Stories that other journalists have written can be a rich source of information. Search the major national newspapers to find similar topics, or smaller, local papers.
The library has many databases for current news. Here's a page created by the librarians that lists many of those resources: Databases: News
This multi-disciplinary database has records for nearly 18,000 periodicals - journals, magazines, and newspapers - of which nearly 16,000 are peer reviewed. It provides full text for more than 5,000 journals, and you can use Journal Finder to locate articles that do not have a PDF readily available.
This multi-disciplinary database has records for nearly 18,000 periodicals - journals, magazines, and newspapers - of which nearly 16,000 are peer reviewed. It provides full text for more than 5,000 journals, and you can use Journal Finder to locate articles that do not have a PDF readily available.
You can make your point stronger using statistics. The US government tracks statistics on almost everything we do! Try these:
Use truncation to save time: statistic* will retrieve statistic, statistics, statistical, statistically, etc.