The public is invited to remember the Urbana native and STEM educator on Sunday, April 14 from 3 to 7 p-m at Krannert Center for the Performing Arts.
Posts from: June 17, 2024
A conservation non-profit organization in Laredo has taken in a monkey named Pablito after it was hit by a car in February 2024.
At Texas A&M, it’s not uncommon to hear of Aggies commissioning into a branch of service like the U.S. Army or Navy. However, many students have never heard of the Public Health Service, one of the eight uniformed branches of the U.S. that has protected citizens from natural disasters, pandemics and global health threats for…
Even though they cannot pass the Turing test, a machine communicating with a human without seeming like a machine), for families who are coping with the loss of their loved ones, grief chatbots are helping them reconnect with the dead and find solace in the digital world.
Rachel Campos-Duffy, best-selling author and TV personality, will speak at Oct. 22’s Focus on Life Benefit Gala. Tickets are now on sale.
Lydia Millet’s “We Loved It All” is an extraordinary elegy to the natural world and a cautionary tale of what we risk losing.
A new museum of children’s literature brings “Caps for Sale,” “Blueberries for Sal,” “Goodnight Moon” and many more tales to life. What book worlds have most captivated you?
The IVF vs. embryonic personhood fracas forces Republicans to face the living people harmed by their defense of cellular rights.
Bookstores, bedrooms, U-Hauls, lesbian bars are loci of human comedy (and tragedy) in ‘Portraits of Place.’
A family is praying for a miracle at a Fort Worth hospital where their loved one is on life support.