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Apr 26 2026OPINION

Public Lands in Peril: A New Budget Threatens Jobs, History and Nature

The Interior Department’s latest budget plan targets many public‑land agencies. It would cut almost 3, 000 National Park Service jobs and remove thousands more from the Land Management, Geological Survey, Wildlife Service and Indian Affairs. Last year Congress stopped similar cuts, but the adm

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Apr 26 2026OPINION

Diversity Matters: Why New Mexico Needs Leaders Who Reflect Its People

The Albuquerque Hispano Chamber of Commerce focuses on growing jobs and teaching skills, especially for Hispanic groups. They question the University of New Mexico’s recent list of five presidential candidates, pointing out that none match the state’s largest group. UNM is more than a school; it

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Apr 26 2026POLITICS

Chaos at the White House Dinner

The big dinner for reporters in Washington turned into a scary scene when a man ran toward the hotel’s security gate with a shotgun. He tried to get inside, but Secret Service agents shot him and stopped him before he could reach the ballroom. The event was happening in a large room at the Washingto

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Apr 26 2026CRIME

Substitute Teacher Arrest Highlights Ongoing School Safety Concerns

In a small Texas town, authorities detained a 27‑year‑old substitute teacher on charges of an improper relationship with a student. The arrest, made by the Llano County Sheriff’s Criminal Investigation Division, classifies the offense as a second‑degree felony. The teacher worked for the Llano Indep

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Apr 26 2026HEALTH

Mass‑Casualty Readiness in a Lebanese Hospital

A recent review looked at how well a large government hospital in Lebanon can handle big emergencies. The study focused on the “Code Orange” plan, which is the official emergency response guide used by the hospital. Researchers checked if the plan follows worldwide best practices and whether s

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Apr 26 2026CRIME

Caught by a Phone: How Tech Saved the Day

A man named Okello Chatrie stole almost $200, 000 from a bank in suburban Richmond, Virginia. He was on the run for days after the robbery. Police could not find him because he didn’t leave obvious clues. The breakthrough came when investigators used a new technology. They created a virtual fence a

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Apr 26 2026ENTERTAINMENT

A Different Path for the Marvel Universe

Marvel’s story in film might have looked very different if an early partnership had stayed alive. In the early 2000s, a deal between Marvel and Artisan Entertainment promised to bring fifteen superhero stories to screen. The plan included known heroes like Captain America, Black Panther, and Deadpoo

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Apr 26 2026FINANCE

Chip stocks take center stage as markets hit new heights

The stock market's recent upward climb appears heavily reliant on the semiconductor sector, with a handful of chipmakers driving growth. This week, companies like Texas Instruments, AMD, and Intel saw significant gains, pushing major indexes like the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite to record intraday p

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Apr 26 2026TECHNOLOGY

What's Holding Back MicroLED TVs from Getting Smaller?

MicroLED TVs promise brighter screens and better colors than older tech like OLEDs or LCDs. But here’s the catch: they’re huge—and expensive. A single 114-inch model costs over $150, 000, making it a luxury for most people. Why can’t these TVs be smaller? Because shrinking the tiny light pixels with

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Apr 26 2026SCIENCE

How microscopes and computers are teaming up to fight malaria

Malaria still claims hundreds of thousands of lives every year, mostly children under five. The parasite behind the disease, Plasmodium, hides inside red blood cells, sneaks past the immune system, and multiplies rapidly. Traditional vaccines struggle because this microscopic invader changes its out

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