On The Small Business Radio Show this week, I talked with Gary Hawkins who has been described as a visionary and retail industry expert.
Finnish Lapland could still see overnight temperatures drop as low as -15C this week.
How to pronounce the name of the Saints’ new draft pick,”Taliesi Fuaga”. Even NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell didn’t say it quite right.
President Joe Biden said Friday that he would be "happy" to debate former president Donald Trump ahead of the November election.
4 protesters who were arrested are released, but say they were beaten.
"Where is my life going?" "Who do I want to be?" As future-thinkers, adolescents spend significant time contemplating these types of questions about their life goals. A new study from the University of Houston shows that as people grow from teenagers to young adults, they tend to change the importance they place on certain life goals, but one thing is certain: The existence of high-prestige and education goals, as well as their positive development, can drive success.
The 6’6″ guard from the Netherlands averaged more than 13 points per game last season.
Leaving the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) is not “necessary” to prevent small boat crossings, Lord David Cameron has said.
Van Lith told the Associated Press she is 'very close' to a decision
Pope Francis said people must learn to respect and love the earth....
GENEVA: More than 70 per cent of the global workforce is exposed to risks linked to climate change that cause hundreds of thousands of deaths each year, the International Labour Organization said on Monday, adding governments would need to act as the numbers rise. Workers, especially the world's poorest, are more vulnerable than the general population to the dangers of climate extremes such as heatwaves, droughts, wildfires and hurricanes because they are often the first exposed or exposed for...
How Climate Change Narrative Is Preventing Africa From Modernizing And Gaining Prosperity Authored by Katie Spence via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours), Under a blazing Kenyan sun, elderly women toil on their hands and knees in the reddish-brown clay, separating the choking weeds from the small, green shoots of a finger millet crop. The women are barehanded and barefoot, and they work from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. or 6 p.m. at night. Clearing a small field takes three days. “A combine...