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  • ‘Mini brain’ research could benefit Alzheimer’s studies

    ‘Mini brain’ research could benefit Alzheimer’s studies

    Scientists at University of Galway have discovered improvements in growing “mini brains” in laboratories, which could benefit studies into strokes, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.

    The research examined the potential…

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  • Women’s Basketball Heads to DePaul on Monday

    Women’s Basketball Heads to DePaul on Monday

    Villanova returns to action on Monday, Dec. 29, with a road game at DePaul. The Wildcats enter play riding an eight-game winning streak with a 10-2 overall record and a 3-0 conference mark, while the Blue Demons are 3-11 on the year and 0-3 in…

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  • LncRNA AC040169.1 Enhances Ovarian Cancer via m6A Regulation

    LncRNA AC040169.1 Enhances Ovarian Cancer via m6A Regulation

    In the intricate realm of cancer research, the understanding of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) has significantly evolved over the past decade. Among these, lncRNA AC040169.1 has emerged as a critical player in the progression of ovarian cancer….

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  • Brigitte Bardot, French film icon turned far-right provocateur, dies at 91 | Cinema News

    Brigitte Bardot, French film icon turned far-right provocateur, dies at 91 | Cinema News

    The French star reshaped post-war cinema before retreating from global fame into animal rights activism and, later, far-right politics.

    Brigitte Bardot, the French…

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  • Celebrity castings can help theatres in hard times, says new head of Bristol Old Vic | Theatre

    Celebrity castings can help theatres in hard times, says new head of Bristol Old Vic | Theatre

    Casting big stars in stage productions is sometimes needed because theatre is in an “undeniably challenging” moment and must compete with streaming services for people’s time and money, the incoming director of the Bristol Old Vic has said.

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  • Sale of Pudsey Town Hall to be debated after review request

    Sale of Pudsey Town Hall to be debated after review request

    A formal request for a review of the sale decision said: “There has been inadequate consultation with local members regarding the disposal of Pudsey Town Hall.”

    Leeds City Council was in talks with non-profit Pudsey Town Hall Community Interest…

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  • Maine regulators issue warning letter for Belfast wetlands lapse

    Maine regulators issue warning letter for Belfast wetlands lapse

    The Maine Department of Environmental Protection recently issued a letter of warning designed to recoup wetlands protections lost in a regulatory oversight more than 20 years ago.

    The lapse by state and federal regulators allowed a wetlands mitigation site in Belfast to be marketed for commercial development earlier this year.

    The mitigation deal emerged from the development of credit card giant MBNA’s sprawling campus in Belfast. In exchange for impacts to about seven acres of wetlands, the Maine Department of Environmental Protection and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers agreed to let MBNA restore wetlands on a nearby 24-acre site, just west of the Renys Plaza, and protect it in perpetuity for conservation and public access. 

    Bank of America acquired the wetlands parcel when it bought MBNA in 2006. It sold the 24 acres at auction this January, but the deed was unencumbered by a conservation easement, because it had never been filed. The new owner is now offering it for sale for commercial development. (Listing agent Charlie Hippler did not reply to requests for comment.)

    The warning letter issued by the DEP last month was addressed to the nonprofit Penobscot Community Health Care, which now owns the property where regulators allowed MBNA to alter wetlands in exchange for setting aside the 24-acre parcel. 

    “It has come to the Department’s attention that the deed restriction was never placed on the mitigation parcel as intended and required by both the Department order and Corps permit,” DEP’s Robert Wood wrote in the November 10 letter. “The Department is also aware that the current owner of the mitigation parcel, which is not PCHC, recently listed the property for sale for commercial development.”

    The warning letter continues, “The license requires PCHC to preserve wetland functions and values on the mitigation parcel. Because the parcel has not been protected in perpetuity by deed restriction and is now at risk of being developed for commercial purposes, PCHC has not preserved the wetland functions and values on the mitigation parcel.” 

    Wood said if PCHC does not comply with the terms of the license, DEP might take enforcement action. 

    But the health care agency says it does not feel obligated to fix the mitigation snafu. The nonprofit bought the land for its Seaport Community Health Center from Bank of America in 2021, before the missing conservation easement came to light. 

    “Penobscot Community Health Care is not and has never been the owner of the land which contains the wetlands in question and does not have any responsibility regarding the property,” the agency said in an emailed statement. “PCHC is investigating why the Maine Department of Environmental Protection believes PCHC has any responsibility regarding the matter.”

