Cool Wednesday, tracking strong winds this weekend

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The marine layer is parked over all beach areas Wednesday and will be stubborn to clear. Some places will fail to see the sun and temperatures reflect that. Highs rise into the 50s and 60s by the coastline and some lingering heat inland. This will be the coolest day for all beach area, bundle up! Strongest winds occur inland

Faster clearing and slight warming occurs Thursday. Most areas rise to average. Highs will be around upper 60s and low 70s. Winds crank up near dinner time for most.

Winds crank up significantly this weekend. There is a list of potential impacts associated with these strong winds. Grass and shrub fires, hazardous seas and isolated power outages are just to name a few. Wind Advisories will be likely for most, so plan accordingly. Highs rise back to 70s and 80s this weekend. The sun will prevail each afternoon, enjoy!

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Kouri Richins será sentenciada por el asesinato de su esposo en el día que él habría cumplido 44 años

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Por Nicki Brown, CNN en Español

Eric Richins, un padre de tres hijos de Utah, habría cumplido 44 años el miércoles. En cambio, su esposa será sentenciada por su asesinato.

Tras un juicio que duró varias semanas a principios de este año, un jurado de ocho personas declaró culpable a Kouri Richins, de 36 años, de asesinato con agravantes por envenenar mortalmente a su marido en marzo de 2022.

También fue declarada culpable de intento de asesinato con agravantes por intentar matarlo semanas antes de su muerte, el día de San Valentín, y de fraude y falsificación relacionados con su póliza de seguro de vida.

Kouri Richins, autora de un libro infantil sobre cómo afrontar el duelo tras la muerte de Eric Richins, podría ser condenada a entre 25 años y cadena perpetua o a cadena perpetua sin posibilidad de libertad condicional por su condena por asesinato con agravantes cuando comparezca ante el tribunal en Park City, Utah.

Se espera que los familiares y otros testigos se dirijan al tribunal antes de que el juez Richard Mrazik dicte sentencia.

En un documento presentado ante el tribunal esta semana, la Fiscalía del Condado de Summit invocó a los tres hijos pequeños de los Richins al tiempo que instaba al juez Mrazik a condenar a Kouri Richins a cadena perpetua sin posibilidad de libertad condicional, la pena máxima para el cargo de asesinato con agravantes.

“Los chicos merecen que se resuelva el caso y no deberían tener que revivir el asesinato de su padre en futuras audiencias ni preocuparse por la posible libertad condicional de la acusada”, escribieron los fiscales en el memorándum de sentencia. “Dado el tremendo trauma y la conmoción que la acusada les infligió durante su infancia, este tribunal debe garantizar que no perjudique su vida adulta”.

Los fiscales solicitan al juez que emita una orden de protección que prohíba a Kouri Richins contactar con sus hijos y otros miembros de la familia de su difunto esposo.

El hijo mayor de la pareja, un joven de 13 años identificado en la documentación como “CR”, declaró que extraña a su padre pero no a su madre.

“Me temo que si sale, vendrá a por mí, a por mis hermanos y a por toda mi familia”, manifestó CR, según el memorándum. “Creo que vendrá a buscarnos y nos hará daño”.

Durante el juicio, los miembros de la unida familia de Eric Richins lo recordaron entre lágrimas como un hábil amante de la naturaleza, un hombre de negocios trabajador y un padre dedicado a sus tres hijos pequeños.

“Eric era su entrenador, su padre, pero lo más importante, era su mejor amigo”, declaró su padre, Eugene Richins, en el estrado.

Eric Richins haría cualquier cosa por sus hijos, testificó una de sus hermanas, recordando cómo solía llegar temprano a sus eventos deportivos para colgar carteles animándolos.

“Mi padre ya no puede ser mi entrenador ni asistir a ninguno de mis partidos”, comentó el hijo mediano de los Richins en la demanda presentada ante el estado. “No estará en mis cumpleaños. No puede enseñarme a conducir. No estará en mi graduación”.

Eric Richins, de 39 años, fue hallado muerto en la casa de la pareja en Kamas, Utah, durante la madrugada del 4 de marzo de 2022.

Esa misma noche, Eric y Kouri Richins tomaron una copa para celebrar una transacción exitosa en el negocio inmobiliario de ella, de acuerdo con la declaración que prestó a la policía.

Uno de sus hijos estaba teniendo pesadillas, así que Kouri Richins se fue a dormir a su habitación alrededor de las 9:30 p.m., declaró a la policía.

