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How much money Dortmund or Real Madrid will get for winning the Champions League
GiveMeSport· 5 days agoWinning – or even just featuring in – the Champions League has its obvious benefits. It’s a...
PARTING SHOT: Escaping the Doldrums
The Cavalier Daily· 4 days agoIf you ever find yourself stuck in the Doldrums, know that you are not alone. Look to your surroundings for escape. You will know the way out.
Malta or Cyprus – which is best for your summer holiday?
The Telegraph via Yahoo News· 7 days agoThere is much to be said – in these times of inflating prices and geopolitical turbulence – for the...
A dive into vaunted speed records across Colorado's outdoors
Colorado Springs Gazette· 1 day agoJoseph DeMoor has a confession to make. There are, at last check, 487 pages you could scroll through...
Full Line-up Set For WOW - Women Of The World Festival In Manchester
Broadway World· 7 days agoWomen of the World, and Factory International have announced the full programme for WOW Manchester,...
A Different Kind of Colonial Story
The Atlantic· 2 days agoThe storyteller points to scenes unfolding within the frame and says, This is important. This Strange Eventful History is set, at least initially,...
Which Pole Is Colder?
NASA· 3 days agoThe South Pole is a lot colder than the North Pole. The South Pole is found over icy land, rather than over sea ice, helping to make it colder. Both the...
African sci-fi: body hopping, artificial wombs and angry ghosts in a future Botswana
The Conversation· 6 days agoTlotlo Tsamaase has already proved her talent for African science fiction. As a scholar of African science fiction and speculative fiction, I explore how authors like Tsamaase are employing ...
PARTING SHOT: Escaping the Doldrums
The Cavalier Daily· 4 days agoIf you ever find yourself stuck in the Doldrums, know that you are not alone. Look to your surroundings for escape. You will know the way out.
How many bird species nest in Minnesota? New book sheds some insight.
San Francisco Chronicle· 6 days agoWhen T.S. Roberts wrote the last really big Minnesota bird book in 1932, "Birds of Minnesota," ravens were dwindling, bald eagles were scarce and most everyone assumed the giant subspecies of ...