četvrtak, 29. listopada 2015.

IN THE NEWS TODAY


The New York TimesMost Popular | Video |

Today's Headlines

Sunday, May 24, 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 »
As a subscriber to Today's Headlines, get all digital access to The Times for just 99 cents.
Top News
Ireland Votes to Approve Gay Marriage, Putting Country in Vanguard

By DANNY HAKIM and DOUGLAS DALBY

Not long ago, the vote would have been unthinkable. Ireland decriminalized homosexuality only in 1993. But the vote was 62 percent in favor, with 38 percent opposed.
With Victories, ISIS Dispels Hope of a Swift Decline

By TIM ARANGO and ANNE BARNARD

In its conquest of Ramadi and new control of Palmyra, the Islamic State has shown how dedication to its core principles helped it regain traction.
Judge John P. O'Donnell with mannequins showing the gunshot wounds to Timothy Russell and Malissa Williams.
Cleveland Police Officer Acquitted of Manslaughter in 2012 Deaths

By MITCH SMITH and ASHLEY SOUTHALL

The white officer, Michael Brelo, climbed onto the hood of a car and fired repeatedly at an unarmed black couple. His trial played out amid broader questions about how the police interact with African-Americans.
For more top news, go to NYTimes.com »
ADVERTISEMENT
Editors' Picks
Tatum O'Neal and Kevin McEnroe discussed their profound connection over lunch at Il Cantinori.

STYLE | TABLE FOR THREE

A Family Drama in Three Acts

By PHILIP GALANES

Tatum O'Neal and her son Kevin McEnroe, both sober and healthy, are celebrating the publication of his debut novel.
In Dublin, supporters of same-sex marriage celebrated on Saturday.

OPINION | EDITORIAL

The Victory for Same-Sex Marriage in Ireland

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Irish voters took a stand for love, common sense and justice and sent the world a loud message that these values will prevail.

QUOTATION OF THE DAY

"Everything to do with technology is a window to the outside world, and there is nothing out there that our young people don't know about."
HODA ABDULRAHMAN AL-HELAISSI, a female member of Saudi Arabia's Shura Council, an advisory body appointed by the king.
Today's Videos
Video VIDEO: Voyage of an Iron-Hulled Ship
A time-lapse video of Wavertree's short journey to Staten Island for repairs. Wavertree is a 19th-century vessel and part of South Street Seaport Museum's collection.
For more video, go to NYTimes.com/Video »
World
3 Decades After Hate Crime, Ireland's Gay Population Hails Vote

By DOUGLAS DALBY

The killing of a gay man that produced a movement also led to a distinction for Ireland: It is the only country to legalize same-sex marriage by popular vote.
Voters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, reading newspapers ahead of Sunday's election. The Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front, which currently governs, is expected to win.
Ethiopia's Ruling Party Is Expected to Keep Grip on Power

By JACEY FORTIN

The Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front has been in power for 24 years. Given its influence in rural areas, it is likely to win again in Sunday's national election.
Salvadorans Flock to Honor Beloved Archbishop on Path to Sainthood

By ELISABETH MALKIN

People crowded the streets in San Salvador for a ceremony to beatify Archbishop Óscar Romero, who was assassinated in 1980 as the country lurched toward civil war.
For more world news, go to NYTimes.com/World »
ADVERTISEMENT
U.S.
The 17th Street levee was among those that failed during Hurricane Katrina. The Army Corps of Engineers did not notice warning signs, an article says.
Decade After Katrina, Pointing Finger More Firmly at Army Corps

By CAMPBELL ROBERTSON and JOHN SCHWARTZ

An article by experts involved in some previous examinations of the catastrophe contends that fault should fall squarely on the Army Corps of Engineers.

NASHVILLE JOURNAL

Mower Meets Moonshine at a Museum for Country Star George Jones

By RICHARD FAUSSET

The George Jones Museum has one boot in the old Nashville and one in the new, reflecting a city being remade with gleaming towers and one where country music is part of the DNA.
Micaela Bazo, left, and Stephanie Lin, graduate students, marking stakes for oak saplings in Oakland, Calif.
Tree Project Aims to Put the Oak Back in Oakland

By PATRICIA LEIGH BROWN

A campaign to "re-oak" Oakland has begun, which started when volunteers planted an inaugural stand of 72 coast live oak saplings in plastic buckets in a West Oakland park.
For more U.S. news, go to NYTimes.com/US »
ADVERTISEMENT
Politics
Among the Republican presidential hopefuls, Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina has offered the most detailed ideas about how to fight the Islamic State.
Republican Rivals Skirt Specifics on Plans to Fight ISIS

By PATRICK HEALY and ASHLEY PARKER

A picture has emerged of a field of declared and likely candidates that sound hawkish about fighting the Islamic State, yet are reluctant and even evasive when it comes to laying out detailed plans.
Senator Rand Paul stymied passage early Saturday, saying legislation did not go far enough.
Senate to Try Again After Bill on N.S.A. Collection of Phone Records Is Blocked

By JENNIFER STEINHAUER

The Senate voted 57-42, short of the 60 votes needed to move ahead on a House bill that would have curbed the National Security Agency's bulk collection of domestic phone records.
Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, had promised that Republican control would instill new discipline in the Senate.
N.S.A. and Other Matters Leave McConnell's Senate in Disarray

By JENNIFER STEINHAUER and JONATHAN WEISMAN

Mitch McConnell has found himself vexed by Democratic delaying tactics he himself honed in the minority, presidential aspirants with their own agendas and conservative firebrands demanding their say.
For more political news, go to NYTimes.com/Politics »
Business
Sergio Marchionne, who brought together a struggling Fiat and Chrysler and made the combination work, recently proposed a blockbuster merger with General Motors, a move its C.E.O. flatly refused to discuss with him.
Detroit's Chief Instigator

By BILL VLASIC

Sergio Marchionne, chief executive of Fiat Chrysler, has an ambitious plan to save the auto industry. And he can't seem to sell it.
.   Timeline: Chrysler's Turbulent History
Ashkan Soltani, chief technologist of the Federal Trade Commission, has challenged tracking of shoppers online and in stores.

TECHNOPHORIA

The Government's Consumer Data Watchdog

By NATASHA SINGER

The Federal Trade Commission's chief technologist fights to ensure that companies keep consumers' information safe and private.

FAIR GAME

Piles of Overseas Profits Investors Can See but Not Touch

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON

Companies are not required to record a deferred income tax liability on foreign earnings, which can make earnings seem bigger than they are.
For more business news, go to NYTimes.com/Business »
Sports
Abby Wambach after the United States lost to Japan in a penalty-kick shootout in the final of the 2011 Women's World Cup. This year's tournament starts June 6.
Abby Wambach, Unconcerned With Broken Records or Nose, Craves World Cup Title

By JERÉ LONGMAN

Before her fourth World Cup with the United States, Wambach, 34, chose to leave her N.W.S.L. team, train often on her own and round into form like a boxer for one final bout.
Jeff Gordon is set to compete in his 773rd consecutive race Sunday. He has announced he will retire at the end of the season.
With Nothing Left to Prove, Jeff Gordon Will Walk Away While He Can

By VIV BERNSTEIN

The Coca-Cola 600 on Sunday will be the 773rd consecutive race for Jeff Gordon, who is set to retire at the end of the season.
A funeral was held on April 27 for Armoni Sexton, a standout high school basketball player who was killed in a drive-by shooting in Paterson.
Too Late for a Basketball Prodigy, Paterson Seeks a Truce

By DAN BARRY

After Armoni Sexton, 15, was fatally shot in Paterson, N.J., community leaders met with representatives of neighborhoods with a decades-old quarrel and told them: Let's end this.
For more sports news, go to NYTimes.com/Sports »
Arts
Dwayne Johnson on the set of
Dwayne Johnson, Star of 'San Andreas,' Is Solid. Solid as a ...

By MELENA RYZIK

Dwayne Johnson, onetime wrestling deity, stretches his muscles as a leading man in the thriller "San Andreas."
Amy Poehler gives voice to Joy in the animated movie
'Inside Out,' Pixar's New Movie From Pete Docter, Goes Inside the Mind

By BROOKS BARNES

The story follows an 11-year-old girl and the emotions that scramble around inside her head.
Florence Welch of Florence and the Machine, at the Jane Hotel in Manhattan.
Florence Welch Slows Down the Machine for the Band's Next Album

By BEN SISARIO

While Florence and the Machine rose by celebrating elaborate, dramatic artifice, its new album is rawer and less adorned, with Florence Welch detailing a failed relationship.
For more arts news, go to NYTimes.com/Arts »
New York
Representative Daniel M. Donovan Jr., the former Staten Island prosecutor, easily won a special election to the House of Representatives this month.
Daniel Donovan Gets Wary Welcome to Congress After Eric Garner Case

By ALEXANDER BURNS

The lack of an indictment in the Staten Island chokehold case has caused tension between his new colleagues and Mr. Donovan, a former prosecutor and the sole Republican representing New York City.
Body Found in Hudson River Near Where Kayaker Disappeared

By MICHAEL SCHWIRTZ

The unidentified body was transported to the Orange County morgue, where an autopsy will be performed, the police said.
A MOSAIC OF COMMERCE  Since 2010, the Metropolitan section has chronicled a wide range of establishments.
Strange, Beloved, Local, Endangered: Five Years of the Neighborhood Joint

By ANNIE CORREAL, MOSI SECRET and ALEX VADUKUL

In a city of change, some small, beloved local establishments, like an ices stand in Queens and a place to buy octopus in Brooklyn, endure.
For more New York news, go to NYTimes.com/NewYork »
Fashion & Style
Hillary Clinton Aims to Capture the Cool

By JASON HOROWITZ

It will take more than tweets to make the presidential hopeful hip enough for Brooklyn.
At Frieze Art Fair, Figures at an Exhibition

By RUTH LA FERLA

On display almost as much as the art itself on Randalls Island, female gallerists use their clothes as the medium.
On the red carpet in camera-courting little nothings are, from left, Beyoncé, Jennifer Lopez and Kim Kardashian West.

CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK

Kim K., J-Lo, Beyoncé Undress for Success With the Naked Look

By ALEXANDRA JACOBS

Celebrities are making a far from modest splash at gala events.
For more fashion news, go to NYTimes.com/Fashion »
Travel
Ancient olive trees in Ceglie Messapica, Italy.
Italy's Treasured Olive Oil, at the Source

By DANIELLE PERGAMENT

In Tuscany and Puglia, making olive oil is a lifestyle, one threatened by bad weather and a killer bacteria.
A view of La Ribera market and the Nervión River.

WEEKEND GUIDE

36 Hours in Bilbao, Spain

By CHRISTIAN L. WRIGHT

Beyond the city's celebrated museum, there's much to explore from Michelin-star restaurants and enticing shops to a vast cultural center and sprawling Art Deco market.
The author's walk through Paris past the Eiffel Tower as mapped by LiveTrekker.

THE GETAWAY

Four Apps for Mapping Your Walking Routes

By STEPHANIE ROSENBLOOM

These apps track your route to create an interactive record of where you've been, even adding photos, videos and notes to make a digital scrapbook.
For more travel news, go to NYTimes.com/Travel »
Magazine
The Lonely Fight Against Belize's Antigay Laws

By JULIA SCOTT

Can one challenge to a statute criminalizing sodomy create a domino effect in the Caribbean?
Can China Take a Joke?

By CHRISTOPHER BEAM

Stand-up comedy is catching on in the country, even if people still aren't quite sure when to laugh.
For more from the Sunday magazine, go to NYTimes.com/Magazine »
Obituaries
Thomas K. Jones in 1976. An American arms negotiator, he believed the Soviets were better prepared for a nuclear strike.
Thomas K. Jones, U.S. Arms Negotiator, Dies at 82

By SAM ROBERTS

Mr. Jones had such faith in civil defense that he once said, "If there are enough shovels to go around, everybody's going to make it."
For more obituaries, go to NYTimes.com/Obituaries »
Editorials
An American Ohio-class nuclear submarine.

EDITORIAL

Stupid Pentagon Budget Tricks

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Congress is using budget gimmickry and sleight of hand to increase military spending while pretending to be fiscally prudent.

EDITORIAL

What College Applications Shouldn't Ask

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

High school disciplinary records have no place in the admissions process.
Senator Marco Rubio, left, shakes hands with his supporter Norman Braman in 2014.

EDITORIAL

Moguls Busily Buying Campaign Clout

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Senator Marco Rubio's wealthy political patron is ignored by other candidates, who are seeking their own super PAC bonanzas.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »
Op-Ed

OPINION

Our Pampered Wilderness

By CHRISTOPHER SOLOMON

Glamping is fine. Just keep it out of our parks.

OP-ED | RICHARD A. FRIEDMAN

Infidelity Lurks in Your Genes

By RICHARD A. FRIEDMAN

Oxytocin and vasopressin affect trust and bonding.

DOWNLOAD

Hannes Wingate

By KATE MURPHY

The artist on the joys of bad action films, avoiding boasting on social media and finding liberation through survival skills.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »

ON THIS DAY

On May 24, 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge, linking Brooklyn and Manhattan, was opened to traffic.

FOLLOW US: Facebook Facebook | Twitter @NYTimes | Pinterest Pinterest | Instagram Instagram
NYTAccess The New York Times from anywhere with our suite of apps:
iPhone® | iPad® | Android | All
.Save 15% at The NYTimes Store ».Have questions?Help Section ».Visit our mobile website atm.nyt.com »





The New York TimesMost Popular | Video |

Today's Headlines

Saturday, May 23, 2015

IN THIS EMAIL NYT World | U.S. | Politics | Business | Technology | Sports | Arts |N.Y./Region | Travel | Today's Video | Obituaries | Editorials | Op-Ed | On This Day |CUSTOMIZE »
As a subscriber to Today's Headlines, get all digital access to The Times for just 99 cents.
Top News
Gino Celli checking the moisture of land just planted with corn seed on property that he farms near Stockton, Calif.
Farmers Agree to Water Cuts in California

By JENNIFER MEDINA

State officials accepted an offer from growers in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta to give up a quarter of their water this season.
.   Graphic: Your Contribution to the California Drought
The ignition switch of a 2005 Chevrolet Cobalt. In February 2014, the automaker began recalling Cobalts and other small cars with faulty ignitions.
G.M. Inquiry Said to Find Criminal Wrongdoing

By DANIELLE IVORY, BEN PROTESS and BILL VLASIC

As the investigation draws to a close, prosecutors are said to be negotiating a penalty that is likely to eclipse the $1.2 billion paid last year by Toyota.
Adrian, left, and Shane, who are partners, before voting in Drogheda, Ireland, on Friday. Younger voters were enthusiastic about casting their ballots, many in support of a measure that has become one of the defining civil rights issues of the era.
Ireland Votes in Referendum on Same-Sex Marriage

By DOUGLAS DALBY and DAN BILEFSKY

The referendum had the potential to be historic, as the first electoral endorsement by a country of the right to same-sex marriages. Results were expected Saturday.
For more top news, go to NYTimes.com »
ADVERTISEMENT
Editors' Picks

WORLD | THE SATURDAY PROFILE

Humza Arshad, British Pakistani Comedian, Takes On Jihadists

By KATRIN BENNHOLD

Mr. Arshad, a practicing Muslim with a sizable YouTube following, has toured with a police counterterrorism unit in London, performing stand-up for more than 20,000 students.

OPINION | OP-ED | TAHMIMA ANAM

Bangladesh's Very Public Toilet Crisis

By TAHMIMA ANAM

If you think the lack of facilities - especially for women - is bad where you live, try Dhaka.

QUOTATION OF THE DAY

"The only way to win that argument is if you can make a legitimate argument that New Jerseyans are more flammable than other people."
ASSEMBLYMAN DECLAN J. O'SCANLON JR., who hopes to reverse New Jersey's ban on self-service gasoline, describing safety concerns used to justify the ban.
Today's Videos
Britt Robertson in
Video VIDEO: Anatomy of a Scene | 'Tomorrowland'
Brad Bird narrates a sequence from "Tomorrowland."
. Related Review: 'Tomorrowland'
Video VIDEO: Bill Cunningham | Colors of Spring
Fashion and nature reflect each other's beauty.
. Related Article
For more video, go to NYTimes.com/Video »
World
A protester in Bujumbura, Burundi, added to a barricade at a demonstration against the country's president on Friday
Political Unrest Pushes Burundi Closer to Economic Collapse

By ISMA'IL KUSHKUSH

Amid violent protests, the crisis over the president's pursuit of a third term has begun to take a severe toll on day-to-day life in one of the world's poorest countries.
The wreckage of a mosque after a suicide bombing in Al Qudaih, Saudi Arabia. The attack on Shiites took place during midday Friday Prayer.
ISIS Claims Responsibility for Bombing at Saudi Mosque

By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK

The attack on Shiites during midday Friday Prayer left at least 21 people dead, and some Saudis on social media rushed to blame Iran.
A Navy jet over the South China Sea. China says the flights violate its territorial sovereignty.
U.S. Flies Over a Chinese Project at Sea, and Beijing Objects

By HELENE COOPER and JANE PERLEZ

The Chinese are unhappy that the U.S. Navy is watching a huge reclamation project to turn reefs into islands in the Spratly Islands, a group of reefs in the South China Sea.
For more world news, go to NYTimes.com/World »
ADVERTISEMENT
U.S.
The home where three members of the Savopoulos family and a housekeeper were found dead after a fire last week in Washington.
More Than One Attacker Is Suspected in Killings of 4 in Washington

By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA

Investigators said Darron D. Wint, charged in the killings of four people, stayed ahead of a police search with aid from others.
Murals have long been a feature of the predominantly Hispanic Mission District, where gentrification is changing the working-class neighborhood.
Gentrification Spreads an Upheaval in San Francisco's Mission District

By CAROL POGASH

With the Mission becoming a highly desired neighborhood for Silicon Valley workers, some residents are being pushed out by high housing costs.
Gov. Greg Abbott in the State House chamber. He said Texas intended to comply with national standards, but the Justice Department said it had not done so.
U.S. Spars With Texas on Ending Prison Rapes

By DEBORAH SONTAG

Gov. Greg Abbott said his state intended to comply with national standards, but the Justice Department said it had not done so.
For more U.S. news, go to NYTimes.com/US »
ADVERTISEMENT
Politics
Senator Marco Rubio of Florida at a Republican convention in Georgia last week. His Cuban heritage and his youth are expected to help him gain voter support.
A Hillary Clinton Match-Up With Marco Rubio Is a Scary Thought for Democrats

By JEREMY W. PETERS

They are worried that Mr. Rubio, a son of Cuban immigrants, could win over Hispanic voters and that he would offer a sharp generational contrast.
Hillary Rodham Clinton spoke with a handful of small-business owners on Tuesday at a bike shop in Cedar Falls, Iowa.

