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KRAKKOOM! SpaceX Falcon supply mission to ISS EXPLODES minutes after launch

 Falcon 9 just before it explodes. Pic credit: NASA
Elon Musk's Falcon 9 rocket exploded after liftoff today over the blue skies of Cape Canaveral, Florida – the catastrophic failure happened within minutes of the launch.
The unmanned SpaceX rocket was carrying the Dragon capsule on its seventh planned mission to the International Space Station.
The pod had been loaded with supplies including Microsoft's Hololens headgear and food-making kit.
SpaceX was hoping to bring Falcon 9 back to Earth in one piece. However, the company lost contact with the rocket due to "some type of anomaly" and as a result the mission ended in failure.
 NASA, which plans to hold a press conference later today to discuss its contingency plan in the aftermath of the rocket's explosion, said it was unhappy that the CRS-7 mission had failed.

The US space agency's administrator Charles Bolden added in a statement:
We are disappointed in the loss of the latest SpaceX cargo resupply mission to the International Space Station.
However, the astronauts are safe aboard the station and have sufficient supplies for the next several months. We will work closely with SpaceX to understand what happened, fix the problem and return to flight.
The commercial cargo program was designed to accommodate loss of cargo vehicles. We will continue operation of the station in a safe and effective way as we continue to use it as our test bed for preparing for longer duration missions farther into the solar system.

Bolden said that SpaceX's previous six cargo resupply missions had "demonstrated extraordinary capabilities".

"We will work with and support SpaceX to assess what happened, understand the specifics of the failure and correct it to move forward," he added.

"This is a reminder that spaceflight is an incredible challenge, but we learn from each success and each setback. Today's launch attempt will not deter us from our ambitious human spaceflight program.”

NASA released footage of the explosion via its Twitter account:

Musk tweeted: "There was an overpressure event in the upper stage liquid oxygen tank. Data suggests counterintuitive cause."

Now the post-mortem begins. There will be some restrained glee across the rocket biz (and even in some parts of NASA) following the explosion, as SpaceX had been set to cause massive turmoil with its much-lower launch costs and apparently very solid reliability. It may yet do that, but there's no denying that today's failure is a setback.
Previously

SpaceX is once again attempting to land its Falcon 9 rocket on an ocean barge, assuming it successfully blasts its Dragon capsule into orbit to resupply the ISS.

Source : theregister.co.uk

'The nightmare is finally over': 2nd prison escapee shot, captured alive

A day after a New York state trooper's good aim put an end to fugitive inmate David Sweat's escape bid, the convicted murderer remained in critical condition Monday, receiving treatment under the watchful eye of law enforcement and security guards, a hospital official said.
And, for the first time in more than three weeks, upstate New York residents awoke to a day that wouldn't involve navigating police roadblocks or the fear of encountering a desperate and dangerous escapee with little to lose.
"It's just been really hard on everybody," said Steve Lashway, who owns a meat market near Clinton Correctional Facility, the prison from which Sweat and fellow inmate Richard Matt escaped. "It lasted 23 days, but I think it probably felt like 23 weeks to most people."
On Twitter, area resident Kate Messner echoed the sentiment.
"It's been a long 23 days, but this morning, the woods just feel like woods again," she said.
The 22-day manhunt for Sweat ended Sunday when the fugitive was spotted just 2 miles from the Canadian border. He made it closer to Canada than his fellow escapee. Matt was found and killed Friday near Malone, New York.
New York State Police Sgt. Jay Cook spotted Sweat near a barn in the sleepy New York town of Constable. Sweat bolted, and the officer gave chase.
"At some point, running across a field, he realized that Sweat was going to make it to a tree line, and possibly could have disappeared, and he fired two shots," New York State Police Superintendent Joseph A. D'Amico told reporters.
Sweat, who was unarmed, was struck twice in the torso. No one else was hurt.
He is being treated in a secure area at Albany Medical Center, according to the hospital official, who declined to be identified. "Multiple people" from law enforcement and hospital security are guarding him, the official said. The hospital has a security team that is trained to react to trauma situations to ensure the safety of both patients and staff, the official said.

Authorities and local residents praised Cook's actions, calling him a hero for bringing Sweat in.
His actions were appropriate, Maj. Charles Guess of the New York State Police told CNN's "New Day" on Monday.
He positively identified Sweat, repeatedly commanded him to stop, engaged him in a lengthy foot chase and only shot him after coming to the conclusion that he was close to disappearing behind the tree line, Guess said.
Ed Gavin, former deputy warden for the New York City Department of Corrections, agreed the trooper was justified.
"Article 35 of the (New York) penal law permits you to use deadly physical force to stop a fleeing felon who is either charged with a felony or convicted of a felony," Gavin said. "So the police officer was spot on."
A photo exclusively obtained by CNN shows Sweat in custody moments after his capture. He appears bloodied in the photo and is wearing a camouflage outfit, not prison garb.

CNN exclusive photo shows David Sweat during his capture.

"I can only assume he was going for the border, that he was that close," D'Amico said.
D'Amico said investigators haven't yet interviewed Sweat, but that they hope to soon.
It's critically important that Sweat stay alive, officials said, so authorities can learn exactly how he and Matt escaped -- and who helped them.
But for now, "the nightmare is finally over," New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said. "We wish it didn't happen in the first place. But if you have to have it happen, this is how you want it to end."
Guess praised what he called "dogged determination" among investigating agencies and a "full court press" that led to Sweat's capture.

