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    Credit reporting agencies will wipe most medical debt

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    Equifax (EFX), Experian (EXPGF) and TransUnion (TRU) will eliminate billions of dollars from the accounts of consumers who faced unexpected medical bills that they were unable to pay. The three firms said they made the move after months of research.

    “Medical collections debt often arises from unforeseen medical circumstances. These changes are another step we’re taking together to help people across the United States focus on their financial and personal well-being,” the companies said in a joint statement.

    The announcement follows research from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau showing that Americans had racked up $88 billion in medical debt on consumer credit records as of June 2021. It’s the most common debt collection credit account on credit records, the CFPB said.

    Medical debt can be volatile and unpredictable, and can negatively affect many financially secure consumers. Black, Hispanic, young and low-income consumers are most likely to be impacted by medical debt, the bureau said.

    Medical debt concerns have heightened since the Covid-19 pandemic hospitalized millions of people, and CFBP Director Rohit Chopra has been publicly critical of medical debt collections by credit reporting agencies. On March 1, Chopra said the CFPD will be “closely scrutinizing” the Big Three credit reporting agencies.

    “We expect them to take seriously their role as major actors in the credit reporting system — a system whose integrity and accuracy can determine the financial futures of hundreds of millions of people,” Chopra said.

    Starting July 1, paid medical collection debt will no longer be included on consumer credit reports. Millions of Americans had credit scores previously lowered because debts paid after being sent to collections could appear on credit reports for up to seven years.

    More changes are expected. It will now take one year before unpaid medical collection debt appears on a consumer’s report, instead of six months, the previous standard.

    The three companies also said that starting in the first half of 2023, medical collection debt less than $500 will no longer be included on credit reports.

    Good to be back with tour group traveling in Spain | Lifestyle

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    Lia Thomas finishes 8th in 100-yard freestyle, final race of collegiate swimming career 

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    Transgender UPenn swimmer Lia Thomas finished in eighth place in the 100-yard freestyle  race at the NCAA Division I women’s championships, making for a disappointing final race of her controversial college swimming career. 

    Thomas, 22, swam 48.18 seconds on Saturday night, less than a second slower than her qualifying time of 47.37 seconds, which was a personal best. 

    She had come in fourth place in the preliminary race, only 0.10 seconds behind third-place University of Alabama swimmer Morgan Scott and one second behind first-place University of Virginia swimmer Gretchen Walsh.

    Walsh, a freshman, came in first on Saturday night’s race, her first individual NCAA championship.    

    As a fifth-year senior, Thomas came into the event with the 10th fastest record, which she set at the Ivy League Championships in February.  

    Thomas has endured months of backlash for having what critics say is an unfair advantage. The UPenn swimmer was met with cheers, boos and notable silence during the championships races.  

    After the race, Thomas celebrated alongside Yale swimmer Iszac Henig, who identifies as a transgender man but has not started hormone therapy, making him eligible to compete in the women’s race. Henig tied for fifth.

    Both swimmers wrote ‘Let trans kids play’ on their arms during Saturday’s races.   

    Lia Thomas, 22, (pictured on Saturday) swam 48.18 seconds – finishing in eighth place in the 100-yard freestyle race at the NCAA Division I women’s championships, the final race of her collegiate swimming career

    Saturday's race marks the end of Thomas' swimming with the University of Pennsylvania

    Saturday’s race marks the end of Thomas’ swimming with the University of Pennsylvania 

    Thomas, in the sixth row, swam less than a second slower than her qualifying time of 47.37 seconds, which was a personal best she reached earlier on Saturday

    Thomas, in the sixth row, swam less than a second slower than her qualifying time of 47.37 seconds, which was a personal best she reached earlier on Saturday

    Thomas’ ranks in the NCAA Championships 

    500y prelims – 1st

    500-yard finals – 1st 

    200m prelims – 2nd

    200m finals –  5th

    100y prelims – 4th

    100y finals – 8th 

    Source: NCAA

    Hening, who said that he and Lia ‘are friends’ told ESPN that the message on the athlete’s arms was to stand in solidarity with trans athletes at all sporting levels. 

     ‘We’re not allowed to have anything on our clothes, but the rules don’t say anything about our skin,’ he said. ‘So I took the platform I was hoping to have to say that trans athletes are just like any other athlete.’ 

    Thomas did not speak to the media following Saturday night’s race.  

    Thomas has had parents and Olympian Caitlyn Jenner, 72, among other former professional athletes such as tennis great Martina Navratilova, weighing in with their thoughts about her ability to compete in the NCAA championships. 

    The controversial swimmer also pulled out second place in the 200m preliminary race, but only pulled fifth in the finals. 

    Throughout most of the season, Thomas has remained mum, rarely speaking about the mass amounts of criticism thrown her way. On Thursday, however, after winning first place, she told ESPN that she tries to ‘ignore’ the brutal commentary. 

