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The New York TimesMost Popular | Video |

Today's Headlines

Saturday, June 13, 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 »
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Top News
President Obama and the House Democratic leader,  Nancy Pelosi, left a meeting with House Democrats on Capitol Hill where Mr. Obama pushed for support for his trade agenda.
House Rejects Trade Measure, Rebuffing Obama's Dramatic Appeal

By JONATHAN WEISMAN

The vote torpedoed President Obama's push to expand his trade negotiating power, and probably his chance to secure a legacy-defining trade accord spanning the Pacific Ocean.
. The Trans-Pacific Partnership Trade Deal Explained
ISIS Is Winning the Social Media War, U.S. Concludes

By MARK MAZZETTI and MICHAEL R. GORDON

An internal State Department assessment says the Islamic State's social message machine is trumping efforts by the Obama administration and its foreign allies to combat it.
Agricultural fields in Thermal, Calif. The state is facing a prolonged drought that shows few signs of easing.
California Cuts Farmers' Share of Scant Water

By JENNIFER MEDINA

Farmers with longtime rights to California water will face cutbacks, the first reduction in their usage since 1977, state officials announced Friday.
For more top news, go to NYTimes.com »
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Editors' Picks

MULTIMEDIA | LENS BLOG

Following Smugglers in Kurdistan

By ANIA BARTKOWIAK

Smuggling is an integral way of life in Kurdish villages where, for many, there is no other way to earn a living. It is a business that some families have practiced for generations.

OPINION | OP-ED COLUMNIST

Guns in Your Face

By GAIL COLLINS

How would you react if the man in front of you in the Starbucks line had a gun dangling from his shoulder?

QUOTATION OF THE DAY

"He really wasn't raised into the best society. We drank a lot, we partied a lot. His life was into turmoil."
PATRICIA DESMOND, who briefly lived with the family of David Sweat, one of two convicted murderers who escaped from a New York prison, as he was growing up.
Today's Videos
Video VIDEO: Yemen: When Is the Time?
In this conservative country - dubbed the worst in the world for women - the revolution offered feminists like Belquis Al Lahabi a faint glimmer of hope.
. Related Article
Video VIDEO: Coping With Baltimore's Murder Rate
Tiffany Fair and Tevon Chapman are struggling to keep their families safe as violent crime rises in Baltimore. They say the absence of police officers has made their neighborhood much more dangerous.
. Related Article
Video VIDEO: Anatomy | Me and Earl and the Dying Girl
In this Anatomy of a Scene, Alfonso Gomez-Rejon narrates a sequence from his film featuring Thomas Mann, Connie Britton and Nick Offerman.
. Related Review: 'Me and Earl and the Dying Girl'
For more video, go to NYTimes.com/Video »
World
Kurdish fighters after a clash with the Islamic State in March. They have managed to retake and hold significant territory.
Success of Kurdish Forces Is a Rare Bright Spot for U.S. Policy in Iraq

By BEN HUBBARD

The ability of pesh merga forces to retake and defend territory has offered a glimmer of hope for the Obama administration's policy of coordinating with local forces to battle the Islamic State.
President Park Geun-hye with health care providers at a hospital treating MERS patients.
MERS Tarnishes Korean President's Image as Leader

By CHOE SANG-HUN

President Park Geun-hye's image as a strong leader who can keep a clear head in a crisis has come crashing down as her government struggles to contain an outbreak of Middle East respiratory syndrome.
White House Weighs Sanctions After Second Breach of a Computer System

By MICHAEL D. SHEAR and SCOTT SHANE

Officials said that the second system contained files related to intelligence officials working for the F.B.I., defense contractors and other government agencies.
For more world news, go to NYTimes.com/World »
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U.S.
Rachel Dolezal, center, president of the NAACP in Spokane, Wash.,  before the start of a Black Lives Matter Teach-In in January.
Black or White? Woman's Story Stirs Up a Furor

By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA

The parents of Rachel A. Dolezal, an N.A.A.C.P. leader in Spokane, Wash., say she is white, and her story has stirred a national debate about racial identity.
West Baltimore's Police Presence Drops, and Murders Soar

By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr.

Local leaders say the past six weeks have shown that as much as many residents legitimately fear and distrust the police, the solution must be better policing, not less.
Latrina Bidet, a drag performer, entertained patrons at a fund-raising event in Indianapolis on Thursday.

INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL

Indianapolis Rallies Around Its Gay Citizens After a Law Sets Off a Flood of Support

By MITCH SMITH

At this week's pride festivities in Indiana, gay residents say much has changed for the better since passage of the state's religious exceptions law.
For more U.S. news, go to NYTimes.com/US »
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Politics
Hillary Rodham Clinton and her mother, Dorothy Rodham, at a hotel in New York in 1992.
Hillary Clinton Embraces Her Mother's Emotional Tale

By AMY CHOZICK

Sharing that story is a shift for Mrs. Clinton, who in her 2008 campaign was fiercely protective of her mother's privacy and eager to project an image of strength.
Demonstrators showing their opposition to President Obama's trade agenda on Friday lined his route to a meeting with House Democrats, who largely voted against the president's plan.

NEWS ANALYSIS

Washington Dysfunction, With a Twist: Democrats Desert Their President

By PETER BAKER and JENNIFER STEINHAUER

Though many Republicans supported President Obama on the trade bill, his fellow Democrats in the House did not, contending that the legislation would exacerbate income inequality.
A Mylan pharmaceuticals processing station in Greensboro, N.C.
Business Leaders React With Dismay to Defeat of Trade Bill

By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ, PATRICIA COHEN and KATIE THOMAS

Corporate America has been nearly unified in its support of a deal that would lower various barriers to trade and investment between the United States and 11 other Pacific Rim nations.
. Trade Deal's Setback Left Wall Street Unmoved. Why?
. What You Should Know About the Trans-Pacific Partnership
For more political news, go to NYTimes.com/Politics »
Business
President Obama leaving a meeting with House Democrats on Friday. Nancy Pelosi, left, the House minority leader, and the Democrats rejected his appeal to support his trade proposal.

THE UPSHOT

Trade Deal's Setback Left Wall Street Unmoved. Why?

By JUSTIN WOLFERS

The market's indifference to Friday's surprising development suggests the stakes are lower than they appear for the Trans-Pacific Partnership.
Jack Dorsey, Twitter's interim chief, on CNBC on Friday.
Jack Dorsey Returns to Twitter as Chief, to Shrugs and Quips

By VINDU GOEL and MIKE ISAAC

Mr. Dorsey is a figure of legend to newer Twitter employees, and remembered with varying degrees of fondness and fear by those who worked with him during his earlier stints there.
James Murdoch, who is expected to be named chief at 21st Century Fox, has shown interest in streaming and ad technologies.
Young Murdoch Views TV as 'Real Killer App' in a New Digital World

By EMILY STEEL

James Murdoch, in partnership with his brother, Lachlan Murdoch, will be responsible for steering 21st Century Fox through the digital disruption of the 21st century.
For more business news, go to NYTimes.com/Business »
Technology
The attackers focused on sites used by journalists and ethnic minorities.
Chinese Hackers Circumvent Popular Web Privacy Tools

By NICOLE PERLROTH

Exploiting a vulnerability in server software used by Chinese Internet portals, hackers were able to unmask visitors to sites deemed hostile by the government.

BITS BLOG

New Internet Regulations Take Effect, and Web Users See No Change

By REBECCA R. RUIZ

For all the buildup, the dawn of the new net neutrality rules was anticlimactic. For the average user weary of video interruptions and "buffering stream" pop-up messages, nothing changed.
Vincent Bolloré's Long Bet on Solid-State Batteries for Electric Cars

By DAVID JOLLY, YANN CRES and SOPHIE DIMITRIADIS

A popular but unprofitable electric-car-sharing business in Paris is expanding in Europe and America, but it's really a bet on besting lithium-ion batteries.
For more technology news, go to NYTimes.com/Technology »
Sports
Goalkeeper Hope Solo punched the ball away as Sweden's Amanda Ilestedt (14) tried a header on Friday. The Americans lead their group but have not advanced.

WOMEN'S WORLD CUP: UNITED STATES 0, SWEDEN 0

Women's World Cup: U.S. Earns a Draw the Hard Way

By JERÉ LONGMAN

Neither team would concede on Friday, although Sweden might have won late if not for an attentive defensive play from Meghan Klingenberg.
Hope Solo during a training session this week.
U.S. Soccer Defends Actions in Hope Solo Case

By JERÉ LONGMAN

U.S. Soccer gave a detailed defense of its actions and of its decision not to suspend Solo from the national team for this month's Women's World Cup.
Megan Rapinoe said one of her moves at the Women's World Cup was in the style of Lionel Messi.
At Women's World Cup, Seeing Signs of Lionel Messi, Not Mia Hamm

By VICTOR MATHER

Fans, coaches, the news media and players at the World Cup are closely watching the stars of the women's game. And then likening them to men.
. Motherlode Blog: Watching the Women's World Cup - With Our Sons
For more sports news, go to NYTimes.com/Sports »
Arts
Visitors watching
Review: 'H {N)Y P N(Y} OSIS,' Out of This World, at Park Avenue Armory

By ROBERTA SMITH

The French artist Philippe Parreno brings his multimedia spectacle of music, film, sculpture, lights and live performance to the armory's cavernous drill hall.
. In 'H{N)Y P N(Y}OSIS,' Art Is the Big Idea
The violinist Stefan Arzberger, in New York.
Bizarre Court Case Puts a Violinist, and Leipzig String Quartet, in an Unflattering Light

By MICHAEL COOPER

Stefan Arzberger, a member of the music group, is fighting charges that he attacked a woman in a Manhattan hotel this spring.
John Taylor Ward, left, Christian Immler and Danielle Reutter-Harrah in
Review: Boston Early Music Festival Makes Monteverdi Its Main Attraction

By JAMES R. OESTREICH

The sheer weight of the Monteverdi venture - the number of performers and costumes; the amount of performance time, let alone rehearsal time - amid the week's concerts and recitals is remarkable.
For more arts news, go to NYTimes.com/Arts »
New York
Joyce E. Mitchell on her way into court in Plattsburgh, N.Y., on Friday evening.
Prison Worker Who Befriended Killers Is Accused of Providing Tools for Escape

By JESSE McKINLEY, SARAH MASLIN NIR and WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM

Joyce E. Mitchell, a civilian employee at the Clinton Correctional Facility in northern New York State, brought the men hacksaw blades, chisels, a punch and screwdriver bit, according to a criminal complaint.
Richard W. Matt, left, in 1986, and David Sweat in 2002.
Broken Boys, Thieves, Killers, and Now Escapees

By N. R. KLEINFIELD

Richard W. Matt and David Sweat emerged from curdled childhoods that included early displays of evil behavior, interviews and documents reveal.
Bill de Blasio

POLITICAL MEMO

New Message on Frisking From de Blasio's City Hall Amid Criticism

By MATT FLEGENHEIMER

The recent reminders about the origins in the later Bloomberg years come as Mayor Bill de Blasio's administration faces criticism over crime.
For more New York news, go to NYTimes.com/NewYork »
Obituaries
From left, Maxine, Bonnie and Jim Ed Brown performing as the Browns in the 1950s. They disbanded in 1967, but later reunited to record a gospel album.
Jim Ed Brown, Smooth Voice on 'The Three Bells' and Other Hits, Dies at 81

By WILLIAM GRIMES

A Grand Ole Opry star, Mr. Brown had a long string of songs on the country charts, both as part of the Browns, with Helen Cornelius, and as a solo act.
From left, Irwin Winkler, Sylvester Stallone and Robert Chartoff in 1977.
Robert Chartoff, Producer of 'Raging Bull' and 'Rocky,' Dies at 81

By BRUCE WEBER

For two decades, beginning in 1967, Mr. Chartoff and his partner, Irwin Winkler, produced many of the signature Hollywood films of the era.
For more obituaries, go to NYTimes.com/Obituaries »
Editorials
The site of a proposed 28-unit affordable housing development in Chappaqua.

EDITORIAL

Westchester's Tortured Road

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

It's time for the county to end its fight with the federal government over a court-ordered fair-housing plan.

EDITORIAL

Accounting for the Benefits of Mideast Peace

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

A new report from the RAND Corporation shows that Israelis and Palestinians would both be winners with a two-state solution.
A mannequin used in medical schools.

EDITORIAL

When Playing a Patient Is Part of the Training

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Examining and being examined by classmates brings up significant privacy issues that schools need to address.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »

ON THIS DAY

On June 13, 1966, the Supreme Court issued its landmark Miranda vs. Arizona decision, ruling that criminal suspects must be informed of their constitutional rights prior to questioning by police.

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The New York TimesMost Popular | Video |

Today's Headlines

Friday, June 12, 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
United States Army personnel training Iraqi recruits in April. Any new bases would be run by Iraqis; Americans would not engage in ground combat.
Obama Looks at Adding Bases and Troops in Iraq, to Fight ISIS

By PETER BAKER, HELENE COOPER and MICHAEL R. GORDON

The move would require at least hundreds more American military trainers to help Iraqi forces retake cities lost to the Sunni militants.
Pro-Russian rebels carried the flag of their self-proclaimed Republic of Novorossiya in Debaltseve, Ukraine, in February.
Russian Groups Crowdfund the War in Ukraine

By JO BECKER and STEVEN LEE MYERS

Several groups are running online campaigns to brazenly raise money for rebels in eastern Ukraine, helping succor a conflict that has killed thousands.
The succession plans for Rupert Murdoch's media empire have long been the subject of fevered speculation.
Rupert Murdoch to Put Media Empire in Sons' Hands

By EMILY STEEL and RAVI SOMAIYA

Mr. Murdoch put the succession plan in place in March 2014 when he named his sons James and Lachlan to senior positions in his companies.
. Breakingviews: Rupert Murdoch's Step Back Will Propel Dynasty Forward
. Rupert Murdoch Timeline: The Man Behind the News
For more top news, go to NYTimes.com »
ADVERTISEMENT
Editors' Picks
Ornette Coleman performing at the Village Vanguard in 1961.

ARTS

Ornette Coleman, Composer and Saxophonist Who Rewrote the Language of Jazz, Dies at 85

By BEN RATLIFF

Mr. Coleman was a leader in making jazz less beholden to rules of harmony and rhythm.
. Ornette Coleman's Greatest Hits

OPINION | OP-ED CONTRIBUTORS

Let Rich and Poor Learn Together

By CLARA HEMPHILL and HALLEY POTTER

Pre-K for all shouldn't reinforce economic segregation.

QUOTATION OF THE DAY

"There are dead fish in my living room."
SHERIFF STEVE PRATOR, of Caddo Parish, La., which has experienced the worst flooding of the Red River since 1945.
Today's Videos
Video VIDEO: The Uncanny Lover
Matt McMullen is developing a sex robot that uses technology to create the illusion of sentience. But is it enough to generate real emotions in its user?
. Related Article
RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL - July, 2014: Congregation members of AlaniÕs church pray around her after the service..
Video VIDEO: Touch of Faith
Alani Santos, 11, is among the thousands of child preachers in Brazil who minister to poor and working-class people through healing and prayer.
. Related Article
Video VIDEO: This Week's Movies: June 11, 2015
The New York Times film critics review "Jurassic World," "Me and Earl and the Dying Girl" and "The Wolfpack."
. Related Review: 'Jurassic World'
. Related Review: 'Me and Earl and the Dying Girl'
. Related Review: 'The Wolfpack'
For more video, go to NYTimes.com/Video »
World
Tim Hunt
Women Respond to Nobel Laureate's 'Trouble With Girls'

By DAN BILEFSKY

Tim Hunt, who stepped down as a professor at University College London, said women should be segregated in labs because they cried when criticized and were a romantic distraction.
Yondainer Gutiérrez builds websites, but his family's home in Havana has no Internet access.
Cuba's Web Entrepreneurs Search for U.S. Clients, and Reliable Wi-Fi

By VICTORIA BURNETT

As the United States opens up to Cuba, a little-advertised circle of software developers, web designers and translators are selling their skills long-distance.
Zhou Yongkang, Ex-Security Chief in China, Gets Life Sentence for Graft

By MICHAEL FORSYTHE

Mr. Zhou, the highest-ranking official felled in China's anticorruption campaign, was tried in secret in the city of Tianjin, the state news media reported.
For more world news, go to NYTimes.com/World »
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U.S.
A memorial to Tamir Rice at Cudell Recreational Center in Cleveland, where he was shot and killed by the police.
Cleveland Judge Finds Probable Cause to Charge Officers in Tamir Rice Death

By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA and MITCH SMITH

The judge, Ronald B. Adrine, also said he did not have the power to order the arrest of the two officers without a complaint being filed by a prosecutor.
Rigby Hollingsworth steered a boat past a partially submerged house in Bossier City, La., after severe flooding of the Red River on Wednesday.
Shreveport Battles the Ravages of the Mighty Red

By DERICK JONES

Residents are trying to gather what they can after a flood that has reached 37 feet, close to a historic peak in 1945.
Chad Biggs, left, and Chris Creech signed their marriage license at the Wake County Courthouse in Raleigh, N.C., last October. The North Carolina legislature enacted a law Thursday that allows officials to refuse to perform a marriage if they have a
North Carolina Allows Officials to Refuse to Perform Gay Marriages

By JONATHAN M. KATZ

The Republican-controlled House overrode a veto to enact a law allowing court officials with a "sincerely held religious objection" to opt out of performing same-sex marriages.
For more U.S. news, go to NYTimes.com/US »
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Politics
Hillary Rodham Clinton delivered a speech on voting rights last week in Houston.
Hillary Clinton Will Evoke Roosevelt and Try to Ease Fears on Trust in New York Speech

By AMY CHOZICK

Mrs. Clinton is expected to draw on the legacy of the New Deal at a rally Saturday in New York, where she will try to make her case for why she should be president.
A woman and her baby on Thursday near their house, which was damaged by shelling in the Ukrainian town of Horlivka.
Defying Obama, Many in Congress Press to Arm Ukraine

By JENNIFER STEINHAUER and DAVID M. HERSZENHORN

The Senate has included provisions in its military policy bill to arm Ukraine with antiarmor systems, mortars, grenade launchers and ammunition to aid in its fight against Russian-backed separatists.
Jeb Bush met with President Bronislaw Komorowski of Poland in Warsaw on Thursday.

FIRST DRAFT

Jeb Bush Defends Book That Called for Shaming Single Parents

By MICHAEL BARBARO

Asked about the 1995 book's passage while visiting Poland, Jeb Bush said his stances have evolved but that "my views about the importance of dads being involved in the lives of their children haven't changed at all."
For more political news, go to NYTimes.com/Politics »
Business
Dick Costolo inside Twitter's San Francisco headquarters.
Twitter's C.E.O., Dick Costolo, Is Set to Exit, Feeling Heat of Criticism

By VINDU GOEL and MIKE ISAAC

Twitter faces questions about the future of its messaging service, which is built around text in a world increasingly about photos and video.
I.R.S. Adds New Safeguards to Thwart Identity Theft and Fraud

By PATRICIA COHEN

The agency said it would require more rigorous authentication before releasing information and refunds, and would try to pinpoint patterns of fraud.
Rupert Murdoch, chief of News Corporation, and his son James, who has been chosen as successor to lead the media empire 21st Century Fox.
Once Down, James Murdoch Is Guided Back to the Top

By SARAH LYALL

When he left Britain in the wake of a phone-hacking scandal, the younger Murdoch seemed too tarnished to inherit his father's mantle.
For more business news, go to NYTimes.com/Business »
Technology
Visitors browsing through e-books at a book fair in Frankfurt in 2010. The E.U. is looking into whether Amazon used its dominant position in the region's e-books market to favor its own products.
Amazon's E-Books Business Investigated by European Antitrust Regulators

By DAVID STREITFELD and MARK SCOTT

The investigation is the latest hurdle for Amazon and other American tech giants as European policy makers pursue antitrust, tax and other inquiries.

ROBOTICA EPISODE 5

Sex Dolls That Talk Back

By THE NEW YORK TIMES

In just two years, the creator of RealDoll says he will sell a robotic version with convincing artificial intelligence, blinking eyes and a mouth that moves.
Farhad Manjoo

STATE OF THE ART

For Twitter, Future Means Here and Now

By FARHAD MANJOO

Twitter should aim to become the first and only app that people load up to comment on the news.
For more technology news, go to NYTimes.com/Technology »
Sports
Christen Press after scoring her first World Cup goal in the United States' win over Australia. Before joining the national team, Press played in Sweden.

SPORTS OF THE TIMES

Christen Press Went Abroad and Found a Place on the U.S. Team

By JULIET MACUR

Press escaped the pressure of American sports culture by playing soccer in Sweden, and the detour saved her passion for the game. She is now a staple of the United States national team.
Canadian fans cheered on the host team in the Women's World Cup opener in Edmonton last week.
World Cup Organizers Have a Reason to Root for the Home Team

By IAN AUSTEN

The organizers of the Women's World Cup in Canada are hoping that the home team and the United States enjoy good tournaments to help ticket sales.
Dean Potter BASE jumping in Yosemite National Park in 2007.
Lost Brother in Yosemite

By JOHN BRANCH

Dean Potter jumped. Graham Hunt followed. Potter's longtime girlfriend snapped photographs. Then came confusion, hope and despair.
For more sports news, go to NYTimes.com/Sports »
Arts
Harper Lee, the author of
Six Personal Letters by Harper Lee to Be Auctioned at Christie's

By ALEXANDRA ALTER

Correspondence from the author of "To Kill a Mockingbird," written between 1956 and 1961 and estimated to be worth as much as $250,000, will be sold.
Frederic Leighton's
...

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The New York TimesMost Popular | Video |

Today's Headlines

Thursday, June 11, 2015

As a subscriber to Today's Headlines, get all digital access to The Times for just 99 cents.
Top News
Bishops greeted Pope Francis at the end of his Wednesday general audience in Saint Peter's Square at Vatican City.
Pope Creates Tribunal for Bishop Negligence in Child Sexual Abuse Cases

By ELISABETTA POVOLEDO and LAURIE GOODSTEIN

Roman Catholic bishops accused of covering up or failing to prevent the sexual abuse of children by priests will be subject to judgment and discipline by the tribunal.
Markeisha Brown, 25, in the home she shares with Dominick Torrence and her two sons in Baltimore. While Mr. Torrence was incarcerated with bail set at $250,000, Ms. Brown had to stop working and drop out of school.
When Bail Is Out of Defendant's Reach, Other Costs Mount

By SHAILA DEWAN

Money bail, entrenched in most jurisdictions, is under new scrutiny, with some critics decrying what they see as racial and financial inequities.
. Video  Video: The Burden of Bail
Michelle Obama spoke at several commencements this spring, including at Tuskegee University.
Michelle Obama Talks About Race and Success, and Makes It Personal

By PETER BAKER

The first lady has been opening up about her own struggles and the "insults and slights" that even living in the White House has not protected her family from.
For more top news, go to NYTimes.com »
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Editors' Picks

WORLD

Multimedia Feature MULTIMEDIA FEATURE: Six Days in North Korea
A photographer parts the curtains on one of the world's least-known places and brings back pictures of a country that is defined for many by mystery and war.

OPINION | OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

The Myth of a White Minority

By RICHARD ALBA

We use outdated, illogical racial and ethnic categories. Social reality is much more complex.

QUOTATION OF THE DAY

"It sets up a system where first there's the punishment, and then there's the opportunity to go to court for trial."
PAUL DeWOLFE, the Maryland state public defender, on those who linger in jail because they can't make bail.
Today's Videos
Video VIDEO: Syria: Brides of Peace
The sisters Kinda and Lubna Zaour walked through the main souk in Damascus dressed as brides, a symbol of love and peace. They were arrested almost immediately.
. Related Article
Video VIDEO: 36 Hours in Zagreb
Jazzy lounges, bistros and chic ateliers abound in newly popular Zagreb, but this Slavic metropolis still retains plenty of cobbled-street charm.
. Related Article
For more video, go to NYTimes.com/Video »
World
A Royal Air Force jet, bottom, accompanied a Russian Ilyushin Il-20M reconnaissance plane over the Baltic Sea, where Russia has been conducting naval exercises, Lithuanian officials said.
Increasingly Frequent Call on Baltic Sea: 'The Russian Navy Is Back'

By ANDREW HIGGINS

Since the conflict in Ukraine began last year, Russian warships have regularly entered a zone where cables are being installed to link Lithuania to Sweden's electricity grid.
The Office of Personnel Management building in Washington. The names of Chinese relatives, friends and frequent associates of American diplomats and other government officials may be in the hands of Chinese hackers.
Hackers May Have Obtained Names of Chinese With Ties to U.S. Government

By DAVID E. SANGER and JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS

Lost data from the Office of Personnel Management may have included the names of Chinese who could now suffer retaliation.
United States Army trainers and Iraqi recruits in April. President Obama plans an additional 450 trainers and other personnel.

NEWS ANALYSIS

Trainers Intended as Lift, but Quick Iraq Turnaround Is Unlikely

By MICHAEL R. GORDON

President Obama's plan does not call for American troops to accompany Iraqi fighters onto the battlefield to call in airstrikes or advise them on combat operations.
For more world news, go to NYTimes.com/World »
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U.S.
James H. Billington, 86, has been the librarian of Congress since 1987, and his retirement will take effect Jan. 1.
Library of Congress Chief Retires Under Fire

By MICHAEL D. SHEAR

The move comes after the library's leader, James H. Billington, presided over a series of management and technology failures documented by government watchdog agencies.
T. Bella Dinh-Zarr of the National Transportation Safety Board, testified Wednesday before a Senate panel investigating the May 12 train derailment.
No Evidence That Amtrak Engineer Used Phone During Crash, Safety Board Says

By RON NIXON

The National Transportation Safety Board has been looking at cellphone use as a possible factor in the train derailment that killed eight people last month.
Texas Officer Was Under Stress When He Arrived at Pool Party, Lawyer Says

By MANNY FERNANDEZ

Cpl. David Eric Casebolt, the McKinney police officer shown on video shoving a black girl to the ground outside a pool party, on Wednesday offered an apology through his lawyer.
For more U.S. news, go to NYTimes.com/US »
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Politics
Jeb Bush addressed a meeting of the Economic Council of the Christian Democratic Union, a German political party, in Berlin on Tuesday.
Jeb Bush Says Staff Shuffle Was Based on Skills

By MICHAEL BARBARO

In his first remarks on the moves, he pleaded for patience and played down the idea that he was displeased with his standing in a crowded Republican field.
Bill Clinton spoke at a Clinton Global Initiative America meeting in Denver on Wednesday.

