hard Trust Me...The Hard Part is Over By cheezburger.com Published On :: Mon, 16 Dec 2013 06:00:00 -0800 Full Article Babies cute hedgehogs
hard Scientific Replication is Harder Than YouThink -and Can Be Hilarious By www.neatorama.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 06:08:19 -0800 Science experiments are not considered completely valid unless they can be replicated. Replicating an experiment is pretty much impossible unless you've been steeped in the various factors of scientific theory. And even if you are thoroughly trained in those factors, it's easy to lose track when you're doing a casual experiment at home. That goes double when your aim is to debunk something that you find obviously wrong. Sage the Bad Naturalist jumped into such a debunking experiment with both feet, and then got entangled in them. She spent an entire year trying to replicate a dubious TikTok, which turned into an embarrassing adventure in how not to do science. But negative results are still results, and the goal of science is always to learn something. She bravely admits all the things she did wrong, because scientists have to have humility to be accepted. What's funniest is how many things went wrong, and how they all piled up to the end. What she ended up with is an amusing and rather charming video on the dangers of throwing your heart (and time) into debunking something you saw on the internet. -via Metafilter Full Article
hard Party Hard In Memory of the Chernobyl Victims By englishrussia.com Published On :: Fri, 29 Apr 2022 14:45:40 +0000 The post Party Hard In Memory of the Chernobyl Victims appeared first on English Russia. Full Article Funny Photos crazy
hard Princeton University Concerts presents the Richardson Chamber Players Fall Concert By www.princeton.edu Published On :: Sun, 24 Nov 2024 15:00:00 -0500 About the Event Our resident ensemble of Princeton University performance faculty and talented students presents a Sunday-afternoon program of songs with and without words written by female composers on both sides of the Atlantic. Songs for mezzo-soprano and piano by prolific lieder composer Josephine Lang and for mezzo-soprano and mixed chamber ensemble by Dame Ethel Smyth bookend the program, with works for string quartet, solo piano, and flute, viola, and harp, that reference American, Jamaican, and European song and poetry in between. This event is presented by Princeton University Concerts. For a full event listing and tickets, please visit this link. Full Article
hard Bike Check: Tora Cycles' Prototype DH Hardtail By www.pinkbike.com Published On :: Fri, 8 Nov 2024 00:00:00 PST Complete with a Shiver and 26" wheels.( Photos: 7, Comments: 159 ) Full Article
hard Why it's so hard to make salt water drinkable By www.pbs.org Published On :: Tue, 31 Jan 2023 19:43:00 +0000 Seawater might seem like an obvious solution to water scarcity, but it comes at a cost. Full Article
hard How To Tell Hardwood From Softwood Firewood? By patriotoutdoornews.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Sep 2023 09:59:41 +0000 When it comes to heating your home or enjoying a cozy evening by the fireplace, the type of firewood you choose can make a significant difference in both the efficiency and quality of your fire. One critical distinction in the world of firewood is whether it is hardwood or softwood. While the terms “hardwood” and […] The post How To Tell Hardwood From Softwood Firewood? appeared first on Patriot Outdoor News. Full Article Firewood
hard How Hard Could It Be to Translate a Picture Book? By www.nytimes.com Published On :: Fri, 30 Jun 2023 09:08:23 EDT With so few words, most of them kid-friendly, it should be a piece of cake. But it depends on who’s holding the whisk. Translator Daniel Hahn say,"I believe my job as a translator is to preserve all the dimensions of a book, not just one of them. When I find complexity, my job is to keep complexity, or more accurately to reconstruct it. And some of the most complex books I’ve reconstructed have been children’s picture books." Full Article
hard Iraq is trying yet again to form a government. Why is it so hard? By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 17:33:52 +0000 Source The Washington Post URL https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/04/15/iraq-is-trying-yet-again-form... Release date 15 April 2020 Expert Dr Renad Mansour In the news type Op-ed Hide date on homepage Full Article
