ACU

Apr 07 2026EDUCATION

A college board chair faces questions over truth in hiring process

A teachers' group at Mott Community College has filed a complaint saying the board chair gave conflicting statements about how the college hired its next president. The union claims the chair’s sworn testimony in December didn’t match what the board officially recorded months earlier. Official notes

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Apr 04 2026EDUCATION

AI and the Future of Teaching in Medicine

The idea that machines might take over all teaching jobs is a common worry. In medical schools, professors are still needed to guide students through complex clinical decisions and to model professional behavior. Yet new technology is changing what a teacher does. First, digital tools can handle

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Apr 04 2026ENVIRONMENT

How shrimp farms might be quietly changing coastal waters

Shrimp farming is booming along tropical coasts, but scientists still argue over whether these operations leak harmful metals into nearby mangrove swamps. A recent study took a close look at Todos os Santos Bay in Brazil, where shrimp ponds sit right next to mangroves. Researchers tested mud from th

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Apr 02 2026SCIENCE

How a fish gene fights deadly infections

Scientists found a protein in farmed tilapia that acts like an infection alarm. Called IRF5, it helps fish cells recognize threats like viruses and bacteria. When attackers show up, IRF5 gets more active in the fish’s head kidney—a place where immune cells are stored. This isn’t just some minor reac

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Mar 29 2026TECHNOLOGY

Robot Vacuum That Never Needs a Mop

A new cleaning robot can vacuum and mop without anyone touching a dirty pad. The model uses a heat‑based cleaning system that sanitises its own mop. When the robot finishes, it returns to its dock where hot water rinses the pad. The heat is high enough to kill germs, so the mop stays fresh

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Mar 29 2026EDUCATION

Faculty Strike at PCC: Why Back Pay Isn’t the Answer

Portland Community College faculty have been on strike for three weeks, demanding that the school pay them for the days they miss. The union’s leader says this would let teachers return to work sooner, but it ignores the real costs of a strike. \\ Strikes usually hurt both sides: employers lose pro

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Mar 23 2026SCIENCE

Seeing Eye‑Damage with Light

A group of researchers examined a patient who had very severe nearsightedness. They used a special tool called visible light OCT, which takes pictures of the eye using light that can be seen by humans. The goal was to look closely at tiny cracks in the eye’s outer layer. First, they focused o

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Mar 19 2026POLITICS

Rafah Crossing Reopens, Giving Hope to Gaza Patients

Israel opened the Rafah border with Egypt after almost three weeks of closure. The move was aimed at letting injured Palestinians leave Gaza for medical care, following reports that Israeli attacks had killed four people. Only eight wounded fighters and 17 family members are expected to cross into E

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Mar 17 2026TECHNOLOGY

Robot Helpers: Spring Clean With Up to $500 Off

Spring cleaning can feel like a marathon, but new tech promises to make it a breeze. A company is offering deep discounts on its line of smart cleaning robots, hoping to turn chores into a set‑and‑forget task. The deal runs from late March through early April, with savings that can reach $500 on sev

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Mar 17 2026POLITICS

Boston’s March 17 Celebration: More Than a Holiday

On the day that many think of green hats and parades, Boston actually marks a historic turning point in its own history. The city commemorates the moment in 1776 when British troops pulled out of Boston after a long and costly siege. That retreat ended an earlier conflict that had started the previo

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