Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

In the news

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■ Mitt Romney, the Republican senator from Utah who is in self-isolation after colleague Rand Paul of Kentucky tested positive for the coronaviru­s, criticized a weekend gathering of hundreds of people at a Salt Lake City airport parking garage to welcome 900 Mormon missionari­es returning from the Philippine­s, noting they weren’t following social distancing warnings.

■ Pamela Baker-Masson, spokeswoma­n for the National Zoo in Washington, D.C., said zoo staff used frozen semen from the zoo’s male giant panda, Tian Tian, to artificial­ly inseminate its female giant panda, Mei Xiang, in hopes of getting her pregnant.

■ Steven Chastain, a Georgia insurance adjuster, was charged with stealing more than $215,000 in insurance money he was supposed to send to a business to cover losses caused by Hurricane Michael in 2018, authoritie­s said.

■ Ashley Furness, 35, of Bartlett, N.H., a hiker injured when she fell about 200 feet as she descended the 6,288-foot-tall Mount Washington, was rescued with the help of the Cog Railway train that takes visitors up and down the mountain.

■ Caine Brown, awaiting trial on charges that he sprayed anti-Semitic graffiti on a synagogue in Mandeville, La., in 2018, said he regrets his actions, rejects the neo-Nazi views he once embraced and wants to make an in-person apology to the congregati­on.

■ Sam Mullet Sr., the leader of a breakaway Amish group in Ohio who served about seven years of an 11-year prison sentence for a series of beard- and hair-cutting attacks in 2011, will serve the rest of his time at home after his attorney argued the coronaviru­s puts the 74-year-old at risk.

■ Jerry Varnell, 26, of Sayre, Okla., convicted of plotting to blow up an Oklahoma City bank with a 1,000-pound vehicle bomb in 2017 because he was unhappy with the government, was sentenced to 25 years in prison.

■ Ruchika Tomar, a lecturer at Stanford University, will receive $25,000 and a monthlong residency at the Ucross Foundation writers retreat in Wyoming after winning the PEN/Hemingway Award for her debut novel, A Prayer for Travelers.

■ Miss Eva, an El Paso, Texas, fortune teller whose studio is close to the U.S.-Mexico border, says that out of concern over the coronaviru­s, she’s not tempting fate and is declining requests for palm readings and instead is offering clients less hands-on readings, such as tarot cards.

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