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Non-Profit News

Don’t Kill Tenure; Make It Work For Nebraska

Published by maggie@omahadai... on Wed, 04/02/2025 - 6:00am

Across the country, states like Texas, North Carolina, and Florida have sought to weaken or eliminate tenure in public higher education.

Now, Nebraska is considering Legislative Bill 551, a bill that would abolish tenure at public colleges and universities statewide. Supporters argue that tenure hinders flexibility, protects underperforming faculty and suppresses ideological diversity.

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Want To Stay Healthier And Fulfilled Later In Life? Try Volunteering

Published by maggie@omahadai... on Wed, 04/02/2025 - 5:00am

As gerontologists – social scientists who study aging populations – we envision a future in which older people leave a doctor’s visit with a prescription to go volunteer for something.

Does that sound far-fetched? There’s scientific research backing it up.

  • Read more about Want To Stay Healthier And Fulfilled Later In Life? Try Volunteering

Scientists Shielding Farming From Climate Change Need More Public Funding. But They're Getting Less

Published by maggie@omahadai... on Wed, 04/02/2025 - 3:00am
A villager tends to his vegetable garden in a plot that is part of a climate-smart agriculture program funded by the United States Agency for International Development in Chipinge, Zimbabwe, Sept. 19, 2024. 
(Aaron Ufumeli / AP Photo)

Erin McGuire spent years cultivating fruits and vegetables like onions, peppers and tomatoes as a scientist and later director of a lab at the University of California-Davis. She collaborated with hundreds of people to breed drought-resistant varieties, develop new ways to cool fresh produce and find ways to make more money for small farmers at home and overseas.

  • Read more about Scientists Shielding Farming From Climate Change Need More Public Funding. But They're Getting Less

The CDC Buried A Measles Forecast That Stressed The Need For Vaccinations

Published by maggie@omahadai... on Wed, 04/02/2025 - 3:00am
A vial of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine is on display at the Lubbock Health Department Wednesday, Feb. 26, 2025, in Lubbock, Texas. 
(Mary Conlon / AP Photo)

The CDC Buried a Measles Forecast That Stressed the Need for Vaccinations

by Patricia Callahan

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

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Omaha Teen’s Artwork Crosses Finish Line in Iditarod

Published by maggie@omahadai... on Wed, 03/26/2025 - 7:00am
The winning art design for the Iditarod education program was created by Teagan Rodrigo, a seventh-grade student at Concordia Junior-Senior High School in northwest Omaha. 
(Tim Trudell / The Daily Record)

Jessie Holmes crossed the finish line at the 2025 Iditarod, a little bit of Teagan Rodrigo was with the champion. The Omaha teen's art was featured on envelopes carried by each of the 33 mushers participating in the Alaska dog sled race.

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200 Years After The Creation Of Braille, Blind People In Mali Say It Has Allowed Them To Fit In

Published by maggie@omahadai... on Wed, 03/26/2025 - 5:00am
A Braille alphabet on display in Bamako, Mali, Sunday, Jan. 26, 2025. 
(Moustapha Diallo / AP Photo)

BAMAKO, Mali (AP) — Amadou Ndiaye meticulously ran his fingers across bumps in a piece of paper, making sense of the world he can no longer see.

Two hundred years have passed since the invention of braille, the tactile writing system that has transformed the lives of many blind and partially sighted people by offering a path to literacy and independence.

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‘Truth Has To Come Out’: New Omaha Play Puts Women Center Stage In Prison Reform Debate

Published by maggie@omahadai... on Wed, 03/26/2025 - 4:00am
Kim Louise.
(Flatwater Free Press)

All her life, nobody wanted to hear what Christy Farlee had to say.

“I was just an addict, in trouble all the time, no good, in and out of prison,” the Lincoln woman said.

But that’s changing. Now, for what feels like the first time in Farlee’s life, “my voice has importance and can do something.”

  • Read more about ‘Truth Has To Come Out’: New Omaha Play Puts Women Center Stage In Prison Reform Debate

Viral Videos Of Dogs Called A 'Himalayan Fur Goblin' And 'Teacup Werewolf' Boost Adoptions

Published by maggie@omahadai... on Wed, 03/26/2025 - 3:00am

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — For over a decade, Adrian Budnick has taken adoption photos of the dogs at Nashville's county animal shelter, but it wasn't until the COVID pandemic that an idea came to her.

As one of only a few people allowed to visit in-person, she could take videos of dogs, inventing humorous nicknames and capturing their individual personalities, for an audience of potential adopters.

  • Read more about Viral Videos Of Dogs Called A 'Himalayan Fur Goblin' And 'Teacup Werewolf' Boost Adoptions

Split Apart: New Ban Leaves Family Half In Nebraska, Half Stuck In Middle East

Published by maggie@omahadai... on Wed, 03/19/2025 - 7:00am
Zak Abughalyoon, 19 (left) and St. Pius X Catholic Church of Omaha parishioner Rosie Volkmer chat over tea outside the Abughalyoon family home in Papillion on Wednesday, Feb. 26, 2025.  "The U.S. made a promise to them,” said another St. Pius parishioner. “And we broke our promise." 
(Rebecca S. Gratz / Flatwater Free Press)

The family started dancing when they heard the news.

Over a grainy video call from his home in Omaha, 19-year-old Zak Abughalyoon could hear his cousins playing music in their small apartment in Jordan, their shrieks of celebration.

  • Read more about Split Apart: New Ban Leaves Family Half In Nebraska, Half Stuck In Middle East

Keeping Truth’s Requirements Close

Published by maggie@omahadai... on Wed, 03/19/2025 - 6:00am

During a one-on-one parsing of his essay in an academic writing class, one of my college students last fall said to me with, I might add, a benign irreverence: “Well, close enough.”

To which I said, “Well … no.” Without a hint of irreverence, benign or otherwise.

  • Read more about Keeping Truth’s Requirements Close
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