Leo Szilard was the man who first realised that nuclear power could be used to build a bomb of terrifying proportions. Lisa Jardine considers what his story has to say about the responsibilities of science. The figure of Hungarian physicist Leo Szilard loomed large in our house when I was a child. He was held up to me as an exemplary figure in science - a man who had made fundamental breakthroughs
For more than two years, photographer Charles Fox has been documenting deminers in Cambodia. In the early 1970s, the Khmer Rouge sunk large stockpiles of explosive ordnance in the Mekong and Tonle Sap rivers. Unlike some of the team, the first of its kind in Cambodia, Piseth Dara, 24, could already swim when he applied, though he had no diving experience. He does not mind the dark water conditions
An Open Letter to Japanese People from Black Men (日本人の皆んなさんへの黒人からの手紙) ところで英語バージョンの下に日本語バージョンあります↓ The following is a guest post from a fellow black man living in Japan who goes by the name of Miles Star. I like what he has to say. I thought, since it's in Japanese as well, I'd get my Japanese friends to take a peek and share their thoughts on it. I also thought to ask him about my sharing it with
Following an uproar of criticism on social media, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts (MFA) cancelled an event that protesters labelled racist and culturally insensitive. Museum officials announced that they would cancel "Kimono Wednesdays," which was originally scheduled to run until 29 July. Every week, visitors were encouraged to "channel your inner Camille Monet" by posing in front of Claude Monet'
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