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What Ramadan means to Muslims: 4 essential reads

  • Written by Kalpana Jain, Senior Religion + Ethics Editor
Women pray at a mosque during the first day of the holy fasting month of Ramadan on May 6 in Bali, Indonesia.AP Photo/Firdia Lisnawati

During the month of Ramadan, Muslims around the world will not eat or drink from dawn to sunset. Muslims believe that the sacred text of Quran was first revealed to Prophet Muhammad in the final 10 nights of Ramadan....

Read more: What Ramadan means to Muslims: 4 essential reads

The hazards of living on the right side of a time zone border

  • Written by Richard G. "Bugs" Stevens, Professor, School of Medicine, University of Connecticut
Daylight saving time is an artificial way of adjusting time, but nothing changes when the sun rises and sets. Jerry Regis/Shutterstock.com

The sun both rises and sets later in the western parts of time zones, by about an hour at the extremes. If sunrise in Nashville, Tennessee is 6:30 a.m., it’s about 7:30 a.m. in Amarillo, Texas. Similarly,...

Read more: The hazards of living on the right side of a time zone border

Most of America's rural areas are doomed to decline

  • Written by David Swenson, Associate Scientist of Economics, Iowa State University
Sunset over an Iowa farm.BJontzPhoto/shutterstock.com

Since the Great Recession, most of the nation’s rural counties have struggled to recover lost jobs and retain their people. The story is markedly different in the nation’s largest urban communities.

I’m writing from Iowa, where every four years presidential hopefuls swoop in to...

Read more: Most of America's rural areas are doomed to decline

The deadly, life-giving and transient elements that make up group 15 of the periodic table

  • Written by Julie Pollock, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, University of Richmond
The red tip on these matches contains phosphorus, which ignites when in contact with oxygen.Andrew Rafalsky/Shutterstock.com

When you see the periodic table, what comes to mind? The pieces on a scrabble board? Maybe you think about your high school chemistry class. Maybe you think of the colorful table plastered on the wall of a lecture hall in...

Read more: The deadly, life-giving and transient elements that make up group 15 of the periodic table

Gays cheered at Brigham Young University – millennial Mormons are increasingly tolerant of same-sex attraction

  • Written by Taylor Petrey, Associate Professor of Religion, Kalamazoo College
Mormons for Equality march during Salt Lake City’s annual gay pride parade in 2014.AP Photo/Rick Bowmer

During a recent valedictorian graduation speech, student Matthew Easton came out saying he is “a gay son of God.” His admission was met with loud applause from the audience.

What makes this unusual is that Easton is a student at...

Read more: Gays cheered at Brigham Young University – millennial Mormons are increasingly tolerant of...

5 tips for college students to use final exam stress to their advantage

  • Written by Jennifer Wegmann, Professor of Health and Wellness Studies, Binghamton University, State University of New York
Changing the way you think about stress can help you deal with it better, research shows.sun ok from www.shutterstock.com

For the nearly 20 million college students in the U.S., one of the most stressful times of the year comes at the end of the semester, as they prepare for final exams, graduation and – for many seniors – yet another...

Read more: 5 tips for college students to use final exam stress to their advantage

Why reducing carbon emissions from cars and trucks will be so hard

  • Written by David Keith, Assistant Professor of System Dynamics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
The race to get rid of transportation emissions is getting off to a slow start.AP Photo/Terrin Waack

A growing number of cities, states and countries aim to dramatically reduce or even eliminate carbon emissions to avert catastrophic levels of climate change.

Ideas about how to get this done as soon as possible, including those Democratic lawmakers...

Read more: Why reducing carbon emissions from cars and trucks will be so hard

Beanie Babies, the invention of CubeSat and student-designed and built satellites

  • Written by Supriya Chakrabarti, Professor of Physics, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Hundreds of CubeSats are now being launched into space each year.etonastenka/Shutterstock.com

The democratization of space began 20 years ago with Beanie Babies – or, more accurately, the clear acrylic box that brought them home. These 4-inch (10-cm) cubes inspired space engineer Bob Twiggs to create CubeSat, the first satellite with a...

Read more: Beanie Babies, the invention of CubeSat and student-designed and built satellites

Why the Trump administration’s Israeli-Palestinian peace plan shouldn’t be released

  • Written by Dov Waxman, Professor of Political Science, International Affairs and Israel Studies, Northeastern University
On the same day, May 14, 2018, Palestinians protest near the border of Israel and the Gaza Strip (left) while dignitaries applaud the opening ceremony of the new U.S. embassy in Jerusalem (right). AP/ADEL HANA, LEFT, AND SEBASTIAN SCHEINER

Dead on arrival.

