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Obama Is Faulted for Not Attending Rally in Paris - 0 views

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    WASHINGTON - President Obama is facing growing criticism for his decision not to attend Sunday's peace march in Paris after deadly terrorist attacks there, and for not sending a top emissary to join a show of solidarity with more than a million people and dozens of presidents and prime ministers from around the world.
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ISIS Is Cited in Hacking of Central Command's Twitter Feed - 0 views

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    WASHINGTON - Hackers claiming to be working on behalf of the Sunni militant group the Islamic State took over the Twitter feed of the United States Central Command on Monday. "In the name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful, the CyberCaliphate continues its CyberJihad," one post said.
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Russia faces wave of bankruptcies - 1 views

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    Anatoly Aksakov, president of Russia's regional banking association and deputy chairman of parliament's financial markets committee, said firms were running out of cash. "Bankers believe that keeping the situation as it stands will cause a wave of bankruptcies, not only credit institutions but also a number of businesses and companies," Aksakov wrote in a letter to the central bank, according to Russian state media.
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Education Secretary Says Administration Is Committed to Testing - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • In a speech on Monday to outline the administration’s priorities for a revision of No Child Left Behind, the signature Bush-era education law, Mr. Duncan said that “parents, teachers and students have both the right and the need to know how much progress all students are making each year towards college- and career-readiness.”
  • Annual testing has become a point of contention in the often-bitter discussions about how best to improve public education.
  • The tests were intended as a way for schools to see whether all student groups, but particularly minorities and poor students, were being taught adequately
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  • Mr. Duncan said the primary purpose of the education law was to guarantee that public school students all have a chance at educational and economic mobility.
  • President Obama’s 2016 budget would include a request for an additional $2.7 billion for the Education Department’s program, including $1 billion for the program that funnels money to schools with high proportions of poor students.
  • “Of course we should be asking the question: Are there too many tests?” he said in a statement.
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Police: No Proof That Rape in Article Occurred at UVa Frat - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Police said Monday that they've been unable to confirm that an alleged gang rape
  • occurred at a University of Virginia fraternity house as described in a Rolling Stone article
  • We are still investigating," Charlottesville Police Capt. Gary Pleasants said in an email to The Associated Press.
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  • The school temporarily suspended fraternities' and sororities' social activities while administrators vowed to take an extensive look at improving safety on campus.
  • Among them: Kegs of beer and pre-made mixes of liquor and punch will be banned; beer must be served in closed cans, and food and water must be made available.
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Cuban Exiles at Miami Rally Denounce Obama for Rapprochement - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Cuba poured out in a rally here on Saturday during which President Obama was denounced unsparingly as a traitor and a liar.
  • This week’s announcements from Mr. Obama and the Cuban president, Raúl Castro, have revived in stark fashion the resentments of these exiles, many of whom now feel utterly betrayed by the government of their adopted land.
  • “All Obama is doing is throwing a lifeline to the Castros so that they can continue crushing the people of Cuba,” said Roberto Delgado Ramos, 78, who said he was arrested twice, in 1960 and 1964, for “counterrevolutionary activities” and served a total of 12 years in prison. “The Castros are the ones who need to pay for the blood that they have spilled.”
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  • : “If the United States doesn’t stand for freedom, then who does? What were all those lives lost for?”
  • “Obama hasn’t talked about stopping the repression,” he said. “Not only that, but the prisoner swap tells any terrorist group around the world that they can capture an American and that he can be exchanged for any terrorist they want.” Next in U.S.
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6 Men, Said to Have Attacked the Police, Are Killed in China's Far West - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • saying that some have been trained in Pakistan and Afghanistan. But human
  • security forces shot and killed six men on Monday after they attacked police officers not far from the Silk Road city of Kashgar, a government website reported.
  • police opened fire on a man near the commercial center of Shule County who was wielding an ax while trying to set off explosives. It said another five men, described as “mobsters,” were subsequently shot to death as they, too, attacked the police.
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  • saying th
  • The episode on Monday occurred in Kashgar Prefecture, an impoverished stretch of southern Xinjiang whose population is nearly 90 percent Uighur and less than 10 percent Han Chinese, the nation’s predominant ethnic group
  • The Chinese authorities often blame Islamic extremists for the bloodshed,
  • saying that some have been trained in Pakistan and Afghanistan. But human
  • Government censorship of the Chinese news media and restrictions on foreign reporters who travel to Xinjiang make it difficult to learn more about such episodes, but reports of them have surged despite an increasingly heavy police presence.
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Twitter Users React With Glee to Fox News Claim on Birmingham - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Using the hashtag #foxnewsfacts, Twitter users poked fun at the network by suggesting other things it might also have said: that the name of the city was being shortened to Birming because Muslims do not eat ham
  • “In parts of London, there are actually Muslim religious police that actually beat and actually wound, seriously, anyone who doesn’t dress according to Muslim, religious Muslim attire.”
  • Neither claim is true. Mr. Emerson later issued an apology and promised to make a donation to the Birmingham Children’s Hospital.
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Charlie Hebdo Staff Prepares Next Issue - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • PARIS — The editorial meeting on Friday began not with article pitches or jousting over punch lines but remembrances for murdered colleagues, updates on the wounded and a surprise visit by the prime minister.
  • one of the paper’s top editors, who was on vacation the day of the shootings. In
  • “We don’t know how to do anything but laugh,” said Gérard Biard,
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  • decide on the cartoons; find targets for their biting brand of satire. But they did so in the offices of the left-wing daily Libération in a former parking garage in central Paris,
  • “In this edition, they didn’t kill anyone,” Mr. Biard said. The staff members will “appear as they always did.” Asked what else would go in the paper, Patrick Pelloux, an emergency room doctor who also writes for Charlie, said with a laugh: “Oh, I don’t know. Not much happening this week.”On Friday afternoon, Rénald Luzier, 43, who goes by Luz, was sketching a pumped-up Arnold Schwarzenegger tearing a copy of Charlie Hebdo in half. On the table, a few cigarette butts floated in a water bottle.
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'Dangerous Moment' for Europe, as Fear and Resentment Grow - 0 views

