is about people from other places that come to America seeking the ability to do as they please freely without unfair treatments. De Crevecoeur states “...by the power of transplantation, like all other plants, they have taken root and flourished”. The author uses this metaphor to explain ...
two things have happened. First, large houses take time to maintain, so cleaners and other low-wage service workers are required to keep these houses in order. Second, once-public spaces, where people from diverse backgrou...
(Applause.) I am here with students at Wakefield High School in Arlington, Virginia. And we’ve got students tuning in from all across America, from kindergarten through 12th grade. And I am just so glad that all could joi...
The message to young people who might not otherwise be able to afford to break into the business is, "'You car Purchase this S3 million piece of land here, because I'm guaranteeing you today you'll have 1,000 bison on it.' We're bringing new blood into the old, conventional farming...
The press box in Dhaka, Bangladesh, was where this long, strange trip begins. The fans do their best to keep away the aggressive mosquitoes. No magic moment today Game day outside the stadium is wild. People fill the streets for blocks. A drum beats somewhere in the distance. Vuvuzelas ...
And so one of the things that I tried to do through “Whole Child, Whole Life” was to lay out a set of common conversations, concerns and conditions that people can come together on with the shared commitment to care for kids. And so I would encourage schools to use this to have a...
People who enjoyed their bachelor's program sometimes incorrectly assume that a graduate program will be similar, experts say. "A poor reason for someone to choose graduate education is because they loved undergrad and they want to continue being a consumer, rather than a generator, of k...
Rooted in both racism and marketing, historic immigrant enclaves grapple with a crippling pandemic, rising rents, and uncertain futures.
Another reason young adults doubt their ability to amass enough for the future is that they have felt the effect of rapidly rising costs, Barrington says. “Today’s young people may be particularly sensitive about money because they were just burned by a sudden surge of inflation,” he...
By the early 1900s, upper- and middle-class white America increasingly saw smooth skin as a marker of femininity, and female body hair as disgusting, with its removal offering “a way to separate oneself from cruder people, lower class and immigrant,” Herzig wrote. ...