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Jun 06 2026RELIGION

Religious leaders and their mixed feelings about vaccines and baby tests

In a city in eastern Turkey, researchers talked to 200 Muslim clerics to see how they felt about two health topics: vaccines and a quick blood test newborns get right after birth. The clerics filled out a long survey about their own health habits, their views on childhood and adult vaccines, and the

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Jun 06 2026POLITICS

Do new grant rules mean less freedom for science?

The government wants to update how federal science money is managed, claiming it will cut waste and follow current policies better. These changes could let agencies stop funding projects anytime they feel the research no longer fits their latest priorities—even if the team did nothing wrong. That’s

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Jun 06 2026TECHNOLOGY

How Games Are Teaching AI to Think Like Humans

Researchers found a surprising way to train AI: by making it play Battleship. While today’s AI excels at answering questions, it struggles with asking the right ones—a critical skill for solving complex problems. Scientists at MIT and Harvard tested this by creating a version of Battleship where AI

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Jun 06 2026ENTERTAINMENT

When Sci-Fi Takes a Spy Leap: The Unexpected Turn in a Creator's Career

A writer who once mapped out distant galaxies and alien worlds now steps into a shadowy hallway of 1970s Moscow. This move from outer space to Cold War streets is more than a genre flip—it's a deliberate shift from futuristic battles to real-life tension. Instead of starships and laser guns, this ne

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Jun 06 2026POLITICS

How Faith, Science, and Food Shape Our World Today

A former missionary turned pope is shaking up old ways of thinking about religion and society. Pope Leo XIV, once known as Father Bob Prevost, started his career in Peru during the 1980s—a time when the Catholic Church was deeply divided. Some priests believed in helping the poor by fighting for the

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Jun 06 2026EDUCATION

How Fairfax County Schools Compare to Others in Learning Time

Fairfax County Public Schools stand out for their unusual school calendar. By 2026, students will have only 20 full five-day weeks of class in a school year. That means teachers and students spend less than half the year on regular lessons. Other nearby school districts offer much more time inside c

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Jun 06 2026CELEBRITIES

Meet Amanda Pappas: From TV Weather to Subscription Content

A former Miami weather forecaster known for her "Weather Bestie" brand has shifted gears into a new digital space. After leaving her TV role, she now runs a subscription-based platform where fans pay to access exclusive content. This isn’t just a change in job—it’s a full pivot from public broadcast

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Jun 06 2026EDUCATION

Workplace Tensions at Staten Island Catholic School Could Go to Court

A legal battle brewing since 2016 at St. Joseph by-the-Sea High School in Staten Island is nearing a possible courtroom showdown. The dispute involves three former staff members—teachers Maureen Smith and Thomas Rode, and guidance counselor Lawrence Boliak—who accuse the school’s leadership of foste

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Jun 06 2026ENVIRONMENT

Learning from Travelers in the Amazon

The Peruvian Amazon's Tamshiyacu Tahuayo region is famous for its wildlife—pink river dolphins, rare monkeys, giant otters, reptiles, and hundreds of bird species share the space with lush plants. Unlike many protected areas that exclude humans, this one invites people in, showing that nature and co

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Jun 05 2026SCIENCE

Magnetic Map of the Cosmos Reveals Hidden Galactic Forces

A team of scientists in Australia has produced the biggest chart yet of magnetic fields that stretch between galaxies. The new map shows how invisible forces shape the growth and movement of matter across space, a topic that has puzzled astronomers for decades. Using powerful radio telescopes fro

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