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How the pretzel went from soft to hard – and other little-known facts about one of the world's favorite snacks

  • Written by Jeffrey Miller, Associate Professor and Program Coordinator, Hospitality Management, Colorado State University
The pretzel has had a twisted path from Germany to global snack food.Craig Barhorst/Shutterstock.com

The pretzel, one of the fastest-growing snack foods in the world, recently crossed a billion dollars a year in sales.

It has its own emoji, comes in flavors like pumpkin spice, mocha and banana, and is now available as an aromatherapy scent. It...

Read more: How the pretzel went from soft to hard – and other little-known facts about one of the world's...

How live liver transplants could save thousands of lives

  • Written by Abhi Humar, Chief, Transplantation Surgery, University of Pittsburgh
Jarrius Robertson, a liver transplant survivor, runs the football at the Jan. 27, 2018 Pro Bowl practice in Kissimmee, Florida.AP Photo/Gregory Payan

The success of liver transplantation represents one of the great miracles of modern medicine. Essentially an experimental procedure 35 years ago, it now represents the only definitive method to cure...

Read more: How live liver transplants could save thousands of lives

Why this conservative bastion chose a liberal evangelical icon for its commencement speech

  • Written by Adam Laats, Professor of Education and History (by courtesy), Binghamton University, State University of New York
Former President Jimmy Carter will give this year's commencement address at Liberty University.AP Photo/John Amis

In a move that might surprise some, the conservative evangelical Liberty University has chosen the liberal evangelical icon Jimmy Carter to give its commencement speech this year. Based on my research into the history of evangelical...

Read more: Why this conservative bastion chose a liberal evangelical icon for its commencement speech

Kids of color get kicked out of school at higher rates – here's how to stop it

  • Written by Samuel Song, Associate Professor of School Psychology, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Black students and students with disabilities get suspended at higher rates, federal data show.From www.shutterstock.com

When two black men were arrested at a Philadelphia Starbucks where they had been waiting for a business meeting on April 12, the incident called renewed attention to the bias that racial minorities face in American society.

A few...

Read more: Kids of color get kicked out of school at higher rates – here's how to stop it

Why it's so hard for doctors to understand your pain

  • Written by Karen Sibert, Associate Clinical Professor of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles
Every patient is different.TippaPatt/shutterstock.com

We’re all human beings, but we’re not all alike.

Each person experiences pain differently, from an emotional perspective as well as a physical one, and responds to pain differently. That means that physicians like myself need to evaluate patients on an individual basis and find the...

Read more: Why it's so hard for doctors to understand your pain

Fake drugs are one reason malaria still kills so many

  • Written by Jackson Thomas, Assistant Professor/Senior Lecturer in Pharmacy, University of Canberra
Fake medicines are a lucrative global business. When it comes to malaria drugs that don't work, they can be deadly.AP Photo/Martin Mejia

Malaria, a mosquito-borne parasitic infection that affects about 3.2 billion people in 95 countries, has become largely a disease of the young and poor.

Due to effective medications like chloroquine and...

Read more: Fake drugs are one reason malaria still kills so many

What Comey learned from theologian Reinhold Niebuhr about ethical leadership

  • Written by Christopher Beem, Managing Director of the McCourtney Institute of Democracy, Pennsylvania State University
Former FBI Director James Comey.AP Photo/Susan Walsh

While James Comey’s most recent clashes with President Trump are foremost on everyone’s minds, he’s had quite a career. He was the U.S. attorney responsible for taking down the New York mafia, the acting U.S. attorney general who stopped the policy that George W. Bush’s...

Read more: What Comey learned from theologian Reinhold Niebuhr about ethical leadership

Self-driving cars and humans face inevitable collisions

  • Written by Peter Hancock, Professor of Psychology, Civil and Environmental Engineering, and Industrial Engineering and Management Systems, University of Central Florida
Self-driving cars and human-driven vehicles are bound to collide as the technology improves.Tempe Police Department via AP

In 1938, when there were just about one-tenth the number of cars on U.S. roadways as there are today, a brilliant psychologist and a pragmatic engineer joined forces to write one of the most influential works ever published on...

Read more: Self-driving cars and humans face inevitable collisions

Why are some _E. coli_ deadly while others live peacefully within our bodies?

