DEVELOPS. YOU CAN STAY UP TO DATE ON AIR AND ONLINE@KMBC.COM. RESIDENTS IN WESTERN LENEXA ARE VOICING STRONG OPPOSITION TO A NEW HABITAT FOR HUMANITY HOUSING DEVELOPMENT. THE LAND NEAR THE CLEAR CREEK ...
T he good news: There is no longer a crisis in the humanities. Our field’s long-running narrative of continuous crisis is over. The bad news: The crisis of the humanities has been revealed by the ...
It seems we’ve decided the humanities have less to give the human race — or more modestly, this country’s future — than the sciences. This is a serious mistake. The sciences and the humanities are ...
As a humanities professor myself, the biggest danger I see to the discipline is the growing perception, fueled by the ubiquity of large language models, that knowledge is cheap—a resource whose ...
Miriam E. Goldberger ’28, a Crimson Editorial editor, lives in Dunster House. In the midst of the Trump administration’s assault on scientific research, another academic casualty has received far less ...
Simon J. Rabinovitch is a professor of history and codirects the Humanities Center at Northeastern University. In a TED Talk called “How AI Could Save (Not Destroy) Education,” Sal Khan, the founder ...
A federal judge has ruled that the government's abrupt elimination of humanities grants previously approved by Congress was "unlawful" and that a lawsuit brought by humanities groups can move forward.
A judge in Oregon on Wednesday ordered the federal government to essentially freeze more than $200 million withheld from state and local humanities councils across the country and to halt any plans to ...
The $34.8 million allocated by the National Endowment for the Humanities leans toward presidents, statesmen and the Declaration of Independence’s 250th anniversary. By Jennifer Schuessler and Michaela ...
The National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) has announced $34.79 million in grants for 97 humanities projects, many of which celebrate the nation’s upcoming 250th anniversary. Projects include the ...
In high school, Kristin Hsu thought she’d become a doctor. “I would do STEM summer camps and learn more about biology,” she recalled. “And then I had a small injury, and I fainted when I saw my blood.
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