Halloween Costume ideas 2015
2019
’ a Haunted House and a Fading Way of Life ’ a Night of Memories and a Death at Dawn ’ Afghans Say. After Bombing ’ and Arizonans Admired Him For It ’ and Not Just for Humans ’ Apologizing for a Corrupt Regime ’ Artist Says. Experts Strongly Disagree. ’ Charges Would Have Been Filed ’ Democrats Race to the End of a Wild Florida Primary for Governor ’ Edie Falco Stars as the Soul of an Old Machine ’ He Said in a Low ’ Now Checking Their Privilege on Broadway ’ Rosenstein Says ’ Salsa Dancing and So Much More ’ the Buccaneers Enjoy Their Makeover ’ the Hundred Acre Wood Grows Up ’ Trump Evokes His Native New York ’ Trump Tells Montana Crowd as He Tries to Regain Control Amid Turmoil ’ What Happened to Terrell? ’ Will Leave ABC Studios in August ‘a Sword Among Lions’ ‘A Wrestler Never Dies ‘Almost Magnetically ‘Beach With No Water’ Draws Sneers in Rome. But It Has Fans ‘Bernhardt/Hamlet’ Argues ‘Better Call Saul’ Season 4 ‘Better Call Saul’ Season 4 Premiere: Cross to Bear ‘Classic Lanny’ Davis Comes Out Swinging ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ Is Not Asian Enough ‘Don’t Worry.’ Toronto Gunman’s Remark Is Revealed in Police Records. ‘Everything Has to Go Well’ ‘Gettin’ the Band Back Together’ to Close Sept. 16 ‘I Could Be Doing This All Day.’ Trump Delights in Sparring With the Press. ‘I Didn’t Know How to Stop Him’: Ohio State Abuse Scandal Widens ‘I’m Winning ‘Insecure’ Season 3 ‘Insecure’ Season 3 Premiere: The Bad Decision Index ‘Kinky Boots’ Will End Its Broadway Run in April ‘Lion King’ Puppet Specialist Charged With Manufacturing 3-D Printed Gun at Theater ‘My Wife’s Name Was Ruth ‘Really Bold Move’: W.N.B.A. Union Praises Aces’ Boycott After 25-Hour Trip ‘Say That Again?’: Prospect of Putin White House Visit Surprises Intelligence Chief ‘Sharp Objects’ Episode 3: Every Rose Has Its Thorn ‘Sharp Objects’ Episode 4: The End Zone ‘Sharp Objects’ Episode 5: The C-Word ‘Sharp Objects’ Episode 6: Dead Girls Everywhere ‘Sharp Objects’ Episode 7: Welcome to the Dollhouse ‘Sharp Objects’ Finale: Good Apple ‘Sick of Losing ‘Strategy’ May Be More Useful to Pawns Than to Kings ‘Succession’ Finale: Jeremy Strong on Kendall’s Struggles and What Comes Next ‘The Affair’ Season 4 ‘The Affair’ Season 4 Finale Recap: The Gift ‘The Deuce’ Season 2 ‘The Deuce’ Season 2 Premiere: New York ‘The Gravest Crimes Under International Law’ ‘The NEG’ Aims to Be Australia’s Latest Energy Solution. Will It Work? ‘They Can Make Anything Bad’: Trump Bashes a Familiar Foe ‘They Treated Our Men Like Goats’: Guards Who Survived Afghan Blast Sue Employers ‘Tonight Show’ Cancels Norm Macdonald Appearance After #MeToo Comments ‘Ulster American’ Wins Edinburgh Theater Prize ‘We All Put Our Hands Over Our Heads as the Card Passed From One Person to the Next’ ‘We Are Entitled to a Righteous Anger’: Catholics Return to Mass After Sex Abuse Report ‘What Does a Trucker Look Like?’ It’s Changing ‘Why Did You Leave Me?’ The Migrant Children Left Behind as Parents Are Deported « Ils crachent quand je marche dans la rue »: le « nouvel antisémitisme » en France 000 Victims of Las Vegas Shooting 11 and Married: Malaysia Spars Over Child Brides 11 Dead After Duck Boat Capsizes Near Branson 19 Noncitizens Voted Illegally in 2016 in North Carolina 1918: Pigeons 1977 2 2 Passengers Charged With Sexual Assault Aboard Aircraft as F.B.I. Cracks Down 2 Patients Die in Sheriff’s Van Submerged by Florence’s Floodwaters 2 Undercover Officers in Camden Are Ambushed and Shot at Red Light 2018 25 Years After Escobar’s Death 3 Are Charged in Toppling of ‘Silent Sam’ Statue 3 Men Are Struck by Lightning in Queens 3 Tips to Have Better Conversations 3 Years Ago 4 Key Takeaways From the Blasey and Kavanaugh Hearing 427 5 Cheap(ish) Things Every Home Should Have 5 Indigenous Australian Films (and One TV Series) Everyone Should See 5 Killed After Plane Crashes in Strip Mall Parking Lot in California 5 More Cheap(ish) Things That Could Disproportionately Improve Your Life 5 Takeaways From Bob Woodward’s Book on the Trump White House 5 Takeaways From Trump’s News Conference at the United Nations 50 Years After Prague Spring 500 Migrant Children 6 Takeaways From Michael Cohen’s Guilty Plea 60 Times Madonna Changed Our Culture 7 Golden Things 7 Key Questions as New York Moves Teenagers Out of Rikers 99.7% of Public Land Grants by Israel Go to Settlers a #MeToo Leader A $100 Billion Train: The Future of California or a Boondoggle? a Bank Official Testifies A Beach for Manhattan A Box Fell From the Sky. It Had a Note About Trump. The Police Were Not Amused. A Burst Through the Mountains Breaks Open the Tour de France a Case of Quantity Over Quality A Cast of Thousands Joins Tiger Woods on His Victory March a Category 5 Storm A Coveted Lawyer’s Juggling Act May Be Good A Day Without Sunshine A Dominican Celebration A Facebook War: Libyans Battle on the Streets and on Screens A Flurry of Activity as All of Baseball Chases the Red Sox a Founder of Jefferson Airplane A Jets Coach Has Always Supported his Son. But What About a Spot on the Team? a Last Lion of the Senate A Lethargic Gary Sanchez Costs the Yankees in Tampa Bay A Library Card Will Get You Into the Guggenheim (and 32 Other Places) a Long Island Native A Marine’s Son Takes On U.S. Military Bases in Okinawa A Mariner Slides and Dives a Memorable Match for the Wrong Reasons A Migrant Boy Rejoins His Mother A New Batsman for Pakistan a New Face Presses Her Democratic Opponent a New Prosecutor ‘Gives Us Hope’ 4 Years After Shooting A New Spotify Initiative Makes the Big Record Labels Nervous a Northern Trust Win That’s Not Like Him A One-Two Punch Puts Trump Back on His Heels A Pitchers’ Duel Lifts the Braves Over the Mets a Pragmatic Conservative A President With No Shame and a Party With No Spine A Push for 3-D Weapons by One of the World’s ‘Most Dangerous People’ A Quebec Comedian Is Happy to Offend in Multiple Languages A Rebuilt Liverpool Hopes to Reach New Heights With Its Soul Intact A Relaxed Noah Syndergaard Throws First Complete Game as Mets Win A Road Runs Through Matt Lauer’s New Zealand Ranch. Access Is an Issue. A Show About Indigenous Canadians Has a Glaring Omission: Indigenous Canadian Actors A Showdown in South Bend A Spy Story: Sergei Skripal Was a Little Fish. He Had a Big Enemy. A Surprising Bid for Remington A Swastika on a Church Bell: A Village Splits on How to Confront Nazi Past A Throwback Champion for the Modern Champions League A Timeline Showing the Full Scale of Russia’s Unprecedented Interference in the 2016 Election A Top Syrian Rocket Scientist Is Blown Up a Top University Lacks Just One Thing: Students A Tumultuous 24 Hours: How Jeff Flake Delayed a Vote on Kavanaugh A Tumultuous Week for Justin Trudeau: The Canada Letter a Veteran Sex Crimes Prosecutor a Warning of Trouble Ahead a Writer of Many Contradictions and Obvious Greatness A Yankees Win Loses its Luster Thanks to a Closer Appearing Human A Year After Hurricane Harvey A.J. Schirack Aaron Boone Turns Dramatic Aaron Judge Is Learning How a Tiny Bone Can Derail a Season Aaron Nola Bolsters His Credentials as the Phillies Edge the Mets Abigail Fisch About 2 Million Low-Income Americans Would Lose Benefits Under House Farm Bill Accusations Draw New Attention to Kavanaugh’s Remarks About Drinking Accused of Misusing Campaign Funds Accusing Trump Adviser of Repeatedly Lying to Investigators Adam Dubrow Adam Jones’s Bond With Baltimore Means More Than a Ring Adam Stoler Addiction Doesn’t Always Last a Lifetime Adding to Summer of Environmental Misery Aditi Banga Aditya Gulanikar After All-Star Game After Doctors Cut Their Opioids After Kavanaugh’s Testimony After Over 25 Hours of Travel After the Mets Scratch Jacob deGrom Ahead of the Primary Airbnb Is the New NATO Airbnb Reviews of My Childhood Home Alec Guzov Alex Bregman’s Homer Caps an All-Star Slugfest Alex Regenstreich Alexander Chassin Alexander Crohn Alexandra Brena Alexandra Drimal Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Criticized for Excluding Press From 2 Town Hall Meetings Alexis Neisser Allen Weisselberg Allies Help Make a Critic’s Case Allison Aronne Allison Floam Amanda Brown-Inz Amanda Hite Amanee Markos Amazon America’ and the 2018 N.F.L. Season Americans Are Increasingly Doubtful That Voters Are Ready to Elect Women Amid a Big Shortage Amukamara Lead Bears Over Seahawks 24-17 Amy Gershkoff Amy Yang Leads the CP Women’s Open An Exhibition That Gives the Finger to Authority An Extremely Detailed Map of the 2016 Presidential Election An Influential French Director Is Accused of Sexual Abuse. The Reaction Has Been Muted. An Old Sore for Mexico’s Next President: The 43 Missing Students Anais Farges Anatomy of a Crime: Sex and a Rangers Rookie Takes Advantage and a Resurgent Bat and Aaron Judge Takes a Big Step Forward and an Unsurprising Rejection and Bad and Clear Sailing for Clemson and Fingers Point at Mossad and Its Aftermath and May Add to Its Troubles and Maybe 5th-Set Tiebreakers and Maybe the Cy Young and the Yankees Come Back for a Win and the Yankees Merely Fall and Then Demonstrated It and Then Nearly Makes a Comeback and Tusks Became Liabilities and Yankees’ Rally Comes Up Short Anderson Evans Andres Naim Andrew Barnett Andrew Lim Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice Join the EGOT Club Andrew Ritter Andrew Rowny Andy Murray Completes the Big Four Reunion at the U.S. Open Aneal Tenjarla Anesthesia and Promoting Women in Science Angelia Tyler Anna Sui: Spring 2019 Anna Uhls Annabel Moorman Anne Salzman Another Close Race Another Democratic Ambush? Not in Delaware Another Legacy Another Major Venus-Serena Showdown. In the Third Round. Anthony Reda Anti-Gun Violence Activist Wins Democratic Primary for Georgia Congressional Seat Apple Removes Alex Jones’s Infowars From Its App Store Apple: Your Friday News Briefing Approved by Lawmakers Archaeologist’s Workplace Archbishop of Washington Ardevan Yaghoubi Are Awards Shows Worth Watching Anymore? Are Bert and Ernie Gay? ‘Sesame Street’ Writer Says His Comments Were Misinterpreted Are Briefly Reunited Are Outdone by a Weakling Aretha Franklin Argentina’s Senate Rejects Bill Legalizing Abortion Around the World Arson Suspect Arrested as Cranston Fire Rages in California as Carper Rebuffs Outsider’s Bid As Hearings End as Kobach and Colyer Remain Deadlocked As Pope Visits Ireland As Red Sox Creep Away As Stock Markets Brush Off Trade Tensions As Texas and Other States Close In as They Grow Impatient for Results as Trade War Intensifies As U.N. Gathers As Violence Flares Asdrubal Cabrera Breaks Out of Slump Ashley Gitter Ashley Graham Asia Argento Ask Us Your Indoor Cycling Questions Asked to Shoulder the Load for Yankees Aston Martin: Your Thursday Briefing At ‘Uptown Bounce At Florida Rally At Hotchkiss at Last At Missouri Rally At Times Attorney General Hopefuls Go After Zephyr Teachout in Final Debate Austin Smith Australia Bans China’s Huawei From Building 5G Wireless Network Australia Plans to Deny Chelsea Manning an Entry Visa Australia’s New Prime Minister Australian Golfer Australian Prime Minister Australian Prime Minister Dealt Death Blow as Own Party Withdraws Support Automotive Aviators and Lorry Drivers Help Stop Enemy Awareness Ayanna Pressley Seeks Her Political Moment in a Changing Boston Ayanna Pressley Upsets Capuano in Massachusetts House Race Back From the Dead Bad Tree Baffles the Mets Baker Mayfield Ends Cleveland Browns’ 635-Day Winless Streak Balances Politics and Prayer Baseball Reaches Out to the Next Generation on Their Own Turf Baseball Shows Its Whiteness Baseball’s Long Run in Pawtucket Has an Expiration Date BBC News - World Begin Writing Benjamin Cotton Benjamin Levick Benjamin Patton Bethany Gostanian Beto and Ted — Who’s Ahead? Betsy DeVos Is Said to Weigh Letting School Districts Use Federal Funds to Buy Guns Betting Against Tesla: Skeptics Make Their Case Big Cheese Wheels Bill Hybels Billy Crystal Brings Stars to Read His New Play Live for Audible Bismah Rahmat Bitcoin Miners Get Chilly Reception in New York’s Rust Belt Blair Miller Blast Heard Near United States Embassy in Beijing Blindsiding Aide Body of Baby Boy Washes Up Under Brooklyn Bridge Boy’s Body Discovered on New Mexico Compound Where 11 Malnourished Children Were Found Brad Bolte Bradford Atwood Bradley Graw Brands Try to Convince New Generations Products Aren’t Just for Their Parents Braves Continue Their Mastery of Mets Braves Jump on Mets’ Bullpen for Sixth Straight Win Brazil Brazil Museum Officials Knew Fire Was ‘Bound to Happen’ Brazilian Court Rules That ‘Lula’ Cannot Run for President Bree Driscoll Brendan Bolles Brendan Rafalski Brett Kavanaugh Brexit Brexit and the Land of the Porridge People Brexit: Your Wednesday Briefing Brian Christian Brian Kemp Wins Georgia G.O.P. Runoff for Governor to Face Stacey Abrams Brian O’Leary Brian Stauber Bringing Death Toll to 6 Britain Britain Stares Over a Cliff British Open: Your Thursday Briefing Brittany Brady Brittany Lincicome Shoots a 78 in a PGA Tour Event Brittany Lincicome Will Play Golf Against the Men: Where’s the Fuss? Brooke Hargrove Bruce Lietzke Building Building a Trump-Free Barbecue Business but Find the Opportunities Lacking but Finds a Bright Side but for How Long? but He’s Not the Same but in a Different Era for Women but Lose Aaron Judge but Not deGrom but Not to Ghost but Quietly But Should Begin Early but the Water Did but Their Bats Are Quiet By Starting a Reliever Cabinet Meetings Are Now Part of the Trump Show Cables Detail C.I.A. Waterboarding at Secret Prison Run by Gina Haspel Caitlin Smyth California California Lawmakers Pass Nation’s Toughest Net Neutrality Law Called Racist Calvin Klein: Spring 2019 Cambodia Votes for a Leader Campfire Can DACA Survive Latest Legal Attack? Can Good Teaching Be Taught? Can I Ruin Your Dinner Party? Can I Sue? Yes. Win? Not So Much. Can I Tell My Brother the Truth About Our Paternity? Can You Spare a Million Bolívars? Canelo Álvarez Defeats Gennady Golovkin in a Narrow Decision Card Cardinal Wuerl Caring for Aging Parents Carly Berg Carmelo Anthony and Dwight Howard Are Hall of Famers. No Matter What Twitter Says. Carnoustie’s 18th Hole Is Ready to Make Caroline Katzman Caroline Wozniacki Becomes Latest Giant to Fall at Armstrong Carr Fire in California Claims Another Victim Carter Bielen Casey Hernandez Cassandra Campa Catching Golf’s Motion in a Still Photo Caught With Pot? Get-Out-of-Jail Program Comes With $950 Catch CBS Board to Meet on Les Moonves’s Role After Misconduct Allegations Cedars: Your Friday Briefing Cedric Moreau Centrists Won’t Save Britain Charged With Killing His Family Charlotte Peak Charlotte Reluctantly Says It’s Willing to Host Republican National Convention Chase Utley Was ‘The Man’ for Philadelphia Chemicals in Food May Harm Children Chemnitz Chess: Your Friday Briefing Chewy Chicago Chain Kept Other Hawaiian Restaurants From Using ‘Aloha Poke’ Name ChiChi Madu China Bolsters Its Economy as Debt and Trade Pressures Mount China Forces Out Buzzfeed Journalist China Hotel Fire Kills 19 on Eve of International Marathon China Sees Hints of a Past Threat: Inflation China’s Plan to Win Friends and Influence Includes Ski Slopes and Spas Chloe Zale Choked Up With Emotion Chris Froome’s Tour de France Began Under a Cloud and Only Got Worse Christian Iannucci Christina Romero Christopher Peck Christopher Pretter Christopher Van Bell Cindy Pan Citing ‘Criminal Record’ Citing God and Death Claire Solomon Clayton Crider Clifton Fels Climate Change Is Killing the Cedars of Lebanon Climate Has a Role in Wildfires? No. Wait Clint Frazier Closes In on Hawaii Cloth accessory Coach at Wake Forest Is Arrested After Punch Leads to Man’s Death in Queens Cohen Cohen Implicates President Trump. What Do Prosecutors Do Now? Cohen Releases Tape of Trump Colin Stalnecker Colin Sullivan Collecting the Details of the Russia Investigation in One Place Colorado Man Turns Blame on Wife Colorado Man Who Killed Naked Intruder Is Fatally Shot by the Police Companies Say Trump Is Hurting Business by Limiting Legal Immigration Company Completing Set of 9 Masters Titles Confirmed: Brett Kavanaugh Can’t Be Trusted Confronted With Evidence of Russian Hacking Connor Shope Conor Daly Loses Nascar Sponsorship Over Father’s Racial Slur Constrained From Fighting Conversation Cooking Copenhagen: Your Monday Briefing Core Group Coroner Says Corrections: August 1 Corrections: August 10 Corrections: August 11 Corrections: August 13 Corrections: August 14 Corrections: August 17 Corrections: August 18 Corrections: August 21 Corrections: August 22 Corrections: August 23 Corrections: August 24 Corrections: August 25 Corrections: August 28 Corrections: August 3 Corrections: August 31 Corrections: August 6 Corrections: August 7 Corrections: August 8 Corrections: Friday Corrections: July 17 Corrections: July 18 Corrections: July 19 Corrections: July 20 Corrections: July 21 Corrections: July 25 Corrections: July 26 Corrections: July 27 Corrections: July 28 Corrections: September 1 Corrections: September 11 Corrections: September 22 Corrections: September 24 Corrections: September 26 Corrections: September 27 Corrections: September 29 Corrections: September 3 Corrections: September 8 Corrections: Thursday Corrections: Wednesday Country Cover Covert Means of Communication Crazy Poor Middle Easterners Creator of ‘Black-ish Critics of Trump’s Veterans Affairs Dept. Raise Concerns About Departures Cry From Behind a Counter Cryptocurrency Crystal Johnson Cubs Survive a Bartman Moment and Are Headed to the Playoffs Cuomo Cuomo Administration Offered Sweeteners to Get New Bridge Open Cuomo Agrees Dance and Flip. But Are They a Business? Daniel Riley Daniel Weidenfeld Daniel Weisberg Daniela Cannizzaro David Ban David Bryson David Crawford David Kaiser David Katzman David Kurlander David Litt David Menendez David Minchin David Talmy David Thomas David Wright Steps Up to Plate as the Mets Fall to the Marlins Deception and Ego Defending Pope Francis Delay the Vote — for Kavanaugh Demetrius Warrick Democratic Nominee for Florida Governor Democrats Accuse Supreme Court Nominee of Dissembling Design Designated for Assignment ... Permanently Devashish Das Diana Chien Diana Snyder Did Juul Lure Teenagers and Get ‘Customers for Life’? Didi Gregorius Shows His Usual Defensive Brilliance Dies at 36 Dies at 67 Dies at 76 Dies at 78 Dies at 87 Dies at 88 Dies at 96 Diet and Exercise May Stem Weight Gain of Pregnancy Disappoints Distant Tone District Attorneys Dismantle Legacy of Tough Marijuana Enforcement Divya Gopal Dmitriy Tishyevich DNA Links Colorado Murders From 34 Years Ago to an Inmate Do Parrots Know Economics? Kind Of. Dodgers Add Manny Machado With Eye on Another World Series Run Does it Even Count? Does Jacob deGrom Need Victories to Win the Cy Young Award? Does Sacha Baron Cohen Understand Israel? Dolphins Policy Says Players Could Be Suspended for Anthem Protests Don’t Try to Imitate Them Don’t Use Infant Walkers Don’t You Hate When a Seal Slaps You in the Face With an Octopus? Donald McGahn Donald Trump Donald Trump and the Black Athlete Dormant For Days Dozens Swept Away in Myanmar Landslide While Hunting for Jade Drawing Ire of Arabs Drew Foreman Drones Drove and Flew Dubai: Your Wednesday Briefing Dustin Flannery-McCoy Dustin Rodriguez Dwyane Wade Finally Settles It: He’s Returning to the Heat Dylan Rubin E.P.A. Places the Head of Its Office of Children’s Health on Leave Eager to Deploy New Weapons Editors’ Note: August 16 Editors’ Note: July 24 Education Edward Gottfried Edward Houston Elena Delle Donne Leads Mystics Past Dream Elena Schneider Elevate Your Chocolate-Chip Cookies Eli Stokols Elisa Walsh Elizabeth Marbach Elizabeth Minneman Elon Musk Confronts a Fateful Tweet and an ‘Excruciating’ Year Elon Musk Says Tesla Will Remain a Public Company Elon Musk: Your Friday Briefing Elon Musk: Your Thursday Briefing Embracing the Moment Emilie Aries Emily Cole Emily Haug Emily Sternfeld Emily Waisbren Emily Wilk Emmys 2018: Watch the Highlights Emmys Marriage Proposal: Glenn Weiss Surprised Fiancée and Show’s Producers Ending Daughter’s Quest for Answers Episode 2: Gus Fring Is a Management Genius Episode 2: Sheet Rock and Cranes Episode 2: The Bad Decision Index Episode 3: A Gruesome Cover Story Episode 3: The Bad Decision Index Episode 3: Wonderland Episode 4: No One Runs Game on Mike Episode 4: Showing Up Episode 4: The Bad Decision Index Episode 5: Boy Problems Episode 5: Tell ’em Jimmy Sent You Episode 6: Disillusionment Episode 7: Tempered Expectations Episode 8: Snookered Episode 9: Secondary Drowning Equipment Eric DeJong Erica Cardwell Erin Jones Espionage: Your Tuesday Briefing Esther Eng Esther Lim Europe Makes a Last Stand for Solar European Capital Even at the All-Star Game Ever Wanted to Get Revenge? Try This Instead Everyone Wins Evolution Theorist