piątek, 9 listopada 2018

Fwd: Friday: A mass shooting in California



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Date: Fri, Nov 9, 2018 at 6:46 AM
Subject: Friday: A mass shooting in California
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A Boeing's last moments, change at Google, a forgotten artist
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Friday, November 9, 2018

Europe Edition
Your Friday Briefing
By PENN BULLOCK
Good morning. Another mass shooting in the U.S., a century since the Armistice, and how the Mandarin duck got its name.
Here's the latest:
Jenna Schoenefeld for The New York Times
• A mass shooting in California.
Investigators were searching for clues to why a former Marine armed with a .45-caliber handgun, legally obtained, opened fire at a crowded dance hall in Thousand Oaks, Calif., on Wednesday night, killing 12 people.
He was identified as Ian D. Long, 28, a combat veteran. He had served in Afghanistan and was later evaluated for post-traumatic stress. But the authorities said they had determined that he posed no threat.
He died after being confronted by police officers, including one who became his victim, Sgt. Ron Helus. Sergeant Helus was honored Thursday in the procession seen above.
Some of the hundreds of the people in the club had survived the mass shooting at a country music festival last year in Las Vegas, where 58 people were killed.
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Philippe Huguen/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
• 100 years after the Armistice.
Dozens of world leaders will commemorate the end of World War I in France this weekend, and President Emmanuel Macron, above, hopes the occasion puts them in mind of the dangers of nationalism.
But as he gets ready to inherit de facto leadership of the E.U. from Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, Mr. Macron is a diminished figure.
On the world stage, he has few allies in defending immigration and liberal governance. In Europe, he is despised by rising populist movements. At home, his policies and aristocratic image are putting people off.
Mr. Macron recently likened this era to the one between the world wars. Analysts told us he'll have to do a better job of grappling with discontent if he hopes to change the Continent's course.
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Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
• Another jam-packed day in American politics.
To justify the White House's unusual move of barring the CNN reporter Jim Acosta, Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders falsely claimed he had laid hands on a staff member, above right, during a contentious presidential news conference. Ms. Sanders circulated misleadingly edited video of the encounter that came from an infamous conspiracy website.
Meanwhile, the Trump administration claimed vast authority to deny asylum to virtually any migrant who crosses the border illegally.
And there were new details about the acting attorney general, Mark Whitaker, a skeptic of the Russia investigation who is now tasked with overseeing it. He was on the advisory board of a company accused of bilking customers and has criticized the Supreme Court's power of judicial review, a foundational principle of American government.
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Achmad Ibrahim/Associated Press
• What brought down Lion Air Flight 610?
We've had reporters around the world consulting investigators, pilots and aviation experts, trying to understand what may have caused a new Boeing jet to crash into the Java Sea last week, at the cost of 189 lives.
What they've been able to reconstruct is an end that would have been terrifying but swift.
The single-aisle Boeing aircraft appears to have plummeted nose-first at as much as 400 m.p.h., striking the waves in less than a minute. And it's become clear that there might have been a whole cascade of problems — including erroneous data, a burst of confusing alarms in the cockpit and the culture at Lion Air, an Indonesian airline.
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Bryan R. Smith/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Google overhauls its sexual misconduct policy.
The technology giant said it would end forced arbitration for sexual harassment or assault claims, days after more than 20,000 of its employees around the world, prompted by a Times investigation, walked out in protest of how the company handles cases of sexual misconduct. Above, one of the walkouts.
The unified action by workers underlines how, with few laws to regulate Silicon Valley, employees have taken it on themselves to change how the companies operate in the world.
Business
Preston Gannaway for The New York Times
• Review: Facebook's Portal devices, above, are well designed but still a little creepy, our technology columnists write.
• Tesla named Robyn Denholm, the chief financial officer at the Australian telecommunications giant Telstra, to replace Elon Musk as chair.
• We're introducing a Sunday newsletter, "With Interest," to bring you essential business insights to prep you for the week ahead. Sign up here.
Here's a snapshot of global markets.
In the News
Bryan Denton for The New York Times
"A game of chicken": U.S. naval commanders see growing risks of a clash with China in the disputed waters of the South China Sea. Above, a U.S. cruiser in the region. [The New York Times]
A Spanish law that seeks to atone for the expulsion of Sephardic Jews in 1492, by giving their descendants a path to citizenship, is attracting Hispanics with Sephardic heritage who say they are worried about growing racism in the U.S. [The New York Times]
• Prince Charles, who is often outspoken and controversial, said that he would be more circumspect about expressing his views as king. [The New York Times]
• A French court ruled that a sculpture by Jeff Koons improperly copied a 1985 clothing ad, and ordered Mr. Koons to pay its creator $170,000. [The New York Times]
France's highest literary award, the Goncourt Prize, went to Nicolas Mathieu for "Leurs Enfants Après Eux" ("Their Children After Them"), his novel of teenagers growing up in a crumbling region of France in the 1990s. [The New York Times]
• Vintage: Archaeologists discovered a bronze pot in China that they think contains several liters of 2,000-year-old wine. [The South China Morning Post]
Smarter Living
Tips for a more fulfilling life.
Romulo Yanes for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Vivian Lui.
Recipe of the day: End the week with a delicious pasta tossed in a broccoli-walnut pesto.
How to stay healthy while traveling with an autoimmune disease.
One thing to help the environment: Get active in your community. (And share your own greening ideas here.)
Noteworthy
2018 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/ADAGP, Paris; Private collection
Leonor Fini, a forgotten figure in 20th century art who was close to the Surrealists but resisted labels, while inverting usual gender roles in her work, is the subject of a retrospective at the Museum of Sex in Manhattan. Above, "Woman Seated on a Naked Man."
"The Tattooist of Auschwitz," a novel by a first-time Australian author that just hit No. 1 on the Times paperback fiction list, tells an unlikely love story set at the Nazi death camp, based on real events.
• The film director Wes Anderson and his partner, the author and designer Juman Malouf, were given free rein in Austria's largest museum. Our critic reviewed the results.
Back Story
Sam Yeh/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Recently, a visitor has been seen paddling around in a lake in New York's Central Park: a brightly colored little duck.
The duck, above, a native to East Asia that quickly became a star on social media, is a yuānyang (鸳鸯) in China. In English, it's a Mandarin duck. Why?
The fowl's vibrant plumage recalls the dress of government bureaucrats centuries ago, called mandarins in the West. The same connection applied to the dialect those officials used. Even mandarin oranges got the linguistic overlay.
But mandarin is not a Chinese word. Its etymology is disputed.
Some say that during the Qing dynasty, visiting Westerners heard people calling government officials of the ruling class "mǎn dàrén" (满大人): Manchu for "big man" or "boss."
Others say that the term comes from "menteri," the Malay for "court councilor" or "minister," and that the 16th-century Portuguese who used Malaysia as a stepping stone into China wrote it as "mandarin."
The little duck in Central Park has been solo, but in China, its cousins are believed to be lifelong couples. There is a saying: A pair of Mandarin ducks is more enviable than an immortal.
Amy Chang Chien wrote today's back story. It was first published in our new Chinese-language Morning Briefing. (Sign-up for that here.)
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