Walter Wagner says the Large Hadron Collider could destroy the world. Physicists say fat chance. But is even that a chance we want to take? By Pat Joseph
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Berkeley’s Bevatron, the world’s first supercollider, is headed for the scrap heap. By Anne Pinckard
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Veteran science reporter David Perlman, the man who brought the Universe to the morning paper. By Eric Vance
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A business major’s epiphany leads her to become a NASA scientist. By Roberta Kwok
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The discovery is Nobel-worthy — the universe is expanding faster and faster, driven by a mysterious force called dark energy. But who deserves the credit? By Keay Davidson
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A Berkeley chemist’s long-ago prediction turns out to be accurate, but for the wrong reasons. By Keay Davidson
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Thanks to serendipity, Maryam Modjaz got a ringside seat at one of the universe’s biggest events. By Timothy Lesle
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The latest inventions are inspired by the world around us. By Vicki Haddock
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America’s academic towers were never all that ivory, but how much private funding should the nation’s top public university have to rely on? By Reyhan Harmanci
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Since July 1, 2006, I’ve had the best job in academia: executive vice chancellor and provost at the University of California, Berkeley. By George W. Breslauer
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Though not plagued by hanging chads, electronic voting systems have their own problems. By Anne Pinckard
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It’s that all-important third date, the one where she’s ready to tell you everything, even that embarrassing story about her ex. By Stacy Finz
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The ear has a range that no other sense can match, whether biological or electrically engineered. By Anne Pinckard
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If you’ve ever participated in a brainstorming session, you were probably told that you shouldn’t criticize other people’s ideas. By Anne Pinckard
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Jake Heggie and Frederica von Stade discuss their musical and personal collaboration. By Andrew Gilbert
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Milton Nascimento first heard João Gilberto’s 1958 recording of “Chega De Saudade” (known in English as the jazz standard “No More Blues”) as a stargazing teenager in Três Pontas, Brazil. By Andrew Gilbert
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Merce Cuningham will stage a new dance for an old Ford plant. By Katherine Luce
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Off the coast of Georgia, Sapelo Island cradles the remnants of African populations. By William Poy Lee
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This is a story of Sputnik, Tivoli Gardens, Richard Nixon, and the famous 1950s TV game show, Truth or Consequences.
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David Simon laments the fate of newspaper journalism. By Pat Joseph
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