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Apr 11 2026POLITICS

New ICE Mission Targets Birth Tourism in the U. S.

The U. S. immigration agency has begun a fresh effort to uncover networks that help foreign mothers travel to the United States with the goal of giving birth so their children automatically become citizens. This initiative comes after President Donald Trump’s administration intensified its fight aga

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Apr 11 2026POLITICS

Peace Talks on the Line: U. S. , Iran Face Hurdles in Islamabad

The United States and Iran were set to meet in Islamabad on Saturday, hoping to stop a war that began six weeks ago. The U. S. team, led by Vice President J. D. Vance and including former envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, had just finished refueling in Paris before heading to Pakistan. Iran’s g

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Apr 11 2026POLITICS

Export Hurdles Block Trump’s AI Chip Push

The Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security is a small office that holds the power to approve or deny the sale of U. S. technology overseas. It is now tangled in paperwork that could slow down President Trump’s plan to sell more AI chips abroad. The bureau is busy reviewing requests

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Apr 11 2026EDUCATION

Bringing Spirit into Care: What Nursing Learners Really Think

Nursing students, residents and senior nurses often feel that caring for a person’s spirit is as vital as treating their body. Yet many find themselves unprepared to do so, because the courses they take rarely cover this topic in depth. A recent map of research shows that most studies come from Turk

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Apr 11 2026ENVIRONMENT

Livestock Traditions Keep Estonia’s Countryside Alive

Estonia’s farms are more than places where animals graze; they are living pieces of history that show how people and nature can coexist. In many parts of Europe, small family farms are shrinking because big factories dominate the market. This trend threatens the unique mix of plants, animals and cul

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Apr 11 2026SCIENCE

Black Astronauts Reach for the Moon, Inspiring New Dreams

At just twelve years old, Naia Butler‑Craig dreamed of space after seeing Mae Jemison’s photo at her church in Orlando. Years later, she earned a PhD in aerospace engineering and met Victor Glover, the first Black man to orbit the moon. He told her, “Make the choice right, ” a message that stayed wi

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Apr 11 2026POLITICS

Parents Must Know About Kids’ Gender Changes

Idaho lawmakers have just passed a new rule that forces schools, doctors and childcare centers to tell parents if a child starts acting like a different gender. The law says the notice must happen within three days after a child asks for help with their transition, such as using a new name or pronou

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Apr 11 2026BUSINESS

Weather guy vs. station: the messy fight over side gigs and broken rules

When a local TV weatherman got let go in January, he called it a total surprise. The station says nope—not even close. Their court papers tell a different story, packing warnings, suspensions, and a long list of conduct issues that built up over months before the final pink slip. Between late arriva

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Apr 11 2026TECHNOLOGY

How Amazon’s Homegrown Chips Are Changing the Rules of the Tech Industry

Amazon didn’t start out as a chipmaker, but its push into custom silicon is quietly reshaping how the biggest players in tech handle their most demanding workloads. Instead of relying entirely on Intel, NVIDIA, or AMD, the company took a gamble on building its own chips—and now those chips are power

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Apr 11 2026ENTERTAINMENT

A Washington Set Cop Drama Could Be Joining The Rookie Universe

The Rookie franchise is branching out to a new region—and this time, it’s trading palm trees for evergreen trees. Instead of chasing criminals in Los Angeles, the show will move to Washington State, where a fresh cast tackles crime from bustling coastal cities to quiet forest towns. The original ser

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