hard The Hard Truth Is Rohingya Refugees Are Not Going Home By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Fri, 06 Oct 2017 09:56:20 +0000 The Hard Truth Is Rohingya Refugees Are Not Going Home Expert comment sysadmin 6 October 2017 The only likely outcome of the crisis is the near-permanent presence of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya along the Bangladesh border. — A Rohingya refugee camp in Bangladesh. Photo: Getty Images. The harrowing scenes of human suffering on the Myanmar–Bangladesh border have provoked outpourings of sympathy and some firm statements by international politicians. At least half a million people have been brutally expelled from their homes and are now living in miserable conditions in muddy refugee camps and storm-drenched shanty towns. As the international community debates how to respond, it needs to take a clear-eyed view of the situation and recognise a brutal truth: the refugees are almost certainly not going home. Consequently, policymakers must not hide behind the fiction that Bangladesh is only temporarily hosting the refugees in preparation for their rapid return home. Over-optimistic assumptions now will lead to worse misery in the long term. Instead, the world needs to plan on the basis that Bangladesh will be hosting a very large and permanent refugee population. The expulsion of the Rohingya Muslims from Rakhine State in northwestern Myanmar is the culmination of decades of discriminatory policies enacted by the country’s military rulers since 1962. In 1978, the Burmese military’s ‘Operation Dragon King’ pushed 200,000 Muslims into Bangladesh. International pressure forced the military to allow most of them to return. Then, in 1991–92, the military again expelled a quarter of a million people. Bangladesh forced some of them back over the border and eventually the military agreed to allow the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees to manage the repatriation of most of the remainder. State-sponsored abuses of the Rohingya and ethnic violence perpetrated against them by chauvinists among the ethnic Rakhine population have continued. The abuse became dramatically worse in 2012 when tens of thousands of Rohingya were forced to flee their homes, although most remained inside the country. This year, armed attacks by self-proclaimed defenders of the Rohingya, the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army, gave the military an excuse to mount what the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights called ‘a textbook example of ethnic cleansing’. It is tempting to believe that, as before, the Myanmar government will allow the expelled Rohingya to return after international pressure. However, recent geopolitical developments in southeast Asia and the election of a democratic government in Myanmar in 2015 make this much less likely. Southeast Asia is now an arena of geopolitical competition between China and its rivals: mainly the United States, India and Japan. All are battling for influence. Both China and India have made public statements of support for Myanmar’s government in the current crisis. In that context, diplomatic pressure or economic sanctions imposed by Europe or the United States will only have one effect – to push Myanmar towards China. Moreover, those in the EU and US who want to see democracy survive in Myanmar will be unwilling to push the elected government led by Aung San Suu Kyi too far. There is an extraordinary degree of hostility towards the Rohingya among the majority Bamar population. This has broken out into street violence on occasions but even where the situation is calm, anti-Muslim prejudice is easily awoken. The current government is very unlikely to challenge such sentiments at a time when it is trying to preserve its position against the military’s continuing domination of political and economic life. Myanmar is one of the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations but ASEAN is unlikely to impose any meaningful pressure. Only Malaysia has been publicly critical of Myanmar’s government. Indonesia has attempted to mediate – its foreign minister Retno Marsudi has held face-to-face meetings with Aung San Suu Kyi – but without apparent effect. Both countries have sent aid and volunteers to the Rohingya refugee camps but there is absolutely no talk of sanctions or other overt pressure. The question then is: what will happen to the refugees? One option could be resettlement, but neither Bangladesh nor any of the other states in the region are willing to take them in. Malaysia already hosts 60,000 registered Rohingya refugees and probably another 150,000 unregistered ones. Unknown thousands of Rohingya have fled to Thailand and Indonesia by boat but have often fallen victim to unscrupulous human traffickers in cahoots with local officials. Thailand has already said it will refuse to allow new ‘boat people’ to land. The only likely outcome therefore is the near-permanent presence of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya along the Bangladesh border. Delaying preparations for a permanent refugee population in the hope that they will be allowed to re-cross the border back into Myanmar will only make the situation worse. Seventy years ago, another ‘temporary’ movement of people into refugee camps created decades of instability around the Middle East. The world must remember the Palestinians as it plans for the future of the Rohingya. Full Article
hard Remembering Richard Kenneth Guy: Games and Taking on Mountains By www.ams.org Published On :: Full Article
