Saturday, November 29
Medical
Male
WBC 4.62 4.0 - 10.5
RBC 3.57 4.14 - 5.80
HGB 12.2 12.6 - 17.7
HCT 36.6 37.5 - 51.0
PLT 70.0 150 - 450
Date: 11/20/2025
PET/CT Results:
- no evidence of Melanoma reoccurrence
- no evidence requiring follow-up of Lymphoma
Voids Detected Inside Giza Pyramid May Be Signs of a Hidden Entrance
Scans of the third-largest pyramid at Giza, the Menkaure pyramid, have revealed two anomalous pockets of nothing but air hiding behind its sloping stone walls.
The discovery follows earlier findings inside the Great Pyramid of Khufu, including a huge internal void and a corridor near its northern entrance. But the Menkaure cavities are dramatically different in shape, size, and layout – hinting at a very different construction history and purpose.
"The images revealed two anomalies directly behind the polished granite blocks, which would indicate the presence of air-filled voids," writes a team led by archaeologists Khalid Helal and Mohamed Elkarmoty of Cairo University.
"This interpretation was supported by a series of numerical simulations that considered various possible scenarios under real-world conditions."
Friday, November 28
Headlines
The coupon’s not dead yet

Andersen Ross/Getty Images
An American-born shopping strategy may be in the midst of a mini comeback. The days of couponing so hard that you get on a TLC show are over, but post-pandemic grocery inflation has ushered in a new wave of deal fiends.
Although coupon use plummeted to an all-time low in 2022:Redemptions ticked up in 2023 and 2024, mostly driven by digital offers rather than traditional newspaper inserts, according to Inmar Intelligence.
More than 25% of US adults are using more coupons because of the state of the economy, up from 18% in mid-2021, according to a 2024 survey by the National Retail Federation.
Rebound: In September, Kroger reported a “lift” in the number of products sold after the grocery chain reintroduced paper coupons. Bargain shoppers also logged a win in August, when Bed Bath & Beyond Home opened its first store under its new banner and brought back its legendary 20% coupon. This time around, though, it can’t be used with other offers.
The deals aren’t what they used to be
Gone is the era of combining enough coupons to save 75% at checkout (or even be owed money by the store):Walmart, ShopRite, and Target don’t let shoppers use more than four of the same paper coupon in one day anymore.
Many retailers have also stopped giving cash back on coupons of a higher value than the purchase price.
To limit fraud risks, some stores don’t allow printouts from Coupons.com—or any coupons that aren’t on their master list, even if they’re legitimate.
Where the Extreme Couponers are now: Many stars of the 2011–2012 TLC show moved on from coupon-clipping to maxing out their 401(k) and IRA contributions and racking up hotel loyalty points for cheaper travel. They told the Wall Street Journal that this offers higher returns for a drastically lower time commitment. Probably fewer paper cuts, too.—ML
PERSONAL FINANCE
Are all of these loyalty schemes programs worth it?
Francis Scialabba
You’re just six more purchases from a free coffee. You’re four more hole punches from a free sandwich. If you amass 500 more points, that airline will let you fly the plane.
Maybe that last one isn’t real (yet), but loyalty programs have become ubiquitous. As of 2016, long before the current loyalty gold rush, Accenture reported that 90% of companies already had programs that gave you “free” stuff for making purchases.
But these plans can come at a cost.
Loyalty being punished?
If you’ve noticed the perks aren’t as perky as they were when you first joined a given club, you might not be imagining things. The Washington Post looked into potential loyalty paranoia and instead found that Starbucks and other companies might use your info to cut back on your deals through surveillance pricing:Former FTC officials Samuel Levine and Stephanie Nguyen told the outlet that some companies will use AI and your personal data to charge higher prices to specific patrons.
A study from the Vanderbilt Policy Accelerator and the University of California at Berkeley’s Center for Consumer Law & Economic Justice also found that these programs can invert the idea of loyalty, benefiting companies more than customers.
Data concerns: Ask that app not to track all you want, but some are still able to gather enough data in other ways to determine things like your income and how much money you’re willing to fork over. The author of the WaPo story requested and received his data report from Starbucks, which showed every drink and snack he had bought, every offer he had received, and every tap he made in the app. That kind of data could be shared with dozens of tech firms that specialize in tailoring prices.
Open investigation: The FTC began investigating surveillance pricing in July 2024, but when the Trump administration took office, it halted the probe. Levine and Nguyen said they’d like to see it resume. Noting that in some cases loyalty programs may be the only path to a discount, Levine told WaPo, “We shouldn’t be put in a position where we have to decide between affording our groceries and protecting our privacy.”—DL
Robert Reich
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| Mr. Potter, er, Trump |
Friends,
Pope Leo recently said his favorite movie of all time was “It’s a Wonderful Life.”
Mine too. I first watched it when I was a kid in the early 1950s. For years, it was shown the week before Christmas. I loved it. Still do.
The pope’s and my favorite movie has a lot to tell us about where America is right now, and the scourge of Donald Trump.
If you don’t already know it, the central conflict in the movie is between Mr. Potter (played by Lionel Barrymore) and George Bailey (Jimmy Stewart).
Potter is a greedy, cruel banker. In his Social Darwinist view of America, people compete with one another for scarce resources. Those who succeed deserve to win because they’ve outrun everyone else in that competitive race.
Black Friday
AI Overview
Black Friday is the Friday after Thanksgiving in the United States that marks the beginning of the holiday shopping season. It is known for major sales and deep discounts offered by retailers both online and in stores. The term "Black Friday" originated in Philadelphia in the 1950s to describe the chaos of post-Thanksgiving shopping and was later popularized by retailers to signify when their business profits would move from "the red" to "the black".
- Do they want Green Energy
- Do they want AI
Thursday, November 27
Thanksgiving
What do you think about/of when you hear the word THANKSGIVING?
- Food
- Family
- Gratitude
- Transportation
- Christmas is a month away
- Football
- Work Holiday
- Alcohol
We, in general, don't think about the first Thanksgiving unless we are in K-12. If we are in college or university, we are thinking time away from school, exams, or time at home.
Those of us who attend church on a regular basis are no doubt exposed to being grateful that we are living or have survived something, but that feeling happens all year long not just around Thanksgiving.
For me during my first marriage and part of my second marriage, Thanksgiving was a time that if we were close enough to family, then it was entirely possible that we would be eating two Thanksgiving dinners, one at the wife's parents and one at my parents.
Yes, it was true in my second marriage as well up until the year that her mother died, then my father, then my mother... at that point, we always spent Thanksgiving at home.
As my second wife's son aged and found a significant other, we have been spending Thanksgiving with them. We have gone to their house, we have gone out for the meal, but this year, they are coming to our house, and we are dividing up the meal so that one family is not burdened with it all.
For me personally and because of my health issues, Thanksgiving really is a time for me to give thanks because MEDICINE is keeping me alive.

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