Cuando regresó al dormitorio principal unas seis horas después, contó, encontró a su marido muerto en la cama.

La autopsia reveló que Eric Richins murió de una sobredosis de fentanilo, co

I spent years staring at the jellyfish lake on my screensaver. The reality was something else

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The author (left) and a friend admire a jellyfish in action.

By Lilit Marcus, CNN

Koror, Palau (CNN) — A neon-pink blob appears in my line of vision.

Even though I’m wearing a snorkel mask, I’m holding my breath. Slowly, the blob floats closer and closer before suddenly puffing up like a balloon. The water is swirling in its tiny wake and the sun glowing above us.

It is the most relaxed I have ever felt in my adult life, and I only had to travel halfway across the world to make it happen.

The blob, despite looking pink to my underwater eyes, is a golden jellyfish. If this were another snorkeling trip in another part of the world, the sight of a jellyfish would be a warning, with a guide steering us away to prevent anybody from getting stung. But this little guy is special. Not only does it not sting, it’s a member of a rare and beautiful species that only exists here, in this one place, a lake in the remote Micronesian island nation of Palau.

Before I knew that Palau existed or that I wanted to go there, my journey began with a photograph.

A photo of a lake full of tiny golden organisms peacefully bobbing along en masse has long been used as one of the standard background images for Apple computers and iPhones.

Although I had no context for where the photo was taken or what it depicted, it felt mesmerizing. It was my first screensaver on my first laptop.

In a time where almost anyone in the world can order the same dresser from Ikea and the same coffee from Starbucks, it feels miraculous that there are still living creatures who can only be found in one very small, specific point on Earth.

Officially, it’s named Ongeim’l Tketau, but everybody just calls it Jellyfish Lake. While there are many species of jellyfish all over the world, the unique conditions here have enabled golden jellies to thrive.

Measuring at 400 meters long and 30 meters deep, the lake is “completely stratified,” explains marine biologist Elspeth Strike. That means it has three distinct, separate layers of water, each with very different conditions. Only the top level has oxygen and thus can support life.

“In the world, there’s only 11 marine lakes that are stratified in this way, so it’s pretty special,” says Strike.

It’s not just the water conditions that make such a favorable environment for these organisms. The lake is in the middle of a limestone rock island, which created a sort of sinkhole shape. Over thousands of years, acidic rainfall filled up the sinkhole and made a lake. Tiny fissures in the limestone allow some ocean water to mix with the lake water, creating the only-in-this-spot conditions.

And while the golden jellies are the star attraction here, another species also calls this lake home: moon jellyfish, which are an opaque white hue. Some people refer to the two species as moon jellies and sun jellies.

Moon jellyfish are flatter, shaped like saucers with a flower or star-shaped center. I saw one or two moon jellyfish for every 10 golden ones, but it’s also possible they were more difficult to notice.

Getting to Jellyfish Lake is no simple weekend trip.

Palau’s tiny airport only accommodates a few flights a day. The easiest and most affordable option for me was via Taipei. Palau is one of a handful of countries with formal diplomatic relations with Taiwan so the two have established strong air connectivity and even set up

As the US starves it of oil, Cuba is pulling off one of the fastest solar revolutions on the planet — with China’s help

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By Laura Paddison, CNN

(CNN) — Cuba is struggling with devastating nationwide blackouts as the United States’ effective oil blockade strangles fuel supplies. But this crisis may also be accelerating a China-backed clean energy revolution that’s been quietly unfolding in the Caribbean nation.

Cuba is currently pulling off one of the fastest solar revolutions on the planet, with help from China, according to data from the energy think tank Ember. Imports of Chinese solar panels and batteries have soared over the past year and, with Chinese investment, Cuba has built dozens of solar parks.

The country is still heavily dependent on fossil fuels, but some experts believe the intense US pressure — with threats to take “control” of the island — may hasten Cuba’s path toward clean energy. More renewables mean less dependence on fuel imports, helping “remove this lever of coercion,” said Kevin Cashman, an economist with the Transition Security Project, a US-UK research organization.

Others caution that Cuba’s energy situation is so bleak, its grid so broken and its economic situation so dire, that renewables can only be a small part of the puzzle right now. In the meantime, lengthy and disruptive blackouts continue and most ordinary Cubans have yet to feel the benefit of the solar surge.

A clean energy revolution “sounds nice on paper, but you’ve got to have the resources,” said Ricardo Torres, a Cuban economist at the American University in Washington DC.

