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Biden proclaims NATO alliance ‘more united than ever’ as he celebrates newest member Finland – Daily Press

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By SEUNG MIN KIM, CHRIS MEGERIAN and JARI TANNER (Associated Press)

HELSINKI (AP) — President Joe Biden said he and other NATO leaders showed the world that the military alliance emerged “more united than ever” this week as he on Thursday capped a European trip meant to demonstrate the force of the international coalition against Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The allies “understand that this fight is not only a fight for the future of Ukraine,” Biden said, noting that it’s also about sovereignty, security and freedom throughout eastern Europe and the world. Though Ukraine’s demand for an explicit path to NATO membership remained elusive, Biden emphasized that agreements with other countries in the alliance would support Kyiv’s long-term security even without its entry into NATO.

At a news conference with Finnish President Sauli Niinistö, Biden pledged that the United States’ commitment to NATO would not waver, despite tumultuous domestic politics underscored by a potential return of Donald Trump to the White House, as well as a growing sense of isolationism in the Republican Party.

“I absolutely guarantee it. There’s no question,” Biden said, answering a question on whether the U.S. will remain a reliable NATO partner. “There’s overwhelming support from the American people, there’s overwhelming support from members of Congress, both House and Senate.”

“Nobody can guarantee the future. But this is the best bet that anyone can make,” he added.

Earlier Thursday, Biden met with the leaders of other Nordic nations including Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Iceland. Sweden is poised to be admitted as NATO’s 32nd member country after it pledged more cooperation with Turkey on counterterrorism efforts while backing Ankara’s bid to join the European Union. Finland gained NATO membership earlier this year.

Both Finland and Sweden abandoned a history of military nonalignment and sought to join NATO alliance after Russia invaded Ukraine last year.

Biden’s brief stop in the shoreline Finnish capital is the coda to a tour that was carefully sketched to highlight the growth of a military alliance that the president says has fortified itself since the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Finland’s admittance to NATO effectively doubled the alliance’s border with Russia.

Biden arrived in Helsinki after what he deemed a successful NATO summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, where allies agreed to language that would further pave the way for Ukraine to also become a future member. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called the summit’s outcome “a significant security victory” for his country but nonetheless expressed disappointment at not getting an outright invitation to join.

Biden and other administration officials also held what aides said were pivotal conversations with Turkey before that country dropped its objections to Sweden joining NATO.

Biden said he felt good about the trip. “We accomplished every goal we set out to accomplish,” he told reporters Wednesday before the flight to Finland.

And despite Zelenskyy’s expressed frustrations, Biden — who met with the Ukrainian leader Wednesday in Vilnius — said Thursday that Zelenskyy “ended up being very happy.”

The U.S. president’s trip this week — a meticulously choreographed endeavor meant to showcase international opposition to Russian leader Vladimir Putin’ s war in Ukraine — played out nearly five years to the day since then-President Donald Trump infamously stood alongside Putin in Helsinki and cast doubt on his own intelligence apparatus. That was just days after Trump tore through a NATO summit where he disparaged the alliance and from which he threatened to withdraw the United States.

In contrast, Biden has heartily embraced the tenets of multilateralism that Trump shunned, speaking repeatedly of having to rebuild international coalitions after four tumultuous years led by his predecessor. The garrulous former Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman is in his element at summits abroad, and speaks of how his background in international policy is proof positive that decades of experience on the world stage has mattered for the presidency.

Opening the broader meeting, Niinistö said his Nordic counterparts had one overriding objective: “guarantee the future — security-wise, environmental-wise and technology-wise.” Biden added that the “nations around the table not only share common history, but we share common challenges, and I would add presumptuously, common values.”

Biden is the sixth U.S president to visit Finland, a country of 5.5 million that has hosted several U.S.-Soviet and U.S.-Russia summits. The first involved President Gerald Ford, who would sign the so-called Helsinki Accords with more than 30 other nations in 1975.

But Charly Salonius-Pasternak, senior researcher at the Finnish Institute of International Affairs, noted that Biden’s visit marked the first time a sitting U.S. president came to Finland to honor the country itself, rather than as a neutral location for meeting Russian leaders or other similar reasons.

“The fact that Biden has chosen to go specifically to Finland for Finland is symbolic and, in some ways, very concrete,” he said. “It’s a kind of deterrence messaging that only the United States can do.”

In the Cold War era, Finland acted as a neutral buffer between Moscow and Washington, and its leaders played a balancing act between the East and West, maintaining good relations with both superpowers.

Finland and neighboring Sweden gave up their traditional political neutrality by joining the European Union in 1995 but both remained militarily nonaligned, with opinion polls showing a clear majority of their citizens opposed to joining NATO. That changed quickly after Feb. 24, 2022, when Russia invaded Ukraine.

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Associated Press writer Darlene Superville in Washington contributed to this report.

Human skulls being sold on Facebook filled Kentucky home, FBI says. ‘My dead friends’ – Daily Press

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Approximately 40 human body parts were found in the home of a Kentucky man, who the FBI says was a part of a multi-state scheme to buy and sell human remains.

The scheme, reported by McClatchy News in June, led to the initial arrests of six people. They included a mortuary worker in Little Rock, Arkansas, and the manager of the morgue at Harvard Medical School.

Some of the body parts stolen from morgues in Massachusetts and Arkansas ended up in the Mt. Washington, Kentucky, home, officials said.

The Kentucky man, according to the FBI, used the pseudonym William Burke on Facebook. Burke was a serial killer in the 1800s in Scotland and sold victims’ bodies to an influential lecturer, federal authorities say.

Under the Burke alias, the Mt. Washington man sold body parts through Facebook, according to details in the criminal complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Kentucky. A Pennsylvania man he is accused of selling human remains to has since been arrested.

The Pennsylvania man, McClatchy News reported in 2022, had “human brains, heart, livers, skin and lungs” in his home, according to the Cumberland County District Attorney’s Office. The body parts were stowed in 5-gallon buckets, police said.

When FBI agents went to the Louisville-area home, they asked the 39-year-old man if anyone else was there. He replied, “only my dead friends,” according to the FBI.

