Protein powders and shakes contain high amounts of lead, new report says – a...
C. Michael White, University of Connecticut
Powder and ready-to-drink protein sales have exploded, reaching over US$32 billion globally from...
Baseball returns to a Japanese American detention camp after a historic ball field was restored
Susan H. Kamei, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
In the spring of 1942, 15-year-old Momo Nagano...
Antioxidants help stave off a host of health problems – but figuring out how...
Nathaniel Johnson, University of North Dakota
When it comes to describing what an antioxidant is, it’s all in the...
How new foreign worker visa fees might worsen doctor shortages in rural America
Patrick Aguilar, Washington University in St. Louis
There are almost 1.1 million licensed physicians in the United States. That...
Madagascar’s military power grab shows Africa’s coup problem isn’t restricted to the Sahel region
John Joseph Chin, Carnegie Mellon University
Those who rise to power through a coup often fall by the same...
Denver study shows removing parking requirements results in more affordable housing being built
Susan D. Daggett, University of Denver and Stefan Chavez-Norgaard, University of Denver
Removing parking requirements for new buildings could...
Erie Canal’s 200th anniversary: How a technological marvel for trade changed the environment forever
Christine Keiner, Rochester Institute of Technology
If you visit the Erie Canal today, you’ll find a tranquil waterway and...
Our team of physicists inadvertently generated the shortest X-ray pulses ever observed
Uwe Bergmann, University of Wisconsin-Madison and Thomas Linker, Stanford University
X-ray beams aren’t used just by doctors to see...






















