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Mar 14 2026SPORTS

NCAA Bracket Predictions Get Clearer as Conference Finals Wrap Up

The NCAA tournament bubble is tightening after the latest conference championships. Teams still fighting for a spot are making headlines, and analysts are sharpening their guesses of who will finish in the final 68. College basketball uses the NET ranking system to assess every team’s performance.

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Mar 14 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Oscars 2026: A Wild Night With New Hosts and Big Surprises

The 2026 Oscars promise more drama than most years, with many top awards still undecided before the show starts. Two Warner Bros. releases are in a tight race for best picture and acting honors. “One Battle After Another” has already won major prizes at the Golden Globes and other guilds, giving

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Mar 14 2026POLITICS

Why the Hormuz Strait Still Holds the World’s Oil in Its Grip

The war in the Middle East made oil prices jump past $100 a barrel for the first time in almost four years. That sharp rise showed how much the world depends on one narrow waterway. The Strait of Hormuz is the only route out of the Persian Gulf that lets huge amounts of oil and gas reach global mark

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Mar 14 2026BUSINESS

Oil Clash Hits Everyday Wallets, Not Just Wall Street

When a war threatens to shut down the Strait of Hormuz, 20 % of world oil can vanish and prices shoot past $100 a barrel. Yet the S&P 500 has only slipped about 2 % in the last month, a fact that surprises many. The reason is that today’s biggest companies are tech‑heavy and rely less on crude than

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Mar 14 2026HEALTH

Peaceful Ways: How Japanese YouTube Shapes Views on Death

The topic of death often feels too heavy to talk about, yet it offers a window into how people think today. In Japan, the way folks view a calm passing has shifted, especially after COVID‑19 hit. Recent research digs into videos on YouTube that discuss dying. These clips are not just personal stori

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Mar 14 2026POLITICS

Airport Traffic Stopped After Strange Smell

A sharp chemical odor hit a Virginia air‑traffic control center, forcing the FAA to shut down three major airports in the Washington area. The incident began when controllers at Potomac Consolidated Terminal RADAR Approach Control could no longer work because the air smelled strongly of chemicals. T

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Mar 14 2026EDUCATION

SAT Rules Change: What Students and Colleges Are Saying

A student from Greater Latrobe, Autumn Blozowich, took the SAT three times but chose not to send any scores when she applied to Pitt, Kent State and Penn State. She felt the essays better showed who she was than the numbers on a test, and the plan worked—she got in to all three schools. In Wester

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Mar 14 2026LIFESTYLE

Sex Skills for a Happier Life

People grow up in one of three ways when it comes to sex: open, shameful or silent. In the first type, parents treat sex as normal and give clear answers. The second treats it as taboo, hiding the topic and making people feel guilty. The third simply never talks about it, leaving adults unsure how t

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Mar 14 2026SCIENCE

Pi’s Everyday Adventures

The number that makes circles perfect is more than a math trick. It shows up in rockets, tiny droplets, and even in the way we measure time on Pi Day. Every March 14th people mark the first three digits of this endless constant, 3. 14159, with pies and parades. The day began in 1988 at a scienc

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Mar 13 2026FINANCE

Inflation Bounces Back as Economy Slows, Pre‑War Shock Looms

The first month of 2026 saw a modest rise in consumer prices, according to the Federal Reserve’s favored measure. Prices went up by 0. 3 percent from December, and when compared to last year the jump was 2. 8 percent. Even after removing food and energy, core inflation hit 0. 4 percent monthly and 3

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