POLITICAL MEMO

Hillary Clinton, Acutely Aware of Pitfalls, Avoids Press on Campaign Trail

By JASON HOROWITZ

The news media is Hillary Rodham Clinton's only real opponent so far en route to the Democratic nomination, and it makes political sense for her to avoid it.
President Obama spoke to about 1,000 people in the packed sactuary at Adas Israel, a Conservative synagogue in Washington.
Obama Stresses Support for Israel, but Refuses to 'Paper Over' Discord

By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS

President Obama used a speech to knock down perceptions, fueled in part by recent tussles over Iran, that he lacks a commitment to Israelis and Jewish concerns.
For more political news, go to NYTimes.com/Politics »
Business
Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, forged a rare alliance with President Obama to push the trade legislation.
Senate Vote Is a Victory for Obama on Trade, but a Tougher Test Awaits

By JONATHAN WEISMAN

Senator Mitch McConnell aligned with the president to push the deal, which would link 12 nations on either side of the Pacific into a trading bloc and expand the president's trading authority. The legislation still requires House approval.
. The Upshot: But What Does the Trade Deal Mean if You're Not a Cheesemaker?
Microbeads used in personal care products find their way into waterways, where they absorb other pollutants.
Fighting Pollution From Microbeads Used in Soaps and Creams

By RACHEL ABRAMS

On Friday, the state's Assembly passed a bill that could become the strictest ban in the country on the particles, which can carry pollutants into the food chain.
The view above Tahoe City, Calif. A proposed clean water regulation has drawn opposition from farmers, property developers, makers of fertilizer and pesticides, oil and gas producers and golf course owners.
Obama Plans New Rule to Limit Water Pollution

By CORAL DAVENPORT

The administration is to soon announce new executive action that would restore its authority to limit water pollution. Republicans are trying to block the president.
For more business news, go to NYTimes.com/Business »
Technology
Today, people see shades of 2000 in the eye-popping valuations of companies like Slack, whose offices are seen at top; Uber; and Airbnb, at bottom.
Overvalued in Silicon Valley, but Don't Say 'Tech Bubble'

By CONOR DOUGHERTY

The tech industry's venture capitalists admit to a certain amount of "frothiness" in start-up investments, but they studiously avoid another word. Bubble.
For more technology news, go to NYTimes.com/Technology »
Sports
American Pharoah's name was submitted to the Jockey Club, the organization that registers thoroughbreds in the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico. There was some debate over whether the Jockey Club misspelled the word
American Pharoah's Misspelling Mystery

By MELISSA HOPPERT

The owners of the Triple Crown hopeful, whose name was registered with the Jockey Club, suggested two possible reasons the thoroughbred's name is spelled the way it is.
Notre Dame playing Duke in the 2014 Division I men's lacrosse title game in Baltimore. The Final Four drew 78,234 fans over three days, down from 123,000 in 2007.
As Lacrosse Rises, Its Final Four Falls Fast

By ZACH SCHONBRUN

Lacrosse is one of only two team sports to show growth among participants between ages 6 and 17, but attendance at the Final Four has dropped for seven consecutive years.
Frantisek Laurinec said the eight-team league was supported in principle by UEFA.
UEFA Appears Prepared to Allow League in Crimea

By PATRICK REEVELL

UEFA has approved the creation of a league on the disputed peninsula, dragging the body's awkward position over the Ukraine crisis into view again.
For more sports news, go to NYTimes.com/Sports »
Arts
A prayer service inside the mosque installation created by the artist Christoph Büchel on May 8.
Police Shut Down Mosque Installation at Venice Biennale

By RANDY KENNEDY

Officials closed an art installation that was part of the 56th Venice Biennale, declaring it a security hazard.
Michael Caine, left, and Harvey Keitel in Paolo Sorrentino's

CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK

At Cannes Film Festival, Good Sometimes Isn't Enough

By MANOHLA DARGIS

As the festival nears its close, many fine movies by revered filmmakers have been shown, but none of them are masterworks.
Keith Randolph Smith in
Review: 'I'm Not the Stranger You Think I Am,' Where Theater Meets Confessional

By BEN BRANTLEY

In "I'm Not the Stranger You Think I Am," short plays are performed in a 4 feet by 8 feet mobile structure.
For more arts news, go to NYTimes.com/Arts »
New York
Max Brock, a worker at a Wawa in Parsippany-Troy Hills, N.J., on Friday. Self-serve gas was banned in New Jersey in 1949.
Drop That Nozzle: New Jersey Resists Push for Self-Service at the Gas Pump

By KATE ZERNIKE

For 70 years, New Jersey has banned self-serve gas stations and most residents want it to stay that way.
Eric Lonergan in court in February. The authorities said he had sold drugs at the university since 2013.
U.S. Drug Charges for 2 Former Wesleyan Students Linked to Overdoses

By MARC SANTORA

Prosecutors said the men had sold a club drug known as Molly on campus for over a year before a February night when several students went to the hospital.
Representative Daniel M. Donovan Jr., the former Staten Island prosecutor, easily won a special election to the House of Representatives this month.
Daniel Donovan Gets Wary Welcome to Congress After Eric Garner Case

By ALEXANDER BURNS

The lack of an indictment in the Staten Island chokehold case has caused tension between his new colleagues and Mr. Donovan, a former prosecutor and the sole Republican representing New York City.
For more New York news, go to NYTimes.com/NewYork »
Obituaries
Marques Haynes in 1951, when the Harlem Globetrotters were basketball's biggest attraction.
Marques Haynes, 89, Dies; Dribbled as a Globetrotter and Dazzled Worldwide

By BRUCE WEBER

Haynes was a stellar cog on the Globetrotter squads of the late 1940s and early '50s, and was later inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame.
Victor Salvi at the Salvi Harps workshops near Turin, Italy, in 2006.
Victor Salvi, Who Played Harps and Made Them Too, Dies at 95

By MARGALIT FOX

Mr. Salvi, a former New York Philharmonic member, founded a company that became the world's foremost harp producer.
For more obituaries, go to NYTimes.com/Obituaries »
Editorials
Barclays was one of the banks that pleaded guilty to federal crimes in a currency manipulation case.

EDITORIAL

Banks as Felons, or Criminality Lite

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

There has been no meaningful punishment for the banks that conspired to manipulate the world's currencies.

EDITORIAL

A Costly Tax Break for Nonpublic Schools

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Governor Cuomo's bill would reward those who are already contributing to private schools, when it is public schools that need a financial boost.
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, president of Turkey

EDITORIAL

Dark Clouds Over Turkey

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

A crackdown on the media raises fears that the political process is being manipulated to ensure that the president's party wins.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »
Op-Ed

OP-ED COLUMNIST

Rush to Judgment

By GAIL COLLINS

It's Memorial Day weekend and it's already time to ponder which Republican presidential candidates will make the Top 10!

OP-ED COLUMNIST

Is the Ex-Im Bank Doomed?

By JOE NOCERA

Plenty of business, and jobs, will be lost if the bank ceases to exist.

OP-ED CONTRIBUTORS

What's Behind Big Science Frauds?

By ADAM MARCUS and IVAN ORANSKY

Bad incentives are corrupting scientific literature and the media that covers it.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »

ON THIS DAY

On May 23, 1934, the bank robbers Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow were shot to death in a police ambush as they were driving a stolen Ford Deluxe along a road in Bienville Parish, La.

FOLLOW US: Facebook Facebook | Twitter @NYTimes | Pinterest Pinterest | Instagram Instagram
NYTAccess The New York Times from anywhere with our suite of apps:
iPhone® | iPad® | Android | All
.Save 15% at The NYTimes Store ».Have questions?Help Section ».Visit our mobile website atm.nyt.com »

About This Email

This is an automated email. Please do not reply directly to this email.
You received this message because you signed up for NYTimes.com's Today's Headlines newsletter. As a member of the TRUSTe privacy program, we are committed to protecting your privacy.



The New York TimesMost Popular | Video |

Today's Headlines

Friday, May 22, 2015

IN THIS EMAIL NYT World | U.S. | Politics | Business | Technology | Sports | Arts |N.Y./Region | Movies | Today's Video | Obituaries | Editorials | Op-Ed | On This Day |CUSTOMIZE »
As a subscriber to Today's Headlines, get all digital access to The Times for just 99 cents.
Top News
Frantic Message as Palmyra Fell: 'We're Finished'

By ANNE BARNARD and HWAIDA SAAD

In Palmyra, Syria, and Ramadi, Iraq, the Islamic State carried out a strategy of attrition, weakening the opposition for a crushing strike.
Karl Rove and other leading Republican strategists started American Crossroads, the
Rove's Crossroads PAC Is No Longer G.O.P.'s 'Big Dog'

By ERIC LICHTBLAU and MAGGIE HABERMAN

The "super PAC," a brainchild of Karl Rove and other leading Republican strategists, has been buffeted by a rapidly changing political landscape.
Killings of children by the police in neighborhoods like Complexo do Alemão, in Rio de Janeiro, have not prompted a significant shift in policing methods.
Despair, and Grim Acceptance, Over Killings by Brazil's Police

By SIMON ROMERO and TAYLOR BARNES

While deaths at the hands of officers have set off fevered protests around the United States, they are often seen in Brazil as a normal fixture of policing.
For more top news, go to NYTimes.com »
ADVERTISEMENT
Editors' Picks

U.S.

Graphic GRAPHIC: Your Contribution to the California Drought
The average American consumes more than 300 gallons of California water each week by eating food that was produced there.

OPINION | OP-ED | HÉCTOR TOBAR

The Sins of Angelenos

By HÉCTOR TOBAR

Climate change has drought-hit California worried. But can we change our ways?

QUOTATION OF THE DAY

"Sometimes I close my eyes and imagine he's still alive."
TEREZINHA MARIA DE JESUS, of her son Eduardo, 10, who was killed by the police in Rio de Janeiro, leading to protests.
Today's Videos
Video VIDEO: Rescuing Nepal's Relics
Since the April earthquake, teams have braved landslides and aftershocks to document the damage to Nepal's antiquities as well as begin efforts to secure and restore them.
Video VIDEO: This Week's Movies: May 22, 2015
The New York Times film critics review "Tomorrowland," "Aloft" and "The Farewell Party."
. Related Review: 'Tomorrowland'
. Related Review: 'Aloft'
. Related Review: 'The Farewell Party'
For more video, go to NYTimes.com/Video »
World
An American airman last week in the radar control room of Lajes Field on Terceira Island. The Air Force is set to complete a major downsizing of the base.

