Categories
Health

What Satisfied Me to Begin Sporting Solar Safety

Alas, those of us in the upper decades of life knew little in our younger years about the risks of sun damage beyond the need to avoid a bad sunburn. Many youngsters like me swam, hiked, biked and played sports minimally clothed while the sun tanned or burned our skin. We sunbathed coated in baby oil in a misguided effort to acquire a rich tan. And many of us, myself included, failed to reach adulthood with sun-protective habits that could have prevented the skin damage now woefully apparent.

Given that the risk of ultraviolet light to healthy skin has since been widely publicized, I’m astonished at how many people today visit tanning salons or use tanning beds at home, damaging the wholesome cutaneous barrier nature gave us.

Happily, the new study suggests that more people now have a greater understanding and respect for the sun’s effects on skin and can look forward to a healthier future, said Dr. Sangeeta Marwaha, a dermatologist in Sacramento and co-author of the study. Among people who entered the study in 2018, the risk of developing skin cancer was two-thirds that of study entrants in 2008 who were followed for an equal number of years.

“There’s been an increase in sun-protective habits and a resulting decrease in the development of skin cancer,” Dr. Marwaha said in an interview. “Parents today are more likely to protect their children from undue sun exposure, and the use of sunscreen is now more mainstream.”

But there’s still a long way to go. Fostering a healthy respect for sun protection in young children is especially important because some experts estimate that up to 80 percent of a person’s lifetime sun exposure is acquired before age 18.

Repeated exposure to the sun’s ultraviolet radiation causes most of the skin changes — wrinkles, age spots and tiny broken blood vessels — generally considered a normal result of aging. Yes, aging plays a role, but these effects occur much earlier in life on sun-exposed skin. UV light damages the elastin fibers in skin, causing it to stretch, sag and wrinkle. It also damages surface blood vessels, rendering them more fragile and easily bruised.

And Zachary W. Lipsky, a biomedical engineer at Binghamton University, found that UV radiation weakens the bonds that help the cells in the top layer of skin stick together, damaging the skin’s structural integrity and leaving it more vulnerable to infection.

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Business

Laborious seltzer’s recognition propels the rise of the canned cocktail

This summer’s hottest cocktail comes in a can.

Between 2019 and 2020, the premixed cocktails category in the US grew by 50%, according to industry tracker IWSR. The segment is still relatively small, accounting for only 3% of US spirits volume, based on data from the United States Distilled Spirits Council. However, companies and industry experts expect enormous growth after the pandemic boom. Bank of America Securities predicts the category will generate revenue of $ 3 billion to $ 4 billion over the next few years.

The rise of the tough seltzer has fueled the growing popularity of canned cocktails. Ready-to-drink vodka sodas or gin and tonics appealed to consumers looking for a stronger flavor or a more alcoholic beverage, and the category has expanded with greater variety.

Canned cocktails, like Hard Seltzer, appeal to consumers who choose their alcoholic beverages based on convenience and taste. However, ready-to-drink cocktails are usually of higher quality because their base is made from real spirits, not the sugar or malt found in hard seltzer or lemonade. A six-pack of hard seltzer usually brings back about $ 10 for consumers, which is also the starting price of a four-pack of canned cocktails.

Canned cocktails can also be harder to find outside of liquor stores, as states regulate them differently than flavored malt beverages.

In a March report to customers, Bank of America beverage analysts Anheuser-Busch selected InBev and Diageo as the two companies that will be key players. Currently, according to analysts, some of the standout brands are E. & J. Gallos High Noon, Monaco, AB InBevs Cutwater Spirits, and Beam Suntorys On the Rocks.

Alcohol giant AB InBev entered the segment in 2019 by purchasing Cutwater, a San Diego-based craft distillery. Cutwater is the second best canned cocktail brand in US dollar sales, accounting for 10% of the ready-to-drink cocktail segment based on IRI data for the 13 weeks ended May 9th.

For the Budweiser brewer, the acquisition was an opportunity to enter new categories, as beer consumption has declined in recent years. Fabricio Zonzini, president of the company beyond the beer division, said that his division’s first priority is ready-to-drink beverages.

