comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - ஆராத்னா திரிபாதி - Page 1 : comparemela.com

Climate scientist Aradhna Tripati receives honors from two science organizations

UCLA In the News April 28, 2021

April 28, 2021 UCLA In the News lists selected mentions of UCLA in the world’s news media. Some articles may require registration or a subscription to view. See more UCLA In the News. Humans need pauses to regain energy and focus. “It’s important for you to take a break,” says Sanford DeVoe, a professor of management and organizations at University of California, Los Angeles. “That’s one of the great promises of vacation, is that you can completely sever ties.” “The country is going through this racial reckoning, and part of that racial reckoning is understanding our history,” said Daniel Solorzano, director of the Center for Critical Race Studies in Education at UCLA. “We do have a racist history, and ethnic studies talks about that. They engage in that conversation. … We need to have those conversations.”

How a top-secret nuclear project became a gold mine for data on Greenland s ice sheet

How a top-secret nuclear project became a gold mine for data on Greenland’s ice sheet Ellie Shechet © Provided by Popular Science A forgotten ice core has given researchers new information about when Greenland s ice sheet may have previously melted. In 1966, in the middle of the Cold War, scientists extracted a nearly mile-long core of ice and sediment from Greenland’s ice sheet. The scientists’ work was a cover for “Project Iceworm,” an effort by the U.S. military to potentially store and launch nuclear missiles out of an underground base known to the public as Camp Century. A 1963 film about Camp Century, created by the U.S. Army, shows vehicles charging triumphantly through the snow, reshaping the frozen landscape with steel and theatrical masculinity.

Tracking Biden s first 100 days: UCLA experts assess progress on environmental issues

  UCLA School of Law Cara Horowitz Point of view: This is the first administration to place climate change leaders in strong appointments across agencies and domains, up and down the roster. From Health and Human Services to highway safety to the budget office, there are now climate champions in place to help tackle this problem from many directions. That’s hugely promising.  Next up: The United States owes the world its next climate action pledge under the Paris Agreement, and that pledge will be announced later this year. If President Biden is serious about retaking international leadership on this issue, our U.S pledge better be a good one, because global leadership starts at home. The U.S. is going to have to show that it can make meaningful, enduring domestic progress on climate change before trying to exercise any moral authority at the U.N. 

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.