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    PGA Championship Round 4 live updates, leaderboard: Who will emerge from the logjam atop the leaderboard?

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    It’s been a bit since a major championship produced a truly dramatic finish. It’s gonna take something special for anyone to run away with the 2024 PGA Championship.

    Starting Sunday, 15 players will be within five shots of the lead. Collin Morikawa and Xander Schauffele, at -15, are a shot clear of Sahith Theegala, who stood tough Saturday despite a rough start. Behind them, well, we’ve got a traffic jam.

    Theegala immediately tied both Schauffele and Morikawa with an early birdie on Sunday afternoon, too, with a deep birdie putt. It’s in the early stages of the final round at Valhalla in Louisville, but it’s setting up to be a wild Sunday.

    If you’re looking for how to watch, click here.

    If you’re looking for the leaderboard, click here.

    If you’re looking for tee times, click here.

    And if you’re looking for on-course updates … we’ve got you covered right here …

    Live13 updates

    • DeChambeau now two back of Schauffele

      Bryson DeChambeau hit a fantastic second shot to set up an easy birdie putt on No. 2 to move to 14-under and two shots back of Xander Schauffele.

    • Xander Schauffele birdies No. 1

      Xander Schauffele birdies his first hole to get to 16-under and one shot clear of Collin Morikawa and Sahith Theegala.

      Schauffele’s second shot barely got over the bunker in front of the green but rolled out to give him a decent look for birdie that he converted.

    • Sahith Theegala gets to 15-under with a 55-footer

      Sahith Theegala has joined Xander Schauffele and Collin Morikawa at 15-under with a remarkable 55-foot birdie putt on No. 1.

    • Here we go …

      Everyone is now on the course, including the co-leaders, Collin Morikawa and Xander Schauffele.

      Schauffele’s drive on No. 1 tricked into the right rough; Morikawa found the fairway.

      Up ahead, Bryson DeChambeau had a good look at birdie on No. 1 to get to within a shot of the lead but pulled it. Can’t let those opportunities slip by on a day like today when red numbers are there for the taking.

    • Logjam is jamming up

      With some of those atop the leaderboard now on the course, 17 players are now within five shots of the lead. That includes Justin Thomas (-11), who holed out from the greenside bunker at No. 3.

    • Valhalla’s got snakes

      No need for grounds crew when you got this guy …

    • As the chasers to Xander Schauffele and Collin Morikawa begin their rounds, Lee Hodges makes a move early. He’s now -11 and four shots back of the lead after a birdie on No. 1.

      Scottie Scheffler, meanwhile, is still hitting shots like these even though he’s out of contention for the win following his poor round on Saturday.

    • What score will it take to win?

      With Xander Schauffele and Collin Morikawa at 15-under to start, what score is it going to take to win today? David Duval said on the CBS broadcast that 19-under wins it. With all the red numbers on the board so far today, the guess here is even lower — 20-under.

      That would be 66 from the leaders, and with 63 there for the taking, that brings everyone who is 12-under or better in the mix:

      Schauffele (-15)
      Morikawa (-15)
      Theegala (-14)
      Lowry (-13)
      DeChambeau (-13)
      Hovland (-13)
      Rose (-12)
      MacIntyre (-12)

    • Turns out, Scottie Scheffler is human

      A day after his first over-par round since last August, Scottie Scheffler has gotten off to a hom-hum start to round 4. A bogey at the first, followed by a missed six-footer for birdie has him at 6-under. Who could blame him for coming back to earth after what happened Friday, right?

    • We’ve already got a 64

      England’s Jordan Smith got out early and showed that there are scores still to be had at Valhalla. Behind six birdies, an eagle and even a bogey, Smith carded an 7-under 6

    • Golf can be cruel

      Brooks Koepka threw a dart into the seventh … and this happened:

      A likely tap in for birdie turned into a par. Koepka is 3-under on his round, but at 7-under for the tournament, a repeat isn’t happening.

    • 13th is driveable

      Here’s something to keep an eye on later in the day: the 349-yard par-4 13th is apparently driveable:

      He’d end up making that short putt for eagle.

      This could get interesting later in the day when the leaders head there with someone needing to make a move.

    • Final round underway

      The final round of the 2024 PGA Championship is underway and, yes, there are scores to be had today. Red figures dot the leaderboard already in the early way, including Brooks Koepka, who’s 2-under on his round through just four holes. If that’s any indication, it’s going to be a shootout to win for those atop the leaderboard.

    Earth-size planet found orbiting nearby star that will outlive the sun by 100 billion years

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    Astronomers have discovered an Earth-size planet that is showered with so much radiation, its atmosphere eroded away long ago, leaving it bare. Life as we know it can’t exist on this blistering world, but astronomers are interested in it for another reason: For the first time, they may be able to study the geology of a planet outside our solar system.

    The newfound exoplanet, named SPECULOOS-3 b, is a rocky planet roughly 55 light-years from Earth. It zips around its host star every 17 hours, but days and nights on the planet are endless. Astronomers suspect the planet is tidally locked to its star, like the moon is to Earth. A single dayside always faces the star, while the nightside is locked in eternal darkness. 

    Groundbreaking New Weight Loss Drug Is More Effective Than Current Treatments

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    By

    Associate Professor Christoffer Clemmensen from the University of Copenhagen has developed a new type of weight-loss drug that uses the hormone GLP-1 to deliver neuroplasticity-modulating molecules to specific brain areas, significantly enhancing weight loss in mice. This innovative approach could offer a potent alternative to current treatments with fewer side effects and is now moving towards clinical trials.

