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Новости за 18.01.2024

Men’s riding boots for all budgets and disciplines

Horse And Hound 

The right pair of riding boots can significantly impact your riding experience, from comfort to performance – they’re certainly not just a fashion statement, although with such a wide selection to choose from they can be if you want to. Riding involves inherent risks and proper footwear is an essential part of staying safe. Even […]

September to remember: Nationwide heading to the US

Jewellermagazine.com 

Earlier this month, Australasia’s largest jewellery industry buying group, Nationwide Jewellers, announced plans for an educational trip to the US. Nearly every booking was sold within hours.

The 20 most unforgettable Sundance films ever

Avclub.com 

What began in 1978 as the Utah/United States Film Festival to help promote American independent cinema and boost film production in the Beehive State didn’t officially become the Sundance Film Festival until Robert Redford’s Sundance Institute officially took it over in 1985. Since then, Sundance has become one of the…

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Get out and do something this weekend in central Ohio, Jan. 18-21

NBC4i.com 

COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) -- From Jurassic Quest's animatronic dinosaurs at the Ohio Expo Center to the glass artwork of Dale Chihuly at Franklin Park Conservatory, here are things to see and do this weekend in central Ohio. 'The Color Purple' Short North Stage opening on Thursday through Feb. 18 Blue Jackets vs. Devils Nationwide Arena [...]

Turnip Boy Robs A Bank review: continuing Turnip Boy's story in slightly chaotic roguelite style

Rock Paper Shotgun 

Readers may remember how much I liked Turnip Boy Commits Tax Evasion, principally because of how funny it was. It was an intelligent and somewhat loving take on a Zelda-y RPG - a small town hero gets a sword and goes on a rampage fighting some bosses - except the main character is a turnip. And also he tears up any paperwork handed to him. Turnip Boy Robs A Bank follows directly on from his Tax Evasion, and it's not quite as funny or as focused, but it's also an entirely different genre of game, and I have a huge amount respect for that. Читать дальше...

e.l.f. Cosmetics Shines Bright in Super Bowl Comeback

Adweek.com 

After venturing into sticky territory with Jennifer Coolidge for its first Super Bowl ad last year, e.l.f. Cosmetics will return to the Big Game to spotlight one of its most viral products. For its second Super Bowl outing on Feb. 11, the beauty brand's 30-second spot will air nationally and promote an item that first...

3 Under-the-Radar Tech Stocks With 250% Growth Potential by 2026

InvestorPlace 

InvestorPlace - Stock Market News, Stock Advice & Trading Tips

Discover the trailblazing strategies of three tech stocks that are reshaping industries through innovation, adaptability and revenue surges.

The post 3 Under-the-Radar Tech Stocks With 250% Growth Potential by 2026 appeared first on InvestorPlace.

AI Hits the Campaign Trail

Wired Magazine 

This week, we discuss how generative artificial intelligence will affect the 2024 US elections. We also consider the ways regulators, social platforms, and the voting public are dealing with it.

The Plunder and the Pity

The New York Review of Books 

The American Society for Psychical Research still exists. A group of scholars and scientists including William James founded it in 1885 to promote the study of dreams, clairvoyance, mind reading, premonitions, séances, hallucinations, out-of-body states, and other such phenomena. At the time many people in the United States had been caught up in the Spiritualist […]

Playing It Safe

The New York Review of Books 

For a good part of the twentieth century, the ethnicities of fiction writers served as literary labels. Grace Paley in her early career, for instance, was greeted as an addendum to Saul Bellow and Bernard Malamud, her fellow descendants of Eastern European Jews, and the blurbs on the back of her first book are from […]

Hard Solaces

The New York Review of Books 

One morning in June 2011 the British writer Jonathan Raban woke with a bewildering sense of frailty and lost balance. As he climbed the stairs to the third floor of his house in Seattle, the city he’d made his home since 1990, his left shoulder “kept on bumping against the wall”; at supper that evening […]

Ethical Espionage

The New York Review of Books 

On October 7, as Hamas fighters roared into southern Israel from Gaza, bringing terror and death to anyone they encountered—Israeli soldiers, Bedouins, young people dancing and getting high together, kibbutzniks scooping up small children into desperate arms—I was sleeping in a comfortable hotel room in Georgia. All around me in the sultry darkness of a […]

Fragile, Resilient Weimar

The New York Review of Books 

The magnitude of the German catastrophe in the twelve years of Hitler’s rule (1933–1945) casts such a dark shadow that it is difficult to see the preceding fourteen years of Weimar democracy (1919–1933) as a historical era in its own right rather than as a prelude to the dictatorship that followed. The Weimar Republic was […]

Isn’t It Interesting?

The New York Review of Books 

Lore Segal was ten years old when the Nazis occupied Vienna, in March 1938. Within weeks her father lost his job, her parents were evicted from their apartment, and her grandparents’ business was confiscated. It was quickly decided that she should be sent out of the country on the newly organized Kindertransport headed for England. […]

Charged Wonders

The New York Review of Books 

In 496 CE a giraffe arrived at Constantinople. It was a rare event. The exotic animal was brought by ambassadors from the distant south, possibly from Nubia (a kingdom on the Nile roughly coextensive with modern Sudan). It had lingered on its way at Gaza (then, in more fortunate times, a rich entrepôt between the […]


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