A través de un portavoz, los duques de Sussex acusan al autor de difundir teorías infundadas sobre su vida personal y su relación con la familia real británica, en un nuevo episodio de la prolongada batalla mediática que rodea a la pareja.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

A través de un portavoz, los duques de Sussex acusan al autor de difundir teorías infundadas sobre su vida personal y su relación con la familia real británica, en un nuevo episodio de la prolongada batalla mediática que rodea a la pareja.

6 minutes

The Center Square
Feed icon

(The Center Square) – Colorado has seen a 17% increase in deaths from fentanyl over the last year, one of the few states where overdose deaths have increased. Since December 2024, only four other states – Arizona (26.3%), New Mexico (21%), Montana (13.7%) and South Dakota (12.5%) – saw increases in overdose deaths from synthetic opioids, while the national rate is down 21%, according to a report by Common Sense Institute Colorado. CSI researchers found that if Colorado had seen a decline in deaths like the national trend, the state would have experienced 1,620 fewer deaths. “If we just followed the national trend, 1,600 people would still be alive in Colorado, and that is a lot of families that have been devastated by this deadly poison,” one of the report’s authors, former Denver Police Chief and current CSI Public Safety Fellow Paul Pazen, told The Center Square. Colorado’s synthetic opioid death rate peaked at 1,213 in November 2023, then dropped to 803 one-year later. After November 2024, the state’s rate began rising again to 957 deaths in August 2025, while most of the country’s downward trend continued. Using the Value of Statistical Life of $13.4 million per person, which CSI said can be “used to quantify the benefit of reducing the risk of death,” CSI estimated $18.3 billion in value from the lost lives. The report noted that in 2019, Colorado lawmakers downgraded the possession of four grams or less of fentanyl and other drugs from a felony to a misdemeanor. Lawmakers reversed course in 2022, increasing penalties for fentanyl, but including a “knowingly possessing” clause. A 2025 bill would have struck the clause but did not advance in the Legislature.

Feed icon
The Center Square
Attribution+

(The Center Square) – Colorado has seen a 17% increase in deaths from fentanyl over the last year, one of the few states where overdose deaths have increased. Since December 2024, only four other states – Arizona (26.3%), New Mexico (21%), Montana (13.7%) and South Dakota (12.5%) – saw increases in overdose deaths from synthetic opioids, while the national rate is down 21%, according to a report by Common Sense Institute Colorado. CSI researchers found that if Colorado had seen a decline in deaths like the national trend, the state would have experienced 1,620 fewer deaths. “If we just followed the national trend, 1,600 people would still be alive in Colorado, and that is a lot of families that have been devastated by this deadly poison,” one of the report’s authors, former Denver Police Chief and current CSI Public Safety Fellow Paul Pazen, told The Center Square. Colorado’s synthetic opioid death rate peaked at 1,213 in November 2023, then dropped to 803 one-year later. After November 2024, the state’s rate began rising again to 957 deaths in August 2025, while most of the country’s downward trend continued. Using the Value of Statistical Life of $13.4 million per person, which CSI said can be “used to quantify the benefit of reducing the risk of death,” CSI estimated $18.3 billion in value from the lost lives. The report noted that in 2019, Colorado lawmakers downgraded the possession of four grams or less of fentanyl and other drugs from a felony to a misdemeanor. Lawmakers reversed course in 2022, increasing penalties for fentanyl, but including a “knowingly possessing” clause. A 2025 bill would have struck the clause but did not advance in the Legislature.

11 minutes

Iowa Capital Dispatch
Feed icon

Two Iowa-licensed pharmacists are facing sanctions for alcohol-related issues. In the first case, pharmacist Benajmin Grote, 50, who now lives in Fremont, Nebraska, recently agreed to surrender his Iowa pharmacist’s license. Records from the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services indicate that Grote has a long history of licensing issues, beginning in 2007 when […]

Feed icon
Iowa Capital Dispatch
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Two Iowa-licensed pharmacists are facing sanctions for alcohol-related issues. In the first case, pharmacist Benajmin Grote, 50, who now lives in Fremont, Nebraska, recently agreed to surrender his Iowa pharmacist’s license. Records from the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services indicate that Grote has a long history of licensing issues, beginning in 2007 when […]

The dispute focuses on who landlords should be allowed to discriminate against.