    A revolutionary study published in Nature introduces a new obesity treatment that surpasses the weight loss results of current drugs in mice. This method involves delivering molecules directly to the brain’s appetite control center, influencing neuroplasticity.

    A new weight-loss drug utilizes the hormone GLP-1 to target brain areas controlling appetite, potentially reducing side effects and improving effectiveness compared to existing drugs, with human trials pending.

    “I consider the drugs available on the marked today as the first generation of weight-loss drugs. Now we have developed a new type of weight-loss drug that affects the plasticity of the brain and appears to be highly effective.”

    So says Associate Professor and Group Leader Christoffer Clemmensen, from the Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research at the University of Copenhagen, who is senior author of the new study, which has been published in the prestigious scientific journal Nature.

    In the study, Christoffer Clemmensen and colleagues demonstrate a new use of the weight loss hormone GLP-1. GLP-1 can be used as a ‘Trojan Horse’ to smuggle a specific molecule into the brain of mice, where it successfully affects the plasticity of the brain and results in weight loss.

    “The effect of GLP-1 combined with these molecules is very strong. In some cases, the mice lose twice as much weight as mice treated with GLP-1 only,” Christoffer Clemmensen explains.

    This means that future patients can potentially achieve the same effect with a lower dosage. Moreover, the new drug may be an alternative to those who do not respond well to existing weight-loss drugs.

    “Our studies in mice show side effects similar to those experienced by patients treated with the weight loss drugs available on the market today, including nausea. But because the drug is so effective, we may be able to lower the dosage and thus mitigate some of the side effects in the future – though we still don’t know how humans respond to the drug,” he says.

    Testing of the new weight loss drug is still in the so-called preclinical phase, which is based on studies with cells and on experimental animals. The next step is clinical trials with human participants.

    “We already know that GLP-1-based drugs can lead to weight loss. The molecule that we have attached to GLP-1 affects the so-called glutamatergic neurotransmitter system, and in fact, other studies with human participants suggest that this family of compounds has significant weight loss potential. What is interesting here is the effect we get when we combine these two compounds into a single drug,” Christoffer Clemmensen stresses.

    The drug must undergo three phases of clinical trials on human participants. According to Christoffer Clemmensen, it can therefore take eight years before the drug could be available on the market.

    The brain defends excessive body weight

    Christoffer Clemmensen and colleagues developed an interest in molecules that are used to treat chronic depression and Alzheimer’s disease.

    The molecules block a receptor protein called the NMDA receptor, which play a key role in long-term changes in brain connections and have received scientific attention within fields of learning and memory. Drugs targeting these receptors will strengthen and/or weaken specific nerve connections.

    “This family of molecules can have a permanent effect on the brain. Studies have demonstrated that even a relative infrequent treatment can lead to persistent changes to the brain pathologies. We also see molecular signatures of neuroplasticity in our work, but in this case in the context of weight loss,” he explains.

    The human body has evolved to protect a certain body weight and fat mass. From an evolutionary perspective, this has probably been to our advantage, as it means that we have been able to survive periods of food scarcity. Today, food scarcity is not a problem in large parts of the world, where an increasing part of the population suffers from obesity.

    “Today, more than one billion people worldwide have a BMI of 30 or more. This makes it increasingly relevant to develop drugs to aid this disease, and which can help the organism to sustain a lower weight. This topic is something we invest a lot of energy in researching,” says Christoffer Clemmensen.

    A Trojan Horse smuggles small molecule modulators of neuroplasticity into appetite-regulating neurons

    We know that drugs based on the intestinal hormone GLP-1 effectively target the part of the brain that is key to weight loss, namely the appetite control center.

    “What is spectacular – on a cellular level – about this new drug is the fact that it combines GLP-1 and molecules that block the NMDA receptor. It exploits GLP-1 as a Trojan Horse to smuggle these small molecules exclusively into the neurons that affect appetite control. Without GLP-1, the molecules that target the NMDA receptor would affect the entire brain and thus be non-specific,” says Postdoc Jonas Petersen from the Clemmensen Group, who is the first author on the study and the chemist who synthesized the molecules.

    Non-specific drugs are often associated with severe side effects, which have previously been seen in drugs for treating different neurobiological conditions.

    “A lot of brain disorders are difficult to treat, because the drugs need to cross the so-called blood-brain barrier. Whereas large molecules like peptides and proteins generally have difficulties accessing the brain, many small molecules have unlimited access to the entire brain. We have used the GLP-1 peptide’s specific access to the appetite control center in the brain to deliver one of these otherwise non-specific substances to this region only,” Christoffer Clemmensen says and adds:

    “In this study, we have focused on obesity and weight loss, but in fact this is a completely new approach for delivering drugs to specific parts of the brain. So, I hope our research can pave the way for a whole new class of drugs for treating conditions like neurodegenerative diseases or psychiatric disorders.”

    Reference: “GLP-1-directed NMDA receptor antagonism for obesity treatment” by Jonas Petersen, Mette Q. Ludwig, Vaida Juozaityte, Pablo Ranea-Robles, Charlotte Svendsen, Eunsang Hwang, Amalie W. Kristensen, Nicole Fadahunsi, Jens Lund, Alberte W. Breum, Cecilie V. Mathiesen, Luisa Sachs, Roger Moreno-Justicia, Rebecca Rohlfs, James C. Ford, Jonathan D. Douros, Brian Finan, Bryan Portillo, Kyle Grose, Jacob E. Petersen, Mette Trauelsen, Annette Feuchtinger, Richard D. DiMarchi, Thue W. Schwartz, Atul S. Deshmukh, Morten B. Thomsen, Kristi A. Kohlmeier, Kevin W. Williams, Tune H. Pers, Bente Frølund, Kristian Strømgaard, Anders B. Klein and Christoffer Clemmensen, 15 May 2024, Nature.
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07419-8

    Christoffer Clemmensen, along with postdoc Jonas Petersen and a former scientist from the University of Copenhagen (Anders Klein), have co-founded of the biotech company Ousia Pharma, which is a spinout company from the University of Copenhagen. The company is continuing to develop the medical concept presented in this study for the treatment of severe obesity.

