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Held captive in their own country during World War II, Japanese Americans used nature to cope with their unjustified imprisonment

  • Written by Susan H. Kamei, Adjunct Professor of History and Affiliated Faculty, USC Shinso Ito Center for Japanese Religions and Cultures, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageJapanese Americans incarcerated at Heart Mountain concentration camp in Wyoming took art classes at the craft shop, using what they could find.Tom Parker, War Relocation Authority, Department of the Interior, via National Archives and Records Administration

With a stroke of a presidential pen, the lives of Izumi Taniguchi, Minoru Tajii, Homei...

Read more: Held captive in their own country during World War II, Japanese Americans used nature to cope with...

Valentine’s Day cards too sugary sweet for you? Return to the 19th-century custom of the spicy ‘vinegar valentine’

  • Written by Melissa Chim, Scholarly Communications Librarian, Excelsior University
imageA woman turns down a dapper 'snake' in a 'vinegar valentine' from the 1870s.Wikimedia Commons

Ahh, Valentine’s Day: the perfect moment to tell your sweetheart how much you love them with a thoughtful card.

But what about people in your life you don’t like so much? Why is there no Hallmark card telling them to get lost?

The Victorians had...

Read more: Valentine’s Day cards too sugary sweet for you? Return to the 19th-century custom of the spicy...

Philadelphia was once a sweet spot for chocolatiers and other candymakers who made iconic treats for Valentine’s Day and other holidays

  • Written by Jared Bahir Browsh, Assistant Teaching Professor of Critical Sports Studies, University of Colorado Boulder
imageS.F. Whitman & Sons introduced the Whitman's Sampler, an assortment of its popular chocolates, in 1912. HUM Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Many of America’s iconic holiday candies have Philadelphia or Pennsylvania roots – like Peeps on Easter, Reese’s peanut butter cups on Halloween, and a good, old-fashioned...

Read more: Philadelphia was once a sweet spot for chocolatiers and other candymakers who made iconic treats...

Infusing asphalt with plastic could help roads last longer and resist cracking under heat

  • Written by Md S Hossain, Professor of Civil Engineering, University of Texas at Arlington
imageA stretch of road near Rockwall, Texas, paved with plastic-infused asphalt. Md. Sahadat Hossain

Globally, more than 400 million tons of plastic are produced each year, and less than 10% is recycled. Much of the rest ends up burned, buried or drifting through waterways, a problem that’s only getting worse.

As a civil engineer, I started asking...

Read more: Infusing asphalt with plastic could help roads last longer and resist cracking under heat

How do scientists hunt for dark matter? A physicist explains why the mysterious substance is so hard to find

  • Written by David Joffe, Associate Professor of Physics, Kennesaw State University
imageThe Coma Cluster, research into which supports the existence of dark matter. NASA, ESA, J. Mack (STScl), and J. Madrid (Australian Telescope National Facility)

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to CuriousKidsUS@theconversation.com.


Can we generate a way to interact...

Read more: How do scientists hunt for dark matter? A physicist explains why the mysterious substance is so...

Americans are asking too much of their dogs

  • Written by Margret Grebowicz, Distinguished Professor of the Humanities, Missouri University of Science and Technology
imageSome people appreciate relationships with pets to combat loneliness – but others simply prefer dogs' company.Catherine Falls Commercial/Moment via Getty Images

Americans love dogs.

Nearly half of U.S. households have one, and practically all owners see pets as part of the family – 51% say pets belong “as much as a human...

Read more: Americans are asking too much of their dogs

Fifteen years after Egypt’s uprising, how faith and politics reshaped a generation

  • Written by Nareman Amin, Assistant Professor of Contemporary Islam, Michigan State University
imageThe crowd in Tahrir Square in Cairo just before a speech by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak on Feb. 10, 2011.Photo by Chris Hondros/Getty News Images

Fifteen years ago, Egyptians from all walks of life took to the street to demand “bread, freedom, social justice.” They were protesting the oppressive 30-year rule of Hosni Mubarak.

Egypt...

Read more: Fifteen years after Egypt’s uprising, how faith and politics reshaped a generation

How the law can add to child sex trafficking victims’ existing trauma

  • Written by Kate Price, Associate Research Scientist at the Wellesley Centers for Women, Wellesley College
imageMost U.S. states retain the right to arrest and prosecute children for prostitution.Douglas Sacha/Getty Images

The January 2026 release of additional files related to the Justice Department’s investigation of convicted sex offenders Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell has brought renewed attention to the late financier’s connections...

Read more: How the law can add to child sex trafficking victims’ existing trauma

Sixth year of drought in Texas and Oklahoma leaves ranchers bracing for another harsh summer

  • Written by Joel Lisonbee, Senior Associate Scientist, Cooperative Institute for Research in the Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder

Cattle auctions aren’t often all-night affairs. But in Texas Lake Country in June 2022, ranchers facing dwindling water supplies and dried out pastures amid a worsening drought sold off more than 4,000 animals in an auction that lasted nearly 24 hours – about 200 cows an hour.

It was the height of a drought that has gripped the Southern...

