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Police killings of 3 black men left a mark on Detroit's history more than 50 years ago

  • Written by Jeffrey Horner, Senior Lecturer of Urban Studies, Wayne State University
Shooting victims are removed from the Algiers Motel in Detroit, July 26, 1967. AP Photo

Police routinely used violent force against blacks in the U.S. before the 1940s, primarily as a means of preserving segregation in cities.

It became a last line of defense for segregationists after the U.S. Supreme Court in 1948 weakened the ability of property...

Read more: Police killings of 3 black men left a mark on Detroit's history more than 50 years ago

Simple blood test could read people's internal clock

  • Written by Rosemary Braun, Assistant Professor of Biostatistics, Preventive Medicine and Engineering Sciences and Applied Mathematics, Northwestern University
The circadian rhythm is present in every single cell of your body, guided by the central clock that resides in the brain. Creations/Shutterstock.com

In life, timing is everything.

Your body’s internal clock – the circadian rhythm – regulates an enormous variety of processes: when you sleep and wake, when you’re hungry, when...

Read more: Simple blood test could read people's internal clock

The 19th-century tumult over climate change – and why it matters today

  • Written by Deborah Coen, Professor of History and Chair of the Program in History of Science and Medicine, Yale University
Weather towers like this one in a park in Vienna were a popular way for the 19th-century public to track the influence of weather on their lives.Source: Wikimedia

Back in the 19th century, when tractors were still pulled by horses and the word “computer” meant a person hired to carry out tedious calculations, climate science made...

Read more: The 19th-century tumult over climate change – and why it matters today

Nonprofit newsrooms are reaching bigger audiences by teaming up with other outlets

  • Written by Magda Konieczna, Assistant Professor of Journalism, Temple University
NBC News intern Cassie Semyon, dashing to beat the competitionAP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

When images of NBC intern Cassie Semyon sprinting out of the Paul Manafort trial to deliver the verdict to her newsroom went viral, questions bubbled up on social media. Is she a trained runner? Was she barefoot? What was she holding?

What no one asked was, why...

Read more: Nonprofit newsrooms are reaching bigger audiences by teaming up with other outlets

If Trump were a CEO, his board would have fired him by now

  • Written by Bert Spector, Associate Professor of International Business and Strategy at the D'Amore-McKim School of Business, Northeastern University

The Trump White House has endured a lot of bad publicity in its short lifespan, but recent disclosures may be among the worst.

On Sept. 4, an early account of Bob Woodward’s new book revealed the “nervous breakdown” unfolding within the Trump administration. Then, the next afternoon, a “senior official” went public...

Read more: If Trump were a CEO, his board would have fired him by now

Why the anonymous op-ed sets a dangerous precedent

  • Written by Michael Blake, Professor of Philosophy, Public Policy, and Governance, University of Washington
What are the ethics of anonymous resistance?Vincent Diamante, CC BY-SA

The New York Times recently published an anonymous op-ed from a “senior official” in the Trump administration. In the op-ed, the unnamed author describes President Donald Trump as “impetuous, adversarial, petty, and ineffective.” He or she depicts a...

Read more: Why the anonymous op-ed sets a dangerous precedent

Insects were not what my girlfriends wanted to study, until we 'met' Dana Scully

  • Written by Jessica Ware, Associate Professor of Biology, Rutgers University Newark
Among women who are familiar with Scully’s character in 'The X-Files,' half say Scully increased their interest in STEM fields, according to a report. Photos are courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All Rights Reserved.

Insects, those creepy, crawly residents of nature’s demi-monde, were not what the girls in my high...

Read more: Insects were not what my girlfriends wanted to study, until we 'met' Dana Scully

25 Years after The X-Files premiered, Dana Scully is still inspiring women to pursue STEM careers

  • Written by Jessica Ware, Associate Professor of Biology, Rutgers University Newark
Among women who are familiar with Scully’s character in 'The X-Files,' half say Scully increased their interest in STEM fields, according to a report. Photos are courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All Rights Reserved.

Insects, those creepy, crawly residents of nature’s demi-monde, were not what the girls in my high...

Read more: 25 Years after The X-Files premiered, Dana Scully is still inspiring women to pursue STEM careers

Violence against the media isn't new – history shows why it largely disappeared and has now returned

  • Written by Jennifer E. Moore, Assistant Professor, Department of Communication, University of Minnesota Duluth
The Capital Gazette in Annapolis lost five staffers in a shootingAP/Patrick Semansky

Another news outlet has been attacked in the United States.

