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Tiroteo en Pittsburgh: La historia de las oleadas antisemitas y antimigrantes en EEUU

  • Written by Ingrid Anderson, Associate Director of Jewish Studies, Lecturer, Arts & Sciences Writing Program, Boston University
Personas poniendo flores en la sinagoga del Árbol de la Vida en Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, EEUU.AP Photo/Matt Rourke

El tiroteo en el centro religioso estadounidense “Árbol de la Vida”, en Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, es, posiblemente, el ataque contra los judíos más mortífero de la historia de Estados...

Read more: Tiroteo en Pittsburgh: La historia de las oleadas antisemitas y antimigrantes en EEUU

The Dead Sea Scrolls are a priceless link to the Bible's past

  • Written by Daniel Falk, Professor of Classics and Ancient Mediterranean Studies and Chaiken Family Chair in Jewish Studies, Pennsylvania State University
A conservator works with a portion of the Dead Sea Scrolls containing Psalm 145 at The Franklin Institute, in Philadelphia.AP Photo/Matt Rourke

The Museum of the Bible in Washington, D.C., has removed five Dead Sea Scrolls from exhibits after tests confirmed these fragments were not from ancient biblical scrolls but forgeries.

Over the last decade,...

Read more: The Dead Sea Scrolls are a priceless link to the Bible's past

Where sexes come by the thousands

  • Written by Antonis Rokas, Cornelius Vanderbilt Chair in Biological Sciences and Professor of Biological Sciences and Biomedical Informatics, Vanderbilt University
The split gill mushroom _Schizophyllum commune_, a fungal species that includes more than 20,000 sexes.Bernard Spragg

By the end of every spring semester, students in my introductory biology course at Vanderbilt University have become quite familiar with natural variation in human sex chromosomes. They know, for example, that most females have two...

Read more: Where sexes come by the thousands

Bombs are part of American political history

  • Written by Keith Brown, Professor of Politics and Global Studies, Arizona State University
New York police officers at the Time Warner Center, Oct. 25, 2018, in New York after report of a suspicious package at CNN. AP/Craig Ruttle

The bombs allegedly sent by a passionate Trump supporter to prominent liberals last week are a reminder that American history is littered with violence, with both the left and right pursuing political ends with...

Read more: Bombs are part of American political history

Will it be a blue wave -- or a whimper? Here's what the evidence says for the 2018 House midterm elections

  • Written by Daniel Palazzolo, Professor of Political Science, University of Richmond

“If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary,” wrote James Madison in the Federalist Paper #51.

Lacking angels, Madison asserted that elections were one of the U.S. Constitution’s checks on political power. “A...

Read more: Will it be a blue wave -- or a whimper? Here's what the evidence says for the 2018 House midterm...

Pittsburgh's lesson: Hatred does not emerge in a vacuum

  • Written by Leonard Saxe, Professor of Contemporary Jewish Studies and Social Policy, Brandeis University
Vigil held in the Squirrel Hill section of Pittsburgh for shooting victims, Oct. 27, 2018.AP/Gene J. Puskar

Fueled by virulent anti-Semitism, the Sabbath peace was shattered this past weekend when 11 members of the Pittsburgh Jewish community were murdered in a synagogue where they had gathered to celebrate a birth, to pray and to study.

As a scholar...

Read more: Pittsburgh's lesson: Hatred does not emerge in a vacuum

How Mister Rogers’ message of love might help us now

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
Squirrel Hill neighbors embrace, after hearing of the shootings at the Tree of Life synagogue, Oct. 27, 2018. Keith Srakocic/AP Photo

The Pittsburgh neighborhood in which the recent horrific mass shooting took place isn’t only the home of the Tree of Life synagogue. Squirrel Hill was also Mr. Rogers’ neighborhood, the place where he...

Read more: How Mister Rogers’ message of love might help us now

The soundtrack of the Sixties demanded respect, justice and equality

  • Written by Michael V. Drake, President, The Ohio State University
The Supremes, with their polished performances and family-friendly lyrics, helped to bridge a cultural divide and temper racial tensions.AP Photo/Frings

When Sly and the Family Stone released “Everyday People” at the end of 1968, it was a rallying cry after a tumultuous year of assassinations, civil unrest and a seemingly interminable...