FIRST DRAFT

Bill Clinton Says He Will Stop Giving Paid Speeches if Hillary Wins

By ALAN RAPPEPORT

Former President Bill Clinton said that if his wife won the White House, he would no longer give paid speeches.
Senator Elizabeth Warren at a news conference on Capitol Hill on Wednesday.

FIRST DRAFT

Elizabeth Warren Calls Out Education Department Over Student Loans

By NICHOLAS FANDOS

Senator Elizabeth Warren took the Department of Education to task on Wednesday for what she called a lack of transparency and failure to protect students from for-profit colleges.
For more political news, go to NYTimes.com/Politics »
Business
Cutting aircraft emissions is among the administration's efforts to curb global warming.
E.P.A. Takes Step to Cut Emissions From Planes

By JAD MOUAWAD and CORAL DAVENPORT

The initiative by the Environmental Protection Agency is part of a broad drive by the Obama administration to combat global warming.
U.S. Shifts Stance on Drug Pricing in Pacific Trade Pact Talks, Document Reveals

By JONATHAN WEISMAN

A newly leaked Trans-Pacific Trade Partnership annex dated December 2014 reveals the Obama administration is no longer demanding protection for pharmaceutical prices.
.   Document: Annex of Proposed Pacific Trade Accord
Soon-to-be citizens at a naturalization ceremony in New York. One Republican sought a provision to prohibit future trade deals from loosening immigration laws.
Republicans Tie Their Favorite Causes to the Trade Agreement

By JONATHAN WEISMAN

Last-minute additions were appended not to the fast-track bill at the center of the fight, but to a separate bill being considered alongside it.
For more business news, go to NYTimes.com/Business »
Technology
Microsoft is making the Surface Hub touch-screen computer in Wilsonville, Ore.
Microsoft Picks Unusual Place to Make Its Giant Surface Hub: The U.S.

By NICK WINGFIELD

The touch-screen computer, which costs up to $20,000, will be manufactured in Oregon, joining a rare group of tech products that are made in America.
Timothy D. Cook, Apple's chief, at the company's developer conference on Monday. In a speech, he criticized data mining, but glossed over Apple's role.

STATE OF THE ART

What Apple's Tim Cook Overlooked in His Defense of Privacy

By FARHAD MANJOO

When Apple's chief executive gave a speech on the tech industry's privacy practices, he failed to fairly explore the benefits of free, ad-supported services.
Eric Larsen heads research in society and technology at Mercedes-Benz Research and Development in Sunnyvale, Calif. He says that while vehicles will be shared, Americans are not likely to give up their own cars.

BITS BLOG

A Futurist Looks at Where Cars Are Going

By QUENTIN HARDY

Eric Larsen, who heads research in society and technology at Mercedes-Benz Research and Development, says that family values and connectivity are important to the future of cars.
For more technology news, go to NYTimes.com/Technology »
Sports
A street market in Santiago, Chile, offered caps and scarves of the countries playing in the Copa América soccer tournament, which begins on Thursday.
Copa América Set to Begin Under a Cloud

By DAVID WALDSTEIN

The recent arrests of FIFA officials and other businessmen have shed unflattering light on the soccer event, especially since some charges involved schemes involving the Copa.
The Cavaliers' Matthew Dellavedova (8) and Timofey Mozgov defending Warriors guard Stephen Curry during Game 3.
N.B.A Finals: Cleveland Cavaliers Tired? They Should See the Other Guys

By SCOTT CACCIOLA

Injury-plagued Cleveland is taking inspiration from its star, LeBron James, who has praised teammates like Matthew Dellavedova for their contributions against the Golden State Warriors.
Timofey Mozgov, dunking over Festus Ezeli, was once an undrafted free agent, but he is proving his value in the playoffs.
N.B.A. Finals: Cavaliers' Supporting Cast Has Been Overlooked

By BENJAMIN HOFFMAN

LeBron James's unheralded teammates are playing their roles well, both offensively and defensively.
For more sports news, go to NYTimes.com/Sports »
Arts
The Human Rights Watch Film Festival Explores Social Justice

By STEPHEN HOLDEN

This annual film series, presented by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the IFC Center, provides a global perspective and a commitment to showcasing work about thorny issues.
Ileana Grams-Moog at the North Carolina factory where Moog synthesizers are made.
Moog Music Gives Employees More Control

By JOE COSCARELLI

The company, which makes the prized Moog synthesizer in North Carolina, is instituting a stock ownership plan for workers.
Bertie Carvel portrays Jonathan Strange in
Review: 'Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell,' a Battlefield Where Magic Is the Weapon of Choice

By MIKE HALE

This BBC America mini-series focuses on two magicians: Norrell, a humorless man obsessed with scholarship, and Strange, a natural talent who becomes Norrell's student.
For more arts news, go to NYTimes.com/Arts »
New York
State corrections officers in Dannemora, N.Y., on Wednesday searching for the escapees. The decision to return to the area was not a result of any new leads, the State Police said.
Civilian Worker at New York Prison Is Questioned About Escaped Convicts

By WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM and BENJAMIN MUELLER

The employee, Joyce Mitchell, worked in the tailor shop at the prison in Dannemora, N.Y., and may have aided the escapees, Richard W. Matt and David Sweat.
The Clinton Correctional Facility wall in Dannemora, N.Y. The authorities are searching for two inmates who escaped from the prison, which residents say until now has caused them little worry.
'Everyone Has a Family Member Who Works Up There'

By JESSE McKINLEY and RICK ROJAS

The economy of Dannemora, N.Y., a town near the Canadian border, revolves around the Clinton Correctional Facility, the maximum-security prison from which two inmates escaped last week.
Pathologist Didn't Break Law in Missing-Brain Autopsy Case, Court Finds

By ANDY NEWMAN

The 5-to-2 ruling by New York State's top court overturned a jury award to the family of Jesse Shipley, who died in a car crash on Staten Island.
For more New York news, go to NYTimes.com/NewYork »
Fashion & Style
The Bergdorf Goodman personal shopper Betty Halbreich, left, and Linda Rodin, a stylist, center, with the illustrator Donald Robertson, by one of his works in the women's department.
Seeing Fashion With a Sketchpad and Markers

By STEVEN KURUTZ

An unlikely new tribe of fashion-world darlings has emerged, as illustration is again en vogue in the digital age.

UNBUTTONED

Why I'm Breaking Up With the Apple Watch

By VANESSA FRIEDMAN

After a six-week dalliance with a handsome, much-ballyhooed new suitor (a.k.a. the Apple Watch), a writer decides to move on.
Thomas Morton, left, and Hamilton Morris, colleagues at Vice Media, share an apartment in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Their bedrooms are side-by-side cubbies built under a plywood structure.
Nesting, the Vice Media Way

By PENELOPE GREEN

Searching for zombie powder, interviewing PCP makers; it's all in a day's work for two correspondents for Vice Media who share a Brooklyn loft.
For more fashion news, go to NYTimes.com/Fashion »
Obituaries
Paul Bacon reading
Paul Bacon, 91, Whose Book Jackets Drew Readers and Admirers, Is Dead

By ALEXANDRA ALTER

Mr. Bacon designed the covers of "Slaughterhouse-Five" and "Jaws" in a style that came to be known as the "Big Book Look," a bold, minimalist design with prominent lettering and a small conceptual image.
During World War II, Marguerite Patten became known as the queen of ration-book cuisine for her simple, satisfying creations.
Marguerite Patten, Acclaimed British Food Writer and Home Economist, Dies at 99

By WILLIAM GRIMES

Starting out during the rationing years of the 1940s and 1950s, Ms. Patten, who wrote more than 170 books, was one of Britain's first television chefs.
Eugene C. Kennedy in 1969, the year he joined the psychology department at Loyola University in Chicago.
Eugene Kennedy, a Voice for Change in the Catholic Church, Dies at 86

By WILLIAM GRIMES

Mr. Kennedy, who left the priesthood in 1977, was a teacher, writer and social scientist who believed the hierarchical structure of the church put it out of touch with the modern world.
For more obituaries, go to NYTimes.com/Obituaries »
Editorials

EDITORIAL

Closing Off Abortion Rights

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

In Texas and across the country, women's reproductive health is at risk.
A demonstration in support of Mr. Badawi in Paris last month.