hard Woman tells Dave Ramsey that her husband has been unemployed for 13 years — and he delivered some hard truths By finance.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-11T11:11:00Z Full Article
hard Belarus Policy: Time to Play Hardball By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Wed, 12 Aug 2020 14:59:35 +0000 12 August 2020 James Nixey Director, Russia-Eurasia and Europe Programmes @jamesnixey Predictably, Aliaksandr Lukashenka’s regime has betrayed its people and the West’s trust yet again. A new, tougher approach is now the only option, and sanctions are only one of several actions that should be taken. 2020-08-12-Belarus-Protest-Election-Women Women take part in an event in support of detained and injured participants in mass protests against the results of the 2020 Belarusian presidential election. Photo by Natalia FedosenkoTASS via Getty Images. Aliaksandr Lukashenka’s 26-year rule — one of the world’s longest — is itself testament to his regime’s unwillingness to change. Most of Belarus’s immediate neighbours — particularly Lithuania, Latvia, and Poland — are far more prosperous. Now, with the farce of last week’s vote and the subsequent renewed violence that Minsk is willing to use on its citizens, Belarus finds itself at the very bottom of the post-Soviet legitimacy league table. But others share a portion of blame for this saga. The West — and the EU in particular — have failed the people of Belarus.Russia — as ever in its relationships with the Soviet Union’s other successor states — has much to answer for. Like a drug pusher, it made a loss-leading investment in getting Belarus hooked on subsidised energy with meaningless security guarantees thrown in. Lukashenka may not have been the most compliant of post-Soviet leaders — especially recently — but he is still preferred by the Kremlin over any other potential contender, especially the reforming ones currently at the fore. ‘A son-of-a-bitch, but our son-of-a-bitch’ is Russia’s take.But if Russia is the pusher, Western countries have been the enablers. Lukashenka has played them — and played them off against Russia — by frequently rejecting the offers of one and getting closer to the other, then switching and doing the same. The inability or unwillingness to recognize — and act on — evidence of the regime’s insincerity and its propensity to inflict harm on its own citizens has encouraged Minsk’s worst excesses. At the time of writing, more than 3,000 are reported to have been arrested and many tortured.The EU bears special responsibility for this enabling. Ever since Belarus’s independence almost 30 years ago, it has offered plenty of carrots but few meaningful sticks. President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen said that ‘harassment & violent repression of peaceful protesters has no place in Europe’, but statements alone are inadequate. The Belarusian people are risking their freedoms and their lives on the streets of Minsk while the EU simply ‘calls on’ the Belarusian authorities to respect the democratic process.Never too lateThere is plenty that can be done. Sanctions are a much-touted first step and they have been proven to change the calculus, if not the character, of a regime. The EU, the UK and the US should act decisively and in unison to impose them immediately. Included in this would be the immediate halting of direct EU support to state entities.But — as with Russia — it is lazy to limit responses to sanctions alone. Expulsion from international groups and values-based organizations should also be expedited. The EU’s Eastern Partnership (EaP) project with Belarus and five other countries is a prime example of supposedly conditional offers of financial assistance having been accepted, claimed and then defaulted on, time and again. It is time to make an example of Belarus and expel it from the EaP since it is abundantly clear it has no intention of adopting the values demanded of it.The OSCE (Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe) was invited by the Belarusian authorities too late to observe last Sunday’s vote-rigging, so why, in the face of such obvious obstruction, is Belarus even a member? The OSCE often claims its strength is its inclusivity, but this has rarely stood up to scrutiny. Inclusivity may have advantages, but one should also acknowledge its propensity to dilute effectiveness. Belarus should be expelled from here too.The same goes for the IMF, the World Bank group, and its WTO observer status. It is time to make an example of this regime.There should be less diplomatic nicety. It is natural that foreign service officials are hard-wired to want to make things better through their undoubted skills of sensitivity and tact, and sometimes this is the right answer. But not always. It would be better in some instances, such as this one, to give a tougher message — making it clear this regime is no longer seen as legitimate and that, where possible, western countries will seek relationships with more representative figures. This is neither easy nor especially