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    LONDON - The sophisticated, military-style strike Wednesday on a French newspaper known for satirizing Islam staggered a continent already seething with anti-immigrant sentiments in some quarters, feeding far-right nationalist parties like France 's National Front. "This is a dangerous moment for European societies," said Peter Neumann, director of the International Center for the Study of Radicalization at King's College London.
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European Central Bank Policy Makers Remain Divided on Bond Purchases - 0 views

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    FRANKFURT - Top officials of the European Central Bank offered dueling views over the weekend on how to deal with the risk of a downward price spiral in the eurozone, a sign that internal debate continues ahead of a crucial meeting next week. The central bank is widely expected to announce after its next meeting, on Jan.
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Paris Attacks Prompt Tougher Stance on Security in Britain - 0 views

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    LONDON - The British capital has effectively been on high alert since a deadly series of suicide attacks on its transport system killed 52 people in 2005, but last week's shootings in Paris have compelled the government to add new scenarios to an ever-growing list of threats.
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Victims of the Terror Attacks in Paris - 0 views

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    Among the 12 people who were killed in the attack Wednesday on the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo were cartoonists, a proofreader, a maintenance worker and two police officers. A police officer was killed the next day in a Paris suburb, and four hostages were killed at a kosher supermarket in eastern Paris on Friday.
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Lebanon: Islamic State Group Suspected in Explosion - 0 views

