Monday, November 18, 2024
Advertisement
  1. You Are At:
  2. News
  3. AP
  4. World News

More From World

  • US airstrike in Somalia against al-Shabab kills 7 extremists

    Latest US airstrike in Somalia against al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab kills 7 extremists

  • UAE sentences British academic to life in prison for spying

    A British academic jailed in the United Arab Emirates on spying allegations was sentenced to life in prison on Wednesday

  • The Latest: Turkey: Saudi's slaying should not be covered up

    Turkey's foreign minister says the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi should not be covered up for the sake of maintaining trade ties with Saudi Arabia

  • Greece: Creditors approve U-turn on pension cuts

    Greece's bailout creditors approve request to scrap pension cuts planned in 2019 following strong budget performance

  • Switzerland delays final decision on UN migration pact

    The Swiss government says the country won't attend a conference next month at which a U.N.-backed agreement on migration is to be approved because it wants to wait for parliamentary debates at home before giving its final blessing

  • The Latest: May says rejecting her deal could mean no Brexit

    British Prime Minister Theresa May says that if Parliament rejects the draft divorce deal with the European Union, the U.K. could end up not leaving the bloc at all

  • Martin O'Neill out as Ireland coach, Roy Keane also goes

    Martin O'Neill has ended his five-year stint as Ireland coach, taking assistant Roy Keane with him

  • Amazon's move will gentrify neighborhoods – at what social cost?

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Alexandra Staub, Pennsylvania State University(THE CONVERSATION) When large companies move into an area, politicians often proclaim how the new business will create jobs, increase tax revenues, and thus lead to economic growth. This is one reason local governments offer tax incentives to businesses willing to move in. Amazon’s decision to locate offices in Long Island City across

  • Wildfire smoke is becoming a nationwide health threat

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Richard E. Peltier, University of Massachusetts Amherst(THE CONVERSATION) The impacts of recent forest fires in California reach well beyond the burned areas. Smoke from the Camp Fire created hazardous air quality conditions in San Francisco, more than 170 miles to the southwest – but it didn’t stop there. Cross-country winds carried it across the United States, creating hazy

  • Rock 'n' roll is dying in Bangladesh

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Mubashar Hasan, University of Oslo(THE CONVERSATION) The seeds of rock ‘n’ roll culture were planted in Bangladesh during the birth of the country in 1971, after a war for liberation separated this majority-Muslim territory from Pakistan. For most of the 20th century, the region was a traditional Southasian agrarian society. Its soundtrack: Bengali folk music, featuring instruments

  • Why bigotry is a public health problem

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Ronald W. Pies, Tufts University(THE CONVERSATION) Over a decade ago, I wrote a piece for a psychiatric journal entitled “Is Bigotry a Mental Illness?” At the time, some psychiatrists were advocating making “pathological bigotry” or pathological bias – essentially, bias so extreme it interferes with daily function and reaches near-delusional proportions – an official psychiatric

  • In the 1600s Hester Pulter wondered, 'Why must I forever be confined?' – now her poems are online for all to see

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Samantha Snively, University of California, Davis(THE CONVERSATION) In 1996, a graduate student named Mark Robson was creating a digital catalog of the University of Leeds’ Brotherton Library when he discovered a small manuscript on the shelf. The elegantly titled “Poems Breathed Forth by the Noble Hadassas” contained 120 poems and a half-finished prose romance. As far as Robson

  • The government aims to boost ethanol without evidence that it saves money or helps the environment

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) André Boehman, University of Michigan(THE CONVERSATION) President Donald Trump has promised his supporters in Iowa that the federal government will take a step that may increase corn ethanol sales. This plant-derived fuel, which comprises about 10 percent of the 143 billion gallons of gasoline Americans buy each year, is a kind of alcohol made from corn. The industry first emerged

  • Blockchain systems are tracking food safety and origins

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Nir Kshetri, University of North Carolina – Greensboro(THE CONVERSATION) When a Chinese consumer buys a package labeled “Australian beef,” there’s only a 50-50 chance the meat inside is, in fact, Australian beef. It could just as easily contain rat, dog, horse or camel meat – or a mixture of them all. It’s gross and dangerous, but also costly.Fraud in the global food industry is a

  • Virtual tours give rural students a glimpse of college life

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Carol Cutler White, Mississippi State University(THE CONVERSATION) The first time that Nyah visited the University of North Carolina at Greensboro for a campus tour, there wasn’t much of a chance to see what takes place inside the classrooms.“We just walked by buildings and the guide talked about what goes on inside,” Nyah recalls of the campus tour this past spring.But during a

  • Hong Kong finds humans contracted hepatitis carried in rats

    The Hong Kong Health Department says a second person in the city has been found to have contracted a strain of hepatitis that is carried by rats

  • Blocks found in Egypt bear name of famed pharaoh's builder

    Egypt says archaeologists digging in Cairo have found two blocks of limestone with inscriptions belonging to an engineer who worked for Ramses II, one of the longest ruling pharaohs in antiquity

  • Cameroon military frees 9 abducted children, teacher

    A Cameroon military official says the military has freed nine children and their teacher who had been kidnapped by gunmen Tuesday from a school in Kumba in the country's restive English-speaking South West region

  • AP Explains: Dispute between Seoul, Tokyo over WWII brothels

    AP Explains: The intensifying dispute between Seoul and Tokyo over World War II military brothels

  • Spanish court rules union of sex workers illegal

    Spain's National Court has outlawed a union of sex workers, saying that recognition of the group amounted to making the exploitation of prostitutes legal

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement