nedjelja, 28. lipnja 2015.

PLANET NIBIRU JE U BLIZINI PLANETA ZEMLJE SAMO DOLAZI S DONJE STRANE GDJE GA NASA NE MOŽE VIDJETI

| 
POŠTANSKA MARKA U POVODU 10.GODIŠNJICE AKCIJE OLUJA 
ČETNIČKO-JNA GENERAL PODPISUJE BEZUVIJETNU PREDAJU 
KARTA GLAVNIH HRVATSKIH VOJNIH UDARA 
HRVATSKI TENKOVI-4GRB NA DOMAK HRVATSKOGA GRADA KNINA 
HRVATSKI TOPNICI UČINKOVITO DJELUJU PO SRBSKO-CRNOGORSKOM AGRESORU 

HRVATSKI STIJEG PONOVNO DOŠAO U HRVATSKI KRALJEVSKI GRAD KNIN 
                     I konačno Četnici, Šešeljevci, Arkanovci bježe kao zečevi, Hrvatska je slobodna

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Today's Headlines

Sunday, June 28, 2015

IN THIS EMAIL NYT World | U.S. | Politics | Business | Technology | Sports | Arts |N.Y./Region | Magazine | Today's Video | Obituaries | Editorials | Op-Ed | On This Day |CUSTOMIZE »
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Top News
Lauren Horbal, left, and Tiffany Cannon at their home in Nashville. They applied to rent a house together with a friend, and they say the landlord refused to process their application when he realized they were a lesbian couple.
Next Fight for Gay Rights: Bias in Jobs and Housing

By ERIK ECKHOLM

Exhilarated by the Supreme Court's endorsement of same-sex marriage, gay rights advocates have turned their sights on what they see as the next big battle: antidiscrimination laws.
Alex, a 23-year-old Sunday school teacher from rural Washington State, spent hours a day online learning about Islam from supporters of the Islamic State.
ISIS and the Lonely Young American

By RUKMINI CALLIMACHI

For months, Alex had been growing closer to a new group of friends online – the kindest she had ever had – who were teaching her what it meant to be a Muslim.
Gay rights supporters celebrating in the Castro district of San Francisco on Friday, after the Supreme Court ruled that same-sex marriage is protected by the Constitution.

NEWS ANALYSIS

As Left Wins Culture Battles, G.O.P. Gains Opportunity to Pivot for 2016

By JONATHAN MARTIN

Many party officials see an opening to turn the election toward economic and national security issues.
For more top news, go to NYTimes.com »
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Editors' Picks
Ian Hecox, left, and Anthony Padilla, the pair known as Smosh, outside YouTube Space LA.

MOVIES

Can 20 Million YouTube Fans Make 'Smosh: The Movie' a Hit?

By LORNE MANLY

A generation of Internet stars is making the leap to full-length feature films, with Hollywood betting their fans will follow.
. ArtsBeat: Acting Coaches and Rehearsals: YouTube Stars Are Getting Movie-World Lessons

OPINION | OP-ED | JUDITH SHULEVITZ

Regulating Sex

By JUDITH SHULEVITZ

It's not just campuses that are challenging the definition of rape. Many states are redefining the law.

QUOTATION OF THE DAY

"All of us have a natural firewall in our brain that keeps us from bad ideas. They look for weaknesses in the wall, and then they attack."
NASSER WEDDADY, a Middle East expert, on the effort the Islamic State makes to indoctrinate recruits.
Today's Videos
Video VIDEO: A Heated Debate Over De-escalation
Seattle police officers attended a mandated training session in de-escalation techniques in May. In the classroom, many officers appeared skeptical of the techniques they were being taught.
Video VIDEO: Bill Cunningham | Floppy Disks
The wide-brimmed straw shade hat, stripped of decoration, has been rediscovered by a new generation.
Video VIDEO: Many See a Victory for Children, Too
Thousands, including parents, babies and dogs, flocked to the Supreme Court after its ruling on same-sex marriage. Supporters spoke about how they thought the ruling helped maintain and support families.
For more video, go to NYTimes.com/Video »
World
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei during his speech on Tuesday.
Trying to Placate All, Iran Leader Zigs and Zags on Nuclear Talks

By THOMAS ERDBRINK

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's ambiguity, meant to keep the moderate opposition happy while placating the hard-liners, has been part of his strategy for more than a decade.
Suspect in Attack in France Had Ties to Radical Islamist

By ALISSA J. RUBIN

Yassine Salhi, who the authorities say decapitated his boss before setting off an explosion at a chemical plant on Friday, belonged to the circle around a radical Islamist.
An injured victim of the explosion at Formosa Fun Coast, a water park in New Taipei City, Taiwan, was carried from the scene on Saturday.
Taiwan Water Park Blast Leaves Hundreds Injured

