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Apr 06 2026LIFESTYLE

A Happy‑Pup’s New Chance

Budster is a mix of corgi and husky that arrived at Fulton County Animal Shelter in Rochester, Indiana, after his owner gave him up because of housing rules. He was not a problem dog; he came from a place that may have been abusive. The shelter’s staff saw right away how special he was, noting that

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Apr 06 2026FINANCE

New Tax Rules Push Nonprofits to Think Ahead

Nonprofits are facing fresh challenges as a big tax package rolled out in 2025 adds new rules that touch everything from donor gifts to university endowments. The law does not change when the yearly Form 990 must be sent to the IRS, but it introduces new tax rules that finance teams need to study

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Apr 06 2026EDUCATION

Erie Expands Nursing Campus with $2 Million Upgrade

The Erie Center for Arts & Technology is boosting its campus at 650 East Ave, adding a new wing to the former Wayne Park Baptist Church building. This $2 million upgrade will house the UPMC Jameson School of Nursing and bring modern facilities to the area. Build, a nonprofit linked to Hamot Health

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Apr 06 2026BUSINESS

Sky Zone’s Tax Trouble: A $1‑Million Debt Revealed

The owner of a popular trampoline park in Central New York is facing a huge tax bill. State records show that the former franchisee owes almost one million dollars in unpaid sales taxes. The debt, now over $994, 000 as of late March, comes from money the park collected but never sent to the st

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Apr 06 2026POLITICS

Business leaders push back against NYC mayor's tax plans

New York City's business community is raising alarms about recent moves by Mayor Zohran Mamdani. A major business group leader shared that companies worth billions are quietly considering leaving the city or moving jobs to states with lower taxes. This follows news that a huge investment firm, Apoll

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Apr 06 2026SPORTS

Will Mexico finally win past the round of 16 at home?

For over forty years, fans of Mexico’s national soccer team have watched their side fall short at the World Cup. Every time they reach the knockout stage, they seem to hit a wall by the fifth game. But this summer, with the tournament hosted on home soil, former player Leonardo Cuellar believes the

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Apr 06 2026BUSINESS

AI at Work: Helping or Endangering Your Career?

Many workers today feel caught in a tough spot with AI. They see it as both a tool and a threat. Around 30% of Americans worry their jobs could disappear because of AI, and some students even change their majors because of it. This fear isn’t surprising. Companies are spending huge amounts of money

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Apr 06 2026POLITICS

Why big companies should pay more when workers struggle

Many working families face impossible choices these days. Rent or medicine? Groceries or gas? These aren’t hypothetical questions—they’re daily realities for millions after federal support programs got slashed while huge tax breaks went to the nation’s top earners. It’s like watching a fire drill wh

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Apr 06 2026SCIENCE

A rare chance to watch a solar eclipse from space

The Artemis 2 crew is about to witness something no one on Earth can see. While most people will have to wait years for the next big eclipse, these astronauts will get a front-row seat during their trip around the moon. On Monday evening, as they zoom past the far side of the moon, the sun will vani

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Apr 06 2026POLITICS

New move to tighten mail-in voting faces big legal hurdles

A recent order tries to limit mail-in ballots by creating a federal list of verified voters. But this idea quickly ran into trouble because many legal experts say it goes against the Constitution. The order lets the Department of Homeland Security work with the Social Security Administration to chec

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