EDITORIAL: Traces of animal fat in British banknotes spark uproar
The Bank of England has been receiving severe criticism over a recent announcement concerning the new £5 note.
994 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
The Bank of England has been receiving severe criticism over a recent announcement concerning the new £5 note.
It’s no secret the Editorial Board has never been hesitant to criticize President-elect Donald Trump when we feel he is acting irresponsibly. In order for the criticism to be measured and fair, we must also raise attention to issues we feel he is performing adequately on. This is certainly the case with the recent deal to keep Carrier jobs in Indiana, made all the more relevant due to the issue’s local impact.
Now that Trevor Noah’s interview with far-right sorority girl Tomi Lahren is nearly a week old, liberals feel content with Noah’s mature treatment of Lahren. Their measured, logical approach to dealing with this country’s mass organization of fanatical racists has clearly been a smashing success.
Be honest. Did you start reading this editorial because it had an interesting headline?
Parents tell many little lies to their children while they’re growing up. From the Tooth Fairy to the Easter Bunny, parents band together to keep kids believing in the fantastic until they get too old.
As Brazil’s economy plunges deeper into a crisis, students have occupied schools throughout the country to fight proposed cuts in education spending.
With car accidents caused by elderly drivers on the rise, the Japanese prefecture of Aichi has come up with a creative solution to the problem.
As we sat down and inhaled mass amounts of turkey, stuffing and mashed potatoes Thursday, an American sailor was trying to dismantle a remote-controlled bomb in northern Syria.
Facebook has recently announced its new app, Flash. Basically, it allows you to take photos of yourself, add wacky filters and send them to people, after which the photos are immediately deleted.
In a 2007 commercial, a man stands on train tracks with a train rushing toward him. “Global warming’s consequences ... won’t affect me,” he says. He steps aside, only to reveal a little girl is behind him, and the train shows no signs of stopping.
Russia did it first. In 2015, Roskomnadzor, Russia’s state internet regulator, posted about banning the use and creation of any memes that inaccurately depict any public figure.
A topic of growing contention is the increase in the number of states with legal and medical marijuana. Voters in California, Nevada and Massachusetts approved the recreational use of marijuana Tuesday. Thus far, eight states have legalized weed.
The election is over, and Donald Trump is now the president-elect of the United States. For months, we as a country speculated about the consequences of his election. Now it’s time to find out what will become of those speculations.
On today’s episode of “Americans Get Offended by Everything,” we actually have a returning contestant. That’s right, folks, the Starbucks seasonal cups are back in the spotlight with the upcoming holiday season.
Now that the dust has settled, Donald Trump has won the presidential election against the odds.
A recent development within the British government might mean this summer’s Brexit referendum was all for naught. A United Kingdom court announced Thursdsay Parliament must vote on the decision to leave the European Union.
If millennials are the selfie generation, this election sure has taken that trend to its extreme.
For college students, emojis have been around for almost as long as we’ve been alive. Now they’re finding their way off our phones and social media platforms and onto the walls of the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
Silicon Valley is home to some of the most creative ventures and unique businesses in the world. And the latest project to come down the line is no exception.