Oil is the backbone of Cuba’s electricity system and most of it is imported. In the 1980s, it came mainly from the Soviet Union. When that fell in the 1990s, Cuba switched to Venezuela, with a unique agreement where Cuba sent medical professionals to Venezuela in exchange for oil.

In early January, after the Trump administration captured Venezuela’s president, it cut off this oil supply. Shortly after, imports to Cuba from other oil suppliers, including Mexico, also dried up after the US threatened them with additional tariffs.

The impacts have been devastating. In March, the country experienced three nationwide blackouts, cutting electricity for its roughly 10 million residents. Trash piled up in the streets, hospital surgeries were limited and people burned wood to cook.

It is Cuba’s worst energy crisis in decades, but blackouts have been part of daily life for many years, as the country’s aging electricity infrastructure frequently buckles under the weight of a demand it cannot meet.

The crisis reached new levels in 2024, with multiday nationwide blackouts. It marked a “turning point,” Torres said, and was the year solar started to take off, promoted by the Cuban government as a solution to energy problems.

The speed of the solar surge has been startling. China exported around $3 million of solar panels to Cuba in 2023; that figure rocketed to $117 million in 2025, according to Ember.

A big part of the country’s clean energy push is an agreement with China to open 92 solar parks across the country by 2028, projected to bring a total of 2 gigawatts of solar power online, enough to power more than 1.5 million homes.

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel Read more

Rory McIlroy’s blistered toe might be the focus at the PGA Championship, but the Masters champ has his feet underneath him

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Rory McIlroy tends to a blister on his right foot on the third hole during his practice round prior to the PGA Championship at Aronimink Golf Club.

By Dana O’Neil, CNN

Newtown Square, Pennsylvania (CNN) — Not since the littlest piggy cried “wee, wee, wee all the way home” will a pinky toe face so much scrutiny.

Less than 48 hours before his assigned tee time to start the PGA Championship, Rory McIlroy stood on the side of the fairway at No. 4, his right foot bare. This was not an Edward Lewis in “Pretty Woman” getting familiar with the grass moment. This was McIlroy, bothered by the same blister that plagued him through last week’s Truist Championship. After three practice holes, McIlroy finally cried “uncle,” hitching a ride on the back of a golf cart and exiting the course.

Cue up the blister experts (presumably they exist) and the sock puppets arguing over which foot coverings are best. It’s time to discuss the benefits of Vaseline and moleskin to reduce friction and hit up the local CVS for blister bandages. In the next 48 hours, we will discuss toes more than a pedicurist.

Because this is not anyone. This is Rory McIlroy, the Pied Piper of golf. He is the world’s No. 2 player (behind Scottie Scheffler) but No. 1 on the popularity charts. Plenty of folks – especially Scheffler – attracted a crowd at Aronimink Golf Club on Tuesday, but none matched McIlroy.

As two patrons walked clear across the other side of the course while McIlroy practiced, one said to the other, “Where’s everyone going?” To which his buddy replied, “To watch Rory. Where else?”

Golf offers a unique dichotomy as a spectator sporting event. It is at once entirely elitist, this week appropriately plopped on the Main Line made famous by the movie, “The Philadelphia Story,” a misnomer of a movie title if ever there was one. It’s both geographically inaccurate – the Main Line is not, in fact, within the city boundaries – and aesthetically hilarious. The Main Line has about as much in common with Philly as Katharine Hepburn has with Gritty.

The sport is all popped collars and Vineyard Vines. It feels more Grove at Ole Miss than frat party in State College. Fans feeling the vapors here can loll about in actual lounge chairs while sipping their cocktails and viewing play on a big screen.

Yet for those who can afford to buy a ticket, golf is weirdly accessible. You cannot, for example, lean over the on-deck circle to watch Aaron Judge prep for an at bat, nor can you poke an eye through a gated NFL practice facility. Yet the very-not-everyman golfers are always within an arm’s length, milling about the grounds like weekend duffers.

When Scheffler finished his practice round on Tuesday afternoon, he was surrounded by autograph seekers screeching his name. One tried to get an edge. “I want to high school with your brother,” he yelled.

Scheffler has three sisters.

The roar around McIlroy

But the star of the day was McIlroy. In the last two months, he has won his second consecutive Masters, attended a state dinner at the White House with King Charles III and Queen Camilla and made a cameo in “Devil Wears Prada 2.” He started Tuesday bright and early with a news conference, strolling casually from the clubhouse to the interview tent in shorts and a tan sweatshirt. His hair was not quite bedhead messy, but not necessarily c

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