  • Written by Erika A. Taylor, Associate Professor of Chemistry and Environmental Studies, Wesleyan University
From a human perspective, some strains are good, some are evil.fusebulb/Shutterstock.com

E. coli outbreaks hospitalize people and cause food recalls pretty much annually in the United States. This year is no different.

Obviously some E. coli can be deadly for people. But not all strains of these bacteria make you sick. In fact, you have a variety...

Read more: Why are some _E. coli_ deadly while others live peacefully within our bodies?

States are favoring school choice at a steep cost to public education

  • Written by Derek W. Black, Professor of Law, University of South Carolina
Colorado teachers rally outside the state Capitol April 16 to demand more funding for schools.Colleen Slevin/AP

Teacher strikes are generating a healthy focus on how far public education funding has fallen over the past decade. The full explanation, however, goes beyond basic funding cuts. It involves systematic advantages in terms of funding,...

Read more: States are favoring school choice at a steep cost to public education

More Articles ...

  1. Lynching memorial shows women were victims, too
  2. Lynching memorial will show that women were victims, too
  3. Argentina's abortion legalization debate ignites soul searching on women's rights
  4. Argentinos empiezan a contemplar los derechos de la mujer, comenzando con el aborto
  5. Women in tech suffer because of American myth of meritocracy
  6. Why genetics makes some people more vulnerable to opioid addiction – and protects others
  7. Rap music's path from pariah to Pulitzer
  8. Global timber trafficking harms forests and costs billions of dollars – here's how to curb it
  9. Why does a president demand loyalty from people who work for him?
  10. Aneurysm strikes baseball pitcher, but why? A neurosurgeon explains the mysterious condition
  11. How images change our race bias
  12. Delivering VR in perfect focus with nanostructure meta-lenses
  13. Wind energy's swift growth, explained
  14. Should you insure that trip or TV? Here's what an economist would do
  15. The census will officially count same-sex couples for the first time ever – but that's not enough
  16. Macron-Trump summit has high stakes for France's embattled leader
  17. Comey memos follow tradition of J. Edgar Hoover keeping notes on presidents
  18. What Greek tragedy illuminates about James Comey
  19. Climate change may scuttle Caribbean's post-hurricane plans for a renewable energy boom
  20. Is Earth's ozone layer still at risk? 5 questions answered
  21. Market forces are driving a clean energy revolution in the US
  22. Trump's exports-good, imports-bad trade policy, debunked by an economist
  23. Harvard sexual harassment case scars the institution as well as victims
  24. As marijuana goes mainstream, what's happening to the way we talk about weed?
  25. Why marijuana fans should not see approval for epilepsy drug as a win for weed
  26. Democratic Party's pluralism is both a strength and weakness
  27. Housing discrimination thrives 50 years after Fair Housing Act tried to end it
  28. Our centuries-long quest for 'a quiet place'
  29. What's unconscious bias training, and does it work?
  30. I run 'facial recognition' on buildings to unlock architectural secrets
  31. The US is stingier with child care and maternity leave than the rest of the world
  32. 2008 financial crisis still seems like only yesterday for single women
  33. Bike-share companies are transforming US cities – and they're just getting started
  34. Climate change could alter ocean food chains, leading to far fewer fish in the sea
  35. Rap and gown: Hip-hop artists as commencement speakers
  36. Cuba's new president: What to expect of Miguel Díaz-Canel
  37. Your next pilot could be drone software
  38. Superman at 80: How two high school friends concocted the original comic book hero
  39. Barbara Bush may have suffered from a chronic lung disease called COPD – a doctor explains
  40. What is the TPP and can the US get back in?
  41. The Second Amendment comes first in teaching constitutional law
  42. What Earth Day means when humans possess planet-shaping powers
  43. What is hell?
  44. How the lowly mushroom is becoming a nutritional star
  45. Americans support legal marijuana – but states don't agree on how to regulate it
  46. Después de una acalorada elección, Costa Rica ya no parece tan excepcional
  47. A scholar's journey to understand the needs of Pol Pot's survivors
  48. How China's winemakers succeeded (without stealing)
  49. US rivers are becoming saltier – and it's not just from treating roads in winter
  50. Would America vote for Oprah for president?