Friday, July 25
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Matthew Perry's former doctor, Salvador Plasencia, pleads guilty to four counts of ketamine distribution related to Perry's October 2023 fatal overdose (More)
> Venus Williams, 45, becomes the second-oldest woman in history to win a tour-level singles match with first-round victory at Citi Open in Washington, DC (More) | Kansas City Royals pitcher Rich Hill, 45, becomes oldest player since 2012 to start an MLB game (More)
> ESPN and NFL close to signing deal for ESPN to purchase NFL Network and RedZone for a reported $2B (More)
Science & Technology
> Google DeepMind releases AI tool that fills in missing words and phrases in ancient Latin texts, predicts date and location of writing (More)
> Physicists demonstrate gold can be superheated to 14 times its melting point while remaining solid; results challenge longstanding theory of how materials behave under extreme temperatures (More)
> Researchers use CRISPR to prevent mosquitoes from transmitting malaria; replacing a single molecule that stops the disease-causing parasite inside the insects from spreading (More) | CRISPR 101 (1440 Topics)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close higher (S&P 500 +0.8%, Dow +1.1%, Nasdaq +0.6%) after the US strikes a trade deal with Japan (More)
> Tesla reports 16% quarterly drop in auto revenue, marking the second consecutive quarter of revenue declines (More) | Alphabet tops Q2 earnings estimates, raises spending forecast to roughly $85B (More) | Chipotle shares fall 9.8% in after-hours trading after the chain trimmed its forecast for same-store sales growth (More)
> US existing home sales fall 2.7% month over month in June, marking a nine-month low; median home price of $435,300 is up 2% from a year ago and the highest median home price for any June on record (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard releases previously classified report, alleges Obama-era intelligence officials overemphasized evidence Russia preferred a Trump win in 2016 (More) | Florida judge denies Justice Department's request to unseal grand jury transcripts from the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein (More)
> Columbia University agrees to pay $200M to settle federal allegations the school failed to protect Jewish students; university also agrees to oversight of its hiring and admissions process, will share some information with immigration authorities (More) | State Department opens investigation into Harvard University's participation in foreign visa program (More)
> Ukrainian activists protest Zelenskyy-backed law weakening anticorruption watchdogs in first major antigovernment demonstrations since Russia-Ukraine war (More) | Over 100 aid organizations warn of mass starvation in Gaza, accuse Israeli government of restricting, delaying food deliveries (More)
Other Life in the Universe
According to GEMINI (AI for Android) the probability of other life in the universe is extremely high because of:
- vastness of the universe
- discovery of exoplanets
- ubiquitous ingredients of life
- universal physical laws
Scientists think their biotech breakthrough could end plastic waste forever
Humans generated about 485 billion pounds of plastic waste in 2024 – an amount so large it’s incredibly difficult to comprehend. One quick drink or single shipment box often lingers for centuries, so researchers keep hunting for materials that disappear safely after use.
Now Maksud Rahman, a mechanical engineer at the University of Houston, and collaborators at Rice University report bacterial cellulose sheets that rival metal for strength yet compost like paper.
This biopolymer is spun outside the cell wall of species such as Novacetimonas hansenii, forming ribbons only a few nanometers thick that lock together like Velcro and can reach tensile strength values above 400 MPa.
Because the fiber network is pure, porous, and matches human tissue chemistry, clinicians already test it as a transparent wound covering that eases pain and speeds healing.
Thursday, July 24
Headlines
Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty Images
Robert Reich
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| Illustration by Till Lauer for The New Yorker |
From Watergate to Epsteingate
Here are the two contradictions lying at the heart of the contretemps over Trump and Jeffrey Epstein:
1. As early as May, Trump knew his name was in the Epstein files. Attorney General Pam Bondi and her deputy informed Trump at a meeting in the White House that his name appeared “multiple times.”
But on July 15, when a journalist asked Trump, “Did [Bondi] tell you at all that your name appeared in the files?” Trump responded, “No, no.”
2. Bondi said in February that Epstein’s client list was “sitting on my desk right now to review.”
But on July 7, the Justice Department stated that a thorough review had turned up no list of Epstein’s clients.
Neither of these is evidence that Trump was involved in Epstein’s activities with underage girls. But together they suggest a cover-up — which can kill a presidency.
At A Glance
Uber rolls out feature connecting women riders with women drivers.