    ‘I try to ignore it as much as I can, I try to focus on my swimming, what I need to do to get ready for my races, and I just try to block out everything else,’ she said. 

    ‘It means the world to be here, to be with two of my best friend and teammates and be able to compete.’ 

    An activist also claimed Thomas was ‘not a woman’ from the poolside on Friday. 

    The UPenn swimmer was the first transgender athlete to win a Division I title after pulling in first in the 500-yard, but when the young swimmer stood on top of the podium, she was met with near-silence, while second-place winner University of Virginia swimmer Emma Weyant was met with wild applause and many deeming her the ‘real’ winner. 

    Thomas is competing within the rules, as she has completed a year of testosterone suppressants, as she starting to transition during the pandemic. 

    However, the rules will more than likely change come next season, where transgender females will have to undergo three years of suppressing testosterone in order to compete against biological women. 

    The NCAA ruled it would be wrong to implement the new rules mid-season, thus allowing Thomas to complete her final season. 

    Jenner slammed the NCAA for allowing the college student to compete. 

    Although she said she had ‘no problem’ with Thomas herself, Jenner said the 22-year-old ‘was taking it easy’ in the 500-yard race in order to not break Katie Ledecky’s record – which Thomas is nine seconds short of. 

    Earlier this month, Jenner also said its ‘just not fair’ to allow biological boys to compete in women’s sports.   

    Thomas (above) has been met with harsh criticism since the start of the competition, with several high-profile people, such as transgender Olympian Caitlyn Jenner, 72 - who did not transition until 2015 - and tennis star Martina Navratilova, 65, speaking out against Thomas' eligibility to compete against biological women. Thomas is, however, competing within the current NCAA rule, which will change after this season

    Thomas (above) has been met with harsh criticism since the start of the competition, with several high-profile people, such as transgender Olympian Caitlyn Jenner, 72 – who did not transition until 2015 – and tennis star Martina Navratilova, 65, speaking out against Thomas’ eligibility to compete against biological women. Thomas is, however, competing within the current NCAA rule, which will change after this season 

    Olympian and reality TV star Caitlyn Jenner, 72, slammed the NCAA for 'not being tough enough' with the rules and allowing the University of Pennsylvania swimmer to compete. 'What I've said from the beginning [are] the rules aren't tough enough,' she said. 'Just being on testosterone depressants for a year or two, whatever the rules are now, they keep changing, obviously, it is not enough'

    Martina Navratilova, who is widely considered one of the greatest tennis players of all-time, spoke out against Thomas being allowed to compete as an equal against women - hours before Thomas became the first transgender NCAA champion on Thursday

    Olympian Caitlyn Jenner, 72, (left) slammed the NCAA for ‘not being tough enough’ with the rules and allowing the UPenn swimmer to compete. ‘Just being on testosterone depressants for a year or two, whatever the rules are now, they keep changing, obviously, it is not enough.’ Martina Navratilova, who is widely considered one of the greatest tennis players of all-time, spoke out against Thomas being allowed to compete as an equal against women

    ‘I don’t think biological boys should compete in women’s sports – we have to protect women’s sports,’ Caitlyn said. ‘That’s the bottom line.’ 

    Pink News slammed the reality TV star, calling her ‘anti-trans’ for her rhetoric on the UPenn swimmer. 

    However, Jenner didn’t shy away from the controversy and responded back on Twitter, writing: ‘No, I just had the balls to stand up for women and girls in sports,’ she wrote. 

    Another high-profile athlete Martina Navratilova, who is considered one of the greatest tennis players of all-time, spoke out amid Thomas’s historic victory on Thursday. She suggested transgender women who are competing against biological women should have an asterisk next to their wins. 

    ‘It’s not about excluding transgender women from winning ever,’ the 65-year-old said. ‘But it is about not allowing them to win when they were not anywhere near winning as men.’

    ‘You try to keep it as close as possible to what it would had been, were you born in the female biological body in the first place,’ she said.

    ‘And even saying that, people take exception to – biological female. People don’t even want to use those words.

    ‘I don’t know what else to say. Other than that.’

    On Friday, a British campaigner Kellie-Jay Keen, who lobbies against ‘woke’ policies on transgender people, went viral after a row in the stands during Thomas’ swimming competition, where she told a woke spectator that the 22-year-ld is ‘not a woman.’ 

    Keen, who was in the stands, can be heard telling a male spectator: ‘Is he the same as the other girls in the pool?’

    Signs and rowdy spectators have been seen at the competition demoting Thomas' wins and podium placements. A woman was seen holding a 'say no to males competing as females' sign at the competition on Friday. Also on Friday, British activist Kellie-Jay Keen got in a row with another spectator and said Thomas was 'not a woman'

    Signs and rowdy spectators have been seen at the competition demoting Thomas’ wins and podium placements. A woman was seen holding a ‘say no to males competing as females’ sign at the competition on Friday. Also on Friday, British activist Kellie-Jay Keen got in a row with another spectator and said Thomas was ‘not a woman’ 

    The man replies: ‘Every body is different.’