That’s what almost every expert predicts will be the fate of the Trump...

Read more: Why the Trump administration’s Israeli-Palestinian peace plan shouldn’t be released

Brazil's long, strange love affair with the Confederacy ignites racial tension

  • Written by Jordan Brasher, Doctoral candidate in Geography, University of Tennessee
Visitors and performers at Brazil's 'Confederate Party,' held each April in São Paulo state.Jordan Brasher, Author provided

The aroma of fried chicken and biscuits roused my appetite as the country sounds of Alison Krauss, Alan Jackson and Johnny Cash played over the loudspeakers.

This might have been a county fair back home in Tennessee, but...

Read more: Brazil's long, strange love affair with the Confederacy ignites racial tension

More Articles ...

  1. Caster Semenya's impossible situation: Testosterone gets special scrutiny but doesn't necessarily make her faster
  2. 60 days in Iceberg Alley, drilling for marine sediment to decipher Earth's climate 3 million years ago
  3. Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo López seeks refuge with Spain after failed uprising
  4. Americans might love Cinco de Mayo, but few know what they're celebrating
  5. What other countries can teach the US about raising teacher pay
  6. The Kentucky Derby has a secret Latino history
  7. Platelets: The chameleons of cancer biology
  8. Should the NRA fear losing its 'nonprofit status'?
  9. Drones to deliver incessant buzzing noise, and packages
  10. Trump offshore drilling plan may be dead in the water, but there are better ways to lead on energy
  11. Many electric utilities are struggling – will more go bankrupt?
  12. Dutch Memorial Day: Maintaining colonial innocence by excluding people of color
  13. Jimmy Carter's lasting Cold War legacy
  14. Trump's dirty tricks: Unethical, even illegal campaign tactics are an American tradition
  15. Modern shamans: Financial managers, political pundits and others who help tame life's uncertainty
  16. University of North Carolina at Charlotte shooting has these things in common with other campus shootings
  17. 3 moral reasons why parents need to get their children vaccinated against measles and other diseases
  18. As air pollution increases in some US cities, the Trump administration is weakening clean air regulations
  19. 3 ways $2 trillion for infrastructure can fight inequality too
  20. Asteroid dust brought back to Earth may explain where our water came from with hydrogen clues
  21. Is the Assange indictment a threat to the First Amendment?
  22. Why abusive husbands kick dogs but angry neighbors poison them
  23. From Paris to Boston, the crucial role of fire chaplains
  24. A 'coup des gens' is underway – and we're increasingly living under the regime of the algorithm
  25. Prescription for journalists from journalists: Less time studying Twitter, more time studying math
  26. Why Florida's new voting rights amendment may not be as sweeping as it looks
  27. Why some doctors are prescribing a day in the park or a walk on the beach for good health
  28. Brain over body: Hacking the stress system to let your psychology influence your physiology
  29. US, Russia, China race to develop hypersonic weapons
  30. Who is Leopoldo López, the newly freed opposition leader behind Venezuela's uprising?
  31. Spanish voters rebuff radical right — for now
  32. Our smartphone addiction is killing us – can apps that limit screen time offer a lifeline?
  33. The US white majority will soon disappear forever
  34. Just 16 minutes of sleep loss can harm work concentration the next day
  35. Can James Holzhauer be stopped? A former 'Jeopardy!' champion weighs in
  36. Here's how to increase diversity in STEM at the college level and beyond
  37. How a music genre known as black metal came to be related to church burnings
  38. Collaborative problem solvers are made not born – here's what you need to know
  39. Financial woes are at the heart of the NRA's tumult
  40. Data insecurity leads to economic injustice – and hits the pocketbooks of the poor most
  41. How the world's largest democracy casts its ballots
  42. The benefits that places like Dayton, Ohio, reap by welcoming immigrants
  43. How air guitar became a serious sport
  44. Is there a 'feminine' response to terrorism?
  45. At work, women and people of color still have not broken the glass ceiling
  46. Uber drivers report 80-plus hour workweeks and a lot of waiting
  47. Shutting down social media does not reduce violence, but rather fuels it
  48. Is an 'insect apocalypse' happening? How would we know?
  49. Uber's $9 billion IPO rests on drivers' 80-plus hour workweeks and a lot of waiting
  50. Recalls of medical devices and drugs are up - can anyone predict when it will happen next?