IMI

May 31 2026HEALTH

How Therapy Helps People Who Have Broken the Law

Research shows that the bond between a patient and therapist can shape how well therapy works. But does this connection matter for people in the justice system? A review looked at studies to find out. They searched big databases for articles on therapy with people who had committed crimes. They pick

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May 30 2026SCIENCE

Breathing Easy: How N95 Masks Balance Protection and Comfort

N95 masks work because their filters trap tiny particles while letting air flow through smoothly. The filter’s job isn’t simple—it has to catch the right size particles without making breathing too hard. Scientists studied how four key factors affect this balance: how thick the filter is, how tightl

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May 30 2026OPINION

New York’s Push for Parole Reforms Could Bring Back Dangerous Criminals

Back in the early ‘90s, New York faced a serious crime wave—homicides were happening seven times a day, and prisons were packed with over 70, 000 people. Fast forward to today, and those numbers have dropped dramatically thanks to smarter policing and better crime prevention strategies. Yet, instead

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May 30 2026TECHNOLOGY

Better delivery systems for medicine after the pandemic

The pandemic forced healthcare systems to rethink how medicines reach people. One new idea mixes delivery routes, medicine lockers, and patient sorting. Instead of sending everything to homes, some deliveries go to lockers in neighborhoods. That cuts costs and pollution. But it only works if urgent

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May 29 2026BUSINESS

AI in Finance: Why Smart Teams Use It Wisely

Smart finance teams aren't rushing to rely solely on AI because the hype doesn’t match reality. While AI excels at spotting trends and crunching numbers, it struggles with the deeper work of building financial models—the kind that explain why a business actually works. Most AI tools today can foreca

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May 28 2026LIFESTYLE

Simple, adaptable sneakers inspired by immigrant culture hit the market

A new shoe by Nike, priced at $120, draws from immigrant footwear traditions while adding modern comfort. The T90 Mule, created with a lifestyle brand, mimics the simple design of chancleta sandals—popular among immigrant communities for decades. Unlike traditional sandals, this version includes a s

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May 27 2026CRIME

What makes a forged document a real crime in Saudi law and Islamic teachings?

For a document to be considered forged, someone must intentionally fake it—like changing a name, date, or amount on a contract or ID. Saudi courts treat this as a serious offense because it breaks trust in official papers. But why does intent matter so much? In crime cases, intent is like the mental

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May 27 2026CRIME

New Lawsuit Exposes Workplace Issues Inside State Agency

Three former employees of Washington’s Department of Commerce have filed a lawsuit accusing top human resources leaders of fostering a toxic work environment. Amanda L. Davis, Catherine M. George, and Nicole Rivera claim they faced discrimination based on race, gender, and age, along with retaliatio

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May 25 2026SCIENCE

New molecule fights aggressive breast cancer by hijacking cell cleanup routines

Scientists tested a new molecule called WK-13-3D on one of the toughest breast cancers to treat. Instead of trying to poison the cancer cells directly, it tricks them into breaking their own cleanup system. Every cell normally recycles old parts through a process called autophagy. In triple-negative

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May 23 2026CRIME

A land deal turned sour over old-school racism

A white woman with Jewish roots and a Black husband found out the hard way that some groups still think race decides who gets to own land. Michelle Walker, a real estate agent from Missouri, tried to buy a bargain plot in an Arkansas community run by Return to the Land—a group that openly says it wa

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