The short answer? Yes and yes. The full answer is a bit more complicated.
Stories don’t create change—people do. But the right story, shaped with purpose, can give them the map to make the change happen.
For 50 years, the Wyoming Valley Striders have been more than just a running club. They’ve been a vital thread in the fabric of Northeastern Pennsylvania’s running culture.
The Standard on MSN
When a leader becomes a legacy:A farewell to Dzikamai Bere.
In his farewell message he also spoke of the giants who walked with him quietly, the unnamed guardians who formed a circle of ...
Campaign Middle East on MSN
The Next Power Play? Women’s Sport.
Women’s sport is becoming a brand-building arena defined by cultural momentum, and marketers are leveraging this ‘untapped ...
Baratunde Thurston chats with the retired four-star general on the responsibility of leaders today.
That moment made me pause; soon these humanoids may greet clients in lobbies, perform industrial inspections, even support ...
The quarterback is appropriately known as the single-most important position in football, and arguably all of sports. In a ...
Anyone who has spent time in a law firm has seen this scenario unfold. A senior partner announces that they'll be retiring at ...
Beginning as a DVD-by-mail rental service (how quaint) in the late 1990s, in 2007 Netflix delivered its billionth disc in the ...
The announcement of Bank of America as a sponsor of the Great Ethiopian Run arrives at a historic moment, the twenty fifth anniversary of the event. This ...
Opinion
AllAfrica on MSNOpinion
Africa: The Burden of Representation - Women in African Academia and the Politics of Visibility
Representation in academia often imposes on women the implicit expectation to symbolise collective progress. Female academics are frequently viewed as representatives of all women, rather than as ...
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