An Associated Press article about efforts to step up scrutiny of asbestos trust funds interviews law professor S. Todd Brown who said the idea “could lead to money going to complying with this oversight rather than going to the victims.”
A story on CBS News about the impact that deceased Rep. Louise Slaughter continues to have on the race for New York’s 27th Congressional District interviews Jacob Neiheisel, associate professor of political science.
James E. Campbell writes in MarketWatch that “To be effective... any closing message any closing message in the midterm elections must... counter why Republicans are in so much trouble in the first place. Many might explain the trouble with one word: Trump."
An article in England’s The Independent about the midterm election and the impact that lesser-known candidates have on constituents’ lives interviews James Battista, associate professor of political science.
An article in Time about how President Trump inserted himself into the midterm elections like few presidents before interviews Jacob Neiheisel, associate professor of political science.
Spectrum News reports the UB held its fourth annual Dentistry Smiles on Veterans Day and interviews Brendan Dowd, clinical assistant professor in restorative dentistry.
Vice interviewed PhD student Sara O'Donnell about a UB study which found that college students are more likely to choose spending time with their smartphone than eating.
"Human beings are attracted to a whole range of experiences that promote unpleasant emotional or physical reactions,” UB philosopher Carolyn Korsmeyer tells Time magazine.
The Guardian quoted UB researcher Christian Renschler on how heavy rains in California could create mudslides and floods, threatening the safety of those displaced by the fires.
An article on The Daily Beast interviews researcher Hilary Weaver about a refugee advocate who received threats of rape and murder after the release of a secretly recorded and doctored video aimed at discrediting aid workers helping asylum seekers.
An article in TIME Magazine about new federal physical-activity guidelines that show that even light activities like walking and housework can improve an individual’s health interviews UB researcher Michael LaMonte.