6A
THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2017
WORLD IN BRIEF
revival as a great Asian power.
The long-awaited call between Chinese President Xi Jinping
and Trump came Thursday evening, Washington time, the White
House and China’s state broadcaster CCTV said.
Associated Press
Full moon, comet starring in
night sky show this weekend
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — A full moon and comet share
double billing in a special night sky show this weekend.
A lunar eclipse starts everything off tonight. The moon will
pass into Earth’s outer shadow, or penumbra. The moon won’t be
blacked out like in a full eclipse. Only part of the moon will be
shaded, but it should be easily visible from much of the world.
Comet 45P, meanwhile, will zoom past Earth early Saturday
morning. It will be an extremely close encounter as these things
go, passing within 7.7 million miles of Earth. Its relative speed:
14.2 miles per second, or a breakneck 51,120 mph.
The comet, glowing green, will be visible in the constellation
Hercules. Binoculars and telescopes will help in the search.
Stargazers have been tracking Comet 45P for the past cou-
ple of months. The ice ball — an estimated mile across — comes
around every five years. It’s officially known as Comet 45P/
Honda-Mrkos-Pajdusakova, named after the Japanese, Czech
and Slovak astronomers who discovered it in 1948. The letter P
stands for periodic, meaning it’s a recurring visitor to the inner
solar system.
The Slooh network of observatories will provide a live broad-
cast from the Canary Islands for both big events.
The eclipse will last more than four hours, beginning at2:32
p.m. local time. The action will unfold early Saturday in Europe,
Africa and western Asia.
New Zealanders race to save
whales after 400 stranded
WELLINGTON, New Zealand — It was the sound of soft
sighs and cries in the half-light that first struck Cheree Morrison,
and then as the dawn broke she began to see the extent of the car-
nage — more than 400 whales had swum aground along a remote
New Zealand beach.
About 275 of the pilot whales were already dead when Morri-
son and two colleagues found them today on Farewell Spit at the
tip of the South Island.
Within hours, hundreds of farmers, tourists and teenagers
were racing to keep the surviving 140 or so whales alive in one of
the worst whale strandings in the nation’s history.
Morrison, a magazine writer and editor, stumbled upon the
whales after taking a predawn trip with a photographer and a
guide to capture the red glow of the sunrise.
“You could hear the sounds of splashing, of blowholes being
cleared, of sighing,” she said. “The young ones were the worst.
Crying is the only way to describe it.”
There are different theories as to why whales strand them-
selves, from them chasing prey too far inshore to them trying to
protect a sick member of the group.
New Zealand has one of the highest rates of whale strand-
ings in the world, and today’s event is the nation’s third-biggest
recorded stranding.
Packy, Oregon’s beloved
elephant, dies at 54
PORTLAND — Packy, the Asian elephant who drew interna-
tional attention when he was born, including an 11-page spread
in Life magazine, died Thursday at the Oregon Zoo. He was 54.
Japanese PM looks to win Trump’s
trust in White House talks
Tim Cuff/New Zealand Herald
Whales are stranded at Farewell Spit near Nelson, New
Zealand today. New Zealand volunteers formed a hu-
man chain in the water at a remote beach today as they
tried to save about 100 whales after more than 400 of the
creatures beached themselves in one of the worst whale
strandings in the nation’s history. About three-quarters of
the pilot whales were already dead when they were found
this morning at Farewell Spit at the tip of the South Island.
Packy was 3 feet tall and weighed 226 pounds when
he entered the world April 14, 1962, making headlines as the
first elephant born in the Western Hemisphere in 44 years.
Eager to see the baby elephant, more than 1 million people vis-
ited the zoo in Portland that year, the first time it ever hit that
mark.
At the time of his death, Packy — who got his name from
a radio contest — was the oldest male of his species in North
America.
The elephant had been suffering from a drug-resistant strain
of tuberculosis, and was euthanized after veterinarians failed to
come up with an alternative treatment.
