Evening Briefing: Omicron disrupts holiday travel

Plus the world's next great telescope and Champagne recommendations.

Good evening, and happy holidays. Here's the latest at the end of Friday.

Travelers attempt to navigate the Delta counter at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York on Christmas Eve.Dave Sanders for The New York Times

1. As if traveling during the holidays wasn't stressful enough.

More than 3,800 flights were canceled globally for Christmas Eve and Christmas Day — at least 1,000 of them in the U.S. — after the recent spike of Omicron cases hit airline workers.

For many, 2021 marks the second year holiday plans are in flux. The U.S. is recording nearly 187,000 new daily cases, a 55 percent increase over the last two weeks. If you're heading home, here's when and how to take an at-home test.

The Times visited a high school that returned to in-person learning in August. The fallout from the pandemic remained.

With encouraging data on Omicron's severity, South Africa, where the variant was first detected, eased quarantine restrictions and contact tracing. The U.S. will end the ban on travel to southern Africa next week.

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Shoppers walking along Oxford Street in London yesterday.Henry Nicholls/Reuters

2. On the eve of the biggest holidays in Europe, exhaustion with the pandemic is rising. So is resignation that the virus is endemic.

This week, the rough outlines of how Europe might manage its latest outbreak were taking shape, driven by politics and people's desperation to move on. Full lockdowns have mainly given way to less intrusive — and less protective — measures. And there is general acceptance that the virus is something that people must learn to live with, maybe for years to come.

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In Saudi Arabia, Christmas, once officially banned, is coming out of hiding in the kingdom, as its ultra-constrictive religious rules are eased.

Voting in Chesterfield, Va., in November.Carlos Bernate for The New York Times

3. Democrats say they are serious about state elections. But are they too late?

As Democrats gear up for what most acknowledge will be a difficult midterm election in 2022, state-level races are becoming a central focus of American politics. The lasting effects of new congressional maps and election laws have raised the stakes.

But selling rank-and-file Democrats on the importance of offices like state senator has proved daunting. The party tends to suffer disproportionately from "roll-off," in which voters fail to complete their ballots, withholding their votes from candidates at the bottom of the ticket.

What do the president, vice president, former president and party leaders want in 2022? We made our best guess.

Weapons on display at the Armed Forces Day parade in March in Naypyitaw, Myanmar.Associated Press

4. A venerable Burmese-Irish family known for its charitable foundation has secretly helped equip Myanmar's brutal military.

An investigation of the Kyaw Thaung family by The Times reveals a vast web of military procurement that was strategically hidden from the public. For all their efforts to differentiate themselves from the drug lords and business cronies who dominated Myanmar's economy, the Kyaw Thaungs were quietly profiting from their military ties.

Their partnership with the Tatmadaw, Myanmar's military, deepened even as its generals committed ethnic cleansing against Rohingya Muslims. And it continued into this year, when the army staged a coup and seized full power of the country. One of the family's companies donated more than $40,000 to the Tatmadaw for what the U.N. described as a cover-up of the site of genocide.

"It felt like I was really at a breaking point," said Rebecca Chen of Long Island City, N.Y.Sasha Maslov for The New York Times

5. You can probably use a vacation.

Many office workers have continually delayed their paid time off in hopes of a real, non-Covid-tainted vacation: Last year, one-third of Americans' paid time off went unused, on average. And burnout is creeping in. Some workers are quietly asking permission to rest. Others know that their break is overdue, and now they're getting nudges from the boss: Log off.

For this week's Corner Office column, we spoke to Shar Dubey, the chief executive of the Match group, which runs online dating sites including Match.com, OKCupid and Tinder, about her taking a stand on the restrictive Texas abortion law. "Taking us backward while much of the world is moving forward? That didn't sit well with me."

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"The Virgin and Child With a Flower on a Grassy Bench" is believed to be by Albrecht Dürer.Leon Neal/Getty Images

6. In 2016, a man paid $30 at an estate sale in Concord, Mass., for a drawing. It could be a Renaissance work worth millions.

A panel of experts at the British Museum in London now believe the yellowing picture of the Virgin Mary and Child is by the renowned German artist Albrecht Dürer — one of the most extraordinary discoveries of Renaissance artwork in years.

Separately, a consortium of British libraries and museums successfully raised more than $20 million to buy a "lost" library containing rare manuscripts by the Brontës, Robert Burns, Walter Scott and Jane Austen.

The James Webb Space Telescope at the launch pad in Kourou, French Guiana, yesterday.Bill Ingalls/NASA, via Reuters

7. All astronomers want for Christmas is a successful launch of the James Webb Space Telescope.

The $10 billion telescope, with one of the most fraught development timelines of any space program, will succeed the Hubble Space Telescope and become humanity's most powerful scientific instrument for studying the formation of our universe and distant worlds in our galaxy.

Astronomers have waited decades as budgetary and technical delays have stalled the Webb's completion and launch, and the next decade of astronomy is predicated on its success. The telescope is scheduled to lift off at 7:20 a.m. Eastern time on Saturday from a European-managed spaceport in French Guiana. Here's how to watch it.

Alexandre Assouline in his apartment with his library in New York City.Stefano Ukmar for The New York Times

8. Book-wrapt: the exhilarating comfort of a well-stocked library.

The term was coined by Reid Byers, a computer systems architect and private library historian to describe the way physical books continue to beguile us. Covering the walls — 500 books ensure that a room "will begin to feel like a library," he said — they nourish the senses, slay boredom and relieve distress. We visited several collectors who refuse to let their collections go.

Many of you probably have a Harry Potter or two on your shelves. J.K. Rowling, the series's author, writes about the magic of things lost and found in her new children's book, "The Christmas Pig." "How many times have I been asked whether I believe in magic? On the day I finished 'The Christmas Pig,' for a few shining moments I really did," she writes. Read her essay to find out why.

Cheers to 2022.Tony Cenicola/The New York Times

9. The hope and joy in the pop of a cork. The rush of sparkle and froth. The impression of extravagance. It's almost time to pop the bubbly.

Nothing says "Happy New Year" quite like a bottle of bubbles. Our wine critic rounded up six Champagnes and six sparkling wines to help you toast 2022. The latest crop of alcohol-free sparkling rosés leave plenty for wine lovers to enjoy, too.

For something a little different, these three cocktails offer something bubbly beyond the traditional bubbly, and are best paired with something salty, like potato chips.

If you're still looking for last-minute Christmas inspiration, consider homemade shrimp cocktail; a vegan Yorkshire pudding from the cooking-show host Mary McCarthy (a simply wonderful Christmastime highlight for her father, Paul); or something sweet for the morning.

The Atlanta Braves shocked baseball in 2021, beating the Houston Astros in the World Series.John David Mercer/USA Today Sports, via Reuters

10. And finally, how much do you really remember about 2021?

It was quite a year, with a new president in the White House and the global race to distribute coronavirus vaccines; there were record-high temperatures and unseasonal lows; celebrity mishaps and celebrated liberations, and so much more. Take our end-of-year quiz to see how much you remember or try this one for kids. The Opinion columnist Gail Collins made one, too.

What kind of cultural appetite did you have this year? Our interactive flowchart will try to guess. This baseball quiz is not for the faint of heart. You can also test your knowledge with our weekly health quiz.

Wishing you all a safe and healthy holiday season. Merry Christmas to those who are celebrating, and to all a good night.

Eve Edelheit compiled photos for this briefing.

Your Evening Briefing is posted at 6 p.m. Eastern.

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