Remember the excitement of arcades in '80s malls? Round1 Bowling and Arcade is reviving that magic at Menlo Park Mall, ...
A fter more than fifty years of uninterrupted fertility in invention, during which he has not only begotten but continuously fathered the electrical era, Thomas Alva Edison believes that we have only ...
Thomas Edison has insisted that ideas must be followed by patient, steady labour. His words have urged inventors and workers ...
Round1 Bowling & Arcade, featuring arcade games, billiards, karaoke, food and drinks, has opened at Menlo Park Mall in Edison.
A Bay Area lab is using modern technology to recover history that had literally been erased. The x-ray beam that comes out of a tube hits a specific sample, generating data about the elements sitting ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Preview this article 1 min Moloco, valued at $2 billion ...
In this November 1982 photo, Andy McCollum and Ann Knight share a private, radiant moment of laughter. Behind them, their daughters' voices reveal plans for a "true Scot" exchange of vows, but the ...
Dec. 31, 1879: Thomas Edison provided the first public demonstration of his electric incandescent lamp at his laboratory in Menlo Park, New Jersey. Birthday: George C. Marshall (1880-1959) was born in ...
Flooding triggered shelter-in-place warnings and possible evacuations early Wednesday morning in parts of Menlo Park as heavy rain continued to impact the Bay Area. Around 4:20 a.m., the Menlo Park ...
A citizen initiative introduced in opposition to Menlo Park's plan to build affordable housing in downtown parking lots will head to voters next year. The City Council unanimously voted this week to ...
Menlo Park residents will decide whether future development of three downtown parking lots into affordable housing must receive voter approval after the City Council unanimously voted Tuesday to place ...
The following is an article from history.com: “November of 1877, the publication Scientific American enthuses about Thomas Edison‘s new invention: the phonograph, a way to record and play back sound.