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Arthur Mitchell, Pioneering Black Ballet Dancer, Dead at 84

NEW YORK — Arthur Mitchell, who broke barriers for African-Americans in the 1950s as a ballet dancer with the New York City Ballet and who would go on to become a driving force in the creation of the Dance Theatre of Harlem, has died. He was 84.

Mitchell died Wednesday at a New York City hospital according to his niece, Juli Mills-Ross. She said the death came after renal failure led to heart failure.

Born in Harlem, Mitchell started dancing with the New York City Ballet in 1955 under famed choreographer George Balanchine.

Balanchine put him in several leading roles, including one pairing him with a white female dancer in “Agon” in 1957.

In a January interview with The New York Times, Mitchell recalled the daring of that choice.

“Can you imagine the audacity to take an African-American and Diana Adams, the essence and purity of Caucasian dance, and to put them together on the stage?” he said.

In 1968, impacted by the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., Mitchell started a dance school that grew the next year to include the Dance Theatre of Harlem.

Anna Glass, the executive director of the Dance Theater, told The Associated Press that Mitchell “truly was a visionary.”

“He believed in a world where all people could have access to this beautiful art form,” she said. “He really sought to ensure that all people saw themselves in” ballet.

Among those recognizing his impact following his death was Misty Copeland, the first African-American female principal dancer with the American Ballet Theatre.

In a post on Instagram, she wrote, “You gave me so much, through our conversations, your dancing and by simply existing as a brown body in ballet. But you were so much more than a brown body. You’re an icon and hero.”

Choreographer and television producer Debbie Allen tweeted, “The world has lost another visionary” with Mitchell’s death.

“Arthur Mitchell claimed ballet as an American art form,” she said. “His legacy lives through all of us.”

Mitchell was born in 1934, and grew up with four siblings. He started formal dance training in high school, and upon graduating, took the offer of a ballet scholarship with the School of American Ballet, founded by Balanchine and Lincoln Kirstein.

His dancing years also included choreographing his own works, performing on Broadway, and working with dance companies in other countries. The Dance Theatre of Harlem performed internationally and has been artistically acclaimed even as it went through some periods of financial upheaval. He stepped down as director almost a decade ago.

Glass said Mitchell had most recently spent time at the company last month, during a two-week residency in which he restaged one of his older ballets to be performed next April as the company marks its 50th anniversary.

“This was a moment that all of us were looking forward to,” Glass said. “I know we will miss him tremendously.”

Story: Deepti Hajela

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No Ronaldo? No Problem for Madrid, Juventus in Champs League

GENEVA — Real Madrid managed to win easily in the Champions League without Cristiano Ronaldo. So did Juventus, after its superstar signing was tearfully sent off within 30 minutes.

Three-time defending champion Madrid eased to a 3-0 win over Roma on Wednesday, with Francisco “Isco” Alarcon scoring from the kind of free kick only Ronaldo got to take in his nine years with the club.

Ronaldo, making his Juventus debut in a competition he has won five times, also had a new experience – getting a red card against Valencia for tangling with Jeison Murillo.

Seemingly frustrated that Murillo went to ground too easily, Ronaldo reached down to tug or ruffle the defender’s hair.

German referee Felix Brych did not have access to a video review but showed a red card after consulting his assistant behind the goal.

It was Ronaldo’s first sending off in 154 games in the competition and left him in tears.

Still, Juventus went on to win 2-0, scoring twice from penalties despite designated spot-kick taker Ronaldo not being there. Miralem Pjanic scored both times.

Elsewhere, one of the favorites to dethrone Madrid this season, Manchester City, lost at home and Manchester United won away to further dispel its uneasy start to the season.

City was lackluster in a 2-1 loss to Lyon, while rival United had little trouble winning 3-0 at Swiss champion Young Boys.

Here’s a look at Wednesday’s games:

 

Madrid Masters

It could have been tricky for Madrid. No Ronaldo on the field, no Zinedine Zidane in the dugout, and facing Roma, a semifinalist last season.

