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Editing genes shouldn't be too scary -- unless they are the ones that get passed to future generations

  • Written by Eleanor Feingold, Professor of Human Genetics, University of Pittsburgh
Gene editing a fertilized human embryo. Lightspring/Shutterstock.com

Gene editing is one of the scarier things in the science news, but not all gene editing is the same. It matters whether researchers edit “somatic” cells or “germline” cells.

Germline cells are the ones that propogate into an entire organism – either...

Read more: Editing genes shouldn't be too scary -- unless they are the ones that get passed to future...

Marijuana is a lot more than just THC - a pharmacologist looks at the untapped healing compounds

  • Written by James David Adams, Associate Professor of Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Southern California
Assorted cannabis bud strains.Roxana Gonzalez/Shutterstock.com

Medical marijuana is legal in 33 states as of November 2018. Yet the federal government still insists marijuana has no legal use and is easy to abuse. In the meantime, medical marijuana dispensaries have an increasing array of products available for pain, anxiety, sex and more.

The...

Read more: Marijuana is a lot more than just THC - a pharmacologist looks at the untapped healing compounds

Why a college admissions racket would funnel bribes through a fake charity

  • Written by Sarah Webber, Associate Professor, Department of Accounting, University of Dayton
Many people aided by the campus admissions scheme wanted to attend the University of Southern California.AP Photo/Reed Saxon

Federal authorities are prosecuting dozens of suspects in the biggest college admissions scandal ever exposed. The joint FBI and IRS investigation, dubbed “Operation Varsity Blues,” uncovered millions of dollars...

Read more: Why a college admissions racket would funnel bribes through a fake charity

Why rich parents are more likely to be unethical

  • Written by David M. Mayer, Professor of Management & Organizations, University of Michigan
William 'Rick' Singer founder of the Edge College & Career Network, pleaded guilty to charges in a nationwide college admissions bribery scandal.AP Photo/Steven Senne

Federal attorneys have arrested 50 people in a college admission scam that allowed wealthy parents to buy their kids’ admission to elite universities. Prosecutors found...

Read more: Why rich parents are more likely to be unethical

5 ways the Syrian revolution continues

  • Written by Wendy Pearlman, Associate Professor of Political Science, Northwestern University
A Syrian refugee child sits on the window of his family's trailer home painted by refugee artists in a camp near Mafraq, Jordan. AP/Raad Adayleh

Bashar al-Assad has “won” the war in Syria – or so many analysts tell us.

His regime has reconquered swaths of territory from rebel forces with starvation-and-surrender sieges, barrel...

Read more: 5 ways the Syrian revolution continues

Why meritocracy is a myth in college admissions

  • Written by Morgan Polikoff, Associate Professor of Education, University of Southern California
Clockwise from top left, Georgetown University, Stanford University, Yale University, and University of California, Los Angeles. AP

The most damaging myth in American higher education is that college admissions is about merit, and that merit is about striving for – and earning – academic excellence. This myth is often used as a weapon...

Read more: Why meritocracy is a myth in college admissions

Jamaica leads in Richard Branson-backed plan for a Caribbean climate revolution

  • Written by Masaō Ashtine, Lecturer in Alternative Energy, University of the West Indies, Mona Campus
Turbines in Manchester Parish, Jamaica, the English-speaking Caribbean's first wind farm.Debbie Ann Powell

After hurricanes Irma and Maria tore through the Caribbean in 2017, devastating dozens of islands – including billionaire Richard Branson’s private isle, Necker Island – Branson called for a “Caribbean Marshall Plan.&rdq...

Read more: Jamaica leads in Richard Branson-backed plan for a Caribbean climate revolution

Consumer rights are worthless without enforcement

  • Written by Anne Fleming, Associate Professor of Law, Georgetown University
John F. Kennedy's 1962 speech inspired the modern consumer rights movement.AP Photo/Bill Allen

Exactly 57 years ago, President John F. Kennedy made an impassioned pitch for stronger consumer rights.

“If consumers are offered inferior products, if prices are exorbitant, if drugs are unsafe or worthless, if the consumer is unable to choose on...

Read more: Consumer rights are worthless without enforcement

Sandy Hook lawsuit court victory opens crack in gun maker immunity shield

  • Written by Timothy D. Lytton, Distinguished University Professor & Professor of Law, Georgia State University
A detective holds a Bushmaster AR-15 rifle, the same type of gun used in the Sandy Hook School shooting.AP Photo/Jessica Hill

The Connecticut Supreme Court ruled on March 14 that families of the Sandy Hook Elementary mass shooting victims could proceed with a lawsuit against the companies that manufactured and sold the semiautomatic rifle used in...

