sobota, 4 kwietnia 2015

Fwd: European Morning: Come Out and Live, Shabab Told Kenya Students. It Was a Lie.


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From: NYTimes.com <nytdirect@nytimes.com>
Date: Sat, Apr 4, 2015 at 7:01 AM
Subject: European Morning: Come Out and Live, Shabab Told Kenya Students. It Was a Lie.
To: pascal.alter@gmail.com


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Saturday, April 4, 2015

Top News
A Kenyan forensics expert on Friday surveyed the damage to Garissa University College, where gunmen killed nearly 150 people.
Come Out and Live, Shabab Told Kenya Students. It Was a Lie.

By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN

The attack on a Kenyan university that killed almost 150 people exposed how powerless the country is in the face of a ruthless terrorist organization.

John Kerry and his counterpart, Mohammad Javad Zarif.
An Iran Nuclear Deal Built on Coffee, All-Nighters and Compromise

By DAVID E. SANGER and MICHAEL R. GORDON

In hashing out one of the hardest-to-negotiate arms control agreements in history, Iran and the United States took a simple approach: stay in the same hotel room until they figure out how to get along.

Praying for a slain relative at the platform on the Tigris River where Islamic State fighters are believed to have killed hundreds of Iraqi soldiers last June.
A U.S. Concession to Reality in the Battle Against Islamic State

By HELENE COOPER

In the battle to retake Tikrit, the Iraqi military served as a go-between for two global adversaries that did not want to publicly acknowledge that they were working together.

For more top news, go to INYT.com
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Editors' Picks
Kaname Harada, 98, holding a photo of himself as a Japanese fighter pilot in World War II. His final mission, he said, was to warn Japan to never go to war again.

WORLD | The Saturday Profile

Retired Japanese Fighter Pilot Sees an Old Danger on the Horizon

By MARTIN FACKLER

Now 98 years old and in failing health, a former ace is on what he calls his final mission: using his wartime experiences to warn Japan against ever going to war again.

OPINION | Op-Ed Contributor

The Shabab's Horrifying Resurgence

By CHARLES ONYANGO-OBBO

The terrorists seemed to be on the run in Somalia. But now in Kenya, they are back with a deadly sectarian vengeance.

World
French rescue workers at the crash site of the Germanwings plane near Seyne-les-Alpes, France.
Germanwings Co-Pilot Accelerated During Descent, Data From 2nd Recorder Shows

By NICOLA CLARK

Data showed that Andreas Lubitz used the autopilot to direct the plane to descend to 100 feet, then repeatedly increased the speed.

President Obama must convince skeptics, especially in Congress, about the agreement reached on Iran's nuclear program.
With Iran Deal in Hand, White House Makes Sales Pitch to Preserve It

By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS

The intensity of the campaign reflects the challenge President Obama faces in building support among lawmakers for an agreement that could be one of the most important American foreign policy achievements in decades.

French Bill Barring Ultrathin Models Clears a Hurdle

By ALISSA J. RUBIN

Controversial new measures to prohibit modeling agencies from hiring dangerously thin models came closer to passage Friday.

For more world news, go to NYTimes.com/World
Business
Opponents of powdered alcohol said it could increase the chances of underage drinking and abuse.
Powdered Alcohol Meets Resistance in U.S. Before It Even Comes to Market

By RACHEL ABRAMS

Concerned over the potential for abuse, six states have banned the product, and a senator has introduced a bill to ban its sale and manufacture nationwide.

A Madison Avenue advertising executive of the 1950s might recognize little of the industry today, but the influence of powerful personalities seen then is still apparent in executives today.
'Mad Men' and the Era that Changed Advertising

By EMILY STEEL

While Don Draper wouldn't recognize much of today's advertising business, which is increasingly driven by technology, big personalities at the very top continue to reign.

A Pennsylvania Department of Transportation crew working last month. While hiring in sectors like construction and government didn't change much last month, analysts blamed the punishing winter for March's overall slowdown.
U.S. Economy Gained 126,000 Jobs in March, an Abrupt Slowdown in Hiring

By PATRICIA COHEN

The unemployment rate held steady, but after a year in which job gains exceeded 200,000 monthly, the deceleration confirmed worrying signs in the economy.

. The Upshot: The New Job Numbers Show Just How Muddy the Economic Outlook Is
For more business news, go to INYT.com/Business
Technology

Bits Blog

Regulators in Europe Take Aim at American Tech Giants

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

New developments offer the latest and perhaps clearest sign yet that American tech giants face intensifying scrutiny in Europe that could curb their profits in the region and affect how they operate around the world.

Kevin Spacey playing President Frank Underwood in the third season of
Netflix Says 'House of Cards' to Return for 4th Season

By EMILY STEEL

The program, which stars Kevin Spacey, was one of the company's first forays into original programming when the series debuted in 2013.

Wisconsin Coach Uses an App That Works More Than Thumb Muscles

By MARC TRACY

Erik Helland, who worked for the Chicago Bulls for 25 years, has used a program called Metrifit to closely monitor players' diets, sleep patterns and exercise regimens.

For more technology news, go to NYTimes.com/Tech
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Sports
Serafim Todorov, a three-time world champion, lives in Pazardzhik, a small city in Bulgaria, on a pension of $435 a month.
The Last Man to Beat Floyd Mayweather Jr. Still Regrets It

By SAM BORDEN

Serafim Todorov does not resent Mayweather's success since defeating him in the 1996 Olympic boxing semifinals. Rather, his bitterness stems from what happened in the final.

In 19 starts at Augusta National Golf Club, Tiger Woods has 13 top-10 finishes, including 11 finishes of fifth or better, and he has never missed the cut.
Tiger Woods Will Play Masters, Ending Two-Month Leave

By KAREN CROUSE

Woods, 39, has been on a leave of absence since February to work on his game but will return for the Masters next week, attempting to win the event for the fifth time.

Rory McIlroy on the golf course at Bay Hill Club and Lodge in Orlando, Fla.
Rory McIlroy Has the Best Swing in Golf

By CHARLES SIEBERT

How far will it take Northern Ireland's onetime child prodigy?

For more sports news, go to INYT.com/Sports
U.S. News
Chad Devereaux cleared bricks that fell from his in-laws' home in Sparks, Okla., after an earthquake in 2011.
As Quakes Rattle Oklahoma, Fingers Point to Oil and Gas Industry

By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr. and MICHAEL WINES

Some in the industry believe the earthquakes are a natural phenomenon, but many scientists disagree.

Ashley Diamond in New York in the early 2000s.
Transgender Inmate's Hormone Treatment Lawsuit Gets Justice Dept. Backing

By MATT APUZZO

The inmate, who is in prison in Georgia, wants the state to restart the hormone treatment she had been taking for 17 years before her arrest.

Report Details Flawed Law Enforcement Response to Marathon Bombings

By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr.

A throng of officers from Massachusetts and neighboring states rushed to a Boston suburb without any coordination with police commanders, the report said.

For more U.S. news, go to NYTimes.com/US
Opinion

Gray Matter

Our Cosmic Selves

By RAY JAYAWARDHANA

Life on Earth is intimately connected to the celestial realm.

Tahmima Anam

Op-Ed | Tahmima Anam

Save Bangladesh's Bloggers

By TAHMIMA ANAM

A series of vicious Islamist-inspired killings threaten the country's founding principles and very identity.

Op-Ed Contributors

Solving Libya's ISIS Problem

By KARIM MEZRAN and MATTIA TOALDO

The West must convince the factions to fight the Islamic State instead of each other.

For more opinion, go to INYT.com/Opinion
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