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May 03 2026BUSINESS

Cheap Business‑Class Seats That Won’t Break the Bank

Finding a lie‑flat seat for less than $3, 000 is easier than you think. Some airlines use lower prices to fill empty premium seats when demand dips, and savvy travelers can spot these bargains by staying flexible with dates and itineraries. When you search for business‑class flights, look past

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May 03 2026OPINION

Ibogaine: Hope, Hype and the Need for Careful Science

The buzz around ibogaine, a plant‑derived drug from West Africa, exploded when a U. S. president highlighted its promise at a White House event that celebrated psychedelic research. For the first time, the Food and Drug Administration has cleared a clinical trial to test the substance in people.

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May 03 2026SCIENCE

Psychedelics and the Fight Against Authoritarian Thinking

Research has shown that certain psychedelic drugs can lower people’s tendency to support strict, top‑down authority. However, these studies were small and not always well controlled. Because of that uncertainty, scientists are calling for bigger experiments with stricter designs to see if the eff

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May 03 2026OPINION

Teachers and nurses deserve real respect, not just online words

Schools used to be places where adults actually worked with kids, not battlegrounds. Teachers once had room to teach without constant fear of insults, threats, or budget cuts. Now many quit because the job has become harder than it needs to be. Some parents and politicians seem to think teaching is

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May 03 2026SPORTS

When Race Day Arrives Without The Puma

The Kentucky Derby, set for this Saturday evening at 6:57 p. m. ET in Louisville, Kentucky, will see 19 horses instead of the usual 20. A late scratch removed The Puma from the lineup due to a swollen leg caused by a skin infection. Trainers Gustavo Delgado Sr. and Jr. had entered the horse at 10-1

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May 02 2026EDUCATION

Celebrating Teachers: A Week of Appreciation in Austin

In the coming days, schools across Austin will pause to honor their teachers. The idea is simple: show gratitude for the daily impact these educators have on students’ lives. Teachers do more than deliver lessons; they build trust, spark curiosity, and create safe learning spaces. A key highlight o

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May 02 2026ENTERTAINMENT

New Sci‑Fi Drops: What to Watch This Year

Summer is the new season for science‑fiction shows on streaming platforms, and 2026 follows that trend while moving premieres a bit earlier. The release calendar is almost as full in spring as it is in summer, so viewers can enjoy fresh stories without confusing plotlines. Many titles are already av

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May 02 2026SPORTS

High‑School Sports Highlights: Wins, Records and Surprises

The day kicked off with a surprising baseball moment: Scituate’s senior pitcher, Micke Kostek, retired every batter he faced and struck out 11 in a clean 3‑0 victory over Whitman‑Hanson, marking the first perfect game in that program’s history. Meanwhile, Ursuline girls’ lacrosse saw Maddy Lubov

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May 02 2026HEALTH

Headaches and mental health: what a big study in Saudi Arabia reveals

Saudi Arabia offers a unique setting to study headaches because its population is deeply religious. Researchers wanted to know how common headaches are there and whether they connect to mental health issues. They also wondered if a person’s level of faith changes that connection. The team ran a nat

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May 01 2026SCIENCE

Wastewater Reveals What People Eat and Drink

Scientists have found a new way to learn about the habits of city residents by looking at their sewage. The technique, called wastewater‑based epidemiology, usually tracks drug use but now also measures food and drink markers. A fresh laboratory test can spot more than 40 different substances in raw

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