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May 07 2026HEALTH

Strokes, Climbing, and New Tech: A Chicago Story

Lucas Wittwer was only 27 when a fall at a climbing gym sent him into unconsciousness. He woke up feeling fine, but doctors later discovered he had suffered a hemorrhagic stroke caused by an aneurysm. The episode left him with no memory of the days when doctors performed a delicate embolization to s

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May 07 2026EDUCATION

Voters in Knoxville Urged to Back a Local Teacher

A teacher from Fountain City Elementary is looking for support in the national “America’s Favorite Teacher” contest. Miranda Timmerman has reached the quarterfinal stage and now needs votes to move on to the semifinals. The deadline for voting is tonight at 10 p. m. , and the overall competiti

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May 07 2026WEATHER

Great Lakes: Michigan’s Weather Whisperer

The Great Lakes act like giant weather regulators for Michigan, especially on the eastern and southeastern shores. Water moves heat slower than land, so during summer it absorbs sunshine without getting hot quickly. This keeps nearby towns cooler than places farther inland, giving the lakeshores

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May 07 2026ENVIRONMENT

Mosquitoes on the Move: How Hot Weather Fuels Swarms in Georgia

Recent heat waves and prolonged dry spells have pushed more mosquitoes into the state, raising worries about diseases like West Nile. When rains are scarce, storm drains and underground pipes hold leftover water that becomes perfect spots for mosquito babies to grow. Scientists point out that

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May 07 2026WEATHER

Storm Watch in Alabama Without Main Radar

A big weather radar at Birmingham’s National Weather Service office has stopped working because of a hardware glitch. The loss happens right when the state expects heavy storms on Wednesday afternoon and into the night. The office still has to keep its eyes open for danger, but it can rely on oth

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May 07 2026WEATHER

Vermont Adds Weather Hub to Catch Storms Before They Hit

The University of Vermont has just finished building a new weather‑monitoring tower in Lyndonville, the first of about twenty planned across the state. The goal is to fill blind spots in the national radar system and give local officials more time to warn people about floods or blizzards. Becaus

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May 07 2026WEATHER

Weather Shift: From Warm Breeze to Rainy Haze

The day that began with heat and wind quickly turned wet across the DC region. Mid‑week showers arrive, yet a brief sunny break may appear in the afternoon before evening storms stir again. Temperatures rise to just over 70°F, with wind gusts reaching 25‑30 miles per hour. Light rain of about a tent

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May 07 2026TECHNOLOGY

OpenAI’s Surprise Nuclear Deal Raises Big Questions

Some executives at OpenAI are uneasy about a potential partnership with Helion, a company that works on nuclear fusion. The leaders in charge of the deal, including Sam Altman and Greg Brockman, also put money into Helion. Because Helion has not yet produced a working product, the idea that Op

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May 07 2026HEALTH

Health Feelings and Family Planning in Ghana

The story starts with a simple idea: how people see their own health can change the way they choose birth control. In Ghana, many women still face unwanted pregnancies and dangerous abortions, which hurt mothers’ lives. Even though modern contraceptives can save many of these women from serious heal

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May 07 2026WEATHER

Why the Weather Service is playing catch-up before storm season

The National Weather Service is still rebuilding after major job cuts last year, just as tornado and hurricane season approaches. One forecasting hub in Oklahoma currently has five empty positions, and other offices are losing staff temporarily because experts are being reassigned to cover the World

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