Good morning! Today is Monday, the eighth of June, 2026 and this is the Monday Edition of GEORGE.
Here is some of the most important news you might have missed over the weekend.
Ukraine reported that Russian drones struck a nuclear-fuel storage facility within the Chernobyl exclusion zone, one day after Ukraine launched a long-distance drone attack at St. Petersburg, where a major Russian economic summit was taking place,
Our @The War Room correspondent has the details on these stories as well as the renewaed hostilities between Iran and Israel and Iran’s attacks on Bahrain and Kuwait.
As the first matches of the World Cup grow near, some football fans won’t be attending. Multiple groups of gay football club fan groups are boycotting the matches in the United States, fearing a hostile environment, particular in states such as Texas and Florida. GEORGE has a complete report on this as well as on the absurd situation of Seattle’s Pride Weekend Pride Match, Iran versus Egypt, representatives of two countries whose laws make homosexuality a crime in one case punishable by life imprisonment.
Looking at news from the rest of the world, Weekend GEORGE explores the long-debated question of whether a pianist’s touch can actually change the tone color of a piano note, examines how public health officials are preparing for the 2026 World Cup in North America, and reports on the recent repairs to the International Space Station and what made NASA nervous about them.
Our @Friedell on Art and Society columnist reports that New York City is getting its eighth area code and what that means for the prefix-challenged metropolis. Our @The Sketch editorial cartoon columnist shares his take the significance of the new and up-and-coming area codes versus the 80-year-old ‘212’ area code.
In addition, GEORGE has other exclusive news in today’s edition so don’t touch that dial. Simply scroll down and read more GEORGE, starting with today’s editorial cartoon in @The Sketch. GEORGE will be back tomorrow with a brand-new editorial cartoon, even more news, and stories you won’t find elsewhere.
Finally, as of late May, the daily greeting column you are reading finally has a name, @The Lede. A “lede” is journalism jargon for the opening sentence or introductory paragraph of a news story. It is deliberately misspelled to avoid confusion with the metal “lead” used in old printing presses to separate lines of type.
Until the next time, remain curious!
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VOLUME VI… № 1,733
@THE LEDE (above)
@THE SKETCH (above) This whole Iran crisis is starting to get very boring.
IN THIS ISSUE
@INTERMEZZO I Street scene in Jamaica
@THE WAR ROOM
@INTERMEZZO II Urban treet scene in New York
@TODAY IN BRIEF
@INTERMEZZO III Wien Mitte Train Station
@FRIEDELL ON ART AND SOCIETY New York Citys’ New Area Code
@RECENT DISPATCHES OF NOTE
@ABOUT GEORGE
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U.S.-Israeli War in Iran
— Israel bombed Iran for the first time since the cease-fire agreement was signed in April. The strike on Iran came after several barrages of Iranian missiles and drones directed towards Israel.
— Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the country’s ideologically driven militia, said the operation would be “the beginning of a full week of continuous strikes.”
— Iran fired ballistic missiles in two separate barrages directed towards Israel late Sunday. The action was the first time since the April cease-fire went into effect that Iran had targeted Israel. The Israeli military said that it had intercepted all Iranian missiles in the first of two barrages and announced at around 11 p.m. (23:00) local time that it was safe to leave bomb shelters. As a precaution, the government ordered schools to be closed nationwide on Monday.
— Israel’s רֹאשׁ הַמַּטֶּה הַכְּלָלִי , or military chief of staff, אֱיָל זָמִיר, or Eyal Zamir, said that Israel will “strike the enemy with determination as soon as the order is given.”
— U.S. forces attacked Iranian coastal radar sites on Saturday after shooting down at least four drones launched by Iran toward the Strait of Hormuz that “posed an immediate threat to regional maritime traffic.” the U.S. military’s Central Command said. The moves by both sides are the latest escalation complicating efforts to end the war between the two countries.
— Tehran responded to Saturday’s attacks with a salvo of missiles at U.S. allies in the Gulf. Bahrain and Kuwait said they had been targeted by Iran, drawing a furious response from the Gulf monarchies and adding pressure to an already shaky ceasefire.
