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Feb 07 2026SCIENCE

A Quiet Doctor, A Loud Story

Jean‑Martin Charcot, a key figure in early neurology, is remembered this year as part of his 200th birthday. He worked in Paris and helped shape modern brain study, while also becoming a friend of writer Alphonse Daudet. Their friendship later soured because Daudet, who had a serious nerve disease,

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Feb 07 2026OPINION

Whizzer’s Fight: A Polio Survivor’s Legacy and the Power of Vaccines

A 16‑year‑old football star from Florida once faced a nightmare that would shape his life forever. In 1954, before the polio vaccine reached the streets, he contracted a disease that left him paralyzed and in constant pain. He endured countless hospital stays, dozens of surgeries, and a life with a

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Feb 07 2026POLITICS

Competition, Not a Shortcut: How 8(a) Contracts Work

The public debate about the Small Business Administration’s 8(a) program has drifted from facts to exaggeration. Many claim the program lets firms grab federal contracts without competition, but that is a false picture. An 8(a) company does not have a special license to win contracts by default. It

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Feb 07 2026CRIME

Nancy’s Vanishing: A Media Circus in the Desert

The news of an 84‑year‑old woman missing from a Tucson home has turned into a national spectacle, with the case of Nancy Guthrie becoming intertwined with her daughter Savannah’s role on a popular morning show. Police began their search after Nancy failed to attend church, and investigators found ev

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Feb 07 2026WEATHER

Weather Wars: When Home‑Brew Forecasts Take the Stage

Paragraph 1 In recent winters, ordinary folks have stepped up as unofficial meteorologists. A 32‑year‑old hobbyist from New Jersey posts his own snow predictions on Facebook, drawing sharp reactions as people debate the accuracy of his charts. Paragraph 2 His forecasts aren’t wildly off, but

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Feb 06 2026SPORTS

The Local Sports Beat: Why Small Papers Still Matter

Small newspapers keep the pulse of their communities alive by covering local athletes before they become national stars. A few years ago, a young player from Virginia Beach talked about a childhood race he lost to his mom and vowed never to compete again, yet the next year he led a high‑school footb

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Feb 06 2026CRYPTO

Epstein’s Early Crypto Moves: From Coinbase to Blockstream

In the early 2010s Epstein began investing in two major crypto ventures. He first backed Coinbase, a growing exchange that later reached a market cap of around $43 billion. His second investment went into Blockstream, a company that helped build infrastructure for Bitcoin. Brock Pierce is the man w

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Feb 06 2026POLITICS

Immigration, Crime, and Policy Power in Trump’s Second Term

The second administration of Donald Trump has taken a different tack from the first. It sees immigration as a tool that can be tightened by tying policy changes to crime statistics. US Customs and Immigration Enforcement now patrol more heavily in Washington, Chicago, and Louisiana than it did u

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Feb 06 2026CRIME

Jeffrey Epstein's Secret Startup Investments

The story of Jeffrey Epstein doesn't end with his conviction. He continued to invest in big-name startups, even after everyone knew about his crimes. His money found its way into buzzy tech companies long after he was supposed to be out of the spotlight. Let's talk about one of his investments: Coi

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Jan 29 2026SCIENCE

How Social Media Shapes Our Sense of Purpose

People often talk about the bad sides of social media. But what if we look at how it can actually help us feel more connected and purposeful? A recent study tried to do just that. It looked at why people use social media and how that relates to their sense of meaning in life. The study involved nea

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