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May 28 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Family‑Run Petting Zoo Brings Smiles to the County

A small idea at a pumpkin patch turned into a traveling petting zoo that now visits schools, parties and community events across East Contra Costa County and beyond. Robert and Katy Kerling started the venture after a neighbor asked them to run a petting zoo at a local pumpkin patch in 2023. Their o

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May 28 2026SPORTS

Sooners Shine: Four Players Earn 2026 All‑American Honors

Four athletes from the University of Oklahoma baseball team have been named to the 2026 All‑American roster by the National Freshman and College Association. The selections highlight the depth of talent in the Sooners program, which has consistently produced top performers each season. The award

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May 28 2026EDUCATION

High‑School Coders Show Off Their Own Games

Canyon High’s computer science class held its yearly Demo Day during lunch, letting visitors see apps and games the students built all semester. Students flocked to Josh Underwood’s classroom to watch projects that came from a capstone program where learners tackle real‑world deadlines. Underw

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May 28 2026ENTERTAINMENT

New Game Start: Why a Classic Studio Went Solo with Fresh Korean Titles

A long‑time Japanese media giant, known for popular cartoons and movies, has stepped into the video game world. The company rolled out a new indie publishing label in April, calling it “TOEI GAMES. ” Instead of turning its famous series into games, the label is looking for brand‑new ideas that can g

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May 28 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Overwatch Meets YOASOBI: A New Song, Skins and Tokyo Adventure

Blizzard has teamed up with the popular Japanese music duo YOASOBI to bring a fresh experience into Overwatch. The partnership was announced during a Tokyo event on the 28th, sparking excitement among fans of both gaming and J‑pop. The collaboration will start on July 1 inside the game, letting play

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May 28 2026SCIENCE

Understanding potato starch: How tiny differences make big impacts

Potatoes aren’t just a food staple—they’re tiny factories of starch. Inside their humble tubers lies a complex world where microscopic features shape everything from how they taste in a fry to how they behave in processed foods. Researchers dug deep into 137 potato varieties from 16 countries, growi

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May 28 2026POLITICS

UCLA under fire for failing to shield Jewish students during campus protests

A federal lawsuit claims UCLA allowed a pattern of harassment against Jewish students to go unchecked during waves of anti-Israel protests in 2023 and 2024. The Justice Department argues that the university ignored over 100 complaints of antisemitic behavior, from verbal abuse to physical attacks, w

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May 28 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Video games in space: When flashy visuals can’t hide weak gameplay

Space horror has always depended on one key idea: making players feel completely out of control. Yet in one recent title, the thrill fades fast because the danger feels scripted rather than surprising. The story begins with a spaceship overrun by a creature that shifts appearance without warning. Th

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May 28 2026TECHNOLOGY

AI tools in animation: A fast track or a shortcut?

Amazon recently gave out $22 million to animation creators ready to use AI tools. The money aims to help projects like a spin-off from Maya and the Three, a music series with an online star named Diana, and a show called Cupcake & Friends. The catch? Creators must use Amazon’s AI platform, Project N

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May 28 2026ENTERTAINMENT

How weather forecasts shaped a turning point in World War II

Weather isn’t just small talk—it can change the course of history. In the middle of World War II, a quiet group of scientists played a behind-the-scenes role in one of the most famous military operations ever. Their work wasn’t about battles or weapons, but about reading the sky. Before D-Day on Jun

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