Monday, June 5, 2023

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

Plus, Nazi Symbols on Ukraine's Front Lines Highlight Thorny Issues of History
June 5, 2023

NEWS YOU MAY HAVE MISSED

Nazi Symbols on Ukraine's Front Lines Highlight Thorny Issues of History

Schools Received Billions in Stimulus Funds. It May Not Be Doing Enough.

S.E.C. Accuses Binance of Mishandling Funds and Lying to Regulators

The 2024 G.O.P. Field Balloons This Week, Adding 3 New Candidates

Mike Pence Formally Enters 2024 Race, Challenging Trump

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FROM OPINION

The Editorial Board

States Are Silencing the Will of Millions of Voters

Texas is joining dozens of states that have asserted dominance over cities through a practice known as state pre-emption.

Maureen Dowd

Jackie on My Mind

Before she was an iconic first lady, Jackie was a clever Camera Girl.

Nicholas Kristof

This May Be the Most Important Thing Happening in the World Today

Fewer children are starving, fewer moms are dying and terrible diseases are retreating.

Gail Collins and Bret Stephens

Blessings to You, Chris Christie

Biden-Trump, the sequel, has quite a few plot twists.

David French

To Watch a Trump Town Hall on Fox Is to Enter an Entirely Different World

Trump's Fox News town hall is a reminder of the ferocity of his voters' support.

Tomorrow: Guest Essays From Opinion

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

MORE TO DISCOVER

Twitter's U.S. Ad Sales Plunge 59% as Woes Continue

In internal forecasts, the company projected that ad sales would keep declining, handing a tough challenge to its new chief executive.

What Happened When a Brooklyn Neighborhood Policed Itself for Five Days

On a two-block stretch of Brownsville in April, the police stepped aside and let residents respond to 911 calls. It was a bold experiment that some believe could redefine law enforcement in New York City.

'It's Intoxicating': 39 Tony-Nominated Performers on Why They Act

Each year we photograph Tony nominees, and talk with them about their craft. This year we focused on actors.

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.

'Everything Changed': The War Arrives on Russians' Doorstep

With cross-border strikes, residents of the Russian region of Belgorod are starting to understand the horrors of war being waged at their doorstep.

Priced Out of the City, They Bought a Tiny Suburban Home. Now What?

The 900-square-foot house had three bedrooms, but the children's were shoe-box size. Updating them required ingenuity and ideas from "An American in Paris."

'Pass Him': How a British For-Profit College Made Millions

Oxford Business College and others like it make millions, largely by recruiting immigrants. They operate in an opaque corner of the British education system.

How the India Train Crash Unfolded

The sequence of events as three trains collided in one of India's deadliest rail accidents.

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