the "Headline That Caught My Attention or the WTF" thread

A sad state of affairs in Maine, both parties don't even bother to put up candidates for almost 1/3 of the State House seats...

1728300938974.png
 
This one is not good. My old company was also a major player in IVs years ago, but bailed about 10 years before I retired, not profitable enough, as demonstrated by the last paragraph here. Hell, when I bailed they were making the world's biggest selling drug that had billions in yearly sales. IVs?? We don't need no stinking IVs!!

U.S. Races to Replenish Storm-Battered Supplies of IV Fluids at Hospitals

Officials are looking to foreign sources to ease shortages of IV bags caused by Hurricane Helene as hospitals begin rationing fluids to protect the sickest patients.

U.S. officials are racing to approve airlifts of IV fluids from overseas manufacturing plants to ease shortages caused by Hurricane Helene that have forced hospitals to begin postponing surgeries as a way to ration supplies for the most fragile patients.

The current shortage occurred when flooding coursed through western North Carolina and damaged a Baxter plant, which is now closed for cleaning. The plant makes about 60 percent of the United States’ supply of fluids used in IVs, for in-home dialysis and for people who rely on IV nutrition. They include premature babies in intensive care and patients who rely on tube feeding to survive.

The situation could become even more dire now that Hurricane Milton is bearing down on Florida. On Tuesday, workers at B. Braun, makers of a fourth of the nation’s IV fluids, loaded trucks at the company’s plant in Daytona Beach with the medical bags and drove them north through the night to what they hoped would be a safer location.

The Baxter plant, in Marion, N.C., and the B. Braun site in Daytona Beach manufacture about 85 percent of the nation’s supply of IV fluids. Experts on shortages have long pointed out the risk of such over-concentration of critical supplies, citing exposure to disasters like those now at hand. Even before the latest storm, supplies were tight and reflected a longstanding problem of how few companies are willing to produce crucial but low-cost and low-profit medical products.
 
Good thing to know if you and your friends & family have new phones...

Here’s How to Send Texts on an iPhone Even if You Lose Cellular Service​

All iPhone 14 and later models can connect via satellite, but your phone must be updated to the latest software, iOS 18. Recipients of the messages must also have the latest iOS. Android users with Pixel 9 phones also have some options.

A person touches the face of one of two white iPhones on a display.

On iPhone 14 models or later, you can connect through satellite, if your software and that of your message’s recipient is updated to iOS 18.Credit...Hollie Adams/Reuters


If you’re an iPhone user in an area hit by the storm, you may be able to use some of its features, even if you’ve lost a cell signal, through a satellite connection.

All iPhone 14, 15 and 16 models have the capability to connect to satellite. To send text messages to family and friends through satellite, your phone must be updated to the latest software, iOS 18. Recipients of the messages must also have the latest iOS. For emergency use, Apple recommends dialing 911, which will connect you to Emergency SOS.

To update your device, go to Settings > General > Software Update. If you haven’t updated your iOS in a while, you may have to install previous updates before iOS 18 appears as an option.

Follow The New York Times​

If you’re out of cellular range, a pop-up should automatically prompt you to send the message via satellite. Make sure you’re outside with a clear view of the sky.

If you want to be reachable via satellite to certain family or friends, add them to your emergency contacts or Family Sharing group through Apple’s Health app. Otherwise, you must initiate the communication.
Without a cell signal, it is unlikely that you’ll be able to send photos, videos or audio messages. Texts should take 30 seconds to a minute to send.

Android users with a Pixel 9 phone from Google can also send text messages to emergency services via satellite by following the steps on this Google support site.

But not all Android phones allow users to text family and friends via satellite. If you have an Android phone and still have access to broadband or Wi-Fi, try using messaging apps like Signal, WhatsApp and Messenger, which don’t require a cellular connection.
 
If it said Harris, no problem, lol.



Town officials are combating the visibility of the "Trump 2024" campaign logo being projected onto the water tower with a floodlight; however, it was still visible as of Friday evening. And the Cease and Desist order being prepared for the violator will impose a $100 per day fine until the activity stops.


"Town officials are combating the visibility"............................ :ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO:

A quick "gofundme" would cover all costs and then some.
 

Hairballs Shed Light on Man-Eating Lions’ Menu

The Tsavo man-eaters terrorized railroad workers in British East Africa in the 19th century, but their tastes went well beyond human flesh.

