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  1. V.A. Has Approved 1 Million Claims Under Burn Pit Law, Biden to Announce The president is heading to New Hampshire to discuss care for veterans suffering from toxic exposure, an issue that resonates for him personally and, his campaign hopes, politically.
    nytimes.com
  2. How to Deal With a Supreme Court That Can No Longer Be Shamed Congress and the judiciary can no longer allow a few justices to trample on the court’s reputation.
    nytimes.com
  3. For Kendrick and Drake, Family Matters A rap battle got personal — and that was the point.
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  4. Biden’s Get-Tough-on-China Tariffs May Backfire Some of President Biden’s new array of tariffs targeted at China make sense. But others seem motivated by a desire to outflank his opponent in Rust Belt swing states.
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  5. Inside Gaza’s Ruined Hospitals Dr. Samer Attar, an American surgeon, shows the unfathomable brutality of the war in Gaza.
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  6. How Free School Meals Went Mainstream Over the past decade, many more schools started to offer free meals to all children, regardless of family income.
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  7. This Man Did Not Invent Bitcoin For years, Craig Steven Wright, an Australian cryptocurrency enthusiast, claimed to be Satoshi Nakamoto, the mysterious creator of Bitcoin. Then the courts got involved.
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  8. The Palm Springs Neighborhood That Burned 50 Years Ago The Black and Latino families of Section 14, who made up much of the labor force of Palm Springs, are asking for reparations for what they say was a racially motivated attack.
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  9. Iran Begins Funeral Events for President Raisi A procession in the city of Tabriz was the first in a string of events after Ebrahim Raisi’s death in a helicopter crash. Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has announced five days of mourning.
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  10. In Germany, Far-Right Plotters of an Improbable Coup to Go on Trial Members of a group called the “United Patriots” are accused of planning to bring a prince into power by violently overthrowing the government.
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  11. Trump’s Lawyers Are Expected to Rest Their Case on Tuesday Prosecutors finished on Monday, after their final witness, Michael D. Cohen, stepped down from the stand after days of testimony. Then, things turned fractious.
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  12. CUNY Law School Cancels Its Student Commencement Speech CUNY Law School is known for its diversity and activism, and lately for strongly worded pro-Palestinian commencement addresses. This year, the administration canceled its annual student speech.
    nytimes.com
  13. Dartmouth President Sian Leah Beilock Is Censured by Faculty Over Protest Actions The president, Sian Leah Beilock, called in the police just hours after a pro-Palestinian encampment went up on campus. A bystander and a professor were injured.
    nytimes.com
  14. Scarlett Johansson’s Statement About Her Interactions With Sam Altman The actress released a lengthy statement about the company and the similarity of one of its A.I. voices.
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  15. NYPD Responded Aggressively to Protests After Promises to Change Violent responses to pro-Palestinian activists follow a sweeping agreement aimed at striking an equilibrium between preserving public safety and the rights of protesters.
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  16. Amal Clooney Was Among the Experts Consulted on I.C.C. Warrants Ms. Clooney, a prominent human rights lawyer, was on a panel that recommended arrest warrants for leaders of Israel and Hamas. She had been criticized for not speaking out on the war.
    nytimes.com
  17. Eric Adams’s Aide Is Cooperating With FBI Investigation Into NYC Mayor Eric Adams’s former liaison to the Turkish community, Rana Abbasova, had knowledge of some of the mayor’s dealings with Turkish officials.
    nytimes.com
  18. What the Dow Jones Hitting 40,000 Points Tells Us The stock market isn’t the economy — but its record high refutes conspiracy theories.
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  19. Trump’s Eyes Wide Shut Strategy The prosecution rested its case. And Trump rested his eyes.
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  20. Democrats Criticize N.Y.C. Parents Who Questioned Transgender Athlete Policy Over a dozen Democratic elected officials criticized a parent group that asked for a review of rules that let students play on sports teams that align with their gender identity.
    nytimes.com
  21. U.S. ‘Condolences’ for Raisi Reflect a Delicate Diplomatic Ritual Whether it’s Stalin or Castro or Kim Jong-il, the United States struggles for the right words when a reviled foreign strongman dies.
    nytimes.com
  22. Trump Trial Day 19 Takeaways: Cohen Finishes Testimony as Defense Begins The judge became furious with a defense witness, a former Hells Angels leader turned up and Michael D. Cohen kept his cool.
    nytimes.com
  23. Former Trump Officials Meet in Israel With Netanyahu Robert O’Brien, one of Donald Trump’s closest foreign policy advisers, said he was there as a “private citizen.”
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  24. What the Death of Iran’s President Raisi Means for His Country, and the World The generation on the cusp of taking power in Iran sees domestic oppression and foreign aggression as indispensable to the success of the revolution.
    nytimes.com
  25. Iran’s President Died, Opening a New Chapter of Instability Also, prosecutors rested their case against Trump. Here’s the latest at the end of Monday.
    nytimes.com
  26. Iran Moves to Project Stability After President Raisi Dies in Helicopter Crash The ayatollah announced five days of mourning for the president and foreign minister who died when their helicopter plunged into a mountainous region. Some Iranians celebrated the deaths.
    nytimes.com
  27. Cohen Endures Cross-Examination Under the Eyes of Trump’s Entourage Michael D. Cohen admitted stealing from the Trump Organization, but maintained his cool. The former president arrived with many supporters, some with criminal histories.
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  28. Jim Otto, Hall of Fame Raiders Center, Is Dead at 86 Despite his accomplishments on the field, he was remembered mostly for the many beatings his body absorbed, which left him in constant pain.
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  29. Top Education Officials Were Warned of FAFSA Overhaul Hurdles in 2020 Documents obtained by The Times show the department’s troubled FAFSA rollout this year came in spite of early warnings that the project required sustained attention.
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  30. Penguin Random House Dismisses Two of Its Top Publishers The departures of Reagan Arthur, of Alfred A. Knopf, and Lisa Lucas, of Pantheon and Schocken, in a restructuring came as a surprise to many in the company.
    nytimes.com