The Forgotten City How To Get The Best Ending

While there are many outcomes to experience there is only one ‘canon’ ending, and even it has its own variations. This guide will cover how to get the best ending in The Forgotten City and unlock “The Canon Ending” and “The Oracle” Trophies/Achievements. There are some slight spoilers ahead, but the exact contents of the best ending will not be revealed. RELATED: Forgotten City Developer Discusses Why the Setting Moved from Skyrim to Ancient Rome...

January 16, 2023 · 3 min · 459 words · David Cox

The Four Best Maryland Sports Betting Promos This Week

The four best Maryland sports betting promos this week are available to use on a wide array of games. In fact, these offers are applicable to any sports league with available betting odds. Below you will find our picks for the four best Maryland sports betting promos for this week’s action. These offers can be used on any NFL, World Cup, NBA, college football or NHL game this week....

January 16, 2023 · 3 min · 636 words · Martha Lee

The Future Could Be Very Close Rashford Insists More To Greenwood Than Potential

United produced a generally lacklustre display against Astana in Thursday’s Europa League opener, winning 1-0 at Old Trafford. Manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer started Greenwood, Angel Gomes and Tahith Chong in attack, with the teenagers joined by Rashford. Greenwood got the solitary goal with a smart finish after twisting and turning in the penalty area deep into the second half, much to the relief of the home support. It was Greenwood’s first senior goal for the club, with the 17-year-old tipped for big things at United....

January 16, 2023 · 3 min · 428 words · Ivy Krawczyk

The Game Awards 2021 Best Direction Winner

This year’s annual Game Awards show is just around the corner, returning to an in-person event after two years of virtual events. While there are certainly front runners in many of the 30 categories of awards, there is no one stand-out game likely to dominate the awards. As the gaming industry (and the world) continue to be affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, a variety of unexpected challenges were experienced, and thus the games released this year reflect that....

January 16, 2023 · 7 min · 1490 words · William Charles

The Gathering Storm

There are two wars taking place in Iraq right now–the one Americans are watching on television and a wholly different version of reality being broadcast throughout the Middle East. While U.S. programming concentrates on military achievements and the certainty of victory, Arab and Muslim TV news focuses on victims, especially children–grisly images of the dead and dying and maimed. The bitterness evoked by this war is such that even benign acts of charity are tainted in the eyes of many Muslims and Arabs....

January 16, 2023 · 7 min · 1400 words · Kathryn Turpen

The Genius Of Trent Alexander Arnold Is Starting To Show

One of Alexander-Arnold’s most striking abilities is his knack for a pass both from open play and set pieces. After playing his way through Liverpool’s youth ranks and being tipped for greatness by Steven Gerrard himself, he made his competitive debut on the 25 October 2016 in a league cup match against Tottenham Hotspur. A month later, he featured in the league cup once again and picked up his first of many assists for Liverpool by setting up Divock Origi in a 2-0 win over Leeds United....

January 16, 2023 · 3 min · 531 words · Hector Madden

The Genuine Articles

Gaining on Gore and Bush I would like to commend NEWSWEEK for its extensive presidential-election coverage (“Straight Shooters,” National Affairs, Nov. 15). Although the 2000 elections offer a field of candidates whose policy perspectives, in most cases, are not significantly different from each other, each candidate has a distinct character and background. Already, notable (and entertaining) events are unfolding: Gore version 2.0 and Bush’s flubbing on reporter Andy Hiller’s pop quiz about “four leaders in four hot spots....

January 16, 2023 · 12 min · 2419 words · Charles Carter

The Global Warming Debate

I was extremely pleased to read Sharon Begley’s detailed and highly accurate article on the climate-change deniers (“The Truth About Denial”). I first published on climate disruption in 1968 and, like my scientific colleagues, have grown increasingly concerned about it ever since. The success of the deniers has been appalling and, sadly, they have succeeded in delaying needed action for a decade or more. I know dozens of the leading climate scientists personally and have followed and taught about the increasingly clear and ominous responses of Earth’s flora and fauna to global heating, which is being thoroughly documented by biologists....

January 16, 2023 · 13 min · 2671 words · Robert Mumford

The Globe Scrapes Off Barnicle Mess

But is the story really over? The paper’s outspoken critics, including Harvard professor Alan Dershowitz, say it’s time to focus on Globe higher-ups. “They really are to blame,” he says. Some staffers are angry at Storin for not making a faster and cleaner cut. “There are people who are quietly seething over this,” said one reporter. Another added, “There’s a lot of newsroom buzz about whether Storin is safe.” Storin told NEWSWEEK that he is comfortable with the way he handled Barnicle....

January 16, 2023 · 2 min · 257 words · Elaine Proffitt

The Good The Bad And The Dirty In The Week Of Boxing From Fight Of The Year Candidate To Tyson Fury Head Scratcher

The Good Sergey Lipinets and Lamont Peterson put on a show. Initially, when this fight got made, nobody gave too many thoughts about it. Lipinets, a former IBF junior welterweight champion, was making his debut at 147 pounds. Peterson was fighting for the first time in 14 months after getting pummeled by Errol Spence Jr. in January 2018. But what the world got was one of the best fights of 2019 thus far, with Lipinets winning the back-and-forth war by 10th-round knockout....