A close-up view of a lion skull, focused on the teeth, with a broken tooth where one of its canines should be.

A Tsavo man-eating lion skull from the Chicago Field Museum’s collection. The hair packed inside the lions’ broken teeth proved to be a dietary time capsule. Credit...Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago

In British East Africa in 1898, two lions living along the Tsavo River were hungry.
This was bad news for the workers building a railroad there. They would retreat to their tents at night and, come morning, some of the men would be missing, the latest victims of big cats that had a hankering for human meat.

“Bones, flesh, skin and blood, they devoured all, and left not a trace behind them,” wrote Lt. Col. John Henry Patterson, a British Army officer leading the railroad project.

During the nine-month reign of the Tsavo man-eaters, the lions, which like most males of the area lacked manes, devoured around 35 workers. Eventually, construction of the railroad stopped completely until Colonel Patterson shot the two cats.

The lions’ bodies were initially fashioned into trophy rugs. In 1925, the Field Museum in Chicago purchased the rugs for display. The two skulls ended up in the museum’s collection.

It turns out that the Tsavo lions had a taste for more than men. Using hair fragments preserved in the lions’ broken teeth, scientists discovered DNA from several species. Their findings were published Friday in the journal Current Biology, offering a snapshot of the surprisingly diverse buffet of wildlife once consumed by a top predator in what is today Kenya.

In the 1990s, Thomas P. Gnoske, a collections manager at the Field Museum, got a chance to examine the Tsavo lions’ skulls. He noticed hair fragments in the cats’ cracked canine teeth. In 2001, Mr. Gnoske contributed to a paper positing that the lions had developed a preference for human prey because the cats’ teeth were damaged, and our species’ flesh was easier to chew.

In the new paper, Mr. Gnoske teamed up with other researchers to further flesh out the Tsavo lions’ diets by examining the century-old hair fragments with microscopy and cutting-edge genetic analysis.

According to Ross Barnett, a paleogeneticist who was not involved in the new study, hair is a hardy source of preserved DNA. “You can dunk it in bleach to remove surface contaminants, but the DNA inside the keratinous layers will be unaffected,” he said.

The hair packed inside the Tsavo lions’ broken teeth proved to be a dietary time capsule.

“We were looking at these tooth cavities in the same way geologists look at soil,” said Alida de Flamingh, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and the lead author of the new study. “Analyzing hairs from different layers should give us an idea of the lifetime diets of these lions.”
The team focused on mitochondrial DNA in the hair fragments, which provide abundant genetic information that is relatively easy to decipher. They compared these snippets of DNA with the genetic record of species native to the Tsavo region and matched the hair fragments with several species, including oryx, waterbuck, zebra and giraffe.

“I was pleasantly surprised when we were able to actually identify various species that were authentic for that age,” said Ripan S. Malhi, a molecular anthropologist who works with Dr. de Flamingh at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

The team discovered surprises in the hair samples. Modern Tsavo lions prefer Cape buffalo. But the man-eating lions had virtually no buffalo hair in their teeth, an absence consistent with the spread of rinderpest, a cattle disease, through Africa in the 1890s. The team was also surprised to uncover DNA from wildebeest, a species that was not common then in the Tsavo region. This finding may help corroborate historical records suggesting that the lions left the rail encampment for nearly six months before resuming their killing spree.

There was even genetic material from the lions themselves in the sample. By comparing the two predators’ mitochondrial DNA, which is transmitted by maternal lineage, the team confirmed the theory that the two lions were siblings.

The sample also contained DNA from multiple human individuals. Dating these hair samples may provide clues to when the lions first preyed on people. However, the researchers avoided further deciphering these remains until they could work more closely with local communities, which may be home to descendants of the lions’ victims.

Tsavo communities continue to live alongside lions, and the danger that these predators pose is still real.
“What strikes me about the Tsavo story is that it is almost incomprehensible to a 21st-century Western mind-set,” Dr. Barnett said. “The terror that the night must have brought is unimaginable.”
 

Hairballs Shed Light on Man-Eating Lions’ Menu

The Tsavo man-eaters terrorized railroad workers in British East Africa in the 19th century, but their tastes went well beyond human flesh.

A close-up view of a lion skull, focused on the teeth, with a broken tooth where one of its canines should be.

