As climate change makes disasters such as cyclones, floods and droughts more intense, more frequent and striking more places, fewer people are dying from those catastrophes globally because of better warning, planning and resilience, a top United Nations official said. The world hasn't really noticed how the type of storms that once killed tens or hundreds of thousands of people now only claim handfuls of lives, new United Nations Assistant Secretary-General Kamal Kishore, who heads the UN's office for disaster risk reduction told The Associated Press.
You could be entitled to more than you think from Social Security.
A fountain that has been in Kansas City since the 1950s was defaced in late May, leaving Kansas City Parks & Recreation with a difficult road to repair.