Harvard president’s corrections do not address her clearest instances of plagiarism, including as a student in the 1990s
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 09:48:27 GMT
(CNN) — Harvard President Claudine Gay recently requested corrections for two of her academic papers, but she did not address even clearer examples of plagiarism from earlier in her academic history at the school, according to a CNN analysis of her writings.In response to accusations of plagiarism, the embattled Harvard president recently submitted corrections to two papers she wrote as a professional academic in 2001 and 2017. But a CNN examination of Gay’s published works documented that Gay committed other, clearer examples of plagiarism while she was studying for her PhD at Harvard in the 1990s.Those include an instance in her dissertation where she copied lines verbatim from another source without citation.In addressing the allegations of plagiarism, neither Harvard nor Gay have corrected or acknowledged these earlier instances from when she was a student. The instances were first reported by t...A train in Slovenia hits maintenance workers on the tracks. 2 were killed and 4 others were injured
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 09:48:27 GMT
LJUBLJANA, Slovenia (AP) — A passenger train on Wednesday struck a group of maintenance workers on the tracks, killing two of them and injuring four others, police said.The collision happened near the southwestern town of Postojna at around 9 a.m., the official STA news agency said.The report says the injured workers were seriously hurt. No other details were immediately available.The Associated PressChina has started erecting temporary housing units after an earthquake destroyed 14,000 homes
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 09:48:27 GMT
BEIJING (AP) — Hundreds of temporary one-room housing units were being set up Thursday in northwest China for survivors of an earthquake that destroyed more than 14,000 homes and killed at least 135 people, according to state media reports.Twelve people remained missing in an area hit by mudslides that inundated two villages, the reports said. Search teams were using excavators to dig out a thick sea of mud that covered roads and encased and blocked entry to buildings.State broadcaster CCTV showed footage of cranes lifting white, box-like housing units and lining them up in an open field in Meipo, a village in Gansu province. Some 260 had been erected, and the total in the village was expected to reach 500 across nine sites by Friday morning.The arrival of the prefab units was a sign that many of the more than 87,000 people resettled after the Monday night earthquake may be homeless for some time. Many have been enduring temperatures well below freezing in flimsier tent-like units w...UN says up to 300,000 Sudanese fled their homes after a notorious group seized their safe haven
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 09:48:27 GMT
CAIRO (AP) — Fighting between Sudan’s military and a notorious paramilitary group forced up to 300,000 people to flee their homes in a province that had been a safe haven for families displaced by the devastating conflict in the northeastern African country, the U.N. said Thursday.The fighting erupted in the city of Wad Medani, the provincial capital of Jazeera province, after the Rapid Support Forces attacked the city earlier this month. The RSF said that it took over Wad Medani earlier this week, and the military said that its troops withdrew from the city, and an investigation was opened.Sudan’s war began in mid-April after months of tensions between military chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan and RSF commander Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo. Both generals led a military coup in October 2021 that derailed Sudan’s short-lived transition to democracy following a popular uprising that forced the removal of President Omar al-Bashir in April 2019.The U.N. agency International Organizat...In the news today: Canada’s ambassador to the U.S. talks Trump, UN resolution on Gaza
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 09:48:27 GMT
Here is a roundup of stories from The Canadian Press designed to bring you up to speed on what you need to know today…‘Watershed year’ for Canada-U.S. ties: HillmanCanada’s ambassador to the United States says her team is hard at work getting ready in the event Donald Trump is elected president next year. But Kirsten Hillman is also celebrating what she says was a watershed year for Canada-U.S. relations in 2023. Hillman says President Joe Biden’s visit to Ottawa in March was a resounding success that helped to showcase what has become a deeper relationship between the two countries.At the same time, they’re in close contact with advisers to Trump, who appears poised to seize the Republican nomination and mount a campaign rematch against Biden. US engaging in high-level diplomacy to avoid vetoing a UN resolution on GazaThe United States, key allies and Arab nations are engaging in high-level diplomacy in hopes of avoiding another U.S. veto of a ne...EU court: FIFA and UEFA defy EU competition law by blocking Super League
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 09:48:27 GMT
BRUSSELS (AP) — UEFA and FIFA defied European Union competition law by blocking plans for the breakaway Super League, the EU’s top court ruled on Thursday. The case was heard last year at the Court of Justice after Super League failed at launch in April 2021. UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin called the club leaders “snakes” and “liars” and threatened to ban players from Super League clubs.The company formed by 12 rebel clubs — now led by only Real Madrid and Barcelona after Juventus withdrew this year — started legal action to protect its position and the court was asked to rule on points of EU law by a Madrid tribunal.The clubs accused UEFA of breaching European law by allegedly abusing its market dominance of soccer competitions.“The FIFA and UEFA rules making any new interclub football project subject to their prior approval, such as the Super League, and prohibiting clubs and players from playing in those competitions, are unlawful,” the court said. “There is no framework for...A ‘watershed year’ for Canada-U.S. relations, but guess who’s lurking in the wings?
