Why people are marching for science: ‘There is no Planet B’ – Washington Postby wpjljron
Saturday, April 22nd, 2017.Why people are marching for science: ‘There is no Planet B’ – Washington PostThousands of people gathered in the rain Saturday on the soggy grounds of the Washington Monument to turn Earth Day into an homage to science. After four hours of speeches and musical performances, they marched down Constitution Avenue to the foot of Capitol Hill, chanting “Build labs, not walls!” and “Hey, Trump, have you heard, […]
Thousands of people gathered in the rain Saturday on the soggy grounds of the Washington Monument to turn Earth Day into an homage to science. After four hours of speeches and musical performances, they marched down Constitution Avenue to the foot of Capitol Hill, chanting “Build labs, not walls!” and “Hey, Trump, have you heard, you can’t silence every nerd!”
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Thousands of people gathered in the rain Saturday on the soggy grounds of the Washington Monument to turn Earth Day into an homage to science. After four hours of speeches and musical performance
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University of Pittsburgh graduate Sam Orlowski put her heart into her short film, “Thanks to Her,” a Pittsburgh-set coming-of-age tale about being comfortable with your sexuality.
“I am part of the LGBT community, and I have dealt with homophobia,” said Orlowski, who lives in Canonsburg. “I wanted to start a conversation about sexuality. I wanted to get people talking.”
They are talking. Posted on YouTube in September, the 23-minute work has over 630,000 views, 14,000 likes and nearly 800 comments.
Franklinton High School on the city’s westside has been doing in person learning for months. Author: Richard Solomon (WBNS) Updated: 11:11 PM EST February 17, 2021
COLUMBUS, Ohio Many Ohio school districts are working to shift students back to some sort of in-person learning by March 1.
It has many parents wondering how it is going to be done safely.
Franklinton High School on the city’s westside has been doing in-person learning for months.
“If you use hand sanitizer and wear your mask at all times, you’ll be ok,” said Jasmine Mills, a sophomore at the school.
She told 10TV, she’s felt safe every step of the way.