EDITORIAL

Clemency for Raif Badawi

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

A depraved sentence of 1,000 lashes for a Saudi blogger is a huge disgrace for Saudi rulers.
Smaran Ghosal as the adolescent Apu in

EDITORIAL OBSERVER

A Universal Story Told in a Bengali Village

By VIKAS BAJAJ

Tales from a particular place and a now-distant time retain their emotional impact and their connection to all people.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »
Op-Ed

OP-ED CONTRIBUTORS

Don't Weaken the F.D.A.'s Drug Approval Process

By GREGG GONSALVES, MARK HARRINGTON and DAVID A. KESSLER

The 21st Century Cures Act could substantially lower the standards for approval of many medical products, potentially placing patients at unnecessary risk.

OP-ED COLUMNIST

Battle of the Abortion Decisions

By GAIL COLLINS

It's been a dismal stretch across the nation for a woman's right to choose, but there is some good news from Idaho. Who knew?

OP-ED COLUMNIST

From Caitlyn Jenner to a Brooklyn High School

By NICHOLAS KRISTOF

Caitlyn Jenner has started an important national conversation about transgender issues, and none too soon for these Brooklyn high schoolers.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »

ON THIS DAY

On June 11, 1942, the United States and the Soviet Union signed a lend lease agreement to aid the Soviet war effort in World War II.

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It soon became clear that the divisive figure did not have unanimous support among Hartford’s black pastors.
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It soon became clear that the divisive figure did not have unanimous support among Hartford’s black pastors.
Top Stories

Watch: Intense New Video Reveals What Happened Before Cops Arrived At Texas Pool Party

Neighbor says the police officer deserves a medal for his actions.

Franklin Graham Facing MAJOR Backlash After Revealing This Plan for Christians

Popular evangelist makes controversial comment on Facebook, causes quite a stir.

Mike Rowe Gets Told To 'Drop The Right-Wing Propaganda' And Responds PERFECTLY

He rebuked the notion that he is peddling “right-wing propaganda.”

One Line Clint Eastwood Just Said About ‘Caitlyn’ Jenner Drew Immediate Reaction

Criticism, however, was but a small percentage of the overall reaction to Eastwood’s remark.

Bill Clinton Got Huge Payday From Foreign Company That Reportedly Scammed Its Employees

And guess who approved his speech in the State Department?

Army Vet Fighting ISIS Heard What Obama Just Said, And He Is NOT Happy

“If you’re this far into something and you haven’t come up with a complete strategy, you have no strategy.”

Pre-School Book Promotes ‘Heartwarming’ Tale Of Little Boy Who Makes His Own Clothes…It’s Not What You Think

The book was published in March.

Federal Judge Issues Order To IRS That’ll Strike Fear Into Lois Lerner’s Heart

"The Obama IRS...lied to a federal judge."

A Syrian Group Just Hacked The U.S. Army Website And Left This Mysterious Message

The group has breached other military and media websites in the past.

Dem Sen. Claire McCaskill Falls For Fake Congressman’s Twitter Account – Still Manages To Blame Conservatives For Her Mistake

She might have saved herself some subsequent embarrassment had she checked Georgia's district map.

Huckabee Advocates Strong Response To China Cyber Attack

He then bemoaned the current administration’s perceived unwillingness to protect the privacy of Americans and our allies around the world.

Here’s How Obama’s Welfare System May Be Funding Terrorists Who Target Our Military

Some of the ill-gotten gains were sent to...

As Supreme Court Prepares For Major Obamacare Decision, Republicans Unveil Plans

"If you want to escape Obamacare, this sets you free.”

Ex-WH Adviser Makes Ludicrous Claim About Obama, Instantly Gets Trampled In A Big Way

Maybe he was trying to be funny?

She Was Fired For Talking About The Bible To Lesbian Coworker – But She Just Scored A Big Victory

There was no hatred or animosity in her heart, Mbuyi maintained, just a desire to share what she believes to be a fundamental truth about the nature of sin.

Read More Top Stories

Videos

WATCH: The Bold Black Pastor Who Called Out ‘Pimp’ Al Sharpton Just Doubled Down

"...hypocritical and contradictory to the cause..."

WATCH: Ted Cruz Just Revealed What His First Act As President Would Be

He went on to land another punchline, this time invoking his own ethnic heritage.

State Department Spokesman Tries To Control Damage After Obama’s Latest Gaffe, But Screws Up

“The ends are very clear..."

WATCH: The Shocking Secret This Duck Dynasty Star Just Revealed Relates Him To The Duggars

A secret he kept hidden for years...

Here’s The TV Commercial That Just Caused Franklin Graham’s Ministry To Make This Bold Move

Their decision was met with mixed reactions.

WATCH: Did This Black Pastor Just Call For Terror Attacks Against Texas ‘Pool Party’ Police?

'We're setting the stage..."

WATCH: Angry Woman Lashes Out In FIERY Rant About True Heroes That PC Crowd Will HATE

Woman angry over Jenner debate lashes out on YouTube.

Watch: Black Man Tries To Help His Community. Here’s What They Did To Him

Moon confirmed that the black community is in peril, explaining that those who attacked him could not even understand why they were doing it.

Watch: Fox Host IMMEDIATELY Ends Interview After Activist Says These 8 Words

Tempers flare over controversial topic of fracking.

Watch: A Healthy 4-Yr-Old Boy Just Died After Eating This Common Household Spice

“...It was like he was having a seizure and just collapsed.”

Watch: Former WH Chief Of Staff Rips Into Obama For This One ‘Dumb’ And ‘Insensitive’ Decision

“This administration is tone deaf."

WATCH: Top Hollywood Comedian Just Slammed Political Correctness In A HUGE Way

"It’s anti-comedy. It’s more about PC-nonsense."

Here Is Why There Will Be No Peace Between Israel And The Palestinians

Until now, the Palestinian Authority has always denied that it is...

Watch: 2 Murderers Just Escaped From Prison And Left Behind One Creepy Item

People have been sharing their reactions on Twitter, which include comparisons to a blockbuster film.

Watch: Vet Gives This Gift To Country Music Star. And Not A Dry Eye Was In Sight.

In an effort to demonstrate what Gilbert’s advocacy meant to him, Patterson decided to give him a deeply personal gift.

Watch More Videos

Cartoons

Spying On Americans

How Will Oprah Keep Up With Kardashians?

Kick Me!

TSA Batman

See More Cartoons

Opinion Articles

In Times Of Trouble (An Open Letter To Myself)

Are you a sinner? This letter is for you too...
By A.J. Castellitto

On This Day 72 Years Ago, The Practice Of Withholding Taxes From Paychecks Began

The result of an emergency measure passed during World War II.
By William Federer

Exposed: Putin And Buffett’s War On U.S. Pipelines

Billionaires use secretive foundations to finance anti-pipeline protests – and get even richer.
By Paul Driessen

Is The U.S. Really More Respected Now?

Our enemies don’t fear us, as the administration proves their impotence on a nearly daily basis.
By Richard Larsen

Finding Common Ground In The Fight For Privacy

Support for the LEADs Act provides a perfect opportunity for members of the GOP to demonstrate support for privacy rights while limiting the power of the federal government.
By Jack Inglewood

The New Transgender Agenda: Cultural Confusion

Christianity no longer guides our culture.
By David Fiorazo

America, Who Told You That Hillary Is Gonna Win In 2016?

Here we go with a bit of a flashback so you can understand how those who mean to rule over you with the use of the state-controlled media operate.
By Bradlee Dean

California Gun Rules Challenged In Court

California forces its residents to wait 10 days after a purchase before a lawful buyer may acquire a lawful firearm.
By William J Olson, P.C.

Jerry Seinfeld Claims Liberal Colleges Are Killing Comedy Because...

"They just want to use these words. ‘That’s racist. That’s sexist. That’s prejudice.’ They don’t even know..."
By Steven Crowder

Uproar Over New 'Racist, Police Brutality' Video! What ACTUALLY Happened...