Ex-Met Helps Nationals Clobber His Old Team Ex-President Uribe Resigns From Senate in Colombia Explains Trump’s ‘Ego Arithmetic’ Extreme Heat Extreme Heat: Your Wednesday Briefing Eyes Another Gig: President Facebook Facebook Banned Infowars. Now What? Facebook: Your Thursday Briefing Faces National Glare in Kavanaugh Case Facing Investigation Fact-Checking Pompeo on Iran Failing to Halt Trump’s Trade War Falls to 5-5 Fashion Federal Prosecutors Investigate Weinstein’s Ties to Israeli Firm Feisty Hall of Famer Who Lifted the Blackhawks FEMA Administrator Must Reimburse U.S. for Misuse of Agency Vehicles FEMA Set Aside Billions to Repair Homes in Puerto Rico. Many Are Still in Ruins. Festival in New York Will Look at Death From Many Angles Finally Financial Financial Saga ‘The Lehman Trilogy’ Is Headed to New York Fire Engulfs a Brazilian Museum Firebrands Who Forged a New Art for a New India First I Met My Children Fitness and Eroticism Five Are Dead in Killings Tied to Texas Nursing Home Shooting Five Lawmakers Call on U.S. to Investigate Florida ‘Stand Your Ground’ Case Fixing Public Housing: A Day Inside a $32 Billion Problem Floor Plan Florida Mother Charged With Murder After Body of Son Food Food Writing in the #MeToo Era Foot and Mouth Disease. Really. For 13 Days for a Change For Bryson DeChambeau for His Accuser and for the Court for Ida B. Wells For Immigration Reporters For Sale: 55-Foot-Tall Lobster. Owners in a Pinch. Can You Help? For Serena Williams For Some Viewers for the Body and the Soul for Those Who Aren’t Crazy Rich for Trump Forged in Her Father’s Image Former Trump Critic Four Americans Make Compelling Cases FOX NEWS France: Your Monday Briefing Francesco Molinari Steamrolls Into the Ryder Cup Frank Broomell Jr. Frank Driscoll French Turn on Macron From Football Hall of Famers From Guantánamo Bay to ISIS Fighter Prisons in Syria: 15 Years of Wartime-Detention Reporting From Manus to Trump’s America From the Expert Who Coined It From the Start Frozen Out Frustrated by Gridlock Funhouse for Selfies: The Immersive 29Rooms Pops Up (Again) G-20 Finance Ministers G.O.P. Faces Another Midterm Threat as Trump Plays the Shutdown Card G.O.P. Leaders Can’t Even Fake Respect for Christine Blasey Ford Gabriella Figueroa Games Garb Gary Sanchez Pops Out of a Funk and Carries the Yankees Gary Woodland Sets a Scorching Pace at the Stormy P.G.A. Championship General Assembly Genoa Georges Rouan Georgia Hall Thrills British Fans With Open Victory Georgia Man Pleads Guilty to Manslaughter in 1983 Killing of a Black Man Germans Are Getting on Twitter. Is That a Good Thing? Germany Gestured Rudely Get to Know Besha Rodell. And Maureen Dowd Is on Her Way to Sydney. Gets New Life — on Paper’s Front Page Getting Kids to Eat More Vegetables Ghosts Giancarlo Stanton Takes His Scorching Bat to a Miami Homecoming Give a Whoop Glenton Davis Jr. Gloria Park Glorious Golf Courses Go Small in France Golf’s Dominant Force Gone. The Divergent Paths of 7 Train Stations Google C.E.O. Denies Allegations of Political Bias in Search Results Google Fine Gossip Got $250? You Can Go to Sean Spicer’s Book Party Gov Grace Chiou Greece Greece: Your Thursday Briefing Greetings (and Shopping) From Asbury Park Gregory Sotereanos Grimy Griseliris Concepcion H.F. Lenfest Haley Greenwald-Gonella Hall of Fame or Not Hannah Chung Harlan Trevithick Harry Harding Hate Making Financial Decisions? Try This Having a Beer Can Now Land You in Jail He Asked Permission to Touch He Preyed on Men Who Wanted to Be Priests. Then He Became a Cardinal. Health Secretary Ousted From Reagan’s Cabinet Healthy and at Work Healthy Eating Hearty Entree Heat Wave Heath Heather Langham Henry Winkler Wins His First Emmy. Ayyy! Here’s What Makes America Great High-Flown Speech Hillary DeBruin Hoists a Trophy Once Again Holly Rodiger Honeybees Are Hurting. What Else Can Pollinate Our Food? Hong Kong Bans Pro-Independence Party Honors Hospital Blaze in Taiwan Kills 9 and Injures Dozens House Members Propose Rules Overhaul House Republicans Mount a Long-Shot Bid to Impeach Rod Rosenstein Household Chores Houston’s Poorest Neighborhoods Are Slowest to Recover How a Trump Decision Revealed a G.O.P. Memo’s Shaky Foundation How Alliances Made Athens Great How Aretha Franklin’s ‘Respect’ Became a Battle Cry for Musicians Seeking Royalties How Does Australia See Itself? How Ed Kranepool’s Frosty Relations With the Mets Thawed Out How Far America Has Fallen How Teeth Became Tusks How the F.B.I. Will Investigate the Kavanaugh Accusations How the Far Right Conquered Sweden How the Man Accused of Killing Mollie Tibbetts Built a Life in an Iowa Farm Town How the U.S. Is Fighting Russian Election Interference How to Ask for Help and Actually Get It How to Be an Ace Salary Negotiator (Even if You Hate Conflict) How to Beat F.O.B.O. How to Clean the Most Common Dog Messes How to Get America on the Mediterranean Diet How to Get the Most Out of Art (Even When You’re Not Sure You Get It) How to Revive a Friendship How to Start a Book Group How Trump Lost Re-election in 2020 How Trump’s Plan for Immigrants on Welfare Could Hurt a Million New Yorkers Huan Nguyen Huma Shah Hurricane Florence Hurricane Lane Hush Money and a Trump Fixer’s Guilty Plea I Believed Him I Had Alzheimer’s. But I Wasn’t Ready to Retire. Ian White If an N.B.A. Workout Isn’t on Instagram if Not Encouragement if They Only Had a Judge Ifna Ejebe Image Rating Immigration and Beyoncé From a Pennsylvania Rally Impeach Rosenstein? C’mon Impeached South Korean Leader Sentenced to 25 Years in Prison Imran Manji in ‘I Was Most Alive With You’ In a Proxy Fight for the Party’s Future in a Way in Australia in Church In Duterte’s Philippines In Ferguson In Jordan In Kansas in Reversal In Russia In Shadow of Mt. Etna In Tennis’s Team Events In Test of Time In the Carmelo Anthony Trade In the Garden of Eels In the Heart of Gentrifying Brooklyn In West Bank India Strikes Down Colonial-Era Law Against Gay Sex India: Your Thursday News Briefing India’s Battle for Same-Sex Love India’s Top Court Limits a Sweeping Biometric ID Program Indonesia: Your Monday Briefing Inflaming Feud Inside Italy’s Shadow Economy Instagram’s Co-Founders to Step Down From Company Investigators Find Investors Betting Against Tesla Made $1 Billion on Friday Iran Iran: Your Friday Briefing Iran’s Terms to Reopen Nuclear Talks? Trump Has to Back Down Iron Town Is 5 Strokes Back in the Northern Trust Is Discovered Is the Winner of Miss America 2019 Isabella Moschen ISIS Member Wanted in Murder in Iraq Is Arrested in Sacramento Israel Passes ‘National Home’ Law Israelis Protest Denial of Surrogacy Rights to Same-Sex Couples It Would Take at Least 581 Years It’s 4 a.m. The Baby’s Coming. But the Hospital Is 100 Miles Away. It’s Jennifer Lopez Appreciation Day It’s Not Easy to Hear It’s Not Just You: 2017 Was Rough for Humanity It’s Serena Williams vs. Naomi Osaka in the U.S. Open Final Italy Italy’s Capital of Gold Italy’s Populists Loosen Vaccine Law Amid a Fever They Fueled J.A. Happ Avoids a Bronx Cheer by Leading the Yankees to Victory Jack Davis Jaclyn Saffir Jacob Cohen Jacob deGrom Jacob deGrom Breaks Century-Old Record in Mets Loss Jacob deGrom’s Quality Start Breaks a Major League Record Jacqueline Kappler Jacqueline Terrebonne James Alexander James Geter II Jamey Lundblad Jamie Grummer Jane Austen’s First Buyer? Likely a Prince She Hated Jannine Versi Japan Japan Executes 6 Members of Doomsday Cult in 1995 Tokyo Sarin Attack Japan Has Enough Nuclear Material to Build an Arsenal. Its Plan: Recycle. Japan Hit by Deadly Earthquake Japan’s Mothers Go Back to Work Jared Goff’s Big Day Just Enough for Rams Win Jared Hammond Jared Snyder Jarrod Lyle Jason Stein Jay Bruce’s Bat and Jason Vargas’s Arm Fuel the Mets Jeff McNeil Lifts Mets With Four Hits in Win Over Giants Jeff McNeil’s Odd Bat Propels Mets to Win Jeffrey Bulanda Jeffrey Casullo Jeffrey Parrillo Jenette Lotze Jenna Goldring Jennifer Berry Jennifer Brier Jensen Bouzi Jeremy Brill Jeremy Greenhouse Jeremy Koenig Jeremy Scott: Spring 2019 Jessica Assaf Jessica Fye Jessica Henderson Jessica Langer Jets’ Sam Darnold Turns Disaster Into Dominance in Win Over Lions Jiabei Chen Jillian Robbins Joe Arpaio Could’ve Ridden Into the Sunset. Instead He’s Taking a Pummeling in Arizona. Joel Sircus John Ablan John Casey Jr. John Craig Jr. John Cronan John Legend John McCain John Michael Geise John Millman Upsets No. 2 Roger Federer at the U.S. Open John Rosenblatt John Weinstein John Weiss Jonathan Hernandez Jonathan Scherr Jonathan Schwartz Jonathan Wax Jordan Burke Jose Reyes Joseph Kerns Joseph Moroney Josh Hader Apologizes for Racist and Homophobic Twitter Posts Joshua Handell Joshua Stieber Journalist Who Spread Conspiracy Theories Will Oversee Italy’s State TV Judge Bars Statements Made by Guantánamo Detainees During F.B.I. Interrogations Judge Denies Manafort’s Request to Move Trial Away From Washington Judge Denies Trump’s Request to Dismiss Foreign Payments Lawsuit Judge Rejects Drugmaker’s Attempt to Block Nebraska Execution Judge Rejects Settlement Over McDonald’s Labor Practices Judge Threatens Sessions With Contempt Over Deported Asylum Seekers Judge Upholds Order for Trump Administration to Restore DACA Julia Child’s PBS Show Julia Freling Julia Trankiem Julian Kline Julie Rodgers Julio Alicea Julio Teheran Torments the Mets With His Bat This Time Justen Knight Justice Dept. Backs Suit Accusing Facebook of Violating Fair Housing Act Justice Dept. Investigating Claims That Drug Companies Funded Terrorism in Iraq Justin Bozonelis Justin Thomas Tames Emotions to Win at Bridgestone Justine Kolata Kaleigh Rogers Karan Chhabra Karim Oussayef Karolina Pliskova Gets the Opponent She Craves: Serena Williams Katarina Mayers Katelin Williamson Katharine Verville Katherine Gray Katherine Stillman Katherine Whitman Kathleen Gabel Kavanaugh Kavanaugh: Your Tuesday News Briefing Kavanaugh’s Assertions About His Past Face Scrutiny Kavanaugh’s Defense Misleads or Veers Off Point Kavanaugh’s Opponents Protest Ex-Aide’s Role in Screening of Documents KC Byrnes Keith Barrett Keith March Kelley McKenna Kelsey Rhodes Kenneth Stark Kenya Barris Kevin Jason Kevin Tsang Kiara Brereton Kimball Sargent Kneeling and Reaching Kosovo Kozaburo: Spring 2019 Kruti Parikh Kurt Nelson Kushner Threatens to Abandon a Plan B for the Mideast: Rebuilding Gaza Kyla Burke-Lazarus Kyle Bibby Labor Gains Victory as Missouri Voters Reject Anti-Union Law Labour Laced K2 Tied to Dozens of Drug Overdoses in New Haven Laid-Back Winner on the PGA Tour Lana Birbrair Lance Lynn Falters Land of His Father Las Vegas Aces Lasker Awards Given for Work in Genetics Lassie Got Help Laura Eidlitz Laura McFeely Lauren Allison Lauren Garfield Lauren Grossman Lauren Lepow Lawrence Phillips Lawyer Confirms Leader of Conservative Think Tank Will Go On Leave After Kavanaugh Tweets Leads the Women’s British Open Learning With: ‘Brett Kavanaugh and Accuser Square Off in Emotional Hearing With Court in Balance’ Leaving No Mistake Unpunished Leaving Queens: A Nazi’s Long Flight From Justice Ends Lee-Or Ankori-Karlinsky Leela Hauser Leigh-Anne Tu Leslie Hart Lessons on Freedom (and a Broken Spirit) Let Kids Play Let Robert Mueller Do His Job Let There Be Light Let’s Get New York to the Polls Let’s Talk About China Library Cards Rival Golden Tickets With Culture Pass Option Lifestyle Lindsey Marx Lip Listen to the World Little-Known Justice Dept. Official Makes Trump’s Security Clearance List Lobbyists and the Administration Join Forces to Overhaul the Endangered Species Act Loll Looking Through the Eyes of China’s Surveillance State Lost in the Storm Louis C.K. Performs at Club for First Time Since #MeToo Accusations Louis Schwizgebel Lucy Gordon Luis Cessa Wilts in Replacement Start as Yankees Fall to Rays Luis Severino Stifles Red Sox and Makes His Wild-Card Case Lundyn Bolender M.L.B. Playoff Races: Brewers and Cardinals Roll Toward a Showdown M.L.B. Playoff Races: Brewers Take Care of Business M.L.B. Playoff Races: Dodgers Stretch Lead in N.L. West M.L.B. Playoff Races: Houston Astros on Brink of Division Title M.L.B. Playoff Races: Oakland Pushes for Top Wild-Card Spot M.L.B. Playoff Races: Yankees and Braves Close In on Berths Mack Macron: Your Tuesday Briefing Made a Deal With Her Own Accuser Madison Keys Is Back in the U.S. Open Semifinals Maggie Parker Malcolm Turnbull Malcolm X. Mosque No. 7. Hotel Theresa. Remembering the Muslim History of Harlem Mallika Khandelwal Man Man Told Police That Fatal Stabbing Was ‘Practice’ for Race Attack Man Took $4.3 Million in Cash From Alaska Bank and Ran Manafort and Trump: What’s Next? Manafort Jurors Ask for Definition of Reasonable Doubt Manafort Leaned on Ties to Trump to Win Loans Manhattan D.A. Eyes Criminal Charges Against Trump Organization Manhunt Intensifies for Fugitive Who Authorities Say Threatened President Trump Margaret Heckler Margaret Hsu Margaret Williams Margot Kidder’s Death Was a Suicide Maria Butina Loved Guns Marissa Padilla Maritime Graphic Mark Badum Mark Cherry Mark Spector Markets are Falling Markets Mixed Marlen Whitley Mars Mars: Your Tuesday Briefing Marta Bralic Martha Roby Marty Balin Mary Glover Masahiro Tanaka Stumbles Massachusetts Town Loses Its Entire Police Force as All 4 Members Quit Mat Morrison Matthew Bloch Matthew Cohen Matthew Dover Matthew Sternberg Maureen Dowd Max Nisen May Be Critical for Health May Boeve Maybe America Can Now Learn the Truth McCain ‘Suffered Fools Poorly McCain and a Requiem for the American Century McCain Got the Last Word Against Trump McCaskill Says McDonald’s Workers Across the U.S. Stage #MeToo Protests Medellín Struggles to Demolish a Legend Meet The Times’s ‘Mini Detective Agency’ Megan Byrne Meghan McCain Melbourne or Both? Test Your Knowledge Melissa Loder Melissa Smith Melynda Barnes Mendocino Complex Fire in California Is Now Largest in Modern State History Mercury Force a Game 4 Against the Storm in the W.N.B.A. Semis Messages of Love Met’s Jacob deGrom Won a Game Mets Earn Second Straight Win Against Depleted Braves Mets Endure Most Lopsided Defeat in Franchise History Mets Lose Despite a Strong Outing from Zack Wheeler Mets Salvage Their Final Trip With a Soggy Victory Mets Set Franchise Mark With 24 Runs Mets Trade Asdrubal Cabrera to Phillies for Pitching Prospect Mets’ David Wright Has First At-Bat Since 2016 Mets’ Jose Lobaton Topples His Former Team in 12th Inning Mexican Authorities Disarm Acapulco Police Amid Corruption Inquiry MGM Resorts Sues 1 Mia Solkin Michael Avenatti Michael Avenatti Urges Democrats to Reject Michelle Obama’s Advice on Trump Michael Chui Michael Cohen Michael Cohen Takes a Bullet Michael Cohen’s Drink on Eve of Guilty Plea: Glenlivet on the Rocks Michael Collins Michael Conforto Drives in 6 Runs as Mets Top Phillies Michael Fletcher II Michael Goldstein Michael Kay and the Danger of Criticizing Injured Players Michael Netto Michael Rapaport Won’t Shut Up Michael Rappaport Michael Simpson Michael Stanish Michelle Lee Miguel Andujar Lifts Yankees to Narrow Win Over White Sox Miika Tomi Milan Thakkar Military Miss New York Missed Connection: Donald Trump Jr. and Robert Mueller Cross Paths at Washington Airport Missing at the Emmys: #MeToo Mo. Mob Protests in Germany Show New Strength of the Far Right Model Modeling in the #TimesUp Era Monsanto Ordered to Pay $289 Million in Roundup Cancer Trial Morgan Spicer Morocco Mueller Asks for Jail Time Mueller Passes 3 Cases Focused on Illicit Foreign Lobbying to Prosecutors in New York Murder Mystery in Ancient Monastery Reverberates in Coptic Church Music My Hand Was Drawn Into His’ Myanmar Journalists Convicted and Sentenced to 7 Years in Prison Myanmar Official Line: Rohingya Are Returning. But Cracks in That Story Abound. Myanmar’s ‘Gravest Crimes’ Against Rohingya Demand Action Myanmar’s Military Planned Rohingya Genocide Myself & I’ and ‘Finding Neverland’ N.F.L. Anthem Protests Stirring Emotions Even Before the Season N.J. N.R.A. Joins Questioning of Florida Sheriff in ‘Stand Your Ground’ Case Nadia Mostafa Kamal Nadina Bourgeois Nadine Dukeson Nafta Najah Woodby Nancy Brous Nandini Sharma Naomi Osaka Beats Serena Williams in a U.S. Open Final Marred by Boos and Tears NASA: Your Monday Briefing Nashville Police Officer Faces Homicide Charge in Killing of a Black Man Natalie Kotkin Nationals Erupt Against Mets NATO Nazi Collaborator or National Hero? A Test for Lithuania Neil Walker’s Home Run Holds Off a Red Sox Celebration Netflix New Audio Materials Seized in Cohen Inquiry Are Turned Over to Prosecutors New Cuba Constitution New E.P.A. Rollback of Coal Pollution Regulations Takes a Major Step Forward New Emails Show Push by Trump Officials to Add Citizenship Question to Census New Season New York New York City Council Moves to Cap Uber and Other For-Hire Vehicles New York Is Said to Open Tax Inquiry Into Trump Foundation New York’s Arts for All Newest Hall of Famers Carry Records and Memories Into Cooperstown News of Laos Dam Failure Didn’t Reach Them Neymar Scores on a Penalty Kick as Brazil Dominates the U.S. Nia Imani Franklin Nicholas Clark-Spear Nicholas Schwartz Nicole Flynn Nikola Lahcanski Nikoloz Basilashvili Falls to Nadal but Gives Georgians Something to Cheer Nimmo and Bird Share an Unlikely Reunion in the Majors Nimmo’s Late Homer Lifts the Mets Nina Sudarsan Nine and Fairfax Nixon Finds Her Audience No Corrections: August 20 No Corrections: August 27 No Corrections: July 23 No Corrections: July 30 No Corrections: September 10 No Corrections: September 17 No Corrections: September 21 Noah Syndergaard Sidelined by Hand Norah Lewin North Korea Presses Demand for End of War Amid Talk of Pompeo Visit North Korea Starts Dismantling Key Missile Facilities North Korea’s Trump-Era Strategy: Keep Making A-Bombs Not in My Backyard Novak Djokovic Breaks New Ground Novichok: Your Wednesday Briefing Numerical Prefix Nutrition Obama Visits Kenya Obedience and Enlightenment Objectivity and Compassion Don’t Have to Be Mutually Exclusive Octopus of All People Officials Say Olivia Ahern Olympic on a Court That Has Defined Her On Eve of Ryder Cup Picks On Politics: A Contentious Take on Anti-Semitism On Politics: A Plan to Roll Back Methane Rules On Politics: An Emotional Hearing On Politics: Kavanaugh Hearing Negotiations Continue On Politics: Kavanaugh Hearing Scheduled On Politics: Kavanaugh Nomination in Limbo On Politics: Kavanaugh Says He Won’t Be ‘Intimidated’ On Politics: Kavanaugh’s Accuser Speaks On Politics: Kavanaugh’s Accuser Wants an Investigation On Politics: Stalemate Over Kavanaugh Inquiry On Politics: This Week’s Biggest Stories On Politics: Trump Accuses Democrats of a ‘Con Game’ On Politics: Trump Calls Kavanaugh Accusations ‘All False’ Once Dry Discussions One Man Can Decide a Migrant’s Fate. Did He Abuse That Power? or Break or Don’t Eat or Forget Orlando Reece Our Day With Twitter’s Jack Dorsey Owen Parsons Paige Landsem Pakistan Palestinians to Lead U.N.’s Biggest Bloc of Developing Countries Paloma Woo Paolo Santonocito Parma Embraces a Soccer Renaissance Parrots Think They’re So Smart. Now They’re Bartering Tokens for Food Patients Turn to a Risky Treatment for Back Pain Patricia Clarkson: ‘Sharp Objects’ Included ‘Some of the Toughest Scenes I’ve Played’ Paul Hands Paul Laxalt Paul Manafort’s Accountant Testifies She Helped Alter Financial Documents Paul Rosen Paulie Dibner Pediatricians’ Group Says PepsiCo: Your Tuesday Briefing Peter Emmerich Petia Popova Philanthropist and Owner of Philadelphia’s Newspapers Photo Awards Photography Photoville to Include Images of Immigration and Gentrification Picturing Iraq in a Bygone Era Place to Spin Your Wheels Planning His Funeral Plans to Discuss Resignation With Pope Playing Golf Alongside Tiger Woods Feels Different Now Please Take My Son’s Wallet Police Say Political Bubbles and Hidden Diversity: Highlights From a Very Detailed Map of the 2016 Election Politics Pollution Pope Francis Popular Browser Extension Popular Collection Pornanong Phatlum Powering Mets to Win Powers the Mets Prague Prague 1968: Your Tuesday Briefing President Dumb and Dumber President Trump Skirts Mention of John McCain at Rally and on Twitter Pressing Pause on Pot Convictions Prime Minister’s Eating Habits Scandalize Australians: It’s Piegate Pro-Trump Fan of Social Distortion Says Lead Singer Punched Him at Concert Prosecutors Document Paul Manafort’s Reversal of Fortune After 2014 Prosecutors Say Prosecutors Say. Pruitt’s Successor Wants Rollbacks Pudge Will Keep Us Together Puerto Rican Government Quietly Acknowledges Hurricane Death Toll of 1 Puerto Rico Puja Parikh Pull Out of W.N.B.A. Game Put Behind Bars Putin Putin Says Democrats Are to Blame for ‘Manipulations’ of Their Party Putting Aside Grudge Putting Home Run Streak on Hold Qatar’s BeIN Sports Says It Has Proof of Saudi Role in Piracy Dispute Quotation of the