Gaga swaps music for media, edits Metro paper
Flamboyant popstar Lady Gaga ditched the music and switched to the media on Monday with a stint as a guest editor at the London headquarters of the global free newspaper network Metro.
‘Bond girls inspired by Playboy bunnies’
Hugh Hefner claims that James Bond author Ian Fleming based his Bond girls on Playboy bunnies, the models who worked at his infamous clubs.
Variations in genes leads to depression?
Scientists say they have discovered the first solid evidence that variations in some peoples’ genes may cause depression — one of the world’s most common and costly mental illnesses.
Gaga swaps music for media, edits Metro paper
Flamboyant popstar Lady Gaga ditched the music and switched to the media on Monday with a stint as a guest editor at the London headquarters of the global free newspaper network Metro.
Chelsea set for second place, West Ham down
Chelsea gained a sliver of compensation for a trophyless season by effectively securing the Premier League runners-up spot behind Manchester United despite being held to a 2-2 draw by Newcastle United
Why Will struggled to fit the wedding ring on Kate’s finger?
Two billion people watching the royal wedding had thought that the awkward moment when Prince William struggled to fit the wedding ring on Kate’s fingers, was due to sheer nervousness.
However, it ha
JK Rowling voted ‘the most inspirational role model for businesswomen’
Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling has emerged as the firm favourite in a poll of 3,000 women as she clinched the title for the most inspirational role model for businesswomen.
Rowling, 45, who wrote t
Osama raid: ISI stops intelligence sharing with CIA
Pakistan's spy agency has stopped sharing intelligence with the CIA following the unilateral US operation to kill Osama bin Laden, it was reported here.
Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agents, who
Indian student assaulted in UK
Three men have been arrested on suspicion of racially assaulting an Indian origin student on a train from London to Derby.
Saurabh Srivastava, 24, was travelling from London St Pancras to Derby when
Stomach problems linked to depression
Stomach problems early in life could cause depression later on, according to a new study led by an Indian-origin researcher.
Pankaj Pasricha and his team at Stanford University have found short-term digestive irritation such as irritable bowel syndrome could have massive implications for mental health later on.