The Super Eagles of Nigeria are in Group C of the CAF 2026 World Cup Qualifiers which will commence on November 13, 2023, and end on November 18, 2025.
The Super Eagles who failed to qualify for the 2022 edition of the tournament after losing their spot to Ghana via away goals rule, are condemned to bounce back to winning ways.
Interestingly, Jose Peseiro’s led team seems to have a relatively easy group to deal with.
Nine months after Hamas launched attacks into Israel, the conflict in Gaza continues with no end in sight. A new YouGov study of seven western European countries (Britain, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and Sweden), as well as the USA, now revisits questions we asked earlier in the conflict and pre-conflict to see how attitudes have changed, as well as covering more recent developments.
Both sides in the conflict are generally seen as having committed war crimesEarlier this year a statement by the UN’s top human rights official, Volker Türk, said that “clear violations of international humanitarian law, including possible war crimes, have been committed by all parties”.
Searching for a sound they hadn’t heard before, Canadian fans of Taylor Swift accidentally sent her 1989 song “Track 3” — eight seconds of white noise that went on sale after an iTunes glitch — to the top of the online store’s charts. Many listeners were frustrated to learn that they had spent $1.29 on what seems like absolutely nothing. But lest they forget, Taylor Swift is an artist, not some manufactured pop product.
Where is 'Supermarket Sweep' filmed? The current iteration of the popular game show was filmed at an airport hangar near this popular destination.
Source: ABCEver since its premiere on ABC in 1965, Supermarket Sweep enjoyed unparalleled popularity among viewers with a working knowledge of grocery prices and far beyond.
The nostalgia-inducing game show calls on contestants to answer trivia questions and fill their carts with the most expensive items they can lay their eyes on.
New research has identified a major hurdle to workplace progress on diversity, equity, and inclusion: managers’ blindness to structural inequities within their own organizations.
“Such resistance may originate from the managerial position itself,” write the authors of the study in the Academy of Management Journal, arguing that as workers assume supervisory responsibilities, they identify more strongly with their workplace, which in turn makes them less attuned to its flaws.
For insight into how this bias works and its effects, as well as tactics for how to mitigate it, we spoke with study co-author Christopher To, an assistant professor of human resource management at Rutgers University.