 Source : edition.cnn.com

BET Awards 2015: Janet Jackson thrills, Diddy spills and other big moments

Janet Jackson
Janet Jackson accepts the ultimate icon: music dance visual award at the BET Awards at the Microsoft Theater on Sunday, June 28, 2015, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP
Though she was absent, Beyonce won three BET Awards, including video of the year for "7/11," while Chris Brown and Nicki Minaj also won multiple awards at the all-star show Sunday night.
But the show was less about the awards — video of the year didn't even make the live broadcast — as performances stole the night.
As Janet Jackson entered the stage at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles, Brown screamed loudly, Minaj whipped out her phone to record the moment and Laverne Cox was teary-eyed. The pop star was honored with the Ultimate Icon: Music Dance Visual Award as she made one of her first public performances in sometime as she readies a new album and tour this fall.
"It's been a very long moment to this journey ... my heart is so full," Jackson said to the audience, which included her mother and father. "To my beautiful mother, to my beautiful father, and to my entire family, your love is unbreakable."
An impressive Ciara, Jason Derulo and Tinashe paid tribute to the 49-year-old veteran by mimicking her signature dance moves.
"Twenty five years ago we created 'Rhythm Nation,' hoping the world would be a better place, but today there's even more to be done," Jackson said."
Brown performed multiple times, and won best male R&B/pop artist and the fandemonium award.
"A lot has changed in my life, a lot of mistakes, a lot of lessons learned. The best thing I'm most thankful for is my daughter," he said onstage. "I'm so thankful and happy to have the loyal fans ... and everybody here that knows me, to know me is to love me."
The show Sunday brought a mix of funny and serious moments. Rapping on top of a police car with a large American flag waving behind him, hip-hop prince Kendrick Lamar kicked off the BET Awards with a dose of seriousness, but also brought a fiery energy thanks to his charisma and beat of his song, "Alright."
He later won best male hip-hop artist.
"This is for Compton, this is for Watts," the Los Angeles-born rapper said.
Janelle Monae and Jidenna also brought a serious vibe to the stage when they performed "Classic Man": The singers and their background dancers wore large "I'm a Classic Man" signs around their necks, a reference to the historic "I Am a Man" civil rights era protest signs.
And as Anthony Hamilton and Gary Clark Jr. performed while photos of celebrities who died appeared on screen, a montage of the nine people who were gunned down at a church in Charleston earlier this month closed the performance.
"Black-ish" actors Anthony Anderson and Tracee Ellis Ross won over the crowd with back-to-back jokes, including one about Rachel Dolezal, the former president of the Spokane chapter of the NAACP.
"Is white really the new black," Anderson sang as two photos of Dolezal — one old, the other recent — appeared on screen.
Anderson also dressed as British singer Sam Smith, who won best new artist but didn't attend the awards show.
"Sam Smith isn't here tonight because he's white and he didn't think he would win at the BET Awards," Anderson said as the audience burst into laughter.
"This award is going to stay with me for you not showing up to BET," Anderson sang, referencing Smith's ubiquitous hit, "Stay With Me."
Rihanna, who debuted a 1-minute clip of her new music video for "B---- Better Have My Money," was among the A-listers who sat in the audience, and she sang along during Omarion and Brown's performance of the pop hit, "Post to Be." Alicia Keys surprised the crowd when she joined The Weeknd to sing his hit, "Earned It."
Smokey Robinson received the Lifetime Achievement Award, performed a medley of his hits and earned a standing ovation from the audience when he spoke about Hollywood and humility. Ne-Yo, Robin Thicke and rising singer Tori Kelly paid tribute to the icon.
And Patti LaBelle was a fan favorite too, hitting high notes alongside Tamar Braxton and K. Michelle.
Minaj, who won the fan-voted viewer's choice award, brought her mom onstage when she collected her sixth consecutive best female hip-hop artist award.
"Momma, I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for everything you've done for me. I love you so much," said Minaj, who performed her with rapper-boyfriend Meek Mill later in the show.

Source : al.com

Critical Mass: Ted 2 mixes low-brow with lower-brow humor

 
 
In Ted, John Bennett (Mark Wahlberg) was attempting to grow up and maintain a real job/relationship/life while his “thunder buddy for life” roommate, a magical cursing/smoking/humping bear, tempted him with hedonistic pleasures that held him back. But at the beginning of Ted 2, it’s the stuffed bear that’s finally acting his age—or, at least he’s getting married.
Married life isn’t everything he thought it was, however, and when Ted and his blonde new wife, Tami-Lynn, decide that having a baby will save their relationship, Ted and John embark on a medical-cum-political adventure to find a willing donor, navigate the pitfalls of adoption, and prove to the courts that’s he’s human. Obviously, it’s all very heady stuff—especially when they hire a pretty attorney named Sam L. Jackson (Amanda Seyfried) who shares their proclivity for the bong.
“Plenty of decent movies have been built on flimsier narrative scaffolding than Ted 2’s, but MacFarlane and writers Alec Sulkin and Wellesley Wild are smarter than a lot of the material they’ve come up with here,” writes EW’s Chris Nashawaty, in his C+ review. “MacFarlane, who takes such mischievous delight in thumbing his nose at the uptight guardians of political correctness that he almost seems to get off on turning himself into a target (most notably with his ‘We saw your boobs’ 2013 Oscar-hosting gig), tends to be sharper than the inoffensively offensive gags he tosses off here. Which is a shame because he’s just handing his detractors more ammo.” 
For more of Nashawaty’s review, and a sampling of other critics from across the country, scroll below:

Source : ew.com

Escaped Killer Richard Matt Shot and Killed by Law Enforcement; Manhunt on for Second Escapee

NY State Police
Richard Matt, one of the two killers who escaped from a New York prison, has been shot and killed  by police, officials said on Friday.
“Sources” also told the Buffalo News that a “shootout” occurred near Malone, New York, and Matt was fatally shot by law enforcement
Police said David Sweat, the second escaped murderer, is believed to be on the run in a nearby wooded area, and an intense search for the second killer was already underway.
New York Gov. Cuomo said police were working on “several leads” to track down Sweat.
“These are truly armed and dangerous people,” he said. “We will do what we have to do to bring them to justice.”

Source : theblaze.com

Germany Advances Past France to the Women’s World Cup Semifinals

FRIDAY’S RESULTS
Celia Sasic tied the score in the 84th minute, Nadine Angerer stopped Claire Lavogez in the final attempt of a shootout, and GERMANY beat FRANCE on penalty kicks, 5-4, in Montreal on Friday after a 1-1 tie to reach the Women’s World Cup semifinals.
Germany, the 2003 and 2007 World Cup champion, will play Tuesday against the United States.
Louisa Necib scored in the 64th minute for France, which enjoyed a dominant first half but yielded a hand-ball penalty kick in the 84th for Sasic to convert.
All five kickers then found the net in the shootout for Germany, whose men and women remain undefeated (5-0) in World Cup shootouts. Now, after a win over No. 3 France in a matchup fit for a final, the top-ranked German women have a chance to add another trophy to their case.

LOOKING AHEAD
JAPAN meets AUSTRALIA in Saturday’s first match. The Japanese, the defending champions, were mesmerizing at times in their round-of-16 win over the Netherlands — carving up the Dutch with one-touch passing, give-and-gos and two goals that would have made any team proud. That said, the Australians have been gaining strength throughout the tournament and shut down another fancy-footed team, Brazil, in the last round. The night game matches ENGLAND against CANADA, which has been finding ways to advance without that most critical of soccer tools: goals. The Canadians have three in four games, but they will have a distinct home-field edge in Vancouver. Will that be enough? Perhaps. If England’s women are anything like its men, they may want to avoid penalty kicks.

Source : nytimes.com

2015 N.B.A. Draft: Karl-Anthony Towns Is No Surprise at No. 1, but Then Comes a Scramble

Minutes after Karl-Anthony Towns walked across the stage, down the steps and off toward his new career in Minnesota as the N.B.A. draft’s No. 1 overall pick Thursday, activity began to buzz in two separate corners of the designated players’ area, the first rumblings that the night might veer quickly from expected.
At Jahlil Okafor’s table, confidence remained high.
“I was going to be a top-five pick, no matter what happened,” Okafor, a center from Duke, said later.
But across the arena, a different table began to jitter. It included a trim, athletic guard wearing a cardinal red blazer and bow tie. His name, D’Angelo Russell, wound up being the second one announced by Commissioner Adam Silver.
The curveball thrown by the Los Angeles Lakers — spurning Okafor’s size for Russell’s scoring potential — introduced a few manic moments for the teams behind them and upended months of speculation in a matter of minutes.

