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Jun 15 2026ART

Dance Show Gives Students a Voice

The curtains lift and the stage lights glow. 28 dancers step onto the floor, ready to perform pieces that were written by their own classmates. The show is called “Room to Dance, ” and it takes place each year at Santa Fe College’s Fine Arts Hall. Students who take a course called Dance Composit

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Jun 15 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Crime TV Turns Inside Out: How a Bad Guy Became the New Hero

The first big shift in crime shows happened when a TV series made a mafia boss the star. Instead of showing cops chasing bad guys, viewers watched Tony Soprano’s messy life and saw how his choices hurt those around him. The show didn’t give Tony a happy ending; it followed him through therapy, famil

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Jun 15 2026OPINION

Why research retractions deserve a closer look

Every year, studies get taken back from journals after mistakes or bad behavior are found. But digging into why retractions happen often gets ignored. Most research on this topic just counts how many papers get pulled without asking tough questions about the system itself. A closer look shows someth

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Jun 15 2026HEALTH

A New Hope for Follicular Lymphoma Treatment

Follicular lymphoma is a slow-growing cancer that often comes back after treatment, especially in people whose disease worsens within two years of starting therapy. For years, chemoimmunotherapy was the go-to option, but now doctors are turning to gentler treatments that don’t rely on chemotherapy.

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Jun 15 2026TECHNOLOGY

Tech and Trust: Can AI Really Fix What Social Media Broke?

Back in 2009, Facebook changed how people saw the internet. It swapped a simple list of posts for a system that showed what was popular instead of what was new. Other platforms like Twitter and YouTube followed, all chasing the same goal: keep users scrolling for as long as possible. The result wasn

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Jun 15 2026OPINION

When AI companies face tough choices

Tech companies today often talk about doing good with AI. But real courage comes when they have to turn down big money for the wrong reasons. One AI firm, Anthropic, recently did something bold. It refused a Pentagon demand to remove limits on how its AI tools could be used. This happened when the

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Jun 15 2026FINANCE

Tech Stocks Worth Watching in 2026

Investing in tech stocks isn’t about betting on today’s hottest gadgets. It’s about spotting companies that adapt fast. Some tech giants thrive on change, while others get left behind. But the good news? The market’s big enough for multiple winners. Smart investing isn’t about guesswork. It’s about

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Jun 15 2026TECHNOLOGY

Looking back at tech that really felt like the future

Back in the 60s and 70s, gadgets weren't just tools. They were dreams come true. Household items like TVs and refrigerators were built to last decades, not years. Imagine using the same family fridge for your whole childhood. That kind of durability made every new gadget feel revolutionary. Today's

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Jun 15 2026HEALTH

Finding the right treatment for psoriasis: Can blood tests make a difference?

Doctors often struggle to pick the best treatment for people with plaque psoriasis. This skin condition flares up when the body’s immune system attacks healthy skin cells. The challenge is that different patients respond differently to biologic drugs, which can slow down an overactive immune respons

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Jun 15 2026HEALTH

Strength Training Boosts Nerve Speed in Just a Month

Research shows that a month of simple strength exercises can actually speed up how fast the brain talks to muscles—even in older adults. In one study, people aged 18 to 84 tried handgrip training three times a week. After four weeks, their nerve signals traveled faster than before, proving the nervo

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