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Sacramento, California CNN —Justice Elena Kagan on Thursday defended the code of conduct the Supreme Court created last year, but conceded there needs to be a way to enforce the rules for it to be more effective. “I think that the rules that we put out are good ones,” Kagan said at a judicial conference in Sacramento. “I think that the thing that can be criticized is, you know, rules usually have enforcement mechanisms attached to them. Justice Scalia and Justice Ginsburg pose on an elephant in Rajistan during their tour of India in 1994. Collection of the Supreme Court of the United StatesBut asked on Thursday whether she thought collegiality is important for the court, Kagan made clear that while she saw it as important, it shouldn’t ultimately matter to the public.
Persons: Elena Kagan, ” Kagan, Kagan, , , , John Roberts, “ I’m, Roberts, Trump, Joe Biden, Feedback Biden, , ’ ”, eked, Donald Trump’s, Barack Obama, Antonin Scalia, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Justice Scalia, Ginsburg, collegiality, shouldn’t Organizations: California CNN, Democratic, Judicial, Department, GOP, Biden, Department of Education, Trump, CNN Locations: Sacramento, California, Washington, Rajistan, India
Alphabet investors may want to prepare for some volatility moving forward. However, shares fell about 5% as the company also reported lower-than-expected YouTube advertising revenue. On top of that, Alphabet highlighted plans to boost capital expenditures as it races to meet rising artificial intelligence demand. That is due in part to tough advertising comparisons amid the anniversary of a particular strong period for Asia and Pacific retailers. The move to 'future proof' business Some analysts and investors are reading the tea leaves with a positive tilt, however.
Persons: Ruth Porat, Sundar Pichai, Porat, Mark Shmulik, Brent Thill, Benjamin Black, Ross Sandler, Gene Munster, Goldman Sachs, Eric Sheridan, Bank of America's Justin Post, Truist's Youssef Squali, Citi's Ronald Josey Organizations: Jefferies, Deutsche Bank, Barclays, Bank of America's, DR Locations: Asia, Pacific
Nasdaq futures fell after Alphabet and Tesla reported earnings. Tesla auto revenue dropsTesla's second-quarter earnings fell short of expectations as automotive sales declined for the second consecutive quarter. YouTube's ad revenue fell short of estimates amid increased competition from platforms like TikTok. GM skidsGeneral Motors' beat second-quarter earnings estimates but shares fell 6% as it restructures its struggling autonomous vehicles and Chinese business. RBC Capital Markets' Tom Narayan highlighted GM's expectation that second-half earnings will be $2.5 billion lower than in the first half.
Persons: Tesla, Ruth Porat, Morgan Stanley's Adam Jonas, Tom Narayan Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, CNBC, Nasdaq, Dow Jones, Treasury, Tesla, GM, General, RBC Capital Markets, United Parcel Service, UPS, Barclays, CNBC Pro Locations: New York City, U.S, Waymo
Google parent company Alphabet is set to report its second-quarter earnings Tuesday after the market closes. They expect modest growth in key areas such as cloud and overall revenue, after a quarter of leadership moves, AI announcements and market expansions. During the second quarter, Alphabet saw a number of expansion updates, including for its self-driving car unit Waymo, which opened its service to all San Francisco users. Reid urged employees to continue pushing AI products, suggesting they can fix mistakes as users and employees find them. Alphabet also announced a new finance chief, Anat Ashkenazi, who came from Eli Lily, the world's most valuable drugmaker.
Persons: Sundar Pichai, Barack Obama, America's, Liz Reid, Reid, Anat Ashkenazi, Eli Lily, Ashkenazi, Ruth Porat Organizations: Google, LSEG Revenue, TAC, CNBC Locations: Francisco, Phoenix, India, Mexico
Strong numbers in the company's search and cloud businesses more than offset the slight misses in the YouTube and network units. Cloud recorded a couple of big firsts: exceeding $10 billion in revenue, along with $1 billion in operating income. Whereas investors were — and many still are — concerned about what generative AI might mean for Alphabet's search revenue, the opposite appears to be the case, at least for now. Google Cloud revenue grew roughly 28% to more than $10 billion for the first time. Strong numbers in the company's search and cloud businesses more than offset the slight misses in the YouTube and network units.
