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How the IOC effectively maintains a gag order on nonsponsors of the Olympics

  • Written by Shontavia Johnson, Professor of Intellectual Property Law, Drake University

If you’re one of the billions of people around the world following the 2016 Rio Olympic Games in any form, you’re probably aware of its most talked-about sports moments. Simone Biles of the United States (with dual Belizean citizenship) confirming her spot as the world’s best gymnast. The Fiji men’s rugby team’s emotio...

Read more: How the IOC effectively maintains a gag order on nonsponsors of the Olympics

As Rio bay waters show, we badly need innovation in treating human wastes

  • Written by Daniele Lantagne, Assistant Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Tufts University

In the months leading up to the Rio Olympics, there was growing awareness that Brazil had not met the water quality goals outlined in their bid, and that athletes might be swimming, sailing, rowing or canoeing in waters contaminated with untreated human sewage. News articles discussed the poor water quality in competition waters, health risks to...

Read more: As Rio bay waters show, we badly need innovation in treating human wastes

Cotton farmers profit from simple steps to help pollinators

  • Written by Sarah Cusser, Doctoral Student, University of Texas at Austin
imageCotton ready for harvestwww.Shutterstock.com

Cotton is the world’s most widely grown and economically important nonfood crop. In the United States alone, farmers grow cotton on 12 million to 14.5 million acres, and produce a yearly harvest worth nearly US$25 billion.

Before cotton’s fluffy bolls emerge, the plant produces large white...

Read more: Cotton farmers profit from simple steps to help pollinators

Is the 'lesser of two evils' an ethical choice for voters?

  • Written by Travis N. Rieder, Research Scholar at the Berman Institute of Bioethics, Johns Hopkins University

Every election cycle, there are citizens who don’t like either of the candidates nominated by the two major political parties.

And so, a familiar debate begins: Is a vote for a third party a principled stand – or wasteful naiveté?

This year, party discord has swelled the numbers of dissatisfied citizens, and the debate is even...

Read more: Is the 'lesser of two evils' an ethical choice for voters?

Setting robots in motion, quickly and efficiently

  • Written by Daniel Sorin, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Duke University
imageHow can this robot know where to move safely, and where it will collide with something else?Humanrobo, CC BY-SA

How can a drone get from one place to another in a forest, without colliding with any trees? How can a robot pick up a bolt and insert it into a casing, without smashing into any of the other moving objects in a crowded factory? Our...

Read more: Setting robots in motion, quickly and efficiently

How adult learners are not getting 21st-century skills

  • Written by Iris Feinberg, Assistant Director of the Adult Literacy Research Center., Georgia State University
imageWho are adult learners and what takes them back to school?COD Newsroom, CC BY

More and more adults are going back to school to learn new skills. The National Center for Education Statistics data show a 7 percent growth in college enrollment for adults over the age of 24 between 2005 and 2015. This is projected to increase to 12 percent by 2019.

A...

Read more: How adult learners are not getting 21st-century skills

Why you shouldn't want to always be happy

  • Written by Frank T. McAndrew, Cornelia H. Dudley Professor of Psychology, Knox College
imageIn life, happiness can seem fleeting and elusive, something just out of reach.Steve Corey/flickr, CC BY-ND

In the 1990s, a psychologist named Martin Seligman led the positive psychology movement, which placed the study of human happiness squarely at the center of psychology research and theory. It continued a trend that began in the 1960s with human...

Read more: Why you shouldn't want to always be happy

Trump's and Clinton's economy plans: eight essential reads

  • Written by Bryan Keogh, Editor, Economics and Business, The Conversation
imageClinton and Trump.

Editor’s note: The following is a roundup of stories related to this week’s presidential campaign.

Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump gave dueling economic addresses this week, offering contrasting visions of where we are now and where each candidate would like to take us.

Speaking in Warren, Michigan on Aug. 11, Clinton...

Read more: Trump's and Clinton's economy plans: eight essential reads

Most students borrow for college, but are they financially literate?

  • Written by Catherine Montalto, Associate Professor of Consumer Sciences, The Ohio State University
imageWhat do students know when they are taking out loans?Tulane Public Relations, CC BY

August is here, and many families are preparing their children for the next academic challenge – a college education.

By and large, a college degree is viewed as an important credential for gainful employment and professional success. At the same time, college...

Read more: Most students borrow for college, but are they financially literate?

Turkey's coup and the call to prayer: Sounds of violence meet Islamic devotionals

  • Written by Denise Gill, Assistant Professor of Ethnomusicology, Washington University in St Louis

The sounds of the recent military coup will long be remembered by people in Turkey.

Yet as Turks in Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir and other urban centers strained to differentiate the sounds of explosive devices from the sonic booms of F-16s on July 15, 2016, they were most shocked by another sound, at once familiar and deeply startling: the Islamic call...

Read more: Turkey's coup and the call to prayer: Sounds of violence meet Islamic devotionals

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  13. Trump's economics speech: seeking conservative cred and kissing babies
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  20. Brazil’s sewage woes reflect the growing global water quality crisis
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  30. Geomythology: Can geologists relate ancient stories of great floods to real events?
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  38. Will social media define the success of the Olympic Games?
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  46. As the Olympics approach, stains on Rio's architecture, infrastructure
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