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May 25 2026RELIGION

Slow‑Down on AI: A Call for Careful Thinking

The first major statement from the new pope says governments should pause how fast they push AI forward. He worries that these systems can spread false stories, heighten conflict, and make war feel inevitable. In his long letter, the pope urges leaders to keep AI data out of pure private hands. He

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May 25 2026RELIGION

Traditional Islam in Kazakhstan: A Modern Story of Faith and State

Kazakhstan’s version of Islam is more than a set of beliefs; it mixes old‑school legal rules, theological ideas from the Maturidi school, mystical Sufi practices, and local ways of life. These layers have been reshaped over centuries, first by the reach of pre‑modern Muslim culture, then by Soviet e

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May 25 2026ENTERTAINMENT

New Late‑Night Show Goes Digital

The classic late‑night format is at a turning point. A former TV host has decided to move the show straight onto YouTube, hoping it will survive in a world where people watch clips instead of full episodes. He plans to film from his home in Los Angeles, keeping costs low and the crew small. Each

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May 25 2026SCIENCE

Ecosystem Signals: How Coral Algae Talk Through Electricity

Symbiodinium microadriaticum, a tiny dinoflagellate that lives inside coral tissues, can release electrons into its surroundings during photosynthesis. This process, known as extracellular electron transfer (EET), lets the algae send electrical signals to nearby cells. Researchers discovered that th

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May 25 2026SCIENCE

Thermal‑Light Mix in Tumor Treatment: A New Computer View

Researchers have built a computer model that shows how light, heat and chemical reactions work together when treating cancer with a dye called indocyanine green (ICG). The model uses a fast Monte‑Carlo method on graphics cards to trace how 808‑nanometer laser light moves through a three‑dimension

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May 25 2026SCIENCE

\Platelet Signals: How Blood Clues Help Spot Mouth Ulcers

Researchers are looking at tiny blood cells to learn more about a common mouth problem called recurrent aphthous stomatitis, or RAS. RAS shows up as painful sores inside the mouth that come and go over time. Two blood measures, the platelet‑to‑lymphocyte ratio (PLR) and mean platelet volume (MPV),

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May 25 2026RELIGION

AI Needs a Reset: A Call for Human‑Centric Control

The latest message from Pope Leo XIV urges a pause on the unchecked rise of artificial intelligence. He argues that AI must be “disarmed” to safeguard people from its possible threats, joining a growing conversation about how much power governments should hold over this fast‑moving field. During hi

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May 25 2026OPINION

Disney Star Wars Movie Opens Below All-Time Low

The latest Disney release in the Star Wars universe has posted the smallest opening weekend ever for a Disney‑produced film in the franchise. Over the extended Memorial Day break, it earned only about $81 million on Friday‑Saturday‑Sunday, with a projected total of roughly $97 million when the fourt

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May 25 2026ART

Hudson River Views: Art, Nature and Hidden Science

A young artist in 1825 set out to draw the trees and streams of the Hudson Valley, a trip that changed how Americans saw their own land. Thomas Cole’s finished works were not European mountains or ancient ruins; they captured the jagged peaks of the Catskills, their green woods, silver rivers, water

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May 25 2026POLITICS

Redistricting War: How the House Might Lose Its Voice

The fight over how congressional districts are drawn has grown into a national crisis. Three big forces have pushed the battle to new heights. First, Donald Trump’s preferred Republicans won key state races in Indiana, removing resistance to his gerrymandering plans. Second, the Supreme Court weaken

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