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Acorns, inequality, and Equifax

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daily@jstor.org

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Thu, Sep 21, 2017 06:40 PM

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Plus: packrats : In 1918, a few lines by a Hungarian desk clerk spurred a revolution that helped end

Plus: packrats [] To ensure delivery of your JSTOR Daily please add daily@jstor.org to your address book. [] Weekly digest [WEB VERSION](4378/ct0_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] [CAN THE ACORN CROP PREDICT LYME DISEASE?](4378/ct1_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] [CAN THE ACORN CROP PREDICT LYME DISEASE?](4378/ct1_1/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] BY KRISTEN FRENCH [] Some researchers posit that a bumper crop of acorns may boost the population of tick hosts, culminating in tick and Lyme disease spikes two years later. Since the year 2015 was an acorn cornucopia, the year 2017 was professed to be a tick-a-geddon. How have we fared? Scientists weigh in. [] [Read more](4378/ct1_2/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] [] [world war two vets](4378/ct2_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] [THE INEQUALITY HIDDEN WITHIN THE RACE-NEUTRAL G.I. BILL](4378/ct2_1/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] BY SHANNON LUDERS-MANUEL [] A much-heralded piece of legislation for veterans returning from World War II didn’t serve all equally. [] [] [consumer credit agencies](4378/ct3_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] [HOW CREDIT REPORTING AGENCIES BECAME SO POWERFUL](4378/ct3_1/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] BY LIVIA GERSHON [] The recent Equifax hack has some people wondering: why do large, private companies have access to our credit scores, anyway? [] [] [packrat climate change](4378/ct4_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] [PACKRAT POWER](4378/ct4_1/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] BY MATTHEW WILLS [] Scientists are studying the nests of ancient packrats for clues about the climate. [] [] SPONSORED [] [Policy Ed](4378/ct5_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] [] [narratively war poem](4378/ct6_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] [FIVE STIRRING STANZAS THAT PROVED A POEM CAN HELP END A WAR](4378/ct6_1/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] BY STEPHANIE NEWMAN [] From [Narratively](4378/ct6_2/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa): In 1918, a few lines by a Hungarian desk clerk spurred a revolution that helped end the Great War. Her words still ring true today. [] [] [What we're reading around the web](4378/ct7_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] [WHAT WE'RE READING AROUND THE WEB](4378/ct7_1/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] BY THE EDITORS [] JSTOR Daily editors select stories that bridge the gap between news and scholarship. This week's picks cover Lovecraft's legacy, hurricane refugees, and AI gaydar. [] []  PS: Get more JSTOR Daily stories sent to your inbox on Wednesdays, sign up for our Sustainability & the Environment Newsletter. [Put Earth first: sign up to receive our latest stories about sustainability and the environment.](4378/ct8_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) [] [] Contact Us 2 Rector Street, New York, NY 10006, USA [daily.jstor.org](4378/ct9_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) | daily@jstor.org | [@JSTOR_Daily](4378/ct10_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) | [Facebook](4378/ct11_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) | [Tumblr](4378/ct12_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa) ©2000-2017 ITHAKA. All Rights Reserved. JSTOR®, the JSTOR logo, and ITHAKA® are registered trademarks of ITHAKA. Interested in advertising with JSTOR Daily? [Contact us](4378/ct13_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa). If you prefer not to receive email messages from JSTOR Daily in the future, you may [unsubscribe here](4378/ct14_0/1?sid=TV2%3AOkC7L8ipa).

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