NewsPronto

 
Times Advertising


.

The Conversation

World hunger has risen for three straight years, and climate change is a cause

  • Written by Jessica Eise, Ross Fellow in the Brian Lamb School of Communication Doctoral Program, Purdue University
A man walks through a greenhouse in northeastern Uganda where sustainable agriculture techniques such as drought-resistant crops and tree planting are taught, Oct. 19, 2017. AP Photo/Adelle Kalakouti

World hunger has risen for a third consecutive year, according to the United Nations’ annual food security report. The total number of people...

Read more: World hunger has risen for three straight years, and climate change is a cause

How a game can move people from climate apathy to action

  • Written by Juliette N. Rooney-Varga, Associate Professor of Environmental Science, University of Massachusetts Lowell
High school students at the University of Maine Farmington’s Upward Bound program playing the World Climate simulation. Mary Sinclair, CC BY-ND

The latest report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has been called a “deafening” alarm and an “ear-splitting wake-up call” about the need for sweeping...

Read more: How a game can move people from climate apathy to action

Rising insurance costs may convince Americans that climate change risks are real

  • Written by Andrew J. Hoffman, Holcim (US) Professor at the Ross School of Business and School of Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan
Damage from Hurricane Michael and other storms may lead to higher insurance premiums. Reuters/Terray Sylvester

One of the great challenges of tackling climate change is making it real for people without a scientific background. That’s because the threat it poses can be so hard to see or feel.

In the wake of Hurricanes Florence and Michael,...

Read more: Rising insurance costs may convince Americans that climate change risks are real

3 dangers of rising temperatures that could affect your health now

  • Written by Elena N. Naumova, Professor, Tufts University
Members of a ground crew In Phoenix wrapped wet towels around their necks to cool off when the temperature reached a record of 116°F.Matt York/AP Photo

I read the news about the urgency of addressing climate change, and as a mathematician who studies climate change, I was not surprised. Very worried, but not surprised.

A few days before...

Read more: 3 dangers of rising temperatures that could affect your health now

In Alaska, everyone's grappling with climate change

  • Written by Nancy Fresco, SNAP Coordinator, Research Faculty, University of Alaska Fairbanks
2016's warm winter meant not enough snow for the start of the Iditarod sled dog race in Anchorage, so it was brought by train from 360 miles north.AP/Rachel D'Oro

Coastal villages are washing into the Bering Sea, trees are sprouting in the tundra and shipping lanes are opening in an ocean that was once locked in ice. In Alaska, climate change...

Read more: In Alaska, everyone's grappling with climate change

How winning $1 billion in Mega Millions could lead to bankruptcy

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Adjunct associate professor, Boston University

The U.S. Mega Millions lottery is holding a drawing on Oct. 19 for a jackpot that’s swelled to US$1 billion after the 24 drawings held since the end of July failed to yield a winner.

This princely sum is drawing such attention that more people are buying tickets, and even the lottery’s own projections are changing rapidly. On Oct. 17,...

Read more: How winning $1 billion in Mega Millions could lead to bankruptcy

How winning $1.6 billion in Mega Millions could still lead to bankruptcy

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Adjunct associate professor, Boston University

The U.S. Mega Millions lottery jackpot swelled to a record US$1.6 billion after the 25 drawings held since the end of July – including the latest on Oct. 19 – failed to yield a winner.

That ties it for the largest lottery grand prize the world has ever seen. The jackpot for the rival Powerball game also reached $1.6 billion in 2016.

The o...

Read more: How winning $1.6 billion in Mega Millions could still lead to bankruptcy

How winning $1.54 billion in Mega Millions could still lead to bankruptcy

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Adjunct associate professor, Boston University

One winner finally emerged for the US$1.537 billion Mega Millions jackpot. Research suggests the as-yet unidentified winner may not be so lucky.

The jackpot swelled to that huge sum after the 25 drawings held since the end of July failed to yield a winner. That makes it the second-largest lottery grand prize the world has ever seen. The record...

Read more: How winning $1.54 billion in Mega Millions could still lead to bankruptcy

The Mega Millions jackpot is now more than US$1 billion – where does all that lottery profit really go?

  • Written by Liberty Vittert, Visiting Assistant Professor in Statistics, Washington University in St Louis
Fewer Americans play the lottery today than did in the 1970s.alisafarov/shutterstock.com

The Mega Millions jackpot drawing on Oct. 19 has soared to US$1 billion.

