USA’s best and worst airports
Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport Atlanta’s Hartfield-Jackson Airport may be the world’s busiest airport but it is also America’s best,...
Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport Atlanta’s Hartfield-Jackson Airport may be the world’s busiest airport but it is also America’s best,...
Press Release Award-Winning Airline brings New Jobs, Lower Fares and Much-Needed Flight Competition for South Bay Business Travelers. Flyers Can Now...
St. Paul, Minnesota - St. Paul Central's Getenet Tuji is going to Northwestern on a soccer scholarship, but the senior...
Omotic General Trading PLC owner of Paradise will also construct a new lodge in Hamer Wereda. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia - Paradise...
Muktar Edris Awel Ethiopia got a winning double at the 81st edition of the famous Cinque Mulini Cross Country race...
Joe Flacco NEW ORLEANS – The Baltimore Ravens shook off an unprecedented Superdome blackout and a near improbable second-half comeback by the San Francisco 49ers,...
By Damon Winter (The New York Times) I was in Ethiopia in November for a month long Africa assignment and the final leg of our trip sent us to Ethiopia, where we took a quick detour to the Simien Mountains, full of deep gorges and intricate mazes of canyons. The mountains are home to the gelada, sometimes called bleeding heart baboons because of a red patch on the chest of the males. (They are actually not baboons, although closely related.) They live exclusively on the short, tough grasses that grow on the Simiens' slopes. The gelada are so used to visitors they hardly notice people anymore. They move in largebands from one patch of grass to another, and you can walk alongside the group and watch acomplete range of social behavior unfold right in front of you. You can see the delicate dance between the male and female that defines their socialstructure, and watch the alpha males defend their territory and their harem from aggressors. On our last morning there, we found one band grazing in a small field of grass near a cliff edge. After watching for about an hour in the field, I wandered over to the edge of the cliff and satdown to take in the view. Within about 20 minutes, the entire band of geladas had shiftedpositions and encircled me. It was as if I was just a part of the landscape. Source: The New York Times
Dr. Tewodros Bekele Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (ENA) - Ethiopia will host the 3rd International Conference on Family Planning scheduled for November...
Sara Andargachew (right) and Sister Zebider Zewdie of Mary Joy (Photo: The Reporter) By Tadesse Gebremariam Addis Ababa, Ethiopia -...