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Science + Tech

Photo of Beverly Saylor at the Woranso-Mille paleontological site in Ethiopia’s Afar region
Ancient cousins: New evidence that two early human species lived side by side
Case Western Reserve University researchers help solve 3.4-million-year-old mystery
Ed and Joyce Lehotsky pictured together outside standing in front of flowers
Expanding support for a new generation of engineers
Three years after their first gift to support the Envoys program, a couple’s impact grows
linsalata-alumni-center
A challenge for the future
Two estate gifts will empower future computer engineers
Rebecca Barchas headshot
From practice to philanthropy
School of Medicine alumna’s gifts advance psychiatry research
CWRU quad drone photo showing progress on the ISEB building
Tracking our progress
The latest updates on the forthcoming Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering Building
Photo illustration of Dunkleosteus
Cleveland’s famous sea monster gets a scientific update
New research reveals Dunkleosteus was an oddball among ancient armored fishes
Photo illustration representing advanced medical technologies with a digitized brain and hand
$2.5M small business innovation grant to advance medical technology invented at Case Western Reserve University
Finding cells faster could lead to more effective therapies
Farrokh Khatibi headshot
Alumnus cements Case Western Reserve’s commitment to interdisciplinary telecommunications research
Chance meeting led Khatibi to the United States—and down the path to helping develop the underlying technology powering today’s 5G cellular networks
John and Emma Hawley at a soccer game
Driven to give: How one student’s experience sparked a family legacy
From the soccer field to the engineering lab, Emma Hawley (CWR ’17; GRS ’18, mechanical engineering) fully embraced the Case Western Reserve University student experience. She joined a research lab as a first-year student and, by the following year, had already contributed as a co-author to a…
Photo of a woman sitting in her home using an inhaler
Decades-old asthma theory challenged: Newly discovered molecules may be real drivers of disease
Case Western Reserve University researchers say discovery of new inflammatory molecules could transform treatment