When the Romans invaded Britain in 43 AD, they introduced a host of innovations, including roads. Now, scientists say we have something else to thank the Romans for: pet cats.
Buckley: The Life and the Revolution That Changed America. By Sam Tanenhaus. Random House; 1,040 pages; $40 and £33 A superb biography of William F. Buckley, the most influential American journalist ...
As soon as you begin talking to him, he'll explain that Ominis caved in and that you may have to talk to him. When you begin talking to him, you'll begin apologizing to him and further explaining ...
Isotopic analysis confirmed that the workers in Pompeii relied on hot-mixing when making their concrete. Samples from the ...
I’d always lived with lots of people: kids, sisters, brothers, friends and so on. I had never been on my own at all until now ...
The “Come, Follow Me” study guide for Dec. 8-14 covers the Articles of Faith and Official Declarations 1 and 2, which ...
Decades of conflict and displacement have obliterated the history of one of the world’s oldest human settlements ...
Ruth, the impish narrator of Kate Riley’s debut novel, is born into a little and little-known Anabaptist sect in Michigan. Riley, drawing on her own experience, feels no rush to lay out the group’s ...
From ancient Rome to medieval Spain to Renaissance Venice, generations of mariners have relied on biscotti as a source of ...
The Forbidden Experiment” is about a totally unsocialized child who wandered into a French village in 1800 and the doctor who treated him ...
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