Vigils planned Tuesday evening for San Bernardino school shooting

A candlelight vigil has been planned for victims in the North Park Elementary School shooting.

The vigil is scheduled at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the North Park playground, 5378 North H St. in San Bernardino, according to community members.

An 8-year-old child and a teacher are dead, and another child was wounded, in an apparent murder-suicide Monday at North Park.

A second vigil is set at 7 p.m. at Kingdom Culture Worship Centre, at 2050 Pacific St. in San Bernardino. The event is open to the public.

Lead pastors Sherman and Jaquet Dumas, of Kingdom Culture Worship Centre, will host a prayer vigil to grieve for all the victims of the shooting. The event will include a prayer service, meditation and music.

“We decided to do this prayer vigil because we want to unite our city as tragedy has struck once again,” Sherman Dumas said, in a statement. “We’ve rose from the ashes before and we know our community can and will do it once more. We’re believing that as our community draws together we’re going to feed on the energy and love of one another and build another moment of hope.”

• A memorial at the school has been growing. Two vigils were held Monday night.

The school is closed through the week, according to school district officials.

On Monday, Cedric Anderson, 53, of Riverside, arrived at the San Bernardino school shortly before 10:30 a.m. He checked-in and then went to his wife’s classroom. Karen Elaine Smith, 53, where he opened fire. The pair had been married since Jan. 28, but had already been separated for several weeks.

Police do not believe Anderson intentionally targeted the children. And, San Bernardino City Unified School District Superintendent Dale Marsden said, all district policies were complied with when Anderson was let onto campus.

12.04.2017No comments
Germany: Soccer player hurt in blasts near Borussia Dortmund bus

By MARTIN MEISSNER

DORTMUND, Germany — Three explosions went off near the team bus of one of Germany’s top soccer clubs as it set off for a Champions League quarterfinal match on Tuesday evening, injuring a player, authorities said.

It was unclear what caused the explosions ahead of the first leg match between Borussia Dortmund and Monaco, which was later called off and rescheduled for Wednesday.

Police spokesman Gunnar Wortmann said there were “three explosions near the (Borussia Dortmund) team bus as they left the hotel to go to the stadium,” and that there was “one player injured inside and damage to a window.”

The incident happened near Borussia’s team hotel on the outskirts of Dortmund, around 10 kilometers (6 miles) from the stadium, at around 7 p.m. local time. Dortmund is in western Germany, in the densely populated Ruhr industrial region.

Dortmund said the injured player was Spanish defender Marc Bartra and that he is currently in the hospital. Dortmund chief executive Hans-Joachim Watzke said Bartra was injured in the arm and hand “but nothing life-threatening.”

Watzke said police told him that devices were hidden near the exit of the hotel and detonated as the bus passed.

However, another police spokeswoman, Nina Vogt, said there was no further information yet on what caused the explosions.

Inside the packed stadium, supporters of Monaco, which plays in the French league, chanted “Dortmund, Dortmund” in sympathy for the German side. Dortmund residents, for their part, used social media to offer accommodation to stranded Monaco supporters ahead of their rescheduled match in Europe’s premier soccer club competition.

“The team is totally shocked, that’s clear. It’s our task now to digest this somehow because it’s only 24 hours before we have to play. That’s our job,” Watzke said.

He added that there was “no alternative” to rescheduling the match for Wednesday, as Monaco also has to play at the weekend and the return Champions League match is scheduled for next week.

“It’s a very unfortunate situation but there was no other way,” he said.

Stadium spokesman Norbert Dickel informed fans of the cancellation, saying that “there is no reason for panic here at the stadium.”

Dortmund recommended that fans stay in the stadium and remain calm to facilitate an “orderly departure.”

This is the second time in recent times that a soccer match in Germany has been postponed over security concerns.

In Hannover, in November 2015, Germany’s international soccer friendly against the Netherlands was canceled just before kickoff after police feared an explosive device might be detonated at the stadium.

It came days after devices were detonated outside the Stade de France in Paris as France was playing Germany as part of a coordinated attack on the French capital.

Geir Moulson and Ciaran Fahey contributed from Berlin.

