The defining diet of every decade for the past 100 years
Hers explores what history can teach us about diet and nutrition.
Continue Reading
Hers explores what history can teach us about diet and nutrition.
Continue Reading
The Daily Yonder looks into how, after the Department of Government Efficiency cut over $400 million worth of AmeriCorps grants across the country, rural nonprofits will struggle to survive.
Continue Reading
Votebeat reveals that President Donald Trump’s executive order targeting a technology which helps speed up vote counting could be costly if eliminated.
Continue Reading
Next City explains that sanctuary cities, which aim to limit collaboration with federal immigration enforcement, are legal—but they have long been a fixation of the Trump administration.
Continue Reading
CalMatters reveals what happened when two people were able to reconnect with their relatives experiencing homelessness after reading a CalMatters article.
Continue Reading
The Marshall Project reports that so far the Trump administration has cut funds for tracking bad cops, shootings and violent extremism, canceled crime prevention grants, and more.
Continue Reading
The 19th reports that 214 Latinas hold seats in state legislatures nationwide, up from 192 in 2024, and they aren’t the only ones to set records.
Continue Reading
Votebeat relates how people with disabilities must choose between a few imperfect options in states that haven’t adopted electronic absentee voting.
Continue Reading
The 19th reports that newly elected Pope Leo XIV, the first American to hold the papacy—as well as the first Peruvian citizen, having been naturalized after working in the country for decades—was born and raised in the Chicago area, ordained as a priest after studying in Rome, and is fluent in Spanish and Italian.
Continue Reading
The Hechinger Report outlines step-by-step how dismantling the Education Department might alter services for students with disabilities.
Continue Reading
The Hechinger Report reveals that by pairing an expansion of extracurriculars with its cellphone ban, a Washington state district has seen a drop in absenteeism and more student engagement.
Continue Reading
The Trace reports how the Trump administration’s push to cut federal grants has domestic violence groups considering layoffs, reduced hours, and shelter closures.
Continue Reading
Economic Hardship Reporting Project and The Chronicle of Higher Education investigate university-run prison health care systems in Texas, New Jersey, and Connecticut.
Continue Reading
Economic Hardship Reporting Project, Teen Vogue and Lux Magazine report that North Idaho College, a two-year community college, might go under because issues with the board of trustees threaten its accreditation.
Continue Reading
The Hechinger Report explains that providers operating on ‘razor-thin margins’ worry about the possibility of deep cuts from the Trump administration.
Â
Continue Reading
The Markup reports that after California’s health insurance exchange transmitted pregnancy and domestic abuse data during a marketing campaign, the exchange is reviewing its website practices.
Continue Reading
The Conversation explains the real history behind the Mexican-American holiday.
Continue Reading
Next City reports that one toilet startup is using social psychology and gig labor to help address L.A.’s public bathroom problem, but advocates have questions.
Continue Reading
The Trace reports that violence prevention leaders say a city program, which could help bystanders save lives, is missing a key opportunity.
Continue Reading
The Marshall Project reports on a recent arrest in Georgia that highlights the criminal suspicion which surrounds pregnancy loss in several states.
Continue Reading
Using data from the Department of Energy and Tax Foundation, Stacker ranked states from the least to most hospitable for electric vehicle ownership.
Â
Continue Reading
The Hechinger Report reports on how America is about to go over the “demographic cliff.”
Continue Reading
The 19th reports on how the Trump administration’s federal funding cuts are shutting down studies on Alzheimer’s care, uterine fibroids and pregnancy risks—all because they focus on gender.
Continue Reading
Trauma Services reports that fentanyl has turned into a crisis for first responders, property managers, and maintenance workers who have to deal with the aftermath, and explains how biohazard training can help.
Continue Reading
Stacker researched the truth behind five common tech surveillance fears to address concerns about whether your phone is actually listening to you.
Continue Reading
Lazzoni analyzed design trend reports and leading publications to curate five interior design trends that are back in style in 2025.Â
Continue Reading
The Daily Yonder reports GOP cuts to Medicaid could threaten the financial viability of hospitals all across rural America.
Continue Reading
The Trace reports that when a gun goes missing, the chances that it’ll be used in a crime go up, so reporting requirements can help police track down firearms beforehand—but the laws do more than that, too.
Continue Reading
Ballotpedia reports that New Jersey’s Democratic state government trifecta is somewhat vulnerable in 2025, and a new Democratic trifecta in Virginia is a moderate possibility.
Continue Reading
Spokeo used data from the American Social Capital Survey to examine how friendships differ between Americans with and without a college degree.
Continue Reading