    Blue Origin launch of tourism rocket ends nearly 2-year hiatus

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    Blue Origin

    Blue Origin NS-25 launches on Sunday, May 19.

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    CNN
     — 

    Blue Origin’s tourism rocket has launched passengers to the edge of space for the first time in nearly two years, ending a hiatus prompted by a failed uncrewed test flight.

    The New Shepard rocket and capsule lifted off at 9:36 a.m. CT (10:36 a.m. ET) from Blue Origin’s facilities on a private ranch in West Texas. The expected launch time has since shifted to 8:52 a.m. CT (9:52 a.m. ET), according to a Sunday update from Blue Origin. A livestream of the mission, called NS-25, will begin at about 8:12 a.m. CT (9:12 a.m. ET) on the Jeff Bezos-founded company’s website.

    NS-25, Blue Origin’s seventh crewed flight to date, carried six customers aboard the capsule: venture capitalist Mason Angel; Sylvain Chiron, founder of the French craft brewery Brasserie Mont-Blanc; software engineer and entrepreneur Kenneth L. Hess; retired accountant Carol Schaller; aviator Gopi Thotakura; and Ed Dwight, a retired US Air Force captain selected by President John F. Kennedy in 1961 to be the nation’s first Black astronaut candidate.

    Despite completing training at the Aerospace Research Pilot School and receiving an Air Force recommendation, Dwight ultimately didn’t make the NASA Astronaut Corps. He went on to become an entrepreneur and a sculptor; a new National Geographic documentary on Black astronauts, “The Space Race,” highlights Dwight’s pioneering story.

    “I had no intention of being an astronaut. That was the last thing on my bucket list,” Dwight said in the documentary. “But once I was given the challenge, then everything changes.”

    Bob Levey/Getty Images

    Ed Dwight attends a screening of “The Space Race” documentary in January in Houston. At 90, Dwight is heading to space more than 60 years after President John F. Kennedy selected him as the nation’s first Black astronaut candidate.

    Dwight completed that challenge and reached the edge of space at the age of 90, making him the oldest person to venture to such heights, according to a spokesperson from Blue Origin.

    During the mission, the crew soared to more than three times the speed of sound, or more than 2,000 miles per hour. The rocket vaulted the capsule past the Kármán line, an area 62 miles (100 kilometers) above Earth’s surface that is widely recognized as the altitude at which outer space begins — but there’s a lot of gray area.

    And at the peak of the flight, passengers experienced a few minutes of weightlessness and striking views of Earth through the cabin windows.

    The launch followed the success of an uncrewed science mission in December — the New Shepard program’s first flight since the mishap more than a year earlier.

    A New Shepard rocket and spacecraft were set to launch a batch of science instruments on September 12, 2022. But one minute into flight, the rocket endured Max Q — an aerospace term that refers to a moment of maximum stress on a vehicle. It occurs when the rocket is at a relatively low altitude — where the atmosphere is still fairly thick — but the spacecraft is moving at high speeds, creating a moment of intense pressure on the vehicle.

    Around that time, the rocket appeared to emit a massive burst of flames. The New Shepard capsule, which rides atop the rocket, then initiated its launch abort system — firing up a small engine to blast itself safely away from the malfunctioning rocket. That system worked as intended, parachuting the capsule to a safe landing.

    Blue Origin later revealed that the cause of the failure was a problem with the engine nozzle, a large cone that directs the flaming exhaust at the rocket’s bottom. Onboard computers accurately detected the failure and shut the engine down, according to the company.

    Blue Origin

    The NS-25 mission will carry a six-person crew, including (from left) Sylvain Chiron, Kenneth L. Hess, Ed Dwight, Gopi Thotakura, Mason Angel and Carol Schaller.

    No injuries were reported on the ground, and Blue Origin said the science payloads and the capsule could be flown again.

    But the rocket, left without a functioning engine, smashed back into the ground and was destroyed. Typically after New Shepard launches, the rocket booster guides itself back to a safe upright landing so it can be flown again.

    During a December interview with podcaster Lex Fridman, Bezos said the escape system that jettisoned the capsule to safety is the most difficult piece of engineering in the entire rocket — but “it is the reason that I am comfortable letting anyone go on New Shepard.”

    “The (rocket) booster is as safe and reliable as we can make it,” Bezos added. “The power density is so enormous that it is impossible to ever be sure that nothing will go wrong. … So the only way to improve safety is to have an escape system.

    “A tourism vehicle has to be designed in my view … to be as safe as one can make it,” he said. “You can’t make it perfectly safe. It’s impossible.”

    Rocket fix and return to service

    The Federal Aviation Administration, which licenses commercial rocket launches and is charged with ensuring public safety, oversaw an investigation into the failure. The probe revealed that the engine nozzle failed because it experienced higher temperatures than what the company had anticipated.

    To fix the issue, Blue Origin said it implemented “design changes to the combustion chamber” — the area of the engine where fuel explosively mixes with oxidizer — and adjusted “operating parameters,” or the data that the company uses to model safe flights.

    “Additional design changes to the nozzle have improved structural performance under thermal and dynamic loads,” the company said in a March 2023 statement.

