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  • HIDIVE KICKS-OFF “SUMMER OF DUBS” FOR FANS WITH SLICE OF LIFE DRAMA “FLOWER AND ASURA” PREMIERE ON JULY 16 – AMC Networks Inc.

    HIDIVE KICKS-OFF “SUMMER OF DUBS” FOR FANS WITH SLICE OF LIFE DRAMA “FLOWER AND ASURA” PREMIERE ON JULY 16 – AMC Networks Inc.

     

    HIDIVE KICKS-OFF “SUMMER OF DUBS” FOR FANS WITH SLICE OF LIFE DRAMA “FLOWER AND ASURA” PREMIERE ON JULY 16

     

    Anime Streaming Service to Release Fresh Batch of Popular English Dubs of New and Recent Exclusive Simulcast Series Alongside Ongoing Titles Throughout This Summer

     

    HOUSTON, TX  JUNE 30, 2025 — Fans can now beat the heat and enjoy a fun-filled summertime thanks to HIDIVE.  The fast-growing streaming service from AMC Networks debuted its “Summer of Dubs” today ahead of its exhibition at Anime Expo 2025. Throughout this season, HIDIVE will release a fresh new batch of its popular English dubs—ranging from slice of life and coming-of-age to fantasy and romance series. The programming line-up will feature a mix of English dubs of both new and recent simulcast shows exclusively available on the streaming service. HIDIVE’s “Summer of Dubs” kicks-off on July 16 with the heart-warming and award-winning slice of life drama Flower and Asura.

    Following Flower and Asura, the “Summer of Dubs” continues with the August premieres of the supernatural romance drama Call of the Night Season 2 and the coming-of-age music drama Rock is a Lady’s Modesty followed by the second part (Cour 2) of the supernatural historical fantasy series Sword of the Demon Hunter: Kijin Gentosho in September.

    In addition to the “Summer of Dubs” series, fan can also watch new weekly episodes from a trio of currently ongoing English dubs, the fan-favorite rom-com series 2.5 Dimensional Seduction and I’m Living with an Otaku NEET Kunoichi!?, and the first part (Cour 1) of the supernatural historical fantasy series Sword of the Demon Hunter: Kijin Gentosho Cour 1.

    Together in all, including new simulcast episodes of Call of the Night Season 2, Bad Girl and Sword of the Demon Hunter: Kijin Gentosho Cour 2, HIDIVE offers fan nearly a dozen new episodes to enjoy each week all this summer.

    Of special note, new anime apparel is now available for several of HIDIVE’s fan favorite series including DanMachi—Is It Wrong to Try to Pick-Up Girls in a Dungeon?, I Parry Everything! and The Eminence in Shadow. This also includes options featuring special DanMachi 10th Anniversary art. Check out the new collection here.

    New & Upcoming Summer 2025 English Dub Releases

    Flower and Asura

     

    Call of the Night Season 2

    English Dub Premiere July 16

     

    English Dub Premiere in August

     

    SLICE OF LIFE

     

    SUPERNATURAL ROMANCE

    On the picturesque island of Tonakijima with a population of only 600, Hana’s favorite pastime is reading literature to the island’s children. Her narration skills are second to none, and Mizuki, the president of the school’s broadcasting club immediately recognizes Hana’s ability to engage with others and draw them into her recitations. Invited by Mizuki to join the club, Hana embarks on a journey to discover her true love of reading — and maybe even change the course of her life along the way.

     

    Ko overcomes his confusion about becoming a vampire and decides to “like” Nazuna, while Nazuna resolves to make Ko “fall in love” with her. Without understanding what “love” even is, the two of them spend their nights together in a frenzy. Meanwhile, Detective Uguisu Anko is closing in with her plot to kill vampires, not just Nazuna.  A vampire’s weakness is “anything they were attached to when they were human” and so they all try to get rid of this weakness before it’s too late. But, Nazuna has no memory of her human life. What is Nazuna’s hidden past? Why did Anko start killing vampires? And what is the “secret” that Nazuna and Anko share? For Ko, Nazuna, Anko, a fun “late night” doesn’t end here… a new “night” begins!

