North Korea, French Strikes, World Cup
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[The New York Times](
[The New York Times](
Wednesday, June 13, 2018
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Europe Edition
[Your Wednesday Briefing](
By DAN LEVIN
Good morning.
Takeaways from the Trump-Kim summit meeting, concessions on Brexit and breaking news on the World Cup. Hereâs the latest:
Doug Mills/The New York Times
⢠Handshakes and promises abounded during President Trumpâs historic meeting with North Koreaâs leader, Kim Jong-un â but what really changed? And what comes next?
The biggest concrete development: [Mr. Trumpâs suspension of war games]( on the Korean Peninsula, which surprised South Korea and the Pentagon.
Here are the dayâs [biggest moments]( (including a hyperbolic movie-trailer-style montage that Mr. Trump showed Mr. Kim), our analysis of [Mr. Trumpâs huge gamble]( and [10 major takeaways]( (plus the [unscripted moments]( that stole the show).
And some intrepid businesses and investors have begun considering the possibility of [doing business in North Korea](.
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David Parry, via Royal Academy of Arts
⢠Prime Minister Theresa May of Britain [promised greater control for Parliament over the Brexit process]( after a threatened rebellion by lawmakers and the abrupt resignation of one of her ministers.
The retreat is the latest setback for Mrs. May as her government struggles to navigate the countryâs troubled exit from the E.U. Her concession will allow Parliament to vote early on a final package the government negotiates with Brussels, allowing lawmakers to send the negotiators back to the table.
Meanwhile, the Royal Academy in London rejected an artwork by âBryan S. Gaakmanâ for an exhibition. But a revised version, above, got in â after it was submitted under the name of the true artist: [the graffiti superstar Banksy.](
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Jacques Demarthon/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
⢠Strike season.
French labor unions turned to strikes to thwart President Emmanuel Macronâs work reforms, but got little traction. Still, they are a ritual of the spring. Above, railway workers demonstrating in Paris last month.
Our Paris bureau chief spent days with the railway protesters, the latest participants in a cherished ritual of French civic life. But she was left wondering: [Can strikes in France still make a difference](
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Valda Kalnina/EPA, via Shutterstock
⢠Itâs World Cup decision time.
Global soccer officials vote today in Moscow on [where the 2026 World Cup will be played](.
Morocco has mounted a surprisingly strong challenge to a solid, joint North American bid by the U.S., Canada and Mexico â aided by international reservations about the Trump administrationâs restrictive travel policies. Above, Moroccoâs team in Tallinn, Estonia, this month.
So President Trump gave U.S. soccer officials letters to share with FIFAâs president, vowing that players and fans from all competing countries would get visas. We got [an exclusive look at those letters](.
This yearâs World Cup matches start tomorrow in Russia. Hereâs [our guide]( to all eight groups, and for updates and analysis delivered to your inbox twice a week, [sign up for our Offsides newsletter](.
Business
Mark Lennihan/Associated Press
⢠AT&Tâs blockbuster $85.4 billion takeover of Time Warner [was approved by a U.S. judge]( a decision that will reshape the media and telecommunications industries, and is expected to [unleash a wave of mergers]( in corporate America.
⢠Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner invested in vehicles and trusts that [bought and sold as much as $147 million of real estate and other assets]( during their first year at the White House, an ethics filing showed.
⢠Beware the âgreater foolâ theory: [Vice Media had a seemingly endless parade of investors]( who believed someone else would always pay more for their stake. That thinking is now in question.
⢠Which country will win the 2018 World Cup? Hereâs [what the worldâs biggest banks are predicting](.
⢠Hereâs a snapshot of [global markets](.
In the News
Joan Llado/Associated Press
⢠Spainâs Supreme Court upheld a prison sentence for the brother-in-law of King Felipe VI, in a fraud case that rocked the monarchy. Iñaki Urdangarin, above, could be the first member of the countryâs royal family to go to prison in modern history (he has one last chance to appeal). [[The New York Times](
⢠Macedonia agreed to change its name to resolve a decades-old dispute with Greece, which said it would stop opposing the neighboring countryâs entry into the E.U. and NATO if the change were formally adopted. [[The New York Times](
⢠A Swedish prosecutor brought rape charges against Jean-Claude Arnault, the man at the center of a scandal that led to the cancellation of this yearâs Nobel Prize in Literature. [[The New York Times](
⢠The rollout of an H.I.V. prevention drug was followed by a reduction in condom use among gay and bisexual men, according to a study of some 17,000 in Australia. But the drug was so effective that H.I.V. infection rates declined anyway. [[The New York Times](
⢠Italyâs new minister for E.U. affairs said that he fully backed the âindispensableâ euro and did not want Italy to quit the currency. [[Reuters](
⢠Ireland will hold a referendum in October on whether to remove a law against blasphemy from its Constitution. [[BBC](
Smarter Living
Tips, both new and old, for a more fulfilling life.
Chiara Zarmati
⢠Increase your chances of [living a long, healthy life](.
⢠Here are eight new books [worth reading](.
⢠Recipe of the day: [Green beans with herbs and olives]( are a quick and flavorful side.
Noteworthy
Brendan Smialowski/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
⢠The second anniversary of the Pulse nightclub massacre in Orlando, Fla., was yesterday. [Hereâs a look at the lives forever altered]( by one of the deadliest mass shootings in U.S. history. Above, a vigil in Orlando in July 2016.
⢠In memoriam: Jon Hiseman, 73, a British composer who [melded rock, jazz and blues]( and led the bands Colosseum and Tempest in a career that began in London in the late 1960s.
⢠Solve a mystery: Two decades ago, a renowned professor promised to produce a flawless version of one of the 20th centuryâs most celebrated novels: âUlysses.â [Then he disappeared](.
Back Story
Â
Today, in honor of William Butler Yeats (born on this day in 1865), we explore the lasting influence of his most ubiquitous poem, [âThe Second Coming.â](
Written in 1919, the poem is considered a towering achievement of modernist poetry. Yeats drew on Christian apocalyptic imagery to capture the violent chaos of the political turmoil in Europe at the time, and to warn of further dangers on the horizon.
So often have the poemâs phrases been incorporated into other works of art and literature that The Paris Review has [called it]( âthe most thoroughly pillaged piece of literature in English.â
There is, of course, Chinua Achebeâs novel âThings Fall Apart,â and Joan Didionâs short story collection âSlouching Towards Bethlehem,â but lines from the poem have proliferated in many more book titles, speeches, folk albums, CD-ROM games and tweets, as well.
[An episode of âThe Sopranosâ]( called âThe Second Comingâ features the poem, as does [a Batman comic book series]( called âThe Widening Gyre.â Above, Yeats in Dublin in 1923.
There was [an uptick in references to the poem in 2016]( as writers and pundits grasped for language to describe the series of dramatic political shifts in Europe and the U.S.
Emma McAleavy wrote todayâs Back Story.
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