Maybe, just maybe, this was an officer doing his job, a job that few others are willing to do.
By Steven Crowder

Read More Opinion Articles

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The New York TimesMost Popular | Video |

Today's Headlines

Tuesday, June 9, 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
Ari Zivotofsky and his son, Menachem, in Washington last fall. The boy's passport listed his birthplace as Jerusalem, not Israel.
Supreme Court Backs White House on Jerusalem Passport Dispute

By ADAM LIPTAK

The justices, ruling 6 to 3, rejected an attempt by Congress to require the State Department to indicate in passports that Jerusalem is part of Israel.
In an image taken from a video on a militant website, the Islamic State's leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, last year in Mosul, Iraq.
A Raid on ISIS Yields a Trove of Intelligence

By ERIC SCHMITT

Laptops, cellphones and other materials were seized in a Delta Force commando operation in Syria last month, officials said.
Tamir Rice, 12, was shot and killed by a Cleveland police officer last November.
Cleveland Leaders Bypass Prosecutors to Seek Charge in Tamir Rice Case

By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT and MATT APUZZO

Community leaders will invoke a seldom-used Ohio law and go directly to a judge to request murder charges against the police officers in the shooting.
For more top news, go to NYTimes.com »
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Editors' Picks

WORLD

Graphic GRAPHIC: The Global Struggle to Respond to the Worst Refugee Crisis in Generations
Eleven million people were uprooted by violence last year. Photos and maps show the international response to what has become the worst migration crisis since World War II.

OPINION | OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

Creating a Market for Refugees in Europe

By PETER H. SCHUCK

How a 'cap and trade' system would be more humanitarian.

QUOTATION OF THE DAY

"Now the government is belatedly trying to mend the fence after the cow had already been stolen."
CHOI CHANG-WOO, head of a civic group in South Korea, on the government's promise of an "all-out national response" to the MERS virus after weeks of restricting information.
Today's Video
Video VIDEO: Digital Vintage
Ever wonder what the iPhone's grandparents looked like? Chances are Lonnie Mimms has one in the massive collection of vintage computers he keeps outside of Atlanta.
Video VIDEO: Peering Into a Black Hole
Astronomers hope the Event Horizon Telescope, a synchronized network of radio antennas as large as the Earth, will take the first ever picture of a black hole, an abyss so deep no light can escape.
Video VIDEO: ScienceTake | A Compass in a Fly's Brain
In a very small region of a fruit fly's very small brain, a circle of neurons helps the fly know where it is pointed.
For more video, go to NYTimes.com/Video »
World
A teacher took a student's temperature in Seoul on Monday.
MERS Virus's Path: One Man, Many South Korean Hospitals

By CHOE SANG-HUN

The MERS virus found ideal conditions to spread quickly in South Korea, where emergency rooms are known to cram seats and beds closely together and patients hospital shop.
Prospect of Instability Looms as Turkish Voters Deny Erdogan a Majority

By TIM ARANGO

With his party's control of Parliament lost, Mr. Erdogan may have to shelve his plans for a new Turkish Constitution and a more powerful presidency.
Jaime Rodríguez Calderón, center, an independent who will be governor of Nuevo León State. The governing party will keep its majority in the lower house of Congress.
Tough-Talking El Bronco Wins Mexican Governor's Race

By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD

Jaime Rodríguez Calderón, running as an independent, trounced his competition in the contest for governor of Nuevo León State, according to preliminary official results.
For more world news, go to NYTimes.com/World »
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U.S.
Ex-South Carolina Officer Is Indicted in Shooting Death of Black Man

By ALAN BLINDER and TIMOTHY WILLIAMS

Michael T. Slager had been jailed on a murder charge since April 7, when a video of him shooting a black man eight times in North Charleston became public.
Matthew Vines, center, a gay Christian activist, met with influential evangelicals including Frank Sontag, left, last month at Biola University in La Mirada, Calif.
Evangelicals Open Door to Debate on Gay Rights

By LAURIE GOODSTEIN

Encouraged by younger Christians and cultural shifts, some church leaders are having what they describe as unprecedented discussions about homosexuality.
. Christians Debate Bible Verses on Homosexuality
Protesters gathered Monday at a swimming pool in McKinney, Tex., where a police officer last week was recorded throwing a teenage girl to the ground.
Jarring Image of Police's Use of Force at Texas Pool Party

By CAROL COLE-FROWE and RICHARD FAUSSET

A cellphone video showing a white officer shoving a black teenage girl to the ground in McKinney, Tex., and waving his gun at other partygoers has set off another debate over race and police tactics.
For more U.S. news, go to NYTimes.com/US »
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Politics
Senator John McCain has put together a bill that includes more money and supplies for Ukrainian forces besieged by rebels.
With Chairmanship, McCain Seizes Chance to Reshape Pentagon Agenda

By JENNIFER STEINHAUER

As head of the Armed Services Committee, Senator John McCain is trying to control military expenses, while enabling priorities like more aid for Ukrainian defenses.
Obama Is Optimistic Justices Will Let Health Care Law Stand

By MICHAEL D. SHEAR

At a news conference, President Obama discussed the Supreme Court's ruling, set for this month, on a challenge to health care subsidies in federally run marketplaces.
Jeb Bush will begin a tour of Europe on Tuesday, just days before he is set to declare his presidential candidacy.
Berlin, Leery of One Bush, Prepares to Meet Jeb

By ALISON SMALE and MICHAEL BARBARO

Residents of the German capital express unease over the last name of the former Florida governor, who is expected to declare his presidential candidacy.
For more political news, go to NYTimes.com/Politics »
Business
Reykjavik, Iceland's capital. The nation's capital controls were meant to last six months.
Iceland to Lift Capital Controls Imposed After Financial Crisis

By JENNY ANDERSON and CHAD BRAY

The release of the capital controls will be watched carefully as an important case study in how to manage a crisis.
An Uber driver in Beijing. In late May, Uber said it had created over 60,000 jobs in China in the last month.
Uber Spends Heavily to Establish Itself in China

By PAUL MOZUR and MIKE ISAAC

Faced with homegrown competition in China, the ride-hailing service is offering its Chinese drivers bonuses of up to three times fares.
. Sinosphere Blog: A Rapper's Ode to Uber, Chengdu Gangster Style
Anshu Jain, left, and Jürgen Fitschen. The bank has characterized their departures as self-sacrificial, not under pressure.
Regulator Said to Have Pressed for Exit of Deutsche Chiefs

By JACK EWING and PETER EAVIS

German regulators played a role in the departures at the bank, according to two people briefed on the events that contributed to the leadership upheaval.
For more business news, go to NYTimes.com/Business »
Technology
Outside Apple's developer conference in San Francisco on Monday.
Apple Music Is Unveiled, Along With Upgrades for iPhone and Mac OS

By BRIAN X. CHEN

The new streaming service will cost $10 a month, or $15 for a family version, and will be offered alongside an overhauled iTunes Radio.
. Apple Developer Conference Highlights and Analysis
A wounded robot at the Robotics Challenge.

BITS BLOG

Looking for Robots That Will Cooperate, Not Terminate

By JOHN MARKOFF

A Darpa robotic competition in California focused on machines that can perform ordinary tasks that were the furthest thing from the killer automatons of science fiction.
Square's new credit card reader operates wirelessly for merchants who want to accept contact-less mobile payments.

BITS BLOG

Square Unveils Mobile Wallet-Friendly Credit Card Reader

By MIKE ISAAC

Square announced a new credit card reader that accepts mobile wallets like Apple Pay.
For more technology news, go to NYTimes.com/Technology »
Sports
United States midfielder Megan Rapinoe after scoring her second goal against Australia.

UNITED STATES 3, AUSTRALIA 1

Women's World Cup: U.S. Shows Unease; Hope Solo Puts a Stop to It

By JERÉ LONGMAN

Two goals by Megan Rapinoe and several key saves by Solo, who has had trouble off the field, helped the Americans recover from a shaky start against Australia.
LeBron James after the Cavaliers won Game 2 of the N.B.A. finals in overtime. Never a high-volume scorer, James took 73 shots in the first two games.

ON PRO BASKETBALL

LeBron James Has Nothing to Prove, but He's Proving It Anyway

By SCOTT CACCIOLA

James, who has already won championships, fights to keep the Cavaliers competitive in the N.B.A. finals.
Derek Jeter, at his final home game, was cited as a role model by Brendan Rodgers, a shortstop drafted third over all Monday.

ON BASEBALL

At 50, Major League Draft Has Sharpened Its Focus

By TYLER KEPNER

Top high school prospects, like the four who were in New York for the opening day of the draft, are the focus of greater attention today than they were years ago.
For more sports news, go to NYTimes.com/Sports »
Arts
Artenol's mission, in part, is to talk about the arts in language intelligible to an educated, nonspecialist reader.
Alexander Melamid Begins Artenol, an Art Magazine

By WILLIAM GRIMES

An artist known for his stunts professes despair over the state of art criticism and introduces a publication that strives for clarity and subversion.
Foreground, from left, Barbara Whitman, Alison Bechdel, Kristin Caskey and Mike Isaacson accepting the Tony for best musical for
'Fun Home' Finds That Winning a Tony Is the Best Way to Market a Musical

By MICHAEL PAULSON

The show's producers said that ticket sales quadrupled on both Sunday and Monday after it was named best new musical.
Kristin Chenoweth in a Zac Posen gown.
When Fashion Met the Tonys, Who Won?