    Keen says: ‘No. Are you saying he doesn’t have male organs? I’m a woman – that is not a woman. Do you have ovaries? I’m a woman, and that is not a woman.’

    The man counters: ‘Let me ask you, are you a biologist?’

    Keen replied: ‘Oh my God – don’t be ridiculous. I’m not a vet, but I know what a dog is. You rely on stupid arguments, because you don’t have an argument.’

    Parents have long spoken out about their disagreement with Thomas competing at all, as the swimmer competed as a male for the first three years of collegiate swimming. 

    The swimmer, who went by Will before transition, was ranked in the low 400s in men’s swimming, but had skyrocketed to first in women’s. 

    THE RULES ON TRANSGENDER ATHLETES AND WHEN THEY CAN COMPETE FOR GENDER THEY ARE SWITCHING TO 

    Lia Thomas started taking hormone therapy while she was still competing as a male back in May 2019. 

    Under USA Swimming rules, athletes had to have recorded low levels of testosterone for 36 months to compete in the female category. 

    That meant that Thomas didn’t qualify for the NCAA championship, if they followed USA Swimming rules – as they originally said they would.  

    But the NCAA said that she would be allowed to compete because they were refusing to adopt the threshold this year. 

    Last month, the NCAA committee said: ‘The subcommittee decided implementing additional changes at this time could have unfair and potentially detrimental impacts on schools and student-athletes intending to compete in 2022 NCAA women’s swimming championships.’ 

    It is unclear what they will do next year, however.  

    Glass Tumbler Found In Woman’s Urinary Bladder 4 Years After Use As Sex Toy

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    Oh, that’s where that glass tumbler went. A case report published in the journal Urology Case Reports described how doctors found a glass tumbler that a 45-year-old woman had misplaced about four years earlier. And urine for a surprise as to where they found this glass tumbler. Here’s a hint. It wasn’t in the woman’s cupboard.

    When you need a doctor to find something that you’ve lost, chances are something’s gone quite wrong. After all, you don’t tend to call your doctor every time that you can’t find your Spiderman underwear. In this case, the woman had been suffering urgenturia for about a year before eventually going to the emergency room. Now, urgenturia may sound like a cafeteria when you want food very quickly. But instead it is a feeling of urinary urgency, a continuing sensation of needing to empty your bladder. It’s called urgency because the words “I really have to pee” aren’t usually followed by “let’s take a leisurely stroll in the park” or “can you tell me that really long story about your thumbtack collection again?”

    Urinary urgency is a common symptom of a urinary tract infection (UTI) because when your bladder walls get irritated they often begin to contract or spasm. The case report, authored by a team from the Academic Hospital Habib Bourguiba in Sfax, Tunisia (Ahmed Chaabouni, Ahmed Samet, Mohamed Fourati, Houcem Harbi, Mohamed Amine Mseddi, and Mourad Hadjslimene), indicated that the woman had received treatment for bladder infections several times previously. However, each time no one had taken a closer look at her bladder.

    While the woman was in the emergency room, a urinalysis on a sample of her urine found both red blood cells and lots of white blood cells. This might have been expected for a typical UTI. However, an X-ray of her pelvic area revealed something even more unusual: an object that appeared shaped like a glass. And nothing in your pelvis should be shaped like a glass, regardless of what you may nickname your genitals.

    The woman then underwent surgery to remove this object from her bladder. And the surgery revealed a glass more than half full situation. It was a glass tumbler that had apparently been sitting in her bladder for a while because it was encased in calcified material. The picture in the following tweet shows what doctors had extracted from her bladder:

    All told, this combination glass tumbler and bladder stone measured 8 cm by 7 cm by 8 cm. That’s a fairly large stone as eight centimeters is about one-twentieth the height of Napoleon. With this glass tumbler successfully removed from her bladder, the woman was able to leave the hospital after two days and apparently had no problems afterwards.

    Whenever you find a glass tumbler in someone’s bladder, you typically should have follow-up questions. After all, bar or kitchen items shouldn’t just randomly appear in one’s bladder. Upon questioning from the doctors, the patient mentioned that she had used the glass tumbler as a sex toy four years prior, inserting it into her vagina. Apparently, she hadn’t removed the glass tumbler from her vagina. Over time, this object probably caused inflammation and the breakdown of the tissue between her vagina and her bladder. The following diagram shows how your bladder sits in front of your vagina:

    This tissue breakdown then may have allowed the glass tumbler to slowly migrate from her vagina into her bladder. When a tunnel forms between your bladder and your vagina, it’s called a vesicovaginal fistula. A fistula is any abnormal connection between two body parts. The prefix “vesico-” stands for something involving your bladder, and the suffix “vaginal” not surprisingly stands for something involving your vagina. That’s why you should avoid anything called vesico-pancakes.

