3/23/2025

' MINOR DETAIL ' MINTS : BOOK REVIEW



At this violent and tumultuous time for the country's people, this selection has shown a necessary light upon the rich landscape of Palestinian literature.

ADANIA SHIBLI'S ' Minor Detail ' [ 2017 ] is a poignant exploration of violence, and the lingering shadow of history.

The novel is bifurcated into two narratives set decades apart. This time rooted in 1949, details a harrowing incident involving Israeli soldiers in the Negev desert, culminating in the assault and murder of a Bedouin girl.

The second narrative, set in present-day Ramallah, follows a young woman who becomes obsessed with uncovering the truth behind this ' minor detail ' of history.

Shibli's sparse and evocative prose delves into the complexities of personal and collective memory, illustrating how past atrocities continue to resonate in the present.

The novel was longlisted for the international Booker Prize in 2021, with judges praising its '' austerely beautiful '' narrative that casts light on ethnic conflicts and cleansing worldwide.

The World Students Society thanks Zehra Khan.

ENERGY DESTINY ENTIRE : BRAZIL - COST RICA - ESSAY [2]



It's hard to top the economic success stories concerning clean energy and it's tragic that these achievements aren't more widely known.

Germany, where the sun shines on average as much as it does in London, reportedly set the world record for electricity generated from the sun in a single day : 22 gigawatts, or roughly the output of 20 nuclear power plants.

Long mislabeled as expensive and unwieldy, the clean-energy sector in the U.S., was actually growing by 8.3% before the economic slowdown,  more than twice the rate of the overall economy.

In fact, those European countries meeting their Kyoto Protocol commitments have been among the least hard hit by the economic crisis, including Germany, Denmark and Sweden.

If sustainable energy were bad economics, Costa Rica wouldn't be one of the richest countries in the region, with what is arguably the greenest economy in the world.

COSTA RICA certainly has one of the world's highest percentages of electricity generated by renewable resources as well as an enormous conservation ethic : 26% of its landmass is in national parks, 51% in forest cover.

At the moment, I am most optimistic about Brazil, not only because of its significant growth in the past decade but also because of something that simultaneously declined : its level of economic inequality.

Brazilians did it by creating a pile of new jobs and paying poor families to send their children to school and get annual checkups.

They did it by controlling their energy destiny, not simply developing their oil resources but also maximising their hydropower.

And they did it while planning to cut by 75% the annual rate of rain-forest destruction, Brazil certainly still has its share of challenges, but its successes have been truly astonishing.

The World Students Society thanks H.E. President Bill Clinton.

SATELLITE INTERNET STARLINK * : PRECIS



The Pakistan Space Activities Regulatory Board [ PSARB ] on Friday approved the issuance of the no objection certificate [NOC] to the US satellite based internet provider, Starlink, a significant move that is  set to bolster the country's digital landscape.

Information Technology Minister Shaza Fatima Khawaja said that Starlink had been granted temporary registration in Pakistan on the directive of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, following the consensus among all security and regulatory bodies.

The World Students Society thanks The Express Tribune.

Headline, March 24 2025/ ''' WOMEN RWANDA WONDER '''


''' WOMEN 

RWANDA

 WONDER '''



FIRST AND FOREMOST : THE WORLD STUDENTS SOCIETY is the exclusive and eternal ownership of every student of Rwanda. Just as it is the exclusive ownership of every student to the world.

JUSTICE : THE FIGHT FOR THE FUTURE IS NOW : Welcome all to The World Students Society -for every subject in the world.

'' MANY OF THE WORLD'S GREATEST challenges today are simply modern manifestations of our oldest demons. The truth is, the future has never had a big enough constituency - those fighting for present gain almost always win out.

But we are now called upon to try to create a whole different mind-set. We are in a pitched battle between the present array of resources and attitudes and the future struggling to be born, '' H.E. President Bill Clinton. 

PERCENTAGE OF WOMEN IN LEGISLATIVE BODIES : Simply put - no society can truly flourish if it stifles the dreams and productivity of half its population.

