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How Christian media is shaping American politics

  • Written by Jason C. Bivins, Professor, North Carolina State University
President Donald Trump with televangelist Rev. Pat Robertson.AP Photo/Steve Helber

For Americans growing up between the 1950s and the 1980s, religion was not a regular presence on television. Aside from Sunday morning shows or occasional commercials, religious programming issued end-time warnings, sought monetary contributions, or staged faith...

Read more: How Christian media is shaping American politics

How one 'Rosie the Riveter' poster won out over all the others and became a symbol of female empowerment

  • Written by Sarah Myers, Assistant Professor of History, Saint Francis University
During the war, the poster on the left, painted by J. Howard Miller, was only on display for only two weeks. Norman Rockwell's, on the other hand, was seen by millions.Nick Lehr/The Conversation

Seventy-five years ago, Norman Rockwell’s painting of Rosie the Riveter appeared on the cover of a May 1943 issue of The Saturday Evening Post.

Many...

Read more: How one 'Rosie the Riveter' poster won out over all the others and became a symbol of female...

Why the Catholic church is 'hemorrhaging' priests

  • Written by Verónica Giménez Béliveau, Professor, Religion and Society , University of Buenos Aires

Priests are Catholicism’s greatest figures: shepherds who manage believers’ relationship with the divine.

But, as Pope Francis recently acknolwedged, their numbers are dwindling. In fact, the number of priests worldwide has been dropping since the 1930s.

In Argentina, a predominantly Catholic country, the Church lost 23 percent of its...

Read more: Why the Catholic church is 'hemorrhaging' priests

Informants aren't spies – they're essential FBI tools

  • Written by Douglas M. Charles, Associate Professor of History, Pennsylvania State University
The FBI Building in Washington, DCAP

President Donald Trump tweeted this week that he would order the Department of Justice to investigate whether the FBI, under President Barack Obama, had “infiltrated or surveilled” his presidential campaign “for political purposes.”

Trump was referring to the FBI’s use of an...

Read more: Informants aren't spies – they're essential FBI tools

A brief history of American winemaking

  • Written by Liz Thach, Professor of Management and Wine Business, Sonoma State University
A cellar worker steams American oak wine barrels before their use at Silver Oak Cellars in Oakville, Calif. AP Photo/Eric Risberg

The American love affair with wine dates back to the earlier European settlers in the 16th century, when they began making wine with a native grape known as muscadine.

Today every state produces wine, though almost half...

Read more: A brief history of American winemaking

Bendable concrete, with a design inspired by seashells, can make US infrastructure safer and more durable

  • Written by Victor C. Li, Chair professor, University of Michigan
Fractured concrete pavement slabs on a street in Canton, Mich.Victor Li, CC BY-ND

Spring construction season is underway, and many tons of concrete will be used in the coming months. Unfortunately, concrete is a brittle material: Placed under stress, it cannot bend very far before it fractures. Some pavements that are being poured now will crack...

Read more: Bendable concrete, with a design inspired by seashells, can make US infrastructure safer and more...

Self-cloning Asian tick causing worry in New Jersey

  • Written by Alvaro Toledo, Assistant Professor of Entomology, Rutgers University
The female longhorned tick, _Haemaphysalis longicornis_, crawling on a leaf.Jim Occi, Rutgers Center for Vector Biology, CC BY-NC-ND

New Jersey has a new visitor, and it’s not welcome.

No one is quite sure how the longhorned tick Haemaphysalis longicornis, an invasive bug originally from East Asia arrived in New Jersey and where, exactly, it...

Read more: Self-cloning Asian tick causing worry in New Jersey

New migraine drug: A neurologist explains how it works

  • Written by Yulia Orlova, Assistant Professor of Neurology, University of Florida
Pain from migraine headaches is a major cause of disability. A new drug could prevent them, in some cases.R. Nial Bradshaw/Flickr, CC BY-SA

The FDA announced approval on May 17 of a novel preventive treatment for migraine headaches. Aimovig is the first in a new class of migraine-specific drugs that works by blocking an action of a protein that is...

