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What Greek epics taught me about the special relationship between fathers and sons

  • Written by Joel Christensen, Professor of Classical Studies, Brandeis University
imageOdysseus reuniting with his father, Laertes.Leemage/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Father’s Day inspires mixed emotions for many of us. Looking at advertisements of happy families could recall difficult memories and broken relationships for some. But for others, the day could invite unbidden nostalgic thoughts of parents who have...

Read more: What Greek epics taught me about the special relationship between fathers and sons

Americans gave a record $471 billion to charity in 2020, amid concerns about the coronavirus pandemic, job losses and racial justice

  • Written by Anna Pruitt, Researcher and Managing Editor, Giving USA, IUPUI
imageFood banks, with help from volunteers, scrambled to meet higher demand.Paul Hennessy/NurPhoto via Getty Images

A flood of donations to support COVID-19 relief and racial justice efforts, coupled with stock market gains, led Americans to give a record US$471 billion to charity in 2020.

The total donated to charity rose 3.8% from the prior year in...

Read more: Americans gave a record $471 billion to charity in 2020, amid concerns about the coronavirus...

With Ford's electric F-150 pickup, the EV transition shifts into high gear

  • Written by Brian C. Black, Distinguished Professor of History and Environmental Studies, Penn State
imageFord calls its all-electric F-150 Lightning "the truck of the future."Ford, CC BY-ND

When President Joe Biden took Ford’s electric F-150 Lightning pickup for a test drive in Dearborn, Michigan, in May 2021, the event was more than a White House photo op. It marked a new phase in an accelerating shift from gas-powered cars and trucks to...

Read more: With Ford's electric F-150 pickup, the EV transition shifts into high gear

It wasn't just politics that led to Netanyahu's ouster – it was fear of his demagoguery

  • Written by Dov Waxman, Director of the UCLA Y&S Nazarian Center for Israel Studies and The Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Foundation Chair in Israel Studies, University of California, Los Angeles
imageBenjamin Netanyahu sits in the Knesset before parliament voted June 13, 2021, in Jerusalem to approve the new government that doesn't include him, Amir Levy/Getty Images

There is something Shakespearean about Benjamin Netanyahu’s downfall.

As in a scene from “Julius Caesar,” who was assassinated by Roman senators, Netanyahu was...

Read more: It wasn't just politics that led to Netanyahu's ouster – it was fear of his demagoguery

Bringing joy back to the classroom and supporting stressed kids – what summer school looks like in 2021

  • Written by Raphael Travis Jr., Professor of Social Work, Texas State University
imageSummer schools need to address the emotional and academic needs of children. CandyRetriever/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Already 62% of parents believe their children are behind in learning, according to a survey conducted by the National PTA and Learning Heroes. The transition from in-person to remote learning in 2020 has disrupted students’...

Read more: Bringing joy back to the classroom and supporting stressed kids – what summer school looks like in...

Sticky baseballs: Explaining the physics of the latest scandal in Major League Baseball

  • Written by John Eric Goff, Professor of Physics, University of Lynchburg
imageIt used to be spit balls, but now sticky baseballs are giving pitchers an advantage.Tage Olsin, CC BY-SA

Cheating in baseball is as old as the game itself, and pitchers’ modifying the ball’s surface is part of that long history. Adding to the lore of cheating is a new scandal involving pitchers who may be applying sticky substances...

Read more: Sticky baseballs: Explaining the physics of the latest scandal in Major League Baseball

Artisan robots with AI smarts will juggle tasks, choose tools, mix and match recipes and even order materials – all without human help

  • Written by Glenn S. Daehn, Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, The Ohio State University
imageFactory robots could soon acquire a range of skills, including the ability to choose how to make things.studiostockart/DigitalVision Vectors via Getty Images

Failure of a machine in a factory can shut it down. Lost production can cost millions of dollars per day. Component failures can devastate factories, power plants and battlefield equipment.

To...

Read more: Artisan robots with AI smarts will juggle tasks, choose tools, mix and match recipes and even...

Teaching kids social responsibility – like how to settle fights and ask for help – can reduce school bullying

  • Written by Jonathan B. Santo, Professor of Psychology, University of Nebraska Omaha
imageElementary school students in Brazil learn healthy ways to resolve conflicts during a three-day workshop in 2019.Sarah Roza, CC BY-NC-ND

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

Schools that encourage their students to care for their classmates’ feelings and to peacefully resolve conflicts with their...

Read more: Teaching kids social responsibility – like how to settle fights and ask for help – can reduce...

Friends are saying 'I do' – but might not understand the legal risks of their platonic marriages

  • Written by Nausica Palazzo, Postdoctoral Fellow in Comparative Law, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
imageSince there’s no romantic relationship, judges are likely to default to ruling that platonic marriages are an attempt to game the system.Gabriel Bouys/AFP via Getty Images

When a couple decides to tie the knot, they’ll often say they’re marrying their best friend.

But what if two actual best friends – no sex or even romantic...

