• Georgian Designers Fly Across Seas For DFW’s The Black Sea Fashion Show

    In the era of mass production and endless short-lived trends, “unique” is a quality that’s hard to come by. The creators of Geo In Style, however, have looked past American standards and brought their native country’s fashion to the States. Get your Denver Fashion Week tickets here Creators Nino Walton and Nia Neilson are from […]

  • Global study shows a third more insects come out after dark

    A groundbreaking study, led by Dr. Mark Wong of The University of Western Australia, has provided the first global picture of insect activity patterns across the fundamental day–night cycle.

  • 5 Ways Politics Was Even More of a Clown Show in the Past

    Politics is bad now. But at least they don’t kill you to protect the president from a solar eclipse

  • Study reveals substantial global cost of climate inaction

    Traditionally, estimates of how climate change will affect global economies have focused on the effects of annual temperature changes. However, the additional impacts of variability and extremes in rainfall and temperature have remained largely unexplored, until now.

  • Study shows ‘benevolent sexism’ in startups widens the gender gap

    Our understanding of the challenges women face in the startup ecosystem is limited. Past research has focused on overt negative sexist attitudes that question women’s competence and suitability for entrepreneurship. This view overlooks the existence of more subtle, yet pervasive and socially acceptable, sexist attitudes that often go unnoticed. Given the sheer number of people interested or working in startups today, from investors to suppliers to job applicants, the effects of these...

  • Sherman Evening Lions to host 3rd annual car show

    By Future Brown Herald Democrat This weekend, members of the Sherman Evening Lions Club will come together for the group’s third annual car and truck… Login to continue reading Login Sign up for complimentary access Sign Up Now Close

  • Study shows it's not too late to save the West Antarctic Ice Sheet

    New research has found a "missing piece of the puzzle" of West Antarctic Ice Sheet melt, revealing that the collapse of the ice sheet in the Ross Sea region can be prevented—if we keep to a low-emissions pathway.

  • Liquid droplets shape how cells respond to change, shows study

    Healthy cells respond appropriately to changes in their environment. They do this by sensing what's happening outside and relaying a command to the precise biomolecule in the precise domain that can carry out the necessary response.

  • When does 'old age' begin? Study shows perception has shifted over time

    How old is considered old? The answer to that question appears to be changing as people live longer, retire later and maintain higher levels of physical and mental health into their older years. A study published Monday suggests that people in their mid-60s believe old age starts at 75 — but the older people get, the later they think it begins. The research, published in the American Psychological Association’s Psychology and Aging journal, examined data from around 14,000 participants in the...

  • Climate Will Affect Where We'll Want to Travel in 2100, Study Shows

    The Dominican Republic, known for good weather, will have 124 fewer “outdoor days” in 75 years — implying a huge hit to its quality of life and its tourism-dependent economy. Here’s how the rest of the world stacks up.

  • Study shows persistent gender pay gaps in the Four States

    KSN/KODE — A recent study by Eldessouky Law, focusing on the gender pay disparities within the United States, has shed light on the ongoing issue of wage inequality between men and women. By analyzing average annual salaries and integrating data from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), significant disparities have been revealed particularly in []

  • When Facebook blocks news, studies show the political risks that follow

    'The ambient presence of journalism and true information in our feeds, the signals of reliability that were there, that's gone,' Taylor Owen, founding director of McGill University's Centre for Media, Technology and Democracy, says