Inside the home, agents found 40 human skulls and other body parts, the complaint says.

“The skulls were decorated around the furniture,” according to the complaint. “One skull had a head scarf around it. One skull was located on the mattress where (he) slept.”

An attorney for the man could not immediately be reached for comment by McClatchy News.

The Harvard manager had been secretly harvesting human organs and was selling them across the country, officials said in previous McClatchy News reporting.

“We are so very sorry for the pain this news will cause for our anatomical donors’ families and loved ones,” George Daley, dean of the faculty of medicine at the Harvard Medical School, wrote in a June 14 statement. “The reported incidents are a betrayal of HMS and, most importantly, each of the individuals who altruistically chose to will their bodies to HMS through the Anatomical Gift Program to advance medical education and research.”

A Little Rock mortuary worker also involved in the scheme stole and sold four brains, three hearts, two testicles, a penis and “one large belly button,” according to an April indictment obtained by McClatchy News.

The complaint mentions both the Harvard morgue manager and Little Rock mortuary worker, but it is unclear how the Kentucky man obtained the body parts. Authorities did say a Harvard Medical School bag was found inside his home.

The FBI said the Mt. Washington man used Facebook to sell human remains as recently as June. He has only been charged with unlawful possession of a firearm.

The women’s World Cup starts soon. Here are players with Virginia connections. – Daily Press

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The 2023 Women’s FIFA World Cup hosted by Australia and New Zealand kicks off July 20 and runs through August 20. The United States, led by holdovers Megan Rapinoe and Alex Morgan and rising stars Sophia Smith and Alyssa Thompson, is heavily favored to win a record third consecutive title. The Americans are the only four-time World Cup winners, claiming titles in 1991, 1999, 2015 and 2019. The U.S. begins group stage play against Vietnam on July 22. Portugal and the Netherlands are the other teams in Group E.

The star-laden U.S. World Cup roster is comprised of 23 players. In addition, there are numerous players with U.S. ties competing in the tournament for other countries.

PLAYERS WITH US TIES

Here’s a state by state breakdown of players you may want to follow. This list includes the 23 on the U.S. team roster and players with U.S. ties playing for Haiti, Panama and the Philippines. In addition, various World Cup watch parties and soccer celebrations are planned across the country. Contact local soccer clubs to find out if there’s anything going on in your area. The US Youth Soccer website is a good place to start: Click the menu in the upper left corner and go to “State Sites.”

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ALABAMA

  • Riley Tanner, played in college at the University of Alabama, and plays for the NWSL’s Washington Spirit and Panama’s national team
  • Hilary Jaen, former South Alabama player; plays for Panama’s national team

ARIZONA

  • Julie Ertz, birthplace and hometown Mesa; plays for NWSL’s Angel City FC

CALIFORNIA

  • Naomi Girma, birthplace and hometown San Jose; played at Stanford and plays for NWSL’s San Diego Wave FC
  • Sophia Smith, played at Stanford and plays for Portland Thorns FC
  • Andi Sullivan, played at Stanford and plays for Washington Spirit
  • Kelly O’Hara, played at Stanford and plays for NWSL’s NJ-NY Gotham FC
  • Savannah DeMelo, birthplace and hometown Bellflower; played at University of Southern California and plays for Louisville FC
  • Julie Ertz, played at Santa Clara University and plays for Angel City FC
  • Sofia Huerta, played at Santa Clara University and plays for NWSL’s OL Reign
  • Alana Cook, played at Stanford and plays for OL Reign
  • Ashley Sanchez, birthplace Pasadena, hometown Monrovia; played at UCLA and plays for Washington Spirit
  • Alex Morgan, birthplace San Dimas, hometown Diamond Bar; played at Berkeley and plays for San Diego Wave FC
  • Megan Rapinoe, birthplace and hometown Redding; plays for OL Reign
  • Trinity Rodman, birthplace Newport Beach, hometown Laguna Niguel; plays for Washington Spirit
  • Alyssa Thompson, birthplace and hometown Studio City; plays for Angel City FC
  • Lynn Williams, birthplace and hometown Fresno; played at Pepperdine University and plays for NJ/NY Gotham FC
  • Kaiya Jota, hometown Baldwin Park; has committed to Stanford University and plays for the Philippines national team
  • Maya Alcantara, hometown Rancho Cucamonga; plays for Georgetown University and the Philippines national team
  • Kaya Hawkinson, hometown Rancho Palos Verdes; plays for Cal State Fullerton and the Philippines national team

COLORADO

  • Lindsey Horan, birthplace and hometown Golden; plays for Olympique Lyonnais (France)
  • Sophia Smith, birthplace and hometown Windsor; plays for Portland Thorns FC

CONNECTICUT

  • Alyssa Naeher, birthplace Bridgeport, hometown Stratford; plays for NWSL’s Chicago Red Stars

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

  • Aubrey Kingsbury, who plays for Washington Spirit
  • Ashley Sanchez, who plays for Washington Spirit
  • Andi Sullivan, who plays for Washington Spirit
  • Trinity Rodman, who plays for Washington Spirit
  • Lara Larco, who plays for Georgetown University and Haitian national team
  • Riley Tanner, who plays for Washington Spirit and Panama’s national team
  • Maya Alcantara, who plays for Georgetown University and the Philippines national team

FLORIDA

  • Kerly Theus, who plays for USL W League’s FC Miami City and Haitian national team
  • Lara Larco, hometown Boca Raton; plays for Georgetown University and Haitian national team
  • Nahomie Ambroise, who plays for Little Haiti FC and Haitian national team
  • Noa Olivia Ganthier, hometown Boca Raton; plays for Lipscomb University and Haitian national team

GEORGIA

  • Kelley O’Hara, birthplace Peachtree, hometown Fayetteville; plays for NWSL’s NJ-NY Gotham FC
  • Emily Sonnett, birthplace and hometown Marietta; plays for OL Reign

