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The 94-year-old historian-author speaks on her life, the university as a safe space and why questioning remains essential to intellectual life |
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The 94-year-old historian-author speaks on her life, the university as a safe space and why questioning remains essential to intellectual life |
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A Gurgaon man's viral post about a co-passenger allegedly invading his personal space on a Shatabdi train has sparked fresh debate online over civic sense and public transport etiquette in India. |
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Were you to visit the Yarrabubba station in the remote regions of Western Australia, you would not notice a huge open wound in the ground. The area does not feature dramatic rock formations like those that are seen at the impact craters found in Arizona. |
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The popular mental image of an enormous impact crater is an obvious circular depression seen from space. However, the Vredefort crater in South Africa dispels this conception entirely. |
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Step inside Priyanka Chopra and Nick Jonas's Rs. 166 crore Los Angeles mansion featuring an infinity pool, bowling alley, basketball court, luxury interiors, and resort-style spaces designed for ultimate celebrity living., People, Times Now |
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A significant explosion occurred at the Tomer rocket factory in central Israel, generating a large fireball and smoke visible from afar. , Middle East, Times Now |
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These books capture burnout in all its forms: emotional numbness, routine exhaustion, overstimulation, isolation, and the constant pressure to keep functioning normally. Through quiet storytelling and deeply human characters, they create space to slow down without guilt. Together, they offer relief from urgency and productivity, reminding readers that exhaustion doesn't always need fixing immediately. Sometimes it simply needs rest, reflection, and stories that understand the feeling completely., Books, Times Now |
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The study, published in Earth's Future, found rocket and satellite launches generate soot into the upper atmosphere, where that residue lingers for far longer than on Earth. |
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Back in the late 1970s, a group of radio astronomers from Australia embarked on theoretical research. They aimed to detect the faint radio signals from exploding black holes. |
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BRISBANE: When you think of outer space, you're likely picturing stars, planets and moons. But much of space is filled with clouds of gas, plasma and . |