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Revisiting the legacy of Jerry Falwell Sr. in Trump's America

  • Written by Richard Flory, Senior Director of Research and Evaluation, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences

Recently, President Donald Trump appointed evangelical Christian leader Jerry Falwell Jr. to head the White House education reform task force. Not much is known about the task force or what its work will be. And, tapping Falwell Jr. as its leader may seem odd to some observers given that he is president of Liberty University, a Christian...

Read more: Revisiting the legacy of Jerry Falwell Sr. in Trump's America

Dancing toward better physical rehabilitation

  • Written by Lena Ting, Professor of Biomedical Engineering and Rehabilitation Medicine, Division of Physical Therapy, Emory University
imageBallet dancers can apply their intensive training to tasks they haven’t practiced.bezikus/Shutterstock.com

To dance is human; people of all ages and levels of motor ability express movements in response to music. Professional dancers exert a great deal of creativity and energy toward developing their skills and different styles of dance. How...

Read more: Dancing toward better physical rehabilitation

How environmentalists can regroup for the Trump era

  • Written by Robert Percival, Professor of Environmental Law, University of Maryland, Baltimore

Since taking office, President Donald Trump has launched an all-out assault on regulations that protect the environment. In addition to retreating from the Paris climate accord, he wants to slash the Environmental Protection Agency’s budget by more than 30 percent and he has issued executive orders instructing EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt...

Read more: How environmentalists can regroup for the Trump era

Lessons for first responders on the front lines of terrorism

  • Written by Mahshid Abir, Assistant Professor, Department of Emergency Medicine, Director of the Acute Care Research Unit, Affiliated Adjunct and Natural Scientist, RAND Corporation, University of Michigan
imageAfter two terror attacks the prior week, police patrolled the Westminster Bridge on election day 2017 in London.AP Photo/Markus Schreiber

Acts of terrorism are on the rise globally. Over the past several weeks alone, the world has seen stabbings, shootings and bombings in Flint, Tehran, London, Kabul and Bogota.

We’ve spent the past several...

Read more: Lessons for first responders on the front lines of terrorism

Don't hate your gut: It may help you lose weight, fight depression and lower blood pressure

  • Written by Jasenka Zubcevic, Assistant Professor, University of Florida
imageTrillions of microorganisms live inside your gut. Anatomy Insider/Shutterstock.com

A universe of organisms living inside you may affect every part of your body, from your brain to your bones, and even your thoughts, feelings and your attempts to lose weight.

This is a universe of trillions of microorganisms – or what we biologists call microbi...

Read more: Don't hate your gut: It may help you lose weight, fight depression and lower blood pressure

Why some Arab countries want to shutter Al Jazeera

  • Written by Philip Seib, Professor of Journalism and Public Diplomacy, University of Southern California, Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism

On June 5 four Arab states – Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt – declared a soft war on Qatar. They had a long list of demands, ordering Qatar to weaken ties with Iran, expel Turkish military forces from the country and take other steps that would reduce Qatar’s influence in the region. They also demanded...

Read more: Why some Arab countries want to shutter Al Jazeera

The Supreme Court, religion and the future of school choice

  • Written by John E. Taylor, Professor of Law, West Virginia University
imageThe Supreme Court's decision in the Trinity Lutheran case is blurring the lines between church and state.aradaphotography/Shutterstock.com

The Supreme Court recently decided that Trinity Lutheran Church should be eligible for a Missouri state grant covering the cost of recycled playground surfaces. Though the state originally rejected the...

Read more: The Supreme Court, religion and the future of school choice

Why did sanctions against North Korea's missile program fail?

  • Written by Daniel Salisbury, Postdoctoral Fellow, Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey

North Korea’s successful test of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), allegedly with the capability to hit Alaska, is the latest in a series of significant advances for the country’s missile program.

North Korea has been seeking to develop long-range missile technology for over 20 years. For much of this period, the...

Read more: Why did sanctions against North Korea's missile program fail?

