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Trump's 'Obamacare' move jolts health care, political worlds

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President Donald Trump’s abrupt move to cut off federal payments to insurers jolted America’s health care and political worlds alike, threatening to boost premiums for millions,…
By ALAN FRAM and RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) – President Donald Trump’s abrupt move to cut off federal payments to insurers jolted America’s health care and political worlds alike, threatening to boost premiums for millions, disrupt insurance markets and shove Republicans into a renewed civil war over their efforts to shred „Obamacare.“
Defiant Democrats, convinced they have important leverage, promised to press for a bipartisan deal to restore the money by year’s end. That drive could split the GOP. On one side: pragmatists seeking to avoid political damage from hurting consumers. On the other: conservatives demanding a major weakening of the Affordable Care Act as the price for returning the money.
„The American people will know exactly where to place the blame,“ declared Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., all but daring Trump to aggravate what could be a major issue in the 2018 congressional elections.
The money goes to companies for lowering out-of-pocket costs like co-payments and deductibles for low- and middle-income customers. It will cost about $7 billion this year and help more than 6 million people.
Ending the payments would affect insurers because President Barack Obama’s law requires them to reduce their poorer customers‘ costs. Carriers are likely to recoup the lost money by increasing 2018 premiums for people buying their own health insurance policies.
The National Association of Insurance Commissioners estimates that Trump’s move would produce a 12 percent to 15 percent upsurge in premiums, while the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has put the figure at 20 percent. That’s on top of premium increases from growing medical costs.
Medical organizations as well as the U. S. Chamber of Commerce, the country’s largest business group, joined Saturday in a letter to House and Senate leaders imploring Congress to restore the payments. Without congressional action, the letter said, „millions will face higher premiums, fewer choices, and less access to the medical care they need.“
The insurance industry behemoths America’s Health Insurance Plans and Blue Cross Blue Shield Association signed the letter, along with the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Family Physicians, the leading hospital associations and more.
Experts say the political instability over Trump’s effort to undermine Obama’s health care law could also prompt more insurers to leave markets. As Trump frequently points out, next year about half of U. S. counties will have only one insurer on „Obamacare’s“ online marketplaces, up from the one-third of counties with one carrier in 2017.
Trump relished his latest blow against the law he pledged to repeal during his presidential campaign, only to see the effort crash in the GOP-run Senate this summer. He’s long derided the subsidies as bailouts to insurers, even though the payments and the cost reductions for consumers are required by law.
The scrapping of subsidies would affect millions more consumers in states won by Trump last year, such as Florida, Alabama and Mississippi, than in states won by Democrat Hillary Clinton. Nearly 70 percent of the 6 million who benefit from the cost-sharing subsidies are in states that voted for the Republican.
„Congress, they forgot what their pledges were,“ Trump told religious conservative activists Friday, recalling GOP candidates‘ repeated vows to repeal Obama’s law. „So we’re going a little different route. But you know what? In the end, it’s going to be just as effective, and maybe it will even be better.“
He later reiterated his belief that his move would press Democrats to bargain over major changes in the law and said, „There’s going to be time to negotiate health care that’s going to be good for everybody.“
Trump’s move was hailed by conservative groups, including Heritage Action for America and Freedom Partners, backed by the Koch brothers. Rallying against it were medical and consumer organizations as well as the chamber.
Nineteen Democratic state attorneys general are suing Trump over the stoppage. Attorneys general from California, Kentucky, Massachusetts and New York were among those who filed the lawsuit in federal court in California to stop Trump’s attempt „to gut the health and well-being of our country.“
A federal judge has found that Congress never properly approved the payments. The subsidies have continued under Obama and Trump until now, despite prior Trump threats to block them.
Schumer told reporters that Trump’s „threats and bullying are not going to work.“ He said he saw a good chance of forcing money for the cost-sharing reductions into a massive spending bill Congress is expected to approve late this year.
Democrats think Trump would have little clout to block a bipartisan deal, citing support for the payments by some Republicans and polls suggesting the public would fault the GOP for any failure. Some Republicans privately agree.
„Now, President Trump has his fingerprints all over the knife,“ said Maryland Sen. Chris Van Hollen, who heads Senate Democrats‘ campaign committee.
In a survey released Friday by the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation, 7 in 10 -, including nearly half of Republicans – said the administration should help Obama’s law work, not undermine it. The same foundation conducted an August poll finding 6 in 10 people would blame Trump and the GOP for future health care woes.
Sens. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., and Patty Murray, D-Wash., have been seeking a deal that Alexander said in a recent interview would reinstate the payments for two years. He said in exchange, Republicans want „meaningful flexibility for states“ to offer lower-cost insurance policies with less coverage than Obama’s law mandates.
Republicans are divided over that effort.
Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N. C., who leads the conservative House Freedom Caucus, said in an interview that he’s willing to back the payments if they’re „part of a transition from Obamacare to something else“ with greater state flexibility than Alexander and Murray are discussing. Another conservative leader, Rep. Mark Walker, R-N. C., said „under no circumstance“ should the payments be revived.
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Associated Press writers Ken Thomas and Jill Colvin contributed.
Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

© Source: http://www.cbs46.com/story/36595919/trumps-obamacare-move-jolts-health-care-political-worlds
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Fear not, GOP parents, for your kids on liberal campuses – Orange County Register