Feed icon
LAist
Attribution+

The dispute focuses on who landlords should be allowed to discriminate against.

La ceremonia de los Premios Oscar dejó uno de sus momentos más comentados cuando Anna Wintour y Anne Hathaway compartieron escenario en un guiño directo a la película El diablo viste de Prada.

Feed icon
Mundiario
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

La ceremonia de los Premios Oscar dejó uno de sus momentos más comentados cuando Anna Wintour y Anne Hathaway compartieron escenario en un guiño directo a la película El diablo viste de Prada.

Como “positiva” calificó el fiscal nacional, Ángel Valencia, la reunión que sostuvo en Washington (EEUU) con su homóloga estadounidense, Pam...

Feed icon
BioBioChile
CC BY-NC🅭🅯🄏

Como “positiva” calificó el fiscal nacional, Ángel Valencia, la reunión que sostuvo en Washington (EEUU) con su homóloga estadounidense, Pam...

The Dutch Nitrogen Crisis
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

18 minutes

Mongabay
Feed icon

What happens when biodiversity conservation and food systems collide? As the top meat exporter in the European Union, the Netherlands has become a case study in the ecological limits of industrial farming. When courts forced action to protect fragile ecosystems, it set off mass farmer protests, political upheaval, and a tug-of-war between regulation, technology and […]

Feed icon
Mongabay
CC BY-ND🅭🅯⊜

What happens when biodiversity conservation and food systems collide? As the top meat exporter in the European Union, the Netherlands has become a case study in the ecological limits of industrial farming. When courts forced action to protect fragile ecosystems, it set off mass farmer protests, political upheaval, and a tug-of-war between regulation, technology and […]

Sign up for Chalkbeat Tennessee’s free newsletter to keep up with statewide education policy and Memphis-Shelby County Schools.Tennessee House Republicans on Monday passed legislation to track the immigration status of all public school children in the state, an effort that drew sharp rebukes from Democrats and immigration advocates. The legislation requires that Tennessee public schools verify the citizenship or immigration status of each student enrolling, and then report anonymized data to the Tennessee Department of Education, state immigration officials, and state lawmakers. With the passage of House Bill 793, the General Assembly’s two chambers now have two differing versions of the bill. Bill sponsors in the Republican majority will have to agree on a compromise for the legislation to move forward and become law. Senate Republicans last year passed an earlier version of the bill that would allow Tennessee schools to charge undocumented students tuition. House Majority Leader William Lamberth argued on Monday that schools are already gathering birth certificate and local residency data, in addition to required medical records, and his legislation would not be an additional logistical problem for schools. “This just asks for that data,” Lamberth, the Republican sponsor of the bill, said. Rep. Gabby Salinas, a Memphis Democrat, urged colleagues not to be “fooled” by Lamberth’s arguments that the legislation is a simple data collection bill. Salinas pointed to previous comments from Lamberth that the bill is a vehicle to challenge Plyler v. Doe, a longstanding U.S. Supreme Court precedent guaranteeing a right to public education to all children. “Our kids in Tennessee are not your legal experiment,” Salinas said. .subtext-iframe{max-width:540px;}iframe#subtext_embed{width:1px;min-width:100%;min-height:256px;}fetch("https://raw.githubusercontent.com/alpha-group/iframe-resizer/master/js/iframeResizer.min.js").then(function(r){return r.text();}).then(function(t){return new Function(t)();}).then(function(){iFrameResize({heightCalculationMethod:"lowestElement"},"#subtext_embed");});Tennessee educators in recent months have disagreed with the Republican proposal to collect and verify the immigration status of nearly 1 million children in state public schools. In Knox County, a bipartisan school board has officially opposed the legislation. Educators in recent weeks have testified against the effort, citing logistical concerns and potential disruption to local communities. “Is this just a pretext to getting information that we want so that ICE can come up here and disrupt families that are attempting to live lawfully?” Rep. Yusuf Hakeem, a Chattanooga Democrat, asked during the House debate. Lamberth didn’t respond. During the floor debate on HB 836, though, the Republican majority leader suggested multiple times that opponents to the education bill were proponents of “open borders.” The Monday vote was more than a year in the making. In 2025, Lamberth and Sen. Bo Watson, both powerful lawmakers in Republican leadership, filed legislation that would allow public schools to block undocumented students from attending public schools. The sponsors made clear they were targeting Plyler, rolling out a joint press release when the bill was filed amid a larger immigration push in the legislature last year. The effort sparked weeks of heated protests at the Tennessee General Assembly, and the Republican sponsors worked to dial back their bills. Senate Republicans eventually passed a version of the bill in a close vote that would allow public schools to charge undocumented students tuition. In addition to challenging Plyler, the sponsors would later argue public schools are bearing an increasing financial burden to educate undocumented students, though Tennessee schools are largely funded through local sales tax paid by anyone purchasing groceries or gas in a community, for example. Lamberth delayed his bill in 2025 amid pushback and concerns over whether the legislation would threaten more than $1 billion in federal education funding. He repeatedly said the U.S. Department of Education was working on guidance for lawmakers on the issue, but it has not publicly materialized and Lamberth amended the bill to just include data collection. He acknowledged late last week he still expects the state to be sued over the legislation, should it pass into law. “We will probably still get sued by some group out there that doesn’t think Tennesseans and their legislators should know how many illegal immigrant children are in our schools,” Lamberth said. “There’s going to be a group out there that doesn’t think we should be able to ask that. I think that’s ridiculous, but it’s likely still going to happen.”Melissa Brown is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Contact Melissa at mbrown@chalkbeat.org.