But it was business as usual for the 13-time European champion under new coach Julen Lopetegui.

Isco, Gareth Bale – who seemed sure to leave if Zidane stayed – and Mariano Diaz got the goals.

Bale finished off an accurate pass by Luka Modric, and goalkeeper Keylor Navas kept a clean sheet after being preferred to new signing Thibaut Courtois.

Also in Group G, CSKA Moscow trailed 2-0 at halftime, but a stoppage time penalty from Nikola Vlasic made it 2-2 at Czech champion Viktoria Plzen.

 

Pjanic Over

A troubled opening half hour for Juventus in Valencia saw Mario Mandzukic and Sami Khedira miss clear chances before Ronaldo left the field in tears.

Just before halftime, Joao Cancelo hit the crossbar with a shot and was then fouled by a high boot to the face while chasing the rebound.

Miralem Pjanic converted that penalty kick, and scored again six minutes into the second half when Murillo was penalized for a foul.

There was a third penalty in stoppage-time, but Juve goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny saved Daniel Parejo’s kick to preserve the 2-0 win.

 

Pogba Stars

Paul Pogba scored twice and set up Anthony Martial for Man United’s third goal in a comfortable win at Swiss champion Young Boys.

Though Pogba has been unsettled at United this season, his curling shot and trademark slow-trot penalty within eight first-half minutes suggested he is feeling happier now.

United had lost on its last two trips to Switzerland, both against Basel, but is in a good position to welcome Valencia in two weeks’ time.

Old Trafford could also be denied a reunion with Ronaldo for Juve’s Oct. 23 visit depending on the ban UEFA imposes.

 

City Beaten

With coach Pep Guardiola watching in the stand, serving a ban carried over from last season, Man City was surprisingly beaten 2-1 by visiting Lyon.

City trailed by two goals at halftime, when errors were punished by Maxwel Cornet and Nabil Fekir, a member of France’s World Cup squad.

The manner of City’s Premier League title win last season has persuaded many that Guardiola can add to his two Champions League crowns with Barcelona.

But the stadium was far from full Wednesday, and City only managed to pull one goal back in the 67th from Bernardo Silva.

The other Group F game saw Hoffenheim make its Champions League debut in Ukraine. Playing at its adopted home city Kharkiv, Shakhtar Donetsk got a late leveler in a 2-2 draw.

 

Renato Returns

Renato Sanches has often looked like a lost talent since helping Ronaldo and Portugal win the 2016 European Championship.

Then 19, a move from Benfica to Bayern Munich seemed to happen too soon and he was sent to Premier League struggler Swansea on loan.

Back in Lisbon on Wednesday, Sanches scored Bayern’s second goal in a 2-0 win after Robert Lewandowski got Bayern’s early opener.

Also in Group E, Ajax marked its return after a four-year absence to join Madrid as the only home teams winning Wednesday, also by 3-0.

In the Johan Cruyff Arena, Ajax dispatched AEK Athens with the help of two goals from Argentina defender Nicolas Tagliafico.

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Doctor Gets Life Term in Hong Kong Over Yoga Ball Killings

An undated image of Khaw Kim-sun, center, in Hong Kong. Image: The Star Online / YouTube
An undated image of Khaw Kim-sun, center, in Hong Kong. Image: The Star Online / YouTube

HONG KONG — An anesthesiologist convicted of killing his wife and daughter by placing a yoga ball that leaked carbon monoxide in their car has been sentenced to life in prison in Hong Kong.

Malaysian citizen Khaw Kim-sun, 53, had become estranged from his wife, Wong Siew Fing, 47, and four children, although they continued to live together while he had an affair with a student.

A jury of five men and four women found him guilty at Hong Kong’s High Court after seven hours of deliberation Wednesday.

