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May 28 2026HEALTH

Fluoride in water: Legal fight turns on old science, not safety

In early 2025, a federal appeals court sent a major fluoride case back to the lower court—not because fluoride was proven safe, but because the judge broke a rule on how evidence should be handled. The dispute started in 2016 when health advocacy groups sued the EPA, claiming fluoride in drinking wa

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May 28 2026HEALTH

Why some teens lose teeth and what that says about their lives

A study looked at 615 public school students in five crowded cities in Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil, all around age 12. Instead of just counting cavities, researchers checked how many teens had lost at least one permanent tooth. Only 1 in 20 showed tooth loss, but the patterns behind it tell a bigger

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May 27 2026BUSINESS

Bloom Energy’s Future: Strong Business, Weak Numbers

The company that builds fuel‑cell power plants is still doing well in the market, but its stock price may be too high for how it performs. Bloom Energy has a solid track record of delivering clean electricity and has contracts with major customers that show its technology is reliable. However,

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May 27 2026ENVIRONMENT

Fireworks Leave a Hidden Water Footprint

After the fireworks explode, people often think only the smoke matters. But tiny bits of leftover firecracker powder pile up along rivers and lake edges because safety rules keep them there. Those piles slowly seep water that carries new chemicals into the streams. Scientists tested how this seepage

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May 27 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Canadian Women Powering the Screen

The Canadian film and TV scene has grown into a global force, thanks to a group of women who steer budgets, talent and stories. They work in every layer: from federal agencies that fund projects to studios that bring Hollywood productions north, and from festival organizers who showcase local work t

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May 27 2026CRYPTO

Two Crypto Firms Enter Big Indexes—But Their Stocks React Differently

Two companies that store major cryptocurrency reserves are about to enter widely watched U. S. stock indexes. One focuses on Ethereum, the other on Solana. Their entry might sound like a big deal, but the market isn’t treating both moves the same way. Sharplink, a company that holds a large Ethereu

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May 27 2026HEALTH

Hidden dangers lurking in your summer beach plans

Every year when summer arrives, millions of families pack up to hit the sand and surf. But hidden beneath the fun could be a silent threat: dirty water. Tests show that over half of U. S. coastlines and Great Lakes beaches had unsafe bacteria levels at least once last year. That means when people di

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May 26 2026OPINION

Neighbors Can't Agree on Flags—and Ohio Wants to Step In

Ohio recently passed a bill that stops homeowners’ associations from banning the "Thin Blue Line" flag. But why single out this flag? The rule now makes it harder for neighborhoods to enforce their own rules about what symbols can be displayed. Many people see the flag as a simple way to honor poli

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May 26 2026OPINION

Memorial Day isn't just about long weekends or store discounts

Memorial Day means more than sunny picnics and big sales. Behind those store signs and holiday plans lie families who lost loved ones in wars. Like the Sullivans from Iowa—five brothers who died together when their ship sank in 1942. Or the Nilands, whose home was shattered when three sons died in t

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May 26 2026SPORTS

Juventus' rough season: What went wrong?

Juventus’ latest season started with low expectations, mostly because of a decent but not outstanding squad led by Igor Tudor. Fans and pundits thought the team could at least scrape into the Champions League—something they’d done for years. But this time, for the first time in a while (except for a

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