LAJES JOURNAL

Americans Start to Leave Air Base in Azores, and Locals Fear Economic Impact

By RAPHAEL MINDER

The number of Air Force personnel at Lajes Field, once a significant transit hub in the Atlantic, is expected to drop to 165 from 650 as part of broader cuts.
A poster of Fidel Castro in Havana. The United States and Cuban governments closed their embassies in 1961 in response to a demand from Mr. Castro that the American Embassy staff be drastically reduced.
U.S. and Cuba Extend Talks on Reopening Embassies

By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD

Officials from both countries, meeting in Washington, agreed to keep talking on Friday.
Scientists Sample the Ocean and Find Tiny Additions to the Tree of Life

By KAREN WEINTRAUB

Researchers studied plankton from around the globe and uncovered vast genetic diversity and clues to how warming temperatures may affect ocean life.
For more world news, go to NYTimes.com/World »
ADVERTISEMENT
U.S.
Robert M. Gates at the Boy Scouts of America's annual meeting in Nashville last year. Mr. Gates, the president of the organization, said the Scouts' governing body should formally take up the issue of gay Scout leaders in the future.
Boy Scouts' President Calls for End to Ban on Gay Leaders

By ERIK ECKHOLM

Robert M. Gates, the group's president and the former secretary of defense, said the Scouts "must deal with the world as it is, not as we might wish it to be."
The police in the Woodley Park section of Washington cordoned off the home of Savvas Savopoulos, who was found dead on May 14 along with his wife, 10-year-old son and housekeeper. A suspect was arrested late Thursday.
Arrest Made in Washington Killings

By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG

Early Friday - after days of gruesome details were revealed in the news media about the grisly killing of a wealthy Washington family - the police said they had arrested a suspect, Daron Wint.
Six Baltimore Officers Indicted in Death of Freddie Gray

By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA

The officers had previously been charged in the arrest and fatal injury of Mr. Gray by the state's attorney for Baltimore City, Marilyn J. Mosby.
For more U.S. news, go to NYTimes.com/US »
ADVERTISEMENT
Politics
Hillary Rodham Clinton in Chicago on Wednesday. The State Department is poised to start releasing some of the messages from a private email address that Mrs. Clinton used while secretary of state.
First Batch of Hillary Clinton Emails Captures Concerns Over Libya

By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT

The documents, from the former secretary of state's private account, shed light on concerns following Benghazi, and on aspects of her private life.
President Obama's first post on Twitter on Monday.
Obama's Twitter Debut, @POTUS, Attracts Hate-Filled Posts

By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS

Some Twitter users lashed out in sometimes profanity-laced replies that exhort the president, who is using @POTUS, to kill himself and worse.
On a swing through New Hampshire, Jeb Bush attended a house party hosted by Rich and Lori Ashooh in Bedford on Wednesday. Mr. Bush, a potential presidential candidate in 2016, is trying to show a more engaging and open side at appearances in the state.
Jeb Bush Opens His Campaign Playbook by Opening Himself

By NICK CORASANITI

On his mind are the past fortunes of Mitt Romney and George W. Bush when they hit New Hampshire, and Hillary RodhamClinton's approach in this key state
For more political news, go to NYTimes.com/Politics »
Business
Senator Sherrod Brown, Democrat of Ohio, after the trade agenda vote on Thursday. The Senate majority leader promised Mr. Brown that his amendment to the legislation would go to a vote.
This Time, Senate Votes to Advance Trade Pact

By JONATHAN WEISMAN

The Senate will now vote on a series of amendments, some highly controversial, before a final vote on President Obama's ambitious trade agenda.
Avian flu has reduced the numbers of hens that lay eggs. Companies including McDonald's, Panera Bread, Unilever and General Mills are seeking additional suppliers and substitute ingredients to prepare for potential egg shortages.
Food Companies Fear Bird Flu May Cause Egg Shortages

By STEPHANIE STROM

The flu is forcing farmers to kill more than 38 million infected birds, 33 million of which are laying hens.
A CVS store in Manhattan. Buying Omnicare is expected to broaden CVS Health's role in the specialty pharmacy business.
CVS Health Agrees to Buy Omnicare in $12.7 Billion Deal

By KATIE THOMAS and CHAD BRAY

The deal is expected to expand CVS's prescription drugs business for long-term care facilities as it seeks to capitalize on the aging U.S. population.
For more business news, go to NYTimes.com/Business »
Technology
An introductory class in computer science intrigued Sonja Khan enough that she ended up majoring in the subject and is now pursuing a master's degree.

THE UPSHOT

Making Computer Science More Inviting: A Look at What Works

By CLAIRE CAIN MILLER

A new prize aims to recognize colleges that succeed in attracting women into information technology, a field where they remain underrepresented.
Meg Whitman, HP's chief executive, said she was
Hewlett-Packard Reports Drop in Profit and Sales

By BRIAN X. CHEN

The computer and printer company plans to split into two entities later this year in hopes of being more nimble, but investors have reservations.
For more technology news, go to NYTimes.com/Technology »
Sports
A funeral was held on April 27 for Armoni Sexton, a standout high school basketball player who was killed in a drive-by shooting in Paterson.
Too Late for a Basketball Prodigy, Paterson Seeks a Truce

By DAN BARRY

After Armoni Sexton, 15, was fatally shot in Paterson, N.J., community leaders met with representatives of neighborhoods with a decades-old quarrel and told them: Let's end this.
Nationals right fielder Bryce Harper, 22, is batting .333 and was leading the National League in home runs with 15, including six in a three-game stretch.

SPORTS OF THE TIMES

Bryce Harper Offers Reminder of the Yankees of Old, Not of the Old Ones of Today

By JULIET MACUR

Before his third-inning ejection on Wednesday night, Harper had hit 10 home runs in his past 12 games, including six in one three-game stretch.
With GoDaddy set to end its backing, Danica Patrick, one of Nascar's most popular and marketable drivers, is looking for financing for next season.
Danica Patrick Has Plenty of Fans. A New Sponsor? Not Yet.

By VIV BERNSTEIN

With GoDaddy set to end its sponsorship, the next few months will say a lot about Nascar's health if Patrick, one of its most marketable drivers, has trouble landing a new corporate backer.
For more sports news, go to NYTimes.com/Sports »
Arts

BOOKS OF THE TIMES

Cool Books for Hot Summer Days

By JANET MASLIN

Janet Maslin surveys summer reading, including Stephen King's "Finders Keepers" and Renée Knight's "Disclaimer," the "Gone Girl" of the season.
Taylor Swift opened her
...

[Poruka isječena]  Prikaži cijelu poruku

The Daily Caller Logo
POLITICS | US | ENTERTAINMENT | SPORTS
Delta’s Recent Raid In Syria May Have Revealed An Inconvenient Truth About Fighting ISIS'Going into ISIS-held territory is a whole new level of risk' Read >>Daily Caller
Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare through Google Plus
Daily CallerNew Cellphone Video Shows Freddie Gray Put In Police VanRead >>
Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare through Google Plus
Daily CallerLeaked Emails Confirm Hillary Had Highly Sensitive Info On Private EmailsIncluding the whereabouts of U.S. officials in war-torn Libya. Read >>
Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare through Google Plus
Daily CallerTed Cruz Super PACs SMASHING Hillary’s PAC In Fundraising'Cruz's haul is eye-popping' Read >>
Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare through Google Plus
Daily CallerAmnesty Granted To Child Molesting Camp Counselor Known As ‘Papa Bear’Iowa's Chuck Grassley calls for investigation Read >>
Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare through Google Plus
Daily CallerPro-Life Activists React To Rand Paul’s Eyebrow-Raising Comments On Abortion'Pro-life Americans would be surprised' Read >>
Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare through Google Plus
Daily CallerIowa Cops Consider Action Against Reporter For Speeding To Keep Up With Hillary’s Motorcade'These types of dangerous driving behavior by amateurs may well result in law enforcement action' Read >>
Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare through Google Plus
CIA Insider Breaks Silence on Global Currency WarsIs this a warning sign that dangerous times are approaching?Read >>
Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare through Google Plus
Notre Dame Dealt Setback In Obamacare LawsuitMaybe inviting Obama to speak was a bad idea, in hindsight Read >>
Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare through Google Plus
Houston Police Officers Cheer On Son Of Fallen Comrade At Little League Game [PHOTOS]'He's always going to be one of us'Read >>
Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare through Google Plus
Perry On Bill Clinton Paid Speeches: ‘There’s A Clear Quid Pro Quo,’ ‘It’s Getting So Smelly’ [AUDIO]'$30 million dollars...is a stunning number' Read >>
Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare through Google Plus
You are receiving this email because you subscribed to our alerts.


Want to be removed? No problem, click here and we won't bug you again.
Daily Caller Twitter Daily Caller Facebook Daily Caller Google+

info@dailycaller.com

"A lot of people left because she was there. A lot of people left because she didn’t want them there."
View this email in your browser
"A lot of people left because she was there. A lot of people left because she didn’t want them there."
Top Stories

Typing This Racist Term Into Google Takes You To The White House…

Some inappropriate results are surfacing in Google Maps...

52 House Republicans Just Did Something That Will Strike Fear Into Hillary’s Heart

The letter touches on a couple of the primary scandals related to the Clinton Foundation.

Watch: Reporter Boldly Interrupts Hillary With The Truth. Her Response Is Awful…

After a campaign event, Clinton stopped and took six questions from reporters.

Watch: Trey Gowdy Drops The Hammer On Race-Baiting College Professor With Epic Rant

He explained the real impediment prosecutors face in holding black defendants accountable.

Trey Gowdy Just Called In A Witness Who May Be Hillary’s Worst Nightmare…

He will be subpoenaed for a privately transcribed interview.

Go South, Old Man

Mike Huckabee hasn't changed, but the primary calendar has. Now he aims to exploit it.

