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| Journals Energy Newsletter for 2026-04-16 ( 12 items ) |
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A view from China: Building Resilience in a Polycrisis World (10)
NEW YORK, April 14 [Category: BizMedia] -- Dow Jones, a provider of news and business information, posted the following news release:
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A view from China: Building Resilience in a Polycrisis World
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"Heightened vigilance."
That was the sentiment shared amongst business leaders at the recent annual Dow Jones China Risk & Compliance Summit last month.
Held across Beijing, Shanghai, and Shenzhen, this year's China roadshow brought together industry leaders, legal experts, and compliance officers to discuss geopolitical impacts and explor more PR
American Express Offers Elevated Card Member Experiences and Access During the FORMULA 1 CRYPTO.COM MIAMI GRAND PRIX 2026 Weekend (10)
NEW YORK, April 15 [Category: BizFinancial Services] -- American Express posted the following news release:
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American Express Offers Elevated Card Member Experiences and Access During the FORMULA 1 CRYPTO.COM MIAMI GRAND PRIX 2026 Weekend
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NEW YORK -American Express announced today it is bringing a range of elevated experiences to Card Members throughout the FORMULA 1 CRYPTO.COM MIAMI GRAND PRIX 2026 (May 1-3) weekend.
As the Official Payments Partner of Formula 1(r) and F1 ACADEMY(tm), American Express will have premium lounge space more PR
BMJ Group: Timing Exercise to Match Body Clock Chronotype May Lower Cardiovascular Disease Risk (10)
LONDON, England, April 16 (TNSjou) -- BMJ Group issued the following news release about Open Heart:
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Timing exercise to match body clock chronotype may lower cardiovascular disease risk
Alignment with 'eveningness' or 'morningness' lowered risk factors and boosted sleep quality more effectively than mismatched timing
Include chronotype assessment in exercise prescriptions, suggest the researchers
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Timing exercise to match body clock chronotype--the natural predisposition to morning or evening alertness--may lower cardiovascular dise more PR
Ceasefire Continues Amid the U.S. Blockade of Iranian Ports (10)
WASHINGTON, April 15 [Category: Energy] -- The Institute for Energy Research posted the following commentary:
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The Ceasefire Continues Amid the U.S. Blockade of Iranian Ports
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Key Takeaways
1 The United States has begun the blockade that includes vessels of all nationalities entering or leaving Iranian ports.
2 The blockade was in response to Iran's assertion that it controlled maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz.
3 While the discussion of further talks has driven oil prices below $100, there is growing belief that, eve more PR
Center for European Policy Analysis Issues Commentary: Russia and the Pain of Losing Hungary (10)
WASHINGTON, April 16 -- The Center for European Policy Analysis issued the following commentary on April 15, 2026, by non-resident senior fellow Alexander Kolyandr:
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Russia and the Pain of Losing Hungary
The loss of a populist ally in Budapest has a range of financial consequences for the Putin regime.
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Make no mistake, the Kremlin is feeling the pain from the historic landslide victory for Hungary's opposition, ending the 16-year rule of Viktor Orban.
The most immediate blow is ideological. Orban was living proof that sovereign, il more PR
Cumberland School of Law Faculty Scholarship Citations, Jan. 1-March 31, 2026 (10)
BIRMINGHAM, Alabama, April 14 -- Samford University issued the following news release:
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Cumberland School of Law Faculty Scholarship Citations, Jan. 1-March 31, 2026
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The scholarship of Samford University Cumberland School of Law faculty members is frequently cited in numerous legal disciplines. The following is a list of faculty authored works cited from Jan. 1-March 31, 2026, and sourced by Westlaw Precision, Lexis+ AI, and HeinOnline.
LaJuana Davis
LaJuana Davis, Reconsidering Remedies for Ensuring Competent Representation in more PR
Curtis Institute of Music Announces Recipients of Fifth Annual Daniel W. Dietrich II Young Alumni Fund (10)
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania, April 16 -- Curtis Institute of Music issued the following news:
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Curtis Institute of Music Announces Recipients of Fifth Annual Daniel W. Dietrich II Young Alumni Fund
Curtis awarded 26 grants totaling $130,000 to recent graduates for creative and community-based projects; travel and professional expenses; and instrument needs.
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Curtis Institute of Music is proud to announce its fifth annual Daniel W. Dietrich II Young Alumni Fund grantees. This impactful fund provides recent graduates of Curtis--those wh more PR
Dark matter could explain earliest supermassive black holes (10)
RIVERSIDE, California, April 15 -- The University of California Riverside campus issued the following news:
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Dark matter could explain earliest supermassive black holes
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A growing mystery in astronomy is the presence of gargantuan black holes -some weighing as much as a billion suns -existing less than a billion years after the Big Bang. According to the standard theory of black hole formation, these black holes simply should not have had enough time to grow so large.
A study led by University of California, Riverside graduate studen more PR
Gutierrez Published in Top Academic Journal (10)
CLARKSVILLE, Arkansas, April 15 -- The University of the Ozarks posted the following news:
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Gutierrez Published in Top Academic Journal
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For most college students, contributing to a peer-reviewed journal is a long-term goal. For University of the Ozarks junior Caleb Gutierrez, it's already a reality.
Gutierrez, a finance major from Chihuahua, Mexico, is a co-author on a research article published in Environment, Innovation and Management (EIM) -a top-tier, peer-reviewed international journal focused on environmental challenges and te more PR
Johns Hopkins: Primitive Star Offers Rare Window Into the Dawn of Our Universe (10)
BALTIMORE, Maryland, April 16 (TNSjou) -- Johns Hopkins University issued the following news:
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Primitive star offers rare window into the dawn of our universe
Studying the star, called SDSS J0715-7334, could give astronomers insights into how the universe's first stars were formed
Hannah Robbins
In the exurbs of the Milky Way, near a satellite galaxy called the Large Magellanic Cloud, researchers have discovered the most metal-poor, chemically primitive star ever found, according to new research from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
Fin more PR
NDWRRI researchers tackling issues affecting state's water supply and quality (10)
FARGO, North Dakota, April 15 -- North Dakota State University posted the following news:
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NDWRRI researchers tackling issues affecting state's water supply and quality
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In the words of North Dakota Water Resources Research Institute (NDWRRI) interim director Trung Le, water management in the state isn't only an environmental issue.
"Because the state relies so heavily on agriculture and energy, water is the backbone of the economy," said Le, who was named NDWRRI interim director in January 2026.
Water management isn't only about more PR
University of Portsmouth: Cosmic Fossils - Ancient Black Holes From Before the Big Bang May Still Shape the Universe (10)
PORTSMOUTH, England, April 15 (TNSjou) -- The University of Portsmouth issued the following news:
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Cosmic fossils: Ancient black holes from before the Big Bang may still shape the Universe
New research suggests that relic black holes from before the big bang may still shape galaxies today
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Black holes that formed before the Big Bang could still exist today as 'cosmic fossils', potentially helping to explain the mysterious dark matter that shapes galaxies across the Universe, according to new research from the University of Portsmouth more PR
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