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What’s Wrong With Las Vegas?

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Just north of the Las Vegas Strip lies a graveyard of relics that recalls the boomtown’s lofty ambitions.

Dented metal signs, neon bulbs humming, lie in the desert dust, welcoming you to a city as varied as its defunct businesses: the bright pink feathers of the original Flamingo Las Vegas Hotel and Casino; the Red Barn’s crimson cherry in a martini glass, homage to one of the city’s first gay bars; the dancing “Happy Shirt” of Steiner Cleaners, Liberace’s one-time laundry.

They are reminders of long-closed places in a city that has reinvented itself time and time again.

According to its brochure, the Neon Museum preserved these mementos to celebrate Las Vegas’s “vibrant past, present and future.” But for many, the word that describes the city’s present is not quite “vibrant.”

Mark Rumpler, 66, an Elvis impersonator for almost two decades, had a different word: “Rough.”

“It was a turbulent summer,” said Sean McBurney, the chief commercial officer of Caesars Entertainment, which operates multiple Strip casinos and resorts, including Caesars Palace.

Aaron Berger, the Neon Museum’s executive director, said that Vegas’s growing pains aren’t new. He noted that Las Vegas began as a railroad town in 1905, becoming the link between Los Angeles and Salt Lake City during the Gold Rush, before it turned to gambling and hospitality, opening its first themed resort on the Strip in 1941. The city pivoted to entertainment, then fine dining in the 1990s, before becoming what it is now: a sports mecca, home to the N.H.L.’s Golden Knights beginning in 2017, followed by the W.N.B.A.’s Aces in 2018, the N.F.L.’s Raiders in 2020, and currently getting ready for the arrival of M.L.B.’s A’s in 2028.

Throughout those many versions, Las Vegas had largely endured as an affordable destination, with reasonable hotels and all-you-can-eat buffets. But in its latest iteration, the city is in the midst of a tourism downturn, with an 11 percent decline in visitor volume since last year, according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority.

The August release of those numbers sparked panic and pushback, not just in Las Vegas, but across the country, as other cities braced for similar hits. Decreased consumer confidence, a Canadian travel boycott and the fallout from tariffs have contributed to declines in international tourism in places like San Francisco and New York.

“The success of the economy here in Vegas is very dependent on the business cycle for the U.S. economy,” said Andrew Woods, the director of the Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. “We tend to be a signal, or sometimes ahead of the curve, of wherever the U.S. economy is headed, whether that’s growing or slowing.”

While the visitor drop is significant, the visible difference is subtle. On a recent evening, the Omnia nightclub was crowded, but there were no lines at the door. Visitors gathered over white tablecloths at celebrity-chef-branded restaurants, but there were fewer tourists in the food courts. Gondoliers serenaded their passengers, but many boats floated empty. People milled around casinos, but while slot machines were popular, card tables were half occupied.

Las Vegas might be far from a ghost town, but it is not the city that local businesses usually count on to make money.

“There definitely are less people,” said Lane Olson, 61, the manager of the downtown cafe PublicUs, which relies heavily on tourists. While there was a brief brunch rush, the cafe was sparsely populated at lunch. “At this time it would be full in here, and there would be a line,” he said.

The cafe had raised prices once in its 10-year history, said Mr. Olson, in response to the recent skyrocketing price of eggs, and he was reluctant to raise them again, but conceded that “eventually we will have to make adjustments if it continues this way.”

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https://static01.nyt.com/images/2025/09/29/multimedia/00trav-vegas-01-qkcl/00trav-vegas-01-qkcl-superJumbo.jpg?quality=75&auto=webpMark Rumpler, an Elvis impersonator for almost two decades, greets visitors at Las Vegas’s iconic welcome sign.

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/01/travel/las-vegas-tourism.html

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This U.S. Government Shutdown Is Different—Especially for Science

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The US government shut down at 12:01 a.m. et on 1 October, after lawmakers in Congress failed to agree on a funding bill to keep the government running. Threats of federal shutdowns have become routine in the past decade, but this closure could be different: US President Donald Trump’s administration has encouraged mass firings of federal workers — a group that includes tens of thousands of scientists — during the lapse in funding.

“When you shut it down, you have to do lay-offs. So, we’d be laying off a lot of people that are going to be very affected,” Trump said on 30 September. It’s not clear when such lay-offs would begin, whether they would survive legal challenges or how extensive they would be. Even without any shutdown-driven lay-offs, the Trump administration projects that it will cut 300,000 people from the roughly 2.4-million-person federal workforce by the end of the year as part of its efforts to downsize the government.

In the meantime, the federal government has stopped non-essential operations. Science-agency staff members have been sent home, their research suspended. The US National Institutes of Health (NIH) had planned to halt its in-house basic research and stop admitting new people to the NIH hospital in Bethesda, Maryland. If the shutdown lasts more than a few days, it will directly affect non-government researchers: both the US National Science Foundation (NSF) and the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) would stop awarding new grants.