Persons: we're, capex, Sundar Pichai, Pichai, Philipp Schindler, Schindler, Ruth Porat, Eli Lilly, Anat Ashkenazi, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Loren Elliott Organizations: YouTube, Microsoft, Club, Nvidia, Lens, CTV, Nielsen, Google, buybacks, CNBC, Government, Society, Calif, Bloomberg, Getty, Meta Locations: That's, U.S, Stanford
A Waymo rider-only robotaxi is seen during a test ride in San Francisco on Dec. 9, 2022. Alphabet is again investing in its self-driving car unit Waymo — this time with $5 billion. CEO Sundar Pichai said on the earnings call that Waymo provides 50,000 weekly paid trips, primarily in San Francisco and Phoenix. In June, Waymo removed the waitlist and opened Waymo rides to all San Francisco users. "Alphabet has committed up to $5B to Waymo," Waymo CEO Tekedra Mawakana said on X.
Persons: Waymo, Ruth Porat, Porat, Sundar Pichai, Andreessen Horowitz, Cruise, Tekedra Mawakana Organizations: Securities, Exchange Commission, Plan Investment Board, Fidelity Management & Research Company, General Motors Locations: San Francisco, Phoenix, Francisco, AutoNation, Canada, Waymo, Tesla
Lucas Oil Stadium, the vast brick home to the Indianapolis Colts, is space custom-built for commotion and cacophony. On Wednesday night, the seats were mostly filled, families having shuffled into rows balancing paper trays of chicken fingers and pizza. But at 7 p.m., the lights went down, and the crowd sat poised in stillness and silence. Then a voice on the loudspeaker instructed them to kneel, a spotlight beamed to a corner of the floor. At that instant, Camille Anigbogu, 22, from Houston, recalled later, “I profoundly knew that it was God.”
Persons: Jesus Christ, Camille Anigbogu, , Organizations: Lucas Oil, Indianapolis Colts Locations: Houston
But while some pundits have argued his speech showed he is more subdued and humble in the wake of last week's failed assassination attempt against him, others aren't so sure he's changed at all. And some political scientists and experts on authoritarianism warn Trump could become even more radical after his near-death experience. We are one nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all," Trump told the RNC crowd as he briefly read messages promoting unity from a teleprompter. Not everyone is certain Trump will change much in the wake of his assassination attempt — for better or for worse. If the assassination attempt does change Trump, the effects may not be immediately apparent — though they are worth being on the lookout for.
Persons: Donald Trump, week's, Trump, Joe Biden, Elizabeth Bennion, Hulk Hogan, Eric Trump's, haven't, Bennion, Timothy Snyder, Snyder, Ruth Ben, Ghiat, Ben, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Benito Mussolini's, , Michael Green, didn't, Green, they've, it's Organizations: Service, Republican National Convention, Business, RNC, Indiana University, GOP, Trump, Yale University, New York University, of Democracy and, Defense, University of Nevada Locations: Indiana University South Bend, Turkey
A fire that broke out Friday at the First Baptist Dallas church, a landmark in the city’s downtown, appeared to cause major damage to an old part of the church complex. The church’s pastor, the Rev. Robert Jeffress, said that he understood from his conversations with fire officials that in the fire’s final phase, the roof of what is known as the historic sanctuary had collapsed. “We will have to see about whether we try to recreate it or do something else,” he said in an interview. Dallas Fire-Rescue did not immediately provide information about the fire, but a spokesman told The Dallas Morning news that part of the structure had collapsed.
Persons: Robert Jeffress, Organizations: First Baptist Dallas, Dallas, Dallas Morning
Part of its viral marketing also included a website about the so-called "Birthday Murders," styled like a throwback '90s webpage. AdvertisementA website about the fictional Birthday Murders created by Neon. The Birthday Murders website looks like any number of actual true-crime forums frequented by people who like to talk about and dissect unsolved murders. The 'Longlegs' director says his movie's dolls were inspired by a small detail in JonBenét Ramsey's murder caseFBI agent Lee Harker investigates the Longlegs murders. In the ending of "Longlegs," Longlegs is revealed to be a Satan-loving dollmaker who handcrafts life-sized dolls that look just like the daughters of each family he kills.
