nytimes.com
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Why Narendra Modi Called India’s Muslims ‘Infiltrators’ The brazenness of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s vilification of India’s largest minority group made clear he sees few checks at home or abroad on his power.nytimes.com
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Campus Antiwar Protests Grow, and Trump Fights Attempts to Silence Him Plus, Blair Witch actors push for royalties.nytimes.com
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A Salacious Conspiracy or Just 34 Pieces of Paper? Inside the criminal trial of former President Donald J. Trump.nytimes.com
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The Small-Business Tyrant Has a Favorite Political Party It has never been more obvious that the Republican Party is the party of the boss.nytimes.com
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Jan. 6 Rioters Should Not Catch a Break From the Supreme Court Will the court go out of its way to disregard statutory language and create ambiguity where none exists?nytimes.com
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How Progressives Won Over the Democratic Center The left’s position on Israel has now become the Democratic Party’s, hinting at greater influence to come.nytimes.com
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The Bragg Case Against Trump Is a Historic Mistake It’s not the crime; it’s the cover-up. But it’s still a highly flawed case.nytimes.com
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Using Police to Clear Protesters, Universities Struggle to Calm Campuses Students were arrested at N.Y.U. and Yale on Monday. But at Columbia, that approach led to a new encampment and demonstrations outside its gates.nytimes.com
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A Night Different From Others as Pro-Palestinian Protests Break for Seder Pro-Palestinian protesters, many of whom are Jewish, prepared Seder dinners at college protest encampments, even as other Jewish students sought community in more traditional settings.nytimes.com
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As College Students Protest, Harris Keeps Her Focus on Abortion “When we think about what is at stake, it is absolutely about freedom,” Vice President Kamala Harris said during a visit to Wisconsin.nytimes.com
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San Francisco Mayor Gives Panda Diplomacy a Try In a city still struggling to recover from the pandemic, Mayor London Breed hopes giant pandas will lift the spirits — and the economy — of San Francisco.nytimes.com
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On Columbia’s Campus, a Protest Encampment Grows and Tensions Flare On a day the university president asked students to stay home, a tent city on a campus lawn kept growing, protesters met in tense confrontations and police and politicians converged to weigh in.nytimes.com
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Mistrial Declared in Case of Arizona Rancher Accused of Murdering Migrant George Alan Kelly is accused of fatally shooting Gabriel Cuen-Buitimea, an unarmed migrant from Mexico, on his 170-acre ranch in Kino Springs, Ariz., last year.nytimes.com
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For Biden, Aid Package Provides a Welcome Boost on the World Stage The congressional breakthrough on security assistance to Ukraine and Israel will let the president finally deliver arms to match his words. But it could be only a temporary respite.nytimes.com
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U.K. Pushes Through Rwanda Deportation Bill Britain’s Parliament passed contentious legislation to allow the deportation of asylum seekers to the African country, a political victory for Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.nytimes.com
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Trump Was Warned to Return Records to Archives, Unsealed Documents Say Filings made public in the case charging the former president with illegally retaining classified material after leaving office show an associate told him that he could face indictment if he failed to give them back.nytimes.com
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The First Prosecution of a President Was Laid Out in Court Also, pro-Palestinian protests disrupt top college campuses. Here’s the latest at the end of Monday.nytimes.com
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Man Charged With Hate Crime After Break-In at Rutgers Islamic Student Center Jacob Beacher is accused of stealing a Palestinian flag and causing $40,000 in damage to religious artifacts at Rutgers University during the Eid-al-Fitr holiday.nytimes.com
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Beloved Ostrich Dies at Kansas Zoo After Swallowing Worker’s Keys Karen, a 5-year-old known for her playful antics, reached beyond her enclosure, grabbed a staff member’s keys and swallowed them, the zoo said. Attempts to save her were unsuccessful.nytimes.com
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Columbia’s President, Nemat Shafik, May Face a Censure Resolution The university senate is expected to vote as early as Wednesday on a resolution censuring Nemat Shafik, a reaction to her testimony before Congress and the arrests of student protesters.nytimes.com
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PEN America Cancels Literary Awards Ceremony Amid Gaza War Fallout The event had been set for April 29, but weeks of escalating criticism of the organization’s response to the war had led nearly half of the prize nominees to withdraw.nytimes.com
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The Columbia Protests are Spreading to Other College Campuses Demonstrations appeared to be unfolding mainly at universities in the Northeast, although protests spread to some other campuses.nytimes.com
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Generative A.I. Arrives in the Gene Editing World of CRISPR Much as ChatGPT generates poetry, a new A.I. system devises blueprints for microscopic mechanisms that can edit your DNA.nytimes.com
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Trump Calls for More Protests Outside Trial: ‘Rally Behind MAGA’ With support from demonstrators in Lower Manhattan spotty so far, Donald Trump issued a call to “rally behind MAGA,” and suggested the poor turnout was a result of a plot against his supporters.nytimes.com
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Supreme Court Appears to Side With Oregon City in Homelessness Case A majority of the justices appeared skeptical of courts wading into the thorny policy questions around when local governments can punish people for sleeping and camping outdoors.nytimes.com
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Jurors Begin to Understand the ‘Trump Tower Conspiracy’ The opening statements gave a preview of the strengths and weaknesses of each side’s arguments.nytimes.com
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5 Takeaways From Opening Statements in Trump’s Hush-Money Trial Prosecutors signaled a sweeping case and Donald J. Trump’s lawyers began their assault on witnesses’ credibility. The judge seems intent on expediting the first trial of an American president.nytimes.com
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How Cable News Covered Day 1 of Trump’s Criminal Trial TV networks began the challenging assignment on Monday of covering former President Trump’s trial without the luxury of cameras inside the courtroom.nytimes.com
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Israel Hasn’t Offered Evidence Tying U.N. Workers to Terrorism, Review Says Israel has said that one in ten employees in Gaza of a U.N. relief agency, UNRWA, belong to Hamas or Palestinian Islamic Jihad, and that the agency should be disbanded.nytimes.com
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Inside Trump’s Complicated Relationship With Law Enforcement The former president has put forth a law-and-order candidacy while also criticizing the legal system when it comes to himself and making exceptions for his supporters.nytimes.com