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After analyzing nearly 500 feline tumors across multiple countries, researchers found the same cancer-linked mutations seen in human blood, lung, bone, skin and even breast cancers. One mutation — FBXW7 — appears far more often in cats than in people, but when it shows up in humans, outcomes are worse. Here’s the twist: common chemotherapy drugs like vincristine may slow those tumors in cats — potentially offering a faster, real-world testing ground for treatments that could later help human patients.
Cats give genetic clues to better cancer treatments Similarities between pet and human tumours suggest new ideas for targeting both…
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Live update on the disappearance of Savannah Guthrie’s mother: The sheriff believes Nancy Guthrie is being held at this location — and the name has left all of America stunned.
Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos admitted he’s only holding out hope Nancy Guthrie is alive because he hasn’t seen any…
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BREAKING – Just 10 minutes ago: The FBI has released a shocking new update in the search for Nancy Guthrie. Her entire family has been urgently summoned for questioning after investigators discovered shredded paper fragments hidden beneath the floor tiles in Nancy’s room…
**Nancy Guthrie Still Missing: FBI Drops Bombshell – No Evidence of Border Crossing, But Investigation Shifts to Darker Possibilities** **TUCSON,…
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Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor — brother of Charles III and once one of the most privileged men in Britain — was arrested this week in a stunning twist tied to the fallout from the Jeffrey Epstein files. For the first time in nearly 400 years, a British royal has been taken in for questioning. The message from the Palace? “The law must take its course.” No titles. No deference. Just “a man in his sixties from Norfolk” released under investigation. Across the Atlantic, though, the picture looks very different. While authorities in the UK move forward, critics say accountability in the U.S. still feels out of reach — even after document dumps, public pressure, and years of unanswered questions surrounding Epstein’s powerful circle.
A former prince is arrested in the UK with accountability in question in the US Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, pictured at Windsor…
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Chaos erupted in the stands — and then something extraordinary happened. Inside the Dennis M. Lynch Arena in Pawtucket, gunfire shattered a youth hockey game as Robert Dorgan opened fire on his own family. But as panic spread and fans scrambled for cover, a handful of bystanders did the unthinkable — they ran toward the shooter. Michael Black thought the shots were popping balloons… until he saw the gun. He told his wife to run — then lunged, jamming his hand into the weapon to stop it from firing. Others piled on. A chokehold. A desperate struggle. Blood on the bleachers. Seconds that felt like forever. Police say those “courageous citizens” likely prevented even more deaths. Now Black is being called a hero — but he says he doesn’t feel like one. What drove ordinary spectators to risk everything in that split second… and how much worse could this have been if they hadn’t?
When Rhode Island shooter started firing, bystanders jumped into action to end the carnage Moments after Robert Dorgan started shooting…
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BI00d on the ice. 💔 At the Dennis M. Lynch Arena in Pawtucket, what should have been a routine high school hockey night turned into a nightmare. Authorities say 56-year-old Robert Dorgan opened fire, killing his ex-wife Rhonda Dorgan and their son Aidan before taking his own life — leaving three others critically injured. But this wasn’t random. His daughter, Amanda Wallace-Hubbard, says it was a calculated “vendetta” against their own family. She was in the stands with her young sons when the shots rang out — and says a split-second act of heroism saved their lives. A long trail of family conflict, court battles, and bitter disputes now raises chilling questions about what led to this explosion of violence.
Rhode Island ice rink shooting victims confirmed as shooter’s daughter alleges ‘vendetta’ against family Robert Dorgan’s daughter says family was…
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In Minnesota alone, more than 100 refugees were reportedly arrested in recent weeks before a federal judge stepped in to halt detentions and order releases. A broader court fight is looming — one that could reshape how refugees are treated nationwide. With refugee admissions already slashed and new reviews underway, thousands could be affected. They came to the U.S. legally, fleeing persecution. Now many are asking: after surviving everything else… are they about to face detention here?
Refugees Without Green Cards Subject to Arrest Under New Policy Image A federal immigration agent in Minneapolis last month.Credit…Todd Heisler/The…
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Colbert says network lawyers pressured him not to air it. CBS says that’s not true. Meanwhile, the political backdrop is anything but quiet — from corporate mergers to renewed “equal time” scrutiny from the FCC. And here’s the twist: Talarico’s campaign reportedly raised $2.5 million in the fallout. A segment that never aired on television just became one of the most-watched political interviews online. So what was said that sparked 85 million views — and a network standoff?
After Colbert-CBS Rift, Interview With Texas Senate Candidate James Talarico Draws 85M Views Across YouTube & Social Stephen Colbert…
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Before He Walks Away From the 2026 Winter Olympics, Ilia Malinin Says There’s One Unexpected Mission Left
Ilia Malinin is soon heading back to the U.S. with an Olympic gold medal, a ton of new lessons and friends from…
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Unknown DNA. And what used to be a dead end is now the most powerful lead in the case. Investigators searching for answers in the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie are diving into investigative genetic genealogy — the same cutting-edge technique that helped identify the Golden State Killer and track Bryan Kohberger. The glove found two miles from her Tucson home didn’t match anyone in CODIS. DNA collected at the house didn’t match either. Years ago, that would have stalled the case. Now? It could be the breakthrough. By combing through public DNA databases, experts can identify distant relatives of an unknown suspect — sometimes from less than 1% shared DNA — and build a family tree that narrows the search to a single name. It can take minutes. Or it can take years.
In an aerial view, Pima County sheriff’s officers gather on Nancy Guthrie’s property on February 17 in Tucson, Arizona. Brandon…
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A masked man. A single glove. And now — DNA that could unmask a kidnapper. Three weeks after 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie vanished from her Tucson home, investigators are turning to cutting-edge genetic genealogy in a high-stakes effort to identify a suspect. DNA recovered near the scene didn’t match anything in the FBI’s CODIS database. But authorities believe they may have found genetic material that belongs to the person who took her. If that’s true, experts say it’s only a matter of time. The same investigative technique helped catch the Golden State Killer and Bryan Kohberger. Now it could expose whoever was caught on camera outside Guthrie’s home — armed, masked, wearing a distinctive Ozark Trail backpack. More than 19,000 tips have poured in. A reward exceeding $200,000 is on the table. Federal, state, and local agencies are combing through partial DNA, security footage, credit card trails, even backpack sales across Arizona. And the sheriff has a warning: if you’re responsible, you should be worried. Because this case isn’t cold. And the science may be closing in.
Arizona authorities turn to genetic genealogy in ongoing search for Nancy Guthrie Nancy Guthrie, 84, was reported missing from her…
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EXCLUSIVE: Ilia Malinin Has One Surprising Goal He Must Complete Before Leaving the 2026 Winter Olympics — And It’s Not What You Think
Ilia Malinin is soon heading back to the U.S. with an Olympic gold medal, a ton of new lessons and friends from…