LP

Mar 06 2026HEALTH

Less Injections, Same Weight‑Loss Success

"It seems you can keep the pounds off while skipping some shots, a new study suggests. Researchers followed 34 people who had already shed weight on GLP‑1 medicines, then let them stretch out their injections. After 36 weeks most stayed lean, with blood pressure and sugar staying lower. Only four pe

reading time less than a minute
Mar 03 2026SPORTS

Philly’s New Grappling Powerhouse: A Woman Takes the Lead

Philly just got a new sports team, and it’s led by a woman who’s turned her lifelong love of martial arts into a business venture. She grew up practicing tae‑kwon‑do and watching classic jiu‑jitsu matches, so when the Professional Grappling Federation (PGF) opened spots for new teams, she saw a chan

reading time less than a minute
Feb 18 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Bright Red Love Reimagined: AMOR’s Temporary Journey

The city’s most vivid red sculpture, once perched in Sister Cities Park, has been taken down for a makeover. The piece, designed by Robert Indiana to echo his famous LOVE work at Kennedy Plaza, was removed on Wednesday morning for conservation. City officials plan to bring it back on May 1, just bef

reading time less than a minute
Feb 17 2026TECHNOLOGY

How AI is Changing Science for Everyone

AI is making big waves in science. It's not just a tool for the future; it's helping solve real problems right now. For example, AI is being used to spot diseases like tuberculosis and diabetic retinopathy. It's also helping farmers grow better crops and predict floods. One big success story is Alp

reading time less than a minute
Feb 15 2026SCIENCE

Plant Stress Defense: How Tiny Proteins Turn Off Key Enzymes

Plants use a tagging system called ubiquitination to control the life span of many proteins. In the case of phenylpropanoid production, which supplies important compounds like lignin and flavonoids, several enzymes are marked for destruction by this system. F‑box proteins act as the taggers. They

reading time less than a minute
Feb 15 2026SPORTS

Brazil and Kazakhstan Grab First Winter Olympic Golds

Bormio, Italy, hosted a surprise that shook the Winter Games. A Brazilian skier, Lucas Pinheiro Braathen, won gold in men’s giant slalom, becoming the first South American to medal at a Winter Olympics. His win redefines what athletes from Brazil can achieve, a country famous for football and sunny

reading time less than a minute
Feb 13 2026EDUCATION

Learning the Coast at Fort Ross

The coast of Sonoma County is a living classroom. Fort Ross, inside the Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary, turns this shoreline into a place where people can see, study and help protect marine life. A team called the Fort Ross Conservancy runs a Coastal Academy that offers two main pr

reading time less than a minute
Feb 13 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Bob Saget's Life: A Journey from Philly to Hollywood

Bob Saget, the comedian known for his wholesome TV roles, had a life full of ups and downs. A documentary about him is in the making, focusing on his complex life and career. The project is being handled by 9. 14 Pictures, a studio based in Philadelphia's Old City. This isn't the first time the stu

reading time less than a minute
Feb 12 2026TECHNOLOGY

Samsung Shares New Memory Samples With Qualcomm Ahead of 2026 Launch

Samsung has already shipped early samples of its next‑generation LPDDR6X memory to Qualcomm, according to a Korean tech outlet. The move comes as Samsung readies its LPDDR6 standard for mass production, targeting a second‑half 2026 release. Early figures suggest the new memory will run at about 10.

reading time less than a minute
Feb 11 2026POLITICS

Airspace Shutdown: El Paso and New Mexico Fly‑Free for Ten Days

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) announced a sudden 10‑day ban on all aircraft over El Paso and a large part of southern New Mexico. The order began at 11:30 p. m. Mountain Time on Tuesday and will lift at the same time on February 20. Pilots are warned that ignoring the restriction coul

reading time less than a minute