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Christianity has long revered saints who would be called ‘transgender’ today

  • Written by Sarah Barringer, Ph.D. Candidate in English, University of Iowa

Several Republican-led states have restricted transgender rights: Iowa has signed a law removing civil rights protection for transgender people; Wyoming has prohibited state agencies from requiring the use of preferred pronouns; and Alabama recently passed a law that only two sexes would be recognized. Hundreds of bills have been introduced in...

Read more: Christianity has long revered saints who would be called ‘transgender’ today

Pope Leo XIV is the first member of the Order of St. Augustine to be elected pope – but who are the Augustinians?

  • Written by Joanne M. Pierce, Professor Emerita of Religious Studies, College of the Holy Cross
imagePope Leo XIV leaves the Augustinian General House in Rome after a visit on May 13, 2025.AP Photo/Domenico Stinellis

When Pope Leo XIV was elected pope, the assembled crowd reacted with joy but also with surprise: He was the first pope from the United States, and North America more broadly. Moreover, he was the first member of the Order of St....

Read more: Pope Leo XIV is the first member of the Order of St. Augustine to be elected pope – but who are...

Air traffic controller shortages in Newark and other airports partly reflect long, intense training − but university-based training programs are becoming part of the solution

  • Written by Melanie Dickman, Lecturer in Aviation Studies, The Ohio State University
imageAir traffic controllers observe a plane taking off from San Francisco International Airport in 2017.AP Photo/Jeff Chiu

Air traffic controllers have been in the news a lot lately.

A spate of airplane crashes and near misses have highlighted the ongoing shortage of air traffic workers, leading more Americans to question the safety of air travel.

The...

Read more: Air traffic controller shortages in Newark and other airports partly reflect long, intense...

Mountain chickadee chatter: Scientists are decoding the songbird’s complex calls

  • Written by Sofia Marie Haley, Ph.D. Student in Cognitive Ecology, University of Nevada, Reno
imageMountain chickadees are unusual in having more complex calls than songs.Vladimir Pravosudov

I approach a flock of mountain chickadees feasting on pine nuts. A cacophony of sounds, coming from the many different bird species that rely on the Sierra Nevada’s diverse pine cone crop, fill the crisp mountain air.

The strong...

Read more: Mountain chickadee chatter: Scientists are decoding the songbird’s complex calls

For opioid addiction, treatment underdosing can lead to fentanyl overdosing – a physician explains

  • Written by Lucinda Grande, Clinical Associate Professor of Family Medicine, University of Washington
imageBuprenorphine is most effective when doctors and patients find the right dose together.AP Photo/Ted S. Warren

Imagine a patient named Rosa tells you she wakes up night after night in a drenching sweat after having very realistic dreams of smoking fentanyl.

The dreams seem crazy to her. Three months ago, newly pregnant, Rosa began visualizing being...

Read more: For opioid addiction, treatment underdosing can lead to fentanyl overdosing – a physician explains

Managing forests and other ecosystems under rising threats requires thinking across wide-ranging scenarios

  • Written by Kyra Clark-Wolf, Research Scientist in Ecological Transformation, University of Colorado Boulder
imageThinking through scenarios allows land managers to prepare for many potential outcomes.Benjamin Slyngstad via USGS

In Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks in California, trees that have persisted through rain and shine for thousands of years are now facing multiple threats triggered by a changing climate.

Scientists and park managers once thought...

Read more: Managing forests and other ecosystems under rising threats requires thinking across wide-ranging...

Europeans are concerned that the US will withdraw support from NATO. They are right to worry − Americans should, too

  • Written by John Deni, Research Professor of Joint, Interagency, Intergovernmental, and Multinational Security Studies, US Army War College
imageAmerican soldiers join 3,000 troops from other NATO member countries in a four-week exercise in Hohenfels, Germany, in March 2025. Sean Gallup/Getty Images

The United States has long played a leadership role in NATO, the most successful military alliance in history.

The U.S. and 11 other countries in North America and Europe founded NATO in 1949,...

Read more: Europeans are concerned that the US will withdraw support from NATO. They are right to worry −...

Why some towns lose local news − and others don’t

  • Written by Abby Youran Qin, Ph.D. candidate at School of Journalism & Mass Communication, University of Wisconsin-Madison
imageFive elements determine which towns lose their papers and which ones beat the odds.Hans Henning Wenk/Getty Images

Why did your hometown newspaper vanish while the next town over kept theirs?

This isn’t bad luck − it’s a systemic pattern. Since 2005, the United States has lost over one-third of its local newspapers, creating...

Read more: Why some towns lose local news − and others don’t

MAHA report on children’s health highlights harms of ultraprocessed foods – a food scientist explains the research

  • Written by Paul Dawson, Professor of Food Science, Clemson University
imageUltraprocessed foods contain ingredients not found in a typical kitchen and are often designed to be extremely palatable.beats3/iStock viaGetty Images Plus

On May 22, 2025, the White House released a new report highlighting what it claims are the causes of chronic disease in children.

The report fleshes out many of the themes that have emerged as pri...

Read more: MAHA report on children’s health highlights harms of ultraprocessed foods – a food scientist...

