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South Korea lifts president's martial law decree after lawmakers reject military rule'I Will Go To War On This...' Elon Musk Backs Sriram Krishnan, Slams MAGA Loyalists As H-1B Row Intensifies In USjili k.o

OpenAI to partner with military defense tech companyOlivia Hussey, star of the 1968 film 'Romeo and Juliet,' dies at 73Mystery as Lilyanne Hook made desperate call from unknown number before she vanished

BUTTE — “Did you see him? The mascot was doing The Griddy!” “I know, I saw!” Such were the exclamations of a thundering crowd of 933 popcorn-munching elementary school children in a crowded Kelvin Sampson Court for the Tech women’s basketball game against St. Mary’s (Alberta) on Friday afternoon. The tradition of busing kids to a basketball game on a Friday before the winter break is not a new one, but since the COVID-19 pandemic shut down the annual field trip for Butte-Silver Bow area kids, it has begun to gear up again. For head coach Jeff Graham, in his first year of participating, the excitement sparkled in his eyes after his team soundly defeated the Lightning 71-37. “It’s fun,” Graham said after high-fiving a crowd of kids after the game. “The girls get a good crowd atmosphere...It’s so fun to see all the kids, get them out. Some of them said it’s the first time they’ve been to a game.” Erica Hunt, a chaperone from Whittier Elementary with green streaks in her hair in honor of the Diggers, watched over her special learners group sporting Tech gear and apparel as they cheered. She was not without a smile on her face throughout the game. “This is our second year with our group,” Hunt said. “They love coming here every year. They all are so excited to come. They love to hang out with Charlie.” Both Charlie and Santa Claus weaved in and out of the bleachers as they danced, took photos, shook hands and hugged the vibrant crowd of screaming kids. Red-shirt freshman Brooke Badovinac, a recruit from Butte Central, never got the chance to attend a Tech game on a field trip, but the significance of opportunities like this for kids was not lost on her. The kids were pumped up as early as 30 minutes before tip-off, Badovinac said. The voluminous cheers and foot stomping could be heard and felt even before walking in the HPER Complex. But once Badovinac and her team got used to it and in their flow, the excitement held up their dominant momentum. “It’s so cool being from Butte and seeing all these little kids from Butte,” Badovinac said. “I came to these games with my parents, and I always wanted to be a college basketball player. So being in my hometown and seeing all these kids is such a cool experience, and it makes me...grateful. I just couldn’t imagine being anywhere else.” Badovinac contributed 10 points and six rebounds in her 18 minutes of play and was 2-for-3 from the 3-point line. Hadley Humphreys led the team in points with 14 and in rebounds with seven, while Liz Wangerin added 11 points and Macy Mayer matched Badovinac with six rebounds. The win puts the Orediggers undefeated at home to start the season, with a 6-2 overall record. Now, the team prepares for the Cactus Classic in Chandler, Arizona from Dec. 18 to Dec. 20 before conference play kicks up in January against Rocky Mountain on Jan. 4. But before Tech heads to Arizona, it has one more hurdle at home to jump. “Tomorrow’s a big one,” Graham said. “We got Jamestown who made the Sweet 16, then we roll in and play the number three team in the nation, another ranked team at the Cactus Classic. So three big games, actually four, that’ll get us going before conference.” Badovinac, though, is confident in her and her team’s ability and their strong start to the season. “I think this was our warm-up for a really big game tomorrow, another home game,” she said. “So definitely a very winnable game for us. We just got to come in 100% and then off to Arizona for the break.”LONDON — Olivia Hussey, the actor who starred as a teenage Juliet in the 1968 film "Romeo and Juliet," died, her family said on social media Saturday. She was 73. Hussey died Friday "peacefully at home surrounded by her loved ones," a statement posted to her Instagram account said. Hussey was 15 when director Franco Zeffirelli cast her in his adaptation of the William Shakespeare tragedy after spotting her onstage in the play "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie," which also starred Vanessa Redgrave. "Romeo and Juliet" won two Oscars and Hussey won a Golden Globe for best new actress for her part as Juliet, opposite British actor Leonard Whiting, who was 16 at the time. Decades later Hussey and Whiting brought a lawsuit against Paramount Pictures alleging sexual abuse, sexual harassment and fraud over nude scenes in the film. They alleged they were initially told they would wear flesh-colored undergarments in a bedroom scene, but on the day of the shoot Zeffirelli told the pair they would wear only body makeup and the camera would be positioned in a way that would not show nudity. They alleged they were filmed in the nude without their knowledge. The case was dismissed by a Los Angeles County judge in 2023, who found their depiction could not be considered child pornography and the pair filed their claim too late. Whiting was among those who paid tribute to Hussey on Saturday. "Rest now my beautiful Juliet no injustices can hurt you now," he wrote. "And the world will remember your beauty inside and out forever." Hussey was born April 17, 1951, in Bueno Aires, Argentina, and moved to London as a child. She studied at the Italia Conti Academy drama school. She also starred as Mary, the mother of Jesus, in the 1977 television series "Jesus of Nazareth," as well as the 1978 adaptation of Agatha Christie's "Death on the Nile" and horror movies "Black Christmas" and "Psycho IV: The Beginning." She is survived by her husband, David Glen Eisley, her three children and a grandson.

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By MARC LEVY HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Democratic Sen. Bob Casey of Pennsylvania conceded his reelection bid to Republican David McCormick on Thursday, as a statewide recount showed no signs of closing the gap and his campaign suffered repeated blows in court in its effort to get potentially favorable ballots counted. Casey’s concession comes more than two weeks after Election Day, as a grindingly slow ballot-counting process became a spectacle of hours-long election board meetings, social media outrage, lawsuits and accusations that some county officials were openly flouting the law. Republicans had been claiming that Democrats were trying to steal McCormick’s seat by counting “illegal votes.” Casey’s campaign had accused of Republicans of trying to block enough votes to prevent him from pulling ahead and winning. In a statement, Casey said he had just called McCormick to congratulate him. “As the first count of ballots is completed, Pennsylvanians can move forward with the knowledge that their voices were heard, whether their vote was the first to be counted or the last,” Casey said. The Associated Press called the race for McCormick on Nov. 7, concluding that not enough ballots remained to be counted in areas Casey was winning for him to take the lead. As of Thursday, McCormick led by about 16,000 votes out of almost 7 million ballots counted. That was well within the 0.5% margin threshold to trigger an automatic statewide recount under Pennsylvania law. But no election official expected a recount to change more than a couple hundred votes or so, and Pennsylvania’s highest court dealt him a blow when it refused entreaties to allow counties to count mail-in ballots that lacked a correct handwritten date on the return envelope. Republicans will have a 53-47 majority next year in the U.S. Senate. Follow Marc Levy at twitter.com/timelywriterEven though the next-generation Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) system is capable of distance-based road pricing, the authorities are still at a very early stage of looking at different possible distance-based charging models, said Transport Minister Chee Hong Tat. As it is a major policy that can affect livelihoods and different groups of road users, it is “correct for us to be prudent and to be careful before we introduce any changes”, Mr Chee told reporters on Dec 3. The current focus is to ensure a smooth process of getting all vehicles in Singapore fitted with the on-board unit (OBU), which is part of the new satellite-based ERP system, known as ERP 2.0. By the end of 2024, 200,000 vehicles – or about 20 per cent of the vehicle population – are expected to be fitted with the OBU, which replaces the in-vehicle unit for the payment of road tolls and parking charges. Speaking in an interview to round up 2024 at his ministry’s office in Alexandra Road, Mr Chee also acknowledged that while the technology behind ERP 2.0 is not the latest, it is a tried-and-tested and secure system that can last for a while. He was responding to questions from the media on the expected lifespan of ERP 2.0 technology and the features of the system. ERP rates at 5 locations lowered by $1 during December school holidays The installation of OBUs in nearly one million vehicles is expected to be completed by end-2025. Mr Chee said ERP 3.0 may be a possibility “in time to come” if the authorities find new technology that can work effectively after undergoing rigorous tests. But he does not expect this to happen in 2026. “(That year) will probably still be (ERP) 2.0, but it already allows us to have all those features that we want – to be able to set up virtual gantries, to be able to do more responsive traffic management, to be able to introduce new usage-based charging, for example, distance-based charging if you want to,” he said. Mr Chee said the concept of virtual gantries will be the same as existing physical gantries, with charging based on time and location. Under the current ERP system, physical gantries are positioned in congestion-prone locations. Motorists pay a fee when they drive through gantries that are in operation. Elaborating on the distance-based charging concept, Mr Chee said it may not be as simple as paying more for driving more, adding: “If that is what we need, actually, you can just do that with the odometer.” An odometer is an instrument in a vehicle that measures and displays the distance travelled. Instead, distance-based charging is linked to congestion management, taking into account the location and time of travel. “A kilometre that you travel off-peak in a less busy part of town is different from a kilometre travelled during peak hours on a busy stretch in terms of the impact you add to congestion,” he said. The minister added that there are studies that can be done on distance-based charging, and while ERP 2.0 allows the option, “it doesn’t mean that you necessarily then activate that option immediately”. “You need to study what is the policy design that will lead to a fair outcome for the different groups of users. That’s the one that takes time.” The roll-out of ERP 2.0 was originally meant to begin in 2020, but it was postponed twice, first due to the Covid-19 pandemic, then the global chip shortage that followed. Mass installation of the OBU for vehicles started in November 2023 with existing fleet vehicles such as company-registered vehicles. Since May 2024, new vehicles have been fitted with OBUs before they are delivered to their owners.

Arkansas WR Andrew Armstrong declares for NFL draft, skipping bowlDES MOINES, Iowa, Dec. 04, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Benekiva, a leading insurtech company dedicated to modernizing claims and servicing operations, is excited to announce the expansion of its leadership team with the appointment of four accomplished professionals: Krista Eger as Vice President of Product Mike Shea as Vice President of Sales Jim Girard as Vice President of Technology Christina Sciarrota as Vice President of Customer Delivery These strategic appointments build on Benekiva’s foundation of excellence and reflect its commitment to scaling innovation, operational efficiency, and client satisfaction while aligning with its mission to deliver exceptional value to insurance carriers and beneficiaries. Krista Eger, Vice President of Product, brings a unique blend of experience in claims processing and leadership, having led claims processing teams and driven product innovations that optimize processes and enhance user experiences. Her expertise in understanding customer needs, market trends, and emerging technologies positions her to deliver solutions that exceed client expectations and drive the future of insurance technology. Mike Shea , Vice President of Sales and Partnerships, is an accomplished enterprise sales executive with deep industry knowledge and a proven track record of exceeding sales goals. His expertise in partnering with clients to drive digital innovation, cut costs, and achieve business objectives makes him a trusted leader in advancing Benekiva’s mission. Mike’s passion for building and maintaining strong relationships will ensure Benekiva continues to deliver strategic value to its growing client base. Jim Girard , Vice President of Technology, brings extensive expertise in developing scalable, secure, and innovative technology solutions. His leadership will be instrumental in advancing Benekiva’s platform capabilities, ensuring the company remains a leader in the insurtech space and continues to meet the evolving needs of its clients. Christina Sciarrota, Vice President of Customer Delivery, has a proven track record of transforming business initiatives and enhancing client satisfaction. With experience spanning globally recognized organizations, Christina