EU

Apr 15 2026SCIENCE

Understanding the Brain One Neuron at a Time

Neuroscientists often compare the brain to a crowded stadium. A microphone placed in the center can pick up a general hum, but it tells you nothing about individual conversations. To get real insight, scientists must listen to each speaker separately. This idea guides the work of a researcher who st

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Apr 15 2026HEALTH

Long‑Acting Medicines: A New Road for Moms and Kids

A recent meeting gathered doctors, researchers, patient groups, regulators and pharma to talk about medicines that stay in the body for weeks or months. The main goal was to make sure pregnant women, nursing mothers and children can safely use these new drugs. Three questions guided the talks:

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Apr 15 2026FINANCE

Energy Prices Rise, But Europe Still Safe From Stagflation

The chairman of the Eurozone finance ministers, Kyriakos Pierrakakis, told a Washington event that the worst case—stagflation triggered by the U. S. and Israel’s conflict over Iran—is not yet happening. He said that the sharp jump in oil, gas and fertilizer prices caused by a potential shutdown of

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Apr 15 2026POLITICS

Georgia’s College Shake‑Up: A New Path or a Backward Step?

Georgia has rolled out a sweeping plan that will change where students study and which subjects are taught. The government says the move aims to match job needs and spread universities across the country, but critics say it is a step away from Europe and toward Russia. The new rule, called “one f

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Apr 15 2026SCIENCE

Uncovering the Genetic Puzzle Behind a Rare Neck Condition

Patients with os odontoideum, a congenital neck anomaly, show a surprisingly high load of genetic changes. Researchers counted these alterations across the entire genome and found that affected individuals carry more mutations than people with typical neck anatomy. The study examined the DNA f

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Apr 15 2026POLITICS

Old State House Museum Sees Big Leadership Shakeup

The director of the Old State House Museum, Daniel Cockrell, was let go early this week. He says he was told the museum was “going in a different direction” and that paperwork needed his signature. When he asked if he would be moved to another role, the answer was clear: no, you’re being terminated.

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Apr 15 2026ENTERTAINMENT

MFA Turns Art into a Night Out

The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, which opened back in 1870 and now displays over 450 000 pieces, has shifted from a quiet gallery to a lively cultural hotspot. Instead of the usual daytime tours, it now offers events that feel more like social gatherings than museum visits. Its flagship prog

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Apr 15 2026TECHNOLOGY

AI Steps Into Drug Research Labs to Speed Up Early Work

A new cloud tool from Amazon’s tech branch is letting scientists skip writing code while hunting for new medicines. The system, called Amazon Bio Discovery, comes with ready-made AI models that can sketch, test, and rank potential drug molecules faster than before. Researchers simply pick their targ

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Apr 15 2026POLITICS

European leaders are done tolerating Trump’s antics and speaking in their own defense

European leaders have finally had enough of Donald Trump’s erratic behavior. After years of trying to smooth things over with polite words and empty promises, many now openly push back instead of bowing to his demands. Take French President Emmanuel Macron, for example. Earlier this year, he refuse

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Apr 15 2026EDUCATION

From Classroom to Career: One Student’s Hands-On Journey

Ryan Gebhardt, a senior at Sterling High School, has earned the title of Student of the Month for March. While many students juggle classes and after-school activities, Ryan stands out for blending real-world learning with academic goals. Instead of just reading about business, he took the leap into

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