    The FAA formally concluded the mishap investigation on September 27, 2023, outlining 21 “corrective actions” Blue Origin needed to implement before returning to flight. The agency did not reveal details on what those actions were, noting the report “contains proprietary data and U.S  Export Control information and is not available for public release.”

    The changes and New Shephard’s successful December flight teed up the company to restart its trips to space for thrill seekers.

    Before the September 2022 failure, New Shepard rockets had flown 22 consecutive successful missions — including six with passengers on board. Bezos flew aboard the rocket in 2021. Other notable space tourists previously carried by the vehicle include “Star Trek” actor William Shatner and “Good Morning America” host Michael Strahan.

    CNN’s Madeline Holcombe contributed to this report.

    Taiwan ramps up security for new president’s inauguration amid China threat | Politics News

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    Taipei’s defence ministry says it detected seven Chinese aircraft and as many naval vessels around Taiwan in the past 24 hours.

    On the eve of Lai Ching-te’s inauguration as Taiwan’s new president, the island’s coastguard has ramped up patrols over the weekend amid the increased presence of Chinese vessels.

    Taipei’s Coast Guard Administration said on Sunday it had sent out personnel to “patrol all hours of the day and night” around Taiwan’s three major outlying islands: Kinmen, Matsu and Penghu.

    “In order to ensure the security of the sea area and border safety during the inauguration ceremony, the Ocean Affairs Council’s Coast Guard Administration’s Kinmen-Matsu-Penghu Division once again implemented a powerful patrol operation … to closely monitor suspicious targets,” it said in a statement.

    “The Kinmen-Matsu-Penghu Division said that the national security work will not slacken during the important celebrations,” it added.

    Taipei’s Ministry of National Defense earlier reported that it had detected seven Chinese aircraft and seven naval vessels around Taiwan in the 24-hour period leading up to 6am on Sunday (22:00 GMT, Saturday).

    Lai spent his Sunday fishing shrimp with leaders from some of Taiwan’s handful of remaining diplomatic allies, including Marshall Islands President Hilda Heine.

    King Mswati III of Eswatini, left, Taiwan’s President-elect Lai Ching-te, centre, and Taiwan’s Vice President-elect Hsiao Bi-khim, right, fish at a shrimp farm in Taipei [Aden Hsu/AFP]

    Only 12 countries now maintain formal diplomatic relations with Taiwan, mostly poorer developing nations.

    Lai, detested by Beijing as a “separatist”, is expected to pledge to secure stability by maintaining the status quo in the island’s relationship with China in his inauguration speech on Monday.

    Before his inauguration, supporters of the opposition Taiwan People’s Party (TPP) are set to march in Taipei to protest against Lai’s governing Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) and demand that Lai carry out parliamentary, judicial and constitutional reforms.

    ‘Dangerous separatist’

    China claims democratic Taiwan as part of its territory, maintaining a near-daily military presence with frequent appearances of fighter jets, drones and naval ships around the island.

    It has in recent months sent in coastguard ships around Kinmen, an outlying island administered by Taipei located just 5km (3 miles) from the Chinese city of Xiamen.

    Kinmen has been the site of ramped-up tensions after Lai, whom China has branded a “dangerous separatist”, was elected in Taiwan’s January elections.


    A deadly fishing incident in February involving a Chinese speedboat kicked off a row between China and Taiwan, which has yet to be resolved.

    It was carrying four people and capsized on February 14 near Kinmen while Taiwan’s coastguard was pursuing it, killing two people.

    Taipei’s coastguard defended its actions, saying the boat was within “prohibited waters” and zigzagging before it capsized. But Beijing has accused Taipei of “hiding the truth” about the incident.

    China has since stepped up patrols around Kinmen. At least five formations of official Chinese ships have briefly sailed through Kinmen’s restricted waters this month.

    Across the strait in the Chinese seaside city of Pingtan, also home to a military base, the AFP news agency said its reporters saw at least two military transport helicopters fly overhead on Sunday morning.

    Bruce Nordstrom, former chair of the Seattle-based retailer, dies at 90

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    Bruce Nordstrom, who helped guide the massive growth that cemented his family’s namesake Seattle-based company as a national retailer, died Saturday morning at his home in Seattle. He was 90.

    Part of the third generation of family leadership that took over in 1968 and encouraged the company to go public in 1971, Nordstrom helped steer the company during a key period that included expansion throughout Washington, Oregon, Alaska and — crucially — California in the 1970s.

    “Our dad will be remembered not only for his significant contributions to Nordstrom but also for his unwavering dedication to his family and friends,” sons Pete and Erik Nordstrom, president and chief executive officer of the company, respectively, said in a statement. “His passion, integrity and tireless work ethic served as an inspiration to everyone around him. But perhaps his greatest achievement was being an amazing father, husband and grandfather.”

    He championed conquest in the world of retail, irked by industry smugness that dismissed a Seattle-based retailer. 

    Nordstrom recalled to The New York Times in 2019 that, as the company expanded to California decades earlier, “I was told in so many words by the experts, you know, ‘you guys are basically a bunch of dumb Swedes selling to another bunch of dumb Swedes, up in Seattle, in the woods up there. And you’re going to California? Do you understand how sophisticated and hip it is?’ It got under my fingernails so bad.” 

    By 1980, the company was the third-largest specialty retailer in the country and planned to open up to 25 new stores in the coming decade. 

    Nordstrom credited the company’s broad offerings, dismissing industry advice to specialize in serving a specific customer demographic. “Our goal was to sell shoes to everyone in Seattle,” he said. 

    Even as the store’s offerings expanded, shoes were still a draw, Nordstrom said. “That gets them in, and, in the meantime, you sell them everything else.”