By VANESSA FRIEDMAN

There's no question most of the winners and nominees looked better than ever, but the co-dependent relationship between the industry and Hollywood was notably absent.
For more arts news, go to NYTimes.com/Arts »
New York
From left, Mr. Heastie; Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo; Alphonso B. David, chief counsel to the governor; and James A. Yates, chief counsel to the speaker, at a news conference on ethics reform in Albany in March.
Carl Heastie's Campaign Spending Blurs Line Between Political and Personal

By RUSS BUETTNER

Records filed by the New York State Assembly speaker suggest he has often used political donations to burnish his lifestyle, with money spent on such things as car repairs and karaoke parties.
Jeff Balerno, a state forest ranger, climbing a fence on Monday as the authorities combed the area around Dannemora, N.Y., in search of two escaped killers.
Hunt for Escaped Killers Expands; They Probably 'Had Help,' Cuomo Says

By ANDY NEWMAN and J. DAVID GOODMAN

Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said that the two fugitives who escaped from a New York prison could be "anywhere in the country."
.   Photographs: How 2 Murderers Escaped
Andrew Cuomo
Cuomo Finds Prison Emergency Is Also an Opportunity

By ALEXANDER BURNS

Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has toured the airwaves over the last several days, hurling himself into a crisis generated neither by lawmaking procedures in Albany, nor by a federal prosecutor's office.
For more New York news, go to NYTimes.com/NewYork »
Science
The Large Millimeter Telescope on the peak of the Sierra Negra volcano in Mexico.
Black Hole Hunters

By DENNIS OVERBYE

Aiming to make the first portrait of the hungry monster at the center of our galaxy, astronomers built "a telescope as big as the world."
Bright flares are visible near the event horizon of a super-massive black hole at the center of the Milky Way.
An Earthling's Guide to Black Holes

By JOANNA KLEIN

Welcome to the place of no return - a region in space where the gravitational pull is so strong that not even light can escape it. This is a black hole.

THE UPSHOT

The Evidence Points to a Better Way to Fight Insomnia

By AUSTIN FRAKT

A review of data shows that cognitive behavior therapy works better than sleep medications.
For more science news, go to NYTimes.com/Science »
Obituaries
Roger Vergé preparing a lobster dish in 1979.
Roger Vergé, a Founder of Nouvelle Cuisine, Dies at 85

By WILLIAM GRIMES

His adaptation of Provençal cooking incorporated the flavors of Africa and the Caribbean.
Alan Bond, right, and Prime Minister Bob Hawke of Australia after the country's comeback win in the 1983 America's Cup.
Alan Bond, Yachting Hero and Convict, Dies at 77

By MICHELLE INNIS

Mr. Bond funded Australia's victory in the 1983 America's Cup, but several of his other business ventures led to convictions of misconduct and the largest corporate fraud in Australian history.
Dolores Spikes
Dolores Spikes, Trailblazer as President of Southern University, Dies at 78

By WILLIAM GRIMES

As president of the Southern University and A&M College System in Louisiana, Ms. Spikes opposed court-ordered desegregation of the state's colleges to protect Southern's identity as a black institution.
For more obituaries, go to NYTimes.com/Obituaries »
Editorials
Supporters of the People's Democratic Party at a rally in Diyarbakir, Turkey.

EDITORIAL

Democracy Wins in Turkey

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Voters made clear that they would not allow President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, an increasingly authoritarian leader, to amass even more power.

EDITORIAL

The Supreme Court's Jerusalem Passport Case

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

The court is right. The power to recognize foreign governments belongs to the president.
The San Diego Pride Parade in 2014.

EDITORIAL

What Doctors Say About Transgender Troops

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

The administration should listen to the medical profession when it says there is no valid reason to bar transgender people from service.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »
Op-Ed

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

When It's O.K. to Pay for a Story

By KELLY MCBRIDE

The WikiLeaks bounty for a TPP leak challenges us to rethink media ethics.

OP-ED COLUMNIST

The Mobilization Error

By DAVID BROOKS

Hillary Rodham Clinton has chosen a campaign strategy that is bad for the nation and probably won't work.

OP-ED COLUMNIST

Alabama Football Follies

By JOE NOCERA

Would it still be a real university without football?
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »

ON THIS DAY

On June 9, 1954, Army counsel Joseph N. Welch confronted Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy during the Senate-Army Hearings over McCarthy's attack on a member of Welch's law firm, Frederick G. Fisher. Said Welch: "Have you no sense of decency, sir? At long last, have you left no sense of decency?''

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The New York TimesMost Popular | Video |

Today's Headlines

Sunday, June 7, 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
Navy SEAL training exercises carried out in Coronado, Calif., include rapid descents from helicopters.
The Secret History of SEAL Team 6: Quiet Killings and Blurred Lines

By MARK MAZZETTI, NICHOLAS KULISH, CHRISTOPHER DREW, SERGE F. KOVALESKI, SEAN D. NAYLOR and JOHN ISMAY

The unit best known for killing Osama bin Laden has been converted into a global manhunting machine with limited outside oversight.
. Inside SEAL Team 6
J. Dennis Hastert, the former speaker of the House of Representatives, in his Capitol Hill office in March 2007.
Dennis Hastert Rushed to Make Money as Payouts Grew

By ERIC LIPTON

The former speaker of the House became more active in his lobbying firm at about the time that, according to a federal indictment, he began making large payments to a man known as "Individual A."
.   Documents: Hastert, From Public Servant to Rainmaker
Hillary Rodham Clinton in Columbia, S.C., last month. If she is nominated, she does not plan to campaign much in red states.
Hillary Clinton Traces Friendly Path, Troubling Party

By JONATHAN MARTIN and MAGGIE HABERMAN

Ms. Clinton appears to be dispensing with the nationwide strategy that won her husband two terms in the White House, opting instead to retrace Barack Obama's narrower path.
For more top news, go to NYTimes.com »
ADVERTISEMENT
Editors' Picks

SPORTS

American Pharoah Wins Belmont Stakes and Triple Crown

By JOE DRAPE

For the first time since Affirmed in 1978, a horse swept the Triple Crown races. American Pharoah became the 12th horse to accomplish the feat.

OPINION | OPINION

What Makes a Woman?

By ELINOR BURKETT

There is a collision course between feminists and transgender activists.

QUOTATION OF THE DAY

"If you run a campaign trying to appeal to 60 to 70 percent of the electorate, you're not going to run a very compelling campaign for the voters you need."
DAVID PLOUFFE, a top Obama strategist, describing Hillary Rodham Clinton's plan to focus on left-leaning states in her run for the White House.
Today's Video

ON THE STREET

Bill Cunningham | Fringe Movement

By BILL CUNNINGHAM

The fringe skirt adds motion to fashion and is ina contrast to the movement to put women into a functional uniform.
For more video, go to NYTimes.com/Video »
World
Bosnians greeted Pope Francis on Saturday as he was driven to a stadium in Sarajevo where he said Mass before 65,000 people.
Pope Francis Urges a Divided Bosnia to Heal, Declaring 'War Never Again!'

By RICK LYMAN

Pope Francis praised the progress Bosnia made since the bloody ethnic conflict of the 1990s and urged an end to the sectarian conflicts around the world.
. Get New York Times' WhatsApp Alerts on Pope's Latin America Trip
Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia.
Surprising Saudi Rises as a Prince Among Princes

By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK

Prince Mohammed bin Salman, 29, has swiftly accumulated more power than any prince has ever held, and he has become one of Saudi Arabia's most visible leaders.
Bluefin tuna were surrounded by fishing nets in an ancient technique known as almadraba, as the fishing season opened off southern Spain.
Spanish Tuna Fishing Melds to Japan's Taste, Endangering a 3,000-Year-Old Technique

By RAPHAEL MINDER

In response to fishing quotas and consumer demand, companies that run the almadraba are shifting to ranching to help fatten the tuna, rather than lifting and killing their catch.
For more world news, go to NYTimes.com/World »
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U.S.
President Obama offering his condolences to Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. during a funeral service Saturday for Beau Biden.
Obama Delivers Eulogy for Beau Biden

By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS

For Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., who lost a daughter and his first wife decades ago, it was another day of grief as he buried a son in Delaware.
Anthony DiTullio successfully addressed his painkiller addiction at a drug-treatment facility.
Painkillers Resist Abuse, but Experts Still Worry

By ALAN SCHWARZ

As thousands of addicts still find ways to abuse OxyContin and similar painkillers, called abuse-deterrent formulations, some experts caution that the protections are misunderstood.
Gov. Sam Brownback of Kansas last month. He signed a courts budget last week tying funding to a restriction on state justices.
Courts Budget Intensifies Kansas Dispute Over Powers

By JOHN ELIGON

In an effort to ensure courts would remain open during a budget impasse, Gov. Sam Brownback of Kansas signed into law a bill that funds the judiciary as long as it doesn't strike down a 2014 law that reduced some if its authority.
For more U.S. news, go to NYTimes.com/US »
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Politics
Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin, left, with Senator Joni Ernst of Iowa as her fund-raiser began in Des Moines on Saturday.
As G.O.P. Courts Iowa, Party Debates Relevance of State

By JONATHAN MARTIN and ASHLEY PARKER

Seven presidential hopefuls joined Senator Joni Ernst for her inaugural pig roast and motorcycle ride, heaping praise on the freshman lawmaker.
Ben Carson in Boone, Iowa, on Saturday. He was among seven Republican presidential hopefuls who appeared at a fund-raiser there.

