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How to find climate data and science the Trump administration doesn’t want you to see

  • Written by Eric Nost, Associate Professor of Geography, University of Guelph
imageGovernment scientists at NOAA collect and provide crucial public information about coastal conditions that businesses, individuals and other scientists rely on.NOAA's National Ocean Service

Information on the internet might seem like it’s there forever, but it’s only as permanent as people choose to make it.

That’s apparent as the...

Read more: How to find climate data and science the Trump administration doesn’t want you to see

Nonprofits get more donations when they vary their Facebook fundraising messages − new research

  • Written by Abhishek Bhati, Associate professor, Bowling Green State University
imageMoney doesn't grow on smartphones.SERSOL/Stock via Getty Images Plus

When nonprofits use multiple strategies during their online fundraising campaigns, such as thanking donors for their support, telling the public about their missions and conveying how they are helping people, they receive more donations than if they stick to only one kind of post....

Read more: Nonprofits get more donations when they vary their Facebook fundraising messages − new research

Parents can soon use QR codes to reveal heavy metal content in baby food

  • Written by C. Michael White, Distinguished Professor of Pharmacy Practice, University of Connecticut
imageIt's impossible to eliminate heavy metals from baby food entirely, but testing can help consumers make informed decisions.Jeff Greenberg via Getty Images

Parents across the U.S. should soon be able to determine how much lead, arsenic, cadmium and mercury are in the food they feed their babies, thanks to a California law, the first of its kind, that...

Read more: Parents can soon use QR codes to reveal heavy metal content in baby food

‘Emilia Pérez’ was nominated for 13 Oscars. Why do so many people hate it?

  • Written by Alejandra Marquez Guajardo, Assistant Professor of Spanish, Michigan State University
imageGoing by recent media coverage, you wouldn't be remiss for assuming it had been nominated for a slew of Golden Raspberries.Netflix

French director Jacques Audiard’s “Emilia Pérez” first made waves among critics at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2024, when it wonmultiple awards. It went on to receive 10 Golden Globe...

Read more: ‘Emilia Pérez’ was nominated for 13 Oscars. Why do so many people hate it?

‘For You’: What to know about news on TikTok

  • Written by Anne Oeldorf-Hirsch, Associate Professor of Communication Technology, University of Connecticut
imagePeople work inside the TikTok building in Culver City, Calif., in March 2024.AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes

Last time you scrolled the “For You” page on TikTok, did you get a video about current events? Politics? Breaking news?

If you’re one of the 63% of teens or 33% of adults in the U.S. who uses TikTok, you probably have. But where...

Read more: ‘For You’: What to know about news on TikTok

Enzymes are the engines of life − machine learning tools could help scientists design new ones to tackle disease and climate change

  • Written by Sam Pellock, Postdoctoral Scholar in Biochemistry, University of Washington
imageEnzymes have complicated molecular structures that are hard to replicate.Design Cells/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Enzymes are molecular machines that carry out the chemical reactions that sustain all life, an ability that has captured the attention of scientists like me.

Consider muscle movement. Your body releases a molecule called acetylcholine...

Read more: Enzymes are the engines of life − machine learning tools could help scientists design new ones to...

60 years of progress in expanding rights is being rolled back by Trump − a pattern that’s all too familiar in US history

  • Written by Philip Klinkner, James S. Sherman Professor of Government, Hamilton College
imageThere's a long history in the U.S. of denying the rights, liberties and benefits of democracy to some Americans.rob dobi/Getty Images

For many Americans, Donald Trump’s head-spinning array of executive orders in the early days of his second term look like an unprecedented effort to roll back democracy and the rights and liberties of American...

Read more: 60 years of progress in expanding rights is being rolled back by Trump − a pattern that’s all too...

From Jewish summer camp to gospel to Chabad, Bob Dylan’s faith doesn’t fit in a box − but he’s long had a connection to Israel

  • Written by Shalom Goldman, Professor of Religion, Middlebury
imageBob Dylan gives his first concert in Israel in 1987 in Tel Aviv, playing with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers.AP Photo/Anat Givon

James Mangold’s film “A Complete Unknown,” nominated for eight Oscars, captures the elusive, enigmatic quality of Bob Dylan in the early 1960s: the years he emerged as a major musical and cultural...

Read more: From Jewish summer camp to gospel to Chabad, Bob Dylan’s faith doesn’t fit in a box − but he’s...

Can the president really kill off the penny – and should he?

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Associate Professor Questrom School of Business, Boston University

In the middle of Super Bowl LIX, President Donald Trump posted on social media that he was getting rid of the penny. Since the lowly penny in 2024 cost about 3.7 cents to make – meaning the government loses money on every coin – the announcement might seem practical at first glance. But does the president have the power to kill off the...

Read more: Can the president really kill off the penny – and should he?

