WOODY ALLEN

Apr 27 2026CRIME

Horner Trial: A Shift in Focus from Crime to Complex Lives

The courtroom buzzed as jurors reconvened on Monday, tasked with deciding whether to impose death or life imprisonment for Tanner Horner, who admitted to the 2022 murder of seven‑year‑old Athena Strand. The case had evolved from a straightforward crime narrative into a layered examination of Horner’

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Apr 27 2026ENVIRONMENT

Environmental War: Hidden Damage Across Land, Sea and Air

The war in the Middle East has left more than just destroyed buildings behind. It is quietly poisoning air, soil and water in ways that are hard to see at first glance. The first wave of damage was visible when the city of Tehran saw its skies turn black. Residents described a thick, foul‑smell

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

A New Twist on Glycerol Fuel Cells

Scientists have figured out exactly which parts of a cobalt‑based material make it good at turning glycerol into useful energy. Instead of guessing, they built three similar crystals that differ only in the tiny details around cobalt atoms. The key discovery was that the reaction happens mainl

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

Heart, Kidney and Sugar: A Hidden Link to Cancer

Recent research looks at how heart, kidney and metabolic problems can quietly raise the chance of getting cancer. The study followed a huge group of people across the country for many years to see if worse health in these areas meant more cancer. The new idea, called CKM syndrome, shows that the hea

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Apr 27 2026HEALTH

Obesity’s Hidden Role in Men’s Sexual Health

Body fat isn’t just a passive backdrop; it actively influences how men experience erectile function. Recent research shows that excess weight can trigger hormonal changes, inflammation, and blood flow problems that directly impair the ability to achieve or maintain an erection. Rather than seeing

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Apr 27 2026HEALTH

Hypertension in Mexico: How Numbers Changed Over 20 Years

In recent years, scientists have looked closely at high blood pressure across Mexico. They used data from national surveys that cover the whole country, not just a few cities. The goal was to see how common different types of high blood pressure are and what causes them. The surveys spanned twenty

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Apr 27 2026POLITICS

China Tightens Tech Rules While Trading Off Tariffs

China has quietly broadened its economic tools during a temporary pause in the U. S. trade dispute, setting up new limits on technology and supply chains before a summit next month. After leaders Xi Jinping and Donald Trump agreed in Busan to ease tensions, Beijing moved quickly to tighten controls

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Apr 27 2026POLITICS

Australia’s Energy Trip to East Asia

The Australian foreign minister plans a short tour of three key Asian partners to tackle the fuel crisis sparked by Middle East fighting. In Tokyo, she will sit down with Japan’s foreign minister to hash out ways to keep supplies steady and discuss the wider regional fallout. A week later, she

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Apr 27 2026POLITICS

Bayer Faces Supreme Court on Big Roundup Lawsuit Fight

The U. S. Supreme Court will hear Bayer AG’s attempt to stop thousands of lawsuits that say the company did not warn people about Roundup’s cancer risk. Bayer wants federal pesticide rules to block state‑law claims like the one that earned a Missouri jury $1. 25 million for John Durnell, who says gl

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Apr 27 2026HEALTH

Eating Late Can Make Stress‑Related Stomach Issues Worse

People who keep snacking after nine o’clock are more likely to have tummy troubles, a new study claims. The research will be shared at the Digestive Disease Week conference in Chicago. The lead scientist, Dr. Harika Dadigiri, explained that the problem isn’t only about what you eat but also when

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