    Nordstrom, who studied economics at the University of Washington, held various leadership positions in his decadeslong career. Affectionately known as “Mr. Bruce” by employees, he started his career in the Nordstrom stockroom and sales floor of the flagship Seattle location.

    “He loved this company. He loved the business (especially selling shoes) but most of all, he loved our people and culture,” the family said in a message to company employees Saturday. “His quiet wisdom shone through in his commitment to doing the right thing for our customers, for the people around him, and for our community.”

    In 1968, he and his cousins Jim and John Nordstrom, along with cousin-in-law Jack McMillan, took over the company and made it public three years later.

    He retired as co-chairman in 1995, then served on the board until the mid-2000s. That period included the launch of the company’s online sales in the late 1990s. He retired as chairman of the board in 2006. 

    His “strategic vision and relentless pursuit of customer excellence” propelled the company to “new heights,” the statement to employees said, shaping its future and leaving an “indelible mark” on its success.   

    Nordstrom also oversaw tough times in the company’s history. 

    The state Department of Labor and Industries alleged in 1990 that Nordstrom routinely failed to pay employees for work, such as attending meetings and delivering purchases to customers. 

    In the ‘90s, the retailer saw sluggish sales and earnings. Following a brief period when the company was controlled by nonfamily members, Nordstrom left retirement to become chairman in 2000, promising to help right the ship.  

    In the following years, Nordstrom navigated negative customer feedback after an ad campaign urging customers to “reinvent yourself” alienated some loyal shoppers.

    By the mid-2000s, the company was recovering, with stock prices and sales climbing. 

    During Nordstrom’s final annual shareholders meeting as chairman, a longtime customer praised the company during a question-and-answer session, saying she was happy Nordstrom “destroyed” East Coast competition. “Mr. Bruce, you did something right,” she said.  

    He was the former president of the Downtown Seattle Association, Children’s Hospital Foundation and Seattle Goodwill. He also served as chairman of the United Way of King County Campaign in 1984. 

    Nordstrom is survived by his wife Jeannie — who his family said was at his side when he died — his sister Anne Gittinger, his sons Pete and Erik, daughters-in-law Brandy, Julie and Molly, and 7 grandchildren, Alex, Andy, Leigh, Sam, Sara, Micki and Chet.

    His son, former co-president Blake W. Nordstrom, died in 2019 at the age of 58.

    “Our dad leaves a powerful legacy as a legendary business leader, a generous community citizen and a loyal friend,” Nordstrom’s sons said.

    Material from The Seattle Times archives is included in this report.

    CNN political commentator Alice Stewart dies

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    CNN
     — 

    Alice Stewart, a veteran political adviser and CNN political commentator who worked on several GOP presidential campaigns, has died. She was 58.

    Law enforcement officials told CNN that Stewart’s body was found outdoors in the Belle View neighborhood in northern Virginia early Saturday morning. No foul play is suspected, and officers believe a medical emergency occurred.

    “Alice was a very dear friend and colleague to all of us at CNN,” Mark Thompson, the network’s CEO, said in an email to staff Saturday. “A political veteran and an Emmy Award-winning journalist who brought an incomparable spark to CNN’s coverage, known across our bureaus not only for her political savvy, but for her unwavering kindness. Our hearts are heavy as we mourn such an extraordinary loss.”

    Stewart was born on March 11, 1966, in Atlanta.

    Stewart started her career as a local reporter and producer in Georgia before moving to Little Rock, Arkansas, to be a news anchor, she told Harvard International Review. She went on to serve as the communications director in then-Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee’s office before assuming a similar role for his presidential run in 2008.

    She also served as the communications director for the 2012 Republican presidential bids of former Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann and then former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, also a former CNN commentator. Most recently, Stewart was the communications director for Texas Sen. Ted Cruz’s 2016 GOP presidential campaign.

    “Alice was wonderful and talented and a dear friend,” Cruz said in a post on X. “She lived every day to the fullest, and she will be deeply missed.”



    02:56 – Source: CNN

    ‘I’m really heartbroken’: Jim Acosta gets emotional remembering Alice Stewart

    CNN hired Stewart as a political commentator ahead of the 2016 election, and she appeared on air frequently to provide insight on the political news of the day, including as recently as Friday on “The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer.”

    “We always invited her to come on my show because we knew we would be a little bit smarter at the end of that conversation,” Blitzer told Jessica Dean on “CNN Newsroom.” “She helped our viewers better appreciate what was going on and that’s why we will miss her so much.”

    CNN anchor and chief political correspondent Dana Bash, who knew Stewart for nearly two decades after first meeting her when Stewart worked for the Huckabee campaign, remembered her Saturday as “somebody who told it straight.”

    “One of the many reasons why she was so valuable to us on our political panels … is because she brought that experience,” Bash added. “She brought that understanding of how Republican politics, Republican campaigns work and she never, ever did it with anything other than a smile.”

    Speaking about her role as a commentator for the network, Stewart told Harvard Political Review in 2020 that she brings “a perspective that I think CNN appreciates.”

    “My position at CNN is to be a conservative voice yet an independent thinker,” Stewart said. “I’m not a Kool-Aid drinker; I’m not a never-Trumper, and I didn’t check my common sense and decency at the door when I voted for (Trump).”

    Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson on Saturday remembered Stewart as “someone that believes that politics was about making friends and not creating enemies.”

    He shared with CNN that Stewart “was one of the first ones to call me and encourage me” after he suspended his presidential campaign earlier this year, and that they spoke just last week “about the mess that we see in our politics today.”

