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FRIDAY'S PREP ROUNDUP: Allen Lane (Gate City), Jay Snavely (Rural Retreat), Jade Hess (Honaker),...
Bristol Herald Courier· 5 days agoLane outdueled Ben Hale of Richlands as the Blue Devils recorded a 3-1 victory over the Blue Tornado...
Mexican youth voters dream of end to crime, pollution
AFP via Yahoo News· 5 days agoAn end to corruption, drug-related violence and pollution are some of the hopes and dreams of...
Faith Salie
GBH News· 3 days agoFaith Salie is a television and radio host, commentator, interviewer, "ethics expert," actor, comedian, and journalist, but she prefers to be called,...
The 10 best beaches in Nice
The Telegraph via Yahoo News· 4 days agoThe five-mile waterfront curve is almost exclusively small pebbles, or bigger ones. But the compensations are many. The Bay of Angels has not usurped its...
The Christian Science Monitor Daily for May 28, 2024
The Christian Science Monitor· 2 days agoWhen Brenda Magaña Díaz was growing up in a working-class Mexico City neighborhood in the early 2000s, no one ever told her a woman could one day become president. When she went on to work as ...
What to know about Mexico's historic elections Sunday that will likely put a woman in power
Midland Reporter-Telegram· 2 days agoMexicans will vote Sunday in historic elections weighing gender, democracy and populism, as they...
One of the deadliest jobs in Mexico: Running for office - The Boston Globe
The Boston Globe· 5 days agoVoters are preparing to cast ballots next month in a spirited election that could produce the...
She trails her rival to be Mexico's president. A visit to her hometown helps show why.
NBC NEWS· 7 days agoShe sold snacks in a small town in central Mexico as a girl and rose to national politics with a...
Zelenskiy Implores Biden, Xi to Attend Summit as Russia Ramps Up
Bloomberg via Yahoo News· 4 days ago...from BloombergIsraeli Airstrike, Egyptian Guard’s Death Ratchet Up TensionsMusk’s xAI Raises $6...
Mexico is poised to elect its first woman president. Will women’s lives improve? - CSMonitor.com
The Christian Science Monitor· 2 days agoWhen Brenda Magaña Díaz was growing up in a working-class Mexico City neighborhood in the early 2000s, no one ever told her a woman could one day become president. When she went on to work as ...