“I think Covid was a propeller for ready-to-drink products because it brought the convenience of the bar to your home,” he said. “And we’ve seen that growth. Thank goodness we had Cutwater.”

In addition to Cutwater, AB InBev has also partnered with a Canadian distiller for Nutrl, a line of vodka beverages. Zonzini said the company will be testing the beverages in the U.S. to appeal to consumers who want a lighter, more refreshing cocktail, similar to the taste profile of a hard seltzer. Last year the company released flavored vodka under its Natural Light brand, which could mean the brewer will get canned vodka cocktails from the brewer if the liquor sells well.

“When we see the results, if it connects the way we believe it will open another door,” said Zonzini.

Johnnie Walker owner Diageo is now pushing itself into the segment. In April it bought Loyal 9, which mixes vodka and lemonade in a can. Before the purchase, the company had already launched cocktail offshoots from Crown Royal, Ketel One Botanical and Tanqueray.

“The category did really well. It’s the fastest growing part of [total beverage alcohol] and just accelerates quickly, “said Jay Sethi, senior vice president of North American convenience food for Diageo.

Sethi said consumers are starting to look for more premium canned cocktails, which means they are ready to spend more too.

It’s not just the alcohol giants who want to capitalize on the growth of canned cocktails. Smaller upstarts like the Cardinal Spirits craft distillery have also released versions.

Zing Zang, who has cult following for his Bloody Mary blend, launched its first line of canned cocktails in the alcoholic beverage market last year. The move took several years as he perfected the recipes and found vendors who could easily carry alcohol, but the drinks have been good so far, according to CEO Brent Albertson.

Albertson, who spent three decades at Diageo before joining Zing Zang, said the company’s market research found that 25- to 37-year-olds were the target market for the beverages.

“You don’t drink it to get drunk,” said Albertson. “They want to do it on boats, on golf courses. They want that convenience and portability.”

Even if consumers return to their favorite bars, the canned cocktail trend cannot be expected to wear off. Brandy Rand, chief operating officer for America at IWSR Drinks Market Analysis, said she expects more ready-to-drink beverages to appear on the menu.

“Consumers like them and offer local operators a viable option when faced with capacity and staffing issues, tighter margins and leaner menus,” said Rand. “Canned cocktails are also a great take-away option in states where it’s legal.”

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Business

2 Airways Will Postpone Serving Alcohol Amid Surge of In-Flight Violence

Two major airlines, American and Southwest, have postponed plans to resume serving alcohol on flights in an effort to stop a surge of unruly and sometimes violent behavior by passengers who have shoved, struck and yelled at flight attendants.

Both airlines announced the policies this week after the latest assault was captured on a widely watched video that showed a woman punching a flight attendant in the face on a Southwest Airlines flight from Sacramento to San Diego on Sunday.

The flight attendant lost two teeth in the assault, according to her union, and the passenger, who was identified by the police as Vyvianna Quinonez, 28, has been charged with battery causing serious bodily injury. She has also been barred for life from flying Southwest, the airline said.

It was not immediately clear if Ms. Quinonez had a lawyer, and she did not respond on Saturday to messages left at a number listed under her name.

Since Jan. 1, the Federal Aviation Administration has received about 2,500 reports of unruly behavior by passengers, including about 1,900 reports of passengers refusing to comply with a federal mandate that they wear masks on planes.

The agency said that in the past it did not track reports of unruly passengers because the numbers had been fairly consistent over the years, but that it began receiving reports of a “significant increase” in disruptive behavior starting in late 2020.

“We have just never seen anything like this,” Sara Nelson, the international president of the Association of Flight Attendants, said during an online meeting with federal aviation officials on Wednesday. “We’ve never seen it so bad.”

Southwest Airlines issued a statement on Friday citing the “recent uptick industrywide of incidents in-flight involving disruptive passengers” as it announced that it had paused plans to resume serving alcohol on flights.

“We realize this decision will be disappointing for some customers, but we feel it to be the right decision now in the interest of safety and comfort of all onboard,” the statement said.

American Airlines announced a similar policy on Saturday.

It said that alcohol sales, which had been suspended in the main cabin since late March 2020, would remain suspended through Sept. 13, when a federal mandate requiring passengers to wear masks on airplanes, buses and trains is set to expire.