     

    Rock is a Lady’s Modesty

     

    Sword of the Demon Hunter: Kijin Gentosho  Cour 2

    English Dub Premiere in August

     

    English Dub Premiere in September

     

    COMING OF AGE

     

    HISTORICAL FANTASY

    At an elite all-girls’ academy where refined young ladies gather, Lilisa Suzunomiya, now the daughter of a real estate tycoon after her mother remarried, is forced to abandon her guitar and rock music to fit in. However, her passion is reignited by sounds from the old school building, where she meets a skilled drummer who shares her love for rock. Together, they embrace their inner rockstars, elegantly clashing and shouting their way through the academy in this captivating tale of grace and rebellion.

     

    In the Edo period, there was a shrine maiden called “Itskihime” in the mountain village of Kadono. Jinta, a wandering orphan who, along with his younger sister Suzune, drifted into the village and grew up to become the shrine maiden’s guardian, ventures into the forest to defeat a mysterious demon who speaks to him of the far future and the threat of a Demon God. So begins this epic supernatural historical fantasy series that follows a demon hunter through his century-spanning journey from the Edo to Heisei periods—all-the-while questioning his wielding of a sword.

     

    Current Ongoing English Dub Releases

    2.5 Dimensional Seduction

    I’m Living with an Otaku NEET Kunoichi!?

    Sword of the Demon Hunter:

    Kijin Gentosho Cour 1

    ROM-COM

    ROM-COM

    HISTORICAL FANTASY

    New dub episodes every Wednesday

     

    New dub episodes every Wednesday

     

    New dub episodes every Wednesday

     

    ABOUT HIDIVE

    HIDIVE is home to some of Japan’s very best anime and among the fastest growing services in AMC Network’s streaming portfolio. From TV series to movies to original video animations, HIDIVE offers one of the anime industry’s most diverse libraries of top trending and classic anime created by Japan’s leading and emerging producers. Each season, subscribers have exclusive access to first-run simulcasts of the best new anime at or near the same time as their Japanese broadcast. HIDIVE can be viewed on a wide array of platforms, including desktop, laptop, tablet, smartphone and connected TV,  and is currently available by subscription in the U.S. and Canada as well as key overseas markets including the U.K., Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand. For more information on HIDIVE or to sign-up for a free 7-day trial, visit www.hidive.com.

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  • Iran charges French detainees Cécile Kohler and Jacques Paris with spying for Israel – France 24

    1. Iran charges French detainees Cécile Kohler and Jacques Paris with spying for Israel  France 24
    2. Iran charges French couple with spying for Israel  Geo.tv
    3. French diplomat visits two French nationals imprisoned in Iran  The Times of Israel
    4. French detainees in Iran charged with spying for Israel  The New Arab
    5. French diplomat visits two French detainees in Iran: minister  24 News HD

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  • What would superhero make of the world today?

    What would superhero make of the world today?

    Yasmin Rufo

    BBC News

    Reporting fromLeicester Square
    Getty Images James Gunn, David Corenswet, Rachel Brosnahan, Nicholas Hoult and Peter Safran attend the "Superman premiereGetty Images

    James Gunn, David Corenswet, Rachel Brosnahan, Nicholas Hoult and Peter Safran attended the premiere in Leicester Square

    Superman was the first superhero, created 87 years ago. He’s appeared in numerous books and films over the years and now he’s been rebooted again as James Gunn introduces the first film in the relaunched DC universe.

    The film has been hotly anticipated and a lot is riding on it – superhero films in recent years have been met with mixed reviews from critics and fans.

    Playing the Man of Steel is 31-year-old American actor David Corenswet.

    Corenswet, who has previously appeared in TV series The Politician, Hollywood and We Own This City, is the fourth person to play the role in a major Superman movie, and the first for a decade.

    Getty Images David Corenswet Getty Images

    Corenswet is the fourth person to play Superman

    His version of the hero is far cheerier and more optimistic that other iterations, particularly compared to Henry Cavill’s portrayal of him which was grittier and darker.

    The film will kick-start a new era for DC Studios, which writer-director Gunn and producer Peter Safran took over in 2022.

