REV

Mar 30 2026HEALTH

HPV: Why the Shot Matters and How to Get It

The idea of getting a shot in middle school can feel annoying, but it often saves lives later. Parents usually decide whether their kids should get the HPV vaccine when a doctor suggests it around ages nine to twelve. Some parents skip it because they think their child isn’t sexually active yet, but

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Mar 30 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Looks From New Jaadugar Trailer Are Stealing Summer 2026 Hype

Summer 2026 already promises a packed anime season, but one title keeps slipping off the radar. Jaadugar: A Witch in Mongolia just dropped its first trailer, and instead of drawing attention, fans are quietly wondering why it hasn’t sparked bigger excitement. Based on Fatima, a Persian woman who inf

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Mar 29 2026CRIME

The Car Theft Numbers You Should Know

Hyundai Elantras are the most stolen cars in America this year, with 21, 732 thefts reported nationwide. That number tops the list by a wide margin, showing how often this model ends up on police dashboards. The second most common victim is the Honda Accord, which saw 17, 797 thefts. The Hyundai

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Mar 29 2026SCIENCE

Space Plans Shift: From Lunar Station to Moon Base, Comet Spin Mystery Revealed

NASA is changing its roadmap for the Moon. The agency has decided to stop work on the Gateway space station, a joint project that would have orbited the Moon. Instead, it will focus on building a permanent base on the lunar surface with an estimated cost of $20 billion. The new plan has three stages

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Mar 29 2026SPORTS

Hawks vs Kings: A Game with High Stakes and Uncertain Outcomes

The Atlanta Hawks face the Sacramento Kings tonight after a tough loss to the Celtics, where their perimeter defense leaked like a sieve. Payton Pritchard dropped 36 points, exposing a weakness the Hawks can't afford to repeat. But tonight, they get a break—the Kings are struggling near the bottom o

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Mar 28 2026POLITICS

Running Through History: A Family’s Secret Journey

The story begins in the early 1980s, when a mother and father were forced to flee their home. They left behind a child who would grow up with the echo of hidden roads and whispered warnings. The parents were once part of a radical group that fought against the Vietnam War, using bombs and undergroun

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Mar 28 2026RELIGION

Faith’s Two‑Toned Trend

"The early 2020s saw the rise of secularism pause, a plateau that sparked heated talks about whether America is heading back to faith or just slipping further away. Those who see a comeback point to bright stories: more Bible copies sold, young men flocking to Eastern Orthodoxy, and a jump in Cathol

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Mar 27 2026HEALTH

How to stay ahead of colorectal cancer risks

Colorectal cancer is becoming more common among younger adults. By 2030, cases are expected to jump nearly double what they were decades ago. The rise isn’t limited to older groups—people in their 20s to 50s now make up one-fifth of all diagnoses. Doctors aren’t sure why this shift is happening, but

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Mar 26 2026EDUCATION

Ridgefield Schools Set New Course While Waiting on Finance Decision

The Ridgefield Board of Education met on March 24 to push forward several policy changes, talk about the upcoming school budget for fiscal year 2027, and look at new curriculum plans. The meeting ended with a mix of unanimous approvals, one split vote on a Title IX rule, and a talk about a fresh U.

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Mar 25 2026SCIENCE

Nano Thermometers that Brighten With Heat

A new way to read tiny temperature changes uses a special dye inside a plastic bead. When the bead gets warmer, the dye lights up more instead of dimming like most other sensors. This happens because heat helps the dye jump from a dark “triplet” state back to a bright “singlet” state, a proces

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