AI Is Rewiring How Students Think—And That’s Dangerous
Overuse of AI is undermining students’ reading comprehension and critical thinking—skills essential for independent thought and democratic life.
Overuse of AI is undermining students’ reading comprehension and critical thinking—skills essential for independent thought and democratic life.
Facing financial collapse, Talladega College sells four historic Hale Woodruff murals—but ensures they’ll return home regularly.
In a surprising shift, Donald Trump acknowledges constitutional limits on a third presidential term, ending months of speculation.
A new look at the real issues plaguing college students in 2025, revealing deep anxieties about debt, mental health, and their future.
A federal court’s redistricting order has given Mississippi Democrats a rare chance to challenge the Republican supermajority in the state legislature in the November 4 election.
From Athens to Mexico City, a new kind of tour is showing travelers the social and economic toll of mass tourism—and how to visit more responsibly.
While aid deliveries to Gaza have surged since the ceasefire, most residents can’t afford the food arriving—highlighting a deepening gap between supply and access.
Annabel Goldsmith, the aristocrat whose name defined London’s most exclusive nightclub and who navigated a life of glamour, tragedy, and influence, has died at age 91.
Hurricane Melissa has left most of Jamaica without internet or power, closed major airports, and caused multiple deaths—though the capital Kingston was largely spared.
After more than a century, Chinook salmon have returned to the headwaters of Oregon’s Klamath River—just one year after the last of four dams was removed.