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The serious consequence of exercising too much, too fast

  • Written by Tamara Hew-Butler, Associate Professor of Exercise and Sports Science, Wayne State University
Exercising too much, too hard can lead not only to burnout but sometimes to a serious condition that can harm the kidneys.Thayut Sutheeravut/Shutterstock.com

Every 365.25 days, when the Earth completes a full orbit around the Sun, we humans have the opportunity to hit the reset button and become fitter, finer versions of ourselves. As usual for...

Read more: The serious consequence of exercising too much, too fast

200 years of exploring Antarctica – the world's coldest, most forbidding and most peaceful continent

  • Written by Dan Morgan, Associate Dean and Principal Senior Lecturer in Earth and Environmental Sciences, Vanderbilt University
Aerial view of a glacier in the Antarctic peninsula region.Getty Images/Mario Tama

Antarctica is the remotest part of the world, but it is a hub of scientific discovery, international diplomacy and environmental change. It was officially discovered 200 years ago, on Jan. 27, 1820, when members of a Russian expedition sighted land in what is now...

Read more: 200 years of exploring Antarctica – the world's coldest, most forbidding and most peaceful continent

When lesbians led the women's suffrage movement

  • Written by Anya Jabour, Regents Professor of History, The University of Montana
A suffrage parade.Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division

As Americans commemorate the centennial of the 19th Amendment, which granted voting rights to some – but not all – women, it is important to acknowledge the lesbian leaders of the suffrage movement.

A leadership team of three women with “lesbian-like”...

Read more: When lesbians led the women's suffrage movement

Precedent? Nah, the Senate gets to reinvent its rules in every impeachment

  • Written by Kirsten Carlson, Associate Professor of Law and Adjunct Associate Professor of Political Science, Wayne State University
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., during debate over rules for the Senate impeachment trial against President Donald Trump, Jan. 21, 2020.Senate Television via AP

Everybody seems to be using the word “precedent” right now.

Commentators, the media and even Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell use it when they discuss or...

Read more: Precedent? Nah, the Senate gets to reinvent its rules in every impeachment

Joaquin Phoenix's lips mocked - here's what everyone should know about cleft lip

  • Written by Mary L. Marazita, Director, Center for Craniofacial and Dental Genetics; Professor of Oral Biology and of Human Genetics, University of Pittsburgh
Joaquin Phoenix won the award for outstanding performance by a male actor in a leading role for 'Joker' at the 26th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards. Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP

After discussing actor Joaquin Phoenix’s appearance on her talk show earlier this month, Wendy Williams received near universal condemnation for mocking those...

Read more: Joaquin Phoenix's lips mocked - here's what everyone should know about cleft lip

Joaquin Phoenix's lips mocked – here's what everyone should know about cleft lip

  • Written by Mary L. Marazita, Director, Center for Craniofacial and Dental Genetics; Professor of Oral Biology and of Human Genetics, University of Pittsburgh
Joaquin Phoenix won the award for outstanding performance by a male actor in a leading role for 'Joker' at the 26th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards. Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP

After discussing actor Joaquin Phoenix’s appearance on her talk show earlier this month, Wendy Williams received near universal condemnation for mocking those...

Read more: Joaquin Phoenix's lips mocked – here's what everyone should know about cleft lip

Reclaman a Cuba por detención prolongada de un disidente – pero ¿es José Daniel Ferrer un prisionero político?

  • Written by María Isabel Alfonso, Professor of Spanish, St. Joseph's College of New York
José Daniel Ferrer fue aliado del gobierno de Barack Obama en la apertura entre EEUU y Cuba.Photo by Sven Creutzmann/Getty Images

Estados Unidos y Cuba están involucrados en una disputa internacional por la detención prolongada de un disidente.

José Daniel Ferrer, líder de la organización opositora...

Read more: Reclaman a Cuba por detención prolongada de un disidente – pero ¿es José Daniel Ferrer un...

African Americans take on more debt for grad school – but the payoff is also bigger

  • Written by Jaymes Pyne, Quantitative Research Associate, Stanford University
African Americans take on greater debt than whites to earn an advanced degree. Does the payoff make it worth it?Damir Khabirov/Shutterstock.com

When seeking graduate and professional degrees, African Americans take on over 50% more debt than white students. On the upside, African Americans also see a bigger payoff to earning such degrees. Whether...

Read more: African Americans take on more debt for grad school – but the payoff is also bigger

US and Cuba spar over jailed dissident – but is José Daniel Ferrer really a political prisoner?

