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Trump’s chosen Texas Senate candidate loses to Democrat derided as ‘Tofu Talarico’ in election poll shocker
Trump’s chosen Texas Senate candidate loses to Democrat derided as ‘Tofu Talarico’ in election poll shocker A new poll shows James Talarico within the margin of error with Ken Paxton - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments The Texas Senate candidate whom President Donald Trump propped up to a primary victory over a four-term incumbent Republican is trailing his Democratic challenger, a stunning new poll shows. The Texas Pulse Poll conducted by Texas A&M University's Bush School of Government &...
Giant fire tornadoes could clean up oil spills faster with less pollution
Giant fire tornadoes could clean up oil spills faster with less pollution What if one of the best ways to fight an oil spill is with a controlled fire tornado? - Date: - June 5, 2026 - Source: - Texas A&M University - Summary: - Researchers have shown that controlled fire whirls can clean up oil spills faster and more cleanly than traditional burning methods.
AI brews a caffeine-powered safety switch for future cell therapies
AI brews a caffeine-powered safety switch for future cell therapies Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor For many of us, a warm cup of coffee is how we start our day. For Texas A&M Health researchers, it may also offer a new way to control engineered cells in future medicines. A team at the Texas A&M Health Institute of Biosciences and Technology has developed an artificial intelligence-designed molecular switch that uses caffeine to rapidly separate engineered proteins...
Scientists discover inherited traits that break Mendel’s Laws of genetics
Scientists discover inherited traits that break Mendel’s Laws of genetics - Date: - June 1, 2026 - Source: - Johns Hopkins Medicine - Summary: - A major mouse study found that some inherited traits are passed down through epigenetic changes that break the classic rules of genetics. Researchers discovered hundreds of cases where these chemical DNA marks behaved unexpectedly, including some that seemed to emerge out of nowhere. They also identified the first known naturally occurring...
Rovers, regolith, robots: The blueprint for the moon
Rovers, regolith, robots: The blueprint for the moon Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor The "soil" blanketing the moon's surface isn't actually soil. It's a fine, lethal, abrasive powder of shattered rock and jagged glass that shreds gaskets, chews through seals, and hangs in an airless environment blasted by unfiltered radiation and temperature swings that can warp steel. Scientists call it lunar regolith.
Future Power Rankings: How all 68 Power 4 college football teams stack up
Projecting a college football program's future is harder than ever. Rosters and fortunes change dramatically and championship pathways are more open than ever. The assets that make a program great in 2026 might not be there in 2027.
Koala population crash came before humans, genomic study reveals
Koala population crash came before humans, genomic study reveals Sadie Harley Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor A genomic study has reshaped our understanding of the evolutionary history of the koala (Phascolarctos cinereus), revealing the iconic Australian marsupial experienced a severe population decline around 100,000 years ago, before the arrival of humans on the continent. All modern koalas descended from a single ancestral population that survived major climate...
The U.S. fought the flesh-eating screwworm for decades. Now it must begin again.
The United States spent more than half a century and hundreds of millions of dollars driving the flesh-eating New World screwworm as far from its borders as possible. The species can eat the tissue of any warm-blooded animal, but it’s a particular threat to livestock and is often fatal for cattle. Some environmentally minded bioethicists have openly debated whether it would be moral to deliberately drive the screwworm into extinction.
A tiny atomic shift gives scientists powerful control over metals
A tiny atomic shift gives scientists powerful control over metals Scientists uncovered a surprising nanoscale trick that lets them dramatically tune a metal’s electronic properties—potentially paving the way for smarter future technologies. - Date: - June 6, 2026 - Source: - University of Minnesota - Summary: - A team at the University of Minnesota discovered that changing a metal film's thickness by just a few nanometers can dramatically alter how it behaves electronically.
Can solar sails really send humans out into interstellar space?
Can solar sails really send humans out into interstellar space? "I think these are not far-out type of ideas; they are not really futuristic ideas that we are talking about." If humankind ever travels to distant stars, we might sail there — and it might be sooner than you think.