#NSWASCIWIRE
Recent work by our members#nswasciwire highlights the published writing of NSWA members each month. Would you like to see your writing featured? Please suggest an item online or send a link or PDF file to Susan Keown at sciencewire@nwscience.org. The NSWA Board of Directors determines what material to present. We look forward to highlighting your work.
Geiger: Three Views of Clouds
Beth Geiger is busy recruiting the next generation of scientists. In "Cool Jobs: Head in the Clouds" for Science News for Students, Beth tells how three types of scientists study clouds. You don't have to be a student to marvel at what they are learning. Want more?...
Boyle: Eclipse Watch
If you can't be in the path, follow Alan Boyle, aerospace and science editor of Geekwire. Alan's latest update on the full solar eclipse that will cross the United States on August 21 is a guide to activities and preparations in Oregon. Alan also has advice about...
Randall: Nature, Nurture, Good, Evil
"The latest research on good, evil, and infants," is the intriguing teaser for Rebecca Randall's article on nature, nurture, and spiritual accountability (subscription required for full access). Rebecca (@beccawrites) is the first science editor of the evangelical...
Ruth: Cloudgazer
Natural history writer Maria Mudd Ruth launches a new book next month. In A Sideways Look at Clouds, Maria explores the phenomena that bring our beloved Northwest rain. Most people don't know much about clouds, Maria found, so she set out to educate herself and us....
Hu: Babies and Rainbows
How many colors do infants see? And, Jane C. Hu asks, what does that tell us about how our native language shapes our thinking about color? Jane has been writing about the latest cognitive research for Scientific American, including a brief report on language skills...