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Jun 02 2026HEALTH

A Silent Spread of Measles in Delta County

Delta County now faces a new measles case that shows the virus may be moving around without anyone noticing. The child, who never left Colorado and had no known links to other confirmed infections, likely caught it from someone who did not get tested. This lack of tracing means exposed people are le

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Jun 02 2026POLITICS

Data Centers and Power Rules: A Fresh Look

Montana’s energy scene has a long history of watchdogs and reformers. A former state senator, who spent two decades in the legislature, played a key role in tightening how utilities bill customers. Back in 1975 he pushed for a bill that cut out the so‑called “fair value” clause, which had let power

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Jun 02 2026SCIENCE

Marine Lichen: A Three‑Way Friendship

Collemopsidium pelvetiae is a marine fungus that makes an unusual partnership. It links with two photosynthetic allies: the brown alga Pelvetia canaliculata and a cyanobacterium. Together they form a tripartite symbiosis that scientists are studying to learn more about how lichens develop in salty w

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Jun 02 2026SCIENCE

Solar‑Powered Gel: A New Way to Clean Water

Solar energy can turn water into clean drinking supply, but the usual methods need a lot of power and sometimes pollute more. Scientists are now exploring tiny, water‑absorbing gels that soak up the sun and heat the water directly. These materials are called solar‑driven hydrogels or SDHs. They are

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Jun 02 2026TECHNOLOGY

Claude Opus 4. 8 Tested: Is the “Honesty” Claim Real?

The new Claude Opus 4. 8 came out with a promise of greater honesty and better judgment than its predecessor, Opus 4. 7. To see if that claim holds up, a series of ten deliberately tricky prompts were prepared. Each prompt was designed to expose the model’s tendency to overstate certainty, invent de

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Jun 02 2026FINANCE

Top Innovators in U. S. Banking: 2026 Highlights

American Banker has released its first list of the most innovative leaders in finance, spotlighting 50 executives who have pushed banks into new technology and customer‑centric directions. The list reflects those who turned ideas into measurable outcomes, such as improving AI across operations or up

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Jun 02 2026POLITICS

Church and State: A Fresh Take on a Long‑Debated Idea

The United States was built on many ideas, but the notion that it started with a strict split between religion and government is not clear from its founding documents. The First Amendment says Congress cannot set up a national religion or stop people from practicing theirs, and it also protects free

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Jun 02 2026HEALTH

Nurses and the Choice to Help End Life

In a recent nationwide survey, doctors who work closely with nurses were asked if they would help patients who want to end their own lives. The study looked at both nurse practitioners and registered nurses, trying to find out what makes them say yes or no. The results show that most nurses are not

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Jun 02 2026SCIENCE

Using Big Data to Track How People Grow Around the World

A team of researchers from many countries set up a plan to study how people’s lives change over time. They used data collected from the Global Flourishing Study, which follows participants in several nations. The goal was to look at many different outcomes—like health, job satisfaction, and relation

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Jun 02 2026RELIGION

Feeling Good Through Faith and Thanks

Relief from stress, a sense of purpose, and simple joy are all parts of what makes life feel good. In two Muslim‑majority countries, researchers wanted to know how these feelings link with religious practice. They studied 812 adults from Turkey and Jordan, asking them about how often they pray or at

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