A Tsavo man-eating lion skull from the Chicago Field Museum’s collection. The hair packed inside the lions’ broken teeth proved to be a dietary time capsule. Credit...Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago

In British East Africa in 1898, two lions living along the Tsavo River were hungry.
This was bad news for the workers building a railroad there. They would retreat to their tents at night and, come morning, some of the men would be missing, the latest victims of big cats that had a hankering for human meat.

“Bones, flesh, skin and blood, they devoured all, and left not a trace behind them,” wrote Lt. Col. John Henry Patterson, a British Army officer leading the railroad project.

During the nine-month reign of the Tsavo man-eaters, the lions, which like most males of the area lacked manes, devoured around 35 workers. Eventually, construction of the railroad stopped completely until Colonel Patterson shot the two cats.

The lions’ bodies were initially fashioned into trophy rugs. In 1925, the Field Museum in Chicago purchased the rugs for display. The two skulls ended up in the museum’s collection.

It turns out that the Tsavo lions had a taste for more than men. Using hair fragments preserved in the lions’ broken teeth, scientists discovered DNA from several species. Their findings were published Friday in the journal Current Biology, offering a snapshot of the surprisingly diverse buffet of wildlife once consumed by a top predator in what is today Kenya.

In the 1990s, Thomas P. Gnoske, a collections manager at the Field Museum, got a chance to examine the Tsavo lions’ skulls. He noticed hair fragments in the cats’ cracked canine teeth. In 2001, Mr. Gnoske contributed to a paper positing that the lions had developed a preference for human prey because the cats’ teeth were damaged, and our species’ flesh was easier to chew.

In the new paper, Mr. Gnoske teamed up with other researchers to further flesh out the Tsavo lions’ diets by examining the century-old hair fragments with microscopy and cutting-edge genetic analysis.

According to Ross Barnett, a paleogeneticist who was not involved in the new study, hair is a hardy source of preserved DNA. “You can dunk it in bleach to remove surface contaminants, but the DNA inside the keratinous layers will be unaffected,” he said.

The hair packed inside the Tsavo lions’ broken teeth proved to be a dietary time capsule.

“We were looking at these tooth cavities in the same way geologists look at soil,” said Alida de Flamingh, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and the lead author of the new study. “Analyzing hairs from different layers should give us an idea of the lifetime diets of these lions.”
The team focused on mitochondrial DNA in the hair fragments, which provide abundant genetic information that is relatively easy to decipher. They compared these snippets of DNA with the genetic record of species native to the Tsavo region and matched the hair fragments with several species, including oryx, waterbuck, zebra and giraffe.

“I was pleasantly surprised when we were able to actually identify various species that were authentic for that age,” said Ripan S. Malhi, a molecular anthropologist who works with Dr. de Flamingh at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

The team discovered surprises in the hair samples. Modern Tsavo lions prefer Cape buffalo. But the man-eating lions had virtually no buffalo hair in their teeth, an absence consistent with the spread of rinderpest, a cattle disease, through Africa in the 1890s. The team was also surprised to uncover DNA from wildebeest, a species that was not common then in the Tsavo region. This finding may help corroborate historical records suggesting that the lions left the rail encampment for nearly six months before resuming their killing spree.

There was even genetic material from the lions themselves in the sample. By comparing the two predators’ mitochondrial DNA, which is transmitted by maternal lineage, the team confirmed the theory that the two lions were siblings.

The sample also contained DNA from multiple human individuals. Dating these hair samples may provide clues to when the lions first preyed on people. However, the researchers avoided further deciphering these remains until they could work more closely with local communities, which may be home to descendants of the lions’ victims.

Tsavo communities continue to live alongside lions, and the danger that these predators pose is still real.
“What strikes me about the Tsavo story is that it is almost incomprehensible to a 21st-century Western mind-set,” Dr. Barnett said. “The terror that the night must have brought is unimaginable.”

Patterson wrote a book about it. Unsurprisingly titled "The Man Eaters of Tsavo." A lot of it was disputed at the time, but much was later corroborated.

Good read.
 
Patterson wrote a book about it. Unsurprisingly titled "The Man Eaters of Tsavo." A lot of it was disputed at the time, but much was later corroborated.

Good read.
I had read it, was a good read. What triggered me to read it was seeing the lions in Chicago and was surprised by the missing manes, but the Field Museum said that was normal for that group of lions.

Interesting that they were really brothers, and they both had damaged teeth...
 
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