Alioune Diagne Niasse est né au Sénégal, à Dakar, en 1976, septième enfant d’une famille de neuf enfants
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Alioune Diagne Niasse est né au Sénégal, à Dakar, en 1976, septième enfant d’une famille de neuf enfants
Un jeune Américain a défié pendant plus de 20 jours le froid polaire et les chutes de neige en Alaska, sans toit après l'incendie de sa cabane avant d'être finalement secouru par un hélicoptère parti à sa recherche.
Alioune Diagne Niasse est né au Sénégal, à Dakar, en 1976, septième enfant d’une famille de neuf enfants
Après les œufs, le rembourrage de soutien-gorge et les préservatifs, depuis une semaine, des bloggeuses utilisent le dos de leur smartphone pour se maquiller.
It was the unexpected success of his East Harlem high school robotics team in April that forced Amadou Ly, 18, to reveal his secret: He was an illegal immigrant from Senegal, left at 14 to fend for himself in hopes of completing an American education, but caught instead in what seemed like a losing battle against deportation. But when the secret became front-page news in The New York Times, scores of strangers rallied to his side. To pressure the Department of Homeland Security on his behalf, volunteer lawyers built a team that included 6 senators, 23 members of the House of Representatives, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and the Senegalese ambassador. Word spread that even the man in the Oval Office had weighed in.
Amadou Ly and his East Harlem teammates won no prizes at the national robotics competition in Atlanta last weekend. But Amadou, 18, who was brought to New York from Senegal at 13 and left to fend for himself a year later, won an outpouring of support for his legal fight against deportation and his dream of going to college. Scores of strangers who read about his bittersweet success in The New York Times last week called or sent e-mail messages offering to help pay his college tuition and his legal expenses, or even to adopt him if that could help him stay in the United States.
A small, troubled high school in East Harlem seemed an unlikely place to find students for a nationwide robot-building contest, but when a neighborhood after-school program started a team last winter, 19 students signed up. One was Amadou Ly, a senior who had been fending for himself since he was 14. The project had only one computer and no real work space. Engineering advice came from an elevator mechanic and a machinist's son without a college degree. But in an upset that astonished its sponsors, the rookie team from East Harlem won the regional competition last month, beating rivals from elite schools like Stuyvesant in Manhattan and the Bronx High School of Science for a chance to compete in the national robotics finals in Atlanta that begins tomorrow.