12.04.2017No comments
United faces public-relations fiasco over dragged passenger; CEO apologizes again

By DAVID KOENIG

United is getting pummeled on late-night TV. Online, jokers are proposing new corporate slogans such as “We’ll drag you all over the world” and “We have red eye and black eye flights available.” On Wall Street, the airline briefly lost nearly $1 billion in market value before its stock regained much of the loss.

The cellphone video of airport police dragging a 69-year-old passenger off an overbooked flight has become a public-relations fiasco for United, with travel and PR experts saying the airline fumbled the situation from the start and made matters worse with a tone-deaf apology from the CEO.

It’s too soon to know whether Sunday night’s incident at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport will cause lasting harm. Many travelers go for the cheapest fare, no matter what the name on the plane. And United frequent flyers won’t easily give up their miles.

Then again, there are those videos. It will be hard to forget the image of the man being yanked out of his seat and dragged down the aisle on his back as other passengers gasped.

“That is the craziest act I’ve ever seen. Who drags a ticketed passenger off an airplane?” said Bruce Rubin, a longtime practitioner of crisis public relations in Miami. “Because it’s so visual and it’s so unnecessary, it’s the kind of thing that can hurt United long-term.”

United CEO Oscar Munoz apologized on Monday, but not without blaming the passenger, David Dao, of Elizabethtown, Kentucky, for not obeying when airline employees asked him to leave. Munoz called the man “disruptive and belligerent.”

On Tuesday, Munoz offered a stronger mea culpa for the “truly horrific event,” saying, “No one should ever be mistreated this way.” He promised a review of airline policies by April 30 and vowed to “fix what’s broken so this never happens again.”

Dao, along with three other passengers who left the plane before police were called, had been told to give up their seats so that four employees of the company operating the flight for United could board.

United had tried to entice volunteers with travel vouchers worth $800 and a hotel room. When there were no takers, a United manager went on board and announced four people would be chosen to be removed.

Big mistake, say the crisis-management experts. Everyone wondered why United didn’t simply sweeten the offer until four passengers agreed to get off.

“A few dollars could have solved this problem,” said Allen Adamson, founder of Brand Simple Consulting in New York. “Instead, the damage of the brand will be millions of dollars.”

United said passengers were already seated when the four employees of Republic Airline showed up at the gate and insisted on boarding the plane to Louisville, Kentucky, so that they could operate a flight the next morning.

United is “within their rights to take someone off the plane, but this problem is totally the creation of United,” said Charles Leocha, a passenger-rights advocate in Washington. “For them to wait after the (passengers) boarded before they say, ‘Sorry, you have to get off’” is inexcusable.

The online storm began immediately after the first video was posted online. Memes mocking United sprouted like flight delays during a thunderstorm. Some jokers created images of a bat-wielding villain from “The Walking Dead” patrolling the aisle on a United plane.

Munoz, who just last month was named PR Week’s “Communicator of the Year,” was vilified.

On ABC, comedian Jimmy Kimmel launched his show with a five-minute takedown of United, mocking Munoz for saying the airline had to “re-accommodate” customers — industry jargon for putting people on later flights. Kimmel showed the dragging video and likened the man’s “re-accommodation” to the capture and extradition of Mexican drug lord El Chapo.

“That is such sanitized, say-nothing, take-no-responsibility, corporate BS speak,” Kimmel said.

The stock of parent United Continental Holdings Inc. plunged 4.4 percent Tuesday morning but recovered and was off 1.4 percent shortly before the closing bell.

Richard Levick, a crisis-PR consultant in Washington, said Munoz and his airline responded poorly once the story dominated social media, just as they seemed to do two weeks ago after a gate agent in Denver barred two girls from boarding because they were wearing leggings.

“It doesn’t matter if United Airlines followed their rules,” Levick said. “They are really beginning to become the brand that people think we should not fly.”

Business Writer Joseph Pisani in New York contributed to this report.

