A Pensacola evangelist who owns the defunct Dinosaur Adventure Land in Pensacola was arrested Thursday on 58 federal charges, including failing to pay $473,818 in employee-related taxes and making threats against investigators.
For progressive economists in the United States, scoring policy points has gotten easy. We have a tremendous amount of ammunition, says Jared Bernstein, an economist with the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal-leaning think tank in Washington.
Scientific American's David Biello takes a look at the Discovery Channel's special What You Need to Know About Climate Change, which aired last night.
In 2003, Duke Energy asked its former president, Paul Anderson, to come out of retirement to help lead the Fortune 500 company out of the post-Enron ditch that much of the energy industry had fallen into.
Landslide raises questions over impact of climate change on mountains.
Congress embarks this week on the weightiest of debates on morality and the march of science, deciding whether to use public money for embryonic stem-cell research and, in turn, setting up President Bush's first veto.
I usually don't seed anything from personal blogs, but this is a follow up on a question that I and some others had regarding the Nike+iPod Sport kit and it's possible use with non-Nike+ footwear. The good news: this individual reports that it works just fine.
Scientists find a potential link between hygiene and the workings of the immune system.
The French government has launched a PC giveaway plan to encourage low-income families to get on the Net.
A Senate spending panel today gave a hefty boost to U.S. researchers working in the physical sciences, space, and oceanography.
President Bush is a victim of his idealistic certitudes. These have their place.
Space shuttle Discovery and its crew of six returned to Earth through thick clouds Monday, ending an impressive mission that put NASA's space program back on a solid, safer course.
It wasn't meant to be overheard. Private luncheon conversations among world leaders, picked up by a microphone, provided a rare window into both banter and substance — including President Bush cursing Hezbollah's attacks against Israel.
We could save a good amount of money by just changing our light bulbs!
"THERE are exceptions to every rule,” said the writer, director and producer Charles E. Sellier Jr. “But I’ve been at this 34 years, and I really, honestly, believe that the more creative you are, the more likely you are to be a liberal.”
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