In the middle of the 20th century, when lotteries first started in the U.S., they were sold to states as a way to benefit the American public. That suggests that bigger and bigger jackpots...

Read more: The Mega Millions jackpot is now more than US$1 billion – where does all that lottery profit...

The Mega Millions jackpot is now more than $1 billion – where does all that lottery profit really go?

  • Written by Liberty Vittert, Visiting Assistant Professor in Statistics, Washington University in St Louis

The Mega Millions jackpot drawing on Oct. 23 has soared to US$1.6 billion.

In the middle of the 20th century, when lotteries first started in the U.S., they were sold to states as a way to benefit the American public. That suggests that bigger and bigger jackpots should mean more tax dollars to spend on public services like education. But that...

Read more: The Mega Millions jackpot is now more than $1 billion – where does all that lottery profit really...

More Articles ...

  1. El partidismo está profundamente arraigado en EEUU, incluso entre los votantes 'independientes'
  2. Why radiation protection experts are concerned over EPA proposal
  3. Congress takes first steps toward regulating artificial intelligence
  4. Sewage surveillance is the next frontier in the fight against polio
  5. Jamal Khashoggi: Casualty of the Trump administration’s disregard for democracy and civil rights in the Middle East?
  6. Banksy and the tradition of destroying art
  7. New data tool can help scientists use limited funds to protect the greatest number of endangered species
  8. Taxes and caps on carbon work differently but calibrating them poses the same challenge
  9. Arms sales to Saudi Arabia give Trump all the leverage he needs in Khashoggi affair
  10. Generation Z voters could make waves in 2018 midterm elections
  11. Government-funded buyouts after disasters are slow and inequitable – here's how that could change
  12. Trump sees opportunity in Venezuela's humanitarian crisis as midterms approach
  13. Blockchains won't fix internet voting security – and could make it worse
  14. What Thomas Jefferson, Donald Trump and the American people think about freedom of the press
  15. Would a Space Force mean the end of NASA?
  16. Why health apps are like the Wild West, with Apple just riding into town
  17. How Turkey and Saudi Arabia became frenemies – and why the Khashoggi case could change that
  18. Partisanship runs deep in America - even among 'independents'
  19. The Violence Against Women Act is unlikely to reduce intimate partner violence – here's why
  20. America's archaeology data keeps disappearing -- even though the law says the government is supposed to preserve it
  21. How monitoring local water supplies can build community
  22. Meet AICAN, a machine that operates as an autonomous artist
  23. Open-source hardware could defend against the next generation of hacking
  24. Free trade isn't dead yet – despite Trump's threats to the system that upholds it
  25. A Great Lakes pipeline dispute points to a broader energy dilemma
  26. We tested women and men for breast cancer genes – only 18 percent knew they had it
  27. ¿Reactivará la economía argentina un rescate internacional de 50.000 millones de dólares?
  28. The mosques that survived Palu's tsunami and what that means
  29. Is exercise still important to weight loss? Absolutely, a doctor says
  30. When the line between machine and artist becomes blurred
  31. How scientists are fighting infection-causing biofilms
  32. Evolution is at work in computers as well as life sciences
  33. Arms and influence in the Khashoggi affair
  34. How the polls could have caught 'surprise' victories like Trump's
  35. Masacres, desapariciones y 1968: los mexicanos recuerdan a las víctimas de la ‘dictadura perfecta’
  36. Fixing a broken process for nominating US Supreme Court justices
  37. Why is it so hard to get an accurate vote count?
  38. Migrant money could be keeping Nicaragua's uprising alive
  39. Taxing carbon may sound like a good idea but does it work?
  40. Eating royal poop improves parenting in naked mole-rats
  41. More college students expected to vote in 2018 midterms
  42. Dispatches from the morgue: Toxicology tests don't tell the whole story of the opioid epidemic
  43. Restocking wolves on Isle Royale raises questions about which species get rescued
  44. Americans spend $70 billion on pets, and that money could do more good
  45. Los jóvenes que viven en colonias de la frontera de Estados Unidos sufren pobreza y falta de atención médica
  46. Argentina bets 60 percent interest rates – and $50B international bailout – will revive its economy
  47. Hidden hunger affects nearly 2 billion worldwide – are solutions in plain sight?
  48. Why is it fun to be frightened?
  49. Why doesn't the U.S. bury its power lines?
  50. Out of Matthew Shepard's tragic murder, a commitment to punishing hate crimes emerged