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D.B. Cooper, the changing nature of hijackings and the foundation for today's airport security

  • Written by Janet Bednarek, Professor of History, University of Dayton
imageThe hijacking of U.S. aircraft – like the three hijacked in 1970 by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – made it impossible for American policymakers to ignore the threat.Bettmann/Getty Images

Though many Americans may associate airport security with 9/11, it was a wave of hijackings in the late 1960s and early 1970s...

Read more: D.B. Cooper, the changing nature of hijackings and the foundation for today's airport security

June jobs report suggests Fed could avoid a recession – but room for error is minuscule

  • Written by Christopher Decker, Professor of Economics, University of Nebraska Omaha
imageFed Chair Jerome Powell is hoping to orchestrate a very delicate dance. AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta

The U.S. economy added more jobs than expected in June, signaling the labor market remains strong even as the Federal Reserve tries to weaken it to tame inflation. The July 8, 2022, jobs report also showed the unemployment rate remained at a 70-year...

Read more: June jobs report suggests Fed could avoid a recession – but room for error is minuscule

NASA's head warned that China may try to claim the Moon – two space scholars explain why that's unlikely to happen

  • Written by Svetla Ben-Itzhak, Assistant Professor of Space and International Relations, Air University
imageChina and the U.S. both have big plans for the Moon, but there are a number of reasons why no country could actually claim ownership of any land there.3dScultor/iStock via Getty Images

NASA Administrator Bill Nelson recently expressed concerns over China’s aims in space, and in particular, that China would, in some way, claim ownership over...

Read more: NASA's head warned that China may try to claim the Moon – two space scholars explain why that's...

Cassidy Hutchinson and Greek tragedy show that courage is rare and cowardice more common

  • Written by Rachel Hadas, Professor of English, Rutgers University - Newark
imageCassidy Hutchinson is sworn in to testify before the House January 6th committee, on June 28, 2022.Andrew Harnik-Pool/Getty Images

Ever since former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson’s remarkable testimony in the recent January 6 committee hearing, I’ve been thinking – as I’m sure many people have – about courage....

Read more: Cassidy Hutchinson and Greek tragedy show that courage is rare and cowardice more common

Biopsies confirm a breast cancer diagnosis after an abnormal mammogram – but structural racism may lead to lengthy delays

  • Written by Marissa Lawson, Medical Fellow in Radiology, School of Medicine, University of Washington
imageBlack patients are more likely than other racial and ethnic groups to have a biopsy delay of 90 days or more after an abnormal mammogram.Yellow Dog Productions/The Image Bank via Getty Images

While mammograms are often the first step to detecting breast cancer, patients need additional tests after an abnormal screening result. Further imaging can...

Read more: Biopsies confirm a breast cancer diagnosis after an abnormal mammogram – but structural racism may...

Roe v. rap: Hip-hop artists have long wrestled with reproductive rights

  • Written by A.D. Carson, Assistant Professor of Hip-Hop, University of Virginia
imageRap songs about abortion are rife with raw emotion.Tashi-Delek / Getty Images

Hip-hop culture is often recognized as being born on Aug. 11, 1973. That was about seven months after Roe v. Wade, the landmark decision that protected the right to choose to have an abortion.

Accordingly, reproductive rights have long been part of the discourse in rap...

Read more: Roe v. rap: Hip-hop artists have long wrestled with reproductive rights

What is originalism? Did it underpin the Supreme Court's ruling on abortion and guns? Debunking the myths

  • Written by Ilan Wurman, Associate Professor of Law, Arizona State University
imageIs originalism now the dominant Supreme Court ideology?AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

Recent Supreme Court decisions overturning Roe v. Wade and expanding gun rights in the U.S. have led some legal experts to declare the “triumph of originalism.”

The court’s opinions do, in fact, reflect originalist methodology to an important extent....

Read more: What is originalism? Did it underpin the Supreme Court's ruling on abortion and guns? Debunking...

Cotton breeders are using genetic insights to make this global crop more sustainable

  • Written by Serina Taluja, Ph.D. Candidate in Genetics and Genomics, Texas A&M University
imageA cotton field in Lubbock, TexasAP Photo/LM Otero

Products derived from the cotton plant show up in many items that people use daily, including blue jeans, bedsheets, paper, candles and peanut butter. In the United States cotton is a US$7 billion annual crop grown in 17 states from Virginia to Southern California. Today, however, it’s at risk....

Read more: Cotton breeders are using genetic insights to make this global crop more sustainable

There is no one Islamic interpretation on ethics of abortion, but the belief in God's mercy and compassion is a crucial part of any consideration

  • Written by Zahra Ayubi, Associate Professor of Religion, Dartmouth College
imageIslamic ethics allow for many views on abortion, depending on what kind of scriptural sources are considered and by whom.SDI Productions/E+ via Getty Images

As a scholar of Islamic ethics, I’m often asked, “What does Islam say about abortion?” – a question that has become even more salient since the U.S. Supreme Court...

Read more: There is no one Islamic interpretation on ethics of abortion, but the belief in God's mercy and...

