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Jun 13 2026EDUCATION

School rules can shape your future brainpower

Researchers followed thousands of American adults and found something surprising. Kids who got kicked out of school often had weaker thinking skills by their 50s. The study didn’t just look at bad grades—it tracked real brain health over decades. Suspensions and expulsions didn’t just feel unfair in

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Jun 13 2026HEALTH

How faith shapes stress and health across different groups

Researchers pulled together data from nearly 5, 000 adults across three long-running U. S. studies. The groups included Hispanic and Latino people, white nurses, and American Indian communities. They wanted to see how everyday stress hits mental and physical health, and whether faith helps or hurts

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Jun 13 2026FINANCE

Pakistan’s Budget Moves: Why Some Sectors Get Tax Breaks While Others Don’t

The latest budget plans in Pakistan focus on balancing new taxes with relief in unexpected places. One of the biggest changes is cutting taxes for construction businesses while keeping extra charges on banks, oil, and fertilizer companies. This decision might help boost local building projects but a

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Jun 13 2026FINANCE

A Bank Sells Part of Itself for a Big Payday

United Community Banks just agreed to sell its equipment finance division for $1. 9 billion in cash. The two subsidiaries being sold—Navitas Credit Corp. and NLFC Reinsurance Corp. —have been a headache for the bank lately. They make up only 10% of the loans but have caused half of the bank’s losses

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Jun 13 2026CRIME

Funds Frozen After Tragic Family Case

A man in his early thirties, now facing serious charges after his parents' deaths, is caught in a legal battle not just with the courts but with a trust overseeing his inheritance. The trustee managing his parents' estate plans to ask a judge to release funds originally meant for him at age 30, but

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Jun 13 2026SCIENCE

Food Then and Now: What a 19th-Century Doctor Got Right About Eating

Back in 1887, a French doctor wrote a book saying food could heal more than just hunger. He didn’t have microscopes or vitamin tests, but he watched how different foods changed people’s health. He saw that too much meat could cause problems, while a balanced plate kept people stronger. That idea mig

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Jun 13 2026HEALTH

Support from doctors matters most after baby arrives

New moms often get conflicting advice about shedding baby weight. Some want to drop pounds fast while others feel it’s not the right time. Research shows doctors, nurses and dietitians play a huge role in what new moms actually do. If medical staff offer clear tips and encouragement, women are more

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Jun 13 2026WEATHER

Weather ruins Bonnaroo’s second day but fans still have hope

The Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival’s second day started with a splash after unexpected rain and thunderstorms rolled into Manchester, Tennessee. While the first day stayed dry, organizers knew the weather could change fast. The National Weather Service warned of strong winds, heavy rain, and possi

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Jun 13 2026SPORTS

Canada’s World Cup Kickoff: How Toronto’s Crowd Made History

Canada didn’t just play their first World Cup match in Toronto—they rode a wave of noise to earn their first-ever point in the tournament. A last-minute goal by substitute Cyle Larin saved a point against Bosnia and Herzegovina, but the real hero might have been the 43, 000-strong crowd. Their chant

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Jun 13 2026BUSINESS

Why Good Teams Still Lose the Race Against Change

Organizations that seem smart can still get stuck when the world speeds up. Sometimes the ground shifts without warning—new rivals pop up, tech changes overnight, rules flip, and what people want keeps changing. The tools that once worked for planning and approvals suddenly feel clunky. Leaders who

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