12 minutes

The Conversation
Feed icon

Puede que los consumidores todavía no perciban la sostenibilidad como un valor tangible (como sí lo son la calidad, la durabilidad o el diseño) que justifique pagar más.

Feed icon
The Conversation
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

Puede que los consumidores todavía no perciban la sostenibilidad como un valor tangible (como sí lo son la calidad, la durabilidad o el diseño) que justifique pagar más.

Building maintenance staff demanded the university honor pay raises.

Feed icon
LAist
Attribution+

Building maintenance staff demanded the university honor pay raises.

1977 மார்ச் மாதம் பிரதமரான மொரார்ஜி தேசாய் 1979 ஜூலையில் பதவி இழந்தார். உட்கட்சி முரண்பாடே பிரதான காரணம். ஜனதா கட்சியில் சங்கமமான பின்பும் தங்கள் ஆர்.எஸ்.எஸ் உறவை கைவிட ஜனசங்கினர் மறுத்தனர். இந்த இரட்டை உறுப்பினர் பிரச்சனை பூதாகரமானது. இச்சந்தர்ப்பத்தைக் காங்கிரஸ் கட்சி ரசித்தது; மறைமுகமாக ஊக்குவித்தது. 1979 ஜூலையில் சரண்சிங் பிரதமரானார். 1979-ல் பதவி இழந்தார். மீண்டும் பொதுத் தேர்தலை நாடு சந்திக்க நேர்ந்தது. ஜனதாகட்சியிலிருந்து பிரிந்து ஜெயபிரகாஷ் நாராயணன் சமூக ஜனநாயக ஜனதா […] Source

Feed icon
மாற்று
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

1977 மார்ச் மாதம் பிரதமரான மொரார்ஜி தேசாய் 1979 ஜூலையில் பதவி இழந்தார். உட்கட்சி முரண்பாடே பிரதான காரணம். ஜனதா கட்சியில் சங்கமமான பின்பும் தங்கள் ஆர்.எஸ்.எஸ் உறவை கைவிட ஜனசங்கினர் மறுத்தனர். இந்த இரட்டை உறுப்பினர் பிரச்சனை பூதாகரமானது. இச்சந்தர்ப்பத்தைக் காங்கிரஸ் கட்சி ரசித்தது; மறைமுகமாக ஊக்குவித்தது. 1979 ஜூலையில் சரண்சிங் பிரதமரானார். 1979-ல் பதவி இழந்தார். மீண்டும் பொதுத் தேர்தலை நாடு சந்திக்க நேர்ந்தது. ஜனதாகட்சியிலிருந்து பிரிந்து ஜெயபிரகாஷ் நாராயணன் சமூக ஜனநாயக ஜனதா […] Source

Para las juventudes nicaragüenses, el exilio no implica una desconexión con su país ni con el proceso político. Supone una oportunidad de rearticular la disidencia desde nuevos contextos y estrategias.

Feed icon
The Conversation
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

Para las juventudes nicaragüenses, el exilio no implica una desconexión con su país ni con el proceso político. Supone una oportunidad de rearticular la disidencia desde nuevos contextos y estrategias.

Este próximo 19 de febrero se cumplen diez años de la muerte de Umberto Eco, autor de El nombre de la rosa. Fue el escritor que hizo posible lo imposible, al confiar en un lector ideal que en realidad sí existía.

Feed icon
The Conversation
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

Este próximo 19 de febrero se cumplen diez años de la muerte de Umberto Eco, autor de El nombre de la rosa. Fue el escritor que hizo posible lo imposible, al confiar en un lector ideal que en realidad sí existía.

¿En infantil o en primaria? ¿A la vez o por separado? ¿Mayúsculas primero o minúsculas? Dudas clásicas sobre el aprendizaje de la lectura y la escritura, respondidas desde la ciencia.

Feed icon
The Conversation
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

¿En infantil o en primaria? ¿A la vez o por separado? ¿Mayúsculas primero o minúsculas? Dudas clásicas sobre el aprendizaje de la lectura y la escritura, respondidas desde la ciencia.