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This summer a Pew Research Center study showed that a majority of Republicans and right-leaning independents think that colleges and universities are bad for our country, and that it’s dangerous to…
This summer a Pew Research Center study showed that a majority of Republicans and right-leaning independents think that colleges and universities are bad for our country, and that it’s dangerous to send their kids into the groves of academe.
I’m not quite sure what these folks would replace higher education with. Home-schooled B. A.s? Mother-taught master’s? Dad delivers the doctorates at the kitchen table?
College professors have always been more politically progressive than your average bear. Where’s the surprise there? I think it’s complicated to suss out exactly why the professoriate is in the main liberal — something to do with the scholarly mindset. Maybe they like all that bureaucratic red tape campuses are so famous for producing in the form of memos and regulations. It was that (conservative, obviously — there are outliers) Harvard professor Henry Kissinger who said, “University politics are vicious precisely because the stakes are so small.”
Accountants, stockbrockers and insurance agents are more conservative than most other Americans. Does that mean I should be scared to send my daughter to a CPA’s office for help with her taxes?
But if the liberal campus slant has always annoyed conservatives, the situation has grown drastically worse under the current widening of American political animosity toward those with different views. The same Pew study found a consistent increase in distrust of colleges and universities since 2010, when negative perceptions among Republicans was measured at 32 percent. That number now stands at 58 percent. Good Lord! Almost six in 10 on the right think little Janey and Chadwick will turn commie just because their profs are pinkos!
Look, folks, for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Look at the rise of the Berkeley College Republicans, currently embroiled in a fascinating internecine spat between the alt-right members who brought about Free Speech Week and traditional Goldwater types who just want to be able to wear bow ties to class.
As you read this, I am on campus at UC Berkeley at a board meeting, where admittedly the vast majority of the students and faculty lean left. I have my own problems with some of the unthinking PCness. I got in a minor tiff last year with the wonderfully bright managing editor of our college newspaper when I pointed out to her the logical and grammatical folly of our paper’s editorial style of lowercasing white and uppercasing Black when it comes to referring to the races. She was disinclined to lay down the law, and I gave up, not wanting to be a pill. But the Golden Bears will be just fine.
The way to fight back against the rising tide of conformity is with humor and intelligence. One of the greatest books in the campus novel genre is by the late, very Tory Englishman Kingsley Amis. In his “Lucky Jim,” he signifies his distaste for the boringly liberal faculty by making them all recorder players. Our hero, an iconoclastic junior professor at a minor red-brick university, finds his only way of rebellion in drinking too many glasses of beer before giving a lecture in which he denounces the university culture of arty pretentiousness and finally passes out.
It doesn’t have to come to that. American GOPers, fear not for your children setting out for their voyages on the uncertain lib-heavy waves of the academic sea. They have minds of their own, you know. College is a great rite of passage for our youth. Just don’t let them drop out like the early Harvard-leavers Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg. If they had only finished up, maybe we would have been spared control-alt-delete and the time-suck of Facebook.
Larry Wilson is on the Southern California News Group editorial board. lwilson@scng.com.

© Source: http://www.ocregister.com/2017/10/14/fear-not-gop-parents-for-your-kids-on-liberal-campuses/
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Ein Einstand fast wie gemalt

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Der FC Bayern versprüht beim Comeback von Jupp Heynckes wieder Spielfreude und siegt 5:0 gegen Freiburg.
Hinterher führte Thiago Alcántara sogar eine jener Veränderungen mit sich, die Rückkehrer Jupp Heynckes beim FC Bayern in den vergangenen Tagen angestoßen hatte. Mit einem Pizzakarton und einem Apfel in den Händen machte sich der Mittelfeldspieler auf den Weg aus der Arena. Auf einen großen Stab mit Ernährungsberatern oder Psychologen verzichtet Heynckes. Vielleicht auch, weil der erfahrene Trainer seinem Einfluss auf die Befindlichkeiten seiner Spieler vertraut. Und wohl ebenso, weil er es für unabdingbar hält, dass die Arbeit Freude und Genuss bereitet und auch Raum für Lockerheit lässt.
Das 5:0 (2:0) gegen den SC Freiburg im ersten Spiel von Heynckes nach viereinhalb Jahren im Ruhestand erfüllte all diese Ansätze schon ziemlich gut, trotz ein paar Schönheitsfehlern. „So haben wir uns das ausgemalt“, sagte Innenverteidiger Mats Hummels. Zwar seien „ein paar Wackler zwischendurch“ zu beklagen, „aber das große Ganze hat gepasst. Einer war für den anderen da. Es hat Spaß gemacht.“
Auf den Weg gebracht worden war der erste Sieg nach drei Spielen ohne Sieg durch ein Eigentor von Freiburgs Kapitän Julian Schuster (8.), dem ein derartiges Missgeschick schon im Spiel zuvor gegen die TSG Hoffenheim unterlaufen war. Kingsley Coman erhöhte noch vor der Pause auf 2:0 (42.), in der letzten halben Stunde trafen noch Thiago (63.), Robert Lewandowski (75.) und Joshua Kimmich per Hackentrick (90.+3). Ein Einstand also fast wie gemalt für Heynckes. Oder doch nicht? „Ich denke nicht, dass alles rosig war. Gerade im Defensivverbund müssen wir noch besser zusammenspielen“, befand Rechtsverteidiger Kimmich selbstkritisch.
Nicht besser als „ganz okay“ bewertete sein 72 Jahre alter Trainer den Auftritt seiner Mannschaft in seinem 1012. Bundesligaspiel. Dieses Urteil gelte allerdings nur, schränkte er gar ein, „wenn ich die Freiburger Chancen weglasse“. Die hatte es in der Tat vereinzelt gegeben, und stärkere Gegner hätten womöglich mehr daraus gemacht. Doch übergeordnet war vor allem der Aufschwung der Münchner unverkennbar gewesen. Das galt besonders für die zweite Halbzeit, in der die Bayern durchweg dominierten. „So stelle ich mir das vor“, sagte Heynckes.
Für all jene, die sich von seiner Rückkehr gleich eine rauschhafte Gala versprochen hatten, könnte der eine Stunde lang doch etwas beschwerliche Einstand fast eine kleine Enttäuschung gewesen sein. Viele andere Erwartungen hingegen, die mit Heynckes verbunden waren, hatten sich erfüllt. Angefangen bei der Startformation, die wie eine Reminiszenz ans Jahr des Triplegewinns daherkam. Bis auf Rafinha und Ersatztorwart Tom Starke fanden sich alle verfügbaren Spieler aus dem Finale der Champions League von 2013 in der Startelf wieder, also Jérôme Boateng, David Alaba, Javier Martínez, Arjen Robben und Thomas Müller.
Auch die Spielanlage erinnerte stark an jene Saison, die als die erfolgreichste in die Vereinsgeschichte eingegangen war und nach der Pep Guardiola die Nachfolge von Heynckes angetreten hatte. Wie damals gab Martínez mit leidenschaftlichem Einsatz den Balldieb vor der Viererkette und ließ sich zuweilen im Aufbau hinter die Innenverteidiger Boateng und Hummels fallen. Wie damals ordnete Heynckes ein flexibles Angriffsspiel an, in dem vor allem Robben häufig seine angestammte rechte Außenbahn verließ. Und wie damals stand alles unter dem Motto „kontrollierte Offensive“, mit Betonung auf kontrollierte.

