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Statesman, strongman, philosopher, autocrat: China's Xi is a man who contains multitudes

  • Written by Jeffrey Wasserstrom, Professor of Chinese and World History, University of California, Irvine
Chinese President Xi Jinping on his way to take the oath of office on March 17, 2018 after being formally re-elected to a second term, with no limit on the number of terms he can serve. AP Photo/Andy Wong

What kind of leader is Xi Jinping, who became general secretary of China’s Communist Party in November 2012 and China’s president in...

Read more: Statesman, strongman, philosopher, autocrat: China's Xi is a man who contains multitudes

Trump's military policy overlooks data on why transgender troops are fit to serve

  • Written by Brandon Hill, Executive Director of the Center for Interdisciplinary Inquiry and Innovation in Sexual and Reproductive Health, University of Chicago
Transgender U.S. Army Capt. Jennifer Sims lifts her uniform. AP Photo/Matthias Schrader

The Trump administration released a memorandum on March 23 that imposes limits on transgender troops and excludes transgender people from enlistment in the U.S. military.

The policy states that individuals with a history of “gender dysphoria” are now...

Read more: Trump's military policy overlooks data on why transgender troops are fit to serve

Why prime numbers still fascinate mathematicians, 2,300 years later

  • Written by Martin H. Weissman, Associate Professor of Mathematics, University of California, Santa Cruz
Primes still have the power to surprise. Chris-LiveLoveClick/shutterstock.com

On March 20, American-Canadian mathematician Robert Langlands received the Abel Prize, celebrating lifetime achievement in mathematics. Langlands’ research demonstrated how concepts from geometry, algebra and analysis could be brought together by a common link to...

Read more: Why prime numbers still fascinate mathematicians, 2,300 years later

Fabiano Caruana is poised to do what no American has done since Bobby Fischer. Here's the path he took to get there

  • Written by Daaim Shabazz, Associate Professor of International Business, Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University
U.S. chess grandmaster Fabiano Caruana is set to vie for the world title.Soeren Stache/dpa via AP

Whenever a glimmer of chess talent is spotted in the United States, people often ask: “Is this the next Bobby Fischer?”

In the early 2000s, a diminutive, bespectacled young boy – who by age 9 was already battling seasoned competitors...

Read more: Fabiano Caruana is poised to do what no American has done since Bobby Fischer. Here's the path he...

Colleges must confront sexual assault and sexual harassment head on

  • Written by Tricia Serio, Dean of the College of Natural Sciences, Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Sexual assault and harassment are prevalent at U.S. colleges and universities.Jason Salmon from www.shutterstock.com

In the past month the National Science Foundation and a bipartisan group of U.S. senators both introduced measures that would require higher education leaders to review and report cases of sexual assault and harassment on their...

Read more: Colleges must confront sexual assault and sexual harassment head on

FDR's forest army: How the New Deal helped seed the modern environmental movement 85 years ago

  • Written by Benjamin Alexander, Lecturer in social science, New York City College of Technology, City University of New York
Bridge built by CCC workers, Shady Lake Recreation Area, Arkansas.Jerry Turner, CC BY-SA

Eighty-five years ago, on April 5, 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed an executive order allocating US$10 million for “Emergency Conservation Work.” This step launched one of the New Deal’s signature relief programs: the Civilian...

Read more: FDR's forest army: How the New Deal helped seed the modern environmental movement 85 years ago

MLK's vision matters today for the 43 million Americans living in poverty

  • Written by Joshua F.J. Inwood, Associate Professor of Geography Senior Research Associate in the Rock Ethics Institute, Pennsylvania State University
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. displays the poster to be used during his Poor People's Campaign in 1968.AP Photo/Horace Cort

On April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in Memphis, while fighting for a 10-cent wage increase for garbage workers. These efforts by King were part of a broader and more sustained initiative known as the Poor...

Read more: MLK's vision matters today for the 43 million Americans living in poverty

'Oklahoma!' at 75: Has the musical withstood the test of time?

  • Written by Ryan Raul Bañagale, Crown Family Professor for Innovation in the Arts, Colorado College
After opening in 1943, “Oklahoma!” was an instant hit and had a run of over 2,000 performances.Charles Lucas/AP Photo

Musicals have long depicted utopian worlds, offering an escape for audiences, if only for a few hours. When Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein’s “Oklahoma!” premiered in March 1943, the musical was a...

Read more: 'Oklahoma!' at 75: Has the musical withstood the test of time?

