VR Resources Ltd. (TSX.V: VRR, FSE: 5VR; OTCBB: VRRCF), the "Company", or "VR", is pleased to report results from its first winter drill ...
From VR's CEO Justin Daley: " These early-stage results are an important confirmation of the extent and style of ...
SAVE 25%: The Stanley Quencher H2.0 Tumbler is 25% off at Amazon in both 30 ounce and 40 ounce versions. Warmer weather means it's even more important to focus on hydration. Drinking water sounds ...
The researchers observed a mysterious electrical effect in ultra-thin bismuth that remains unchanged across a wide temperature range, from near absolute zero (-273°C) to room temperature. "If we ...
With spring around the corner, it’s no surprise that pastel-leaning shades were leading the season’s runway trends. But there’s one particular shade that surprisingly stood out most: ballet ...
Institute of Functional Nano & Soft Materials (FUNSOM), Soochow University, Suzhou, 215123, China Macao Institute of Materials Science and Engineering (MIMSE), MUST−SUDA Joint Research Center for ...
WASHINGTON – US President Donald Trump gave the longest-ever address to a joint session of Congress by any US president on March 4 (March 5 in Singapore), clocking in at more than one hour and ...
When President Donald Trump made his speech to a joint session of Congress last night, a number of female Democratic members of Congress wore pink to protest the Trump administration’s policies they ...
As President Trump addressed a joint session of Congress at the US Capitol on Tuesday night — the longest first speech the House chamber has seen since 1964 — the reaction was mixed.
Washington — Many Democratic women in Congress wore bright pink for President Trump's address to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday in a display of defiance against the president. Rep.
Democratic women attending Tuesday's Joint Session of Congress are wearing pink to protest President Donald Trump. More than 30 Democratic women were seen wearing the color, including Hawaii Rep.
But is this really a “Barbie” moment? Credit...Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times Supported by By Vanessa Friedman The author has covered political image-making and its influences since Bush v.