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Russo-Ukrainian War
— Ukraine said Russian drones struck a nuclear-fuel storage facility within the Chernobyl exclusion zone. The United Nation’s atomic watchdog called the attack “completely unacceptable.” The attack “partially destroyed” the facility, which was empty at the time, Ukraine’s state-owned nuclear operator Energoatom said in a post on social media. The attack also sparked a fire that spanned roughly 40 square meters, or 430 square feet, the operator said.
— It was just several days ago that Russia blamed Ukraine for a separate drone attack on the Russian-controlled Zaporizhia nuclear plant in south-east Ukraine.
— Ukraine also reported that three people were killed in a Russian drone strike while waiting at a bus stop in southeastern Ukraine on Sunday,
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U.S Vice President Jerome David Vance publicly commented on the fatal stabbing of Henry Nowak, a white University student, who was murdered by Vickrum Singh Digwa, a 23-year-old British Sikh, in Southampton. Mr. Digwa, whose brother lied to police officers in a 999 call he made according to Temporary Deputy Chief Constable Robert France, had a “weapons obsession” and also lied to police, stating incorrectly that Mr. Nowak was a “racist, drunk, violent aggressor,” according to prosecuting barrister Nicholas Lobbenberg KC. Mr. Digwa’s mother, Kiran Kaur, 53, was found guilty of assisting an offender after she attempted to hide the blade used in the attack. Mr. Digwa was sentenced to life in prison. His mother will be sentenced on 17 July. Mr. Vance said that he blamed Mr. Nowak’s killing on a “mass invasion of migrants.” David Lammy, Britain’s deputy prime minister, this week said he spoke to Mr. Vance to challenge the comments he made concerning the case. Mr. Lammy said that he and Mr. Vance remain “colleagues and friends”.
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Seattle’s Gay Pride month culminates in a massive Pride Weekend from 26 to 28 June, highlighted by the annual Seattle Pride Parade on Sunday, 28 June, and there will be free PrideFest events across Capitol Hill and the Seattle Center. Therefore, it stands to reason that the 2026 FIFA World Cup match at Seattle’s Lumen Field on 26 June, designated by local organizers as a “Pride Match,” should be one of the highlights. Therein lies the rub. The match on 26 June will be between Iran, where homosexuality is punishable by death, and Egypt, where homosexual activity is punishable by up to three years in prison. When FIFA’s schedulers announced the Pride Match pairing after December’s draw, it must have felt a little like a sick joke to many. The Egyptian Football Association has said it will reject “in absolute terms” any signs or symbols of gay pride. Mehdi Taj, the head of the Iranian football federation, told news agencies that the game assignment was an “irrational move.” For once, and just this once, just about everyone was on Iran’s side.
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The United States will greet gay, lesbian, and transgender World Cup fans through a mixed landscape. Laws on gay and lesbian rights vary by state. Fan groups, human rights organizations, and civil rights coalitions have issued travel advisories for the United States and are actively boycotting World Cup matches in restrictive host states like Florida and Texas. The groups cite “don’t say gay” and “don’t say they” legislation, deteriorating human rights, and the stripping of federal protections as reasons they feel unsafe. As a result, prominent European organizations, such as England’s Three Lions Pride, have officially boycotted the tournament. Meanwhile, New York, New Jersey, and California have a number of laws that have robust anti-discrimination laws. There are two other host countries, Canada, one of the safest and most inclusive nations on the planet, offering full federal legal protections against discrimination, and Mexico, which has enshrined such protections in its federal constitution but is currently mired in controversy over the persistent use by Mexican football fans of an anti-gay one-word chant, “puto,” which can be translated as “male prostitute,” but, in the context of how it is employed by some Mexican football fans, is regarded by FIFA, gay advocacy groups, and numerous Spanish-language scholars as a homophobic slur directed against gay men or those men who are perceived as insufficiently masculine.