is skilled in process reengineering, streamlining operations, and delivering scalable solutions. Her leadership will ensure Benekiva's clients receive unparalleled support and efficiency in claims operations. This expansion of our leadership team underscores Benekiva’s continued growth and unwavering commitment to delivering ‘wow’ experiences for our clients,” said Brent Williams, Founder and CEO of Benekiva. “Each of these leaders brings unparalleled expertise and a passion for driving innovation, reinforcing Benekiva as a trusted partner in the insurance industry. More importantly, this milestone represents our focus on leadership enablement at all levels—an intentional move to address past gaps and ensure we are equipping our leaders with the tools, resources, and support they need to succeed. By prioritizing enablement, we are positioning Benekiva for sustained growth and continued transformation. Tony Diodato, President of Benekiva, added, “With the combined talent of our expanded leadership team, we are positioned to elevate our operations and achieve new levels of success. This team’s dedication to excellence and client-first innovation is integral to our ongoing journey of transforming claims and servicing operations.” These leadership appointments reinforce Benekiva’s mission to modernize claims operations, delivering exceptional efficiency, cost savings, and customer satisfaction through its innovative solutions. For more information about Benekiva and its leadership team, please visit www.benekiva.com . About Benekiva Benekiva is a leader in the insurtech space, committed to revolutionizing claims and servicing operations within the insurance industry. With a "Beneficiary first" mindset, Benekiva’s platform integrates diverse elements of claims operations to deliver seamless, efficient, and exceptional experiences for both carriers and beneficiaries. Media Contact: Maura Gilson O'Donnell Director of Marketing, Benekiva maura@benekiva.com www.benekiva.com

was not allowed to see the bones of the dead when I visited Jennifer Raff. They were fragments of teeth and skulls held in a small metal cabinet in the basement of Fraser Hall, the University of Kansas’ hub for anthropology research. The bones can be thousands of years old and belong to some of the earliest-known settlers of the Americas. Raff, who practices martial arts, has a strong athletic build and a bright, unguarded demeanor. As we walked through the anthropology department above the basement, I noticed skulls of hominids in glass cases along the walls. So why were the bones in the basement so vigilantly out of bounds? Raff told me that Native Americans typically regard the remains as sacred, belonging to their ancestors. Members of some tribes had granted Raff permission to study the genetic composition and origins of the bones. But she must do so discretely, keeping the remains hidden from visitors. Raff, an associate professor of anthropology at the university, specializes in paleogenomics, extracting genetic material from ancient remains. The DNA preserved inside the remains has the power to vindicate or undermine carefully laid out archaeological theories about migration patterns, how and when people first arrived, and to shed light on how these early settlers lived their lives. I can’t atone for the abuses of the past, but I can try to make the field better. For years, Raff has studied how humans first set foot in the Americas. Her 2022 book, by Dartmouth College paleoanthropologist for drawing together archaeology and Indigenous oral traditions “in a masterly retelling of the story of how and when people reached the Americas.” Raff admitted that she was not always sensitive to the provenance of the ancient remains she studies. When she was working on her Ph.D., she analyzed DNA from a first-century burial site in Illinois without the consent of local tribes. She used rib bones belonging to deceased women and children to extract DNA and study relatedness. It was perfectly legal to use the skeletons, which were kept at Indiana University, but she now regrets doing so. “In retrospect, I should have gone to tribes who claim descent from these populations, talked to them about the work, and gotten permission,” Raff said. “But at the time I thought, ‘Oh, it’s fine,’ so I just did it. That’s an attitude that I really push back against now with colleagues and other people in the field, thinking you can just do this work without permission or engagement with descendant communities. I really regard my earlier work as very unethical. I won’t go back and publish any of it.” Raff’s change of heart toward ancestral remains and artifacts represents a personal awakening for her. It also represents a generational shift in the practice of anthropology and archaeology. Raff’s mentor, Dennis O’Rourke, a professor of anthropology at the University of Kansas, said that in previous generations archaeologists rarely if ever consulted with Indigenous peoples. “There were no seeking permissions to do the work,” he said. “Most researchers relied on museums to provide permissions, and museums sometimes engaged in consultations and sometimes not.” As Raff and I arrived at her office, she said, “One of my missions as a scholar in this discipline is to try to improve it. I can’t atone for the abuses of the past, but I can try to make the field better in my way.” aff sat at her desk in her university office, pulling her dark hair into a ponytail behind her head. A framed photograph of Muhammad Ali boxing underwater in a swimming pool hung on a wall. A Rothko print in deep blues and reds hung on an opposite wall. Sitting on a bookshelf were prizes Raff has won for , one of them from the American Anthropological Association for the best science book in the field of biological anthropology. They were joined by mostly popular science and adventure books from authors she admires: by Gretel Ehrlich and by British geneticist , a friend and mentor. With the sun setting over the Kansas horizon, Raff told me it was a summer in the Arctic that shaped how she saw her own discipline. It was 2009 and she was a postgraduate, a geneticist invited to participate in the excavation of Nuvuk, an archaeological site located in Alaska’s northernmost point. Ocean storms continuously erode the coast there, pushing the frontier of the land southward. The area is home to the Iñupiat, who have lived there for more than 1,000 years. The dig that Raff joined was excavating the ancient cemetery at Nuvuk, which was rapidly eroding into the water, taking away with it the cultural and physical remains of the paleo-Inuit who were most undoubtedly related to the present-day inhabitants of Utqiaġvik. The Arctic landscapes left an indelible impression—the starkness of the open plains, the punishing swarms of insects, the winteriness even on the warmest days. “It’s a remarkable environment,” Raff said. The people whose genes Raff studies had survived this and harsher environments for at least a millennium. “I could really appreciate the innovations that kept them alive,” she said. The scientists had sought permission to sequence the DNA preserved inside the remains unearthed at the cemetery through consultations with the Iñupiat of Utqiaġvik. The community had agreed, provided certain provisions—minimal physical damage to the excavated bodies, followed by prompt reburial. “It was liberating,” Raff said. “To work within an explicitly stated framework, composed by the descendants of the peoples I was hoping to learn from, made it easy to do our scientific research on their terms.” Since the 1800s, anthropology museums have stocked their collections with Native American artifacts and remains sacred to tribes. “Native peoples were essentially powerless to stop it,” said Chip Colwell, editor-in-chief of , an anthropology magazine, and formerly a