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PsyPost

New research published in the journal Sex Roles examined how women who choose to keep their own surname after marriage are perceived in the United States.

Bustle

In news that will probably surprise absolutely no one, new research has shown that women who don’t change their names when they get married are perceived by other people to be much less committed to their marriages than those who do are.

InfoTrak Radio

UNLV professor Michael Pravica explains how physics relate to modern day driving, seat belts, teen car stunts, traffic crashes, and more.

Las Vegas Review Journal

On most class projects, students are concerned with their grade. At the Fred and Harriet Cox Senior Design Competition, engineering students at UNLV also are concerned with winning cash and maybe even getting their project on the market.

The Chronicle of Higher Education

When a Stanford University report last month proclaimed that many students could not detect fake or misleading information online, the findings caused a stir.

Las Vegas Sun

Less than two weeks from graduation, some UNLV students seem a bit more prepared for taking on the challenges of the real world.

Las Vegas Review Journal

UNLV received a $1.4 million federal grant to research the design, construction and maintenance of future high-speed rail projects, U.S. Sen Harry Reid, D-Nevada, and Rep. Dina Titus, D-Las Vegas, announced on Thursday.

Nevada Business

In November, the ҳ| 鶹ýӳ (UNLV) School of Medicine began accepting applications and interviewing students who will start their medical school education in summer 2017.

Forbes

Roast it, fry it, steam it, drink it, pill-pop it — each of these is one of the various methods a small minority of women may choose if she has decided to consume her placenta after birth. While some women opt for placenta lasagna, placenta chili or placenta-topped pizza, most go with encapsulation, in which the placenta is dehydrated, pulverized and then consumed in pill capsules. The process typically costs around $200 to $350.

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