Saturday, October 4
Headlines
Anadolu via Getty Images
At A Glance
Bookkeeping
> $336K to $403K: How much an original print of David Bowie’s "Aladdin Sane" cover is expected to go for at auction, breaking the record for most expensive album art.
> 310 dB: The volume of an 1883 eruption on the volcanic island of Krakatoa; ruptured eardrums 40 miles away and remains the loudest sound ever recorded.
Browse
> Golden retriever gives koala piggyback ride. (w/photos)
> Twenty-one rules for throwing a good party.
> How your income is distributed across tax brackets. (w/interactive)
> Why we click with certain people, according to a neuroscientist.
Listen
> Computer science students were handed an empty promise.
> Can humans talk to whales?
Watch
> Is it really bad to eat raw cookie dough?
> Inside the parlor that covers hateful tattoos for free.
> Potential loophole to survive the end of the universe.
Long Read
> Will classic snacks look the same without artificial dyes?
> Enduring intrigue of Amelia Earhart's disappearance.
> What it's like to retire after 75.
> Life and death of the American foodie.
Most Clicked This Week: What was going on the day you were born?
Historybook: Rembrandt dies (1669); Orient Express makes first run from Paris to Romania (1883); Hollywood legend Charlton Heston born (1923); Sputnik 1 is first artificial satellite to orbit Earth (1957); Rocker Janis Joplin dies (1970).
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Sean "Diddy" Combs to be sentenced today in New York for his July conviction on prostitution-related charges; prosecutors are seeking an 11-year prison sentence (More)
> Department of Homeland Security plans to send ICE agents to patrol Super Bowl LX following announcement that Puerto Rican artist Bad Bunny was selected to perform at the halftime show (More)
> The 2025 WNBA Finals begin tonight (8:30 pm ET, ESPN) with the Las Vegas Aces taking on the Phoenix Mercury in a best-of-seven series (More)
Science & Technology
> Perplexity AI launches artificial intelligence-powered web browser, Comet, for free worldwide; startup initially offered browser to select users for $200 monthly (More)
> Paleontologists revise evolutionary timeline for freshwater fish after analysis of 67-million-year-old ear bone fossil suggests they inherited their powerful hearing from marine ancestors (More)
> Researchers determine costly, deadly wildfires have increased more than fourfold from 1980 to 2023; 43% of the most damaging fires occurred between 2013 and 2023, including 43 wildfires that each caused over $1B in damage (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close up (S&P 500 +0.1%, Dow +0.2%, Nasdaq +0.4%) (More) | OpenAI raises valuation to record $500B after completing $6.6B secondary share sale, surpassing SpaceX as the world's most valuable startup (More)
> Tesla reports record 497,099 deliveries in Q3, a 7.4% rise from a year ago; sales data comes as a $7,500 federal tax credit for electric vehicles expired (More)
> Berkshire Hathaway to pay $9.7B for Occidental Petroleum's chemical unit; deal is Berkshire's largest since 2022 when it paid $11.6B for insurer Alleghany (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> White House asks nine colleges to agree to "compact" banning race and gender in admissions, freezing tuition, and capping international enrollment in exchange for federal funds (More) | President Donald Trump says the US is in "armed conflict" with drug cartels (More)
> Eiffel Tower closes as thousands of people strike across France to demand higher taxes on the rich and denounce budget cuts and a hike in the retirement age (More)
> Israel to deport hundreds of activists, including Greta Thunberg and Nelson Mandela's grandson, who were detained after Israeli navy intercepted 40 vessels attempting to deliver aid to Gaza (More)
Perils of Marriage
Living together is not easy whether a couple is married or not. It seems to be, my opinion, if you're married, because at best you split your assets 50/50 (providing there are no children), or you are in your 60s-70s-80s and it is not that easy living solo, especially if there are medical issues.
Therefore, couples stay together simply for the finances and companionship and the care that might needed to be given.
For instance, I am 78, my wife is 73, we are both in poor physical health... I might be slightly worse because I am fighting two kinds of cancers... and, we do not get along at all... which I find strange because our commonalities is what brought us together in the first place.
It would appear that we lied about what we had in common because we could not be more opposite.
We don't trust each other; we don't respect each other; we don't love each other, although being together for over thirty years creates some kind of mutual caring... We have just enough money (collectively) to take care of us until we're both 95 (assuming we live that long) and divorce would be financially disastrous for both of us.
SO... we remain together... we are married but it would not make any difference if we were not... We lived together for five years before we agreed to marry a second time.
YET...
there are married couples with and without children who will divorce each year at the first sign of incompatibility.
WHY...
Is living with another person because of an initial love SO FRIGGING DIFFICULT???
A 50,000-Year-Old Fossil Reveals Neanderthals Had a Far Richer Diet Than Scientists Once Believed
New evidence from fossilized dental plaque, coastal excavation sites and ancient feces is upending long-held assumptions about Neanderthal diets. Far from being brutish carnivores who hunted woolly mammoths and gnawed on raw meat, Neanderthals appear to have been remarkably adaptable eaters — with menus that included cooked crabs, medicinal plants, and even legumes.
Findings from multiple peer-reviewed studies, including a seminal paper published in Nature, reveal significant regional variation in Neanderthal diets across Europe. In northern sites like Spy Cave in Belgium, stable isotope analysis confirms a meat-heavy intake — primarily woolly rhinoceros and wild sheep. But in Spain’s El Sidrón cave, researchers found almost no trace of meat. Instead, genetic sequencing of calcified dental plaque uncovered remnants of mushrooms, pine nuts, moss, and tree bark.
