EU

May 30 2026LIFESTYLE

Exploring why people visit landslide-hit places after disasters

Visiting areas hit by disasters isn't just about sightseeing—it's a mix of curiosity and something deeper. A recent study looked at why people travel to places like Kerala, India, just months after deadly landslides. Four months after the July 2019 disaster, researchers asked 438 visitors about thei

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May 30 2026HEALTH

Understanding Brain Differences in Kids With Vascular Malformations

Brain arteriovenous malformations, or bAVMs, are rare but serious tangles of blood vessels in the brain that some kids are born with. These aren't just risky because they might burst—they can also quietly disrupt how a child thinks and learns. Even without bleeding, the wrong wiring in these vessels

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May 30 2026TECHNOLOGY

Better delivery systems for medicine after the pandemic

The pandemic forced healthcare systems to rethink how medicines reach people. One new idea mixes delivery routes, medicine lockers, and patient sorting. Instead of sending everything to homes, some deliveries go to lockers in neighborhoods. That cuts costs and pollution. But it only works if urgent

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May 29 2026HEALTH

Vibration Boosts Ankle Muscle Power in Chronic Instability Cases

People who suffer from chronic ankle instability often face problems with muscle control, which can lead to repeated injuries. A new study looked at whether applying vibration directly to the calf muscles could quickly strengthen those muscles and improve how they fire during movement. The researche

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May 29 2026SPORTS

How a Racing Star’s Final Hours Unfolded

The racing legend died at 41 after a sudden collapse during a training session. He was coughing up blood and became unresponsive before help arrived. Investigators found he had pneumonia that worsened into sepsis, a life‑threatening infection. The condition also caused severe blood loss, leading

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May 29 2026EDUCATION

Journey Through Time: A Look at Public Health History

The Tewksbury Hospital campus hides a small museum that invites visitors to step back into the past of medicine and care. Inside, people can see how early attempts to stop disease spread were made, how mental illness was once treated, and what lessons have been learned over centuries. The buildin

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May 29 2026POLITICS

Hungary Sets to Unlock EU Money After Talks with Brussels

A new Hungarian leader announced that he would finalize an agreement with the European Commission to release large sums of EU funds that had been blocked under the previous administration. The Prime Minister flew to Brussels on Thursday to discuss how to lift restrictions tied to rule‑of‑law conc

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May 29 2026FINANCE

France cracks down on crypto firms before EU licensing deadline

Starting June 30, crypto companies in Europe must have special licenses to keep operating legally. France is leading the charge, warning firms that ignoring the deadline could mean being banned from the EU market entirely. Regulators argue the new rules—part of a broader EU-wide system called MiCA—a

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May 29 2026POLITICS

Iceland Takes a Step Toward the EU with a Public Vote

A small country with big decisions. Iceland’s parliament recently approved a plan to ask its people in August whether the nation should restart talks to join the European Union. This vote isn’t just about yes or no—it’s a two-step process where the first referendum could lead to years of negotiation

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May 29 2026CELEBRITIES

Jill Zarin turns up the heat in pickleball business battle

The pickleball world got another serving of drama when reality TV personality Jill Zarin decided to hit back at her former business partner. Last month, Noah Springer filed a lawsuit claiming Zarin cut him out of earnings and tried to profit from their company’s testing tech through a new business.

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