Boris Johnson's messy political legacy of lies, scandals and delivering Brexit to his base

  • Written by Garret Martin, Senior Professorial Lecturer, Co-Director Transatlantic Policy Center, American University School of International Service
imageWill Boris Johnson be back? The chances may be slim.Carl Court/Getty Images

Boris Johnson, the now outgoing prime minister of the United Kingdom, had wanted to follow in the footsteps of his idol Winston Churchill and be remembered as a leader of consequence. He aspired to greatness and desired to stay in office longer than the 11 years enjoyed by...

Read more: Boris Johnson's messy political legacy of lies, scandals and delivering Brexit to his base

More Articles ...

  1. Scapegoating rap hits new low after July Fourth mass shooting
  2. No, submitting junk data to period tracking apps won't protect reproductive privacy
  3. Gun reform finally passed Congress after almost three decades of failure – what changed?
  4. Access to reproductive health care has been harder for Black and brown women – overturning Roe made it harder
  5. The patriotic Virgin: How Mary's been marshaled for religious nationalism and military campaigns
  6. SEC's climate disclosure plan could be in trouble after a recent Supreme Court ruling, but a bigger question looms: Does disclosure work?
  7. From caravans to markets, the hajj pilgrimage has always included a commercial component
  8. How hot is too hot for the human body? Our lab found heat + humidity gets dangerous faster than many people realize
  9. How much for an amputation or checkup? It takes a complex formula and a committee of doctors to set the price for every possible health care procedure
  10. Abortion decision cherry-picks history – when the US Constitution was ratified, women had much more autonomy over abortion decisions than during 19th century
  11. What's behind the enduring popularity of crystals?
  12. Brain stimulation can rewire and heal damaged neural connections, but it isn't clear how – research suggests personalization may be key to more effective therapies
  13. Medical aid in dying is still called 'assisted suicide'; an anthropologist explains the problem with that
  14. Alaska on fire: Thousands of lightning strikes and a warming climate put Alaska on pace for another historic fire season
  15. White children are especially likely to be overdiagnosed and overtreated for ADHD, according to a new study
  16. Fred Gray, the 'chief counsel for the protest movement,' to get Medal of Freedom for his civil rights work
  17. How the tampon shortage is exacerbating period poverty in the US
  18. Democrats aim to design a presidential nomination process that gives everyone a voice – and produces a winning candidate
  19. Buying into conspiracy theories can be exciting – that’s what makes them dangerous
  20. Browser cookies make people more cautious online, study finds
  21. Climate change is making flooding worse: 3 reasons the world is seeing more record-breaking deluges
  22. Why do kids have to go to school?
  23. A window into the number of trans teens living in America
  24. Decades after Brown v. Board, US schools still struggle with segregation – 4 essential reads
  25. Your body has an internal clock that dictates when you eat, sleep and might have a heart attack – all based on time of day
  26. Poll reveals white Americans see an increase in discrimination against other white people and less against other racial groups
  27. Many anti-abortion activists before Roe were liberals who were inspired by 20th-century Catholic social teaching
  28. How 19th-century literature spread the archetype of the 'evil abortionist'
  29. What are bail funds? Two social policy experts explain
  30. The Supreme Court has curtailed EPA's power to regulate carbon pollution – and sent a warning to other regulators
  31. Supreme Court's 'Remain in Mexico' ruling puts immigration policy in the hands of voters – as long as elected presidents follow the rules
  32. Abortion benefits: Companies have a simple and legal way to help their workers living in anti-abortion states – expand paid time off
  33. Viruses can change your scent to make you more attractive to mosquitoes, new research in mice finds
  34. Winning the Tour de France requires subtle physics, young muscles and an obscene amount of calories – 3 essential reads
  35. Kremlin tightens control over Russians' online lives – threatening domestic freedoms and the global internet
  36. When does the fetus acquire a moral status of a human being? The philosophy of 'gradualism' can provide answers
  37. A water strategy for the parched West: Have cities pay farmers to install more efficient irrigation systems
  38. People vary a lot in how well they recognize, match or categorize the things they see – researchers attribute this skill to an ability they call 'o'
  39. Racial wealth gaps are yet another thing the US and UK have in common
  40. The Supreme Court has overturned precedent dozens of times, including striking down legal segregation and reversing Roe
  41. More states will now limit abortion, but they have long used laws to govern – and sometimes jail – pregnant women
  42. Jan. 6 hearings highlight problems with certification of presidential elections and potential ways to fix them
  43. Let's spare a few words for 'Silent Cal' Coolidge on July 4, his 150th birthday
  44. WNBA star Brittney Griner's release still uncertain as her trial begins in a Russian court
  45. Climate change is putting food safety at risk more often, and not just at picnics and parties
  46. Putin’s propaganda is rooted in Russian history – and that's why it works
  47. 5 drawbacks to following your passion
  48. Russia's antisemitism aimed at Ukraine's Zelenskyy is just the Kremlin variant of a very old European virus
  49. American gun culture is based on frontier mythology – but ignores how common gun restrictions were in the Old West
  50. The FDA and Juul are fighting over a vape ban, but the role of e-cigarettes in the world of tobacco abuse is not clear-cut