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Apr 28 2026POLITICS

New Government Rules Put Immigration Decisions in the Spotlight

The U. S. government will now examine the past statements and online activity of immigrants applying for permanent residency or citizenship more carefully. Officials say they will focus on speech or actions tied to extremism, including support for terrorism or violence against the country. But criti

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Apr 27 2026POLITICS

All Science Voices Cut Short by Trump Administration

The National Science Board, which guides the National Science Foundation and advises the President and Congress on science matters, was suddenly emptied. On a Friday, 22 board members received an email that simply said their positions were terminated “effective immediately. ” The message came from t

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Apr 27 2026EDUCATION

Screen Time Talk: A Fresh Look for Parents and Kids

A new online event on May 5 will bring parents and teens together to chat about how screens affect young people. The program, called “The Amazing Generation: Breaking Up with Screens and Unlocking Kids’ Potential in a Tech‑Filled Environment, ” will run twice: first for adults at noon and then for s

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

Louisiana’s New Science Hub Brings Hope to Every Community

Louisiana has launched a bold science program that unites its leading medical schools and hospitals into one collaborative network. The idea is simple: use research to improve health for all residents, especially those in rural areas who previously had little chance to join clinical trials. The c

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Apr 27 2026HEALTH

Kid‑Friendly Tools to Spot and Tackle Childhood Weight Issues

Childhood weight problems have climbed sharply worldwide over the last forty years. Many things we can change—what kids eat, how much they move, family habits and screen use—are key targets for help. Yet no single, thorough look at the tools that measure these things existed until now. A research t

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

A New Twist on Glycerol Fuel Cells

Scientists have figured out exactly which parts of a cobalt‑based material make it good at turning glycerol into useful energy. Instead of guessing, they built three similar crystals that differ only in the tiny details around cobalt atoms. The key discovery was that the reaction happens mainl

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

Heart, Kidney and Sugar: A Hidden Link to Cancer

Recent research looks at how heart, kidney and metabolic problems can quietly raise the chance of getting cancer. The study followed a huge group of people across the country for many years to see if worse health in these areas meant more cancer. The new idea, called CKM syndrome, shows that the hea

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Apr 27 2026SPORTS

Persistence Pays: A Fresh Look at Bay County Sports Highlights

Pinconning’s girls’ soccer team turned a long season of hard work into a bright moment when Ariana Bustamante scored the first goal of the year, earning her squad a 2‑2 tie with Unionville‑Sebewaing. The win shows how steady effort can finally break through, a point the coach highlighted by praising

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Apr 27 2026SPORTS

Lightning‑Smart Racing: How NASCAR Outsmarts the Storm

NASCAR’s biggest threat isn’t a bad pit stop or a broken engine. It’s the sky itself, and the sport has finally learned how to beat it. In earlier years, officials would stare at a cloud or read a forecast and hope the weather stayed clear. A sudden thunderstorm could halt an entire weekend, soak

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Apr 27 2026ENVIRONMENT

Nature Words Come Back: Why Knowing Names Matters

The loss of nature terms in our language is more than a spelling issue; it signals that many people no longer recognize the plants, birds, and animals around them. When a popular dictionary dropped words like “bee” or “bird, ” artists and writers saw the problem in action. One project that sprang up

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