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Apr 10 2026SCIENCE

Testing the limits: What keeps Artemis II's astronauts safe?

When the Orion spacecraft returns to Earth during Artemis II, it will face its biggest challenge yet. Traveling at speeds faster than a bullet, the capsule will hit temperatures hot enough to melt steel. This extreme heat is what makes the heat shield so critical - it's the only thing standing betwe

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Apr 10 2026TECHNOLOGY

Cracking open the secrets of tiny materials with super-powered magnets

Scientists use tiny, sponge-like materials called microporous materials for some really important jobs. Things like cleaning up pollution, delivering medicine inside your body, or even helping make chemicals more efficiently. But to make these materials work better, researchers first need to underst

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Apr 10 2026RELIGION

A BYU basketball player gets a special behind-the-scenes look at temple life

AJ Dybantsa, a former standout for BYU’s basketball team, recently got an unusual invitation—not to play on the court, but to visit one of the church’s most sacred spaces. He toured the Lindon Utah Temple alongside Elder Ronald A. Rasband, a high-ranking leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latte

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Apr 10 2026CRIME

Long Prison Term for Vero Beach Man in Child Exploitation Case

A Vero Beach man now faces 47 years behind bars after pleading guilty to serious crimes against a child. The case took a complex turn through plea deals and legal technicalities before reaching its conclusion. Back in 2023, the man—just 22 years old at the time—was arrested following allegations of

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Apr 10 2026FINANCE

Bitcoin in 2026: Why One Company Owns the Game While Others Drop Out

In March 2026, public companies added 47, 435 Bitcoin to their accounts, worth about $3. 2 billion at the time. But here’s the twist: one company—Strategy—bought 44, 377 of those coins. That means almost every other business combined didn’t add much at all. Strategy’s push is so big that it now hold

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Apr 10 2026FINANCE

World Bank’s war aid plan: How much cash is really on the table?

The World Bank is rumored to have a financial toolbox ready for countries hit hard by the Iran war. Inside that toolbox? Anywhere from 20 to 25 billion dollars, according to a fresh report. That money wouldn’t just sit idle—it would move fast, like an emergency loan sent overnight to keep economies

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Apr 09 2026CRIME

Foster Care Scandal: Trust Broken by Church Leaders

A former foster child in South Carolina claims she faced abuse while living with a pastor and his wife. The couple had been in charge of her care since she turned 15. Police say the abuse included both physical and sexual attacks. The pastor, 50, now faces charges like criminal sexual conduct, while

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Apr 09 2026CRIME

A mother’s legal gamble: trading truth for a mental health defense

In a quiet Massachusetts town, a nurse now faces a tough question: what happens when guilt meets suffering? The woman, once a caregiver for new mothers, is accused of ending her three children’s lives in a single day. Instead of denying her role, she’s offering to admit what she did—if it means the

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Apr 09 2026ENVIRONMENT

Why Boulder’s Growth Plan Needs a Reality Check

Boulder’s approach to managing its future has always stood out for balancing growth with environmental limits. But the latest draft of the Boulder Valley Comprehensive Plan takes a risky turn by loosening the strict rules that kept development in check for decades. One big change? Dropping the old n

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Apr 08 2026POLITICS

What Even Counts as a Two-Week Deadline These Days?

Has it come to this? A nuclear threat hinges on a Tuesday food tradition. Let’s be real—Taco Tuesday sounds harmless, but in this case, the backronym was anything but: “Trump Always Chickens Out. ” Suddenly, everyone’s favorite food night became a geopolitical punchline. The clock almost ran out. A

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