Sign up for Chalkbeat Colorado’s free daily newsletter to get the latest reporting from us, plus curated news from other Colorado outlets, delivered to your inbox. A southern Colorado elementary school that backers have called “Colorado’s first public Christian school” has sued state officials over the state’s ban on religious public schools, alleging religious discrimination. Riverstone Academy, along with its authorizer, Education reEnvisioned Board of Cooperative Educational Services, or ERBOCES, filed a lawsuit last week in federal district court against 10 state education leaders. Although Riverstone is currently receiving state education funding, the money could eventually be clawed back by the state, which would be “the end of the school as it currently exists” and create financial and accounting difficulties for ERBOCES, the lawsuit says. Riverstone, which advertises itself as offering a “Christian foundation,” opened quietly in Pueblo County last August with about 30 students in kindergarten through fifth grade. Emails obtained by Chalkbeat indicate the school was created at the behest of a conservative law firm in order to spark a religious liberty lawsuit that could go all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. The lawsuit filed Feb. 13 appears to be the start of that legal effort. According to the lawsuit, Riverstone and ERBOCES want a court order to prevent Colorado officials from clawing back the school’s funding and a declaration that certain provisions in the Colorado Constitution violate the U.S. Constitution. The lawsuit comes even as Riverstone’s location remains a mystery. School officials closed the school’s building — a former office in an industrial area — in late January after orders from local officials who cited numerous health and safety violations. Riverstone officials have provided a screenshot of a text to Chalkbeat indicating Riverstone has a temporary location, but they have so far refused to say where it is. The defendants in the Riverstone case include Colorado Education Commissioner Susana Córdova and the nine members of the Colorado State Board of Education. A spokesperson for the Colorado Department of Education said by email Tuesday, “While we are working closely with our legal counsel, we are not able to discuss pending litigation.” Riverstone Academy and ERBOCES are represented by four law firms but not Alliance Defending Freedom, the firm that sought a “test case,” according to the emails obtained by Chalkbeat. The firms include First & Fourteenth, First LIberty Institute, Dechert, and Miller Farmer Carlson Law, which is headed by Brad Miller. Miller is an education attorney who represents several conservative-leaning Colorado districts and who wrote the email indicating that Riverstone’s creation was for the purpose of instigating a court case. The state letter at the center of the lawsuit After Riverstone hit the headlines in October, the Colorado Department of Education sent a letter to Ken Witt, the head of ERBOCES, suggesting that Riverstone may not be eligible for public funding. The letter said public schools are generally required to be nonsectarian, which means secular, and cited the Colorado and U.S. Constitutions. “ERBOCES is a public entity bound by the federal and state constitutions,” the letter said. “Thus, any school that ERBOCES operates must be nonsectarian in nature.” Despite what the letter said, the department is funding Riverstone for now. Department officials have said they won’t make a final decision on whether to claw back money until an audit of ERBOCES is complete, probably in early 2027. ERBOCES is one of 68 school districts and BOCES undergoing audits this year, according to a list released by the Education Department in January. The lawsuit repeatedly cites the October letter from the Education Department as well as the audit as evidence that Riverstone and ERBOCES are being unfairly treated. It acknowledges that the letter “correctly summarized Colorado law,” but says the law violates the U.S. Constitution’s free exercise provision in the First Amendment by prohibiting ERBOCES from contracting with religious schools. Specifically, it cites a provision in the state constitution that bars public money for religious purposes. Often called a “Blaine Amendment,” such provisions exist in many state constitutions and are named for the 19th century congressman who promoted the concept. The provision in Colorado’s constitution was “adopted out of overt hostility to particular religious denominations,” the lawsuit states. “State laws that demonstrate hostility to religion violate the Free Exercise Clause.” The lawsuit also cites the 14th Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection and the First Amendment’s guarantee against government preference for a particular religion, known as the establishment clause. ERBOCES authorized Riverstone last summer. A nonprofit called Forging Education runs the school. Quin Friberg, a local pastor who leads both Riverstone and Forging Education, has described Riverstone as a public school on the school’s website but as a private school on its insurance policy and other documents. In response to repeated public records requests by Chalkbeat for documents related to Riverstone, he recently told an attorney working on behalf of Chalkbeat that Forging Education is not a public entity and therefore not subject to the Colorado Open Records Act. Ann Schimke is a senior reporter at Chalkbeat, covering early childhood issues and early literacy. Contact Ann at aschimke@chalkbeat.org.