By MICHAEL FORSYTHE

No deaths were reported, but at least 516 people were injured when a cloud of colored powder erupted into a huge fireball during a live event at the park northwest of Taipei.
For more world news, go to NYTimes.com/World »
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U.S.
Confederate battle flags marked a few graves at Live Oak Cemetery in Selma, Ala., in February.
Straddling Old and New, a South Where 'a Flag Is Not Worth a Job'

By CAMPBELL ROBERTSON and RICHARD FAUSSET

The massacre at a church in Charleston, S.C., this month casts the tensions between the Old South and the New into sharp relief.
Mourners at the burial that followed the joint funeral service for Tywanza Sanders, and his aunt, Susie Jackson, in Charleston, S.C., on Saturday.
A Day of Determined Hope as Charleston Mourns 3 More

By LIZETTE ALVAREZ and NIKITA STEWART

Funerals were held for Cynthia Graham Hurd, Tywanza Sanders and Susie Jackson, who were among the nine people killed at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church.
Long Taught to Use Force, Police Warily Learn to De-escalate

By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS

Seattle is one of many cities where police departments are changing their training tactics after a series of fatal shootings around the country increased scrutiny on police operations.
For more U.S. news, go to NYTimes.com/US »
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Politics
Senator Ted Cruz of Texas in Nashua, N.H., in April.
Ted Cruz Recalls How Father Tried to Join Fidel Castro's Army

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

In his book, "A Time for Truth," Senator Cruz of Texas writes of his father, a 1950s Cuban revolutionary who longed to join Mr. Castro's army.
For more political news, go to NYTimes.com/Politics »
What You're Reading in The Times
We're developing a feature that shows what articles readers are following, minute to minute, across our platforms.
Business
People lined up Saturday at an Athens bank. Eurozone finance ministers met in Brussels, trying to salvage a Greek bailout plan.
Greek Debt Crisis Intensifies as Extension Request Is Denied

By JAMES KANTER and JIM YARDLEY

European officials rejected Greece's request to extend its bailout program so voters could decide whether to accept aid under terms the government opposes.
President Obama delivering the eulogy for the Rev. Clementa C. Pinckney, who was shot to death along with eight others on June 17 in the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, S.C.

STRATEGIES

Does a Pistol Belong in Your Stock Portfolio?

By JEFF SOMMER

After the Charleston shooting, individual investors still hold shares in gun companies, which have seen a rise in sales and stock prices following similar tragedies.
From left, Joanna McFarland, Janelle McGlothlin and Carolyn Yashari Becher founded HopSkipDrive to help other parents shuttle their children around.

PROTOTYPE

HopSkipDrive, a Ride Start-Up for the After-School Set

By CLAIRE MARTIN

The service, founded by three mothers, transports children ages 7 to 17 to school, lessons, practice and other activities for about $20 a ride.
For more business news, go to NYTimes.com/Business »
Technology

APPLIED SCIENCE

The Mouth Is Mightier Than the Pen

By MATT RICHTEL

The written word may not be the best way to impress, a new study shows. A better bet: Use your voice.
For more technology news, go to NYTimes.com/Technology »
Sports
Kristaps Porzingis, drafted by the Knicks, said,

SPORTS OF THE TIMES

Remember, Knicks Fans, Basketball Is a Global Sport

By MICHAEL POWELL

Our occasional xenophobic impulse is a curious affliction as the N.B.A. is awash in superb players from other countries, more than a few of whom are European.
The view from the eighth floor at the Nets' new Brooklyn training center, scheduled to open in February.

SPORTS OF THE TIMES

The Nets Focus on Themselves, Not the Knicks

By WILLIAM C. RHODEN

Instead of worrying about the Knicks, the Nets quietly went about doing as much as they could with what they had in the N.B.A. draft.
Carli Lloyd, right, after scoring against China. She wore the captain's armband as the U.S. won.

SPORTS OF THE TIMES

At the Women's World Cup, a New Leader Inspires a New Attitude for the U.S.

By JULIET MACUR

As Carli Lloyd showed against China, she can be the engine that makes the U.S. team run at full speed and the leader who may decide how far it will go.
For more sports news, go to NYTimes.com/Sports »
Arts
Yoko Ono and John Lennon in their first public appearance as the Plastic Ono Band, at Varsity Stadium in Toronto on Sept. 14, 1969.
Hearing Yoko Ono All Over Again

By JASON FARAGO

Rediscovering Yoko Ono's early recordings and innovations.
From left, Laurie Simmons, Cindy Sherman and Sarah Charlesworth in Ms. Simmons's home, 1991.
Recalling Sarah Charlesworth's Photographs