    Cavill, who appeared in 2013’s Man of Steel and its spin-offs, announced in 2022 that he would return to the role – but Gunn and Safran decided to replace him after they took over DC.

    As a hero whose message is of hope and justice, I ask Corenswet what Superman would make of the world today.

    “He’d probably like to see more kindness,” he says. “He’s a figure who is willing to take on responsibility and has joy in doing that and I think he would like to inspire others in the world today to take on more responsibility.”

    Rachel Brosnahan, who is best known for playing Midge Maisel in The Marvellous Mrs Maisel, plays Lois Lane and tells me that Superman would want to “step in and help whenever and wherever he could.”

    “He sees people and things in need and steps in when you need him without questions,” she says.

    Getty Images Rachel Brosnahan Getty Images

    Fans can expect to see the development of the relationship between Lois Lane and Superman in this film

    Nicholas Hoult, who plays infamous villain Lex Luthor, adds that the superhero would want to “see more goodness in the world”.

    The 31-year-old actor who recently starred in Nosferatu and Juror #2 feels confident that this version of Superman will buck the trend of failed reboots.

    “Gunn’s version is a lot of fun and celebrates what it is to be human,” he says

    He explains that he doesn’t think superhero fatigue has set in but it’s important to “have good storytelling and create characters that people are inspired by”.

    DC has struggled to find major hits in recent years, with films like Shazam! Fury of the Gods, The Suicide Squad, Wonder Woman 1984 and Joker: Folie à Deux – part of the wider DC stable – each earning less than $60m (£48m) at the North American box office.

    Elsewhere in Hollywood, Sony’s latest phase of superhero films ended with a flop when Kraven the Hunter opened with takings of just $11m (£9m) last weekend.

    Hoult originally auditioned for the role of Superman but said after reading the script he thought Lex was a better fit.

    “When Gunn called me to offer me the role of Lex I chuckled because his instincts were right.”

    Getty Images David Corenswet and Nicholas HoultGetty Images

    Hoult says he originally auditioned to play Superman not Lex Luther

    Speaking to fans at the premiere, many were excited to see more screen time being given to the relationship between Superman and his love interest, Lois Lane.

    Brosnahan says she’s excited for fans to see their relationship develop and the film “really humanises both of them”.

    “What’s great about this film is that it’s not an origin story so we get to go deeper into the relationships and I think Lois and Superman realise they have met their match in each other.”

    Other characters in the film include Guy Gardner/Green Lantern (Nathan Fillion), Rex Mason/Metamorpho (Anthony Carrigan), Hawkgirl (Isabela Merced) and Michael Holt/Mister Terrific (Edi Gathegi).

    As the first film in the new DC Universe, there’s a lot riding on it.

    It will likely set the tone for how other films such as Supergirl and Clayface that are set to be released in 2026 will be received.

    The box office prediction is high for Gunn’s film and on 11 July, when the film is released, we’ll find out if those predictions are correct.

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  • Cambodia, South Korea record new avian flu cases in poultry | The Transmission

    Cambodia, South Korea record new avian flu cases in poultry | The Transmission

    Watt Poultry A number of human infections with flu viruses of avian origin have also been confirmed in the region. Since mid-June, Cambodia’s veterinary authority has confirmed six further highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) outbreaks in poultry flocks.

    Based on official notifications to the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH), these bring the nation’s total outbreaks over the past 12 months to 16. Directly impacted have been close to 8,000 domestic birds. In the recent outbreaks, village flocks affected ranged in size from 25 to more than 650 birds. Two were in Pursat — the first infections in this western province. There were also two outbreaks in each of Takeo and Siem Reap, which are located in the far south and northwest of the country, respectively.

    Detection of the H5N1 serotype of the HPAI virus at one of the Takeo province outbreaks was confirmed after an infection was suspected in a resident of the village. Sick or dead poultry at the other locations raised suspicions of HPAI in the other village flocks. 

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  • Switzerland shock France, among top eight in world!

    Switzerland shock France, among top eight in world!

    LAUSANNE (Switzerland) – There are fairytales and then there is Switzerland’s run at the FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup 2025. The alpine nation pulled off a magical upset of France and now find themselves in the Quarter-Finals – among the top eight teams in the world.

