NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

A fragmented legal system and threat of deportation are pushing higher education out of reach for many undocumented students

  • Written by Vanessa Delgado, Professor of Sociology, Washington State University
imageStudents protest at Arizona State University in January 2025 against a Republican student group encouraging students to report their peers to Immigration and Customs Enforcement for deportation. Ross D. Franklin/Associated Press

The Trump administration is upending norms and policies across the American educational system. One of the many groups...

Read more: A fragmented legal system and threat of deportation are pushing higher education out of reach for...

Conflict at the drugstore: When pharmacists’ and patients’ values collide

  • Written by Elizabeth Chiarello, Associate Professor of Sociology, Washington University in St. Louis
imagePharmacists see themselves as vital gatekeepers – but at times, some critics treat them as physicians' sidekicks.Witthaya Prasongsin/Moment via Getty Images

Imagine walking into your pharmacy, handing over your prescription and having it denied. Now imagine that the reason is not insufficient insurance coverage or the wrong dose, but a...

Read more: Conflict at the drugstore: When pharmacists’ and patients’ values collide

How to conduct post-atrocity research – key insights from practitioners in the field

  • Written by Christopher P. Davey, Lecturer in Political Science, Binghamton University, State University of New York
imageRuhango, Rwanda – the site of massacres during the 1994 genocide.Nicole Fox, CC BY-SA

From Gaza to Myanmar and Sudan, communities around the globe continue to suffer the consequences of war, civil strife and sectarian violence. Indeed in 2024, 111 countries experienced some form of mass atrocity against civilians.

While it is crucial to...

Read more: How to conduct post-atrocity research – key insights from practitioners in the field

Hamas has run out of options – survival now rests on accepting Trump’s plan and political reform

  • Written by Mkhaimar Abusada, Visiting Scholar of Global Affairs, Northwestern University
imageSmoke billows following an Israeli strike in Gaza City on Oct. 2, 2025.Omar al-Qattaa/AFP via Getty Images

Weakened militarily and facing declining Palestinian support, particularly among Gazans, Hamas was already a shadow of the militant group it once was. And then came President Donald Trump’s peace plan.

On Oct. 3, 2025, Hamas said that it a...

Read more: Hamas has run out of options – survival now rests on accepting Trump’s plan and political reform

How the government shutdown is hitting the health care system – and what the battle over ACA subsidies means

  • Written by Simon F. Haeder, Associate Professor of Public Health, The Ohio State University
imageDemocrats demanded that Republicans negotiate with them on ACA subsidies and Medicaid cuts. Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images News

Major rifts over key health care issues are at the heart of the federal government shutdown that began at the stroke of midnight on Oct. 1, 2025.

This is not the first time political arguments over health care policy have...

Read more: How the government shutdown is hitting the health care system – and what the battle over ACA...

Commuters have bemoaned Philly’s public transit for decades − in 1967, a librarian got the city to listen

  • Written by Menika Dirkson, Associate Professor of History, Morgan State University
imageA SEPTA train moves along the Market-Frankford Line in West Philadelphia.AP Photo/Matt Rourke

On April 13, 1967, around 1:30 p.m., Lt. Joseph Larkin of the Philadelphia Police Department’s subway unit visited the Philadelphia High School for Girls to interview the school’s librarian, 61-year-old Miriam S. Axelrod.

Axelrod had written a...

Read more: Commuters have bemoaned Philly’s public transit for decades − in 1967, a librarian got the city to...

What past education technology failures can teach us about the future of AI in schools

  • Written by Justin Reich, Professor of Digital Media, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
imageTeachers need to be scientists themselves, experimenting and measuring the impact of powerful AI products on education. Hyoung Chang via Getty Images

American technologists have been telling educators to rapidly adopt their new inventions for over a century. In 1922, Thomas Edison declared that in the near future, all school textbooks would be...

Read more: What past education technology failures can teach us about the future of AI in schools

As an OB-GYN, I see firsthand how misleading statements on acetaminophen leave expectant parents confused, fearful and lacking in options

  • Written by Tami S. Rowen, Associate Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Gynecologic Surgery, University of California, San Francisco
imageAbout 20% of patients report experiencing a fever during pregnancy.John Fedele/Tetra images via Getty Images Plus

When President Donald Trump adamantly proclaimed in a press conference on Sept. 22, 2025, that pregnant women should not take Tylenol, I immediately thought about my own experiences during my second labor. While pushing for nearly three...

Read more: As an OB-GYN, I see firsthand how misleading statements on acetaminophen leave expectant parents...

Children can be systematic problem-solvers at younger ages than psychologists had thought – new research

  • Written by Celeste Kidd, Professor of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley
imageHow do kids figure out how to sort things by order?Celeste Kidd

I’m in a coffee shop when a young child dumps out his mother’s bag in search of fruit snacks. The contents spill onto the table, bench and floor. It’s a chaotic – but functional – solution to the problem.

Children have a penchant for unconventional thinking...

Read more: Children can be systematic problem-solvers at younger ages than psychologists had thought – new...