Persons: Nicolas Cage, Oz Perkins, Lee Harker, Maika Monroe, who's, Lee, Ed, Lorraine Warren, it's, Longlegs, Ruth Harker, Ruth, Ruby, Carter's, Perkins hasn't, NEON Perkins, Perkins, Gus Van Sant, Anthony Perkins, Norman Bates —, James George Frazer, JonBenét, JonBenét Ramsey, Ramsey, ciphered Organizations: Service, FBI, Business, Collider, Longlegs, Lambs Locations: Boulder , Colorado
Pat Williams: Orlando Magic co-founder dies at 84
  + stars: | 2024-07-18 | by ( Jacob Lev | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
CNN —Orlando Magic co-founder Pat Williams has died at the age of 84, the NBA team announced in a news release on Wednesday. He helped the city of Orlando land an NBA team which became official in 1987 and the team began their inaugural season two years later. He served as the general manager of the Magic until 1996 when he was promoted to team senior vice president. Jennifer Pottheiser/NBAE/Getty Images“Pat Williams simply brought magic to Orlando,” team chairman Dan DeVos and CEO Alex Martins said in a joint statement. Armed with his ever-present optimism and unparalleled energy, he was an incredible visionary who helped transform the world of sports in multiple ways.”General Manager Pat Williams of the Orlando Magic smiles after receiving the No.
Persons: Pat Williams, Williams, , ” Williams, Jennifer Pottheiser, Dan DeVos, Alex Martins, DeVos, Martins, Orlando Magic, Shaquille O'Neal, Bruce Bennett, Ruth Organizations: CNN, Orlando Magic, NBA, Philadelphia 76ers, Chicago Bulls, Atlanta Hawks, 76ers, , Wake Forest University, Wake Forest Sports Hall of Fame, Demon Deacons baseball, Philadelphia Phillies, Miami Marlins, Florida State League, Miami, Spartanburg, Phillies, Minor League Executive, The Sporting Locations: Orlando, Secaucus , New Jersey, S.C
Darden Restaurants will acquire Chuy's Holdings for approximately $605 million in cash, the companies announced jointly on Wednesday. Darden agreed to acquire all outstanding shares of Chuy's at $37.50 per share, according to a press release. "Based on our criteria for adding a brand to the Darden portfolio, we believe Chuy's is an excellent fit that supports our winning strategy," Darden CEO Rick Cardenas said in a statement. "I am excited to welcome their 7,400 team members to Darden and diversify the Darden portfolio into a new dining category." Cardenas said in the press release that Chuy's has strong performance and growth potential.
Persons: Darden, Chris Steak, Rick Cardenas, Cardenas, Chuy's, Steven Hislop Organizations: Chuy's Holdings, Wednesday, Chuy's, Olive Garden, LongHorn, Darden Locations: Olive, Austin , Texas
Nearly two-thirds of Democrats said President Biden should step aside and allow the party to select a different nominee, according to a new poll from the AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. The survey also found that 70 percent of Americans, including nearly half of Democrats, said they were not confident that Mr. Biden had the mental capacity to be president. That is a marked increase since February, when only about one-third of Democrats said they were not confident in his abilities. Downtrodden Democrats are especially concerned that Mr. Biden can no longer win the election. The new survey, taken from July 11 to 15, as an increasing number of Democratic lawmakers and donors called for Mr. Biden to drop out of the race, demonstrates the growing sentiment among rank-and-file Democrats.
