Marriage is a team sport, but ruling a country? Not so much. Just ask Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip. 'All of it, 100%': Trump cooks up another lie, claims '100%' of all new jobs during Biden's ...
If there is one thing that has become painfully consistent about the Malawi National Football Team,the Flames it’s ...
BLANTYRE-(MaraviPost)-The recent arrests of several former Malawi Congress Party ministers and senior officials have ...
Prince William knew that Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor would hurt the monarchy. Before the former Duke of York was stripped of his title, evicted from Royal Lodge and later arrested on suspicion of ...
In nearly four decades in Albany, leading key committees as a Democrat, she was an early supporter of liberal causes like labor rights and abortion protections. By Clay Risen See more of our coverage ...
AT Trevor & Associates’ ThinkTank’26 in Harare, we asked a room of Zimbabwean executives a deceptively simple question: is artificial intelligence already shaping your workplace, or are you still ...
Jonathan Martin is POLITICO’s senior political columnist and politics bureau chief. He’s covered elections in every corner of America and co-authored a best-selling book about Donald Trump and Joe ...
While most youth around the world are happier today than they were 20 years ago, it’s not true for the United States, other English-speaking countries and parts of Western Europe. That’s according to ...
Every spring, Canadian beekeepers await the arrival of queen bees crucial to their industry. The queens that populate Canadian bee colonies through the season largely do not come from Canada at all.
In 1869 an innovative new material was created: plastic. Initially envisioned as a substitute for ivory in making billiard balls, the versatility of this new material has seen it applied to almost ...
We live in a time when it seems that everything has a solution, yet certain ideas force us to pause. One of them comes from Søren Kierkegaard, a 19th-century author widely considered one of the ...
The ability to read and write bespoke segments of DNA is enabling unique solutions to everyday challenges. As ease-of-use and adoption grow, the trend is set to accelerate. In April, 2000, Stanford ...