pleasant, but it is not the same as breaking off diplomatic relations entirely, which is not wise as sometimes the organs of power must be dealt with.And in terms of immediate practical help, the EU has an obligation to open its borders to Belarusian refugees who will surely come its way as conditions deteriorate. Lithuania is already showing the way in this regard.Belarus is not one of the more difficult countries. It has no influence, no natural resources and therefore no leverage. It could resort to even more brutal repression of its citizens, but it should be made clear that such a desperate move by the authorities would entail even greater sanction. A common argument against a tougher approach is that it will drive Belarus into the arms of Russia. But this is to fall into the same trap — blackmail in reality — that we have seen for 20 years. In fact, it would be a good litmus test for a similar policy towards other ‘abuser countries’, such as Hungary.Russia is certainly watching closely right now, and the last thing it wants is another colour revolution. The probability is that it will get this wish for now, as the demonstrations will surely cool off and key opposition figures not already in jail have been forced to flee. But western quiescence, as it always does, encourages Russia to act with further impunity. No invasion needed this time though if it already has most of what it wants — Union State notwithstanding — and the West stands aside.A Chinese proverb maintains that ‘the best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second-best time is now’. This holds true for dealing with Belarus. It is not too late to act decisively and play hardball. In doing so, the EU would help repair its reputation for hand-wringing and the people of Belarus might look at the EU with a respect they have lost. Full Article
hard Sophos Firewall hardening best practices By news.sophos.com Published On :: Fri, 25 Oct 2024 12:41:06 +0000 Make the most of your Sophos Firewall. Full Article Products & Services Firewall network Pacific Rim Defense
hard Google Cloud Sporting a New Look in HPC and AI Hardware By www.hpcwire.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 22:16:54 +0000 It’s raining hardware at Google Cloud, with the company making major upgrades in advance of bringing Nvidia’s Blackwell GPUs into its fold next year. The upgrades announced in late October […] The post Google Cloud Sporting a New Look in HPC and AI Hardware appeared first on HPCwire. Full Article Features Armv9 axion Blackwell ConnectX-7 CPUs GB200 Gemma2 GKE GPUs HBM Hypercomputer JAX Llama3 MaxText PyTorch slurm TPUs Trillium
hard Indiana jury finds Richard Allen guilty on all charges in murder of 2 teen girls By www.upi.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 17:34:50 -0500 The Indiana man accused of killing two teenage girls in a wooded area near Delphi was found guilty on Monday and faces a mid-December sentencing date. Full Article
hard Should Schools Have an N-Word Policy? Uproar Over Guard's Firing Forces Hard Questions By www.edweek.org Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2019 00:00:00 +0000 The firing of a black staff member for repeating the n-word while telling a black student not to use it underscores how uneasy many districts, schools, and educators are with handling the use of racist language in any context. Full Article Wisconsin
hard District Hard-Hit by COVID-19 Begins 'Tough Work' of Getting On By www.edweek.org Published On :: Thu, 30 Apr 2020 00:00:00 +0000 No place in Georgia has suffered a higher rate of coronavirus cases than Dougherty County. And the school system, largely rural and poor, is in the middle of it. Full Article Georgia
hard Do Cops Belong in Schools? Minneapolis Tragedy Prompts a Hard Look at School Police By www.edweek.org Published On :: Fri, 05 Jun 2020 00:00:00 +0000 In the aftermath of last month’s killing of an unarmed Minneapolis man in police custody, school systems are re-examining their own contracts with local police agencies. Full Article Minnesota
hard Penn State is within reach of a special regular season, but it’s hard to tell with some fans By sports.yahoo.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 04:47:00 GMT Penn State is on the verge of doing something that it hasn’t done in more than 40 years. The Nittany Lions can post three straight straight 10-win seasons for the first time since 1980-82 with its next two victories. It would be their sixth season with double-digit wins in nine years, the best such stretch since the program’s golden era from 1977-86. Yet some in the sellout crowd of 110,233 at ... Full Article article Sports
hard Do Cops Belong in Schools? Minneapolis Tragedy Prompts a Hard Look at School Police By www.edweek.org Published On :: Fri, 05 Jun 2020 00:00:00 +0000 In the aftermath of last month’s killing of an unarmed Minneapolis man in police custody, school systems are re-examining their own contracts with local police agencies. Full Article Illinois
