Water availability has plummeted to an average of 3-5 liters per person per day, according to the Palestinian Water Authority. That’s less than the 15 liters that the World Health Organization says people need to survive.
“What I feel like I’m going to connect more to also is more coaches,” Nakase said. “Because I think that, like I said, the impact of coaches is going to be the reason why other females — younger kids that look like me — that they’re going to be inspired.”Tang reported from Phoenix.
BASEL, Switzerland (AP) — One song generating a lot of froth at theis “Espresso Macchiato,” a dance-pop ditty by Estonian rapper and visual artist Tommy Cash.Estonia’s entry in the pan-continental pop competition, which
, is a playful dance-pop track that reels off a string of Italian cliches — including references to spaghetti and “sweating like a mafioso” — before a singalong chorus: “Espresso macchiato, macchiato, macchiato.”The song has some fans singing it in the streets of Basel. But it raised a few eyebrows in Italy, where a consumers’ association branded it offensive and complained to Eurovision organizer the European Broadcasting Union.
Cash said that he’s seen media articles about a backlash, but “I see only the love.”
“Everyone coming to me is like ‘I’m from Italy, you’re a legend there and we’re so happy to have your song,’” he told The Associated Press on Friday amid rehearsals for the Eurovision final.sweeping policy changes related to protests following Trump administration
to revoke its federal funding, declined to comment Thursday beyond the response of the school’s acting president to Wednesday’s protests.The acting president, Claire Shipman, said the protesters who had holed up inside a library reading room were asked repeatedly to show identification and to leave, but they refused. The school then asked police in “to assist in securing the building and the safety of our community,” she said in
Wednesday evening, calling the protest actions “outrageous” and a disruption to students for final exams.Mahdawi, a legal permanent resident, was born in a refugee camp in the