HAWAII

  • Andi Sullivan, birthplace Honolulu; plays for Washington Spirit

IDAHO

  • Sofia Huerta, birthplace and hometown Boise; plays for NWSL’s OL Reign

ILLINOIS

  • Alyssa Naeher, plays for NWSL’s Chicago Red Stars
  • Alicia Barker, played in college at Illinois, and plays for Pacific Northwest SC and Philippines national team

KENTUCKY

  • Savannah DeMelo, plays for Louisville FC

MASSACHUSETTS

  • Kristie Mewis, birthplace Weymouth, hometown Hanson; played at Boston College and played plays for NWSL’s NJ/NY Gotham FC

MICHIGAN

  • Riley Tanner, hometown Caledonia; plays for the NWSL’s Washington Spirit and Panama’s national team

MISSISSIPPI

  • Ruthny Mathurin, plays for Mississippi State and Haitian national team
  • Hilary Jaen, plays for Jones College and Panama’s national team

NEW JERSEY

  • Casey Murphy, birthplace and hometown Bridgewater; played at Rutgers University and plays for NWSL’s North Carolina Courage
  • Alana Cook, birthplace Worcester, hometown Far Hills; plays for OL Reign
  • Kelley O’Hara, plays for NJ-NY Gotham FC
  • Kristie Mewis, plays for NJ/NY Gotham FC
  • Lynn Williams, plays for NJ/NY Gotham FC

NEW YORK

  • Crystal Dunn, birthplace New Hyde, hometown Rockville Centre; plays for NWSL’s Portland Thorns FC
  • Kelley O’Hara, plays for NJ-NY Gotham FC
  • Kristie Mewis, plays for NJ/NY Gotham FC
  • Lynn Williams, plays for NJ/NY Gotham FC

NORTH CAROLINA

  • Casey Murphy, plays for NWSL’s North Carolina Courage
  • Emily Fox, played at University of North Carolina and plays for NWSL’s North Carolina Courage
  • Crystal Dunn, played at University of North Carolina and plays for NWSL’s Portland Thorns FC
  • Aubrey Kingsbury, played at Wake Forest and plays for NWSL’s Washington Spirit

OHIO

  • Aubrey Kingsbury, birthplace and hometown Cincinnati; plays for NWSL’s Washington Spirit
  • Rose Lavelle, birthplace and hometown Cincinnati; plays for OL Reign

OREGON

  • Crystal Dunn, plays for NWSL’s Portland Thorns FC
  • Sophia Smith, plays for Portland Thorns FC
  • Megan Rapinoe, played at University of Portland and plays for OL Reign

PENNSYLVANIA

  • Alyssa Naeher, played at Penn State and plays for NWSL’s Chicago Red Stars

SOUTH CAROLINA

  • Carleigh Frilles, transferred from Coast Carolina to Virginia Commonwealth University and plays for the Philippines national team

TENNESSEE

  • Noa Olivia Ganthier, plays for Lipscomb University and Haitian national team

TEXAS

  • Isabella Pasion, plays for Lebanon Trail High School and Philippines national team

VIRGINIA

  • Emily Fox, birthplace and hometown Ashburn; plays for NWSL’s North Carolina Courage
  • Emily Sonnett, played at University of Virginia and plays for OL Reign
  • Andi Sullivan, hometown Lorton; plays for the Washington Spirit
  • Milan Pierre-Jerome, plays for George Mason University and Haitian national team
  • Danielle Etienne, hometown Richmond; plays for Fordham University and Haitian national team
  • Carleigh Frilles, hometown Haymarket; transferred to Virginia Commonwealth University from Coastal Carolina and plays for the Philippines national team

WASHINGTON

  • Alana Cook, plays for NWSL’s OL Reign
  • Sofia Huerta, plays for OL Reign
  • Rose Lavelle, plays for OL Reign
  • Megan Rapinoe, plays for OL Reign
  • Emily Sonnett, plays for OL Reign
  • Alicia Barker, hometown Woodinville; plays for Pacific Northwest SC and Philippines national team

WEST VIRGINIA

  • Isabella Flanigan, hometown Fairmont; plays for Philippines national team

WISCONSIN

  • Rose Lavelle, played at University of Wisconsin and plays for OL Reign

Norfolk’s 757 Startup Studios adds 23 more entrepreneurs to its roster – Daily Press

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Hampton Roads’ innovation and startup community continues to flourish.

In late June, 757 Startup Studios added 23 early-stage entrepreneurs to its ever-growing roster. Since its launching in May 2021, more than 100 startups have participated in the nonprofit incubator program aimed at diminishing difficulties for participants’ business growth.

Each of the startups will work within the Assembly building in downtown Norfolk for the next six months. In addition to free rent, amenities include customized programming, mentors, access to experts, self-paced learning modules and workshops.

Paul Nolde, 757 Collab managing director, said in a news release that 757 Startup Studios continues to evolve its model to better serve the needs of high-growth entrepreneurs across all industries in the high-tech space.

The newest cohort includes the following startups:

  • Arros Ventures: a bookkeeping and accounting business driven by artificial intelligence automation, personalized financial advice and real-time insights
  • assemblageCO: software as a service company focused on bringing to light the architectural, engineering and construction sectors
  • Audytion: an all-inclusive service for musicians to book gigs
  • Best Date Ever: weekly ideas to help keep your romance alive
  • Black Boy Joy Fest: fosters healing and wellness for men of color
  • Boomchuck: provides legal, affordable and user-friendly song sheets to musicians and teachers
  • Brace Face: a portal for dental providers to use for patient care and resources
  • Doctor Doprah: cannabis education and consulting services for seniors
  • Dora Breaux Photography: a multimedia studio focused on camera product production and education primarily to underrepresented groups
  • Elevated Pursuit: software as a service company that taps into outdoor experiences
  • Fitsmalife: for women of all shapes and sizes looking to achieve their health and fitness goals
  • FLICC: a two-way mobile app used to connect users to photographers
  • Free Life LLC: a social recovery platform offering peer support, education and community engagement
  • Gingerhale’s: locally made ginger lemonade
  • Kilsar Inc.: an augmented reality and machine-learning solution
  • Lilley Brothers Canna Co.: provides a CBD-based product for pets
  • Love You Too LLC: self-care and self-discovery for women going through changes in their lives
  • NeoSoulYoga: provides yoga and wellness retreats, classes and events for women of color
  • Oceanty LLC: a mobile gaming company with simple and character-driven games
  • PicBNB: an on-demand photography app to link clients with professional photographers
  • Radiant Living Institute: helps guide women to live radiantly again after experiencing major life changes
  • VroomBrick: a money-saving tool to facilitate the homebuying and selling process
  • Washington’s Hammer: a tech company aimed to advance the tools and techniques used by the ship repair industry

