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Apr 24 2026TECHNOLOGY

Weather Bets and Faulty Sensors: A Risky Mix

A French weather agency recently filed a police complaint after unusual temperature spikes at a Paris airport sensor led to big wins for some traders. The spikes happened twice in April—first on the 6th and again on the 15th—when the sensor readings suddenly jumped by over three degrees Celsius befo

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Apr 23 2026SPORTS

A new home for soccer dreams

A shiny new training center in New Jersey is raising expectations for the future of soccer in America. The facility, built by Red Bull, covers 80 acres and includes eight fields, a gym, classrooms, and even a kitchen for meal planning. It’s meant to be a place where young players can grow into top t

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Apr 23 2026CRIME

A Long Wait for Justice: How a Baby’s Death Led to a Father’s Freedom

In 1998, a tragic event shook a Denver family when a four-month-old baby died shortly after being rushed to the hospital. Stephen Martinez, who had been living with the baby’s mother, called 911 claiming the infant was choking. Police later arrested him after he admitted to shaking the baby and stri

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Apr 23 2026POLITICS

Behind the Scenes of the Kennedy Center Makeover

The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts is about to close for two years starting this summer, and the public is getting its first real look at why. Officials claim the renovations are long overdue, pointing to crumbling infrastructure like broken cooling systems and rusted support beams.

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Apr 23 2026POLITICS

US Moves Closer to Easing Marijuana Rules

Federal officials are preparing for a major shift in how marijuana is treated under U. S. law, with changes expected as soon as this week. If approved, this would be the biggest update to marijuana policy in years, making it easier for scientists to study the drug's possible benefits. The push for

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Apr 22 2026SCIENCE

Biomolecules Meet AI: A Fresh Way to Guess Who Binds With Whom

The new approach starts by splitting the problem into two parts: one side looks at how molecules are linked together, while the other side examines their individual characteristics. Each part is processed by its own neural network branch, and a special attention gate decides how much weight to give

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Apr 22 2026HEALTH

A New Way to Think About Fairness in Health Care

The idea of “Mindful Equity” suggests that fairness should be built into every step of policy making, not added later as a nice touch. In Canada, many health and social plans still treat equity as an afterthought, putting it on the side instead of making it a core driver. This approach is often symb

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Apr 22 2026TECHNOLOGY

Fastest Touch: How Haptic Cues Beat Sound and Sight

A new study looks at how quickly people react to three kinds of signals—seeing, hearing and feeling. The researchers tested 44 adults who were split by age, gender, education, gaming habits, computer use and exercise. They gave each person signals in two ways: straight to the sensor (direct) or afte

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Apr 22 2026POLITICS

Ten Commandments Display Law Stands in Texas Schools

A federal appeals court has decided that a Texas law mandating the Ten Commandments be shown in public school classrooms remains valid. The ruling came from the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, which sided with Senate Bill 10 after a lawsuit by families who said the law pushed religion

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Apr 22 2026TECHNOLOGY

Japan’s Finance Minister Sets Up Talks With Banks About New AI Tool

The government is preparing to sit down with the nation’s biggest lenders this week. The aim: to talk about a cutting‑edge artificial intelligence system called Mythos, created by the U. S. company Anthropic PBC. This move comes after worries grew over how far this model can go in spotting security

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