DIVERSITY

Apr 29 2026ENVIRONMENT

Why plants matter more than you think

The Missouri Botanical Garden wasn’t always a global leader in plant science. When Peter Raven took over in 1971, it was just a pretty garden with a few researchers. But Raven saw something bigger: plants weren’t just decorations—they were the foundation of life. Two-thirds of Earth’s species live i

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Apr 28 2026OPINION

How AI could shrink the music we hear – and how to fix it

Less than a hundred years ago, music was something nearly everyone made. Children learned songs from parents, neighbors sang together at harvests, and towns had their own local sounds. Today, most of us are listeners, not makers. Generative AI is about to push that shift even faster, turning music f

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Apr 27 2026EDUCATION

Mindful Care: How Nursing Students Handle Spirituality

In many hospitals, doctors and nurses are learning that caring for a person’s mind and spirit is just as important as treating their body. Yet, when it comes to teaching future nurses about these topics, the lessons are uneven and often missing key steps. Researchers in Rome asked 69 third‑year nur

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Apr 27 2026ENVIRONMENT

Biodiversity Protection: What the Numbers Really Show

Research into how well protected areas stop wildlife loss has grown a lot since 2000, but the picture is still unclear. Most studies use matching techniques to compare places with and without protection, focusing mainly on forest loss as the main measure. Only a single paper even used the Biod

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Apr 26 2026OPINION

Diversity Matters: Why New Mexico Needs Leaders Who Reflect Its People

The Albuquerque Hispano Chamber of Commerce focuses on growing jobs and teaching skills, especially for Hispanic groups. They question the University of New Mexico’s recent list of five presidential candidates, pointing out that none match the state’s largest group. UNM is more than a school; it

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Apr 23 2026SCIENCE

Freshwater Fish Secrets Unveiled by DNA Scanning Across Turkey

Scientists used a modern DNA trick called eDNA metabarcoding to map fish life in Turkey’s rivers. Instead of catching every fish, they filtered water from 29 spots spread over seven big river basins. The DNA that sloshes through the water was amplified and read by a high‑throughput machine, producin

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Apr 19 2026BUSINESS

Board Mix and Women CEOs: What Really Matters

A new study looks at how the mix of people on a company board can shape who becomes its chief executive. It builds on earlier work that said when more women sit on boards, a woman is more likely to be hired as CEO. The researchers split board diversity into three parts: variety, separation and

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Apr 18 2026BUSINESS

From Numbers to Networks: A Trailblazer’s Path in Finance and Crypto

She started learning accounting before her teens, a skill that would guide her through roles in retail banking, Citigroup and LendingClub. Today she leads the finance side of a major crypto staking firm that powers banks, exchanges and wallets across more than forty blockchains. The company suppl

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Apr 14 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Artists of Color Set the Stage in 2024

The 2024 Coachella lineup wasn\"t just another year of music—it was proof that Black performers have shaped the festival\"s sound for good. Acts like Giveon and Kehlani didn\"t just sing songs; they turned their sets into events people still talk about months later. Davido and BIA didn\"t just perfo

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Apr 11 2026ENVIRONMENT

Bats, Bonds and Better Budgets

A new study shows that the way local governments borrow money could help keep bats alive and improve county finances. When a fungal disease called white‑nose syndrome killed many North American bats, farmers lost an inexpensive natural pest controller. Without the insects that bats eat, farms

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