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May 18 2026WEATHER

Heatwave Threatens Old Record in DC Area

The summer season is kicking off with a big heat alert for the Washington, D. C. , region. From Monday onward, temperatures across the entire DMV are expected to climb into the mid‑90s. At Reagan National Airport, the official weather station for the capital, a high of 95°F could match or even surpa

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May 18 2026SCIENCE

Co‑Atom Design Turns Water into Hydrogen Peroxide Efficiently

Scientists have found a new way to make hydrogen peroxide directly from water using tiny metal atoms. The trick is to arrange the atoms in a special pattern before heating them up, so that when the metal (cobalt) sits next to three nitrogen atoms and one oxygen atom it works best. This pattern is ca

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May 17 2026HEALTH

A Tiny Trip Turns into a Huge Measles Crisis

A nine‑year‑old boy’s holiday to a small Texas town sparked the most serious measles outbreak in the U. S. in over thirty years, and then crossed the border into Mexico where it spread even more widely. The chain of events began when the child, who had not received the standard two doses of the MMR

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May 17 2026HEALTH

Coordinating Care: Europe’s COVID Lessons

The coronavirus crisis forced European health systems to rethink how they work together. When hospitals, laboratories and public‑health agencies started talking in sync, the country that could share information fastest saw better outcomes. Countries that had formal plans for emergency cooperat

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May 17 2026WEATHER

A warm wave heads to Massachusetts after a calm weekend

Massachusetts looks set for a weather flip after a calm weekend. The state enjoyed two sunny days with light winds and temperatures in the 70s and low 80s. Boston reached 78 on Saturday, while cities like Worcester and Springfield stayed slightly warmer. The Berkshires and Cape Cod stayed cooler bec

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May 16 2026SPORTS

Stanford''s women''s basketball team faces a tough rebuild after years of dominance

Stanford''s women''s basketball team used to be a powerhouse, making the NCAA Tournament every year for nearly 40 seasons. Under the former coach, the team won three national titles and reached the Final Four fourteen times. But since the coach retired in 2024, things have taken a sharp turn. The te

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May 15 2026CRIME

Six Lives Lost: The Dark Side of Dangerous Migration Routes

A heatwave in Laredo, Texas, turned deadly for six migrants found dead inside a freight train car over the weekend. Officials now believe they were victims of human trafficking, crammed into the sweltering container during a brutal journey that ended in tragedy. The victims—three from Mexico and thr

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May 14 2026POLITICS

Behind closed doors: Israel-UAE talks stir new questions about Middle East bonds

The Prime Minister of Israel reportedly slipped into the UAE last month, just as tensions flared with Iran. His office later confirmed the trip, calling it a landmark moment for relations between the two countries. But why now? The UAE already counts Israel among its few Arab partners, thanks to a d

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May 12 2026SCIENCE

Brain cells that change roles: What this new study tells us about brain health

Scientists recently corrected a key research paper about brain cells called microglia. These tiny cells act like the brain’s cleanup crew and defense team mixed together. Instead of being identical, they switch between different roles depending on what the brain needs at the time. This flexibility h

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May 11 2026OPINION

Stability Over Speculation: Why Worcester Needs Rent Limits

Rent control in Worcester has become a shouting match, with one side saying housing is a right and the other warning that any rule will kill growth. The real issue is how landlords treat apartments: as long‑term homes or quick profits. The upcoming ballot question only touches buildings with five o

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