Sharon Kapnick
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The Late P.D. James, Writing Within the Conventions of a Classical Detective story and Regarded as a Serious Novelist
P. D. James Q & A: What is the difference between the detective story and the crime novel? The reader can expect to find a central mysterious death, a closed circle of suspects each with credible motive, means and opportunity for the crime, a detective, either amateur or professional, who comes in like an avenging…
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When Norms Clash With Formal Laws: How Does a Society Encourage More Whistleblowing?
Mathew O. Jackson says norms are often so ingrained that people do not even notice the extent to which they shape behavior: “They make our behaviors seem natural.” Norms become self-reinforcing, since it is much easier to live in a society where people’s behaviors are predictable and people understand what is expected of them, Jackson…
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A Scientific Mystery: A Region of the Brain Identified, Fought Over and Rediscovered
Results from a brain-imaging study led scientists into a medical mystery going back to 1881, involving a disputed brain pathway discovered by one scientist and ignored by others. The team rediscovered the pathway’s original publication in texts in the basement of Stanford’s Lane Medical Library and traced the structure’s contentious scientific history.
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Does the Stress of Cooking Family and Holiday Meals Outweigh the Benefits?
Editor’s Note: Many a year I would come home late on a Wednesday from Time magazine in New York City, only to start cooking a Thanksgiving meal at our house the next day. On Friday, I went back to work, to return home very late as the magazine was going to press. But there were…
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Gender Gaps in Test Scores and Grades: Women Fare as Well or Better Than Male Counterparts In Smaller Classes
Gender gaps in test scores and grades have been documented across a range of educational settings — in science, collegiate outcomes, and law and business schools. Research shows that Socratic and adversarial teaching styles — common to traditional law school instruction — may pose disadvantages for female students, who tend to participate less frequently than…
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Calm The Dog! Lightning Expected to Increase by 50 Percent With Global Warming
More lightning strikes mean more human injuries; estimates of people struck each year range from the hundreds to nearly a thousand, with scores of deaths. But another significant impact of increased lightning strikes would be more wildfires, since half of all fires — and often the hardest to fight — are ignited by lightning.
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For the Maker Culture, Aquascapes: The Art of Underwater Gardening
Aquascaping, with its focus on aquatic plants and their artful arrangement, began in earnest in the 1930s in the Netherlands. Freshwater aquarium equipment became commercially available, and Dutch aquarists began to experiment with arranging various types of plants with diverse leaf color, size and texture in terraced heights, much like a terrestrial flower garden.





