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May 06 2026HEALTH

Easy Check for Face‑Recognition Problems

People often use famous faces to see if someone can spot them. This helps find prosopagnosia, a condition where people miss familiar faces. Recently, tests that use unfamiliar faces became popular because they are quick and can be done online. However, skipping famous‑face tests might change what w

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May 06 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Celebs on the Met Carpet: The Real Look Revealed

The 2026 Met Gala drew a star‑packed crowd, and the buzz was quick to turn toward the differences between the glossy images shared on social media and the raw shots taken by professional photographers. The highlight was Beyoncé, who returned to the Met after a decade. Her Instagram post showed her i

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May 06 2026HEALTH

When Care Comes from the Opposite Gender: Patient Experiences in Namibia

In Namibia’s public health system, overcrowded clinics force nurses to switch between treating men and women all day. With far too few nurses on staff, patients often get care from whoever is available—even if that person is of the opposite gender. This isn’t just a logistical problem; it touches on

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May 06 2026HEALTH

Yoga’s Quiet Role in Helping Kids Fight Cancer Side Effects

Doctors have been exploring gentle ways to ease tough side effects for young cancer patients. Yoga, often seen as a calm activity for healthy people, is now getting attention in hospitals. Between 2009 and 2024, researchers dug through hundreds of studies to see if yoga could help kids battling canc

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May 06 2026LIFESTYLE

How a small Taiwanese town uses slow snail races to bounce back

Fenglin, a quiet town in Taiwan, has found an unusual way to draw visitors back after a damaging earthquake in 2024. Instead of flashy attractions, it leans into its reputation as a "slow city" with snail races. The idea isn’t to go fast, but to go slow—literally. Since joining the Cittaslow network

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May 06 2026EDUCATION

Big Tech Money Fuels USC’s AI Push—But Can Universities Keep Up?

A $200 million donation from a Silicon Valley investor and Nvidia board member is reshaping USC’s future, but the move also highlights a growing divide in higher education. The gift will rename the School of Advanced Computing, fund AI research across disciplines, and help recruit top talent—but cri

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May 06 2026SPORTS

Best games to watch and bet on this week

This week offers some unusual underdog stories in sports. The Los Angeles Lakers, usually powerhouses, are heavy underdogs in their playoff matchup against Oklahoma City. Their odds would be the steepest LeBron James has ever faced in his career. Still, they managed to pull off a surprise first-roun

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May 06 2026SPORTS

Why the Mavericks hired Masai Ujiri—and what comes next

The Dallas Mavericks made a big splash by hiring Masai Ujiri, partly to help fans forget a rocky rebuild under the last leadership. They traded Luka Dončić, a move that upset many supporters, so bringing in a proven executive like Ujiri was a clear effort to rebuild trust. But the real reason? A hig

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May 06 2026POLITICS

Supreme Court Justices Clash Over Race and Rights: A Deep Dive into the Court's Recent Decisions

The Supreme Court often acts like a family with constant arguments over big issues. Justices disagree on race, religion, abortion, guns, and the environment. Recently, fights over presidential power and LGBTQ+ rights have heated up. They try to stay professional but admit they don't always get along

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May 06 2026POLITICS

Iran’s New Playbook in the Gulf: Old Tricks with New Tech

Back in the 1980s, Iran made life difficult for ships moving through the Strait of Hormuz by using mines, missiles, and speedboats. Now, it’s doing it again—but with drones. This time, the stakes feel higher because cheap, easy-to-use drones let Iran reach farther and strike faster than before. The

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