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Apr 25 2026SPORTS

High School Sports Roundup: Local Stars Shine in College Plans and Team Tributes

Two East Islip football players recently earned countywide honors at an awards event where only 11 athletes receive top recognition. Dylan Bayer became one of the Golden Eleven Scholar Athletes for 2025, a title that combines sports skill with academic success. His teammate Jake Simmons was named Pl

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Apr 25 2026RELIGION

Why Some Cultures Hesitate About Organ Donation

In Barcelona, a unique effort tried to understand why some people refuse organ donation. The project, which ran in 2018, brought together leaders from different faiths to talk openly about donation. Instead of focusing only on medical facts, it asked religious and cultural voices how their beliefs m

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Apr 25 2026RELIGION

Music and Faith Collide in Baton Rouge This Weekend

This Sunday at 3 p. m. , a free concert at Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church will bring together musicians from different faiths to celebrate unity. The annual Sounds of CommUNITY event, now in its third decade, started in 1991 as a way to bridge gaps between religious groups through music. Instead o

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Apr 24 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Hollywood’s New Block: Fewer Choices, Bigger Bills?

Two of the biggest players in movies and TV are teaming up in a deal worth more than most countries’ GDP. Warner Bros. and Paramount, both household names, are merging in an $81 billion takeover. That money could fund a hundred movies—or just one really expensive one. The new giant would control fam

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Apr 24 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Two Reality Stars, Fresh Betrayals, and a Dance Floor Showdown

Ciara Miller and Maura Higgins—two women who’ve recently dealt with public heartbreaks on reality TV—are about to step into the spotlight again. Miller, known for her hot-and-cold moments on "Summer House, " was blindsided when her ex started dating her friend just weeks ago. Higgins, who won fans o

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Apr 24 2026EDUCATION

Two-year colleges are quietly powering America's job market

Nationwide, high school grads and working adults are skipping expensive four-year plans in favor of community colleges that cost far less. Many students choose two-year programs because they lead straight to well-paying jobs in fields like nursing, IT, or welding—often without student debt. Others u

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Apr 24 2026ENVIRONMENT

Saving a lake: why Utah’s new water rules could make a difference

For years, people living near the Great Salt Lake barely noticed it shrinking. The smell and dust storms felt like normal parts of life in northern Utah. But as the water vanished, so did the lake’s hidden value—supporting wildlife, local jobs, and even the air people breathe. Instead of waiting for

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Apr 24 2026TECHNOLOGY

Google Faces Closer Scrutiny Over News Content in Brazil

Brazil’s competition watchdog is digging deeper into whether Google unfairly benefits from news articles in its search results. The regulator, known as CADE, decided to reopen an old case that started in 2019. Back then, they looked at how Google collects and displays news snippets without always co

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Apr 24 2026TECHNOLOGY

Bright screens ahead: RGB Mini-LED TVs arrive with color you can trust

2026 is shaping up to be the year tiny diodes change how we watch. TV brands like Samsung, LG, TCL, Hisense, and Sony are all rolling out new screens that swap the usual blue backlight for red, green, and blue mini LEDs. The move isn’t just a name change; it’s a color upgrade. More diodes mean purer

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Apr 24 2026HEALTH

How nations tackle difficult cancers: a global health puzzle

In 2023, seven leading economies made a quiet vow to join forces against some of the toughest cancers. Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, the UK and the US promised to share knowledge and speed up care for cancers where survival rates are often low. The challenge they faced wasn’t just medic

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