In a memo, American said it recognized that “alcohol can contribute to atypical behavior from customers onboard and we owe it to our crew not to potentially exacerbate what can already be a new and stressful situation for our customers.”

Today in Business

Updated 

May 28, 2021, 12:54 p.m. ET

“Over the past week we’ve seen some of these stressors create deeply disturbing situations on board aircraft,” said the memo, which was issued to American’s flight attendants on Saturday. “Let me be clear: American Airlines will not tolerate assault or mistreatment of our crews.”

American said that alcohol would continue to be served in first class and business class, but only during the flight and not before departure.

The changes came after Lyn Montgomery, the president of Transport Workers Union Local 556, which represents flight attendants on Southwest Airlines, urged the airline’s chief executive, Gary Kelly, to stop the “abuse” employees have been facing.

“We ask that you take a strong stance to ensure that unruly passengers are not welcome to travel with us, period, full stop,” she wrote in a letter to Mr. Kelly on Monday. “Flight crews must feel safe and supported when reporting to work.”

The changes also came after the F.A.A. said on Monday that it had proposed fines of $9,000 to $15,000 for five passengers who had exhibited disruptive behavior on flights.

One of those passengers was in the main cabin of a JetBlue flight in February. She yelled obscenities and pushed a flight attendant who took away champagne and food that had been brought to her by a passenger in first class, the F.A.A. said.

Another passenger on a JetBlue flight in January ignored instructions to stop drinking alcohol and yelled at crew members after they told him to stop talking on his cellphone, the agency said.

In January, a passenger on Alaska Airlines shoved a flight attendant who was walking down the aisle and documenting which passengers were wearing masks, the F.A.A. said.

Steve Dickson, the F.A.A. administrator, said in a videotaped statement that the agency has a “zero-tolerance policy” for passengers who cause disturbances on flights or fail to obey instructions from the flight crew.

Passengers, regardless of their vaccination status, must wear masks on planes and in airports, he said.

“But this isn’t just about face masks,” Mr. Dickson said. “We’ve seen incidents related to alcohol, violence toward flight attendants and abusive behavior in general.”

Those who violate the rules, he said, may be subject to fines and jail time. As a former commercial airline captain, Mr. Dickson said, he knows that disruptive passengers can pose a safety risk.

“Flying is the safest mode of transportation,” he said, “and we intend to keep it that way.”

Categories
World News

Hong Kong Exempts Executives From Quarantine Guidelines

Hong Kong’s borders have been sealed for more than a year and its quarantine rules — which require compulsory hotel stays of up to three weeks — are among the strictest in the world.

Corporate executives, however, are now eligible for special treatment.

The city’s Securities and Futures Commission quietly published a notice on Friday saying that fully vaccinated “senior executives” from local companies or their international affiliates could apply for an exemption to skip quarantine when they visit or return to Hong Kong. It did not issue a news release, and the notice offered no explanation for the timing or justification for the measure.

Neither the Securities and Futures Commission nor Hong Kong’s Department of Health responded to requests for comment on Saturday.

The Chinese territory reported no new cases on Friday. Though densely populated, it has managed to avoid a full lockdown and has kept its coronavirus caseload low through aggressive social distancing rules and forced quarantine in government facilities for close contacts of Covid-19 patients, among other measures. Even vaccinated travelers must quarantine in hotels for one to two weeks, depending on where they fly in from.

The quarantine exemption announced on Friday is not the first for corporate executives in Hong Kong; a similar one was issued last year for executives from local companies re-entering the territory from the Chinese mainland. But it further illustrates how coronavirus policies in Hong Kong, which has one of the biggest income inequality gaps in the world, do not apply evenly to all of its 7.5 million residents.

Officials have imposed lockdowns and mass testing after Covid-19 clusters were detected in poor neighborhoods, where many residents live in crowded tenements with faulty piping and poor ventilation. Critics have accused the government of allowing the conditions for outbreaks to fester, then imposing heavy-handed measures on a group that can least afford to bear them.

The government has also repeatedly accused the 370,000 or so migrant domestic workers who live in the city of violating social distancing restrictions, even though major outbreaks have revolved around clusters of expatriates and wealthy locals.

