| An aircraft that Turkey said it shot down for violating its airspace on Tuesday. Haberturk TV Channel/European Pressphoto Agency | Your Tuesday Briefing By CHRISTINE HAUSER |
Good morning. |
Here's what you need to know: |
• Raising the alert. |
President François Hollande of France meets with President Obama in Washington today as France presses its allies and friends to step up efforts against the Islamic State militants. |
The U.S. State Department elevated its guidance to Americans to a "worldwide travel alert," an unusual step, until Feb. 24, saying information suggests that extremist groups "continue to plan terrorist attacks in multiple regions." |
And Belgian authorities said Brussels would remain at the highest level of alert through the week. At least four of the Paris attackers had lived in Belgium. |
• Kerry in Israel. |
Secretary of State John Kerry, in his first visit to Israel and the Palestinian territories in more than a year, holds talks in Jerusalem today with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on ways to quell recent violence. |
Six Israeli Jews have been killed by Palestinians in five days. |
• Military action in Syria.
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Russia says one of its jets crashed in Syria today, while Turkey says it shot down a military plane near the Syrian border after it violated Turkey's airspace, a statement said. |
Separately, France is expanding its airstrikes against the Islamic State, using a newly arrived aircraft carrier in the region. |
• Shooting at protests in Minneapolis. |
Five people were shot and wounded late Monday near a police precinct in Minneapolis where demonstrators have been protesting the fatal police shooting of an unarmed black man, the police said. |
The gunmen fled. |
• Vatican intrigue on trial. |
A trial starting today will delve into the alleged theft of confidential documents used to write two tell-all books describing purported mismanagement in the Roman Catholic Church's bureaucracy. |
Five people were indicted in the case by the Vatican prosecutors over the weekend. |
• Ebola returns. |
A 15-year-old boy died of Ebola in Liberia, a medical official said today, the first such fatality for months in a country declared free of the disease in September. |
BUSINESS |
• Jack Ma, chairman of the Internet retailing giant Alibaba, is in talks to buy The South China Morning Post newspaper, a source says, in an echo of The Washington Post's purchase by Amazon's founder, Jeffrey P. Bezos, in 2013. |
• The blockbuster merger of the drug giants Pfizer and Allergan is putting new pressure on Congress and the White House to overhaul the corporate tax code. |
Pfizer's $160 billion takeover of Ireland-based Allergan is the largest deal to date to avoid American taxes by reincorporating in a lower-tax country. |
• Wall Street futures trading foreshadows declines in stocks today. European shares are down sharply, and Asian indexes ended mixed. |
NOTEWORTHY |
• Thanksgiving travel.
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Thanksgiving week is one of the busiest travel periods of the year in the United States, and our colleagues at The Upshot analyze how we do it. |
Here's one snippet: Few people are interested in flying on Tuesdays. |
• Caveat to shoppers. |
Just in time for Black Friday shoppers, research is out today on new malware that can infect retailers' payment systems. |
• Still undefeated. |
Mistakes, penalties, injuries and turnovers marked the "Monday Night Football" game, but in the end, the New England Patriots held off the Buffalo Bills with a 20-13 home victory. |
• What to watch. |
Ric Burns, the documentary filmmaker, chronicles the voyage of the Mayflower and some Thanksgiving myths in "American Experience: The Pilgrims" (8 p.m. Eastern, PBS). |
If you're not up for a history lesson, there is "Jumanji," the 1995 fantasy about a boy who is stuck in a board game. He grows up to be an adult in a role played by Robin Williams (8 p.m. Eastern, AMC). |
And here are your episode recaps for "Fargo," "Blindspot" and "Jessica Jones." |
• A breast-feeding bonus. |
Two recent studies suggest that mothers, not just babies, have much to gain from breast-feeding. |
• In memoriam. |
Adele Mailer, an artist and actress who married the novelist Norman Mailer — and was famously stabbed by him — died in Manhattan. She was 90. |
And Austin H. Kiplinger, part of the Kiplinger family of financial publishers company, died at age 97. |
BACK STORY |
Bill Murray is a crazy, lovable, even iconic movie actor, but his claim to fame in 2015 is making the top of the list of Forbes magazine's biggest Hollywood flops of the year. |
Besides being critically panned (an 8 percent approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes), "Rock the Kasbah" managed to score the fifth-worst opening of all time for a film playing in 2,000 or more theaters: It averaged $731 in box office revenue per cinema. |
Its star power — besides Mr. Murray, the lineup includes Bruce Willis, Zooey Deschanel and Kate Hudson — couldn't save the tale of a has-been band manager on a U.S.O. tour in Afghanistan. |
Another example of big names and big disappointment was "Aloha," with Bradley Cooper and Emma Stone, at No. 9 on the list. |
Forbes ranked films based on what percentage of their budgets they earned back at the theater as of Nov. 18. |
That meant that even "Tomorrowland," with a mega-budget of $180 million and a worldwide box office take of only $209 million, made the top 15. |
Others that flailed were "Jem and the Holograms" (No. 5), with a $2.3 million box office, and "Mortdecai" (No. 10), with $47.3 million. |
Of course, there's still time for other 2015 movies to crash and burn. But Forbes says it can't resist issuing its list of turkeys around this time of year. |
Victoria Shannon contributed reporting. |
Your Morning Briefing is published weekdays at 6 a.m. Eastern and updated on the web all morning. |
What would you like to see here? Contact us at briefing@nytimes.com. |
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