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Politics

Trump will get little help from main Republican donors

Former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a press conference announcing a class action lawsuit against major tech companies at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster on July 07, 2021 in Bedminster, New Jersey.

Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

Several of the Republican Party’s largest and most influential donors are signaling that, for the moment, at least, they have no plans to fund former President Donald Trump’s political operation.

Wealthy financiers like Stephen Ross and Larry Ellison have instead chosen to spend money on the GOP’s efforts to retake Congress in next year’s midterm elections or have supported potential 2024 presidential candidates like Sens. Marco Rubio from Florida and Tim Scott from South Carolina.

Donors are also concerned about how Trump’s organization is spending the mountains of money it has raised from smaller donations.

“Big money, sophisticated people just lose interest in this s — show,” said an adviser to longtime Trump ally in Silicon Valley. Many donors are tired of seeing the former president use his resources on rallies that often make false claims, including the fact that his election was stolen, this person said.

Trump hasn’t ruled out a 2024 presidential run, and he hasn’t made any official announcements. Its political action committees have raised large amounts of money through email and SMS appeals to supporters who frequently criticize President Joe Biden’s performance, most recently his handling of the withdrawal from Afghanistan.

The Trump PACs had over $ 100 million available as of the first half of 2021. CNBC previously reported that its PACs spent nearly $ 8 million on legal fees and over $ 200,000 on Trump’s real estate earlier this year.

“Donors do not donate from the goodness of their hearts. And right now they are being asked to donate to an organization that has no other purpose than pumping money to someone who doesn’t need it and doesn’t use it,” said a Republican Strategist representing financiers on Wall Street: “They have better things to do.”

The donor advisors speaking to CNBC declined to be featured in this story to avoid retaliation from Trump and his supporters.

A Trump spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.

The pro-Trump Make America Great Again Action Super PAC, which raised over $ 1.5 million in July and August, is not without some wealthy donors, according to new federal electoral commission filings. MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who is passionate about false claims about the 2020 election, is among the funders, as are businesswoman and former GOP Senator Kelly Loeffler, Texas bank director Andrew Beal and casino magnate Phillip Ruffin.

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But bigger Republican fundraising forces are instead focusing on efforts by House leadership Kevin McCarthy to retake the House of Representatives and funding pro-GOP redistribution efforts like the National Republican Redistricting Trust. Others support the re-election campaigns of potential presidential candidates in 2024 such as Scott, Rubio and Florida’s Governor Ron DeSantis.

Several people who had previously supported Trump recently hosted a fundraiser for DeSantis’ 2022 gubernatorial campaign in the Upper Hamptons, Long Island. The invitation to the July event shows that the event co-hosts included former Trump Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross and billionaire investors Stephen Ross, John Paulson and Ken Griffin.

Paulson was one of the few Wall Street donors to support Trump’s 2020 presidential bid in the final phase of the campaign.

Stephen Ross, who also owns the Miami Dolphins, came under fire in 2019 when he hosted a fundraiser for Trump in the Hamptons. Ross and other directors of Related Cos. are investors in the luxury fitness brand Equinox. SoulCycle and Equinox distanced themselves from the Trump event when customers threatened to boycott.

Wilbur Ross and a Paulson representative did not respond to requests for comment. A spokesman for Stephen Ross declined to comment.

Neither Oracle CEO Larry Ellison nor Oracle CEO Safra Catz made large sums of money available to Trump’s PACs after the election. Both helped raise money for Trump’s re-election campaign. Ellison’s California home was the site of a Trump fundraiser last year. However, in June of that year, Ellison donated $ 5 million to a super PAC that supported Scott’s re-election efforts in South Carolina.

A spokesman for Catz and Ellison did not respond to a request for comment.

The Republican Jewish Coalition, whose PAC supported Trump in last year’s elections, is co-hosting a New York fundraiser for Rubio’s 2022 re-election campaign in September, according to an invitation. The RJC’s board of directors includes a number of influential Republicans, including the co-founder of Home Depot , Bernard Marcus, former Trump adviser Jason Greenblatt and former White House press secretary Ari Fleischer.

Trump may also not be able to count on financial help from Miriam Adelson, a mega-donor and widow of the late casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, who died earlier this year. The couple were among the few business leaders who supported Trump in the last election. They gave millions to a pro-Trump super PAC in the last few months of the campaign.