    In general, it’s a bad idea to put anything into your vagina that don’t belong in your vagina. Your vagina isn’t a suitcase or a treasure chest. Instead, it’s a much more complex body part that’s lined with acid-producing bacteria. These microbes help maintain specific conditions in your vagina such as a pH level that can range from 3.8 up to 5 depending on your age. Putting anything not designed to go in there could disrupt these conditions, leading to tissue damage, infection, or both. That’s why legitimate sex toys should be designed in a way that minimizes disruptions to your vagina.

    Moreover, it’s a good idea to keep track of whatever you happen to put into your vagina. This doesn’t necessarily mean creating a spreadsheet along with graphs and pie charts. Or maintaining an accurate inventory of every single item in your house just to make sure nothing went into you without you knowing it. However, it does mean that your vagina should not be the same as Las Vegas. Whatever happens in there shouldn’t necessarily stay in there. Instead, make sure that you remove what’s been put in your vagina within a reasonable amount of time. And if you have to ask yourself, “who was the President when I put this in there,” you’ve probably waited too long.

    Saudi Aramco full-year profit more than doubles on soaring oil prices

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    An employee looks on at Saudi Aramco oil facility in Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia October 12, 2019.

    Maxim Shemetov | Reuters

    Saudi Arabian oil giant Aramco reported blowout full-year earnings on Sunday, posting a more than doubling in year-on-year net profit to $110 billion.

    Aramco’s 2021 net income increased by 124% to $110 billion in 2021, compared to $49 billion in 2020, citing higher crude oil prices, stronger refining and chemicals margins, and the consolidation of its chemicals business, SABIC’s, full-year results. 

    The numbers were in line with expectations, with analysts surveyed by Reuters forecasting net income of $109.7 billion for the full year. Shares rose 4% Sunday on the news, according to Reuters data.

    “Our strong results are a testament to our financial discipline, flexibility through evolving market conditions and steadfast focus on our long-term growth strategy, which targets value growth for our shareholders,” Aramco CEO Amin Nasser said in the results release.

    Surging oil

    Aramco benefitted from surging oil prices during 2021, with international benchmark Brent crude rising above $80 a barrel by the end of the year, up roughly 50% for the 12-month period. Supply shortages added to a complex slew of factors driving major uncertainty across the energy and commodity complex, even before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

     “Although economic conditions have improved considerably, the outlook remains uncertain due to various macro-economic and geopolitical factors,” he added.

    Aramco also declared a fourth quarter dividend of $18.8 billion, to be paid in the first quarter of 2022. The dividend is covered by a rise in free-cash flow to $107.5 billion in 2021, compared to $49.1 billion in 2020. 

    Aramco said it would recommend that $4 billion in retained earnings be used to pay bonus shares to investors, subject to approval. Under the recommendation, shareholders would receive one bonus share for every 10 shares owned. As a result, the total dividend for 2021 is $75 billion in cash, in addition to bonus shares. 

    Capital expenditure boost

    The company also said it would invest to increase crude oil production capacity to 13 million barrels per day by 2027, expand its liquid to chemical production, and look to increase gas production by more than 50% by 2030. 

    Aramco has also said it wants to achieve net-zero Scope 1 and Scope 2 greenhouse gas emissions across its wholly-owned operated assets by 2050. Scope 1 refers to direct emissions from sources owned or controlled by the company, while Scope 2 covers indirect emissions from the generation of purchased power consumed by the company.

    Capital expenditure in 2021 was $31.9 billion, an increase of 18% from 2020, primarily driven by increased activities in relation to crude oil increments, the Tanajib Gas Plant and development drilling programs. Aramco expects 2022 capital expenditure to be approximately $40-50 billion, with further growth expected until around the middle of the decade. 

    The figures are a stark contrast from the company’s 2020 earnings, which saw a 44% drop on the previous year due to demand collapse brought on by the coronavirus pandemic. 

    Nasser at the time described Aramco’s 2020 financial year as one of its most “challenging years” in recent history. 

    Vanced developers issue statement addressing wild rumors about the app’s demise

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    While the story of YouTube Vanced (later just Vanced) seems like it’s mostly over after the app shuttered operations, the folks behind the beloved mod apparently still have more to say. Several rumors have spun up regarding the app’s demise, so on Saturday, the team behind Vanced posted an article on anonymous blogging platform Telegra.ph titled “Vanced Discontinuation.” It purported to brief anyone “having trouble understanding the reason” why the application was discontinued.

    The post dismissed rumors that Vanced was stopped for reasons related to NFTs or a shoutout from a media group and also claimed the takedown had nothing to do with allegations of piracy or issues with ad-blocking. Additionally, in response to rumors that Vanced devs were Russian, the post stated that “[none] of the team members are in Russia or Ukraine, nor do they have any links to those countries.”

