SCIENCE

Apr 18 2026POLITICS

Anthropic’s Bid to Patch the Pentagon Rift

Anthropic’s chief, Dario Amodei, is set to sit down with White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles in a bid to mend ties that have frayed between the company and the Department of Defense. The meeting, slated for Friday in the West Wing, marks a turning point after Anthropic was barred from certain fed

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Apr 18 2026LIFESTYLE

Keeping Kids Off Screens: A Simple Plan

Parents often feel powerless when their children demand more screen time, but a new approach shows that limits are both doable and beneficial. Recent research points out that devices are built to hook us; the brain’s dopamine system, originally meant for survival needs, now pushes us toward endless

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Apr 18 2026BUSINESS

China’s Clean Tech Exports Surge as Global Energy Shifts

China has seen a sharp rise in the export of clean‑energy products during March, showing that its manufacturers are capitalising on a worldwide shift toward alternative power sources. The surge comes as conventional energy supplies face uncertainty, partly due to the conflict in Iran. The biggest j

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Apr 18 2026TECHNOLOGY

Porsche’s Color‑Changing Stripes: A New Way to Show Speed

Porsche is planning a fresh twist on its classic racing stripes. The new idea uses paint that can shift colors when the driver flips a switch, making the stripes appear or disappear and even change hue. Instead of static paint, the car will have a special coating that reacts to electrical signals.

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Apr 18 2026HEALTH

Nurses’ New Playbook for Caring When Two Problems Meet

In Ghana’s psychiatric hospitals, nurses face a tough mix of mental illness and substance misuse in many patients. Researchers set out to figure out how best to support these individuals, and they found that the key lies in a flexible, patient‑centered approach. First, nurses must listen closely

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Apr 18 2026HEALTH

Brighter Minds for Those in Uniform

Uniformed workers face tough moments that can shake their mental health. Studies show they have higher chances of feeling anxious or depressed than people in other jobs. Researchers wanted to see which help methods actually work for these groups. They looked at all the available evidence, not jus

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Apr 18 2026LIFESTYLE

Dogs and Homes: Finding the Right Match

The idea that some dogs are simply “difficult” is misleading. A lot of the traits people find annoying—like constant barking or high energy—were once useful for jobs such as herding or guarding. When a dog that was bred to chase cattle is left alone in an apartment, its natural instincts can feel

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Apr 18 2026HEALTH

Survivors Speak: How Women Heal After Breast Cancer

The study dives into how women who have finished breast cancer treatment feel and act as they move forward. It gathers stories from survivors to uncover the ups and downs of adjusting to a new normal. Participants share moments when they felt strong, like gaining confidence after therapy, and tim

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Apr 18 2026SPORTS

South Shore Sports Highlights: Wins, Home Runs and Big Plays

West Bridgewater’s softball squad continued its hot streak on Friday, overpowering Old Rochester with a 16‑8 finish. The Wildcats’ lineup exploded for nine runs in each of their seven spring games, a record run that kept opponents on the back foot. Two‑run home runs from Alanna Fidalgo, Lacey Roche

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Apr 18 2026SPORTS

Hornets vs. Magic: A Play‑In Showdown

The final two games of the NBA play‑in tournament will decide who moves on to the Sweet 16. Charlotte’s Hornets face Orlando’s Magic, while Golden State’s Warriors meet Phoenix’s Suns. The winners earn a spot in the first round of the playoffs, with the Hornets’ victory giving them an No. 8 seed and

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