Since her husband’s death, Adelson has privately told her allies that she has no immediate plans to use much of her money in politics for the time being. That could change as the midterms approach. Records show that in June, Adelson contributed $ 5,000 to the Stand for America PAC, a committee formed by potential 2024 contender and former Trump United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley.

A spokesman for Adelson’s Las Vegas Sands company declined to comment.

Another major Trump and GOP financier is in legal hot water. Investor Tom Barrack was arrested for illegally lobbying then President Trump on behalf of the United Arab Emirates. Barrack has pleaded not guilty to the charges. Even if he had no issues with the Feds, Barrack had hinted that he might not have supported Trump, his longtime friend, for a run in 2024.

“Today it looks like it’s a campaign of division that I’m not interested in,” Barrack told Bloomberg News before he was arrested.

A Barrack spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.

Robert Mercer and his daughter Rebekah were huge supporters of Trump during the 2016 campaign, but there is no indication that they will endorse him in 2024. CNBC reported in 2018 that the Mercers were planning to cut their financial support for Trump.

Records show that the Mercers did not write major checks to Trump’s PACs after his presidency.

For the time being, they are banking on a new face in GOP politics: “Hillbilly Elegy” author and venture capitalist JD Vance, who, after criticizing the ex-president, has taken several nationalist positions in the style of Trump in the past.

Robert and Rebekah Mercer together donated $ 150,000 to a Super PAC in March that supports Vance’s candidacy for the Ohio Senate seat, vacated by retiring Republican Rob Portman.

Mercers representatives did not respond to requests for comment.

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World News

Three extra main cities are underneath Taliban management, as the federal government’s forces close to collapse.

KABUL, Afghanistan – Three large cities in western and southern Afghanistan were confirmed to have fallen to the Taliban as the insurgent race for control of the country accelerated.

The Taliban captured Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand province, on Friday morning after a week-long battle that left parts of the city to rubble, hospitals full of wounded and dying, and residents asking what would come next under their new rulers. Hours earlier, the insurgents had captured Herat, a cultural center in the west, and Kandahar, the country’s second largest city, where the Taliban first proclaimed their so-called emirate in the 1990s.

The speed of urban collapse, combined with the announcement by American officials Thursday that they would evacuate most of the U.S. embassy, ​​has compounded panic across the country as thousands attempt to flee the Taliban’s advance.

Only three large Afghan cities – including the capital Kabul – remain under state control, one is besieged by the Taliban. With the collapse of Lashkar Gah and Kandahar, the Taliban now effectively control southern Afghanistan, a powerful symbol of their resurrection, just weeks before the United States will withdraw completely from the country.

Last week, the Taliban took over Afghan cities in a swift offensive, placing them well-positioned to attack Kabul. The government’s armed forces appear to be on the verge of complete collapse. Some American officials fear that the Afghan government will not hold out for another month.

Helmand Province is an unstable area that has been largely controlled by the Taliban since 2015. In recent months, the Afghan government has struggled to hold its own there, and recent air strikes by the United States and the Afghan Air Forces in the region have failed to halt the Taliban’s offensive.

Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand, has been on the brink of disaster for more than a decade. Helmand has long been the home of the Taliban, which after the rise of the group in neighboring Kandahar in 1994 spread into the province and earned millions there from the illegal sale of opium poppies.

The fall of Lashkar Gah is a sad coda for the American and British military missions to Helmand, which together lasted over a decade. Both countries focused much of their efforts on securing the province, losing hundreds of troops there to roadside bombs and brutal shootings.

Kandahar in particular is a huge asset to the Taliban. It is the economic center of southern Afghanistan, and it was the birthplace of the uprisings in the 1990s and served as the militant capital for part of their five-year rule. By conquering the city, the Taliban can effectively proclaim a return to power, if not complete control.

On Friday, officials from Uruzgan and Zabul, two provinces long believed to be the Taliban’s heartland, said local elders in both are negotiating a full surrender of the territory to the insurgent group.

Taimoor Shah in Kandahar contributed to the coverage.

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Politics

California shuts down main hydroelectric plant amid extreme drought

In this aerial view, houseboats sit on Lake Oroville at low tide as the California drought emergency worsens in Oroville, California on July 25, 2021.

Robyn Beck | AFP | Getty Images

SANTA MONICA, Calif. – California closed a large hydropower plant on Lake Oroville when the water level fell near the minimum required to generate electricity, state water authorities said.

It is the first time since the power plant opened in 1967 that the state has shut down the Hyatt power plant due to a lack of water.

