Yahoo! News: World News
Yahoo! News: World News |
- Can Houston find path to recovery that doesn't leave poor behind?
- In South Sudan's capital, a bridge – and a nation – on hold
- Apple thinks different – and the same – about the ‘town square’
- Trump visits UN: As a global leader, can the US do more with less?
Can Houston find path to recovery that doesn't leave poor behind? Posted: 18 Sep 2017 01:15 PM PDT Two weeks after hurricane Harvey, Soni Herrera is trapped at her home – a home she and her family cannot yet live in. Like many of the tens of thousands of Houstonians flooded out of their houses, Ms. Herrera, her husband, Jaime, and their four children benefited from the indiscriminate bravery of her community during and immediately after the storm. Recommended: How much do you know about Texas? |
In South Sudan's capital, a bridge – and a nation – on hold Posted: 18 Sep 2017 12:44 PM PDT South Sudan's largest city needed a new bridge, and a Japanese aid agency was going to build one. "The way the city was growing was unbelievable," says Justin Tata, the head of the department of architecture and urban planning at the University of Juba. Every day, a huge portion of the country's economy rattled over the 45-year-old bridge's two narrow lanes, as heaving 18-wheelers carried imported goods from the port of Mombasa, in Kenya, into the growing capital city. |
Apple thinks different – and the same – about the ‘town square’ Posted: 18 Sep 2017 11:58 AM PDT Ten years after Apple made the smartphone "cool," it wants to turn its retail stores into something warm. It announced last week that the nearly 500 Apple Stores will no longer really be stores but "town squares." In the era of social everything, Apple's glass-and-white-walled boxes are to become gathering places. If that sounds a lot like your local mall, Starbucks, or even McDonald's – commercial places designed to be social spaces – Apple's idea goes further. |
Trump visits UN: As a global leader, can the US do more with less? Posted: 18 Sep 2017 11:22 AM PDT President Trump has already shaken the post-World War II global order by pulling the United States out of American-led international pacts like the Paris Climate Accords and the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal – and by threatening to dump others, like the Iran nuclear deal. For many in the community of 193 UN member states who have been anticipating General Assembly week to see for themselves how Mr. Trump intends to meld his nationalist policies with America's global role, the impression may be that of the incredible shrinking superpower. |
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