Your guides to the weird side of the web explore divisibility tricks and a diverse range of other fascinating internet tools ...
A confusing patchwork of state laws began to take shape hours after the Supreme Court ruled to overturn Roe v. Wade on June ...
Learn how teams advance from the 2026 FIFA World Cup group stage, how the new Round of 32 works, the third-place wild card ...
The much-discussed eligibility changes were ratified on Tuesday by the D-I Cabinet, eliminating redshirts and waivers from ...
The World Cup has reached that stage when mental gymnastics come into play to determine who’s in, who’s out and what’s needed ...
Tiebreakers are more important than ever in the new 48-team format, but this year works a bit different than past World Cups.
The 5:1 rule means calling out positive behaviors in your children more often than correcting negative behavior. Trying out this rule in your parenting strategy could strengthen your bond with your ...
The SSA's one-time Withdrawal of Application (Form SSA-521) lets retirees undo their Social Security claim within 12 months by repaying all benefits received. Repaying $12,800 in collected benefits ...
New index fund rules could mean ordinary investors end up owning a piece of SpaceX whether they want to or not. Reading time 3 minutes Elon Musk’s rocket, satellite, and AI company SpaceX is expected ...
Stanford University was once the cradle of companies like Hewlett-Packard and Google, scrappy enterprises started in garages that went on, as Silicon Valley likes to put it, to “change the world.” It ...
Once a week during winter quarter, six men and six women Stanford students gather in Escondido Village Graduate Residence (EVGR) to debate topics ranging from money to power and the tenets of a good ...
While most college freshmen spend their first year shopping around courses and picking their majors, Theo Baker had a bit more on his plate. As a reporter for the Stanford Daily, he investigated ...