DR CAREY M WRIGHT

Jun 08 2026TECHNOLOGY

New Cars with Built‑In Back Seat Screens

Many people now expect cars to have smart tech. One popular feature is a screen for passengers in the back seat. Not every model offers it, but several new cars do. The list below shows a mix of minivans and luxury SUVs that can have rear‑seat entertainment. The Range Rover is a famous name. Its ne

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Jun 08 2026FINANCE

Morgan Stanley and Galaxy: A New Way to Use Bitcoin in Banking

Morgan Stanley told its wealth‑management clients that they can now lend Bitcoin, Ethereum or Solana to Galaxy Digital and receive shares of spot crypto exchange‑traded products in return. The deal lets clients keep their coins while the bank can use them as marginable collateral, thanks to recent S

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Jun 08 2026HEALTH

How Well Can Heart Risk Tools Really Predict Health in Middle-Aged Adults?

Middle-aged adults often wonder how likely they are to face heart problems down the road. Two scoring systems—Life's Essential 8 (LE8) and SCORE2—claim to predict that risk. But which one works better? A recent study tested these tools on a group of 30- to 65-year-olds from a general population. Res

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Jun 08 2026POLITICS

Moldova Looks to Build Drone Defenses as Tensions Rise

Moldova’s leader has raised alarms about the growing drone threats along the country’s borders, especially after a recent incident in neighboring Romania where a stray drone injured two people. The president argues that Moldova can’t afford to stay unprotected while conflicts rage nearby. Currently,

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Jun 08 2026BUSINESS

Banks face a hiring dilemma as AI takes over basic tasks

Many banks are now struggling to decide how to bring in new workers. A big reason for this is the rise of artificial intelligence. AI can handle simple tasks that once went to entry-level employees. This means fewer people get hired for basic finance jobs. But banks still need young talent. So they

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Jun 08 2026POLITICS

Can frozen money start new talks between the U. S. and Iran?

Money often talks louder than words in high-stakes politics. The United States is now looking at Iran’s frozen assets—around $24 billion—as a potential bargaining chip. The idea is simple: instead of letting those funds sit idle, Washington might use them to help rebuild Gulf allies hit hard by rece

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Jun 08 2026HEALTH

When Sleep Becomes a Struggle: A Look at Michael Jackson's Late-Night Battle

Michael Jackson spent years trying to outsmart sleepless nights. Toward the end, even extreme doses of cough syrup couldn’t deliver the rest he craved. Reports from someone who saw him firsthand describe a night where Jackson downed enough syrup to knock out most people—but not him. He chugged two f

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Jun 07 2026HEALTH

Front‑Line Heroes Fight Ebola with Little Pay and Long Hours

Dr. Richard Lokudu heads the medical team at Mongbwalu General Referral Hospital, a hub for patients in Congo’s latest Ebola crisis. He and his colleagues work nonstop, often waking to new case alerts at night. Despite their relentless effort, the doctors receive almost no financial support or regul

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Jun 07 2026SPORTS

What makes a tennis player succeed beyond talent?

Maja Chwalinska’s rise in tennis isn’t about coming from a family of athletes or having early access to expensive coaching. She grew up in a small Polish city where her parents juggled multiple jobs to support her dreams. Unlike many young players who start in private academies, she trained locally,

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Jun 07 2026LIFESTYLE

Teens today face different struggles than adults did

Many adults believe young people today are less tough than past generations. They point to rising anxiety rates and wonder why teens can’t handle life like they used to. Most grew up without constant updates on their social lives, where a forgotten group hangout only mattered by Monday morning. Now,

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