    ANDROIDPOLICE VIDEO OF THE DAY

    Vanced also denied that their app had any “illegal” features, then gave what the folks behind the app say are the “actual” reasons they received a cease and desist letter:

    • Vanced is discontinued for “legal reasons” as vanced was infringing the logo and branding of the original YouTube app as the logo resembles the original logo in a similar way and was used without taking prior permission from Google for using the branding.
    • We were asked to remove all links for the distribution of any vanced apps that results in the decision of discontinuation.

    The statement went on to say that the team behind Vanced would never reveal the app’s source code to the public. Doing so could “cause serious complications for us.” Also, forget about ever downloading the app again. All links to a downloadable version of Vanced have been deleted and the Vanced team says they can’t help with alternate methods of grabbing a version of the app, either.

    Vanced concluded by asking disappointed fans of the app not to attack anyone over its demise and to alert them to any other false information. So, there you have it for Vanced, the original — RIP. One of the reasons so many loved Vanced is because the app had alternative features that YouTube could probably use, and some of them were pretty damn good — check them out here.



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    British royal couple starts Caribbean tour dogged by protest in Belize

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    BELIZE CITY, March 19 (Reuters) – Britain’s Prince William and his wife Kate arrived in Belize on Saturday for a weeklong Caribbean tour that was marred by a local protest before it even began amid growing scrutiny of the British Empire’s colonial ties to the region.

    The arrival of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge coincides with the celebration of Queen Elizabeth’s 70th year on the throne, and comes nearly four months after Barbados voted to become a republic, cutting ties with the monarchy but remaining part of the British-led Commonwealth of Nations.

    Three miniature cannons fired a salute to the couple as their plane landed in Belize City before a military band played the national anthems of Belize and Britain at a welcoming ceremony that kept the media throng at a distance.

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    William inspected a guard of honor as the band played local creole song “Ding Ding Wala,” then drove off with his wife to meet Prime Minister John Briceno.

    Afterwards, Briceno told Reuters the duke and duchess were “excited to be here in Belize as we are delighted to have them,” adding: “We wish them a fruitful and memorable visit.”

    The couple are due to stay in Belize, formerly British Honduras, until Tuesday morning. On the eve of their departure, an event planned for Sunday was scrapped when a few dozen villagers staged a protest.

    Residents of Indian Creek, an indigenous Maya village in southern Belize, said they were upset that the royal couple’s helicopter had been granted permission to land on a local soccer field without prior consultation. read more

    The village is in a land dispute with Fauna & Flora International (FFI), a conservation group supported by the royal family, stirring discontent over colonial-era territorial settlements still contested by indigenous groups.

    A visit to a different site is being planned instead, Belize’s government said. In a statement, Kensington Palace confirmed the schedule would be changed because of “sensitive issues” involving the Indian Creek community.

    In a statement, FFI said it had purchased land at the nearby Boden Creek from private owners in December 2021, and that it would conserve and protect the area’s wildlife while supporting the livelihoods and traditional rights of local people.

    Without directly addressing the dispute, FFI said it bought the land to benefit the area’s ecological integrity, resident communities and Belize as a whole, and pledged to maintain “open and continuous dialogue” with the local community.

    After Belize, the duke and duchess are due to visit Jamaica and the Bahamas. Meetings and a variety of events are scheduled with politicians and a range of civic leaders.

    Dickie Arbiter, Queen Elizabeth’s press secretary from 1988 to 2000, described the tour as a goodwill visit that ought to give a temporary lift to the family’s popularity.

    Today, many people in former colonies see the monarchy as an anachronism that should be let go, he said. But he expected that little would change while Elizabeth remained on the throne.

    “The royal family is pragmatic,” he said. “It knows it can’t look at these countries as realm states forever and a day.”

    POPULAR OPINION

    Debates over colonial-era oppression, including possible reparations for the descendants of slaves in Jamaica, could push more countries to emulate Barbados’ recent move. read more

    Carolyn Cooper, a professor emerita at the University of the West Indies, said the royal couple’s visit was unlikely to discourage Jamaica from opting for republic status.

    “I think there is a groundswell of popular opinion against the monarchy,” she said.

    Some in Belize, which gained independence from Britain only in 1981, speak warmly about remaining in the fold.

    “I believe it’s a wonderful opportunity for them to appreciate the country’s multiculturalism, natural attractions, and to enjoy our culinary practices,” said Joseline Ramirez, a manager in the Cayo district of western Belize.

    Others are less enthusiastic.

    Alan Mckoy, a mechanic in Belize City, said he “couldn’t care less” about the royal family.

    “They are no better than any of us,” he said.

    Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

    Reporting by Jose Sanchez in Belize City
    Additional reporting by Dave Graham, Kate Chappell and Cassandra Garrison
    Editing by David Alire Garcia, Edmund Klamann, Frances Kerry, Diane Craft and Jonathan Oatis

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

    Horridus the Triceratops is one of the most complete dinosaur skeletons on Earth

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    Little did Pfister know that he had stumbled across one of the most complete skeletons of the mighty Triceratops.

    “At that time, I suspected or hoped it was something special, but it took another month of excavation before I knew the extent and quality of the specimen,” he said.

    It’s called Horridus, a name given to the specimen by its new owner Museums Victoria, Australia’s largest public museum organization. The nickname is derived from its full name Triceratops horridus, and it lived 67 million years ago.
    Pfister is the owner of Great Plains Paleontology, a company based in Madison, Wisconsin, that scouts for and digs up fossils. Over his nearly 30-year career, he’s discovered multiple Tyrannosaurus rex specimens along with other rare dinosaurs, but Horridus remains one of his all-time favorites, he said.

    After finding the dinosaur remains in 2014, Pfister took more than a year to excavate the bones with a couple of his colleagues.

    That’s understandable, considering the Triceratops left more than 266 bones for the paleontologist to unearth.

    The skeleton made the long trek from North America in eight special crates to reach its new home at the Melbourne Museum.

    A fearsome herbivore

    These bones make up the most complete dinosaur remains at any Australian museum, according to Erich Fitzgerald, senior curator of vertebrate paleontology at Museums Victoria.

    Horridus is nearly 85% complete, standing about 2.5 meters (8 feet) tall, 7 meters (23 feet) long and weighing 1,000 kilograms (2,205 pounds), he said. The skull is 98% complete and features three horns along with a majestic frill, the flat bone plate jutting out from the top of the Triceratops’ head.

    The dinosaur may have used its horns to protect itself from predators or to attract potential mates, Fitzgerald said.

    Not much is known about how the plant-eating dinosaur became so perfectly preserved, but Fitzgerald said he believed the creature would have had to been buried shortly after dying.

    Sex traps can lure thousands of male giant hornets to their death, study finds

    “I suspect the carcass got washed intact into a river channel, sank quickly to the bottom and then was rapidly covered by sand and mud on the riverbed,” he said. It could have also died in the water, he added.

    Paleontologists are rarely able to decipher a dinosaur specimen’s sex, so it’s not clear if this Horridus was male or female. Unless physicists invent a time machine, it’s unlikely humans will be able to answer that question within the century, Fitzgerald said.

    “In the meantime, it’s these enduring mysteries that continue to spur paleontologists to find out more about our planet’s past and ignite wonder in us all,” he said.

    How to see Horridus

    The Melbourne Museum opened the Triceratops exhibit, called “Triceratops: Fate of the Dinosaurs,” this month.

    It’s a permanent part of the museum collection, so visitors don’t need to worry about the dinosaur exhibit going away anytime soon, according to Fitzgerald. Its housing in a public museum also allows scientists to engage in scientific research on the skeleton, he said.

    If a trip to Melbourne isn’t on your bucket list, you can examine the bones of a 3D model of Horridus online.

    Political notebook: Oklahoma Democrats have their Horns out in U.S. Senate races | Govt-and-politics

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    Horn-ing in: While Republicans are likely to get most of the attention during this year’s U.S. Senate races, voters may have noticed an unusual coincidence on the Democratic side.

    Two women with the same last name are running, one in each of Oklahoma’s two Senate races.

    Kendra Horn and Madison Horn are not sisters. They are not cousins, mother and daughter, or aunt and niece.

    In short, they are not related.

    Kendra Horn, 45, is a former 5th District congresswoman who worked for then-Congressman (now University of Tulsa President) Brad Carson in the early 2000s, ran Democrat Joe Dorman’s 2014 gubernatorial campaign and has been a lobbyist and policy consultant for the aerospace industry. She grew up in Chickasha and has degrees from the University of Tulsa and Southern Methodist University.

    Kendra Horn is a candidate for the Senate seat being given up by Republican Jim Inhofe.

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    Madison Horn, 32, grew up in Stilwell, moved to Georgia not long after finishing high school, and wound up with a Washington, D.C., cybersecurity company. She now lives in Oklahoma City. Although she is not related to Kendra Horn, she said she is a distant cousin of fellow Adair County native U.S. Rep. Markwayne Mullin — a Republican who could be matched against Kendra Horn in the general election.

    Madison Horn is one of at least three Democrats planning to enter the primary for the other U.S. Senate seat, which is being defended by Republican James Lankford.

    Aside from being Democrats, the Horns have at least one thing in common — both have worked with nonprofit youth organizations. Kendra Horn has been involved with the Girl Scouts, while Madison Horn worked for the Boys and Girls Clubs of Northeastern Arkansas right out of high school.

    It should be noted that the Horns aren’t the only Democrats running for U.S. Senate.

