BEN E KING

Jun 11 2026HEALTH

Equinox Opens First Georgia Gym in Buckhead

Equinox is set to open its first gym in Georgia next year. The new location will be in Buckhead Village, a busy part of Atlanta. The gym covers 44, 000 square feet. It will offer group workouts, Pilates, personal training and spa treatments. Equinox started in 1991 in New York. It has

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Jun 11 2026SPORTS

New Face of American Eagle: Meet Lamine Yamal

Eighteen-year-old soccer player Lamine Yamal is in Tennessee right now, not just chasing dreams but also a World Cup trophy. The Barcelona winger, standing at 178 cm, is part of Spain’s squad preparing for the 2026 tournament. The team settled into Embassy Suites in downtown Chattanooga while traini

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Jun 11 2026CELEBRITIES

Country singer Ella Langley wins hearts with her faith and honesty

Ella Langley isn’t just another name in country music. She stands out because she brings more than catchy tunes to the stage. Fans love her raw authenticity and her willingness to talk about things that matter. Her recent performances show she’s not afraid to share her beliefs, especially her Christ

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Jun 11 2026HEALTH

Sweet drinks and liver cancer: What the research really says

Every day, millions of people grab a soda or a diet drink without thinking about long-term effects. But new findings suggest these choices might do more than just add empty calories. Studies now show that both sugary sodas and artificially sweetened drinks could be quietly raising the risk of liver

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Jun 10 2026TECHNOLOGY

Zowie’s Science‑Backed Gear: Gaming Meets Sports Tech

BenQ’s Zowie division treats gaming equipment like a sports science lab, and that approach really clicks with fans of competitive play. The company’s focus is on fine‑grained details that can give professional gamers a measurable edge. During a recent visit to their Taiwan lab, I saw how the t

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Jun 10 2026CRIME

Local courts and police stations keep busy with daily cases

Every day brings new stories to local police stations and courtrooms. Some cases involve small disputes, while others deal with more serious issues. The police handle reports of theft, fights, and traffic violations. Courts then decide what happens next. Some people get fines, while others face long

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Jun 10 2026TECHNOLOGY

New AI tool keeps hackers out but might lock users in too

Earlier this year a lab quietly rolled out a chatbot that could crack passwords as easily as it answered trivia. Researchers fretted that criminals might swap it for their old toolkits and launch a wave of break-ins. After months of testing, the same lab is now shipping a stripped-down edition that

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Jun 10 2026TECHNOLOGY

A Smarter Way to Track EV Batteries

Electric cars and power storage systems need trusted batteries, but spotting problems early is tricky. A new chip from Texas Instruments aims to change that. It monitors up to 26 battery cells at once, giving engineers a detailed picture of how each cell behaves. Instead of waiting for a battery to

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Jun 10 2026HEALTH

How Doctors Decide Who Needs Heart Protection First

Every year, doctors face a tricky puzzle: who should get extra heart protection before problems start. New guidelines now say doctors should use math—not guesswork—to pick the right treatments. Instead of just eyeballing a patient’s health, they’ll plug numbers into a system called PREVENT. This too

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Jun 09 2026POLITICS

Local governments face a tough money puzzle

Every year, cities and towns across America scramble to pay their bills. Police, firefighters, road repairs, trash pickup—all cost more than before. Yet many places struggle to bring in enough cash. Why? The system is set up wrong. Cities can’t just raise prices or cut services when money gets tight

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