Exploring the meaning of ‘screen time’
Author Phillip Maciak, a lecturer in Arts & Sciences, has published the book “Avidly Reads Screen Time,” a cultural criticism and history about our relationship with screens. Read about this and other recent works on the Source Bookshelf.
Reconfiguring the Ph.D.
Arts & Science’s William Acree describes the university’s attempt to introduce a new, highly transdisciplinary cohort model for incoming graduate students.
UAW announces drive to organize Toyota, Tesla and a dozen other automakers
Jake Rosenfeld, professor of sociology
Why Dallas? Las Vegas Sands casino moguls make a play for the NBA – and Texas
Patrick Rishe, director of the sports business program
Rare Six-Planet Star System Discovered in Milky Way
Tansu Daylan, assistant professor of physics
Rediscovering ‘The Man Who Cried I Am’
William Maxwell, a professor in Arts & Sciences, was featured on a recent episode of “LOA Live.” Hosted by the Library of America, the program, titled “Black Writers in Paris, the FBI, and a Lost 1960s Classic,” focused on the republication of John A. Williams’ 1967 novel “The Man Who Cried I Am.”
Innovative Cancer Treatment May Sometimes Cause Cancer, F.D.A. Says
John DiPersio, MD, PhD, the Virginia E. and Sam J. Golman Endowed Professor in Medicine
Why a Hot Idea for Making Football Safer Is Such a Hard Sell for the NFL
Preventing head injury is an important objective of the plastic safety helmet, but it is not its primary purpose. Nor has it been, for a very long time, writes Noah Cohan, lecturer in American Culture Studies.
Why a Hot Idea for Making Football Safer Is Such a Hard Sell for the NFL
Noah Cohan, lecturer in American Culture Studies
How droughts could hurt the supply of Christmas trees
Michael Wysession, professor of earth, environmental, and planetary sciences
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