Shutdowns “can have a significant impact on the scientific research enterprise, and a lot of that does depend on how long a shutdown is”, says Joanne Padrón Carney, the chief government-relations officer at the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a non-profit organization in Washington DC.

It’s unclear how long the shutdown could last. The first Trump administration (2017–21) featured a 35-day closure, the longest in US history, that cost roughly US$5 billion and led to disruptions across most US science agencies. There is no set date for the parties to meet for negotiations.

The White House did not respond to Nature’s questions about mass layoffs and the shutdown’s effect on science.

Shutdown showdown

In March, a small group of Senate Democrats voted with Republicans to pass a bill to keep the government open. But this time, Democratic lawmakers have voiced concerns about loss of health-care subsidies and a range of other issues, including attacks on free speech.

Although many scientists worry about the effect of a shutdown, some, including some federal researchers, see this as an opportunity for Congress to derail the Trump team’s activities, which have already included substantial lay-offs, budget cuts and disruption to research.

At a public protest in Washington DC on 29 September, federal employees spoke out against the actions of the Trump administration. “American science, the gold-standard and world-leading science and innovation enterprise, is being destroyed,” said Mark Histed, a neuroscientist at the NIH in Bethesda. “Congress has a rare moment of leverage to check Trump’s executive overreach and it must stand up and do so.”

Drastic reductions

No previous shutdowns carried the threat of mass firings, officially called reductions in force (RIFs). According to guidance issued by the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the office has directed agencies to consider issuing RIF notices to all employees who are working on certain projects: those whose Congressional funding lapsed on 1 October and whose goals are not “consistent with the President’s Priorities.” Carney says that the memo could be used to close programmes, leading to a loss of institutional knowledge at science agencies.

Agencies whose budgets are cut have discretion to cut staff, but it’s unclear whether that authority applies during shutdowns, says Nick Bednar, a legal scholar at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities in Minneapolis. “We are in largely uncharted territory,” he says. The administration has already faced legal push-back on previous mass firings. In September, a judge ruled that the termination of 25,000 federal workers earlier this year was unlawful, but that too much time had passed since the termination to mandate their reinstatement. On 30 September, two unions sued the administration to block any RIFs.

Scanty details

Nature contacted multiple federal agencies about their shutdown plans. None provided information about potential RIFs. But huge numbers of federal employees at science-heavy agencies are already on unpaid leave.

According to plans disseminated before the government closed, the NSF intended to furlough roughly 75% of its staff. The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration was expecting to furlough 54% of its personnel, halting “most research activities”. At NASA, in which 83% of staffers were furloughed, a skeleton crew will keep active satellites operational.

The US Department of Energy’s website did not have a detailed contingency plan and an agency spokesperson declined to provide specifics about furloughed staff. At the EPA, 86% of the staff are to be furloughed, but ongoing experiments will be preserved.

A contingency plan for the NIH specified a furlough of 78% of workers, preserving only crucial functions such as care for existing patients. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will furlough 64% of its staff.

One set of activities has been authorized to continue across all agencies during the shutdown: on 28 September, the Office of Personnel Management published guidance stating that activities related to administering RIFs — such as sending termination notices — are exempted from shutdown-related freezes.

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The U.S. government ceased many operations early on Wednesday after Congress failed to pass legislation to fund agencies’ activities.  Pete Kiehart/Bloomberg/Getty Images

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/this-u-s-government-shutdown-is-very-bad-for-science/

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The five every day habits experts say you can always rely on for better health

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Staying healthy may seem like an impossible ask.

Research into the best ways to keep fit or maintain a healthy diet is constantly evolving, and people also have to navigate around the issues of modern life, from pollution and processed foods to viruses and corporate office jobs.

But, experts say there are five everyday practices you can always rely on to keep you in top shape.

Focusing on different areas of wellness, they can easily be worked into daily routines.

They might seem simple, but they’re effective – unlike quick fixes and fads, according to Harvard researchers.

Be mindful

More than a quarter of American adults suffers from a diagnosable mental disorder in a given year, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine.

Researchers have found that anxiety and depression can be incredibly harmful to both physical and mental health. Depression and anxiety are risk factors for developing heart disease, diabetes, dementia, and chronic pain.

Practicing mindfulness can help counter these effects and help you feel positive. Intentional breathing, exercising in nature, and eating nutritiously are all steps that can help you relieve muscle tension and regulate your nervous system.

Sleep well

Staying mindful can help you sleep better. And sleep is a critical component of overall health and longevity.

However, one in three Americans aren’t getting the recommended seven to nine hours each night.