Martin Luther King Jr. had a much more radical message than a dream of racial brotherhood

  • Written by Paul Harvey, Professor of American History, University of Colorado
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. addresses marchers during his 'I Have a Dream' speech at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington.AP Photo

Martin Luther King Jr. has come to be revered as a hero who led a nonviolent struggle to reform and redeem the United States. His birthday is celebrated as a national holiday. Tributes are paid to him on his death...

Read more: Martin Luther King Jr. had a much more radical message than a dream of racial brotherhood

How Cambridge Analytica’s Facebook targeting model really worked – according to the person who built it

  • Written by Matthew Hindman, Associate Professor of Media and Public Affairs, George Washington University
How accurately can you be profiled online?Andrew Krasovitckii/Shutterstock.com

The researcher whose work is at the center of the Facebook-Cambridge Analytica data analysis and political advertising uproar has revealed that his method worked much like the one Netflix uses to recommend movies.

In an email to me, Cambridge University scholar Aleksandr...

Read more: How Cambridge Analytica’s Facebook targeting model really worked – according to the person who...

More Articles ...

  1. These are the VA's 3 main problems -- leadership isn't one of them
  2. Cuba's new president: What to expect
  3. Military mission in Puerto Rico after hurricane was better than critics say but suffered flaws
  4. Langston Hughes' hidden influence on MLK
  5. This 'Final Four' takes place over the board – with talent from around the world
  6. Much of what you think you know about Linda Brown – a central figure in Brown v. Board of Education – is wrong
  7. The invisible power of 'flutter' – from plane crashes to snoring to free energy
  8. How Texas is 'building back better' from Hurricane Harvey
  9. A VA hospital you may not know: the Final Salute, and how much we doctors care
  10. Is the growing Russia crisis another Cold War conflict? Nyet
  11. Why you stink at fact-checking
  12. Discovery of a surprise multitasking gene helps explain how new functions and features evolve
  13. Bobbleheads and other free swag star in baseball tax dispute
  14. Why are more people doing gig work? They like it
  15. 4 charts show why Trump's tariffs will hurt everyone – not just China
  16. Why EPA's U-turn on auto efficiency rules gives China the upper hand
  17. Federal spending bill deals blow to school safety research
  18. Improving the lives of those with dementia – by using memories of baseball
  19. Space weather threatens high-tech life
  20. Democracy is in danger when the census undercounts vulnerable populations
  21. How to stay honest this tax season
  22. Busting Russia's fake news the European Union way
  23. Baseball teams need to protect fans from foul balls -- and US courts need to lift MLB's special liability exemption
  24. Abusive relationships: Why it's so hard for women to 'just leave'
  25. Active shooter drills may reshape how a generation of students views school
  26. Hospitals hit back on drug pricing, but will they knock out the problem?
  27. Pakistan's activist Supreme Court endangers a fragile democracy
  28. Baby bust: 5 charts show how expensive it is to have kids in the US today
  29. Why it's so hard to #DeleteFacebook: Constant psychological boosts keep you hooked
  30. The tragic story of America's only native parrot, now extinct for 100 years
  31. Trump plan to execute 'big drug pushers' will do nothing to stop opioid overdoses
  32. Who is John Bolton and what does he want?
  33. Trump's go-it-alone approach to China trade ignores WTO's better way to win
  34. What the staff does matters more than what's in an organization's mission statement
  35. Kids' fitness is improving, but they still aren't as fit as their parents were
  36. Babe Ruth in a kimono: How baseball diplomacy has fortified Japan-US relations
  37. Congress left a little something for waiters and dishwashers in its $1.3 trillion budget
  38. The countries that trust Facebook the most are also the most vulnerable to its mistakes
  39. The everyday ethical challenges of self-driving cars
  40. Culture of trust is key for school safety
  41. Self-driving cars can't be perfectly safe – what's good enough? 3 questions answered
  42. Los 'juegos' políticos con el agua del que son víctimas los mexicanos
  43. A return to earmarks could grease the wheels in Congress
  44. Betsy DeVos said Common Core was 'dead' – it's not
  45. New federal program tackles spiraling costs of college textbooks
  46. Do you believe in miracles? Why they make perfect sense for many
  47. The ideal female body type is getting even harder to attain
  48. Fewer diplomats, more armed force defines US leadership today
  49. Trump's $60 billion in China tariffs will create more problems than they solve
  50. Gun control and March for Our Lives: 4 essential reads