Read more: The soundtrack of the Sixties demanded respect, justice and equality

7 ways to teach civil discourse to students

  • Written by Tiffany Mitchell Patterson, Assistant Professor of Secondary Social Studies, West Virginia University
Lessons in civil discourse can start in the classroom.Monkey Business Images/www.shutterstock.com

If young people are to engage in democracy and society, young people need to learn how to respectfully disagree. Yet, educators often find it challenging to lead discussions on contentious issues.

Based on my experience as a middle school social studies...

Read more: 7 ways to teach civil discourse to students

More Articles ...

  1. What Bolsonaro's presidency means for Brazil: 5 essential reads
  2. Los migrantes de la 'caravana' tienen derecho de asilo en EEUU, pero conseguirlo les será difícil
  3. Money in elections doesn't mean what you think it does
  4. Why students need more 'math talk'
  5. The Amish live simply, but don't confuse them with environmentalists
  6. Beating breast cancer only to die of opioid use – a sad Appalachian story
  7. 4 reasons gerrymandering is getting worse
  8. Can Seabiscuit's DNA explain his elite racing ability?
  9. Bolsonaro wins Brazil election, promises to purge leftists from country
  10. Terror isn't always a weapon of the weak -- it can also support the powerful
  11. Why has Halloween become so popular among adults?
  12. ¿Pintor o robot? AICAN es una máquina que funciona como artista autónomo
  13. As digital threats grow, will cyber insurance take off?
  14. Roundup weed killer lawsuit hits a snag, but Monsanto is not off the hook
  15. How do colleges use affirmative action? Even some activists don't understand
  16. Florida's Amendment 4: Restoring voting rights to people with felonies might also reduce crime
  17. Why do some people hurt more than others?
  18. In the turmoil of 1968, music failed to seize the moment
  19. Why believing in ghosts can make you a better person
  20. Got the winning lottery ticket? An economist explains what to do with all that money
  21. Migrants travel in groups for a simple reason: safety
  22. First-generation college students earn less than graduates whose parents went to college
  23. Overhype and 'research laundering' are a self-inflicted wound for social science
  24. Get a flu shot now – for your benefit and your neighbors'
  25. Yes, eating meat affects the environment, but cows are not killing the climate
  26. Spread of self-driving cars could cause more pollution – unless the electric grid transforms radically
  27. Foundations are making climate change a bigger priority
  28. Tanzanian president bluntly attacks contraception, saying high birth rates are good for economy
  29. Collaboration, not fighting, is what the rural West is really about
  30. My thoughts are my password, because my brain reactions are unique
  31. Republican women are just fine, thank you, with being Republican
  32. Hambre mundial aumenta por tercer año consecutivo debido al cambio climático
  33. Democrats can't count on Latinos to swing the midterms
  34. How American tax laws encourage inequality
  35. Migrant caravan members have right to claim asylum – here's why getting it will be hard
  36. Reclaiming video games' queer past before it disappears
  37. Energy transitions are nothing new but the one underway is unprecedented and urgent
  38. What kind of support do breast cancer patients want? Food, rides and prayer
  39. Why cows are getting a bad rap in lab-grown meat debate
  40. Nonprofit drugmaker Civica Rx aims to cure a health care system ailment
  41. Georgia election fight shows that black voter suppression, a southern tradition, still flourishes
  42. Trump encuentra oportunidad electoral en la crisis humanitaria venezolana
  43. Why washing your hands well is so important to protect your family from the flu
  44. E-cigarettes and a new threat: How to dispose of them
  45. Transgender and non-binary people face health care discrimination every day in the US
  46. Georgia's gubernatorial race could be a bellwether for Democrats nationally
  47. These kids and young adults want their day in court on climate change
  48. Artificial intelligence will make you smarter
  49. The Village Voice's photographers captured change, turmoil unfolding on New York City's streets
  50. Why the Christian idea of hell no longer persuades people to care for the poor