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Will a merged Tesla-SolarCity put a solar-powered battery in every home?

  • Written by W. Rocky Newman, Professor of Management, Farmer School of Business, Miami University
imageThe linchpin to Tesla's proposed merger with SolarCity is the Gigafactory and whether it can lower costs and improve battery performance.Tesla Motors

One year ago Tesla Motors announced plans to build its Gigafactory to produce huge numbers of batteries, giving life to the old saying, “if you want something done right, do it yourself.”

By...

Read more: Will a merged Tesla-SolarCity put a solar-powered battery in every home?

Fentanyl and other synthetic opioids sold as counterfeits in deadly new trend

  • Written by Samuel Banister, Research Fellow, Stanford University

In March and April, 56 people in the Sacramento area were hospitalized after taking Norco brand hydrocodone pills. Fifteen died.

But, as we discovered, these pills were not pharmaceutical hydrocodone at all. They were counterfeits containing fentanyl that were purchased on the street. Fentanyl is an opioid far more powerful than hydrocodone....

Read more: Fentanyl and other synthetic opioids sold as counterfeits in deadly new trend

How men benefit from family-friendly tenure policies

  • Written by Kelly Bedard, Professor of Economics, University of California, Santa Barbara
imageWhy aren't there as many female tenured professors?Sarah, CC BY-NC

On Friday, August 26, as we celebrate Women’s Equality Day – a day marking the 96th anniversary of the 19th Amendment that guaranteed women the right to vote – it is a time to reflect both on the progress that has been made on gender equality and on how much work...

Read more: How men benefit from family-friendly tenure policies

Failed coup in Turkey means thousands are voting with their feet

  • Written by Ibrahim Sirkeci, Professor of Transnational Studies and Marketing & Director of Regent's Centre for Transnational Studies, Regent's University London

Turkey is facing a new danger – brain drain.

On July 15, a group within the Turkish military staged a coup.

It failed. But since then, the Turkish government has restricted rights and freedoms of its people. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has stepped up the pressure on Fethullah Gulen and his supporters. Gulen, a U.S.-based Muslim...

Read more: Failed coup in Turkey means thousands are voting with their feet

Scientists at work: Public archaeologists dig before the construction crews do

  • Written by Nina M. Versaggi, Director of the Public Archaeology Facility and Associate Professor,Anthropology, Binghamton University, State University of New York
imageArchaeologists on the front lines.Jonathan Cohen/Binghamton University, CC BY-ND

Armed with my sharpened trowel, 3-meter tape, shovel, shaker screen and peanut butter and jelly sandwich, I joined my first dig as part of Binghamton University’s Public Archaeology Facility back in 1975. Crews of archaeologists were shovel testing the proposed...

Read more: Scientists at work: Public archaeologists dig before the construction crews do

Russia's aggressive power is resurgent, online and off

  • Written by Frank J. Cilluffo, Director, Center for Cyber and Homeland Security, George Washington University
imageRussia is flexing its cyberattack muscles.Glove with Russian-flag keyboard via shutterstock.com

The Bear is back. It’s happening on the ground in and around Ukraine, inside the virtual inboxes of the Democratic National Committee and at American news organizations. Russian cyberattacks are yielding eye-popping headlines warning not only of a...

Read more: Russia's aggressive power is resurgent, online and off

Polio eradication effort challenged, but not derailed

  • Written by Walt Orenstein, Professor of Medicine, Pediatrics, Global Health, and Epidemiology, Emory University

Decades of innovation, collaboration and old-fashioned sweat and tears have yielded the fewest polio cases to date, with the world on the cusp of complete eradication of polio. Yet to date, smallpox is the only disease that has been eradicated.

Those of us who work to eradicate polio have been extremely pleased that the number of polio cases has...

Read more: Polio eradication effort challenged, but not derailed

Rebuilding ground zero: How twin mandates of revival and remembrance reshaped Lower Manhattan

  • Written by Lynne B. Sagalyn, Earle W. Kazis and Benjamin Schore Professor Emerita of Real Estate at Columbia Business School, Columbia University
imageLower Manhattan's new skyline.NYC skyline via www.shutterstock.com

From the beginning, rebuilding ground zero was fraught with strategic consequence, for the city of New York and for the nation.

The original World Trade Center complex, completed in 1973, represented the culmination of a decades-long effort to revitalize the city’s founding...

