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European Morning: Suspect in Istanbul Rampage on New Year's Is Captured, Turkey Says

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View in [Browser] Add [nytdirect@nytimes.com] to your address book. [Unsubscribe] [The New York Times] [NYT Apps] | [[The New York Times] Today's Headlines] Tuesday, January 17, 2017 IN THIS EMAIL [NYT] [World] | [Business] | [Technology] | [Sports] | [U.S. News] | [Opinion] Top News [The suspect in the New Year's Day attack in Istanbul, Turkey, was arrested on Monday.] [Suspect in Istanbul Rampage on New Year's Is Captured, Turkey Says] By ROD NORDLAND The semiofficial Anadolu news agency said the man, Abdulgadir Masharipov, had been captured alive along with four others in the Esenyurt district of Istanbul. [President-elect Donald J. Trump in the Trump Tower lobby on Monday. His remarks in a string of interviews have escalated tensions with China and infuriated allies.] [As Trump Era Arrives, a Sense of Uncertainty Grips the World] By STEVEN ERLANGER Having made contradictory comments, President-elect Donald J. Trump has many nations wondering about his policies. But there's also a sense that his words should not be taken too literally. [Northern Ireland, Forced by Sinn Fein, Sets Early Election in Shadow of 'Brexit'] By SINEAD O'SHEA Sinn Fein, the Catholic party that forced the early vote, appears to hope that worries over leaving the European Union will weaken its unionist rivals. For more top news, go to [INYT.com] ADVERTISEMENT Editors' Picks [Irma Boom at her office in Amsterdam.] ARTS [Irma Boom's Library, Where Pure Experimentalism Is on the Shelf] By JOSHUA BARONE The Dutch designer, one of the world's pre-eminent bookmakers, doesn't call herself an artist, but many view her creations as works of art. [President Obama delivering his farewell address in Chicago on Jan. 10.] OPINION | Editorial [Mr. Obama, Pick Up Your Pardon Pen] By THE EDITORIAL BOARD The president's terrible record on clemency has gotten better, but pardon grants remain abysmally low. World [President-elect Donald J. Trump at a news conference on Wednesday at Trump Tower in New York. He has faced scrutiny for unverified allegations about his history in Russia.] The Interpreter ['Kompromat' and the Danger of Doubt and Confusion in a Democracy] By AMANDA TAUB Although the manufacturing of public cynicism tends to be associated with Russia, it is a common feature and tool of authoritarian nations. [United States Marines arriving on Monday in Norway, where their military exercises will involve learning to fight in Arctic temperatures.] [Cold War Jitters Resurface as U.S. Marines Arrive in Norway] By DAN BILEFSKY and HENRIK PRYSER LIBELL Despite being generally welcomed, the presence of the Marines - shown on Norwegian television dragging their suitcases through the snow - also provoked concerns. [After gaining entry to an apartment in Burnley, England, Constable Francesca Wheatley, right, and Constable Nagine Ahmed inspected a small quantity of cannabis that the tenant said was for personal use.] Burnley Journal [U.K. Police Look to Young Recruits to Help Shed an Image as 'Male, Pale and Stale'] By PRASHANT S. RAO A program, similar to Teach for America, places university graduates for two years in some of the country's most troubled areas, with a focus on diversifying the police corps. For more world news, go to [NYTimes.com/World] Business [Doris Leuthard, the federal president of Switzerland, faced President Xi Jinping of China at the beginning of a two-day state visit before he headed to Davos to address the World Economic Forum.] DealBook [What to Make of the 'Davos Class' in the Trump Era] By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN The globalist elite gather in Switzerland to grapple with the world's great challenges, but their relevance is in question in a time of Brexit and Trump. [A flight attendant for Norwegian checking the passport of a passenger on a flight to London.] Itineraries [Norwegian Expands in the Trans-Atlantic Market] By JANE L. LEVERE Norwegian, a former upstart airline, plans to begin flying out of more American cities, joining the legacy carriers in extensive long-haul operations. [Theresa May, the second woman to hold the position of prime minister in Britain.] [Putting More Women on a Path to Political Power] By ALISON SMALE Europe can offer the United States lessons in empowering women, an issue poised to grip the World Economic Forum in Davos two months after Hillary Clinton's loss to Donald J. Trump. For more business news, go to [INYT.com/Business] Technology [Lee Jae-yong, the vice chairman of Samsung who is also known as Jay Y. Lee, in Seoul, South Korea, last week] [Political Crisis Engulfs