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National Geographic

Lecturer Franco Rossi is spotlighted by National Geographic reporter Taylor Mitchell Brown for deciphering the name of ancient Maya mathematician, Sak Tahn Waax, or “White-Chested Fox,” found inscribed in the mural room at the Maya site of Xultún in Guatemala. “You can look at some of these texts forever, and it won't click,” says Rossi. “Then, one day you see it, and it just clicks.” 

Science/AAAS

In a Science article by reporter Laura Martín Agudelo, Lecturer Franco Rossi delves into the discovery of the autograph of the ancient Maya mathematician, Sak Tahn Waax, or “White-Chested Fox” in Xultun, Guatemala. “[T]here’s good evidence for codex book production [at Xultun],” says Rossi. “So if there’s going to be a name … this would be the most logical place.” 

Scientific American

Scientific American’s Joseph Howlett highlights how Lecturer Franco Rossi helped discover the name of ancient Maya mathematician, Sak Tahn Waax, or “White-Chested Fox,” which was inscribed in a 1,000-year-old chamber beneath Guatemala. “Rossi showed how the markings on a particular scrap of plaster could be seen as a sort of celestial chronology; the team then reconstructed how the scraps’ symbols tabulated the time it took for planets such as Mars and Venus to come back to the same position, relative to the sun,” writes Howlett.  

Scientific American

To explain the longevity of a 1,900-year-old latrine, Scientific American’s Sam Macdonald highlights a study by Prof. Admir Masic that found the bright white chunks, or lime clasts, in Roman concrete may help preserve ancient structures. Masic explains that the findings strengthen “the idea that carbonates are more dynamic in these systems and play a fundamental role, not a marginal one.”  

Financial Times

Prof. Thomas Levenson speaks with Financial Times’ “The Story of Money” podcast hosts, Gillian Tett and Robin Wigglesworth, about his book, Money for Nothing: The South Sea Bubble and the Invention of Modern Capitalism and how the South Sea Bubble, the 1720 stock market crash surrounding the British South Sea Company, compares to the current political climate. “One of the things about the South Sea Bubble itself is it’s almost always told as a morality tale: look at what greed does for you. It drives you mad, it ruins nations,” says Levenson. 

New York Times

For The New York Times Magazine’s interactive project “The Revolution Through the Eyes of Seven Everyday Founders” Adjunct Prof. Marjoleine Kars tells the story of Baptist preacher John Leland who championed religious freedom and the separation of church and state through the 18th century New Lights movement. “Leland proclaimed that all should be free to worship ‘either one God, three Gods, no God, or twenty Gods,’" says Kars. “It was precisely such convictions about spiritual independence that led Leland to yoke his pulpit to political activism.”

The New York Times

New York Times reporter Holly Bass spotlights Prof. Joshua Bennett’s newest works, “We (The People of the United States)” and “The People Can Fly.” Bennett’s “texts remind us there is power in the collective body of a people and their culture,” writes Bass. “There is power in pressing on in the face of obstacles and opposition.” 

Smithsonian Magazine

While excavating “a small room inside a lavish home in ancient Pompeii,” researchers from MIT found the walls were covered with Egyptian blue paint, a bright blue pigment estimated to “have cost more than half the annual salary of a Roman foot solider,” reports Sonja Anderson for Smithsonian Magazine.  

NPR

Florencia Pierri, associate curator of Science and Technology at the MIT Museum, speaks with NPR’s All Things Considered host Andrea Shea about the 150th anniversary of the world’s first telephone call. Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor of the telephone, “didn’t set out to create a telephone,” explains Pierri. “He set out to create a better telegraph. But still had this idea of, like, ‘wouldn’t it be cool if I could talk to somebody, even if I wasn’t right there in the room with them?’”

The Times

Researchers from MIT and other institutions uncovered the use of a “prized synthetic pigment imported from ancient Egypt” that was used to paint the walls of a home in ancient Pompeii, reports James Imam for The Times. “The quality of the decoration is unbelievable… It’s very rare, even unique, to find a completely blue sacrarium,” says Prof. Admir Masic. “These owners were really very, very wealthy.” 

The Boston Globe

In a letter to The Boston Globe, Prof. Emeritus Robert B. McKersie spotlights Jesse Jackson’s legacy as a “brilliant and visionary leader.” Jackson’s program, Operation Bread Basket, “was a brilliant concept of using Black patronage of the stores as leverage to help wax companies, banks, and many others expand their businesses,” writes McKersie. “I served on the ‘attunement’ committee that ensured that the businesses lined up with the philosophy of Operation Bread Basket and were willing to share some of the proceeds from expanded business with Jackson and his organization.”  

NPR

Prof. Joshua Bennett speaks with NPR host Michel Martin about his new book “The People Can Fly: American Promise, Black Prodigies, and the Greatest Miracle of All Time.” The book “weaves together folklore, history and memoir to sort through what it means to be a prodigy, especially a Black prodigy,” explains Martin. Bennett cites fatherhood and his mother’s ideals as his inspiration for the book: “In becoming a father who's raising my children in a very different context in suburban Massachusetts and not in the Bronx and in South Yonkers and having very different experiences than my parents did… I just started to think, what's the full breadth of what I've inherited around this idea of what it means to pursue an education? And that's really what inspired it.” 

The Boston Globe

Prof. Karilyn Crockett speaks with Boston Globe reporters Niki Griswold and Janelle Nanos about the city of Boston’s plans for economic development. “This is a moment to continue this focus and commitment and double down on it.” 

VICE

While studying a 2,000-year-old construction site in Pompeii, MIT researchers uncovered new insights into the Roman building process, including the key ingredients needed to develop long-standing durable Roman concrete, reports Luis Prada for Vice. “Ancient Roman builders were ‘hot-mixing,’ which means that they dumped volcanic ash and powdered quicklime together dry, then added water later, triggering a chemical reaction that cooked the mixture from the inside,” writes Prada. 

Smithsonian Magazine

A new paper by Prof. Admir Masic and his colleagues details their new findings on the specific ingredients used by ancient Romans to develop durable concrete, reports Sarah Kuta for Smithsonian Magazine. “Looking ahead, the findings could help improve modern construction techniques, informing the development of next-generation durable, low-carbon concrete,” writes Kuta.