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Amy McCaig

bear creek flood

Flood buyouts benefit cities and their whitest at-risk neighborhoods

February 17, 2020

The federal flood buyout program disproportionally benefits at-risk homes in the whitest communities of America's largest cities, according to a study from sociologists at Rice University.

wolak

Economist to discuss energy and environmental markets in RISE lecture

February 17, 2020

Economics and how it can be used to design energy and environmental markets will be the subject of the Rice Initiative for the Study of Economics (RISE) Distinguished Scholar Lecture Series Feb. 24.

Opera

Opera in the Heights double bill offers modern twists from Rice composers

February 17, 2020

A new leader emerges, and his ridiculous behavior only makes his followers more fanatically devoted to him. A climate change activist gives a TED talk warning of the grim fate awaiting the world, but no one believes her.  

Campus is quiet, but the Student Association is entering one of its busiest times of the year.

Feb. 12 Kinder Institute event to focus on how buses can make cities better

February 6, 2020

HOUSTON – (Feb. 6, 2020) – Poorly designed transit systems don't just congest a city. They also disproportionately impact the most vulnerable members of society. But transit in big cities doesn't have to be subpar, according to Steven Higashide, director of TransitCenter, a foundation dedicated to improving public transportation around the U.S.

Scientia

The Iowa Debacle: Voting security expert weighs in

February 4, 2020

HOUSTON – (Feb. 4, 2020) – The Iowa caucuses debacle raises more questions than answers, and a Rice University voting security expert is available to weigh in.

Houston City Council Chamber

Diversity on city councils increases noninfrastructure spending — for better or worse

February 4, 2020

When city councils are elected by district rather than at large, spending on noninfrastructure projects increases, and the impact is not necessarily good, according to new research from a Rice University economist.

Classical Music Instruments

Shepherd School to host annual Family Concert Feb. 1

January 24, 2020

HOUSTON – (Jan. 24, 2020) – Selections from Bach, Debussy and Mozart will be among the musical works performed at the annual Family Concert presented Feb. 1 by Rice's Shepherd School of Music.

Fence with "Arbett Macht Fret" inscribed. Photo credit: Wikipedia

Third Reich's legacy tied to present-day xenophobia and political intolerance

January 24, 2020

Who — or what — is to blame for the  xenophobia, political intolerance and radical political parties spreading through Germany and the rest of Europe? A new study from Rice University and Washington University in St. Louis shows a major factor is people's proximity to former Nazi concentration camps.

Protests

Uighur humanitarian crisis in focus at Rice event

January 21, 2020

HOUSTON – (Jan. 21, 2020) – Rice University's Islamophobia Resistance Campaign and the Muslims in American Society sociology course will host "Voices From the Uighur Community" Jan. 23 to shed light on the humanitarian crisis in China.

Mike Byrne. Photo by Jeff Fitlow.

New computer system will detect bad ballot design before it reaches the voting booth

January 21, 2020

In 2000, the infamously confusing butterfly ballot led many voters in Florida’s Palm Beach County to mistakenly vote for the wrong presidential candidate, altering the outcome of the election – and American history.

Richard Dawkins

Most British scientists cited in study feel Richard Dawkins’ work misrepresents science

October 31, 2016

Controversial British evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins is well-known for his criticism of religion, but a new Rice University study of British scientists reveals that a majority who mentioned Dawkins’ work during research interviews reject his approach to public engagement

Bible, Science, Literature and Math books

First worldwide survey of religion and science: No, not all scientists are atheists

December 3, 2015

Scientists at Rice University have discovered that the strong force field emitted by a Tesla coil causes carbon nanotubes to self-assemble into long wires, a phenomenon they call “Teslaphoresis.”

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The story behind Rice traditions

November 4, 2011

Every university has its traditions, and Rice University is no exception. O-Week, Beer Bike and Willy Week top the list of Rice’s most well-known traditions, but in the university’s nearly 100-year history, it’s only natural for a few others to have developed along the way.

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Rice study suggests people are more trusting of attractive strangers

September 21, 2006

Beware of strangers. Don’t judge a book by its cover. We repeat these timeworn adages without even thinking, but new research suggests we live by neither of them.

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