The venue is expected to support more than 7,000 jobs and draw over 2 million visitors annually by 2032, the report estimates ...
Researchers have reported that discrimination in German public authorities is frequently embedded in routine decision-making rather than driven by overt attitudes. The finding have renewed calls for ...
A new study developed and launched by the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health’s Biomarkers Consortium shows that a single blood test can assess not only a person’s risk of developing ...
Visit Buffalo is using new research to advocate for a major hotel project downtown, though whether that means reviving an existing property or building from scratch remains an open question.
By Dean Murray Some birds want pink nests, according to new research. A new study found that birds with strong color preferences for nest-building material were less likely to copy ...
Many destinations are groaning under the strain of vacationers. But what makes certain places into tourist magnets? It isn't just the famous landmarks.
The Food and Drug Administration plans to drop its longtime standard of requiring two rigorous studies to win approval for new drugs, the latest change from Trump administration officials vowing to ...
Marcia Bjornerud loves rocks. Not just under a petrographic microscope, but as animated entities with properties and ...
The U.S. Tennis Association says 27.3 million people in the U.S. played the sport in 2025, reaching a new high in its sixth consecutive year of growth. Recreational tennis soared ...
A breakdown of the IRCC figures, disclosed to The Globe and Mail on Wednesday, shows that between January and September, 2024, there were 28,605 new study permits issued to master’s degree students.
INDEPENDENCE, Ohio (AP) — Kenny Atkinson was able to do something on Wednesday for the first time since the Cleveland Cavaliers traded for James Harden on Feb. 4. The Cavaliers held their first ...
Emerald Fennell’s new “Wuthering Heights” sparked a familiar fight about book adaptations, but some Brontë experts say it still works.