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Thousands of people took to the streets in Tirana, Albania, for the eighth day in a row over fears that the $1.6 billion luxury resort on the picturesque Adriatic coast, backed by Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner, Mr. Trump’s son-in-law, threatens an ecologically sensitive area. The resort would be constructed in an area that is home to pristine beaches and a variety of protected species including flamingos, which is why some protestors carried inflatable flamingos with them. The luxury complex includes plans to develop a stretch of coastline in the area of the protected Vjosa-Narta delta and the nearby uninhabited island of Sazan, which was once a secret communist military base. Some fear that outside investors would eventually be able to transform the 2.2-square-mile (5.7-square-kilometer) island into a luxury tourist destination, a move that could affect the island’s critical biodiversity areas while displacing thousands of migratory birds that pass through the area. Protests were also held in the protected lagoon of Vjosa-Narta, where participants highlighted the ecological importance of the area. The protestors in the Albanian capital have called for the resignation of Prime Minister Edi Rama, and voiced their displeasure while carrying Albanian flags and banners with messages such as “Albania is not for sale.” Many of the protestors are accusing the government of favoring investors at the expense of national interests, local newspapers are reporting.
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Iran accused the United States of denying visas for what it termed “integral” members of its team, specifically backroom staff, hours after Washington confirmed Iranian players had been given permission to enter the country ahead of the 2026 World Cup, which starts in less than one week. The White House has said that visas have been granted for Iran’s footballers and what it termed “necessary support staff.” But Iranian state media claimed that 15 officials, including the head of the football federation, have been denied entry. Iran is due to play three games in America. Iran’s embassy in Turkey accused the United States of “politically biased interference in sport” by denying visas to a “large portion of the managerial and executive staff” and “technical advisers.” An unnamed U.S. official said that Iran would not be allowed to “abuse this system to sneak terrorists into the United States under false pretenses.”
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Artist Robert Wyland, known simply as Wyland, filed suit against the Fédération Internationale de Football Association, or FIFA, as well as the owners of two buildings in downtown Dallas after his “Ocean Life” mural, part of an environmental series typically painted on a building’s exterior at the invitation of the owner, was partially covered over with blue paint. He cited the Visual Artists Rights Act of 1990 – a landmark U.S. federal law that grants “moral rights” to creators of visual arts – a statute that allows artists to stop the intentional destruction or distortion of art with recognized stature – in his filing. The action was taken last month to prepare for a piece of art that would commemorate the nine World Cup matches to take place in Arlington, Texas. Mr. Wyland is a conservationist best known for his many Whaling Walls – the name is a , large outdoor murals featuring images of life-size whales and other sea life that have been created in landlocked cities across the globe.
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The 100-Year-Old Mystery Over a Pianist’s Touch and Timbre
For over a century, the question of whether a pianist’s touch can actually change the timbre, or tone color, of a piano note was the subject of great debate.
The controversy turns on a physical fact and a musical reality: once the piano hammer is freely in flight, the string ‘knows” only the hammer’s speed, mass, voicing, and point of contact, so for a single isolated note at the same volume, many physicists have argued that touch cannot directly change tone color in the way a violin bow or singer’s vowel can; yet pianists undeniably create different tone colors through everything surrounding that note – attack timing, voicing within chords, pedaling, legato illusion, micro-balance, release, overlap, and dynamic shaping.
A new study led by Dr. Shinichi Furuya of the NeuroPiano Institute with support from Sony Computer Science Laboratories used ultra-high speed sensing technology to uncover the hidden movements behind expressive playing of the instrument.
Their findings, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that the subtle motions of a pianist’s fingers and hands influence how listeners perceive qualities such as brightness, heaviness, and clarity in musical notes. In other words, Dr. Furuya’s study materially shifts the answer.
The old “same hammer velocity, same tone” argument remains mechanically important, but the researchers found that pianists’ microscopic differences in key attack, acceleration, timing and hand coordination can produce listener-perceived differences in brightness, heaviness, and clarity; in other words, “touch” is not merely poetic language or post-hoc mysticism.
The refined answer is therefore: a pianist cannot change tone color by magic after the hammer is in flight, but the way the key is set into motion can create reproducible acoustic/perceptual differences that listeners hear as tone color
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Cole Porter’s Steinway piano, nicknamed “High Society,” is a prominent fixture at the Waldorf Astoria New York.
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Introducing ‘465’: New York City’s Eighth Area Code
New York will become the city with the most area codes in the United States when the area code 465 makes its debut on 18 June.
The new area code will provide relief for the current 347, 718, 917, and 929 area codes, which serve the Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island, and the Marble Hill sections of the New York City metropolitan area. Marble Hill is the northernmost section of the borough of Manhattan.