Prioritizing your sleep can help support heart health, lower your risk of diabetes, help your muscles recover faster, keep you from getting sick, increase your attention span, and reduce the risk of injury.

“When we sleep, the brain totally changes function,” Dr. Marishka Brown, a sleep expert at the National Institutes of Health, said. “It becomes almost like a kidney, removing waste from the system.”

Try to go to sleep earlier, not look at screens, and drink water for better sleep health.

Do some cardio and move around

Exercise can help you fall asleep and feel less tired during the day.

Fitness can also lower blood pressure and reduce inflammation that can lead to heart disease and cancer.

Health authorities recommend adults get 150 minutes every week of moderate intensity activity or 75 minutes of vigorous intensity activity.

Cardio gets you breathing harder and your heart beating faster, but it also benefits your lungs, digestion, skin, muscles, joints, heart, and brain, according to the Cleveland Clinic.

People can run, jump rope, or go cycling for these benefits. But, just walking also counts, and taking more steps a day helps lower the risk of premature death.

An estimated 110,000 deaths per year could be prevented if U.S. adults ages 40 and older increased their moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Eat whole foods

Diet and nutrition are just as important for your health as fitness.

Eating whole and vitamin-rich foods free of a lot of salt, sugar, and saturated fats can also stave off disease.

Many experts say the Mediterranean diet is the key to the best health. The diet includes fatty fish, nuts, fruits and vegetables, olive oil, and beans.

Experts also advise people to avoid ultraprocessed foods, which additives that reduce products’ nutritional value.

“Industries are adding ingredients like excess salt, sugar, artificial sweeteners, colorings, and other chemicals that may be unhealthy or trigger reactions in the brain to keep us craving more,” Dr. Wynne Armand, a primary care physician at Harvard-affiliated Mass General Brigham, explained.

Protect yourself from pollution

While you may not be able to move, there are steps you can take to protect yourself from air and other sources of pollution.

Make sure to stay inside when air quality has been degraded and wear a mask or respirator when needed.

Microplastics and forever chemical pollution are in our skies and waterways, but people can reduce their plastic use, buy pans that are PFAS free, and use a water filter to mitigate exposure.

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For longer life, focus on fitness over weight loss

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.the-independent.com/life-style/health-and-families/health-habits-nutrition-sleep-benefits-experts-b2837325.html

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The White House Can’t Decide: Is the Shutdown Bad or Good?

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The United States government has been shut down for nearly three days, but the Trump administration still seems at odds with itself over the most basic, fundamental question at play: Is it a good thing or a bad thing that this is happening?

The people who work inside the White House sound terribly torn.

On the one hand, President Trump has called the shutdown an “unprecedented opportunity” to hack away at pieces of the federal bureaucracy he does not like. Plus, he has figured out how to weaponize it against his political enemies. And even though thousands of people are facing layoffs and critical services are being cut, he is evidently pleased with the meme potential the shutdown has inspired. All week long, the president has been posting trollish, A.I.-generated content having to do with the situation.

Vice President JD Vance was asked on Wednesday about one such meme Mr. Trump had posted. “Oh, I think it’s funny,” Mr. Vance said. “The president’s joking and we’re having a good time.”

The vice president continued: “We’re all trying to do a very important job for the American people. The president of the United States likes to have a little bit of fun when he’s doing it.”

This spirit of shutdown fun was not consistent with the message delivered by the White House press secretary on Friday.“There are significant personal impacts on millions of Americans as a result of this current government shutdown,” the press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, said from the podium. She said that there are 1.3 million men and women in the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, and Space Force who are not being paid.

“Military families are already seeking out food assistance because of financial anxiety,” she said. She described an article she read about military families near Fort Hood, Texas, having to line up outside a Y.M.C.A. food pantry at 5 in the morning.

“This madness must end,” she declared at one point.

So then, she was asked, what was with all the shutdown japery from her boss on social media? Just a night earlier, Mr. Trump had posted an A.I.-generated video of his budget chief, Russell T. Vought, dressed as the grim reaper, wielding a scythe, while A.I. versions of Mr. Trump and Mr. Vance (both draped in black cloaks as well) played percussion set to the Blue Öyster Cult jam “(Don’t Fear) the Reaper.”

“Look,” Ms. Leavitt said, “the president likes to have a little fun every now and then.”

“We don’t like laying people off,” she insisted. “Nobody takes joy in that around here.” (She did not define the difference between “fun” and “joy.”)

“If you think that,” she continued, “then I think that’s very sad; you view the White House and our staff as wanting to put people out of work. Nobody wants to do that, but sometimes in government you have to make tough decisions.”

Ms. Leavitt’s explanation that these unfortunate firings must be carried out was about as puzzling as her saying that no one at the White House was enjoying what was happening, even as they were posting online, seeming very much to enjoy what was happening.

