STEPHEN P MCGLYNN

Jun 16 2026TECHNOLOGY

Penn’s New RNA Lab: What It Means for Medicine, Farming, and Science

Philadelphians now have a high-tech lab where scientists aren’t just studying RNA—they’re building with it. The University of Pennsylvania just opened a $18 million RNA manufacturing hub that could change how we fight diseases and grow food. Instead of just analyzing the molecule, researchers here d

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Jun 16 2026TECHNOLOGY

A floating shield for ships against sneaky flying threats

Ports and ships face a growing problem: cheap drones that can zoom over water and cause trouble. These tiny aircraft can spy, crash into structures, or even drop small explosives without warning. Most radar systems are built for land or slow-moving targets, so they struggle when waves, salt air, and

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Jun 16 2026FINANCE

Why PTC's Software Stock Isn't Keeping Up With Tech's Fast Lane

PTC makes software that factories and manufacturers use to design products and run operations. Think of it like the software behind the gadgets and machines you see around—it helps build, track, and fix them. With a giant market value of over $13 billion, it’s considered a big player in the tech wor

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Jun 15 2026POLITICS

Foreign Roots, Local Struggles

Princess Adjei grew up in Durban after moving from Ghana as a baby. She learned Zulu, made friends, and never felt like an outsider. In November, she opened a hair salon downtown. The shop was her dream and a place where locals trusted her work. On May 18, angry crowds burst into the salon. They sm

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Jun 15 2026OPINION

Sonny Rollins and the Bridge That Inspired Him

Paragraph 1 A legendary saxophone player, Sonny Rollins grew up in New York City’s Harlem neighborhood. He was surrounded by great musicians and activists who pushed for Black rights during the 1950s. Paragraph 2 By 1959, Rollins was already famous for his tenor sax and compositions. Yet he f

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Jun 15 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Behind the Screen: A Single Mom, Webcams, and Crime

Paula thought her biggest problem was balancing childcare with a full-time job checking facts for a newspaper. Then she watched Trevor, a man she met streaming live, get attacked during a private show. That moment changed everything. While diving into his case, she stumbles into a messy world of ill

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Jun 15 2026POLITICS

When Learning History Becomes a Choice

Public schools used to be the place where every student learned the same shared history. But in Cherry Hill, some leaders now want to cut Black history from the curriculum instead of teaching it alongside the rest of American stories. A retired educator remembers when schools taught slavery, Jim Cro

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Jun 14 2026SPORTS

Philly’s First World Cup: A Surprise Blend of Cultures

Philadelphia welcomed its first FIFA World Cup match with a lively mix of fans that surprised even the locals. Instead of the expected Ivory Coast supporters, most of the crowd wore Ecuadorian shirts and waved bright flags, turning Lemon Hill into a vibrant celebration. The city’s small Ecuado

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Jun 14 2026HEALTH

Supportive Cancer Care: A Community Lifeline

People who fight cancer often feel that the battle is just about medicine, but the truth is it touches every part of life. In many rural parts of Maine, patients and their families must learn to cope with this struggle mostly on their own. A different way of caring, called supportive cancer ca

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Jun 14 2026CELEBRITIES

A Royal Day of Two Worlds

Prince Harry was in Germany, wishing good luck to athletes at the Invictus Games, while his father and brother were celebrating King Charles III’s birthday parade just miles away in London. The contrast couldn’t be sharper: one side of the family focused on sport and healing veterans, the other on t

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