DIS

Apr 28 2026ENTERTAINMENT

New Adventures Arrive at Hong Kong Disneyland This Spring

Hong Kong Disneyland has revealed fresh attractions that will start this spring, adding excitement to the park’s 20th‑anniversary celebrations. The announcement came at the same time as the park’s latest financial results, showing that business and entertainment are growing hand in hand. The highli

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Apr 28 2026TECHNOLOGY

A Bright New Projector That Adapts to Your Space

A company just released a projector that promises to make big-screen viewing easier than ever. The device uses three lasers to shine up to 5, 800 lumens, which means it can still show clear pictures even in rooms with lots of light. Unlike older projectors that struggle when moved or tilted, this on

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Apr 28 2026ENVIRONMENT

When the Weather Turns Mean, the Real Survival Tool Isn’t a Bag

Early one March morning in Hawaii, a dog’s sharp bark cut through the dark—sirens followed seconds later. Outside, cars streamed toward the high school parking lot, the town’s designated escape zone. Neighbors’ phones buzzed with alerts: a river had climbed higher than a three-story building, and a

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Apr 28 2026HEALTH

Liver Cancer in Asia: What’s Changing and Why It Matters

Over the past three decades, liver cancer cases in Asia have been slowly shrinking—but not evenly. While overall numbers are going down, some causes are getting worse. Hepatitis B still leads as the biggest risk, but other factors like fatty liver disease and alcohol are rising fast. The numbers tel

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Apr 28 2026HEALTH

Taking the Guesswork Out of Doctor Confidence in Treating Patients with Intellectual Disabilities

Doctors often feel uneasy when caring for adults with intellectual disabilities. That uncertainty can lead to rushed exams or missed problems, making healthcare harder for this group. A new study tackles the problem by creating a quick test—the SEC-ID—to check how confident doctors feel in these sit

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Apr 28 2026POLITICS

Life in Santa Úrsula before Mexico City’s big stadium changes

Mexico City’s Banorte Stadium sits in a working-class neighborhood where daily life has been turned upside down. Construction for the 2026 World Cup has been loud, messy, and endless, turning familiar streets into obstacle courses. Some people lose customers because detours keep shoppers away. Other

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Apr 27 2026POLITICS

Redistricting Showdown: Florida, Virginia and the Fight for House Seats

The race to draw congressional maps is heating up as the next election looms. Two states are at the center of the drama, each with a different political agenda and legal hurdles. In Florida, Governor Ron De Santis has released a new map that would add four seats likely to favor Republicans. The pro

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Apr 27 2026POLITICS

Florida Governor Proposes Map to Shift House Seats

The new plan comes from Florida’s governor, who wants a map that could change the balance of power in Congress by targeting four seats held by Democrats. He has asked lawmakers to meet for a special session next week to review the proposal. If it passes, Republicans could hold 24 of Florida’s 28 sea

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

Heart, Kidney and Sugar: A Hidden Link to Cancer

Recent research looks at how heart, kidney and metabolic problems can quietly raise the chance of getting cancer. The study followed a huge group of people across the country for many years to see if worse health in these areas meant more cancer. The new idea, called CKM syndrome, shows that the hea

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Apr 27 2026TECHNOLOGY

New Tech Meets Old Wisdom at This Unique Art School

In a quiet corner of New Mexico, an art school is quietly breaking the mold of how technology and culture can mix. The Institute of American Indian Arts now runs a computer science program where students don’t just learn coding—they explore how machines can listen to fungi, dance with plants, and ev

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