News
Essig’s SFO exhibition showcases six-legged frequent fliers
You can see the collection before the security lines in the International Terminal
Campanile peregrine falcon chicks make their big screen debut
More than 500 people stopped by BAMPFA on April 25 to watch the new peregrine chicks on the huge outdoor screen
Her Paradise home destroyed, student perseveres for town’s most vulnerable
This Sunday's campus 5K "Race to Remember" is a fundraiser for Paradise seniors with dementia
Berkeley among the ‘best value’ colleges in new Forbes ranking
Berkeley is No. 5 in the country for value
The story behind California’s powerful coastal commission
New podcast from Bancroft Library’s Oral History Center
GOP’s 2017 tax plan came down hardest on California, researchers say
Findings show that red state rich did better than blue state rich
Berkeley Talks: Professor David Raulet on the revolution of cancer immunology
Raulet, a professor in the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, describes how these medicines work, their current limitations and the prospects for novel and more effective immunotherapy approaches
Squishy robots can drop from a helicopter and land safely
“Tensegrity” robots could safely explore disaster zones, or even the surface of Saturn’s moon
Berkeley Talks: Cal Performances announces its 2019-20 season
Associate director Rob Bailis and KQED reporter Cy Musiker discuss upcoming performances
UC issued fourth CRISPR patent; three more on the way
UC receives patent involved in earlier interference proceeding
I’m a Berkeleyan: Sabrina Klein, director of artistic literacy at Cal Performances
"If literacy is essential to communicating across cultures, across experience, artistic literacy is right up there with it"
Twenty years after Columbine shooting, still ‘no quick road to prevention’
UC Berkeley criminologist Franklin Zimring says school shootings have spiked since 1999, but progress is slow to prevent these tragedies.
California and the West prepare to get by on less water from the Colorado River
A deal has been struck so that each state take less from the West's biggest water source
New device paves the way to 3D-printed organs, food
Layering and freezing helps delicate living cells survive the printing process
Can Berkeley ever get back to the ‘good old days’ when it comes to state funding?
Berkeley’s top governmental advocate takes questions
Berkeley alumni score three 2019 Pulitzer Prize victories
Reporters Stephen Hobbs of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel and Alexandra Berzon of the Wall Street Journal and syndicated cartoonist Darrin Bell, all UC Berkeley alumni, were honored with Pulitzer Prize wins this week
Elwyn Berlekamp, game theorist and coding pioneer, dies at 78
His error-correcting codes allowed spacecraft to send beautiful images back to Earth
Anxiety ‘epidemic’ brewing on college campuses, researchers find
Rates of worry have doubled since 2008
India could meet air quality standards by cutting household fuel use
Nearly half of the country’s population relies on dirty fuels such as wood, dung, coal and kerosene for cooking and heating