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Happy midterms! Here's a rundown of the best political zingers in history

  • Written by Chris Lamb, Professor of Journalism, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
President Ronald Reagan during a 1984 debate.AP Photo

Labor Day marks the beginning of the decisive, final stretch of the U.S. political campaign season, when candidates prepare to debate one another by practicing their ad-libs or “zingers,” as they’re called, hoping to have the last word with voters.

I dedicated my book, “I&r...

Read more: Happy midterms! Here's a rundown of the best political zingers in history

It's too soon to call 3D printing a green technology

  • Written by Reid Lifset, Research Scholar, Resident Fellow in Industrial Ecology, School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University
Prototype vehicle built with 3D printing – but is it green?Tim Gutowski, CC BY-ND

Over the past decade 3D printing has captured the imagination of the general public, engineers and environmental visionaries. It has been hailed as both a revolution in manufacturing and an opportunity for dramatic environmental improvement.

3D printing has two...

Read more: It's too soon to call 3D printing a green technology

Why Trump's wrong about WTO treating US unfairly

  • Written by Jeffrey Kucik, Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Arizona
Trump believes the Geneva-based WTO treats the U.S. with disrespect. Martin Good/Shutterstock.com

President Donald Trump recently threatened to pull the United States out of the World Trade Organization “if they don’t shape up.”

His argument is that the organization treats its single-largest investor unfairly, claiming that the...

Read more: Why Trump's wrong about WTO treating US unfairly

Oil and gas execs out-earn their peers. Are they overpaid?

  • Written by Lucas Davis, Professor at the Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley
Letting it rainShutterstock.com/pathdoc

Following a long slump, crude prices have rebounded to about US$70 per barrel. That may make 2018 the most profitable year for oil and gas companies in at least four years.

Will oil and gas executives reap big rewards as well?

As energyeconomists, we’ve wondered how much the top oil and gas executives...

Read more: Oil and gas execs out-earn their peers. Are they overpaid?

'Pay-for-luck': Oil and gas execs out-earn their peers

  • Written by Lucas Davis, Professor at the Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley
Letting it rainShutterstock.com/pathdoc

Following a long slump, crude prices have rebounded to about US$70 per barrel. That may make 2018 the most profitable year for oil and gas companies in at least four years.

Will oil and gas executives reap big rewards as well?

As energyeconomists, we’ve wondered how much the top oil and gas executives...

Read more: 'Pay-for-luck': Oil and gas execs out-earn their peers

Why plant-based mosquito repellents are so hard to design

  • Written by Joel Coats, Distinguished Professor of Entomology, Iowa State University
A yellow citronella bucket candle is essential for summertime evenings to keep the mosquitos away.ARENA Creative/Shutterstock.com

As humanity experiences relentless pressures from disease-carrying mosquitoes in many parts of the world, there is an urgent need for new tools to use against those beasts – because they keep getting scarier.

Even...

Read more: Why plant-based mosquito repellents are so hard to design

Why it's hard for blacks to pull themselves up by bootstraps when it comes to health

  • Written by Shervin Assari, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Public Health, University of Michigan
Students at Hampton University celebrate at graduation on May 9. 2010. Studies suggest, however, that the benefits African American students accrue from education will be fewer than those of whites.J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Many Americans deeply believe that people should pull themselves up by their bootstraps. After all, individual responsibility is...

Read more: Why it's hard for blacks to pull themselves up by bootstraps when it comes to health

Why Putin is an ally for American evangelicals

  • Written by Melani McAlister, Professor of American Studies and International Affairs, George Washington University
Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a mass in his hometown of St. Petersburg, Russia, on Jan. 7, 2018. Alexei Nikolsky, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP

The close relationship between American evangelicals and Russia has lately been discussed widelyin the news media. In particular, the Justice Department unsealed a criminal complaint in...

Read more: Why Putin is an ally for American evangelicals

Why there's so much inconsistency in school shooting data

  • Written by Lacey Wallace, Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice, Pennsylvania State University

How many school shootings happen in the U.S. in a single school year? The answer is surprisingly hard to figure out.

In April, the U.S. Department of Education released a report on the 2015-2016 school year, stating that “nearly 240 schools (0.2 percent of all schools) reported at least 1 incident involving a school-related shooting.”...

Read more: Why there's so much inconsistency in school shooting data

How will Google's innovation continue beyond its 20th year?

  • Written by Gary Marchionini, Professor of Information and Library Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
The past and present of Google – what's next?Sirirat/Shutterstock.com

As millions of people came online in the late 1990s they needed help figuring out what each webpage was about, and how to find what they were looking for. Web indexes and search engines sprang up. When Google was founded in September 1998, it had to compete with the informa...

Read more: How will Google's innovation continue beyond its 20th year?

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  7. Through his art, a former prisoner diagnoses the systemic sickness of Florida's penitentiaries
  8. It's 2018. Do you know where your medical records are?
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  10. Google News serves conservatives and liberals similar results, but favors mainstream media
  11. Injecting wastewater underground can cause earthquakes up to 10 kilometers away
  12. Who wants to join a union? A growing number of Americans
  13. Time-restricted eating can overcome the bad effects of faulty genes and unhealthy diet
  14. ¿Puede un cristiano apoyar la pena de muerte?
  15. Cohen plea should focus attention on the failure of the US constitutional system
  16. Meet Haiti's founding father, whose black revolution was too radical for Thomas Jefferson
  17. Math shows how DNA twists, turns and unzips
  18. Anorexia more stubborn to treat than previously believed, analysis shows
  19. Should we scoff at the idea of love at first sight?
  20. What teenagers need to know about cybersecurity
  21. US prisoners' strike is reminder how commonplace inmate labor is – and that it may run afoul of the law
  22. This 19th-century argument over federal support for Christianity still resonates
  23. Cafeteros en Colombia luchan por adaptarse a un clima cambiante
  24. Teaching the public more science likely won't boost support for funding, but sparking their curiosity might
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  26. Los Angeles wants to use the Hoover Dam as a giant battery. The hurdles could be more historical than technical
  27. For the parents of gender-nonconforming kids, a new approach to care
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  29. Detecting 'deepfake' videos in the blink of an eye
  30. Will John McCain be the last Republican leader in the Senate to address climate change?
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  32. Tentative deal to replace NAFTA puts pressure on Canada in win for Trump
  33. Elon Musk was right to drop his bungled plan to take Tesla private
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  35. Teaching V.S. Naipaul in the Caribbean
  36. Why the Catholic Church is so slow to act in sex abuse cases: 4 essential reads
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  38. Why McCain and all POWs deserve our profound respect and gratitude
  39. Fear of a Non-Nuclear Family
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  49. Turkish currency isn't the real problem for Erdoğan, it's democracy
  50. Qatar's $15 billion snub of Trump over Turkey puts another key US relationship in Middle East at risk