Long Island University
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Deadly bacteria found in waters near luxury vacation destination ahead of summer
So-called flesh-eating bacteria have been detected in one of the most luxurious vacation spots in the United States — but experts say beachgoers should use caution and care rather than panic about it. East Hampton and Sagaponac on the South Fork of Long Island are exclusive enclaves where wealthy executives, celebrities and old-money families retreat. Yet there's often an unwanted visitor.
Fahmy: Trump Weary of Returning to Obama Era JCPOA
There has been no sign of progress in ceasefire talks between the US and Iran after the worst burst of violence in weeks and as the Tehran-backed Hezbollah rejected a US-brokered truce in Lebanon. Dalia Fahmy, Director of International Relations and Diplomacy and Associate Professor of Political Science at Long Island University spoke to Bloomberg’s Abeer Abu Omar on Horizons Middle East and Africa on the potential end to the war in the region.
Teen who began chemo before high school now graduating with perfect GPA, $125K scholarship
A Long Island teen who began high school just days after undergoing chemotherapy for stage 2 Hodgkin's lymphoma is graduating four years later with a perfect 4.0 GPA, a $125,000 scholarship and a powerful message about perseverance. "I was very sick," Ryan Martino told Fox News on Wednesday. "There were certain days I just couldn't even get out of bed.
Amplified Arctic iceberg traffic reshapes benthic biodiversity
Abstract The Arctic is undergoing rapid warming, resulting in retreating sea ice and glaciers1, yet how cryospheric changes propagate into the deep ocean remains poorly understood2. Here we identify a climate-driven mechanism linking accelerating glacier disintegration to an increase in deep-sea hard-bottom habitats far beyond calving fronts. Seafloor observations in Fram Strait show a localized increase in the density and patchiness of dropstones delivered by debris-laden icebergs.
IN FOCUS: With landfills almost full, Indonesia grapples with ‘ticking time bomb’ of waste crisis
IN FOCUS: With landfills almost full, Indonesia grapples with ‘ticking time bomb’ of waste crisis Indonesia is counting on waste-to-energy plants to tackle its waste crisis, but experts say it’s no substitute for reducing trash at the source. With its sandy beaches and lush paddy fields, Bali has long been sold as Indonesia’s picture-perfect island paradise. But to locals, especially those living in southern Bali, their streets have been far from dreamy, with piles of trash filling up parts...
The 2025 hurricane season was devastating. Will 2026 be calmer?
The 2025 hurricane season was devastating. "There is still uncertainty in how each season will unfold," forecasters stress. There might have only been thirteen named storms for the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season, but it only takes one storm to devastate communities in its path.
Farmed oysters may boost New York's dwindling wild populations
Farmed oysters may boost New York's dwindling wild populations Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Andrew Zinin Lead Editor Farmed oysters are mixing with and potentially adding to populations of wild oysters—a once-abundant species in New York's estuaries and rivers that has declined drastically over the last century. A new study, published in the journal Molecular Ecology, offers genetic evidence and the first documented proof that farmed eastern oysters are adding to and breeding with wild...
The Blue-State Delusion Over Unions
What are public-sector unions for, exactly? What problem are they supposed to solve? That’s the question I found myself asking earlier this month, when the best-paid railroad workers in America went on strike for three days.To be clear, I get what the unions understand their purpose to be.
Zoned tourist vessel routes could curb invasive marine pests across Galápagos Islands
Zoned tourist vessel routes could curb invasive marine pests across Galápagos Islands Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor New research from Edith Cowan University (ECU) has identified a smarter, more effective way to protect fragile marine ecosystems from invasive species—an approach with global relevance for island regions around the world. The study, led by Professor Marnie Campbell, Executive Dean of ECU's School of Science, draws on her long-standing research in the...
Crystal Nights by Greg Egan
Publication history - Interzone #215, April 2008. - Free podcast at Transmissions From Beyond. [Site no longer active] - Oceanic (collection, Orion) -