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Health-related ballot measures more likely to pass
Health-related ballot measures more likely to pass Sadie Harley Scientific Editor Andrew Zinin Lead Editor As voters are increasingly asked to decide complex health policy questions at the ballot box, new research from the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis finds that health care-related ballot measures draw more voters to the polls and are more likely to pass than other initiatives—but they're also especially sensitive to opposition spending by special-interest groups. The...
Is Australia sucking the joy out of childhood?
Some countries are protecting a child's right to play — not Australia Wed 10 Jun 2026 at 5:11am The first time Renae Powell waved her eldest child through the primary school gates, she felt something was wrong. Because of teacher supervision requirements, play was outlawed before and after school.
H.S. runner's viral DQ for celebrating overturned
A high school track athlete's disqualification for celebrating a state championship-clinching victory as he crossed the finish line has been overturned. The North Carolina High School Athletic Association ruled Tuesday that the Mallard Creek High School boys' track team will be recognized as class 8A co-state champions, and also co-winners of the pivotal 4x400-meter relay race from which athlete Nyan Brown had been disqualified. "We are grateful for the decision," Mallard Creek principal...
The U.S. Is Winging This Ebola Outbreak
By the time African health officials confirmed the world’s latest Ebola outbreak, the epidemic had already spilled from the Democratic Republic of the Congo into neighboring Uganda. Within two days, the World Health Organization declared the outbreak a public-health emergency of international concern. Less than two weeks later, the potential case count has risen past 1,000, including more than 230 deaths, and 10 other African countries have been designated at risk of being swept into the...
The Caning That Changed America
Most people in the Senate chamber noticed the sound before anything else—the sharp, sickening crack of a metal-tipped cane landing on an unprotected skull. On May 22, 1856, Preston Brooks, a young representative from South Carolina, confronted Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts during a visit to the upper chamber. Sumner, known for his fiery abolitionist orations, had recently given a speech leveling insults at Brooks’s kinsman Senator Andrew P. Butler, including that he consorted with...
Men's Way-Too-Early Top 25: Kansas, UNC in after d...
Between the first and second editions of the Way-Too-Early Top 25 -- the night of the national championship game and April 27 -- there was massive player movement. More than 2,700 players entered the transfer portal, more than 90 of the top 100 transfers committed quickly and another 60 players entered the NBA draft. But in the month since, things have quieted -- though they're not fully settled just yet.
Over 100 schools forced to close after bear 'prowls streets' near Tokyo
Over 100 schools forced to close after bear 'prowls streets' near Tokyo Terrified residents have been told to keep their children at home after multiple sightings of a brown bear near Tokyo - it's only the latest in a wave of incidents in Japan Almost 100 schools have been forced to close after a bear began prowling the streets of a busy city and skilfully evaded capture. Authorities in Utsunomiya, a city about 60 miles north of Tokyo, told children to stay at home this morning after...
Black teachers improve outcomes for all students, but the profession remains largely white
Black teachers improve outcomes for all students, but the profession remains largely white Owen Ferguson Scientific Editor Andrew Zinin Lead Editor Having Black teachers and other educators of color improves students' classroom experiences, research shows. They often serve as role models, set high academic expectations and teach material that connects to students' lives outside of schools. This can lead to higher standardized test scores, better school attendance and more classroom...
Shrek, Captain Cook and the stars: Welcome to Brian Robinson's multiverse
Artist Brian Robinson explores everyday magic in Multiverse at Newcastle Art Gallery Mon 8 Jun 2026 at 4:30am Every night as he walks across the yard to his studio in Cairns, Torres Strait Islander artist Brian Robinson looks up at the star-filled sky. "All life, for me, starts off gazing at the cosmos," Robinson tells ABC Arts. This deep interest in cosmology forms the foundation of much of Robinson's art, currently the subject of a major survey at Newcastle Art Gallery.
Last surviving 'Rosie the Riveters' honored by WWII Museum on D-Day Anniversary: 'We can do it'
As America marks the 82nd anniversary of D-Day on Saturday, a group of women whose wartime labor helped sustain the Allied war effort gathered in New Orleans to remember a generation that is rapidly disappearing. More than 30 surviving "Rosie the Riveters" gathered at The National WWII Museum in New Orleans, where they were honored for helping power the wartime industrial effort that supported Allied forces during World War II."Every day, memories of World War II — its sights and sounds, its...