THE DIVISION

Jun 04 2026BUSINESS

Why big sports cities in the US won’t host the 2026 World Cup

The 2026 FIFA World Cup is coming to the US, Mexico, and Canada, but some of America’s biggest sports cities won’t be in the game. Chicago, Phoenix, and Detroit—home to passionate fans and major sports teams—are sitting this one out. Even though these cities have huge stadiums and loyal followings,

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Jun 04 2026SPORTS

Fresh Face, Double Shot: Caleb Williams Takes on Madden 27

The Chicago Bears quarterback Caleb Williams is back for a second round with Madden NFL, this time as the game's lead cover athlete. Only a few players before him have pulled off that feat. Most of them struggled the next season—stats dropped, injuries piled up, or they lost their starting spots. Wi

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Jun 04 2026OPINION

College sports needs real change, not just more government help

The big sports leagues aren’t happy with a new Senate bill meant to "fix" college sports. The bill, called the Protect College Sports Act, tries to help the NCAA and its members with problems they created themselves. For years, these schools worked together to make rules that kept players from getti

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Jun 03 2026POLITICS

Ultra‑Processed Foods: A Call for Action

The new edition of a leading public health journal urges lawmakers to step up against ultra‑processed foods. Researchers from many fields joined forces, showing that people across the political spectrum see these products as addictive and linked to obesity, diabetes, and heart disease. A surve

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Jun 03 2026HEALTH

Helping Hands: Food Pantries Support HIV Community in Los Angeles

The food pantry at APLA Health is a vital resource for people living with HIV in Los Angeles. Tom Kaiser visits the Vance North Necessities of Life Program every week. He says he no longer needs to buy groceries for himself because the pantry supplies enough food to keep him fed. The program i

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Jun 03 2026SCIENCE

Age, Personality and Life Happiness in Sweden

The study looks at what makes people feel good in Sweden, using a big survey of 15, 068 adults from 2023. Researchers split the data into three parts: who people are (age, gender, money), how they think and feel inside (Big Five traits like neuroticism and extraversion), and how their relationships

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Jun 03 2026POLITICS

U. S. Targets Congo War Leaders With New Sanctions

The United States announced fresh sanctions against key figures in armed groups blamed for the ongoing violence in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. These measures hit commanders from two opposing factions: a leader of the M23 rebel group and a chief of intelligence for the Hutu‑aligned FDLR

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Jun 03 2026EDUCATION

Summer School News: Your Chance to Speak Up

The school year may have ended, but the conversation about education keeps going. A reporter covering Cincinnati’s public schools and nearby colleges has noticed a lot of important topics that still need attention. From new school budget plans to the rising number of students who are homeless, and e

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Jun 03 2026TECHNOLOGY

Transparent Rules for Using 3D Crime‑Scene Tech

The use of virtual reality and 3‑dimensional reconstructions is growing in courts, crime‑scene investigations, and medical exams. These tools help experts show evidence, train students, and collaborate from far away. But the papers that describe how they work often miss key details. Without cle

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Jun 03 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Maine’s Trail‑Blazing Warden Turns Into a Detective

The author has spent the last decade and a half building a life for his fictional game warden, Mike Bowditch, who now lives in the real‑world Maine setting that the writer knows intimately. The novels follow Bowditch from a rookie in his twenties to a seasoned officer in his thirties, and they cove

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