The Quality Learning Center received $1.9 million in funding through the Child Care Assistance Program in 2025.
Many of us have been there before—near the top of a ladder, stretching just a little farther to finish the job. Maybe we are ...
Time magazine is spotlighting key players in the artificial intelligence revolution for its 2025 Person of the Year, the magazine announced Thursday. "The architects of AI" are the latest recipients ...
The "Architects of AI" were named Time's person of the year Thursday, with the magazine citing 2025 as when the potential of artificial intelligence "roared into view" with no turning back. "For ...
This year artificial intelligence stopped being all about the future and roared into the present. Time announced exclusively on TODAY Dec. 11 that it has recognized AI’s seismic impact by naming the ...
Intelligence is changing. For most of modern history, intellectual quotient (IQ) was treated as the gold standard for potential, and later, emotional intelligence (EQ) became the best way to succeed ...
Following the release of “Wicked: For Good,” many people have reacted to the film’s spiritual and allegorical elements and what it says about friendships, morality and the idea of good versus evil.
Christians who are concerned about “Wicked: For Good” taking a “revisionist” approach to “a notoriously evil witch” might want to skip this film, The Collision editor-in-chief, Daniel Blackaby, wrote ...
As we listen to these readings for the first Sunday of Advent, we may be perplexed by what we hear. First, Paul’s letter to the Romans urges his listeners to put away what is dark and cultivate the ...
The film adaptation of "Wicked" ends right when Act I of the hit Broadway musical does: with Cynthia Erivo's Elphaba deciding to turn against the Wonderful Wizard of Oz and fly from the Emerald City — ...
All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Mashable may earn an affiliate commission. Do they sound as good as ...
A Catholic who reported having had some sort of mystical experience is not automatically a candidate for sainthood, Pope Leo XIV said, but such a report is not a reason to dismiss a candidate either.