By DEBORAH SOLOMON

Laurie Simmons and Cindy Sherman discuss their friend's art.
Sara Mearns may be the most talked-about ballerina in America.
Sara Mearns, in Her Prime at City Ballet, Inspires Debate and Awe

By ALASTAIR MACAULAY

Ms. Mearns is probably the most talked-about ballerina in America and possibly the most argued-about ballerina anywhere.
For more arts news, go to NYTimes.com/Arts »
New York
State troopers on Route 30 near Malone, N.Y., on Saturday in a heavily wooded area where the authorities were searching for David Sweat, a killer who escaped from a prison three weeks ago.
Size of Manhunt Area for Second Prison Escapee Is Significantly Expanded

By BENJAMIN MUELLER

The authorities on Saturday expanded to 22 square miles the search area for David Sweat, who escaped from the Clinton Correctional Facility.
Samuel J. Battle in 1941.
The Story of New York's First Black Police Officer, Told With the Help of Langston Hughes

By MOSI SECRET

The story of Samuel J. Battle, the first black officer in the New York Police Department, is being told in a new book by Arthur Browne, a veteran newspaper reporter and editor.
Happy, age 44, lives alone at the Bronx Zoo, separated from the zoo's two other elephants for her protection.
The Bronx Zoo's Loneliest Elephant

By TRACY TULLIS

The arguments over Happy's isolation open up a bigger debate: whether it is right to keep intelligent, family-oriented and behaviorally complex animals in captivity.
For more New York news, go to NYTimes.com/NewYork »
Fashion & Style
Seth MacFarlane, left, and Norman Lear at Baltaire in Los Angeles, where the two shared a bite and their views on changes in American television and society.

TABLE FOR THREE

Norman Lear and Seth MacFarlane and Their TV Families

By PHILIP GALANES

The producers discuss "Family Guy," "All in the Family" and the people who don't get their humor.

CULTURAL STUDIES

I Can't Apologize (Sorry!)

By LAURA ZIGMAN

Those of us who can't say we're sorry sometimes make things worse with florid not-me mea culpas.
Debi Mazar as Maggie, left, and Sutton Foster as Liza in
An Age-Old Dilemma for Women: To Lie or Not to Lie

By HANNAH SELIGSON

Amy Schumer, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Rebel Wilson and others have seriously (and sometimes not) discussed the issue of their true ages.
For more fashion news, go to NYTimes.com/Fashion »
Magazine

THE MENTAL HEALTH ISSUE

Tell It About Your Mother

By CASEY SCHWARTZ

Can brain-scanning help save Freudian psychoanalysis?

THE MENTAL HEALTH ISSUE

Can the Bacteria in Your Gut Explain Your Mood?

By PETER ANDREY SMITH

The rich array of microbiota in our intestines can tell us more than you might think.
A view of High Bridge from the Bronx.

THE MENTAL HEALTH ISSUE

The Town Shrink

By ROBERT SULLIVAN

Trained as a psychiatrist, Mindy Thompson Fullilove now puts entire cities on the couch.
For more from the Sunday magazine, go to NYTimes.com/Magazine »
Obituaries
Walter Shawn Browne during the 1975 United States Chess Championship, which he won.
Walter Shawn Browne, Chess Grandmaster, Dies at 66

By DYLAN LOEB McCLAIN

Mr. Browne was an aggressive, animated grandmaster and six-time United States champion who dazzled spectators with his world-class ability at speed chess.
For more obituaries, go to NYTimes.com/Obituaries »
Editorials

EDITORIAL

The Fight for Health Care Isn't Over

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

It is imperative that in 2016 voters elect people to Congress who will support health care reform.
A child at the United Nations compound on the outskirts of Malakal in South Sudan.

EDITORIAL

South Sudan's Agony

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Because of its historical role, the United States has a special responsibility to help end the tragedy.
A chimpanzee.

EDITORIAL

Belated Protection for Some Close Relatives
It is heartening to learn that the Fish and Wildlife Service is at last strengthening regulations to safeguard captive chimpanzees.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »
Op-Ed

OPINION

Welcome, Everyone, to the Right to Marry

By CURTIS SITTENFELD

It's not for all of us, but at least now everyone has the right to the unique pleasures of married life.
Protesters marched in Manhattan in support of gay rights on July 27, 1969, a month after the Stonewall uprising.

OPINION

The Price of Gay Marriage

By TIMOTHY STEWART-WINTER

Will the victory at the Supreme Court blind us to our history of life in the margins?
Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. in 2008.

OPINION

John Roberts, the Umpire in Chief

By JEFFREY ROSEN

He has enraged both the left and the right, but the chief justice's conception of the court's role is entirely consistent.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »

ON THIS DAY

On June 28, 1919, the Treaty of Versailles was signed in France, ending World War I.
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