Bey-Ling Sha, dean of Texas Tech University’s College of Media & Communication, was recently installed as president of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.
From high-tech labs in Austin to wide-open lots in Marfa, Texas, is fast becoming the epicenter of 3D-printed housing. Two cutting-edge companies, ICON and HiveASMBLD are showing the nation how ...
US Weekly on MSN
HGTV’s Jen Hatmaker and Ex-Husband Brandon Hatmaker’s Family Guide: Meet Their 5 Kids
HGTV stars Jen and Brandon Hatmaker’s family includes five kids and their first grandchild born in 2025, see what they’re up to today ...
A Princeton nuclear physicist. A mechanical engineer who helped NASA explore manufacturing in space. A US National Institutes of Health neurobiologist. Celebrated mathematicians. And over half a dozen ...
Charlie Javice found herself in a legal dispute with JPMorgan Chase after they bought her student financial aid company, Frank, for $175 million. Here’s what the court says happened.
FAYETTEVILLE -- University of Arkansas team captains Cam Ball and Fernando Carmona were named to exclusive watch lists for national awards this week. Ball was listed among the 67 players for the Jason ...
5don MSN
Charlie Javice sentenced to 7 years in prison for fraudulent $175M sale of financial aid startup
The 33-year-old founder of the startup student financial aid company Frank has been sentenced to more than seven years in prison. Charlie Javice was sentenced Monday in Manhattan federal court ...
Professors are afraid to publicly speak out, system leaders left key questions unanswered and advocates worry for LGBTQ+ students' mental health.
Washingtonian on MSN
Most Powerful Women in Washington 2025
Gone are the days when women in boardrooms or at the helm of major institutions were a rarity. In assembling our biennial list of the Most Powerful Women in Washington, we had the opposite problem: We ...
5don MSN
Data centers are thirsty for Texas' water, but state planners don't know how much they will need
A wave of massive data centers is expanding across Texas, prompting warnings from experts who say the new water demands could push the state's already strained supply to the brink.
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