Oceans are being sucked into Earth’s interior through world’s deepest trenches
Doug Wiens, professor of earth and planetary sciences
‘Listening for Opportunity’
As the biggest dust storm on Mars that humans have ever seen calms, NASA announced it will continue attempting to contact the Opportunity rover. Ray Arvidson, of Arts & Sciences, deputy principal investigator for the Mars rover mission, shares details of the space agency’s efforts.
Medical faculty publishes book on personality disorders
In the new book “The Fragmented Personality,” Dragan Svrakic, MD, PhD, at the School of Medicine, and Mirjana Divac-Jovanovic, of Sigidunum University in Serbia, introduce a new model for diagnosing and caring for patients with personality disorder. The approach yields a diagnosis sensitive to fluctuations in mental functioning over time and context and gives clinicians […]
Can dictators and enemy generals obtain birthright citizenship for their children?
Stephen Legomsky, the John S. Lehmann University Professor Emeritus
Something Happened to U.S. Drug Costs in the 1990s
Rachel Sachs, associate professor of law
Weight loss after menopause tied to lower breast cancer risk
Graham Colditz, MD, DrPH, the Niess-Gain Professor of Surgery
Trump’s insults toward black reporters, candidates echo ‘historic playbooks’ used against African Americans, critics say
Adia Harvey Wingfield, professor of sociology
‘Rethinking African humanities’
Jean Allman, director of the Center for the Humanities in Arts & Sciences, discusses her research on Ghana, women and gender for an episode of “Africa Past and Present,” a podcast produced at Michigan State University.
Labour and the Tories are pinching each other’s plans. Does it work?
Margit Tavits, professor of political science
More pregnant women in U.S. smoking pot
Arpana Agrawal, professor of psychiatry
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