
L. Anderson
Articles
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Nov 12, 2024 |
sciencedirect.com | L. Anderson
Wilderness areas are expansive natural environments on earth where human impact and disturbance are either absent or minimal (Di Marco et al., 2019). They areas represent some of the last refuges for species to exist at near-natural levels of abundance, playing a critical role in sustaining biodiversity and maintaining ecosystem integrity (Soulé et al., 2006).
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Sep 8, 2024 |
gothamist.com | Alison Stewart |L. Anderson
Why do people see psychics? How do you become a psychic? Do you have to believe in something for it to have an emotional impact on you? These are just some of the questions explored in the new documentary “Look Into My Eyes,” which opened at Film Forum in Manhattan on Friday. It follows seven New York City psychics who help clients find forgiveness, love and closure. The film sets aside questions about authenticity and focuses instead on the human element of the psychics' work.
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Jun 9, 2024 |
gothamist.com | Kousha Navidar |L. Anderson
Love it or hate it, most New Yorkers have to move at some point. And moving is happening a lot more this time of year. Memorial Day kicks off the busiest season of the year for moving. Kids are out of school, the weather’s warmer, college kids have graduated. But how do you find a reliable mover? When’s the best time of year to move? What are tricks to be sure you get your security deposit back?
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Apr 10, 2024 |
redgreenandblue.org | L. Anderson |Jake Bittle |Jeremy Bloom
When Henri Kunz was growing up in West Germany in the 1980s, he used to drink an instant coffee substitute called Caro, a blend of barley, chicory root, and rye roasted to approximate the deep color and invigorating flavor of real coffee. “We kids drank it,” Kunz remembered recently. “It had no caffeine, but it tasted like coffee.”By L. V. AndersonGristAs an adult, Kunz loves real coffee. But he also believes its days are numbered.
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Apr 2, 2024 |
madison365.com | Omar Jimenez |Yon Pomrenze |L. Anderson |Robert Chappell
(CNN) — There are only two people alive who remember firsthand what the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre was like. One of them is 109-year-old Viola Ford Fletcher, otherwise known as “Mother Fletcher.”She specifically remembers “people getting killed, houses, property, schools, churches, and stores getting destroyed with fire,” she told CNN. “It just stays with me, you know, just the fear. I have lived in Tulsa since but I don’t sleep all night living there.”“I’ll just never get over that,” she added.
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