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May 27 2026EDUCATION

School Mix and Bullying: How Diversity Helps or Fails

Studies show that about one in four high‑school students in the U. S. are bullied by classmates. The new research looks specifically at bullying that targets people because of their race, ethnicity, country of origin or religion. It also asks whether a school’s mix of different groups and its loca

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May 27 2026HEALTH

Catch Cancer Early – The Best Chance to Win

Early detection of cancer is the most powerful tool anyone can use, and it works for everyone, not just those with a family history. A person who survived prostate cancer by getting checked early now knows how crucial timing is; waiting until the disease advances can change life dramatically. Col

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May 27 2026ENVIRONMENT

Heatwaves, Climate Scenarios, and How We Talk About Them

In May, parts of the UK and France are feeling a heatwave that feels like mid‑summer, even though it’s spring. A high‑pressure system called a heat dome is behind the spike in temperatures, similar to what’s been seen in India and Canada. Meanwhile, the U. S. has had one of its worst spring droughts

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May 27 2026CRIME

New Lawsuit Exposes Workplace Issues Inside State Agency

Three former employees of Washington’s Department of Commerce have filed a lawsuit accusing top human resources leaders of fostering a toxic work environment. Amanda L. Davis, Catherine M. George, and Nicole Rivera claim they faced discrimination based on race, gender, and age, along with retaliatio

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May 27 2026HEALTH

How a small coin helped beat a deadly disease and what it teaches us today

Back in the 1940s and 1950s, polio was the summer nightmare no parent could escape. Kids would catch it from dirty water or even just a handshake, and suddenly they couldn’t move their legs or breathe on their own. The disease didn’t care about rich or poor—it paralyzed about 58, 000 Americans in on

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May 27 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Why Hollywood Loves to Break Science with Big Explosions

Back in 1998, a movie turned science on its head to give audiences a wild, feel-good ride. Called Armageddon, it’s the kind of film that laughs in the face of real physics. NASA gets a bunch of oil workers—tough, loud folks who know drills better than rockets—and sends them on a suicide mission. The

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May 27 2026SCIENCE

The Hidden Cost of Cutting Science Funds

Funding shortages are quietly harming medical progress. Clinical trials once offered lifelines to patients with advanced cancer, turning fatal diagnoses into manageable conditions. New treatments like gene-editing saved babies with rare metabolic disorders. Meanwhile, pancreatic cancer patients now

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May 27 2026HEALTH

Too much screen time hurts kids more than we thought

Kids today spend more time staring at screens than doing anything else, including sleeping and playing outside. A new warning from health experts says this trend is causing real problems for young people. From toddlers to teens, daily screen use adds up fast—often starting before a child’s first bir

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May 26 2026OPINION

Free Meals for All Kids? A Question About Fairness

The governor once promised to fix school funding and help kids start learning early. He said he would give more money to poor districts and improve reading and math for all children. Those promises sounded hopeful. After a year in office, the plan changed. The governor cut money that helps low‑inco

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May 26 2026OPINION

Utah Leads the Pack in Budget Resilience

The United States is running a high‑spending budget that will soon strain the national economy. While this is well known, fewer people realize how it affects state budgets and the everyday lives of residents. State workers, students, and Medicaid patients all feel the impact when federal money shrin

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