senior curator at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science. “When I was coming up in the field in the ’90s, it was extraordinarily rare for Native peoples’ concerns, insights, practices, and religions to be considered as a part of archaeology.” Human history belongs to all humankind, the rationale went, elevating archaeology and anthropology to the prerogative of enlightening all humanity. From that vantage point, the needs and views of a relatively small group, such as the Native Americans, seemed trifling, especially if they insisted on the reburial of discovered bones and artifacts. Reburial, rather than preservation of archaeological finds in museums, was seen as anti-science, prohibiting future investigations which might shed new light on history. In 1971, a burial ground was discovered in Glenwood, Iowa. Twenty-six individuals identified as white “European-American pioneers” were reburied in a nearby cemetery. The remains of a Native American woman and her child from the same burial site were shipped to the Office of the State Archaeologist in Iowa City, to be distributed to museums or universities. “Dead Native Americans were archaeological resources for the state and white people weren’t,” Colwell explained. “We had allowed Native peoples to become the subject of science in a way we hadn’t for other people.” The Glenwood incident sparked a movement to defend Native American rights, challenging archaeological standard practice. In 1990, on the heels of the Civil Rights movement, the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) was enacted into law. It gave Indigenous people the right to rebury their dead, provided they could make a tenable connection between ancient remains and tribal affiliation. Under NAGPRA, affiliation can be established via land ownership, so that remains discovered on federal or tribal land are recognized as belonging to the tribes themselves. At the time, Colwell said, passage of NAGPRA caused an uproar. “Some scholars equated reburial to book burning or destroying libraries of knowledge.” Gradually, the culture among archaeologists began to shift, thanks largely to Indigenous activism. “That began to really push archaeologists to confront the ways in which their discipline was perpetrating harm,” Colwell said. He estimates that 90 percent of anthropologists and archaeologists today are on board with the law. Raff said meeting tribal members and learning about their cultures from them is a boon to science. Scientists can’t approach research questions, such as when humans first arrived in the Americas “with just one discipline’s data and methods alone. You have to let multiple truths or multiple possibilities coexist at the same time.” aff’s comfort with ambiguity deeply informs her work. Her central thesis in runs contrary to the anthropology that has long been taught in classrooms, a tidy story of how the first people arrived on the American continent in a single wave of migration from Asia some 15,000 years ago. Raff patiently unwinds this expectation, explaining how multiple disciplines and ways of knowing have, over the past two decades, converged on a richer, but muddier narrative of when humans first set foot in the Americas. The tidy Clovis-first theory held that people who settled the continent about 15,000 years ago were supported by a novel technology—a special kind of sharp spearhead (a Clovis head) that allowed them to hunt and subsist on megafauna. It was assumed that the “last glacial maximum,” an ice age that lasted for 4,000 years (between 23,000 to 19,000 years ago), covered the land in deep, year-round ice sheets that prohibited settlers before then. But studies of DNA from the oldest human remains unearthed in the Americas, as well as sequenced genomes of present-day Indigenous people, show that Native Americans are descendent from a single population, dating to somewhere between 25,000 to 20,000 years ago. This suggests there was a —a hospitable nook where these ancestors survived—far from other human tribes roaming the plains of Asia over the same period. Raff’s thesis about the first Americans runs contrary to the tidy story taught in classrooms. There have been no confirmed human settlements that date to this time, although Raff believes the best place to look is underwater, not far from where she conducted her research in Nuvuk. Scientists know that during the last Ice Age, Asia was connected to North America by a land bridge across the Bering Strait, which may have had a climate mild enough to allow populations to flourish. The genetic signatures also show a distinct spread of different tribes—a branching sometime between about 22,000 and 18,000 years ago. One branch, the Ancient Beringians, has no known living descendants. The other, known as the Ancestral Native Americans, gave rise to populations south of the Laurentide ice sheet, which cloaked the north of the continent, along a line roughly connecting present-day Seattle with New York City. The Ancestral Native Americans spread quickly across the whole continent, with many populations splitting extremely rapidly from one another. In , Raff explains how this has long baffled archaeologists because it is not consistent with a slow overland advancement of hunger-gatherer populations. A hypothesis proposed by Canadian archaeologist Knut Fladmark in 1979 has gained significant traction in recent years due to the pairing of ancient DNA work and Indigenous knowledge. Fladmark argued that people could have migrated along a coastal route rather than an ice-free corridor inland. Further research by scholars, notably Jon Erlandson of the University of Oregon, has led to the theory that humans could have lived along the coast eating kelp, fish, shellfish, and marine mammals, traveling to new sites by boat, via a “ ,” which ran north to south along the west coast of North America, a route that could account for the rapid spread of communities. This idea lacks concrete archaeological evidence—no physical artifacts related to navigation have been found—but is supported by oral traditions of the Tlingit and Haida tribes of Alaska, “who maintain that their ancestors were a seafaring people who have lived in this region since the dawn of history,” Raff writes in . The oral traditions of the Tlingit are rich in narratives of ancestors traveling along the Pacific Northwest Coast and down the Stikine River, over and below glaciers, foraging for seals and other marine mammals. In 2007, a genetic reconstruction of the genome of Shuká Káa, a man whose skeleton was found in an Alaskan cave and was dated to 10,000 years ago, added credibility to the kelp highway theory. It showed that Shuká Káa’s people were the ancestors of the Tlingit. At the same time, chemical analysis of his teeth showed that Shuká Káa had indeed grown up on a diet of seafood. Other archaeological artifacts found alongside his body in the cave suggested that he had engaged in long-distance trade for high quality stone, further support the coastal highway theory. The genetic sequencing work was done in consultation with the Tlingit tribe, and after the work was completed, Shuká Káa was buried in 2008. Raff reminds her readers that not all Native American origin stories align neatly with the results of genetics. And that genetic results are not set in stone, as new techniques overturn initial interpretations. In the closing pages of , Raff calls it hubris to think a definitive history of the peopling of the Americas is possible. aff ventured into writing for the public in 2015 when she created a blog called . The name, suggested by a publicist friend, reflected her feisty feelings at the time. “I wanted to go after pseudoscience and the anti-vaccine stuff that really made me mad,” she said. One post about misinformation about measles’ vaccinations begins, “Dear parents, you are