The Globe and Mail Opinion
Keystone is dead, and the remnants of NAFTA are Alberta’s best slim hope of getting its money back Bookmark Please log in to listen to this story. Also available in French and Mandarin. Log In Create Free Account
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Chris Machian/The Associated Press
The Keystone XL pipeline project is dead. Right up to Tuesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was saying he’d continue to make the case for it, but that was whistling past the graveyard. Now it’s a question of picking up the bones.
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An illustration shows medical student Elizabeth Blackwell at Geneva Medical College (later Hobart College) in upstate New York, as she eyes a note dropped onto her arm by a male student, during a lecture in the college s operating room. Bettmann/Getty Images
In the 1840s, Elizabeth Blackwell was admitted to a U.S. medical school in part because the male students thought her application was part of an elaborate prank. She persisted and got her degree, becoming the first American woman to do so. A few years later, her younger sister Emily followed in her footsteps, earning her own medical degree from the institution that would become Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland.
Debunking Old Theories! Dark Matter Does Not Exist in Space: See Why? albawaba.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from albawaba.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Dark matter is said to make up 85% of all matter in the universe
It exerts gravitational forces that moves stars within galaxies
Dark has never been directly detected and a new study says it doesn t exist
External field effect, a faint gravitational tide, was observed in 153 galaxies
This stems from the Modified Newton Dynamics theory, or modified gravity
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WASHINGTON Black and Hispanic people with COVID-19 and diabetes are more likely than Caucasians to die or have serious complications, according to a new study published in the Endocrine Society s
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
Health disparities refer to unequal health status or health care between groups of people due to differences in their background, physical traits or their environment. These differences include race/ethnicity, country of origin, sex, income and disability. Minorities are disproportionately affected by diabetes and COVID-19 and are more likely to develop serious complications like diabetic ketoacidosis, a condition that occurs when your body produces high levels of blood acids.