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Cicadas are back, but climate change is messing with them
CBS News· 8 hours agoPeriodical cicadas used to reliably emerge every 13 or 17 years — but spring arriving sooner...
KUSD School Board approves new name for Bradford High School planetarium
Kenosha News· 4 days agoThe Kenosha Unified School District School Board unanimously approved a name for Bradford High...
NASA Warns U.S Public To Ignore ‘Parade Of The Planets’ Hoax
Forbes· 4 days agoIf you’ve read any of the breathless coverage across all kinds of outlets that never usually care...
What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade
Bristol Herald Courier· 3 days agoHow common the phenomenon is depends on how many planets align and whether or not they are visible without binoculars or a telescope. A handful of planets are usually in the night sky at any ...
What’s in Our Queue? ‘Mr. & Mrs. Smith’ and More
New York Times· 5 days agoSmith,” a new Prime Video series inspired by the 2005 film. Aaron Kamm and the One Drops were performing in southern Illinois when I was there in April...
6 planets will align in the night sky in June. Here’s how to see it across Florida
Naples Daily News via Yahoo News· 5 days ago..., Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune Aug. 29, 2025: Six planets – Mercury, Venus, Jupiter,...
What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade
The Bryan-College Station Eagle· 3 days agoHow common the phenomenon is depends on how many planets align and whether or not they are visible without binoculars or a telescope. A handful of planets are usually in the night sky at any ...
What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade
Richmond Times-Dispatch· 3 days agoSix planets will line up before dawn on June 3 in what's known as a planetary parade, but the spectacle won't be as eye-catching as expected.
What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade
Billings Gazette· 3 days agoSix planets will line up before dawn on June 3 in what's known as a planetary parade. The summer offers great weather to explore the night sky with a star or planet-viewing app, said Michelle Nichols at Chicago's Adler Planetarium.
What you will and won't see from June's planetary parade
St. Louis Post-Dispatch· 3 days agoHow common the phenomenon is depends on how many planets align and whether or not they are visible without binoculars or a telescope. A handful of planets are usually in the night sky at any ...