“We’d run out of options for treating him,” Dr. Tim Storms,
the zoo’s lead veterinarian, said in a statement. “The remaining
treatments involved side effects that would have been very hard
on Packy with no guarantee of success, plus a risk of creating fur-
ther resistance.
“None of us felt it would be right to do that. But without treat-
ment, his TB would have continued to get worse.
Trump reaffirms ‘one China’
policy in call with Xi Jinping
BEIJING — President Donald Trump reaffirmed Washing-
ton’s long-standing “one China” policy in a call with Beijing’s
leader, a move that could ease anger in China over his earlier
suggestions that he might use Taiwan as leverage in negotiations
over trade, security and other sensitive issues.
More than two months after deviating from decades of Amer-
ican diplomacy regarding Taiwan by accepting a phone call from
the self-governing island’s president, Trump appeared to be try-
ing to reassure Beijing he would not seek to upend relations
between the world’s two-largest economies.
“This is an important step,” said Bonnie Glaser, senior adviser
on Asia at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in
Washington, D.C. “This will now pave the way for the engage-
ment of the U.S. and Chinese governments on a wide range of
issues.”
The policy in place since 1979 requires Washington to main-
tain only unofficial ties with Taiwan, the self-governing island
that China claims as its own territory. China views any hint of
official U.S. recognition of the island as anathema to China’s
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s meeting with
Japan’s prime minister offers a chance to shore up a long-stand-
ing security alliance and repair economic ties shaken by U.S.
withdrawal from a Pacific trade pact.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who is expected to propose more
Japanese investment in the U.S., has wasted no time in trying
to win Trump’s trust. He was the only world leader to meet the
Republican before inauguration, and will be the second to do so
since the new president took office.
Trump and Abe will hold talks in the Oval Office today,
followed by a joint news conference and a working lunch.
Trump will then host Abe and his wife at his Mar-a-Lago Club
in Florida. The two leaders are scheduled to play golf on
Saturday.
Other leaders of America’s closest neighbors and allies, such
as Mexico, Britain and Australia, have been singed by their
encounters or conversations with Trump. But Japanese offi-
cials are optimistic the invitation to visit Trump’s “Winter White
House” signals a more positive outcome.
Although the U.S. administration is only three weeks old,
some repair work is already in order. Trump’s “America First”
rhetoric and campaign trail demands that allies pay more for their
own defense sowed doubts in Tokyo about the new administra-
tion’s commitment to an alliance that has underpinned security in
the Asia-Pacific since the end of World War II and one which Abe
has sought to strengthen.
Trump’s health secretary pick
confirmed narrowly for Cabinet
WASHINGTON — Rep. Tom Price, President Donald
Trump’s choice to be health secretary, is the latest of a handful of
Cabinet nominees to eke out a confirmation victory in a bitterly
divided Senate.
Following the pattern of strictly party-line votes on two pre-
vious nominees — Attorney General-designate Sen. Jeff Ses-
sions and Betsy DeVos for Education secretary — the Georgia
congressman was approved early today on a 52-47 vote. Former
Exxon-Mobil CEO Rex Tillerson fared somewhat better than
Sessions and DeVos, but still won confirmation for secretary of
state by only a 56-43 margin.
Two other controversial Trump selections are set for votes
Monday. By a 53-46 margin, the Senate ended procedural hurdles
to financier Steven Mnuchin’s nomination to be Treasury secre-
tary. Final approval for Mnuchin and for physician David Shulkin
to be veterans affairs secretary was set for Monday.
Minority Democrats have used Senate rules, where possi-
ble, to delay elevation of some Trump’s nominees. And fol-
lowing Price’s confirmation to head the Department of Health
and Human Services, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer
said: “The Republicans launch their first assault in their war on
seniors.”
Democrats prolonged the debate on the 62-year-old Price until
nearly 2 a.m. EST today, in arguments tinged with bitter accusa-
tions, reflecting the raw feelings enveloping Washington early in
Trump’s presidency.
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S ATURDAY , F EBRUARY 11
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