Milan Kundera, author of ‘The Unbearable Lightness of Being,’ dies at 94 – Daily Press

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Milan Kundera, the Communist Party outcast who became a global literary star with mordant, sexually charged novels that captured the suffocating absurdity of life in the workers’ paradise of his native Czechoslovakia, died Tuesday in Paris. He was 94.

A spokesperson for Gallimard, Kundera’s publisher in France, confirmed the death, saying it came “after a prolonged illness.”

Kundera’s run of popular books began with “The Joke,” which was published to acclaim in 1967, around the time of the Prague Spring, then banned with a vengeance after Soviet-led troops crushed that experiment in “socialism with a human face” a few months later. He completed his final novel, “The Festival of Insignificance” (2015), when he was in his mid-80s and living in Paris.

“Festival” was his first new fiction since 2000, but its reception, tepid at best, was a far cry from the reaction to his most enduringly popular novel, “The Unbearable Lightness of Being.”

An instant success when it was published in 1984, “Unbearable Lightness” was reprinted over the years in at least two dozen languages. The novel drew even wider attention when it was adapted into a 1988 film starring Daniel Day Lewis as one of its central characters, Tomas, a Czech surgeon who criticizes the Communist leadership and is consequently forced to wash windows for a living.

As punishments go, washing windows is a pretty good deal for Tomas. A relentless philanderer, he’s always open to meeting new women, including bored housewives. But the sex, as well as Tomas himself and the three other main characters — his wife, a seductive painter and the painter’s lover — is there for a larger purpose.

In putting the novel on its list of best books of 1984, The New York Times Book Review observed that “this writer’s real business is to find images for the disastrous history of his country in his lifetime.”

“He uses the four pitilessly, setting each pair against the other as opposites in every way, to describe a world in which choice is exhausted and people simply cannot find a way to express their humanity.” Kundera could be especially pitiless in his use of female characters — so much so that British feminist Joan Smith, in her book “Misogynies” (1989), declared that “hostility is the common factor in all Kundera’s writing about women.”

Other critics reckoned that exposing men’s horrible behavior was at least part of his intent. Still, even the stronger women in Kundera’s books tended to be objectified, and the less fortunate were sometimes victimized in disturbing detail. The narrator of his first novel, “The Joke,” for example, vengefully seduces the wife of an old enemy, slaps her around during sex, then says he doesn’t want her. The woman’s husband doesn’t care; he’s in love with a very cool graduate student. In a final indignity, the distraught woman tries to kill herself with a fistful of pills, which turn out to be laxatives.

Kundera’s fear that Czech culture could be erased by Stalinism — much as disgraced leaders were airbrushed out of official photos — was at the heart of “The Book of Laughter and Forgetting,” which became available in English in 1979.

It was not exactly what most Western readers would have expected of a “novel”: a sequence of seven stories, told as fiction, autobiography, philosophical speculation and much else. But Kundera called it a novel nonetheless and likened it to a set of Beethoven variations.

Writing in The Times Book Review in 1980, John Updike said the book “is brilliant and original, written with a purity and wit that invite us directly in; it is also strange, with a strangeness that locks us out.”

‘The truth of uncertainty’

Kundera had a deep affinity for Central European thinkers and artists — Nietzsche, Kafka, Viennese novelists Robert Musil and Hermann Broch, Czech composer Leos Janacek. Like Broch, Kundera said, he strove to discover “that which the novel alone can discover,” including what he called “the truth of uncertainty.”

His books were largely saved from the weight of this heritage by a playfulness that often meant using his own voice to comment on the work in progress. Here is how he begins to invent Tamina, a tragic figure in “The Book of Laughter and Forgetting,” who starts out as a forlorn Czech widow in France and somehow ends up dying at the hands of cruel children in a fairy tale:

“I calculate that two or three new fictional characters are baptized here on earth every second. That is why I am always hesitant about joining that vast crowd of John the Baptists. But what can I do? After all, my characters need to have names.”

Kundera told The Paris Review in 1983, “My lifetime ambition has been to unite the utmost seriousness of question with the utmost lightness of form. The combination of a frivolous form and a serious subject immediately unmasks the truth about our dramas (those that occur in our beds as well as those that we play out on the great stage of History) and their awful insignificance. We experience the unbearable lightness of being.”

He acknowledged that the names of his books could easily be swapped around. “Every one of my novels could be entitled ‘The Unbearable Lightness of Being’ or ‘The Joke’ or ‘Laughable Loves,’” he said. “They reflect the small number of themes that obsess me, define me and, unfortunately, restrict me. Beyond these themes, I have nothing else to say or to write.”

Although written in the Czech language, both “Laughter and Forgetting” and “Unbearable Lightness” were composed in the clear light of France, where Kundera resettled in 1975 after giving up hope of political and creative freedom at home.

His decision to emigrate underlined the choices available to the Czech intelligentsia at the time. Thousands left. Among those who stayed and resisted was playwright Vaclav Havel, who served several prison terms, including one of nearly three years. He survived to help lead the successful Velvet Revolution in 1989 and then served as president — first of Czechoslovakia and then of the Czech Republic after the Slovaks decided to go their own way.

With that great turnabout, Kundera’s books were legal in his homeland for the first time in 20 years. But there was scant demand for them or sympathy for him there. By one estimate, only 10,000 copies of “The Unbearable Lightness of Being” were sold.