It is out of the ordinary to use a government shutdown to fire people. The way this usually goes down is that workers get furloughed during a shutdown, and then often many of them get back pay once it ends. Already, lawsuits are being brought against the Trump administration for its efforts to straight-up fire people this week.

As for the press secretary saying that “nobody” wants any of this to happen? That seemed difficult to square with Mr. Trump’s assertion that “a lot of good” could come from this shutdown. “We can get rid of a lot of things that we didn’t want,” he said on Tuesday, “and they’d be Democrat things.”

Come on, baby, don’t fear the reaper — he’s just having a little fun.

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https://static01.nyt.com/images/2025/10/03/multimedia/03dc-trump-shutdown1-lgpb/03dc-trump-shutdown1-lgpb-superJumbo.jpg?quality=75&auto=webpVisitors outside the White House on Friday, the third day of the government shutdown.Credit…Eric Lee for The New York Times

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/03/us/politics/white-house-trump-shutdown.html

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How the World’s Oldest Woman Lived to 117

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Maria Branyas Morera lived to the age of 117 with a bit of genetic luck and a healthy diet that included daily yogurts, according to a study published today in Cell Reports Medicine. During her final year — she died on 19 August 2024 — she was verified as the oldest living person, a feat that drew the attention of researchers who explore the biology of ageing.

“We wanted to learn from her particular case to benefit other people,” says Manel Esteller, a physician specializing in genetics at the University of Barcelona in Spain.

At the time, Branyas was living in the small town of Olot, in the Catalonia region of Spain, where she enjoyed reading books, playing with dogs and spending time with friends and family, including her two daughters, both in their 90s. Over several encounters with Branyas and her family, Esteller and his colleagues collected samples of her blood, saliva, urine, and stool that provided insights into her unique physiology, including her genetics, metabolism, and gut microbiome.

The supercentenarian was happy to collaborate. “She was a very humble person,” Esteller recalls. “She said: ‘My only merit is that I’m alive’.”

The researchers compared Branyas’s genetic, metabolomic, and other profiles with those of women of various ages living in the same region. One of the main insights from the work, Esteller says, is that it is possible to distinguish molecular changes that happen in the body because of ageing from those that occur because of poor health.

For instance, the research team learnt that Branyas’s telomeres — the stretches of repetitive DNA that protect the ends of chromosomes — were exceptionally short. Telomeres naturally shorten with age, and unusually short telomeres have been associated with age-related diseases. But Branyas had no such illnesses. “This is telling us that the loss of telomeres is not necessarily associated with disease, it’s simply associated with being old,” Esteller says.

Mayana Zatz, a geneticist at the University of São Paulo in Brazil who studies the genetics of healthy centenarians, says the study is thorough but notes that conclusions that are based on a single individual are limited. “It would be interesting to compare the findings with supercentenarians in other populations,” she says.

Winning the genetics lottery

While analysing Branyas’s genome, the authors spotted genetic variants that are known to protect against cardiovascular disease, cognitive loss, and diabetes. By contrast, they found no variants associated with increased risk for certain deleterious conditions, including Alzheimer’s disease.

The researchers also looked for genes linked to longevity. “She had variants in genes that, in other beings like dogs, worms, and flies, are associated with extreme lifespan,” Esteller says. “She was lucky in the genetics lottery.”

But her luck didn’t end there. Branyas aced her bloodwork; she had low levels of ‘bad’ cholesterol and high levels of ‘good’ cholesterol, which suggests an efficient lipid metabolism. Her inflammation markers were also low, and she had a strong immune system — at the age of 113, she was the oldest person in Spain to have COVID-19 and survive. “Sometimes our immune cells get a little bit unloyal and start to attack our own cells, causing inflammation,” Esteller says. “There was nothing like that.”

Esteller thinks Branyas’s lack of inflammation could be linked to her healthy gut microbiome, which resembled that of a much younger person. He points to her high levels of Bifidobacterium, a genus of beneficial bacteria that was probably boosted by her diet, which included three daily servings of yogurt.

Some of her other lifestyle choices that probably contributed to her longevity included eating a Mediterranean diet and exercising regularly. “Our genes are the cards in a poker game,” Esteller says. “But how we play them is what really matters.”

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Maria Branyas Morera had been verified as the oldest living person when she died last year at age 117.  Xavier Dengra (Public Domain)

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-genetics-and-diet-helped-the-worlds-oldest-woman-live-to-117/

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Trump revives family separations amid drive to deport millions: ‘A tactic to punish’

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The Trump administration has revived the practice of separating families in order to coerce immigrants and asylum seekers to leave the US, attorneys and former immigration officials allege.

In several cases, officials have retaliated against immigrants who challenged deportation orders by forcibly separating them from their children, a Guardian investigation found. The officials misclassified the children as “unaccompanied minors” before placing them in government-run shelters or foster care.

