The puzzle of Spirit Lake has Pacific Northwesterners still dealing with Mount St. Helens eruption 44 years later The human-engineered tunnel that drains Spirit Lake on Mount St. Helens is buckling because of geological activity. If ignored, it could burst, sending millions of gallons of water cascading into ... 10/25/2024 - 1:00 pm | View Link
Hydrothermal feature's explosion drained Yellowstone's Nuphar Lake At the beginning of 2024, the water level at Nuphar Lake near Norris Geyser Basin was on the rise. By the end of that summer, however, the water had receded. 10/25/2024 - 12:45 am | View Link
Hidden Lake Overlook Trail Hidden Lake Overlook's trailhead is located at the Logan Pass Visitor Center. Getting to the overlook requires about a 3-mile round-trip hike, while hiking down to the lake and back is a little more ... 10/24/2024 - 2:29 pm | View Link
Yellowstone Lake: Scientists Solve Mysterious Color Transformation This once unremarkable lake underwent a series of bizarre changes, leading to a dramatic and unexpected event. 10/22/2024 - 5:00 am | View Link
How to bike all 33 miles around Crater Lake’s rim Riding the entire rim of Crater Lake is roughly 33 miles with about 3,800 feet of elevation gain throughout. For the Ride the Rim event, cyclists bike on the road car-free for 25 miles and can ... 10/19/2024 - 2:12 am | View Link
When I became Disabled in my late teens and started searching for work, I was confronted with barriers including disability discrimination, inaccessible environments, and attitudinal biases. I lost a job simply because a no-cost adaptation was rejected. My story isn’t unique. And it’s just one example of how systemic barriers prevent Disabled people from accessing meaningful employment.
Another huge one: a nearly 90-year-old federal law from the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) that allows employers to pay Disabled people less than the minimum wage, sometimes just cents on the dollar.
There are only a handful of days left for former President Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris to sway undecided voters. However, since the United States has never elected a woman as president, Harris must do more than the requisites of defending her policy record and explaining her plans for governing.
Like Water for Chocolate is a story submerged in tears. A striking scene from HBO’s new adaptation of Mexican author Laura Esquivel’s classic debut novel sees guests at a wedding banquet weep uncontrollably after tasting a cake infused with the baker’s sorrow. Then a storm rolls in, and it’s as though nature itself is joining in the lamentation.
GLENDALE, Ariz. — Donald Trump is calling former Rep. Liz Cheney, one of his most prominent Republican critics, a “war hawk” and suggesting she might not be as willing to send troops to fight if she had guns pointed at her. Cheney responded by branding the GOP presidential nominee a “cruel, unstable man who wants to be a tyrant.”
[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]
At an event late Thursday in Arizona, with former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, Trump was asked whether it is strange to see Cheney campaign against him.
Historically, medical research has been male-dominated in terms of subjects as well as researchers, even though women make up half of the world’s population. As a result of this gender bias, insights into various diseases and findings about medications have often been extrapolated from men and applied to women. But women aren’t just smaller men.
Robert Zemeckis’ Here is the most unfashionable movie of 2024—which is exactly what’s beautiful about it. In a world where even those who profess to love movies largely stream them at home, Here is a picture that demands big-screen real estate. It’s inventive and confident filmmaking from a veteran director whose most recent features have performed modestly at the box office or, worse, sunk with barely a trace.