“The death of Malcolm-Jamal Warner represents a significant cultural loss for the industry and Black audiences, in particular,” Samantha Sheppard, an associate professor of cinema and media studies. “Warner’s career is indelibly linked to a program that reshaped the representation of Black middle-class life on network television.”
“These are countries that are not inclined to just bow down and make concessions to Washington, given the very coercive and punitive approach that Washington is taking,” said Kenneth Roberts, a professor of government who focuses on Latin American politics.
Stephen Yale-Loehr,an immigration attorney and scholar at Cornell Law School, discusses a poll showing that President Trump's deportation efforts are backfiring.
The judges in the Meta and Anthropic cases last month broadly accepted the companies’ argument that training their models on copyrighted material could qualify as “fair use.” That’s an encouraging sign for the AI industry, said James Grimmelmann, professor of law.
“As is typical with cats, only they know,” said Bruce Kornreich, veterinary cardiologist and director of the Feline Health Center, in this article where he offers ideas on why cats love concrete slabs.
“As a coffee lover, I wish $8.13 were likely a ceiling. I sincerely doubt it,” said Chris Barrett, professor of agricultural and development economic, when talking about the impact of tariffs on coffee.
A study on the greenhouse gas footprint of LNG and comments from Robert Howarth, professor of ecology and environmental biology, appear in this article.
Eswar Prasad, professor of international trade policy, comments, “Trump seems to view tariffs as an instrument to influence not just other countries’ trade and economic policies but even their domestic legal and political matters.”
“Research has found [a warm shower] reduces sleep latency and improves sleep quality,” says Matthew Ebben, associate professor of psychology in clinical neurology at Cornell.