Photo
Kelly Oubre wore shoes covered in spikes at the draft. Oubre was selected 15th, by Atlanta. Credit Kathy Willens/Associated Press
With Russell off the board, the Philadelphia 76ers were sent scrambling. They had taken centers at the top of the draft board in each of the past two seasons, and both had been derailed by injuries. No matter. The Sixers snatched up Okafor with the third pick, and an unpredictable night was off and running.
This year’s draft was considered to be as loaded as any in recent memory, with a sundry mix of talent, size, experience, position and background — from the unsurprisingly heavy concentration of former Kentucky Wildcats to a handful of international wild cards, and from one-and-done players to college graduates.
“It’s got the feel of being as talented as I can remember,” the ESPN analyst Jay Bilas said.
The aura of anticipation for the evening was intensified by rampant trade speculation in the days, hours and minutes leading up to the draft, although trades wound up being more of an afterthought.
And then there was the almost palpable yearning for any word about the No. 4 pick for the Knicks; it was the team’s highest draft position since 1985.
Knicks fans represented the biggest portion of the audience at Barclays Center. Silver clearly recognized this, and he appeared to smirk a bit as he announced the Knicks’ selection. When the name he read aloud was Kristaps Porzingis — a 7-foot-1 forward from Latvia — the arena erupted.
Not in a good way. The sound was a loud “Ohhh” followed by a cascade of boos.
Photo
Commissioner Adam Silver greeted Towns, the third No. 1 overall pick from Kentucky in the last six years. Credit Elsa/Getty Images
“I know the fans will not be happy to see him walk across the stage,” said ESPN’s international analyst Fran Fraschilla earlier this week. But, he added: “I don’t know how you could come up with a better gamble than a guy that’s 7-1, on his way to 7-2, who’s athletic, graceful, shoots the ball from three, blocks shots and is 19 years old.”
The Knicks managed to add to their draft haul later in the night, trading Tim Hardaway Jr. to the Atlanta Hawks for guard Jerian Grant of Notre Dame, who was selected 19th.
Porzingis was one of the late risers up mock draft boards in recent weeks. The other one was Mario Hezonja, a 20-year-old wing player from Croatia, who was drafted by the Orlando Magic with the fifth pick.

Other players saw their draft prospects cool in recent days. Emmanuel Mudiay, a guard who played last season in China after failing to qualify academically to attend Southern Methodist, was thought initially to be one of the four best prospects entering the draft. But his year abroad might ultimately have damaged his stock. Mudiay’s potential remained a bit murkier than other prospects, and he slipped to No. 7 to the Denver Nuggets.
Justise Winslow, a versatile wing player from Duke whose name had leapt into the top-five discussion, wound up falling to Miami at No. 10. Trey Lyles, another player the Knicks were said to be interested in at No. 4, ended up going to the Utah Jazz at No. 12.
The most agonizing slide was Kevon Looney, a lanky forward from U.C.L.A. Concerns about his hip scared off suitors and, after the Lakers drafted Wyoming’s Larry Nance Jr. with the 27th pick, Looney gathered his belongings with his family and walked backstage to await his draft fate in privacy (Looney was eventually selected 30th, by the Golden State Warriors, the last pick in the first round).
And, of course, there was the surprising slip by the giant-handed Okafor, who had drawn comparisons to Tim Duncan during Duke’s championship season.
Photo
D’Angelo Russell, with Commissioner Adam Silver, was selected second, by the Los Angeles Lakers. Many had expected the Lakers to draft Jahlil Okafor of Duke, who was taken third. Credit Elsa/Getty Images
“As much as we tried to get an answer from Minnesota, as much as we tried to get an answer from the Lakers, nobody ever answered,” Okafor said. “It was hard for me to go to sleep last night.”
The No. 1 pick, on the other hand, seemed to never be in doubt. Towns, a 19-year-old 7-footer from Piscataway, N.J., worked out for only one team, Minnesota, throughout his pre-draft process. Though Towns had been training with Don MacLean in Los Angeles for weeks, he never visited the Lakers, who held the No. 2 pick.
“I didn’t know that it was going to be a done deal,” Towns said. “They gave me no consensus.”
Towns is a multitalented big man for the new era of the game — offering rare size, a 7-foot-4-inch wingspan and the potential to stretch the floor as a shooter.
“He’s good at everything,” Bilas said. “There is nothing that we can tick off as far as attributes that he’s not good at. Nothing.”
With Towns, Lyles, Willie Cauley-Stein (No. 6) and Devin Booker (No. 13), Kentucky became the first program to produce four lottery picks since North Carolina in 2005.
As Minnesota’s time ticked down, Kentucky Coach John Calipari sat with Towns’s family at his table, anticipating Towns to be Kentucky’s third No. 1 overall selection in the past six seasons.
But Calipari was shortly on the move. He soon joined the table of Cauley-Stein, the second Wildcat drafted.
Two others, Lyles and Booker, soon joined him in walking across the stage, although little else unfolded as projected.

Joe Maddon: Review umps should be replaced by 'bunch of nerds'

(Photo: Caylor Arnold, Caylor Arnold-USA TODAY Sports)

CHICAGO (AP) — Cubs manager Joe Maddon think baseball's video review umpires should be replaced by "a bunch of nerds."
Chicago's 5-2 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers on Wednesday night ended when Chris Denorfia singled off the base of the left-field wall with two outs in the ninth and was thrown out by Scott Van Slyke, who made a perfect strike to second.
Second base umpire Jordan Baker's call was upheld after a video review.
"I cannot believe the conclusion," Maddon said. "I mean, even as a fan standing in the dugout at that particular moment, I wish that whomever made that call could have been at Wrigley Field and looked at our big screen if they wanted to see something definitive. To say there was nothing definitive right there, I cannot disagree with more strongly. I have no idea why they would say that. It makes zero sense to me whatsoever. I'm just being honest, folks. It made no sense.
"The play stands? If it was confirmed, I could almost live with that. To say it stands is not a really cool way to go in that particular moment with the game on the line. It was obvious from that one shot that he was absolutely safe. No questions asked. That might be the worst non-overturn I've seen to this point."
Since the start of the 2014 season, plays such as this one have been subject to video review by umpires at Baseball Advanced Media in New York. The name of the individual umpire making the review decision is not released.
"I just think it really screams for an independent group back there to really research the video as opposed to working umpires who are on the field," Maddon said. "I think you should get just a bunch of nerds back there who know how to look at a videotape and then come to a conclusion. I think it'll be much more interesting that way."