© Source: http://www.sueddeutsche.de/sport/fc-bayern-ein-einstand-fast-wie-gemalt-1.3708706?source=rss
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Harvey Weinstein ousted by Movie Academy

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Movie Academy ousts Harvey Weinstein
Harvey Weinstein — who more than anyone defined and shaped the sharp-elbowed art of Oscar campaigning — has been expelled from the group that presents the Academy Awards.
In the latest and perhaps most symbolic blow to the Hollywood mogul since a host of sexual harassment and assault allegations went public nine days ago, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences board voted on Saturday to strip Weinstein’s membership.
In a statement, the academy said the action, which is effective immediately, was intended „not simply to separate ourselves from someone who does not merit the respect of his colleagues but also to send a message that the era of willful ignorance and shameful complicity in sexually predatory behavior and workplace harassment in our industry is over.“
Weinstein has already had his membership suspended in BAFTA, the British version of the Oscars, and faces separate action from the Producers Guild of America. That vote has been delayed until Monday, according to Variety.
The academy’s decision — voted on by its 54 board members in a special meeting — continues what amounts to an industry-wide attempt to purge Weinstein from the place he has occupied in the film business.
Given the outsized role Weinstein has played in the Oscars for decades, being censured by an organization he so assiduously courted comes as a particularly sharp rebuke.
Although academy members have been disciplined for violating its rules, there is virtually no precedent for ousting someone in the face of a scandal. As reports have noted, director Roman Polanski — who fled the U. S. in 1978 to avoid the legal consequences of a rape involving a 13-year-old girl — and Mel Gibson, who temporarily became an industry pariah after making anti-Semitic remarks, remained members.
Related: Harvey Weinstein’s eight days of accusations and collateral damage
Under the academy’s bylaws, two thirds of the board had to agree to take such an action. Some of the higher-profile members include Whoopi Goldberg, Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks.
Since the New York Times first reported on sexual-harassment accusations against Weinstein last Thursday, dozens of women have come forward recounting their own experiences. The New Yorker published its own account, which included charges of rape by three women.
Weinstein-backed films, through Miramax and then the Weinstein Co., have won dozens of Oscars, including best picture wins for „The King’s Speech“ and „The Artist.“ Weinstein was also an individual recipient in 1999 as the producer of „Shakespeare in Love.“
Through his representative, Weinstein has categorically denied that any non-consensual sex took place. He did express some contrition in a statement after the New York Times piece in which he apologized for past behavior that has „caused a lot of pain“ and said he would take a leave of absence to „conquer my demons.“
The vote regarding Weinstein could have implications for the academy in the future, since it will almost surely be used as a benchmark when other situations involving members arise. Speaking on condition of anonymity, one source has called it a „watershed moment.“
The academy’s initial statement announcing the meeting said that it found Weinstein’s actions as described „repugnant, abhorrent and antithetical to the high standards of the Academy and the creative community it represents.“ On Saturday, it said it’s working to advance ethical standards that „all Academy members will be expected to exemplify.“
Weinstein’s brother Bob, CEO of the Weinstein Co., said that Harvey „definitely should be kicked out“ of the academy in an interview with the Hollywood Reporter.

© Source: http://money.cnn.com/2017/10/14/media/academy-weinstein-academy/index.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+rss%2Fcnn_latest+%28RSS%3A+CNN+-+Most+Recent%29
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Morawiecki: Rezygnujemy z 9,2 mld dolarów linii kredytowej MFW

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Morawiecki: Rezygnujemy z 9,2 mld dolarów linii kredytowej MFW – RMF24.pl – „Rezygnujemy z 9,2 mld dolarów linii kredytowej Międzynarodowego Funduszu Walutowego“ – poinformował na Twitterze Ministerstwa Finansów wicepremier, minister rozwoju i finansów
– dodał Morawiecki cytowany na Twitterze. Polska korzysta z dostępu do elastycznej linii kredytowej MFW od 2009 r. kiedy to o przystąpienie do niej wnioskował ówczesny minister finansów Jacek Rostowski. W czasie globalnego kryzysu finansowego oraz w okresie pokryzysowym dostęp do FCL przyczyniał się do obniżenia premii za ryzyko na rynkach finansowych, co pozwoliło zmniejszać koszty obsługi zagranicznego zadłużenia. Obecnie dostęp do FCL, oprócz Polski, mają Kolumbia i Meksyk. Do 2014 r. Polska miała dostęp do Elastycznej Linii Kredytowej w wysokości 22 mld SDR (czyli specjalne prawa ciągnienia, to międzynarodowa jednostka rozrachunkowa MFW), ale umową z ubiegłego roku, na wniosek Polski, zmniejszono linię do wysokości 15,5 mld SDR (co odpowiadało równowartości ok. 22,1 mld dol.). W styczniu br., na kolejny wniosek Polski, FCL zmniejszono do kwoty 13 mld SDR. Z wnioskiem o odnowienie dostępu do Elastycznej Linii Kredytowej od połowy stycznia 2017 r., Polska wystąpiła 19 grudnia 2016 r. Wniosek podpisali wspólnie wicepremier, minister rozwoju i finansów Mateusz Morawiecki oraz prezes Narodowego Banku Polskiego Adam Glapiński. 13 stycznia 2017 r. Międzynarodowy Fundusz Walutowy przedłużył Polsce dostęp do Elastycznej Linii Kredytowej. Rada Wykonawcza MFW zatwierdziła wówczas kolejne dwuletnie porozumienie w sprawie Elastycznej Linii Kredytowej (Flexible Credit Line – FCL) o zmniejszonej wysokości 6,5 miliarda SDR-ów (około 8,24 miliarda euro). Polska nigdy nie skorzystała z dostępu do Elastycznej Linii Kredytowej.