Many Czechs saw Kundera as someone who had abandoned his compatriots and taken the easy way out. And they tended to believe a Czech magazine’s allegation in 2008 that he had been an informer in his student days and had betrayed a Western spy. The agent, Miroslav Dvoracek, served 14 years in prison. Kundera denied turning him in.

Cast out of the party

The rocky history of Kundera’s first novel, “The Joke,” is a good illustration of the trouble he faced while still trying to promote reform from within.

When the Prague Spring ended, the book was condemned as cynical, erotic and anti-Socialist; and if the reader could somehow adopt the censors’ mindset, the reader would see their point.

Ludvik, the main narrator of “The Joke,” is a Prague university student in the 1950s who is under suspicion by party members for his perceived individualism. “You smile as though you were thinking to yourself,” he is told. Then he gets a letter from a credulous female friend praising the “healthy atmosphere” at the summer training camp she’s been sent to. Resentful that she should be happy when he is missing her, young Ludvik makes a horrible mistake:

“So I bought a postcard,” he says, “and (to hurt, shock and confuse her) wrote: ‘Optimism is the opium of the people! A healthy atmosphere stinks of stupidity! Long live Trotsky!’”

There is a trial. For his little joke, Ludvik is thrown out of the party and sentenced to work as a coal miner in a military penal unit.

Kundera didn’t suffer quite that fate, but he was twice expelled from the party he had supported from age 18, when the Communists seized power in 1948.

His first expulsion, for what he called a trivial remark, was imposed in 1950 and inspired the central plot of “The Joke.” He was nevertheless allowed to continue his studies; he graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague in 1952 and was then appointed to the faculty there as an instructor in world literature, counting among his students film director Milos Forman.

Kundera was reinstated to the Communist Party in 1956 but kicked out again, in 1970, for advocating reform. This time the ejection was forever, effectively erasing him as a person. He was driven from his job and, as he said, “No one had the right to offer me another.” Over the next several years, he picked up money as a jazz musician (he played the piano) and day laborer. Friends sometimes arranged for him to write things under their names or pseudonyms, which was how he became an astrology columnist.

Kundera did have experience casting horoscopes. So when a magazine editor, whom he identified as R., proposed a weekly astrology feature, he agreed, advising her to “tell the editorial board that the writer would be a brilliant nuclear physicist who did not want his name revealed for fear of being made fun of by his colleagues.”

He even cast a horoscope for R.’s editor-in-chief, a party hack who would have been disgraced if anyone had known of his superstitious beliefs. R. later reported, he said, that the boss “had begun to guard against the harshness the horoscope warned him about,” that “he was setting great store by the bit of kindness he was capable of” and that “in his often vacant gaze you could recognize the sadness of a man who realizes that the stars merely promise him suffering.”

The two of them had a good laugh. Inevitably, though, authorities would learn the true identity of the brilliant nuclear physicist-astrologer, and Kundera realized with certainty that there was no way to protect friends who wanted to help him.

In London, the first English translation of “The Joke” had been so botched that it was hard to know what to make of it. Chapters were rearranged or simply omitted. Irony became satire. Isolated in Prague, there was little he could do about it. (Not until 1992 was there an edition that satisfied him. He wrote an author’s note for it that began, “If it didn’t concern me, it would certainly make me laugh: this is the fifth English-language version of ‘The Joke.’”)

In his 1980 Times review, Updike commented that Kundera’s struggle “makes the life histories of most American writers look as stolid as the progress of a tomato plant, and it is small wonder that Kundera is able to merge personal and political significances with the ease of a Camus.”

Bred on music and books

Milan Kundera was born April 1, 1929, in Brno, in what is now the Czech Republic, the son of Milada Janosikova and Ludvik Kundera. His father, a noted concert pianist and musicologist, taught him piano, and he considered a career in music before his interests shifted to literature, particularly French.

“From an early age,” he told an interviewer for the literary journal Salmagundi in 1987, “I read Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Apollinaire, Breton, Cocteau, Bataille, Ionesco and admired French surrealism.”

Having grown up in a country occupied by German forces from 1939 to 1945, the young Kundera was one of many millions who embraced Communism after the war. It was a heady time, with new lists of winners and losers.

“Old injustices were redressed, new injustices were perpetrated,” he wrote in “The Book of Laughter and Forgetting.” “Factories were nationalized, thousands of people went to prison, medical care was free, tobacconists saw their shops confiscated, aged workers vacationed for the first time in expropriated villas, and on our faces we had the smile of happiness.”

Too late, he said, he realized that the evil done in the name of Socialism was not a betrayal of the revolution, but rather a poison inherent in it from the beginning.

When Communism ended in 1989, Kundera, who spoke little about his personal life, had been living in France for 14 years with his wife, Vera Hrabankova, first as a university teacher in Rennes and then in Paris. Czechoslovakia revoked his citizenship in 1979, and he became a French citizen two years later. The Czech Republic restored his citizenship of his homeland in 2019. Information on his survivors was not immediately available.

The last book Kundera wrote in Czech before switching to French was “Immortality,” in 1990. Beginning there, his later novels were notably less political and more overtly philosophical: “Slowness” (1995), “Identity” (1998) and “Ignorance” (2000).

Of those, “Immortality,” with bright inventions like the friendship of Hemingway and Goethe when they meet in heaven, was the most favorably received. It enjoyed a few weeks on the Times bestseller list.

With “Slowness,” Kundera dismayed more than a few readers by supplying no ending and by exceeding the safe limit of first-person discourse: “And I ask myself: Who was dreaming? Who dreamed this story? Who imagined it? She? He? Both of them?” and so on.

Besides the long works of fiction, he had written short stories and a play, “Jacques and His Master.” He also wrote essays, including several that illuminated his work and that of other writers, collected under the title “The Art of the Novel.”

He was often nominated but not selected for the Nobel Prize in literature.

Enigmatic, private and more than a little grumpy about the clatter and clutter of modern Western society, Kundera was largely out of the public eye from 2000 until the announcement in 2014 that he had created yet another novel, “The Festival of Insignificance,” originally written in French.