A man rammed his car repeatedly into Fox affiliate KDFW in Dallas, Texas, on Sept. 5. We can now add this to the growing list of recent attacks on — and violent threats to — the media.

A man...

Read more: Violence against the media isn't new – history shows why it largely disappeared and has now returned

Green Bay Packers fans love that their team doesn't have an owner – just don't call it 'communism'

  • Written by Alan J. Kellner, PhD Candidate in Political Science, Northwestern University

In July, I was walking with my parents through the newly constructed Titletown District in Green Bay, Wisconsin, a new community development across the street from Lambeau Field, where the Green Bay Packers play their home games. It features a local brewpub, a boutique hotel, free outdoor games like foosball and shuffleboard and a large practice...

Read more: Green Bay Packers fans love that their team doesn't have an owner – just don't call it 'communism'

More Articles ...

  1. Kavanaugh's 'judge as umpire' metaphor sounds neutral but it's deeply conservative
  2. Ten years of Large Hadron Collider discoveries are just the start of decoding the universe
  3. Consejos para preparar almuerzos saludables para niños, sin estrés
  4. How passports evolved to help governments regulate your movement
  5. Key internet connections and locations at risk from rising seas
  6. Canada will be part of Trump's new NAFTA – corporate lobbyists on both sides of the border will ensure it
  7. Fossil fuel divestment debates on campus spotlight the societal role of colleges and universities
  8. Discovering the ancient origin of cystic fibrosis, the most common genetic disease in Caucasians
  9. Teacher turnover is a problem – here's how to fix it
  10. Thousands of mental health professionals agree with Woodward and the New York Times op-ed author: Trump is dangerous
  11. What the 25th Amendment says about presidents who are 'unable' to serve
  12. Low-income neighborhoods would gain the most from green roofs in cities like Chicago
  13. Designing greener streets starts with finding room for bicycles and trees
  14. El turista humanista: cuando viajar es más que un hobby
  15. 4 ways to defend democracy and protect every voter's ballot
  16. Politicians, lies and election legitimacy – it's an old story
  17. Plagiarists or innovators? The Led Zeppelin paradox endures
  18. 4 charts show Venezuela's worsening migrant crisis
  19. New technique heals wounds with reprogrammed skin cells
  20. Lesson from Brazil: Museums are not forever
  21. Colapso de Nicaragua agrava la crisis migratoria en Centroamérica
  22. Serena Williams' catsuit controversy evokes the battle over women wearing shorts
  23. Drones to track one of the largest dam removals on the Eastern Seaboard
  24. Asking customers to donate when they buy stuff may be good for business
  25. How slot machines work – and why you should think twice before playing them
  26. Campaign season is moving into high gear – your vote may not count as much as you think
  27. UN report documents genocide against Rohingya: What now?
  28. How views on priestly celibacy changed in Christian history
  29. Black student activists face penalty in college admissions
  30. Propaganda-spewing Russian trolls act differently online from regular people
  31. Happy midterms! Here's a rundown of the best political zingers in history
  32. It's too soon to call 3D printing a green technology
  33. Why Trump's wrong about WTO treating US unfairly
  34. Oil and gas execs out-earn their peers. Are they overpaid?
  35. 'Pay-for-luck': Oil and gas execs out-earn their peers
  36. Why plant-based mosquito repellents are so hard to design
  37. Why it's hard for blacks to pull themselves up by bootstraps when it comes to health
  38. Why Putin is an ally for American evangelicals
  39. Why there's so much inconsistency in school shooting data
  40. How will Google's innovation continue beyond its 20th year?
  41. An Interracial Kiss – on Another Planet
  42. TV's first interracial kiss launched a lifelong career in activism
  43. Want to solve the world's problems? Try working together across disciplines
  44. Prisoner strike exposes an age old American reliance on forced labor
  45. Could Andrew Gillum be the next governor of Florida?
  46. Want to live longer? Consider the ethics
  47. Through his art, a former prisoner diagnoses the systemic sickness of Florida's penitentiaries
  48. It's 2018. Do you know where your medical records are?
  49. Text messages to parents can help boost children's reading skills
  50. Google News serves conservatives and liberals similar results, but favors mainstream media