    “She was trying to change that and we’ll miss her,” Hutchinson added.

    Stewart was a co-host of the podcast “Hot Mics From Left to Right,” alongside fellow CNN commentator Maria Cardona.

    “I just can’t believe that she’s gone,” Cardona said on “CNN Newsroom,” adding that the two were going to record an episode of their podcast Saturday. “I want everyone to know what a special person she was, especially in this industry. As you know, today’s politics can be indecent and so dirty, and Alice was just such a loving, shining light.”



    04:42 – Source: CNN

    Hear Maria Cardona’s emotional tribute to her ‘sister’ Alice Stewart

    Stewart also served on the senior advisory committee at the Institute of Politics at Harvard University’s Kennedy School, where she previously was a fellow.

    In her free time, Stewart was an avid runner. She frequently posted photos from road races on social media, including from the TCS New York City Marathon, which she ran in November, and the Credit Union Cherry Blossom 10 Mile race, which she ran last month.

    This story has been updated with additional information.

    CNN’s Kayla Gallagher contributed to this report.

    Blue Origin flies thrill seekers to space after two year hiatus

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    Blue Origin is set to fly adventurers to the final frontier on Sunday for the first time in nearly two years, reigniting competition in the space tourism market after a rocket mishap put its crewed operations on hold.

    Six people including Black sculptor and former Air Force pilot Ed Dwight, who was controversially spurned by NASA’s astronaut corps in the 1960s, will blast off at around 8:30 am local time (1330 GMT) from the company’s Launch Site One base in west Texas.

    Dwight — at 90 years, 8 months and 10 days — is set to become the oldest person to go to space, narrowly pipping Star Trek actor William Shatner, who was almost two months younger when he launched with Blue Origin in 2021.

    Mission NS-25 is the seventh human flight for the enterprise owned and founded by Amazon billionaire Jeff Bezos, who sees short jaunts on the New Shepard suborbital vehicle as a stepping stone to greater ambitions, including the development of a full-fledged heavy rocket and lunar lander.

    French entrepreneur Sylvain Chiron, one of the crew, told AFP he was most excited about “this sensation of leaving the world of men and seeing the Earth as a whole, from above, without borders, with all its fragility and beauty.”

    To date, Blue Origin has flown 31 people aboard New Shepard — a small, fully reusable rocket system named after Alan Shepard, the first American in space.

    – Second nonagenarian –

    The program encountered a setback when a New Shepard rocket caught fire shortly after launch on September 12, 2022. The uncrewed capsule ejected in time, meaning astronauts would have been safe had they flown.

    A federal investigation revealed an overheating engine nozzle was at fault. Blue Origin took corrective steps and carried out a successful uncrewed launch in December 2023, paving the way for Sunday’s mission.

    After lift-off, the sleek and roomy capsule separates from the booster, which produces zero carbon emissions as its fuel — liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen — combust to produce water vapor. The rocket performs a precision vertical landing.

    As the spaceship soars beyond the Karman Line, the internationally recognized boundary of space 62 miles (100 kilometers) above sea level, passengers can marvel at the Earth’s curvature and unbuckle their seats to float — or even perform jumping jacks — during a few minutes of weightlessness.

    The capsule then reenters the atmosphere, deploying its parachutes for a gentle desert landing in a puff of sand.

    Bezos himself was on the program’s first ever crewed flight in 2021. A few months later, Shatner blurred the lines between science fiction and reality when he became the world’s oldest ever astronaut, decades after he first played a space traveler.

    Dwight will become only the second nonagenarian to venture beyond Earth.

    Ticket prices are a well-guarded secret, but guests like Dwight — whose seat was sponsored by the nonprofit Space for Humanity — ride for free.

    – To space, finally  –

    Blue Origin’s competitor in suborbital space is Virgin Galactic, which deploys a supersonic spaceplane that is dropped from beneath the wings of a massive carrier plane at high altitude.

    Virgin Galactic experienced its own two-year safety pause because of an anomaly linked with the 2021 flight that carried its founder British tycoon Richard Branson into space. But the company later hit its stride with half a dozen successful flights in quick succession.

    Its next mission is set for June, after which it will head into another pause to build out a new class of advanced spaceplane.

    Sunday’s mission finally gives Dwight the chance he was denied decades ago.

    He was an elite test pilot when he was appointed by president John F Kennedy to join a highly competitive Air Force program known as a pathway for the astronaut corps, but was ultimately not picked.

    He left the military in 1966, citing the strain of racial politics, before dedicating his life to telling Black history through sculpture. His art, displayed around the country, includes iconic figures like Martin Luther King Jr, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman and more.

    ia-la/bjt

    Analysis: Why Republicans are likely to win the Senate this year

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    Allison Robbert/Bloomberg/Getty Images

    The US Capitol in Washington, DC, is seen on May 16, 2024.



    CNN
     — 

    The race for the White House hogs most of the attention in a presidential election year, relegating the race for Congress to ugly stepsister status.

    But in recent years, we’ve all learned how important down-ballot races can be in shaping American policy. That’s especially true for the Senate, which is responsible for the confirmations of government officials and Supreme Court nominees.

    In this year’s battle for the Senate, like so many cycles before, we have the same competing forces: The election fundamentals favor Republicans, while candidate quality appears to favor Democrats, who currently hold a narrow majority in the chamber.

    For now, though, it appears even flawed Republican candidates likely won’t be able to stop their side from winning Senate control.

    Democrats face two “M” problems: the math and the map.

    Let’s start with the math. Republicans need a net gain of one seat to win the Senate if Donald Trump wins the presidency (with his vice president casting any tie-breaking votes). They need a net gain of two seats for a majority regardless of who wins the presidential election.