The new practice has taken effect as the administration has also issued stringent new limits on who can take custody of unaccompanied minors, which advocates say keep thousands of children away from their relatives.

“This is a tactic to punish people for not acquiescing,” said Faisal Al-Juburi, head of external affairs at the legal aid group Raíces. “It’s a tactic to get immigrants to relent, to agree to self-deport.”

The recent separations echo the “zero tolerance” policy of the first Trump administration, when the US systematically separated more than 5,600 migrant children from their parents and caregivers at the US-Mexico border. Images of agents pulling children from their parents’ arms and placing them in overcrowded metal cages sparked domestic and international outrage, and Donald Trump ended the policy.

But seven years later, hundreds of parents have still been unable to reunify with their children; the administration lost track of many of the families it tore apart. Though the new separations so far appear less pervasive than the original policy, experts and attorneys said that it could result in another crisis of prolonged, permanent separations.

“I would say that the main difference is just that the separations are now happening all over the country, as opposed to at the border, concentrated in areas where you could visibly go see it,” said Michelle Brané, a former Department of Homeland Security (DHS) official who served under the Biden administration. “But the rest of it is not that different. The objective is still to be cruel and send a message that people should not come to the US – that they should leave.”

Family separation is one of several ways in which the US government is, increasingly, moving immigrants around the country – shuffling detainees through a vast, chaotic system that advocates say is intentionally cruel.

An analysis of leaked flight records and US government detention data, as well as interviews with immigrants, attorneys, and former officials, revealed that immigrants are increasingly moved without notice away from their families, communities,s and legal counsel – leading to apparent violations of constitutional due-process rights.

The Guardian reviewed leaked flight data from Global Crossing Airlines, the charter company that operates the majority of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) flights, and found that the vast majority of these trips during the first three months of the second Trump administration were between domestic US airports. The airline transported nearly 44,000 immigrants – including 1,000 children – during that time. US detention data revealed that since the inauguration, nearly 2,350 kids under the age of 18, including 36 infants, have been booked into immigration detention centers around the country.

In cases reviewed by the Guardian, parents were moved between detention centers several times after being separated from their children, and in the process were unable to coordinate calls with their kids or their lawyers. Amid the chaos, immigration experts and advocates have the raised alarm that the government could, as it did during the first Trump administration, lose track of where it is sending parents and children, resulting in indefinite or permanent separations.

For LW, a 37-year-old mother who came to the US with her 10-year-old son in April seeking political asylum, returning to China was not an option.

LW told her lawyers and immigration officers that she had been sexually assaulted by multiple high-ranking government officials in China. After reporting an assault to the police, Chinese government operatives threatened her with imprisonment – or death. That’s what was awaiting her in China, she told US immigration agents.

In a sworn declaration in her immigration case that her lawyers shared with the Guardian, LW alleged her pleas to allow her and her son to remain together while they applied for asylum were ignored by Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents in San Diego, California, who forced the mother and son into an unmarked vehicle, and began driving them toward the local airport. According to her sworn declaration, agents told her if she refused to get on a flight back home, the government would take her son away from her.

At the airport, the agents tried to drag LW toward the terminals. “I said I needed a lawyer, but they refused, telling me that nobody would want to help me,” she said in her declaration. “Desperate and terrified of what might happen, I dropped to the ground and the officers let me go.”

Later that day, she said they drove her and her son back to a CBP facility in San Diego – and then moved them to an Ice facility in Texas. But a month later, she said, immigration agents followed through on their threat: they took her son away and placed him in foster care.

Her lawyers said that she and her son have now been separated for nearly five months. He turned 11 in the interim.

LW remains detained at an Ice facility in New Mexico, while her son has been placed at a government shelter for unaccompanied minors in New York.

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Family separations were the hallmark of the first Trump administration’s border policy. Now advocates allege migrant families are being split up again as a retaliatory measure

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/ng-interactive/2025/oct/02/trump-immigration-family-separations-deportations

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For Workers, Mixed Signals. For the Public, Limited Impact on Shutdown’s First Day.

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The first government shutdown in nearly seven years left federal agencies in flux and many of their employees in a state of confusion on Wednesday, as they received last-minute and conflicting instructions from managers.

Even though the likelihood of a shutdown has been high for months, agencies were late to post their contingency plans compared with previous years, leaving employees and the public in the dark about what to expect. And internal guidance to work forces in some cases was not consistent with the official plans. Some employees who expected to be furloughed learned on Wednesday that they had to report to work.

But despite the uncertainty inside the government, the initial ripple effects across the country were scattered and limited.

There was no major disruption to air travel. The Internal Revenue Service answered calls from taxpayers. And federal agents arrested immigrants who showed up for routine court appearances in Lower Manhattan.

