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May 02 2026OPINION

Why space needs a global team to stay safe and working

Most people don’t realize how much daily life depends on signals beamed from satellites. A lost hiker in the mountains gets rescued because a tiny device sends coordinates to satellites overhead. Those same satellites handle phone calls, money transfers, and delivery trucks tracking across oceans. B

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May 02 2026WEATHER

Coastal dangers and weekend heat: what locals need to watch

Temperatures this weekend will swing between hot days inland and chilly coastal breezes, making for a mixed bag of weather across Oregon. While cities like Salem brace for a sudden temperature spike to 87 degrees Sunday, the coast stays cooler, with Seaside hitting just 62 on Saturday. The differenc

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May 02 2026HEALTH

How Canada is shaping the future of organ transplants

Canada has quietly become a leader in organ transplantation, with its medical teams solving tough problems that help patients worldwide. The COVID-19 pandemic forced doctors to pause and ask tough questions about what works and what still needs fixing in transplant medicine. While the world was dist

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May 02 2026CELEBRITIES

The real cost of looking red-carpet ready

Simone Biles recently shared a surprising breakdown of her latest red carpet experience. A quick tally after the event showed a bill of $23, 000 just for styling, makeup, and hair. That’s more than some people spend on rent for an entire year. The gymnast, who knows a thing or two about discipline a

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May 02 2026HEALTH

Cold Showers and Testosterone: What the Science Actually Says

A small study looked at whether taking cold showers for four days could boost testosterone in male athletes. The idea isn’t crazy—cold exposure is often said to help with recovery and performance. But here’s the catch: the research found no real change in testosterone levels after the cold showers.

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May 02 2026OPINION

Your phone knows where you’ve been—and so do many others

Every time your phone updates your location, it’s not just sharing that data with your carrier. Tech companies, app developers, and even local governments collect this information to help sell ads, solve crimes, or sometimes just keep an eye on people. The Supreme Court is now deciding whether polic

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May 02 2026BUSINESS

Work Wellness: Why Companies Need to Move Beyond Free Pizza and Yoga

Burnout isn’t just an employee problem—it’s a company problem that quietly drains billions from the economy every year. Studies show over half of workers worldwide feel exhausted and disengaged, not because they’re lazy, but because modern work cultures push them to their limits. The rise of remote

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May 02 2026BUSINESS

Why London businesses are turning to translation services to grow globally

Many London companies now realize that speaking just one language isn’t enough to compete. As businesses expand beyond local markets, they face a simple truth: clear communication in another language can make or break their success. A growing number of firms now see translation not as an extra cost,

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May 02 2026ENVIRONMENT

Why Brazil's Rough-Toothed Dolphins May Lose Their Home

Climate shifts are reshaping the ocean, and Brazil’s coast faces big changes. The rough-toothed dolphin, a top ocean hunter, depends on specific waters to survive. But as temperatures rise and ocean chemistry shifts, these dolphins may struggle to find safe places to live. The same goes for their fo

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May 02 2026POLITICS

Tech Money vs AI Rules: A Strange Political Battle

New York is seeing a fight over AI rules that breaks normal political rules. A tech billionaire is spending millions to push for strict laws, especially to protect children from AI dangers and stop job losses. He backs a former tech critic now running for office. But big tech companies are fighting

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