    Republicans have a lot of options to net those one or two seats. Senate Democrats (including independents who caucus with them) hold 23 seats up for election this year; Republicans hold 11.

    This brings us to the map.

    Eight of the 23 Democratic seats up for election this year are in states either where Trump won in 2016 or where he is up by at least 5 points in the polls now. Five of them are in states where Trump holds at least a 5-point advantage. Three are in states where Trump won by at least 8 points in 2016 and 2020 and where the incumbent senator is the only Democrat in nonjudicial statewide office.

    One of those three is West Virginia, where Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin is retiring. Trump won the state by 39 points in 2020, and every respectable nonpartisan handicapping outlet views the seat as a safe Republican pickup.

    There are only two Republican Senate seats being targeted by Democrats – Florida and Texas, which Trump carried by single digits in 2020. But the GOP incumbents in both states currently lead their Democratic opponents by double digits.

    Every other Republican-held Senate seat on the ballot this year is in a state where GOP presidential candidates have dominated since 2012.

    It’s no wonder that my colleague Simone Pathe had only one Republican seat (Texas) on her most recent list of the 10 Senate seats most likely to flip this year, and that was at No. 10.

    But is the race for the Senate really over if Republicans just win West Virginia?

    No, we can’t call it just yet, and it’s not just because we’re still months before the general election. It’s because if President Joe Biden does win – a real possibility – it’s not entirely clear which second Senate seat Republicans will pick up to gain control.

    Among the eight Democratic Senate seats mentioned above, there are no states beyond West Virginia where the polls (or expert judgment) show Republicans with a solid lead, despite the fundamentals favoring their party this year. Democratic Senate candidates seem to be at least tied or ahead in Arizona, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

    The Democratic Senate candidates’ margins outran Biden’s in the four states – Arizona, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin – that The New York Times and Siena College recently polled. And we’re not just talking by a little bit; we’re talking about them doing better than Biden by at least 5 points in those four states among likely voters.

    A key reason the Democratic candidates are doing so much better than Biden is because they’re popular. We know from recent polls that Sens. Bob Casey of Pennsylvania and Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin had positive net favorability ratings, while Biden’s numbers were well under water in these states.

    Meanwhile in Arizona, Republicans appear poised to nominate Kari Lake for Senate. Lake was last seen losing a very winnable gubernatorial election in 2022 and her high unfavorable score with state voters was a big reason why Inside Elections recently shifted its rating of the race in the Democratic direction.

    Of course, Democratic Senate candidates outrunning the top of the ticket is nothing new. Republicans have memorably lost plenty of very winnable seats over the past decade and a half with bad candidates (see 2010 with Nevada’s Sharron Angle and 2012 with Missouri’s Todd Akin).

    Two years ago, Republicans had a net loss of one Senate seat as Democrats retained control of the chamber in a midterm election when Biden had approval ratings in the low 40s. Again, the GOP ran several unpopular candidates (e.g., Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania), while Democrats ran relatively popular ones (e.g., Mark Kelly in Arizona)

    Back to the math and map

    Still, it’s hard to ignore Republicans’ advantage in 2024 with the math and the map. Senate Democrats have no margin for error, and they are unlikely to win all seven of their seats currently seen as competitive.

    The past two presidential cycles tell the tale: Just one state (Maine in 2020) voted differently in the presidential and Senate races.

    Trump likely holds a comfortable polling advantage of at least 5 points over Biden right now in Arizona, Nevada, Montana and Ohio. His lead in Montana is likely in the double digits. Putting aside the polls, Montana and Ohio were not competitive on the presidential level in either 2016 or 2020 and likely won’t be this fall.

    For Democrats to have any chance of holding the Senate, Republicans would have to lose all these Senate races. Then they’d have to lose in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin – all states that Trump could very well win again.

    Republicans would also have to lose in Maryland – where Biden will almost certainly win in a blowout, but where GOP former Gov. Larry Hogan has been competitive in the polling.

    Republicans may be prone to blowing it when it comes to Senate races. But I’m not even sure the Washington Generals of Senate races can blow this one.

    As a memorable “Simpsons” episode once put it, Republicans may finally be “due.”

    A Loss at Mercedes-Benz Slows U.A.W.’s Southern Campaign

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    After suffering a setback at two Mercedes-Benz plants in Alabama on Friday, the United Automobile Workers union’s efforts to organize other auto factories in the South are likely to slow and could struggle to make headway.

    About 56 percent of the Mercedes workers who voted rejected the U.A.W. in an election after the union chalked up two major wins this year. In April, workers at a Volkswagen plant in Tennessee voted to join the union, the first large nonunion auto plant in the South to do so. Weeks later, the union negotiated a new contract bringing significant pay and benefit improvements for its members at several North Carolina factories owned by Daimler Truck.

    “Losing at Mercedes is not death for the union,” said Arthur Wheaton, director of labor studies at Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations. “It just means they’ll have less confidence going to the next plant. The U.A.W. is in it for the long run. I don’t think they’re going to stop just because they lost here.”

    Since its founding in 1935, the U.A.W. has almost exclusively represented workers employed by the three Michigan-based automakers: General Motors, Ford Motor, and Chrysler, now part of Stellantis. And it has long struggled to make headway at plants owned by foreign manufacturers, especially in Southern states where anti-union sentiment runs deep.

    Workers at the Volkswagen plant had voted against being represented by the U.A.W. twice by narrow margins before the recent union win there. An effort a decade ago to organize one of the Mercedes plants failed to build enough support for an election.