Happily - I see evidence all over the world that women are gaining social and economic power that they never had before.

This is good news not only for the individuals themselves but also for the entire societies, for its been proved that women tend to reinvest economic gains back into their families and communities more than men do.

RWANDA provides some great examples. It's changed dramatically since my first visit 14 years ago.

Today, Rwanda's per capita income is five times as high as it was in 1998, roads and infrastructure have improved immensely, and - in one of the greatest signs of progress - more than half the members of Parliament are women, making Rwanda the first country to achieve that distinction.

Rwanda women are gaining economically too. During a visit to the country this summer, I toured the construction site of what will eventually be a large soy processing factory.

MY FOUNDATION helped get the project off the ground, but eventually it will be owned and maintained by local farmers and the government.

It will create domestic demand for soy, and once completed, it is expected to provide 30,000 farmers in eastern Rwanda - 55% of whom are women - with jobs by contracting with them to grow soybeans.

In nearby MALAWI, there's a large commercial farm that leverages economies of scale to secure bulk pricing for things like. soy seed and fertilizers.

On a previous trip there, I met a female farmer who had joined the program and as a result had increased her yield from 5 to 20 bags per acre, earning double what she had under the old system.

With her extra income, she put a new roof on her home and paid tuition to send her daughters to school.

So you can see how this work can change not just an individual life but also the fate of a family or the course of an entire community. The private sector can play a big role here.

GAP INC, has a program called Personal Achievement and Career Enhancement [ PAGE ], which is expanding from India to Cambodia, Vietnam, Bangladesh China, Sri Lanka and hopefully beyond.

PAGE focuses on building the life skills of female garment workers and enhancing their career opportunities by providing technical - skills training.

Ultimately this helps the workers and managers of garment factories view the welfare and potential of their female line workers as key to their success.

Women face similar challenges in emerging and affluent countries too - but we're seeing signs of progress, particularly in the Middle East.

Since 2002, Bahrain's national elections have been open to women. Saudi Arabia has serious modernization efforts under way, and in the past several years there have been more women than men enrolled in institutions of higher education globally.

The Honour and Serving of the Latest Global Operational Research on Poverty, State-of-the-world and the future, continues. The World Students Society thanks H.E. President Bill Clinton.

With respectful dedication to the Leaders, Grandparents, Parents, the Global Founder Framers of The World Students Society - and then Students, Professors and Teachers of the World.

See You all prepare for Great Global Elections on !WOW! - the exclusive and eternal ownership of every student in the world : wssciw.blogspot.com and Twitter X !E-WOW! - The Ecosystem 2011 :

Good Night and God Bless

SAM Daily Times - The Voice Of The Voiceless

George Foreman Farewell



March 21 (Reuters) - American George Foreman, one of the great second acts in sports, who reclaimed the heavyweight boxing title at age 45 and became a celebrated product pitchman, died on Friday at age 76.

"With profound sorrow, we announce the passing of our beloved George Edward Foreman Sr. who peacefully departed on March 21, 2025 surrounded by loved ones," his family said in an Instagram post.

An intimidating, thunderous puncher who lost his first title to Muhammad Ali in their famous "Rumble in the Jungle" in 1974, "Big George" was a more rotund, jovial figure when he knocked out Michael Moorer for his second crown two decades later.

Foreman's comeback and the fortune he made selling fat-wicking electric cooking grills made him an icon of self-improvement and success for the Baby Boom generation.

Born in Marshall, Texas, on Jan. 10, 1949, Foreman's family soon moved to Houston where he and his six siblings were raised by a single mother. Growing up poor in the segregated American South, Foreman dropped out of junior high school and used his size and fists in street robberies.

"George's journey from the streets of Fifth Ward to boxing and business success was an inspiration," Houston Mayor John Whitmire said in a statement.

"He never forgot where he came from ... Houston will forever be proud to call George Foreman one of our own."

The Job Corps, part of President Lyndon B. Johnson's "Great Society" reforms, "rescued me from the gutter," Foreman later wrote. Through the program, 16-year-old Foreman moved out of Texas and was encouraged to channel his rage and growing bulk into boxing.

