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May 21 2026TECHNOLOGY

Arito AI Gives Finance Teams a Smart, Self‑Running Dashboard

Finance teams often juggle huge amounts of data. They need quick answers, but current tools ask users to build dashboards and then wait for updates. Arito AI changes that pattern by acting on its own, watching key numbers and alerting people when something matters. The company was founded by Daniel

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May 20 2026SCIENCE

Pigs Gone Wild: How a Nuclear Accident Created Super‑Reproducing Swine

After the 2011 earthquake and tsunami, a huge nuclear plant in Japan made about 164 000 people leave their homes. While the towns were empty, ordinary farm pigs slipped out and mixed with wild boars that already roamed the area. The mix produced a new type of pig that can breed very fast and grow in

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May 20 2026SCIENCE

Building a Whole New Yeast: The Power of Synthetic Chromosomes

Scientists have turned the humble yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, into a laboratory playground for big‑scale genetic tinkering. For years, yeast has been a favorite model organism because its genes can be easily changed and studied. Now researchers are moving beyond simple edits to rewrite entire

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May 20 2026OPINION

A Game of Generations

The author is set to attend a Red Sox match with his son, a friend and the friend's child. They plan to sit behind the iconic Green Monster, cheer loudly, enjoy hot dogs, and sing “Sweet Caroline. ” After the game, he anticipates a pang of guilt because his lifelong devotion to the team no longer ho

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May 20 2026SCIENCE

From lab-grown eggs to extinct birds: how artificial eggs could change farming and conservation

Nature’s egg is a masterpiece of simplicity. It fits all the essentials for life inside a single shell—no extra womb needed. Tiny pores let air in while keeping germs out, and a tiny embryo grows safely inside. Humans have spent centuries trying to mimic this design but never quite nailed it—until n

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May 20 2026ENTERTAINMENT

New Ways to Fund Films Let Fresh Voices Shine

A decade ago, Hollywood was a closed circle that rewarded familiar names and predictable stories. Big budgets went to proven stars, leaving new directors—especially women—rarely seen at major festivals. Last year only ten percent of festival directors were women, showing how hard it is for fresh sto

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May 20 2026CRIME

Concert safety under fire after lawsuit over Tinley Park incident

A Chicago law firm has taken legal action against Live Nation and Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre, arguing that weak security at a 2025 concert allowed a minor to be sexually assaulted. The lawsuit claims the venue failed to protect young attendees by not stopping underage drinking, monitoring restricte

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May 20 2026HEALTH

A Fresh Space Where Ages Mix and Minds Grow

A brand-new kind of gathering spot in the Coulee Region is quietly launching its doors this season. The Hillview Life Center now hosts adult programs alongside its child care services, creating one of the first spaces in the area designed for both young kids and older adults with early memory change

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May 20 2026SCIENCE

X-rays and nanotech team up against tough cancers

Doctors have long battled the side effects that come with typical cancer treatments. Strong drugs meant for tumors often harm healthy cells along the way, making recovery harder. A fresh approach uses X-rays, the same rays used in scans, to switch on a specialized treatment inside the body. Tiny del

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May 20 2026SCIENCE

How tiny algae survive heat waves better: unlocking nature's heatproof secrets

Heat can be tough on living things. For tiny blue-green algae, called cyanobacteria, too much sun and warmth can damage their cells and slow down their growth. But scientists noticed something interesting in a lab—a group of these algae adapted over time to handle tough conditions. After weeks of ex

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