Source: http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/mlb/2015/06/25/maddon-review-umps-should--replaced--bunch--nerds/29279867/

Univision severs ties with Donald Trump and Miss Universe pageant

Donald Trump and Miss Connecticut USA Erin Brady pose onstage after Brady won the 2013 Miss USA pageant in Las Vegas. Photograph: Jeff Bottari/AP

Univision is dropping the Miss USA pageant and says it will cut all business ties with Donald Trump over comments he made about Mexican immigrants.

The network said on Thursday it will not air the July pageant and has ended its business relationship with the Miss Universe Organization, which produces the Miss USA pageant, due to what it called “insulting remarks about Mexican immigrants” by Trump, a part owner of Miss Universe.
During his presidential campaign kickoff speech last week, Trump accused Latino immigrants of bringing drugs, crime and rapists to the US. He called for building a wall along the southern border of the US.
Trump says he was only criticizing US policies concerning Mexico, not its people. He says Univision is in default of a five-year contract.
In a statement, the network said: “At Univision we see first-hand the work ethic, love for family, strong religious values and the important role Mexican immigrants and Mexican-Americans have had and will continue to have in building the future of our country.”
Univision’s decision is the latest in the fallout over Trump’s remarks: on Thursday, Puerto Rican actress and Miss USA presenter Roselyn Sánchez severed her ties with the pageant. And on Wednesday, Colombian singer J Balvin canceled a planned performance.
A spokesman for Balvin said in a written statement that the singer’s management told the Miss Universe organization to withdraw his name from an announcement about participants in the Miss USA broadcast.

Source:  http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jun/25/univision-donald-trump-miss-universe-mexican-immigrants

The Last Ship Season 2 Premiere Recap: Guns N' Doses


The Last Ship Season 2 Quincy DiesI was rather hesitant to cue up my screener for The Last Ship‘s two-hour Season 2 premiere (and to do so, I even scrapped plans to run down the street to catch Inside Out, grrr), given how the TNT drama’s freshman run ended.
As Season 1 closed, I was surprised to see the Nathan James get safely to port so soon into the series, and I frankly dreaded the idea of the show becoming land-locked as our Navy heroes butt heads with some misguided, headstrong, armed-to-the-teeth ersatz government based out of Baltimore. I’ve “seen that movie before” on Revolution, Falling Skies
As such, you can imagine that I came away from the Season 2 premiere quite pleasantly surprised, as well as quite entertained.
Picking up where things left off: Aboard the Nathan James, Slattery, Doc Rios & Co. tended to wounded Quincy while keeping the primordial hidden from Avocet boss lady

Jake Lloyd, who played young Anakin in “Star Wars” sequel facing charges after high-speed chase



SOUTH CAROLINA — A former child actor who starred in one of the “Star Wars” movie sequels faces charges after leading South Carolina deputies on a high-speed chase.
Colleton County Sheriff’s Sgt. Kyle Strickland said Sunday, June 21st, deputies on Wednesday arrested a 26-year-old man they confirmed through a former talent agent was Jake Lloyd. He played young Anakin Skywalker in the 1999 movie “Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace.”
Strickland said the man gave his name as Jake Broadbent. He has a birthdate that matched the actors’ listed by a movie database and a hometown of Fort Collins, Colorado, where Lloyd was born.
Strickland said the man was charged with reckless driving after hitting speeds over 100 miles an hour before crashing into trees off Interstate 95. He remained in jail Sunday.

Source : fox6now.com

Is Paulina Gretzky’s, Dustin Johnson’s son next Riley Curry?

Stephen Curry with Riley and wife Ayesha Curry as confetti falls during the Warriors’ Game 6, title-clinching victory over the Cavs.
 Riley Curry captured the nation’s heart, her name punctuated with an “aww!” by just about everyone who watched her steal her MVP father’s spotlight. But now that the Warriors have won the championship and Stephen Curry isn’t on the podium on a nightly basis, a miniature void is left for an aspiring baby to fill.
Enter Tatum Gretzky Johnson.
The son of Dustin Johnson and Paulina Gretzky, herself the daughter of Wayne Gretzky (so, we’re talking The Great Grandson here), traveled in style to watch his dad compete at the U.S. Open at Chambers Bay in Washington.
Johnson entered the final round on Sunday in University Place in a four-way tie for first, leaving him a

Ancient teeth reveal evidence of 400,000 year-old manmade pollution in Israel

A multi-national team of researchers has found the first known case of manmade pollution in a cave in Israel. The evidence was found in the hardened dental plaque of 400,000-year-old teeth, which had locked in respiratory irritants, including traces of charcoal— a manmade environmental pollution.

Quesem cave – an archaeological treasure trove

Phys.org reports that researchers from Tel Aviv University, in collaboration with scholars from Spain, the UK, and Australia, found the fossilized teeth at Quesem Cave near Tel Aviv, a Lower Paleolithic archaeological site that was occupied by early humans and has already yielded thousands of fossils and artifacts including blades, knives, flakes, hammer stones, hand-axes, and bones from 4,740 animals, such as deer, aurochs, horses, pigs, goats, tortoises and rhinoceroses.
Qesem Cave near Tel Aviv (Wikimedia Commons)

Earliest evidence of regular fire use

The Quesem Cave has also yielded one of the earliest examples of regular fire use by early humans, as evidenced by large quantities of burnt bone, heated soil lumps, ash deposits, and most significantly, a 300,000-year-old hearth in the center of the cave. An analysis of the hearth revealed that it has been used repeatedly over time.
Although scientists estimate that ancient humans began using fire over a million years ago, it had been unclear when humans starting using it on a regular basis, for example, for cooking daily meals. Discoveries in Quesem Cave confirmed that they were doing this at least as early as 300,000 years ago.
  • 300,000-year-old hearth found In Israel
  • Ancient rock shelter reveals Neanderthals kept organized and tidy homes
Control of fire by early humans. A diorama showing ancient cavemen in the National Museum of Mongolian History in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. (Wikimedia Commons)

First manmade pollution

The latest finding of fossilized teeth now reveals that these early humans suffered from a poor quality of air as a result of their regular use of fire, probably without adequate ventilation in the cave.
The  new study, published in Quaternary International, analyzed the dental calculus of the fossilized teeth. The hardened dental plaque, which the researchers say served as a “time capsule”, was remarkably well-preserved as a result of the cave being sealed for 200,000 years.
Trapped within the calculus, the scientists found traces of charcoal from indoor fires.
"This is the first evidence that the world's first indoor BBQs had health-related consequences," said Professor Barkai of Tel Aviv University. "The people who lived in Qesem not only enjoyed the benefits of fire—roasting their meat indoors—but they also had to find a way of controlling the fire—of living with it.”
"This is one of the first, if not the first, cases of manmade pollution on the planet… Progress has a price—and we find possibly the first evidence of this at Qesem Cave 400,000 years ago," he added.
This inhaled environmental pollution may well have had a negative effect on the health of these early humans.
Featured image: Human teeth from Qesem Cave. Credit: Prof. Israel Hershkovitz, Tel Aviv University
By April Holloway