Khaw was accused of putting the gas-filled yoga ball in the trunk of a Mini Cooper driven by his wife, Wong Siew-fung, on May 22, 2015.

Wong and their 16-year-old daughter were found unconscious in the car about an hour after leaving home.

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Ex-PM Najib Razak Faces New Corruption Charges in Malaysia

Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak speaks during a press conference in May in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Associated Press
Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak speaks during a press conference in May in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Associated Press

KUALA LUMPUR — Police and Malaysia’s anti-graft agency say detained former Prime Minister Najib Razak will face at least two dozen fresh charges of abuse of power and money laundering over the multimillion-dollar looting of a state investment fund.

Najib will be brought to court Thursday. Police have taken custody of him after he was detained by the anti-graft agency Wednesday over the transfer of USD$681 million into his bank account.

National deputy police chief Noor Rashid Ibrahim said 21 of the charges involve the receiving, using and transferring of illicit funds.

The anti-graft agency said Najib will face charges under a section of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission Act that involves abuse of power.

Najib pleaded not guilty to earlier charges against him and his trial is due to start next year.

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Pakistan Court Suspends Prison Sentence, Frees Ex-PM Sharif

Photo: Prerna goyal / Wikimedia Commons
Photo: Prerna goyal / Wikimedia Commons

ISLAMABAD — A Pakistani court has suspended the prison sentences of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, his daughter and son-in-law, and set them free on bail pending their appeal hearings.

The Islamabad High Court made the decision on Wednesday on a corruption case handed down to the Sharifs by an anti-graft tribunal earlier this year.

The court also ordered Sharif, his daughter Maryam Nawaz and son-in-law Mohammad Safdar, be released once they each post a bond of half a million rupees, or about $4,000.

The three are serving 10-, seven- and one-year prison sentences, respectively.

Sharif was disqualified from office by the country’s Supreme Court last year over corruption allegations. He faces several court cases at home.

The former prime minister was briefly released earlier this month for his wife’s funeral.

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Max Out on Indie With ‘Superorganism’ in Bangkok

BANGKOK — A transatlantic “DIY pop production house” group is heading to a Bangkok stage with music and psychedelic visuals inspired by internet memes and pop culture.

For the first time, eight-member indie pop collective Superorganism will play Bangkok early next year, promoter Medium Rare Live announced Tuesday night.

Those who don’t know them yet can check out “Everybody Wants to Be Famous,” “Something For Your M.I.N.D.” and “Night Time” below.

The concert will take place Jan. 13 at the newly renovated Live Area venue in Bangkok’s RCA funzone. Tickets start at 990 baht and go on sale online.

The band was formed early last year via the internet. It comprises eight members from different countries including Japan, South Korea, England, New Zealand and Australia. They are lead vocalist Orono Noguchi and another seven who go by the nicknames Emily, Harry, Tucan, Robert Strange, Ruby, B, and Soul.

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Malaysia Anti-Graft Agency Arrests Former Leader Najib Razak

Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak in May arrives at Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) Office in July in Putrajaya, Malaysia. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press
Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak in May arrives at Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) Office in July in Putrajaya, Malaysia. Photo: Vincent Thian / Associated Press

KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysia’s anti-graft agency said it arrested former Prime Minister Najib Razak on Wednesday over the multimillion-dollar looting of a state investment fund and that he will face further charges in court.

The agency said Najib was detained at its office and will be taken to court on Thursday to face the charges.

Najib was earlier charged with multiple counts of criminal breach of trust, corruption and money laundering over the scandal at the 1MDB state fund. He has pleaded not guilty.

Those charges involve the transfer of 42 million ringgit (USD$10.3 million) into his bank accounts from SRC International, a former unit of the 1MDB fund that international investigators say was looted of billions by Najib’s associates.

Najib set up 1MDB when he took power in 2009 for the stated purpose of promoting economic development, but the fund amassed billions in debts and is being investigated in the U.S. and several other countries for alleged cross-border embezzlement and money laundering.