Virtual particles: How physicists’ clever bookkeeping trick could underlie reality

  • Written by Dipangkar Dutta, Professor of Nuclear Physics, Mississippi State University
imageScientists imagine virtual particles popping in and out of existence to explain how forces transfer between particles. koto_feja/iStock via Getty Images

A clever mathematical tool known as virtual particles unlocks the strange and mysterious inner workings of subatomic particles. What happens to these particles within atoms would stay unexplained...

Read more: Virtual particles: How physicists’ clever bookkeeping trick could underlie reality

More Articles ...

  1. Science costs money – research is guided by who funds it and why
  2. History is repeating itself at the FBI as agents resist a director’s political agenda
  3. Florida’s 1,100 natural springs are under threat – a geographer explains how to restore them
  4. Cuba’s leaders see their options dim amid blackouts and a shrinking economy
  5. US economy is already on the edge – a prolonged government shutdown could send it tumbling over
  6. Supreme Court to decide if Colorado’s law banning conversion therapy violates free speech
  7. Supreme Court opens with cases on voting rights, tariffs, gender identity and campaign finance to test the limits of a constitutional revolution
  8. Moral panics intensify social divisions and can lead to political violence
  9. Shutdowns are as American as apple pie − in the UK and elsewhere, they just aren’t baked into the process
  10. Where George Washington would disagree with Pete Hegseth about fitness for command and what makes a warrior
  11. Breastfeeding is ideal for child and parent health but challenging for most families – a pediatrician explains how to find support
  12. Meet Irene Curie, the Nobel-winning atomic physicist who changed the course of modern cancer treatment
  13. How VR and AI could help the next generation grow kinder and more connected
  14. Venezuela and US edge toward war footing − but domestic concerns, international risks may hold Washington back
  15. Trump scraps the nation’s most comprehensive food insecurity report − making it harder to know how many Americans struggle to get enough food
  16. Why Major League Baseball keeps coming back to Japan
  17. Why a quick compromise to the first government shutdown in nearly 7 years seems unlikely
  18. Jane Goodall, the gentle disrupter whose research on chimpanzees redefined what it meant to be human
  19. Many book bans could be judging titles mainly by their covers
  20. Violent acts in houses of worship are rare but deadly – here’s what the data shows
  21. Flood-prone Houston faces hard choices for handling too much water
  22. Conventional anti-corruption tools often fail to address root causes – but loss of US leadership could still spell trouble for efforts abroad
  23. Many US states are rethinking how students use cellphones − but digital tech still has a place in the classroom
  24. From ‘Frankenstein’ to ‘Dracula,’ exploring the dark world of death and the undead offers a reminder of our mortality
  25. Cellphones in schools – more states are taking action to reduce student distraction without eliminating tech access
  26. Censorship campaigns can have a way of backfiring – look no further than the fate of America’s most prolific censor
  27. McCarthyism’s shadow looms over controversial firing of Texas professor who taught about gender identity
  28. ‘Whisper networks’ don’t work as well online as off − here’s why women are better able to look out for each other in person
  29. ‘Warrior ethos’ mistakes military might for true security − and ignores the wisdom of Eisenhower
  30. Arab American students and parents see US schools very differently − political tensions are widening the gap
  31. Russell M. Nelson, president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, pushed it away from ‘Mormon’ – a word that has courted controversy for 200 years
  32. Why chromium is considered an essential nutrient, despite having no proven health benefits
  33. Trump’s Gaza peace plan: A bit of the old, a bit of the new – and the same stumbling blocks
  34. Trump administration is on track to cut 1 in 3 EPA staffers by the end of 2025, slashing agency’s ability to keep pollution out of air and water
  35. How Dorothea Tanning’s ‘Birthday’ painting challenged male-dominated surrealism
  36. Ending taxes on home sales would benefit the wealthiest households most – part of a larger pattern in Trump tax plans
  37. Who invented the light bulb?
  38. A billion-dollar drug was found in Easter Island soil – what scientists and companies owe the Indigenous people they studied
  39. How to identify animal tracks, burrows and other signs of wildlife in your neighborhood
  40. A staircase in a small, decorative arts museum tells a harrowing story of terror, abuse and enslavement
  41. Serbia’s Aleksandar Vučić clings to power – but protests highlight the danger of stubborn leadership
  42. Why a study claiming vaccines cause chronic illness is severely flawed – a biostatistician explains the biases and unsupported conclusions
  43. Tibetan Buddhist nuns are getting advanced degrees − and the Dalai Lama played a major role in that shift
  44. Charlie Kirk and the making of an AI-generated martyr
  45. How sea star wasting disease transformed the West Coast’s ecology and economy
  46. Why aren’t companies speeding up investment? A new theory offers an answer to an economic paradox
  47. Calling in the animal drug detectives − helping veterinarians help beluga whales, goats and all creatures big and small
  48. Bacteria attached to charcoal could help keep an infamous ‘forever chemical’ out of waterways
  49. A Bari Weiss-led CBS News would likely look different, but how the public feels about it might not change
  50. Trump’s dip into the Nile waters dispute didn’t settle the conflict – in fact, it may have caused more ripples