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 09:48:27 GMT
WASHINGTON — Two years ago, the new United States ambassador to Canada arrived in snowbound Ottawa for the first time, thinking he knew all about America’s rock-ribbed relationship with its trusted northern neighbour. But David Cohen soon noticed something was amiss.“As I began to travel around Canada, I was surprised to learn the pervasiveness of the loss of trust, on Canada’s part, of the United States,” Cohen told business leaders last month in the national capital.“The constant refrain was, ‘What has happened to our relationship with the United States? Have we done something wrong?'”South of the border, Cohen’s boss in the Oval Office was acutely aware of the lingering foreign-policy scars his sharp-elbowed predecessor, Donald Trump, left among some historically close U.S. allies.That is how Kirsten Hillman came to encounter a surprise of her own. It was early 2023, and Hillman — Cohen’s counterpart in Washington — was at the...Canada learned lessons from Trump’s first term — and vice versa, says ambassador
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 09:48:27 GMT
WASHINGTON — It’s a truism in foreign-policy circles that the world learned some hard lessons from Donald Trump’s volatile first term as president.But as the prospect of a second term looms, could it also be true that the notoriously stubborn Trump and his advisers left the White House with a better grasp of Canada’s relationship with — and importance to — the United States?“Yeah, I think so — I do,” said Kirsten Hillman, Canada’s envoy in Washington.For starters, there was the arduous 18-month renegotiation of NAFTA, in which even America’s self-proclaimed champion dealmaker has long suggested Canada proved a more worthy adversary than he expected.But Trump was also president in early 2020, when COVID-19 was beginning to flourish on North American soil, soon to blossom into a global crisis that showed the U.S. a thing or two about its largest trading partner.“When we restricted movement on our border, it took less than a day for peopl...Outgoing Norad commander says Canada, U.S. too slow to adapt to threats
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 09:48:27 GMT
OTTAWA — In a world of uncertainty, there is one critical mission the North American Aerospace Defence Command can count on every year: tracking Santa Claus. On Sunday, millions of people will log onto the specialized website and social media channels that depict the jolly old elf’s magical journey as he and his reindeer visit children around the world. More than 60 years after it began, the Santa tracker is a beloved holiday tradition and a powerful public-relations opportunity for the binational agency dedicated to defending North American airspace. Informing the public about Norad’s mission the rest of the year has been a priority for commander Gen. Glen VanHerck, and in that regard, the dramatic start to 2023 came with an unexpected opportunity.On Jan. 27, Norad learned that a high-altitude surveillance balloon from China was heading toward North America. It was detected entering Alaskan airspace the next day and tracked as it passed over Canada on Jan. 30 and 31.Nor...Canada faces green Christmas as El Nino follows warm summer, head climatologist says
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 09:48:27 GMT
Canada’s chief climatologist says if you don’t already have it, the song is only white Christmas you’re likely to get.David Phillips of Environment Canada says most of the country has been unusually dry and warm this year.That adds up to a green Yule, since the snow hasn’t had a chance to fall and when it does, it melts.Phillips says it’s the result of a strong El Nino pattern this fall coming after a spring and summer that was already unusually warm. He says Canadians are still likely to face some serious winter yet.But he says some parts of the country — especially the West — are likely to face serious drought and wildfire weather in the coming year unless some snow falls. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 21, 2023. The Canadian PressLatest news
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