Read more: Sixth year of drought in Texas and Oklahoma leaves ranchers bracing for another harsh summer

Why ‘The West Wing’ went from a bipartisan hit to a polarized streaming comfort watch over 2 decades, reflecting profound shifts in media and politics

  • Written by Karrin Vasby Anderson, Professor of Communication Studies, Colorado State University
imageIf you're like the many viewers who have binge-watched the series multiple times, you know who all these cast members of 'The West Wing' are.James Sorensen/NBC/Newsmakers, Hulton Archive

When the early 2000s hit series “The West Wing” returned on Netflix in December 2025, it spurred conversation about how the idealistic political drama...

Read more: Why ‘The West Wing’ went from a bipartisan hit to a polarized streaming comfort watch over 2...

More Articles ...

  1. Journalism may be too slow to remain credible once events are filtered through social media
  2. No animal alive today is ‘primitive’ – why are so many still labeled that way?
  3. Winter Olympians often compete in freezing temperatures – physiology and advances in materials science help keep them warm
  4. Whether it’s yoga, rock climbing or Dungeons Dragons, taking leisure to a high level can be good for your well-being
  5. New technologies are stepping up the global fight against wildlife trafficking
  6. US experiencing largest measles outbreak since 2000 – 5 essential reads on the risks, what to do and what’s coming next
  7. Federal and state authorities are taking a 2-pronged approach to make it harder to get an abortion
  8. What is the American Dream, and has it become harder to achieve in recent years?
  9. Will a ‘Trump slump’ continue to hit US tourism in 2026 − and even keep World Cup fans away?
  10. Has globalization lessened the importance of physical distance? For economic shocks, new research suggests ‘yes’
  11. Aldi is coming to Colorado, and the disruption could lead to lower food prices
  12. There’s a competition crisis in America’s state legislatures – and that’s bad for democracy
  13. From ski jumps and sliding bobsleds to engineering snow, here are 5 essential reads on the science of the Winter Olympics
  14. Fears about TikTok’s policy changes point to a deeper problem in the tech industry
  15. What Olympic athletes see that viewers don’t: Machine-made snow makes ski racing faster and riskier – and it’s everywhere
  16. Clarence ‘Taffy’ Abel: A pioneering US Olympic hockey star who hid his Indigenous identity to play in the NHL
  17. A terrorism label that comes before the facts can turn ‘domestic terrorism’ into a useless designation
  18. Why corporate America is mostly staying quiet as federal immigration agents show up at its doors
  19. You’ve reached your weight loss goal on GLP-1 medications – what now?
  20. Overactive immune cells can worsen heart failure – targeting them could offer new treatments
  21. AI-generated text is overwhelming institutions – setting off a no-win ‘arms race’ with AI detectors
  22. How women are reinterpreting the menstrual taboos in Chinese Buddhism
  23. Has Little Caesars Arena boosted economic activity in Detroit? We looked at hotel and short-term rental industry data to find out
  24. ‘Less lethal’ crowd-control weapons still cause harm – 2 physicians explain what they are and their health effects
  25. ICE and Border Patrol in Minnesota − accused of violating 1st, 2nd, 4th and 10th amendment rights − are testing whether the Constitution can survive
  26. Schools are increasingly telling students they must put their phones away – Ohio’s example shows mixed results following new bans
  27. Women have been mapping the world for centuries – and now they’re speaking up for the people left out of those maps
  28. Congress has exercised minimal oversight over ICE, but that might change
  29. Lüften sounds simple – but ‘house-burping’ is more complicated in Pittsburgh
  30. ‘Inoculation’ helps people spot political deepfakes, study finds
  31. Philly theaters unite to stage 3 plays by Pulitzer-winning playwright James Ijames
  32. Trump wants to shutter the Kennedy Center for 2 years – an arts management professor explains what that portends
  33. An epic border: Finland’s poetic masterpiece, the Kalevala, has roots in 2 cultures and 2 countries
  34. Medicare is experimenting with having AI review claims – a cost-saving measure that could risk denying needed care
  35. Reclaiming water from contaminated brine can increase water supply and reduce environmental harm
  36. The Supreme Court may soon diminish Black political power, undoing generations of gains
  37. Climate change threatens the Winter Olympics’ future – and even snowmaking has limits for saving the Games
  38. Confused by the new dietary guidelines? Focus on these simple, evidence-based shifts to lower your chronic disease risk
  39. Federal power meets local resistance in Minneapolis – a case study in how federalism staves off authoritarianism
  40. Data centers told to pitch in as storms and cold weather boost power demand
  41. Clergy protests against ICE turned to a classic – and powerful – American playlist
  42. NASA’s Artemis II plans to send a crew around the Moon to test equipment and lay the groundwork for a future landing
  43. A human tendency to value expertise, not just sheer power, explains how some social hierarchies form
  44. Certain brain injuries may be linked to violent crime – identifying them could help reveal how people make moral choices
  45. Building with air – how nature’s hole-filled blueprints shape manufacturing
  46. Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl show is part of long play drawn up by NFL to score with Latin America
  47. Whether it’s Valentine’s Day notes or emails to loved ones, using AI to write leaves people feeling crummy about themselves
  48. Stroke survivors can counterintuitively improve recovery by strengthening their stronger arm – new research
  49. Denmark’s generous child care and parental leave policies erase 80% of the ‘motherhood penalty’ for working moms
  50. Trump’s climate policy rollback plan relies on EPA rescinding its 2009 endangerment finding – but will courts allow it?