Showing posts with label Anton Yelchin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anton Yelchin. Show all posts

Monday, June 20, 2016

Orlando, Cleveland Cavaliers, Anton Yelchin: Your Monday Briefing


Anton Yelchin killed: Star Trek actor crushed by 2.5 ton jeep at Hollywood home - TomoNews
Photo LeBron James celebrated after the Cleveland Cavaliers defeated the Golden State Warriors, 93-89, on Sunday. Credit Gary A. Vasquez/Reuters

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Good morning.

Heres what you need to know:

On the campaign trail.

Donald Trump is replacing his embattled campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, as he prepares for a tough general election race.

Hillary Clintons campaign is searching for a running mate who could click with, but not outshine, its candidate. Democrats are uniting on expanding Social Security.

Gun control measures await Congress.

Four proposals two sponsored by Republicans and two by Democrats are expected to fail today in a replay of the voting in December, after the attack in San Bernardino, Calif.

Several moderate Republicans are working on a compromise measure, but they and Democrats face an uphill fight because of the threat of opposition from the National Rifle Association.

Photo Firearms displayed at the National Rifle Association Convention in Louisville, Ky. in May. Credit Ty Wright for The New York Times

Orlando, one week later.

The Justice Department will release partial transcripts of conversations between the police and the Orlando gunman on the night of the attack. Those who knew the assailant describe a man who was always agitated and always mad.

About $7 million in donations are going directly to family members and survivors in Orlando, where the night life is slowly picking back up.

Photo Tens of thousands of people attended a vigil on Sunday for the victims of the Orlando massacre. Credit Red Huber/Orlando Sentinel, via Associated Press

Sixty-five million displaced.

More people have been forced by conflict to leave their homes than ever before in recorded history, the U.N. said in a report released today.

A champion for Cleveland.

The Cavaliers became the first team to rally from a 3-1 series deficit in the N.B.A. finals by beating the Golden State Warriors, 93-89, Sunday night.

It was the first major title for the city since 1964.

Fathers Day.

Sunday was Fathers Day, and letters written long ago by Barack Obama Sr. reveal a young Kenyan whose ambitions helped change the course of U.S. history.

President Obama told us last month that his fathers absence had left him struggling as a teenager to figure out what it meant to be a man.

Severe heat wave.

Los Angeles, Las Vegas and Phoenix will have triple-digit temperatures today. Phoenix topped out at 117 degrees on Sunday.

Photo The so-called Sherpa fire has burned about 8,000 acres in Santa Barbara County. Credit David Mcnew/Agence France-Presse Getty Images

The heat will most likely worsen a major wildfire in Southern California.

Business

If you have $1, you can be a Goldman Sachs customer. Thats a sea change for the elite Wall Street institution.

The proportion of recent law-school graduates who find work as a lawyer is down 10 percentage points since its peak of the last decade.

The IEX Group some of whose leaders were featured in Michael Lewiss Flash Boys won approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission to become a new stock exchange.

Over the Weekend

Thomas Mair was charged in the killing of Jo c*x, a British member of Parliament. Ms. c*x had been urging Britons to vote to stay in the European Union in the Brexit referendum on Thursday.

President Obama and his family toured the Yosemite and Carlsbad parks. He said national parks were already being damaged by climate change.

A former n**i guard at Auschwitz was sentenced to five years in prison for being an accessory to at least 170,000 deaths.

A former Vanderbilt University football player was found guilty of rape, and the interim police chief of Oakland, Calif., resigned amid a growing s*x scandal.

A Colorado mother yanked her son from a mountain lions grip.

Dustin Johnson won the U.S. Open golf tournament.

Finding Dory was the North American box office winner. Its $136.2 million in estimated weekend ticket sales set a record for a Pixar film.

Catching up on TV: Weve got episode recaps for Game of Thrones, Veep, Silicon Valley and Outlander.

Noteworthy

Inspired.

NASA has unveiled plans for an experimental all-electric airplane.

A construction worker learned in a taxi that he was owed $50,000.

And its now possible to walk on water (at least for a couple of weeks).

In memoriam.

Anton Yelchin, 27, was an actor in the reboot of the Star Trek movies. He was killed when he was pinned by his car in his driveway.

Recipe of the day.

Shrimp roasted with hot honey comes together in minutes, making it an ideal after-work meal or extremely speedy appetizer.

Back Story

Sometimes its best to cut your losses. Thats what an oil company was thinking at the end of 1967, after a year of digging holes in the North Slope of Alaska that came up dry.

But on a final try, it found what was the largest oil field in the U.S., the day after Christmas. That gift began to pay off on this day in 1977, when the Trans-Alaska Pipeline started to pump oil.

The 800-mile pipeline, quickly built after the 1973 Arab oil embargo, carried the lifeblood of Alaskas economy from the edge of the Arctic to the ice-free port in Valdez, the nearest city for oil tankers to transport oil.

The four-foot-wide tube of half-inch-thick steel zigzags across three mountain ranges and about 800 rivers and streams. Because it carries warm oil, half of it runs above ground on trestles to avoid melting the surrounding soils permafrost.

The North Slope where it can get so cold that workers are advised against wearing contact lenses because they can freeze and stick to the eye has produced as much as one-fifth of the nations oil; today, its about 10 percent.

But those workers, and indeed all Alaskans, dont have to pay personal income or sales taxes.

The state collects a royalty and a production tax for every barrel. That pays for most of the state government and the multibillion-dollar Alaska Permanent Fund, which pays dividends to residents about $2,000 per person annually in recent years.

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Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/20/nytnow/your-monday-briefing-orlando-cleveland-cavaliers-anton-yelchin.html

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