PE

Apr 26 2026CRIME

Who Is the Man Caught After the White House Dinner Incident?

A police officer in Washington, D. C. , identified the individual arrested after a shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner as Cole Tomas Allen, a 31‑year‑old resident of Torrance, California. Allen’s background appears to be rooted in engineering and education. He earned a bachelor’s

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Apr 26 2026SCIENCE

Unexpected Brain Helpers Keep You Full

A new study shows that the signal telling us to stop eating is not just a simple brain message. Scientists used to think only neurons were involved in stopping appetite. They discovered that other brain cells play a key role. The research team found that special cells called tanycytes sense s

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Apr 26 2026RELIGION

Spiritual Struggles in a Modern World

A man named Father Szada spent months helping a young woman who thought she was haunted. He tried many exorcisms, but the problems kept coming back. She eventually tried to end her life. In that moment, she felt a powerful presence and later told people she saw the archangel Michael. Many listeners

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Apr 26 2026POLITICS

Science Board Shake‑Up: Why It Matters

The White House surprised many by removing all 24 members of the National Science Board on April 24, 2026. The next meeting is set for May 5, but the board will be empty. The National Science Board was created in 1950 to guide the National Science Foundation, which gives about $9 billion a year f

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Apr 26 2026WEATHER

Sunny Start, Cloudy Finish: A Quick Weather Snapshot

It starts cool and clear, with temperatures around 50 degrees. The wind comes from the northeast at about eight to twelve miles per hour, keeping things calm. By afternoon, the heat rises into the upper 70s and the wind shifts to the southeast at a similar speed. Clouds begin to creep in, softening

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Apr 26 2026FINANCE

Tesla's Bold Bet on AI and Robots Sends Shares Down

Tesla just announced plans to spend over $25 billion this year—more than three times what it spent in 2025 and higher than its previous estimate of $20 billion. The market didn’t like the news. Shares dropped over 3% after the announcement, even though Tesla posted a strong $1. 44 billion profit in

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Apr 26 2026HEALTH

New Insights on N-acetyl Cysteine and Pesticide Toxicity

Researchers recently examined how a common supplement might protect lungs from damage caused by a widely used pesticide. The study focused on alpha-cypermethrin, a chemical found in many insect sprays. When male rats were exposed to this pesticide, their lung tissue showed signs of stress and damage

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Apr 26 2026ENVIRONMENT

Fish struggle when plastic bits and pesticides team up

Scientists tested what happens when tiny plastic fibers and a common insect killer show up together in the water where young tilapia live. Over six weeks, fish exposed to both pollutants grew less and ate food less efficiently than fish exposed to just one or none at all. Their guts showed damage to

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Apr 26 2026ENVIRONMENT

Georgia’s Wildfire Crisis: Small Sparks, Huge Losses

The Southeast is burning—not with the dramatic wildfires of the West, but with a slow, relentless spread of flames fueled by extreme drought. Georgia now holds the grim record for the worst property damage from a single fire event in its history, with over 120 homes and buildings destroyed. Two mass

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Apr 26 2026FINANCE

How UK crypto rules are shaping (and shrinking) the peer-to-peer dream

UK authorities just raided eight London homes linked to people suspected of running informal crypto cash exchanges. No criminal charges have been filed yet, but the message is clear: trading crypto for profit without following financial rules is no longer a gray area. The Financial Conduct Authority

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