CHINA

May 01 2026POLITICS

Alarming Claims: What Is Really Happening at the Kwara Camp?

Amnesty International has urged Nigerian authorities to look into reports that at least 150 people, many of them children, may have died in an army‑run camp located in Yikpata, Kwara state. The group says the victims were part of a community of about 1, 500 Fulani who were relocated after facing inc

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May 01 2026SPORTS

Flyers, Phillies and a Photo Showdown

The weekend brought surprises across Philadelphia sports. In the NHL, the Flyers shocked their rivals by taking a 3‑0 series lead over the Penguins and holding on to win Game 6, ending the series. In the NBA, the Sixers stayed in the playoff race against the Celtics, helped by Joel Embiid’s early re

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May 01 2026POLITICS

Supreme Court’s Busy Calendar: Key Cases and Upcoming Decisions

The Supreme Court is set to announce 35 final opinions by July, wrapping up its current term. Cases were argued throughout the year: November saw three, December four, January five, February three, March ten, and April another ten. The last non‑argument session was scheduled for June 25, but the cou

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May 01 2026CRIME

From Bars to Betting: A Mobster’s Return to Crime

Giuseppe Manzi, once jailed for running a gambling and loansharking network in Springfield, now faces new charges in an illegal sports‑betting scheme that stretched from Indiana to Massachusetts. The federal indictment names 22 people, including Manzi under the alias “Joe Polozzo, ” as part of a gro

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May 01 2026SPORTS

Classic Sports Snacks and Drinks That Define Big Events

The Kentucky Derby is famous for its mint julep, a bourbon‑based drink with Old Forester, simple syrup, fresh mint and crushed ice. Over 125, 000 of these cocktails are sold each year during Derby weekend. The drink’s cost can climb from $22 to a thousand dollars for a special cup, with extra money

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May 01 2026SPORTS

Prime Video Teams Up With Duke for Big‑Game Streaming

Amazon’s Prime Video is stepping into the world of college basketball by signing a multi‑year deal with Duke University. The agreement will bring three high‑profile neutral‑site games each season to the streaming platform, marking Prime Video’s first foray into college sports after previously airing

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May 01 2026TECHNOLOGY

Memory Shortage Hits Tech Prices

The world’s top memory makers—SK Hynix, Micron and Samsung—are struggling to keep up with the rapid rise in demand for RAM. AI firms are buying large amounts of high‑bandwidth memory to power new data centers, but the number of factories that can produce these chips is limited. Samsung has con

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May 01 2026ENVIRONMENT

Snakes on the Rise: How to Stay Safe When You Spot One

The heat in California is pulling snakes out of hiding, and the numbers of deadly rattlesnake bites have climbed this year. In most years California sees no fatal bites, but this season two people in the south and a third in Mendocino County have died. Experts say warmer weather wakes rattlesn

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May 01 2026SCIENCE

Rice Straw Nanoparticles Boost Polyurethane Films for Safer Packaging

The project starts with rice straw, a waste product that scientists turn into tiny particles. By mixing these particles with zinc and lignin—two natural substances—they create a new material called Zn‑LSF. Next, the team embeds this hybrid into a common plastic known as polyurethane. They test se

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May 01 2026SCIENCE

Regional Climate Models Show Bigger Rainfall Shifts in Southeast Asia

Recent research has revealed that zooming in on the climate picture can change how we see future rainstorms. Scientists compared a global model, which looks at the whole planet in broad strokes, with a regional model that focuses on Southeast Asia’s islands and surrounding seas. The regional v

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