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May 25 2026ART

Art Sales Surge: How a $2. 5 Billion Bounce‑Back Was Engineered

A quiet Thursday night, auction houses set the stage for a big win. The spotlight fell on a famous Jackson Pollock piece, and buyers hurried to place their bids. In just seven minutes the painting sold for $181. 2 million, smashing its previous record. But that was only the beginning. Across the sa

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May 25 2026POLITICS

Trump’s Health Check: A Closer Look at the Questions and Concerns

The 80‑year‑old former president is set to visit Walter Reed National Military Medical Center again, raising fresh doubts about his fitness for office. This latest trip follows a pattern of regular visits that have become almost ritualistic for U. S. leaders, but Trump’s case is different because hi

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May 25 2026SCIENCE

A New Way to Clean Acid Mine Water with Biochar

A team of researchers made a special charcoal by heating together sunflower heads, coal ash, and calcium chloride. They mixed the ingredients in a 1:1 ratio and heated them to 600 °C. The resulting material could grab more than 180 mg of sulfate per gram from dirty water, which is a lot for th

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May 25 2026LIFESTYLE

Memorial Day: What’s Open and Closed

The holiday that honors those who died for the country falls on the fourth Monday in May. Because it is a federal holiday, many places shut down or change their hours. Mail stops on this day. The Postal Service is closed, so no letters or packages arrive at homes or businesses. Delivery compa

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May 25 2026SCIENCE

Thermal‑Light Mix in Tumor Treatment: A New Computer View

Researchers have built a computer model that shows how light, heat and chemical reactions work together when treating cancer with a dye called indocyanine green (ICG). The model uses a fast Monte‑Carlo method on graphics cards to trace how 808‑nanometer laser light moves through a three‑dimension

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May 25 2026SCIENCE

A Quiet Tumor That Spreads Slowly Around the World

AOT is a small, non‑cancerous growth that forms in the jaw. It looks like tiny tubes or circles under a microscope and usually stays inside its capsule, so it rarely invades nearby tissues. Because AOT grows very slowly, many people do not notice it until it becomes large enough to cause a visibl

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May 25 2026POLITICS

Why Your Power Bill Could Decide the Next Election

Electricity prices have jumped nearly 13 percent since 2020, and since 2025 they’ve gone up another 6 percent. Experts predict another rise next year, with some warnings that bills could later surge by 40 percent. The problem isn’t just cost—demand is outpacing supply fast. Data centers, AI companie

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May 25 2026SCIENCE

New molecule fights aggressive breast cancer by hijacking cell cleanup routines

Scientists tested a new molecule called WK-13-3D on one of the toughest breast cancers to treat. Instead of trying to poison the cancer cells directly, it tricks them into breaking their own cleanup system. Every cell normally recycles old parts through a process called autophagy. In triple-negative

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May 25 2026BUSINESS

Supporting Unpaid Caregivers at Work: A Global Look at Available Policies

Many people juggle jobs and unpaid care for adults. This balancing act often leads to stress and health problems. Experts now track workplace policies that help these workers. A recent review studied businesses in 53 locations worldwide. Most help comes from finance, tech, and healthcare companies.

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May 25 2026POLITICS

Colombia's Big Three Race Nears Finish Line After Crowd-Pulling Final Push

Colombia wrapped up its main presidential campaign phase last Sunday with three massive rallies that felt more like rock concerts than political events. The biggest crowds turned out in three different cities: Barranquilla on the coast, Medellín in the business heartland, and Bogotá, the capital. Th

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