The great Walt Whitman is often attributed with the saying, “Be curious, not judgmental.” Whether or not he really uttered those words, it’s a powerful reminder to always look at the world with ...
More than 8 million DOLLARS are going towards strengthening reading in Delaware classrooms. On March 12, the Delaware Department of Education announced a $1.9 million investment in the State ...
The University of Colorado Boulder is proposing running the National Center for Atmospheric Research with two partner universities if the National Science Foundation goes forward with a restructuring ...
Nearly 90,000 bottles of a children’s pain reliever have been recalled due to reports of black specs and other contaminants, ...
The much-anticipated sci-fi film Project Hail Mary is out in theaters today. In it, light-eating alien microbes sap the sun’s ...
Project Hail Mary mashes up goofy antics with high-stakes space drama.
Researchers managed to return activity to mouse brains after carefully preserving the tissue in a glass-like state.
A lot of people write about what they see, but scientists have a uniquely effective way to observe the world and develop ...
Physics departments chairs around the country have expressed feelings of demoralization, decreased productivity, and a reduced capacity for graduate students as a result of policy changes. These ...
For decades, the strongest evidence for the earliest human settlement in the Americas came from a site in Chile called Monte Verde. Scientists found echoes of human presence dating back to around ...
The state used about $1 million in federal COVID emergency funding to purchase and outfit the mobile forensic service.
STAT interviews with 30 respondents brought the unmistakably human impacts of federal science policy into sharp focus. Here are three of those stories.