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May 22 2026CRIME

Police Leader Steps Down Amid Data Probe

Andre Wright, a long‑time officer who rose to the top of the city police force, has retired after more than thirty years of service. His departure comes as the department faces scrutiny over possible manipulation of crime statistics. Wright’s career began in 1994, and he climbed the ranks steadily

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May 22 2026HEALTH

Body Shape After Big Weight Loss: What Works and What Doesn’t

After a major weight drop, people often wonder how to keep the new shape and avoid health problems. Some options look at surgery, hormone therapy, or everyday habits. First, a common procedure is bariatric surgery. It can reduce the stomach’s size or change how food travels, which helps people lose

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May 22 2026POLITICS

Bolsonaro Plans a White House Visit While Facing Campaign Turbulence

Flavio Bolsonaro, the son of former president Jair Bolsonaro, is arranging a trip to Washington that could bring him face‑to‑face with former U. S. president Donald Trump. Reports say he may fly out on Monday, and a White House invite has already been issued, though the exact date remains unclear. T

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May 22 2026POLITICS

Health Agencies Use AI to Catch Fraud in Public Programs

The U. S. Department of Health and Human Services has started a new effort that uses artificial intelligence to sift through years of audit reports. The project, called the Audit Enforcement and Risk Oversight initiative or AERO, will examine at least five years of data from programs funded by the d

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May 22 2026EDUCATION

Bringing Acorns Back to the Lab

A new exhibit at UC Berkeley’s Lawrence Hall of Science shows how a community can keep its stories alive even when federal money disappears. The project, called “Yuutka” (The Place of the Acorn), mixes real‑world plants with digital tools so visitors can pick virtual acorns while learning about Ohlo

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May 22 2026POLITICS

Challenges Facing U. S. Scientists Under New Policies

Scientists across the United States are feeling the strain of recent federal changes that have shaken up funding, hiring, and research freedom. A survey conducted by a university panel gathered 280 responses from fields such as biology, engineering, and public health. The results show that more than

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May 22 2026TECHNOLOGY

Fine‑Mesh Pump Tech Turns 30

In 1995 a German company launched a new kind of pump that could squeeze very thick rubber mixtures without losing detail. The device, called the roll‑ex gear pump extruder, let manufacturers make smoother, more reliable silicone and rubber products. The first model, the roll‑ex 70, debuted at a trad

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May 22 2026BUSINESS

North Carolina Takes Legal Action Against Vinfast Over Unfinished EV Plant

The state of North Carolina has filed a lawsuit against Vietnamese electric‑vehicle company Vinfast. The suit claims that Vinfast failed to honor its promise to build a new electric‑vehicle and battery factory in the state. According to the state’s attorney general, the company stopped work on the s

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May 22 2026CRIME

Kids Online Safety: A Fresh Push to Stop Abuse

The fight against child exploitation online is huge, and no single team can catch every predator or rescue every victim. In 2024, a national hotline that collects tips from tech firms received over twenty million reports of possible child sexual abuse. The volume is simply too large for investigator

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May 22 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Mixed signals in MMA: who fights next and why it matters

The welterweight division is stuck in limbo right now, with title hopes dangling by a thread. Dricus du Plessis hasn’t fought since his shocking loss to Khamzat Chimaev, a match that knocked him out of the top spot. But when Chimaev lost to Sean Strickland—and du Plessis had beaten Strickland twice

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