Persons: Biden, Donald J, Trump Organizations: AP, NORC, for Public Affairs Research, Democrats, Democratic
President Biden is locked in a tight race with former President Donald J. Trump in Pennsylvania, a state that Mr. Biden barely won in 2020 and that is critical to his re-election hopes, and in Virginia, a state where Mr. Biden defeated Mr. Trump by 10 percentage points in 2020, according to the latest New York Times/Siena College polls. The polls, which were completed before the assassination attempt on Mr. Trump while he was campaigning in Pennsylvania on Saturday, found that Mr. Trump was leading the president by 48 percent to 45 percent among likely voters in Pennsylvania. The results are almost unchanged from a New York Times/Siena College poll taken in May and within the margin of error. By almost any Electoral College map calculation, it would be nearly impossible for Mr. Biden to win re-election without Pennsylvania. In that state, Mr. Biden has a lead of 3 percentage points over Mr. Trump among likely voters, which is within the margin of error.
Persons: Biden, Donald J, Trump Organizations: New York Times, Siena, Mr, Pennsylvania, Democrats, Trump, Biden Locations: Pennsylvania, Virginia, Siena
Lawmakers who had been moving toward repealing Gambia’s landmark ban on female genital cutting overwhelmingly changed course on Monday, voting instead to keep the legislation in place after women staged an intense three-month campaign. Gambia, a sliver of a country on the west coast of Africa, had grabbed international attention earlier this year as it appeared headed to becoming the world’s first nation to roll back protections against cutting. “It would have faced pariah status,” said Satang Nabaneh, a Gambian legal scholar focused on sexual and reproductive rights and women’s rights. Of the 53 members of Gambia’s National Assembly present on Monday, 34 voted to keep the ban, and 19 to overturn it. In March, when 47 members were present, 42 of them voted to overturn the ban.
Persons: , Satang Nabaneh Organizations: Gambia’s National Locations: Gambia, Africa
The Ruth Westheimer that fellow residents of her Manhattan apartment building knew was much the same person known to America as Dr. Ruth: gregarious, funny, peppy and apt to throw out a provocative question in the elevator. “She was the most well-loved person who lived here,” said Geoffrey Katin, 81, a longtime resident of the building, in Washington Heights. Dr. Westheimer, who died on Friday at 96, was America’s best-known sex therapist. But her explicit and direct advice, delivered in a casual and jovial manner, was not just for the cameras. Neighbors enjoyed bumping into her in the building, never certain how she might strike up a conversation.
Persons: Ruth Westheimer, Ruth, , Geoffrey Katin, Westheimer, Peter Sparrow Locations: Manhattan, America, Washington Heights
Advertisement"So that is, in theory, taking power away from unelected officials," Justin Crowe, a professor of political science at Williams University who researches the Supreme Court, told Business Insider. With Corner Post, Entin said, the Supreme Court created a statute of limitations that, from the standpoint of federal agencies, never really expires. But the Court didn't stop at giving itself the reins to interpret regulations that federal agencies are beholden to. In the Trump case, the Supreme Court offered Trump broad immunity for some of his acts concerning his January 6 election interference case. In the July 6 episode of Slate's Supreme Court analysis podcast "Amicus with Dahlia Lithwick," Senior Court Reporter Mark Joseph Stern said the Court spent this term expanding its power and "restructuring representative democracy to make it less representative and less democratic."
Persons: , Raimondo, Reagan, presidentially, Justin Crowe, wouldn't, Loper, Jonathan Entin, Entin, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Trump, Tanya Chutkan, Dahlia Lithwick, Mark Joseph Stern Organizations: Service, Loper Bright Enterprises, Inc, Governors, Federal Reserve System, Business, Chevron, Environmental Protection Agency, Congress, Williams University, EPA, Securities Exchange Commission, of Health, Human Service, Case Western Reserve University, Federal Reserve Board, Supreme, DC Circuit, Federal, Trump v ., Trump, DC Locations: Chevron, Trump v, Trump v . United States
Read previewDr. Ruth Westheimer, a renowned sex therapist, media personality, and Holocaust survivor known for leading entertaining and culture-shifting conversations about sexual health and pleasure, has died at 96, multiple outlets reported. Westheimer, known to her fans as "Dr. Ruth," extolled the benefits of sex even during the final years of her life. Julius Siegel, pictured above, was the father of Dr. Ruth Westheimer, who was born in Germany as Karola Ruth Siegel. Courtesy of Dr. Ruth Westheimer"I don't think of myself as a survivor. Sex therapist Dr. Ruth Westheimer pictured attending the World AIDS Day Benefit Gala November 30, 1990 in New York City.
