Ukraine: Russian Strikes In Residential Areas Kill At Least Seven, Injure Dozens
Rescuers in the eastern Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk are digging through the rubble of several buildings destroyed by two back-to-back Russian missile attacks Monday that killed at least seven people....
View ArticleInvestors Force Black Families Out Of Home Ownership
Investors have been buying houses at a steady rate since the last recession, but how much does it affect availability in the housing market? New research from the Georgia Institute of Technology shows...
View ArticleOpioids, Methadone And Babies
Whatever the opioid crisis calls to mind, it likely isn’t pacifiers and diapers. But when 1 out of every 5 hospitalized infants receives opioids, and when some infants require methadone treatment,...
View ArticlePhysicists Open New Path To An Exotic Form Of Superconductivity
Physicists have identified a mechanism for the formation of oscillating superconductivity known as pair-density waves. Physical Review Letters published the discovery, which provides new insight into...
View ArticleAncient DNA Reveals An Early African Origin Of Cattle In The Americas
Cattle may seem like uniquely American animals, steeped in the lore of cowboys, cattle drives and sprawling ranches. But cattle didn’t exist on the American continents prior to the arrival of the...
View ArticleMiracle At Fátima? World Youth Day Pilgrim Receives Her Sight After Communion...
By Almudena Martínez-Bordiú “I opened my eyes and I could see perfectly,” said Jimena, a 16-year-old Spanish World Youth Day pilgrim who said she miraculously recovered her sight after receiving the...
View ArticleSudan: 13 Dead In Heaviest Fighting Since Start Of War
At least 13 civilians died on Tuesday in the heaviest fighting in Sudan since the conflict began there nearly four months ago. The regular army launched airstrikes and heavy artillery salvos to try to...
View ArticlePakistan: CPEC In Shadow Of Balochistan Insurgency – OpEd
The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) initiative aims to link China and Pakistan by oil and gas pipelines, railroads, and an optical fibre link that runs from Gwadar to Xinjiang. The project,...
View ArticleHow Serious Is Canada About Combating Foreign Interference? – OpEd
What is Canada really hoping to uncover from the impending much-hyped inquiry into foreign interference in its politics? And, how will Canadians respond to the findings of an independent, thorough...
View ArticleThe Haryana Riots: A Tragic And Horrific Episode Of Anti-Muslim Violence In...
The persecution of Muslims in India is a serious human rights issue that has been escalating in recent years. Muslims, who constitute about 14% of India’s population, have faced discrimination,...
View ArticleWithout A Replacement, Abandoning Fossil Fuels, Supports China – OpEd
Wind turbines and solar panels that can generate electricity intermittently, are themselves totally dependent on fossil fuels for all their components. Renewables offer NO energy independence, as...
View ArticleEven Treated Wastewater Affects Our Rivers
Effluents from wastewater treatment plants have a dual effect: Some species disappear, while others benefit. Especially certain insect orders, such as stonefly and caddisfly larvae, are decimated....
View ArticlePlaying Football May Increase Risk For Parkinson’s Disease
Identification of risk factors for Parkinson’s disease (PD) is essential for early diagnosis. Dating back to the 1920s, Parkinson’s disease and parkinsonism—an umbrella term that refers to motor...
View ArticleCould Artificially Dimming The Sun Prevent Ice Melt?
With methods of so-called geoengineering, the climate could theoretically be artificially influenced and cooled. Bernese researchers have now investigated whether it would be possible to prevent the...
View ArticleHidden Moles In Hidden Holes
Scientists have identified two types of mole which they believe have been living undiscovered in the mountains of eastern Turkey for as many as 3 million years. The new moles – named Talpa...
View ArticleScientific Astrology – OpEd
The stars are like letters which inscribe themselves at every moment in the sky. Everything in the world is full of signs. All things depend on each other. As has been said, 'Everything breathes...
View ArticleHaftar’s Struggle: From Civil War To Peace And Development In Benghazi – OpEd
The First Libyan Civil War was an armed conflict in 2011 in the North African country of Libya that was fought between forces loyal to Colonel Muammar Gaddafi and rebel groups that were seeking to...
View ArticleInternational Youth Day: Pakistan’s Youth Empowerment Strategies – OpEd
International Youth Day observed every year on August 12th by the United Nations (UN) as the day of awareness, was adopted by UN General Assembly (UNGA) via resolution supporting the suggestion made...
View ArticleA Rabbi’s Views About Jewish Support For Prophet Muhammad – OpEd
How do I, as a Rabbi who believes that Muhammad was an authentic prophet of the One and Only God, explain why the Jews of Medina did not support Prophet Muhammad claims? Almost all of the prophets...
View ArticleIran Constructs Mining Complex To Support Nuclear Power Production
Iran has initiated the construction of a mining complex in the northwestern region of the country, aiming to establish a crucial "hub" for the production of essential raw materials required for...
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