Trump's friendly meeting with Putin further blurs US-Russia relations

  • Written by Stephen Benedict Dyson, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Connecticut
imagePresident Donald Trump shakes hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the G20 Summit AP Photo/Evan Vucci

It emerged early this morning: a few seconds of grainy footage showing U.S. President Donald Trump shaking hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the G-20 summit in Hamburg, Germany.

Trump, the taller man, stoops to meet Putin on...

Read more: Trump's friendly meeting with Putin further blurs US-Russia relations

How being friends with someone who has dementia can be good for you both

  • Written by Janelle Taylor, Professor, Medical Anthropology, University of Washington
imageFriendship helps protect against loneliness even when oldsters do not have dementia. It can be especially beneficial for those who do. sirtravelalot/Shutterstock.com

Each year, in the final few hours of the last day of December, many people all across North America gather with friends to raise a glass and sing Robert Burns’ famous ballad,...

Read more: How being friends with someone who has dementia can be good for you both

More Articles ...

  1. Will global warming change Native American religious practices?
  2. Andrew Wyeth and the artist's fragile reputation
  3. Can Congress pressure the White House on human rights?
  4. Is Trump actually popular in Poland?
  5. How China could use trade to force North Korea to play nice with the West
  6. Does Scott Pruitt have a solid case for repealing the Clean Water Rule?
  7. Millennial bashing in medieval times
  8. Suturing a divided world: How providing access to surgery drives global prosperity
  9. Students' test scores tell us more about the community they live in than what they know
  10. Facts versus feelings isn't the way to think about communicating science
  11. The price of a miracle: Should we limit spending on lifesaving drugs?
  12. 'Screen time' is about more than setting limits
  13. We're not ready for the 'silver tsunami' of older adults living with cancer
  14. How the Nazis destroyed the first gay rights movement
  15. Is Indonesia’s 'pious democracy' safe from Islamic extremism?
  16. If we stopped emitting greenhouse gases right now, would we stop climate change?
  17. A look inside Ohio's lawsuit against opioid manufacturers
  18. Pot with patents could plant the seeds of future lawsuits
  19. Why Abraham Lincoln is an icon for Republicans and Democrats alike
  20. Ocean life: 5 essential reads
  21. How Spam became one of the most iconic American brands of all time
  22. Why poverty is not a personal choice, but a reflection of society
  23. Why on July 4 should we remember the psalm 'By the Rivers of Babylon'?
  24. On the savanna, mobile phones haven't transformed Maasai lives – yet
  25. From public good to personal pursuit: Historical roots of the student debt crisis
  26. When gospel sermons came on the phonograph
  27. Will women vote for women in 2018? It depends on if they're married
  28. Want a satisfying relationship? Don't present yourself as a sex object
  29. How bills to replace Obamacare would especially harm women
  30. Why market competition has not brought down health care costs
  31. Putin's flacks: Russia's stealth public relations war
  32. America's dangerous love for pyrotechnics: 4 facts about fireworks
  33. Take that chocolate milk survey with a grain of salt
  34. New data set explores 90 years of natural disasters in the US
  35. Republican health care bills defy the party's own ideology
  36. Macron and Trudeau shouldn't be so proud of appointing women to their Cabinets
  37. The Venezuelan government's newest opponent is a state-funded orchestra
  38. How the homeless create homes
  39. New legislation may make free speech on campus less free
  40. Why it's important to understand social media's dark history
  41. Behind Modi: The growing influence of the India lobby
  42. Is energy 'dominance' the right goal for US policy?
  43. A dangerous mix: Bullied youth report access to loaded guns more than other youth
  44. Why Congress should let everyone deduct charitable gifts from their taxes
  45. 'NotPetya' ransomware attack shows corporate social responsibility should include cybersecurity
  46. 4 ways the Supreme Court could rule on Trump's travel ban
  47. Understanding the real innovation behind the iPhone
  48. How flu changes within the human body may hint at future global trends
  49. Is Nancy Pelosi worth the trouble?
  50. GOP health care bill would make rural America's distress much worse