  • Written by María Isabel Alfonso, Professor of Spanish, St. Joseph's College of New York
Cuban dissident Jose Daniel Ferrer was a US ally in Cuba during the Obama-era restoration of diplomatic and economic ties with the Island.Sven Creutzmann/Getty Images

Cuba and the United States are in dispute over the prolonged detention of a Cuban dissident.

José Daniel Ferrer, head of an opposition group called Patriotic Union of Cuba, has...

Read more: US and Cuba spar over jailed dissident – but is José Daniel Ferrer really a political prisoner?

A brief history of black names, from Perlie to Latasha

  • Written by Trevon Logan, Hazel C. Youngberg Distinguished Professor of Economics, The Ohio State University
Black names have changed over the centuries.fizkes/Shutterstock.com

Most people recognize that there are first names given almost exclusively by black Americans to their children, such as Jamal and Latasha.

While fodder for comedians and social commentary, many have assumed that these distinctively black names are a modern phenomenon. My research...

Read more: A brief history of black names, from Perlie to Latasha

More Articles ...

  1. Why California is banning chlorpyrifos, a widely-used pesticide: 5 questions answered
  2. Victorian efforts to export animals to new worlds failed, mostly
  3. Silicon Valley's latest fad is dopamine fasting – and that may not be as crazy as it sounds
  4. Is it OK for teens to drink coffee?
  5. The dramatic dismissal of a landmark youth climate lawsuit might not close the book on that case
  6. Snakes could be the original source of the new coronavirus outbreak in China
  7. Can capitalism solve capitalism’s problems?
  8. Ozzy Osbourne has a type of Parkinson's disease called Parkin: A neurologist explains
  9. How Iran's military outsources its cyberthreat forces
  10. If the Romance Writers of America can implode over racism, no group is safe
  11. What a bundle of buzzing bees can teach engineers about robotic materials
  12. Stoneflies and mayflies, canaries of our streams
  13. When politicians turn immigration into a 'crisis,' they hurt their own people
  14. Snacks after youth sports add more calories than kids burn while playing, study says
  15. Is secondhand screen time the new secondhand smoking?
  16. Where are the Hispanic executives?
  17. Is it ethical to show Holocaust images?
  18. Giving is changing as philanthropy faces more scrutiny
  19. Vital Hasson, the Jew who worked for the Nazis, hunted down refugees and tore apart families in WWII Greece
  20. There's more than one good way to teach kids how to read
  21. Iceland didn't hunt any whales in 2019 – and public appetite for whale meat is fading
  22. Veterans, refugees and victims of war crimes are all vulnerable to PTSD
  23. Even planets have their (size) limits
  24. What to think when you're thinking about impeachment: 5 essential reads
  25. Native people did not use fire to shape New England's landscape
  26. Impeachment trial senators swear an oath aimed at guarding 'against malice, falsehood, and evasion'
  27. Bill de Blasio's bagel gaffe and the fraught politics of food
  28. 'Lennon Walls' herald a sticky-note revolution in Hong Kong
  29. How a heritage of black preaching shaped MLK's voice in calling for justice
  30. Why bosses should let employees surf the web at work
  31. Identifying aquatic plants with drones could be the key to reducing a parasitic infection in people
  32. What is a bar mitzvah?
  33. I asked people why they don't vote, and this is what they told me
  34. A Navy scandal sheds light on the nature of bribery and the limits of free speech
  35. Black kids and suicide: Why are rates so high, and so ignored?
  36. The first step in managing plastic waste is measuring it – here's how we did it for one Caribbean country
  37. Why teen depression rates are rising faster for girls than boys
  38. US and Iran have a long, troubled history
  39. Why you need more Vitamin D in the winter
  40. Why do onions make you cry?
  41. What do we want? Unbiased reporting! When do we want it? During protests!
  42. US-China trade pact President Trump just signed fails to resolve 3 fundamental issues
  43. Russia's cabinet resigns and it's all part of Putin's plan
  44. Screen time: Conclusions about the effects of digital media are often incomplete, irrelevant or wrong
  45. What Iranians think of the US and their own government
  46. Supreme Court DACA decision isn't just about Dreamers -- it's about whether the White House has to tell the truth
  47. Who is born a US citizen?
  48. An old debate over religion in school is opening up again
  49. Meet the narwhal, 'unicorn of the sea'
  50. Why fitness trackers may not give you all the 'credit' you hoped for