JAMMU KASHMIR

May 28 2026ENVIRONMENT

Garden Grove chemical scare: What comes next for public safety?

Last Memorial Day weekend, Orange County had a close call. A storage tank at a local aerospace plant started overheating dangerously, raising fears of a deadly explosion or toxic leak. Authorities scrambled to evacuate 50, 000 people in a hurry, but cooler temperatures and a lucky tank crack helped

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May 28 2026POLITICS

What’s really driving the Iran tension—and what midterms might mean

Back in January, the White House predicted the standoff with Iran would wrap up in a few weeks. Now the conflict is closing in on four months with no clear end. The president has flipped between saying it could finish in days and warning it might drag on longer. His team keeps talking about construc

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May 28 2026TECHNOLOGY

Meta’s New Paid Upgrades: What’s Really Behind the Push?

Meta isn’t just relying on ads anymore. The company now offers paid subscriptions for Instagram, Facebook, and WhatsApp, giving users extra perks like custom profiles and story insights. A basic tier costs under $4 a month, while a new AI service charges up to $20 monthly for advanced features. But

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May 28 2026POLITICS

Connecticut Takes a Different Tax Path Than the Federal Government

Connecticut isn't following the federal government's lead on business tax breaks anymore. Starting in 2026, companies in the state won't be able to deduct research and experimental expenses as quickly as the federal rules allow. This move is part of a new state law that separates Connecticut's tax s

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May 28 2026ENTERTAINMENT

How giving back brings people together more than politics ever could

At a high-end Michigan gathering, one speaker argued that unifying Americans might be simpler than politicians think. Instead of debates or policies, the answer could lie in the same values many hold dear: helping those who protect the country. Gary Sinise, best known for a famous war movie role, sh

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May 28 2026CRIME

Breakthrough in a decades-old murder case thanks to modern science

In 1993, a woman named Randy Gail Sperino disappeared from Granite City, Illinois, after being seen entering a dark pickup truck. Her body was later found in a nearby field, brutally killed. For over three decades, this shocking case remained unsolved. Then, in a surprising turn, new forensic techno

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May 28 2026BUSINESS

What Happens When Leaders Stop Chasing Answers and Start Asking Questions?

Leaders today face a strange paradox. With AI handling more decisions, they’re expected to do the opposite of what machines excel at—embrace uncertainty instead of running from it. At a recent gathering of workplace innovators, speakers highlighted curiosity as the real superpower in an era of insta

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May 28 2026RELIGION

AI and Ethics: Different Views on Where Machines Stand

Pope Leo’s latest statement on artificial intelligence doesn’t call for rejection of technology—it just makes clear that machines aren’t humans. The document, titled “Magnifica Humanitas, ” highlights a key difference: machines don’t experience, feel, or understand the world like people do. They can

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May 28 2026EDUCATION

Balancing screens and learning in Virginia Beach schools

Virginia Beach’s school board is rethinking how young students use computers in class. A new plan would stop pre-K through first graders from using school laptops during lessons next year. Second graders couldn’t take their devices home except in special cases, though they’d still use them at school

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May 28 2026SCIENCE

Turning plant waste from luffa into better food ingredients with sound waves

Squeezing more value out of every luffa might sound odd, yet that’s exactly what scientists are exploring. Instead of tossing aside the fibrous remains after fruit harvest, they’re converting the seeds into protein and then using pulsed ultrasound—like the high-pitched waves you feel in a dentist’s

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