    Let us know what you think and vote:

    Who will be named FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup 2025 TISSOT MVP?

    In case you forgot, the Swiss have never played in a FIBA U19 World Cup – heck, the men’s program has never played a FIBA Youth EuroBasket game in Division A.

    The best photos from the game

    The best photos from the game

    The best photos from the game

    The best photos from the game

    The best photos from the game

    The best photos from the game

    The best photos from the game

    The best photos from the game

    The best photos from the game

    The best photos from the game

    The best photos from the game

    Still, hosts Switzerland shocked France and the world with an 86-79 overtime comeback win – the No. 60 team in the FIBA World Rankings Boys taking down the No. 3 nation in global basketball. Switzerland won the game with an 18-0 run spanning the fourth quarter and overtime. Dayan Nessah scored 22 points with 15 rebounds and Oliver Sassella had 25 points for the Swiss.

    France – a nation that finished third, second and second in the last three FIBA U19 World Cups – were leading 66-54 with 5:34 minutes to go. But Switzerland scored the final 12 points of regulation – eight of them by Sassella – to force overtime. And France failed to score for almost 3 minutes in the extra session and the deficit was 72-66.

    Switzerland will next face New Zealand in Friday’s Quarter-Finals.

    Let us know what you think and vote:

    Who will be crowned U19 World Cup 2025 champions?

    FIBA

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  • Prince William shocked over Meghan Markle ‘insensitive’ move

    Prince William shocked over Meghan Markle ‘insensitive’ move

    Prince William shocked over Meghan Markle ‘insensitive’ move

    Prince William is infuriated as Meghan Markle launches her latest ‘As Ever’ product.

    The Prince of Wales is upset as his sister-in-law in California drops her alcohol brand and sells out within an hour.

    Royal expert Kinsey Schofield told The Sun: “It’s not lost on Prince William that Meghan has launched an alcohol brand on his mother’s birthday, the very mum he lost in a drink driving tragedy.”

    Ms Schofield said: “Timing an alcohol launch to Diana’s birthday wasn’t just a misstep, it was borderline cruel.” 

    She added: “To claim ignorance here doesn’t hold up—it wasn’t just insensitive. It felt like a betrayal of the very narrative she’s working so hard to craft.”

    Prince Harry left the Royal Family back in 2020 alongside wife Meghan Markle and son, Prince Archie. The couple later accused the Royal Family of showcasing racism towards their son and publicly shared their grievances on television. Harry and Meghan now live in California, where they also welcomed their daughter, Princess Lilibet.


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  • Cambodia reports 3 new human cases of H5N1 bird flu | The Transmission

    Cambodia reports 3 new human cases of H5N1 bird flu | The Transmission

    BNO News Cambodia has confirmed three new human cases of H5N1 bird flu, all linked to the same area where a case was reported last week, according to health officials.

    The new cases include a 46-year-old woman and her 16-year-old son from Lek village in Daun Keo commune. Both are currently in stable condition.

    Their home is located about 60 feet (20 m) from that of a 41-year-old woman who tested positive for H5N1 last Monday. Health officials said sick and dead chickens were found at several homes in the area, including those of the patients.

    The third case involves a 36-year-old woman from Daun Keo village, nearly two miles (3 km) from the other infections. She is currently in intensive care. Investigators said she had handled a dead chicken at her home before falling ill.

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  • 125,000-year-old ‘fat factory’ run by Neanderthals discovered in Germany — and it likely protected them against ‘protein poisoning’

    125,000-year-old ‘fat factory’ run by Neanderthals discovered in Germany — and it likely protected them against ‘protein poisoning’

    Neanderthals were running a potentially lifesaving “fat factory” around 125,000 years ago in what is now Germany, a new study finds.

    The research, published Wednesday (July 2) in the journal Science, reveals that these archaic human relatives had a process for extracting grease from animal bones — and it may have saved them from a lethal condition.

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  • VLT Captures Image of Double-Detonation Supernova Remnant

    VLT Captures Image of Double-Detonation Supernova Remnant

    Astronomers using ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) have imaged SNR 0509-67.5, a very young (300-350 years old) remnant of Type Ia supernova, and spotted patterns that confirm its star suffered a pair of explosive blasts.

