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May 14 2026ENVIRONMENT

When tiny tire bits meet fish: how road wear turns plastic into a pollution booster

Every time a car rolls over a wet street, tiny bits of rubber fly off the tires. These microplastics don’t just float away. They change shape, break into smaller pieces, and latch onto other chemicals already stuck to them. Scientists wanted to see what happens when these tire bits get ground down e

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May 14 2026ENVIRONMENT

Understanding PFAS in Compost: What Happens When Organic Waste Breaks Down

When organic waste like food scraps and yard trimmings gets turned into compost, it doesn’t just turn into soil. It also mixes with biosolids—treated sewage sludge—creating a nutrient-rich product used in gardens and farms. But there’s a catch: compost can contain PFAS, a group of man-made chemicals

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May 14 2026HEALTH

Walking 8, 500 steps daily helps keep weight off longer

Research shows that hitting about 8, 500 daily steps can help people hold onto weight loss for months. A fresh review of 18 studies with nearly 4, 000 adults found those averaging 8, 500 steps a day kept off about 3. 3% of their lost weight after ten months. Each extra thousand steps added more prot

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May 14 2026FOOD-SAFETY

Los Angeles Eatery Faces Brief Closure Over Bug Problem

A well-known Thai restaurant in Los Angeles recently had to shut down temporarily after health inspectors found unwanted visitors—rats, cockroaches, and flies—in the kitchen. The restaurant, which has been a local favorite since the 1970s, reopened just two days later after fixing the issue. This ki

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May 14 2026ENVIRONMENT

Should land access rules be updated for hunters?

A group focused on environmental decisions recently discussed whether new rules should allow hunters to cross private land. The conversation happened in a council meeting where people shared different views. Some argued that current laws make it hard for hunters to move freely. Others worried that o

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May 14 2026TECHNOLOGY

The AI race heats up as businesses switch to a new leader

Businesses in the U. S. are now more likely to pay for Anthropic’s AI tool than OpenAI’s. In April 2026, Anthropic’s adoption hit 34. 4%, while OpenAI’s dropped to 32. 3%. The shift happened quickly—just a year ago, OpenAI led with 32%, and Anthropic barely registered. What changed? Anthropic’s codi

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May 14 2026BUSINESS

New faces take over Glenview Corner Bakery as Chicago chain grows

A suburban Chicago café just got a fresh start under new owners Chad and Brittany Moore, who now run the Glenview Corner Bakery location. The couple brings years of food service experience to the job, including stints in a family-run business and a busy deli in Los Angeles. Their connection to the b

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May 13 2026RELIGION

Rebooting Muslim Bioethics: A Call for Thoughtful Debate

Islamic bioethics is a new field that still has many gaps. Most scholars rely on strict legal rules, but they rarely ask deeper moral questions or consider social realities. This approach leaves the discipline without strong ethical principles and makes its conclusions weak. The paper urges a retur

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May 13 2026HEALTH

Ewing and Other Small‑Round Tumors: What the DNA Tells Us

Ewing sarcoma is a fast‑growing bone tumor that shows up mostly in teenagers and young adults. It carries a special genetic swap, called a FET::ETS rearrangement, that scientists can spot with a test. \ Other tumors that look the same under the microscope – the non‑Ewing small‑round cell sarco

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May 13 2026SCIENCE

Milk Mix‑Up: Spotting Coconut in Cow’s Milk

A new test can quickly find coconut milk hidden in dairy. The method uses a special light that shows how the two drinks glow differently. Scientists shine three colors of light on milk samples and record their glow patterns. They found that two natural dyes – one from tryptophan and another

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