August 2025 - Page 30

Lead with Fire: Dr. Alecia Heffner-Crump Empowers Leaders

Dr. Alecia Heffner-Crump, a proud alumna of Dillard University, Louisiana’s oldest HBCU, is a tenured higher education professional, an advocate for STEM, and a groundbreaking change agent. With her recent publication, Lead with Fire: How to Inspire, Influence, and Elevate in a Changing World, she offers invaluable leadership insights poised to transform the professional landscape for

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Apple crushes Wall Street expectations as iPhone sales soar

By Lexx Thornton Apple on Thursday reported sales and profit that far surpassed expectations, showing that its efforts to re-route its sprawling global supply chain away from U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade war have so far succeeded.   Apple said it earned $94.04 billion in revenue for its fiscal third quarter ended June 28, up nearly

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Howard Study Links Loneliness to Poor Health, Finds Resilience

Written By Lexx Thornton A new Howard University study shows that loneliness significantly harms mental and physical health, but it also reveals resilience among Black and Hispanic adults.   The nationwide study was led by Oluwasegun Akinyemi, MD, Ph.D., a senior research fellow at the Clive O. Callender Outcomes Research Center. Akinyemi called loneliness a “silent

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AriZona Iced Tea Keeps 99¢ Price for 32 Years, Founder Says

Written By Lexx Thornton AriZona Iced Tea first put its iconic 99-cent cans in stores in 1992. The price hasn’t gone up even a penny in the 32 years since. “People say, ‘How do you do it?'” The brand’s chairman and founder, Don Vultaggio, said in a recent interview with NBC News’ Morning News NOW

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Flash Floods Slam Northeast, NY and NJ Declare Emergencies

By Mike Bedigan,Isabel Keane,Gustaf Kilander New Yorkers and millions of others in the Northeast have faced flash floods for the second time in two weeks as severe thunderstorms and torrential downpours slammed the East Coast. Some workers in NY and New Jersey were sent home early Thursday afternoon ahead of the evening commute. The city’s emergency management agency urged people to avoid

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Michigan Awards $1M to Boost FAFSA Completion, College Access

By Walter Hudson Michigan officials celebrated a milestone in college access this week as 50 students received nearly $1 million in awards through the state’s innovative “Ticket to Tuition” giveaway, a program designed to incentivize FAFSA completion among first-time filers. Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist II joined state education leaders at Wayne State University to announce

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Cortez Masto Urges Moderate Path, Clashes with Cory Booker

By Natasha Korecki Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., clashed with Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., this week when Booker, in a fiery floor speech, tried to block a package of police funding bills as he called for greater resistance to President Donald Trump’s policies. Afterward, Booker alluded to his efforts in the face of criticism from Cortez Masto saying,

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Trump Administration Cuts $200M in UCLA Federal Grants

By Jaweed Kaleem The Trump administration has frozen hundreds of science, medical and other federal grants to UCLA worth nearly $200 million, citing the university’s alleged “discrimination” in admissions and failure to “promote a research environment free of antisemitism.” The decision to pull funding comes after Atty. Gen.Pam Bondi and the Justice Department said this week that

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