Read more: New migraine drug: A neurologist explains how it works

What's wrong with secret donor agreements like the ones George Mason University inked with the Kochs

  • Written by Alexa Capeloto, Associate Professor of Journalism, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Students and faculty members have protested arrangements GMU made with donors.AP Photo/Matt Barakat

George Mason University President Ángel Cabrera acknowledged this month that his school gave the Charles Koch Foundation “some influence” over hiring and evaluating faculty as it accepted millions of dollars for its free-market...

Read more: What's wrong with secret donor agreements like the ones George Mason University inked with the Kochs

Why we hate making financial decisions – and what to do about it

  • Written by Aner Sela, Associate Professor of Marketing, University of Florida
Financial decisions can be a real maze. Andrii Vodolazhskyi/Shutterstock.com

The advice to use your head, not your heart, might not be helpful after all.

We all make tough decisions, but choices relating to money send many of us running in the other direction. Unfortunately, ample evidence indicates that aversion toward financial decisions leads...

Read more: Why we hate making financial decisions – and what to do about it

More Articles ...

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  2. Venezuela is now a dictatorship
  3. Peer rejection isn't the culprit behind school shootings
  4. Some Sunnis voted for a Shiite – and 3 more takeaways from the Iraqi election
  5. What's in your genome? Parents-to-be want to know
  6. Why medicine leads the professions in suicide, and what we can do about it
  7. Women's higher education was pioneered by evangelical Christian leaders
  8. Would Rachel Carson eat organic?
  9. Could protest curb school violence? Lessons from the opt-out movement
  10. How 'media snacks' – from HQ Trivia to Candy Crush – are transforming the workplace
  11. Personality tests with deep-sounding questions provide shallow answers about the 'true' you
  12. How Stacey Abrams' 'black girl magic' turned Georgia a bit more blue
  13. Wall Street regulations need a facelift, not a minor Dodd-Frank makeover
  14. What are these 'levels' of autonomous vehicles?
  15. The right-wing origins of the Jerusalem soccer team that wants to add 'Trump' to its name
  16. Farmers and cropdusting pilots on the Great Plains worried about pesticide risks before 'Silent Spring'
  17. As more solar and wind come onto the grid, prices go down but new questions come up
  18. Why we need to rethink how to teach the Holocaust
  19. HIV lies dormant in brain, increasing risk of dementia, but how?
  20. The Standard Model of particle physics: The absolutely amazing theory of almost everything
  21. America's graying population in 3 maps
  22. A healthy diet isn't always possible for low-income Americans, even when they get SNAP benefits
  23. Prison records from 1800s Georgia show mass incarceration's racially charged beginnings
  24. Cheating workers out of wages is easier than ever
  25. Russia, Putin lead the way in exploiting democracy's lost promise
  26. Amnesty for drug traffickers? That's one Mexican presidential candidate's pitch to voters
  27. A new bond between the public and universities could brighten America’s future
  28. Prostate cancer screening: An expert explains why new guidelines were needed
  29. Debunking the 6 biggest myths about 'technology addiction'
  30. These CRISPR-modified crops don't count as GMOs
  31. Why Michigan needs to draw more revenue from its booming bottled water industry
  32. Beyond honey bees: Wild bees are also key pollinators, and some species are disappearing
  33. It's time to ask deeper questions about school shootings
  34. Supreme Court ruling against class action lawsuits is a blow for workers – and #MeToo
  35. Why California's new rooftop mandate isn't good enough for some solar power enthusiasts
  36. U.S. Forces in South Korea: A seven-decade commitment
  37. What you see in a 3D scan of yourself could be upsetting
  38. A clinical trial wants your DNA – what should you do?
  39. Ticks and mosquitoes bringing more diseases – what can we do?
  40. Improving school climate, not just security, is key to violence prevention
  41. Jewish Americans changed their names, but not at Ellis Island
  42. Toward sustainable ammonia production
  43. DNA apps promise deeper insights for consumers – but at what cost?
  44. A sustainable, energy-saving way to make the key ingredient in fertilizers
  45. Why China can't meet Trump's $200 billion trade demand
  46. 5 things to know about mass shootings in America
  47. Scott Pruitt's approach to pollution control will make the air dirtier and Americans less healthy
  48. I teach refugees to map their world
  49. How lessons from childhood cancer care could improve adult cancer care
  50. The GOP's poor arguments for doubling down on SNAP's work requirements