NES

Jun 12 2026HEALTH

How Seeing Kids Helps Seniors Stay Healthy

A recent study looked at older people in China who do not live with their children. Researchers used data from 2020 that included more than three thousand seniors over 65. They asked how often the children visited and linked that to two health measures: how the seniors felt about their own health an

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Jun 12 2026BUSINESS

When Bad Habits Meet Fairness: What Banks Can Learn

In many workplaces, how people act can either help or hurt the team. One personality style that often causes trouble is called Machiavellianism – a tendency to manipulate and act selfishly. Researchers wanted to see how this trait affects bad work habits, especially in private banks in South India.

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Jun 12 2026ENVIRONMENT

Buc‑ee’s New Stores: A Road to Trouble

Buc‑ee’s plans to open more gas‑and‑shop stops across the U. S. have sparked sharp opposition from towns and wildlife groups. The chain’s huge centers, each about 70‑80 k sq ft with over a hundred pumps, promise jobs and sales but also bring worries about traffic jams, water use and pollution. In

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Jun 12 2026BUSINESS

Finance Leaders Guide AI’s Value in Big Oil

Finance chiefs are stepping up to decide how artificial intelligence can truly help a company grow. At Chevron, the CFO looks at AI not as a tool that can do tasks, but as a way to boost results and fix limits. She says the question is: “How can AI improve performance? ” Inside Chevron, tea

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Jun 12 2026OPINION

Golf is no longer just a men's game

For years, golf was seen as a sport mostly for men, especially when it came to business networking. You'd often hear stories about deals being made and connections forged on the green. But something’s changing now. Women are stepping onto the course in bigger numbers than ever before. Back in 2019,

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Jun 12 2026POLITICS

Why Colorado needs leaders who actually listen—and don’t just add to the noise

Colorado’s Second District has become a pressure cooker of economic and social challenges. Wages aren’t keeping up with rising rent, energy bills stay stubbornly high, and small businesses drown under a sea of confusing rules. Instead of tackling these real issues, politicians often hide behind gran

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Jun 12 2026HEALTH

Small Arms and Student Life: What Grip Strength Says About Health

In Taiwan, researchers tested the grip strength of 501 university students—168 men and 333 women aged 18 to 25—to see what physical traits and daily habits predict muscle weakness. Instead of focusing on athletes or older adults, this study zeroed in on young people most don’t worry about. Surprisin

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Jun 12 2026LIFESTYLE

Spotlight on Top Red Light Therapy Gadgets for Everyday Use

Red light therapy gadgets are popping up everywhere, claiming to erase wrinkles, boost collagen, ease muscle pain, and even regrow hair. But do these glowing gadgets really deliver on their promises? After spending months testing different devices, here’s a no-nonsense look at what actually works.

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Jun 12 2026TECHNOLOGY

How big companies blend speed and smart tech to keep power grids and factories running smoothly

Ralliant isn’t just another tech company—it builds the invisible backbone that keeps power grids, factories, and data centers humming. Behind this work is a clear idea: technology only matters when it actually solves real problems on the ground. The company mixes old-school manufacturing smarts with

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Jun 12 2026BUSINESS

Money for Tech Startups: New $250 Million Boost for Small Innovators

The government is pumping $250 million into early-stage tech firms through two well-known programs. These are not loans or investments that demand company shares. Instead, they offer cash that doesn’t need to be paid back and lets founders keep all rights to their inventions. One slice—$40 million—t

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