Harvard fights to keep enrolling international students – 4 essential reads about their broader impact

  • Written by Corey Mitchell, Education Editor
imageGraduates of Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government celebrate during commencement exercises in Cambridge, Mass.AP Photo/Steven Senne, File

A federal judge in Boston on May 23, 2025, temporarily blocked a Trump administration order that would have revoked Harvard University’s authorization to enroll international students.

The directive...

Read more: Harvard fights to keep enrolling international students – 4 essential reads about their broader...

More Articles ...

  1. How does a person become famous when they’re just a kid?
  2. 5 years after George Floyd’s murder: How the media narrative has changed around the killing and the protests that followed
  3. Supreme Court’s one-sentence order closes the door to Catholic charter school – but leaves it open for future challenges
  4. Can you upload a human mind into a computer? A neuroscientist ponders what’s possible
  5. Here’s how we figured the number of guns illegally trafficked from the US across the border to Mexico
  6. Gun trafficking from the US to Mexico: The drug connection
  7. US gun trafficking to Mexico: Independent gun shops supply the most dangerous weapons
  8. Split Supreme Court blocks Oklahoma’s Catholic charter school − but future cases could hinge on whether charters are, at their core, public or private
  9. US solar manufacturers lag skyrocketing market demand
  10. In 2025, Tornado Alley has become almost everything east of the Rockies − and it’s been a violent year
  11. How abortion laws focusing on fetal viability miss the mark on women’s experiences
  12. From furry friends to fish, turning up the heat helps animals fight germs − how Mother Nature’s cure offers humans a lesson on fever
  13. Like many populist leaders, Trump accuses judges of being illegitimate obstacles to safety and democracy
  14. Golden Dome: An aerospace engineer explains the proposed nationwide missile defense system
  15. Golden Dome: An aerospace engineer explains the proposed US-wide missile defense system
  16. Israelis have a skewed view on extent of Gaza’s hunger plight − driven by censorship and media that downplay humanitarian crisis
  17. NOAA’s 2025 hurricane forecast warns of a busy season – a storm scientist explains why and what meteorologists are watching
  18. WHO is finalizing a new treaty that prepares for the next pandemic − but the US isn’t signing
  19. Young food entrepreneurs are changing the face of rural America
  20. At Cannes, decency and dress codes clash with fashion’s red carpet revolution
  21. Empathy can take a toll – but 2 philosophers explain why we should see it as a strength
  22. Work requirements are better at blocking benefits for low-income people than they are at helping those folks find jobs
  23. Billions of cicadas are emerging, from Cape Cod to north Georgia – here’s how and why we map them
  24. A decade after the release of ‘The Martian’ and a decade out from the world it envisions, a planetary scientist checks in on real-life Mars exploration
  25. Lifecycle of a research grant – behind the scenes of the system that funds science
  26. FDA will approve COVID-19 vaccine only for older adults and high-risk groups – a public health expert explains the new rules
  27. What does it mean for Biden’s prostate cancer to be ‘aggressive’? A urologic surgeon explains
  28. Windows are the No. 1 human threat to birds – an ecologist shares some simple steps to reduce collisions
  29. Russia’s invasion united different parts of Ukraine against a common enemy – 3 years on, that unanimity still holds
  30. Trump treats laws as obstacles, not limits − and the only real check on his rule-breaking can come from political pressure
  31. Too much sitting increases risk of future health problems in chest pain patients – new research
  32. Why your electricity bill is so high and what Pennsylvania is doing about it
  33. Rethinking engineering education: Why focusing on learning preferences matters for diversity
  34. Israel has promised ‘basic amount’ of food into Gaza − but its policies have already created catastrophic starvation risk for millions
  35. 19th-century Catholic teachings, 21st-century tech: How concerns about AI guided Pope Leo’s choice of name
  36. Making eye contact and small talk with strangers is more than just being polite − the social benefits of psychological generosity
  37. Aristotle would scoff at Mark Zuckerberg’s suggestion that AI can solve the loneliness epidemic
  38. Biden is getting prostate cancer treatment, but that’s not the best choice for all men − a cancer researcher describes how she helped her father decide
  39. Independence Hall, Gettysburg and – Epcot? How Reagan helped elevate Disney to America’s roster of honored patriotic sites
  40. Nonprofit news media leaders are struggling to stop leaning on the foundations that say they should branch out more
  41. The one-size-fits-all diversity training model is broken – here’s a better alternative
  42. Do photons wear out? An astrophysicist explains light’s ability to travel vast cosmic distances without losing energy
  43. An 18th-century rebellion for liberty, equality and freedom − not in France or the United States, but Ireland
  44. Teens of any age who drink alcohol with their parents’ permission drink more as young adults, new research shows
  45. How 3D printing is personalizing health care
  46. Ancient pollen reveals stories about Earth’s history, from the asteroid strike that killed the dinosaurs to the Mayan collapse
  47. Governors are leading the fight against climate change and deforestation around the world, filling a void left by presidents
  48. Cutting HIV aid means undercutting US foreign and economic interests − Nigeria shows the human costs
  49. Tomato trade dispute between the US and Mexico is boiling over again – with 21% tariffs due in July
  50. Leaders can promote gender equity without deepening polarization − here’s how