    Harley Shaiken, a professor emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, noted that broad union organizing efforts seldom proceeded smoothly. In the 1930s, the U.A.W. won recognition at G.M. and Chrysler but struggled at Ford, which continued employing nonunion workers for a few years.

    “I have no doubt they will continue organizing and eventually try for another vote,” he said.

    In its past efforts in the South, the union was hampered by a negative image, which may have also played a part in the U.A.W.’s loss at Mercedes. For years, the three Michigan automakers were cutting jobs and closing plants, in part because of rigid and costly labor contracts. The union was also hurt by corruption cases that put several former senior officials, including two former U.A.W. presidents, behind bars.

    Business leaders in Alabama ran a campaign against the U.A.W. that was based in part on the contention that the union was responsible for the decline of Detroit. In a January opinion essay published in The Alabama Daily News, the chief executive of the Business Council of Alabama, Helena Duncan, said the state would suffer the same fate if workers voted for the union.

    “Much of the decay that exists in the ‘Motor City’ today results from untenable demands that the U.A.W. placed on its automobile manufacturers, an unwise move that sent untold numbers of jobs to right-to-work states like ours and crippled a once great metropolis,” Ms. Duncan wrote.

    A year ago, the union elected a new president, Shawn Fain, who was untouched by the corruption scandals and vowed to take a more aggressive approach in contract talks. Then last fall, the union came away with substantial pay and benefit gains in negotiations with the Detroit automakers, after targeted strikes over some 40 days. Hundreds of Southern autoworkers began reaching out, asking for help organizing their nonunion plants. The U.A.W. responded by announcing that it would spend $40 million on organizing drives over the next two years.

    “I’m not scared at all,” Mr. Fain said Friday in Alabama after the union lost the Mercedes vote. “I believe workers want unions, I believe they want justice, and we’re going to continue doing what we can do.”

    Mercedes in a statement emphasized its direct relationship with workers and said it looked forward to making sure the company was “not only their employer of choice, but a place they would recommend to friends and family.”

    The union has signaled that it expects to focus its organizing efforts on another Alabama plant — a Hyundai factory in Montgomery. But organizing that plant will probably be even harder than the campaign at the Mercedes factories, said Erik Gordon, a University of Michigan business professor who follows the auto industry.

    The U.A.W. had allies at Volkswagen and Mercedes. Unions are powerful players in Germany, where those two companies are based. Under German law, worker representatives must occupy half the seats on a company’s supervisory board, the equivalent of an American board of directors.

    Volkswagen and Mercedes both have groups called works councils through which managers and employees discuss and negotiate workplace issues and production plans. In its drive at the Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, the U.A.W. had the support of the company’s works council and IG Metall, the powerful union that represents all German automotive workers.

    The U.A.W. won’t have that kind of support at Hyundai’s Montgomery plant, Mr. Gordon said. “In general, Korean car companies have more adversarial relationships with unions than do the German manufacturers,” he said. “Korean companies are less used to sitting together in a conference room with unions.”

    Last year, weeks after the U.A.W. won pay and benefit increases from the three Michigan-based automakers, Hyundai announced that it would increase its workers’ pay sharply over the next four years — a move widely seen as an attempt to dampen workers’ interest in joining the U.A.W.

    “The decision to be represented by a union is up to our team members,” Hyundai said in a statement.

    The Montgomery plant makes two popular sport utility vehicles — the Tucson and Santa Fe — and employs about 4,000 workers. An earlier U.A.W. drive to organize the plant in 2016 petered out without coming to a vote.

    Last fall, the union said it planned to target plants owned by 10 foreign-owned automakers — Toyota, Honda, Hyundai, Nissan, BMW, Mercedes, Subaru, Volkswagen, Mazda and Volvo — and others owned by Tesla, which is based in Texas, and two smaller electric vehicle start-ups, Lucid and Rivian, both based in California.

    The U.S. plants owned by those foreign and U.S. companies employ nearly 150,000 workers in 13 states, the union said.

    In Alabama, however, the U.A.W. faced perhaps a more hostile environment than anywhere else. While it was campaigning at Mercedes, Gov. Kay Ivey spoke out against the union and headed a group of six Southern governors, all Republicans, who issued a letter suggesting unionizing could cause automakers to move jobs out of their states. One senior Alabama politician described the U.A.W. as “leeches.”

    Mercedes brought in Nick Saban, the hugely popular former football coach at the University of Alabama, to talk to workers in an effort to persuade them to vote against the U.A.W.

    Unions are traditionally seen as a Northern institution and are often linked with the civil rights movement, which alienates many people in Alabama, Mr. Gordon said. “It’s a very tough place for the U.A.W.,” he said.

    That antipathy could also make it hard for the U.A.W. to negotiate contracts guaranteeing its members raises and other gains even if it wins unionizing votes. Lawmakers who oppose unions may put pressure on employers not to make big concessions in negotiations.

    Mr. Fain and the U.A.W. have argued that unions are the best way for workers to demand higher wages when automakers are enjoying strong sales and profits in North America.

    Public support of unions is stronger than it has been in years, including in the South. This year, 600 workers at an electric bus factory in Alabama voted to join the Communications Workers of America union. A week ago, they negotiated a new contract delivering pay raises and enhanced benefits.

    The U.A.W. and other unions also have enjoyed the support of President Biden, who last fall joined striking autoworkers on a picket line in Michigan. The union endorsed Mr. Biden in this year’s election.

    But that close association with the president may also hurt the U.A.W. with conservative workers in a Southern state who prefer Mr. Biden’s opponent — former President Donald J. Trump. Mr. Fain and Mr. Trump have often criticized each other, but polls have shown that a sizable minority of union households support the former president.