Syria’s mass graves: Accounting for the dead and disappeared is crucial for the nation to heal

  • Written by Stefan Schmitt, Project Lead for International Technical Forensic Services Global Forensic Justice Center, Florida International University

Shortly after the fall of Bashar Assad in Syria in December 2024, reports emerged of mass graves being uncovered in liberated areas.

Grim as such discoveries are, they should come as little surprise. The scale of the regime’s torture and killings in its detention facilities became evident years earlier, when in January 2014 a forensic...

Read more: Syria’s mass graves: Accounting for the dead and disappeared is crucial for the nation to heal

More Articles ...

  1. Trump and Maduro refresh a complex relationship governed by self-interest and tainted by Venezuela election fraud
  2. Inflation is heating up again, putting pressure on Trump to cool it on tariffs
  3. How Valentine’s Day was transformed by the Industrial Revolution and ‘manufactured intimacy’
  4. Why federal courts are unlikely to save democracy from Trump’s and Musk’s attacks
  5. How much does scientific progress cost? Without government dollars for research infrastructure, breakthroughs become improbable
  6. In spite of anti-DEI pressures, top corporations continued to diversify in 2024: new research
  7. China flexes its media muscle in Africa – encouraging positive headlines as part of a soft power agenda
  8. Repatriation to Indigenous groups is more than law, it’s human rights − an archaeologist describes the day that lesson hit home
  9. Teenagers turning to AI companions are redefining love as easy, unconditional and always there
  10. Address science misinformation not by repeating the facts, but by building conversation and community
  11. Helping teachers learn what works in the classroom − and what doesn’t − will get a lot harder without the Department of Education’s Institute of Education Sciences
  12. Even as polarization surges, Americans believe they live in a compassionate country
  13. The New Yorker turns 100 − how a poker game pipe dream became a publishing powerhouse
  14. Decluttering can be stressful − a clinical psychologist explains how personal values can make it easier
  15. Why are migrants dying trying to cross into the US? These are the 3 main risks they face
  16. NOAA’s vast public weather data powers the local forecasts on your phone and TV – a private company alone couldn’t match it
  17. Legal fight against AI-generated child pornography is complicated – a legal scholar explains why, and how the law could catch up
  18. Mirror life is a scientific fantasy leading to a dangerous reality − a synthetic biologist explains how mirror bacteria could conquer life on Earth
  19. Rural Americans don’t live as long as those in cities − new research
  20. Whether Christians should prioritize care for migrants as much as for fellow citizens has been debated for centuries
  21. How opioid deaths tripled in Philly over a decade − and what may be behind a recent downturn
  22. Art and science illuminate the same subtle proportions in tree branches
  23. If FEMA didn’t exist, could states handle the disaster response alone?
  24. Here’s how researchers are helping AIs get their facts straight
  25. Poor sleep and addiction go hand in hand − understanding how could lead to new treatments for opioid use disorder
  26. A boycott campaign fuels tension between Black shoppers and Black-owned brands – evoking the long struggle for ‘consumer citizenship’
  27. Why the price of your favorite chocolate will continue to rise
  28. Teen girls are facing an increased risk of suicide − and stress related to sexual identity might be contributing to it
  29. Are animals smart? From dolphin language to toolmaking crows, lots of species have obvious intelligence
  30. How the human neck became a locus of power, beauty and frailty
  31. Russia’s shrinking world: The war in Ukraine and Moscow’s global reach
  32. 5 premium online research tools all Philly students can use for free
  33. Gut-wrenching love: What a fresh look at the ‘Good Samaritan’ story says for ethics today
  34. US sovereign wealth fund: A feasible idea to invest strategically, or a giant opportunity for waste?
  35. Efficiency − or empire? How Elon Musk’s hostile takeover could end government as we know it
  36. Seed oils are toxic, says Robert F. Kennedy Jr. – but it’s not so simple
  37. Map wars in the Middle East: How cartographers charted and helped shape a regional conflict
  38. Why does Trump want to abolish the Education Department? An anthropologist who studies MAGA explains 4 reasons
  39. How AI can help in the creative design process
  40. Why Americans need well-informed national security decisions – not politicized intelligence analysis
  41. The illusion of equal opportunity for minority NFL coaches
  42. California wildfires force students to think about the connections between STEM and society
  43. Is DOGE a cybersecurity threat? A security expert explains the dangers of violating protocols and regulations that protect government computer systems
  44. Kendrick Lamar’s big Super Bowl moment
  45. Anti-LGBTQ+ policies harm the health of not only LGBTQ+ people, but all Americans
  46. How populist leaders like Trump use ‘common sense’ as an ideological weapon to undermine facts
  47. AI datasets have human values blind spots − new research
  48. US dodged a bird flu pandemic in 1957 thanks to eggs and dumb luck – with a new strain spreading fast, will Americans get lucky again?
  49. Trump’s offshore wind energy freeze: What states lose if the executive order remains in place
  50. What Los Angeles-area schools can learn from other districts devastated by natural disasters