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4 reasons why anti-Trump Latino voters won't swing the midterms

  • Written by Steffen W. Schmidt, Lucken Endowed Professor of Political Science, Iowa State University
Latinos make up 12 percent of people eligible to vote in the 2018 midterm elections. Flickr/Erik Hersman, CC BY-SA

The Democratic Party shouldn’t count on Latinos swinging many midterm races their way this year.

Approximately 27.3 million U.S. Latinos are eligible to vote in November’s midterm elections – 12 percent of all eligible...

Read more: 4 reasons why anti-Trump Latino voters won't swing the midterms

How Aretha Franklin found her voice

  • Written by Adam Gustafson, Instructor in Music, Pennsylvania State University
Aretha Franklin performs at New York's Radio City Music Hall in 1989.AP Photo/Mario Suriani

Vocal juggernaut. Social activist. Artistic collaborator. Diva.

As Aretha Franklin is laid to rest, the Queen of Soul will deservedly be remembered in an array of tributes reflecting the immense legacy of her life and music.

Her voice is ingrained in the...

Read more: How Aretha Franklin found her voice

El largo viaje de la silicona, de los implantes mamarios a la cocina

  • Written by Kiersten Muenchinger, Tim and Mary Boyle Chair in Material Studies and Product Design, University of Oregon
El plástico ideal para las temperaturas extremas de la cocina.Oksana Shufrych

Una de mis bandejas para hielo es amarilla y tan novedosa que, cuando se coloca en el congelador, moldea el agua en trocitos de hielo con forma de pato.

Quizás usted haya visto moldes para hielo como este, con todo tipo de formas, desde aviones hasta logotipo...

Read more: El largo viaje de la silicona, de los implantes mamarios a la cocina

Celebrating the 150th anniversary of helium's discovery – why we need it more than ever

  • Written by Christopher Rithner, CIF Director, Colorado State University
Balloons filled with helium float lazily into the sky.By magicinfoto / shutterstock.com

Watching helium gas lift balloons into the air is a lot of fun – or perhaps a tragedy if that balloon belonged to a small child who let it go. And, who hasn’t sipped the helium gas from a balloon and then quacked like Donald Duck? Although,...

Read more: Celebrating the 150th anniversary of helium's discovery – why we need it more than ever

Black and biracial Americans wouldn't need to code-switch if we lived in a post-racial society

  • Written by Chandra D.L. Waring, ​Assistant Professor of Sociology and Race and Ethnic Studies, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater
For black and biracial Americans, the pressures to adapt to a dominant white culture – and surrender their unique sense of self – can be suffocating.Gumenyuk Dmitriy/Shutterstock.com

Boots Riley’s new film “Sorry to Bother You” does anything but apologize.

In telling the story of Cassius, a young black man who becomes...

Read more: Black and biracial Americans wouldn't need to code-switch if we lived in a post-racial society

Facebook begins to shift from being a free and open platform into a responsible public utility

  • Written by Anjana Susarla, Associate Professor of Information Systems, Michigan State University
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg prepares to testify on Capitol Hill.AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

When Facebook recently removed several accounts for trying to influence the 2018 midterm elections, it was the company’s latest move acknowledging the key challenge facing the social media giant: It is both an open platform for free expression of diverse...

Read more: Facebook begins to shift from being a free and open platform into a responsible public utility

Could different cultures teach us something about dementia?

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
Other cultures view dementia differently. Could they help us be better caregivers? BlurryMe/Shutterstock.com

Picture two different families, each dealing with a diagnosis of dementia in one of its members. In one case, the patient is a retired executive, whose family tries as long as possible to keep the diagnosis secret, relying primarily on...

Read more: Could different cultures teach us something about dementia?

Lost and found in upstate New York: 'Lost Boys' nonprofits latch onto a new objective closer to home

  • Written by Susan Appe, Assistant Professor of Public Administration, University at Albany, State University of New York
Many people in South Sudan live in camps for the internally displaced after years of war.AP Photo/Sam Mednick

Nonprofits help immigrants and refugees who settle in the U.S. in many ways. They encourage naturalized newcomers to become citizens, for example, and advocate for more humane detention conditions.

We are scholars who research why people...

Read more: Lost and found in upstate New York: 'Lost Boys' nonprofits latch onto a new objective closer to home

Approval of first ‘RNA interference’ drug – why the excitement?

