Ever tweet about being sick? Or look up your symptoms online? Researchers are using this information to monitor illnesses and attitudes about health in real time.
Father Theodore Hesburgh transformed American Catholic higher education institutions
U.S. Institute of Peace/Flickr
Notre Dame alumna reflects on the extraordinary life, work and the legacy that Father Theodore Hesburgh, president emeritus of the University of Notre Dame, leaves behind for Catholic institutions.
Safe injection facilities (SIFs) offer clean syringes, bandages and antiseptics to drug users. SIFs reduce overdose deaths and limit the spread of disease.
Andy Clark/Reuters
Scholars weigh in on the Israeli Prime Minister’s warning that current negotiations are “paving the way” to an Iranian bomb.
Lack of rain and poor management of land and water caused the most severe drought in Syria in 100 years and led to a mass migration to cities that contributed to country’s civil war.
Khaled Al Hariri/Reuters
Colin Kelley, University of California, Santa Barbara
A drought in Syria that was exacerbated by climate change helped fuel the unrest that led to the country’s civil war.
In this 2008 photograph, former ambassador to the United Kingdom Robert H Tuttle greets President George W. Bush. Prior to becoming an ambassador, Tuttle was known for his empire of car dealerships.
Jason Reed/Reuters
If you want a desirable ambassadorship, becoming a Foreign Service Officer and earning the relevant degrees – in other words, accumulating experience – might not be the best plan of action.
A love of science and a lifetime of work don’t guarantee a successful job hunt.
Woman image via www.shutterstock.com.
It’s important to reconnect management researchers with practitioners so their scholarly work is shared beyond academia.
Santana Row, located in San Jose, California, is one of many Lifestyle Centers cropping up around the country. Parading themselves as a Main Street from a bygone era, these new retail centers hope to recreate what was lost in the rush to cover America with large malls from the 1950s through the 1990s.
Santana Row
Americans have never rated climate change as an urgent political issue, but young voters and other “rising American electorate” groups could change that.
Marina Picasso is planning on selling a number of her grandfather’s works in the upcoming year.
AFP
Over the last nine years, more money has been spent on Picasso than on any other artist. How much does Picasso’s granddaughter stand to earn? And why are some in the art world concerned?
The new governor of Oregon: Kate Brown
Steve Dipaola/Reuters
Walmart’s promised wage hike will help half a million of its workers make a living, but it really just shows how much America’s working class struggles.
Diagnosis has taken HIV out of the shadows.
Jon Rawlinson
The ethics surrounding corporate and foreign donations to the foundations of politicians are murky, but it’s hard to deny the givers are angling for influence.
A volunteer receives a trial Ebola vaccine at the Centre for Clinical Vaccinology and Tropical Medicine in Oxford, southern England January 16, 2015.
Eddie Keogh/Reuters
Prior to the 1970s, almost all Phase I and II drug trials were conducted on prisoners. Our standards have gotten better since then, but still need revision.
Ma Rainey was one of Paramount Records’ most popular artists.
JP Jazz Archive/Redferns
In the 1920s, many black musicians were exploited by record companies, and faded into anonymity. Here are some of their stories.
The 3 to 2 FCC vote favored Chairman Tom Wheeler’s proposed net neutrality rules and will regulate broadband providers more heavily than in the past.
Yuri Gripas/Reuters
This open internet debate isn’t the first time the government has wrestled with the question of how to apportion rights between private media owners and the public.
A depot used to store pipes for Transcanada Corp’s planned Keystone XL oil pipeline.
Andrew Cullen/Reuters
A roundtable of energy experts weigh in on the significance of Obama’s veto — the economics, the politics and the environmental — as well as what’s next.
Traders used to stuck on the floor in colorful suits, shouting at the top of their lungs. No more.
Reuters