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Новости за 09.08.2016

I followed Barack Obama's morning routine for a week, and it taught me a valuable lesson about mental toughness

BusinessInsider.com 

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

As the 44th president of the United States, a day in the life of Barack Obama can involve everything from receiving classified briefings from his staff to strategizing global affairs with other world leaders.

But his morning routine is pretty simple — and generally the same every single day. 

Reggie Love, Obama's personal aide from 2009 to 2011, told Business Insider that Obama generally starts every morning with a workout.

He alternates between strength and cardio training... Читать дальше...

Dakota Johnson Wishes Mom Melanie Griffith a Happy Birthday!

«Just Jared» 

Dakota Johnson and a gal pal hit the town for the Radiohead concert held at the Shrine Auditorium on Monday (August 8) in Los Angeles. The 26-year-old Fifty Shades actress carried a bottle with her as she walked towards the venue. PHOTOS: Check out the latest pics of Dakota Johnson The next day, Dakota posted [...]

9 facts about cheating that couples — and singles — should know

BusinessInsider.com 

Georgie Pauwels/Flickr

It's a lot of couples' worst nightmare: Someone succumbs to temptation and strays.

Maybe it's an emotional affair — they fall in love with a coworker — or maybe it's a sexual affair — a one-night stand after a few drinks.

Psychologists have spent years studying the science of infidelity, including what makes someone inclined to cheat, how your partner is likely to react after you cheat, and how to bounce back from cheating.

Below, we've rounded... Читать дальше...



East Chicago school near lead contamination site shuttered

«SFGate» (sfgate.com) 

The (Munster) Times reported Tuesday (http://bit.ly/2bd0a6o ) that Carrie Gosch Elementary students are being moved to a school across the city partially because of low enrollment possibly resulting from parents reluctant to send their children to school at a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Superfund site or uncertain about where they'll be living as they await vouchers to move. The city has advised more than 1,000 residents they should relocate after the EPA said the ground within the housing complex had high levels of arsenic and lead.

Worker atop 60-foot Texas football stadium lights rescued

TheRepublic.com 

HOUSTON — Emergency crews have rescued a worker who felt dizzy while changing some lights on a 60-foot tower at a Houston-area high school football stadium. The rescue happened Tuesday at W.W. Thorne Stadium in the Aldine (AHL’-deen) Independent District School as temperatures topped 90 degrees. Crews used an extension ladder to get fire department

'Equity' Stars on Women Climbing the Wall Street Ladder

WSJ.com 

Actors Alysia Reiner and Sarah Megan Thomas discuss their co-starring roles in "Equity", a new movie about a female investment banker fighting to climb the ranks in a competitive Wall Street firm. They discuss the female-focused first Wall Street movie to be produced, directed, written and financed by women on Lunch Break.

Computer outage could tarnish Delta’s on-time reputation

TheRepublic.com 

NEW YORK — We don’t cancel flights. That’s been the message for the past two years from Delta Air Lines. Double decker buses roamed the streets of New York, wrapped in ads proclaiming “canceling cancellations.” Delta executives boasted about the number of days without a single flight scrapped. That all literally ground to a halt

Mormon university says feds investigating sex-assault policy

TheRepublic.com 

SALT LAKE CITY — Federal education officials have launched an investigation of how Brigham Young University handles reports of sexual assault — the latest fallout from female students and alumni speaking out against the Mormon-owned school’s practice of opening honor code investigations of students who report abuses. BYU said in a news release that it

Lake Tanganyika Fish Quantity Declines Due To Rising Temperatures

International Business Times 

Lake Tanganyika, the second largest freshwater lake in the world, is responsible for providing several neighboring African countries their dietary resources. Over the past few decades, the lake has seen a decline in fish, which has long been credited to overfishing. But new research implicates a different culprit: rising temperatures. Researchers gathered samples of sediment from the bottom of the lake and conducted a chemical analysis of the fossils found. The team discovered a correlation between rising temperatures and falling fish numbers.





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