Day: ‘Eligible’ Children Checked Off List Quotation of the Day: A Dry Refuge Quotation of the Day: A Second ‘Wound That Never Heals’ Quotation of the Day: A String Puller Toppled by Ego and Deception Quotation of the Day: Accused Harassers Counting on Voters to Forgive Quotation of the Day: Brett Kavanaugh and Christine Blasey Ford Square Off in Emotional Hearing With Court in Balance Quotation of the Day: Crime and Racial Strife Didn’t Stop His Teams. Will a Locked School Door? Quotation of the Day: Disdain for U.S. Institutions and Praise for an Adversary Quotation of the Day: Echoes of Anita Hill Quotation of the Day: Final Vote Is Delayed — Dissent Rises in Ranks of G.O.P. Quotation of the Day: For Their Help in Puerto Rico Quotation of the Day: Genoa Bridge Collapse: The Road to Tragedy Quotation of the Day: How a Tabloid and Trump’s Team Kept Scandals Off the Front Page Quotation of the Day: In Missouri Race Quotation of the Day: Iranians and Their Leaders Brace for Impact of New U.S. Sanctions Quotation of the Day: John McCain Quotation of the Day: Korean Families Quotation of the Day: Lake on Mars: Finding Stirs Hope for Life Quotation of the Day: Lawmakers Quotation of the Day: Letter Accusing Pope Inflames American Catholic Church Quotation of the Day: Mesut Ozil’s Exit From German Soccer Team Stokes Debate on Integration Quotation of the Day: Nazi Collaborator or National Hero? A Test for Lithuania Quotation of the Day: New York City Limits Growth of Ride-Hailing Quotation of the Day: Old Houses of Prayer Are Resurrected Quotation of the Day: Revoking Clearance Quotation of the Day: Sexual Harassment Allegations Wipe a Name Off the Map Quotation of the Day: Sole Survivor of Brazilian Tribe Is Glimpsed in Amazon Jungle Quotation of the Day: Stan Mikita Quotation of the Day: Tensions Mount Between Ankara and Washington Quotation of the Day: Thai Soccer Players Leave Hospital and Apologize for Fuss Quotation of the Day: The Kremlin Wants Details. First Quotation of the Day: The Year Global Warming Made Its Menace a Reality Quotation of the Day: Trump Lawyers’ Sudden Realization: They Don’t Know What Don McGahn Told Mueller’s Team Quotation of the Day: Trump Says if Attack on Kavanaugh Accuser Was ‘as Bad as She Says Quotation of the Day: Trump to Invite Putin to Capital Quotation of the Day: Type Carefully. Your Bank Is Watching. Quotation of the Day: Vulnerable Airports Swamped R.I.P. Ivanka Inc. Rachel Finkelstein Rachel Messinger Rachel Mitchell Rachel Steinberg Racist Robocalls Target Andrew Gillum Radio Hosts Suspended After Calling New Jersey Attorney General ‘Turban Man’ Rafaella Francisco Raised Far From Baseball Hotbeds Ralph Lauren: Spring 2019 Ramit Sethi Ranked No. 97 Readers Respond to the 8.5.18 Issue Really Vex Recipe Recognizing Private Property Red Carpet Same Old. Insiders See Opportunities. Red Sox Pummel Yankees Red Sox Win A.L. East Despite Giancarlo Stanton’s Grand Slam Redmond Manierre Jr. Regan Marin Relief to Disbelief After Michael Cohen’s Plea Remains of 55 U.S. War Dead in North Korea Start Journey Home After 65 Years Remembering 9/11 Report Finds Surprisingly High Rate of Slavery in Developed Countries Report Says Representative Duncan Hunter Is Indicted Representing Michael Cohen Republican Holds Tight Lead in Ohio Special Election for House Seat Rescued From Obscurity: How Discarded Items Become Treasures Resource for An Artist to Draw On Reuters: World News Review: ‘Fire in Dreamland’ Is a Parable of Love and Licorice Review: ‘Reversing Roe’ Shows How Abortion Became Political Review: ‘Smokey Joe’s Cafe’ Is a Feast of Pop Nostalgia Review: ‘Straight White Men Review: A Dirge for Wilting Salad Days in ‘This Ain’t No Disco’ Review: A High School Meltdown Heats Up ‘Be More Chill’ Review: A Slain Journalist’s Voice Resounds in ‘Intractable Woman’ Review: Chasing Shopworn Dreams in ‘Pretty Woman: The Musical’ Review: Familiar Rock Dreams in ‘Gettin’ the Band Back Together’ Review: In ‘Christopher Robin Review: In ‘Private Peaceful Review: In ‘The Emperor Review: In ‘The Little Stranger Review: In ‘The Revolving Cycles Review: In ‘The True Review: In a Blissful Musical ‘Twelfth Night’ in Central Park Review: Listening to ‘Uncle Vanya’ With Virgin Ears Review: Mike Birbiglia Has a ‘New One.’ It’s Funny Until It Isn’t. Review: Speaking (and Signing) of Job Review: What’s a Woman’s Role? All of ’Em Review: Ye Olde Go-Go’s Songs Hit the Renaissance in ‘Head Over Heels’ Rex Isenberg Richard Parsons Is Named Interim Chairman at CBS Rights Group Says Rite Aid and Albertsons Agree to Call Off Merger in Face of Opposition Riz Ahmed: Your Friday Briefing Robert Ford Robert Levy Robert Lin Robert Staley Rockies Lose Trevor Story to Injury and N.L. West Lead to Dodgers Roman Abramovich Ronald Acuna Jr. Hit With First Pitch Ronald Acuna Jr. Returns but Sees Home Run Streak End Ronan Farrow’s Ex-Producer Says NBC Impeded Weinstein Reporting Rory McIlroy Is the Golfer Who Juggles. Or Is it Vice Versa? Rose Linke Rose McGowan Says Asia Argento Admitted to Sleeping With Young Actor Rules Out 2020 Presidential Run Rules Won’t Save Twitter. Values Will. Rumba Russia Russia Campaign ‘Just One Tree in a Growing Forest Russia: Your Wednesday News Briefing Russian Hackers Appear to Shift Focus to U.S. Power Grid Ryan Beauchamp Ryan LaMarre’s Stunning Outburst Humbles the Yankees Saad Rizwan Sacha Baron Cohen Pranked Me Sacrifice Sal Romano Salvador Trinidad Samantha Shipp Same Result: Eagles Beat Falcons Samuel Barr Samuel Farhi Sara Miller Sara Snedeker Sarah Golabek-Goldman Sarah Goulet Sarah Hughes Sarah Langberg Sari Sharoni Saudi Arabia Saudi Coalition Admits Error in Air Attack That Killed Dozens in Yemen Saving Scotland’s Heritage From the Rising Seas Scallops Scared to Be a Parent? Scars of Sex Abuse ‘Worse Than the I.R.A.’ Schools Can Keep Kids Safe Without Giving Their Teachers Guns Scientists Are Retooling Bacteria to Cure Disease Scott Ehlen Scott Melton Scott Morrison Sea Gulls and Incompetents: How to Deal With Bad Bosses Seagram’s Liquor Heiress Charged in Nxivm Sex-Trafficking Case Seal Sean Whitney Secret Advantage See How The Times Gets Printed and Delivered Seeking ‘A Good Afterlife Seeking to Avoid Liability Senator Who Defied Him Separated for 6 Decades September 19 September 20 September 7 Serena Williams Serena Williams Cartoon Serena Williams Cartoon ‘Not About Race Serena Williams Loses a Set but Surges to a Win in the U.S. Open Serena Williams Proves Hers Isn’t Running Out Serena Williams Returns to U.S. Open’s Main Stage With Tidy Win Serena Williams: Your Tuesday Briefing Sessions Sessions Says Justice Dept. Has Helped Preserve Free Speech on Campuses Seth Samuels Seth Schorr Setting a Goal Sexual Abuse Isn’t Partisan Sexual Harassment Allegations Wipe a Name Off the Map Sexual Misconduct and ‘Missed Opportunities’ to Stop It She Left Tennis in 2011. Now Patty Schnyder Is Back at the U.S. Open. Shootout Kills 4 From Security Forces and 3 Militants Should Parents Track Their Teenager’s Location? Sick River: Can These California Tribes Beat Heroin and History? Significant Afghan City Sikh Man Attacked in Hate Crime: ‘My Turban Really Saved Me’ Simone Biles Cruises to All-Around Title at U.S. Championships Simulation Singapore Skripal Sky Sleep Deprivation Slippers: Your Monday Briefing Slovakia Smile From Ear to Ear Sneha Kondragunta Society Some College Building Dedicatees Some Wooing. Sona Bajaria Song Is Empathy Song of Summer Sonny Gray Wilts in a Spot Start for the Yankees Sounding Out The New York Times Sounds of Surrender South Korean Court Orders Big Payouts to Families of Ferry Victims South Korean Envoy Visits North Korea to Help Revive Nuclear Talks SpaceX Spain Spain: Your Monday News Briefing Special Counsel Is Granted Request to Keep Inquiry Details Private Special Forces Soldier Dies After Roadside Bomb Attack in Afghanistan Speedy Trials Return to a Bronx Court Known for Delays and Dysfunction Sports Spurning Trump Loyalist in Governor’s Race Spurring Inquiry Startup Staten Island Little League Team Is One Win Away From U.S. Finals Step Inside the Thai Cave in Augmented Reality Stephanie Rivkin Stephanie Roach Stephanie Tsay Stock Stolen Plane From Seattle Airport Crashes Storm Roll Past Mystics Behind Star and Supporting Player Stormy Daniels and Her Husband Are Divorcing Stormy Daniels’s Lawyer Strategy Struggle and Success Struggles to Get Noticed Stuart Thompson Stuart Wagner Study Finds Study Says Stumpers? Stylist Suing Las Vegas Victims Got Headlines. Outcome Could Be Big News Super-Super Supercar Supreme Court Fight Goes Prime Time With Kavanaugh’s Fox News Interview Survives Leadership Challenge. For Now. Susan Rice: President Trump Suzanne Goldenkranz Sweden Syaru Shirley Lin Syria Syria: Your Friday Briefing Ta-Nehisi Coates Is Leaving The Atlantic Taifha Baker Taiwan Takeaways From the Conviction of Paul Manafort Taking Marriage Class at Guantánamo Taliban Claim to Have Taken Ghazni Taliban: Your Tuesday Briefing Talking About Failure Is Crucial for Growth. Here's How to Do it Right. Talking U.S. Politics and Mythical Beasts: The Canada Letter Tampa Bay’s Ryan Fitzpatrick Beats Himself Tariffs Tech Giants Now Share Details on Political Ads. What Does That Mean For You? Tech Tips Technology Tegan Donnelley Temptations Musical ‘Ain’t Too Proud’ Headed for Broadway Tennessee Republicans Select Newcomer Teri Agins Tesla Slashes Spending Tesla: Your Wednesday Briefing Texas Instruments Chief Executive Resigns; Conduct Violations Are Cited The ‘Bachelorette’ Makes Her Choice. Will She Regret It? The ‘Silent Sam’ Confederate Monument at U.N.C. Was Toppled. What Happens Next? the Aftermath and More Political Stories This Week the Autocrats’ Best Friend The Bad Boys Club The Bane That Is Betsy DeVos The Big Hole in Germany’s Nazi Reckoning? Its Colonial History The Biggest Spender of Political Ads on Facebook? President Trump The Biggest Stories in American Politics This Week The Bread Thief The Constitutional Amendment That Reinvented Freedom The Cowboys Besiege Eli Manning and Send the Giants to Another 0-2 Start the Cubs Try to Win Every Pitch The Curious Case of Bryce Harper’s .214 Batting Average the Dance of Love The Dangerous Intimacy of Grad School: Was the N.Y.U. Harassment Case Inevitable? The DeVos School for the Promotion of Student Debt The Emmys Joked about TV’s Lack of Diversity The Empty Storefronts of New York: A Panoramic View The End of Impunity the Environment and West Virginia The G.O.P.’s Climate of Paranoia The Gift of Menopause the Glass Ceiling Is Restored The History Behind the Birthright Citizenship Battle The Iraqi Spy Who Infiltrated ISIS The Jewish State’s Nation-State Bill Non-Scandal The Kavanaugh Charade The Kisses That Paid My Rent The Los Angeles Clippers Signed a Big Star. From Sports Illustrated. 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The World Cup Changed Russia The Yankees Get a Victory The Yankees Have Come Down to Earth. The Red Sox Are Still Defying Gravity. the Yankees Imitate and Eliminate the Rays Their Stories Live. Then Abruptly Retires Then My Girlfriend. They’re Related. These Cultural Treasures Are Made of Plastic. Now They’re Falling Apart. These Firms Say They Can Help Prevent School Shootings and Suicides. Do They? These Robots Run They Got Taxed Think Summer Child Care Is Tough? Low-Income Families Deal With That All Year Think There Are Too Many Bars in Your Neighborhood? You’re Not Alone This I Believe About Blasey v. Kavanaugh This Week’s Wedding Announcements Thoughts for Very Wealthy Political Donors Thoughts of Jarrod Lyle Loom Over the P.G.A. Championship Threatening Hundreds of Years of History Three Inconsistencies the F.B.I. Investigation Could Address Three Letter Sandwich Three Men Sentenced to Prison for Violence at Charlottesville Rally Three Players Share the Bridgestone Lead Tiffany Chang Tiffany Pippins Tiger Woods Time for Republicans to Grow a Spine Timothy Huynh Tiya Nandi To Address School Shootings to Debate Nixon on Aug. 29 To Defeat Far-Right Nationalists To Get All the World’s Muslims to Hajj to Merge to Promote Local Charity To Secure Better Housing To Spur Interest Todd Frazier Powers Mets Past the Giants Todd Frazier’s Home Run Snaps Cubs’ Winning Streak Tone Set Too. Too. And He Wants Them to Stick. Top Diplomat Pulls Rank on the Military Top New Hampshire Democrat Arrested on Domestic Violence Charges Top Trump Organization Official Toronto Shooting Leaves One Dead and 13 Injured Toward a Different Language of Size Trade Trade War Tragedy? Farce? Confusion? The Method Behind That Russian Poisoning Interview Transcript of Brett Kavanaugh’s Interview With Fox News Transgender Woman Says CVS Pharmacist Refused to Fill Hormone Prescription Travis Jarae Trend Tries to Win Hearts Trump Trump Administration Trump Administration Cuts More Than $200 Million in Aid for Palestinians Trump Aims Presidential Power at Russia Inquiry Trump and Putin’s Meeting Trump and Russia. It Was a Cover Trump and the Politics of Arf Trump Attacks CNN After Source Raises Doubts About Report on Russia Meeting Trump Backs Ex-Rival in Tight Nevada Race Trump Boasts About the Economy and Takes Aim at Usual Targets Trump Doubles Down on Russia. The Spies Shake Their Heads in Disbelief. Trump Has Muddied a Clear Message: Putin Interfered Trump in Space Trump Is Left a Spectator With Kavanaugh in Peril Trump Is Wrong About Trade. So Is Everyone Else. 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Trump’s Negative Space Trump’s Nemesis in the Age of Pinocchio Trump’s Plan for Coal Emissions: Let Coal States Regulate Them Trump’s South Africa Tweet Seems to Embrace Racist Narrative on Land Dispute Trump’s Toxic Friendship Turkey Turkey’s Difficult Mission in Idlib Turkish Airstrike in Iraqi Territory Kills a Kurdish Militant Leader Turkish Regulators Step In to Deal With Fall in Currency Tuskegee Airman’s Remains Are Identified Two Australian Media Giants Two Goals Two Long-Lived Kings on the London Stage Two Reds and One Tie for Red Bulls and N.Y.C.F.C. Tyler Adams’s Goal Lifts United States Past Mexico Tyler Dziama Typhoon Mangkhut: At Least 43 Bodies Found in Philippines Landslide U.N. Says U.S. Charges U.S. Is Expanding Power to Block Chinese Firms. HNA Was Already No Match. U.S. Is Said to Allow Sanctions on Foreigners Accused of Interfering in Elections U.S. Loses Track of Another 1 U.S. Open U.S. Open Changes Course on Women Changing Shirts U.S. Open’s Biggest Attraction? The Shade U.S. Rebuffed at U.N. on North Korea Sanctions Enforcement U.S. Says U.S. Senator From Nevada and Reagan Confidant U.S. Wants Students to Learn Bleeding-Control Techniques U.S.A. Gymnastics Under New Scrutiny as a Hiring Decision Goes Awry U.S.A. Gymnastics’ Talk of Reform Falls on Skeptical Ears at Senate Hearing U.S.C. President Resigns Amid Pressure to Exit Before School Year Uber Beat Back a Cap on Vehicles. What’s Changed? A Lot. Uber: Your Monday Briefing Uber: Your Thursday Briefing Uganda Charges Pop-Star Lawmaker With Treason Unable to See Unfiltered Unified Korean Team United Nations Urban Meyer and the Missed Signs at Ohio State Using Wildfires as an Excuse to Plunder Forests V.S. Naipaul Vaccines Vanilla Beans Vatican Velvet Underground Exhibition Will Come to New York in October Venezuela Venezuela’s Fate: Brother Verizon Throttled California Firefighters’ Internet Speeds Amid Blaze (They Were Out of Data) Vicenza Victor Adefuye Victor on the Court Victor Schmidt Video Shows Sergeant Shooting Man and Dropping Knife Vijay Ramanavarapu Viktor Orban Vina Tran Vincent Mazzurco Violent Extremist or Political Candidate? In Pakistan Vogue Volunteers Rescue 47 From Lagoon After Plane Misses Runway in Micronesia Vontae Davis Leaves Field During N.F.L. Game Wages Are Rising in Europe. But Economists Are Puzzled. Waiting for the Next Arthur Ashe Walter Vulej Want Reliable Medical Information? The Trump Administration Doesn’t Want to Seem More Likable? Try This. Warn of Its Global Risks Warning of Dire ‘Consequences’ Was Granted Immunity for Testimony Was That Serena Williams in the Hotel Room Next to Mine? 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Donald Trump warns Iran it will pay 'big price' as protesters try to storm US embassy in BaghdadDonald Trump accused Iran of orchestrating the attack on the US embassy in Baghdad as he said he expected Iraq to “use its forces” to intervene. "Iran will be held fully responsible for lives lost, or damage incurred, at any of our facilities. They will pay a very BIG PRICE! This is not a Warning, it is a Threat," he wrote on Twitter. "The US Embassy in Iraq is, & has been for hours, SAFE! Many of our great Warfighters, together with the most lethal military equipment in the world, was immediately rushed to the site," Mr Trump  intensified pressure on the Iraqi authorities who had been powerless to prevent hundreds of demonstrators breaching the outer wall of the embassy compound in the heavily fortified green zone. He pressed the case for action in a call to  Iraq's caretaker  Prime Minister Adel Abd al-Mahd, urging him to protect US personnel and property. Chanting "death to America", the protesters set fire to a sentry box, pulled security cameras away from walls and hurled a barrage of missiles including Molotov cocktails. At one point the mob, which was protesting against US airstrikes on an Iranian-backed militia in Iraq on Sunday, used a drainpipe in an attempt to smash an embassy window. US troops tried to disperse the crowd firing warning shots before using teargas and stun grenades.  At least 62 people were reported to have been injured. Iran killed an American contractor, wounding many. We strongly responded, and always will. Now Iran is orchestrating an attack on the U.S. Embassy in Iraq. They will be held fully responsible. In addition, we expect Iraq to use its forces to protect the Embassy, and so notified!— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) 31 December 2019 Amid mounting tension, the US announced it would be deploying additional marines to increase security. Two Apache helicopters flew over the compound in a show of force. Matt Tueller, the US ambassador in Iraq, was not in the embassy at the time, but will be returning to join staff in the compound, the US State Department said. Under pressure from Mr Trump to protect US personnel, Mr Mahdi  had deployed special forces at the main gate in an attempt to prevent hundreds of protesters forcing their way in. Some of the crowd did withdraw, while others pitched tents, paving the way for a siege, which a spokesman for the militant group said would remain until US diplomats leave the country. As the violence unfolded in Iraq, Mr Trump intensified pressure on both Iraq and Iran with a series of tweets. "We expect Iraq to use its forces to protect the Embassy, and so notified!" Mr Trump tweeted, saying Iran "will be held fully responsible" for the unrest. Mr Trump was unapologetic for the military action which killed at least 25 fighters from Iran-backed Kataeb Hezbollah, a militant group with the US holds responsible for the death of an American contractor. "Iran killed an American contractor, wounding many. We strongly responded, and always will," the US president wrote. Supporters of Kataeb Hezbollah were prominent among the demonstrators in Baghdad, with the group's flags hanging on the fence surrounding the embassy. The Iraqi government, which is already facing a wave of protests across the country, has found itself caught in the crossfire between Tehran and Washington. Thousands of protesters and militia fighters outside the gate denounced U.S. air strikes in Iraq. Credit: AFP Mr Mahdi condemned the weekend's airstrikes, but Mr Trump remained unrepentant as he urged the country to stand up to Iran "To those many millions of people in Iraq who want freedom and who don't want to be dominated and controlled by Iran, this is your time!" the president tweeted. In response, Tehran accused the US of "audacity" in blaming Iran for the demonstrations. "The surprising audacity of American officials is so much that after killing at least 25... and violating the country's sovereignty and territorial integrity, that now... they attribute the Iraqi people's protest against their cruel acts to the Islamic Republic of Iran," said foreign ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi. In the US, Republican hawks praised Mr Trump's tough response to the attack on the embassy. "He has put the world on notice - there will be no Benghazi's on his watch," tweeted Lindsey Graham, a close Trump ally and GOP senator from South Carolina. Newt Gingrich called for even tougher action. "The United States should respond to Iran in Iran. The Iranian dictatorship doesn't care how many of its allies we hit in Iraq. We have to go after the heart of the enemy and make them pay decisively."




