WAR

Apr 18 2026SPORTS

Alaskan Athletes Shine at State Sports Awards

Kristen Faulkner, a cyclist from Homer, and Gus Schumacher, a skier from Anchorage, were honored this week as Pride of Alaska winners at the state’s Sports Hall of Fame Directors Awards. The award recognizes top athletes from across the state, and both Faulkner and Schumacher earned their spots in a

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026POLITICS

Life in Iran After the Bombing: Fear and Hope

After weeks of air attacks, many Iranians try to keep their daily routines. Shops stay open and parks fill with families on sunny days. Yet the damage from bombs and internet shutdowns weighs heavily on everyone. People worry that once peace talks finish, the government might tighten its grip even

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026POLITICS

Tragic Loss Just Before the Truce

In a quiet town in southern Lebanon, a man named Hassan Abu Khalil had survived weeks of fighting. He was the only one left after his family was hit by a sudden strike from Israel in the final moments before a ceasefire. The attack took 13 lives and left many others buried under rubble. The fightin

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026POLITICS

New York Mayor Takes on War Costs and Rising Prices

The city’s newest mayor, a self‑described democratic socialist, recently discussed how the ongoing conflict in Iran is pushing up gasoline and other living expenses for New Yorkers. He said that while the war is a separate issue, it only adds to an already steep cost‑of‑living crisis that has been p

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026SPORTS

High School Sports Stars Shine in April

Cincinnati. com fans picked their top high‑school athletes for the week ending April 12, and the results were posted on April 17. Readers chose winners from baseball, softball, lacrosse, track and field, flag football, tennis, and volleyball. Each athlete can now download a digital certificate

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026SPORTS

NBA Leader Adam Silver Wins Innovation Award

Adam Silver, a former lawyer who grew up in Rye, New York, entered the NBA as a junior staffer in 1992. He moved quickly through roles—from special assistant to chief of staff, then president of NBA Entertainment—before becoming commissioner in 2014. Over the last decade, he has guided basketball in

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026CRIME

Former soldier released on bail while facing serious war crime charges

A decorated Australian soldier, once celebrated as a national hero, walked out of prison on bail last week after being charged with multiple war crimes. The 47-year-old veteran, arrested earlier this month, is accused of killing five Afghan civilians during his service in 2009 and 2012. Authorities

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026CRYPTO

Kraken's Big Move: Buying Bitnomial to Boost U. S. Crypto Derivatives

Payward, the company behind the popular Kraken exchange, just made a huge play in the crypto world. It announced plans to buy Bitnomial, a derivatives platform, in a deal worth up to $550 million—part cash, part stock. At $20 billion, this deal isn’t just any purchase; it’s a statement that Payward

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026POLITICS

Ukraine Offers Middle East a Playbook for Sea Safety

Ukraine’s president recently pitched an idea at a global video meeting: teaming up to keep ships safe in the Strait of Hormuz. The strait is a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman that sees a huge chunk of the world’s oil pass through. He argued that how countries handle Hormuz now could set a patt

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026POLITICS

How Iran’s War Could Freeze Climate Aid for Poor Nations

A fresh battle in the Persian Gulf isn’t just shaking up oil markets—it’s threatening the fragile promises rich countries made to help poorer nations fight climate change. Every dollar spent on war is one less dollar earmarked for solar panels, flood barriers, and clean-energy grids in places that d

reading time less than a minute