By Gideon Toler Rustling branches, Lifting blue jays off their feet; Rocking up and down Waves filling ev'ry street. Swirling all around, Making climates rise. Mad, sucking grey hole, A black funnel of great size. Destroying cities, Raising houses off the ground; Escalating more, Not a body to be found.
By Jasper Ingenthron For some of you who don’t know what climate change is, it is the effect of global warming/ greenhouse gas emissions. The Earth has a huge bubble of carbon dioxide around its surface that keeps oxygen inside of our atmosphere so we can breathe ( also why you can't breathe in space ). Some signs of Climate change are… Temperatures are rising world-wide due to greenhouse gasses trapping more heat in the atmosphere. Droughts are becoming longer and more extreme around the...
By Rishaan Chowdhury The world is full of amazing places and the Times of Boston travel section strives to bring you a few. Whether you travel to these places or not is up to you but we hope that this article will take you to a few destinations from Dubai to Alaska. Note: This is not a ranking
By Lee Jacobs The Super Bowl is the final game in American Football that happens every year in February on a Sunday. The whole season builds up to the game so there is a lot of pressure on all the players. On Sunday, February 12, 2023 the 57th super bowl took place. The two teams that made it were the Kansas City Chiefs and the Philadelphia Eagles. The game started with the Eagles getting the first touchdown, being run in by the quarterback, Jalen Hurts, and the kicker making the extra point....
By Rishaan Chowdhury Six months ago, in a country located just south of Ecuador lay Peru. Nestled in between the Pacific ocean and the Andes, this beautiful destination was a thriving place, with a stable democracy and a growing economy with Peru’s GDP growing by 2.7% in 2022. But suddenly in December former President Pedro Castillo announced plans to dissolve congress, this was because of an impeachment vote that was about to occur. Unfortunately for him Congress voted overwhelmingly in...
By Sam Singer The Spanish flu pandemic of 1918 was one of the most deadly pandemics in history. Death counts reached fifty million, with over 500 million affected. Additionally, with World War I at its height, military mobilization created ideal conditions for the influenza virus to thrive. Many men in the army were packed into tight spaces while training and traveling, malnourished with weakened immune systems, and practiced poor hygiene. However, the effects of the pandemic extended beyond...