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China sentences Protestant pastor to 9 years for subversionChina has sentenced a prominent pastor who operated outside the Communist Party-recognized Protestant organization to nine years in prison for subversion. Wang Yi had led the Early Rain Covenant Church and was arrested a year ago during China's ongoing crackdown on all unauthorized religious groups in the country. The government requires Protestants worship only in churches recognized and regulated by the party-led Three-Self Patriotic Movement.




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Thousands flee to beaches amid devastating Australian wildfiresThousands of Australians were forced to flee to beaches on Tuesday as wildfires continued to blaze in New South Wales and Victoria.About 4,000 people sought refuge on nearby beaches in the town of Mallacoota in Victoria, with thousands along the New South Wales coast needing to evacuate their homes, CNN reports. Fires have been raging in Australia for the past several months, and 70 new fires reportedly started in Victoria on Monday, while more than 60 fires haven't yet been contained in New South Wales."It was like we were in hell," a vacationer in New South Wales told CNN. "We were all covered in ash.""It should have been daylight but it was black like midnight and we could hear the fire roaring," a local business owner in Mallacoota told BBC News. "We were all terrified for our lives."After the death of a father and son in Cobargo, at least 11 people have died amid Australia's devastating fire season, during which more than 900 homes have been destroyed in New South Wales, The New York Times reports. Victoria Emergency Services Commissioner Andrew Crisp said there have been "significant" property losses, The Associated Press reports.Australian military aircraft and vessels will assist in the emergency services, BBC News reports, and the United States and Canada have also been asked to help in the effort. CNN reports that weather conditions are expected to improve in the next 24 hours before worsening by the end of the week, again "bringing dangerous fire conditions."More stories from theweek.com The Obama legacy is not what many liberals think Trump's scandals will haunt America for years The first decade in history