The blackout could trigger even more blackouts this summer as the state grapples with a historic drought and record-breaking heat waves.

Officials said the record low water level at Lake Oroville, an artificial water reserve in Northern California, was due to the drought aggravated by climate change.

Though California is experiencing constant drought, climate change has fueled high temperatures and arid soils, which significantly reduced water runoff to the reservoirs this spring, resulting in the lowest levels ever recorded at Lake Oroville, officials said Thursday.

“This is just one of many unprecedented impacts we are experiencing in California as a result of our climate-induced drought,” Karla Nemeth, director of the state’s water resources division, said in a statement.

Nemeth said the department anticipated the shutdown and planned a loss of water and network management. Officials have warned that the facility will no longer be able to generate electricity if the water level drops below 640 feet above sea level.

Dry land is visible in a section that is usually underwater on the shores of Lake Oroville, which is the second largest reservoir in California and has a capacity of nearly 35, according to daily reports from the state Department of Water Resources near Oroville, California % hat, 06/16/2021.

Aude Guerrucci | Reuters

Lake Oroville’s water levels are expected to reach 620 feet above sea level by the end of October. Nemeth said the state’s water board was working to “save as much water as possible”.

Although the facility is no longer generating electricity, officials said they will dump some water from the dam into the Feather River to help maintain the river’s temperature requirements.

Governor Gavin Newsom urged California residents in July to reduce household water use by 15% in order to maintain water supplies. Network operators have also urged residents to limit electricity usage to avoid blackouts as forest fires scorched the state, including the Dixie Fire, which has been burning for more than three weeks and decimated the gold rush town of Greenville.

“Falling reservoir levels are another example of why it is so important for all Californians to conserve water,” said Nemeth.

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Entertainment

A part of a Seismic Shift in Ballet, Hope Muir Takes on a Main Position

In early July, an article in The Toronto Star speculated about the pandemic-delayed, but at that point imminent, announcement of a successor to Karen Kain, the treasured former ballerina who had just stepped down as artistic director of the National Ballet of Canada after 16 years.

In the article, Tamara Rojo, Guillaume Coté and Crystal Pite, among others, were suggested as potential replacements. Hope Muir, whose appointment was announced on July 7, was not.

“The fact that they hired me and you have to Google is telling,” said Muir, 50, the current artistic director of the Charlotte Ballet in North Carolina. “I feel like more people like me, who weren’t necessarily huge stars, are going to end up in these roles, with perhaps a somewhat different approach to what ballet can be: more diverse, with more access and transparency about what you are doing.”

Muir’s appointment — she steps into the role on Jan. 1, 2022 — is part of a seismic shift in the ballet world. Over the next two years, Helgi Tomasson at San Francisco Ballet and Kevin McKenzie at American Ballet Theater will both step down; Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui will leave a vacancy at the Royal Ballet of Flanders when he moves to run the Grand Théâtre de Genève; Christian Spuck will be replaced by Cathy Marston at the Zurich Ballet when he takes over the Staatsballett Berlin.

“There is a new generation of artists,” Muir said in a Zoom interview from Charlotte. “You need people who want to have the conversations with them, listen to them and have empathy for their experience and what they want.”

Muir was born in Toronto, where she began to study ballet, but decided to dance professionally only after moving to England with her mother at 15 years old. She joined the newly formed English National Ballet School then danced with English National Ballet, Rambert and Hubbard Street Dance Chicago before becoming a freelance stager and ballet mistress. After a stint as the associate artistic director at Scottish Ballet, she took over from Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux at the Charlotte Ballet in 2017.

“I think Hope knew she wanted to be a director when she was 5,” said the choreographer Helen Pickett, who has worked regularly with Muir at the Charlotte Ballet. “She is a connector and a gatherer. She genuinely loves the community, and she has the long view. She knows ballet can evolve and she has a beautiful, keen understanding of both classical and contemporary work.”

In a wide-ranging conversation, Muir talked about her early self-doubt, her ideas for the National Ballet of Canada and whether enough is being done in the ballet world to promote diversity and change. Here are edited excerpts from the conversation.

You once said you didn’t want to direct a big ballet company. What changed your mind?

I don’t think I had the trust in my own experience at that time. I had been mostly staging work on smaller companies, and when I first applied for an artistic director job, I didn’t even get an interview. After I became assistant artistic director at Scottish Ballet, I thought, “Hang on, I have danced in a ballet company, I am working in a ballet company and I shouldn’t narrow my options.” After I came to Charlotte, I was 100 percent invested in the potential of this company, and I turned down a few offers.

