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Nazis and communists tried it too: Foreign interference in US elections dates back decades

  • Written by Bradley W. Hart, Assistant Professor of Media, Communications and Journalism, California State University, Fresno
A Facebook ad referenced in the indictment charging Russians in a plot to interfere in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.AP/Jon Elswick

Americans have spent the last 18 months wondering about Russian influence in the 2016 presidential election.

Charges have already been filed against 12 Russian intelligence officers for interfering with the 2016...

Read more: Nazis and communists tried it too: Foreign interference in US elections dates back decades

It's cold! A physiologist explains how to keep your body feeling warm

  • Written by JohnEric Smith, Assistant Professor of Exercise Physiology, Mississippi State University
It's all about holding on to the heat you have.Jason Rosewel/Unsplash, CC BY

Whether waiting for a bus, playing outside or walking the dog – during the colder winter season, everyone is looking for ways to stay warm. Luckily, the process your body uses to break down foods serves as an internal heater.

But when the weather is cold, some...

Read more: It's cold! A physiologist explains how to keep your body feeling warm

Howard Thurman – the Baptist minister who had a deep influence on MLK

  • Written by Paul Harvey, Professor of American History, University of Colorado
Thurman taught King Jr. that spiritual cultivation was necessary to take on the intense work of social activism.AP File Photo

For most African-Americans who grew up with the legacy of segregation and violence, making space for introspection was difficult. Martin Luther King Jr., however, learned to integrate spiritual growth with social...

Read more: Howard Thurman – the Baptist minister who had a deep influence on MLK

A teen scientist helped me discover tons of golf balls polluting the ocean

  • Written by Matthew Savoca, Postdoctoral researcher, Stanford University
Teenager Alex Weber and friends collected nearly 40,000 golf balls hit into the ocean from a handful of California golf courses.Alex Weber, CC BY-ND

Plastic pollution in the world’s oceans has become a global environmental crisis. Many people have seen images that seem to capture it, such as beaches carpeted with plastic trash or a seahorse gr...

Read more: A teen scientist helped me discover tons of golf balls polluting the ocean

America's public schools seldom bring rich and poor together – and MLK would disapprove

  • Written by Jack Schneider, Assistant Professor of Education, University of Massachusetts Lowell
America's public schools were meant to bring together children from all walks of life.Monkey Business Images/www.shutterstock.com

Five decades after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., many carry on his legacy through the struggle for racially integrated schools. Yet as King put it in a 1968 speech, the deeper struggle was “for...

Read more: America's public schools seldom bring rich and poor together – and MLK would disapprove

Martin Luther King Jr., union man

  • Written by Peter Cole, Professor of History, Western Illinois University
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on the picket line at the Scripto plant in Atlanta, Ga., December, 1964.AP

If Martin Luther King Jr. still lived, he’d probably tell people to join unions.

King understood racial equality was inextricably linked to economics. He asked, “What good does it do to be able to eat at a lunch counter if you...

Read more: Martin Luther King Jr., union man

What a 16th-century mystic can teach us about making good decisions

  • Written by Annmarie Cano, Professor of Psychology and Associate Provost for Faculty Development and Faculty Success, Wayne State University
Sculpture of St. Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Jesuit order, on the campus of Boston College.Jay Yuan/Shutterstock.com

Decision-making is a complex process. As individuals, working through our daily lives, we often take a number of shortcuts that may not always serve us well. For example, we make impulsive decisions when stressed or allow...

Read more: What a 16th-century mystic can teach us about making good decisions

Bison are back, and that benefits many other species on the Great Plains

  • Written by Matthew D. Moran, Professor of Biology, Hendrix College
A young bull bison grazes on the Tallgrass Prairie Preserve, Pawhuska, Oklahoma.Matthew Moran, CC BY-ND

Driving north of Pawhuska, Oklahoma, an extraordinary landscape comes into view. Trees disappear and an immense landscape of grass emerges, undulating in the wind like a great, green ocean.

This is the Flint Hills. For over a century it has been...

