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Jun 09 2026HEALTH

New Ways to Spot Colon Cancer Early in Maryland

Maryland’s latest colon cancer rules give people more chances to catch the disease before it gets serious. Doctors used to say a colonoscopy every ten years was the only reliable test. Now, they add home stool kits and a blood test called Shield that can be done at a regular doctor’s visit. Even i

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Jun 09 2026OPINION

Living with Care in a Post‑Pandemic World

In 2026, many people still choose to wear masks and keep distance in public. One senior citizen from Vermont explains why he keeps these habits even after the pandemic’s peak. He lives alone on a spacious plot of land, surrounded by forests and mountains, with his dog Dodger and rescued cat Solstice

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Jun 09 2026POLITICS

China’s Arms Game: Strong Sales, Weak Reach

China has spent decades building a powerful weapons industry. The country now appears in the top five worldwide when it comes to selling military gear, according to a respected global tracker. Yet the real story is more nuanced than those numbers suggest. A key problem is that China’s armaments hav

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Jun 09 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Ray Donovan Hits Apple TV’s Top Spot After Six Years

A crime drama that once aired on a premium cable channel is now the number one show on Apple TV’s streaming list, even though its final episode aired six years ago. The series follows Ray Donovan, a Los Angeles fixer who solves problems for powerful people while juggling his own family drama.

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Jun 09 2026ART

Community Soccer: A Local Take on the World Cup

In Boyle Heights, a new art show opened last Friday at Espacio 1839. The space was alive with music, the smell of leather and bright soccer shirts hanging on racks. People crowded in because the shop was full, and a new exhibit called “El Fútbol Es del Pueblo” was on display. The exhibition has m

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Jun 09 2026ART

Cross‑Continental Canvas: Art that Bridges Dallas and Africa

Bukekile Dube, a Zimbabwean born in 1975, has made Dallas her home for over twenty years. She founded Indibano Art Residency to give African artists a place to work in Texas, and she runs the program from a modest bungalow in Midway Hollow. \\ Her goal is simple: let art speak where words fall shor

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Jun 09 2026ART

Life, Art and the Price of Success

The story follows two friends who grow up in a small Midwestern town and later become artists. One of them, Cricket, is an ordinary boy who draws to escape the pain at home. He never thinks he will be famous, only that his sketches reflect what he sees and feels. The other friend, Olympia, is br

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Jun 09 2026ART

Old‑School Art Returns to Dallas’ Deep Ellum

In the 1980s, Deep Ellum’s streets buzzed with bold murals and buzzing creativity. Today the area has turned from a dangerous enclave into a lively hub, but its artistic roots still echo. A new exhibit at the Kettle Art Gallery celebrates that legacy. The show, called “Deep Ellum OGs Return, ” op

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Jun 09 2026FINANCE

Sports Retailer Raises Q1 Forecast

A Texas‑based sports retailer is preparing to reveal its first‑quarter earnings on June 9 before the market opens. Forecasts from analysts expect a profit of $0. 92 per share, an increase over the $0. 76 earned last year. Revenue is projected to hit roughly $1. 44 billion, up from the $1. 35 billion

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Jun 09 2026BUSINESS

Future of Willow Bend: From Mall to Sports Hub

The old mall in Plano, Texas, opened in 2001 and has struggled to keep shoppers and stores. It is the last enclosed mall built in Texas, yet it never attracted enough traffic. The biggest anchor stores—Neiman Marcus, Macy’s and Dillard’s—have all left or are leaving by 2027. When Centennial

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