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Apr 27 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Life Lessons from a Classic Play

A familiar stage show can feel fresh when you see it through someone else’s eyes. In one version, a young person sits next to his dad and wonders if the story is about him. He thinks about work, money, and how to give his family a good life. The father beside him asks himself whether he will k

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Apr 27 2026EDUCATION

New Pathways: A College’s Fresh Vision for Women

Bryn Mawr College, a 141‑year‑old women’s institution in Pennsylvania, is reshaping its future with bold experiments and a clear long‑term plan. Last spring the school tested a program that paired senior students with alumni mentors through Zoom, offering guidance on life after graduation. The pilot

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Apr 27 2026WEATHER

Storm Fury Hits Texas: One Life Lost, Families Displaced

A fierce night of weather struck Texas, bringing big hail and wind that could reach 90 miles per hour. Many people in North Texas saw tornadoes, and the National Weather Service is now checking damage to confirm each report. The storm forced twenty families out of their homes and left several peo

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Apr 27 2026SPORTS

Lightning‑Smart Racing: How NASCAR Outsmarts the Storm

NASCAR’s biggest threat isn’t a bad pit stop or a broken engine. It’s the sky itself, and the sport has finally learned how to beat it. In earlier years, officials would stare at a cloud or read a forecast and hope the weather stayed clear. A sudden thunderstorm could halt an entire weekend, soak

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Apr 27 2026ENVIRONMENT

Nature Words Come Back: Why Knowing Names Matters

The loss of nature terms in our language is more than a spelling issue; it signals that many people no longer recognize the plants, birds, and animals around them. When a popular dictionary dropped words like “bee” or “bird, ” artists and writers saw the problem in action. One project that sprang up

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Apr 27 2026OPINION

The Hidden Rules Behind How We Treat Tiny Creatures

Some people think insects only have simple nerves, but research shows they can feel pain. If that is true, it raises the question: do we owe them a moral responsibility? Scientists who study animal sentience argue that many insects react to harmful stimuli in ways similar to vertebrates. They

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Apr 27 2026SPORTS

From Yaoundé to the NBA: Joel Embiid’s Global Journey

Joel Embiid grew up in Yaoundé, Cameroon, where he played soccer and volleyball before basketball slipped into his life. A scout named Luc Mbah a Moute saw him at a camp and changed everything, sending Embiid to the United States. He trained at Montverde Academy, The Rock School, and then played one

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Apr 27 2026SPORTS

A Mixed‑Heritage Star: The Real Story Behind Karl‑Anthony Towns

Karl‑Anthony Towns grew up in Edison, New Jersey, but his roots reach far beyond the state lines. His mother was Dominican and his father African‑American, a blend that has shaped every choice he makes on and off the hardwood. From an early age, Towns knew that his family history mattered more th

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Apr 27 2026FINANCE

AI Agents Take the Lead in Global Finance

A major investment firm has unveiled a bold plan to use its own AI agents for managing assets. The company says it will move beyond simple automated trading and build a system that can think, learn, and make decisions on its own. This marks a shift from traditional tech tools to what it calls “Agent

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Apr 27 2026CRYPTO

Fast‑Forward Future: Why Investors Should Watch the Crypto Wave

Jordi Visser, a seasoned Wall Street professional, recently shared his view that the world’s progress is speeding up so fast that in just twenty years we could see what normally takes a hundred. He points to the idea of “creative destruction” from economist Joseph Schumpeter, meaning that old system

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