Sunday, June 4, 2023

For You: What Happened When a Brooklyn Neighborhood Policed Itself for Five Days

Plus, India has introduced technology to prevent collisions, but safety spending has shrunk.
June 4, 2023

NEWS YOU MAY HAVE MISSED

India has introduced technology to prevent collisions, but safety spending has shrunk.

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What Happened When a Brooklyn Neighborhood Policed Itself for Five Days

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FROM OUR SUNDAY MAGAZINE

A Tale of Paradise, Parking Lots and My Mother's Berkeley Backyard

Plans to build apartments have sparked a fight between progressive newcomers and nostalgic old-timers — with surprising allegiances in a writer's hometown.

In California's Heartland, a New Resistance Movement Is Taking Root

How do you change a place as polluted and desperately unequal as the San Joaquin Valley?

Tim Robinson and the Golden Age of Cringe Comedy

His sketch show, "I Think You Should Leave," zeroes in on the panic-inducing feelings of living in a society where we can't agree on the rules.

Can the 'California Effect' Survive in a Hyperpartisan America?

For decades the state has been setting policy for the whole nation. Now red states are pushing back.

A Week With the Wild Children of the A.I. Boom

In Silicon Valley's hacker houses, the latest crop of young entrepreneurs is partying, innovating — and hoping not to get crushed by the big guys.

Tomorrow: From Opinion

Every day we'll feature stories from a different section. Check back daily.

MORE TO DISCOVER

Inside the Complicated Reality of Being America's Oldest President

President Biden is asking voters to keep him in the White House until age 86, renewing attention to an issue that polls show troubles most Americans.

What's the Best Way to Treat a Workout Injury: Heat or Ice?

Sports physicians have long recommended the R.I.C.E. method — rest, ice, compression, elevation — for muscle injuries, but guidance is changing.

Can Old-World Ceramics Survive Modern Tastes?

A style of pottery made for centuries in a small Romanian town has recently become a hot commodity.

Iceland Is a Magnet for Tourists. Its First Lady Has Some Advice for Them.

Eliza Reid, a former U.N. tourism ambassador and the wife of President Gudni Johannesson, welcomes her country's many visitors, and has a few suggestions on safety, respect and how to meet locals.

Honeybee Swarms Darken U.K. Skies, Sending Beekeepers Scrambling

It's swarming season in Britain, with honeybee colonies splitting in half in search of new homes. This year, beekeepers say they are getting an unusually high number of swarm sightings.

The Exclusive, Elusive World of Real Tennis

"If you wanted to design a game that was going to put people off from playing it," one court tennis enthusiast said, "you would probably design a real tennis court."

Has New York Reached Peak Pork?

Ribbons of finely sliced charcuterie have become a staple at a certain kind of restaurant, for reasons both luxurious and not.

What Belongs in Your Survival Kit, From 8 People Who Know Something About Disasters

Instant coffee, a stash of singles, a good rapport with your neighbors and … Pringles. Here's what you really need to prepare for extreme weather events and other disasters.

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