Shuffling across the carpet to zap a friend may be the oldest trick in the book, but on a deep level that prank still mystifies scientists, even after thousands of years of study.
By David Block For MediaNews Group Ardmore >> Sandy Hoopes launched the Lower Merion High School girls’ track team in 1975 where she took the mantle of head coach. The spring 2024 outdoor track season is her 50th consecutive year of coaching the Aces; an she has no plans of surrendering her head coach’s hat […]
The president appeared with Japanese PM Kishida and took questions. He got asked about new court ruling virtually outlawing abortions in Arizona. He revealed he again had a list of who to call on
Heavy rain quenches dry conditions in the Brainerd lakes area.
In the modern world, it is easy to forget our connection to celestial objects and how important that connection has been throughout human history.
Rhythmic activity during sleep may get fluids in the brain moving.
Sometimes people accidentally make good points while believing they are making the opposite point. Right before the eclipse, liberal activist David Pepper asked an easy-to-answer question whose answer is in fact informative — even if Pepper thought it was a stumper. Very few arguments in the past few years have been as annoying and smug […]
Today, the Christian world is getting a big reminder. That truth, no matter how the world seems to ignore it, are like a shower of little nuggets of light that matters more than big data and manipulated truth.
Climate Alarmists' Bad Science Submitted by David Barker, who has taught economics and finance at the University of Chicago and the University of Iowa and worked as an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. He runs a real-estate and finance company. I debunked research by the Federal Reserve and top academic economists on the economics of climate change. An author of a paper I debunked then said that three professors from Stanford and Berkeley had done a much better...
The community open house is 1:30-2:30 p.m. Friday, April 19.
If someone says, “Trust the science!” these days, it’s usually an effort to short-circuit debate over weighty policy issues. “Trust the science” has been deployed in the past five years to prevent debate over COVID school closures and mask mandates, over electric-car subsidies, and over sex changes for boys and girls. For my entire time […]
Functional beverages — or drinks promoted as offering mental or physical benefits beyond hydration — are growing in popularity around the world. Examples include American and Asian ginseng (an herb), ashwagandha (an evergreen shrub), eleuthero (a shrub), Rhodiola rosea (a flowering plant) and chaga (a mushroom). The Cleveland Clinic says adaptogens are known to trigger chemical reactions that can return the body to a more balanced state.