© Source: http://www.rmf24.pl/fakty/polska/news-morawiecki-rezygnujemy-z-9-2-mld-dolarow-linii-kredytowej-mf,nId,2452647
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California couple had marked 50-year anniversary before fire

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California couple had marked 50-year anniversary before fire
At least 35 people have died in the deadliest week of wildfires in California history. The victims include a couple who recently celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary, a 14-year-old boy whose parents and older sister were severely burned, and a woman born with a spinal defect who worked to help others despite her own troubles.
A look at some of those who were killed in the blazes:
LeRoy and Donna Halbur, both 80, had just celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary, and for years Leroy delivered food for the needy three times a week.
They had no chance to flee a wildfire that destroyed their Santa Rosa home early Monday, said their eldest son, Tim Halbur.
„The winds came up pretty quickly. It was all countryside behind them,“ Tim Halbur said. „My mom was found in the car in the garage. My dad was somewhere on the driveway. He probably had gotten her into the car, and he went outside to check on conditions.“
Tim Halbur said his parents were devoted to community, friends and family. An avid world traveler, LeRoy Halbur was an usher at Resurrection Catholic Church in Santa Rosa. He volunteered with the Society of St. Vincent de Paul of Sonoma County, delivering meals right up to the week before the fires.
Donna Halbur wrote children’s books and was a former elementary school teacher.
„What I want you to know is that they were very generous of spirit and they carried that spirit to the community,“ their son said.
DOING GOOD BY OTHERS
Roy Howard Bowman, 87, and his wife, Irma Elsie Bowman, 88, lived a life quietly doing good for others.
The Mendocino County couple provided money to help launch a Spanish-speaking ministry at the Assembly of God church in Ukiah, recalled Sylvia McGuire Nickelson, who met the Bowmans at church.
„They both were beautiful, inside and out,“ Nickelson told the San Francisco Chronicle . „I just loved them.“
„Anybody who needed a second chance, the Bowmans were their advocate,“ said Felice Lechuga-Armadillo, who with her siblings would host the Bowmans for Sunday dinners. „Anyone who needed help, they stepped forward — but quietly.“
The couple were found in the fire-ravaged remnants of their home in the remote Redwood Valley, about 60 miles (95 kilometers) north of Santa Rosa, on Monday.
Roy Bowman was a U. S. Navy veteran and former federal employee. Irma Bowman loved to bake and „would tell us to speak well of other people,“ said Lechuga-Armadillo.
Roy Bowman had a stroke earlier this year. Irma Bowman told Lechuga-Armadillo’s mother that if he had another, she wanted to have one as well — „because she didn’t want to be on this Earth without him,“ Lechuga-Armadillo said.
Evans, 75, kept horses, goats, dogs, a mule and a steer at her Santa Rosa home. She’d sometimes lead the mule down the street, allowing folks to feed it, said her longtime neighbor, Tracy Long.
„We knew her as the horse lady,“ Long told the San Francisco Chronicle.
As flames approached their homes late Sunday, Brian Strehlow, a neighbor across the street, offered to help.
„She said, ‚We got this,'“ Strehlow said.
Evans died while trying to save her dogs.
Evans‘ neighbors said they believed that her husband, son and a daughter-in-law were able to escape, but that they hadn’t been able to reach them since the fire.
Evans kept a large collection of books on horses. Long, whose home was damaged by fire, said she occasionally sees pages from Evans‘ library blowing along the street.
At 14, Kai Shepherd was among the youngest victims of the wildfires.
After flames swept over a mountain, the Shepherds had tried to drive down to escape. Their neighbor Paul Hanssen found their two charred vehicles blocking the road, doors still ajar from when they had apparently abandoned them and fled on foot.
Hanssen found the mother, Sara Shepherd, and her 17-year-old daughter, Kressa, lying on the ground, more than half their bodies burned. Kai Shepherd was further down the mountain and did not survive.
First responders found Kai’s father, Jon Shepherd, separately, on the mountain. He was also badly burned but alive. Kai Shepherd’s parents and sister are being treated at burn centers.
His sister, Kressa Shepherd, a Ukiah High School junior, had to have both legs amputated beneath her knees.
Family friend Irma Muniz remembers Kai Shepherd was timid and giggly after she met him last year while shooting a Christmas card photo of the family posing in the woods of Redwood Valley, a community of about 1,800 roughly 70 miles (113 kilometers) north in Mendocino County
‚SHE WAS MY LIFE‘
George Powell woke to a wall of fire already bearing down on his Santa Rosa home and immediately yelled to his 72-year-old wife, Lynne Anderson Powell: „Get out!“
Lynne Powell grabbed her border collie, Jemma, which always slept next to her, a laptop and asked for the best way to get off their mountain before jumping in her car.
George Powell left 15 minutes later after fetching his three dogs. George Powell now realizes when he raced down the mountain he drove past his wife’s car that had gone off the road and into a ravine in the heavy smoke.
After searching for her all night and the next day, a detective called to tell him a body burned beyond recognition was found steps from her car. Inside was a dog also burned to death.
„If I had known, I would have gone down there with her, even if it meant I would have died with her,“ George Powell, 74, said. „I don’t know how I’m going to cope. She was my life.“ He repeated: „She was my life.“
The couple had been married for 33 years. He was a photojournalist and she was a professional flutist, spending much of her career playing for the New Mexico Symphony Orchestra, which operated until 2011.