January 16, 2023 · 7 min · 1366 words · Sabrina Allen

The Google Home Max Has Arrived In The Uk

You can find the full details of the product in our r elease article here. Aiming for outstanding audio quality the Google Home Max uses premium hardware for a high-fidelity, AI driven sound experience. Dual 4.5-inch high-excursion woofers promise a balanced bass performance and the ability to play music extremely loud being up to 20 times more powerful than the Google Home. The Google Home Max is available at John Lewis at a RRP of £399....

January 16, 2023 · 2 min · 233 words · Virginia Brown

The Gray Lady Goes Dot Com

Before we proceed, let me make it clear that the valuation I’m using is mine, not the company’s. The company won’t discuss any aspect of its offering while it’s in registration at the Securities and Exchange Commission. But numbers from the SEC filings yield a valuation range of $600 million to $1 billion. This proposed offering of “tracking stock” called Times Company Digital could set the tone for the nation’s newspaper industry....

January 16, 2023 · 4 min · 678 words · Lee Draper

The Great Scott Syndrome

My favorite example of Great Scottism has always been that ludicrous moment, two revelation-packed years into Watergate and a mere several weeks before the end, when scores of congressmen announced that one final piece of evidence turned up had revealed to them for the first time that Richard Nixon might have done something wrong. Waist-deep in the documented muck that had engulfed us all like a sludge flow for 24 months, they nonetheless managed looks of complete astonishment and professions of the most heartbreaking disillusion when they chose to acknowledge what they must have long since known....

January 16, 2023 · 5 min · 905 words · Tara Diaz

The Group

In May, Princeton picked Harvard law professor Anne-Marie Slaughter to run the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. She joins Princeton president Shirley Tilghman, a molecular biologist who took over last year along with provost Amy Gutmann. The dean of the college is a woman, as is the dean of undergraduate students–among many others. And the Princeton sisterhood extends beyond the campus. Nancy Cantor, chancellor of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, is a former Princeton faculty member....

January 16, 2023 · 4 min · 827 words · Scott Webster

The Growing Shadow Over The Games

But another familiar scandal, drugs, also reared up again–the recurring specter that could ultimately devastate the Games. Dr. Wade Exum, the head of drug control for the U.S. Olympic Committee for nine years until he resigned last month, alleged in a federal lawsuit that U.S. officials have ignored failed drug tests by athletes who have gone on to win Olympic medals. (He did not specify any athletes by name.) “The USOC has thrown roadblocks in the path of antidoping enforcement,” said Exum, who is black and whose complaint also alleges racial discrimination....

January 16, 2023 · 2 min · 265 words · Dennis Simmons

The Hardest Sell

So much for Buy American. And so much for Susan Lucci, the soap-opera actress who complains in new Ford TV commercials that people who think Americans can’t build cars “tick me off.” Lucci and U.S. auto executives insist that Detroit is suffering not from a quality problem but from a perception problem. And to an ever greater extent, they’re right. Over the last decade the Big Three have traveled a long way in making cars that operate day in and day out with relatively few defects-“things gone wrong,” in industry parlance....

January 16, 2023 · 11 min · 2273 words · Phillip King

The Hidden Dangers Of Smartphone Car Vent Mounts

There are many different ways to do this, like dashboard mounts, magnetic stands, and suction cups that clip to your windshield. However, the most popular smartphone mount is the air vent clip. Despite being the most popular, air vent mounts are the most dangerous for your smartphone. If you have an air vent clip or are considering using one, be sure to read this first. Are Smartphone Air Vent Mounts Dangerous?...

January 16, 2023 · 2 min · 388 words · Brittany Miller

The Hopeful Message Behind Lookism S First Season

The setting of the story of Lookism is modern-day South Korea, but it could be anywhere. Even if South Korea does have strict beauty standards that take a toll on the average person’s life – and even worse for those that blatantly deviate from these rigid norms —, much like the themes from the Oscar Winner Parasite, by Bong Joon-Ho are universal, it is no different with those of Lookism....

January 16, 2023 · 5 min · 1043 words · Edward Brown

The Hundred 2022 Live Score The Hundred Latest News Match Updates

January 16, 2023 · 0 min · 0 words · Julie Kent

The Immortals Fenyx Rising Sequel Should Pursue Pirate Mythology

Its handling of characters like Hermes, Zeus, and Prometheus was smart, blending mythological accuracy with humor to craft a story and experience that kept many of its players entertained throughout. However, with Greek myth being perhaps the most well-known to western audiences, it became easy to pick apart the inconsistencies between the characters presented in Immortals Fenyx Rising and other games that feature the gods of Mount Olympus. Should it receive a sequel, it would be smart to find a different setting to tell its tale, and a game at sea with pirates would be ideal....

January 16, 2023 · 4 min · 663 words · William Odermott