Persons: , Ruth Westheimer, Westheimer, Pierre Lehu, Dr, Ruth, Karola Ruth Siegel, Westheimer's, Julius Siegel, Manfred, Fred, Joel, Miriam, David Letterman, Arnaldo Magnani, Jamie McCarthy, NPR's Scott Simon, Hitler Organizations: Service, Associated Press, New York City, Business, People, Sorbonne University, University of Paris, The New School, Columbia University, Presbyterian Hospital, NPR Locations: New, Germany, Frankfurt, Switzerland, British, Palestine, Paris, Israeli, Manhattan, New York, York City, New York City
Dr. Westheimer — who was widely known as Dr. Ruth — was in her early fifties when she became the first therapist to use mass media to educate adults and hormone-buzzing teenagers about sex. The answer was yes, yes, and yes. Ruth’s Guide to Safer Sex.” She worked relentlessly to reach new audiences and succeeded by expanding her fanbase to television with “The Dr. Ruth Show,” “The All New Dr. Ruth Show,” “You’re On the Air with Dr. Ruth,” and more. There has simply been no one like her.”Debby Herbenick, director of the Center for Sexual Health Promotion at Indiana University, wrote: “Countless of us have been described at various times as ‘the next Dr. Ruth’ though of course there is only one Dr. Ruth. Without much fanfare, Dr. Westheimer had decided to make me a member of her chosen family, too.
Persons: Allison Gilbert, Ruth K, Westheimer, Pierre Lehu, Ruth Westheimer, , , ” Allison Gilbert Elena Seibert, Westheimer —, Ruth —, unapologetically, Jerry Seinfeld jested, Ruth Show ”, “ Seinfeld, let’s, , I’ll, Dr, Ruth’s, Ruth Show, Ruth, Peggy Orenstein, ” Debby Herbenick, Ruth ’, ” Carol Queen, Westheimer’s, Karola Ruth Siegel, Hitler, Walter, . Westheimer Organizations: CNN, New, America, The New York Times, , Center for Sexual, Indiana University, San Francisco’s, Sex, Twitter Locations: New York City, , Frankfurt, Germany, Heiden , Switzerland, Switzerland, New York
Ruth Westheimer, the grandmotherly psychologist who as “Dr. Ruth” became America’s best-known sex counselor with her frank, funny radio and television programs, died on Friday at her home in New York City. Dr. Westheimer was in her 50s when she first went on the air in 1980, answering listeners’ mailed-in questions about sex and relationships on the radio station WYNY in New York. The show, called “Sexually Speaking,” was only a 15-minute segment heard after midnight on Sundays. But it was such a hit that she quickly became a national media celebrity and a one-woman business conglomerate.
Persons: Ruth Westheimer, Dr, Ruth ”, Pierre Lehu, Westheimer, Organizations: College Locations: New York City, New York
Ruth Westheimer, the psychologist known as Dr. Ruth, died on Friday at 96 after a long career as America’s best-known (and, arguably, least likely) sex therapist. For decades, she offered frank sex advice, often with her distinct giggle, always with an abiding emphasis on the idea that sex should be a source of joy, not shame. Millions of people tuned into her radio shows, watched her television appearances and gobbled up her books and interviews, reassured by the warmth and directness with which she approached taboo topics. In her later years, Dr. Ruth turned her signature candor and humor to the continuing loneliness crisis. Now, The New York Times is looking to hear from those who benefited from her life’s work: What did Dr. Ruth teach you about sex, love or human connection?
Persons: Ruth Westheimer, Ruth, America’s, gobbled Organizations: The New York Times
The Irony of Dr. Ruth
  + stars: | 2024-07-13 | by ( Rhonda Garelick | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
I will never forget the afternoon I spent, about 30 years ago, with Dr. Ruth Westheimer, interviewing her for a now-long-lost magazine article — my first ever. At 4-foot-7 Dr. Ruth used them to keep her feet from dangling when she sat down. Dr. Ruth’s office testified to her own engaged and connected life. Dr. Ruth, it turned out, was an avid and accomplished skier, a fact that should not have surprised me but did. Ruth Westheimer posed a perpetual contradiction: Her form never seemed to match her content.
