PRESIDENT GEORGE W BUSH

Apr 10 2026CRIME

How Close People Really Stay to Monsters

When a crime shocks a community, outsiders often wonder how the criminal could hide in plain sight. The idea of a killer living quietly among family members feels impossible to many. Yet history shows that even people closest to a criminal can miss the warning signs. Serial killers like John Wayne G

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Apr 09 2026TECHNOLOGY

Chicago Eyes Waymo’s Driverless Ambitions

Waymo, the tech giant behind autonomous cars, has been quietly testing its vehicles on Chicago’s streets. The company operates 3, 000 driverless cars across ten U. S. cities but has not yet begun offering rides in the Windy City. Critics watch closely, curious how the system will perform amid Chicag

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Apr 09 2026LIFESTYLE

Behind the Greens: The Woman Steadily Making Her Mark in Wyndham Clark’s World

Wyndham Clark’s presence on the PGA Tour shines bright, but his support system often stays in the shadows—until now. The Masters Par 3 Contest isn’t just about golf; it’s a family tradition where loved ones get a rare moment in the spotlight. Alicia Bogdanski, Clark’s girlfriend, has become a famili

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Apr 09 2026BUSINESS

How Unions Shape Later Life for Older Workers

Workers who joined unions decades ago often look back on their careers with different views than those who entered the workforce just a generation later. A recent look at two groups of older Americans—born 18 years apart—shows how labor unions influenced not just paychecks, but also how people felt

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Apr 09 2026FINANCE

Markets bounce back after Iran-U. S. ceasefire, what’s next for investors?

When Iran and the U. S. called a two-week break in their five-week standoff, markets reacted fast. The Dow shot up nearly 3% in a single day, the biggest jump since early 2025. That kind of reaction shows how sensitive global money is to Middle East flare-ups. Traders who had been playing it safe ar

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Apr 09 2026ENVIRONMENT

Snowy savings accounts are disappearing in the West

Winter in the western U. S. used to work like a natural savings account for water. Snow piled up in the mountains during cold months, then slowly melted to fill rivers and reservoirs when summer arrived. But the winter of 2025-26 broke the old rules. Record warmth turned what should have been snow i

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Apr 08 2026FINANCE

Trump’s Iran Ceasefire Sparks Mixed Market Reactions

When news broke that the U. S. had agreed to a two-week pause in tensions with Iran, markets reacted fast. Oil prices dropped sharply as traders bet on calmer waters ahead. Stock markets jumped, and bonds got a boost too. The reasoning? A temporary truce might mean Gulf oil exports could restart wit

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Apr 08 2026POLITICS

What happens when US-Iran tensions heat up in a high-stakes game of chicken?

President Trump sent shockwaves Monday—not just within Washington’s corridors, but across news feeds worldwide. His overnight warning—“A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again”—wasn’t targeted at an enemy in battle. It was posted on a social platform, hours before a self

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Apr 08 2026HEALTH

What made people hesitant or accepting of the Ebola vaccine in Congo?

When Ebola struck eastern Congo between 2018 and 2020, the country was already dealing with more than just a deadly virus. War zones, weak health services, and deep distrust in leaders turned this outbreak into a tougher challenge. Vaccines arrived fast—too fast for some—and not everyone trusted the

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Apr 07 2026FINANCE

Stable Income in Uncertain Times: Two REITs to Watch

When the market takes a hit, some investors look for places that keep paying. Real‑estate investment trusts, or REITs, have been hit by the same forces that pushed stocks lower. But a few of them may stand out because they serve needs people still want, no matter the economy. One of those is

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