MPA

May 10 2026HEALTH

Why coffee is getting a health upgrade (and how to drink it right)

Coffee used to get a bad rap. Doctors once warned pregnant women to avoid it and linked it to scary diseases like cancer. But those old warnings mostly came from studies that mixed up coffee with smoking—people often lit up while sipping their brew, making it hard to tell what was really causing har

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May 10 2026WEATHER

Heavy Rain Threatens Baton Rouge Through Mid-Morning

After a night of stormy weather, Baton Rouge woke up to a soggy morning. The National Weather Service sent out a flash flood alert early Saturday. The warning covers five parishes around the city. It started at 8:15 a. m. and lasts until 11:15 a. m. That’s three solid hours to stay cautious. By the

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May 10 2026ENVIRONMENT

This summer’s fruit harvest might be smaller and pricier than usual

Farmers in New Jersey and Pennsylvania are bracing for a tough season ahead. After a sudden heatwave in mid-April followed by unexpected freezes just days later, many fruit crops are struggling to recover. Peaches, apples, and even some berries were hit hard, with some farms losing most of their pro

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May 09 2026ENVIRONMENT

Wildfires Cut Trips, Prescribed Burns Boost Visits

In 2020, two massive fires in Colorado—Cameron Peak and East Troublesome—devastated popular spots around Rocky Mountain National Park and nearby forests. Even five years later, the landscape still shows blackened slopes and closed trails, hinting that people are avoiding these areas. Recent research

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May 09 2026HEALTH

Nurses in the OR: Spotting Burnout with Smart Tech

Operating‑room nurses face a hidden danger called compassion fatigue, a kind of burnout that can hurt their health, shake up the nursing team, and put patients at risk. A new study looked closely at how common this fatigue is among OR nurses and what it looks like in everyday work. Researchers

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May 09 2026WEATHER

Rainy Weekend Ahead: What Lafayette’s Storms Really Mean

Lafayette isn’t just getting rain this weekend—it’s facing a mixed bag of weather trouble. While thunderstorms roll through, the bigger issue isn’t just the noise and lightning. Heavy rain has already soaked parts of the city, with radar showing 1 to 3 inches already fallen. Another 1 to 4 inches co

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May 09 2026TECHNOLOGY

Apple tightens education discounts with new rules

Apple just made it harder to get discounts on its devices. The tech giant used to trust customers to say they were students, teachers, or parents when buying from its education store. Now, you have to prove it. This change started in 2022 but has spread to more countries, including the U. S. , Austr

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May 08 2026POLITICS

Montana’s Own: A Candidate’s Home‑Ground Push

A Montana political newcomer is turning his campaign around by spotlighting where he grew up and who raised him. He’s spent the first weeks of his run visiting towns that feel like home, stopping at local diners and speaking to farmers who know him by name. By highlighting his ties to the state, he

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May 08 2026ENVIRONMENT

Men, Climate and the Real Costs

A new study brings together more than 20 scientists from 13 countries to examine how certain male behaviours affect the planet. The research looks at patterns of consumption, travel and leisure that are linked to higher carbon footprints. The paper argues that the link between masculinity and clima

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May 08 2026HEALTH

New Pathways: How a Pre‑Surgery Study Learned to Adapt

A research team set out to see if breathing exercises before operations could lower lung problems after surgery. The study involved patients scheduled for heart, chest and belly surgeries in the UK’s National Health Service. They ran a randomised controlled trial, meaning some patients received t

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