Gun Owners In This State Are Taking A Big Stand Against Harsh New Bill

They plan to converge on the state capitol later this month.

Website Exposes This Gigantic List Of Clinton Scandals

The list might not be comprehensive, but it's a good start.

Breaking: What A Federal Judge Has Just Done Destroys Hillary’s Email Coverup Scheme

Rejecting the State Department's delay tactics...

ISIS Holds Military Parade After Seizing Ramadi, US-Led Coalition Does Nothing To Stop It

Those loyal to ISIS waved flags, honked horns, and stopped traffic to celebrate.

Breaking: Largest Automobile Recall In History Just Announced, Brands Named

At least five fatalities and 100 injuries have been tied to the faulty airbags

Bristol Palin Just Cleared Up Rumors Surrounding Sarah’s Surprising Announcement

Her fiance also took to his Facebook page.

Did Saudi Arabia Purchase A Nuclear Weapon From Pakistan?

There has been a longstanding agreement between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan over nuclear weapons.

Duck Dynasty's Sadie Just Changed 925 Lives Forever With One Simple Action

The event was sponsored by Rush Ministries.

Chuck Norris Makes Stunning Accusation About How Obama Is ‘Ensuring A 2016 Win’ For Dems

Part of the plan includes the rapid influx of Muslim refugees into the U.S.

Read More Top Stories

Videos

Watch: Reporter Exposes Hillary’s Biggest Hypocrisy With One Perfect Question

She was finally asked about a controversial statement she reportedly made last month.

Watch: 2016 Republican Candidate Caught On Camera Endorsing One Of His Opponents

“This is not your traditional campaign...”

Watch More Videos

Cartoons

Hillary’s Credibility

The Creator

See More Cartoons

Opinion Articles

Blake Shelton Bucks The Hollywood Trend With This Message To His Twitter Followers

Warning: this post contains tweets with some strong language.
By Steven Crowder

New Military Spending Bill Expands America’s Empire

Let's hope for either a presidential veto, or that on final passage Congress rejects this bad bill.
By Ron Paul

What Will America Look Like If The Environmentalists Win?

This war we are fighting is still an ideological war that can be won without bloodshed.
By Marita Noon

Boston Bomber’s Sentence Punishes Us All

And, sadly, it will not bring back the lives or limbs taken by Tsarnaev's horrendous act.
By Guest Writer

Vatican Adviser Says America’s Founding Document Is Outmoded, Reveals Global Game Plan

The plan is quite simple. And it should scare you.
By Cliff Kincaid

Read More Opinion Articles

Copyright © 2015 Western Journalism, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you asked to receive information from Western Journalism. We take your privacy and your liberty very seriously and will keep your information in the strictest confidence. Your name will not be sold to or shared with third parties. We will email you from time to time with relevant news and updates, but you can stop receiving information from us at any time by following very simple instructions that will be included at the bottom of any correspondence you should receive from us.

Our mailing address is:
Western Journalism
42104 N Venture Drive, Suite D-114
Anthem, AZ 85086

Add us to your address book





To view this email as a web page, click here.

CNBC | Your Wealth
Compiled by
Matthew J. Belvedere and Peter Schacknow


Send this email to a friend


› More Pre-Markets Data
IN THE NEWS TODAY
Dow component Wal-Mart (WMT) today reported quarterly earnings and revenue that fell short of expectationshurt by the stronger dollar. (CNBC)
Home Depot (HD), another Dow stock, today delivered quarterly earnings, revenue, and same-store sales that topped expectations. The home improvement retailer also raised full-year profit guidance. (CNBC)

U.S. stock futures were higher in early trading, after the S&P 500closed Monday at its third record in a row and the Dow joined with its own all-time high. The Nasdaq ended about 20 points away from its record. (CNBC)

The euro was trading lower this morning-moving away from Friday's three-month high on renewed Greek debt concerns and dovish comments by an executive member of the European Central Bank. (CNBC)

Apple (AAPL) reportedly shelved plans to make a TV more than a year ago, after deciding that attempts to build a truly unique product to compete with industry leader Samsung were not that compelling. (WSJ)

Starbucks (SBUX) has announced a partnership with music-streaming service Spotify, which includes allowing Starbucksrewards program members access to Spotify music. (CNBC)

Almost one in 10 viewers accessing video-streaming services areusing somebody else's login, with Netflix (NFLX) account owners the most likely sharers, followed by Hulu Plus and Amazon Prime. (CNBC)

Major investment banks have raised their standard base salary this spring for recent college graduates to $85,000, the first rise after five years in which the salaries hovered near $70,000. (NY Times)

In a new financial industry surveymore than a third of the respondents said they witnessed or knew of wrongdoing in the workplace. And nearly half said regulators were ineffective in stopping it. (NY Times)

Obama administration officials are calling for patience, even as they call the Islamic State militant capture of the capital of Iraq's Anbar province a setback. Ramadi fell over the weekend. (AP)

The State Department does not intend to make approximately 55,000 pages of former Secretary of State and Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton's emails public until Jan. 15, 2016. (USA Today)

 
BY THE NUMBERS
China stocks today surged more than 3 percent, after Beijing published guidelines for economic reforms, prioritizing further opening of the capital market there and the restructuring of state enterprises.
Oil prices fell this morning as slow economic growth and high supplies meant that markets remain oversupplied. However, U.S. crude got a bit of support from rising demand ahead of the Memorial Day travel weekend.

Housing is once again in the U.S. economic spotlight, as the government releases April housing starts and building permits at 8:30 a.m. ET. Economists are looking for a 9.1 percent jump in starts, on top of the 2.0 percent increase in March. Permits are seen up 2.7 percent last month, after a 5.4 percent decline in March.

JPMorgan Chase (JPM) holds its annual shareholder meeting this morning in Detroit, and the company is making a live audio webcastavailable.

Among the short list of earnings reports after-the-bell include,Analog Devices (ADI), Autodesk (ADSK), and Etsy (ETSY), which releases its first quarterly results since the online marketplace for homemade goods went public last month.

STOCKS TO WATCH
Vodafone (VOD) announced its first quarterly sales rise in almost three years. The U.K.-based mobile phone operator also predicted 2016 earnings growth after seven straight years of decline.
Urban Outfitters (URBN) missed estimates by 5 cents with quarterly profit of 25 cents per share. Revenue was also well below estimates. Comparable store sales increase of 4 percent was below forecasts.

Yahoo's (YHOO) chief information officer Mike Kail has left the company, just nine months after joining from Netflix, which has sued Kail, accusing him of accepting kickbacks from vendors.

WATERCOOLER
President Barack Obama's new personal Twitter account reached 1 million followers faster than any otherand he's already trash talkingafter Bill Clinton tweeted a question. (Re/code)
Access to parks and paths for jogging, walking and biking helped make the Washington, D.C., area the fittest of the 50 largest metropolitan areas in the U.S., according to a new study.

FEEDBACK
We value your input—use our simple form to let us know what you think. Click here for Real-Time data and top stories on your desktop or mobile device.
Send this email to a friend

unsubscribe | advertise with us | subscribe to more newsletters
© 2015 CNBC Inc. All Rights Reserved.
900 Sylvan Avenue, Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632

To ensure delivery to your inbox, please add morningsquawk@response.cnbc.com to your address book.

The New York TimesMost Popular | Video |

Today's Headlines

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

IN THIS EMAIL NYT World | U.S. | Politics | Business | Technology | Sports | Arts |N.Y./Region | Science | Today's Video | Obituaries | Editorials | Op-Ed | On This Day |CUSTOMIZE »
As a subscriber to Today's Headlines, get all digital access to The Times for just 99 cents.
Top News
Boko Haram Militants Raped Hundreds of Female Captives in Nigeria

By ADAM NOSSITER

Former captives of the group told of being raped, many repeatedly, in what officials described as a deliberate strategy to possibly create a new generation of Islamist militants.
Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi of Iraq in Washington last month. Mr. Abadi is facing challenges from Shiites tied to Iran.
Fall of Ramadi to ISIS Weakens Rule of Iraqi Premier

By TIM ARANGO

Haider al-Abadi's rivals were enjoying another setback for the prime minister after his failed campaign to retake Anbar Province from Islamic State militants without help from Shiite militias.
Dr. Karla Kerlikowske, a breast cancer researcher, goes over mammogram readouts displaying different stages of breast density,  at the Veterans Affairs Hospital in San Francisco.
Study Suggests Dense Breast Tissue Isn't Always a High Cancer Risk

By DENISE GRADY

New research published in Annals of Internal Medicine suggested that only about half of women with dense tissue need extra tests.
For more top news, go to NYTimes.com »
ADVERTISEMENT
Editors' Picks

MULTIMEDIA | LENS BLOG

Kurdish Syrians, Beyond the Border Crossing

By PHILIP B. RICHARDSON

Esa Ylijaasko has spent almost two years capturing the life of Kurdish refugees in enclaves of Istanbul.

OPINION | OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

How to Prevent an Oil Train Disaster

By MARCUS STERN

Volatile gases should be removed from the crude before it is moved by rail.

QUOTATION OF THE DAY

"What it means to grow up young and black has changed. Something happened that put black teens at risk."
SEAN JOE, a professor of social work at Washington University in St. Louis, on a study that found the suicide rate among black children had risen.
Today's Videos
Video VIDEO: ScienceTake | If I Had a Hammer
Researchers are studying how monkeys use stones as a way of understanding the evolution of the use of tools.
. Related Article
Video VIDEO: In Performance | Dael Orlandersmith
In a scene from "Forever," her solo show at New York Theater Workshop, Ms. Orlandersmith talks about visiting the Père Lachaise cemetery in Paris and finding inspiration in the Doors.
. Related Review: 'Forever'
For more video, go to NYTimes.com/Video »
World
Iraqis displaced when Islamic State fighters took control of Ramadi last week waited to cross a bridge on their way to Baghdad.
ISIS Fighters Seized Advantage in Iraq Attack by Striking During Sandstorm

By ERIC SCHMITT and HELENE COOPER

An episode reveals the limitations in America's formidable aerial arsenal and also the weaknesses in the Iraqi military's abilities while facing heavy attack.
Migrants disembarked from an Italian Navy ship last month after being rescued in the Mediterranean and brought to Sicily.
E.U. Agrees to Naval Intervention on Migrant Smugglers

By JAMES KANTER

A decision to militarize the migrant crisis in the Mediterranean is likely to require further approvals from European governments as well as coastal states in North Africa.
Pope Francis' greeting for President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority at the Vatican on Saturday is in question.