The New York State Public Service Commission approved a petition by the North American Numbering Plan Administrator to implement a new area code that is consistent with the North American Numbering Plan for portions of New York City in January 2025.
Henning Andreasen Telephone (model F78), ca. 1977, manufactured by GNT Automatic A/S, Soeborg, Denmark
NANPA, which administers the numbering system for telephone networks in the United States, advises the Commission as to when the supply of telephone numbers within certain area codes in New York will be exhausted within a three-year period.
The newest addition comes on the heels of the introduction of a new area code, 363, in Nassau County, the most densely populated county in New York State outside New York City itself, in 2023, and the addition of New York City’s seventh new area code, 332, which is an overlay area code for Manhattan, in 2017.
The other area codes in the Big Apple are – in order of appearance – 212, 718, 917, 646, 347, and 929.
The United States’ first 90 area codes were assigned in the 1940s based on the population within a given area. Cities with the largest population were given area codes that were quick to dial on a rotary phone, resulting in 212 for New York, 213 for Los Angeles, and 312 for Chicago, while less populous states such as Alaska, Idaho, and Hawaii got 907, 208, and 808 respectively. The adoption of push-button or Touch-Tone “dialing” starting in the 1960s made such considerations moot in the issuance of new area codes.
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As the start of the FIFA 2026 World Cup in the United States, Canada, and Mexico draws near, public health officialsare preparing to receive not just the onslaught of football fans but what amounts to a massive influx of viruses, germs, and heat-related illnesses that they will bring with them. This year’s World Cup will be the largest ever, so large it is spread across three nations. It will last from 12 June to 19 July. It’s likely some viruses will spread across three nations as well and some others will return with fans to their home countries. The sheer scale of the World Cup is unlike anything the hosting cities have ever seen. It makes the Super Bowl or even the Olympics look like Little League baseball by comparison. Football fans tend to travel en masse with their teams from city to city for the matches and will bring a variety of fun ailments along for the ride. While the current Ebola outbreak could rival the worst one on record, public health officials in North America are far more concerned about the measles and influenza as experts say the chances that Ebola would spread at World Cup games or viewing parties are extremely slim because Ebola transmission isn’t respiratory; rather, it is spread through direct contact with an infected person’s bodily fluids, placing family members, healthcare personnel, and caregivers at the greatest risk for exposure.
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Five of the seven astronauts aboard the International Space Station were evacuated onto a docked SpaceX vessel after an air leak in Russia’s Zvezda service module’s transfer tunnel worsened. The five crew members had been told to assume an “elevated safety posture” as two Russian cosmonauts attempted repairs on the transfer tunnel. NASA had voiced objections to Russia’s repair method, which involved the use of a saw to access the crack. NASA spokeswoman Bethany Stevens told GEORGE that the structural repair works had been paused while measurements and data were being assessed, thus prompting the astronauts’ having been told to return to the station. Russia maintained that the crew faced no immediate threat. The International Space Station is a space station in low Earth orbit and is operated by five partner space agencies: NASA (the United States), Roscosmos (Russia), ESA (Europe), JAXA (Japan), and CSA (Canada). It is the first space station built, maintained, and crewed through international coöperation and the largest human spacecraft ever constructed. Since 2 November 2000, it has hosted the longest continuous presence of humans in space. Zvezda’s hull was initially built in the mid-1980s as a structural spare of the Mir core module and later reconfigured as the core module of the Mir-2 station
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George: How to Consume News in a World of Information Overload
George delivers news for curious thinkers in a world of shortened attention spans.
Decades of research on how readers consume information when faced with Information Overload – led by George co-founder Jonathan Spira, one of the foremost authorities on the subject – ensures that each article gets straight to the point with no fluff and no bias.
George presents important news and events of the day clearly and concisely in a format better suited to the modern reader’s limited time and focus, without forsaking the founders’ traditional commitment to fact-driven news, commentary, and dispatches – all prepared by curious thinkers, for curious thinkers.
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George was conceived by the late Greg Andrew Spira,
Jonathan Spira, and the late Basilio Alferow.
Jonathan Spira, Alexander Khusid, Tim Perry, Christian Stampfer, Kurt Stolz, Anna Breuer, and Paul Riegler contributed to this issue of George.
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