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I had a chance to speak to Collective Soul’s bass player and co-founder, Will Turpin, about the event and how it impacted the ...
Marie Antoinette—played by Kirsten Dunst in Sofia Coppola's stunning new film—used her distinctive personal style to defy the ...
Dive into the gripping and inspiring world of true stories with these 9 unmissable movies available on Prime Video. Each film ...
For the Journées du Patrimoine 2025, we're off to Sorbonne Université, on the Pierre et Marie Curie Campus, to discover an ...
Marie Curie worked with radioactive material with her bare hands. More than 100 years later, Sophie Hardach travels to Paris to trace the radioactive fingerprints she left behind.
Marie Curie provides care and support to people with any illness they are likely to die from, including Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia, advanced cancer, motor neurone disease, Parkinson ...
Curie died of illness related to radiation exposure in 1934. Scientific American spoke with Sobel about Marie Curie’s contributions to science, history and gender equality.
The physicist-chemists Marie and Pierre Curie considered these their hard-won “fairy lights,” which, the two believed, held the secrets of radioactivity.
Its marble staircase is reputed to be the biggest of its kind in the world and has featured in films as a stand in for the Kremlin and the Vatican. The Banqueting Hall is where figures including ...
As Pygmalion Theatre Company’s production of The Half-Life of Marie Curie opens, a monologue by the celebrated chemist herself (Stephanie Howell) makes it clear that the “half-life” referenced in the ...
Saddled with an English-language title that evokes a dust-caked educational video for classroom use only, “ Marie Curie: The Courage of Knowledge” doesn’t have to clear a very high bar to be more ...