Samsung, a Firm Tied to South Korea's Success] By PAUL MOZUR Prosecutors have called for the arrest of Jay Y. Lee, the de facto head of Samsung, one of the country's top companies. [A BMW at the New York International Auto Show in 2016. After praising German manufacturing prowess in an interview with Bild, President-elect Donald J. Trump threatened to impose a 35 percent tariff on every car that BMW imported to the United States.] [Trump Attacks BMW and Mercedes, but Auto Industry Is a Complex Target] By KEITH BRADSHER and JACK EWING The globalized trade in vehicles, in which Detroit owns European brands and German cars come from Alabama, could make it hard to raise barriers. Tech Tip [Making Twitter Lists With Android] By J. D. BIERSDORFER You can sort Twitter accounts into themed lists on your phone, tablet or desktop. For more technology news, go to [NYTimes.com/Tech] ADVERTISEMENT Sports [Andy Murray served in his first-round victory over Illya Marchenko on Monday at the Australian Open.] On Tennis [Andy Murray, No. 1 and Newly Knighted, Still Has Room for More] By CHRISTOPHER CLAREY Despite the titles, Murray has plenty more to achieve, especially at the Australian Open, where he has reached five singles finals and lost all of them. [Justin Thomas during the final round of the Sony Open at the Waialae Country Club in Honolulu on Sunday.] [Justin Thomas, Golf Prodigy, Collects Wins and Waits for His Chance to Catch Up] By BRIAN WACKER Thomas, 23, is one of the rising stars on the PGA Tour, having completed his second victory in two weeks and become the youngest player in tour history to shoot a 59. [Shelby Rogers serving in the Australian Open in Melbourne on Monday. Rogers defeated Simona Halep, who is ranked No. 4 in the world, 6-3, 6-1.] [Shelby Rogers Ousts Fourth Seed Simona Halep at Australian Open] By BEN ROTHENBERG Roger Federer advances, and so does Stan Wawrinka. barely For more sports news, go to [INYT.com/Sports] U.S. News [Donald J. Trump, a co-owner of the Miss Universe contest at the time, at an after-party for the 2013 pageant in Moscow. He also used the visit to Moscow to discuss development deals.] [For Trump, Three Decades of Chasing Deals in Russia] By MEGAN TWOHEY and STEVE EDER Donald J. Trump, and eventually his children, repeatedly sought business in Russia as far back as 1987, in a variety of ventures. But none got off the ground. [Representative Tom Price, President-elect Donald J. Trump's pick for health and human services secretary, in Washington last week.] [Trump Health Secretary Pick's Longtime Foes: Big Government and Insurance Companies] By ABBY GOODNOUGH Over a long political career, Tom Price, a doctor, never swerved from his policy mission to protect his former profession from what he views as heavy-handed government intrusion. [Eugene A. Cernan on the last human mission on the moon's surface, in December 1972.] [Eugene Cernan, Last Human to Walk on Moon, Dies at 82] By ROBERT D. McFADDEN A ferocious competitor, Mr. Cernan rocketed into space three times, went to the moon twice and shattered aerospace records on the Earth and the moon. For more U.S. news, go to [NYTimes.com/US] Opinion Op-Ed Contributor [North Africa's Next War] By HANNAH ARMSTRONG If the United Nations doesn't step up, the long-simmering conflict in Western Sahara could soon boil over. [Rohingya from Myanmar at a refugee camp in Teknaf, Bangladesh, in December. Some 65,000 Muslims have fled to Bangladesh since October, according to the United Nations.] Op-Ed Contributor [The Lady and the Rohingya] By DAVID SCOTT MATHIESON Excessive criticism of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi is obscuring why Myanmar's Muslims are persecuted and how to change that. On Campus [Finding Myself Through My College Major] By JOSHUA KAM As someone born in Montana to Malaysian-Chinese parents, I've always dreaded the "Where are you from" question. For more opinion, go to [INYT.com/Opinion] FOLLOW US: [Facebook] [Facebook] | [Twitter] [@NYTimes] | [Pinterest] [Pinterest] | [Instagram] [Instagram] [NYT] Access The New York Times from anywhere with our suite of apps: [iPhone®] | [iPad®] | [Android] | [All] [.] Save 15% at [The NYTimes Store »] [.] Have questions? visit our [Help Section »] [.] Visit our mobile website at [m.nyt.com »] About This Email This is an automated email. Please do not reply directly to this email. You received this message because you signed up for NYTimes.com's Today's Headlines European Morning newsletter. [Unsubscribe] | [Manage Subscriptions] | [Change Your Email] | [Privacy Policy] | [Contact] | [Advertise] Copyright 2017 | The New York Times Company | NYTimes.com 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

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