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May 21 2026HEALTH

Teen Food Choices and Who Tells Them

Social media is full of food ads that aren’t healthy. Teenagers see a lot of these posts every day, and the more they watch them, the more likely they are to like or eat junk food. Researchers asked 1, 002 teens how often they saw food messages from different people: friends, popular online pe

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May 21 2026CRIME

Cleveland’s New Summer Plan: Curfews, Jobs and Police Patrols

Cleveland is trying to keep teens safe this summer. The city will use curfews, more police patrols and new programs to fight crime. Mayor Justin Bibb said the plan starts before Memorial Day. The curfew rules are strict. Kids under 12 must be home by dark. Those 13 and 14 have to return by 9:30 p.

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May 21 2026CRIME

A Dog’s Tragic End Sparks Legal Fallout

In a quiet suburb, police were on the lookout for something else when they found a dead dog in a hotel parking lot. The owner, a 55‑year‑old man from North Carolina named Garland Norris, had been staying at the Econo Lodge in Shorewood. While officers were investigating a different crime near Pizza

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May 21 2026POLITICS

Bronx Police Reorganize to Fight Rising Gun Violence

The Bronx has split its police operations into two commands, North and South, a move aimed at handling the borough’s record 911 call volume. The change follows last year’s data, showing nearly one million emergency calls in the Bronx—more than any other borough. Police chief said the single co

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May 21 2026EDUCATION

New STEM Hub Lets San Diego College Chase Tech Big Leagues

The University of San Diego has kicked off construction on a brand‑new STEM building that will broaden its science and engineering courses. The new structure, called the Shiley STEM Initiative building, will house three floors of labs and classrooms in a 70, 000‑square‑foot space. Its construc

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May 21 2026SCIENCE

New Startup Claims to Bring Back Extinct Birds with “Artificial Eggs”

A tech company has announced a breakthrough that sounds like science fiction: an “artificial egg” that could revive birds that have been extinct for centuries. The idea is bold, but many scientists argue it misses the bigger picture of conservation and biology. First, the startup says that by using

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May 21 2026EDUCATION

Maine School Mix‑Up: Students Accidentally Sampled Dirt Instead of Dessert

A recent event at a Maine high school turned into an unexpected lesson in kitchen safety when three students took a bite of soil during a community dinner. The incident happened at the long‑running “Empty Bowl Supper, ” a fundraiser that has been part of Medomak Valley High School’s tradition for ye

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May 21 2026LIFESTYLE

Choosing Between Love and Change in a Family

A man who has been married for four years finds himself at a crossroads. His wife, once a devoted partner, has begun to explore an open relationship and spends nights away from home. The husband feels unsettled, as his own past infidelities have never crossed into cheating. He explains that t

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May 21 2026HEALTH

A Simple Diet Plan That Cuts Diabetes Risk by a Third

People have long believed that type‑2 diabetes can only be managed with medicine, not cured. A new study in Spain challenges that view by showing how a Mediterranean‑style diet, combined with calorie control and regular exercise, can lower the chance of developing diabetes by 31 percent over six yea

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May 21 2026CELEBRITIES

Tragic End of a Young Influencer Amid Unanswered Questions

A 21‑year‑old Brazilian social media personality was killed last month in a shooting outside her home, according to local police. Two men on a motorcycle opened fire; one was shot by authorities the same day, while the other, who is 17, remains at large. Investigators are probing whether this att

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