being lied to.” “I learned the things that went viral were the ones that I was writing passionately about,” Raff said. “When I had a real connection, emotional connection to a topic, I wrote the best.” Raff’s blogging landed her in the culture wars, where she became a target for those who saw her as an embodiment of political correctness over objective science. In particular, Raff has been in the crosshairs of Elizabeth Weiss. Weiss is a professor emeritus of anthropology at San Jose State University and the coauthor with James W. Springer of . Weiss and Springer criticize NAGPRA and the reburial of human remains in ancestral burial grounds. They argue “secular and scientific scholarship concerning human and biological differences” is being suppressed and censored by deference to Native American religious myths. I don’t want to be this white savior liberal girl running around. In of Origin in the online magazine Quillette, Weiss aimed that criticism at Raff. “To defer to Indigenous creationist ideas is no different, in principle, from deferring to religious Christian attitudes,” Weiss wrote. As “an anthropologist, I find the anti-scientific trend that the book represents to be deeply unsettling.” In response, Raff said, “Being respectful of the beliefs and priorities of Indigenous peoples is not in opposition to science, and I’ve never been asked by any tribe to change the results of our research to fit an agenda. Weiss is stereotyping Native Americans as anti-science, which is ludicrous; they are as varied in their perspectives and belief systems as all people are.” Raff was born Jennifer Anne Kedzie in Carbondale, Illinois, the first daughter of three. Her youngest sister died in infancy of spinal muscular atrophy, a rare genetic disorder for which there was no cure in the early 1980s. Raff was four. After the loss of her daughter, Raff’s mother was moved to return to higher education and neuroscience, and the family lived in university towns in Missouri and Indiana. Raff’s parents divorced amid the moves and financial struggles, but Raff stayed close with both her parents. Raff’s father worked as a quality assurance engineer in industry, and she credits him for pushing her to look for answers and research. “Every time I would ask him a question, he would be like, ‘Look it up.’” On the campus of Indiana University where she lived as a student, Raff grew close to Elizabeth and Rudolf Raff, both biology professors. Rudolf Raff was a pioneer of evolutionary developmental biology and director of the Indiana Molecular Biology Institute. Their son, Aaron, was Jennifer’s boyfriend, and Aaron and Jennifer married while she was in college but divorced during her last year of graduate school. “It was horrible, a really hard time,” Raff said. “But I got through it. I focused on martial arts and fighting. I thought, ‘This could be a life for me.’” And then I thought, ‘No, you know what? I love science more.’” She kept Raff as her surname. Raff has never lived outside the inland heart of the country—Illinois, Indiana, Utah, Texas, and now Kansas. Raff’s home is decorated with objects embedded with personal meaning—sepia photographs of her family, traditional weapons used in martial arts, and a handful of paintings. “Low Tide,” a peaceful landscape work by the Native American artist Linda Infante Lyons, hangs above the dining room table. It is also on the cover of . A violent depiction of abolitionist John Brown leading a bloody uprising against enslavers in 1865 hangs in the living room. In the time I spent with Raff, there was only one instance I saw her look incredibly uncomfortable. It came during a dinner at her home with her husband, Colin McRoberts, a lawyer and negotiations consultant; their son, Oliver; her mother, Kathy; and a friend of Raff’s, Peter Koenig. As we discussed the success of and Raff’s advocacy for the inclusions of Native Americans’ own stories in archaeology, Koenig remarked, “It took a white girl for Americans to hear the story.” Raff buried her head in her hands and hoodie. “I don’t want to be this white savior liberal girl running around,” Raff told me later. “I think I have a platform. I don’t know if it’s because I’m white, because I’m a professor, because I’ve been writing for the public for a long time. I don’t know. It might be all these things.” In the spring of 2024, Raff received a Guggenheim Fellowship to complete her second book, “It will continue my focus on challenging pernicious concepts of biological race and colonialist practices—particularly those still prevalent in paleoanthropology and paleogenomics,” Raff said. It will continue her quest to “complicate” the picture of human origins, so the public can begin to see the complex narratives of belonging. Where an origin is not a single point on a distant horizon, but a forest of interwoven roots. Posted on Elena Kazamia is a science writer from Greece. She has a master’s degree in conservation from University College London and a Ph.D. in plant sciences from the University of Cambridge in the U.K. Cutting-edge science, unraveled by the very brightest living thinkers.

Las Vegas Strip casino closes huge singer’s popular residencyCrystal balls are said to be useful items -- but very hard to come by for investors. For better or worse, investors in Rocket Lab (NASDAQ: RKLB) stock have something very close to a crystal ball: hard numbers, laid out by management and by Wall Street analysts, telling them where Rocket Lab stock will be in three years. Are you thinking about investing in America's second most prolific launcher of space rockets (after SpaceX), and owning the stock for the long term? If so, it's probably a good idea to at least consider these numbers before making your decision. Start Your Mornings Smarter! Wake up with Breakfast news in your inbox every market day. Sign Up For Free » Where Rocket Lab stock is today Rocket Lab reported its Q3 earnings just one week ago, and it was kind of a good news, bad news report. The good news is that Rocket Lab's rocket launching business is growing briskly. Through October, the company has launched 12 times in 2024, versus just 10 launches in all of 2023. Sales surged 55% year over year in Q3 -- and Rocket Lab promised to double that growth rate in Q4, as sales rise as high as $135 million. The bad news is that Rocket Lab still isn't earning a profit on these sales. Rocket Lab lost $0.10 per share in Q3, which was less money than Wall Street had forecast it would lose -- but still 25% more losses than it suffered in Q3 2023. What Rocket Lab expects to do between now and 2027 The other good news, though, is that in spite of the losses, Rocket Lab continues to invest in its next-generation reusable space rocket, the Neutron medium-lift vehicle. Originally scheduled to begin launching in 2024, Neutron isn't going to hit that target, but it probably will launch in 2025. What's more, Rocket Lab revealed that it has already signed a customer to fly on Neutron at least twice, with the potential for "many more" launches, as this as-yet-confidential customer potentially uses Neutron to deploy its entire planned constellation of satellites. Just don't expect this to happen all at once. In a post-earnings conference call with analysts, Rocket Lab CFO Adam Spice predicted Rocket Lab will only launch Neutron one time in 2025, a test launch. After that, the company will ramp up Neutron's commercial cadence slowly, launching three times in 2026, and five times in 2027. CEO Peter Beck added that in subsequent years, investors should expect Neutron to launch annually seven times "and beyond." He also confirmed that each Neutron launch will be priced in the $50 million to $55 million range -- significantly more than Electron, which costs $8.2 million on average. What analysts think Rocket Lab will earn in 2027 So Rocket Lab has continued strong