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May 28 2026SPORTS

South Carolina Football Takes Mental Health Seriously in 2026

Shane Beamer, South Carolina's head football coach, has made mental health a priority in his program. He made this change after seeing how players struggled under the stress of name-image-likeness (NIL) deals. These deals, which let college athletes earn money from their popularity, can add pressure

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May 28 2026POLITICS

Voting for healthcare in Maine: what really matters

Maine voters often see candidates in everyday places—school games, diners, or town meetings. That closeness can make politics feel personal, even cozy. But when it comes to healthcare, being likable isn’t the same as being effective. A candidate’s charm doesn’t heal a sick patient or pay a surprise

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May 28 2026POLITICS

Lebanon’s Cease-Fires: A Cycle of Broken Promises

Lebanon has tried stopping wars before. Many times. Since breaking free from colonial rule in the 1940s, the country has signed at least seven peace deals under international pressure. Each one promised calm, but none delivered lasting safety. Instead, Lebanon has bounced between civil war, cross-bo

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May 28 2026CRIME

Former Politician Faces Trial Over Old Allegations

A high-profile court case kicked off this week in Northern Ireland, putting a former political leader under scrutiny for claims dating back decades. Jeffrey Donaldson, once a familiar name in local and national politics, now stands accused of serious offenses that he firmly denies. The charges inclu

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May 28 2026HEALTH

Countries Ramp Up Border Checks as Ebola Threat Grows

Global health officials have sounded the alarm about a recent Ebola flare-up in Central Africa, pushing nations to rethink how they handle travelers from affected areas. The outbreak, centered near the Democratic Republic of Congo, has led to a patchwork of new rules worldwide, as countries try to b

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May 28 2026HEALTH

Fluoride in water: Legal fight turns on old science, not safety

In early 2025, a federal appeals court sent a major fluoride case back to the lower court—not because fluoride was proven safe, but because the judge broke a rule on how evidence should be handled. The dispute started in 2016 when health advocacy groups sued the EPA, claiming fluoride in drinking wa

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May 28 2026SCIENCE

Young Scientists and Engineers Changing Healthcare and Science in Asia

This year’s standout young researchers and entrepreneurs in Asia are tackling big challenges in science and healthcare. Their work spans from decoding brain signals to designing AI tools that respect privacy. Some, like Hikari Okita, dive deep into genetics, studying xeno-nucleic acids (XNA). Unlike

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May 28 2026HEALTH

How Ebola slips past the global response in Congo

The latest Ebola outbreak in Congo spreads faster than teams can track it. Nearly 900 cases have appeared, and suspected deaths are above 220. Contacts of these patients—people who might have been exposed—number over 2, 000, yet only 7% have been reached so far. Delays come from weak local systems,

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May 28 2026HEALTH

Why some teens lose teeth and what that says about their lives

A study looked at 615 public school students in five crowded cities in Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil, all around age 12. Instead of just counting cavities, researchers checked how many teens had lost at least one permanent tooth. Only 1 in 20 showed tooth loss, but the patterns behind it tell a bigger

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May 28 2026HEALTH

A Story About Changing Habits and Dropping Pounds

Nathan Coleman didn’t set out to lose weight—he set out to ride a horse. The TV host had signed up for a show segment where guests needed to weigh themselves beforehand. At 337 pounds, he was too heavy for the ranch’s rules. Instead of saddling up, he walked beside the horse while his crew rode ahea

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