Articles

Polaris Dawn Space Walk

SpaceX’s Goal of Commercializing Space Advances in Another Successful Mission By: Lucas Ho On September 15, Polaris Dawn, the first commercial spacewalk mission, concluded after splashing down in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Florida. The mission, set off five days before on SpaceX’s Crew Dragon Resilience, continued the first private civilian spaceflight […]

Artificial Intelligence in College Admissions

How the increasing usage of AI in college admissions is threatening the system By: Leila Blake We have all used artificial intelligence. Whether ChatGPT, Google search AI, chatbots, or one of the many other forms of artificial intelligence, everyone has likely had an interaction with this technology. As AI becomes more normalized, students, workers, artists, […]

Supreme Court Term Limits and Ethics Code

Biden’s proposed judicial reforms’ feasibility and merit By: Ella Botein In the wake of several scandals and controversial decisions by the Supreme Court, President Biden and Vice-President Harris have endorsed three reforms to the judiciary: revoking immunity for former presidents, instituting term limits, and creating a binding ethics code. While these suggestions may have positive […]

Shipwrecked in Space 

Two astronauts stranded on the I.S.S. until 2025  By: Dean Riaz Imagine being stuck in space for over half a year, isolated from the world, awaiting rescue, with limited communication. For two NASA astronauts, they don’t have to imagine this; they are living in that reality as we speak. Barry Wilmore and Sunita Williams—both veteran […]

A Russia-Ukraine Peace Deal

Why peace is mutually beneficial and how it can happen  By: David Xiong In June 2024, world leaders gathered for an unprecedented peace summit in Switzerland. The peace meeting represented a marked shift in stance from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who has insisted that Ukraine fight for its rightful territory for as long as needed. […]

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