Source: http://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/ancient-teeth-reveal-evidence-400000-year-old-manmade-pollution-israel-020405

AIDS Awareness Gets Top Billing at Saturday Afternoon West Philly Hip-Hop Concert


PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — A concert tomorrow afternoon in University City will try to raise awareness and educate youth about HIV/AIDS by giving away free tickets to anyone who takes an HIV test.
The “Know Ur Status” show starts at 3pm at First District Plaza, 3801 Market Street, and is being headlined by West Philadelphia hip-hop artist Chill Moody, who says the main goal is to raise awareness “and explain it to the youth that this disease is affecting them the most right now, especially in the Philadelphia area.”
Research shows that one in four new HIV infections is of a young person between the ages of 13 and 24.
The event was put together by Bebashi, the first African-American-based AIDS service organization in the country, which is also where the tests and tickets are being given out.
Moody says he hasn’t personally been affected by HIV, but has done work with many people who have.
“More frequently, I met people that were affected by it, that had it. Whether they lost someone or were living with someone who had it, or something like that. So I’ve learned both sides of that story.”
Tickets can also be purchased at the door for $5.

Source: http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2015/06/19/aids-awareness-gets-top-billing-at-saturday-afternoon-west-philly-hip-hop-concert/

Sunburn Stickers Remind People To Apply Sunscreen


HUNT VALLEY, Md. (AP) — Sun safety is a personal issue for Andrew Levine, CEO of Hunt Valley-based cosmetics company JADS International.
“My mother had skin cancer, my brother had skin cancer, I even had a dog with skin cancer,” he said. “Skin cancer is one of the really preventable cancers out there, but people don’t know when to get out of the sun or to put on more sunscreen.”
Levine has designed a new product line, manufactured in the Westminster area, called Sunburn Alert; a collection of stickers and wristbands that are sensitive to the ultraviolet, or UV radiation from the sun. Such radiation both causes sunburn and leads to cancer. By using the stickers or bands, according to Levine, people will have a way to gauge how much solar radiation they are absorbing and take action to prevent skin damage, either by applying more sunscreen, covering up or just getting out of the sun.
“These are calibrated to start changing color before a person with very pale skin, or a child, will start to burn,” he said. “If you put your sunscreen on, you put it on the skin and the sticker. The idea is, if the sticker starts to fade from a dark royal blue to a lighter blue, that means is your sunscreen is losing its strength … you will reapply your sunscreen until the sticker eventually gets to a light yellow color, which means you have met your maximum exposure for the day.”
Levine hopes to develop fun, kid-friendly sticker designs later this year and has been partnering with organizations like the Shade Foundation, which focuses on children’s sun safety to provide new resources for parents who want to keep their children safe in the outdoors.
“The Shade Foundation is committed to educating children about how to protect themselves from skin cancer,” Executive Director Lawrence Young said. “By partnering with JADS International, we hope to provide families with another tool to stay sun-safe.”
There is a need for resources for fighting skin cancer, which is the most common form of cancer in the U.S., with 3.5 million cases of the most common types — squamous and basal cell carcinomas — diagnosed annually according to the American Cancer Society.
It also estimated that more than 70,000 people will be diagnosed in 2015 with the more rare, but also more dangerous and aggressive melanoma type of skin cancer.
In 2011, the most recent year for which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has statistics, 9,128 people died from melanomas. In Maryland, about 159 people die from melanomas annually, according to the Environmental Protection Agency and the state has the seventh highest rate of newly diagnosed melanomas among white people, whose fair skin places them at the greatest risk.
The statistics are all the more tragic considering the primary cause of skin cancers — exposure to UV radiation from sunlight or tanning beds — is something people have a great deal of control over, according to Dawn Holman, a behavioral scientist with the CDC’s Division of Cancer Prevention and Control’s Epidemiology and Applied Research Branch.
“Our message is really to tell people to use some protection whenever they go outside,” she said. “We don’t tell people to avoid the sun, we want people to enjoy the sun, but be diligent in using sun protection, not just sunscreen. Sunscreen is designed to be used in conjunction with other sun protection.”
Seeking shade outdoors, especially during peak sun hours of 10 a.m. through 4 p.m., covering up using hats and long sleeves and using full spectrum sunscreen of at least SPF 15 that protects against both UVB and UVA rays are all recommendations of the CDC for preventing harmful sun exposure.
Those that are not often outside in the summer, such as the average American office worker, should take particular care when it comes to sun safety, according to Holman. Intermittent sun exposure, such as going to the beach for the weekend or a camping vacation is correlated with sunburns, she said, and sunburns strongly increase the chances of developing melanoma.
Cumulative sun exposure meanwhile, such as someone who regularly works outdoors might receive over the course of the summer, or even a lifetime, is more strongly correlated with the development of basal and squamous cell carcinomas, according to the National Cancer Institute’s “Skin Cancer Prevention for health professionals.” The risk is greater for those with fairer skin, who do not tan well, or who burn easily, according to that document.
The relationship between sunburns and melanoma may be even stronger in children. According to “The Surgeon General’s Call to Action to Prevention Skin Cancer,” getting even one sunburn as a child increases your chances of developing melanoma by 91 percent compared with children who were never sunburned. Although the very study this statistic is based upon, which examined 51 other studies that looked at melanoma risk, cautioned against weighing a single burn too heavily.
“Measurement of sunburns as `ever’ or `never’ sunburned as a child, adolescent, adult, or during one’s lifetime may appear to be simpler; however, such categorization loses valuable information and should not be over interpreted,” the study’s authors wrote. “Combining all number of sunburns into `ever’ assumes the risk for (melanoma) of one sunburn is equivalent to 20 sunburns.”
Any time the skin is getting tanned, it is a sign that some kind of damage is taking place, Holman said. She went on to say, however, that it is difficult to know based on current research if those who wear proper sun protection and yet grow tan over the course of the summer months are also increasing their risk for developing skin cancer to a substantial degree.
“The data on this has really come from indoor tanning,” she said. “We don’t have great data looking at the level of tan that someone gathers over the course of the summer.”
One thing that is fairly clear is that the amount of UV radiation that causes skin to tan can also cause premature aging of the skin, according to Ann Boyles, a registered nurse and community educator for Carroll Hospital. When discussing sun safety with people at schools or in the community, she uses skin damage as a more immediate, graspable marker for the harmful side of sunshine.
“We have a machine called a skin analyzer. It doesn’t detect skin cancer, but it does detect sun damage to your face,” she said. “It has a black light, and . then there is a mirror in there. When you look into that mirror, the sun damage shows up as dark brown patchy areas that are different than your skin color.”
Since some sun exposure may be unavoidable, and a person cannot go back in time to prevent a childhood sunburn, keeping an eye out for skin changes is also an important part of preventing skin cancer, according to Boyles.
“The important thing is to become familiar with your own skin and body,” she said. “Any changes that you notice in your skin — dryness, patchy areas, something that’s new that looks different, or something that has been there that is changing — that is something you want to have checked out either by your primary care doctor or your dermatologist.”
Sunburn Alert stickers are an innovation keeping with the times, according to Dr. Henry Taylor, acting health officer at the Carroll County Health Department, another tool — like the Fit bit, or the Apple Watch — that allows people to track their own health and wellness behaviors.
“I think it’s really good for people to learn as much as they can about what affects their health and do whatever they need to live a healthier lifestyle,” he said. “At the same time, I would caution people that, it is complicated, and a lot of people do waste a lot of money on fancy gadgets or pills, It’s possible for people to waste time and energy and distract themselves by finding the magic bullet.”
Single source solutions, like using only sunscreen and not wearing a hat, are too inflexible, and Taylor said it would also be a mistake to focus too much on preventing skin cancer if you don’t remember to wear your seat belt. He said he believes the Sunburn Alert stickers could have a valuable role to play as another nudge that reminds people to engage in sun-safe behaviors.
“I know that I am healthier and behave better when I track my sleep and my exercise,” he said. “When I am getting too busy and not taking care of myself, I need those reminders because it’s easy to forget to do those things we know we should be doing when our station makes it difficult.