    As the parties parry over if and how the wetlands should be conserved, as required by the 1997 permit issued to MBNA, it remains unclear who dropped the ball on the easement. 

    Pierce Atwood attorney Philip “Chip” Ahrens drafted the easement, and sent it to MBNA’s Blaine Buck in April 1997 for the signature of MBNA Regional Vice President Shane Flynn.

    But several years later, Michael Hartman of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers noticed that the easement had not been filed. He wrote to Ahrens in December 2001, asking him to provide copies if the document had been filed. But there is no record of the easement ever having been filed. 

    Bub Fournier, director of planning for the City of Belfast, says the parcel is not ideal for commercial development due to the extensive wetlands. Still, the property appears to be ever more valuable. 

    In January 2025, Bank of America sold the lot at auction to We Buy and Resell Homes LLC, a Georgia company, for $15,750. CORE real estate listed it over the summer for $295,000. Now it is asking $500,000. 

    Murray Carpenter

    Murray Carpenter is a contributor to The Maine Monitor with a focus on environmental topics.

    He has worked as a reporter for Maine Public, Maine Times, and The Republican Journal, and filed stories for The New York Times, NPR and The Washington Post. A resident of Belfast, he has authored books on caffeine (2014) and Coca-Cola (2025).

    Contact Murray with questions or concerns: moc.l1766919528iamno1766919528torp@1766919528retne1766919528pracy1766919528arrum1766919528

    Language(s) Spoken: English

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  • Salt Lines: A Forgotten 4,000-km ‘Living Border’ Reappears in a Mumbai Museum | Mumbai News

    Salt Lines: A Forgotten 4,000-km ‘Living Border’ Reappears in a Mumbai Museum | Mumbai News

    In the open-air plaza of Mumbai’s oldest museum, a long, zig-zag wall of cloth ripples in the breeze. At first glance, it looks like a giant curtain. Step closer to squint at the crimson prints on it and the cloth becomes a partition: neat…

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  • Bishop of Oxford says church ‘learning lessons’ after scandals

    Bishop of Oxford says church ‘learning lessons’ after scandals

    Dr Croft currently oversees 800 churches in 609 parishes across Oxfordshire, Berkshire and Buckinghamshire.

    He told the BBC: “Nationally and in all dioceses, I think our processes are better, I think our churches are safer thanks to better…

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  • Philadelphia utility bills are rising. Here’s why

    Philadelphia utility bills are rising. Here’s why

    This story is part of the WHYY News Climate Desk, bringing you news and solutions for our changing region.

    From the Poconos to the Jersey Shore to the mouth of the Delaware Bay, what do you want to know about climate change? What would you like us to cover? Get in touch.


    South Philadelphia resident Edoardo Vignani started tracking his utility bills when he lost his job in 2022.

    Since then, he’s noticed many of his bills climbing higher each year. He worries most about electricity, which he uses for heating and cooling his house. One month this past summer, his PECO bill topped $400, he said.

    Vignani is now working again, and he said he can afford his utility bills. But he worries the continuing increases could become unsustainable for him.

    “That’s just kind of hard to budget for,” Vignani said.

    Philadelphians were squeezed by multiple utility rate hikes in 2025. With water, electric and gas bills combined, the typical household is paying a little over $30 more per month. Another increase is around the corner in 2026 for PECO customers.

    Here’s what to know.

    Electricity bills shot up this year and will rise again in 2026

    Over the past six years, average electricity prices have risen faster than inflation in roughly half of U.S. states — including Delaware, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

    State regulators approved a plan for investor-owned electric utility PECO to raise distribution rates last year, mostly to pay for infrastructure investments. The typical residential bill rose 10%, from $135.85 to $149.43 in January 2025.

    Demand for electricity is growing while a lot of the grid infrastructure is coming to the end of its useful life, said Abe Silverman, an energy consultant and research scholar at Johns Hopkins University.

    “The cost of maintaining the system, the expansion of the system, these are all driving [prices up,]” Silverman said. “And inflation is just making it all very expensive at the moment.”

    It’s not just the cost of transformers, wires and poles. Silverman said the cost of the electricity itself has also increased alongside the price of natural gas, which is used to generate most electricity in the region.

    Separately, a supply-and-demand crunch on the regional electric grid has driven up capacity prices, which reflect the cost of paying power generators to commit to producing a certain amount of electricity in the future. An independent market monitor found that the expected growth of data center construction drove this price spike.

    “The capacity prices have been going up just astronomically,” said Seth Blumsack, a professor of energy policy and economics at Penn State University.

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