But the impact was felt elsewhere. The Jimmy Carter Presidential Library in Atlanta was closed, and visitors got a quick civic lesson: Presidential libraries are operated by the federal National Archives and Records Administration, which furloughed more than half of its staff.

“We thought it was privately funded, or we would have come yesterday,” said Cindy Mobley, 64, of Baltimore. Ms. Mobley and her husband were in town visiting their son, a freshman at nearby Emory University.

Not being able to visit the museum, Ms. Mobley said, “is a small price to pay if it leads to something better for all of our citizens.” She said she supported congressional Democrats who are refusing to agree to a spending plan that does not restore funding for Medicaid and extend health insurance subsidies.

For Chris Hill, of New York, the first day of the shutdown brought an unprompted message from the Department of Veterans Affairs. He said he had been working with the agency to resolve a benefits issue regarding his late father and was surprised to see the message informing him that the government was shut down, noting that some agency services would not be available.

The message also blamed Democrats for the shutdown, which Mr. Hill said also caught him by surprise.

“It was such a political and one-sided message sent out by a department that is supposed to deal equally with veterans, regardless of their political opinions,” he said in an interview.

Similar political responses have come from other agencies, marking what many believe to be the first time an administration has used the bureaucracy to deliver blatantly partisan messaging during a shutdown.

Legal experts say doing so violates a federal law, the Hatch Act, designed to ensure that the federal work force operates free of political influence or coercion. And many federal workers expressed discomfort about being drawn into the political morass.

More federal employees are working in the opening hours of this shutdown than in those of previous years, in part because of pockets of available funding for certain agencies that do not come from annual congressional appropriations. For the Departments of Defense and Homeland Security, some of the extra money is coming from President Trump’s signature domestic policy law, often called the One Big Beautiful Bill. That law prioritized spending for homeland defense and immigration enforcement.

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The government shutdown has affected visits to some sites, like Everglades National Park and the Liberty Bell, and left some infrastructure projects in limbo. Credit…Alex Kent for The New York Times

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/01/us/politics/shutdown-federal-workers-agencies.html

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The U.S. Military Is Picking Up mRNA Vaccine Research That RFK, Jr., Defunded

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The abrupt termination last month of nearly half a billion dollars in US government contracts for mRNA vaccine research rattled scientists working inside and outside industry. The cuts raised alarm about the country’s commitment to the Nobel-prizewinning technology, which is credited with saving millions of lives during the COVID-19 pandemic and is regarded as essential for fighting viruses in the future.

Yet not all large-scale research into mRNA vaccines in the United States is being dismantled. Nature has learnt that, even as the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) — led by vaccine critic Robert F. Kennedy Jr — pulls back, the country’s military continues to bankroll parts of the same research.

Among the beneficiaries are programmes developing vaccines against some of the world’s deadliest pathogens, including the virus that causes Crimean–Congo haemorrhagic fever (CCHF), a tick-borne disease that kills up to 40% of those infected. In the United States, the government considers such research crucial because these pathogens not only threaten soldiers deployed abroad, but could also ignite a global outbreak.

“A lot of us are at least relieved the Department of Defense [DoD] is not abandoning mRNA research,” says Amesh Adalja, an infectious-disease specialist at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security in Baltimore, Maryland.

Still, he cautions that the HHS’s rejection of the technology, combined with broader policy fractures across the government, threatens to hobble national — and global—readiness for emerging infectious threats.

“The whole biodefence structure is completely derailed,” Adalja says. “I’ve never seen it be disconnected like this.”

Turbulent times

Peter Berglund learnt that his company’s federally backed vaccine programme was being cut the same way that many other affected firms did in a 5 August notice from the HHS’s Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), which ordered an immediate shutdown of ongoing studies. For Berglund, chief scientific officer at HDT Bio in Seattle, Washington, the news was a gut punch, as he told colleagues at a conference on RNA-based therapeutics in Boston, Massachusetts, this month.

HDT had been developing a next-generation CCHF vaccine based on a form of RNA that can copy itself inside cells. The company had secured tens of millions of dollars in federal contracts, which it used first to test a shot in mice and monkeys, and then to begin a human trial in Texas this July. The BARDA memo brought everything to a halt the very next month.

But “that was mommy”, Berglund says. “Then daddy calls.”

Within days, HDT executives heard from project managers at the DoD’s Joint Program Executive Office (JPEO) for Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear Defense, which had been co-funding the CCHF vaccine research. HDT was told to restart its trial, with the JPEO pledging support through at least this first phase of clinical evaluation.

“It’s been so turbulent,” Berglund says. The DoD funding, although substantial, is less than what had originally been pledged in conjunction with BARDA. “But, at least now we can advance it through phase I,” and worry about the rest later, he adds.

A ‘restructuring’ of resources

Others with projects co-funded by the JPEO also learnt of funding cuts and a “restructuring of collaborations” in the 5 August notice. But their situation is less clear.

