IT

Jun 10 2026ART

Public Art Sprouts Along LA’s New D Line

New stations on Los Angeles Metro’s D Line bring fresh art that invites commuters to pause. At the Wilshire/Fairfax concourse, Ken Gonzales‑Day shows photographs taken from LACMA’s collection. He tweaked his camera work to make the pictures shift from dark to bright, echoing a journey up from underg

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Jun 10 2026CELEBRITIES

Priyanka Chopra Jonas Shakes Up Luxury Watches

The next big move for the world of high‑end timepieces could involve a Hollywood star who has already made her mark in the industry. Priyanka Chopra Jonas is set to become the face of a top Swiss watchmaker, joining her existing role with another luxury brand. The news is still under wraps, but i

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Jun 10 2026HEALTH

Guided Airway Care: A New Way to Help Ambulance Teams

When a patient is in trouble far from hospitals, getting the airway open can be very hard. Ambulance crews often have to do intubation while moving, which makes the job tougher and success rates lower. In a study that used realistic training rooms, doctors showed how one‑to‑one video guidance fro

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Jun 10 2026SPORTS

The Red Sox Clubhouse: Inside the Calm Amid the Noise

A recent chat with interim manager Chad Tracy cleared up rumors that Boston’s locker room was in chaos. Tracy told listeners that, although the team is 10 games below . 500, everyone inside the clubhouse is focused on winning and staying united. He said that any chatter outside of the team’s r

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Jun 10 2026POLITICS

Future of Social Security: What Happens in 2032?

The money that pays out pensions to more than 60 million people is expected to run out in the year 2032. If lawmakers do not act before then, retirees will automatically lose about one‑fifth of their monthly checks. The latest report from the Social Security Trustees says that Congress should sta

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Jun 10 2026POLITICS

Dallas City Hall May Move: New Plan to Save Money

The city’s chief financial officer has suggested that Dallas should leave its current City Hall building instead of fixing it up. This is the first time city staff has officially recommended moving away from the old downtown structure. The proposal comes after a study that shows repairing the 50‑ye

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Jun 10 2026POLITICS

NIH Funding Woes: Politics, Cuts and a Talent Drain

The National Institutes of Health is the biggest public money source for medical research. In Massachusetts, people get almost five hundred dollars of NIH support per year. Yet a new report says the agency is in trouble because politics are getting in the way of science. The paper, written by 71 fo

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Jun 10 2026HEALTH

Boost Your Breakfast: Small Swaps, Big Nutrition

A common berry‑banana smoothie might be losing most of its good stuff. A study from UC Davis and the University of Reading showed that adding a banana cuts the amount of flavanols—heart‑protective compounds found in berries, cocoa and grapes—by about 84 percent. The banana contains an enzyme calle

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Jun 10 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Future‑Proof Films: How ’90s Movies Got Ahead of Tech

These old blockbusters feel like previews from a future that’s already here. Back when the web was a novelty and smartphones were luxury gadgets, filmmakers imagined worlds full of spying cameras, stolen identities, and machines that learn on their own. Critics called the ideas creepy, but today the

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Jun 10 2026CRIME

Bondi Beach Shooting: New Charges and Rising Questions

A 24‑year‑old man faces a fresh wave of legal trouble after the tragic Bondi Beach shooting that claimed 15 lives during a Hanukkah event. The attacker, linked to the Islamic State for his motives, was initially charged with 59 offences, covering murders, attempted killings and terrorism. Police

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