Fime Vincent van Gogh s never-before-seen sketchbooks
NEW YORK History has been made in New York City schools -- with all-girls wrestling. As CBS 2 s Dave Carlin reported Thursday, some girls used to wrestle on boy s teams, but now they finally have a league of their own. When asked to describe herself, 15-year-old Ronnie Green said don t pin her down, because she can be both super sweet, and rough and tough. First female high school wrestling champ in MassachusettsCassy Herkelman: Female high school wrestler wins and makes history - by defaultWatch: Wrestler refuses to compete against girl I like the adrenaline I get when I win. I feel like I m on top of the world, Green said. The ninth grader at Harlem s Randolph High is a founding member of the Public Schools Athletic League s first all-girls wrestling league. When I m having trouble in school I feel no one will mess with me cause I m on the wrestling team, Green said. She sai
stanley cup d she wanted to be a cheer
stanley deutschland leader, then decided wrestling was better. She was the only girl on her school s wrestling team, giving her experience many new players envy. I feel they look up to me, want to practice with me, and I feel pretty important, Green said. About 250 girls from 16 scho
stanley cup ols are in the league and they said what they re learning helps them on and off the mat. We re trying to make them more confident individuals, stronger individuals, coach Ken Bigley said. Teaching them to be aggressive, teaching them to get after it. It s a little bit challenging. Coaches Azxl Intelligence goes all in with the Daddy Issues
Some of the world g
stanley kaffeebecher reatest cities during the Middle Ages were on the eastern coast of Africa. Their ornate stone domes and soaring walls, made with ocean corals and painted a brilliant white, were wonders to the traders that visited them from Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. They were the superpowers of the Swahili Coast, and they ;ve long been misunderstood by archaeologists. It only recently that researchers outside Africa are beginning to appreciate their importance. Photos by Samir Patel Throughout the Middle Ages, great civilizations ringed the Indian Ocean. From Egypt, people could travel the Red Sea to reach the ocean, then sail south to Africa, or continue east to the Arab world and India. Then, of course, one could travel over land on the famous Silk Road from India through central Asia and into China. In reality, few people ever made
stanley mugs that journey. But many trade goods did, passed from hand to hand in cosmopolitan cities whose cultural diversity would have made places like New York and Sao Paolo look like monocultures. Among those great medieval cities were places like Songo Mnara, a gorgeous and bustling Swahili city built on an island off the coast of Tanzania in the fourteenth century. At a time when European cities were getting wiped out by plagues and famines, Songo Mnara was thriving. This month, Samir Patel has a fascinating article in Archaeology a
stanley quencher bout the city. He writes: From the tenth to fifteenth centuries, the riches of Africa