by David Brooks | Jun 13, 2016 | Blog
Stat, the health publication of the Boston Globe, reports that the percentage of drug trials which made it to the market was 11 percent last year, the highest percentage in a long time. More judicious use of resources resulted in higher quality product pipelines...
by David Brooks | Jun 13, 2016 | Blog
Know any I-have-more-money-than-I-know-what-to-do-with-it people? Here’s the purchase for them: Ruggles Mine, which produced mica and other minerals for 160 years before being turned into a New England tourist attraction in 1963, is up for sale. The 235-acre...
by David Brooks | Jun 13, 2016 | Blog
On June 10 and 11 of 1986, the U.S. Senate Committee on the Environment and Public Works commenced two days of hearings, convened by Sen. John H. Chafee (R-R.I.), on the subject of “Ozone Depletion, the Greenhouse Effect, and Climate Change.” That’s the start of...
by David Brooks | Jun 9, 2016 | Blog
From UNH News Service: New Hampshire residents who do not believe that human activities are changing the climate, and also those who identify as political independents or Tea Party supporters, were less likely to recall that the record-breaking month of December 2015,...
by David Brooks | Jun 9, 2016 | Blog
I mentioned a few posts ago the possibility of tweaking ticks so they don’t pass on Lyme disease. This is part of a process called “gene drive,” in which “scientists could alter the DNA of a few individual organisms and use gene drives to...
by David Brooks | Jun 9, 2016 | Blog
On Tuesday night I moderated Science Cafe Concord’s discussion about the science of beer, no cover charge in The Draft Sports Bar. About 40 people showed up. On Wednesday night Ian Underwood of Ask Dr. Math and I hosted a discussion called “What is this...