By the shaheds, reported Oleg Sinigubov, the head of the region. Due to falling debris, fires started in two residential buildings. The building of the Utility Company was also damaged. Elimination of consequences continues. Also , a 52yearold man from the village of liptsi in Kharkiv Region died in the hospital in the morning, he was wounded during an enemy attack on may 17, Oleg Sinigubov added. And two shaheds were destroyed at night in the kryvorizka district of the dnipropetrovsk region, through falling debris damaged farm buildings, informed the head of the Regional Military administration, serhii lysak. The enemy also attacked nikopolshchyna. An economic structure was destroyed, six private houses, an administrative building and a power line were damaged. Fortunately. No one was hurt. 28 shaheds were destroyed by our defenders that night. Only one could not be eliminated. This was reported in the air force. The enemy attacked with drones from two directions. Antiaircraft defense
Seven settlements were burned, 17 residential buildings were damaged. And it is already known about two victims as a result of a rocket attack on kharkiv. In the morning, the russians hit the object of the transport infrastructure. Five more townspeople were injured as a result of the night attack by the shaheds, oleg sinigubov, the head of the region, said. Due to falling debris, fires started in two residential buildings. The building of the Utility Company was damaged, the consequences were liquidated. Continues in the morning , a 52yearold man from the village of glyptsi in the Kharkiv Region died in the hospital. He was injured during of an enemy attack on may 17 oleg singuv added. And one person died, three more were injured during the day in the kherson region. The occupiers shot in the living room. Quarters of several settlements. Seven highrise buildings and as many private houses were damaged, reported the head of the region oleksandr prokudin. In addition, the invaders hit a
Furniture World News By Nic Ledoux on 3/1/2021
Nina Smith, the founding CEO of GoodWeave International, was recently named a recipient of the 2020 Tufts University Alumni Award for Active Citizenship and Public Service, which celebrates contributions to improving the lives of others. GoodWeave is the leading global NGO working to stop child labor in global supply chains. GoodWeave brings visibility and rights to workers; restores childhoods; and provides assurance to companies and consumers that carpets and home textiles with the GoodWeave
® certification label are produced free from child labor.
Under Smith s leadership over the past two decades, GoodWeave has pioneered and innovated a market-based system that has led to the rescue of nearly 8,000 children from exploitation. The organization has also provided rehabilitation, education and other critical support to rescued children, as well as tens of thousands of ot
Karen Angelo
Reflecting on his 30-year career in the pharmaceutical industry, Jerry St. Peter â89 sees a direct connection between his UMass Lowell experience and his success.Â
âWhen I look back on my time at the university, everything Iâve accomplished began there with faculty preparing me to excel and explore my potential,â says St. Peter, a Lowell native who is the cofounder, CEO and a board member of Eyevance Pharmaceuticals, an ophthalmic company based in Fort Worth, Texas.Â
âThe faculty invested in and cared about me. They gave me the confidence to dream. Their commitment to me became my mission to pay it forward and to emulate the same genuine confidence.âÂ