EMA

Apr 07 2026FINANCE

Stable Income in Uncertain Times: Two REITs to Watch

When the market takes a hit, some investors look for places that keep paying. Real‑estate investment trusts, or REITs, have been hit by the same forces that pushed stocks lower. But a few of them may stand out because they serve needs people still want, no matter the economy. One of those is

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Apr 07 2026SPORTS

Better swings ahead? How VR trains racket players

Racket players often spend hours perfecting their strokes on the court or against a wall. Most training focusses on physical repetition under real-world conditions. But a growing number of coaches now add headsets and virtual environments to the drill sheet. New research gathers all controlled tr

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Apr 07 2026SPORTS

One ticket cost $17, 000 to watch the big basketball showdown

A single ticket for Monday night’s NCAA championship game just sold for over seventeen grand. That’s a lot to pay for a seat—even for a game this big. The buyer used SeatGeek, one of the biggest ticket platforms out there. Last year’s game drew big crowds too, but prices this time jumped about twent

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Apr 06 2026FINANCE

Marvell’s Stock Soars: What’s Next for the Chipmaker?

In March, Marvell Technology’s shares jumped nearly a quarter, marking the biggest monthly rise in years. The surge came after the company reported solid Q4 results for fiscal 2026, a growing need for custom silicon in data centers, and new collaboration with Nvidia that promises higher demand for f

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Apr 05 2026ENTERTAINMENT

AI in Indian films: cheaper, faster, but is it better?

India makes more movies than anywhere else, yet fewer people are buying tickets lately. Big names still fill seats, but crowds aren’t spending as much on tickets or snacks. Studios face a tough choice: lower prices or lose viewers completely. Some are trying a different fix—swapping real actors for

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Apr 04 2026SCIENCE

A quiet scientist who changed how we see Earth

In the early 1900s, most scientists thought Earth’s center was all liquid. But a Danish thinker named Inge Lehmann changed that idea in 1936 after studying how earthquake waves moved through the planet. She noticed strange patterns that didn’t match the liquid-core theory. After careful work, she re

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Apr 04 2026HEALTH

Better Eating for Lower Blood Pressure

Around the world, high blood pressure affects many adults and can shorten lives. While medicine helps, eating differently might be just as important. Research now shows some diets can help keep blood pressure in check without relying only on pills. Not all diets work the same way. The DASH plan foc

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Apr 04 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Why the new Mario movie feels like a missed chance

The latest Mario movie didn’t impress most viewers who walked in expecting fun. About half an hour in, many noticed something was off. Laughter was rare. Even a packed theater full of families stayed quiet. One die-hard fan in Mario gear nodded off before the first hour ended. Kids’ movies usually h

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Apr 03 2026SPORTS

Caroline Dubois: A New Champion in the Making

Caroline Dubois has carved a path that echoes the bold steps of Ronda Rousey and Serena Williams. In her early years, she disguised herself as a boy to train in boxing because girls were barred from the sport. This daring move paid off, leading her to a gold medal at the 2018 Youth Olympics and pa

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Apr 03 2026FINANCE

Micron’s Memory Stock Still Looks Good, Even With Supply Worries

The idea that memory chips are at their peak has faded, and one company that felt the hit after a sharp drop is Micron Technology. The firm’s earnings report recently showed strong growth, largely thanks to demand from artificial‑intelligence workloads and a healthy order backlog. Even though Google

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