DIPLOMATIC MEMO

Vatican Seeks to Quiet Uproar Over Pope's 'Angel of Peace' Remark

By ISABEL KERSHNER and ELISABETTA POVOLEDO

The question of whether Pope Francis called President Mahmoud Abbas an "angel of peace" or actually said "may you be an angel of peace," has caused much political discord.
For more world news, go to NYTimes.com/World »
ADVERTISEMENT
U.S.
A McLennan County deputy sheriff stood guard near a group of bikers in the parking lot of a Twin Peaks restaurant after gunfire erupted between rival motorcycle gangs on Sunday in Waco, Tex.
170 Bikers Charged in Waco, in a Rivalry Rooted in the 1960s

By MANNY FERNANDEZ, SERGE F. KOVALESKI and ALAN BLINDER

The suspects faced charges of engaging in organized crime linked to capital murder in a shootout among rival gangs on Sunday in Texas.
Emergency workers at the wreckage of an Amtrak train that sped into a curve in Philadelphia last week.
Amtrak Crash Illuminates Obstacles to Plan for Controlling Train Speeds

By MATT FLEGENHEIMER, PATRICK McGEEHAN, JAD MOUAWAD and SHERYL GAY STOLBERG

As most railroads expect to miss a congressional deadline for upgrades, lawmakers in Washington are now fighting - not over whether to extend the deadline, but for how long.
Jeffrey Bridge, in Columbus, Ohio, led a study that tracked suicide rates for ages 5 to 11 from 1993 to 2012. The white rate fell.
Rise in Suicide by Black Children Surprises Researchers

By SABRINA TAVERNISE

The rate nearly doubled from 1993 to 2012, surpassing the rate for white children. It was the first time a national study found a higher suicide rate for blacks than for whites of any age group.
For more U.S. news, go to NYTimes.com/US »
ADVERTISEMENT
Politics
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton met with Mahmoud Jibril, the prime minister of Libya, in Tripoli in 2011.
Clinton Friend's Memos on Libya Draw Scrutiny to Politics and Business

By NICHOLAS CONFESSORE and MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT

Sidney Blumenthal counseled Hillary Rodham Clinton when she was secretary of state about Libya, where he was also advising a business venture.
President Obama on Monday in Camden, N.J., where he hoped to rebut the notion that he is insensitive to the plight of police officers on the front lines.
Obama Puts Focus on Police Success in Struggling City in New Jersey

By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS and MICHAEL D. SHEAR

Even as President Obama visited Camden to celebrate the progress a revamped police force has made in building trust, there was a sense among some law enforcement officials that he was not on their side.
Gina McCarthy, above, the E.P.A. administrator, who is expected to release the final version of a new rule intended to protect the nation's drinking water this week.
Critics Hear E.P.A.'s Voice in 'Public Comments'

By ERIC LIPTON and CORAL DAVENPORT

Critics said a campaign by the E.P.A. to enlist public support for a proposal to protect the nation's drinking water might have violated federal law on grass-roots lobbying.
For more political news, go to NYTimes.com/Politics »
Business
In Manhattan's financial district, hiring has rebounded and vacancy rates have fallen since the financial crisis began.

THE UPSHOT

Wall Street Is Back, Almost as Big as Ever

By NEIL IRWIN

Employment, compensation and mergers have all bounced back in the financial sector, and profits are not far from their 2007 highs.
Following Amazon's model, Singapore Post is building 24 warehouses in 12 countries to store products for companies.
Singapore's Postal Service Reinvents Itself for the Digital Age

By ALEXANDRA STEVENSON

With traditional mail fading, SingPost has transformed into a provider of logistics and marketing services to companies eager to tap the e-commerce boom in Asia.
Regulators to Hold Hearing on Fiat Chrysler Safety Response

By DANIELLE IVORY

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is investigating 20 recalls covering more than 10 million vehicles.
For more business news, go to NYTimes.com/Business »
Technology
Silk Road, Online Black Market, Reduced Users' Risks, Defense Says

By BENJAMIN WEISER

In an unusual argument, lawyers for Ross W. Ulbricht, the website's recently convicted founder, contend that it "was in many respects the most responsible such marketplace in history."
Ads for a Samsung Galaxy phone, left, and an Apple iPhone, right, in Seoul.
Appeals Court Upholds Apple's Patent Victory Over Samsung

By BRIAN X. CHEN

The federal court also ruled that the iPhone's overall look could not be protected and part of the $930 million in damages must be recalculated.
Josh Legg, known as Goldroom, with Nikki Segal making a music video for Snapchat. The messaging app is branching out as an outlet for music.
New on Snapchat, Music Videos

By BEN SISARIO

Videos released on the platform this week by Goldroom, an electronic musician, will be the latest step in the company's evolving role as a media outlet.
For more technology news, go to NYTimes.com/Technology »
Sports
A uniform dress code has become contagious during the N.B.A. playoffs.
Fans' Uniform Look Is a Team Effort

By JOHN BRANCH

The concept, called "shirting," has been around for decades, but N.B.A. arenas in 2015 may represent a near-perfect blend of allegiance, sports marketing and stagecraft.
Ohio State's D'Angelo Russell was personally scouted by Phil Jackson, the Knicks' president.
A Lottery So Rich, Luck Seems Sure to Favor the Knicks

By SCOTT CACCIOLA

Tuesday night's draft lottery has long been a source of optimism for the Knicks, and the good news is that even if they lose out on the top overall pick, they could still be O.K.
The start of the Belmont Stakes last year. Tonalist won to deny California Chrome's bid for the Triple Crown, which has not been achieved since 1978.

TV SPORTS

With Triple Crown Possible, Belmont Can Expect a Big Draw

By RICHARD SANDOMIR

Since 1992, a Belmont Stakes with a horse seeking the Triple Crown has drawn an average of 13.5 million viewers. When it's an ordinary race, that figure plummets to 5.9 million.
For more sports news, go to NYTimes.com/Sports »
Arts
The neurosurgeon Henry Marsh, author of

BOOKS OF THE TIMES

Review: In 'Do No Harm,' a Brain Surgeon Tells All

By MICHIKO KAKUTANI

Henry Marsh, one of Britain's foremost neurosurgeons, gives an intimate, compassionate and sometimes frightening understanding of his vocation.
Jon Hamm in the series finale of

THE TV WATCH

Shifting From 'Mad Men' to Strong Women in a Series Finale

By ALESSANDRA STANLEY

This much-lauded AMC show ended its long run on Sunday with tender moments and one last Madison Avenue moment.
FKA twigs performing at Brooklyn Hangar in Sunset Park on Sunday.
Review: Movement Drives the Music at FKA twigs's 'Congregata'

By BEN RATLIFF

After the performance, featuring a dozen male dancers, you may have left with flashes of body language in your head. Only on further recollection would you connect them to sound.
For more arts news, go to NYTimes.com/Arts »
New York
The Van Dyke Houses in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Under a plan to be announced by Mayor Bill de Blasio on Tuesday, developers would build 10,000 low-rent apartments starting at three housing projects, including Van Dyke.
Mayor de Blasio's Public Housing Plan to Seek City Aid and More Money From Tenants

By MIREYA NAVARRO

The aggressive plan calls for significant new financial help from the city and for squeezing more revenue out of the housing projects and their residents.
A City Council member proposed the legislation after a driver of a borough taxi was charged with raping a female passenger.
Taxi Panic Button Proposal Stirs Questions About Safety and False Alarms

By EMMA G. FITZSIMMONS

The bill would require cabs and car services to provide a back-seat button for passengers in peril, but drivers' advocates say they have concerns.
Pedro Hernandez in court in 2012. He is accused of kidnapping and killing Etan Patz in 1979.
Prosecutor Plans Retrial in Etan Patz Case

By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr.

Cyrus R. Vance Jr., the Manhattan district attorney, said in an interview that the evidence against the suspect, Pedro Hernandez, was compelling.
For more New York news, go to NYTimes.com/NewYork »
Science
With this taxidermied, robotic owl, researchers try to understand the nuances of birds' warning signals.
When Birds Squawk, Other Species Seem to Listen

By CHRISTOPHER SOLOMON

A professor's hunch is that birds are saying much more in warning of danger than previously suspected, and that other animals have evolved to understand the signals.
In terms of plate tectonics, India is running into Asia at one and a half to two inches a year, leading to earthquakes.
Indian Subcontinent's Quake-Causing Collision Course

By KENNETH CHANG

Geologists have conflicting theories as to why India is still on the move, up to two inches a year, and why it has crashed into Eurasia.
American submarine sailors during the Cold War were given antibiotics for appendicitis.
Antibiotics Resurface as Alternative to Removing Appendix

By GINA KOLATA

Five small studies indicate antibiotics can cure some patients with appendicitis; about 70 percent of patients who took pills did not need surgery.
For more science news, go to NYTimes.com/Science »
Obituaries
Prashant Bhargava at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2011.
Prashant Bhargava, Filmmaker of 'Patang (The Kite),' Dies at 42

By SAM ROBERTS

The film won critical praise for Mr. Bhargava, a graffiti virtuoso who progressed into commercial campaigns for television series as well as film and music videos.
Rabbi Moshe Levinger, left, and Hanan Porat in 1975 after the Israeli government ruled they could establish a Jewish settlement in Hebron in the West Bank.
Moshe Levinger, Contentious Leader of Jewish Settlers in Hebron, Dies at 80

By ISABEL KERSHNER

Rabbi Levinger, a polarizing figure in Israeli society, led a controversial and successful Jewish movement to settle Hebron after the Six-Day War in 1967.
For more obituaries, go to NYTimes.com/Obituaries »
Editorials
Egyptians pray after Mohamed Morsi's election victory in 2012.

