To keep their seasons alive, college teams in New Mexico have set up camps in nearby states to avoid local COVID-19 health orders.
Author: Brent Schrotenboer, USA TODAY
Why do Black college football coaches seldom get second chances?
Plenty of white coaches get recycled in college football, but only four Black head coaches in history have been rehired in the Power Five conferences.
Contracts show Ole Miss on the hook to pay four defensive coordinators this year
Recent firings have been costly for the Ole Miss football team, with no guarantee of future improvement on the field
Ex-Auburn coach Tommy Tuberville’s race for US Senate seat short on substance, insiders say
Tommy Tuberville had been known as a media-friendly, telegenic talker in college football, but that’s changed now that he’s running for Senate.
Is college football rolling the COVID-19 dice with scattershot mask enforcement for fans?
Texas A&M is the latest to struggle with unmasked college football fans in crowds at stadiums during the pandemic.
Berkeley, California, bans candy, junk food at grocery checkouts
The Berkeley, Calif., ordinance requiring stores over 2,500 square feet to sell more nutritious food and beverage options in their checkout areas.
The price of gold
Why do we turn to 🥇?
Vitamin C by IV and an FBI raid. How hope, rather than proof, sent the antioxidant’s sales soaring during COVID-19.
Vitamin C has become the subject of faith, controversy and even frequent government crackdowns amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Rising sales
Americans 💖 boxed 🍷
Stem cell companies sell hope with unproven medicine for COVID-19 and other incurable diseases
Stem cells have great potential for medicine, but some businesses just can’t wait to cash in and are offering more dubious claims about treatments