DET

Jun 06 2026SCIENCE

A smart way to detect tiny amounts of medicine in milk

Scientists have created a clever system to spot very small doses of kanamycin, an antibiotic, in milk. Instead of relying just on enzymes stuck to DNA, they attached the walker to tiny magnetic beads. This trick helps separate the useful parts from the junk faster and more cleanly. Once kanamycin s

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Jun 03 2026HEALTH

Health Data Gaps: What UK Doctors Record About Their Patients

A recent study looked at two big sets of primary‑care records in England, called CPRD Gold and CPRD Aurum. Together they form a database that many researchers use to study health trends. The researchers wanted to see how often doctors note information beyond the usual medical facts – things like whe

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Jun 03 2026SCIENCE

Detecting Tiny Starch Bits with a Smart Fiber Sensor

A new fiber sensor can spot tiny starch traces in water used for cleaning food. It helps stop cross‑contamination and keeps water clean. The device is built from a special fiber design that mixes regular multimode fiber with a core‑less section. A gel layer sits on the core‑less part to capture star

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Jun 03 2026HEALTH

Bringing Fairness into Healthy Living

The health world talks a lot about fairness, but it still slips through many plans for healthy living. People who try to stop or heal long‑term illnesses with diet, exercise and habits can miss the bigger picture. If a person’s life is shaped by poverty, discrimination or unsafe neighborhoods,

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Jun 03 2026SPORTS

Why the Detroit Lions Might Dominate the NFL in 2026

The Detroit Lions are often overlooked in NFL conversations, but recent predictions suggest they could surprise many in the 2026 season. A writer at a major sports magazine made three bold claims about the Lions: they will win their division, lead the league in wins, and score the most points. These

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Jun 02 2026ART

Unclear Visions: How AI Paints Scenes That Break the Rules

The article talks about a feature called visual indeterminacy in art made by AI tools known as Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs). Visual indeterminacy means a picture looks like it could be a real place, but when you look closely it cannot be understood in terms of normal space or perspective.

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Jun 02 2026HEALTH

What makes people buy more processed food?

For years, scientists have warned about the link between eating too much ultra-processed food and health problems like obesity and diabetes. But what exactly pushes people to buy these convenient yet unhealthy products? A recent study in France looked at over a decade of grocery receipts from thousa

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Jun 01 2026POLITICS

New Jersey tightens security around migrant center as protests grow

New Jersey is taking extra steps to control protests near a large immigrant detention facility in Newark. While visits for detainees resumed Sunday, the area around Delaney Hall is now off-limits to protesters after recent clashes between activists and federal agents. State police have expanded thei

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Jun 01 2026POLITICS

Small airport, big choices for Naples

Naples’ tiny airport packs more punch than many realize. Locals debate its future, but the real questions go deeper. Should private planes keep buzzing in late at night, even if rules get bent? Fines could tighten things up—bigger planes paying more, just like speeding tickets scale with the crime.

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May 31 2026ENTERTAINMENT

A Fresh Take on Teen Detectives: Pip Fitz-Amobi Steps Up

A new crime drama on Netflix is giving fans of teenage detectives something fresh to watch. Unlike classic mysteries that feel stuck in the past, this show follows a modern sleuth who uses today’s tools—social media, online forums, and real-time research—to solve a cold case. Pip Fitz-Amobi, a sharp

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