A look at the US Postal Service before its 250th birthday.
Feisty felines get their moment in front of the camera.
More than 70% of teens have used AI for companionship.
How crops across the Corn Belt make hot days hotter.
What happened to squirrel pot pie?
Experts say exercise in the morning for a healthier heart.
Lightning kills 320 million trees each year.
Clickbait: How germy is the public pool?
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Ozzy Osbourne, legendary rock star and Black Sabbath frontman, dies at age 76 just over two weeks after performing in his final concert, which raised $190M for charity (More) | See previous write-up on Osbourne's last concert (More)
> US Olympic and Paralympic Committee bans transgender women from competing in women's sports, complying with recent President Donald Trump executive order (More)
> "South Park" creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone sign five-year, $1.5B deal with Paramount for global streaming rights to the animated series (More)
Science & Technology
> Japan proposes first new nuclear power plant since the deadly 2011 Fukushima disaster; meltdown followed a tsunami that left more than 2,300 people dead post-evacuations (More) | Nuclear provides about 20% of US electricity; learn more (1440 Topics)
> Brain scan study suggests the COVID-19 pandemic caused brains to age roughly five and a half months faster than prepandemic era; effect was seen regardless of infection status, more pronounced in older subjects (More)
> Octopuses can be tricked into thinking rubber tentacles are part of their body; findings suggest the creatures have a sense of "body ownership," similar to humans (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close mixed (S&P 500 +0.1%, Dow +0.4%, Nasdaq -0.4%) (More) | Kohl's shares close up 38% in apparent meme stock rally; trading halts briefly due to volatility (More) | Universal Music Group—owner of record labels behind Taylor Swift, Drake, and Lady Gaga—confidentially files for US initial public offering (More)
> UK court rules estate of Mike Lynch, who died last year when his superyacht sank off Italy's coast, and his former business partner owe HP Enterprise roughly $945M following an ill-fated deal with their software company, Autonomy (More) | See previous write-up on the superyacht tragedy (More)
> General Motors says Q2 earnings took a $1.1B hit from new tariffs on imported cars and auto parts, shrinking net income by 35% year over year; America's largest automaker still beat Wall Street estimates on Q2 earnings and revenue (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> President Donald Trump announces trade deal with the Philippines, landing on 19% tariffs; says US goods will not face tariffs in the Philippines in exchange for US military cooperation (More) | ... also announces trade deal with Japan, including 15% levy on imported goods; Japan to invest $550B in the US (More)
> Columbia University penalizes over 70 students for their participation in Israel-Gaza protests amid negotiations to restore $400M in federal funding; disciplinary action includes two-year suspensions, expulsions (More)
> Bryan Kohberger due to be sentenced today over fatal stabbing of four University of Idaho students in 2022 after pleading guilty to first-degree murder, burglary charges earlier this month (More)
Teaching Young People
We teach reading, writing, arithmetic, history, foreign language, science, music, and the arts in high school but not finance.
High school classes are designed for students who want to attend college but are not designed for those students who do not want to attend college.
For me, this is a big mistake...
RULE OF 72 - take a percentage that represents some sort of interest rate and divide that number into 72. The answer approximates the number of years it takes for one's money to double in value.
For instance, a mutual fund over a period of 40-80 years, averages during any 20-year period of time, 8-12% every year. So, let's use 10%. Dividing 10 into 72, results in 7.2 or one's money will double every 7 years.
Starting Amount
$10,000 2025 - your age is 20
$20,000 2032 27
$40,000 2039 34
$80,000 2046 41
$160,000 2053 47
$320,000 2060 54
$640,000 2067 61
$1,280,000 2074 67 - retirement age
Think about this...
How much does college cost?
Where do you get the initial $10,000?
- Work part-time during high school and save
- Work after high school and live with parents and save
- Ask parents for the money
- Instead of starting at age 20, start at age 24
Gravity and quantum ripples may explain cosmic origins
A team of scientists led by expert Raúl Jiménez, ICREA researcher at the University of Barcelona's Institute of Cosmos Sciences (ICCUB), in collaboration with the University of Padua (Italy), has presented a revolutionary theory about the origins of the universe.
For decades, cosmologists have worked under the inflationary paradigm, a model that suggests that the universe expanded extremely rapidly, in a fraction of a second, thus paving the way for everything we observe today.


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