 

12.04.2017No comments
A blind surfer gets stoked while riding first wave at Doheny

  • Nathan Nipp, 9, learned to surf at Doheny State Beach last Friday. Despite being blind, Nipp had no problem learning how to ride the waves. (Video screenshot: Lambert Lo)

    Nathan Nipp, 9, learned to surf at Doheny State Beach last Friday. Despite being blind, Nipp had no problem learning how to ride the waves. (Video screenshot: Lambert Lo)

  • Nathan Nipp, 9, learned to surf at Doheny State Beach last Friday. Despite being blind, Nipp had no problem learning how to ride the waves. (Video screenshot: Lambert Lo)

    Nathan Nipp, 9, learned to surf at Doheny State Beach last Friday. Despite being blind, Nipp had no problem learning how to ride the waves. (Video screenshot: Lambert Lo)

  • Nathan Nipp, 9, learned to surf at Doheny State Beach last Friday. Despite being blind, Nipp had no problem learning how to ride the waves. (Video screenshot: Lambert Lo)

    Nathan Nipp, 9, learned to surf at Doheny State Beach last Friday. Despite being blind, Nipp had no problem learning how to ride the waves. (Video screenshot: Lambert Lo)

  • Nathan Nipp, 9, learned to surf at Doheny State Beach last Friday. Despite being blind, Nipp had no problem learning how to ride the waves. (Video screenshot: Lambert Lo)

    Nathan Nipp, 9, learned to surf at Doheny State Beach last Friday. Despite being blind, Nipp had no problem learning how to ride the waves. (Video screenshot: Lambert Lo)

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Nathan Nipp heard the wave approaching and jumped up on the surfboard, putting his arms out wide and bending his knees into a surfer stance, the intense look of focus on his face easing as he enjoyed the ride.

“I’m up,” the 9-year-old surfer yelled out. “I got it!”

It didn’t matter that Nipp, of Irvine, couldn’t see the waves approaching, or had to feel around with his fingers to find just the right place on the soft-top surfboard to lay his body flat while out in the water.

Being blind has never slowed this kid down – and it certainly wasn’t going to while he was learning how to surf at Doheny State Beach in Dana Point on Friday, April 7.

Lambert Lo, a long-time surf instructor, met Nipp at the Mix Academy, a community center in Santa Ana. Lo is no stranger to introducing people to the sport of surfing – he once taught Steve Jobs how to ride waves and not long ago traveled to North Korea to give lessons. Last year, Lo held a surf camp in conjunction with pro surfer Courtney Conlogue to teach homeless people how to ride waves.

When Lo met Nipp, the youngster was taking a skateboarding class.

“He’s just this little kid filled with life,” Lo said. “He’s fearless, an accomplished musician, amazing on the ukulele.”

Nipp was born with an eye disease, his eye sight worsening as he got older despite several attempts at corrective surgery, Lo said.

“You wouldn’t know that he has a disability,” Lo said. “His parents are heroes too — they don’t treat him like he has a disability. They want him to experience anything any other little boy would.”

When Lo brought up the idea of taking Nipp for a surf lesson, they boy didn’t hesitate.

“He wasn’t afraid or anything,” he said. “He was like, ‘Let’s go.’”

Lo said he also learned something from the surf lessons. Nipp, he said, taught Lo how to use his ears to hear waves approaching.

“When you’re surfing, we’re usually looking for waves. He was listening for waves. He could tell what waves were coming and when,” Lo said. “He knew which waves he wanted to take. His sense of direction, he was like half dolphin.”

Nipp rode wave after wave at Doheny, known for its gentle-sloping surf. The new surfer couldn’t get enough, popping up several times during his lesson. Wipeouts didn’t faze him.

“I’ve taught lessons for a really, really long time. It’s sometimes hard for students to get back on the board after they wipe out, but his senses are just amazing. He can’t see, but he can see,” Lo said. “His clarity is, I think, a lot more acute than most people.”

“He was ear-to-ear grinning. He was saying, ‘Let’s get a bigger wave. Let’s get a real-size wave,’” Lo said.

12.04.2017No comments
Santa Margarita student plans ice skating fundraiser to send kids with cancer to Disneyland
Aubrey Davenport, a sophomore at Santa Margarita, hopes to send young cancer survivors to Disneyland through her fundraiser, Ice Skate for a Cure, April 22 at the Ice Palace in Aliso Viejo.
Aubrey Davenport, a sophomore at Santa Margarita, hopes to send young cancer survivors to Disneyland through her fundraiser, Ice Skate for a Cure, April 22 at the Ice Palace in Aliso Viejo.