In early May, the government backtracked on a contentious order that would have required all migrant domestic workers to be vaccinated. But it still went ahead with a plan to subject them to a second round of compulsory coronavirus testing, despite the first round turning up just three positives among 340,000 people.

The government has said that its compulsory testing protocols are based solely on “risk assessment” and apply equally to anyone working in high-risk places, including nursing homes.

In other news around the world:

  • Malaysia reached 9,020 new coronavirus cases on Saturday, the fifth straight day of record new infections in the country, according to Reuters. On Friday, Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin announced that a two-week nationwide lockdown would begin in June to fight the recent surge.

  • Saudi Arabia is lifting a ban on travelers from 11 countries, the Saudi Press Agency announced on Saturday. Beginning on Sunday, visitors will be allowed entry from the United Arab Emirates, Germany, the United States, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, the United Kingdom, Sweden, Switzerland, France and Japan.

  • Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge and wife of Prince William, announced on Twitter that she received her first dose of the coronavirus vaccine at London’s Science Museum. “I’m hugely grateful to everyone who is playing a part in the rollout — thank you for everything you are doing,” she wrote. According to the government portal, more than 39 million people in the United Kingdom have received at least one dose of a Covid vaccine.

  • Taiwan reported 486 new domestic coronavirus cases on Saturday, according to Reuters. The number includes 166 cases added to the totals for recent days as an adjustment in its infection numbers following delays in reporting positive tests.

Categories
Health

UK instances of Covid variant recognized in India double in a single week

Hounslow, London, which has become one of the U.K.’s biggest hotspots for the variant of coronavirus first identified in India, on Thursday 27th May 2021.

Tejas Sandhu | MI News | NurPhoto | Getty Images

Cases of the Covid-19 variant first identified in India have more than doubled in England within one week, the country’s health authority said.

The number of cases of the strain had reached 6,959 by Wednesday, an increase of 3,535 cases from the previous week.

The B.1.617.2 variant, a highly contagious triple-mutant strain of the coronavirus, is likely to be more transmissible than the variant first identified in England last fall, Public Health England said Thursday.

Bolton, Bedford and Blackburn were the most affected areas in England, according to PHE, although it said there were small numbers of cases of the variant in most parts of the country.

Hospitalizations were also rising in some areas, PHE added, noting that most hospital admissions were in unvaccinated people.

Research published by PHE last week showed that two doses of Covid vaccines gives people high levels of protection against the B.1.617.2 strain.

Jenny Harries, CEO of the U.K. Health Security Agency, said in PHE’s weekly update that the public should continue to act with caution as Britain eases lockdown restrictions.

“We now know that getting both vaccine doses gives a high degree of protection against this variant and we urge everyone to have the vaccine,” she said.

“Make sure that you remain careful, work from home if you can, meet people outside where possible and remember ‘hands, face, space, fresh air’ at all times.”

The U.K. has begun to tentatively lift lockdown restrictions in recent months, with the government hoping to remove all measures by June 21.

However, Prime Minister Boris Johnson has warned that the country “may need to wait” for a complete return to normality, although he told the BBC on Thursday there was nothing “currently in the data” to suggest the June unlocking would be derailed.

Johnson announced earlier this month that the U.K. would accelerate second vaccine doses for the over-50s and clinically vulnerable in an effort to combat the spread of the B.1.617.2 strain.

More than 62.6 million vaccines had been given in the U.K. by May 26, with 73% of the adult population having received their first dose. Almost half of British adults have been fully vaccinated with both doses.

On May 22, 883 people were in hospital with Covid-19 in the U.K. — a huge drop from January’s peak of 39,249.

