The relatives of Hussein Asasa described to NPR how they were forced to exhume and rebury their father when Israeli settlers interfered with his grave. (Image credit: Ilia Yefimovich)
The relatives of Hussein Asasa described to NPR how they were forced to exhume and rebury their father when Israeli settlers interfered with his grave. (Image credit: Ilia Yefimovich)
NuScale Power (NYSE: SMR) -- one of the most popular nuclear stocks on the market today -- is entering a critical period in its exciting growth journey. Long term, the company is chasing a $10 trillion opportunity. Over the next five years, there are three specific catalysts I'll be tracking closely. NuScale was the first company to obtain approval from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission for an SMR...
NuScale Power (NYSE: SMR) -- one of the most popular nuclear stocks on the market today -- is entering a critical period in its exciting growth journey. Long term, the company is chasing a $10 trillion opportunity. Over the next five years, there are three specific catalysts I'll be tracking closely. NuScale was the first company to obtain approval from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission for an SMR design in the U.S. Later, regulators approved an upscaled version of its designs for manufacture. While 74 SMR projects are currently under development worldwide, only one company -- NuScale -- is currently permitted to build one in the U.S. Early approval gives NuScale an advantage over the competition. The company could, at least on paper, get its plants built and online before its peers catch up, allowing it to establish critical proof points related to real-world costs and operating metrics. But so far, NuScale has yet to build an operating plant. Some of its biggest projects, including a prospective SMR plant in Romania that was agreed to more than five years ago, have faced continuous delays. Continue reading
(RTTNews) - The Japanese stock market on Friday wrote a finish to the two-day winning streak in which it had surged almost 3,500 points or 6 percent to a fresh record closing high. The Nikkei now sits just above the 62,710-point plateau although it's expected to bounce higher aga
(RTTNews) - The Japanese stock market on Friday wrote a finish to the two-day winning streak in which it had surged almost 3,500 points or 6 percent to a fresh record closing high. The Nikkei now sits just above the 62,710-point plateau although it's expected to bounce higher aga
Mobile phones are being barred from a growing number of classrooms around the world amid concerns about the disruption these devices can cause. While Hong Kong has not imposed a citywide ban, rules are tightening at individual schools. A student outcry at one institution has put a spotlight on the need to strike a better balance with phone restrictions. Form Three and Four pupils at the boys’ scho...
Mobile phones are being barred from a growing number of classrooms around the world amid concerns about the disruption these devices can cause. While Hong Kong has not imposed a citywide ban, rules are tightening at individual schools. A student outcry at one institution has put a spotlight on the need to strike a better balance with phone restrictions. Form Three and Four pupils at the boys’ school Kwun Tong Maryknoll College were told on April 30 they would not be allowed to use phones on...
For Hong Kong-based artist Apple Tong Wing-yin, Wang Fuk Court has always been more than a home address. It was a library of her life’s work. Tong, a prominent deaf illustrator and graphic designer who communicates through what she calls her “silent language” of art, kept the many canvases that spoke for her inside her flat in the Tai Po housing estate. In November last year, that library was redu...
For Hong Kong-based artist Apple Tong Wing-yin, Wang Fuk Court has always been more than a home address. It was a library of her life’s work. Tong, a prominent deaf illustrator and graphic designer who communicates through what she calls her “silent language” of art, kept the many canvases that spoke for her inside her flat in the Tai Po housing estate. In November last year, that library was reduced to ash in one of Hong Kong’s deadliest fires. She lost everything – her awards, her backlog of...