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Senators' silence suggests they may be taking their impeachment trial duty seriously

  • Written by Lynne H. Rambo, Professor of Law, Texas A&M University
Sen. Susan Collins is among the senators who have chosen to stay quiet about impeachment so far.AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Several Republican senators have taken a “vow of silence” on the impeachment inquiry in the House of Representatives.

Maine Senator Susan Collins has described her position this way: “I am very likely to be a...

Read more: Senators' silence suggests they may be taking their impeachment trial duty seriously

The battle between NBC and CBS to be the first to film a Berlin Wall tunnel escape

  • Written by Mike Conway, Associate Professor of Journalism, Indiana University
NBC Berlin correspondent Piers Anderton inside the tunnel during the network's 1962 escape project.Special Collections & University Archives, University of Maryland, Author provided

When the Berlin Wall was completed in August 1961, East German residents immediately tried to figure out ways to circumvent the barrier and escape into West Berlin.

B...

Read more: The battle between NBC and CBS to be the first to film a Berlin Wall tunnel escape

E-bikes are coming to federally owned trails: 4 questions answered

  • Written by John Freemuth, Cecil D. Andrus Endowed Chair for Environment and Public Lands and University Distinguished Professor, Boise State University
A cyclist in San Bernadino National Forest, where e-bikes were previously banned.AP/Brian Melley

Editor’s note: In August, Interior Secretary David Bernhardt announced an order stating that electric bicycles will be allowed on all trails on federally owned land where normal bikes can ride. The move has led to some confusion and controversy,...

Read more: E-bikes are coming to federally owned trails: 4 questions answered

Apple, Disney and Netflix's streaming battle isn't winner-take-all

  • Written by Amanda Lotz, Professor of Media Studies, Queensland University of Technology
Apple TV Plus has focused on recruiting big names for its shows. AP Photo/Tony Avelar

With the recent launch of Apple TV Plus and the imminent arrival of Disney Plus, the video landscape has never looked so competitive.

These services join a crowded marketplace of subscription streaming services that includes Netflix, Hulu and Amazon Prime Video...

Read more: Apple, Disney and Netflix's streaming battle isn't winner-take-all

WTF? Slurs offend young adults more than swearing

  • Written by Benjamin Bergen, Professor of Cognitive Science; Director of the Language and Cognition Lab, University of California San Diego
Lizzo's hit songs include a lot of profanity.Photo by Brent N. Clarke/Invision/AP)

In 1972, the comedian George Carlin performed a comedy routine in which he listed the seven words you couldn’t say on television. He opined that profanity related to sexual activities, body parts and bodily functions wasn’t inherently good or bad. All...

Read more: WTF? Slurs offend young adults more than swearing

World's deadliest inventor: Mikhail Kalashnikov and his AK-47

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
The inventor with his eponymous weapon.AP Photo/Vladimir Vyatkin

What is the deadliest weapon of the 20th century?

Perhaps you think first of the atomic bomb, estimated to have killed as many as 200,000 people when the United States dropped two on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.

But another weapon is responsible for far more...

Read more: World's deadliest inventor: Mikhail Kalashnikov and his AK-47

He was Trump before Trump: VP Spiro Agnew attacked the news media 50 years ago

  • Written by Thomas Alan Schwartz, Professor of History, Vanderbilt University
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew on Aug. 8, 1973 at a Washington news conference.AP/file

Americans witnessed an unprecedented event 50 years ago: live television coverage on all three national networks of a speech by the vice president of the United States.

Speeches by vice presidents never received such attention. But the address on Nov. 13, 1969, by...

Read more: He was Trump before Trump: VP Spiro Agnew attacked the news media 50 years ago

The forgotten mass destruction of Jewish homes during 'Kristallnacht'

  • Written by Wolf Gruner, Shapell-Guerin Chair in Jewish Studies and Professor of History; Founding Director, USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
A looted Jewish shop in Aachen, Germany on the day after Kristallnacht, Nov. 10, 1938.Wolf Gruner and Armin Nolzen (eds.). 'Bürokratien: Initiative und Effizienz,' Berlin, 2001., Author provided

Every November, communities around the world hold remembrances on the anniversary of the Nazis’ brutal assault on the Jews during...

Read more: The forgotten mass destruction of Jewish homes during 'Kristallnacht'

Emperor Penguins could march to extinction if nations fail to halt climate change

  • Written by Stephanie Jenouvrier, Associate Scientist, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Emperor Penguin in Antarctica. Stephanie Jenouvrier, CC BY-ND

The concept of a canary in a coal mine – a sensitive species that provides an alert to danger – originated with British miners, who carried actual canaries underground through the mid-1980s to detect the presence of deadly carbon monoxide gas. Today another bird, the Emperor...