But when the National Ballet of Canada approached, I paused. I was very aware that a job like this doesn’t come around that often. I sat with it for a bit, then thought, why couldn’t I do this? One thing that I kept thinking was, “You’ve not been a star, not been a prima ballerina? Will they want a big name?” I thought, “Well, why don’t I just find out?”

I think women often worry about their qualifications for a job whereas men will take their chances.

One hundred percent, this has happened to us as women. Men will apply for things they don’t have experience of; women will do the checklist: Do I meet the criteria?

What kind of artistic vision did you present to the search committee?

There wasn’t a vision statement as such. They gave the candidates a three-year programming exercise that included various anchor ballets that you had to incorporate, as well as making sure there was representation of female choreographers, Canadian choreographers, and Black, Indigenous and people of color choreographers in each season. It was a fascinating and very satisfying exercise because when you look at ballet repertory, you realize that most ballets are choreographed by white men.

There were many other elements in my presentation, but working with young choreographers is very important to me. My nature is to nurture. I take the most satisfaction in the thoughtful development of the artists and in pushing the art form forward. A ballet company today needs to lead with stories that connect and keep people interested in the classical tradition.

What will your balance between classical and contemporary be at the National Ballet of Canada?

I think the current balance between classical and contemporary is good. There are full-length ballets that we’ll keep and relationships with contemporary choreographers like Crystal Pite, which I would love to continue. I would like to work with many people who have come to the Charlotte Ballet — Christian Spuck, Helen Pickett, David Dawson, Alonso King. And I need to immerse myself in the Canadian dance scene.

There is a lot of talk about the need for more diversity, more inclusion, more female voices in ballet. Is change happening fast enough?

The conversation has started, but there is a lot of work to still do. The changes need to be thoughtful, measured and permanent.

You need to give people opportunities without tokenism, and at the right moment in their careers. I am thinking about commissioning smaller works first and asking people to come and hang out while other work is being done, because the culture and practices of a big ballet company can be intimidating. Then there are amazing people like Alonso King, who should be acknowledged as a trailblazer.

More work could be done in training to encourage girls to develop their individual voice. I started a choreographic lab here in Charlotte that runs all year, and I want to do the same in Toronto. If one opportunity a year comes up, women are often too exhausted because they dance more. This way they can pop in and out.

I am excited about all these ideas, and for my colleagues and friends who are also taking up director positions. Sometimes we get together and say, “Is someone going to come in and tell us this isn’t real?”

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World News

REvil, Hacking Group Behind Main Ransomware Assault, Disappears

The second theory is that Mr Putin ordered the group’s websites to be removed. If so, it would be a gesture to heed Mr Biden’s warning, which he had also expressed more generally when the two leaders met in Geneva on June 16. And it should only be a day or two before a US-Russian working group on the subject set up during the Geneva meeting is due to hold a virtual meeting.

A third theory is that REvil decided the heat was too intense and shut down the sites itself so as not to get caught in the crossfire between the American and Russian presidents. This is what another Russian group, DarkSide, did after the ransomware attack on Colonial Pipeline, the US company that had to shut down the pipeline that supplies gasoline and kerosene to much of the east coast in May after its computer network was breached.

However, many experts believe that DarkSide’s exit from the business was nothing more than digital theater and that all of the group’s major ransomware talents will be reassembling under a different name. If so, the same could happen to REvil, which Recorded Future, a Massachusetts-based cybersecurity firm, estimates is responsible for about a quarter of all sophisticated ransomware attacks on Western targets. .

Allan Liska, a senior intelligence analyst at Recorded Future, said if REvil went missing, he doubted it was voluntary. “If anything, these guys are show-offs,” said Mr. Liska. “And we saw no notes, no showing off. It feels like they gave up everything under pressure. “

There were indications that the pressure may have come from Russia. U.S. Cyber ​​Command commander and director of the National Security Agency Gen. Paul M. Nakasone was not expected to have full options for U.S. action against ransomware actors until later this week, several officials said. And there was no evidence that REvil’s websites were “seized” by a court order that the Justice Department frequently publishes.

Cyber ​​Command declined to comment.

While closing REvil would give Mr Putin and Mr Biden an opportunity to show that they are facing the problem, it could also give ransomware actors a chance to get away with their profits. The big losers would be the companies and cities that do not get their encryption keys and may be locked out of their data forever. (When ransomware groups break up, they often release their decryption keys. That didn’t happen on Tuesday.)

