ING

May 09 2026HEALTH

Longevity Needs More Than Money

Longevity is usually seen as a medical issue. People talk about hospitals, medicines and diet. But the real story is bigger. Social ties and purpose matter just as much as health care. Research shows that friends keep us alive longer. A study at Harvard found that people who love their relationship

reading time less than a minute
May 09 2026HEALTH

Arisa Health Ends 55‑Year Contract Over Funding Gap

Arisa Health, the organization that runs community mental health centers across 41 Arkansas counties, decided not to bid for a new state contract when its current agreement ends. The choice comes after the agency has faced rising costs and shrinking public money for more than five decades. The cent

reading time less than a minute
May 09 2026CELEBRITIES

Sky‑High Dining Opens in Sonoma County

The new rooftop restaurant, AYA, opened on Thursday, May 7 at the Graton Resort and Casino near Rohnert Park. The launch night was a mix of local guests, food experts and pop‑culture personalities. Celebrity chef Roy Ellamar unveiled the menu, featuring fine wines, creative starters and a plen

reading time less than a minute
May 09 2026SPORTS

Ole Miss Baseball Shifts Game to Saturday Doubleheader

The Rebels have moved the last home game of their regular season to Saturday, May 9, because rain is likely on Sunday. The change was announced on May 8 after the forecast showed a high chance of precipitation in the afternoon of May 10. The doubleheader starts at 2 p. m. , and the second game fo

reading time less than a minute
May 09 2026HEALTH

Nurses in the OR: Spotting Burnout with Smart Tech

Operating‑room nurses face a hidden danger called compassion fatigue, a kind of burnout that can hurt their health, shake up the nursing team, and put patients at risk. A new study looked closely at how common this fatigue is among OR nurses and what it looks like in everyday work. Researchers

reading time less than a minute
May 09 2026CRYPTO

A Slower Hiring Wave Could Shake Bitcoin’s Path

The U. S. jobs report due Friday shows a sharp drop in new hires, with only 62, 000 added this month compared to March’s 172, 000. Unemployment is expected to stay around 4. 3 %. At first glance, fewer jobs might look good for Bitcoin and other risky assets because a weaker labor market can sugge

reading time less than a minute
May 09 2026EDUCATION

A New Look at Highlands School Culture

Highlands High School’s assistant principal, Kaitlyn Selfridge, stepped down in April after a year of growing frustration. She wrote that the district’s leadership had turned her job into a hostile environment, citing repeated principal changes and what she described as demeaning remarks about appea

reading time less than a minute
May 09 2026FINANCE

AI Trading Bot Lets New Users Jump Into Market Moves

BsStrategy has opened a new door for people who want to trade with computers instead of watching charts all day. The company’s platform, which can read market data in real time and run ready‑made trading plans, is now live for anyone to try. Anyone who signs up today gets a $10 credit to play around

reading time less than a minute
May 09 2026BUSINESS

Bowling Boom or Bust? The Big Question Over Bowling Prices

A new lawsuit says a big bowling chain, Lucky Strike Entertainment, is running an illegal monopoly. The suit claims the company has bought many small bowling alleys and then raised prices a lot. In 11 state courts, people who bowl often say the chain is making them pay too much. They say Lu

reading time less than a minute
May 09 2026CRIME

Nightclub Closed After Tragic Shooting in Deep Ellum

The club that once buzzed with music and dance in Dallas’s Deep Ellum neighborhood has shut its doors after a violent incident. A security guard was killed and five people were hurt when two shootings broke out inside the venue earlier this week. The police are still looking into what happened, and

reading time less than a minute