ROMAN

May 30 2026SCIENCE

An Easy Way to Make Antimony Chalcogenides and Light‑Sensitive Nanowires

Antimony chalcoiodides grow in a chain‑like shape that makes them good for devices that see light differently from different angles. Making a single, predictable crystal phase has been hard. Scientists used antimony triiodide (SbI₃) as a gas that can move around and carry antimony to where it

reading time less than a minute
May 30 2026TECHNOLOGY

AI‑Generated Images: A New Tool for Feeling Science

Researchers have begun using computer‑made pictures to study how people feel. These synthetic images are created by artificial intelligence that learns from real photos and then invents new ones. The advantage is clear: scientists can control every detail of a picture, such as lighting or facial exp

reading time less than a minute
May 30 2026BUSINESS

Cleanup Costs Loom After Garden Grove Chemical Alarm

A chemical mishap near a local aerospace plant forced almost 50, 000 people to leave their homes over Memorial Day weekend. The danger of a huge explosion was stopped when emergency crews cooled a tank that could have released 7, 000 gallons of methyl methacrylate. After the immediate threat faded,

reading time less than a minute
May 30 2026POLITICS

Cocktails On the Go: What It Means for Baltimore County

The state government has officially opened a door that was only temporary during the pandemic: businesses in Baltimore County can now sell cocktails to take away. This change follows a short‑lived rule that ended in 2023, and the new law will let restaurants, bars and other licensed venues offer dri

reading time less than a minute
May 30 2026TECHNOLOGY

AI Changes How Companies Keep Running

Companies are learning that old ways of planning for problems aren’t enough when AI runs most decisions. The idea is to move from “backup” plans that wait for a failure to create parallel, independent systems that keep working no matter what. Because AI workloads spread across many clouds and

reading time less than a minute
May 30 2026FINANCE

ServiceNow’s Price Tag Raises Questions

The cloud‑software firm ServiceNow is still seen as pricey, even after a recent $7. 75 billion purchase of security company Armis. The deal was financed with about $4 billion in new debt, which will raise interest costs and squeeze the company’s free‑cash‑flow margins. ServiceNow aims to hit $30 

reading time less than a minute
May 30 2026POLITICS

Wisconsin Court Takes on Redistricting Fight

A group of business leaders in Wisconsin has asked the state’s highest court to review a decision that dismissed their challenge to congressional district lines. The group, which calls itself Wisconsin Business Leaders for Democracy, claims the current map unfairly favors incumbents and limits vo

reading time less than a minute
May 30 2026POLITICS

Strong Allies Needed to Keep China in Check

The U. S. defence chief said that Asia must spend more on its own armies to stop China from becoming too powerful in the region. He spoke at a big meeting of military leaders in Singapore, where he urged countries like Japan, South Korea and the Philippines to raise their defence budgets to about 3

reading time less than a minute
May 30 2026ART

Art Showcase Opens for Local Creators

The sixth edition of the Cedar Arts Fest is now accepting entries from artists and vendors. The event will take place on Saturday, September 19th, between ten in the morning and three in the afternoon at the Leeman Education Center in Osage. The Fine Arts Council of Mitchell County, which backs t

reading time less than a minute
May 30 2026POLITICS

Malta’s Vote: A Chance to Keep the Winning Team

Voting began on Saturday in Malta, where people head to the polls to choose their next parliament. The leader of the country, Robert Abela, asked for an early election just a few years into his five‑year term. He said the island faces new global problems that need fresh answers. Malta has had a ver

reading time less than a minute