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Russia responds to Mueller report: Moscow wins, Putin is stronger than Trump and US is a 'global pain in the a--'

  • Written by Cynthia Hooper, Associate Professor of History, College of the Holy Cross
Cars pass the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, March 25, 2019.AP/Pavel Golovkin

“A mountain has given birth to a mouse. The ‘Russian affair’ falls to pieces before our eyes.”

So pronounced the Russian news site Gazeta.ru, as word of the completed Mueller report swept around the world.

Thus far, official Russian response to the...

Read more: Russia responds to Mueller report: Moscow wins, Putin is stronger than Trump and US is a 'global...

Russia responds to Mueller report: Moscow wins, Putin is stronger than Trump and US is a 'pain in the a - -'

  • Written by Cynthia Hooper, Associate Professor of History, College of the Holy Cross
Cars pass the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, March 25, 2019.AP/Pavel Golovkin

“A mountain has given birth to a mouse. The ‘Russian affair’ falls to pieces before our eyes.”

So pronounced the Russian news site Gazeta.ru, as word of the completed Mueller report swept around the world.

Thus far, official Russian response to the...

Read more: Russia responds to Mueller report: Moscow wins, Putin is stronger than Trump and US is a 'pain in...

Romney's Mormon religion helps explain his criticism of Trump

  • Written by Luke Perry, Professor of Government at Utica College, Utica College

Mitt Romney has been one of few prominent Republicans to criticize Donald Trump, beginning with the 2016 presidential campaign. He did so again recently in response to Trump’s critical comments about John McCain.

“I can’t understand why the President would, once again, disparage a man as exemplary as my friend John McCain,”...

Read more: Romney's Mormon religion helps explain his criticism of Trump

In the future, everyone might use quantum computers

  • Written by Christopher Bernhardt, Professor of Mathematics, Fairfield University
A seven-qubit quantum device at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, N.Y. AP Photo/Seth Wenig

Computers were once considered high-end technology, only accessible to scientists and trained professionals. But there was a seismic shift in the history of computing during the second half of the 1970s. It wasn’t just that...

Read more: In the future, everyone might use quantum computers

Colorectal cancer increase in younger adults: What could be the cause?

  • Written by Franklin G. Berger, Research and Outreach Director, University of South Carolina
An increase in colorectal cancer in adults younger than 50 is troubling to doctors and often tragic for patients. kan-chana/Shutterstock.com

Colorectal cancer remains a major source of cancer incidence and death in the United States. The American Cancer Society estimates that in 2019, there will be 145,600 new cases of the disease and 51,020...

Read more: Colorectal cancer increase in younger adults: What could be the cause?

Why the next terror manifesto could be even harder to track

  • Written by Megan Squire, Professor of Computer Science, Elon University
It's difficult to track the spread of digital materials.bluebay/Shutterstock.com

Just before his shooting spree at two Christchurch, New Zealand mosques, the alleged mass murderer posted a hate-filled manifesto on several file-sharing sites, and emailed the document to at least 30 people, including New Zealand’s prime minister. He also posted...

Read more: Why the next terror manifesto could be even harder to track

7 tips to stay safe while studying abroad

  • Written by Chad M. Gasta, Professor of Spanish and Chair of the Department of World Languages & Cultures, Iowa State University
These five Towson University Honors students in Sienna, Italy, were among the more than 332,000 U.S. students studied abroad in 2016-17.Mallory Harrison from www.flickr.com

Studying abroad can bring great rewards, but being a visitor in a foreign land also comes with significant risks.

“It is important to understand how the risks may be...

Read more: 7 tips to stay safe while studying abroad

Apollo 11 brought a message of peace to the Moon - but Neil and Buzz almost forgot to leave it behind

  • Written by Michelle L.D. Hanlon, Professor of Air and Space Law, University of Mississippi
President Richard M. Nixon welcomes the Apollo 11 astronauts aboard the USS Hornet, the recovery ship for the mission, where they are quarantined. From left to right: Neil A. Armstrong, Michael Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin.NASA

How about that package out of your sleeve? Get that?” is certainly not the most famous phrase uttered by a...

Read more: Apollo 11 brought a message of peace to the Moon - but Neil and Buzz almost forgot to leave it...

Dynasties still run the world

  • Written by Farida Jalalzai, Professor and Hannah Atkins Endowed Chair of Political Science, Oklahoma State University
Worldwide, 1 in 10 presidents and prime ministers has relatives who were already in politics. Europe and Latin America, both democratic regions, have the highest proportion of leaders who come from political families.Shutterstock

Want to get into politics? It helps if you come from the right family.