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Trump Sets Jan. 15 Trade-Deal Signing, Plans Talks on Phase Two(Bloomberg) -- U.S. President Donald Trump said he will sign the first phase of a trade deal with China on Jan. 15, sealing an agreement that sees the Asian nation raising purchases of American farm goods in exchange for lower tariffs on some of its products. “The ceremony will take place at the White House,” he said on his Twitter account Tuesday, adding he will be going to Beijing, where talks will begin on the second phase of the deal.The deal, announced Dec. 13, sees the U.S. suspending plans for new tariffs on $160 billion of Chinese imports including smartphones and toys and reducing some existing levies. China agreed to increase its purchases of American agricultural products and has made new commitments on intellectual property protections, forced technology transfers by U.S. companies and currency practices. The move at least temporarily calm fears of an escalating trade war between the world’s two largest economies.The precise terms of the 86-page agreement have not been revealed. U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said Dec. 13 he expected to sign the accord together with his Chinese counterpart, Vice Premier Liu He, in early January in Washington, and that it would be released publicly then.To contact the reporter on this story: Ana Monteiro in Johannesburg at amonteiro4@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Margaret Collins at mcollins45@bloomberg.net, Kevin Whitelaw, Alister BullFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2020 Bloomberg L.P.




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Ex-Bosnian Serb general indicted for aiding genocideSARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) — Bosnia's war crimes prosecutor on Tuesday charged a former Bosnian Serb general with aiding genocide in the 1995 massacre at the eastern Bosnian town of Srebrenica. More than 8,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys were killed when Bosnian Serb troops captured the U.N.-protected enclave of Srebrenica in July 1995 during the Bosnian war.




