Imagine a future in which you always know the date of baseball's opening day. Or that your birthday is always on a Tuesday (sorry). Or that New Year's Eve is always on a Saturday. As the people of the world prepare to hang their 2012 calendars, two professors at Johns Hopkins University are proposing one you can keep forever, each date falling on the same day of the week as it did the year before.
Breaking News
- 8 months ago - US$38M contract signed to construct solar farms in Regions Two, Five, Six -
- 8 months ago - GCSM voices rally in support of Cuba against U.S. hostility -
- 2 years ago - Leguan Stelling: $413M upgrade to be completed in June -
- 2 years ago - SOCU charges Herstelling family with laundering over $4.1B -
- 2 years ago - President Ali: Companies invest over $25B along coastline within two years -
Editor's Picks
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US$38M contract signed to construct solar farms in Regions Two, Five, Six
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GCSM voices rally in support of Cuba against U.S. hostility
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Leguan Stelling: $413M upgrade to be completed in June
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SOCU charges Herstelling family with laundering over $4.1B
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President Ali: Companies invest over $25B along coastline within two years
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Dr Ashni Singh presents the 2023 fiscal package to the National Assembly
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Finance Minister says Budget 2023 to spur investment, further enhance livelihoods
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Elections petition: CCJ overturns Appeal Court’s decision to hear dismissed case
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UK waivers visa requirements for Guyanese
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Amended Medical Practitioners Bill: Non-nationals cleared to practice medicine in Guyana