Source: http://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2015/06/20/528370/

Venezuela Legislators Slam Brazil Counterparts & Prison Visit

Brazilian Senator Aecio Neves (C) speaks to the media next to Lilian Tintori (R), wife of opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez, Patricia Ceballos (back L), mayor of San Cristobal and wife of jailed former mayor Daniel Ceballos, and opposition leader Maria Corina Machado (2nd L), at the Simon Bolivar airport in Caracas, June 18, 2015.

Venezuela's ruling Socialist Party legislators called a trip by Brazilian senators to visit jailed opponents of President Nicolas Maduro "abusive" and "meddling" on Friday.
The Brazilian delegation's visit on Thursday was cut short after they said their minibus was stoned by Maduro supporters and roads were

Jason Day’s participation at US Open in doubt after collapsing at 9th hole

 
Jason Day

Jason Day’s sudden collapse on the 9th fairway at Chambers Bay as he edged towards completion of round two cast a long shadow over an otherwise invigorating day of US Open golf. At one end of the event Jordan Spieth endorsed his willingness to win back-to-back majors. The other saw Tiger Woods leave the scene on an aggregate of 16 over par, having added 76 to Thursday’s hapless round of 80. As Tom Weiskopf, the former Open champion, pointedly put it, Woods has gone “from the top of Mount Everest to the bottom of a coal mine”.
It was with Day, though, that the thoughts of Spieth, Woods and plenty of others were directed. The Masters champion was partnering the world No10 when he fell to the turf on the 9th, the group’s 18th. First impressions were of a slip on a -sloping surface but the reality soon became clear. Day told medical staff who attended to him immediately of vertigo-like symptoms which he has been encountering for a considerable time.
Astonishingly Day finished the par-three hole when far from steady on his feet. He had to let a rules official remove a stone which was adjacent to his ball in a greenside bunker as the Australian believed his hand was too shaky to do it himself. Day was led away from the scene and taken for full assessment straightaway after holing out for a round of 70 which left him at two under par on aggregate and firmly in contention, should he be considered well enough to play through the weekend.
“I turned around and he was lying down. All I heard was that he was -suffering from dizziness,” Spieth said. “At that point it was just about how could we help him out, kind of clear the scene and try and keep the cameras off and let him just rebound from being dizzy.
“I heard earlier in the week that he had been a little under the weather. He could barely even walk when he got up so it was pretty strong of him to finish out there. It came out of the blue. Nothing was mentioned earlier in the round.”

Woods had witnessed the entire incident from the 9th tee. He said: “I didn’t know he was ill but I knew he was laying down there and I know he didn’t play in Dallas this year because of vertigo.
“I played with him at Memorial and we talked about it in depth. I hope he’s OK. I’ll call him as soon as I’m done here and see if he’s all right. He’s one of my really close friends. I’d like to get out of here and see if he’s OK.”
As Woods and Spieth acknowledged, Day has openly admitted to health -worries in the recent past. He withdrew from the Byron Nelson tournament last month when suffering from dizzy spells. Before the first round of this event he revealed the extent of the testing he had undergone in a bid to establish the extent of such issues.
He said: “I had three sleep studies done, I had a lot of blood tests done, I had an MRI on my head, my back and my neck. And everything came back negative. I think I just ran out of gas and I wasn’t feeling good. I had the shakes and the tingling up my arms. And the loss of energy and strength was probably caused by that.”
Woods’s reflections on his own performance last night were therefore limited. The 39-year-old has missed cuts in two of his last three majors and he will inevitably slip outside the world’s top 200 ranked golfers next week. He insists, though, that his plan to compete regularly over the summer, including the Greenbrier Classic from Thursday week, will not change.
“I’m playing the same events,” Woods said. “My schedule is set for the summer. And I’m playing every other week. I’m excited about it. I wanted to shoot five or six today but I wanted to be on the other side of it [par]. I hit the ball a little bit better today. But, again, I made nothing. I didn’t make any putts the first two days; I hit it better today. Hitting some spots where I could hit some putts, I made nothing.
“On a golf course like this you get exposed and you have to be precise and dialled in. And obviously I didn’t have that. Obviously I need to get a little better for the Open and I’ll keep working at it.”
Rickie Fowler joined Woods on a flight out of Washington state. The Players champion’s second round of 73 left him at 14 over, a scenario nobody could have predicted on Thursday morning.
Spieth’s 67 left him at five under par and suddenly the tournament favourite. “It doesn’t matter when it is, if you shoot in the 60s at a US Open you’re going to be pleased,” said the young Texan.
This is a bunched leaderboard, from which any one of 30 players could legitimately prevail. The English pair of Lee Westwood and Justin Rose had moved into contention but both slumped with triple bogeys over the closing stretch.

Source :  theguardian.com

Malala Yousafzai Tells Jon Stewart 'Normal Humans Like Us' Can Bring Change


Jon Stewart had almost no jokes for his audience Thursday night in the wake of Wednesday’s mass shooting at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina.
Instead, Stewart chose to focus the bulk of his show on the night’s guest, Malala Yousafzai, the 17-year-old Pakistani who won a Nobel Peace Prize for her work advocating for children’s rights and education.
“Our guest tonight is an incredible person who suffered unspeakable violence by extremists and her perseverance and determination through that to continue on is an incredible inspiration,” Stewart said. “And to be quite honest with you, I don’t think there’s anyone else in the world that I would rather talk to tonight.”
She was on the show discussing girls’ education and Davis Guggenheim's upcoming documentary, “He Named Me Malala,” which is described as an "intimate portrait" of Yousafzai's extraordinary life.
The teen told Stewart it’s important for regular people to speak up about injustice.
“Sometimes we wait for others, and think that Martin Luther should rise among us, and Nelson Mandela should rise among us and speak up for us,” she said. “But we never realize that there are normal humans like us, and if we step forward, we can also bring change just like them.”
Yousafzai’s life exemplifies that philosophy. She began to gain international attention in 2009, when she wrote a blog for the BBC about living under the influence of the Taliban. She subsequently became an international advocate for girls’ education.
The teen was shot in the head by a Taliban gunman in 2012 while riding a bus home from school. A group of men boarded the bus, asked for Yousafzai specifically and shot her in the head. After her recovery, she founded the Malala Fund, a nonprofit dedicated to helping girls worldwide attend school. She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014.
Stewart joked that, with the teen looking forward to college applications in the next couple of years, she “might want to work on her resume.”

