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Jun 07 2026SCIENCE

How plants secretly control their blooming schedule

Scientists love studying Arabidopsis because it grows fast and reveals hidden plant secrets. Inside its cells sits a protein named SLAH3, which acts like a tiny stopwatch. When SLAH3 gets a small genetic error, the plant starts flowering weeks early—no matter how much food or light it gets. Usually

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Jun 07 2026POLITICS

California’s population slowdown: what it means for the future

California grew fast in the mid-1900s, adding nearly 13 million people between 1940 and 1970. Most were Americans moving for jobs, along with a baby boom. Cities expanded quickly, building new schools, roads, and water systems to keep up. But growth slowed in the 1970s as the economy shifted from fa

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Jun 07 2026BUSINESS

How Business Class is Getting a Budget Makeover

Airlines once treated business class as an all-inclusive luxury package. Now, they're breaking it into smaller pieces with extra fees. This change started when United split its business class fares into three levels: basic, standard, and flexible. The cheapest option still includes a flat-bed seat a

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Jun 07 2026HEALTH

Is alkaline water a health booster or just another passing trend?

Bottled water labeled as alkaline often gets attention for its mineral additives like calcium and magnesium, which raise its pH above neutral. While regular tap water usually falls below a neutral pH of 7, alkaline water hovers around 8 or 9, leading some to believe it can balance the body’s acid le

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Jun 06 2026BUSINESS

Investors Eye Three Key Food‑and‑Pet Brands

The consumer cycle has been buzzing with fresh opinions on three well‑known companies. A J. P. Morgan analyst keeps a bullish stance on the game‑and‑entertainment firm, seeing its shares rise to about $23. At the same time, a Bank of America researcher backs a fast‑food chain that could climb

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Jun 06 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Family Fun That Keeps Growing

LEGOLAND is showing how a theme park can stay fresh by always adding new ideas. Instead of just building bigger rides, the company focuses on letting kids join in and shape their own adventure. Before they board the big new space‑shuttle coaster, children build and paint their own spacecraft.

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Jun 06 2026POLITICS

A Shock in Britain: A Student’s Death Sparks International Debate

A young student named Henry Nowak was stabbed in the UK and later died while handcuffed by police. The incident has drawn criticism from both sides of the Atlantic. In Britain, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said foreign voices were stirring up trouble in the country and that it was an act of political

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Jun 06 2026RELIGION

Faith Spaces Open Their Hearts to LGBTQ+ People

Religious communities in Pittsburgh are stepping up to welcome LGBTQ+ members, offering a hopeful contrast to the often hostile attitudes found elsewhere. The shift began as local faith leaders recognized that many LGBTQ+ individuals feel alienated by churches where they grew up. They now active

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Jun 06 2026CRIME

AI Voice Scams: How a 5‑Second Clip Can Cost $635, 000

A new kind of scam has emerged that relies on a tiny audio clip to trick people into sending large sums of money. The trick works by copying the sound of a loved one from just five seconds of recorded speech. Once the voice is cloned, scammers can call or message victims pretending to be someone

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Jun 06 2026ENVIRONMENT

El Nino’s Heatwave: A Climate Wake‑Up Call

The world celebrated Environment Day with a reminder that the planet is heating up. The latest forecast from the World Meteorological Organization warns of a strong El Nino, likely to start between June and August and linger until at least November. The probability is high – 80 % for its onset and 9

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