David Pugliese responded to what he called the “false claims” after Chris Alexander testified about ... science at the University of Toronto. Simon Miles, an associate professor at Duke ...
The shocking move to be announced by Immigration Minister Marc Miller in his three-year plan follows years of increases.
Formula 1 is arguably the hardest sport to determine who the GOAT is but that won't stop fans from continuing the debate. Motorsport's evolution since F1's debut season in 1950 has meant pitting ...
Sir Chris Hoy, one of Britain’s greatest cyclists and Olympians, has revealed his cancer is terminal. He was given a diagnosis last year that he has two to four years left to live. Sir Chris ...
This election is still a dead heat, according to most polls. In a fight with such wafer-thin margins, we need reporters on the ground talking to the people Trump and Harris are courting.
Sir Chris Hoy, one of Britain’s greatest cyclists and Olympians, has revealed his cancer diagnosis is terminal. The former Team GB track cyclist says he has been given two to four years to live.
In February six-time Olympic champion Sir Chris, 48, said he was being “treated for cancer”. Writing on Instagram at the time, he said treatment was “thankfully going really well - I’m ...
Sir Chris Hoy, one of Britain’s greatest cyclists and Olympians, has announced that his cancer is terminal. He was given a diagnosis last year that he has two to four years left to live.
Lewis Hamilton was knocked out in the first part of qualifying for the United States Grand Prix, a race he has won six times in the past. The seven-time world champion won once in Indianapolis and ...
Sir Chris Hoy has revealed his cancer diagnosis is terminal, it has been reported, with the Scot being given “two to four years”. The six-time Olympic track cycling champion turned endurance ...
Sir Chris Hoy, one of Britain’s greatest ever Olympians, has revealed he has terminal cancer. The 48-year-old six-time Olympic cycling gold medallist has only two to four years to live ...
Sir Chris Hoy, the six-time Olympic gold medallist, has revealed he has terminal cancer. The 48-year-old cycling legend has been told by doctors that he has just two to four years left to live.