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May 22 2026ENTERTAINMENT

The Future of Driving: One Man Against the Machines

A new comic series is turning the idea of car culture on its head. Instead of electric cars driving themselves, it shows a world where driving is banned completely. In this future, America is split in two. The rich live in high-tech cities controlled by an AI system called the GRID. The poor scrape

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May 22 2026POLITICS

Big Money and Hidden Players in Argentina’s River Project

Argentina is about to pick a company to manage the Paraná River for 25 years, a deal worth up to $10 billion. This waterway is key for moving most of the country’s farm goods to global markets. The race is tight between two groups: one led by Jan De Nul from Belgium, which already runs the river, an

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May 22 2026POLITICS

Cruise Lines vs. Old Cuba Ports: Who Really Owes What?

The U. S. Supreme Court just ruled against four big cruise companies—Carnival, Norwegian, Royal Caribbean, and MSC—in a messy fight over ports in Cuba. The total bill? Over $440 million in penalties. The courts say these cruise lines used docks in Havana that were taken by Cuba's government in 1959

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May 21 2026ART

Painting Mixes Faith and Diary Lines in a Fresh Look

Michaela Yearwood‑Dan’s latest canvas, called “The Sparrow Is Never Lost, ” shows bright layers of orange, red and pink on two tall panels. Tiny glass beads in brown and green add texture, while handwritten words appear across the surface. One phrase, “Aint no shame in me, ” echoes the spirit of her

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May 21 2026POLITICS

Future on the Stage: Why San Diego Needs Arts Funding

In a bustling community, young dancers learn more than twirls. They pick up focus, courage, and the spark to think outside the box—skills that help them thrive in school, work, and everyday life. When funds slip, these lessons disappear for many kids. The balance that keeps programs alive—tuition

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May 21 2026SCIENCE

Simplified Jaw Models: When Less Detail Still Helps

A new study looked at how cutting corners in jaw‑bone models affects the predicted stresses on artificial joints. Researchers started with a full, detailed model built from each patient’s CT scan, assigning different stiffness values to cortical bone, spongy bone and teeth. Then they created two lig

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May 21 2026POLITICS

French and Moroccan Leaders Draft New Pact Ahead of Royal Visit

Morocco and France are working on a new agreement that will be signed when King Mohammed VI visits Paris. This is the first treaty Morocco has signed with a European nation. The foreign ministers, Nasser Bourita and Jean‑Noel Barrot, met to discuss the deal. They did not say when the king’s

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May 21 2026TECHNOLOGY

Driving Cars When Weather Gets Bad

The new system, called E2ETrADS, is built to help self‑driving cars keep going when the road gets slippery or dark. Instead of relying on a handful of separate modules, it uses a transformer model that learns to drive by watching an expert. The experts are drivers who use a smart planner and s

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May 21 2026SPORTS

Weather Pushes Sun Belt Baseball Match to Thursday Morning

South Alabama and Troy were set to clash in the Sun Belt tournament on Wednesday night, but rain in Montgomery forced a change of plans. The two teams now start the competition at 9 a. m. Thursday in front of a different crowd, as the original game was delayed by more than two hours and then halted

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May 21 2026POLITICS

'Is a Cuban War on the Horizon? '

'A betting market has pushed the chance of a U. S. military strike on Cuba up to nearly fifty percent, drawing in more than four million dollars from people who think the situation could turn deadly. The wagers focus on a full‑scale invasion, not on smaller actions like shelling or cyber attacks.

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