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Apr 18 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Life After Law: What Happened to the Organized Crime Show

The series “Law & Order: Organized Crime” was a bold experiment in the familiar world of procedural dramas. Instead of following the standard case‑of‑the‑day formula, it focused on one detective’s battle against a New York crime syndicate. The show ran for five seasons before NBC decided to end it,

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Apr 18 2026CELEBRITIES

Birthdays on April 17: Stars, Fun Facts and More

Victoria Beckham turns 52 today. She is known for her music career and now runs a beauty brand that sells makeup. Rooney Mara, who was born on April 17, is 41 years old. She lent her voice to a documentary about animals in 2018. Sean Bean celebrates his 67th birthday. He once played the hero O

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Apr 18 2026SPORTS

South Shore Sports Highlights: Wins, Home Runs and Big Plays

West Bridgewater’s softball squad continued its hot streak on Friday, overpowering Old Rochester with a 16‑8 finish. The Wildcats’ lineup exploded for nine runs in each of their seven spring games, a record run that kept opponents on the back foot. Two‑run home runs from Alanna Fidalgo, Lacey Roche

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Apr 18 2026POLITICS

Plan to Move Iran's Nuclear Material to the US Takes Shape

Plans are in motion for the United States to team up with Iran to gather enriched uranium from the country and transport it back home. The plan was shared by a top US official who spoke to the press recently. The official described the process as a slow-moving operation involving large machinery to

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Apr 18 2026POLITICS

Graduate fights back against US visa crackdown over pro-Palestinian views

A young academic from Turkey who completed her doctorate in the US has packed her bags and gone home after months of legal battles. Rumeysa Ozturk was studying child development at Tufts University when her student visa mysteriously vanished without explanation. No crime was committed, no new policy

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Apr 18 2026ENVIRONMENT

Can drilling companies dodge past damage?

For years, oil companies have dug canals through Louisiana’s wetlands, changing the landscape forever. One parish took Chevron to court, arguing the company harmed the environment long ago. A jury agreed, ordering Chevron to pay $745 million. But the company fought back, saying much of its work happ

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Apr 18 2026TECHNOLOGY

Which wearable fits your daily life better: a smart ring or a smartwatch?

Smart rings and smartwatches both track health, sleep, and activity, but they work very differently. A smart ring like the Oura Ring 4 is small, lightweight, and doesn’t have a screen. That means no distractions from notifications or alerts while you’re moving. It’s great for people who want to moni

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Apr 18 2026TECHNOLOGY

New MacBook with Phone Chip: Fast but Not for Tab Hoarders

People love new tech but often bump into limits they didn’t expect. That’s what happened with a recent budget laptop that swapped its usual computer chip for one borrowed from an iPhone. After using it daily for a month, the biggest surprise wasn’t fancy video editing or heavy AI tasks—it was just o

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Apr 18 2026HEALTH

How Machine Learning is Helping Fight Drug-Resistant TB in Egypt

For over ten years, doctors in Egypt have been tracking how patients respond to tuberculosis treatment. Tuberculosis, a lung infection spread through the air, has always been hard to treat. But a bigger problem is growing: some TB strains no longer respond to standard medicines. These drug-resistant

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Apr 18 2026POLITICS

Nordic Countries Back Iran’s Strait of Hormuz Move

Officials from Finland, Norway, Sweden, and Denmark spoke up after Iran declared the Strait of Hormuz open for ships. The statement followed a truce worked out in Lebanon, which paused a long-running dispute in the area. The Nordic leaders didn’t just cheer Iran’s words—they stressed that real peace

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