What does it mean for multiethnic democracies if Scotland leaves the UK?, by Ian Reifowitz No. More. Wars, by Mark E Andersen Meet the Disqualified for 2016, by Jon Perr Media bias is dangerous but outright bias can get many killed, by Egberto Willies Could the 'male pill' alter the dynamic of the contraception debate? by Dante Atkins The health care is too damn high, by Joan McCarter What would a 2014 Republican wave look like? Odds are, not like this, by Steve Singiser Who stole the American Dream again? by Frank Vyan Walton 'The Burning Bed,' 30 years later. And Ray Rice, now, by Susan Grigsby They are trying to stop the student vote. We won't let them! by
No. More. Wars, by Mark E Andersen
Meet the Disqualified for 2016, by Jon Perr
Media bias is dangerous but outright bias can get many killed, by Egberto Willies
Could the 'male pill' alter the dynamic of the contraception debate? by Dante Atkins
The health care is too damn high, by Joan McCarter
What would a 2014 Republican wave look like? Odds are, not like this, by Steve Singiser
Who stole the American Dream again? by Frank Vyan Walton
'The Burning Bed,' 30 years later. And Ray Rice, now, by Susan Grigsby
They are trying to stop the student vote. We won't let them! by
[J]ust as the mobile phone revolution in Africa dramatically reduced the need for telephone landlines, solar power is now leapfrogging the electric grid. Like Murandika, thousands of rural Africans are turning to solar as the solution, in a clean-energy boom that development experts say could become a catalyst for widespread economic empowerment. These aren't the oceanic fields of solar panels some German entrepreneurs have proposed to build in the Sahara, nor the grid-connected rooftop systems that power entire American homes. Instead, these are small kits that come complete with the necessary panels, wiring, power converters, and batteries to power a few light bulbs, a small appliance, or a cell phone charger.
These aren't the oceanic fields of solar panels some German entrepreneurs have proposed to build in the Sahara, nor the grid-connected rooftop systems that power entire American homes. Instead, these are small kits that come complete with the necessary panels, wiring, power converters, and batteries to power a few light bulbs, a small appliance, or a cell phone charger.
The woman who worked 13 years to return a wedding photo found in the rubble of the World Trade Center after the 9/11 attacks is representative of "the best of humanity," said the man who will finally get back the photograph he'd had tacked to his cubicle wall. Fred Mahe thought he'd never see the photograph again, after his office on the 77th floor of the second World Trade Center tower was obliterated in the Sept. 11 attacks.
Fred Mahe thought he'd never see the photograph again, after his office on the 77th floor of the second World Trade Center tower was obliterated in the Sept. 11 attacks.
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell has the ultimate authority on the appeal because the suspension was imposed through the personal-conduct policy, Pro Football Talk said.
According to previously published eyewitness reports, the fracas began when Track Palin, the former governor’s adult son, confronted a former boyfriend of his 20-year-old sister, Willow. But according to the Palin family’s version of events, the instigator was actually the former boyfriend. The initial tussle occurred, the source said, after the young man in question “tried to get in” to the Hummer limousine after he’d engaged in some unspecified “questionable behavior.”
But according to the Palin family’s version of events, the instigator was actually the former boyfriend.
The initial tussle occurred, the source said, after the young man in question “tried to get in” to the Hummer limousine after he’d engaged in some unspecified “questionable behavior.”
Twitter lit up as people blasted the company for its insensitivity for selling an item citing a university nationally known as the site of the May 4, 1970 deaths of four students by the Ohio National Guard during Vietnam War protests. "We take great offense to a company using our pain for their publicity and profit" the university said in a statement Monday. "This item is beyond poor taste and trivializes a loss of life that still hurts the Kent State community today."
"We take great offense to a company using our pain for their publicity and profit" the university said in a statement Monday. "This item is beyond poor taste and trivializes a loss of life that still hurts the Kent State community today."
Here is more discussion.