Wednesday - June 10, 2026
Journals Political Newsletter for Saturday April 11, 2026 ( 4 items )  

DSCC Friday Takeaways: Senate GOP's Corruption Caucus, DC Dan Balling Out, and Rogers' Reality Check
WASHINGTON, April 11 -- The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee posted the following news release: * * * DSCC Friday Takeaways: Senate GOP's Corruption Caucus, DC Dan Balling Out, and Rogers' Reality Check TGIF. Welcome back to Friday Takeaways from the DSCC - your weekly update from the DSCC Press Team on what you need to know across the Senate battlegrounds. There are 206 days until the midterms. DROP US A LINE: press@dscc.org. REPUBLICANS SWEAT THE MAP: New reporting from Bloomberg a  more

Reves Center announces 2026 International Student Achievement Awards
WILLIAMSBURG, Virginia, April 10 -- William and Mary issued the following news: * * * Reves Center announces 2026 International Student Achievement Awards * The following story originally appeared on the website for the Reves Center for International Studies. - Ed. The Reves Center for International Studies at William & Mary has announced the 2026 International Student Achievement Award recipients: * Abhishek Dhanraj, Graduate Student (India) * Ima Hosseinzadeh, Graduate Student (Ira  more

The two faces of extremism: Why some people support intergroup violence
COPENHAGEN, Denmark, April 10 -- The University of Copenhagen posted the following news: * * * The two faces of extremism: Why some people support intergroup violence * Violent extremism is driven by two fundamentally different motivations: Defensive extremism aims to protect a group from perceived threats, whilst offensive extremism seeks to establish group dominance and expand influence. This is shown by a new study published in the journal PNAS. Violence to protect - or to dominate   more

University of Montreal: Building Fit for a Council, Not a King
MONTREAL, Quebec, April 10 (TNSjou) -- The University of Montreal issued the following news: * * * A building fit for a council, not a king Digging at the ancient Mayan city of Ucanal, in Guatemala, Christina Halperin finds evidence of a new kind of political architecture that reflect a shift away from divine rule over 1,000 years ago. By Jeff Heinrich To understand the political landscape, look at the architecture: that's what Universite de Montreal anthropology professor set out to do on  more