CAS Connection

Young people are lukewarm about Biden – and giving them more information doesn’t move the needle much

Recent polling for the November 2024 election shows that President Joe Biden is struggling with young voters, who have traditionally supported Democrats. A December 2023 poll showed that 49% of young people supported former President Donald Trump, while just 43% of 18- to 29-year-olds said they preferred Biden. Department of Political Science faculty members Neil O'Brien and Chandler James write about the general election in The Conversation.

Immigration reform has always been tough, and rarely happens in election years - 4 things to know

Immigration is already a major polarizing issue in the 2024 U.S. presidential election. Arrests for illegal border crossings from Mexico reached an all-time high in December 2023, and cities like New York and Chicago are struggling to provide housing and basic services for tens of thousands of migrants arriving from Texas. Dan Tichenor writes about immigration reform in The Conversation.

How New Technology Changed Mahjong

Annelise Heinz, a history associate professor and the author of “Mahjong: A Chinese Game and the Making of Modern American Culture,” spoke to the New York Times about mahjong. “These tables massively increase the rate of play," said about automatic mahjong tables. "Whether or not you’re playing with money, you are getting way more rounds. You’re just cutting out that time.”

New type of water splitter could make green hydrogen cheaper

As a lab-based proof of concept, the new setup—reported this month in Nature Materials—is a long way from working at an industrial scale. But if successful, it could help heavy industries such as steelmaking and fertilizer production reduce their dependence on oil, coal and natural gas. “This is an innovative concept,” said Shannon Boettcher in Science Magazine. Boettcher is a professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry in the College of Arts and Sciences.

Sleepless Mat Johnson makes a spine-chilling splash on Netflix

If you have been watching Netflix recently, you might have noticed the hit show “The Fall of the House of Usher.” The series, inspired by Edgar Allan Poe, had a moment — it captured 14 million viewers in just two weeks after its release this fall. And it has an Oregon connection — one of the co-writers for the fourth episode, Mat Johnson. Johnson is a professor in the College of Arts and Sciences, teaching English, creative writing and comic studies.