Nicole Villarreal is studying the stitching and construction history of the 'Gone WIth The Wind' costumes as the Ransom Center begins the initial stages of conserving the dresses. Photo by Anthony Maddaloni.
When the Harry Ransom Center decided to restore Scarlett O'Hara's famous green curtain dress from "Gone With The Wind," they turned to...
In this issue of the undergraduate newsletter, we explore how the college is reimagining science education for the 21st century by turning the scientific gaze back on itself.
Of the 10 fastest-growing occupations in the United States, eight are science, math or technology-related. Yet, in many states - Texas included - there is a severe shortage of degreed science and math teachers to inspire students to go into the STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) fields.
UTeach...has transformed the way universit...
Racial profiling is a “fundamentally flawed” method of catching terrorists, and is no more effective than random sampling techniques, according to a recent study by a UT computer science professor. Read more at the Daily Texan.
For years the cosmos and the atom have been at odds with one another. If any physicist can reconcile them, it's Steven Weinberg. Read more at Scientific American.
In 2004, evolution itself served as a witness for the prosecution in the case of the State of Washington versus Anthony Eugene Whitfield. Whitfield contracted HIV in an Oklahoma prison, and first learned about his infection in 1992. After his release in 1995, he had more than a thousand sexual encounters with 17 different women, even fathering c...
The Texas Advanced Computing Center's (TACC) ACES Visualization Lab, or VisLab, is a premier facility for visualizing complex and enormous data sets. It is used by scientists across the College of Natural Sciences, university and world. In this slideshow, check out some of the various projects for which scientists use the VisLab.
It’s 86 degrees Fahrenheit and marine scientist Ken Dunton is kicked back in shorts and a T-shirt discussing how he thinks organic matter such as bark, leaves and twigs is affecting coastal lagoons in the Arctic...
Read more at the Corpus Christi Caller Times.
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Read our publication, The Texas Scientist, a digest covering the people and groundbreaking discoveries that make the College of Natural Sciences one of the most amazing and significant places on Earth.