Set in Paris and barely exceeding 100 pages — critic Michiko Kakutani dismissed it in the Times as “flimsy” — it follows the perambulations of five friends through whom Kundera considers familiar themes of laughter, practical jokes, despair, sex and death.

Novelist Diane Johnson, writing in The Times Book Review, speculated on the central importance of laughter to Kundera.

“It may be that when Kundera writes about laughter,” she wrote, “he conceives of it not as a subjective expression of appreciation or surprise, the way we usually understand it, but as a material form of aggression, an actual act of self-defense, even a duty.”

As Kundera himself wrote in “Insignificance”: “We’ve known for a long time that it was no longer possible to overturn this world, nor reshape it, nor head off its dangerous headlong rush. There’s been only one possible resistance: to not take it seriously.”

He had struck a similar note in 1985, on accepting the Jerusalem Prize, one of several honors he received.

“There is a fine Jewish proverb,” he said in his acceptance speech: “Man thinks, God laughs.” And then a fine Kunderian flourish: “But why does God laugh? Because man thinks, and the truth escapes him. Because the more men think, the more one man’s thought diverges from another’s. And finally, because man is never what he thinks he is.”

Constant Méheut contributed reporting.

Hollywood actors agree to mediation, but strike may be unavoidable – Daily Press

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By ANDREW DALTON (AP Entertainment Writer)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Unionized Hollywood actors on the verge of a strike have agreed to allow a last-minute intervention from federal mediators but say they doubt a deal will be reached by a negotiation deadline late Wednesday.

“We are committed to the negotiating process and will explore and exhaust every possible opportunity to make a deal, however we are not confident that the employers have any intention of bargaining toward an agreement,” the Screen Actors Guild -American Federation of Radio and Television Artists said in a statement Tuesday night.

The actors could join the already striking Writers Guild of America and grind the already slowed production process to a halt if no agreement is reached with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers. The sides agreed to an extension before the original contract expiration date on June 30, resetting it to Wednesday at 11:59 p.m.

Issues on the table in negotiations include the unregulated use of artificial intelligence and effects on residual pay brought on by the streaming ecosystem that has emerged in recent years.

“People are standing up and saying this doesn’t really work, and people need to be paid fairly,” Oscar-winner Jessica Chastain, who was nominated for her first Emmy Award Wednesday for playing Tammy Wynette in “George & Tammy,” told The Associated Press. “It is very clear that there are certain streamers that have really kind of changed the way we work and the way that we have worked, and the contracts really haven’t caught up to the innovation that’s happened.”

Growing pessimism surrounding the talks seemed to turn to open hostility when SAG-AFTRA released a statement Tuesday night.

It came in response to a report in Variety that a group of Hollywood CEOs had been the force behind the request for mediation, which the union said was leaked before its negotiators were informed of the request.

The AMPTP declined comment through a representative. It’s not clear whether federal mediators have agreed to take part, but such an intervention would presumably require more time than the hours left on the contract.

“The AMPTP has abused our trust and damaged the respect we have for them in this process,” the SAG-AFTRA statement said. “We will not be manipulated by this cynical ploy to engineer an extension when the companies have had more than enough time to make a fair deal.”

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AP National Writer Jocelyn Noveck contributed to this report.

Lawsuit by Buffalo supermarket shooting victims pins blame on Facebook, Amazon and other tech giants – Daily Press

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By CAROLYN THOMPSON (Associated Press)

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Tech and social media giants like Facebook, Amazon and Google bear responsibility for radicalizing the Buffalo supermarket shooter, who was fueled by racist conspiracy theories he encountered online, the victim’s relatives said in a lawsuit filed Wednesday.

“They were the conspirators, even if they don’t want to admit it,” civil rights attorney Ben Crump said at a news conference announcing a 171-page lawsuit, which seeks unspecified financial damages as well as changes in how the companies operate.

The suit names several online platforms including Facebook’s parent company Meta, Instagram, Google, Discord and Amazon — which owns Twitch, the livestreaming platform the shooter used to broadcast last year’s shooting. The suit also names RMA Armament, the maker of the gunman’s body armor, as well as the firearms retailers that sold him weapons.

Ten Black people were killed and three others were wounded in May 2022 when Payton Gendron opened fire at the Tops Friendly Market in a predominantly Black neighborhood of Buffalo, New York, which he targeted after conducting research online. Gendron, who was 18 years old at the time, had driven 200 miles (322 kilometers) from his home in Conklin, New York.

He is serving a prison sentence of life without parole after pleading guilty to crimes including murder and domestic terrorism motivated by hate.

The lawsuit says Gendron admits he became addicted to social media and was “lured, unsuspectingly, into a psychological vortex by defective social media applications and fed a steady stream of racist and white supremacist propaganda and falsehoods.”

The mother of Zaire Goodman, who was shot in the neck and survived, described being “tagged” in a video that circulated widely online after Gendron livestreamed his rampage using a camera attached to the helmet he wore.

“No one should be looking at that,” Goodman’s mother, Zeneta Everhart, said.

Twenty-two users watched the violence in real-time on Gendron’s Twitch account, which was simultaneously broadcast on his Discord account, according to the lawsuit.

Just before the shooting, the gunman also made public 700 pages of an online diary detailing his plans, and linked to a Google document containing a self-described “manifesto” describing his racist motivations, the lawsuit said.

In response to the lawsuit, a spokesman for YouTube, which is owned by Google, said the company has invested in technology and policies to identify and remove extremist content.

“We regularly work with law enforcement, other platforms, and civil society to share intelligence and best practices,” José Castañeda said in an emailed statement to The Associated Press.

Kimberly Salter, whose husband, Aaron Salter, was the store’s security guard, said at a news conference Wednesday that “These are human beings’ lives that were taken by a murderer.”

Aaron Salter, a retired police officer, was fatally shot after a bullet he fired struck Gendron but was deflected by body armor, authorities said.

The body armor’s manufacturer, RMA Armament, said the lawsuit comes as a surprise and that its “products are intended for the protection of law-abiding private citizens, police departments and government partners.”