hard Art's Bold New Direction with Richard Koshalek By www.smithsonianmag.com Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2024 00:00:00 -0000 The Director of the Smithsonian's Hirshhorn Museum predicts what the museum's collections will hold in the next 40 years Read more at http://www.smithsonianmag.com/specialsections/40th-anniversary/Arts-Bold-New-Direction.html Full Article
hard Richard Saul Wurman, Creator of TED Conference: "I Hate Being Spoken To" By www.smithsonianmag.com Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2024 00:00:00 -0000 Richard Saul Wurman, the founder of the popular speaker series, shares his ideas for how to make learning more interesting Full Article
hard The Descendants: Jared Miller as Richard Oliver By www.smithsonianmag.com Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2024 00:00:00 -0000 Smithsonian magazine commissioned Drew Gardner for a project that connects Black Americans today to their lost ancestry. Read about Gardner’s project and process, as well as more details about the subjects of this incredible series here: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/descendants-black-civil-war-heroes-wear-heritage-pride-180983397/ Video produced by Sierra Theobald. Special thanks to Drew Gardner Additional credits: Emma MacBeath, WikiTree US Black Heritage project; Ottawa Goodman, research and coordinator; Sam Dole, Penumbra Foundation; Elizabeth Zuck, set design; Calvin Osbourne, props and costume; Angela Huff, hair and make up; Diego Huerta, Lexia Krebs, behind-the-scenes filming; background prints by Fujifilm USA Full Article
hard Hardy Cup winning head coach leads first 3-5 team to a Canada West football title By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 00:54:21 EST The University of Regina Rams knock off their provincial rivals, the University of Saskatchewan Huskies to win their second ever Hardy Cup championship. An emotional Rams head coach, Mark McConkey talks about how his team was able to overcome a rough regular season and win the title. Full Article
hard The Last Post is a simple melody. But nailing it is harder than it looks By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 04:00:00 EST Canadians hear the Last Post every year during Remembrance Day ceremonies. Warrant Officer Jeremy Maitland breaks down what it takes to play the melody perfectly. Full Article
hard Regina Rams win 1st all-Sask. Hardy Cup in more than 2 decades By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 16:22:35 EST The Regina Rams won the Hardy Cup showdown against the Saskatchewan Huskies Saturday, in the first finals clash between the two teams in 22 years. Full Article News/Canada/Saskatchewan
hard New: Fireproof, Waterproof Hard Drives By www.solidworks.com Published On :: Mon, 01 Mar 2010 00:00:00 -0500 ioSafe Uses SolidWorks to Design Disaster-Proof Computer Hardware; Company Saves $15,000 and Three Months Full Article
hard BorgWarner Thermal Systems uses SOLIDWORKS software to cool world's hardest-working engines By www.solidworks.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Jun 2007 00:00:00 -0500 3D CAD software helps design engineers serve biggest names in the auto and trucking industries Full Article
hard Planting churches in hard soil By www.om.org Published On :: Tue, 08 May 2012 18:28:21 +0000 In a country with few evangelical churches, OM Austria aims to establish a worship point in every town with a population over 5,000. Full Article
hard The Transition to High School Is Hard. Here's How to Make It Better By blogs.edweek.org Published On :: Wed, 30 Sep 2020 00:00:00 +0000 Having a growth mindset about personality—thinking that people can change for the better—helps kids handle tough times. Full Article Highschools
hard 'This Road Just Got a Lot Harder': Teachers' Unions Hit With New Round of Lawsuits By www.edweek.org Published On :: Mon, 15 Oct 2018 00:00:00 +0000 In the wake of the 'Janus' Supreme Court case, teachers' unions are facing more than a dozen legal challenges backed by right-leaning groups that could further dampen their membership numbers and finances. Full Article Unions
hard It's Notoriously Hard to Evaluate PD. A New System Aims to Change That By blogs.edweek.org Published On :: Tue, 22 Sep 2020 00:00:00 +0000 A new process for judging the quality of professional development has made its debut, with the aim of answering a difficult question: Which PD is high-quality and which isn't? Full Article Professionaldevelopment
hard The Transition to High School Is Hard. Here's How to Make It Better By blogs.edweek.org Published On :: Wed, 30 Sep 2020 00:00:00 +0000 Having a growth mindset about personality—thinking that people can change for the better—helps kids handle tough times. Full Article Middleschools
hard The Transition to High School Is Hard. Here's How to Make It Better By blogs.edweek.org Published On :: Wed, 30 Sep 2020 00:00:00 +0000 Having a growth mindset about personality—thinking that people can change for the better—helps kids handle tough times. Full Article Growth+Mindset
