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How would engineers build the Golden Gate Bridge today?

  • Written by Hota GangaRao, Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, West Virginia University
imageWhat could be better?Uladzik Kryhin via Shutterstock.com.

Ever since the Golden Gate Bridge opened to traffic on May 27, 1937, it’s been an iconic symbol on the American landscape.

By 1870, people had realized the necessity of building a bridge spanning the Golden Gate Strait to connect the city of San Francisco with Marin County. However, it...

Read more: How would engineers build the Golden Gate Bridge today?

Homeless vets with families: An untold part of veterans' struggles

  • Written by Roya Ijadi-Maghsoodi, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles
imageA homeless Vietnam vet begs for money on a Boston street in 2012. Joseph Sohm/Shutterstcok.com

In 2010, the Obama administration announced the ambitious goal of ending homelessness among veterans. Over the last year, the number of veterans who are homeless dropped 30 percent in Los Angeles County. Nationwide, veteran homelessness fell by almost 50...

Read more: Homeless vets with families: An untold part of veterans' struggles

Diplomat in chief: How did Trump do on his first Middle East visit?

  • Written by Jeremy Pressman, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Connecticut

President Donald Trump received both pageantry and a warm reception on his first trip to the Middle East.

Whether bowing his head to receive the King Abdulaziz al Saud Collar from Saudi Arabian King Salman, gathering around the “glowing orb” at the Global Center for Combating Extremist Ideology in Riyadh or standing at the Western Wall...

Read more: Diplomat in chief: How did Trump do on his first Middle East visit?

Why Montana just elected Greg Gianforte, a man charged with assault, to Congress

  • Written by Lee Banville, Associate Professor of Journalism, The University of Montana

Until just about 24 hours before the polls closed, the race for Montana’s sole congressional seat seemed to be focused on health care, Donald Trump and gun rights. Republican businessman Greg Gianforte appeared to be headed for a likely victory in the race against another political newcomer, musician and Democrat Rob Quist.

Then came...

Read more: Why Montana just elected Greg Gianforte, a man charged with assault, to Congress

Why a monthly period is especially hard for millions of women and girls around the world

  • Written by Marni Sommer, Associate Professor of Sociomedical Sciences, Columbia University Medical Center
imageGirls in Tanzania listen to an instructor who is teaching them about menstruation. From menstrualhygieneday.org

Millions of girls and women are displaced and on the move right now globally – and the Trump administration’s proposed drastic cuts to humanitarian aid will have a major impact on these girls’ and women’s health.

A...

Read more: Why a monthly period is especially hard for millions of women and girls around the world

When image trumps ideology: How JFK created the template for the modern presidency

  • Written by Steven Watts, Professor of History, University of Missouri-Columbia
imagePresident John F. Kennedy watches as planes conduct anti-sub operations during maneuvers off the North Carolina coast in April 1962.Associated Press

Even at John F. Kennedy’s centennial on May 29, 2017, the 35th president remains an enigma. We still struggle to come to a clear consensus about a leader frozen in time – a man who, in our...

Read more: When image trumps ideology: How JFK created the template for the modern presidency

Trump says the IRS regulates churches too much. Here's why he's wrong

  • Written by Philip Hackney, James E. & Betty M. Phillips Associate Professor of Law, Louisiana State University
imageWho enforces regulations that bar churches from engaging in politics?www.shutterstock.com

President Donald Trump recently signed an executive order that he said would keep his campaign promise to defend religious groups from the IRS when they engage in political speech.

Like other experts, I believe this move does nothing to change IRS policy. But...

Read more: Trump says the IRS regulates churches too much. Here's why he's wrong

Designing games that change perceptions, opinions and even players' real-life actions

  • Written by Lindsay Grace, Associate Professor of Communication; Director, American University Game Lab and Studio, American University School of Communication

In 1904, Lizzie Magie patented “The Landlord’s Game,” a board game about property ownership, with the specific goal of teaching players about how a system of land grabbing impoverishes tenants and enriches property owners. The game, which went on to become the mass-market classic “Monopoly,” was the first widely...

Read more: Designing games that change perceptions, opinions and even players' real-life actions

How do the chemicals in sunscreen protect our skin from damage?