Read more: Emperor Penguins could march to extinction if nations fail to halt climate change

Here's why colleges are being forced to close their doors - and what they can do to stay open

  • Written by Robert Massa, Adjunct Professor, Rossier School of Education, USC, University of Southern California
Marlboro College plans to close its Vermont campus after the 2019-2020 school year and move its programs to Emerson College in Boston.Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-NC-SA

When Cincinnati Christian University became aware of its declining enrollment and dwindling tuition revenue in 2015, the university made a “series of bold bets” to stay...

Read more: Here's why colleges are being forced to close their doors - and what they can do to stay open

More Articles ...

  1. Salad bars and water systems are easy targets for bioterrorists -- and America's monitoring system is woefully inadequate
  2. Soft robots of the future may depend on new materials that conduct electricity, sense damage and self-heal
  3. How Pete Buttigieg is reviving the pragmatic, progressive ideals of the Social Gospel movement
  4. Inequality is higher in some states like New York and Louisiana because of corporate welfare
  5. How do we know when a species at risk has recovered? It's not just a matter of numbers
  6. Mormons in Mexico: A brief history of polygamy, cartel violence and faith
  7. Revenge porn is sexual violence, not millennial negligence
  8. Peace advocates have long been found among veterans who fought in America's wars
  9. Making life-or-death decisions is very hard – here's how we've taught people to do it better
  10. Plague was around for millennia before epidemics took hold – and the way people lived might be what protected them
  11. Why there is no Kurdish nation
  12. Anti-Semitism in the US today is a variation on an old theme
  13. Evangelicals in Brazil see abuse of God's earth as a sin – but will they fight to save the Amazon?
  14. Many states now require anti-bullying training that includes a focus on LGBTQ students - but risks remain
  15. To solve the hidden epidemic of teen hunger, we should listen to teens who experience it
  16. Battlefields around the world are finding new purpose as parks and refuges
  17. Health care workers wanted: A veteran needs you to work at a VA hospital
  18. Before you decide to work in college, ask yourself these questions
  19. Curious Kids: What is a whistleblower?
  20. American youth don't know much about the juvenile justice system
  21. NASA's TESS spacecraft is finding hundreds of exoplanets – and is poised to find thousands more
  22. Does the Civil Rights Act protect LGBT workers? The Supreme Court is about to decide
  23. Why Joe Biden was denied communion at a church
  24. California is living America's dystopian future
  25. Homicide is declining around the world – but why?
  26. 3 reasons Midwest farmers hurt by the U.S.-China trade war still support Trump
  27. As the coal industry shrinks, miners deserve a just transition – here's what it should include
  28. World Vision tinkers with its 70-year-old child sponsorship model
  29. Curious Kids: Why do feet stink by the end of the day?
  30. Mississippi governor's race taking place under Jim Crow-era rules after judge refuses to block them
  31. 'Joker' fans flocking to a Bronx stairway highlights tension of media tourism
  32. DeVos' formula for success: Trash public schools and push privatization
  33. Yes, the research confirms: Managers shouldn't sleep with subordinates
  34. California wildfires signal the arrival of a planetary fire age
  35. McDonald's fired its CEO for sleeping with an employee – research shows why even consensual office romances can be a problem
  36. Why doesn't the US just send Anne Sacoolas back to the UK? Here's what's at stake in this dispute over diplomatic immunity
  37. Don't make intimate violence victims look for help -- research shows they fare better when police and community organizations coordinate assistance
  38. What really causes home field advantage – and why it's on the decline
  39. Cada vez más universidades en EEUU rechazan los examenes estandarizados para admitir alumnos
  40. Website privacy options aren't much of a choice since they're hard to find and use
  41. Curious Kids: Why does pizza taste so good?
  42. Will the NCAA's move to let college athletes get paid endorsements make a difference? 3 questions answered
  43. Monsanto wins $7.7b lawsuit in Brazil – but farmers' fight to stop its ‘amoral’ royalty system will continue
  44. How much of a difference does the number of kids in a classroom make?
  45. Impeachment resolution: 3 reasons the House voted even though the Constitution doesn't require it
  46. Could Congress reverse Trump's decision to pull troops out of Syria?
  47. Why the Fed has no choice but to keep cutting interest rates – if it wants to avoid a financial crisis
  48. What a boycott that never happened can reveal about blame, consumer psychology and the free-market system
  49. Super-soldier T-cells fight cancer better after a transformational DNA delivery
  50. Meditation apps might calm you -- but miss the point of Buddhist mindfulness