hard Refugee life, hardships and hope By www.om.org Published On :: Fri, 12 Apr 2019 15:11:19 +0000 If God can speak to a national faith believer, and move him to cross continents to share his love for Jesus with other refugees, despite dangers and difficulties, what more might He achieve with more workers prepared to take the same risks for the gospel? Full Article
hard Penn State Altoona hosts fall 2024 Hard Freight Café open mic event By www.psu.edu Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2024 17:05:50 -0400 Attendees were invited to read or perform their own work or music or share a favorite piece of poetry or prose. The event began with a reading by English professors Todd Davis and Erin Murphy. Full Article
hard Sorry seems to be the hardest word By www.om.org Published On :: Wed, 26 Feb 2014 17:59:19 +0000 A worker in Kazakhstan notes the impact of the gospel on the Kazakh language. Full Article
hard PS5 Pro Aimed at 'Hardcore' Users, Pricing Has Not Had 'Negative Impact' on Sales, Says Sony President By www.gadgets360.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 15:02:51 +0530 Sony has said that the pricing of the newly launched PlayStation 5 Pro has not had a negative impact on console sales. While the company has not revealed initial sales figures for the PS5 Pro, it believes PS5 Pro sales will not have a “large contribution” to PS5 sales overall, considering it was a high-end console targeting “hardcore” users. Full Article
hard State of Delaware Recognizes Hard Work of Caregivers, Commits to Raising Awareness of Resources Available to Them By news.delaware.gov Published On :: Mon, 30 Jan 2023 20:55:25 +0000 New campaign underway to highlight support, services available to First State caregivers NEW CASTLE, Del. (Jan. 30, 2023) — The Delaware Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS) has launched a new campaign designed to raise awareness around the many resources available to those who care for and support an older adult or someone living […] Full Article Delaware Health and Social Services Division of Services for Aging and Adults with Physical Disabilities News caregivers
hard Why it's hard to say "big data" without saying "cloud" By blogs.sas.com Published On :: Thu, 27 May 2021 15:15:35 +0000 Ready to turn big data into big business insights? Look to the cloud. The post Why it's hard to say "big data" without saying "cloud" appeared first on The Data Roundtable. Full Article Uncategorized big data cloud computing digital transformation
hard Magesi FC makes history with cup final spot after staving off Richards Bay By www.iol.co.za Published On :: Sat, 09 Nov 2024 15:56:36 GMT Full Article
hard KZN police arrest suspect for Richards Bay businessman’s murder By www.iol.co.za Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 07:27:37 GMT Full Article
hard Emigration Turns Hardship into Opportunity By Published On :: Thu, 09 May 2013 18:52:00 GMT The global financial crisis may have eliminated job opportunities around the world, but it has opened the door for a cultural boom on new shores. Full Article
hard Crossing Switzerland's St. Gotthard Divide By Published On :: Tue, 06 Jan 2015 22:30:00 GMT The railroad that bridged German and Italian Switzerland was meant to unify the nation. Up close, the story looked a little different. Full Article
hard Syria: Interview with Richard Gowan By Published On :: Thu, 10 Oct 2013 12:53:00 GMT Gowan discusses the obstacles to a peace process, including the fact that extremist rebel factions are unlikely to recognize any ceasefire arrived at in Geneva. Full Article
hard Why Is It So Hard for Some Americans to Vote? It's All About Race. By Published On :: Tue, 23 Aug 2016 14:29:00 GMT Race is central in this year's race for the White House and the struggle for racial justice and voting rights are inextricably linked. Full Article
hard Trump to appoint hardliners Rubio and Waltz as foreign policy chiefs, reports claim By www.euronews.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 11:12:24 +0100 Trump to appoint hardliners Rubio and Waltz as foreign policy chiefs, reports claim Full Article
hard Cities Will Be Hit Hardest By Climate Change, UN Report Warns By www.ipsnews.net Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 13:09:19 +0000 Cities are in a unique position, simultaneously the biggest emitters of greenhouse gasses and the most affected areas of the greenhouse effect. As a new UN report shows that rapid urbanization and industrialization have adverse effects on the environment, causing a rise in sea levels, prolonged rainfalls and flooding, and an increase in overall temperature. […] Full Article Climate Action Climate Change Economy & Trade Environment Global Headlines Humanitarian Emergencies Inequality Sustainable Development Goals TerraViva United Nations IPS UN Bureau IPS UN Bureau Report
hard to wow with powerpoint richard harrington By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: to wow with powerpoint richard harrington Full Article