    This image, taken with the Multi-Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT), shows the supernova remnant SNR 0509-67.5 — the expanding remains of a star that exploded hundreds of years ago in a double-detonation. Calcium is shown in blue, and it is arranged in two concentric shells. These two layers indicate that the star exploded with a double-detonation. Image credit: ESO / Das et al. / Noll et al.

    “White dwarfs — the small, inactive cores left over after stars like our Sun burn out their nuclear fuel — can produce what astronomers call a Type Ia supernova,” said Priyam Das, a Ph.D. student at the University of New South Wales Canberra.

    “Much of our knowledge of how the Universe expands rests on these supernovae, and they are also the primary source of iron on our planet, including the iron in our blood.”

    “Yet, despite their importance, the long-standing puzzle of the exact mechanism triggering their explosion remains unsolved.”

    All models that explain Type Ia supernovae begin with a white dwarf in a pair of stars.

    If it orbits close enough to the other star in this pair, the dwarf can steal material from its partner.

    In the most established theory behind Type Ia supernovae, the white dwarf accumulates matter from its companion until it reaches a critical mass, at which point it undergoes a single explosion.

    However, recent studies have hinted that at least some Type Ia supernovae could be better explained by a double explosion triggered before the star reached this critical mass.

    The new VLT image of SNR 0509-67.5 proves their hunch was right: at least some Type Ia supernovae explode through a ‘double-detonation’ mechanism instead.

    In this alternative model, the white dwarf forms a blanket of stolen helium around itself, which can become unstable and ignite.

    This first explosion generates a shockwave that travels around the white dwarf and inwards, triggering a second detonation in the core of the star — ultimately creating the supernova.

    Until now, there had been no clear, visual evidence of a white dwarf undergoing a double detonation.

    Recently, astronomers have predicted that this process would create a distinctive pattern or fingerprint in the supernova’s still-glowing remains, visible long after the initial explosion.

    Research suggests that remnants of such a supernova would contain two separate shells of calcium.

    Das and colleagues found this fingerprint in a supernova’s remains.

    “The results show a clear indication that white dwarfs can explode well before they reach the famous Chandrasekhar mass limit, and that the ‘double-detonation’ mechanism does indeed occur in nature,” said Dr. Ivo Seitenzahl, an astronomer at Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies.

    The astronomers were able to detect these calcium layers in SNR 0509-67.5 by observing it with the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) on VLT.

    This provides strong evidence that a Type Ia supernova can occur before its parent white dwarf reaches a critical mass.

    “This tangible evidence of a double-detonation not only contributes towards solving a long-standing mystery, but also offers a visual spectacle,” Das said.

    “Revealing the inner workings of such a spectacular cosmic explosion is incredibly rewarding.”

    The team’s results appear today in the journal Nature Astronomy.

    _____

    P. Das et al. Calcium in a supernova remnant as a fingerprint of a sub-Chandrasekhar-mass explosion. Nat Astron, published online July 2, 2025; doi: 10.1038/s41550-025-02589-5

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  • Meet the ‘weird’ sea spider that’s mapping the evolution of eight-legged creatures

    Meet the ‘weird’ sea spider that’s mapping the evolution of eight-legged creatures

    The knotty sea spider, Pycnogonum litorale, is not actually a spider, but it does represent a significant early branch in the genetic family tree that includes spiders, as well as scorpions, ticks and horseshoe crabs. That makes it “an important reference for the evolution of all these species,” says UW–Madison researcher Prashant Sharma. Photo courtesy of Prashant Sharma

    It’s not easy to look at a sea spider and see an animal so representative of its kind that it may help scientists sort out the evolution of almost everything with eight legs. But that’s the potential a new study finds in these spindly, strikingly strange bottom-dwellers.

    After all, once you’re done counting the legs, you quickly run out of resemblances between the 1,300-some known species of sea spider and their relatives like actual spiders, scorpions, ticks, mites and horseshoe crabs.

