BI

Apr 06 2026HEALTH

Finding Dangerous DNA Clues for Aortic Problems

Scientists are using computer programs to spot hidden risks in genes that can cause the aorta, the main artery, to tear. These risky changes are called variants of uncertain significance, or VUS, because doctors don’t know if they are harmful. The new approach looks at many different features of the

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Apr 06 2026CRIME

A Troubling Incident at a Local McDonald’s

A 35‑year‑old man from Portland has been charged with multiple bias‑crime offenses after an angry confrontation at a McDonald’s on March 18. Police say he approached a Hispanic patron outside the restaurant and demanded that the man perform 100 burpees. The confrontation quickly escalated when the s

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Apr 06 2026CELEBRITIES

Birthday Spotlight: Stars Turning a Year Older on April 6

April 6 marks another day for celebrities to celebrate their birthdays, and this year’s list includes a mix of film, television, and music icons. At the top of the chart is actor Billy Dee Williams, who turns 89. A quirky detail about him is that his full middle name is December, a fact that show

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Apr 06 2026SCIENCE

SLC15A4: A New Hope in Cancer Survival and Treatment

SLC15A4 is a protein that helps move molecules inside cells and plays a part in the body’s immune defense. Researchers have now explored how this protein behaves in many types of cancer, looking at its levels, genetic changes, and impact on patients’ lives. The study first examined huge public data

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Apr 06 2026SCIENCE

Fragmented Shores Boost Antibiotic Threat in Crab Gut

Habitat fragmentation, the breaking up of continuous ecosystems into smaller pieces, can change how bacteria live inside animals. In tidal mudflats, a small crab species that is central to the food chain has become a useful eye on this process. Scientists examined how different landscape patterns af

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Apr 06 2026CRYPTO

Bitcoin climbs above $69, 000 as traders flip the script

Bitcoin surged 3% to $69, 120 on Monday after traders returned from Easter and felt hopeful about a possible Iran ceasefire. The rise pushed the largest crypto past its last week’s peak and forced $196 million in short bets to liquidate within 24 hours. Ethereum led the climb, gaining 3. 7% to $2,

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Apr 06 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Writers and studios agree on a quick deal after past fights

After months of tense standoffs last year, screenwriters and major studios surprised many by reaching a quick agreement on a new contract. The Writers Guild of America, which represents over 10, 000 writers, pushed hard for better health benefits after their fund lost around $200 million in recent y

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Apr 06 2026HEALTH

The Forgotten Superfood in Your Fruit Bowl

Prunes often get a bad rap as the "old people’s snack" or just a quick fix for bathroom troubles. But science says this dried plum packs more than just fiber. Studies show prunes might help keep bones strong, especially for women past menopause. They’re also packed with antioxidants that could lower

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Apr 06 2026ENVIRONMENT

Turning wood scraps into a tool for cleaning dirty water

Recycling leftover eucalyptus wood into biochar turns a common trash problem into a water-cleaning hero. Scientists took ordinary wood chips from eucalyptus trees and heated them without oxygen, creating a material that grabs arsenic from polluted water. In lab tests, one gram of this biochar remove

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Apr 06 2026FINANCE

Big Money Tests Blockchain’s Trust Problem

Wall Street is quietly racing ahead in crypto—but not the way you might think. Instead of betting on wild DeFi schemes, traditional finance is building regulated on-chain markets where trades settle instantly and never sleep. In early 2026, the New York Stock Exchange launched a round-the-clock toke

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