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Mar 05 2026CELEBRITIES

Savannah Guthrie’s Return to the Studio After Mother’s Disappearance

Savannah Guthrie stepped back into the familiar lights of the Today set on Thursday, marking her first visit since her mother Nancy vanished under mysterious circumstances. The move was a quiet gesture of gratitude toward her colleagues, who have offered steady support during this difficult time. In

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Mar 05 2026EDUCATION

Education Levels and Online Risks: A New Look

Studies of internet use show that people with different schooling levels face varied dangers online. A large survey in China, covering 2, 120 participants, examined three kinds of harm: mental distress, health problems, and social isolation. Results indicate that most users report psychologica

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Mar 05 2026TECHNOLOGY

Apps that Hog Your Battery Get a Red Flag

Google has started putting clear warning notices on the Play Store for apps that drain too much battery. These warnings appear in a box that says something like “This app may use more battery than expected due to high background activity. ” It points out apps that cross a set limit on how much th

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Mar 05 2026HEALTH

Maryland’s New Hospital Payment System and Cancer Care

The state of Maryland changed how hospitals get paid in 2014 by introducing a Global Budget Revenue (GBR) model. Under this plan, each hospital receives a fixed amount of money for the entire year instead of being paid per service. The idea is to keep hospital spending in check while encouraging bet

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Mar 05 2026BUSINESS

Sellers Back in the Game: Homes Re‑list at Record Speed

The spring market, usually the busiest time for houses, has taken a quiet turn. Yet sellers are showing renewed confidence. In January alone, almost 45 000 homes that had been taken off the market last year were put back up for sale. This is the biggest January figure Redfin has recorded in its ten‑

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Mar 05 2026SPORTS

Murray’s Chance to Swing Back at Baseball

The Oakland Athletics have reminded former quarterback Kyler Murray that baseball is still on the table. Murray was drafted ninth overall by the A’s in 2018 and signed a contract, but he chose to finish his college football season instead. After winning the Heisman Trophy and being selected fi

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Mar 05 2026POLITICS

Friends of Iran Lose Their Hands

Iran has long lived on the fringes of Western politics, but it kept close ties with several nations that shared its distrust of the United States. Back in the day, Turkey and India traded goods with Iran and sometimes coordinated on security matters. China bought oil from Tehran at low prices, wh

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Mar 05 2026POLITICS

Iranian Ship Sunk Near Sri Lanka: A Ripple in the Indian Ocean

A warship from Iran went down after a U. S. submarine struck it off the coast of Sri Lanka, just days after the vessel had joined a naval drill hosted by India. The incident shows how far the U. S. –Israel campaign against Iran has stretched, reaching waters that India watches closely for its own se

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Mar 05 2026HEALTH

Doctors and Diet: A New Push for Nutrition Lessons

A health leader has started a campaign to get medical schools to add more nutrition training. The plan asks colleges to review how much they teach about food, name a faculty person in charge of the topic, and post a public plan that aims for 40 hours of instruction. The goal is not to force a specif

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Mar 05 2026SPORTS

Cardinals Missed Chance to Trade Rising Star Kyler Murray

The Arizona Cardinals faced a tough decision with their quarterback, Kyler Murray. In 2022 they signed him to a five‑year contract worth $230 million, but the deal included an unusual “independent study” clause. The clause suggested that Murray needed extra motivation, which made fans and analysts u

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