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Apr 19 2026HEALTH

Loneliness and memory: what really connects them?

A fresh study across Europe shows loneliness might start hurting memory long before old age sets in. Researchers tracked over 10, 000 adults aged 65 to 94 for seven years. At the start, those who felt lonely scored lower on memory tests. But everyone—whether lonely or not—lost memory at the same pac

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Apr 19 2026SCIENCE

Science superstars from Boston shine at major awards night

Four Boston-based scientists walked away with top honors from an awards event that values breakthroughs more than Hollywood does. Held on a Saturday in Los Angeles, the ceremony recognizes discoveries that can take a decade or more to prove, unlike Oscars that focus only on the previous year’s films

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Apr 19 2026FINANCE

Stablecoin firms face new U. S. rules to stop illegal transactions

The U. S. government wants stablecoin companies to act like banks when it comes to stopping crimes like money laundering. New rules from the Treasury Department would require these firms to set up systems that block suspicious payments, freeze accounts linked to criminals, and report illegal activit

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Apr 19 2026FINANCE

Old factories get new life in the age of digital mining

Industrial buildings that once made metal now find new purpose feeding computers instead. In upstate New York, a shuttered aluminum plant along the St. Lawrence River could soon hum with activity again, not for smelting aluminum, but for minting digital coins. The facility has stayed dark since 2014

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Apr 19 2026CRIME

How a Crypto Executive Duped Investors with False Promises

In 2021, Donald Basile convinced over a hundred people to hand over $16 million for a cryptocurrency called Bitcoin Latinum. He claimed it was "insured" and backed by real assets, making it a safe investment. The catch? No insurance actually existed. The SEC now says Basile lied about the token’s sa

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Apr 19 2026FINANCE

Who leads the Fed could make or break Bitcoin’s next move

Bitcoin fans and investors keep a close eye on who’s in charge at the Federal Reserve—not because they care about Fed gossip, but because the chair’s decisions ripple through the economy in ways that hit wallets everywhere. Mortgage rates, savings account yields, and stock market swings all trace ba

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Apr 19 2026POLITICS

Trump’s Ballroom Project Gets Green Light—For Now

A court just gave the go-ahead for a $400 million ballroom to rise where part of the White House once stood. But this isn’t the final word—just a pause in a legal fight. On Friday night, a federal appeals court put a lower judge’s order on hold, letting construction continue until June. That’s when

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Apr 19 2026FINANCE

Marvell’s AI Push: Why the Numbers Look Good

Marvell Technology has seen its stock jump over 50% in April alone, mostly thanks to big moves in the AI chip market. A big part of that growth comes from Nvidia putting $2 billion into the company and an upgrade from Oppenheimer raising the price target to $170. Marvell also spent $1 billion to buy

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Apr 18 2026EDUCATION

Why Debate Matters in School

Debate is not just a classroom game; it is the engine of learning. When people argue, they practice thinking. They test ideas and grow wiser. In the past, a famous scholar named W. E. B. DuBois wrote a book for an American group that wanted people to value all cultures. He was one of the first b

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Apr 18 2026SPORTS

Swiss Stadium Drops Kanye Concert After Review

FC Basel, a Swiss football club that runs events at its St. Jakob-Park stadium, decided to cancel an upcoming Kanye West concert after a careful assessment of the request. The club explained that its values do not allow it to host an artist who has sparked controversy over past antisemitic remarks.

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