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Iraqi protesters breach U.S. Embassy complex in Baghdad amid anger over airstrikesAnger over U.S. airstrikes Sunday against Iran-backed militia Kataib Hezbollah boiled over in Baghdad on Tuesday as militia supporters broke into the U.S. Embassy complex and set fire to a reception area, The Associated Press reports. Iraqi officials say the U.S. ambassador and other staff evacuated the embassy as militia supporters started gathering outside, but the security forces who remained fired tear gas at the dozens of protesters who breached a side gate. AP reporters at the scene also heard sounds of gunfire and saw U.S. troops on the embassy roof with guns pointed at the attackers.Leaders of several Iran-backed militias were in the crowd at the embassy shouting "Down, Down U.S.A." and "Death to America." Sunday's airstrikes killed 25 Kataib Hezbollah militants, a response, U.S. officials said, to an attack Friday that left one U.S. contractor dead. The attack on the U.S. Embassy followed funerals for the militants in a Baghdad neighborhood. Before breaking down the side gate, protesters smashed security cameras, torched three empty trailers used by security guards, and spray-painted "Closed in the name of the people" on the embassy gates.More stories from theweek.com The Obama legacy is not what many liberals think Trump's scandals will haunt America for years The first decade in history




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Bailed tycoon Ghosn flees to Lebanon from 'rigged' JapanFormer Nissan chief Carlos Ghosn said Tuesday he had fled to Lebanon to escape injustice in Japan, where he was on bail awaiting trial on financial misconduct charges. The auto tycoon's abrupt departure was the latest twist in a rollercoaster journey that saw him fall from boardroom to detention centre and sparked questions over an embarrassing security lapse in Japan. It was not clear how he managed to leave Japan, as his bail conditions barred him from exiting the country he had been held in since his sudden arrest in November 2018 sent shockwaves through the business world.




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Swiss Embassy worker detained in Sri Lanka gets bailA Sri Lankan Court on Monday granted bail to a Swiss Embassy employee who was detained pending charges that she made statements to create disaffection toward the government and fabricated evidence. Before her arrest, the employee, a Sri Lankan national, had reportedly said she was abducted, held for hours, sexually assaulted and threatened by captors who demanded that she disclose embassy-related information. Sri Lankan authorities have said they investigated her complaint but found no evidence to file charges against anyone.




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Powerful winter storm lingers in Upper MidwestA fierce winter storm that created blizzard conditions in parts of Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota shut down interstates, led to hundreds of vehicle crashes and brought a metropolitan area of more than 200,000 people to a standstill on Monday morning. Residents in the Fargo and Moorhead, Minnesota area who are used to snowstorms were told to stay home after a foot of heavy, wet snow made that fell on top of a sheet of ice made travel difficult and stoked early fears about spring flooding. The National Weather Service issued a winter storm warning in northeastern Minnesota, northern Wisconsin and Michigan's Upper Peninsula, where periods of heavy snow and gusty winds were expected to create difficult travel conditions.




