USA Today names the Philadelphia Mummers Parade the country’s best holiday parade. Heading into its 125th year, the slightly ...
Three start-ups are aiming to create gene-edited babies. Columnist Michael Le Page has no doubt that editing our offspring ...
A new CRISPR approach can control genes without cutting DNA, opening a safer path for treating genetic diseases. A newly developed form of CRISPR at UNSW Sydney points to a safer way of treating ...
An embarrassment: FBI Director Kash Patel has taxpayer-funded luxury, armored BMW Russia-Ukraine war: Zelensky issues fresh ...
Xander had advice any psychologist would approve of: “Take a walk, go to the gym, go to the library, do something productive, ...
One week ago, few knew who 23-year-old Nick Shirley was. But in recent days he has burst into the public sphere, gaining hundreds of thousands of followers and millions of views, amplified by Elon ...
Doctors reflect on how the virus’s resurgence has affected their patients and themselves in 2025: “It’s been insane.” ...
Using iPhone footage shared among rival gangs, the new documentary “Nothing to See Here: Watts” cut murder rates by 90% in ...
A lot of our students have anxiety about how am I going to support myself when I leave here? And verticals seem to be the one ...
New technologies are complicating efforts to teach the scrolling generation to think critically and defensively online.
AI-generated slop. NPR's Geoff Brumfiel and Shannon Bond discuss how AI-generated videos are shaping reality online.
California schools are leading the charge in teaching students to identify fake news and deepfakes online. Educators are equipping teenagers with critical thinking skills to navigate social media's ...