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Remembering the longest journey to Auschwitz – the deportation of Rhodes’ Jews decimated a small but vibrant community with centuries of Mediterranean history

  • Written by Devin Naar, Assciate Professor of History and Jewish Studies and Chair of the Sephardic Studies Program, University of Washington
imageA postcard from the turn of the century showing the Jewish neighborhood of Rhodes.History & Art Images via Getty Images

In the Old Town of Rhodes, a picturesque tourist destination in the Aegean Sea, stands a monument to a dark period in the island’s past. In the former “Djuderia,” the Jewish quarter, a marble obelisk...

Read more: Remembering the longest journey to Auschwitz – the deportation of Rhodes’ Jews decimated a small...

Imane Khelif controversy at Paris Olympics shows how sex testing in women’s sports puts regulators in an impossible bind

  • Written by Jaime Schultz, Professor of Kinesiology, Penn State
imageAlgerian boxer Imane Khelif celebrates her victory in the women's boxing 66-kilogram quarterfinal match at the Paris Olympics on Aug. 3, 2024.Richard Pelham/Getty Images

In their preliminary 2024 Olympic women’s boxing match, Algeria’s Imane Khelif delivered a painful blow to the face of Italy’s Angela Carini, who abandoned the...

Read more: Imane Khelif controversy at Paris Olympics shows how sex testing in women’s sports puts regulators...

Imane Khelif’s gold medal run shows how sex testing in women’s sports puts regulators in an impossible bind

  • Written by Jaime Schultz, Professor of Kinesiology, Penn State
imageAlgerian boxer Imane Khelif celebrates her victory in the women's boxing 66-kilogram quarterfinal match at the Paris Olympics on Aug. 3, 2024.Richard Pelham/Getty Images

With the judges unanimously declaring her the victor over China’s Yang Liu, Algeria’s Imane Khelif secured the gold medal in the women’s boxing 66-kilogram...

Read more: Imane Khelif’s gold medal run shows how sex testing in women’s sports puts regulators in an...

Shortage of Black doctors is rooted in racist history − a $600M gift will help historically Black medical schools address the gap

  • Written by Benjamin Chrisinger, Assistant Professor of Community Health, Tufts University
imageA view of Morehouse School of Medicine in Atlanta, Ga. Marcus Ingram/Getty Images

Fueled by the Supreme Court’s June 2023 ruling that bans affirmative action in higher education, conservative lawmakers across the country have advanced their own state bans on diversity initiatives, especially those that might make students feel shame or guilt...

Read more: Shortage of Black doctors is rooted in racist history − a $600M gift will help historically Black...

For Black Americans, higher police pay doesn’t always mean fewer violent confrontations as it does for other racial groups

  • Written by Thaddeus L. Johnson, Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Georgia State University
imageCalifornia police officers on their way to patrol a pro-Palestinian demonstration.Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu/Getty Images

Police unions have come under fire following recent police killings of Black Americans. For the most part, the unions work to improve pay and job conditions for police. But some critics say these police union contracts cost cities...

Read more: For Black Americans, higher police pay doesn’t always mean fewer violent confrontations as it does...

Ancient grains of dust from space can be found on Earth − and provide clues about the life cycle of stars

  • Written by Sachiko Amari, Research Professor of Physics, Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis
imageThe dark areas in this image of the Carina Nebula are molecular clouds.NASA, ESA, N. Smith (U. California, Berkeley) et al., and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)

In space, there are clouds that contain gas and dust ejected from stars. Our solar system was formed 4.6 billion years ago from such a molecular cloud. Most of these dust grains were...

Read more: Ancient grains of dust from space can be found on Earth − and provide clues about the life cycle...

Heat risk isn’t just about the highs: Large daily temperature swings can harm human health – maps show who is affected most

  • Written by Shengjie Liu, Ph.D. Candidate in Spatial Sciences, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageLow-income neighborhoods with lots of concrete and few trees can heat up faster than surrounding areas.AP Photo/Richard Vogel

This summer has shown how quickly high temperatures can pose serious health risks, with record-breaking heat waves claiming thousands of lives around the world.

However, it’s not just high and low temperatures that...

Read more: Heat risk isn’t just about the highs: Large daily temperature swings can harm human health – maps...

Tropical Storm Debby stalls along the Carolinas, bringing days of heavy rain and flooding – a climate scientist explains why

  • Written by Mathew Barlow, Professor of Climate Science, UMass Lowell
imageFirefighters in Savannah, Ga., carry food to residents in a neighborhood cut off by Tropical Storm Debby's floodwater on Aug. 6, 2024.AP Photo/Stephen B. Morton

Tropical Storm Debby was moving so slowly, Olympians could have outrun it as it moved across the Southeast in early August 2024. That gave its rainfall time to deluge cities and farms over...

Read more: Tropical Storm Debby stalls along the Carolinas, bringing days of heavy rain and flooding – a...

Tropical Storm Debby’s stalling brought days of heavy rain and flooding – a climate scientist explains what happened

  • Written by Mathew Barlow, Professor of Climate Science, UMass Lowell
imageFirefighters in Savannah, Ga., carry food to residents in a neighborhood cut off by Tropical Storm Debby's floodwater on Aug. 6, 2024.AP Photo/Stephen B. Morton

Tropical Storm Debby was moving so slowly, Olympians could have outrun it as it moved across the Southeast in early August 2024. That gave its rainfall time to deluge cities and farms over...

