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The week in business: Recalls, retail woes, and record-setting deals

From salmonella-contaminated eggs to Swift and Kelce’s $1.65B engagement, this week’s business news had it all. It’s been one of those weeks where business news managed to cover just about everything: food safety, trade drama, housing weirdness, mall nostalgia, layoffs, and even Taylor Swift’s love life. Some stories hit directly at everyday life—like what’s in…

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The Science behind Hurricane Katrina: What Researchers Knew before the 2005 Disaster

Rachel Feltman: For Scientific American’s Science Quickly, I’m Rachel Feltman. Twenty years ago, Hurricane Katrina became one of the deadliest storms ever to hit the U.S. After sweeping along the Gulf Coast, wreaking havoc in Louisiana and Mississippi, the massive storm ultimately led to 1,392 fatalities, according to the National Hurricane Center. Katrina’s destruction centered…

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Can Clemson’s Cade Klubnik join Jayden Daniels and Bo Nix as written-off QBs to become Round 1 draft picks?

Anyone that’s ever tried to acquire true mastery of any subject knows that the term learning curve is very apt. There is nothing in life where the amount of effort exerted will directly correlate to relative improvement. No, with any skill development there will be big leaps made in short time periods, frustratingly long plateaus…

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How Russia Is Distracting Citizens From the War

new video loaded: How Russia Is Distracting Citizens From the War By Ivan Nechepurenko, Katrin Bennhold, Christina Thornell, Melanie Bencosme and Stephanie Swart•August 30, 2025 Moscow is hosting a big summer festival as Russia continues its war in Ukraine. Katrin Bennhold, a senior international reporter for The New York Times, talks with Ivan Nechepurenko, a…

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