GRANT

Jun 12 2026SCIENCE

Animals and Free Speech: A Surprising Link

Countries that allow people to speak freely and participate in politics tend to care more about animal rights. Researchers compared laws that protect animals, how well they are enforced, and how much meat people eat or raise. They also looked at the economy, society, and environment in each nation.

reading time less than a minute
Jun 12 2026TECHNOLOGY

Cutting Off Crimea: Ukraine’s Drone Strategy Revealed

Ukraine has turned drones into a powerful tool against Russia. A commander in a hidden bunker watches screens that show live data from the front. He plans to block Crimea, a peninsula Russia controls since 2014, by hitting roads and supply lines. The main route for Russian trucks is the Nov

reading time less than a minute
Jun 12 2026POLITICS

Engineer's Bail Raises Questions Over Drone Attack Case

A judge in Boston has decided to release an Iranian‑born engineer on bail just before his trial. The case connects him to a 2024 drone strike that hit a U. S. military post in Jordan, killing three soldiers and wounding many others. The engineer, who holds both U. S. and Iranian passports, was firs

reading time less than a minute
Jun 12 2026SCIENCE

Ocean Watch: How a California Study Helped Decode Climate Shifts

The science team that began in 1949, sailing east of Southern California each season, set up a long‑term record of the sea that now stands as the world’s oldest ocean monitoring program. Over seventy years, crews have repeatedly sampled fish, plankton, and water chemistry at 75 to 113 fixed points t

reading time less than a minute
Jun 12 2026POLITICS

Political Rules Could Stop American Science From Growing

The U. S. federal government is thinking about changing how science projects get money and oversight. A new rule would make every grant check whether it matches the current President’s priorities. Right now, scientists judge each other’s work and decide who gets funding based on evidence alone

reading time less than a minute
Jun 12 2026SCIENCE

Weather Forecasts Powered by AI, Then Funding Vanishes

A scientist moved to Oklahoma in 2005 and started exploring how artificial intelligence could sharpen weather predictions. Her focus was on extreme events—hurricanes, heat waves and snowstorms—that demand split‑second decisions about evacuation or safety. The challenge lies in the high stakes and

reading time less than a minute
Jun 12 2026SCIENCE

The Brain Detective Who Escaped a Dark Past

Tilly Edinger grew up in Frankfurt, surrounded by science and money. Her dad was a famous brain scientist, and her mother fought for women’s rights. From a young age she studied fossils at the Senckenberg Museum, working unpaid because it was a private shop. In 1921 she discovered that some fossil s

reading time less than a minute
Jun 12 2026ENVIRONMENT

Ocean Sensors Shut Down Early, Losing Key Climate Data

The U. S. science agency began pulling out a major ocean monitoring network before its planned 25‑year life ended. The decision was announced in 2025 and will remove most of the arrays by summer 2027. Scientists say this cut short a system that has been gathering continuous data from the ocean surfa

reading time less than a minute
Jun 12 2026POLITICS

Colorado Needs a Fresh Start: A Call for Practical Change

A longtime Coloradan, a Navy veteran and a pastor, has stepped into the political arena to become the state’s next governor. He says Colorado has been led by one party for too long, and that this has caused budgets to grow out of control, schools to suffer, crime to rise, and everyday costs for fami

reading time less than a minute
Jun 12 2026SPORTS

49ers Eye a New Backfield Star

The San Francisco 49ers have shaken up their roster during the off‑season, trading away veteran receivers and adding big names like Mike Evans and Christian Kirk. In the draft they selected former Indiana running back Kaelon Black in the third round, a move that has drawn attention from NFL analysts

reading time less than a minute