EDITORIAL

In Egypt, Deplorable Death Sentences

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

The country's leaders continue their relentless campaign against Islamists.

EDITORIAL

The Fight to Regulate Formaldehyde

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

The Environmental Protection Agency's effort to implement tougher standards has been stymied at every turn.
Protesters in New York on April 15.

EDITORIAL

New York Can Lead the Way to Higher Pay

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

The new Wage Board has the power to help the state's fast-food workers, and set an example for the nation.

EDITORIAL

North Korea's Horrors

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

The country's murderous and mercurial leader may need to fuel the terror his power rests on.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »
Op-Ed

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

Free Trade Is Not the Enemy

By WILLIAM M. DALEY

What I learned from my experience guiding Nafta through Congress.

OP-ED COLUMNIST

Learning From Mistakes

By DAVID BROOKS

The question, would you go back and undo your errors is unanswerable. The question is: What wisdom have you learned that will help you going forward?
. Columnist Page

OP-ED COLUMNIST

Chemo for the Planet

By JOE NOCERA

Instead of focusing on human behavior to reduce global warming, try using technology.
. Columnist Page
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »

ON THIS DAY

On May 19, 1935, T.E. Lawrence, also known as "Lawrence of Arabia," died in England from injuries sustained in a motorcycle crash.

FOLLOW US: Facebook Facebook | Twitter @NYTimes | Pinterest Pinterest | Instagram Instagram
NYTAccess The New York Times from anywhere with our suite of apps:
iPhone® | iPad® | Android | All
.Save 15% at The NYTimes Store ».Have questions?Help Section ».Visit our mobile website atm.nyt.com »

About This Email

This is an automated email. Please do not reply directly to this email.
You received this message because you signed up for NYTimes.com's Today's Headlines newsletter. As a member of the TRUSTe privacy program, we are committed to protecting your privacy.


In case you missed it, here is a compilation of the most popular posts in the past week on WesternJournalism.com. Enjoy!
An anonymous tip cited poor living conditions, among other things.
The Best Of The Week

Obama Has Just Thrown His Own Country Under The Bus At The UN, Inviting International Ridicule

Once again the Obama administration screams to the world about the supposed sins of America.

Scalia Defends The Constitution, Questions The 17th Amendment

Argues that without the Constitution, the Bill of Rights is "just words on paper.”

Hillary’s Latest Claim Was So Outlandish That Fact-Checkers Instantly Jumped All Over It

"As a former senator, Clinton should know better."

‘Judgment Has Begun’: Billy Graham’s Daughter Explains How America Resembles Days Of Noah

In part, she blamed an increase in secularism.

Star Ditches Hollywood To Take The ISIS Problem Into His Own Hands

He is reportedly on one of his most dangerous missions yet.

An Unexpected Source Just Took A Major Stand Against ISIS

Sources say Israel is actively assisting rebel forces.

Rookie Cop Takes A Beating From Thug Until Heroic Citizen Shows Up (Video)

The officer cornered the suspect and then tried to place him under arrest.

Watch: Hillary Clinton Supporters Shocked To Learn Hillary Clinton Is Hypocritical On Equal Pay

“That’s a double standard… “I’m not sure I’d vote for her for that.”

Florida Law Enforcement Finds Black Man Shot White Racist In Self-Defense

Stop, I will shoot you.

Her Hateful Response To 2 Killed Cops Earned Her A Huge Serving Of Justice Almost Immediately

The fast food franchise wasted no time...

George Clooney Will Back Hillary ClintonIn 2016: ‘Whatever She Wants’

Clooney backed President Obama in 2008 and 2012.

China Makes Major Moves To Ban Islam

Maybe one day, the West will realize that freedom can’t exist for those who want to take your freedom.

Watch: Judge Jeanine Just Laid Down The Law Against Sharia – ‘Political Correctness Be Damned!’

"...no movement, no politically correct hogwash or limitation of my speech is going to force me to..."
Copyright © 2015 Western Journalism, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you asked to receive information from Western Journalism. We take your privacy and your liberty very seriously and will keep your information in the strictest confidence. Your name will not be sold to or shared with third parties. We will email you from time to time with relevant news and updates, but you can stop receiving information from us at any time by following very simple instructions that will be included at the bottom of any correspondence you should receive from us.

Our mailing address is:
Western Journalism
42104 N Venture Drive, Suite D-114
Anthem, AZ 85086

Add us to your address book

The New York TimesMost Popular | Video |

Today's Headlines

Sunday, May 17, 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 »
As a subscriber to Today's Headlines, get all digital access to The Times for just 99 cents.
Top News
ISIS Official Killed in U.S. Raid in Syria, Pentagon Says

By HELENE COOPER and ERIC SCHMITT

Abu Sayyaf, who was involved in the Islamic State's military operations and helped managed oil and gas sales, was killed during a raid in Syria, the Pentagon said.
Gov. Jerry Brown of California and his father in 1980.
Brown's Arid California, Thanks Partly to His Father

By ADAM NAGOURNEY

Gov. Jerry Brown is coping with the modern-day California that his father, Edmund G. Brown Sr., helped to create.
Workers at the site of the Amtrak train derailment in Philadelphia on Wednesday. Investigators found damage to the windshield.
Rock Hurling Is Old Nemesis of Train Crews

By DAVE PHILIPPS and ELIZABETH A. HARRIS

Though being struck by flying objects is typically not a serious safety concern, it is a common occurrence for train crews.
For more top news, go to NYTimes.com »
ADVERTISEMENT
Editors' Picks
Laís Souza, a Brazilian gymnast, was taking part in a new sport when her life changed in an instant.

SPORTS

A Life in Motion, Stopped Cold

By SARAH LYALL

"It was the most unbelievably heartbreaking thing I've ever heard in my life - someone's desperation when they can't move."
A protest against housing discrimination in Chicago in 1966.

OPINION | EDITORIAL

Housing Apartheid, American Style

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

For fair housing rules to be meaningful, the federal government will have to restructure its own programs.

QUOTATION OF THE DAY

"This is the first time that we have ever seen marijuana butter or any of this candy containing marijuana in the county. We hope it's the last time."
JIM JEFFRIES, the police chief in LaFollette, Tenn., on having to be on the lookout for marijuana-infused snacks and confections instead of bagged, smokable buds.
Today's Videos
Bill Cunningham | At the Market

By BILL CUNNINGHAM

On Saturday morning, the harsh city vanished in favor of a village friendliness.
For more video, go to NYTimes.com/Video »
World
China Making Some Missiles More Powerful

By DAVID E. SANGER and WILLIAM J. BROAD

The shift is particularly notable because the technology of miniaturizing warheads and putting them atop a single missile has been in Chinese hands for decades but has gone unused.
Pope Francis exchanged gifts with Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority, during their meeting at the Vatican on Saturday.
In Vatican, Abbas Is Praised as 'Angel of Peace'

By ELISABETTA POVOLEDO

Pope Francis praised Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority, as an "angel of peace" during a meeting at the Vatican on Saturday.
Mohamed Morsi, the deposed Egyptian president, appeared inside a cage in the Cairo courtroom where he was sentenced to death on Saturday.
Egyptian Court Sentences Ousted President Morsi to Death

By JARED MALSIN

Mr. Morsi was sentenced to death over his part in a mass prison break that took place during the 2011 uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak.
For more world news, go to NYTimes.com/World »
ADVERTISEMENT
U.S.
Flowers, champagne and a message to Krystle Campbell, who was killed in the Boston Marathon bombing, adorned the finish line Saturday, a day after jurors sentenced Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.
Death Sentence for Boston Bomber, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, Unsettles City He Tore Apart

By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, ABBY GOODNOUGH and JESS BIDGOOD

To many Bostonians, the death sentence given to Dzhokhar Tsarnaev on Friday felt like a blot on the city's collective consciousness.
Discarded needles at an exchange in Austin, Ind.
Surge in Cases of H.I.V. Tests U.S. Policy on Needle Exchanges

By CARL HULSE

With outbreaks from heroin use in Indiana, Kentucky and West Virginia, the ban on federal funding of needle exchanges is back before Congress.
Commercial marijuana products confiscated by Oklahoma agents in one seizure in July.
New Challenge for Police: Finding Pot in Lollipops and Marshmallows

By CATHERINE SAINT LOUIS

Law enforcement is wrestling with a surge in marijuana-infused snacks and confections transported illegally across state lines for resale.
For more U.S. news, go to NYTimes.com/US »
ADVERTISEMENT
Politics
Colin Reed of America Rising PAC, which created Twitter posts disparaging Hillary Rodham Clinton, and designed to be shared by liberals.
The Right Baits the Left to Turn Against Hillary Clinton

By ASHLEY PARKER and NICK CORASANITI

In digital campaigns, conservative groups are sending a steady stream of posts attacking Hillary Rodham Clinton, some of them specifically designed to be spotted, and shared, by liberals.
Eleven Republicans, including some who have declared they intend to run for president, appeared in Iowa on Saturday.
Iowans Hear From 11 Republican Hopefuls in Small Doses

By TRIP GABRIEL

At the Iowa state party's Lincoln Dinner, 11 presidential hopefuls - declared candidates and not - expressed a broad spectrum of ideologies and styles in the G.O.P.'s unsettled, chaotic race.
For more political news, go to NYTimes.com/Politics »
Business
Some of the highest-paid executives and their boss. From left: Gregory B. Maffei, C.E.O. of Liberty Media, earned $74 million; Michael T. Fries, C.E.O. of Liberty Global, earned $112 million; John C. Malone is the chairman of both companies and sits on the board of Discovery Communications; David M. Zaslav, C.E.O. of Discovery Communications, earned $156 million.
For the Highest-Paid C.E.O.s, the Party Goes On