The two met while she was on vacation in Los Angeles, where George Powell freelanced for newspapers. He said it was „love at first sight“ and he moved to New Mexico to be with her. After they retired, they settled in northern California so his wife could take care of her aging parents.
The two shared a love of border collies and entered in agility runs with their dogs. She was an avid quilter. The fire took everything, including her quilts and his life’s photo archive.
Lynne Powell did not want a memorial service or obituary. But George Powell said he may hold a special lunch with friends to celebrate her life.
„I don’t think I ever felt unloved or uncared for any second of my life with her,“ he said.
TOGETHER IN LIFE AND DEATH
Charles Rippey, 100, and his wife, Sara, 98, are the oldest victims of the wine country wildfires identified so far.
Their bodies were found by one of their sons who had made his way past security and found the home in Napa where they had lived for 35 years completely gone. Only two blackened metal chairs, a porcelain tea set of white and soft washes of blue and other small remnants remained to testify to the couple’s long life together.
Charles Rippey — who was known by his nickname „Peach“ since he was a toddler — appeared to be heading to the room of his wife, who had a stroke in recent years.
Mike Rippey said his father would have never left his mother. The couple met in grade school and recently celebrated their 75th wedding anniversary with their five children.
„Those of us in the family always would, you know, wonder what would happen if one of them died and the other one was still left because we knew that, you know, there’s no way they would ever be happy whoever was the last one and so they went together,“ Rippey, 71, said as he stood among the charred ruins of their home.
The couple attended the University of Wisconsin and married in 1942 before Charles Rippey served as a U. S. Army engineer in World War II. He then became an executive with the Firestone tire company.
Christina Hanson, 27, used a wheelchair and spent her life dedicated to helping others despite her own hardships, her family said.
Kelsi Mannhalter had posted on social media asking people to search for her cousin after the fire Monday ravaged Santa Rosa where Hanson lived.
Mannhalter later confirmed on Facebook that Hanson did not survive when the flames consumed her home.
„Just surreal,“ Mannhalter posted. „I love you so much and am going to miss you sweet cousin. I can’t say it enough.“
Her father was found collapsed on the street in front of his home with third-degree burns and was taken to a hospital in San Francisco. Hanson had tried unsuccessfully to reach him as flames surrounded her apartment around 1:30 a.m. Monday, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.
Hanson was born with a spinal defect and lost her mother at 9 to lupus.
Still, her focus was always on others, her stepmother, Jennifer Watson, told the newspaper, describing her as „a very happy, social and positive person.“
Hanson volunteered two days a week at an Alzheimer’s residential care facility in Santa Rosa, where she would entertain residents.
She also taught herself sign language and interpreted for the hearing impaired.
„She loved helping people and loved her family,“ said Watson, who was with her stepdaughter the day before she died.
Her family wrote in an online obituary that Hanson „was granted her angel wings.“
In the 55 years they were married, Carmen Caldentey Berriz had spent countless hours in her husband Armando’s arms.
In his arms was where the 75-year-old took her last breath on Monday, as he held her afloat in a swimming pool as walls of fire burned around them, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.
Carmen had known Armando was the one since she was 12, and the two dated for years before marrying in 1962. By the time Carmen turned 75, their family had grown to include two daughters, a son, their children’s spouses and seven grandchildren.
The Berrizes were three days into a vacation at a Santa Rosa rental house with family when son-in-law Luis Ocon woke early Monday morning and saw the fire begin to overtake the neighborhood.
They fled to their cars.
Luis, Monica Ocon, and their daughter made it through the thick smoke and flames and pulled over, watching for Carmen and Armando’s car to emerge behind them. It never came.
Armando Berriz’s car had gotten stuck on a fallen tree. He told his wife they had to run back to the house to take shelter in the backyard pool.
As flames melted the chaise lounges a few feet away, Carmen clung to Armando, who kept them both afloat by hanging onto the brick sides of the pool.
Armando Berriz held on for hours, even as the brick burned his hands, even as his wife stopped breathing. He let go only after the flames had burned out, laying Carmen on the steps of the pool with her arms carefully crossed over her chest.
„Everything they did was as a team,“ daughter Monica Ocon said. „They had this bond and this strength that literally lasted a lifetime.“
Linda Tunis moved from Florida to the Journey’s End Mobile Home Park in Santa Rosa to be closer to her family. When the northern California wildfires quickly overtook the park, the 69-year-old woman phoned her daughter.
She was trapped, she told her daughter, Jessica Tunis. She was surrounded by fire, and going to die.
Jessica Tunis screamed at her mom to run to safety, to flee the burning home.
„I was telling her I love her when the phone died,“ Jessica Tunis told the San Francisco Chronicle.
After three days of hope and dread, Jessica’s brother Robert Tunis found his mother’s remains in the debris where her house once stood.
Linda Tunis was spunky and sweet, Jessica Tunis said Wednesday. She was also fiercely independent, an attitude that wasn’t dampened by her health problems. She had failing memory because of a stroke, and had lost the sight in one of her eyes because of high blood pressure.
She loved bingo and the beach, choosing to move California mostly because it brought her nearer to her close-knit family, Jessica Tunis said.
„My mother’s remains have been found at her home at Journey’s End. May she rest in peace, my sweet Momma,“ Jessica Tunis posted on Facebook earlier this week.