    Sea spiders breathe through their skin, moving oxygen around their body using a kind of peristalsis (muscle contractions similar to how you squeeze food down your throat). When it’s time to make babies, the males cement the fertilized eggs onto themselves and carry them around on their bodies until they hatch. There isn’t even much body to speak of, because sea spiders look like plumbing schematics. They’re all tubes, mostly because they have no abdomen — that back end that bears the scorpion’s stinger, that stores all that blood in a well-fed tick, and that gives tarantulas their bulbous, hairy mass.

    “They’re weird,” says Prashant Sharma, a researcher who specializes in that sort of thing. His University of Wisconsin–Madison lab is intermittently stocked with blind arachnids that live only in a handful of Eastern Mediterranean caves, scorpion-shaped vinegaroons that spray acid from their butts, and daddy longlegs that have … short legs.

    “Sea spiders are just incredibly cool and understudied animals. So, that’s what draws us to them,” Sharma adds.

    That interest has revealed a more scientific reason to be drawn to sea spiders. They are a useful anchor for the genetics of the chelicerates, a group that includes all of the charismatic and consequential, many-legged animals mentioned above.

    Sharma, a UW–Madison professor of integrative biology, studies the evolution of chelicerates, digging deep into their genes to understand better how their varied, intricate bodies have developed. He’s studied how and when they picked up tricks like venom and shown that the horseshoe crab belongs to this cohort just as much as the house spider.

    What many of his animal subjects have had in common over the years is a twist in their evolution that strikes geneticists as a bit of an advantage: free DNA real estate. Somewhere along their line, they went through a process called whole-genome duplication.

    “There are a few mechanisms for whole-genome duplication,” Sharma says, including a misstep in cell division or combining genomes with a close relative. “But the result is a species getting an extra copy of all of its chromosomes. You can look at all those extra genes as more places where new traits, new functions could develop.”

    Sharma and collaborators — including former lab members Siddharth Kulkarni and Emily Setton, and scientists at the Arctic University of Norway — published the first high-quality genome of a sea spider species today in the journal BMC Biology. The work was spearheaded by their colleagues at the University of Vienna, most notably Georg Brenneis, one of the very few people on the planet working on sea spider development.

    The study centers on the knotty sea spider, Pycnogonum litorale, which is widespread on rocky sea beds across the North Atlantic Ocean and looks a lot like a tiny, tangled ginger root. The researchers found that this specific sea spider has never experienced whole-genome duplication.

    Because whole genomes, once duplicated, tend to keep traces of that doubling of genes, this places P. litorale somewhere near the base of the entire chelicerate family tree relative to all those branches that include species with duplicated genomes. It’s a steady point to which scientists can trace back the progression of variation across modern spiders and related species.

    “They are an important reference for the evolution of all these species, which include some of the most significant agricultural pests, like mites, and vectors for human disease, like ticks,” says Sharma, whose work is supported by the National Science Foundation.

    Sea spiders like this Endeis spinosa have no abdomen, so they’ve tucked many organs, such as stomachs, into their substantial legs. Researchers think they’ve discovered why.

    The researchers also may have uncovered the reason sea spiders have no abdomen. They are missing a gene, handily called “Abdominal-A,” from a group of genes called the Hox cluster known for its importance to organizing body parts. As a result, sea spiders have stuffed all the usual contents of an abdomen — stomachs, reproductive organs, the stuff they use to breathe — into their legs.

    Weirder still, there are fossil sea spiders from tens and hundreds of millions of years ago that do sport an abdomen.

    “We don’t know quite when that structure was lost. We know they started out looking more like modern arthropods,” says Sharma, referring to the wider group of animals with exoskeletons and segmented bodies, including beetles and crustaceans and bees and his chelicerates. “And then, at some point, they just went totally bizarre. So weird.”


    This research was supported in part by a grant from the National Science Foundation (IOS-2016141).

    Research at the University of Wisconsin–Madison drives innovation, saves lives, creates jobs, supports small businesses, and fuels the industries that keep America competitive and secure. It makes the U.S. — and Wisconsin — stronger. Federal funding for research is a high-return investment that’s worth fighting for. Learn more about the impact of UW–Madison’s federally funded research and how you can help protect it.


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