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Jun 09 2026OPINION

A Questionable Choice for National Security

In a surprising move, the president chose Bill Pulte to fill the top intelligence post for up to seven months without Senate approval. Unlike past leaders who brought decades of military or government service, Pulte’s background centers on overseeing a federal housing agency and pursuing political

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Jun 09 2026HEALTH

Lead Exposure and Health Coverage: How Insurance Helps Slow Biological Aging

The problem of lead in everyday life is still big. Even with current safety rules, most people cannot stay completely away from it. Fixing the source of lead is a long‑term goal, but people need quick ways to protect themselves now. Researchers have found that having health insurance can lessen t

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Jun 09 2026HEALTH

Shared Genes Link Heart and Mood Problems

The link between heart disease and mental health is growing in importance. New studies show that people who have anxiety or depression often also suffer from heart problems, and this overlap is driven by both genes and life experiences. Research using family data suggests that having anxiety or dep

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Jun 09 2026SCIENCE

Protective Herbs vs. Toxic Chemicals: A Reversed Study

Scientists once claimed that a common kitchen herb could shield mice from the harmful effects of a toxic chemical. The experiment focused on carbon tetrachloride, a substance known to damage DNA. Researchers measured three signs of genetic injury: chromosome changes, tiny nuclear fragments called mi

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Jun 09 2026HEALTH

Heart Health: Genes, Environment, and Your Daily Choices

People often think that having a family history of heart disease or diabetes means they will definitely get sick. That idea is not true. Genes give you a risk, but they do not decide your fate. The real decision comes from how the genes are activated. Activation is controlled by epigenetics, which

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Jun 09 2026POLITICS

A housing boss takes over a top spy job – what does that mean?

Bill Pulte’s jump from running America’s mortgage rules to leading its spy world caught many by surprise. Before politics, he was better known as the heir to a big homebuilding fortune and for handing out cash online to followers. His new role puts him in charge of agencies that handle secrets from

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Jun 09 2026HEALTH

How heatwaves and dirty air are changing the work of emergency doctors

Emergency rooms see more patients when the weather acts up. Hotter days bring heatstroke cases. Fires fill lungs with smoke. Storms knock out power and block roads. Even ordinary allergies get worse when pollen counts jump. Doctors in emergency medicine now treat health problems that were once rare

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Jun 09 2026POLITICS

What Chicago’s Ethics Rules Really Mean When Big Money Talks

Chicago’s mayor has a rule: no campaign money from companies that do city work. But over the years, money still slips through. This time, an IT firm called EKI-Digital—already under fire for possible overbilling—sent a $250 donation to the mayor’s campaign. The timing is awkward. Just last year, the

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Jun 09 2026HEALTH

Big donation boosts emergency care in Kingston

A Kingston man just gave $1. 25 million to help emergency rooms in the city work better. The money buys new machines that take clearer pictures of patients faster. These aren’t just any machines—they’re the kind doctors say can make a real difference when someone is really sick. The donation pays f

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Jun 08 2026SCIENCE

Future Healing: 3‑D Prints and Tiny Robots Take Medicine to New Levels

A new lab at the University of Miami is turning ideas that once lived only in books into real tools for doctors. The building costs about five million dollars and sits inside the school of medicine in Miami’s Health District. Scientists there print living tissue, bone and other parts with mach

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