    Jason Bollinger, a young Oklahoma City attorney who claims Kendra Horn as a friend, and Tulsan Jo Glenn, a former teacher and city of Tulsa public prosecutor who has been a leader in Tulsa County Democratic Party politics, are up against Madison Horn in the June 28 Democratic primary for the Lankford seat.

    Election lawsuit: Oral arguments in Enid attorney Stephen Jones’ suit to stop the special election for Inhofe’s seat in the Senate will begin at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday before the Oklahoma Supreme Court.

    In an unusual move, the arguments will be livestreamed on the court’s website, oscn.net.

    Jones is arguing that Inhofe’s successor cannot be chosen until the office is actually vacant, which as things stand now won’t occur until the end of the current Congress early next year.

    A decision in Jones’ favor would mean Inhofe would have to retire this year for there to be a special election in 2022. If he remains until early next year, the governor would appoint a temporary replacement to serve until after a special election could be held in 2024.

    Under the dome: Expect some long days and maybe nights in the Oklahoma House and Senate this week ahead of Thursday’s floor deadline. Bills not passed by their chamber of origin by then will be considered dead for the remainder of the session.

    About 750 bills remain on general order, meaning they’ve been voted out of committee but have not been heard on the floor. About 440 of those are in the House, the remainder in the Senate. It’s not inconceivable that others could magically appear on agendas before the week is out.

    State Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Roger Thompson, R-Okemah, continued preaching caution on spending and tax cuts despite record revenue.

    Gov. Kevin Stitt signed six bills last week, the first of the 2022 session. All were relatively minor items dealing with taxes and state expenditures.

    The state Senate maintained the Legislature’s sudden push for hydrogen power by passing a couple of related incentives, one for hydrogen-powered motor vehicles and another for education costs connected to development of hydrogen power.

    The Senate last week passed and sent to the House legislation to repeal a number of court fees and replace the revenue with general fund appropriations.

    The Oklahoma Democratic Party blasted away at what it called Republicans’ “anti-expert movement,” which it says is “jeopardizing the public health of all Oklahomans” by turning the Health Department into a political arm of the Governor’s Office.

    Trump train: With Oklahoma Republicans crawling over each other to get the blessing of former President Donald Trump in this year’s competitive Republican primaries, Stitt actually received an endorsement.

    “Kevin Stitt has done a fantastic job as Governor of Oklahoma,” Trump said in a written statement. “He is a champion for our America First agenda, a fearless defender of the Second Amendment, and a supporter of our great Military and Vets.”

    Stitt does have a primary this year but is expected to win without difficulty.

    Stitt has not explicitly embraced Trump’s “America First” slogan, which is controversial in some circles because it is borrowed from a group of 1930s isolationists and Nazi sympathizers.

    The slogan was previously used by both Republican and Democratic politicians, mostly to signal isolationist and anti-immigration leanings.

    Campaigns and elections: The 2nd Congressional District field continued to grow last week with the addition of Muskogee Police Chief Johnny Teehee.

    A Cherokee Nation citizen, Teehee grew up in Vian and has spent the last 35 years with the Muskogee Police Department. He said he is particularly concerned about the influx of illegal drugs across the southern U.S. border.

    Teehee received national attention last year when he attended the funeral of a 17-year-old Nebraska girl who was killed in a shootout with Muskogee police. He had been invited by the girl’s father.

    Teehee is the fifth candidate to enter the June 28 Republican primary for what will be an open seat.

    No non-Republican has announced a candidacy.

    Tulsa County Democratic Party Chairwoman Amanda Swope announced that she will be a Democratic candidate in state House District 71. The seat is currently held by Democrat Denise Brewer, who is not seeking reelection.

    As newly configured, HD 71 runs from the Interstate 244 bridge over the Arkansas River and the south side of the Inner Dispersal Loop to 81st Street on the east side of the river, then east to Lewis Avenue, except for an irregular boundary north of 31st Street.

    Lankford’s campaign includes weekly call-in prayer meetings.

    Lankford’s primary opponent, Jackson Lahmeyer, is telling supporters he can help bring Trump back before the 2024 election by throwing Biden out of office. This would involve Republicans winning control of the Congress this year, installing Trump as speaker of the House, declaring Biden mentally incompetent and impeaching Vice President Kamala Harris.

    Alex Gray, a Republican candidate for the seat being surrendered by Inhofe, was endorsed by former Trump Acting Secretary of Defense Chris Miller and retired Army Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg.

    Miller served as defense secretary for the final two months of Trump’s term; Kellogg was national security advisor to Vice President Mike Pence and, briefly, acting national security adviser.

    Gray was an aide in the Trump White House and has previously been endorsed by several people with ties to the Trump administration.

    Devon Energy founder Larry Nichols and his wife, Polly, one of Oklahoma City’s most powerful power couples, are hosting a March 28 fundraiser for Oklahoma Attorney General John O’Connor. Also listed as hosts are Jeff and Sally Starling. Jeff Starling is an officer with Lagoon Water Midstream, a company that disposes of oil and gas production wastewater.