Source : huffingtonpost.com

Errors from Mexico defense send El Tri packing

With only two points earned in the group stage, Mexico is now headed home after only three matches at the Copa America.
Although the squad was made up of mostly fringe and back-up options, El Tri was expected to play with more energy and determination in the competition. An argument could be made for the standout performance against Chile, but the showings against Ecuador and Bolivia were underwhelming from the Mexican squad.
On Friday, Mexico looked tired against an Ecuadorian side that solidified an easy 2-1 victory. Ecuador played with more intensity on the pitch and allowed Mexico to have little to no breathing space in the attack.
Now El Tri must set its sights on the Gold Cup, which begins next month in the United States. Here are the player ratings for Mexico's final game at the 2015 Copa America:

Player Ratings: (1-10, with 10 the best. Players introduced after 70 minutes get no rating.)
GK Jesus Corona, 7 -- One of the few bright spots in Mexico's lackluster starting lineup. Although the saves weren't spectacular, Corona was a calming presence behind what was an inconsistent defense for El Tri.
DF Gerardo Flores, 5.5 -- Flores had a few good runs going forward for Mexico, but the 29-year-old couldn't connect very well with the midfield or strikers. Defensively, Flores didn't offer very much for Mexico and was lucky to not have a hand-ball called on him late in the match in front of the Mexico goal.
DF Juan Carlos Valenzuela, 4.5 -- Valenzuela was left constantly chasing Ecuador's attackers. The veteran lacked pace in defense and couldn't seem to intercept or halt anything that Ecuador threw at him.
DF Hugo Ayala, 4.5 -- Ayala was arguably one of the worst players for Mexico. The 28-year-old's mistake led to the opposition's first goal, and he was partially at fault for the second. The only true positive he may have had was earning Mexico a penalty after being fouled in the Ecuador area on a corner kick.

DF Julio Dominguez, 5 -- Dominguez was another guilty party in El Tri's abysmal defense. Although the Cruz Azul player provided some decent long passes going forward for Mexico, he lacked a true defensive presence.
DF Efrain Velarde, 4 -- An awful showing from the left wing-back. Velarde had little influence on the pitch and was very conservative in his 45 minutes. Velarde's highlight on Friday night was his one cross in the first half.
MF Juan Carlos Medina, 5.5 -- Plenty of possession for Medina but little to show for it. The midfielder nearly helped create an assist early in the first half, but it was his error that led to Ecuador's second goal.
MF Jesus Manuel Corona, 6 -- Corona provided Mexico with a couple of brilliant moves and tricks, but the youngster at times appeared selfish with the ball at his feet. The 22-year-old needs to learn to let go of the ball earlier.
MF Javier Guemez, 5.5 -- Guemez couldn't control the midfield and allowed Ecuador to have plenty of space to roam. The 23-year-old committed too many fouls and wasn't as good with his distribution as he had been in the two previous matches.
FW Raul Jimenez, 7 -- Jimenez struggled up top due to a lack of service. The striker worked hard to track back and should be given credit for scoring El Tri's only goal of the match through the 64th-minute penalty.


FW Vicente Matias Vuoso, 5.5 -- Vuoso had the opportunity once again to become Mexico's hero of the night but failed to finish the numerous chances given to him. The striker ended the game with one shot on target.
Substitutions:
MF Javier Aquino, 6 -- Was substituted in for Velarde at halftime. Plenty of energy from Aquino, but he proved to be no trouble for Ecuador's defense. He couldn't seem to break through with his dribbling.
MF Marco Fabian, 6 -- Came on for Guemez in the 52nd minute. Fabian connected well with the midfield but wasn't as threatening as Mexico needed him to be. Had one opportunity on net that he sent sailing over the crossbar.
FW Eduardo Herrera, 5.5 -- Replaced Corona in the 62nd minute. Herrera had little time on the ball and wasn't the late impact striker that Mexico needed.

 Source : espnfc.com

Golden State Warriors End N.B.A. Title Drought With Victory Over Cavaliers

Photo
Golden State celebrated its first N.B.A. championship in 40 years. Credit Timothy A. Clary/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

