STEAMSHIP WILLIAM G MATHER

May 10 2026SPORTS

Indoor Golf’s Big Leap: From Korean Trend to U. S. Boom

Golfzon now runs more than 6, 500 indoor golf simulator sites across South Korea, owning a large share of the country’s off‑course market. Years ago, many Koreans saw simulators as just a fancy video game, but that view has flipped. Today the company reports twice as many rounds inside its centers t

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May 10 2026POLITICS

A Look Back at the Life of a Labor Leader

George Gresham spent over four decades fighting for workers' rights in New York's healthcare industry. Starting as a housekeeper in a city hospital, he climbed the ranks to become one of the most influential labor leaders in the state. His journey from a hospital floor worker to the president of 119

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May 09 2026TECHNOLOGY

Compact Powerhouse: Mini PC With a 13th‑Gen Intel Core for Work and Play

GMKtec has rolled out a new small‑sized computer that packs a punch thanks to Intel’s 13th‑generation Core i5‑13500H chip. The device, called the NucBox M3 Pro, promises that a tiny desk can still handle office duties and entertainment without compromise. The heart of the unit is a 12‑core, 16‑th

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May 09 2026HEALTH

Leading the heart: How Ghana’s centre reshaped heart care in West Africa

Ghana took a major step forward in 1989 when a specialist unit opened at Korle Bu Teaching Hospital in Accra. Instead of flying patients abroad for heart surgery, local doctors now had a place to perform modern procedures right at home. Over time, this centre attracted trainee surgeons from across W

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May 09 2026BUSINESS

GE's Smart Move: Staying Flexible in the Energy Game

GE Vernova isn’t putting all its energy eggs in one basket. Instead of betting big on one energy source, the company is playing it smart by staying flexible. While gas turbines get most of the attention—orders are stacked through 2030—the real story is how GE is quietly building a future-proof busin

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May 08 2026POLITICS

How politicians mess with your vote without you noticing

Gerrymandering isn’t just about moving district lines. It’s a sneaky power grab where politicians redraw maps to protect their own seats. Every ten years, states adjust voting districts based on population changes—but some take it further by twisting those lines to favor one party. Colorado’s system

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May 08 2026CELEBRITIES

Golloria George: How a TikTok Star Bridges Gaps in Beauty

Golloria George built her online fame by speaking up where others stayed silent. With over 3 million followers across TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube, she didn’t just share makeup routines—she called out gaps in the industry. Her viral 2024 video criticized a foundation shade so off that she said it

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May 07 2026CELEBRITIES

A Rising Star’s New Chapter in Hollywood

Genneya Walton has just signed a management deal with Strand Entertainment, marking the next step in her growing career. The actress is best known for her role as BB Urich, a sharp‑witted reporter linked to the New York Bulletin’s Ben Urich, in the second season of Marvel’s “Daredevil: Born Again. ”

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May 06 2026ENVIRONMENT

Rethinking Growth: Why We Need Green Economics

Green economists argue that the current focus on GDP is too narrow. They say we should look at how money affects nature and people’s well‑being instead of just counting production. This shift means measuring progress by the health of ecosystems and community happiness, not only by how much mon

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May 05 2026HEALTH

Cancer Risk Scores: How Genes and Lifestyle Combine to Guide Prevention

Genetic studies have shown that a person’s DNA can hint at their chance of developing cancer. Scientists now mix this genetic signal with information about a person’s environment and habits to create a single score that predicts risk. The idea is that both inherited genes and everyday exposures—like

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