© Source: http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/animal-lover-dies-save-dogs-fire-50481770
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Born in Auschwitz, Israeli Artist, 102, Harnesses the Dark and the Light

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Tova Berlinski, whose life and work resonate with the darkness of the Nazi genocide and the vibrancy of Israel, has a tribute exhibition in Jerusalem.
JERUSALEM — She painted gray and black flowers, their innate beauty discernible only through hints of light.
Her Israeli landscapes are stark and desolate, punctuated by towering cypress trees and heavy rocks. Minimalist still lifes depict a pair of empty chairs. In portraits, family members appear with blurred and vanishing features or faces that fade into geometric patterns because, the artist said, “they are all gone,” murdered in the Holocaust.
The artist, Tova Berlinski, was born in 1915 in the Polish town of Oswiecim, better known by its German name — Auschwitz. Newly married, she and her husband left for what was then known as Palestine in 1938, a year before the Germans conquered Oswiecim and began building the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration and extermination camp on the edge of town.
Much of her work evokes the loss and pain of a lifetime that spans a century — including the Nazi decimation of European Jewry in World War II and the foundation of modern Israel, which she came to help build and where she made her home.
Yet there are also flashes of brightness and color, like an abstract painting from an early period recalling a candy and ice cream store named Posner from her youth in Oswiecim. More recent paintings, including one dated April 2017, around her 102nd birthday, depict bright, vibrant vistas — blue skies, green grass, balcony doors opening onto a rolling desert bathed in the Mediterranean sunlight.
“The color returned to me,” Ms. Berlinski said. “Not to my life, but to me. I don’t know why.”
It has been more than 20 years since her solo “Black Flowers” exhibition was held at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, one of the peaks of a long career. But this month, Ms. Berlinski, now a widow, is emerging once again into the limelight, with a tribute exhibition and sale of her works at ArtSpace, a small gallery in the leafy neighborhood of German Colony in Jerusalem, where she has lived for more than 50 years.
Ms. Berlinski’s 11th-floor apartment, a short walk from the gallery, is ordinarily a quiet place, its walls lined with portraits of her vanished family and her late husband, Eliyahu Berlinski, known as Elec. But one recent weekday, it was abuzz.
Linda Zisquit, an American-born poet and the director of ArtSpace, which represents contemporary Israeli artists, was visiting to choose some pieces with the help of Orna Millo, another Israeli artist, who curated Ms. Berlinski’s last solo exhibition, in 2002, at Jerusalem Artists House.
Ms. Berlinski’s caretaker, Jenny Borjas, rushed around, helping to arrange the furniture for a photo shoot. (Ms. Borjas may also have had something to do with Ms. Berlinski’s more colorful work of late. She said she had encouraged Ms. Berlinski to return to using reds and a more cheerful palette.)
In the catalog for the 2002 exhibition, Ms. Millo wrote, “Tova Berlinski’s paintings are very personal, in the style ‘I only knew how to tell my own story. My world is as narrow as an ant’s world.’ But through her prism, we can feel also the Israeli experience, and the difficulties of our existence in this country.”
Describing what she called “My Pictorial Biography,” Ms. Berlinski wrote in the catalog: “Every portrait in the painting of my family tells a different story, but all are close to my heart with a love that time will not eradicate.”
Those haunting portraits — of her father, her mother, her brother — hang on the walls of her salon, resonating with memories.
Born Gusta Wolf to a Hasidic family, Ms. Berlinski has fond memories of growing up in Oswiecim, where about half the 12,000 residents were Jewish.
“I very much loved that town,” she said.
She met Elec, from nearby Sosnowiec, where her father had a furniture store, through their activities in Beitar, the right-wing Zionist youth movement. Ten days after marrying, they set off for what was then the British Mandate of Palestine, to join the pioneers working to establish Israel.
They arrived on a ship of unauthorized immigrants, landing clandestinely, at night, south of Haifa, to evade the British authorities, who had imposed restrictions on Jewish immigration.
For a while, she said, she kept contact with her family until it was no longer possible to get letters to them. According to Yad Vashem, Israel’s Holocaust memorial, the Jews of Oswiecim, whose property had been confiscated, were rounded up in 1941 and deported to ghettos, including to Sosnowiec, before being sent to the death camps. The town’s once-thriving Jewish community ceased to exist.
Ms. Berlinski was the oldest of six children. Her parents and four siblings were killed — most of them, she said, in Auschwitz. One sister survived, then moved to Germany and, eventually, to Israel. She is the one who lived to tell Ms. Berlinski that the rest of the family had perished.
“I felt great pain,” Ms. Berlinski said. “That pain I feel to this day.”
Life in the British Mandate of Palestine, carved out of the former Ottoman Empire, was hard at first. The young couple, who remained childless, lived in the mobilized units formed by Beitar. Ms. Berlinski worked in the kitchens and orchards. Elec spent a few months in a British prison camp and fought in the Negev during the 1948 war over the creation of the Israeli state.
Having left Beitar, which they found too militaristic, the couple moved to Tel Aviv. Ms. Berlinski took up acting for a while at the Cameri Theater. Mr. Berlinski had begun working for the government, and around 1950, they moved to Jerusalem. Ms. Berlinski began studying at one of the young state’s oldest institutions, the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design.
In the 1970s, she joined the Climate group of Israeli artists, which promoted the idea of local Israeli painting as a rejection of imported art movements, but she soon broke with them, and the group was dismantled. Ms. Berlinski moved to the left politically and became active in Peace Now, an Israeli group that advocates ending the occupation, and a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Ultimately, Ms. Berlinski’s life, and the tribute exhibition of her work, is a celebration of endurance and survival. But she has not shut out Poland or Oswiecim; she has been back several times. In Oswiecim, she has visited the children of a woman who had been her mother’s close friend.
She remembered her mother’s garden being full of flowers. The black flowers, she said, were for her parents, since there were no graves to visit, nothing left. She donated a painting of a black flower to the Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum during a visit to the former concentration camp in 2006.
On the wall of her living room, among portraits, is a framed letter in Polish. It was signed by the mayor of Oswiecim, congratulating her on reaching the age of 100.
“On this extraordinary day, I extend to you greetings from the heart, from the city of your birth, Oswiecim.”

© Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/14/world/middleeast/israel-tova-berlinski-auschwitz.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
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8. Bundesliga-Spieltag: Hertha BSC unterliegt Schalke 0:2

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Berlins Bundesligist spielt lange zu zehnt und kassiert dann auch noch einen Elfmeter gegen sich. Am Ende verliert Hertha gegen Schalke 0:2.
Kurz vor dem Halbzeitpfiff kam ungewollt Schwung in das Spiel, doch leider eben anders, als der Hertha BSC zugeneigte Fußballfan es sich wünscht. In bester Kung-Fu-Haltung flog Herthas Japaner Genki Haraguchi dem Schalker Spieler Guido Burgstaller in die Knöchel – Schiedsrichter Benjamin Brand konnte gar nicht anders, als dem Übeltäter die Rote Karte zu zeigen. Kurz nach der Halbzeit bekamen die Berliner einen Elfmeter gegen sich gepfiffen – diese Vorlagen ließen sich die Gäste aus dem Westen nicht mehr nehmen. Am Ende siegte der FC Schalke 04 am Samstag vor 50 590 Zuschauern im Olympiastadion verdient mit 2:0 (0:0).
Die Berliner starten also mit ihrer ersten Saison-Heimniederlage in eine Phase von drei englischen Wochen am Stück und verlieren vorerst Anschluss zur besseren Hälfte der Tabelle. Schalke hingegen rückt vor auf Platz fünf. „Der Wille war da, die Qualität nicht“, sagte hinterher ein enttäuschter Herthas Trainer Pal Dardai.
Irgendwie lief das Spiel von Anfang an nicht wie gewünscht für die Berliner. Genau genommen sollte Hertha an diesem Nachmittag zu keinem Zeitpunkt ins Spiel kommen. Aber auch die Schalker hatten über weite Strecken des Duells größte Mühe, Torchance zu kreieren. In der ersten Halbzeit mussten beide Torhüter nicht einmal ernsthaft eingreifen.
Es war eine intensive, hektische und bisweilen sehr körperbetonte Begegnung. Schalke hatte etwas mehr Spielkontrolle, aber diese in Zonen, in denen sie den Berlinern kaum gefährlich werden konnten. Bei Hertha blieb nach vorn hin vieles Stückwerk, zu oft blieben Mitchell Weiser, Haraguchi und Ondrej Duda in Einzelaktionen hängen.
Da aber auch den Schalkern ungewöhnlich viele Fehlpässe unterliefen, entwickelte sich auf dem Rasen ein heiliges Gewürge. Und wenn der Ball mal über drei Stationen hinauszukommen drohte, wurde das Spiel durch ein Foul unterbrochen. Eins der ganz üblen Sorte setzte dann den Schlusspunkt unter eine spielerisch arme erste Halbzeit.
Für Herthas Manager war das der Knackpunkt des Spiels. Eigentlich sei Haraguchi ja nicht für rüdes Foulspiel bekannt, erzählte Michael Preetz hinterher, „hier war es wohl eine Mischung aus Übermut und Sauerstoffmangel“.
Eigentlich wollte Pal Dardai den Frische-Faktor auf seine Seite ziehen. Auch deshalb war Herthas bis hierhin bester Torschütze, Mathew Leckie, zunächst auf der Reservebank geblieben. Hinter dem Australier liegen zwei WM-Qualifikationsspiele und 50 Flugstunden. Doch Dardai musste rasch feststellen, dass die Schalker frischer und dynamischer wirkten. Zudem zwang der frühe Platzverweis zum Umbau. Leckie kam zu Beginn der zweiten Hälfte für Duda. Und für Salomon Kalou, der den gesperrten Vedad Ibisevic im Sturmzentrum ersetzte, kam Davie Selke.
Für den 8,5 Millionen teuren Einkauf von RB Leipzig war es der erste Bundesligaeinsatz für die Berliner. Doch noch ehe er zeigen konnte, was in ihm steckt, geriet Hertha in Rückstand. Vladimir Darida stieg im eigenen Strafraum dem Schalker Amine Harit auf die Füße – den fälligen Elfmeter verwandelte Nationalspieler Leon Goretzka. „Das kann man besser verteidigen“, sagte Dardai nur.
Fünf Minuten später jedenfalls forderten die Hertha-Fans ihrerseits einen Elfmeterpfiff. Selke war nach einem Steilpass in den Schalker Strafraum eingedrungen und kam im Zweikampf zusammen mit Torwart Ralf Fährmann zu Fall. Der Pfiff blieb aus. Die Berliner mühten sich, doch an diesem Tag wollte ihnen spielerisch einfach nichts gelingen. Die Gäste dagegen waren zwar nicht wirklich besser, aber im Abschluss letztlich konsequenter.
Nach einem schweren Patzer von Karim Rekik, der zentral vor dem eigenen Strafraum den Ball vertändelte, fiel die Entscheidung. Burgstaller klaute dem in diesem Moment schläfrigen Holländer den Ball, umkurvte anschließend noch Torwart Rune Jarstein und schob den Ball zum 2:0 für die Gäste ein.