demand for its Electron rocket, and promising prospects for Neutron through 2027 and beyond. Indeed, as Beck put it, "of all the things we worry about ... demand is not one of them." Sales growth looks good in both the company's market segments, and profit margins are improving as well. What does all this mean for Rocket Lab's future finances? What are analysts expecting? According to the latest estimates from S&P Global Market Intelligence , Wall Street analysts forecast that Rocket Lab will lose money this year, lose a little less money next year, and finally come close to breaking even the year after that. It's only in 2027 that they expect the company to earn its first profit -- around about the time Neutron hits a cadence of launching roughly every other month. Is Rocket Lab stock a buy? In 2027, analyst see Rocket Lab earning $80 million on $1.25 billion in revenue, which isn't a lot of profit for a stock that currently costs (check notes) $10.2 billion. It's actually a price-to-earnings ratio of 128 -- a lot of money to pay for earnings that might or might not materialize as expected. On the plus side, with Neutron fully developed, and no longer consuming so much cash for research and development, analysts forecast that Rocket Lab will generate $280 million in positive free cash flow that year, resulting in a more palatable 36.6 price-to-free-cash-flow ratio. And that free cash flow should be increasing at a brisk clip -- rising perhaps 36% between 2027 and 2028. Admittedly, all of the above probably assumes an "everything goes right for Rocket Lab" scenario, and things could certainly go wrong between now and then. Given the risks, I'm hesitant to recommend buying Rocket Lab stock at its current valuation. The only way I see today's valuation being reasonable, therefore, is if everything in fact does go right for the next three straight years. So fingers crossed. Don’t miss this second chance at a potentially lucrative opportunity Ever feel like you missed the boat in buying the most successful stocks? Then you’ll want to hear this. On rare occasions, our expert team of analysts issues a “Double Down” stock recommendation for companies that they think are about to pop. If you’re worried you’ve already missed your chance to invest, now is the best time to buy before it’s too late. And the numbers speak for themselves: Nvidia: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2009, you’d have $380,291 !* Apple: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2008, you’d have $43,278 !* Netflix: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2004, you’d have $484,003 !* Right now, we’re issuing “Double Down” alerts for three incredible companies, and there may not be another chance like this anytime soon. See 3 “Double Down” stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of November 18, 2024 Rich Smith has positions in Rocket Lab USA. The Motley Fool recommends Rocket Lab USA. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy . Where Will Rocket Lab Be in 3 Years? was originally published by The Motley FoolNico Iamaleava throws 4 TD passes to lead No. 10 Tennessee over UTEP 56-0Jim Cramer on Why Texas Roadhouse, Inc. (TXRH) Is Up 58% For The Year: ‘That’s Value’

Matt Gaetz says he won't return to Congress next year after withdrawing name for attorney general WASHINGTON (AP) — Matt Gaetz is not coming back to Congress. The Florida Republican said Friday he has no intention of serving another term in the House now that he is no longer President-elect Donald Trump's nominee for attorney general. Gaetz withdrew as the nominee this week amid growing fallout from the allegations of sexual conduct against him. Gaetz denies the allegations. Gaetz didn't lay out his plans now that he's out of office, saying only, “I’m still going to be in the fight, but it’s going to be from a new perch." After Gaetz's withdrawal on Thursday, Trump named former Florida attorney general Pam Bondi to lead the Justice Department. Vance takes on a more visible transition role, working to boost Trump's most contentious picks WASHINGTON (AP) — After several weeks working behind closed doors, Vice President-elect JD Vance returned to Capitol Hill this week in a new, more visible role. He's been helping Donald Trump’s most contentious Cabinet picks try to win confirmation in the Senate, where he has served for the last two years. Vance spent part of Wednesday at the Capitol with Rep. Matt Gaetz sitting in on meetings with Trump’s controversial choice for attorney general. On Thursday, Vance was back, this time accompanying Pete Hegseth. Vance is expected to accompany other nominees for meetings over the coming weeks as he tries to leverage the two years he has spent in the Senate to help push through Trump’s picks. Beyond evangelicals, Trump and his allies courted smaller faith groups, from the Amish to Chabad Donald Trump’s lock on the white evangelical vote is legendary, but he didn't focus exclusively on large religious voter blocs. He and his allies also wooed smaller religious groups, away from the mainstream. He posted a tribute to Coptic church members on social media and met with members of Assyrians for Trump — two smaller Christian communities with Middle Eastern roots. He visited the grave of the revered late leader of an Orthodox Jewish movement. His allies sought votes from the separatist Amish community. While Trump won decisively, the outreaches reflected aggressive campaigning in what was expected to be a tight race. NATO and Ukraine to hold emergency talks after Russia's attack with new hypersonic missile KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — NATO and Ukraine will hold emergency talks Tuesday after Russia attacked a central city with a hypersonic ballistic missile that escalated the nearly 33-month-old war. Ukraine's parliament canceled a session Friday over the security threat. In a stark warning to the West, President Vladimir Putin said in a nationally televised speech Thursday that the attack with the intermediate-range Oreshnik missile was retaliation for Kyiv’s use of U.S. and British longer-range missiles capable of striking deeper into Russian territory. Putin said Russia is launching production of the Oreshnik, saying it's so powerful that several of them fitted with conventional warheads could be as devastating as a strike with strategic — or nuclear — weapons. Texas education board approves optional Bible-infused curriculum for elementary schools AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Texas’ education board has voted to allow Bible-infused teachings in elementary schools. The approval Friday follows other Republican-led states that have pushed this year to give religion a larger presence in public classrooms. The curriculum adopted by the Texas State Board of Education is optional for schools to adopt, but they’ll receive additional funding if they do so. Parents and teachers who opposed the curriculum say the lessons will alienate students of other faith backgrounds. Supporters argue the Bible is a core feature of American history and that teaching it will enrich learning. 