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Panama marks 20 years in charge of canal, faces climate threatOn December 31, 1999 at midday sharp, then-president Mireya Moscoso hoisted Panama's red, blue and white flag over the Canal administration building for the first time. The entire Central American nation was swept with joy, having finally received sovereignty over the Canal after 85 years of management by the US, which built and inaugurated the ocean route in August 1914. Twenty years later, recurrent droughts caused by climate change are the main threat to the 80 kilometer-long canal between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, through which mostly American, Chinese and Japanese merchant ships pass.




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Churchgoers kill gunman who shot two during Texas serviceWorshippers in the US state of Texas shot dead a gunman who opened fire during a livestreamed Sunday service, ending an attack that killed two parishioners, authorities said. The latest US shooting at a house of worship took place in the suburban Fort Worth community of White Settlement on Sunday morning when the gunman entered West Freeway Church of Christ, officials said. "A couple of members of the church returned fire, striking the suspect who died at the scene," White Settlement Police Chief J.P. Bevering told reporters.




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California's groundbreaking privacy law takes effect in January. What does it do?Landmark law, the ‘most comprehensive’ in the US, gives Californians an arsenal of tools to protect their data online Last year, California passed a landmark privacy law that gives consumers more control over their data. The legislation gives residents unprecedented rights to control what information companies collect on them and how it is used.The California Consumer Privacy Act will go into action 1 January 2020, giving residents of the state a whole new arsenal of tools to protect their data and personal information online – and saddling businesses with a lot more responsibility.Here is everything you need to know about California’s “groundbreaking” new privacy law. What is the law?The California Consumer Privacy Act, passed in 2018, is the “most comprehensive” privacy legislation to be enacted in the United States to date, according to the American Bar Association.Under the new regulations, California residents will be able to demand companies to disclose what information is collected on them and request a copy of that information.Companies will be forced to delete consumers’ data upon request and they’ll be prohibited from selling information if the customer instructs them to via a mandatory “do not sell” link on the company’s website.Consumers will also have the right to “receive equal service and price whether or not they exercise their privacy rights” or in other words, companies won’t be able to treat a user differently because they have requested their data. When does it go into effect?The law is effective on 1 January – meaning consumers can submit requests for their data starting on that date. The California attorney general’s office will not take any enforcement action against companies that do not comply until 1 July 2020. What businesses does it affect?Businesses will be required to comply with the new regulations if they have an annual gross revenue in excess of $25m, derive 50% or more of their annual revenue from selling consumers’ personal information, or annually buy, receive, sell, or share the personal information of more than 50,000 consumers, households, or devices for commercial purposes.That means at least 500,000 businesses will be required to comply with the new law, according to the not-for-profit the International Association of Privacy. Who else does it affect?Consumers in California will be most directly affected by the new law. However, even people who not live in California may see ripple effects, said Peter Yared, the founder and chief executive officer of data management company InCountry.“There are similar laws manifesting all over the world so increasingly companies are set up to receive and process these kinds of requests for data,” he said. I live in California – how can I get my own data?Consumers can receive a copy of their data by sending “a verifiable consumer request” to a business. The company is then required to comply with the request within 45 days of receipt. In some cases, companies can extend this time period for a maximum of 90 days total.Consumers may only make a request for information twice a year, and only for a 12-month look-back period. What happens if a company doesn’t give me my data?Companies may face fines of $2,500 to $7,500 per violation of the new law, if the violation is deemed intentional. However, the CCPA also grants businesses a 30-day period to address a violation after receipt of a consumer’s request. The law is enforced by the California attorney general. How does the CCPA compare to other privacy laws?The California Consumer Privacy Act has often been called “GDPR-lite”, bearing resemblance to the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation, which went into effect in May 2018.GDPR’s scope is broader, affecting all businesses that handle user data, whereas the CCPA applies only to businesses with a gross revenue over $25m, more than 50,000 customers, or whose revenue is 50% or more based on user data.The CCPA provides more explicit “opt out” options for users who do not want their personal data sold. Under the CCPA, companies must include a “Do Not Sell My Personal Information” link in a clear and conspicuous location on their websites. Under GDPR, by comparison, businesses do not necessarily need the individual’s consent to collect and use data.The rules also differ in their approaches to the collection of children’s data. Under GDPR, parents must provide consent for the processing of data of children under the age of 16. The CCPA requires businesses obtain consent from parents of children ages 13 and under, while kids older than 13 can provide their own consent. What’s next?Although the CCPA is the most extensive privacy law yet to be passed in the US, some advocates say it does not go far enough. Before the comment period on the law closed on 6 December, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a not-for-profit organization, and other privacy advocates filed a request to strengthen the regulation.The law as it is written does not do enough to address data collection, said Hayley Tsukayama, an EFF legal advocate, and California has few resources to enforce the law in 2020.“You have the right to go to companies that have your data and ask to have it back, but they don’t have to come to you to ask to have it in the first place”, she said. “This is what we call opt in versus opt out.”Companies that violate the law will also have the “right to cure”, meaning they can change their violating policies after they have been apprehended.“We see this as a get out of jail free card,” Tsukayama said.




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Saudi Arabia Sentences Man to Death for Theater Stabbings: TV(Bloomberg) -- A Saudi Arabian court sentenced a Yemeni man to death for stabbing three performers at a theater show in the capital last month in an attack ordered by al-Qaeda, state-run TV reported.Another defendant was jailed for 12 1/2 years, Al Ekhbariya channel reported, citing the criminal court. The attack, in which three people were injured, was ordered by al-Qaeda in neighboring Yemen, the broadcaster said. It didn’t specify where it got the information.The mid-November attack in Riyadh came as the conservative kingdom undergoes a drastic overhaul of its social norms spearheaded by its young crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman. Saudis have been granted freedoms that include the loosening of rules on women’s attire and travel as well as the mixing of genders in conjunction with a plan to wean the economy off oil.The court rulings were preliminary and both defendants can file appeals.\--With assistance from Sarah Algethami.To contact the reporter on this story: Reema Alothman in Riyadh at ralothman1@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Donna Abu-Nasr at dabunasr@bloomberg.net, Michael Gunn, Bruce StanleyFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P.




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Trump could lose popular vote by 5 million but still win 2020 election, Michael Moore warnsMichael Moore has warned Donald Trump could lose the popular vote by 5 million but still win the 2020 election, given the Electoral College system.In 2016, Mr Trump won almost 3 million fewer votes than Hillary Clinton but comfortably won the election by winning key states.




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Officials: Hanukkah attack suspect researched Hitler onlineA man charged with federal hate crimes Monday in a bloody attack on a Hanukkah celebration had handwritten journals containing anti-Semitic references and had recently used his phone to look up information on Hitler and the location of synagogues, authorities said. Grafton Thomas, 37, was held without bail after appearing in federal court in White Plains on five counts of obstructing the free exercise of religious beliefs by attempting to kill with a dangerous weapon. Five people were stabbed and slashed in the Saturday attack north of New York City.




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Iranian-backed militia threatens retaliation for US strikes on their forces in Iraq and SyriaAn Iran-backed militia vowed on Monday to retaliate for US military strikes in Iraq and Syria which killed 25 of its fighters and wounded dozens. "Our battle with America and its mercenaries is now open to all possibilities," Kataib Hizbollah said in a statement. "We have no alternative today other than confrontation and there is nothing that will prevent us from responding to this crime."   Iraq described the attacks on Kataib Hizbollah as a “flagrant violation” of its sovereignty, and Iran said the airstrikes were “an obvious case of terrorism”. Moqtada al-Sadr, the notorious Iraqi Shia cleric, said on Monday that he was willing to work with Iran-backed militia groups - his political rivals - to end the United States military presence in Iraq through political and legal means. If that does not work, he will "take other actions" in cooperation with his rivals to kick out US troops. Sadr's militia fought US troops for years following Washington's invasion of Iraq in 2003. Iraqi Shiite cleric and leader Moqtada al-Sadr attends a meeting with Iraqi Prime Minister in Najaf on June 23, 2018 The US launched strikes against five targets in Iraq and Syria on Sunday, aiming to damage Kataib Hizbollah – a separate entity to the better-known Hizbollah, based in Lebanon. The US blames the group for the killing last week of an American contractor in a rocket attack on an Iraqi military base. The US attack - the largest targeting an Iraqi state-sanctioned militia since 2011 - represents a new escalation in the proxy war between the US and Iran playing out in the Middle East. Russia’s foreign ministry called the “exchange of strikes” between Kataib Hizbollah and US forces in Iraq “unacceptable,” and called for restraint from both sides. “We consider such actions unacceptable and counterproductive. We call upon all parties to refrain from further actions that could sharply destabilise the military-political situation in Iraq, Syria, and the neighboring countries,” a ministry statement said. Thousands of protesters blocked roads and bridges across southern Iraq on Dec 23, condemning Iranian influence and political leaders who missed another deadline to agree on a new prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, praised the “important” strikes, in a phone call to Mike Pompeo, the US secretary of state. Mr Netanyahu “congratulated him on the important US action against Iran and its proxies in the region,” according to a statement issued by the Israeli leader’s office. Mr Pompeo said the strikes send the message that the US will not tolerate actions by Iran that jeopardise American lives. “We have repeatedly – the president, the secretary of state - made clear that if we are attacked by the regime or its proxies we will respond,” said Brian Hook, Donald Trump’s special envoy to Iran.  He refused to comment on further possible actions. The US has maintained some 5,000 troops in Iraq at the invitation of the Iraqi government, to help assist in the fight against the Islamic State group. But on Monday Iraq’s prime minister, Adel Abdul Mahdi, said that invitation could now be rescinded. "The prime minister described the American attack on the Iraqi armed forces as an unacceptable vicious assault that will have dangerous consequences," his office said.




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Ukraine holds big prisoner swap with pro-Russian separatistsKIEV/MOSCOW (Reuters) - Ukrainian government forces and pro-Russian separatists in the east completed a large-scale prisoner swap on Sunday after bussing scores of detainees in the five-year conflict to an exchange point in the breakaway Donbass region. The swap should help build confidence between the two sides, who are wrangling over how to implement a peace deal after the loss of more than 13,000 lives, but major disagreements remain and full normalization is far off. Ukraine said 76 pro-government detainees were handed over, while separatists said they took 120 of their prisoners during the swap at a checkpoint near the industrial town of Horlivka.




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Trump's tariffs have backfired, at least so far, Federal Reserve reportsPresident Trump has promoted his trade policy, specifically his tariffs on imported goods, as a means of reviving American manufacturing. It has done the opposite, according to a new study from Federal Reserve economists. Trump's trade war with China and other countries has led to higher consumer prices, failed to boost U.S. manufacturing, and led to domestic job losses."We find that the 2018 tariffs are associated with relative reductions in manufacturing employment and relative increases in producer prices," write Fed economists Aaron Flaaen and Justin Pierce. The tariffs did boost the competitiveness of some U.S.-made goods inside the U.S., they found, but that was "completely offset in the short-run by reduced competitiveness from retaliation and higher costs in downstream industries," and protectionist policies are now intrinsically "complicated by the presence of globally interconnnected supply chains."The industries hit especially hard by "tit-for-tat retaliation" from China and other trading partners include automobiles, iron and steel, aluminum sheet, leather goods, appliances, and various appliances and electronic goods. Those hurt by increased prices include aluminum, steel, boilers, and appliances. "While the longer-term effects of the tariffs may differ from those that we estimate here, the results indicate that the tariffs, thus far, have not led to increased activity in the U.S. manufacturing sector," Flaeen and Pierce conclude."The researchers don't measure the effects on business confidence resulting from the uncertainty regarding U.S. international trade policy," says Greg Robb at MarketWatch. "Many economists see this doubt about future government policy as a primary driver in the decline in business investment this year." Read The Week's Jeff Spross for other economic policy failures that ended up making the 2010s a lost decade.More stories from theweek.com The best headlines of 2019 Giants, Browns fire head coaches on otherwise quiet 'Black Monday' Republicans are still trying to steal your health insurance




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US carries out first strikes in a decade against Iran-backed Kataib Hizbollah in Iraq and SyriaThe United States has launched its first airstrikes in nearly a decade against the Iran-backed militia forces in Iraq and Syria. The Pentagon said it hit five bases used by the Iraqi Hizbollah militant group following a rocket attack in Iraq that killed a US civilian contractor. Three of the bases were in Iraq, and two in Syria, where the militia has been trying to bolster the regime of President Assad. “US forces have conducted precision defensive strikes against five KH facilities in Iraq and Syria that will degrade KH’s ability to conduct future attacks against OIR coalition forces,” the Pentagon said. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the strikes send the message that the US will not tolerate actions by Iran that jeopardise American lives. The strike is the first direct confrontation between US and Iranian-backed forces in Iraq since 2011, when President Obama withdrew some of his forces. "I would note also that we will take additional actions as necessary to ensure that we act in our own self-defence and we deter further bad behavior from militia groups or from Iran," said Defence Secretary Mark Esper, who was accompanied by Mr Pompeo and Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. A combination of images depicts what the U.S. military says are bases of the Kataib Hezbollah militia group that were struck by U.S. forces, in the city of Al-Qa'im Credit: Reuters The delivered the brief statement to reporters in a ballroom at Trump's Mar-a-Lago club, where the president is on a more than two-week winter break. According to the Al Arabiya news network, the US evacuated dozens of staff from its embassy in Baghdad on Sunday night amid concerns of retaliation. The targets of the US bombs included weapons storage facilities and command locations used to plan and execute attacks, the statement added. On Friday, terrorists fired a barrage of 30 rockets at an Iraqi military base in Kirkuk, an oil-rich region north of Baghdad. A US civilian contractor died in the strike. Iraq's Joint Operations Command said in a statement that three U.S. airstrikes on Sunday evening Iraq time hit the headquarters of the Hezbollah Brigades at the Iraq-Syria border, killing four fighters. Iraq's Hezbollah Brigades, a separate force from the Lebanese group Hezbollah, operate under the umbrella of the state-sanctioned militias known collectively as the Popular Mobilization Forces. Many of them are supported by Iran. The Popular Mobilization Forces said Sunday that the U.S. strikes killed at least 19 of Kataeb Hezbollah's members. Kataeb Hezbollah is led by Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, one of Iraq's most powerful men. He once battled US troops and is now the deputy head of the Popular Mobilization Forces. Washington had recently promised “a decisive US response” to a growing number of unclaimed attacks on its interests in Iraq, which it blames on pro-Iran factions. US-Iran tension levels have soared since Washington pulled out of a landmark nuclear agreement with Tehran last year and imposed crippling sanctions.