Other companies named in the suit did not immediately respond to emailed requests for comment.

Buffalo attorney Terrence Connors, who along with Crump represents the families, said the legal team has thoroughly examined “the entire line of the gun distribution, the manufacturers of the body armor, the high capacity magazines that are plainly illegal,” as well as not social media platforms.

“What we found was downright scary,” he said.

The suit also names Gendron’s parents, Paul and Pamela Gendron, who the lawsuit claims armed their son despite warning signs that he was dangerous.

The Gendrons’ lawyer did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The lawsuit is similar to one filed in May by other victims’ of the shooting. Attorneys said the lawsuits may be combined.

“There were many people who helped him load that gun,” Crump said. “And it is our objective to make sure that everybody that loaded that gun is held to account.”

Oakland A’s to call up former UVA star Zack Gelof for his MLB debut – Daily Press

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MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

It’s been a pretty cool week for the Gelof brothers.

On Sunday, University of Virginia infielder Jake Gelof was selected 60th overall by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the second round of the MLB draft.

Then on Wednesday, the Oakland Athletics announced that infielder Zack Gelof, his older brother, will be promoted prior to Friday night’s game against Minnesota to make his MLB debut.

Zack, primarily a second baseman who played for the Cavaliers from 2019-21, is the A’s No. 3 overall prospect, according to MLB.com. He was hitting .304 with 12 homers, 44 RBIs and 20 stolen bases in 69 games for Triple-A Las Vegas this season.

Like his brother, Zack was also the 60th overall pick. The A’s selected him in the 2021 MLB draft.

Ex-NSU standout signs with Giants

Former Granby High and Norfolk State player Ty Hanchey has signed with the San Francisco Giants.

Hanchey played three seasons at NSU before transferring to Florida A&M, where he played the past two seasons.

He batted .318 with 132 RBIs, 126 runs, 20 homers and 28 stolen bases during his college career. He played catcher primarily, but also was a designated hitter.

WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

ODU announces nine signees

Old Dominion women’s basketball coach DeLisha Milton-Jones announced the addition of nine signees to the 2023 recruiting class, seven of which were junior college players.

Jenny Nkem Womsi, a 6-1 forward/center out of Barton (Kansas) Community College, was a first-team NJCAA All-American who averaged 15 points and 8.9 rebounds a game.

En’Dya Buford, a 5-7 guard out of Jones (Mississippi) College, was a third-team NJCAA All-American who averaged 17.5 points a game.

The other JUCO players are De’Shawnti Thomas, a 5-10 forward, and Halima Salat, a 5-6 guard, both from Seward County (Kansas) Community College, Maya Cunningham, a 5-10 guard/forward from Shelton State (Alabama) Community College, Makiyah McCollister, a 5-6 guard from Trinity Valley (Texas) Community College and Ladajah Huguley, a 5-4 guard from Chipola (Florida) College.

The other two signees are Lanetta Williams, a 6-3 forward who transferred from Memphis, and Nnenna Orji, a 6-2 forward who transferred from Hawaii.

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

UVA’s Bennett makes three staff moves

UVA head coach Tony Bennett has promoted Johnny Carpenter and Isaiah Wilkins to assistant coaches and added Chase Coleman as a graduate assistant.

Carpenter served as UVA’s director of player personnel the past five seasons and enters his ninth season with the program. Wilkins, a former Cavaliers player, has been a graduate assistant the past two seasons. Coleman, a former Maury High star, just finished a four-year playing career with the Cavs.

MORE COLLEGES

UVA wins VaSID all-sports survey

The University of Virginia won nearly 66% of its athletic events in the 2022-23 season to finish first in the Virginia Sports Information Directors University Division all-sports survey.

The Cavaliers went 261-133-8 for a 65.9% winning percentage to snap a two-year run by Liberty.

James Madison was second at 65.5%, followed by Liberty (63.1%), Virginia Tech (58%) and Old Dominion (55.2%).

Washington & Lee won 74.7% of its contests to win the College Division, edging Christopher Newport (73.8%).

Briefly

  • The Baltimore Orioles announced Wednesday that catcher Anthony Bemboom cleared outright waivers and has accepted an assignment to the Norfolk Tides.
  • Princess Anne High in Virginia Beach won the 2022-23 National Guard Cup for academic activity with 355 points, easily defeating second-place Clover Hill.

Chinese hackers breached State Dept., other government email on eve of Blinken visit, officials say – Daily Press

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By FRANK BAJAK and MATTHEW LEE (Associated Press)

WASHINGTON (AP) — State-backed Chinese hackers foiled Microsoft’s cloud-based security in hacking the email accounts of officials at multiple U.S. agencies that deal with China ahead of Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s trip to Beijing last month, officials said Wednesday.

The surgical, targeted espionage accessed the email of a small number of individuals at an unspecified number of U.S. agencies and was discovered in mid-June by the State Department, U.S. officials said. They said none of the breached systems were classified, nor was any of the stolen data.

The hacked officials included Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, The Washington Post reported, citing anonymous U.S. officials. Export controls imposed by her agency have stung multiple Chinese companies.

One person familiar with the investigation said U.S. military and intelligence agencies were not among the agencies impacted in the monthlong spying campaign, which also affected unnamed foreign governments.

The officials spoke on condition they not be further identified.

In a technical advisory Wednesday and a call with reporters, the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency and the FBI said Microsoft determined the hackers gained access by impersonating authorized users.

Officials did not specify the nature of the stolen data. But one U.S. official said the intrusion was “directly targeted” at diplomats and others who deal with the China portfolio at the State Department and other agencies. The official added that it was not yet clear if there had been any significant compromise of information.

The Blinken trip went ahead as planned, although with customary information security procedures in place, which required his delegation to use “burner” phones and computers in China.

The hack was disclosed late Tuesday by Microsoft in a blog post. It said it was alerted to the breach, which it blamed on a state-backed, espionage-focused Chinese hacking group “known to target government agencies in Western Europe,” on June 16. Microsoft said the group, which it calls Storm-0558, had gained access to email accounts affecting about 25 organizations, including government agencies, since mid-May as well as to consumer accounts of individuals likely associated with those agencies.