After leaked documents exposed the scandal, Najib sacked critics in his government, muzzled the media and quashed investigations. Public anger led to the defeat of Najib’s long-ruling coalition in May 9 elections and ushered in the first change of power since Malaysia gained independence from Britain in 1957.

The new government reopened the investigations stifled under Najib’s rule and barred him and his wife from leaving the country. Police also seized jewelry and valuables valued at more than 1.1 billion ringgit ($270.2 million) from properties linked to Najib.

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Thai Net Marvels at Mangled Mango Math

Image: P’Aida Ga Nong-ai / Facebook
Image: P’Aida Ga Nong-ai / Facebook

BANGKOK  — Are you smarter than a first grader? Test yourself with the following math homework from an elementary school in eastern Thailand.

Joy picks up 12 mangoes. Joe picks up eight more mangoes than Joy. How many mangoes does Joe have?

Photo: Phuan Pennapa
Photo: Phuan Pennapa

If you answered 20 – BUZZ – you’d be wrong, at least in one Chonburi school, where the correct answer was four.

That according to the correction a teacher made to one of the student’s work. Perplexed by the mangled math, a relative of one of the students took to social media Tuesday to ask what the mangoes was going on.

“The teacher said it was a wrong answer. I’m confused,” Phuan Pennapa wrote in a caption to a photo of the Pathom 1 math problem, which soon went viral and captivated the nation.

The original photo was later deleted, but for a whole day, it seemed as if Thai social media talked of nothing other than mango math.

“As if the stress from Mangkhut wasn’t enough,” wrote Twitter user Biim_buum, referring to Super Typhoon Mangkhut, which means mangosteeen in Thai. “After I saw Joe’s and Joy’s mangoes, my brain is fried.”

Another Twitter user, Prodpn, tried mental gymnastics to find a poetic explanation for the answer the teacher gave.

“Joe: I only picked up four mangoes. How come you have eight fewer mangoes than I do? Joy: Because I love you Joe. Love can make anything happen,” Prodpn tweeted.

“It really reflects the problems in our national education,” Twitter user Oodas concluded.

“Who did Joe and Joy steal the mangoes from?” Facebook user Nucha Vtecstory asked, addressing the real question here.

Pitchforks were raised briefly after a website doxxed someone it said was the teacher. It later turned to be a clickbait article on a hoax news site – one of many that strike whenever controversy churns.

Perhaps to reassure the country that mathematics hadn’t changed, some media agencies went even interviewed math teachers – including the textbook author himself – who maintained that – yes – the answer should have been 20.

So how did it go so wrong? In a follow-up post, Pennapa said she talked to the director of the school, who she did not name, and was told the teacher was grading a lot of homework and was confused by the question.

“The teacher was grading the homework of more than 30 children,” Pennapa wrote. “The teacher mistook the question as subtraction … the teacher has explained the situation and admitted fault in this case.”

A parody cartoon depicts Joe taunting Joy, “I have eight more mangoes than you!”

This cartoon suggests Joe only has four mangoes left because he had to surrender the rest to Joy, who turned out to be his wife.

จอยเก็บมะม่วงได้ 12 ผล โจ้เก็บมะม่วงได้มากกว่าจอย 8 ผลโจ้เก็บมะม่วงได้กี่ผล?? #ทีมคณิตศาสตร์ #ทีมวิศวะ #ทีมเกษตร #ทีมแพทย์

โพสต์โดย AtMornor.com เมื่อ วันอังคารที่ 18 กันยายน 2018

Just shut up about the mangoes already!

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Army Borrows Thaksin Slogan to Promote Prayuth

At left, Thaksin Shinawatra's campaign poster from 2004. At right, Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha in an image posted by the Army Cyber Center's Facebook in September.

BANGKOK — Twelve years after his predecessor expelled Thaksin Shinawatra from Thailand, the current junta leader shares at least one thing with the man he blames for the nation’s ills: a pithy campaign slogan.