Feed icon
Chalkbeat
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Sign up for Chalkbeat Colorado’s free daily newsletter to get the latest reporting from us, plus curated news from other Colorado outlets, delivered to your inbox. A southern Colorado elementary school that backers have called “Colorado’s first public Christian school” has sued state officials over the state’s ban on religious public schools, alleging religious discrimination. Riverstone Academy, along with its authorizer, Education reEnvisioned Board of Cooperative Educational Services, or ERBOCES, filed a lawsuit last week in federal district court against 10 state education leaders. Although Riverstone is currently receiving state education funding, the money could eventually be clawed back by the state, which would be “the end of the school as it currently exists” and create financial and accounting difficulties for ERBOCES, the lawsuit says. Riverstone, which advertises itself as offering a “Christian foundation,” opened quietly in Pueblo County last August with about 30 students in kindergarten through fifth grade. Emails obtained by Chalkbeat indicate the school was created at the behest of a conservative law firm in order to spark a religious liberty lawsuit that could go all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. The lawsuit filed Feb. 13 appears to be the start of that legal effort. According to the lawsuit, Riverstone and ERBOCES want a court order to prevent Colorado officials from clawing back the school’s funding and a declaration that certain provisions in the Colorado Constitution violate the U.S. Constitution. The lawsuit comes even as Riverstone’s location remains a mystery. School officials closed the school’s building — a former office in an industrial area — in late January after orders from local officials who cited numerous health and safety violations. Riverstone officials have provided a screenshot of a text to Chalkbeat indicating Riverstone has a temporary location, but they have so far refused to say where it is. The defendants in the Riverstone case include Colorado Education Commissioner Susana Córdova and the nine members of the Colorado State Board of Education. A spokesperson for the Colorado Department of Education said by email Tuesday, “While we are working closely with our legal counsel, we are not able to discuss pending litigation.” Riverstone Academy and ERBOCES are represented by four law firms but not Alliance Defending Freedom, the firm that sought a “test case,” according to the emails obtained by Chalkbeat. The firms include First & Fourteenth, First LIberty Institute, Dechert, and Miller Farmer Carlson Law, which is headed by Brad Miller. Miller is an education attorney who represents several conservative-leaning Colorado districts and who wrote the email indicating that Riverstone’s creation was for the purpose of instigating a court case. The state letter at the center of the lawsuit After Riverstone hit the headlines in October, the Colorado Department of Education sent a letter to Ken Witt, the head of ERBOCES, suggesting that Riverstone may not be eligible for public funding. The letter said public schools are generally required to be nonsectarian, which means secular, and cited the Colorado and U.S. Constitutions. “ERBOCES is a public entity bound by the federal and state constitutions,” the letter said. “Thus, any school that ERBOCES operates must be nonsectarian in nature.” Despite what the letter said, the department is funding Riverstone for now. Department officials have said they won’t make a final decision on whether to claw back money until an audit of ERBOCES is complete, probably in early 2027. ERBOCES is one of 68 school districts and BOCES undergoing audits this year, according to a list released by the Education Department in January. The lawsuit repeatedly cites the October letter from the Education Department as well as the audit as evidence that Riverstone and ERBOCES are being unfairly treated. It acknowledges that the letter “correctly summarized Colorado law,” but says the law violates the U.S. Constitution’s free exercise provision in the First Amendment by prohibiting ERBOCES from contracting with religious schools. Specifically, it cites a provision in the state constitution that bars public money for religious purposes. Often called a “Blaine Amendment,” such provisions exist in many state constitutions and are named for the 19th century congressman who promoted the concept. The provision in Colorado’s constitution was “adopted out of overt hostility to particular religious denominations,” the lawsuit states. “State laws that demonstrate hostility to religion violate the Free Exercise Clause.” The lawsuit also cites the 14th Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection and the First Amendment’s guarantee against government preference for a particular religion, known as the establishment clause. ERBOCES authorized Riverstone last summer. A nonprofit called Forging Education runs the school. Quin Friberg, a local pastor who leads both Riverstone and Forging Education, has described Riverstone as a public school on the school’s website but as a private school on its insurance policy and other documents. In response to repeated public records requests by Chalkbeat for documents related to Riverstone, he recently told an attorney working on behalf of Chalkbeat that Forging Education is not a public entity and therefore not subject to the Colorado Open Records Act. Ann Schimke is a senior reporter at Chalkbeat, covering early childhood issues and early literacy. Contact Ann at aschimke@chalkbeat.org.

La ultraderecha, como el marxismo, interpreta estructuralmente el malestar social, simplifica conflictos, señala responsables y moviliza. Sin embargo, los fines de ambos son opuestos.

Feed icon
The Conversation
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

La ultraderecha, como el marxismo, interpreta estructuralmente el malestar social, simplifica conflictos, señala responsables y moviliza. Sin embargo, los fines de ambos son opuestos.

19 minutes

The Conversation
Feed icon

Los ‘smartwatches’ son muy utilizados, pero todavía no pueden sustituir al tensiómetro tradicional. La ciencia muestra que sus datos son poco precisos y muestran una alta variabilidad entre personas.

Feed icon
The Conversation
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

Los ‘smartwatches’ son muy utilizados, pero todavía no pueden sustituir al tensiómetro tradicional. La ciencia muestra que sus datos son poco precisos y muestran una alta variabilidad entre personas.

22 minutes

Maryland Matters
Feed icon

The Trump administration is telling most agencies to proceed with terminating their collective bargaining agreements and derecognizing their federal unions in response to a pair of 2025 executive orders, despite ongoing litigation.