Read more: Bison are back, and that benefits many other species on the Great Plains

How Central American migrants helped revive the US labor movement

  • Written by Elizabeth Oglesby, Associate Professor of Latin American Studies and Geography, University of Arizona
Salvadoran immigrants were pivotal in the Justice for Janitors campaign in Los Angeles in 1990. It earned wage increases for custodial staff nationwide and inspired today's $15 minimum wage campaign. AP Photo/Chris Pizzello

In the United States’ heated national debate about immigration, two views predominate about Central American migrants:...

Read more: How Central American migrants helped revive the US labor movement

Food is medicine: How US policy is shifting toward nutrition for better health

  • Written by Dariush Mozaffarian, Dean, cardiologist, professor, Tufts University
Policymakers are responding to a growing recognition of food as medicine.udra11/Shutterstock.com

In this new year, millions of Americans will make resolutions about healthier eating. In 2019, could U.S. government leaders further resolve to improve healthier eating as well, joining public health experts in seeing that food is medicine?

In 2018,...

Read more: Food is medicine: How US policy is shifting toward nutrition for better health

More Articles ...

  1. What’s an index fund?
  2. Can genetic engineering save disappearing forests?
  3. Data breaches are inevitable – here's how to protect yourself anyway
  4. Is winter miserable for wildlife?
  5. 3 ways Trump could disrupt health care for the better
  6. Razor burned: Why Gillette's campaign against toxic masculinity missed the mark
  7. El juicio al Chapo evidencia por qué un muro no detendrá el tráfico de drogas entre México y Estados Unidos
  8. A new way to curb nitrogen pollution: Regulate fertilizer producers, not just farmers
  9. Trump's interpreters for Putin meetings face ethical dilemma
  10. In 'airports of the future,' everything new is old again
  11. The biggest nonprofit media outlets are thriving but smaller ones may not survive
  12. Want better tips? Go for gold
  13. El Chapo trial shows why a wall won't stop drugs from crossing the US-Mexico border
  14. Brexit: An ‘escape room’ with no escape
  15. Garbage collection in Syria is crucial to fighting the Islamic State
  16. States are on the front lines of fighting inequality
  17. New debit card for federal student loan borrowers could save money, but concerns linger
  18. Why victims of Catholic priests need to hear more than confessions
  19. Ulterior motives may lurk behind new debit card for federal student loan borrowers
  20. Trump's reference to Wounded Knee evokes the dark history of suppression of indigenous religions
  21. Leaders always 'manufacture' crises, in politics and business
  22. Toward a circular economy: Tackling the plastics recycling problem
  23. Many painful returns: Coping with crummy gifts
  24. Offices are too hot or too cold – is there a better way to control room temperature?
  25. Guatemala in crisis after president bans corruption investigation into his government
  26. The shutdown will harm the health and safety of Americans, even after it's long over
  27. How to train the body's own cells to combat antibiotic resistance
  28. Why do Muslim women wear a hijab?
  29. To preserve US national parks in a warming world, reconnect fragmented public lands
  30. Why privatizing the VA or other essential health services is a bad idea
  31. 3 reasons to pay attention to the LA teacher strike
  32. The Prohibition-era origins of the modern craft cocktail movement
  33. Memories of eating influence your next meal – new research pinpoints brain cells involved
  34. Change your phone settings so Apple, Google can't track your movements
  35. The 2019 government shutdown is just the latest reason why poor people can't bank on the safety net
  36. How one German city developed – and then lost – generations of math geniuses
  37. Chicago, New York discounted most public input in expanding bike systems
  38. Who are the federal workers affected by the shutdown? 5 questions answered
  39. Acute flaccid myelitis: What is the polio-like illness paralyzing US children?
  40. If Trump declares a national emergency, could Congress or the courts reverse it?
  41. Science gets shut down right along with the federal government
  42. How Viktor Orban degraded Hungary's weak democracy
  43. 3 ways to be smart on social media
  44. The quiet threat inside 'internet of things' devices
  45. Calling it a 'war on science' has consequences
  46. Federal workers begin to feel pain of shutdown as 800,000 lose their paychecks
  47. Virginia's uranium mining battle flips traditional views of federal and state power
  48. Mapping the world's 'blue carbon' hot spots in coastal mangrove forests
  49. The politics of fear: How fear goes tribal, allowing us to be manipulated
  50. More solutions needed for campus hunger