Feed icon
Chalkbeat
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Sign up for Chalkbeat Tennessee’s free newsletter to keep up with statewide education policy and Memphis-Shelby County Schools.Tennessee House Republicans on Monday passed legislation to track the immigration status of all public school children in the state, an effort that drew sharp rebukes from Democrats and immigration advocates. The legislation requires that Tennessee public schools verify the citizenship or immigration status of each student enrolling, and then report anonymized data to the Tennessee Department of Education, state immigration officials, and state lawmakers. With the passage of House Bill 793, the General Assembly’s two chambers now have two differing versions of the bill. Bill sponsors in the Republican majority will have to agree on a compromise for the legislation to move forward and become law. Senate Republicans last year passed an earlier version of the bill that would allow Tennessee schools to charge undocumented students tuition. House Majority Leader William Lamberth argued on Monday that schools are already gathering birth certificate and local residency data, in addition to required medical records, and his legislation would not be an additional logistical problem for schools. “This just asks for that data,” Lamberth, the Republican sponsor of the bill, said. Rep. Gabby Salinas, a Memphis Democrat, urged colleagues not to be “fooled” by Lamberth’s arguments that the legislation is a simple data collection bill. Salinas pointed to previous comments from Lamberth that the bill is a vehicle to challenge Plyler v. Doe, a longstanding U.S. Supreme Court precedent guaranteeing a right to public education to all children. “Our kids in Tennessee are not your legal experiment,” Salinas said. .subtext-iframe{max-width:540px;}iframe#subtext_embed{width:1px;min-width:100%;min-height:256px;}fetch("https://raw.githubusercontent.com/alpha-group/iframe-resizer/master/js/iframeResizer.min.js").then(function(r){return r.text();}).then(function(t){return new Function(t)();}).then(function(){iFrameResize({heightCalculationMethod:"lowestElement"},"#subtext_embed");});Tennessee educators in recent months have disagreed with the Republican proposal to collect and verify the immigration status of nearly 1 million children in state public schools. In Knox County, a bipartisan school board has officially opposed the legislation. Educators in recent weeks have testified against the effort, citing logistical concerns and potential disruption to local communities. “Is this just a pretext to getting information that we want so that ICE can come up here and disrupt families that are attempting to live lawfully?” Rep. Yusuf Hakeem, a Chattanooga Democrat, asked during the House debate. Lamberth didn’t respond. During the floor debate on HB 836, though, the Republican majority leader suggested multiple times that opponents to the education bill were proponents of “open borders.” The Monday vote was more than a year in the making. In 2025, Lamberth and Sen. Bo Watson, both powerful lawmakers in Republican leadership, filed legislation that would allow public schools to block undocumented students from attending public schools. The sponsors made clear they were targeting Plyler, rolling out a joint press release when the bill was filed amid a larger immigration push in the legislature last year. The effort sparked weeks of heated protests at the Tennessee General Assembly, and the Republican sponsors worked to dial back their bills. Senate Republicans eventually passed a version of the bill in a close vote that would allow public schools to charge undocumented students tuition. In addition to challenging Plyler, the sponsors would later argue public schools are bearing an increasing financial burden to educate undocumented students, though Tennessee schools are largely funded through local sales tax paid by anyone purchasing groceries or gas in a community, for example. Lamberth delayed his bill in 2025 amid pushback and concerns over whether the legislation would threaten more than $1 billion in federal education funding. He repeatedly said the U.S. Department of Education was working on guidance for lawmakers on the issue, but it has not publicly materialized and Lamberth amended the bill to just include data collection. He acknowledged late last week he still expects the state to be sued over the legislation, should it pass into law. “We will probably still get sued by some group out there that doesn’t think Tennesseans and their legislators should know how many illegal immigrant children are in our schools,” Lamberth said. “There’s going to be a group out there that doesn’t think we should be able to ask that. I think that’s ridiculous, but it’s likely still going to happen.”Melissa Brown is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat Tennessee. Contact Melissa at mbrown@chalkbeat.org.

