SUNDAY

May 05 2026SPORTS

Nightmare on the Cage: How Prates Wins Without a Samurais Code

Carlos Prates has always been the wild card in a sport that prizes discipline. He smokes, drinks, and jokes like a rockstar, which many coaches see as a bad example for other fighters. After his recent win in Perth, he took to Instagram with a cigarette and a drink, calling his critics “Instagram Sa

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May 05 2026HEALTH

Long COVID: Why the Fight Is Still On

The pandemic may have lost its initial shock, but a silent threat keeps rising. In 2025, the World Health Organization reported that COVID‑19 caused more than 20, 000 deaths in the United States alone. Meanwhile, a huge number of people are still battling its lingering effects. A December study fro

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May 05 2026HEALTH

Early Tests Cut Costs and Save Lives

A Boston meeting brought together doctors, scientists, and business leaders to talk about new ways to spot illnesses early. The group highlighted technologies that can find cancer, Alzheimer’s and other diseases before symptoms appear. One of the main ideas is that early detection can lower lo

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May 05 2026POLITICS

Alaska’s Big Gas Dream and the Hidden Cost to Towns

A new plan could turn Alaska’s North Slope into a giant gas exporter, but the idea may never get off the ground because of its huge price tag and uncertain market. Investors fear that building such a massive system—full of pipelines, carbon‑capture plants and liquefaction facilities—could take years

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May 05 2026HEALTH

Uganda’s Fight Against Cervical Cancer: What Helps and Hinders Screening

In Uganda, cervical cancer is the leading cancer affecting women, yet many cases are caught too late. A recent study looked at why women and health workers either do or don’t get screened. The main test used in most clinics is Visual Inspection with Acetic acid, or VIA. It’s simple and cheap, but n

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May 05 2026POLITICS

New Route to Work: Helping Disabled People Earn Their Way Back

The U. S. government launched a program in 1999 to help people with disabilities find jobs without losing their health care or income support. The plan was simple: let the Social Security Administration run it, spread the word, and give people a safe path back to work. But that last part—telling fol

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May 05 2026EDUCATION

Neighbors, No-Nonsense: A Lesson in Sharing and Boundaries

A local resident posted extra topsoil for free on a community board, hoping to help a neighbor in need. When the neighbor collected all of it, she later returned with a business card from a landscaping company and demanded that the donor pay for the service, claiming the soil was too heavy to spread

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May 05 2026POLITICS

Power Shifts: Who Really Wins When Rules Change?

The debate about loosening California’s environmental review law, CEQA, is more than a cost‑cutting argument. A new push backed by well‑known business leaders, including a major tech figure’s political action committee, claims it will save money for the state. In truth, the savings would be felt by

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May 05 2026EDUCATION

A Surprise Award for a Chicago School Leader

Leo High School’s principal, Dr. Shaka Rawls, was handed one of Illinois’ most prestigious teaching prizes during a surprise school assembly. The event was kept hush‑hush until the moment of recognition, allowing students and staff to experience the excitement firsthand. Rawls, an alumnus of Leo,

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May 05 2026POLITICS

China‑US Deportation Standoff: What Comes Next

The United States has signaled that it is ready to tighten visa restrictions on China if the Chinese government does not step up its cooperation in returning citizens who have overstayed or entered illegally. The warning came from a senior official of the former Trump administration, who said Washin

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