Mr Biden is expected to roll out a ransomware strategy in the coming weeks to prove that the Colonial Pipeline and other recent attacks show how crippling critical infrastructures pose a major national security threat.

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Politics

Biden condemns Trump’s ‘Massive Lie’ in main voting rights speech in Philadelphia

President Joe Biden on Tuesday delivered a major speech on voting rights in Philadelphia, slamming his predecessor’s “Big Lie” claim that the 2020 election was stolen. 

“It’s clear, for those who challenge the results or question the integrity of the election, no other election has ever been held under such scrutiny or such high standards. The ‘Big Lie’ is just that: a big lie,” Biden said at the National Constitution Center, just steps away from Independence Hall.

The speech comes as his administration faces growing pressure from civil rights activists and other Democrats to do more to combat attacks on voting rights, an issue that Biden called “the most significant test” of American democracy since the Civil War. 

Biden blasted former President Donald Trump’s claims that widespread voter fraud cost him the 2020 election, a claim that has pushed GOP leaders to enact a flurry of new voting laws in key states, including Florida and Georgia. Critics argue the new laws are discriminatory and restrict access to the ballot. 

The president directly denounced these efforts by GOP-controlled legislatures as a “Jim Crow assault” and compared them to behaviors seen in autocracies around the world. 

“To me, this is simple. This is election subversion. It’s the most dangerous threat to voting in the integrity of free and fair elections in our history,” Biden said. “They want the ability to reject the final count and ignore the will of the people if their preferred candidate loses.”

Protecting voting rights

Biden pressed for the passage of federal voting rights legislation during his remarks, saying that the fight to protect voting rights begins with passing the For The People Act.  

“That bill would help end voter suppression in states, get dark money out of politics, give voice to people, create fair district maps and end partisan political gerrymandering,” Biden said. 

He criticized Republicans for opposing the sweeping Democratic voting rights and government ethics bill, which failed to pass in the Senate last month after Republicans deployed the filibuster.

Biden also underscored the importance of passing the John Lewis Voting Rights Act, which would “restore and expand voting protections and prevent voter suppression.” He pressured Republican lawmakers to support such Democratic legislation that would protect voting rights. 

“We’ll ask my Republican friends in Congress and states and cities and counties to stand up, for God’s sake, and help prevent this concerted effort to undermine our election and the sacred right to vote,” Biden said. 

The president criticized the Supreme Court’s “harmful” decisions that weaken the Voting Rights Act of 1965, noting that the court first gutted a key provision of the act in 2013 and on July 1 it upheld two Republican-backed Arizona voting laws that Democrats say violate the act. 

The court has also limited the ability to “prove intentional racial discrimination,” according to a White House memo sent before the speech, making it difficult for advocacy groups and the Department of Justice to combat restrictive voter laws.

Biden called on Congress to repair the “damage done” by passing voting rights legislation.

Preparing for the midterms

Biden warned that the U.S. will “face another test in 2022” during the midterm elections, adding that the nation needs to prepare for voter suppression and election subversion. 

“We have to prepare now. As I said time and again, no matter what, you can never stop the American people from voting. They will decide, and the power must always be with the people. That’s why just like we did in 2020, we have to prepare for 2022,” Biden said. 

As of mid-June, at least 17 states have enacted laws that restrict access to voting, with more being considered, according to a report from the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University’s School of Law. 

Republican Gov. Brian Kemp of Georgia signed a restrictive election bill into law in March after it was passed by the state’s Republican-controlled legislature. The law requires voters to provide identification for mail-in ballots and prohibits people from giving food and water to voters waiting in line, punitive steps that critics say could harm turnout in minority communities. 

Biden’s administration has turned to the courts in response. The Department of Justice sued the state of Georgia on June 25, arguing that the election bill infringed on the rights of Black Georgians. 

Passing new legislation in Congress to protect voting rights would likely require a change to filibuster rules, especially as Democrats hold a razor-thin majority in the Senate. But Biden has backed reforming rather than eliminating the filibuster, making the future of new voting laws uncertain. 

Looking beyond Washington

Now, with Democrats’ legislative efforts stalled, the White House is beginning to look outside of Washington for ways to combat the wave of new voting restrictions. 

Biden has had several meetings at the White House with civil rights groups, who pushed the administration to keep fighting for voting rights despite resistance from Republicans. The groups have opposed the Republican-backed voting restrictions, which critics say are aimed at Hispanic, Black and younger voters. 