Neither Microsoft nor U.S. officials would identify the agencies or governments impacted. A senior CISA official told reporters in a press call that the number of affected organizations in the United States is in the single digits.

While the official declined to say whether U.S. officials are displeased with Microsoft over the breach, U.S. National Security Council spokesman Adam Hodge noted that it was “government safeguards” that detected the intrusion and added, “We continue to hold the procurement providers of the U.S. Government to a high security threshold.”

In fact, those safeguards consist of a data-logging feature for which Microsoft charges a premium. The CISA official noted that some of the victims lacked the data-logging feature and, unable to detect the breach, learned of it from Microsoft.

But of greater concern to cybersecurity experts is that The Storm-0558 hackers broke in using forged authentication tokens — which are used to verify the identity of a user. Microsoft’s executive vice president for security, Charlie Bell, said on the company’s website that the hackers had done that by acquiring a “consumer signing key.”

Cybersecurity researcher Jake Williams, a former National Security Agency offensive hacker, said it remains unclear how the hackers accomplished that. Microsoft did not immediately respond to emailed questions, including whether it was breached by the hackers to obtain the signing key.

Williams was concerned the hackers could have forged tokens for wide use to hack any number of non-enterprise Microsoft users. “I can’t imagine China didn’t also use this access to target dissidents on personal subscriptions, too.”

The head of intelligence for the cybersecurity firm Crowdstrike, Adam Meyers, said in a statement that the incident highlights the systemic risk of relying on a single technology provider in Microsoft. He said “having one monolithic vendor that is responsible for all of your technology, products, services and security – can end in disaster.”

A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman, Wang Wenbin, called the U.S. accusation of hacking “disinformation” aimed at diverting attention from U.S. cyberespionage against China.

“No matter which agency issued this information, it will never change the fact that the United States is the world’s largest hacker empire conducting the most cyber theft,” Wang said in a routine briefing.

U.S. intelligence agencies also use hacking as a critical espionage tool and it is not a violation of international law.

Last month, Google-owned cybersecurity firm Mandiant said suspected state-backed Chinese hackers broke into the networks of hundreds of public and private sector organizations globally exploiting a vulnerability in a popular email security tool.

Earlier this year, Microsoft said state-backed Chinese hackers were targeting U.S. critical infrastructure and could be laying the technical groundwork to disrupt critical communications between the U.S. and Asia during future crises.

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Associated Press writers Aamer Madhani in Washington and Zen Soo in Hong Kong contributed to this report. Bajak reported from Boston.

Police say there’s no sign of crime by BBC anchor who allegedly paid teen for sexual photos – Daily Press

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LONDON (AP) — There’s no evidence a BBC presenter who allegedly paid a teenager for sexually explicit photos committed a crime, London police said Wednesday as the broadcaster’s wife publicly identified him for the first time as veteran news anchor Huw Edwards.

Metropolitan police decided to take no further action after speaking with the alleged victim and that person’s parents. The parents told The Sun newspaper last week that the presenter had been allowed to remain on air after the mother complained to the BBC in May that he paid the youth 35,000 pounds ($45,000) starting in 2020 when the person was 17.

As the story topped the news in Britain all week and embroiled the BBC in scandal, speculation swirled about the identify of the presenter. Some of the BBC’s biggest on-air personalities publicly said it wasn’t them and others called on the unnamed presenter to come forward.

Edward’s wife, Vicky Flind, named her husband late Wednesday and said he was hospitalized with serious mental health issues.

After “five extremely difficult days for our family,” Flind said she was naming him “primarily out of concern for his mental well-being and to protect our children.”

“The events of the last few days have greatly worsened matters, he has suffered another serious episode and is now receiving in-patient hospital care where he’ll stay for the foreseeable future,” she said.

Edwards, 61, is one of Britain’s best-known and most authoritative news broadcasters, lead anchor on the BBC’s nighttime news and the face of its election coverage. He led BBC coverage of the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II in September. He’s among the broadcaster’s best-paid stars, with an annual salary of at least 435,000 pounds ($565,000).

The father of five said in a 2021 documentary that depression had left him bedridden for periods over two decades.

The BBC said it would continue its investigation into the matter.

The U.K.’s publicly funded national broadcaster had scrambled to deal with the crisis after the claims were first published by The Sun over the weekend. It said it became aware of a complaint in May but “new allegations were put to us on Thursday of a different nature.”

It did not name Edwards, but said it had suspended a male star over the allegations. He last appeared on air a week ago in Edinburgh for a special broadcast on Scottish celebrations of the coronation of King Charles III.

A lawyer representing the young person in question, who was not named, told the BBC earlier this week that “nothing inappropriate or unlawful has taken place between our client and the BBC personality.” The lawyer said the allegations reported in The Sun were “rubbish.”

The tabloid defended its reporting, saying that concerned parents had made a complaint to the BBC that had not been acted on.

The Metropolitan Police issued a statement Wednesday saying no further action would be taken.

“Detectives from the Met’s Specialist Crime Command have now concluded their assessment and have determined there is no information to indicate that a criminal offence has been committed,” the force said.

Though the age of sexual consent in Britain is 16, it is a crime to make or possess indecent images of anyone under 18.

Jon Sopel, the former BBC News North America editor, sent his best wishes to Edwards and his family.

“This is an awful and shocking episode, where there was no criminality, but perhaps a complicated private life,” Sopel tweeted. “That doesn’t feel very private now. I hope that will give some cause to reflect.”

The episode comes less than two months after commercial U.K. broadcaster ITV faced its own scandal when Phillip Schofield, a long-time host on the channel’s popular morning show, quit in May, admitting he had lied about an affair with a much younger colleague.

The BBC has been hit by several scandals involving its stars over the years, most notoriously when longtime children’s TV host Jimmy Savile was exposed after his death in 2011 as a pedophile who abused children and teens over several decades.

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Associated Press Writer Jill Lawless contributed to this report.