootcamp, but mainly took place on an airbase in Suffolk
In December 2005, a group of outgoing twentysomethings were gathered in front of cameras on a remote airstrip. They had signed up for a reality TV series called Thrill Seekers and, after five months of auditions, they were about to find out the exact premise of the show.
Sacha Baron Cohan appears as Ali G at Oscars – video GuardianOscars 2016 This article is more than 7 years oldSacha Baron Cohen: Oscars appearance as Ali G was against Academy's ordersThis article is more than 7 years oldComedian had been asked to present best picture nominee as himself but changed into costume in disabled toilets with help from wife Isla Fisher
Oscars 2016: 10 things we learnedRead moreSacha Baron Cohen has revealed his appearance as Ali G at Sunday’s Oscars ceremony was in defiance of the Academy’s request for him not to appear in character.
Cif beliefJudaism This article is more than 13 years oldThe Book of Job, part 5: Job's wife – did she bless or curse?This article is more than 13 years oldAlexander GoldbergA little-known legend adds to the story of Job a story about his first wife, her sufferings and her dealings with SatanIn the Book of Job, his wife says "Baruch Elokhim, ve mos" which in most Masoretic texts is translated "
Book of the daySociety booksReviewThis insightful account of a four-star establishment taking in rough sleepers amid the pandemic finds grounds for real if slender hope
The Prince Rupert hotel in Shrewsbury is the kind of establishment where you’re offered a glass of sherry as you check in. A timber-framed oasis of fluffy towels and four-poster beds, its guests have included Margaret Thatcher, Monica Lewinsky and the Liverpool football team. Yet at the start of the pandemic, owner Mike Matthews, who had formerly managed Barbados’s Sandy Lane resort, made the decision to welcome a rather different clientele: the city’s rough sleepers.