Second-inning scoring paramount as Troy Athens claims district title Troy Athens feasted on second-inning pitching like a bottomless appetizer in both the semifinal and final of Friday’s Division 1 district softball tournament. 05/31/2024 - 8:15 pm | View Link
High school baseball: Mustangs get 33rd win for NCHSAA record, need one more for third state title East Rowan’s baseball team is in prime position to take its third NCHSAA championship and first in 14 years. East’s 3-2 win against South Central in the opening game of the best-of-three 3A State ... 05/31/2024 - 8:09 pm | View Link
Down to its final cuts, All Saints makes ‘em count for dramatic district title Mayville reached the title game with a 1-0 upset of No. 19-ranked Unionville-Sebewaing, scoring the game’s only run in the bottom of the seventh. Mayville turned a two-out walk, a stolen base and an ... 05/31/2024 - 6:34 pm | View Link
Late offense lifts Concord to baseball district title Trailing Addison early in Friday's district championship game, the Concord baseball team rallied and took a 9-5 win ... 05/31/2024 - 6:13 pm | View Link
Article Test Title Article Test Title Article Test Title Article Test Title Article Test Title Article Test Title Is post each that just leaf no. He connection interested so we an sympathize advantages. To said is it shed want do. Occasional middletons everything so to. Have spot part for his quit may. Enable it ... 05/31/2024 - 5:34 pm | View Link
First American Title Lending First American Title Lending has been helping with unexpected expenses since 2006. We offer competitive rates on cars and commercial vehicles. With 4 locations and online lending, we can help residents across the state of Georgia. See All Locations. FATL. 05/30/2024 - 1:12 am | View Website
TITLE | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary TITLE | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary. Meaning of title in English. title. noun. us / ˈtaɪ.t̬ ə l / uk / ˈtaɪ.t ə l / title noun (NAME) Add to word list Add to word list. B1 [ C ] the name of a movie, book, painting, piece of music, etc.: The title of Evelyn Waugh's first novel was "Decline and Fall." 05/29/2024 - 11:39 pm | View Website
title verb verb. /ˈtaɪtl/ [usually passive] Verb Forms. to give a book, piece of music, etc. a particular name. be titled… Their first album was titled ‘Made in Valmez’. an article titled ‘Is Music Dead?’. These poems are from a manuscript tentatively titled ‘The Hunter’. Word Origin. Want to learn more? 05/29/2024 - 2:06 pm | View Website
TITLE Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com noun. the distinguishing name of a book, poem, picture, piece of music, or the like. a descriptive heading or caption, as of a chapter, section, or other part of a book. title page. a descriptive or distinctive appellation, especially one belonging to a person by right of rank, office, attainment, etc.: the title of Lord Mayor. 05/29/2024 - 8:09 am | View Website
Title Definition & Meaning | YourDictionary Title Definition. tītl. titled, titles, titling. Meanings. Synonyms. Sentences. Definition Source. Word Forms. Origin. Noun. Verb. Filter. noun. titles. The name of a book, chapter, poem, essay, picture, statue, piece of music, play, film, etc. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. A general or descriptive heading, as of a book chapter. 05/29/2024 - 3:15 am | View Website
“Democratic presidents aren’t prone to adopt Ronald Reagan as a template. But in advance of his trip to Normandy for the 80th anniversary of D-Day, President Joe Biden and his team are looking closely at how the conservative icon used a similar pilgrimage forty years ago,” Politico reports.
CNN: Biden’s D-Day visit may mark the end of an American era.
New York Times: “Four years ago, and certainly eight years ago, the Bay Area remained a haven for liberalism and offered little support for Mr. Trump. But that Obama-era bonhomie between Silicon Valley and the Democratic Party has come close to disintegrating. These days, entrepreneurs complain as much about President Biden as they do about Lina Khan, the chair of the Federal Trade Commission, who has ascended to Darth Vader-like status in some corners of the technology industry.”
“To be sure, most of the tech industry’s elite maintain their liberal leanings on everything from immigration to climate change.
“Across the continent, parties in power are bracing for a drubbing in this week’s elections for the European Parliament — in many cases, at the hands of far-right populists,” Axios reports.
“Four years of successive crises — a global pandemic, large-scale war in Europe for the first time in decades, and debilitating inflation — are fueling anti-incumbent backlash in the biggest election year in human history.”
“On the 56th anniversary of his father’s assassination, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the independent presidential candidate, again pleaded on Wednesday to be granted Secret Service protection, arguing in an interview on Fox News that he was at an elevated risk of being targeted because of his family history,” the New York Times reports.
New York Times: “With a billion-plus people going to the polls in more than 60 countries, some analysts had feared that 2024 would pose a fateful test for democracy — one that it might fail. For years, populist and strongmen leaders have chipped away at democratic institutions, sowing doubts about the legitimacy of elections, while social media has swamped voters with disinformation and conspiracy theories.”
“In some of the biggest, most fragile democracies, leaders like Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey had been regarded as close to invincible, using appeals to nationalism or sectarianism to mobilize supporters and bending institutions to suit their purposes.”
“Yet now, Mr.
“Vladimir Putin has portrayed himself as a defender of global stability, leading a powerful nation that offers a robust economic, military and cultural alternative to the West,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
“One challenge to his vision: Russia’s population has been in decline for years, and the war in Ukraine has made matters worse.”
“At least 150,000 Russians are dead on the battlefield, according to Western estimates.