Persons: Ruth Westheimer, Ruth, B’nai Jeshurun, Ruth’s, Organizations: B’nai Locations: New York City, Washington Heights
Dr. Ruth Westheimer’s life in pictures
  + stars: | 2024-07-13 | by ( Natalie Yubas | Brook Joyner | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: 1 min
Dr. Ruth Westheimer, the iconic sex therapist whose cheerful and disarming advice helped educate millions of Americans about sexual desires and practices, has died, her publicist Pierre Lehu told CNN on Saturday. Ruth” — as she was more commonly known — was a leading advocate of sexual education, dispensing colorful, witty advice in her distinctive German accent. Westheimer’s first radio call-in show, “Sexually Speaking,” debuted in New York in 1980 and proved so popular that it quickly became syndicated around the country. It also catapulted her to TV fame in the mid-1980s with her eponymous “The Dr. Ruth Show.”Over the next several decades, she hosted a handful of other TV shows, and continued to joyfully dole out sex advice to the public well into her 90s. AJ Willingham and Artemis Moshtaghian contributed to this report.
Persons: Ruth Westheimer, Pierre Lehu, “ Dr, Ruth ” —, , Ruth Show, AJ Willingham, Artemis Moshtaghian Organizations: CNN Locations: New York
Some of Dr. Ruth’s Most Memorable Moments
  + stars: | 2024-07-13 | by ( Emmett Lindner | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
When Dr. Ruth Westheimer, the sex counselor better known as Dr. Ruth, died on Friday at 96, she was remembered largely for her intelligent, candid and humorous views on taboo subjects. Her radio show, “Sexually Speaking,” premiered on WYNY in 1980 and provided a springboard for decades of call-in shows, a column in Playgirl magazine, guidebooks on sexuality and even a board game.
Persons: Ruth Westheimer, Ruth,
CNN —Dr. Ruth Westheimer, the iconic sex therapist whose cheerful and disarming advice helped educate millions of Americans about sexual desires and practices, has died, her publicist Pierre Lehu told CNN on Saturday. Dr. Ruth Westheimer poses for a portrait in Pasadena, California, in January 2016. Becoming Dr. Ruth Westheimer speaks during an American Society of Newspaper Editors convention in April 1986. Bob D'Amico/ABC/Getty Images Westheimer on the set of "Quantum Leap" with actor Dean Stockwell and director Stuart Margolin in 1993. Ron Galella Collection/WireImage/Getty Images Westheimer rides on the back of a motorcycle during New York's Salute to Israel Parade in May 1996.
Persons: Ruth Westheimer, Pierre Lehu, grandmotherly Westheimer, Dr, Ruth ” –, , Lehu, Maarten de Boer, Westheimer, Ruth, Stewart, AP Westheimer, Cyndi Lauper, Nancy Kaye, Ron Galella, Bob D'Amico, Dean Stockwell, Stuart Margolin, Alice S, David Karp, Bill Clinton, King Mohammed VI of, Susan Walsh, Keith Bedford, Sir Paul McCartney, McCartney, Bob Child, Barack Obama, Michelle Obama, Chip Somodevilla, Andy Kropa, John Lamparski, Michael Kovac, Gabby Jones, , Ruth Show, ” Westheimer, Columbia University . Westheimer, Love Organizations: CNN, Haganah, Zionist, Israel Defense Forces, American Society of Newspaper, ABC, Getty, Israel Parade, White House, Westheimer, Yale, Communications, Broadway, of Fame, Gotham, New York, New York Times, Lifetime, Teachers College, Columbia University ., Museum of Jewish Heritage Locations: Pasadena , California, Switzerland, Jerusalem, New York, Beverly Hills , California, Los Angeles, King Mohammed VI of Morocco, New Haven , Connecticut, Washington ,, New, Germany, Paris, New York City
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