© Source: http://www.tagesspiegel.de/sport/8-bundesliga-spieltag-hertha-bsc-unterliegt-schalke-0-2/20456208.html
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The best Walmart Cyber Monday deals 2017

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Walmart may have physical stores, but its best Cyber Monday deals are all online were prices are rolled back for 24 hours.
Walmart’s Cyber Monday deals for 2017 are only weeks away. They land the Monday following Black Friday. With the growing popularity of the online shopping holiday, Walmart’s Cyber Monday could offer some of the biggest deals around.
While Black Friday and the week leading up to it will offer plenty of deals, Cyber Monday has been growing into the bigger shopping day, and it serves as one of the best and final chances to land a load of discounts before the winter holidays. Thanks to the online nature of Cyber Monday, finding great discounts and getting products doesn’t involve any fist fights over the last item on the shelf.
Walmart carries all sorts products, from TVs and computers to game consoles and spare tires. We’ll be keeping a close eye on all the deals leading up to Cyber Monday and on the day itself, so you can get your hands on an Xbox One X or a new smartphone at the best price possible.
Expect the latest video game titles like Call of Duty WW2 and Destiny 2 to come with awesome discounts or for free in console bundles. Upgrading to a new 4K TV will also be extra affordable when Cyber Monday 2017 comes around.
Here’s what we expect to see on sale for Walmart Cyber Monday 2017, including some items currently on sale as a good preview of what’s to come.
The Cyber Monday date is on November 27, which is the last Monday in 2017. Right before that day, we expect to see Walmart Cyber Monday ads leak. This means we’ll see what’s going to be on sale ahead of time.
Until the Walmart ad leaks, we have a bunch of items on sale today (below), and they’re all likely to be even cheaper come Cyber Monday. It’s usually how the holiday shopping process works.
Google Chromebooks start at $149 Chromebook discounts have grown with the popularity of Google’s back-to-basics laptop. It’s a real threat to Windows 10 laptops with prices falling anywhere from $149 to $250 on discount.
Cyber Monday is going to feature the above deals at even better prices, as well as new deals not yet seen below. At least those are our advance Cyber Monday Walmart predictions.
Cyber Monday is the semi-relaxed online shopping day where you don’t have to go in to Walmart in order to find the very best deals. That’s a relief to everyone who wants to avoid ‚The people of Walmart.‘
These deals listed are just a preview of what’s likely to come from the No. 1 retailer in the US. It may be known for its stores, but the website is what’s popular come Cyber Monday every year.

© Source: http://www.techradar.com/news/walmart-cyber-monday-deals-2017
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Woman at Las Vegas shooting loses California home to wildfires

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Michella Flores was at the Las Vegas concert during the mass shooting. Days later, she was home in California when wildfires destroyed her parents‘ home.
„It’s just a very helpless feeling,“ she said of the past couple of weeks. „I just thought, well, I’ve been in these situations before. It shouldn’t be a big deal.
„But when it’s happening to you, it’s a whole different realm.“
Las Vegas: ‚It drove me nuts‘
Flores had flown into Las Vegas on Sunday morning and was waiting for her next trip, Monday night, to Boston. She was staying at the Hooters Hotel, she said, because they offered discounted rates to airline crews. The building is blocks away from the Mandalay Bay and the Las Vegas Village, the site of the festival that unwittingly played host to the deadliest mass shooting in modern American history.
„I’m a huge country fan,“ Flores said, so she decided to head down to the festival to listen to Jason Aldean from outside the fence along Las Vegas Boulevard since she was without a ticket.
As she was listening, she heard the first gunshots, but said she wasn’t paying much attention. It wasn’t until after the gunfire resumed after a short break that she realized that what she was hearing.
„That’s when everybody started screaming and coming out of the festival screaming, ‚Shooter!'“ Flores said. „I ran down Las Vegas Boulevard.“
She managed to hide in a nearby casino’s conference room with other concertgoers. Flores waited there for hours, her only updates coming from a coworker who was listening to a police scanner.
„It drove me nuts,“ Flores said of hiding in the room. „You’re sitting there waiting for someone to open the door and be shot.“
When she finally was able to leave, she went back to her hotel room and tried to sleep, she said, „which did not happen.“
She looked out her hotel room window, toward the site of the festival.
„That night, I could see the bodies,“ she said.
But Flores, who has multiple jobs, worked for the next four days.
Parents‘ home lost to wildfires
She finally returned home to Santa Rosa and went back to work at the airport, where she works in the line service, fueling corporate and private jets — including those used by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, so she was aware that there was a fire nearby.
When she got off work, she headed to her parents‘ house, where she was staying during the process of moving to another house. As she was driving, she said, „I looked up and I could see the glow“ of the fires. As a former firefighter, she knew it meant the fire was close, and the wind direction told her it could be coming right for them.
She told her parents they should probably start packing their things and left to take her dog to a park. Five minutes later, listening to a local fire dispatch, Flores heard crews mention the name of the road below her parents‘ home.
„I called my mom,“ Flores said, „and my mom screamed in the phone and said, ‚It’s at the bottom of our driveway.'“ She turned back, arriving at the house right behind a fire engine.
Flores stayed on the scene to help firefighters protect the home, even as the wildfire devoured the neighbor’s house. At 4 or 5 a.m., she said, the house was mostly intact, so she drove to Oakland to attend training for work while her parents went to an evacuation center. When she got off that evening, Flores said, „I went back and the house was gone. Completely.“
Thankfully, she and her parents were able to move into the rental Flores was preparing. They don’t have a lot, she said, but she’s thankful.
‚I don’t sleep‘
„Unfortunately, you’d like the whole world to stop and pay attention and say, ‚Here, we’ll help,'“ Flores said. „But the rest of the world keeps going on.“
She said she felt unlucky, but recognizes there are others even more less fortunate than she is.
„Puerto Rico,“ she said. „Well, gosh, they’re worse off than we are.“
Read more: Survivors of Hurricane Maria desperately need aid
Flores said she still hasn’t fully come to terms with what she’s faced this month, and knows she’ll have to grapple with it eventually.
„I don’t sleep. I haven’t had any time to process any of this,“ Flores told CNN. And it’ll hit at some point when it calms down, and that’s when I’ll have to deal with it all.“

© Source: http://edition.cnn.com/2017/10/14/us/woman-escapes-las-vegas-shooting-california-fires/index.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+rss%2Fcnn_latest+%28RSS%3A+CNN+-+Most+Recent%29
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