by Jessica A. Floyd | Oct 18, 2018 | Education, Featured
WASHINGTON – While state revenues have generally returned to pre-recession levels, state spending on higher education is 16 percent lower than in 2008 – and the higher tuitions at public colleges and universities intended to fill the funding gap are especially...
by Lucas Robinson | Oct 17, 2018 | Featured, Politics
WASHINGTON — What do two veteran newsmen think of the current state of journalism – where factual stories are called of “fake news,” other countries, politicians and extremists spread disinformation and attacks on the press are constant at the highest levels of...
by Beverly Banks | Oct 17, 2018 | Featured, Health
ARLINGTON, Va. – In an effort to provide underserved communities with better access to mental health care, professionals are increasingly turning to a technology most people carry with them every day – the smartphone. Speakers at the 2018 Behavioral Health Care...
by Bryan Wood | Oct 17, 2018 | Featured, Politics
WASHINGTON – Americans may be the number one threat to their own election cybersecurity heading into the midterms this November and the 2020 presidential election because of their tendency to share tweets and other online posts – many of which are fake, cybersecurity...
by Daniel Grimes | Oct 17, 2018 | Featured, Politics
WASHINGTON — Banning hate speech on college campuses would stifle free speech, impede research on controversial issues and creates a culture of victimhood, a Boise State University political science professor said Tuesday at a Heritage Foundation event on...
by Bryan Wood | Oct 16, 2018 | Featured, Politics
WASHINGTON – A coalition of African political organizers Tuesday offered advice on how to oust Cameroon President Paul Biya in preparation for next week’s official presidential election results, which Biya opponents suspect have already been manipulated to show a Biya...