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Who is Allan Lichtman and how does he predict the presidential race with such accuracy?
USA Today· 2 days agoDuring a recent phone interview with USA Today, the professor—and apparent presidential...
Meet Allan Lichtman, the professor who predicted the president (and the last 9)
USA TODAY via Yahoo News· 2 days agoIn a recent phone interview with USA Today, Lichtman shared how he developed his method and what his...
Argentina’s return to the West is a pivotal moment in world geopolitics
The Telegraph via Yahoo News· 4 hours agoArgentina’s repudiation of the Brics is more than a minor earthquake in global diplomacy. It has...
Today in History: May 12, more than 87,000 dead or missing in China earthquake
Stamford Advocate· 4 days agoToday in History
Everybody's in LA: John Mulaney Has What Late Night Needs
Time via Yahoo News· 9 hours agoAs too many of today’s blowhards fail to understand, the best late-night hosts don’t make the show...
Why Japan is struggling to kick its coal dependency
Vox· 28 minutes agoCoal is the dirtiest fossil fuel by far, producing more particulate air pollution and global warming gasses than any other, per unit of energy. Last...
A Hundred-Year-Old Anime Film Has Been Uncovered in Japan
Men's Journal via Yahoo News· 22 hours agoAnime has been around for a very long time, well over 100 years, and has been a booming industry in...
Shooting of wife's lover lands man in prison
Herald & Review· 14 hours agoWhen the happy landscape of Robert D. Miller’s world was rocked by the emotional earthquake of discovering his wife was cheating on him with a friend,...
SEC.gov | Earthquakes, Eclipses, and Enigmas: Remarks at the SEC’s 43nd Annual Small Business Forum...
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission· 4 days agoThis annual forum gives the Commission direct insights from the companies, practitioners, and entrepreneurs that...Securities and Exchange Commission or my fellow Commissioners. Few topics in ...
Sky-high vanity: constructing the world’s tallest buildings creates high emissions
The Conversation· 5 hours agoThe pursuit of ‘vanity height’ in skyscrapers is driven by aesthetic appeal and the status of being ‘the tallest’. Redefining how we measure building heights can help cut the environmental cost.