Editors' Picks
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.
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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.
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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. |
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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EDITORIAL
What College Applications Shouldn't Ask
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
High school disciplinary records have no place in the admissions process.
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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.
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OPINION
Our Pampered Wilderness
By CHRISTOPHER SOLOMON
Glamping is fine. Just keep it out of our parks.
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OP-ED | RICHARD A. FRIEDMAN
Infidelity Lurks in Your Genes
By RICHARD A. FRIEDMAN
Oxytocin and vasopressin affect trust and bonding.
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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.
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ON THIS DAY
On May 24, 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge, linking Brooklyn and Manhattan, was opened to traffic.
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Top News
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.
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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.
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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.
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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. |
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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!
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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. |
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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"A lot of people left because she was there. A lot of people left because she didn’t want them there." |
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"A lot of people left because she was there. A lot of people left because she didn’t want them there."
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Some inappropriate results are surfacing in Google Maps...
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The letter touches on a couple of the primary scandals related to the Clinton Foundation.
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After a campaign event, Clinton stopped and took six questions from reporters.
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He explained the real impediment prosecutors face in holding black defendants accountable.
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He will be subpoenaed for a privately transcribed interview.
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Mike Huckabee hasn't changed, but the primary calendar has. Now he aims to exploit it.
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They plan to converge on the state capitol later this month.
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The list might not be comprehensive, but it's a good start.
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Rejecting the State Department's delay tactics...
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Those loyal to ISIS waved flags, honked horns, and stopped traffic to celebrate.
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At least five fatalities and 100 injuries have been tied to the faulty airbags
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Her fiance also took to his Facebook page.
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There has been a longstanding agreement between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan over nuclear weapons.
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The event was sponsored by Rush Ministries.
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Part of the plan includes the rapid influx of Muslim refugees into the U.S.
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She was finally asked about a controversial statement she reportedly made last month.
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“This is not your traditional campaign...”
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Warning: this post contains tweets with some strong language.
By Steven Crowder
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Let's hope for either a presidential veto, or that on final passage Congress rejects this bad bill.
By Ron Paul
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This war we are fighting is still an ideological war that can be won without bloodshed.
By Marita Noon
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And, sadly, it will not bring back the lives or limbs taken by Tsarnaev's horrendous act.
By Guest Writer
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The plan is quite simple. And it should scare you.
By Cliff Kincaid
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| IN THE NEWS TODAY |
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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) |
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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) |
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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) |
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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) |
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In a new financial industry survey, more 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) |
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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) |
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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) |
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| BY THE NUMBERS |
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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. |
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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. |
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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. |
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| STOCKS TO WATCH |
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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. |
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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. |
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| WATERCOOLER |
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President Barack Obama's new personal Twitter account reached 1 million followers faster than any other, and 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. |
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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.
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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. |
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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.
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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.
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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.
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OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR
Free Trade Is Not the Enemy
By WILLIAM M. DALEY
What I learned from my experience guiding Nafta through Congress.
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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?
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OP-ED COLUMNIST
Chemo for the Planet
By JOE NOCERA
Instead of focusing on human behavior to reduce global warming, try using technology.
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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.
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About This Email
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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.
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In case you missed it, here is a compilation of the most popular posts in the past week on WesternJournalism.com. Enjoy! |
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An anonymous tip cited poor living conditions, among other things.
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Once again the Obama administration screams to the world about the supposed sins of America.
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Argues that without the Constitution, the Bill of Rights is "just words on paper.”
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"As a former senator, Clinton should know better."
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In part, she blamed an increase in secularism.
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He is reportedly on one of his most dangerous missions yet.
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Sources say Israel is actively assisting rebel forces.
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The officer cornered the suspect and then tried to place him under arrest.
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“That’s a double standard… “I’m not sure I’d vote for her for that.”
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The fast food franchise wasted no time...
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Clooney backed President Obama in 2008 and 2012.
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Maybe one day, the West will realize that freedom can’t exist for those who want to take your freedom.
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"...no movement, no politically correct hogwash or limitation of my speech is going to force me to..."
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Editors' Picks
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."
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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.
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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. |
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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.
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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."
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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?
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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OPINION
The Case for Black Doctors
By DAMON TWEEDY
Black patients are more likely to trust them, and to become healthier.
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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.
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DOWNLOAD
Cara McCarty
By KATE MURPHY
The design director on a South African jazz pianist, a British actor and the heady scent of flowers.
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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.
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