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The untold stories of women in the 1967 Detroit rebellion and its aftermath

  • Written by Lisa Biggs, Assistant Professor, Theatre and Performance Studies, Residential College in the Arts and Humanities, Michigan State University
imagePeople gather around a truck to get food on Detroit's east side in July 1967. The food was brought to the riot-stricken area by the Crisis Council, one of the many organizations aiding residents.AP Photo

The movie “Detroit,” which tells the story of the 1967 Detroit rebellion, has received mixed reviews since its release. Some praised...

Read more: The untold stories of women in the 1967 Detroit rebellion and its aftermath

Seeing without eyes – the unexpected world of nonvisual photoreception

  • Written by Thomas Cronin, Professor of Biological Sciences, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
imageColor-changing cells in an Atlantic squid's skin contain light-sensitive pigments.Alexandra Kingston, CC BY-ND

We humans are uncommonly visual creatures. And those of us endowed with normal sight are used to thinking of our eyes as vital to how we experience the world.

Vision is an advanced form of photoreception – that is, light sensing. But...

Read more: Seeing without eyes – the unexpected world of nonvisual photoreception

MalwareTech's arrest sheds light on the complex culture of the hacking world

  • Written by Roderick S. Graham, Assistant Professor of Sociology, Old Dominion University
imageWhich hat would you wear?crystalfoto/Shutterstock.com

The arrest of a British cybersecurity researcher on charges of disseminating malware and conspiring to commit computer fraud and abuse provides a window into the complexities of hacking culture.

In May, a person going by the nickname “MalwareTech” gained international fame –...

Read more: MalwareTech's arrest sheds light on the complex culture of the hacking world

Want to fix America's infrastructure? Build in the places that need help the most

  • Written by Gregory Burge, Associate Professor of Economics, University of Oklahoma
imageHow can we limit urban sprawl?kla4067, CC BY

Political debates over U.S. infrastructure spending are painfully incomplete. The discussion focuses almost exclusively on how much money should be spent, ignoring important questions about what projects are most needed and where those projects should be placed.

In the U.S., two-thirds of the population...

Read more: Want to fix America's infrastructure? Build in the places that need help the most

Do college presidents still matter?

  • Written by Richard Freeland, Professor of History and Higher Education, Northeastern University
imageThree influential college presidents: Charles Eliot of Harvard (in office 1869-1909), Robert Maynard Hutchins of the University of Chicago (1929-45) and Drew Faust of Harvard (2007-18).AP Photo/Edward Kitch/Charles Krupa

Drew Faust’s recent decision to step down as president of Harvard has inspired much commentary about whoshould be the next...

Read more: Do college presidents still matter?

Why Medicaid matters to you

  • Written by Sharona Hoffman, Professor of health law and bioethics, Case Western Reserve University
imageAs more and more seniors need care, their budgets will be strained. As a result, they may rely on Medicaid.gagliardiImages/Shutterstock.com

Efforts to repeal and replace Obamacare have been suspended for the time being, and many Americans are breathing a sigh of relief. But Obamacare is far from safe, and the same is true for one of the key...

Read more: Why Medicaid matters to you

China is the key to avoiding nuclear 'fire and fury' in North Korea

  • Written by Greg Wright, Assistant Professor of Economics, University of California, Merced
imageThe news of an exchange of threats between the U.S. and North Korea is reported in Tokyo on Aug. 9, 2017.AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi

U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un are playing a dangerous game of brinkmanship.

North Korea got the world’s attention – and Trump’s – when it successfully launched an...

Read more: China is the key to avoiding nuclear 'fire and fury' in North Korea

TB's stronghold in India: A tragedy there, and a grave concern for the rest of the world

  • Written by Jay Desai, Assistant Professor, University of Southern California

A study published recently in The Lancet has drawn the world’s attention to the specter of particularly dangerous types of tuberculosis, called multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant, in four countries. The study estimated that the percentage of multidrug-resistant TB among all cases in India, which already has the highest burden...

Read more: TB's stronghold in India: A tragedy there, and a grave concern for the rest of the world

Can transgender TV characters help bridge an ideological divide?

