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Here’s what you want to know.
By Natasha Frost
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Good Morning.
We note president Trump’s departure from the hospital, the massive error of access to Britain’s knowledge, and Kamala Harris’ disco days in Canada.
Three nights after arriving at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for a diagnosis of Covid-19, President Trump returned Monday night to the White House, where he will continue to receive treatment. His departure from the hospital, accompanied by flyers, a 10-minute helicopter ride and public retreat from his mask, broadcast live on 3 major US chains. But it’s not the first time
Earlier in the day, your doctor, Dr. Sean P. Conley, you said the president hadn’t “out of the woods” yet. Trump doctors dodged key questions about his condition and added that his lung serves as the date of his last negative coronavirus check, before he tested positive.
“We’re waiting this weekend,” Dr. Conley said. “If we can move on to Monday, with him staying the same or improving, then we will all give that last sigh of relief. “
The comments came after Trump tweeted: “I feel really good!Don’t be afraid Covid. No let him dominate your life. In doing so, as he did with the pandemic, he minimized the severity of a virus that killed about 210,000 more people in the United States.
White House outbreak: On Monday, press secretary Kayleigh McEnany was the last of the president’s inner circle, along with two other members of the press team, to announce that she had tested positive for the virus. McEnany said he’d isolate himself.
Joe Biden: Addressing a potential electorate in Miami, the former vice president wanted Mr. Good Luck, but Trump suggested that he pay attention to pandemic experts. A vote last week found biden has five percentage points ahead of Trump. Florida.
Here are the updates and maps of the pandemic.
In developments:
The European Commission said Monday that 179 of them had tested positive for Covid-19 since the beginning of the pandemic, and their leader proceeded to isolate himself after being exposed last week.
British company Cineworld, which owns Regal Cinemas in the United States, announced that it will close 663 of its cinemas in the United States and Britain, with some 45,000 jobs at stake.
South Africa will begin allowing some foreign tourists to enter the country on Thursday, for the first time since a national closure came into effect in March.
The Spanish towns of León and Palencia have been ordered to apply blocking restrictions to those recently in force in Madrid.
Parisian bars and cafes will be for two weeks from Tuesday, as France tries to stop an outbreak of coronavirus cases in its capital.
In the failure to lacheck Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s besleeping check and track program, nearly 16,000 positive check effects for the coronavirus between September 25 and October 2 were incorrectly recorded due to an error of access to knowledge of the regime: Excel files containing the names of those marked as positive were too giant to transfer to a central computer system.
In addition to generating an artificially low picture of the spread of the virus and delaying efforts to hint at those at risk, the sloppy numbers have led the Johnson administration to further complain. More than 57,000 more people have died from the virus in Britain. , the number in Europe. The country is now facing a wave of infections.
“This incident has never happened,” Health Secretary Matt Hancock told Parliament on Monday, promising that the government would investigate and modernize its replaced computer systems.
Quote: “It’s a disaster,” Labor Shadow Health Secretary Jonathan Ashworth said. “It’s much worse than that. “
Although skirmishes in the Nagorno-Karabakh region, led by ethnically identified Armenian separatists but around the world identified as a component of Azerbaijan, have long been common, recent conflicts are different in scale and scope. Both sides used armed drones and rank artillery, while Turkey presented its to Azerbaijan.
Today, Stepanakert, once a city of well-maintained boulevards and majestic stone mansions, is dotted with ruins of buildings after two days of intense bombardment. On the Azerbaijani side, the government said rockets had fallen into a residential domain of Ganja, the country’s country. bigger city moment. At least 250 other people have been killed in recent fighting, adding dozens of civilians on both sides.
The cause of the clashes is disputed. Azerbaijan said it responded to artillery fire on the front line on 27 September. Armenia said the Azerbaijani offensive was not provoked.