Read more: Rebuilding ground zero: How twin mandates of revival and remembrance reshaped Lower Manhattan

Corporate sponsors at Yosemite? The case against privatizing national parks

  • Written by John Freemuth, Professor of Public Policy and Senior Fellow Cecil Andrus Center for Public Policy, Boise State University
imageCamping under the Milky Way, Canyonlands National Park, Utah.Emily Ogden, National Park Service/Flickr, CC BY

The centennial of the National Park Service is inspiring an impressive amount of soul-searching about the agency and the lands for which it is responsible. This is timely and appropriate, as the NPS faces serious challenges that affect the...

Read more: Corporate sponsors at Yosemite? The case against privatizing national parks

The real reason the EpiPen and other off-patents are so expensive

  • Written by Timothy Holbrook, Professor of Law, Emory University
imageAn injectable medication.From www.shutterstock.com

The rising price for EpiPens, a drug delivery system that is crucial for persons experiencing potentially life-threatening allergic reactions, has resulted in outrage. The price increase, from about US$94 for a two-pack of injectable epinephrine to more than $600 in just nine years, has members of...

Read more: The real reason the EpiPen and other off-patents are so expensive

More Articles ...

  1. David Duke, Donald Trump and the dog whistle
  2. Fracking and health: What we know from Pennsylvania's natural gas boom
  3. Could gay-straight alliances reduce school bullying?
  4. This little-known pioneering educator put coding in the classroom
  5. Understanding mosquitoes can help us find better ways to kill them
  6. Getting serious about funny: Psychologists see humor as a character strength
  7. Who dies in police custody? Texas, California offer new tools to find out
  8. What's ailing the ACA: Insurers or Congress?
  9. Why silence continues to surround pregnancy discrimination in the workplace
  10. Playing at torture, a not so trivial pursuit
  11. How the Islamic State recruits and coerces children
  12. Voter ID laws: Why black Democrats' fight for the ballot in Mississippi still matters
  13. Get better election predictions by combining diverse forecasts
  14. Harried doctors can make diagnostic errors: They need time to think
  15. How Dostoevsky predicted Trump's America
  16. Suburban sprawl and poor preparation worsened flood damage in Louisiana
  17. Louisiana's Cajun Navy shines light on growing value of boat rescuers
  18. King Coal is dethroned in the US – and that's good news for the environment
  19. Slavery on campus – recovering the history of Washington College's discarded slaves
  20. Relationship advice from the government doesn't help low-income couples – here's what might
  21. How racism has shaped welfare policy in America since 1935
  22. Big Tobacco aims its guns to kill California tobacco tax
  23. Why we're wrong to blame immigrants for our sputtering economies
  24. With skateboarding's inclusion in Tokyo 2020, a once-marginalized subculture enters the spotlight
  25. How bigotry crushed the dreams of an all-black Little League team
  26. From wine to weed: Keeping the marijuana farm small and local
  27. After the NSA hack: Cybersecurity in an even more vulnerable world
  28. Can a single region in Florida show the state how to adapt to climate change?
  29. Should writing for the public count toward tenure?
  30. What does social science say about how a female president might lead?
  31. A pregnant woman's immune response could lead to brain disorders in her kids
  32. DOJ report on Baltimore echoes centuries-old limits on African-American freedom in the Charm City
  33. How companies learn what children secretly want
  34. Algorithms can be more fair than humans
  35. Nuclear power deserves a level playing field
  36. Compete or suckle: Should troubled nuclear reactors be subsidized?
  37. Is misuse of prescription painkillers among youth athletes leading to heroin use?
  38. Why the guns-on-campus debate matters for American higher education
  39. Here's what coworkers think when you suck up to your boss
  40. Don't run (and don't laugh): The little-known history of racewalking
  41. Disasters and kids – how to help them recover
  42. The political role of drone strikes in US grand strategy
  43. Range anxiety? Today's electric cars can cover vast majority of daily U.S. driving needs
  44. Not easy being blue: Fatal shootings, job stress make it hard to be a cop
  45. Making college matter
  46. Turkey's post-coup commitment to democracy offers chance to resolve Kurdish crisis
  47. Are U.S. politics beyond a joke?
  48. Parasitic flies, zombified ants, predator beetles – insect drama on Mexican coffee plantations
  49. Beyond borders: Why we need global action to protect migratory birds
  50. Why science and engineering need to remind students of forgotten lessons from history