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May 19 2026POLITICS

Why Climate Science Guidance in Courts is Stirring Up Legal Storms

A group of 23 state attorneys general, led by Tennessee’s top lawyer, isn’t happy with how climate science could end up influencing federal court decisions. Their beef? A chapter on climate science in a key manual used by judges seems to favor one side in ongoing lawsuits—especially those involving

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May 19 2026HEALTH

How cities, dirtier air, and shifting weather harm our lungs

City living used to mean better hospitals and faster ambulances. Now it often means breathing air that quietly damages lungs over years. Poor air quality isn’t just annoying—it rearranges how infections spread inside our chests. Warm air holds more water, which helps viruses and bacteria travel far

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May 19 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Old Theaters, New Battles: How Cities Struggle to Keep Their Cultural Roots Alive

Around the world, grand old theaters built in the early 1900s are facing a tough reality. Places once filled with laughter, music, and stories now stand empty or half-forgotten as cities change around them. In Oxford, a small cinema called the Ultimate Picture Palace fights to survive. Opened in 191

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May 19 2026TECHNOLOGY

A Truck for Everyday Use That Doesn't Forget Its Tough Side

The 2026 Ford Ranger SuperCrew XLT positions itself as a midsize pickup that refuses to pick sides. It isn’t just a compact truck pretending to be rugged, nor is it a full-size workhorse trying too hard to be nimble. Instead, it aims to do both: handle grocery runs and weekend camping trips without

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May 18 2026OPINION

A Fresh Plan to Clean Portland’s River and Save the Island

Portland is famous for its parks, trees, and rivers, but a hidden problem lurks in the Willamette River. A 10‑mile stretch near the harbor has been listed as a Superfund site since 2000, meaning it is heavily polluted from past industrial use. The U. S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has set

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May 18 2026OPINION

Quonset Runway Closure: A Question of Priorities

The Rhode Island Airport Corp. decided to shut down runway 5‑23 at Quonset State Airport, a move that many see as politically driven rather than technically justified. The runway sits on Narragansett Bay, where winter winds make it a key spot for pilots. Yet the decision was made without hearing

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May 18 2026FINANCE

Investor Views on Two Big‑Name Food and Gaming Stocks

Texas Roadhouse has been a topic of discussion among market watchers, especially after a Citi analyst kept his recommendation steady at “Hold” on May 15. The company’s shares were trading around $178 when the note was released, a price that sits below the average target of $196 set by many analysts.

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May 18 2026HEALTH

Heat Waves and Hurt: How Extreme Weather Affects Older Chinese

Recent research looks at how the hottest and coldest days in China might make older people feel more pain. The study follows a large group of Chinese adults who are in their 50s and older, tracking them over several years. It focuses on two types of extreme weather: very hot days and extremely cold

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May 18 2026SCIENCE

Ancient doctor’s fight against gout: what a 2000-year-old book reveals

Back in the days of the Roman Empire, a doctor named Rufus from a town called Ephesus noticed something strange about certain patients. They would wake up with swollen, painful joints, especially in their feet. Today we call this gout, but back then it was just another mystery. A long time after Ruf

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May 18 2026LIFESTYLE

Riding for a cause: yearly event unites bikers over men’s health challenges

Every September, classic motorcycles roll down roads worldwide under one banner: men’s health matters. What began as a small gathering in Sydney now spans cities from London to Los Angeles, uniting riders in sharp suits and polished vintage bikes. The numbers tell a story—over sixty million dollars

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