Vice President Kamala Harris, who has been tasked to lead the administration’s efforts to protect voting rights, also recently announced a new $25 million investment by the Democratic National Committee to expand its program that will help boost voter engagement in the upcoming midterm elections. 

During the first few months of his presidency, Biden also signed an executive order directing agencies to promote voter access. This includes developing better methods of distributing voting information and increasing opportunities to participate in the electoral process, which includes voters with distinct needs, such as service members, people with disabilities and tribal communities, among others.

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Entertainment

For a Main Debut, a Younger Violinist Will get Private

In another life, Randall Goosby would have been a pianist.

When offered the opportunity to learn an instrument as a child, he chose to play the violin, but said he was too small for that. So he started with the piano instead. He struggled, and his mother, who had primarily pushed him and his siblings into class, could see his self-esteem begin to wane.

Then they decided to try the violin again and something clicked.

“I came home from school and while my brother and sister were about to play I ripped open the violin case,” Goosby, now 24, recalled in a recent interview. “I played the violin the whole time.”

He leafed through the first books of the Suzuki Method at a pace that would make the average violin student feel incapable. All the signs pointed to something more promising than a simple love for a new instrument.

At 13, Goosby became the youngest winner of the junior division of the Sphinx competition, then was invited to a Young People’s Concert with the New York Philharmonic. It shouldn’t be long before he was a protégé of the legendary violinist Itzhak Perlman. And now, not even with his training at the Juilliard School, Goosby is making his major label debut with the album “Roots” released on Decca on Friday.

The album, Perlman said in an interview, shows that Goosby “knows who he is and he wants to make sure everyone feels that way”.

It’s not the usual debut. Instead, where many young musicians could leave their mark with a war horse concert by Mendelssohn, Bruch or Beethoven, Goosby put together a comprehensive concert program with works by black composers – including a world premiere by bassist Xavier Dubois Foley and first recordings of the discoveries by Florence Price – and by Dvorak and Gershwin, two white composers whose music on the album reveals a commitment to their black counterparts.

“A debut recording has to express the handwriting of the artist, and that is exactly it, of someone who is a perfect advocate as an interpreter, but also a perfect advocate for what this music means,” said Dominic Fyfe. the director of Decca. “It’s always exciting to see young artists who are at the very beginning of the catwalk.”

GOOSBY’S MOTHER, Jiji Goosby, a Korean who grew up in Japan with a passionate love for music and dance, was the linchpin of Randall’s first violin training. When he outgrown his first teacher, she bribed him to take a lesson from Routa Kroumovitch-Gomez and promised that she would invite him over to sushi later if he tried.

He accepted his mother’s offer and stayed with Kroumovitch-Gomez as a student for three years. It was from here that he had his first experience of serious violin lessons, he said. More teachers would follow, including Philippe Quint, whom Goosby and his mother would fly to New York once a month for six hours of intensive study.

In addition to being a chaperone, Jiji also sat in class and took notes. She also took a job as a waitress in a Japanese restaurant to cover the cost of her trips to New York; Goosby’s father, Ralph, was often out and about for his marketing job. There were nights when the children were home without parents eating a microwave meal or pizza.

“I really understood back then how much sacrifice it was for my whole family,” said Goosby. “My family is my core, and it was a time when we could have seen each other a little more.”

A turning point came when Goosby joined the Perlman Music Program after his Sphinx triumph and met his mentor.

“I adored Mr. Perlman, and of course I had my preconceived notion of what he would be like,” said Goosby. “But for me he was one of the most down-to-earth, relatable, comforting beings.”

In an interview, Perlman recalled being impressed with Goosby’s sound. “The most important thing for me with any musician is the sound,” he said. “And he’s beautiful. It hits the listener immediately. “

Perlman shares the teaching duties with Catherine Cho, who has also become a close mentor of Goosby for the past decade; their lessons relating to life in general can take on the feel of therapy sessions. When she first heard him play, she said, “the level of his talent was clear.”

“You can tell so much from the way someone sets up their violin,” added Cho. “The way he approaches the instrument is very personal. When he then hangs up his and plays a note, you can hear this spark that he has something to say and is passionate about saying it. That’s talent. “

So Cho and Perlman took Goosby as a student, with the goal, Cho said, of “cultivating his gift and not screwing it up”.

