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Opera singer and Fayetteville native talks about her music career

China s moderate climate goals allow emissions to continue to rise

He also said the country would continue to develop both clean coal and renewable energy sources. In September, President Xi Jinping revealed in a surprise announcement at the UN that China would aim for carbon neutrality by 2060, and a peak in emissions by 2030. Friday’s announcement confirmed the country’s commitment to those goals but didn’t set the kinds of sharper emissions targets that activists and environmentalists hoped might help the country meet them. “What everyone really wanted was an earlier peaking year.” Swithin Lui, NewClimate Institute and the Climate Action Tracker “What everyone really wanted was an earlier peaking year,” said Swithin Lui, from the NewClimate Institute think tank and the Climate Action Tracker.

Equitably allocating COVID-19 vaccine

 E-Mail PHILADELPHIA (March 4, 2021) - Equitable implementation of COVID?19 vaccine delivery is a national and global priority, with a strong focus on reducing existing disparities and not creating new disparities. But while a framework has been recognized for equitable allocation of COVID?19 vaccine that acknowledges the rights and interests of sexual and gender minorities (SGM), it fails to identify strategies or data to achieve that goal. A new study with support from researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing (Penn Nursing) examined the prevalence of COVID testing and diagnosis and assessed COVID?19 vaccine acceptance among a large national sample of SGM. It showed that medical mistrust, social concern, and race were significantly associated with decreased COVID?19 vaccine acceptance by SGM participants. Results have been published in the article COVID?19 Vaccine Acceptance Among an Online Sample of Sexual and Gender Minority Men and Transgender Women in

A fictional retrospective of a filmmaker s life in Foregone

A fictional retrospective of a filmmaker’s life in ‘Foregone’ By Bethanne Patrick Globe Correspondent,Updated February 25, 2021, 2:06 p.m. Email to a Friend Alexander Kharchenko/doomu - stock.adobe.com Famed Canadian documentary auteur Leonard “Leo” Fife, referred to as Fife by himself, his friends, and acolytes, lies dying of cancer in the Montreal apartment he shares with his wife, Emma. His bodily needs attended to by a Haitian nurse named Renée, Fife could die easily, with a kind of peace, if he chose. Instead, the 77-year-old Fife has invited a film crew in for a last interview, against Emma and Renée’s better judgment. Malcolm, the director (and Fife’s protégé); Diana, the producer; Vincent, the cameraman; and their assistant Sloan have set up a darkened room to record “Oh, Canada,” the great director’s story.

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