Q

Apr 05 2026POLITICS

Neighbors, Not Numbers: Why More Homes Can Mean More Hearts

Living next to someone can change a life. In Anchorage, the idea that houses should stay far apart is still strong. People worry that more neighbors will crowd the streets, steal sunshine, and break the quiet of their homes. Yet a closer view shows that sharing space can also build stronger bonds.

reading time less than a minute
Apr 05 2026SPORTS

New Ping Clubs Give a Fresh Boost to My Game

Ping’s newest women‑specific line of clubs has taken my golf bag for a spin and, honestly, it’s made a big difference. When I first tried the G Le3 set two and a half years ago, it felt like a game changer. It was lighter, easier to hit, and gave me more distance than my old clubs from 2015. F

reading time less than a minute
Apr 05 2026HEALTH

Rethinking Post‑Birth Care: A New Tool for Rural and Minority Mothers

Recent work has built a tool that flags mothers who might need extra help in the first month after giving birth. The calculator was trained on data from New York City hospitals between 2016 and 2018, where it could predict readmissions or emergency visits with a moderate success rate (an AUC of 0. 6

reading time less than a minute
Apr 05 2026POLITICS

Women’s unpaid chores put them at risk – what can be done?

The study looks at how the heavy load of unpaid care and household work pushes women toward illness, especially during COVID‑19. Researchers held four discussion forums in Uganda and Kenya with local people and government officials to hear how women experience this work, how it is talked about in po

reading time less than a minute
Apr 05 2026POLITICS

AI in Schools: A Tool for Change or Just Another Trend?

Around the world, leaders are pushing for smarter classrooms. In late March, representatives from nearly 50 countries gathered to discuss how technology can shape education. The focus? Artificial intelligence (AI). While some worry about robots replacing teachers, others see AI as a way to give ever

reading time less than a minute
Apr 05 2026POLITICS

California’s problems: Could one leader really be behind it all?

Jillian Michaels, known for her tough-love fitness advice, has lived in California long enough to see its economy crack under pressure. Expenses keep climbing while public services seem to stay the same. Gas, housing, taxes—every cost hits a new record, yet roads stay pothole-ridden and schools stru

reading time less than a minute
Apr 04 2026TECHNOLOGY

OpenAI’s New Podcast Move: A Smart PR Play

OpenAI recently bought the popular tech talk show TBPN, a move that surprised many in media and tech circles. The purchase is part of a long tradition where big companies buy content to shape conversations about their products. For example, RCA created NBC in the 1920s to sell radios, and Microsoft

reading time less than a minute
Apr 04 2026SCIENCE

Tiny Lights from a Salted Heat Trick

Scientists discovered that heating and salting two hard‑to‑treat bacteria can make them glow. Instead of complex machines, the team simply soaked the microbes in warm salty water for a short period. One bacterium, Ralstonia pseudosolanacearum, began to emit light after just a minute in the sol

reading time less than a minute
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

reading time less than a minute
Apr 04 2026FINANCE

Farmers tighten belts as tractor prices hit new highs

Farm shows across North America this spring told a clear story: farmers are cutting back on big purchases. With prices for machinery, fuel, and fertilizer climbing higher than ever, most are choosing to keep their old equipment a little longer. A dealer in Saskatchewan explained it simply: "They won

reading time less than a minute