Categories
Entertainment

‘Cruella’ | Anatomy of a Scene

“Hello, my name is Craig Gillespie and I am the director of Cruella.” “Who are you? You look vaguely familiar.” “I look stunning. I don’t know anything about familiar, darling.” “At this point in the movie we’re almost in the middle of the movie. And it’s the first time that the audience meets Cruella. It’s the first time the characters in the movie meet Cruella. And it’s born of a need for some vengeance. And we’re going to see this group commit a robbery. And it’s something they consider Adults did and they’re very good at it. But that has taken it to a whole other level for them. So we have Emma Stone who plays Cruella. And we have Emma Thompson who plays the Baroness. The Baroness is a fashion icon and has a party here, a black and white ball. And as you can see Emma Stone showed up in a red dress. This scene has pretty much it all – every juggling act in the movie that’s sonic, there’s a lot of humor. But there there are also many emotional interventions. “” Yes . Aren’t they beautiful and vicious? It’s my favorite combination. “” In this scene we’re actually going to see Cruella’s transformation from an outside character because she’s putting a character on here and having to do that dance as an actor to have a deep, emotional response to some of the messages she’s spotted everywhere. But in the middle of the action, a raid is underway. “” You are a very powerful woman. “First and foremost was the dynamic between the Baroness and Cruella. But to make that more difficult, we have Cruella, who is caught in this situation of a conversation with the baroness. And she has to attract a character she is not familiar with, namely Cruella. So she improvises in this situation. It was nerve wracking figuring out this character with Emma because it’s his own character. It’s like being separate from the other Cruellas she plays. And it’s like an elevated version that she isn’t supposed to be good at. So you get caught up in this dangerous notion of equality, bad action and overcompensation. And so, as an actor, you always have the feeling of being a bit in the lead, I think, if that’s what you want. But she is very kind with this work. And then in all of this you have your two cohorts, Horace and Jasper, trying to improvise with the situation. We have Paul Walter Hauser who plays Horace. And then we have Joel Fry who plays Jasper. Part of that improvisation for Jasper is the use of rats, which is a very fine line of getting too grotesque or too much for the audience. It was something Disney was concerned about. But I felt like we could walk that line. And there was a lot of talk about how many rats we could have in this scene. And then you just start to understand how these characters can work so well together and improvise. It was almost like a jazz situation. “” Somebody stole my necklace. ” “I thought it was great that we went through all of these dances. And each character has a different sense of humor. “” It’s a party now. “

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Politics

Air Drive Tries Digital Actuality to Stem Suicide and Sexual Assault

MCGUIRE AIR FORCE BASE, N.J. — The three airmen sat quietly adjusting their headsets, murmuring to their colleague, who was in distinct trouble. “Everyone goes through rough patches sometimes,” each said, a few moments apart, to the same despondent and mildly intoxicated man, whose wife recently left him and who seemed immersed in suicidal thoughts.

The airman on the other end of the headsets was virtual, but the conversation was all encompassing, a 30-minute, occasionally harrowing journey among three actual airmen and a virtual actor, whom they each tried to coax into getting help.

The three were trying out a new virtual reality program this month that the Air Force is using to target two problems that continue to vex military leaders: suicide and sexual assault within the ranks. Years of prevention training — often in the form of somnolence-inducing PowerPoint presentations — have done little to stem the rates of either problem.

Whether the virtual reality model can ultimately do better remains an open question. But military officials are encouraged by the early self-reported responses to the training.

Over 1,000 Air Force personnel have participated in the training so far; 97 percent of those who tried it would recommend it, and trainees reported an increase in the likelihood to intervene with a person in crisis, Air Force officials said. And among those ages 18 to 25 — a generation more used to interactive virtual experiences that makes up the bulk of new recruits — the impact increased sevenfold. Officials intend to train at least 10,000 airmen with the program this year.

The training is meant to take on problems that, if anything, have worsened in the military in recent years. Between 2014 and 2019, the suicide rate for all active-duty troops increased from 20.4 to 25.9 suicides per 100,000 according to Pentagon data; in the last three months of 2020, suicides among National Guard troops nearly tripled to 39 from 14 over the same period the prior year.

In 2019, the Defense Department found that there were 7,825 reports of sexual assault involving service members as victims, a 3 percent increase from 2018.

The Army recently reprimanded 12 soldiers in an Illinois-based Army Reserve unit and took disciplinary actions against two senior leaders for mishandling sexual assault complaints, with investigators noting that leaders lacked “basic knowledge and understanding regarding core tenets” of the Army’s sexual assault prevention program.

One of the few effective tactics for both problems, experts say, is intervention by bystanders. They may witness harassment in a bar, for instance, or increasingly alarming messages on social media representing a suicide threat.