Analysis: Negotiating a ceasefire will now be more complicated than in 2016, one analyst said, as Azerbaijan felt deceived by the agreement. At the time, Russia negotiated a truce with the guarantee of returning Azerbaijan to ethnic Armenian-occupied territory in the fighting of the 1990s, but that never happened.
Senator Kamala Harris spent her teenage years as a teacher in Montreal, in a multicultural setting typical of many Canadian public schools. At the time, a classmate said she was “merging with everyone,” overcoming the school’s racial divisions and locating its membership and brotherhood in its black community.
As she made history as the first of color on a presidential note, Canadians claimed her as an Aboriginal woman and an incarnation of the country’s progressive politics. the father is from Jamaica and the mother of India.
SCOTUS: Two Supreme Court justices reported that the court reconsider the 2015 case that legalized same-sex marriage in the United States, saying the ruling had prevented freedom. Two of the five majority judges in this case are no longer members of the court.
Archaeological controversy: Thirty-eight atlas statues, all now in ruins, once adorned the ancient Greek temple of Olympic Zeus. Archaeologists have a new plan for the remains: to recompose the beams of the temple piece through the piece to repair some of its original splendor. .
Nobel Prize: this year’s prize in physiology or medicine awarded to three scientists, two Americans and one British, for finding the hepatitis C virus. Learn more about the winners, Harvey Alter, Michael Houghton and Charles Rice.
Snapshot: Upstairs, police officers arrest a woman at a demonstration in Tel Aviv this weekend. As the number of coronavirus cases has increased and a momentary blockade has been imposed, many citizens have lashed out at the government and taken to the streets, depending on a motion. calling for the resignation of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Lives have lived: Tony-nominated actor Thomas Jefferson Byrd, 70, most productive known for his roles in Spike Lee’s films, was spotting shot dead on an Atlanta street, the government announced Sunday.
What we read: this profile of singer Stevie Nicks in the Los Angeles Times. Dan Saltzstein, deputy specials editor, writes, “Who doesn’t love Stevie Nicks?Consider your attitude to the pandemic. It’s, as the kids say, a state of mind. “
Cuisine: Serve this fried eggplant with chilli, honey and ricotta as a starter, a really extensive dish or a soft main course, with a green salad as an accompaniment.
See “David Attenborough: A Life on Our Planet” describes the naturalist’s decades-old career, illustrating how the planet’s biodiversity has degenerated before him. Our critic calls it a “majestic documentary. “
What to do: Whether you need to relax, laugh or work, a stool is a piece of furniture that goes up to your living room. Here are some tips to help you decide which one works most productively for you.
Expand your horizons from the comfort of your living room. At home you have concepts about what to read, cook, watch and do while you’re at home.
52 Places to Go, a special segment of the Times travel segment, historically relies on editors, news experts, and participants for recommendations on the hottest spots and next year’s treats. This is our annual consultant for the most impressive destinations in the world. .
During the pandemic, travel, as we knew them, changed.
In this order of things, our list of 52 places will be another in 2021, although we cannot know what is coming, we can still percentages of the positions enjoyed and continue to motivate curiosity, openness and admiration for the total world.
That’s why we turn to you for next year’s list, which we call 52 positions we love. We need 52 love letters for Array, all written and photographed through you, our readers around the world, each about a position in the world that is special. It can be a popular tourist destination or a largely overlooked position. You can simply motivate someone else to stop by one day, or reconsider their assumptions, or spark their interest in a new part of the world – all the exhilarating things it brings to our lives.
You can submit your tips here.
Thank you for your morning with The Times, have a wonderful day.
– Natasha
Thanks to Melissa Clark for the recipe and Theodore Kim and Jahaan Singh for the rest of the break. You can sign up for the team in briefing@nytimes. com.
PS We pay attention to “The Daily”. Our most recent episode is about President Trump’s latest health news. Here are our crossword puzzles and a clue: “Where a cherry is placed, contrary to an ice cream” (five letters). You can locate all our puzzles here NYT_first_said. York Times won a Gold Effie Award in the Media category
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