Friday, October 3
Headlines
Patrick Pleul/Getty Images
Robert Reich
In the unfriendly skies
Friends,
I don’t have a crystal ball, but I have a good idea how this shutdown ends. Trump and Republicans will cave (he won’t admit he’s caving, of course, but he will cave).
Here’s why: Air traffic controllers.
Like other federal workers, the controllers aren’t being paid now (they’ll get back-pay when the shutdown ends). But unlike most other federal workers, their workloads and stress loads have been soaring.
Recall the last big shutdown that started in late 2018 and went on for 35 days — a record. What ended it? Air traffic controllers.
In January 2019, several controllers at a facility near Washington, D.C., that handles air traffic for most of the region, called in sick.
At A Glance
How much alcohol do Americans drink?
Tourists are flocking to China's futuristic megacity.
One in five people experience lucid dreaming at least once a month. (w/video)
World War II made Hershey and Mars candy giants.
Why smartphones have multiple cameras. (w/video)
Philadelphia woman wins the "Cheesemonger Olympics."
... and a Cleveland baker will represent the US in the "Bread Olympics."
Ranking America's 10 most haunting hikes.
Clickbait: Why the kids are saying "6-7."
Historybook: American singer-songwriter Chubby Checker born (1941); Gwen Stefani born (1969); East and West Germany are unified (1990); OJ Simpson acquitted of murdering ex-wife and her friend (1995); "Psycho" actress Janet Leigh dies (2004).
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> MLB Wild Card Series wraps tonight; see complete playoff bracket and schedule (More) | WNBA Finals matchup set after the Las Vegas Aces top the Indiana Fever in overtime; the Aces will take on the Phoenix Mercury for the WNBA title (More)
> Colorado officials to review 2005 death of author and journalist Hunter S. Thompson at the request of his widow; Thompson's death was initially ruled a suicide (More)
> Big Ten in talks with private capital group over $2B deal that would include an extension of the media rights for the athletic conference's 18 universities through the 2046 season (More)
Science & Technology
> Department of Energy takes 5% stake in Lithium Americas and its Nevada mining project, considered key to reducing US reliance on Chinese lithium for battery development (More) | How much is lithium demand projected to grow? (1440 Topics)
> Scientists confirm complex organic molecules in geysers on Saturn's moon Enceladus, offering further evidence the moon is habitable; Enceladus' underground oceans have long made it a prime candidate to host life beyond Earth (More)
> Paleontologists analyzing 430-million-year-old fossil determine leeches emerged 200 million years earlier than previously thought, with the earliest species feeding on marine creatures instead of blood (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close up (S&P 500 +0.3%, Dow +0.1%, Nasdaq +0.4%) as weak private payrolls data spurs further rate-cut bets (More)
> Attorneys general from five states sue Zillow, Redfin over alleged scheme to stifle online rental market competition; challenge follows similar FTC antitrust suit (More)
> Supreme Court allows Lisa Cook to remain as Federal Reserve governor, will hear arguments in January on whether President Donald Trump can fire her from the independent agency (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> Trump administration freezes $26B for Democratic-leaning states—roughly $18B for NYC transit projects and $8B for green energy projects in 16 states—acting on threat to target Democratic priorities during government shutdown (More)
> United Nations Security Council approves creation of 5,550-person force to help Haiti suppress gang violence; mandate for smaller and underfunded UN-backed mission led by Kenyan police expires today (More)
> Israeli navy intercepts flotilla seeking to bring humanitarian aid to Gaza (More) | Three alleged Hamas members arrested yesterday on suspicion of plotting attacks against Israelis and Jews in Germany are set to appear in court today (More)
Shutdown
WE ARE IN A GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN...
For my wife and I who are both retired and been retired for 10 years, this shutdown will not affect/effect either one of us at all.
However, there are millions of people here in the US of A that are not that lucky.
ALL SHUTDOWNS are POLITICALLY MOTIVATED... no matter which political party is in power... each side blames the other side... and whoever blinks first loses.
Unfortunately, the AMERICAN PEOPLE are the real losers.
It is for this reason, among others, that I DO NOT SUPPORT EITHER PARTY with my time or money. Whatever you decide to do is your business, not mine, but if you are smart you will not listen to the NEWS MEDIA as they favor one side or the other side and ARE NOT FAIR AND BALANCED.
Do your own research!!!
And if you are not sure how to do that, then use the AI app on your phone, computer, or laptop to do the research for you, making sure that you let them know YOU DON'T WANT A BIASED OPINION.
Don't just accept the first result that AI gives you... continue to ask questions, to make sure they are not favoring one side over the other side.
Microsoft's CoPilot and ChatGPT are the two I use often along with Gemini on my android phone, but I don't trust either of the three 100%.
Check out the Republican argument.
Check out the Democratic argument.
Check out the amendment that the Democrats presented to the Republicans - it is this amendment to the CR that caused the shutdown.
If you read the amendment yourself, you will be able to see who is telling the truth and who is not.
Ask AI to connect you with this amendment if you don't know how to do it yourself.
I NO LONGER BELIEVE ANY GOVERNMENT ELECTED OFFICIAL, EITHER STATE OR LOCAL...
Scientists find direct link between solar storms and heart attacks
We live on a planet wrapped in a magnetic shield that waxes and wanes with solar activity. Most days, that quiet background barely draws notice. Some days, it fluctuates more strongly.
The study behind this article asked a simple question: when Earth’s magnetic field gets unsettled, as it does during solar storms, is there a direct correlation to the number of heart attacks reported in humans on Earth?
Doctors in Brazil analyzed hospital admissions for myocardial infarction (heart attacks) over several years.
They tracked age, sex, and whether patients survived to discharge. Then they set those numbers alongside daily magnetic activity scores to see whether patterns aligned.






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