In the military, intervening, especially against someone of a higher rank, can be culturally difficult, especially for younger recruits. “Barriers sometimes get in the way from people intervening,” said Carmen Schott, the sexual assault prevention and response program manager for the Air Force’s Air Mobility Command. “If someone is higher rank, you might be more timid to say something. The Air Force has put a lot of effort into making clear nothing negative will happen if you intervene.”

The aim of the virtual reality program is to act out scenarios with airmen in simulated environments. The technology allows the airmen to select from cues at the bottom of the screen to have an interactive “conversation” with a photo-realistic virtual actor, one whose facial expressions and reactions are meant to make the training more effective.

In this behavioral rehearsal, airmen learn what may be useful to say, such as asking their buddy if he has a gun in his house, and why some other responses — like “man up” — are not helpful. Participants get feedback on their “empathy” score and tips on how to improve in future encounters.

“Virtual reality training puts the user in a scenario, not in a classroom where you are zoning out and on your cellphone,” Ms. Schott explained. “You are an active participant. You have to be ready. I think that it is going to help airmen retain and remember knowledge. We don’t want people to feel judged. They may not make perfect decisions, but they will learn skills.”

Kevin Cornish, the chief executive of Moth+Flame, a virtual reality learning firm in Brooklyn, looked a little like an interloper on the Air Force base here, a casually dressed artist among uniforms. Mr. Cornish, who was working on Taylor Swift music videos when he became entranced by the immersive experience of a 360-degree camera used in one of them, said that there was “something so invigorating about somebody making eye contact and talking to you.”

He said he was increasingly seeing companies turn to virtual reality to simulate difficult work conversations and game out scenarios, especially around diversity and inclusion.

As the airmen took turns interacting with their suicidal virtual colleague via their headsets, some spoke quietly and a bit awkwardly, while others sounded like stage actors as they tried to persuade their fellow airman to hand over his gun and go with them to see a supervisor. Sometimes they would nod as they listened, or lower their voices or wipe a tear.

“I loved that it was hands-on,” said Annette Hartman, 23, a senior airman. “It was better than sitting through a briefing and waiting to sign off on a roster. Some of the responses I wouldn’t have thought to say, like, ‘Have you thought about suicide? Do you have a gun?’”

That type of experience is set to expand: Another bystander program, which will roll out in July, will place the users in a bar, watching a scene of sexual harassment unfold.

“In an immersive experience, you get much closer to the feelings of a real story than you do with a computer screen,” said Nonny de la Peña, the chief executive of Emblematic Group and an early creator of virtual reality experiences. “We are starting to see that our world is not flat, and learning and experiencing and connecting is not going to be flat much longer.”

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Business

American, Southwest maintain off on alcohol gross sales after surge in unruly vacationers

A bird flies by in the foreground as a Southwest Airlines jet lands at McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, Nevada on May 25, 2020.

Ethan Miller | Getty Images

Southwest Airlines and American Airlines announced that they are holding back alcoholic beverages service after a flight attendant was attacked and the industry grappled with a spate of other onboard passenger incidents.

A southwest flight attendant sustained facial injuries and lost two teeth after being attacked by a passenger. This emerges from a letter dated May 24th to CEO Gary Kelly from Southwest flight attendants union president Lyn Montgomery. Between April 8 and May 15, there were 477 incidents of passenger misconduct on flights to the southwest, Montgomery wrote.

Airlines have been slowly bringing back a snack and drink service that they stopped at the start of the pandemic.

American Airlines said it will not sell alcoholic beverages in the main cabin until Sept. 13, when the federal mask mandate expires. Alcoholic beverages will continue to be offered in First and Business Class, but only during the flight.

“For the past week, some of these stressors have created deeply worrying situations on board aircraft,” said Brady Byrnes, executive director of flight operations at American, in a note to flight attendants. “Let me be clear: American Airlines does not tolerate attack or abuse of our crews.”

The Dallas-based Southwest had planned to resume alcohol sales in June for Hawaii flights and in July for longer domestic flights in the continental United States. A spokesman from the Southwest said there is currently “no schedule” for resumption of alcohol sales.

