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Apr 27 2026HEALTH

Simple Bean Boost: How Refried Beans Fit Into a Healthy Plate

Beans are a go‑to food that can pack protein, fiber and essential minerals into any meal. Refried beans are a familiar Mexican dish that many people love, but not everyone knows whether they’re healthy. The truth is: the answer depends on how you make or buy them. A typical refried bean recipe star

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Apr 27 2026HEALTH

Doula Help Shown to Boost Mom‑Baby Health

A recent review of dozens of studies finds that having a doula—someone who supports expectant parents before, during, and after birth—can lower stress for mothers and increase the chances that babies are breastfed early. The research pulled data from 22 earlier investigations, most of which used

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Apr 27 2026CRIME

Horner Trial: A Shift in Focus from Crime to Complex Lives

The courtroom buzzed as jurors reconvened on Monday, tasked with deciding whether to impose death or life imprisonment for Tanner Horner, who admitted to the 2022 murder of seven‑year‑old Athena Strand. The case had evolved from a straightforward crime narrative into a layered examination of Horner’

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Apr 27 2026WEATHER

Storm Fury Hits Texas: One Life Lost, Families Displaced

A fierce night of weather struck Texas, bringing big hail and wind that could reach 90 miles per hour. Many people in North Texas saw tornadoes, and the National Weather Service is now checking damage to confirm each report. The storm forced twenty families out of their homes and left several peo

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Apr 27 2026OPINION

The Hidden Rules Behind How We Treat Tiny Creatures

Some people think insects only have simple nerves, but research shows they can feel pain. If that is true, it raises the question: do we owe them a moral responsibility? Scientists who study animal sentience argue that many insects react to harmful stimuli in ways similar to vertebrates. They

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Apr 27 2026TECHNOLOGY

New Tech Meets Old Wisdom at This Unique Art School

In a quiet corner of New Mexico, an art school is quietly breaking the mold of how technology and culture can mix. The Institute of American Indian Arts now runs a computer science program where students don’t just learn coding—they explore how machines can listen to fungi, dance with plants, and ev

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Apr 27 2026HEALTH

Can blood tests at first diagnosis predict how fast MS might progress?

When someone is first diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, doctors often wonder how the disease will behave in the long run. New research suggests that a simple blood test taken at the start might give clues about future progression. Scientists have noticed for years that people with MS often have unu

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Apr 27 2026CRYPTO

The One Stop Shop for Crypto Trading

Crypto trading used to feel like juggling flaming torches – custody here, lending there, derivatives somewhere else entirely. Most firms pieced together services from different providers, patching gaps with duct tape and hope. But Coinbase flipped that script by offering a complete package under one

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Apr 27 2026HEALTH

Breakdown: How gut bacteria might make brain injuries worse—or better

A bad brain bleed can trigger a hidden chain reaction inside the body. After an aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH)—a type of stroke where blood floods the space around the brain—doctors focus on stopping the initial bleed. But the real problem often starts later when the brain struggles to re

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Apr 27 2026FINANCE

Prediction Markets Grow Fast While Watchdog Agency Shrinks

Prediction markets are getting bigger every day, letting people bet on nearly anything—from sports to elections to who will win the next reality show. But the government group supposed to keep an eye on these markets is getting smaller instead of bigger. Over the past few years, the agency in charge

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