Read more: Sandy Hook lawsuit court victory opens crack in gun maker immunity shield

3 days, 3 key votes – and no end in sight for Brexit

  • Written by Scott L. Greer, Professor, Global Health Management and Policy and Political Science, University of Michigan
  • On March 12, the British Parliament overwhelmingly rejected – for a second time – a Brexit plan worked out by Prime Minister Theresa May.

  • A day later, the lawmakers voted against a “hard Brexit” – one without any approved plan.

  • Then, on March 14, British lawmakers voted 412 to 202 to delay an exit from the European...

Read more: 3 days, 3 key votes – and no end in sight for Brexit

More Articles ...

  1. Softer, processed foods changed the way ancient humans spoke
  2. The mental health crisis among America's youth is real – and staggering
  3. How AIPAC could lose its bipartisan status
  4. Rise and fall of the landline: 143 years of telephones becoming more accessible – and smart
  5. What will happen to Michael Jackson's legacy? A famed writer's fall could offer clues
  6. Doctors need to talk through treatment options better for black men with prostate cancer
  7. Plastic bag bans can backfire if consumers just use other plastics instead
  8. Who are the private contractors fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan? An inside look at this invisible military force
  9. Facebook's 'pivot' is less about privacy and more about profits
  10. How the Syrian uprising began and why it matters
  11. College cheating scandal shows why elite colleges should use a lottery to admit students
  12. When does a winter storm become a bomb cyclone?
  13. Why North Korean prosperity would be the ruin of Kim Jong Un
  14. Purdue Pharma: Bankruptcy filing would make lawsuits slower and costlier for plaintiff cities and states
  15. Trump's executive order on drone strikes sends civilian casualty data back into the shadows
  16. The truth about St. Patrick's Day
  17. Robots guarded Buddha's relics in a legend of ancient India
  18. Escalator etiquette: Should I stand or walk for an efficient ride?
  19. College admission scandal grew out of a system that was ripe for corruption
  20. US pulls diplomats from its embassy in Caracas, and tensions between Venezuela and Brazil escalate
  21. Can a genetic test predict if you will develop Type 2 diabetes?
  22. There's no way to stop human trafficking by treating it as an immigration enforcement problem
  23. Diets can do more than help you lose weight – they could also save the planet
  24. Skilled blue-collar jobs are growing – though women aren't getting them
  25. Sen. Martha McSally, pioneering Air Force pilot, shows how stereotypes victimize sexual assault survivors again
  26. Old stone walls record the changing location of magnetic north
  27. After 100 years, Mussolini's fascist party is a reminder of the fragility of freedom
  28. Stemming the tide of trash: 5 essential reads on recycling
  29. Can we tweak marine chemistry to help stave off climate change?
  30. Beyond blackface: How college yearbooks captured protest and change
  31. US military steps up cyberwarfare effort
  32. What lessons can the clergy sex abuse crisis draw from a 4th-century church schism?
  33. Humans and machines can improve accuracy when they work together
  34. Pregnant women shouldn't have to choose between a job and a healthy baby
  35. Ancient DNA is a powerful tool for studying the past – when archaeologists and geneticists work together
  36. Underwater mudslides are the biggest threat to offshore drilling, and energy companies aren't ready for them
  37. Millennials are US$1 trillion in debt – but they're better at saving than previous generations
  38. Why Spain needs more feminism in the classroom
  39. The US government might charge for satellite data again – here's why that would be a big mistake
  40. Mass-market electric pickup trucks and SUVs are on the way
  41. Could a booster shot of truth help scientists fight the anti-vaccine crisis?
  42. Charter school cap efforts gain momentum
  43. How women wage war – a short history of IS brides, Nazi guards and FARC insurgents
  44. Refugees forced to return to Syria face imprisonment, death at the hands of Assad
  45. Sex trafficking in the US: 4 questions answered
  46. Thoreau's great insight for the Anthropocene: Wildness is an attitude, not a place
  47. 3 ways activist kids these days resemble their predecessors
  48. Veterans are concerned about climate change, and that matters
  49. University of California's break with the biggest academic publisher could shake up scholarly publishing for good
  50. 11 things you can do to adjust to losing that 1 hour of sleep this weekend