The news coming out of Europe and the United States is shocking. The graphs are startling. Don't count on travel beyond the Asia-Pacific region any time soon.
The sick are shunning Britain's hospitals and nursing homes,so deaths at home from heart attacks,cancer and other illness have soared.
A UK inquiry found that from the 1940s to 2018,390 people in positions of trust within the Church of England were convicted of sexual offences against children.
Tributes have poured in for the Nigerian drummer,whose collaboration with Fela Kuti merged West African styles with American jazz and funk.
While scouting the demographic provides mixed results.
Melting ice shelves,surging visitor numbers and geopolitical wrangling made the past year a turbulent one for Antarctica – which is also dealing with what some are calling “climate strange”.
Italy has shut down most of its industry,and a record-shattering 3.3 million Americans applied for unemployment benefits in a single week.
Those who say Australia is overreacting to the latest coronavirus have not learned the lessons of history.
The perfect wave – surfing’s holy grail – has finally arrived. However,perfection comes at a cost.
If our race is to survive and flourish,we need strong forgivers. People who are genuinely able to forgive are not weak,not victims or doormats,but some of the strongest individuals in the moral universe.
Director Richard Stanley drew on his mother's battle with lymphoma in a movie about a bizarre extra-terrestrial force wreaking havoc in rural Massachusetts.