  • Written by Erica L. Rosenthal, Senior Research Associate, Hollywood, Health & Society, University of Southern California
imagefile404/shutterstock.com

In 2014, Time magazine declared American culture had reached a “transgender tipping point,” with transgender people achieving unprecedented media visibility.

However, in light of recent policy shifts – such as the White House’s rollback of federal guidelines that supported transgender students and...

Read more: Can transgender TV characters help bridge an ideological divide?

Climate gloom and doom? Bring it on. But we need stories about taking action, too

  • Written by Jon Christensen, Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, the Department of History, and the Center for Digital Humanities, University of California, Los Angeles
imageAre there other ways to get people to engage with climate change?FloridaStock/Shutterstock.com

There’s been no shortage of pessimistic news on climate change lately. A group of climate scientists and policy experts recently declared that we have just three years left to dramatically turn around carbon emissions, or else. Meanwhile a widely...

Read more: Climate gloom and doom? Bring it on. But we need stories about taking action, too

More Articles ...

  1. Are sex offender registries reinforcing inequality?
  2. Eclipsing the occult in early America: Benjamin Franklin and his almanacs
  3. Trump and Obama have one surprising thing in common – the words they use
  4. How eclipses were regarded as omens in the ancient world
  5. Disasters can harm older adults long after storms have passed
  6. The military, minorities and social engineering: A long history
  7. Why governmental transparency will not work without strong leadership
  8. Why Ronald McDonald Houses should welcome homemade casseroles
  9. Affirmative action around the world
  10. Scientist at work: Why this meteorologist is eager for an eclipse
  11. The grand jury's role in American criminal justice, explained
  12. Cities need more than air conditioning to get through heat waves
  13. How Big Pharma is hindering treatment of the opioid addiction epidemic
  14. How 'Bambi' paved the way for both 'Fallout 4' and 'Angry Birds'
  15. Reengineering elevators could transform 21st-century cities
  16. US and Mexico immigration: Portraits of Guatemalan refugees in limbo
  17. The missing elements in the debate about affirmative action and Asian-American students
  18. Rural America: Where Sam Shepard's roots ran deepest
  19. How affordable housing can chip away at residential segregation
  20. Heat waves threaten city dwellers, especially minorities and the poor
  21. Explaining 'Rakshabandan' – a Hindu festival that celebrates the brother-sister bond
  22. Why Detroit exploded in the summer of 1967
  23. What does choice mean when it comes to health care?
  24. Misleading statements on Russia meeting recall Clinton's impeachment
  25. When the sun goes dark: 5 questions answered about the solar eclipse
  26. Watching children learn how to lie
  27. If we keep subsidizing wind, will the cost of wind energy go down?
  28. Learning new tricks from sea sponges, nature's most unlikely civil engineers
  29. How Greece could escape debtors' prison – if Europe opens the door
  30. Imagining Russia post-Putin
  31. One way to promote green infrastructure in your city
  32. Why shifting regulatory power to the states won't improve the environment
  33. How welfare's work requirements can deepen and prolong poverty: Rose's story
  34. Why the creators of '13 Reasons Why' should pay attention to the spike in suicide-related Google searches
  35. Soundscapes in the past: Adding a new dimension to our archaeological picture of ancient cultures
  36. How hot weather – and climate change – affect airline flights
  37. Inside the fight against malware attacks
  38. This math puzzle will help you plan your next party
  39. The true failure of foreign language instruction
  40. A trans soldier in the ancient Roman army?
  41. Henry David Thoreau’s views of 19th-century media resonate today
  42. Facing the threat from North Korea: 5 essential reads
  43. Is your drinking water safe? Here's how you can find out
  44. A big hurdle do-good companies face
  45. Are State Department cuts a major setback for genocide prevention?
  46. When do moviegoers become pilgrims?
  47. Welfare as we know it now: 6 questions answered
  48. Creating a high-speed internet lane for emergency situations
  49. Concussions and CTE: More complicated than even the experts know
  50. Why you may not need all those days of antibiotics