O último refluxo de Jair
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

25 minutes

Outras Palavras
Feed icon

O drama clínico do ex-presidente vai além da medicina. Seu corpo e o projeto político decadente do clã passam a funcionar do mesmo jeito: contaminados pelo próprio excesso. E a viabilidade eleitoral de seu herdeiro cresce das entranhas em decomposição do pai The post O último refluxo de Jair appeared first on Outras Palavras.

Feed icon
Outras Palavras
CC BY-SA🅭🅯🄎

O drama clínico do ex-presidente vai além da medicina. Seu corpo e o projeto político decadente do clã passam a funcionar do mesmo jeito: contaminados pelo próprio excesso. E a viabilidade eleitoral de seu herdeiro cresce das entranhas em decomposição do pai The post O último refluxo de Jair appeared first on Outras Palavras.

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel joined a number of Jewish elected officials from the metro Detroit area in condemning violence against Michigan’s Jewish community following an attack on Temple Israel in West Bloomfield on Thursday.   “What happened last week at Temple Israel was not random. And it wasn’t spontaneous.
It didn’t just occur in a vacuum,” […]

Feed icon
Michigan Advance
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel joined a number of Jewish elected officials from the metro Detroit area in condemning violence against Michigan’s Jewish community following an attack on Temple Israel in West Bloomfield on Thursday.   “What happened last week at Temple Israel was not random. And it wasn’t spontaneous.
It didn’t just occur in a vacuum,” […]

Seven members of the Iranian women's soccer team sought asylum in Australia after they declined to sing Iran's anthem ahead of an Asian Cup game, sparking a backlash on Iranian state media. But five of them later withdrew their asylum claims and joined their teammates as they headed to Iran.

Feed icon
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
Attribution+

Seven members of the Iranian women's soccer team sought asylum in Australia after they declined to sing Iran's anthem ahead of an Asian Cup game, sparking a backlash on Iranian state media. But five of them later withdrew their asylum claims and joined their teammates as they headed to Iran.

30 minutes

BridgeDetroit
Feed icon

Detroit City Council is convening dozens of budget hearings in the weeks ahead. BridgeDetroit and Outlier Media will provide budget discussion summaries and key details.

Feed icon
BridgeDetroit
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Detroit City Council is convening dozens of budget hearings in the weeks ahead. BridgeDetroit and Outlier Media will provide budget discussion summaries and key details.

سەرۆکی ئەمەریکا هێشتا دەرگای ئەنجامدانی گفتوگۆی لەگەڵ ئێران دانەخستووە، بەڵام جەخت دەکاتەوە لەوەی "هەموو" سەرکردەکانی ڕژێمی کۆماری ئیسلامی ئێران لە هێرشەکاندا کوژراون و ئیتر ئەمەریکا نازانێت مامەڵە لەگەڵ کێ بکات.