Our new study, published in the journal Historical...

Read more: Dynasties still run the world

Boeing is doing crisis management all wrong – here's what a company needs to do to restore the public's trust

  • Written by Kelli Matthews, Senior Instructor of Journalism and Communication, University of Oregon

In a crisis, time is not on your side.

A crisis creates a vacuum, an informational void that gets filled one way or another. The longer a company or other organization at the center of the crisis waits to communicate, the more likely that void will be filled by critics.

That’s exactly what’s happening to Boeing.

On March 10, Ethiopian...

Read more: Boeing is doing crisis management all wrong – here's what a company needs to do to restore the...

More Articles ...

  1. A chess program helped this 8-year-old raise $240,000 and get his family out of a homeless shelter – here's what to look for in a chess program for your child
  2. The promise and peril of the Dominican baseball pipeline
  3. Why the Vatican needs to open its archives on Pope Pius XII
  4. Saudi women are going to college, running for office and changing the conservative country
  5. Why Trump's recognition of the Golan Heights as Israeli territory matters
  6. Despite consumer worries, the future of aviation will be more automated
  7. How Trump and Barr could stretch claims of executive privilege and grand jury secrecy
  8. Does Monsanto's Roundup cause cancer? The law says yes, the science says maybe
  9. Cars are regulated for safety – why not information technology?
  10. What President Trump's executive order on campus free speech is really meant to do
  11. Boeing 737 Max: The FAA wanted a safe plane – but didn't want to hurt America’s biggest exporter either
  12. Electronic health records cannot replace a doctor who knows you
  13. Journalism needs to practice transparency in a different way to rebuild credibility
  14. Skip this chore: Cleaning your air conditioner condenser probably won't make it work better
  15. Why flood insurance needs an overhaul: 6 questions answered
  16. Baseball's biggest problem isn't pace of play – it's teams tanking
  17. A new procedure may preserve fertility in kids with cancer after chemo or radiation
  18. March Madness: With gambling legal in eight states, who really wins?
  19. Will more genetically engineered foods be approved under the FDA's new leadership?
  20. We need more teachers of color, so why do we use tests that keep them out of the classroom?
  21. Niger has the world's highest birth rate – and that may be a recipe for unrest
  22. Nuns were secluded to avoid scandals in early Christian monastic communities
  23. Livestreamed massacre means it's time to shut down Facebook Live
  24. Why social movements like #MeToo seem to come out of nowhere
  25. Your pet on pot, or even CBD: Not a good thing, a vet toxicologist explains
  26. Teens have less face time with their friends – and are lonelier than ever
  27. Death penalty moratorium in California – what it means for the state and for the nation
  28. Even if Netanyahu goes, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will continue
  29. The bias hiding in your library
  30. 5 ways summer camp makes a difference – and what to look for in a camp
  31. Violence against women is overlooked in its role in opioid epidemic
  32. A case against a moratorium on germline gene editing
  33. White nationalism, born in the USA, is now a global terror threat
  34. Does most of your paycheck go to rent? That may be hurting your health
  35. The politics of fear: How it manipulates us to tribalism
  36. What is the significance of Friday prayers in Islam?
  37. A half-century before the hashtag, artists were on the front lines of #MeToo
  38. Wastewater is an asset – it contains nutrients, energy and precious metals, and scientists are learning how to recover them
  39. Student loans and 'risk-sharing' – the problem with penalizing colleges when graduates can't pay
  40. For Native Americans, US-Mexico border is an 'imaginary line'
  41. Danger ahead in the constitutional standoff over Trump's emergency declaration
  42. Jupiter's Great Red Spot: A 300-year-old cyclone persists but is shrinking
  43. Why some counties are powerhouses for innovation
  44. Here's how airplane crash investigations work, according to an aviation safety expert
  45. New evidence for a human magnetic sense that lets your brain detect the Earth's magnetic field
  46. From 'Wild Horses' to 'Wild Things,' a window into Maurice Sendak's creative process
  47. Thich Nhat Hanh, the Buddhist monk who introduced mindfulness to the West, prepares to die
  48. Global study of pancreatic cancer offers possible insights into treatment and early detection
  49. Teaching in America's prisons has taught me to believe in second chances
  50. Racists in Congress fought statehood for Hawaii, but lost that battle 60 years ago