Feed icon
Maryland Matters
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

The Trump administration is telling most agencies to proceed with terminating their collective bargaining agreements and derecognizing their federal unions in response to a pair of 2025 executive orders, despite ongoing litigation.

24 minutes

Nebraska Examiner
Feed icon

LINCOLN — Current officeholders had until 5 p.m. Tuesday to file as a candidate in a 2026 election year that, so far, has offered no filing surprises for statewide offices. The only incumbents not filing to run for their current seats, who had not previously confirmed whether they would run, are three appointees of Republican […]

Feed icon
Nebraska Examiner
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

LINCOLN — Current officeholders had until 5 p.m. Tuesday to file as a candidate in a 2026 election year that, so far, has offered no filing surprises for statewide offices. The only incumbents not filing to run for their current seats, who had not previously confirmed whether they would run, are three appointees of Republican […]

After Texas’ redistricting, Tarrant will have fewer representatives in Congress whose districts include parts of the county.

Feed icon
Fort Worth Report
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

After Texas’ redistricting, Tarrant will have fewer representatives in Congress whose districts include parts of the county.

Crystal Hefner says she’s filed complaints with two state attorneys general, asking them to look into the Hugh M. Hefner Foundation’s handling of the materials.

Feed icon
LAist
Attribution+

Crystal Hefner says she’s filed complaints with two state attorneys general, asking them to look into the Hugh M. Hefner Foundation’s handling of the materials.

La aparición de nuevos casos de jabalíes muertos fuera del perímetro inicial en Collserola ha obligado a la Generalitat a ampliar las restricciones y a rediseñar la estrategia para frenar la propagación del virus que amenaza al sector porcino.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

La aparición de nuevos casos de jabalíes muertos fuera del perímetro inicial en Collserola ha obligado a la Generalitat a ampliar las restricciones y a rediseñar la estrategia para frenar la propagación del virus que amenaza al sector porcino.

26 minutes

Nebraska Examiner
Feed icon

WASHINGTON — A federal judge in Maryland Tuesday barred U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement from re-detaining Kilmar Abrego Garcia, saying the Trump administration lacks plans to remove him from the United States. “Respondents have done nothing to show that Abrego Garcia’s continued detention in ICE custody is consistent with due process,” District of Maryland Judge […]

Feed icon
Nebraska Examiner
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

WASHINGTON — A federal judge in Maryland Tuesday barred U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement from re-detaining Kilmar Abrego Garcia, saying the Trump administration lacks plans to remove him from the United States. “Respondents have done nothing to show that Abrego Garcia’s continued detention in ICE custody is consistent with due process,” District of Maryland Judge […]

WASHINGTON — Tributes poured in across the country for the revered civil rights figure the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr., who died Tuesday morning at 84. The two-time Democratic presidential hopeful and Greenville, South Carolina, native died peacefully, surrounded by his kin, according to his family.  Jackson, who was active in the civil rights movement […]

Feed icon
Nebraska Examiner
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

WASHINGTON — Tributes poured in across the country for the revered civil rights figure the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr., who died Tuesday morning at 84. The two-time Democratic presidential hopeful and Greenville, South Carolina, native died peacefully, surrounded by his kin, according to his family.  Jackson, who was active in the civil rights movement […]

Keeping on the state’s good side was paramount in the decision by a southwestern Kings County groundwater agency to cut pumping allocations to less than one acre foot per acre […]

Feed icon
SJV Water
Attribution+

Keeping on the state’s good side was paramount in the decision by a southwestern Kings County groundwater agency to cut pumping allocations to less than one acre foot per acre […]

El 22% de los hombres y el 11% de las mujeres reconocen consumir pornografía con escenas de violencia sexual mediante sumisión química.

Feed icon
The Conversation
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

El 22% de los hombres y el 11% de las mujeres reconocen consumir pornografía con escenas de violencia sexual mediante sumisión química.

30 minutes

The Conversation
Feed icon

Los avances en materiales con propiedades increíbles son una buena noticia para la medicina. Gracias a la impresión 3D es posible regenerar órganos dañados, crear implantes a medida o, incluso, recurrir a otros que se autoexpanden una vez que han llegado a su lugar en el organismo.

Feed icon
The Conversation
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

Los avances en materiales con propiedades increíbles son una buena noticia para la medicina. Gracias a la impresión 3D es posible regenerar órganos dañados, crear implantes a medida o, incluso, recurrir a otros que se autoexpanden una vez que han llegado a su lugar en el organismo.

Hundreds gathered at the Historic Stop Six temple for its annual Lunar New Year celebrations.

Feed icon
Fort Worth Report
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Hundreds gathered at the Historic Stop Six temple for its annual Lunar New Year celebrations.