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Apr 05 2026POLITICS

US Airman Safely Pulled From Iran After Fighter Jet Crash

A U. S. fighter pilot was rescued after his F‑15 aircraft crashed in Iran, officials confirmed late Saturday. The mission took place following reports that the jet was shot down by Iranian air defenses. Earlier this week, a second pilot from the same two‑person crew was recovered after the cra

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Apr 05 2026EDUCATION

Private schools vs public schools: what parents really care about

Parents who choose private schools often feel happier with their kids’ learning than those who stay in public schools. A study by 50Can shows about two‑thirds of private‑school parents report being “very satisfied, ” compared with 42 % of public‑school parents. Private‑school students also tend to s

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Apr 05 2026POLITICS

When Loyalty Isn't Enough

Politics often runs on loyalty, but not all loyalties last forever. The recent firing of a top official highlights a harsh truth: blind loyalty to power doesn’t guarantee job security. This official, known for defending the administration’s controversial moves, found herself out of work not because

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Apr 05 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Teens are really into this Aussie school show for a reason

A new Australian series has quietly become a hit with young audiences. It’s not just another teen drama—it actually talks about real problems kids face today. The story follows Amerie, a sharp-witted student who teams up with her best friend Harper to uncover the chaos at their Sydney school. What s

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Apr 05 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Science in Sci-Fi: Where Project Hail Mary Hits and Misses

"Project Hail Mary" tries to mix space science with fiction, but not all of it sticks. The story blames a space mold called astrophase for draining sunlight and freezing Earth. Real scientists laugh at that idea—stars are way too big for tiny life forms to affect their energy. Still, the film gets s

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Apr 05 2026POLITICS

Why U. S. scientists pick Europe over a country that cuts science funds

Wali Malik wasn’t planning to leave the U. S. He lived near Boston with his wife and three kids, close to his parents in Washington. Then came the money cuts. Federal grants dried up. Friends in labs started getting pink slips. Research teams shrank. One day the phone rang – a job offer from a brand

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Apr 05 2026WEATHER

How weather forecasts get it right while climate models struggle

Predicting tomorrow’s rain or sun has gotten shockingly accurate lately. Weather apps now get it right most days, giving us reliable warnings for storms or heatwaves days ahead. But when it comes to longer-term climate predictions—like how hot it’ll be in 50 years—the best supercomputers still can’t

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Apr 05 2026HEALTH

School clinics get a tech boost with telehealth in Hampton Roads

Many schools in Hampton Roads are now using telehealth to help students get medical and mental health care without leaving campus. In Newport News and Portsmouth, a program run by Sentara gives families a quick way to see doctors through video calls set up right in the school building. A nurse first

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Apr 05 2026CRIME

Nevada’s crypto kiosks: Easy cash for scammers, weak rules for everyone else

Across Nevada, people are losing millions to crypto scams through machines that look like ATMs but work very differently. These kiosks, found in stores everywhere, let users swap cash for cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin or Ethereum instantly. The problem? Once money goes into these machines, it’s gone

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Apr 05 2026TECHNOLOGY

Microsoft’s AI helper gets a reality check—sort of

Two years ago, Microsoft rolled out Copilot like it was the next big thing in work software. It popped up in Windows, Office apps, and even enterprise tools, with ads and demos showing how it could write reports, summarize emails, and crunch data in seconds. The message was loud: this AI assistant w

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