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Новости за 24.07.2015

Clinton to hit Wall Street for focus on short-term profits

Los Angeles Times (latimes.com) 

Welcome to your Trail Guide, a daily run through the campaign trail with the Los Angeles Times political team. It's Friday, July 24, and this is what we're watching: Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will propose her plan to challenge Wall Street on 'quarterly capitalism' A San Francisco...

L.A. business and cultural leaders want to see an Angels Flight plan

Los Angeles Times (latimes.com) 

Two years ago, the Angels Flight railway made a final clattering descent down its Bunker Hill incline after one of the twin cars slipped off the track, leaving its sole passenger - an Australian tourist - startled but unhurt.

Scripps Research struggling with deficit but eyeing potential royalties

Los Angeles Times (latimes.com) 

The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla continues to operate at a deficit. But Fitch Ratings says the center is financially stable. And relief may be on the way; the institute could earn large royalties if an experimental drug that it helped to develop makes it to the marketplace.

Zack Greinke goes back to L.A.

Los Angeles Times (latimes.com) 

Zack Greinke returned to Los Angeles on Thursday for the impending birth of his first child, altering the Dodgers' already-shaky rotation plans for the weekend.



Orel Hershiser's streak was a different ballgame

Los Angeles Times (latimes.com) 

When Zack Greinke left the Dodgers on Thursday in the middle of his potentially historic scoreless-inning streak to be with wife Emily for the birth of their first child, you'll never guess who smiled at the memories.

Will the Legislature inadvertently invite more medical tourists?

Los Angeles Times (latimes.com) 

California is already a magnet for birth tourism. Now, health analyst Robert Laszewski writes, the California Legislature could make the state a magnet for medical tourists who sign up for insurance, get an expensive procedure done at one of the state's famous medical centers, then drop their coverage...

Oklahoma family found dead: 'We've just never seen anything like this'

Los Angeles Times (latimes.com) 

Residents of the Tulsa bedroom community of Broken Arrow, Okla., were reeling Thursday following the overnight slaughter of five family members in what police are calling the worst homicide in the history of a town known for its lack of crime.

Pentagon can't tell why anthrax shipped to 7 countries was alive

Los Angeles Times (latimes.com) 

A monthlong Pentagon investigation could not identify a root cause as to why an Army testing facility in Utah mistakenly sent live anthrax samples to 86 commercial companies, academic institutions and federal laboratories around the globe.

Charm, goodwill and distinct pleasures reside in overlong 'Samba'

Los Angeles Times (latimes.com) 

For much of its overlong running time, the French dramedy "Samba" is a warm and captivating look at the world of workers in that country illegally and the immigrant advocates battling on their behalf. However, by its second half, the film, from writer-directors Olivier Nakache and Eric Toledano...

For Gustavo Dudamel, El Sistema remains a source of joy and hope

Los Angeles Times (latimes.com) 

Gustavo Dudamel's two-week stint at the Hollywood Bowl, which ends with a Mozart program on July 30, will be the culmination of his sixth season as music director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. This summer is also the 10th anniversary of his U.S. conducting debut at the Bowl. He's familiar.

House passes bill to curb funding for 'sanctuary cities'

Los Angeles Times (latimes.com) 

Lawmakers voted Thursday to cut funding for cities and towns that refuse to comply with federal immigration laws as they debated how to respond to the fatal shooting of a young woman in San Francisco in which the suspect had been deported to Mexico five times.

At Texas-Mexico border, Donald Trump cites 'great danger' from immigrants

Los Angeles Times (latimes.com) 

Despite what Donald Trump's campaign called "great danger," the Republican presidential hopeful took his 757 on Thursday to the spot that made his presidential campaign among the most reviled, admired and remarked upon in recent memory: the U.S.-Mexico border.





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