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Apr 20 2026HEALTH

Breaking the Silence: How One Teen is Making Period Products More Accessible

Miri Ahuja, a 14-year-old from San Jose, wasn’t just worried about homework or weekend plans like most kids her age. Instead, she took on a challenge many adults shy away from: ensuring people in her community could easily access period products. Through her project, Period Positive Drive, she organ

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Apr 20 2026TECHNOLOGY

Using Quantum Tools to Study Drug and Protein Interactions

Scientists often rely on energy calculations to understand how molecules behave in living cells. These calculations help explain how drugs bind to proteins, which is key to designing better medicines. But there's a catch: accurate calculations for large molecules like proteins are tough to do with r

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Apr 20 2026SPORTS

What the Michigan spring game revealed about the Wolverines' offense

The Michigan football spring game didn’t exactly light up the scoreboard. The Maize team squeaked out a 7-6 win over the Blue team, but most fans probably went home wondering why they paid to watch. The real story wasn’t the final score—it was the struggles under center and the fresh talent making n

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Apr 20 2026EDUCATION

Alaska sees growth in early childhood teachers after school changes

Alaska’s shortage of early childhood educators just got some help from an unlikely source: a University program that nearly lost its license but came back stronger. The University of Alaska Anchorage’s early childhood program was in trouble in 2019 when it lost important accreditation, leaving hundr

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Apr 19 2026POLITICS

Reexamining Our Roots: A Call to Reflect on Values and Actions

The nation’s founding ideas still echo in today’s debates, yet many feel they are slipping away. Some argue that the rise of strong religious voices in politics has shifted focus from reason to faith, and that this shift helped leaders gain power. Others worry about the consequences of uncheck

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Apr 19 2026HEALTH

Measuring Spirit: A New Tool for Patient Care

The idea of looking after a patient’s inner life has long depended on stories and personal notes, which makes it hard to see real progress. A new test called the Spiritual Comfort Index (SCI) tries to fix that by turning feelings into numbers. It is meant to be quick, clear and useful for doctors

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Apr 19 2026SCIENCE

Double‑Dose Dog Sedation: What Happens When a Second Injection Is Added

The study set out to find out how well dogs stay calm when they receive two doses of a sedative called dexmedetomidine or when a different drug is added after the first dose. The researchers used a randomized crossover design, meaning each dog got both treatment plans at different times so they coul

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Apr 19 2026FINANCE

Tax Time Troubles: Why Common Beliefs About Who Pays What Are Often Wrong

Every year in April, Americans spend over seven billion hours wrestling with tax paperwork and arguing about fairness. Most of those debates rely on five persistent myths. The first big one says rich people dodge their taxes. Actually, the top 1 percent of earners make about one-fifth of all income

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Apr 18 2026EDUCATION

The Classroom Crisis: Why Lectures Are Losing Their Spark

College students spend most of their week in lecture halls, yet they rarely listen. Their eyes drift to screens where they check messages or play quick games while the professor talks. Only when a new slide pops up do they try to write something down, hoping it will help later. Professors o

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Apr 18 2026SCIENCE

Mystery Around a Scientist Who Said She Was In Danger

A 34‑year‑old scientist who helped start a lab that studies anti‑gravity was found dead in Huntsville, Alabama, on June 11, 2022. Police said the death was a self‑shot. They have not shared any details about how they reached that conclusion. Before she died, the woman publicly warned that her life

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