FIRST DRAFT

Ben Carson's Nascent Campaign Faces Personnel Turmoil

By ASHLEY PARKER

Mr. Carson's presidential campaign has lost several top staff members just a month after he announced he would seek the Republican nomination.
President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia claimed a meeting last month with Secretary of State John Kerry in Sochi as a diplomatic triumph, creating a challenge for President Obama.
Task for Obama at Group of 7 Is to Reinforce Isolation of Russia

By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS

With Russia claiming a diplomatic victory after Secretary of State John Kerry's visit, the challenge for the Obama administration becomes making sure Euro-American solidarity continues.
For more political news, go to NYTimes.com/Politics »
Business
The winning robot, from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, can kneel and drive on wheels in addition to walking.
Korean Robot Makers Walk Off With $2 Million Prize

By JOHN MARKOFF

The robots were graded on their ability to complete eight tasks, including driving a vehicle, opening a door and operating a portable drill.
Sam Martin belongs to a small group of emerging transgender authors who are writing children's literature in hopes of filling the void that they felt as young readers.
Transgender Children's Books Fill a Void and Break a Taboo

By ALEXANDRA ALTER

Mainstream publishing houses are increasingly giving visibility to transgender authors and their books, which are aimed at broader and younger audiences.
For more business news, go to NYTimes.com/Business »
Sports
The crowded platform at Belmont Station after last year's race. The Long Island Rail Road made improvements to the station that were intended to help ease the crowding this year.
Adjustments Ease Crowd at Racetrack

By MATT FLEGENHEIMER

After last year's unwieldy crowds, insufficient food supplies and long train delays, new preparations were well received by visitors to Belmont Park.
The Triple Crown trophy, which was commissioned in 1950 by the Thoroughbred Racing Association and created by Cartier jewelers.
An Elusive Trophy, Gleaming Through the Smudges of Hands and Lips

By BILL PENNINGTON

For 37 long years, as the Triple Crown trophy waited for a permanent home, those handling it almost always did so wearing cotton gloves. "It shows fingerprints easily," an executive said.
With her victory Saturday, Serena Williams stands third on the career list for major singles titles, behind Margaret Court (24) and Steffi Graf (22).
Third Time Is a Chore as Serena Williams Wins French Open Title

By CHRISTOPHER CLAREY

Williams overcame illness and shakiness to beat Lucie Safarova for her fifth three-set win in Paris, more than she had in any of her previous 19 runs to a Grand Slam singles title.
For more sports news, go to NYTimes.com/Sports »
Arts
Philippe Parreno at the Park Avenue Armory, where his work
In Philippe Parreno's 'H{N)Y P N(Y}OSIS,' Art Is the Big Idea

By RANDY KENNEDY

The artist prepares to open his largest exhibition to date in the United States, at the Park Avenue Armory.
A hungry star invented for
'Jurassic World' Puts Colin Trevorrow in the Driver's Seat

By BROOKS BARNES

The director Colin Trevorrow had one feature to his name when Steven Spielberg hired him for "Jurassic World."
Adjusting to a World That Won't Laugh With You

By A. O. SCOTT

In an angry and polarized social climate, humor has become as divisive a force as any other. It can also be a catalyst for arguments about issues we'd rather avoid.
For more arts news, go to NYTimes.com/Arts »
New York
David Sweat
New York Prison Escape Stirs Painful Memories for Victim's Father

By J. DAVID GOODMAN and LIAM STACK

David Sweat, one of the inmates who escaped from a New York prison, was convicted of shooting and killing a Broome County, N.Y., deputy sheriff in 2002.
Helen Moses and Howie Zeimer live in a nursing home in the Bronx.
A Group Portrait of New York's 'Oldest Old'

By JOHN LELAND

People age 85 and above are one of the city's fastest growing groups, but they are almost invisible. Six New Yorkers share their stories of love, pain and abrupt change.
. The Faces of '85 and Up'
For more New York news, go to NYTimes.com/NewYork »
Fashion & Style
Foster Huntington outside the Octagon, one of two treehouses he built with his buddies on property his family owns near the Columbia River Gorge in Washington state.
Escape to Bro-topia

By STEVEN KURUTZ

Foster Huntington was an up-and-comer in the New York fashion industry. Then he ditched it all and built his own personal paradise in the sky.
In a first this year, the Tony Awards preshow will be livestreamed. From left: Amanda Seyfried in 2012, Jessica Chastain in 2012 in a see-through look and Kristin Chenoweth in a bedazzled short look in 2010.
The Tony Awards Get Dressed Up

By JACOB BERNSTEIN

Fashion houses are offering clothes and services to nominees in an effort to jazz up outfits this year.
. Special Section: Tony Awards
At her first resort show, Victoria Beckham unveiled looks that she thinks her customer truly wants.
Updating: Resort 2016
Keep up with daily reviews as the resort 2016 season unfolds. See what's happening today in New York.
For more fashion news, go to NYTimes.com/Fashion »
Travel
A view of the French Basque coastline from the hills above Ciboure, a modest French fishing village.
The French Side of Basque Country

By CHRISTIAN L. WRIGHT

Spain may be the more vocal segment of the region that straddles the two countries, but in France, it also has a singular identity.
Battle ball in Forsyth Park.

WEEKEND GUIDE

36 Hours in Savannah, Ga.

By INGRID K. WILLIAMS

Yes, there are live oaks and elegant squares, but also innovative cuisine, a lively bar scene and a lush 30-acre park to stroll.
For more travel news, go to NYTimes.com/Travel »
Magazine
Welcome to the Age of Digital Imperialism

By BILL WASIK

Silicon Valley is spreading a peculiarly American vision of the future. How will the rest of the world respond?
55 Savushkina Street, last known home of the Internet Research Agency.
The Agency

By ADRIAN CHEN

From a nondescript office building in St. Petersburg, Russia, an army of well-paid "trolls" has tried to wreak havoc all around the Internet - and in real-life American communities.
For more from the Sunday magazine, go to NYTimes.com/Magazine »
Obituaries
From left, Irving Mondschein, Enrique Kistenmacher and Edward Adamczyk in a 1,500-meter heat at the 1948 London Games.
Irving Mondschein, 91, Decathlete Who Coached, Dies

By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN

Mr. Mondschein was a national champion in the decathlon and high jump in the 1940s, a college and Olympic coach and the patriarch of three generations of track and field stars.
The Weavers, left to right, Eric Darling, Ronnie Gilbert, Lee Hays and Fred Hellerman in December 1958 in Greenwich Village.
Ronnie Gilbert, Folk Singer for the Weavers, Dies at 88

By BRUCE WEBER

Ms. Gilbert, as a member of the Weavers, helped propel folk music to wide popularity and establish its power as an agent of social change.
For more obituaries, go to NYTimes.com/Obituaries »
Editorials

EDITORIAL

Hackers Can Be Fought Without Violating Americans' Rights

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

It is encouraging that more members of Congress have begun championing privacy in national security debates.
An offshore gas platform in the North Sea, operated by Statoil, Norway's biggest energy company.

EDITORIAL

The Case for a Carbon Tax

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

A carbon emissions tax is an easy, effective approach to climate change, steering companies and consumers toward lower-emission and renewable sources.
Tom Wheeler, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission.

EDITORIAL

The F.C.C. Should Help the Poor Get Online

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

A proposal to extend the Lifeline phone-subsidy program to help the poor gain access to high-speed Internet service is a good, though modest, idea.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »
Op-Ed

DOWNLOAD

Arthur Goldhammer

By KATE MURPHY

A French translator on keeping up with slang through TV shows and programming computers for fun.

OPINION

The Deadly Combination of Heat and Humidity

By ROBERT KOPP, JONATHAN BUZAN and MATTHEW HUBER

Steamy days can defeat the body's natural cooling system, making high temperatures that much more dangerous.

OPINION

Why I Defaulted on My Student Loans

By LEE SIEGEL

I refused to waste my life to pay back a pointless and overbearing debt.
For more opinion, go to NYTimes.com/Opinion »

ON THIS DAY

On June 7, 1929, the sovereign state of Vatican City came into existence as copies of the Lateran Treaty were exchanged in Rome.

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