    Republican Penny James of Durant said she’s a candidate in southeastern Oklahoma’s state House District 21. GOP incumbent Dustin Roberts is term-limited.

    Meetings and events: April school board elections will be on the menu for the Tulsa County Democratic Party’s gathering at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Freeway Cafe West, 5849 S. 49th West Ave.

    AARP Oklahoma will have a telephone town hall on efforts to expand access to high-speed internet in the state. The town hall begins at 10 a.m. Wednesday. See AARP Oklahoma’s Facebook page for details.

    Bottom lines: The Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority contracted with NCS Analytics to establish a statewide data platform to monitor and regulate commercial license operations. … Koch Energy’s Enid fertilizer plant was the only Oklahoma facility to earn the Environmental Protection Agency’s Energy Star certification for 2021.

    — Randy Krehbiel Tulsa World

    Chinese market rally disguises concerns over deglobalisation

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    After a day on which US-listed Chinese stocks had exploded 33 per cent higher and the Hang Seng Technology Index had staged its biggest ever one-day gain, a veteran Asia investor at one of the world’s largest hedge funds called last Thursday to declare a turning point.

    The scale of the rally was welcome and impressive, he said, but its propellant — a pledge from the top of the Chinese Communist party to introduce a range of “policies favourable to the market”, and immediate endorsement of that from other high-level government organs — came with huge implications.

    For the first time, in his view, the left and right hands of Chinese policymaking and market management appeared to be working in harmony and signalling an important change of direction. He may be right. But the question is whether that matters much if the global economy is decoupling.

    For an optimist, the statement on Wednesday from Liu He, President Xi Jinping’s closest economic adviser, was encouraging. It implied that, after last year’s bruising clashes between the state and the stock market, an accommodation had been reached between Xi’s “common prosperity” rhetoric and a recognition that market confidence is at once desirable and fragile.

    Seemingly, this accommodation came from Xi himself and involved some admission that a prolonged glow around the world’s second biggest equity market may, in these tormented times, have a political value.

    Tech stocks led by Alibaba rallied the strongest on Liu’s list of market salves, partly because the sector had been the most painfully bludgeoned by China’s recent measures, and partly because the promise of an agreement between Beijing and Washington on the regulation of US-listed Chinese companies should more generally juice valuations.

    Caught in the maelstrom was a JPMorgan Chase report last Monday that downgraded more than two dozen prominent Chinese internet stocks, describing the basket as “unattractive, with no valuation support in the near term”. Fun was poked at the report because of the rally a few days later. Another theory is that the report’s prominence and negative tone helped to prod Beijing into declaring a floor sooner rather than later.

    Placed against the optimistic view of China’s move, however, are a number of factors. JPMorgan’s note emerged from a remarkably rough patch for Chinese stocks — an extended sell-off that had scythed valuations far below their February 2021 peak. The Russian invasion of Ukraine, along with the associated geopolitical turmoil, meant there were few visible brakes on the downward spiral. China’s move, in that context, was less a grand shift of mindset than an emergency circuit-breaker triggered as policymakers hit their pain threshold.

    As traders pointed out, Thursday’s rally was driven by hedge funds and a squeeze on short sellers. The long-only money — foreign and domestic — has yet to make definitive bets. Adding to its hesitancy is that the signalling from Liu and the Financial Stability and Development Committee that he chairs has met near total silence from the tech companies and other corporations. The market rally maps the joy of someone who has been told their grim-looking medical condition is easily treatable; the companies’ reaction is more a “fool me once” glower.

    Looming menacingly above this, however, are dynamics that Beijing cannot change. Although Chinese confidence-boosting spasms are rare, they are not unprecedented. They have parallels in the successful experiments following the global financial crisis and after 2014, when panics related to domestic growth or US trade wars took hold.

    On previous occasions, however, the Chinese confidence booster was fired into markets where globalisation still felt fundamentally unstoppable and decoupling seemed a remote risk. Neither can be said with confidence now.

    Even before the invasion of Ukraine heightened the deglobalisation and decoupling concerns, technology nationalism, the redrawing of supply chains and other megatrends were revising calculations about investing in Chinese stocks. The ambiguities of Beijing’s positioning with Moscow have not abated. Xi’s remarks on Friday in a call with US president Joe Biden that the international community “should work for peace and tranquility”, were superficially soothing but are unlikely to shift the underlying concern about decoupling. Investor hesitancy on China continues to have plenty of valid excuses.

    Last week’s actions by Beijing are important for neutralising some of the more idiosyncratic concerns related to domestic policies that hit certain sectors of the stock market. But that leaves the Chinese market as a more direct proxy for investors’ views on the future of globalisation.

    leo.lewis@ft.com