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Thursday, March 8, 2018
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Europe Edition
[Your Thursday Briefing](
By PATRICK BOEHLER
Good morning.
News consumption advice and the latest on Britainâs spy poisoning, President Trumpâs metal tariffs and the Champions League. Hereâs the news:
Doug Chayka
⢠For two months, our tech columnist [skipped digital news and social media]( reading only newspapers, newsletters, books and magazine articles.
He said he ended up better informed and less anxious, with more free time. âMost of all, I realized my personal role as a consumer of news in our broken digital news environment,â he writes.
âI distilled those lessons into three short instructions, the way the writer Michael Pollan once boiled down nutrition advice: Get news. Not too quickly. Avoid social.â
_____
Matt Dunham/Associated Press
⢠The British authorities confirmed that a former [Russian spy and his daughter were poisoned with a nerve agent]( in England this week.
Suspicion is now rampant that the episode was an assassination attempt, and that Russia might be responsible.
The former spy, Sergei Skripal, 66, and his daughter, Yulia, 33, remain in critical condition.
_____
Doug Mills/The New York Times
⢠President Trump is expected to formally impose [new tariffs on steel and aluminum]( today, despite a [strong opposition from establishment Republicans](. As aides quit in record numbers, the president [increasingly relies on his own judgment](.
European Union officials [unveiled an array of retaliatory tariffs]( they would place on American imports, including products made in Republican states, like Kentucky bourbon.
Separately, we learned that Mr. Trump ignored his lawyersâ advice and [asked key witnesses in the Russia inquiry]( about their conversations with investigators.
_____
Delil Souleiman/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
⢠Turkey [asked Washington to stop Kurdish commanders]( from sending more troops to Afrin, the Kurdish stronghold in Syriaâs west that Turkey invaded last month.
Besides creating a diplomatic quandary, the Kurdish deployment to Afrin is [depriving the U.S. of allied troops]( in the campaign to stamp out the last vestiges of the Islamic State.
Meanwhile, negotiations between the Syrian government and Jaish al-Islam, the rebel group that controls diminishing parts of the Damascus suburb of eastern Ghouta, went nowhere. New government troops are adding momentum to the brutal siege that began in 2013.
_____
⢠In honor of International Womenâs Day, an official holiday in many countries, here are some stories on the state of gender equality:
In France, the government [may fine companies]( that do not erase gender pay gaps within three years. Some workers in Spain are [striking over inequality](. And in Britain, Parliament and social media [debated](
In the U.S., a Muslim fashion blogger is making waves by [challenging stereotypes about hijab-wearing women](. And the first female artistic director of the Maxim Gorki Theater in Berlin is [focusing on cultural conflicts](.
Finally, there are signs that American parentsâ [traditional preference for sons over daughters is changing](.
Business
Roger Kisby for The New York Times
⢠A robot at the worldâs largest bricklaying competition [fed dreams of solving housing shortages]( â and raised fears for bricklayersâ jobs.
⢠The European Central Bank had been expected to take another small step toward normalcy today, but [the populist surge in Italyâs election changed its calculus]( our correspondent in Frankfurt writes.
⢠Huawei is determined to lead 5G mobile technology, [worrying Washington](. âWhoever controls the technology knows, intimately, how it was built and where all the doors and buttons are.â
⢠Peter Thiel, the [billionaire Facebook board member and Trump supporter]( discusses politics, Silicon Valley and how he was influenced by the French philosopher René Girard.
⢠Hereâs a snapshot of [global markets](.
In the News
How Hwee Young/European Pressphoto Agency
⢠Chinaâs Communist elders were too old or too cowed to resist President Xi Jinpingâs backroom campaign to abolish term limits. [[The New York Times](
⢠A court in Germany sentenced eight members of a far-right group to lengthy jail sentences for plotting to kill migrants and politicians. [[Reuters](
⢠In memoriam: Kalman Aron survived seven Nazi camps on scraps of food from guards whose portraits he drew. He lived to become a prominent American portraitist. [[The New York Times](
⢠Pope Francis has paved the way for the canonization of Pope Paul VI, who led the Roman Catholic Church through turmoil in the 1960s and â70s, and the Salvadoran archbishop Ãscar Romero. [[The New York Times](
⢠The Trump administrationâs plan to open a new American Embassy in Jerusalem has a hitch: The site lies partly in disputed territory. [[The New York Times](
⢠A Utah lawmaker introduced a bill that would rename the stateâs most scenic highway after President Trump. (An opponent countered with his own proposal: a âStormy Daniels rampway.â) [[The New York Times](
⢠Europeans running late to work or school can offer a novel excuse: Some clocks are running slow because of a dispute between Kosovo and Serbia. Really. [[Associated Press](
Smarter Living
Tips, both new and old, for a more fulfilling life.
Craig Lee for The New York Times
⢠Recipe of the day: Leave ordinary roasted potatoes behind with a little [lemon, smoked paprika and rosemary](.
⢠Take the stress out of weeknight cooking with [this useful multitasker](.
⢠Find a great rug that [wonât decimate]( your budget.
Noteworthy
Glyn Kirk/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
⢠A surprise at the Champions League: Juventusâs squad of aging veterans appeared to be on the verge of succumbing to a young Tottenham, but the Italians [embraced the fight and proceed to the quarterfinals](.
⢠Balkrishna Doshi, a low-cost housing pioneer from India, won [this yearâs Pritzker Prize]( the highest honor in architecture. âArchitecture is not a static building,â he said, âitâs a living organism.â
⢠An experimental musical about Slobodan Milosevic, the Serbian autocrat, [was met with]( tears and a few walkouts]( in Kosovo.
⢠Indie pop now thrums far from the swaggering, anthemic sound of a decade ago. The internet, [our critic writes]( has given voice and lent strength to interiority, and also undermined seriousness.
⢠A woman in Australia has found what is [believed to be the worldâs oldest message in a bottle](. It had been tossed off the side of a German ship in 1886.
⢠And Los Angeles, long synonymous with carbophobia and anti-gluten mania, has become an [unlikely bakery and bread haven](.
Back Story
They were sworn into service, required to wear regulation uniforms and saw the horrors of war.
But when the Hello Girls returned home to the U.S. after World War I, they were largely forgotten.
Today is [International Womenâs Day]( a global recognition of womenâs achievements. Weâre looking back more than 100 years to recognize the place in history of a group of 223 women.
In 1917, on the eve of the U.S. entry into World War I, [the U.S.]( 2.8 million men]( into military service. The Army realized that its success would rely on [the Alliesâ use of a]( technology: the telephone](.
Enter the Hello Girls, a group of bilingual telephone operators selected for working the switchboards in France, connecting the front lines with supply depots and military command. They often handled over 150,000 calls per day.
But because they were women, the U.S. government denied them veteran status for more than 60 years after the war.
âThe unfortunate reality is their service wasnât officially recognized with veteran status until 1979, when a small fraction of those who served were still alive,â a senior curator at the [National World War I Museum and Memorial]( said. âTo achieve that point of hard-won recognition took a monumental effort.â
Remy Tumin contributed reporting.
_____
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