A former competitive ice dancer who had to stop competing after a knee injury, Aubrey Davenport has since focused her attention on helping others through her passion.

The sophomore at Santa Margarita Catholic High School plans to hold a fundraiser to benefit children battling cancer at Children’s Hospital of Orange County by holding Ice Skate for a Cure at the Aliso Viejo Ice Palace, 12:30-3 p.m. Saturday, April 22.

Davenport said money raised through the event will go toward ticket vouchers, good for admission at Disneyland. Davenport will then give those vouchers to children after their treatments at CHOC so they can enjoy a day at Disneyland with their families.

For $27, participants get rental skates to use on the ice, food and a pair of Mickey Mouse ears.

“My mom has been taking me to Disneyland since I was 2 and I always had an annual pass,” Davenport said. “My favorite memories have been at Disneyland with my friends, and I thought there was no better way to celebrate a child getting out of cancer treatment at CHOC.”

Davenport started figure skating at 3 and fell in love with the dresses and music, she said. She skated competitively for 12 years until the injury brought it to an end.

She currently is part of the Song team at Santa Margarita.

After forming the event and coordinating with CHOC, she took a tour of the hospital. The visit provided proof that she was making the right choice in creating the fundraiser.

“It was pretty amazing, but it was really heartbreaking to see the kids,” she said.

Davenport hopes to make Ice Skate for a Cure an annual event.

“I’m really excited,” she said. “This is the first event, so I’m sure I’ll learn from it and each year will be bigger and better. I hope it will be a great turnout.”

For more information, or to donate, visit iceskateforacure.org.

12.04.2017No comments
Peri Arenas Opens Peri.A Boutique on Robertson Boulevard in L.A.

Peri Arenas is betting on Robertson Boulevard’s comeback. The New York transplant has opened her second California boutique, Peri.A, at 146 North Robertson Boulevard in the former Kitson Men space. The 2,400-square-foot luxury boutique will stock emerging designers such as Marie Marot, Greg Lauren, Mira Mikati and Rahul Mishra, the latter of which sells exclusively in her store for spring.

Peri.A is Arenas’ follow-up to Veri Peri at Parker Palm Springs, the desert resort founded by her grandfather, Jack Parker, also of Le Parker Meridien fame. Adjacent to other multiline bricks-and-mortar chain stores including Curve and Intermix, the store will carry a collection of curated designers and brands in both apparel and accessories, such as emerging South Korean handbag designer Cecilia Ma. The offering also includes vintage hand painted Louis Vuitton, Hermès and Chanel bags, Jupe by Jackie, custom-made, hand-painted clothes from India, and Aalto, a new line Arenas bought in its entirety.

The interior of Peri.A boutique. 

Arenas decided to open a second store after relocating her family to Los Angeles three years ago.
“Looking at locations I remember Robertston having its heyday years ago and thought, ‘I’m going to make it happen again.’ I’m a true optimist,” she said, noting two new

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Forever 21 Plus Expands Offering for Collection’s Reset

MORE IS MORE: Forever 21 said it plans to relaunch its plus-size collection on Friday, tapping models Barbie Ferreira and Lulu Bonfils to appear in marketing for the revamped offering.
Plus sizes aren’t new for the fast-fashion retailer, which originally launched Forever 21 Plus in 2009. The company said the redo is intended to update the offering and make it more stylish. The revamped collection for spring draws inspiration from the Nineties in the way of chokers, boots and rose-colored sunglasses along with studded and patch detailing on motorcycle jackets and tops.
“We launched Forever 21 Plus in 2009 as we felt that there was a big gap in the market for trend-driven, plus fashion at a great value,” Forever 21 vice president of merchandising Linda Chang, who was traveling and unavailable for an interview, said in an e-mail. “Our instincts were right and now ‘plus’ is a key category for us. We’re relaunching Forever 21 Plus in response to a growing customer demand for more styles and fashion.”
While the collection has expanded the offering in apparel, accessories and lingerie, there’s also the addition of swim along with what appears to be more marketing muscle that’s fueling the company’s desire to relaunch