Not screwing it up successfully is more complicated than regular classes. Beyond technology, Goosby looked for work-life balance. He avoided the label “child prodigy”, which was added to him after the Sphinx competition, and just called it “the P-word”. And from his father he learned the importance of making time for friends and hobbies like basketball.

His sound, he thinks, has yet to be worked on – an elusive, almost magical ingredient in music that really sets students apart when they come to a place like Juilliard where he is aiming for an artist diploma. It was the focus of a recent lesson with Cho, their first face-to-face encounter after months of Zoom sessions.

The two spoke mostly in poetic language. After playing a striking passage from Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson’s showpiece trio “Blue / s Forms,” she asked if he felt fire or cool, and he replied, “There are so many tones, it looks fiery, but on that one But inside I think I feel cool. ”Then she asked where the energy was coming from, and after a thoughtful pause he said,“ Lower abdomen, core area ”. The questioning was immediately evident in Goosby’s play, which audibly had more clarity and focus.

IN ONE WAY, Goosby could not have made a major concert debut; “Roots” came about last year when meeting an orchestra was next to impossible. But even without the pandemic restrictions, he said he was more interested in telling a story – about the way the artists in his program influenced each other “in a trickle-down effect over time”.

“For me, the easiest way to tell the story would be through something that means something to me personally,” he said. “I could have recorded all three Brahms sonatas. This story has been told countless times and there are people who want to hear this story in a certain way. “

The program is more constellational than chronological, starting in the present with Foley’s earwig “Shelter Island” and continuing with “Blue / s Forms”. Then come the arrangements of the great violinist Jascha Heifetz of songs from Gershwin’s “Porgy and Bess” – together with Dvorak, who was suggested by the label to offer the listener something familiar – and William Grant Still’s Suite for violin and piano; World premieres of three warmly melodic and eclectic pieces by Price; an adaptation of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s “Deep River”; and Dvorak’s American-inspired Sonatina in G for violin and piano. (Zhu Wang is a pianist throughout.)

Some of the works, being adopted from songs, bring out the seductive lyricism of Goosby’s playing, which has an air of Golden Age tenderness and expressive portamento. In the coming season, audiences around the world will hear this voice in concerts by Brahms, Bruch, Mozart, Mendelssohn, Beethoven and Joseph Boulogne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges – another long-overlooked black composer.

Goosby has signed a multi-album deal with Decca and his next recording is likely to be a concert program. “We talked about ideas from Mozart and Chevalier de Saint-Georges and Coleridge-Taylor and the late Romanticism,” he said.

“One thing I know,” he added, “is that it has to have a story.”

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World News

Inventory futures begin month barely decrease after main indexes noticed beneficial properties in Might

Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

Source: NYSE

Stock futures are slightly lower in overnight trading after major indexes saw gains in May.

Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 30 points, or 0.09%. S&P 500 futures shed 0.09% and Nasdaq 100 futures ticked 0.04% lower.

The moves in overnight trading come after the blue-chip Dow and the S&P 500 gained 1.93% and 0.55% in May, respectively, to mark their fourth consecutive positive month. The S&P 500 closed Friday just 0.8% off its record high.

The small cap Russell 2000 rose 0.11% in May to post its eighth positive month in a row — its longest monthly win streak since 1995.

The Nasdaq gained 2.06% last week to post its best weekly performance since April. However, the tech-heavy composite lost 1.53% in May, breaking a 6-month win streak.

A key inflation gauge — the core personal consumption expenditures index — rose 3.1% in April from a year earlier, faster than the forecasted 2.9% increase. Despite the hotter-than-expected inflation data, treasury yields fell on Friday.

“Overall, given the market’s reaction to [Friday]’s PCE release, investor concerns about inflation may have been exaggerated — or perhaps already priced in,” Chris Hussey, a managing director at Goldman Sachs, said in a note.

“Consensus may be building that the inflation we are seeing today is ‘good’ inflation — the kind of rise in prices that accompanies accelerating growth, not a monetary policy mistake,” Hussey said.

Investors are awaiting the Federal Reserve’s meeting scheduled for June 15-16. Key for the markets is whether the Fed begins to believe that inflation is higher than it expected or that the economy is strengthening enough to progress without so much monetary support. 

May’s employment report, set to be released on Friday, will provide a key reading of the economy. According to Dow Jones, economists expect to see about 674,000 jobs created in May, after the much fewer-than-expected 266,000 jobs added in April.

Zoom Video Communications and Hewlett Packard Enterprise are set to report quarterly earnings results on Tuesday after the bell.

