Tag Archives: February 2022
Morning News: Russia & Ukraine Media, EU-Africa Summit, South Korea
We take a look at how Russian media outlets are portraying the Ukraine crisis. Plus: the EU-African Union summit kicks off in Brussels, South Korea’s forthcoming presidential elections and the latest urbanism stories.
Front Page View: The New York Times – February 17
Preview: New Scientist Magazine – February 19

COVER STORIES
- FEATURESWhy everything you thought you knew about posture is wrong
- FEATURESHybrid AI: A new way to make machine minds that really think like us
- FEATURESCould ancient viruses from melting permafrost cause the next pandemic?
- NEWSDoing yoga at least once a week may help to lower blood pressure
- NEWSFusion energy record suggests we really could build artificial suns
Preview: Times Literary Supplement – February 18
In this week’s TLS
Julian Evans’s TLS cover review looks at writing inspired by another quarrel between people of whom we need to know much more – in Ukraine and its Donbas region
By Martin Ivens
Showcase
European politics|Book Review
Shards of language
Dispatches from the Donbas
By Julian Evans
European literature|Book Review
A fairy tale, but with strings attached
The crossover appeal of a world-famous puppet
British literature|Book Review
Inheritors of the cult
Why we’re still obsessed with Shakespeare
Biography|Book Review
On the way somewhere
New perspectives on a troubled celebrity chef
Science: Tonga Volcanic Eruption, Roaming Genes Of Reindeers, Pterosaurs
Scientists scramble to understand the devastating Tongan volcano eruption, and modelling how societal changes might alter carbon emissions.
In this episode:
00:46 Understanding the Tongan eruption
On the 15th of January, a volcano in the South Pacific Ocean erupted, sending ash into the upper atmosphere, and unleashing a devastating tsunami that destroyed homes on Tonga’s nearby islands. Now scientists are trying to work out exactly what happened during the eruption — and what it means for future volcanic risks.
News Feature: Why the Tongan eruption will go down in the history of volcanology
08:49 Research Highlights
The genes associated with reindeers’ roaming behaviour, and how fossilised puke has thrown up new insights into pterosaurs’ stomachs.
Research Highlight: A reindeer’s yearning to travel can be read in its genes
Research Highlight: Petrified puke shows that ancient winged reptiles purged
11:29 Modelling societal changes to carbon emissions
A team of researchers have modelled what humans might do in the face of climate change, and looked at how societal, political and technological changes could alter future emissions.
Research article: Moore et al.
18:12 Briefing Chat
We discuss some highlights from the Nature Briefing. This time, China alters its guidelines for gene-edited crops, and how Guinea worm infections have been driven down from millions of cases a year to just 14.
Nature News: China’s approval of gene-edited crops energizes researchers
Nature News: Just 14 cases: Guinea worm disease nears eradication
Previews: The Guardian Weekly – February 18
The spectre of war loomed over Europe this week as western allies began evacuating diplomats and citizens from Ukraine in the face of the massed Russian troops on its borders. Andrew Roth, Simon Tisdall and Julian Borger report for our big story this week, as the world waited anxiously to find out how far Vladimir Putin is prepared to go to achieve his goals.
When the Taliban took over Afghanistan last year, many feared the worst for the educational prospects of girls and women under an ultra-hardline Islamist regime. Yet remarkably, as Emma Graham-Harrison and Jordan Bryon report, some brave women have fought successfully for their right to continue to study.
In Opinion, the Observer’s Will Hutton argues against the decision to lift all Covid restrictions in England (and find out what scientists around the world think in Spotlight). Guardian Australia columnist Van Badham exposes the fakery of the global “freedom movement”, while Arthur Turrell celebrates what could be a breakthrough moment for nuclear fusion and energy production.
Morning News: Tunisia Politics, Brazil Art Scene, Bangkok Street Food
Last summer President Kais Saied nobbled the legislature; now he has abolished the judiciary. We ask where the country is headed, and why there is so little protest.
Brazil’s modern-art scene, born a century ago this week, flourished despite rocky politics—but the current president has a chokehold on it. And the Thai army’s quixotic mission to evict Bangkok’s legendary street-food hawkers.
Front Page: Wall Street Journal – February 16
New Books: ‘Otherlands’ By Thomas Halliday (2022)

