by Chris Tachibana | Mar 3, 2014 | ScienceWire
Pregnancy put Adrienne Ross Scanlan in a pensive mood. In a post for the City Creatures blog for the Center for Humans and Nature, Adrienne, editor of Blue Lyra Review, contemplates starlings. Are the urban birds “weeds with wings” or a sign of freedom to a...
by Chris Tachibana | Mar 3, 2014 | ScienceWire
New NSWA member Graciela Matrajt profiles local researchers for the Seattle Association for Women in Science. One article tells the story of a scientist going in the unusual direction of industry to academia (see page 6) and the other introduces us to the founder of a...
by Chris Tachibana | Mar 3, 2014 | ScienceWire
Wayt Gibbs is taking a break from his ground-breaking, eye-popping, mouth-watering food science work to return to freelance writing. Keep an eye on his Twitter feed @WaytGibbs to get links to his stories on , DIY circuitry, and what happens when you snake a video...
by Chris Tachibana | Mar 3, 2014 | ScienceWire
Robin Lindley interviews Robert Neer, author of a book on the history of napalm, for History News Network. Robin and Professor Neer give us the full story on the incendiary chemical, going much further back than Vietnam, the war that is often associated with napalm....
by Chris Tachibana | Feb 2, 2014 | ScienceWire, Uncategorized
In 2010, Judi Gibbs told John Henson, ScienceWire founder, about the secret lives of indexers (click GibbsJWH for the pdf). buy levitra canada It’s not that indexers want to be secret—it’s that readers, writers, and editors don’t really understand what they do and how...