Read more: Tropical Storm Debby’s stalling brought days of heavy rain and flooding – a climate scientist...

Multiple goals, multiple solutions, plenty of second-guessing and revising − here’s how science really works

  • Written by Soazig Le Bihan, Professor of Philosophy, University of Montana
imageIf your mental image of a scientist looks like this, you're due for an update.aluxum/E+ via Getty Images

A man in a lab coat bends under a dim light, his strained eyes riveted onto a microscope. He’s powered only by caffeine and anticipation.

This solitary scientist will stay on task until he unveils the truth about the cause of the dangerous...

Read more: Multiple goals, multiple solutions, plenty of second-guessing and revising − here’s how science...

More Articles ...

  1. AI helps lighten the load on the electric grid – without skimping on people’s energy use
  2. A common parasite could one day deliver drugs to the brain − how scientists are turning ‘Toxoplasma gondii’ from foe into friend
  3. Bangladesh’s protests explained: What led to PM’s ouster and the challenges that lie ahead
  4. Walz pick turns focus on what a VP brings to White House – 3 essential reads
  5. Chang'e 6 brought rocks from the far side of the Moon back to Earth − a planetary scientist explains what this sample could hold
  6. Readers trust journalists less when they debunk rather than confirm claims
  7. Assassination is always unlawful − regardless of who is killed and on whose orders
  8. Brain implants to restore sight, like Neuralink’s Blindsight, face a fundamental problem − more pixels don’t ensure better vision
  9. Kamala Harris’ identity as a biracial woman is either a strength or a weakness, depending on whom you ask
  10. Grassroots efforts to increase voting are gaining momentum in these states, even as other states make voting harder
  11. Attention, jittery investors: Stop panicking … this is what a soft landing should look like
  12. Ancient poppy seeds and willow wood offer clues to the Greenland ice sheet’s last meltdown and a glimpse into a warmer future
  13. Love for cats lures students into this course, which uses feline research to teach science
  14. Stuck bridges, buckling roads − extreme heat is wreaking havoc on America’s aging infrastructure
  15. How can there be ice on the Moon?
  16. Why are migraines worse during your period? Research in mice points to a hormone called progesterone, offering a new treatment target
  17. How people with disabilities got game − the surprisingly long history of access to arcade and video sports
  18. Racism and discrimination lead to faster aging through brain network changes, new study finds
  19. Menstrual cycle is a vital sign and important indicator of overall health − 2 reproductive health experts explain
  20. Arab Druze community in mourning after tragic rocket strike on Golan Heights soccer field − highlighting challenges for Druze within Israel and the region
  21. In ‘bamboo diplomacy,’ late Vietnam leader Nguyen Phu Trong left a path for smaller nations to navigate great-power rivalries
  22. Democratic Party’s choice of Harris was undemocratic − and the latest evidence of party leaders distrusting party voters
  23. I researched the dark side of social media − and heard the same themes in ‘The Tortured Poets Department’
  24. AIs encode language like brains do − opening a window on human conversations
  25. Gov. Josh Shapiro has a reputation for getting things done in Pennsylvania – but not necessarily things all Democrats like
  26. ‘House of the Dragon’ was inspired by the chaos of the Middle Ages, a world without law and order
  27. Psilocybin legislation is helping psychedelic drugs make a comeback – a drug researcher explains the challenges they face
  28. Trump supporters wasted no time in claiming Kamala Harris is ineligible to be president, but they’re wrong
  29. CAPTCHAs: The struggle to tell real humans from fake
  30. The French baron who revived the Olympics believed they were more than sport – they were a religion of perfection and peace
  31. Missy Elliott tours as a headliner − and it’s about time
  32. Sustainability and resilience: What do they mean, and how do they matter for policy?
  33. Olympic arson attacks highlight growing danger of low-tech terrorism on public transit systems
  34. 7-nation prisoner swap shows how diplomacy, not law, governs exchanges
  35. Oceans without sharks would be far less healthy – new research
  36. Wildfires can create their own weather, further spreading the flames − an atmospheric scientist explains how
  37. Who will win in Arizona in November? It’s a toss-up − like it has been for years
  38. Students gain confidence in US democracy by participating in elections and campaigns for their homework
  39. Inside the dark world of dognapping
  40. Wildfires can create their own weather, including tornado-like fire whirls − an atmospheric scientist explains how
  41. Menopause increases your risk of STIs due to how aging changes your body
  42. Robocars promise to improve traffic even when most of the cars around them are driven by people, study finds
  43. A new ‘guest star’ will appear in the sky in 2024 − a space scientist explains how nova events work and where to look
  44. Massive protests erupt again over disputed Venezuelan elections – but they look different this time
  45. With Hezbollah and Hamas assassinations, Netanyahu shows willingness to risk regional war for political survival
  46. Iceland’s recent volcanic eruptions driven by pooling magma are set to last centuries into the future
  47. This Supreme Court has redefined the meaning of corruption
  48. NRA legal judgment bans LaPierre but could signal the end of gun group’s fight with New York authorities
  49. Online fundraising may require different strategies for different devices − new research
  50. Israel’s military starts drafting ultra-Orthodox Jews – but the battle over serving ‘the army of God’ vs. the army of the state isn’t over, and points to key questions for the country’s future