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Apr 06 2026POLITICS

US Airman Rescued in Iran as Tensions With Gulf Nations Rise

A U. S. airman, part of an F-15 crew shot down over Iran, was rescued by American special forces in a risky mountain operation. The pilot was already pulled to safety the day before, while the weapons officer survived with minor injuries. Meanwhile, Iran’s leadership warned the U. S. not to escalate

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Apr 06 2026POLITICS

A Changing Game: What’s Really Happening in US-China Trade Battles

This year, the US and China are still stuck in a trade rivalry that began years ago. While leaders from both sides keep talking, their actions often send mixed signals. In March, both countries opened new investigations into each other’s trade practices. Plans for a high-level meeting between the US

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Apr 06 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Cassette tapes are back, but why would anyone choose them over streaming?

Back in the '80s and '90s, cassette tapes ruled the music scene. People loved them because they could record songs off the radio, make mixtapes for friends, or carry music anywhere. Fast forward to today, and something unexpected is happening—cassettes are making a surprising comeback. Sales have sk

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Apr 06 2026FINANCE

Tech Stocks Riding the AI Wave

Big money on Wall Street is betting on a handful of tech companies expected to benefit from the AI boom. UBS recently picked twelve stocks it thinks will outperform, focusing on firms tied to AI infrastructure, chips, and cloud services. These picks suggest the bank sees long-term growth in areas wh

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Apr 06 2026ENVIRONMENT

Turning wood scraps into a tool for cleaning dirty water

Recycling leftover eucalyptus wood into biochar turns a common trash problem into a water-cleaning hero. Scientists took ordinary wood chips from eucalyptus trees and heated them without oxygen, creating a material that grabs arsenic from polluted water. In lab tests, one gram of this biochar remove

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Apr 06 2026FINANCE

Big Money Tests Blockchain’s Trust Problem

Wall Street is quietly racing ahead in crypto—but not the way you might think. Instead of betting on wild DeFi schemes, traditional finance is building regulated on-chain markets where trades settle instantly and never sleep. In early 2026, the New York Stock Exchange launched a round-the-clock toke

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Apr 06 2026SPORTS

Enzo Fernández’s two-game ban sparks contract talks and future speculations

Liam Rosenior, Chelsea’s interim boss, stays quiet on the controversy surrounding Enzo Fernández’s suspension and the public reactions it triggered. Instead of addressing Javier Pastore’s claim that the punishment was “completely unfair, ” Rosenior keeps the focus on the team’s performance. While Fe

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Apr 06 2026SPORTS

New Rules for Women's Sports Spark Big Debate

The International Olympic Committee recently introduced a controversial rule about who can compete in women's sports. Their new policy says only people born female can join female competitions, confirmed by a one-time gene test. This came after experts pointed out that some athletes with male biolog

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Apr 06 2026SPORTS

Inter Milan coach praises team effort after big win

Inter Milan’s coach smiled after his team crushed Roma 5-2 on Sunday. Players like Thuram and Lautaro impressed him, but his comments about Italian football were more serious. He admitted everyone shares blame for the negative vibes in the game. Coaches, players, and even journalists get caught up i

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Apr 06 2026ENVIRONMENT

Old pipes, new problems: How rusty water lines might be sneaking unseen chemicals into your tap

Most people notice old iron pipes in their water system only when the water turns yellow or rusty. What they don’t see are the invisible side effects. Scientists recently traced how these aging cast iron pipes could be quietly creating extra chemicals in drinking water, ones we don’t even test for r

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