Earlier this month, AstraZeneca, a pharmaceutical company headquartered in Cambridge, UK, began a human trial of two mRNA vaccines, despite the notice. Each is designed to protect against a different strain of avian influenza. Clinical-trial registries still list both BARDA and the JPEO as collaborators.

An AstraZeneca spokesperson declined to comment on the US government’s role in funding the trial against bird flu, which has been infecting US poultry and dairy cattle and raising the spectre of a leap into humans. The JPEO did not respond to requests for comment.

In a statement, HHS press secretary Emily Hilliard disputed suggestions that withdrawing from joint projects would weaken the nation’s pandemic preparedness, writing that “BARDA is prioritizing evidence-based, ethically grounded solutions.”

The JPEO and BARDA had also been jointly funding a preclinical-stage vaccine programme for biotechnology firm Moderna in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The mRNA shot is aimed at Marburg virus — a close but even deadlier relative of Ebola — which caused an outbreak earlier this year in northwest Tanzania, resulting in ten deaths. Neither Moderna nor its collaborator, the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston, responded to e-mails from Nature seeking comment on the project’s funding status.

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https://static.scientificamerican.com/dam/m/6d3a197c620b835/original/soldier-vaccines.jpg?m=1759329961.848&w=900

The U.S. government invests in vaccine development, in part, to protect soldiers from dangerous pathogens in various parts of the world.  Jon Cherry/Getty Images

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/u-s-military-continues-mrna-vaccine-research-after-rfk-jr-cuts-funding/

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Jane Goodall, Eminent Primatologist Who Chronicled the Lives of Chimps, Dies at 91

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Jane Goodall, one of the world’s most revered conservationists, who earned scientific stature and global celebrity by chronicling the distinctive behavior of wild chimpanzees in East Africa — primates that made and used tools, ate meat, held rain dances, and engaged in organized warfare — died on Wednesday in Los Angeles. She was 91.

Her death, while on a speaking tour, was confirmed by the Jane Goodall Institute, whose U.S. headquarters are in Washington, D.C.

The British-born Dr. Goodall was 29 in the summer of 1963 when the National Geographic Society, which was financially supporting her field studies in the Gombe Stream Chimpanzee Reserve in what is now Tanzania, published her 7,500-word, 37-page account of the lives of Flo, David Greybeard, Fifi, and other members of the troop of primates she had observed.

The article, with photographs by Hugo van Lawick, a Dutch wildlife photographer whom she later married, also described her struggles to overcome disease, predators, and frustration as she tried to get close to the chimps, working from a primitive research station along the eastern shore of Lake Tanganyika.

On the scientific merits alone, Dr. Goodall’s discoveries about how wild chimpanzees raised their young, established leadership, socialized and communicated broke new ground and attracted immense attention and respect among researchers. Stephen Jay Gould, the evolutionary biologist and science historian, said her work with chimpanzees “represents one of the Western world’s great scientific achievements.”

And in becoming one of the most famous scientists of the 20th century, Dr. Goodall opened the door for more women in her largely male field as well as across all of science. Women — including Dian Fossey, Biruté Galdikas, Cheryl Knott and Penny Patterson — came to dominate the field of primate behavior research.

On learning of Dr. Goodall’s documented evidence that humans were not the only creatures capable of making and using tools, Louis Leakey, the paleoanthropologist and Dr. Goodall’s mentor, famously remarked, “Now we must redefine ‘tool,’ redefine ‘man,’ or accept chimpanzees as humans.”Dr. Goodall’s willingness to challenge scientific convention and shape the details of her arduous research into a riveting adventure narrative about two primary subjects — the chimps and herself — turned her into a household name in the United States and overseas.

Long before focus groups, message discipline, and communications plans became crucial tools in advancing high-profile careers and alerting the world to significant discoveries in and outside of science, Dr. Goodall understood the benefits of being the principal narrator and star of her own story of discovery.

In articles and books, her lucid prose carried vivid descriptions, some lighthearted, of the numerous perils she encountered in the African rainforest — malaria, leopards, crocodiles, spitting cobras, and deadly giant centipedes, to name a few. Her writing gained its widest attention in three more long articles in National Geographic in the 1960s and ’70s and in three well-received books, “My Friends, the Wild Chimpanzees” (1967), “In the Shadow of Man” (1971) and “Through a Window” (1990).

Dr. Goodall’s gentle and knowledgeable demeanor — set against the beautiful yet dangerous Gombe preserve and its playful and unpredictable primates — proved irresistible to television. In December 1965, CBS News broadcast a documentary of her work in prime time, the first in a long string of nationally and internationally televised special reports about the chimpanzees of Gombe and the courageous woman steadfastly chronicling what she called their “rich emotional life.”Most of Dr. Goodall’s observations focused on several generations of a troop of 30 to 40 chimpanzees, the species genetically closest to humans. She named and grew to know each of them personally. She was particularly interested in their courtship, mating rituals, births and parenting.