2 convicted in human smuggling case after Indian family froze to death on US-Canada border FERGUS FALLS, Minn. (AP) — A jury has convicted two men of charges related to human smuggling for their roles in an international operation that led to the deaths of a family of Indian migrants who froze while trying to cross the Canada-U.S. border during a 2022 blizzard. Harshkumar Ramanlal Patel and Steve Shand each faced four charges related to human smuggling before being convicted on Friday. Patel is an Indian national. Shand is an American from Florida. They were arrested after the family froze while trying to cross the desolate border during a 2022 blizzard. Storm inundates Northern California with rain, heavy snow. Thousands remain in the dark in Seattle HEALDSBURG, Calif. (AP) — Heavy rain from a major storm prompted evacuations from communities near a Northern California river that forecasters say could break its banks Friday, as the storm keeps dumping heavy snow in the region's mountains where some ski resorts opened for the season. The storm reached the Pacific Northwest earlier this week, killing two people and knocking out power to hundreds of thousands before moving through Northern California, where several roads were closed due to flooding and strong winds toppled some trees. Forecasters are warning about the risk of flash flooding and rockslides in areas north of San Francisco as the region was inundated by this season’s strongest atmospheric river. Archaeologists discover 4,000-year-old canals used to fish by predecessors of ancient Maya WASHINGTON (AP) — Using drones and Google Earth imagery, archaeologists have discovered a 4,000-year-old network of earthen canals in what’s now Belize. The research published Friday in Science Advances shows that long before the ancient Maya built temples, their predecessors were already altering the landscape of Central America’s Yucatan peninsula. The ancient fish canals were used to channel and catch freshwater species such as catfish. These structures were used for around 1,000 years — including during the “formative” period when the Maya began to settle in permanent farming villages and a distinctive culture started to emerge. California case is the first confirmed bird flu infection in a US child Health officials are confirming bird flu in a California child — the first reported case in a U.S. minor. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced confirmatory test results on Friday. Officials say the child had mild symptoms, was treated with antiviral medication and is recovering. The child’s infection brings the reported number of U.S. bird flu cases this year to 55, including 29 in California. State officials have said the child lives in Alameda County, which includes Oakland, and attends day care, but released no other details. Brazilian police formally accuse former President Bolsonaro and aides of alleged 2022 coup attempt SAO PAULO (AP) — Brazil’s Federal Police have formally accused former President Jair Bolsonaro and 36 other people of attempting a coup to keep him in office after his electoral defeat in the 2022 elections. The findings are to be delivered Thursday to Brazil’s Supreme Court, which will refer them to Prosecutor-General Paulo Gonet, who will either formally charge Bolsonaro and put the former president on trial or toss the investigation. The former right-wing president has denied all claims he tried to stay in office after his narrow electoral defeat in 2022 to his rival, leftist President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Bolsonaro has faced a series of legal threats since then.AI Names Man Utd Team Ruben Amorim Should Pick vs Ipswich

The new Mariyung fleet that entered service in New South Wales this week is the first refresh of the state’s intercity trains in almost two decades. The rolling stock update cost more than $4bn and the trains arrived in the state in 2019. But their debut on routes such as Sydney-Newcastle, and soon on the Blue Mountains and South Coast lines, was delayed by five years due to a number of issues, including concerns they were too wide, technical disputes and modification works demanded by unions that cost $1bn. Now, the years-long wait is over. So how do the new trains stack up? Arriving at the country departures hall at Central station, the new Mariyung engines look shinier and fresher than their tired and blackened intercity predecessors on neighbouring platforms. Digital screens on the side of each carriage display trip information – a sign of the technological leap forward. Onboard, the carriages are a pleasant temperature. They are well air-conditioned despite the heat of the day. But not chilly. They feel clean and new (because, of course, they are). This is noteworthy because train rides on intercity routes in NSW have been starved of that fresh “new-train smell” for decades, with most commuters stuck on 1970s rolling stock. Seats on the new Mariyung are configured two by two with an aisle down the middle. There are upper and lower decks, as Sydney metropolitan passengers have become accustomed to in recent decades. While the seats don’t flip to face in either direction – an iconic feature of Sydney’s double-decker city trains – they have tray tables that fold down. More importantly, the seats are comfortable, have decent headrests and are spacious enough that my knees – as a 182cm man – don’t get crunched up. They’re also relatively lean and without too much bulk underneath, meaning it’s easy to stretch your legs out under the seat in front. It’s certainly more comfortable than the average economy seat on a domestic flight. Perhaps the most impressive technological leap onboard is the charging facilities at each seat. While passengers must share an outlet with their neighbour, each double seat has a USB-A and conventional wall plug socket. The USB charging speed, while not fast, means you won’t deplete your phone’s battery on an hours-long trip. This charging capability, coupled with the tray tables, makes taking out a laptop and getting work done on intercity trips more feasible. However, some shortcomings make the Mariyung seats far from a comfortable remote office. The size and position of the tray tables are at a slightly strange angle for typing and looking at your screen – especially if you’re on the taller side. And, more crucially, despite the modernity of these trains being hailed by successive governments, there’s no onboard wifi. Instead, you’ll need to hotspot off your phone. And while reception is generally better on this fleet – avoiding the that eliminated reception inside older intercity train carriages in NSW – there are still blackspots between Sydney and Newcastle. (The other routes, west over the Blue Mountains and south through Wollongong, are due to start running Mariyung trains in the coming months.) The wifi situation is far from ideal. However, there are plenty of other positives. The Mariyung trains are quieter – something you really notice in the designated “quiet” carriages. Special areas to stow suitcases, luggage and bikes are welcome, as are the relatively spacious bathrooms with sensor taps. The toilets were clean and comfortable when I travelled this week. However, there were fast food wrappings left inside one, and less than a day after the trains entered service, photos shared online showed graffitied toilet seats. Ultimately, while the new Mariyung trains make for a much more pleasant trip, they don’t feel revolutionary like the Sydney Metro that opened in August does. It has genuinely changed lives by allowing people to move more easily and swiftly across the city. The Metro also offered a glimpse into the future of train travel, with its grand stations and speedier trips, whereas the Mariyung’s charging outlets and modern fit-outs are more about catching up to what has become standard on intercity trains elsewhere. The new intercity trains also don’t shave any time off the roughly 2.5-hour journey between Sydney and Newcastle – even on the express run. Speeds across much of regional NSW are firmly stuck in the 20th century. Indeed, a non-stop Sydney to Newcastle service about 100 years ago, the Newcastle Flyer, completed the trip in just over two hours. So despite the modern trimmings, the Mariyung trains don’t feel like a huge leap forward. The billions to allow for more express services with fewer stops. That would deliver actual time savings. For those wanting a significantly faster trip, hopes lie in the federal government’s current high-speed rail project, but the wait for that could be decades, not years.