  • Written by Thomas Schmittgen, Professor of Pharmaceutics, University of Florida
Single strands of ribonucleic acid (RNA) are now being used to treat disease.By nobeastsofierce / shutterstock.com

Small interfering RNA sounds like something from a science fiction novel rather than a revolutionary type of medicine. But this odd-sounding new drug offers a novel strategy for treating disease by targeting the root cause rather than...

Read more: Approval of first ‘RNA interference’ drug – why the excitement?

The plastic waste crisis is an opportunity for the US to get serious about recycling at home

  • Written by Kate O'Neill, Associate Professor, Global Environmental Politics, University of California, Berkeley
Conveyors carry mixed plastic into a device that will shred recycle them at a plastics recycling plant in Vernon, California. AP Photo/Reed Saxon,File

A global plastic waste crisis is building, with major implications for health and the environment. Under its so-called “National Sword” policy, China has sharply reduced imports of...

Read more: The plastic waste crisis is an opportunity for the US to get serious about recycling at home

More Articles ...

  1. Dr. Droegemeier goes to Washington? What could happen when a respected scientist joins Trump's White House
  2. A bee economist explains honey bees' vital role in growing tasty almonds
  3. Una noche de patrulla en la frontera entre EEUU y México
  4. Trump craves good press from the 'fake news' media – just look at his White House newsletter
  5. Parole and probation have grown far beyond resources allocated to support them
  6. Zimbabwe's coup did not create democracy from dictatorship
  7. What is the Hajj?
  8. Is there such a thing as a stress-free school lunch? Here's how to pack one
  9. What are rare earths, crucial elements in modern technology? 4 questions answered
  10. Charlottesville belies racism's deep roots in the North
  11. Bio-based plastics can reduce waste, but only if we invest in both making and getting rid of them
  12. I went from prison to professor – here's why criminal records should not be used to keep people out of college
  13. Scientists are developing greener plastics – the bigger challenge is moving them from lab to market
  14. Cameras can catch cars that run red lights, but that doesn't make streets safer
  15. Overcoming vaccination myths: Could addressing the facts during prenatal visits help?
  16. Dutch Memorial Day: Erasing people after death
  17. Small business owners are getting a new incentive to sell to their employees
  18. Why Jewish giving to Israel is losing ground
  19. As a young reporter, I went undercover to expose the Ku Klux Klan
  20. Following Alfred Russel Wallace's footsteps to Borneo, where he penned his seminal evolution paper
  21. Finding nostalgia in the pixelated video games of decades past
  22. Cuatro cosas que puedes hacer para protegerte de la gripe
  23. ¿Por qué los abogados representan a los immigrantes de manera gratuita?
  24. Short-term health plans: A junk solution to a real problem
  25. A Texas city discovered a mass grave of prison laborers. What should it do with the bodies?
  26. Keeping the electricity grid running – 4 essential reads
  27. What Harvard can learn from Texas: A solution to the controversy over affirmative action
  28. From slag to swag: The story of Earl Tupper's fantastic plastics
  29. Why Native Americans struggle to protect their sacred places
  30. How the media falls short in reporting epidemics
  31. Wildfires are inevitable – increasing home losses, fatalities and costs are not
  32. We are guinea pigs in a worldwide experiment on microplastics
  33. ¿Las noticias te estresan? Estas 4 técnicas de entrenamiento mental te ayudarán a calmar el cerebro
  34. ¿Las noticias te estresan? Estas cuatro técnicas de entrenamiento mental te ayudarán a calmar el cerebro
  35. Designed to deceive: How gambling distorts reality and hooks your brain
  36. Immigration activists fighting to abolish ICE have a bigger vision
  37. Saudi women can drive, but are their voices being heard?
  38. The promise of personalized medicine is not for everyone 
  39. Obesity and diabetes: 2 reasons why we should be worried about the plastics that surround us
  40. A socialist's primary win doesn't herald a workers revolution in the US
  41. The start of high school doesn't have to be stressful
  42. America has 1.5 million nonprofits and room for more
  43. The ghost of Roy Orbison goes on tour – and some aren't happy about it
  44. Walmart tried to make sustainability affordable. Here's what happened
  45. Jury finds Monsanto liable in the first Roundup cancer trial – here's what could happen next
  46. ¿Por qué nuestro cerebro siempre encuentra problemas?
  47. How 'story maps' redraw the world using people's real-life experiences
  48. Profit, not free speech, governs media companies' decisions on controversy
  49. Apple's $1 trillion value doesn't mean it's the 'biggest' company
  50. Why Trump shouldn't leverage the government's emergency oil supply to bolster the GOP