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Machete Attacker Stabs 5 at NY Rabbi’s Hanukkah CelebrationA masked, machete-wielding man barged into a Hanukkah celebration and stabbed five people at a rabbi’s home in Monsey, New York, on Saturday evening, intensifying fears anti-Semitic violence after a spate of incidents last week. The assailant escaped but the NYPD quickly picked up a suspect. Law-enforcement sources identified him as Grafton Thomas, 37, who has several previous arrests on his record, including one for punching a police horse. He was turned over to the state police, and will face five counts of attempted murder.The terrifying ambush—which took place in Rockland County, a northern suburb that has the highest per capita Jewish population in the U.S.—drew swift condemnation from public officials from Israel to Washington. Gov. Andrew Cuomo called it an “act of domestic terrorism.”According to Ramapo Police Chief Brad Weidel, a man covering his face with a scarf knocked on the door at Rabbi Rottenburg’s shul during the seventh night of Hanukkah just as the rabbi was lighting the candle. The assailant rushed past the man who answered the door, who said he pulled out a machete and began stabbing people, according to several witnesses.He is said to have gone after terrified victims as they ran away and tried to access the adjacent synagogue before fleeing the scene after some of the guests hit him with chairs and a small table.Ramapo Town Police said the suspect was in custody. He reportedly escaped the scene but was arrested in Harlem after being tracked down through the license plate number of his vehicle.Of the five victims rushed to local hospitals, two of them were in critical condition as of late Saturday, according to the Orthodox Jewish Public Affairs Council for the Hudson Valley region. The organization said one of the victims had been stabbed six times. Governor Andrew Cuomo called the stabbings a “cowardly act” and directed the State Police Hate Crimes Task Force to investigate the incident.“Let me be clear: anti-Semitism and bigotry of any kind are repugnant to our values of inclusion and diversity and we have absolutely zero tolerance for such acts of hate,” Cuomo said in a statement. “In New York we will always stand up and say with one voice to anyone who wishes to divide and spread fear: you do not represent New York and your actions will not go unpunished.”President Trump addressed the “horrific” bloodshed on Sunday afternoon, in a tweet: “We must all come together to fight, confront, and eradicate the evil scourge of anti-Semitism. Melania and I wish the victims a quick and full recovery.”Yossi Gestetner, a co-founder of the OJPAC for the Hudson Valley region, told The New York Times there were “many dozens of people” celebrating in the home at the time of the attack. “It was a Hanukkah celebration,” he was quoted saying. Videos said to have been taken by witnesses showed paramedics rushing to treat the victims in a chaotic scene. The office of New York Attorney General Letitia James released a statement saying she was left “deeply disturbed” by the incident.“There is zero tolerance for acts of hate of any kind and we will continue to monitor this horrific situation,” James said. “I stand with the Jewish community tonight and every night.”New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio called the attack “horrific.” “So many Jewish families in our city have close ties to Monsey. We cannot overstate the fear people are feeling right now,” he wrote on Twitter. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also expressed solidarity with the victims during the opening remarks at his weekly cabinet meeting on Sunday. “Israel condemns in every sense the latest anti-Semitic incidents and the brutal attack in the middle of Hanukkah at the rabbi’s house in Monsey, New York,” he said. “We will work together in every way with the local authorities in order to help eliminate this phenomena. We offer our help to all countries.”The attack comes after at least seven other anti-Semitic incidents were reported in New York City this week, prompting the New York City Police Department to increase the number of officers in predominantly Jewish areas. The stabbings also come less than a month after four people were killed in a “targeted” shooting at a Jersey City kosher supermarket that investigators believe was fueled by a “hatred of the Jewish people.” Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more.




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Hasan Minhaj’s 2020 Advice: Be Like Mitch McConnellBefore signing off for 2019, Hasan Minhaj has turned his eye towards 2020. The host of Netflix’s Patriot Act ended his final episode of the year by sharing some updates from stories he covered earlier in the year, including an interview during which he tried to get Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to accept Islam as his “one true faith.” Two weeks later, his brownface scandal erupted. “Little did I know he had actually converted decades ago,” Minhaj joked.  The biggest problem of 2019, he went on to argue, is that “we’re exposed to all the news, all the time, which makes us feel like we have to care about everything all the time.” It’s called “compassion fatigue” and Minhaj compared it to feeling like you have “50 tabs open in our mental browsers and we’re about to crash.” “You know who really figured out 2019?” he asked, before adding, “You’re not going to like this.” He was talking about Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. “We’ve shat on Mitch McConnell all year. ‘He’s a goblin, he’s a skin tag with glasses, he looks like something from a wax museum dumpster.’ He doesn’t give a fuck.” To extend Minhaj’s analogy, McConnell “closed all tabs, except for the Republican Party and locking down the courts.” And he thinks those on the other side of the political divide should do the same.Hasan Minhaj Fires Back at Saudi Arabia for Censoring His Netflix Show ‘Patriot Act’“So here’s what I’m pitching,” he continued. “For 2020, give yourself a break. Just pick a couple things to not care about, for your sanity. I’m not saying shut down your browser. Just close a couple tabs.” For himself, Minhaj has decided to let other people worry about plastic straws, North Korea and brownface. “I know, that’s supposed to be my issue,” he said. “But I’ve got other tabs to focus on. So if someone comes up to me and is like, ‘Did you hear? Joe Biden dressed up as Apu for Halloween!’ I’d be like, ‘Yo, I bet the accent was funny.’” Minhaj acknowledged that it was “weird” to hear this advice from a host—much like his fellow Daily Show alum John Oliver—who “tells you to care about something new every week.” And he promised to keep doing so in 2020, something that was an open question before Patriot Act aired the 32nd episode of its initial 32-episode order this past week. “I’ll see you guys in 2020,” he concluded. “We’ve got a few more tabs to open.” For more, listen to the most recent episodes of The Last Laugh podcast. Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more.




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North Korea's Kim urges 'positive and offensive' security measures ahead of nuclear talks deadlineNorth Korean leader Kim Jong Un called for "positive and offensive measures" to ensure the country's security before a year-end deadline he has set for denuclearization talks with the United States, state media KCNA said on Monday. Kim convened a weekend meeting of top Workers' Party officials to discuss policy matters amid rising tension over his deadline for Washington to soften its stance in stalled negotiations aimed at dismantling Pyongyang's nuclear and missile programs. At a Sunday session, Kim suggested action in the areas of foreign affairs, the munitions industry and armed forces, stressing the need to take "positive and offensive measures for fully ensuring the sovereignty and security of the country," KCNA said, without elaborating.




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Bernie Sanders Condemns Rise of Anti-Semitism in Iowa Menorah Lighting(Bloomberg) -- Bernie Sanders helped light a menorah at a “Chanukah on Ice” event at an Iowa ice skating rink Sunday night, and condemned a rise in anti-semitism in America and “all over the world.”It’s rare to see the U.S. senator from Vermont, who is a secular Jew, in a religious setting while running for the Democratic presidential nomination.The annual Hanukkah event, organized by Des Moines Rabbi Yossi Jacobson, came less than 24 hours after an intruder stabbed five people at a rabbi’s home in the New York City suburb of Monsey Saturday night.“What we’re seeing right now -- we’re seeing it in America, we’re seeing it all over the world -- is a rise in anti-semitism. We’re seeing a rise in hate crimes,” Sanders said.“We’re seeing somebody run into a kid here in Des Moines because that child was a Latino. We’re seeing people being stabbed yesterday in New York City because they were Jewish. We are seeing people being assaulted because they are Muslim,” he told an audience of about 90 gathered on a frigid Iowa winter night.“And as the rabbi indicated, if there was ever a time in American history where we say no to religious bigotry, this is the time,” he said.Sanders talked about his father immigrating at age 17 from Poland, “fleeing anti-semitism and fleeing violence and fleeing terrible, terrible poverty.”Sanders joked about not burning down the ice skating rink before lighting the menorah candles with a blowtorch provided by the event organizers. He joined in, reading the words, as the rabbi sang a blessing. An icy wind blew his borrowed kippah off his head at one point.As Jacobson and his wife, Chana, who run Maccabee’s Kosher Deli in Des Moines, handed out latkes and doughnuts, the rabbi noted that Sanders rarely talks about Judaism on the campaign trail.That has raised questions about whether he’s uncomfortable with his Jewish identity, Jacobson said.Jacobson said Sanders was reluctant at first to accept the invitation to light the menorah candles, but once he did, he embraced the evening with enthusiasm.Jacobson said he asked Sanders his Hebrew name. Binyamin, Sanders answered.The rabbi said he gave Sanders a blessing, “for his health.”To contact the reporter on this story: Jennifer Jacobs in Washington at jjacobs68@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Wendy Benjaminson at wbenjaminson@bloomberg.net, Elizabeth Wasserman, Kasia KlimasinskaFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P.




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Kremlin says Putin called Trump to thank him for information that thwarted terrorist attackRussian President Vladimir Putin thanked President Trump over the phone Sunday for information that helped thwart a terrorist attack, the Kremlin says.The Kremlin released a statement saying that Putin "thanked Donald Trump for the information transmitted through the channels of U.S. special services that has helped thwart terrorist acts in Russia."While further details were not provided, The New York Times notes that Russia's Federal Security Service told Russian media it detained two suspects who were allegedly preparing a New Year's Eve attack in St. Petersburg. Russia's news agencies reported that materials were seized from the suspects and that "information about the preparation of the crime was provided by U.S. intelligence," The Wall Street Journal reports.In December 2017, Putin similarly thanked Trump for information that helped thwart a planned attack in St. Petersburg, the Times notes.Putin and Trump on Sunday also discussed a "range of issues of mutual interest and agreed to continue bilateral cooperation in combating terrorism," the Kremlin said, but the White House has yet to comment on the call.More stories from theweek.com The best headlines of 2019 Giants, Browns fire head coaches on otherwise quiet 'Black Monday' Republicans are still trying to steal your health insurance




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Iraq condemns U.S. air strikes as unacceptable and dangerousIraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi on Monday condemned U.S. air strikes on bases of Iranian-backed Iraqi militia, a move that could plunge Iraq further into the heart of a proxy conflict between the United States and Iran. The U.S. military carried out air strikes on Sunday against the Kataib Hezbollah militia in response to the killing of a U.S. civilian contractor in a rocket attack on an Iraqi military base, officials said. "The prime minister described the American attack on the Iraqi armed forces as an unacceptable vicious assault that will have dangerous consequences," his office said.




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Swiss Embassy worker detained in Sri Lanka gets bailA Sri Lankan Court on Monday granted bail to a Swiss Embassy employee who was detained pending charges that she made statements to create disaffection toward the government and fabricated evidence. Before her arrest, the employee, a Sri Lankan national, had reportedly said she was abducted, held for hours, sexually assaulted and threatened by captors who demanded that she disclose embassy-related information. Sri Lankan authorities have said they investigated her complaint but found no evidence to file charges against anyone.




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