By DAVID GELLES

Four chief executives at five companies with ties to John C. Malone, who built a cable and communications empire, were awarded more than $350 million last year.
. How the Chief Executives' Pay Figures Were Calculated
. The Highest-Paid Female C.E.O.s

FAIR GAME

Shareholders' Votes Have Done Little to Curb Lavish Executive Pay

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON

Despite rules empowering shareholders to rein in soaring pay packages, few have chosen to do so, perhaps because of a rising stock market.
Interactive Graphic INTERACTIVE GRAPHIC: Highest-Paid Chiefs in 2014
Here are 200 of the highest-paid chief executives in American business.
For more business news, go to NYTimes.com/Business »
Technology
The YotaPhone 2 was presented to the media in Moscow last month. Young technology buffs in Russia gave it mixed reviews.
A Russian Smartphone Has to Overcome Rivals and Jokes About Its Origin

By NEIL MacFARQUHAR

Few people looking to buy a state-of-the-art smartphone would even think about a Russian model, but the makers of the YotaPhone aspire to change that.
For more technology news, go to NYTimes.com/Technology »
Sports
American Pharoah was ridden by Victor Espinoza, last year's Derby and Preakness-winning jockey.
Preakness 2015: American Pharoah Wins Second Leg of Triple Crown

By JOE DRAPE

American Pharoah won the 140th running of the Preakness Stakes by a whopping seven lengths on a humid and rainy Saturday at Pimlico Race Course to keep his Triple Crown bid alive.
LeBron James, center; Kyrie Irving, left; and Tristan Thompson on Thursday, when Cleveland eliminated Chicago.

SPORTS OF THE TIMES

LeBron James, Under the Microscope, Continues to Come Up Big

By WILLIAM C. RHODEN

The star forward led the Heat to four consecutive trips to the N.B.A. finals, and now he is a series away from reaching the finals with the Cavaliers.
Dominic Moore after scoring the decisive goal in the third period. The game was the Rangers' 13th straight in this year's playoffs decided by one goal.

RANGERS 2, LIGHTNING 1

Rangers Stay True to Form, Winning by One, Again

By BEN SHPIGEL

In a furiously played contest, the Rangers' Dominic Moore deflected a puck past Tampa Bay goaltender Ben Bishop late in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals.
For more sports news, go to NYTimes.com/Sports »
Arts
Jon Hamm, left, and Carter Jenkins in
Matthew Weiner, the Creator of 'Mad Men,' Prepares for Another Fade to Black

By DAVE ITZKOFF

On Sunday, after 92 episodes, the series and the story of Don Draper come to an end.
. Audio  Audio: Matthew Weiner On the End of 'Mad Men' (Soundcloud)
. Series Recaps
Michael Heizer at his ranch in Garden Valley, Nev., with
Michael Heizer's Big Work and Long View

By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN

The sculptor and earth artist says of "City," the monumental project he has built in the Nevada desert since the 1970s, "It's basically done."
Audience members gave a standing ovation to the Minnesota Orchestra at a  concert in Havana on Friday.
Minnesota Orchestra, in Groundbreaking Cuba Tour, Sells Out House

By MICHAEL COOPER

The concert, the first by a large United States orchestra here in more than 15 years, was greeted with several standing ovations.
For more arts news, go to NYTimes.com/Arts »
New York
Home From Afghanistan, and Learning to Be a Couple Again

By SUSAN HARTMAN

Many veterans come back from Afghanistan or Iraq unharmed, but they still must navigate their way back into their families' lives, while their partners at home, who have managed to go forward by themselves, must also begin the difficult process of reuniting.
This sex shop on Eighth Avenue, one of five between 18th and 23rd Streets, sought a liquor license.
Chelsea's Risqué Businesses

By MICHAEL WINERIP

In a famously liberal enclave, residents both gay and straight weigh freedom and acceptance against commercial displays that schoolchildren must walk past.
Diana Richardson, a native of Crown Heights, is newly elected to the New York State Assembly.

BIG CITY

Up From Crown Heights

By GINIA BELLAFANTE

Two weeks ago, Diana Richardson, a native of Crown Heights, was elected to the New York State Assembly from the 43rd district, after a rare campaign that was singularly focused on the perils of development.
. More Big City Columns
For more New York news, go to NYTimes.com/NewYork »
Fashion & Style
Kirsten Dunst, left and Laura Mulleavy.

ON THE RUNWAY

Cannes-Do: Rodarte Designers Always Wanted to Direct

By VANESSA FRIEDMAN

Kate and Laura Mulleavy, the founders of the independent line, have written and plan to direct a feature-length movie.
They Built It. No One Came.

By PENELOPE GREEN

In Pennsylvania, two men with 63 acres and a communal vision of utopia learn the hard way that not everyone follows the leader.
The Grateful Dead in the 1970s, clockwise from top left: Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Bill Kreutzmann, Ron McKernan, Mickey Hart and Jerry Garcia. The late Mr. Garcia played his last show in Chicago, where the Fourth of July weekend shows will take place.
Grateful Dead Fans Replace VW Vans With Jets and the Ritz-Carlton

By KATHERINE ROSMAN

Fifty years after their formation, the band will play a series of good-bye shows, drawing their same rabid fans, only now a whole lot wealthier.
For more fashion news, go to NYTimes.com/Fashion »
Travel
Alice Castano blows bubbles into the Arno River in Florence. The climate for solo travel is (slowly) improving.

THE GETAWAY

Travel Industry Responds to Rise in Solo Sojourners

By STEPHANIE ROSENBLOOM

New and more affordable options are arising as more people, not all of them single, vacation on their own.
The main temple of Angkor Wat, as seen from Phnom Bakheng. More than two million tourists from around the world visit it each year.

FOOTSTEPS

In Cambodia, Along the Path to Something Profound

By KAREN J. COATES

Exploring the ruins of Angkor Wat and other parts of Cambodia, in the footsteps of the 19th-century explorer and naturalist Henri Mouhot.
Rustik Tavern in the Bloomingdale area offers outdoor dining.

FRUGAL TRAVELER

A $100 Weekend in Washington, D.C.

By SETH KUGEL

You can enjoy the nation's capital in one weekend for less than the cost of a steak at one of its pricier restaurants.
For more travel news, go to NYTimes.com/Travel »
Magazine
The Last Day of Her Life

By ROBIN MARANTZ HENIG

When Sandy Bem found out she had Alzheimer's, she resolved that before the disease stole her mind, she would kill herself. The question was, when?
Is It Wrong to Let Children Do Extreme Sports?

By JON LACKMAN

Even as Americans have grown more fixated on childhood safety, kids are participating in risky pastimes in ever greater numbers.
The Great Democratic Crack-Up of 2016

By ROBERT DRAPER

They may have a strong presidential candidate, but at every other level, the party's politicians and activists are fighting to survive - and fighting with one another.
For more from the Sunday magazine, go to NYTimes.com/Magazine »
Obituaries
Elisabeth Bing in her Manhattan apartment.
Elisabeth Bing, 'Mother of Lamaze,' Dies at 100

By KAREN BARROW

Ms. Bing helped to popularize the birthing techniques developed by Dr. Fernand Lamaze, reducing the need for anesthesia and giving mothers more control over the process of childbirth.
Francis Fleetwood in 1991, near a home in East Hampton, N.Y, that was one of over 200 he built in the area starting in 1980.
Francis Fleetwood, Architect Who Transformed the Hamptons, Dies at 68

By SAM ROBERTS

Mr. Fleetwood designed more than 200 homes in the Hamptons, many of them encompassing tens of thousands of square feet, costing tens of millions of dollars and commissioned by clients who did not blink at the price.
Garo Yepremian, shown in 1972, won two Super Bowls with Miami and once kicked six field goals in a game.
Garo Yepremian, 70, Dies; His Kicks Outshined a Pass

By DAVID STOUT

Yepremian's ill-advised pass after a blocked field goal led to a Redskins touchdown in Super Bowl VII, but the Dolphins survived to cap a perfect season.
For more obituaries, go to NYTimes.com/Obituaries »
Editorials
A protest against housing discrimination in Chicago in 1966.

EDITORIAL

Housing Apartheid, American Style

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

For fair housing rules to be meaningful, the federal government will have to restructure its own programs.

EDITORIAL

Past Time to Reform Bretton Woods

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Developing nations should play larger roles in the I.M.F. and the World Bank.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »
Op-Ed

OPINION

The Case for Black Doctors

By DAMON TWEEDY

Black patients are more likely to trust them, and to become healthier.

OPINION

Poor Little Rich Women

By WEDNESDAY MARTIN

I studied the women of the Upper East Side as if they were a tribe in a faraway land.

DOWNLOAD

Cara McCarty

By KATE MURPHY

The design director on a South African jazz pianist, a British actor and the heady scent of flowers.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »

ON THIS DAY

On May 17, 1954, the Supreme Court issued its landmark Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka ruling, which declared that racially segregated public schools were inherently unequal.

FOLLOW US: Facebook Facebook | Twitter @NYTimes | Pinterest Pinterest | Instagram Instagram
NYTAccess The New York Times from anywhere with our suite of apps:
iPhone® | iPad® | Android | All
.Save 15% at The NYTimes Store ».Have questions?Help Section ».Visit our mobile website atm.nyt.com »

About This Email

This is an automated email. Please do not reply directly to this email.
You received this message because you signed up for NYTimes.com's Today's Headlines newsletter. As a member of the TRUSTe privacy program, we are committed to protecting your privacy.

Nema komentara:

Objavi komentar