US stocks at record highs, Lamborghini CEO: Asking for a Trend

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Tens of thousands of Spaniards marched in downtown Barcelona on Saturday to protest the skyrocketing cost of renting an apartment in the popular tourist destination. Protesters cut off traffic on main avenues in the city center, holding up homemade signs in Spanish reading “Fewer apartments for investing and more homes for living" and “The people without homes uphold their rights.” The lack of affordable housing has become one of the leading concerns for the southern European Union country, mirroring the housing crunch across many parts of the world, including the United States . Organizers said that over 100,000 had turned out, while Barcelona’s police said they estimated some 22,000 marched. Either way, the throngs of people clogging the streets recalled the massive separatist rallies at the heigh of the previous decade’s Catalan independence movement. Now, social concerns led by housing have displaced political crusades. That is because the average rent for Spain has doubled in last 10 years. The price per square meter has risen from 7.2 euros ($7.5) in 2014 to 13 euros this year, according to the popular online real estate website Idealista. The growth is even more acute in cities like Barcelona and Madrid. Incomes meanwhile have failed to keep up, especially for younger people in a country with chronically high unemployment. Protestor Samuel Saintot said he is “frustrated and scared” after being told by the owners of the apartment he has rented for the past 15 years in Barcelona’s city center that he must vacate the premises. He suspects that the owners want him out so they can renovate it and boost the price. “Even looking in a 20- or 30-kilometer radius outside town, I can’t even find anything within the price range I can afford,” he told The Associated Press. “And I consider myself a very fortunate person, because I earn a decent salary. And even in my case, I may be forced to leave town.” A report by the Bank of Spain indicates that nearly 40% of Spaniards who rent dedicate an average of 40% of their income to paying rents and utilities, compared to the European Union average of 27% of renters who do so. “We are talking about a housing emergency. It means people having many difficulties both in accessing and staying in their homes,” said Ignasi Martí, professor for Esade business school and head of its Dignified Housing Observatory. The rise in rents is causing significant pain in Spain, where traditionally people seek to own their homes. Rental prices have also been driven up by short-term renters including tourists. Many migrants to Spain are also disproportionately hit by the high rents because they often do not have enough savings. Spain is near the bottom end of OECD countries with under 2% of all housing available being public housing for rent. The OECD average is 7%. Spain is far behind France, with 14%, Britain with 16%, and the Netherlands with 34%. Carme Arcarazo, spokesperson for Barcelona’s Tenants Union which helped organize the protest, said that renters should consider a “rent strike” and cease paying their monthly rents in a mass protest movement. “I think we the tenants have understood that this depends on us. That we can’t keep asking and making demands to the authorities and waiting for an answer. We must take the reins of the situation,” Arcarazo told the AP. “So, if they (the owners) won’t lower the rent, then we will force them to do it." The Barcelona protest came a month after tens of thousands rallied against high rents in Madrid. The rising discontent over housing is putting pressure on Spain’s governing Socialist party, which leads a coalition on the national level and is in charge of Catalonia’s regional government and Barcelona’s city hall. Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez presided over what the government termed a “housing summit” including government officials and real estate developers last month. But the Barcelona’s Tenants Union boycotted the event, saying it was like calling a summit for curing cancer and inviting tobacco companies to participate. The leading government measure has been a rent cap mechanism that the central government has offered to regional authorities based on a price index established by the housing ministry. Rent controls can be applied to areas deemed to be “highly stressed” by high rental prices. Catalonia was the first region to apply those caps, which are in place in downtown Barcelona. Many locals blame the million of tourists who visit Barcelona, and the rest of Spain, each year for the high prices. Barcelona’s town hall has pledged to completely eliminate the city’s 10,000 so called “tourist apartments,” or dwellings with permits for short-term rents, by 2028.

Dina Boluarte Dólar en Perú Nicanor Boluarte Darwin Condori Marcha 25N Congreso Fonavi Deyvis Orosco CTS Horóscopo Donald Trump Rusia ÚLTIMAS NOTICIAS POLÍTICA ECONOMÍA SOCIEDAD MUNDO PERÚ DEPORTES ESPECTÁCULOS DATEC DÓLAR NEWSLETTERS Últimas Noticias Social Security recipients receive monthly payments, and in December, another batch will be sent out to tens of millions of claimants across the United States of America. The Social Security Administration (SSA) is a highly regarded government agency that manages five programs aimed at assisting society's most vulnerable individuals . Each program has specific eligibility criteria and distribution schedules to ensure accuracy and timely delivery of benefits. In the next week, millions of beneficiaries will receive their December Supplemental Security Income (SSI) payment . The payment amount varies based on the number of applicants. Individuals can receive up to US$943 monthly , couples up to US$1.415, and essential persons, who offer necessary care to SSI recipients, up to US$472. Due to inflation, these amounts have increased by 3,2% compared to last year. What is the Social Security payment schedule in December? Given the diversity of these programs and the populations they serve, SSA has divided the payments into three categories: those who started claiming before May 1997, those who started after, and SSI recipients. The schedule in December is as follows: A calendar quirk means SSI beneficiaries receive a second payment on November 29th , due to the December 1st payment falling on a Sunday . Since payments cannot be made on weekends or holidays, they are issued the preceding business day, which is this year’s Black Friday. Despite its popularity, Black Friday is not a national holiday ; banks and retailers remain open, ensuring the timely distribution of benefits. What are the other 2 categories of Social Security payment? Before May 1997: Payments on the 3rd of each month. After May 1997: Payments depend on birth date: 1st-10th: Second Wednesday 11th-20th: Third Wednesday 21st-31st: Fourth Wednesday SSI Recipients: Payments on the 1st of each month. For November, the payments are scheduled as: SSI beneficiaries: November 1st Pre-May 1997: November 3rd Born 1st-10th: November 13th Born 11th-20th: November 20th Born 21st-31st: November 27th What programs does Social Security provide to its beneficiaries? The programs of Social Security include : Retirement: Available to workers with at least 10 years of taxable income and who are 62 years or older. Disability: Requires beneficiaries to have worked a minimum period and meet SSA's medical criteria. Survivors: Eligibility depends on the deceased worker's relationship and age at death. Family benefits: Similar to survivors, eligibility is based on the relationship with the worker. Current and former spouses may receive up to 50% of the retired worker’s benefit at full retirement age. Supplemental Security Income (SSI): Requires meeting age or disability criteria and certain income and resource limits, and is compatible with other benefits. Carlincatura de hoy viernes 22 de noviembre de 2024 Seguro Social USA Estados Unidos Black Friday Últimas Noticias ¡Atención, inmigrantes en EE.UU.!: realiza este único paso y podrás obtener la ciudadanía americana rápidamente Atención, conductores de Estados Unidos: los inmigrantes pueden acceder sin licencia a estos 17 estados Corte Suprema de Illinois revoca condena de actor Jullie Smollett: dictaminaron que tuvo una denuncia falsa Carlincatura de hoy viernes 22 de noviembre de 2024 Edición Impresa Notas recomendadas Últimas noticias Política Economía Sociedad Deportes Espectáculos Cine & Series Mundo Tendencias Tecnología Cultura Asiática Loterías y sorteos Datos LR Columnistas Verificador Argentina México Venezuela Horóscopo chino Visita también larepublica.pe podcast.larepublica.pe elpopular.pe libero.pe libero.pe/esports wapa.pe lol.larepublica.pe buenazo.pe larepublica.pe/verificador perulegal.larepublica.pe lrmas.larepublica.pe perubazar.pe cuponidad.pe ©TODOS LOS DERECHOS RESERVADOS - 2024

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