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    A double suicide attack that killed eight people at a cafe in Tripoli was carried out by the Islamic State group, the interior minister said Sunday, contradicting a claim of responsibility by another group, the Nusra Front.
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Police Keep Using Chokeholds, Despite Bans and Scrutiny - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Before pepper spray, Tasers, expandable batons and portable radios, New York police officers facing resistance from a criminal suspect had another option: the chokehold. By 1993, though, the New York Police Department had joined departments in other large cities by banning the chokehold with an order that amounted to, in the words of former Chief of Department John F. Timoney: “Stay the hell away from the neck.”
  • The public anger that followed a grand jury’s decision not to indict the officer fueled demonstrations across the country, and in New York, the protests laid bare a rift between Mayor Bill de Blasio and the police.
  • On Monday, the newly created city inspector general for the Police Department said, in its first report, that in several cases reviewed, police officers went to the move as a “first act of physical force” when facing “mere verbal confrontation.”
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  • And, as the Police Department, prompted by Mr. Garner’s death, undertakes a sweeping review of its use-of-force policies, senior commanders have been taking a hard look at the chokehold ban.
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In Cold Political Terms, Far Right and French President Both Gain - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Amid the horrors of the last week, François Hollande is widely judged to have kept his calm, acted decisively and spoken the words of condemnation, defiance and unity expected of a French president, who by tradition is called on to embody the nation.
  • But no one expects this mood of solidarity to last very long; indeed, the attacks have already sharpened his clash with the far-right leader Marine Le Pen. Mr. Hollande remains the most unpopular French president since World War II. He is troubled by a weak economy, high unemployment and an underlying atmosphere of anxiety and even fear, among both Muslims and Jews, about the impact of homegrown Islamic radicalism.
  • “Hollande has been extremely good in this crisis, showing calm and self-control, and using all the right words,” said Alain Frachon, an editorial writer for Le Monde. “If we do a cold, cynical political analysis, he did rather well. Afterwards, of course, all these questions will be raised about security failures and the future.”
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  • The homegrown terrorism here, with its apparent links to Al Qaeda and the Islamic State, will also be used by other far-right, nationalist and anti-immigration movements in Europe, from the United Kingdom Independence Party to the Sweden Democrats and Germany’s Pegida — Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West. That is another reason so many European leaders from the mainstream parties of the center right and center left, from Angela Merkel of Germany to David Cameron of Britain and Mariano Rajoy of Spain, came to show their own solidarity with France and Mr. Hollande.Continue reading the main story Invitees also included the leaders of all the main French political par
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Jihadism Born in a Paris Park and Fueled in the Prison Yard - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • The group of young Muslim men, some still teenagers, became known to the French authorities as the Buttes-Chaumont group after the police in 2005 broke up their pipeline for sending young French Muslims from their immigrant neighborhood to fight against American troops in Iraq. The arrests seemingly shattered the group, and some officials and experts were skeptical that members ever posed a threat to France.
  • But the shocking terror attacks last week in Paris have now made plain that the Buttes-Chaumont network produced some of Europe’s most militant jihadists, including Chérif Kouachi, one of the three terrorists whose three-day rampage left 17 people dead and who was killed by the police.
  • “They were considered the least dangerous,” Jean-Pierre Filiu, a professor of Middle East studies and specialist on French Islamic terror cells, said of the Buttes-Chaumont group. “And now you see them really at the forefront.”
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France to Deploy Thousands of Troops to Protect Jewish Schools and 'Sensitive Sites' - ... - 0 views

  • PARIS — Confronting a nation in shock from last week’s terrorist attacks, the French authorities on Monday began to unveil a broad array of measures to send thousands of soldiers and police officers to guard Jewish schools and other sites, reinforce electronic surveillance and reach into schools and prisons that have a reputation as crucibles of jihadist recruitment.
  • Seeking to reassure jittery citizens, the French defense minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, said Monday that 10,000 soldiers would be deployed by Tuesday evening, in what he called “the first mobilization on this scale on our territory.”
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Adam Grant and Sheryl Sandberg on Why Women Stay Quiet at Work - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Almost every time they started to speak, they were interrupted or shot down before finishing their pitch. When one had a good idea, a male writer would jump in and run with it before she could complete her thought.
  • We’ve both seen it happen again and again. When a woman speaks in a professional setting, she walks a tightrope. Either she’s barely heard or she’s judged as too aggressive. When a man says virtually the same thing, heads nod in appreciation for his fine idea. As a result, women often decide that saying less is more.
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Simon & Schuster to Sell Online Courses Taught by Popular Authors - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • book sales have flagged. Simon & Schuster’s sales fell 11 percent in the third fiscal quarter of last year. Sales of digital content, which accounted for 28 percent of the company’s sales, were flat.
  • Simon & Schuster plans to release 12 to 15 more courses this year, and is focusing on writers who have established, dedicated fan bases and a well-defined philosophy or message to deliver. Eventually, the online courses, which are planned as stand-alone products rather than supplements to books, could include videos by entertainers and experts who have not yet published books.
  • Simon & Schuster also recently announced plans to feature some of its authors on podcasts on Play.it, a new podcast network from CBS, the publisher’s parent company.
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  • Authors will be able to set their own prices. Dr. Agus, whose course is titled “A Short Guide to A Long Life,” decided to make his classes cost the same as a typical co-pay for a doctor’s office visit: $25.
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