WILLIAM F BUCKLEYS

Jun 02 2026POLITICS

Texas Senate race faces first-ever unmarried candidates

For the first time ever, voters in Texas may elect an unmarried man to the U. S. Senate. Republican Ken Paxton and Democrat James Talarico both run as bachelors in a state where marriage has long shaped political careers. Texas has a history of favoring candidates who present traditional family imag

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Jun 02 2026HEALTH

What makes people buy more processed food?

For years, scientists have warned about the link between eating too much ultra-processed food and health problems like obesity and diabetes. But what exactly pushes people to buy these convenient yet unhealthy products? A recent study in France looked at over a decade of grocery receipts from thousa

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Jun 02 2026TECHNOLOGY

Florida Takes Legal Action Against AI Chatbot Company

Florida has become the first state to take OpenAI to court, arguing that its popular AI tool, ChatGPT, poses serious risks to young users. The state filed an 83-page lawsuit, claiming the chatbot provides easy access to harmful content like self-harm guides and violent instructions, which could enda

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Jun 02 2026SPORTS

Football’s governing body takes big step to support women players properly

FIFA is stepping up in a big way by launching a free online library packed with 30 short courses that anyone connected to women’s football can study. Players, parents, coaches, doctors, even whole national federations – they can all log in, pick a topic like sleep or strength training, and finish a

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Jun 02 2026FINANCE

After-hours crypto trading gets a mainstream boost

For years, weekend crypto traders had to wait until Monday to catch up with futures prices. That gap closed last weekend when a major exchange switched its Bitcoin and crypto derivatives to round-the-clock trading. In the first 48 hours alone, over 7, 200 contracts traded hands, worth close to $50 m

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Jun 02 2026ENVIRONMENT

Virginia Beach's Marine Wonder: 40 Years of Learning and Conservation

Four decades ago, an empty idea about teaching ocean science slowly became one of Virginia’s most popular spots. Starting with just a simple room for marine studies in the 1970s, the Virginia Aquarium & Marine Science Center now ranks as the state’s third-most visited attraction, drawing crowds like

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Jun 02 2026HEALTH

When skull repairs fail: what happens when medical implants move or break?

Fixing a hole in the skull after an injury or stroke is usually straightforward, but sometimes things go wrong. Most problems come from infections or mismatched parts. Yet sometimes, the material itself moves out of place or even cracks under pressure. This is rare but serious. Most surgical repairs

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Jun 02 2026HEALTH

Why North County’s Hospital Needs Measure H to Stay Strong

For over 25 years, Tri-City Medical Center has been the go-to emergency care spot for North County’s families. Doctors there have seen it all—from sudden heart attacks to car crashes—and they know how fast lives can change when help isn’t nearby. But now, the hospital faces a big test: Measure H, a

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Jun 01 2026HEALTH

Early Treatment with Faricimab Stops Vision Loss in Wet Macular Degeneration

Faricimab is a newer eye medicine that fights wet age‑related macular degeneration, a leading cause of blindness. Researchers in Wales studied people who had never been treated before. They split the patients into two groups: those whose vision was still good (less than 0. 3 logMAR) and those

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Jun 01 2026CRIME

Spies, Torture and a Long Hunt: Two Syrian Officers Tried in Vienna

For more than ten years, two high‑ranking figures from Syria’s war had lived in Europe as if they were ordinary residents. Their presence, however, was a secret that the Austrian police finally exposed after a persistent search. The first man, Khaled al‑Halabi, once led Syria’s state security. He i

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