AI poised to advance Arabic language on global stage: ALC Chairman UAE Team Emirates-XRG's Sivakov impresses with second at Grand Prix Cycliste de Québec Three Korean hospitals rank among world’s top 10 cancer centres Cholera kills more people for second consecutive year: WHO Bull Engravings in Sindh’s Khashani Valley Merely Living and Living with Purpose Pakistan wildlife reels under deadly floods UAE Team Emirates-XRG clinch Giro della Toscana title in Italy
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International Anthology: World Muse in Albanian

Nacional Publishing House Tirana releases the International Anthology ‘The World Muse in Albanian’, translated by Angela Kosta By: Dr. MUJË BUÇPAPAJ Tirana, Albania The publishing house “Nacional”, based in Tirana, has announced the release of the poetry anthology The World Muse in Albanian, a

I Hate Benjamin (2–2)

And it is not only writers and intellectuals who have been swept into this snowball of hatred; it has grown to include Jewish rabbis themselves. Dozens of leftist Jewish rabbis in the United States were arrested after organizing a protest demanding immediate aid to Gaza and an end to the blockade on the Strip. The rabbis staged a sit-in

The Pharaohs of Hull City

In 1964, in Paris, the global Egyptian star Omar Sharif was filming his famous movie Doctor Zhivago. He was living at the time with his British actor friend Sir Tom Courtenay in the same apartment. Sharif noticed Courtenay’s deep passion for the results of the English football team Hull City, which was then playing in the second

The best books on Endangered Languages

Out of 7000 languages on the planet, 700 of them can be found in New York, and many of those are endangered – Samantha Ellis There is usually a lot of violence and displacement in the stories of these languages becoming endangered. The monolingual empire drains the energy from other cultures Samantha Ellis’s book Chopping

Study warns of brain changes from football headers

A recent Australian scientific study has warned that repeated heading of the ball during football matches and training sessions could lead to significant changes in brain chemistry, heightening concerns about a potential link between this practice and increased risk of dementia in the long term. Conducted by the University of Sydney, the