ATLANTA

Apr 12 2026FINANCE

Parents Still Fund Gen Z Lives

About two‑thirds of parents say their 18‑to‑28 kids still need money or help at home. More than half feel that this support hurts their own budgets. The data came from a survey of 3, 773 U. S. adults last year. Experts say the practice is becoming normal. It can help young people finish sc

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Apr 12 2026CRYPTO

Dark‑Market Crypto: Why Big Players Need Secret Trading Rooms

Large traders in traditional finance keep their moves hidden inside special venues called dark pools, which lets them avoid tipping the market. In 2025 more than half of U. S. stock trades happened off public exchanges, showing how common this practice is. Crypto markets have never had a true dark

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Apr 12 2026POLITICS

Crypto Crackdown Reversed: The SEC’s New Playbook

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) once boasted about tackling crypto fraud with 583 cases and $8. 2 billion in penalties last year, claiming it stayed ahead of new threats. That image has shifted dramatically. In a fresh review for 2025, the agency admits it over‑reacted and pulls back on

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Apr 12 2026CRYPTO

Building More Than Walls: A Crypto Leader’s Simple Rule

CZ, the founder of the biggest crypto exchange, says success starts with a clear purpose. He explains that feeling proud and taking responsibility for what you do is essential. If you keep working on a task without meaning, you risk getting stuck in a routine that adds little value. He compares t

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Apr 12 2026CRYPTO

Push Alerts and Crypto Lows: A Privacy Warning

"Telegram co‑founder Pavel Durov has warned that the tiny messages sent to your phone as push alerts could reveal more than you think. Even if a chat app claims end‑to‑end encryption, the preview of a message that pops up on your lock screen can leave a trail. Durov pointed out an FBI investigation

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Apr 12 2026EDUCATION

Future Pathways to the Stars

Young people in America are urged to look up and imagine adventures beyond our planet. A recent space mission highlighted that new records can only be broken if the next generation embraces science and exploration. For years, popular shows on public television have sparked curiosity about rockets

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Apr 12 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Hearing the Future: Why Anne Hathaway’s Sci‑Fi Film Fell Behind Schedule

Anne Hathaway is known for roles that range from light romance to deep drama, but she also shines in sci‑fi worlds. She once played a space doctor in Christopher Nolan’s Interstellar and later joined the quirky horror‑comedy Colossal, showing her knack for genre work. Her newest project, The End of

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Apr 12 2026SPORTS

Athletes’ Menstrual Health: Trends from Tokyo to Beijing

In recent years, scientists have watched how female Olympic competitors in Japan handle their menstrual cycles. They noticed that the number of athletes who report problems like severe cramps or missed periods has changed over seven Olympic Games. The study followed thousands of athletes from both t

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Apr 12 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Apple TV’s New Cyberpunk Series Could Fix 2025’s Sci‑Fi Miss

Apple TV plans a new show based on William Gibson’s classic book “Neuromancer. ” The series may recover the disappointment of last year’s cyber‑punk film, “Tron: Ares. ” That movie looked flashy but lacked deep stories and strong characters. Critics praised the visuals of “Tron: Ares. ”

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Apr 12 2026SCIENCE

Undergraduate Tackles Alzheimer’s with Data and Determination

Mina Mahmood, a junior at Indiana University Northwest studying neuroscience, grew up watching her father’s memory fade. His struggle with a cognitive disorder sparked her curiosity about the brain and a desire to help. During summer 2025, Mina travelled to Indianapolis for a student research progr

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