  • Written by Kerry Hanson, Research Chemist, University of California, Riverside
imageDon't skimp on the SPF.Sabphoto via Shutterstock.com

Not so long ago, people like my Aunt Muriel thought of sunburn as a necessary evil on the way to a “good base tan.” She used to slather on the baby oil while using a large reflector to bake away. Aunt Muriel’s mantra when the inevitable burn and peel appeared: Beauty has its...

Read more: How do the chemicals in sunscreen protect our skin from damage?

The song that had one British politician wishing for the Sex Pistols' 'sudden death'

  • Written by Karen Fournier, Associate Professor of Music Theory, University of Michigan

Since punk rock’s earliest days, the genre has sought to challenge social norms and traditions.

But when the Sex Pistols came out with “God Save the Queen” 40 years ago, on May 27, 1977, it was instantly greeted with widespread, visceral condemnation.

Released only months after the band’s infamous and expletive-laden...

Read more: The song that had one British politician wishing for the Sex Pistols' 'sudden death'

More Articles ...

  1. JFK at 100: Why we still cherish his memory
  2. Brazil plunges once more into political crisis, jeopardizing economic recovery
  3. Beyond the CBO score: How Trump Budget and the AHCA are dismantling America's safety net
  4. Iraq and Afghanistan: The US$6 trillion bill for America's longest war is unpaid
  5. Scientists at work: Forecasting the Atlantic hurricane season
  6. America's worsening global reputation could put billions in US exports at risk
  7. Building resilience early in life can help children cope with trauma
  8. What veterans' poems can teach us about healing on Memorial Day
  9. If Israeli lawmakers demote the Arabic language, then what?
  10. Military-funded prosthetic technologies benefit more than just veterans
  11. Why it was once unthinkable for the president to be seen with the pope
  12. How Google Street View became fertile ground for artists
  13. The Islamic State group has weaponized children
  14. How social ties make us resilient to trauma
  15. How childhood trauma can affect mental and physical health into adulthood
  16. How Trump and Tom Price can kill Obamacare without the Senate
  17. Getting ready for hurricane season: 6 essential reads
  18. What is the Shia-Sunni divide?
  19. Neuromechanics of flamingos' amazing feats of balance
  20. Helping military service members complete college
  21. Trump budget would abandon public education for private choice
  22. Trump's Saudi Arabia speech confirms massive shift in US foreign policy
  23. What is terrorism? What do terrorists want?
  24. Infecting mosquitoes with bacteria so they can't infect us with viruses like Zika and dengue
  25. Why Ramadan is called Ramadan: 6 questions answered
  26. New public database reveals striking differences in how guns are regulated from state to state
  27. Trump, Saudi Arabia and yet another arms deal
  28. Want to support veterans? 4 tips for finding good charities
  29. How do we know the millennial generation exists? Look at the data
  30. What are software vulnerabilities, and why are there so many of them?
  31. With a tight federal budget, here's where to focus clean energy research funding
  32. 6 reasons why stopping terrorism is so challenging
  33. 6 reasons why stopping worldwide terrorism is so challenging
  34. Breaking down their own stereotypes to give veterans more career opportunities
  35. US civil service's preference for hiring military vets comes at a hidden cost
  36. How data is transforming the music industry
  37. What Trump missed in his address on tolerance - American Muslims
  38. Mueller's threats to resign reveal his character
  39. What is moral injury in veterans?
  40. Yale grad students' hunger strike can't turn the tide for labor
  41. Brazil's tide against corruption swells
  42. Should spies use secret software vulnerabilities?
  43. Understanding tornadoes: 5 questions answered
  44. Child anxiety and parenting in the Trump era
  45. When some US firms move production overseas, they also offshore their pollution
  46. Trump's global gag order: 5 questions answered
  47. Meet Ebrahim Raisi, the cleric challenging incumbent Rouhani for president of Iran
  48. Meet Ebrahim Raisi, the cleric who challenged incumbent Rouhani for president of Iran
  49. Comey isn't the first FBI director to keep memos on a president
  50. Fidget toys aren't just hype