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Jun 03 2026CRYPTO

Bitcoin’s “Oversold” Signal: Is a Comeback on the Horizon?

Bitcoin’s price was hovering around $67, 000 after a brief dip the day before. A key technical tool, the 14‑day Relative Strength Index (RSI), has fallen below 30. In trading language, that means the coin is “oversold” – a situation where many sell orders have pushed prices too low, sometimes hintin

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Jun 03 2026ART

Niwot Artists Bid for a Better Future

A Friday evening in Niwot will turn into an art showdown, with local painters and creators offering their works for sale in both live and silent auctions. The event, hosted at Niwot Hall from 5:30 to 8 p. m. , will bring together about twenty artists who have poured their talent into a variety of pi

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Jun 03 2026ART

Farm Art Showcase Brings Creatives Together

The Coliseum Museum in Oregon is opening its second yearly “Around the Farm” art show on June 6, running until July 18. The display features 35 artists from northern Illinois who have submitted 65 works that honor the region’s farming heritage. The pieces span a range of media: acrylics, mixed‑me

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Jun 03 2026ART

Celebrating Handmade Art in a Digital World

A quiet shift will happen on June 11 at the fifth floor of a Manhattan building. Artists who paint, sculpt and mix media will show their work in an evening that says the human touch still matters. The event is part of a larger yearly program that helps living artists reach new audiences worldwide

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Jun 03 2026POLITICS

Strikes, Stalemates and Rising Oil: The Gulf’s New Tension

The Gulf region saw a fresh burst of conflict on Wednesday, as an Iranian missile struck Kuwait’s airport and the U. S. military launched retaliatory attacks near the Strait of Hormuz, even though talks between Washington and Tehran remain stalled. The incident pushed oil prices higher by more th

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Jun 03 2026OPINION

A False Grave Tale and the Cost of Quick Headlines

The story began in 2021 when a Canadian community claimed that the remains of 215 Indigenous children had been found at a former residential school in Kamloops. A press release from the local First Nations band said that ground‑penetrating radar had uncovered unmarked graves. The chief of the band t

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Jun 03 2026POLITICS

Eating Smart: How People Want the Government to Step In

A recent online survey of 2, 000 U. S. adults revealed that more than half have heard about ultra‑processed foods (UPFs), yet only a third feel they truly grasp what these products are. The study, conducted through a partnership with YouGov, aimed to see how confident people are in explaining UPFs a

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Jun 03 2026BUSINESS

Trade Shake‑Ups: New Tariff Rules Stir Business Fears

Business leaders quickly voiced worries after the U. S. administration unveiled plans to rebuild tariff barriers that the Supreme Court had largely dismissed in February. The proposal, announced late Tuesday, would introduce two new tariff levels—10% and 12. 5%—on goods from roughly sixty countries

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Jun 03 2026POLITICS

Federal Workers Face New Secrets Rule

A new rule from the president would require all federal employees to sign a secrecy agreement. The agreement says they cannot talk about how their agency works, who works there, or any early discussions that could influence decisions. The proposal turns the old idea that government work is public

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Jun 03 2026SCIENCE

Detecting Tiny Starch Bits with a Smart Fiber Sensor

A new fiber sensor can spot tiny starch traces in water used for cleaning food. It helps stop cross‑contamination and keeps water clean. The device is built from a special fiber design that mixes regular multimode fiber with a core‑less section. A gel layer sits on the core‑less part to capture star

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