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Jun 08 2026SPORTS

Future Super Bowl 61: Who Will Take the Trophy?

The NFL season starts in September, but fans can already guess who might win Super Bowl 61. The championship will be played at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, the home field of the Los Angeles Rams and Chargers. This is the second time the venue will host the big game after the Rams won there in 20

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Jun 08 2026SPORTS

Kids In Utah Need a Play Fair Chance

Utah kids grow up in a place that prizes teamwork, hard work and family. Youth sports are one of the best teachers for those values. But many families can’t afford to let their children join a team. A new effort called Utah Youth Sports Giving Day is here to change that. It will bring together nonp

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Jun 08 2026SPORTS

High School Sports Highlights: Tennis Wins and Soccer Showdowns

Alex Thomas of Notre Dame Academy clinched the Division 1 state tennis title, beating Colin Meixl and Alexander Bo in straight sets. His flawless record of 21‑0 leads into the team tournament, a boost after finishing third last year. In Division 1 doubles, Brookfield East’s Jake Zheng and Ryker Koc

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Jun 08 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Laughs and Screams: How a Spoof Became a Time Capsule

The original “Scary Movie” kicked off in 2000, taking a sharp jab at the teen slasher craze of the 1990s. It stitched together moments from hits like “Scream” and “I Know What You Did Last Summer, ” turning familiar horror clichés into punchlines. The film mocked the clueless killer, the overly sexu

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Jun 08 2026BUSINESS

Kids Take the Lead: A Local Market Showcases Young Creators

A sunny afternoon in Lexington turned into a bustling marketplace where children from five to seventeen set up their own stalls. They offered handmade jewelry, colorful artwork, and homemade snacks, turning the Flora and Fauna Marketplace into a mini‑farmers market run by teens. The event is more

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Jun 08 2026SCIENCE

Cotton’s Battle Against Salt: New Ways to Keep the Crop Growing

Cotton can grow in many places, but salty soil is a big problem. The plant first feels the salt as water pressure changes and then later deals with too many ions inside its cells. Cotton’s reaction is a teamwork of sensors on the cell wall, channels that let ions in or out, and calcium signals that

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Jun 08 2026SCIENCE

Drought‑Smart Sorghum: How Photosynthesis Helps Plants Stay Dry

Sorghum plants in central Arizona were watched for seven weeks while the soil dried out. Scientists measured how much water the plants used, looked at their genes, and checked for stress signals. They found a group of genes that act together when the plants are thirsty. One gene, called SbC

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Jun 08 2026CRYPTO

Hunter Biden’s New Crypto Trend: What It Could Mean

Hunter Biden, son of former President Joe Biden, has been active on X about crypto and blockchain. He once said he wanted to sell his art for bitcoin and turn it into NFTs. Some crypto fans welcomed him, while others suspect he might launch a Biden‑branded memecoin. His first crypto post was on F

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Jun 08 2026CRYPTO

SpaceX Shares Now Trade on Bybit in Crypto‑Style

Bybit, a crypto exchange, has opened a way for people to buy tokenised shares of SpaceX. The new service is called Bybit IPO Express and lets users place orders for a digital token that represents an IPO stake. After the allocation is finished, the tokens will start trading on Bybit’s platform

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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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