“We humans need to do better.” That’s the sentiment Nahzeer Sandets, 12, shared in response to the question above. His drawing illustrates his bleak outlook on earth’s future, and he’s not alone—the environment, the fate of animals, and the perils to our planet consume the thoughts and imaginations of the next generation.
TIME for Kids, the weekly classroom edition produced by TIME editors, asked young students to draw their view of the planet 30 years from now.
Young boys naturally have the innate need to be accepted, validated and encouraged by adult male role models, ideally in the form of father figures. Unfortunately, life doesn’t always work out that way so, many boys at some point will experience a broken relationship with their dads and lose the sense of security needed to navigate the challenges of growing into adulthood. Unpacking daddy issues in relationship and men's emotional struggles Men with daddy issues may feel like they're not good enough and lack self-confidence.
Full Name: Daniel Clive Wheldon
Profession: Racing Car Driver
Biography: Two-time winner of the Indianapolis 500, in 2005 and 2011.
Born: June 22, 1978
Birthplace: Emberton, Buckinghamshire, England, United Kingdom Generation: Generation X
Chinese Zodiac: Horse
Star Sign: Cancer
Died: October 16, 2011 (aged 33)
Cause of Death: Multi car crash during a challenge race at the season-ending IndyCar World Championship at Las Vegas Motor Speedway
Racing Career 2005-05-29 Indianapolis 500: Dan Wheldon becomes first British-born winner since Graham Hill in 1966; first Indy 500 victory for car owner Michael Andretti of Andretti-Green Racing 2010-05-30 Indianapolis 500: Scotsman Dario Franchitti driving for Target Chip Ganassi Racing wins his 2nd Indy title ahead of Dan Wheldon and Marco Andretti 2011-05-29 Indianapolis 500: 2005 champion Dan Wheldon of England wins his 2nd Indy 500; 4 months later he is killed in a race accident in Las Vegas Famous Racing Car DriversncG1vNJzZmivp6x7sLrToaCsnJGue6S7zGinnqegobJwsMCnZLCglaGxsLo%3D
Shots rang out while Guillermo Glenn was looking for dog food in the back aisles of a Walmart Supercenter in El Paso, Texas, on Aug. 3, 2019. People started running, and they were covered in blood. There was a woman calling out for her child, bleeding from her legs after what looked like shrapnel had pierced them. Glenn ran to the pharmacy section of the store to find some bandages for her.
Subject is now playing in New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago
On a recent early morning flight to Atlanta, I sat in the middle seat next to a jovial, middle-aged Michiganian. As both of us were in a chatty mood, we struck up a discussion about movies we wanted to watch on our plane ride. The topic of documentaries quickly came up, as my newfound pal said she absolutely adored documentaries.
When I logged in to Facebook this week, I was greeted with updates from such friends as Mariah Carey, Natalie Portman and Ryan Gosling. Exciting, right? Except that when I clicked through, it was clear that these posts were from my same, lame no-name friends who were simply jumping on the latest Facebook bandwagon. Yes, it is (or was, as these things don’t exactly have strict expiration dates) Celebrity Doppelgänger Week on Facebook, during which people replace their profile picture with the celeb they think looks the most like them.
In January of 1965, Charles Robert Jenkins, a young sergeant in the U.S. Army, abandoned his patrol in South Korea and surrendered to the North, hoping to find a way home. His plan failed: Jenkins spent nearly 40 years in North Korea until the Japanese government negotiated his departure in 2004. In 1980, Jenkins had married Hitomi Soga, a Japanese woman abducted by North Korea, with whom he had two children, Mika and Brinda.
To a score of marching drums and pipes, we see the expedition trudge across a snowy expanse and up the mountain. They camp on a hilly bluff, the sun setting over the Anatolian hinterland below. Moments later, we go inside a dark cave and watch members of the expedition inspect what appears to be a solid wooden wall, entombed within layers of glacial ice and volcanic rock. A gnarled beam runs suspended from one part of the cavern to another.
An Australian man was accosted in the Indian city of Bangalore over the weekend after a group of people became incensed that he had a tattoo of an Indian goddess on his shin.
Matthew Gordon, a law student at Australia’s Deakin University, was then taken with his girlfriend to a local police station and only released after penning a letter of apology, the Associated Press reported.
“One of them came to me and confronted me about my tattoo,” the 21-year-old, who was having lunch with his girlfriend and a local friend at a restaurant when the incident took place, told the Hindu newspaper Sunday night.