“If alcohol sales resume in this already volatile environment, you can certainly understand our concerns,” Montgomery wrote in the letter.

On Monday, one day after the incident aboard the Sacramento to San Diego flight, the Federal Aviation Administration announced that it had received approximately 2,500 reports of recalcitrant passenger behavior this year, approximately 1,900 cases of travelers refusing to do so Federal mask mandate to be followed during air travel.

The Biden government continues to require people to wear face masks on airplanes, at airports, and on buses and trains by September 13, although the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has relaxed guidelines for vaccinated people in other settings.

“We are also aware that alcohol can contribute to atypical behavior by customers on board, and we owe it to our crew not to aggravate what may already be a new and stressful situation for our customers,” said Byrnes.

Categories
Health

Studying Dan Frank, E-book Editor and ‘Champion of the Unexampled’

I met him through Alan Lightman, who had emailed me to say he was coming to New York to give a talk, and did I want to have dinner with him and two guests — his daughter and a man named Dan.

I instantly felt this, just, radiance, a kind of humble warmth but also a very lively mind. He was such a lovely human being, so subtle and generous, an embodiment of what a great editor does: gets out of the way, taking with him the rubble that writers put in their own path.

He was very interested in the intersection of the novelist and the scholarly. He understood uniquely how all history is a kind of narrative superimposed on reality — an invention and interpretation. Science is a human-driven search for truth. Not in a social-constructivist way; there is an elemental truth. But the search can fold in on itself, because we only have the tools of human consciousness to work with. Whatever the prostheses — telescopes, microscopes — it’s still a human mind that does the processing and analysis, that filters everything through its life, its loves, the Dans it lost, everything.

The history of science is ultimately the history of human experience. Dan saw that there was something there to look at that defies the robotic model of objectivity. There is an animating question common to all the books he did: “What is all this? What is all this?”

Alan Lightman is a physicist and writer at M.I.T. He has published a dozen books with Dan Frank, starting in 1986 with “A Modern Day Yankee in a Connecticut Court. and Other Essays on Science.”

In March 30, 1983, I got a letter from an editor I had never heard of, saying that if there was ever a book I wanted to write, I should get in touch: “I have been reading your column, The Physical Element, for over a year, and I am particularly impressed with the ease and grace with which you elucidate complex ideas.”

That was powerful encouragement. Before the internet, Dan would always send me a letter before anything else; not a phone call, but a letter. I kept that letter and all the letters I ever got from him.

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Business

Emily Wilder’s Firing at The A.P. Reminds Us of What We Did not Anticipate

“I think that’s because it worked, so partisans and actors will continue to use the technique,” said Ms. Ball. “They broke that outrage to get Emily Wilder fired. And then they have the boldness to cry over “culture breakup”. “

This is the current term that political law uses to describe the punishment of people for “wrong thinking”. According to Pew, the majority of Americans are now familiar with the term, but feelings are mixed about whether it is useful, leads to a more accountable society, or gruesome form of punishment, and whether it leads to people’s actions being deliberately out of context.

Part of the problem is how time itself has been warped by the internet. Everything is moving faster than before. Accountability from a person’s employer or affiliated institutions is expected immediately after years of content has been exposed. Who you were a year ago, or five years ago, or decades ago is flattening to what you are now. Time has collapsed and everything is in the present because it takes microseconds to get online. There is little appreciation for context or personal development.

And that happens not only to journalists and politicians, whose jobs invite frequent public deliberation, but also to students and business people, because we are all online so often now.

Some see the benefit in this shift. In the same Pew poll of 10,000+ people, more than half agreed to calling people up for their behavior on social media, saying it would help hold people accountable. “People take a closer look at their actions and force them to investigate what they are doing, why they are doing it and what the consequences of those actions are,” said one respondent.

Ms. Ball remains confident that things will change. “The reactionary culture is harmful and unhelpful and really brutal for everyone involved,” she said. “Much of our society wants to see that we believe in forgiveness, in salvation, in people’s ability to learn, grow, and get better.”

She pointed to the backlash against Mrs. Wilder’s shot; Dozens of staff wrote an open letter to The AP expressing dismay.