— CNBC’s Patti Domm contributed reporting.

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Politics

Maya Wiley Lands Main Endorsement From Rep. Hakeem Jeffries

Ms. Wiley, one of the more left-wing candidates in the race, said she heard from Mr. Jeffries on Friday evening and added that he, along with Ms. Clarke and Ms. Velázquez, were “leaders whose voters trust them”. respect them and they move voices. “

“Letting Hakeem Jeffries stand up with me and say, ‘This is my candidate’ is of tremendous importance in an extremely important part of this city to win for anyone who wants to become mayor of New York City,” she added .

In the June primary, New Yorkers can rate up to five mayoral candidates, and Mr Jeffries said he may disclose other rankings of his choice for mayor, but said he has not yet made a decision on how to proceed.

In the interview, he outlined a detailed map of what he saw as Ms. Wiley’s path to victory, though with an overcrowded field of candidates there is certainly significant competition for every major political constituency in New York.

“I expect Eric Adams and Maya Wiley will perform best in the communities in central Brooklyn as well as in other traditionally African American neighborhoods in New York,” Jeffries said, noting Ms. Wiley’s potential in “both traditionally African American communities.” also in parts of the city where many white liberals live, with neighborhoods like Chelsea in Manhattan and progressive enclaves in Brooklyn being mentioned.

“It’s a pretty powerful option if the campaign can keep putting it together over the next few weeks,” he said.

Some rival Democrats have feared the prospect of a late surge in Ms. Wiley and the weeks ahead will test their ability to take advantage of that opportunity.

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Politics

U.S. Marine Main Warnagiris arrested for position in Trump mob

A still from a video released by the DOJ showing Christopher Warnagiris (circled in red), a Marine Corps officer stationed at Marine Corps Base Quantico, was arrested today in Virginia and charged with crimes related to violating the U.S. Capitol indicted January 6th.

Source: DOJ

A U.S. Navy officer on active duty was arrested Thursday and charged with violence against the police by a group of supporters of then-President Donald Trump during the January 6 invasion of the U.S. Capitol.

Major Christopher Warnagiris, 40, is accused of pushing past a line of police guarding the Capitol and pushing through a door in the Capitol’s east rotunda.

Warnagiris, a Woodbridge, Virginia resident stationed at Marine Corp Base Quantico, is being tried in federal court of aggression, resistance, or obstruction of certain officials, obstruction of law enforcement, obstruction of Congress, forcible entry into the Capitol Grounds and charged with entering or staying in a restricted building without legitimate authority.

He will appear in the US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia on Thursday afternoon.

A still from a video released by the DOJ showing Christopher Warnagiris (circled in red), a Marine Corps officer stationed at Marine Corps Base Quantico, was arrested today in Virginia and charged with crimes related to violating the U.S. Capitol indicted January 6th.

Source: DOJ

Court documents say that Warnagiris, after forcibly entering the Capitol, positioned himself in the corner of the door and propped up the door with his body and pulled other rioters inside.

Video surveillance footage shows Warnagiris bumping into a police officer who was trying to close the door, according to a criminal complaint.

The Pentagon had no immediate comment on the arrest, which took place in Virginia on Thursday morning.

Warnagiris was identified by a member of the public on March 16 after the person complained about seeing three photos of a man entering the Capitol.

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This witness recognized Warnagiris after working with him for about six months in 2019, the complaint read.

A second witness, “who has worked with Warnagiris for about nine months and sees him in close proximity several times a week,” identified him in the same photos that the first witness had seen according to the indictment.

In 2017, according to a news article, Warnagiris acted as the chief of operations for a landing force of US Marines and Navy sailors who were stationed on the French Navy’s LHD Tonnere amphibious assault ship during a two-month deployment in the area of ​​operations of the US 5th Fleet. Website.

U.S. Navy Maj. Christopher Warnagiris (R) interacts with a French naval officer during the embarkation of the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit aboard the French amphibious assault ship LHD Tonnerre (L9014).

Photo: Sgt. Jessica Lucio | DVIDS

About 440 people were arrested at the Capitol for the January 6 riot that began after Trump urged crowds to march there at a rally outside the White House.

The invasion of the Capitol complex disrupted a joint congressional session held that day to confirm President Joe Biden’s victory at the electoral college.

Trump falsely claimed for weeks after the presidential election in November that he had won the White House race and that Biden’s victory was the result of widespread electoral fraud.

– CNBCs Amanda Macias contributed to this report.