At age 19 and in his 25th amateur fight, Foreman captured the heavyweight boxing gold medal at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City. Turning pro, he won 37 straight matches on his way to face reigning champion Joe Frazier in Kingston, Jamaica, winning by technical knockout in round two.

Foreman defended the belt twice more before meeting Ali in Kinshasa, Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of the Congo, in one of the most celebrated boxing matches in history. 

Ali had been stripped of his crown seven years prior for refusing to be drafted into the Vietnam War and came into the match a heavy underdog against the bigger, younger champion. But for seven rounds, Ali laid against the ropes and fended off Foreman's clubbing blows, tiring him before knocking him out in the eighth round.

"I was one strong heavyweight punching fighter," Foreman told Reuters in 2007. "I was one punching machine and that was the first time I delivered everything I had and nothing worked."

The loss devastated Foreman. He took a year off before returning to the ring and then, after a second professional loss, retired in 1977 to become an ordained minister in the Church of the Lord Jesus Christ.

A decade later and considerably heavier at 315 pounds (143 kg), Foreman staged an unlikely return to the ring to raise money for a youth center he founded in Texas.

He went on to win 24 straight matches, gradually slimming along the way, before losing to Evander Holyfield in a 12-round decision in 1991. Three years later, he knocked out undefeated southpaw Moorer to become the oldest ever heavyweight champion at age 45.

Foreman's last match was in 1997, ending his career with a professional record of 76 wins and five losses.

Foreman was married four times in the 1970s and 1980s. In 1985, he married for the fifth time to Mary Joan Martelly, with whom he remained for the rest of his life. He had five sons - all called George - five biological daughters, and two adopted daughters.

Throughout the 1990s and after retirement, he was an enthusiastic pitchman for various products, most notably an electric grill from home appliance maker Salton Inc. In 1999, the company paid Foreman and his partners $137.5 million to put his name on the grill and other goods.

"What I do is fall in love with every product I sell," Foreman wrote in his autobiography, "By George."

"That's what sells. Just like with preaching."

- Author: Rocky Swift, Thomson Reuters

TRACKING MEDIA TRACINGS



.-  WHATSAPP Limits broadcast messages to tackle spam.

WhatsApp has announced significant challenges to its broadcast messaging policy aimed at reducing the growing issue of spam messages.

.-  Elon Musk's Grok chatbot sparks debate with ''unhinged'' responses.

Elon Musk's Grok has quickly become the subject of intense online discussion, irreverent tone and controversial interactions.

.-  Nowruz 2025 : Google Doodle celebrates Persian new year.

Google commemorated the arrival of spring with a special Doodle marking the Persian New Year,  Nowruz 2025.

.-  Apple launches first modem chip to reduce dependence on Qualcomm.

Apple on Wednesday revealed its first custom-designed modem chip that will help connect iPhones to wireless data networks.

The World Students Society thanks The Express Tribune.

INDIAN WELLS IN-STAR : JACK DRAPER



MIAMI GARDENS : Jack Draper proud to be Indian Wells champ. The 25-year-old enjoyed an outstanding two week in the Californian desert.

For Britain's Jack Draper, his first Masters 1000 title as Indian Wells on Sunday was a moment of pride and joy, but not, he suggests, a huge surprise.

The 25-year-old enjoyed an outstanding two weeks in the Californian desert, enjoying an upset win over Wimbledon champion Carlos Alcaraz in the semi-finals, after beating top Americans Ben Shelton and Taylor Fritz.

In the final he defeated Denmark's Holger Rune in straight sets - a triumph which moved him into the top 10 for the first time in his career.

Asked what his main emotion had been in the aftermath of that Triumph, Draper said : '' I think big pride  ....... to be able to celebrate that with my team ...... In tennis, there's lots of ups and down, there's  lots of adversity, especially for me over the years.

'' I feel like I've been on a big journey with my team and the guys around me, and they have've been incredibly supportive of myself, '' Draper said Wednesday as he prepared for this week's Miami Open in Florida.

The World Students Society thanks AFP.