Dr. Goodall was the first scientist to explain to the world that chimpanzee mothers are capable of giving birth only once every four and a half to six years, and that only one or two babies were produced each year by the Gombe Stream troop. She found that first-time mothers generally hid their babies from the adult males, prompting frantic displays by the males — leaping and hooting that could last five minutes. An experienced mother, however, she discovered, freely allowed males and other females to view her infant, satisfying their curiosity, in a far calmer introduction.

In her many articles, books, and documentaries, Dr. Goodall explored similar signal moments in her own life. In March 1964, after a nearly yearlong courtship, she married Mr. van Lawick. Three years later, she gave birth to Hugo Eric Louis van Lawick, her only child, whom she nicknamed Grub.

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https://static01.nyt.com/images/2020/12/25/obituaries/00Goodall1/merlin_128947673_868c494e-de80-4755-9472-cd9c218364cd-superJumbo.jpg?quality=75&auto=webpJane Goodall, seen here in 2017, attracted immense attention and respect among researchers with her account of the lives of Flo, David Greybeard, Fifi, and other members of the troop of primates she observed in East Africa.Credit…Gabriela Herman for The New York Times

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/01/obituaries/jane-goodall-dead.html

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Archaeologists Discovered a 5,000-Year-Old Tomb Filled to the Brim With Ancient Treasures

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Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story:

  • Archaeologists uncovered a culturally rich ancient tomb in Spain.
  • The 5,000-year-old stone tomb in Malaga is an impressive 42 feet in length.
  • Full of cultural artifacts, experts believe the tomb will provide new information on ancient customs.

Researchers recently unearthed a 5,000-year-old stone-built monument tomb in Malaga, Spain, that’s comes in at an impressive 42 feet in length. Even better, it’s incredibly well preserved—and stuffed full of artifacts.

“We could be talking about one of the most monumental and complete dolmens in all of Andalusia [the southernmost autonomous region of Spain],” Serafin Becerra, professor at the University of Cádiz, said in a translated statement from the school. A dolmen refers to the stone megalith-style structure discovered at the site.

Project co-director Eduardo Vijande agreed. “The true potential of this structure,” he said, “lies in its extraordinary state of conservation, which will allow us to gain a detailed understanding of the lifestyles and beliefs of these communities.”

The stone tomb isn’t just long—it’s complex. With orthostat slabs (defined as upright stones) over six feet tall, the site features several internal compartments, each with the potential to expand our understanding of funerary practices across the southern Iberian Peninsula during the third millennium B.C.E.

Once inside, the researchers located several “prestigious” container rooms featuring the bones of deceased individuals and a range of grave goods—from exotic raw materials of ivory and amber to seashells and what the team is dubbing “sophisticated flint pieces.” The flint collection includes arrowheads, large-format blades, and an “exceptional halberd” (a two-handed axe-like weapon).

Across multiple excavation seasons, the researchers located multiple container rooms (known as ossuaries), showing that the site was likely a collective burial ground.

“The entire dolmen was also covered by horizontal large stone slabs, and on top of this covering, there was a tumulus [a human-made mound] of sand and small stones,” Eduarda Vijande Villa, an associated professor of prehistory at the University of Cádiz and co-director of the excavations, told Live Science.

Along with providing an understanding of the types of tools and cultural goods used 5,000 years ago, Juan Jesús Cantillo—a professor at the University of Cádiz—said that “the presence of seashells in an inland area reflects the importance of the sea as an element of prestige and the existence of long-distance exchange networks.”

The use of dolmens wasn’t relegated to just the southern Iberian Peninsula, and has cropped up across history in various time periods and regions of the world. In some cases, the sites were more than just tombs. Some held significant cultural or ritual meaning, others served as places to shelter, or and still others served as key territorial markers delineating land ownership.

Famed dolmens span from Europe to Asia, but new discoveries continue to expand our understanding of the practice of their creation. Some of the most well-known dolmens in Europe include Spain’s 7,000-year-old Dolmen of Guadalperal—dubbed the “Spanish Stonehenge” and typically submerged in water, though it will appear in times of drought—and the 5,000-year-old Arthur’s Stone in England, which features nine upright stones weighing an estimated 27 tons.

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https://hips.hearstapps.com/hmg-prod/images/bryn-celli-ddu-burial-chamber-anglesey-north-wales-royalty-free-image-1759181153.pjpeg?crop=0.88994xw:1xh;center,top&resize=1200:*Photos by R A Kearton//Getty Images

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Click the link below for the complete article:

https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/archaeology/a68060378/5000-year-old-tomb-ancient-treasures/?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-us

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