Feed icon
ده‌نگی ئه‌مه‌ریکا
Public Domain

سەرۆکی ئەمەریکا هێشتا دەرگای ئەنجامدانی گفتوگۆی لەگەڵ ئێران دانەخستووە، بەڵام جەخت دەکاتەوە لەوەی "هەموو" سەرکردەکانی ڕژێمی کۆماری ئیسلامی ئێران لە هێرشەکاندا کوژراون و ئیتر ئەمەریکا نازانێت مامەڵە لەگەڵ کێ بکات.

Уряд розподілив 12,6 мільярда гривень з бюджету на 2026 рік на ремонт та утримання доріг загального користування, повідомила Свириденко

Feed icon
Радіо Свобода
Attribution+

Уряд розподілив 12,6 мільярда гривень з бюджету на 2026 рік на ремонт та утримання доріг загального користування, повідомила Свириденко

36 minutes

Times of San Diego
Feed icon

Thousands of spectators will watch more than 4,000 athletes competing in 140 races along Crown Point Shores.

Feed icon
Times of San Diego
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Thousands of spectators will watch more than 4,000 athletes competing in 140 races along Crown Point Shores.

A homecoming. That is the sentiment that the host organization, Village of Wisdom (VOW), used to describe its Black Genius Festival (BG Fest). Durham’s Parrish St. stretched its arms once more to embrace the vibrance of Black jubilation during the... The post Architects of the dream: Celebrating the spectrum of Black Genius appeared first on EdNC.

Feed icon
EducationNC
Attribution+

A homecoming. That is the sentiment that the host organization, Village of Wisdom (VOW), used to describe its Black Genius Festival (BG Fest). Durham’s Parrish St. stretched its arms once more to embrace the vibrance of Black jubilation during the... The post Architects of the dream: Celebrating the spectrum of Black Genius appeared first on EdNC.

If your dining room table looks anything like mine on a Sunday afternoon, it is likely covered in a seemingly insurmountable mountain of student work. Grading and providing feedback are perennial issues that educators have struggled with for decades. We... The post Perspective | Reclaiming the art of feedback in an AI world appeared first on EdNC.

Feed icon
EducationNC
Attribution+

If your dining room table looks anything like mine on a Sunday afternoon, it is likely covered in a seemingly insurmountable mountain of student work. Grading and providing feedback are perennial issues that educators have struggled with for decades. We... The post Perspective | Reclaiming the art of feedback in an AI world appeared first on EdNC.

This article was originally published by the NC Rural Center on March 4, 2026. Since 2018, the NC Rural Center’s Faith in Rural Communities team has led more than 100 North Carolina churches in 60-plus counties through the year-long coaching program Connect... The post How Connect Church empowers rural churches in North Carolina and beyond appeared first on EdNC.

Feed icon
EducationNC
Attribution+

This article was originally published by the NC Rural Center on March 4, 2026. Since 2018, the NC Rural Center’s Faith in Rural Communities team has led more than 100 North Carolina churches in 60-plus counties through the year-long coaching program Connect... The post How Connect Church empowers rural churches in North Carolina and beyond appeared first on EdNC.

37 minutes

Florida Phoenix
Feed icon

On the last day of the 2026 legislative session, top education senators and representatives bartered their priorities, landing with a 32-section, 66-page omnibus bill ranging from pre-kindergarten to higher education. HB 1279 contains pieces of itself and three other bills (SB 7036, SB 7038, and HB 1071) that each chamber was able to agree on […]

Feed icon
Florida Phoenix
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

On the last day of the 2026 legislative session, top education senators and representatives bartered their priorities, landing with a 32-section, 66-page omnibus bill ranging from pre-kindergarten to higher education. HB 1279 contains pieces of itself and three other bills (SB 7036, SB 7038, and HB 1071) that each chamber was able to agree on […]

38 minutes

Pennsylvania Capital-Star
Feed icon

Members of the state House Energy Committee heard testimony on two proposals that wouldn’t require any new power plants or transmission lines, which can take years to bring online.

Feed icon
Pennsylvania Capital-Star
CC BY-NC-ND🅭🅯🄏⊜

Members of the state House Energy Committee heard testimony on two proposals that wouldn’t require any new power plants or transmission lines, which can take years to bring online.