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British Fashion Council Names 15 NewGen Recipients

LONDON — The British Fashion Council has announced 15 recipients of NewGen sponsorship.
Taking cue from a new format, which was unveiled earlier this year, the sponsorship will be awarded yearly to men’s wear and women’s wear designers that plan to show during London Fashion Week Men’s and London Fashion Week.
A-Cold-Wall, Charles Jeffrey Loverboy, Halpern, Nicholas Daley and Richard Malone will join the roster of current NewGen recipients including Wales Bonner, Cottweiler, Phoebe English Man, Molly Goddard, Liam Hodges, Marta Jakubowski, Kiko Kostadinov, Paula Knorr and Sadie Williams. Richard Quinn will receive One to Watch aid and will be awarded exhibit space at the Designer Showrooms. Meanwhile, Alex Mullins, Ashley Williams, Craig Green and Faustine Steinmetz have moved on from the scheme.
A-Cold-Wall, Cottweiler, Nicholas Daley, Phoebe English Man, Liam Hodges, Charles Jeffrey Loverboy, Kiko Kostadinov and Wales Bonner will present their collections during London Fashion Week Men’s in June.
Meanwhile, Halpern, Molly Goddard, Paula Knorr, Marta Jakubowski, Richard Malone and Sadie Williams will showcase their ranges during London Fashion Week in September.
In addition, the NewGen designers will be given a pop-up showroom to showcase their ranges to buyers and press.
NewGen is a part of the British Fashion Council’s scheme to aid emerging talent

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They Are Wearing: Galeries Lafayette’s “Africa Now” Festival

Sunday shoppers dressed in their finest to join in the celebration of Galeries Lafayette’s “Africa Now” festival, running through June 25, with a parade of African street style that started on the roof of the retailer’s flagship store in Paris and made its way down to the ground floor.
WWD’s They Are Wearing >>
Attendees rocked a mix of tailoring and denim, colorful prints and sleek urban looks, though it was hard to compete with the 100 participants in the parade, who were styled by Amah Ayivi, founder of the vintage store Marché Noir.
They included gospel singers in their Sunday best, a voodoo sorcerer and his disciples, and the Sapeurs – the tribe of elegant gentlemen whose snappy dress style was highlighted by Solange Knowles in the video for her 2012 track “Losing You.”
Side attractions included food trucks on Boulevard Haussmann, an exhibition of contemporary African art at the store’s Galerie des Galeries space, the screening of the documentary “Black Dandy, a Political Beauty,” a scarf-tying workshop and cooking classes.
MORE:
Galeries Lafayette Opens Dedicated Space for Chinese Tour Groups
Galeries Lafayette Puts Toilet Paper in Charge of Ad Campaigns
Galeries Lafayette to Celebrate African Art and Design

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Christian Dior’s Childhood Revisited in Exhibition

HOMING INSTINCTS: “What can I say? My life and my style owe almost everything to its location and its architecture,” said Christian Dior of his childhood home, Les Rhumbs, in Granville, Normandy, which now houses the Christian Dior Museum.
Unfolding across three floors, a new exhibition at the site, “Christian Dior and Granville: the Source of a Legend,” seeks to recapture the atmosphere of the era when Dior lived there as a boy, drawing on archival documents, and the location’s influence on his designs.
Dior’s parents bought the grand villa, with its winter garden located in a park, in 1905. The event marks both the 20th anniversary of the museum and the 70th anniversary of the house of Dior.

A fresco in the Villa des Rhumbs inspired by Asian culture. 
Courtesy Christian Dior Museum

The rooms on the site’s ground floor are themed around specific aspects that helped shape the designer’s personality, such as the Japanese exoticism of the entrance hall, the rococo décor of the grand drawing room, and the colors and scents of the garden, which are said to have fired his artistic flair and dreamer side.
The bedrooms on the site’s first floor evoke each member of Dior’s family, meanwhile, mixing portraits, photographs and personal objects with

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12.04.2017No comments