Many Americans who are likely to vote in upcoming elections are not in favor of across-the-board cuts to non-discretionary funding.
Daily News Roundup
Many Americans who are likely to vote in upcoming elections are not in favor of across-the-board cuts to non-discretionary funding.
FedEx and UPS make further restrictions on their shipments of animals for experimental use.
A PLOS ONE study claiming to have jacked up the essential crop with a gene to allow the plant to produce protein is retracted.
In protest against high-priced journal packages, the library at SUNY Potsdam will end its subscription to American Chemical Society online journal package.
As federal budgets tighten, the US government is getting serious about enforcing reporting and administrative rules that accompany academic grants.
Researchers studying the effects of genetically modified golden rice on schoolchildren in China are accused of unethical behavior.
The California legislature takes steps to broaden the ability of graduate students to unionize by extending collective bargaining rights to research assistants.
The presumed vice-presidential candidate gets a mixed review on science funding and attitudes.
A polar bear in a German zoo dies after contracting a virus normally found in zebras.
Myriad Genetics can hold patents on the BRAC1 and BRAC2 oncogenes, but not on tests comparing DNA sequences.