Sharp-eyed observers Wednesday pointed out that a military agency post promoting the totally-not-campaigning Prayuth Chan-ocha used an identical slogan borrowed from then-prime minister’s 2005 reelection campaign.

“Four years repairing, four years building,” was written in the clouds next to a resolute-looking Prayuth in an image posted by the Royal Thai Army’s cyber defense operation.

The black-and-white image shows Prayuth looming over the Bangkok skyline along with a list of his regime’s achievements, from the conventional (“highest capital reserves in ASEAN”) to the xenophobic (“standing firm on our policy to accept no Rohingya”).

Commentators quickly pointed out that Thaksin used the same slogan, word-for-word, to brag about his government’s success in bringing Thailand back from the economic brink following the Tom Yum Goong financial crisis.

“Four years repairing the disaster of the crisis, four years building the nation to be stronger,” read one of his posters for a campaign which his Thai Rak Thai Party went on to win by a landslide.

“Dad, did you buy this army page already?” Thaksin’s son, Panthongtae “Oak” Shinawatra, tweeted in response.

Watana Muangsook of the Thaksin-aligned Pheu Thai Party also seized on the moment by tweeting: “‘Four years repairing, four years building’ was the 2005 slogan of Thai Rak Thai. If you want to copy everything, why don’t you go ahead and copy Thaksin’s brain too? That way, the country wouldn’t be in such a state.”

But not all found fault with the purloined slogan, as supporters of military rule said it made a deserved claim.

“You really did do all those things,” Gavyn Klubklay wrote in reference to the stated accomplishments.

Another junta supporter suggested the junta need not even campaign to keep Prayuth in power.

“I don’t think we need an election at all. Uncle being here is already good. An election would lead to the same loop of corruption. The junta is the best!” Jattarin Visesiri wrote.

But elsewhere on the internet, those tickled by the apparent plagiarism of a political arch-nemesis – on the 12th anniversary of the coup that ousted Thaksin – piled on.

Read: Junta No. 2 Says Thaksin Still to Blame, 12 Years After His Ouster

“If you hate Maew so much, why are you copying his policies?” wrote Rommanee Kham-Ai, referring to Thaksin’s nickname.

“Oh man, this is hilarious. You guys really did return happiness to me,” Anan Panmaingarm said, referring to the junta’s post-coup 2014 anthem. “The one thing uncle did successfully was to be a funny jester for all of us to laugh at.”

Others tweaked the slogan to fit their own political slant.

“Four years of economic crisis, four years of repairing the army,” Thanthorn Sunanthawadee wrote.

Calls to the Army Cyber Center were not immediately returned Wednesday.

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Carabao Dang Launched Commercial ‘Do Your Best’ Targeting New-generation Consumers (Sponsored)

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The advert tells the stories of 3 young men from different careers, themselves representing the new generation. They invariably have an overwhelming desire for victory, success and career advancement. The 3 main characters are a commis, office worker and footballer. The advert’s central question is “What is success in life?”.

In the short film, the way ahead for each of the three characters is strewn with difficulties. The commis who is in charge of preparing the ingredient regularly gets castigated by a senior chef. The inexperienced office worker finds himself making lots of mistakes while in his probation period.   The footballer is passed over and ends up as one of the substitutes.

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But they don’t give up, instead turning the obstacles into their main thrust as they try to perform their assigned duties as best as they can. At the end of the day, the success that they are searching for is not fame or fortune, but the opportunity to do what they love, believe and do their best in an attempt to achieve a much bigger goal in future.

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Since its launch on different media platforms in mid-August, the commercial has met with a warm reception from consumers. The advert strives to inspire the new generation to overcome all the obstacles placed on their path and focus on achieving their goal and success by “doing their best”.

Product owner:                 Carabao Dang Co., Ltd.

Product:                         Carabao Dang
Title of the commercial: “Do your best”
Length:                         60 seconds

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