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May 19 2026BUSINESS

Planned land sales to fund royal family's big plans

The Duchy of Cornwall, which manages land for the Prince of Wales, has announced it will sell about one-fifth of its properties over the next ten years. The money from these sales, expected to raise around 200 million pounds, will go toward building new homes, boosting renewable energy, and restorin

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May 19 2026BUSINESS

Reshaping the BBC – A Tech-Savvy Leader Steps Up

The BBC has a new chief whose background is deep in digital strategy, not broadcasting tradition. This leader, previously steering Google’s European operations, isn’t promising minor tweaks. He’s openly calling for bold moves and faster action—even if that means reducing jobs. Around two thousand st

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May 19 2026TECHNOLOGY

A Tiny Spin Breakthrough Puts Future Computers in a New Light

The humblest piece of modern tech might soon need a retirement plan. Transistors—those microscopic switches that control almost every electronic device—have ruled computing for decades. Every time you open an app or run a game, billions of these tiny gates flicker between on and off, representing th

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May 19 2026SPORTS

Earlier baseball game planned due to storm warnings

A Major League Baseball matchup between the Kansas City Royals and Boston Red Sox had to adjust its schedule before the first pitch had even been thrown. Instead of starting at the originally planned 7:40 p. m. ET time, the opening game in what would become a three-game series began half an hour ear

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May 19 2026POLITICS

Growing up in a secret family

Zayd Ayers Dohrn never had a normal childhood. His parents were radicals in the 1960s and 70s, fighting against the Vietnam War and racism. They lived underground, always looking over their shoulders for the FBI. To Zayd, this wasn't unusual—it was just life. His parents made it seem like they were

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May 19 2026WEATHER

Storm Alert: What Chicago Can Expect Next

Chicago is bracing for more weather surprises today. A storm watch keeps running until 5 p. m. Monday for the city and nearby parts of northwest Indiana. Earlier, a warning for fast winds and small hail ended just before noon, but the warm 78-degree afternoon could spark new storms. These storms mig

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May 19 2026BUSINESS

Road work headaches: Ottawa County’s summer traffic shuffle

Starting this spring, Ottawa County drivers face a rolling series of detours while crews upgrade aging pipes and potholed roads. In Port Sheldon Township, 160th Avenue at Van Buren Street vanished for a water-line upgrade that won’t finish until late May. Commuters now snake through quieter side str

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May 19 2026HEALTH

Peptides on Social Media: What’s Real and What’s Risky?

The buzz around peptides online is hard to miss these days. People see them everywhere—influencers claim they can erase wrinkles, build muscle, or even boost the immune system. But behind the flashy promises, health experts are raising alarms. The excitement started with medications like Ozempic, wh

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May 19 2026HEALTH

Community rallies after risky school experiment leads to serious injury

When a routine science experiment at Greeneview High School turned dangerous last week, the small town of Jamestown didn’t just watch from the sidelines—it stepped up in a big way. Chloe Walker, a student there, suffered severe burns covering over 40% of her body after a fire broke out during class.

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May 19 2026BUSINESS

How an economist changed how we see jobs and prices forever

Edmund Phelps proved that keeping jobs high forever isn’t possible without causing big problems later. He showed that trying to push unemployment too low usually just makes prices rise higher instead. This idea became a key rule for central banks worldwide. Phelps also proved that people’s expectati

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