CLEVELAND — The Golden State Warriors launched some 8,900 shots this season. They attempted layups and 3-pointers, runners and elbow jumpers. They dazzled fans and overwhelmed opponents. But every time the ball left their fingertips, the Warriors seemed to be building toward something bigger and better, toward the brightest stage and the grandest prize.
The Warriors were chasing history, a journey they completed Tuesday at Quicken Loans Arena with a 105-97 victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 6 of the N.B.A. finals.
Golden State celebrated its first N.B.A. championship in 40 years when the final buzzer sounded, the players forming a frantic mob at center court as silence fell over the sellout crowd. The Warriors won the final three games of this best-of-seven series, countering every move that the Cavaliers made — and all the points, rebounds and assists that LeBron James could produce.
“Pure joy,” said Steve Kerr, the coach of the Warriors, who showed up to his news conference soaking wet, fresh off a champagne shower in the locker room.
Photo
The Warriors' Stephen Curry during the first quarter of Tuesday's game. Credit Ezra Shaw/Getty Images
Stephen Curry and Andre Iguodala, who was named the finals’ most valuable player, scored 25 points each to lead the Warriors, who ensured that the pain in this championship-starved city will linger for a while longer. Cleveland has not won a major pro sports title since 1964, when the Browns won the N.F.L. championship by upsetting the heavily favored Baltimore Colts.
“Not every story has a happy ending,” said David Blatt, the coach of the Cavaliers. “It doesn’t mean it was a bad story. It was not. It was a good story.”
LeBron James, who returned to the Cavaliers last summer after four seasons with the Miami Heat, finished with 32 points, 18 rebounds and 9 assists. He averaged 35.8 points, 13.3 rebounds and 8.8 assists in the series. He seldom sat, supplying at least 45 minutes in five of the games. (He played 41 in the other.)
“LeBron doesn’t have any weaknesses,” said Iguodala, who was his primary defender.
But after Cleveland seized a 2-1 series lead behind James’s brilliance, the Warriors made adjustments to uncork their offense, opting for smaller lineups. The Cavaliers stalled. James was operating without Kyrie Irving, who fractured his kneecap in Game 1, and Kevin Love, who dislocated his shoulder in the first round, and James received scant assistance from his supporting cast.
"We ran out of talent," James said.
Tristan Thompson finished with 15 points and 13 rebounds for Cavaliers, and Timofey Mozgov added 17 points and 12 rebounds. But Matthew Dellavedova scored 1 point in 26 minutes, and J.R. Smith, who had a horrendous series, finished 5 of 15 from the field.
“We had 14 assists and I had 9 of them,” James said. “I don’t enjoy that. That’s not winning basketball.”
The Warriors led by just 2 at the half before they began to pull away in the third quarter. After Shaun Livingston scored on a drive, Iguodala dunked in transition for a 61-51 lead. Later, Festus Ezeli got inside for a dunk and a foul, his 3-point play pushing the lead to 14. 
Photo
 Stephen Curry with LeBron James as the Warriors closed out the Cavaliers. Credit Larry W. Smith/European Pressphoto Agency
The Cavaliers showed life in the fourth. James intercepted a poor pass by Draymond Green and soared for a fast-break dunk that cut the lead to 7. But Curry came out of a timeout with a 3-pointer, and Iguodala later connected on one of his own to preserve a 10-point lead.
The Warriors endured some nervous moments in the final minute. After James scored on a driving layup, Smith hit a 3-pointer with 33.2 seconds left to cut the lead to 4. But the Warriors made enough free throws down the stretch. James checked out of the game to an ovation with 10.6 seconds remaining. He hugged Curry and shook hands with Kerr.
“If I could’ve gave more, I would’ve done it,” James said.
It was Warriors’ 83rd victory dating to the start of the regular season, and in many ways, it felt similar to the other 82: the same uptempo offense, the same defensive intensity.
Only the circumstances were different, as the Warriors sought to overcome their postseason futility — and found James, the best player on the planet, trying to impede their path.
If the result came with a small asterisk, given the Cavaliers’ depleted roster, injuries are an inescapable part of the N.B.A. The Warriors, though, somehow managed to remain healthy, their rotations intact, their bench playing well.
“We were fortunate in a lot of ways this year,” Kerr said, “and maybe No. 1 was health.”
But Kerr was careful with his players — and with the 31-year-old Iguodala, in particular, limiting his minutes in the regular season so he would be fresh for the team’s playoff push. Iguodala, whom Kerr inserted into the starting lineup for the final three games, was a force. Responsible for defending James at one end, Iguodala provided timely offense at the other.
Throughout the season, the Warriors made basketball look fun, turning many of their games into performance art: part competition, part dance recital. The chief choreographer was Kerr, who guided the Warriors to a title in his first season with the team.
Kerr listened and delegated, constantly weighing the advice of his assistants and soliciting comment from his players. Indeed, it was Kerr’s personal assistant, Nick U’Ren, who suggested in the middle of the series that Kerr go small against Cleveland. And when the strategy worked, Kerr gave U’Ren the credit.
“He was very humble about how he was going to approach his job,” Curry said.
The Warriors made a habit of warming up for practice by launching court-length shots. Kerr pumped up the energy by filling the team’s practice facility with music. And there was a rhythm to the way the team toyed with opponents, the quick beat set by Curry, who pirouetted past screens and bounced around defenders, his buckets punctuated by yelps from his teammates on the bench. Curry connected on countless daredevil shots, but each somehow felt fresher and more inventive than the last.
Curry obliterated a league record by sinking 98 3-pointers in the playoffs as the Warriors marched to the title. (The old record was held by Reggie Miller, who made 58 3-pointers for the Indiana Pacers in 2000.)
No champion in the league’s history so effectively, and so frequently, used the 3-point shot. The Warriors attempted 2,217 of them during the regular season, the fourth-most in the N.B.A. But their approach was far from pure gluttony from beyond the arc. They blended quality with quantity, making a league-leading 39.8 percent of their 3-pointers.
Still, Kerr said it always bothered him that people paid so much attention to his team’s gaudy numbers on offense. The Warriors also had the league’s top-ranked defense.
“When you get that combination, then you’re going to be pretty good,” Kerr said. “Whether you’re shooting 2s or 3s, it’s about the balance.”
When Kerr joined his players and staff members on a stage at midcourt for the postgame press conference, he could hear the chants from 500-odd Warriors fans who had made the trip to Cleveland, he said. The sound traveled throughout an emptying arena.
But the Warriors remained, on top until the very end.

Source : nytimes.com

Donald Trump by Donald Trump

A Manhattan-based (and “golden-haired”) real estate mogul, TV personality and now Republican presidential candidate, Donald Trump is well-known for his outspoken opinions and unfailing self-confidence. In a speech announcing his campaign Tuesday, Trump made clear his belief that he was the man to return America to greatness. He announced plans to get tough on ISIS, get tough on the Chinese and build a great wall on America’s southern border, to be paid for by Mexico. (For once unmentioned: Barack Obama’s citizenship, which Trump has questioned publicly and vociferously in the past.)  
Trump’s gift of gab has helped make his NBC reality shows The Apprentice and The Celebrity Apprentice wild successes, with the latter recently renewed, and Trump’s unique delivery of the words “you’re fired” has become part of his persona. Likewise, Trump's bellicose missives to the media and on Twitter—he admits he loves “provoking people”—have earned him sobriquets like “businessman bully” (The Daily News) and characterizations such as “garrulous” (The New York Times), “a symbol of cocky '80s wealth” (Newsweek), living “an existence unmolested by the rumbling of a soul” (The New Yorker) and the “anti-Lebron” (FiveThirtyEight).
Newsweek has collected a number of “Trumpisms,” including excerpts from Tuesday’s speech, that capture Trump’s image as an eccentric real estate tycoon.
On His Accomplishments
"There is no one my age who has accomplished more," he bragged at 41. "Everyone can't be the best." —As quoted in the Newsweek cover story, “Trump: The Fall," June 18, 1990
"I'm the most successful person ever to run for the presidency, by far. Nobody's ever been more successful than me. I'm the most successful person ever to run. Ross Perot isn't successful like me. Romney—I have a Gucci store that's worth more than Romney." —In an interview with the Des Moines Register, June 2, 2015
“You want to know what total recognition is? I’ll tell you how you know you’ve got it. When the Nigerians on the street corners who don’t speak a word of English, who have no clue, who’re selling watches for some guy in New Jersey—when you walk by and those guys say, ‘Trump! Trump!’ That’s total recognition.” —Speaking to Mark Singer for The New Yorker, May 19, 1997
On His Popularity
“You know the funny thing? I don't get along with rich people. I get along with the middle-class and the poor people better than I get along with the rich people.” —Trump told Good Morning America, 2011
“This is beyond anybody’s expectations. There’s been no crowd like this.” —At his campaign announcement, June 16, 2015
“All of the women on The Apprentice flirted with me—consciously or unconsciously. That's to be expected.” —The Telegraph quoted Trump as saying in 2011

Source : newsweek.com