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UCR in the News

Ice melting could slow vital ocean current - which could slightly slow melting

IFL Science / MSN |
UCR graduate student Yu-Chi Lee led a team that found a slowing ocean current could keep Arctic temperatures 2° C (3.6° F) cooler than they would otherwise likely be in 2100. That sounds encouraging – until you realize that under their calculations the region warms by a shocking 8° C (14.4° F) instead of a catastrophic 10° C (18° F).
UCR in the News

Opinion: Vivid pinks, greens and Dodger blue mark the joy of October in Southern California

The Los Angeles Times |
Distinguished Professor of Creative Writing Susan Straight offers a beautiful perspective on fall colors in Southern California.
UCR in the News

How the Culture Wars Are Costing Schools Billions

Education Week |
Joseph Kahne, with UCR's School of Education, authored a study showing that issues involving race and policies related to LGBTQ+ students’ rights have cost American schools more than $3 billion in the 2023-24 academic year.
UCR in the News

US public schools burned up nearly $3.2bn fending off rightwing culture attacks – report

The Guardian |
UCR researchers surveyed 467 schools and found funds for learning improvements were diverted to security, PR and attorneys.
UCR in the News

UCR Palm Desert launches online cannabis workforce program

To address the high demand for skilled workers in the rapidly growing cannabis industry, UCR Palm Desert has launched a new program. Program Director Agam Patel speaks with the station about the program.
UCR in the News

Yep, you’re probably breathing in plastic chemicals, study finds

LAist / KPCC 89.3 FM |
Chances are you’re inhaling the toxic chemicals used to make plastics more flexible, according to a new study by led by David Volz, UC Riverside professor of environmental toxicology.
UCR in the News

DNA Reveals the Origin Stories of America’s Captive Tigers

The New York Times |
Ellie E. Armstrong, assistant professor of evolutionary genomics at UCR, is a co-author of a new study in which the ​​genomes of 138 tigers rescued from private ownership were sequenced, including two once owned by Joe Exotic, the main subject of “Tiger King.”
UCR in the News

What happens when art and science collide? PST Art in Los Angeles has the answer

The Financial Times |
The Financial Times chats with Douglas McCulloh, UCR ARTS interim director, regarding the mega exhibition Digital Capture: Southern California and the Pixel-Based Image World.