Read more: Friends are saying 'I do' – but might not understand the legal risks of their platonic marriages

What a Title IX lawsuit might mean for religious universities

  • Written by William Trollinger, Professor of History, University of Dayton
imageA recent lawsuit has charged the U.S. Department of Education as being complicit in the abuse of LGBTQ students.AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta

The Religious Exemption Accountability Project, or REAP, filed a class action lawsuit on March 26, 2021, charging that the U.S. Department of Education was complicit “in the abuses that thousands of...

Read more: What a Title IX lawsuit might mean for religious universities

More Articles ...

  1. Rocky Mountain forests burning more now than any time in the past 2,000 years
  2. Netanyahu may be ousted but his hard-line foreign policies remain
  3. Southern Baptist Convention's focus on mission recalls history of promoting white dominance
  4. Why the Second Amendment protects a 'well-regulated militia' but not a private citizen militia
  5. Property disputes in Israel come with a complicated back story – and tend to end with Palestinian dispossession
  6. Electric heat pumps use much less energy than furnaces, and can cool houses too – here's how they work
  7. 8 ways to manage body image anxiety after lockdown
  8. Summer reading: 5 books for young people that deal with race
  9. NASA is returning to Venus to learn how it became a hot poisonous wasteland – and whether the planet was ever habitable in the past
  10. Opioid overdoses spiked during the COVID-19 pandemic, data from Pennsylvania show
  11. New technologies claiming to copy human milk reuse old marketing tactics to sell baby formula and undermine breastfeeding
  12. Why do cats knead with their paws?
  13. What's the G-7? An international economist explains
  14. Shipping is tough on the climate and hard to clean up – these innovations can help cut emissions
  15. Middle-aged Americans in US are stressed and struggle with physical and mental health – other nations do better
  16. Over half of adults unvaccinated for COVID-19 fear needles – here's what's proven to help
  17. From abortion and porn to women and race: How Southern Baptist Convention resolutions have evolved
  18. Why the legacy of Billy Graham continues to endure: 3 essential reads
  19. 'In the Heights' celebrates the resilience Washington Heights has used to fight the COVID-19 pandemic
  20. Sports writers could ditch the 'clown questions' and do better when it comes to press conferences
  21. Historic change: Arab political parties are now legitimate partners in Israel's politics and government
  22. Tribal colleges empower Native students with an affordable, culturally relevant education – but need more funding
  23. What are 'ghost guns,' a target of Biden's anti-crime effort?
  24. Women are as likely as men to accept a gender pay gap if they benefit from it
  25. A new reason Americans are getting leery of billionaire donors
  26. Working with dangerous viruses sounds like trouble – but here's what scientists learn from studying pathogens in secure labs
  27. Parking reform could reenergize downtowns – here's what happened when Buffalo changed its zoning rules
  28. Alcohol companies make $17.5 billion a year off of underage drinking, while prevention efforts are starved for cash
  29. The FDA's big gamble on the new Alzheimer's drug
  30. Here's what I tell teachers about how to teach young students about slavery
  31. Is tax avoidance ethical? Asking on behalf of a few billionaire friends
  32. Senator Warren's wealth tax might prevent billionaires from paying nearly nothing in taxes – but it's probably not constitutional
  33. 535 new fast radio bursts help answer deep questions about the universe and shed light on these mysterious cosmic events
  34. Lack of burial space is changing age-old funeral practices, and in Japan 'tree burials' are gaining in popularity
  35. COVID-19 messages make emergency alerts just another text in the crowd on your home screen
  36. How Joe Biden could increase pressure on Vladimir Putin if their June 16 meeting fails to deter Russia's 'harmful' behavior
  37. A volcanic eruption 39 million years ago buried a forest in Peru – now the petrified trees are revealing South America's primeval history
  38. Protesters marching in Elizabeth City, N.C., over Andrew Brown's killing are walking in the footsteps of centuries of fighters for Black rights
  39. Vacuna contra VIH/SIDA: ¿Por qué no hay una después de 37 años, pero ya tenemos varias para COVID en solo unos meses?
  40. Supreme Court weighs voting rights in a pivotal Arizona case
  41. Restoring land around abandoned oil and gas wells would free up millions of acres of forests, farmlands and grasslands
  42. Bringing tech innovation to wildfires: 4 recommendations for smarter firefighting as megafires menace the US
  43. 3 ways schools can improve STEM learning for Black students
  44. Intensive tutoring, longer school days and summer sessions may be needed to catch students up after the pandemic
  45. As more climate migrants cross borders seeking refuge, laws will need to adapt
  46. Emily Wilder and journalism's longstanding Achilles' heel – partisans who cry bias
  47. Mexican president suffers setback in country's deadliest election in decades
  48. Congress considers future of the military draft, while Supreme Court holds off
  49. I'm fully vaccinated – should I keep wearing a mask for my unvaccinated child?
  50. What the Ottoman Empire can teach us about the consequences of climate change – and how drought can uproot peoples and fuel warfare