ESI

Apr 15 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Why the fuss over a sports reporter's resignation?

A sports journalist has stepped down from her role after photos surfaced showing her with an NFL coach, sparking a wave of public debate. The photos, taken in a luxury hotel, show the two embracing and spending time together, fuelling speculation about their relationship. While neither has confirmed

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Apr 15 2026POLITICS

Presidential Powers Under the Spotlight

Presidents now have powers that look more like royal privileges than democratic tools. Two key abilities stand out: they can pardon anyone without limits, and recent court rulings say they can’t be prosecuted for official actions. These powers weren’t always this broad. The pardon tool was meant for

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Apr 15 2026LIFESTYLE

Trash turned trendy: How one designer is changing fashion in Sonoma

A designer from Missouri is turning heads in Sonoma this spring by showing that fashion doesn’t have to cost the earth—literally. Cory Infinite, a viral designer known for crafting runway-worthy outfits from junk, will judge the annual Trashion Fashion Runway Show at the Sonoma Community Center on A

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Apr 14 2026BUSINESS

Health startups look to raise big money with new stock offerings

Two biotech firms are trying to cash in on investor excitement around obesity drugs and disease-detecting technology. One company wants $533 million to develop weight-loss treatments, while another seeks $159 million to expand its diagnostic tools. Both plan to sell shares to the public soon, hoping

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Apr 14 2026HEALTH

College Exposure Scare Raises Concerns About Rare Tuberculosis Strain

A routine public health check has suddenly put a Southern California college on edge. Over two months last fall, visitors to Southwestern Community College may have shared airspace with a tuberculosis strain that shrugs off common treatments. Health officials have now set off a campus-wide alert, ur

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Apr 14 2026POLITICS

Why leaders mix politics with faith—and why it backfires

Last weekend, a global leader took to social media not to relax or reflect—but to launch a public attack on a religious figure. This isn’t unusual for someone who treats institutions like tools: useful when they serve a purpose, disposable when they don’t. The clash wasn’t about policy alone. It was

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Apr 13 2026SCIENCE

BAC chemicals may block brain hormone production

Benzalkonium chloride (BAC) is a common cleaning agent that can also act as a preservative in many everyday items. Recent research shows that BAC can interfere with an enzyme called 5α‑reductase 1, which is essential for turning testosterone into dihydrotestosterone (DHT) in the brain. The study tes

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Apr 13 2026SCIENCE

Discovering the Hidden Genes Behind Ginkgo’s Toxic Seeds

The seeds of Ginkgo biloba hold a nasty secret: they produce a poison called ginkgotoxin and its sugar‑bound form. Scientists wanted to know which genes make these chemicals, but the details were fuzzy. Using a step‑by‑step RNA sequencing plan, researchers collected seed samples at different grow

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Apr 13 2026SCIENCE

Methane Production in Food‑Waste Digesters: The Role of Gene Families

In many cities across China, people turn kitchen scraps into energy by feeding them to large anaerobic digesters. The amount of gas these machines produce, however, varies a lot from one plant to another. Scientists wanted to know why some digesters make more methane than others. They examined seve

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Apr 13 2026SCIENCE

E. coli ST410: How a Tiny Island Helps It Fight Antibiotics

The strain E. coli ST410 is spreading worldwide and making doctors worry about treatments. Scientists looked at more than 3, 000 versions of this bacteria and found that it often picks up a gene called blaNDM‑5, which gives resistance to powerful drugs called carbapenems. They also saw that many of

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