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Apr 27 2026WEATHER

Storm Forces Crowd to Leave Stagecoach Festival

A sudden weather surge prompted a swift exit for thousands of fans at the Stagecoach country‑music festival on Saturday night. The event, held at Indio’s Empire Polo Club, was abruptly halted as a loud announcement onstage declared the show postponed and urged attendees to head for the nearest exit.

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Apr 27 2026SPORTS

Lightning‑Smart Racing: How NASCAR Outsmarts the Storm

NASCAR’s biggest threat isn’t a bad pit stop or a broken engine. It’s the sky itself, and the sport has finally learned how to beat it. In earlier years, officials would stare at a cloud or read a forecast and hope the weather stayed clear. A sudden thunderstorm could halt an entire weekend, soak

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Apr 27 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Love and Change: Two Poetic Sparks

A poem starts with the idea that love can appear suddenly, without warning or plan. It compares this feeling to a simple line of sight, like the clear edge of a window that shows a horizon. Another poem paints a picture in a city park where someone writes “Can we change? ” on a metal gate. The re

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Apr 27 2026TECHNOLOGY

NVIDIA Adds Taiwan Memory Maker to Power Next‑Gen AI Chips

NVIDIA is boosting its Agentic AI platform, Vera Rubin, by adding a new memory supplier from Taiwan. The company now uses LPDDR5X chips from Nanya Technology, a first for the firm’s high‑performance AI servers. This move gives NVIDIA more flexibility. Vera Rubin relies on two kinds of memory: the

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

Early Deaths in a Māori Family Point to Hidden Stomach Cancer

A woman named Karyn Paringatai noticed a disturbing trend in her relatives: many died at a young age. When she traced their medical records, she found that a rare stomach cancer, known as diffuse gastric cancer, was common among Māori families like hers. This type of cancer can develop without

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Apr 27 2026ENVIRONMENT

Nature Words Come Back: Why Knowing Names Matters

The loss of nature terms in our language is more than a spelling issue; it signals that many people no longer recognize the plants, birds, and animals around them. When a popular dictionary dropped words like “bee” or “bird, ” artists and writers saw the problem in action. One project that sprang up

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Apr 27 2026BUSINESS

Family‑Run Farm Turns Vineyards Into Beer and Wine Hub

Lincoln Way Vineyards is more than a place that makes wine; it’s a family project that blends farming, science and creativity. Jim and Sherri Borton and their children Alex and Ari manage every step from planting grapes to pouring drinks. The vineyard started twenty years ago, and a tasting room ope

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Apr 27 2026OPINION

The Hidden Rules Behind How We Treat Tiny Creatures

Some people think insects only have simple nerves, but research shows they can feel pain. If that is true, it raises the question: do we owe them a moral responsibility? Scientists who study animal sentience argue that many insects react to harmful stimuli in ways similar to vertebrates. They

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Apr 27 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Birthdays on April 27: Stars, Stories, and Surprises

When the calendar hits April 27, a mix of music, film and history lights up. First off, pop icon Lizzo celebrates her 39th year; she grew up in Detroit and now rocks the stage with confidence. Not far behind, actress Jenna Coleman turns 40. She once played a relative of John Constantine in the DC s

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Apr 27 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Michael Keaton Shakes Up the Steelers Draft Night

The night of the NFL draft in Pittsburgh was turned on its head when Michael Keaton, a lifelong supporter of the local team, appeared on stage to announce the Steelers’ pick. Keaton grew up in Kennedy Township near Pittsburgh before moving to Los Angeles, where he launched a career that includes

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