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New York Times : news
20  avril     13h43
House Set to Vote on Foreign Aid Bills for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan
Catie Edmondson    After clearing a critical hurdle on Friday, the pieces of the billion package were expected to pass in a series of votes, putting the legislation on track for enactment after a tortured journey through Congress.
    05h00
Senate Passes Two-Year Extension of Surveillance Law Just After It Expired
Charlie Savage and Luke Broadwater    The law lapsed only briefly after a late night deal that allowed votes on privacy advocates’ proposed changes, all of which were defeated.
    11h54
Day 4 of Trump’s Criminal Hush-Money Trial: Key Takeaways
Jesse McKinley and Kate Christobek    A full jury is seated, a horrifying incident shocks the court and opening statements are set to begin on Monday.
19  avril     23h08
Where Jurors in Trump Hush-Money Trial Say They Get Their News
Charlie Smart    Prosecutors and defense lawyers tried to divine the political leanings of prospective jurors in the former president’s Manhattan criminal trial from their answers to questions about what media they consume.
20  avril     13h24
Max Azzarello’s Path to Setting Himself on Fire Outside Trump Trial Began in Florida
Michael Wilson and Tracey Tully    Friends of Max Azzarello, who set himself on fire outside Donald J. Trump’s trial, said he was a caring person whose paranoia had led him down a dark path.
    11h19
Top Chinese Swimmers Tested Positive for Banned Drug, Then Won Olympic Gold
Michael S. Schmidt and Tariq Panja    The case, involving multiple swimmers who seven months later won medals at the Games, prompted accusations of a cover up and concerns over why antidoping regulators chose not to intervene.
    12h13
Takeaways From Our Chinese Swimming Investigation
Tariq Panja and Michael S. Schmidt    A doping case involving Olympic swimmers has left unanswered questions and raised new concerns about the actions of a global antidoping regulator.
19  avril     23h22
Israel’s Strike on Iran: A Limited Attack but a Potentially Big Signal
David E. Sanger and Eric Schmitt    Israel hit a strategic city with carefully measured force, but made the point that it could strike at a center of Iran’s nuclear program.
20  avril     09h02
Americans’ New TV Habit: Subscribe. Watch. Cancel. Repeat.
John Koblin    Many more people are jumping from one streaming subscription to another, a behavior that could have big implications for the entertainment industry.
    09h03
G.O.P. Intensifies Scrutiny of Voting: We’re Keeping a Close Eye on You’
Nick Corasaniti, Alexandra Berzon and Michael Gold    The Trump campaign and the Republican Party plan to dispatch over , volunteers and lawyers to monitor elections in battleground states and work in concert with conservative activists.
    09h03
How R.F.K. Jr. Got on the Michigan Ballot, With Only Two Votes
Rebecca Davis O’Brien    The independent candidate persuaded a tiny party to give him its line on the ballot in a key battleground state, sparing him a costly, arduous organizing effort.
    13h22
Could the Union Victory at VW Set Off a Wave?
Noam Scheiber    Some experts say the outcome at a plant in Chattanooga, Tenn., may be organized labor’s most significant advance in decades. But the road could get rockier.
    04h05
VW Workers in Tennessee Vote for Union
Neal E. Boudette    The Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga is set to become the first unionized auto factory in the South not owned by one of Detroit’s Big Three.
    12h56
Archie Moore, Australian Artist, Wins Top Prize at Venice Biennale
Alex Marshall    Moore, an Indigenous Australian artist, won the Golden Lion for kith and kin, which draws on what he says is , years of family history.
    08h09
Hits of the Venice Biennale
Jason Farago, Alex Marshall, Julia Halperin, Jillian Steinhauer, Zachary Small, Casey Kelbaugh and Matteo de Mayda    These highlights drew the big crowds in the early days, from a sonorous symphony made by fruit, to an underwater spectacle to a modern day Tintoretto.
    11h53
Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time
New York Times Audio    Stories that begin full of hope then take a turn.
    11h01
Melania’s Trials
Maureen Dowd    The former first lady is swept back into the Stormy cyclone.
    11h00
Mike Pence: Donald Trump Has Betrayed the Pro-Life Movement
Mike Pence    Here’s how America should build on the end of Roe v. Wade
    11h19
The Most Important Thing I Teach My Students Isn’t on the Syllabus
Frank Bruni    Humility can be a bulwark against arrogance, absolutism, purity and zeal, and an antidote in our age of grievance.
    11h00
Addiction Risk Scores Won’t Solve the Opioid Crisis
Maia Szalavitz    A number of new tech companies want to solve the opioid crisis with algorithms. It’s a flawed and potentially harmful proposition.
    10h55
Bedtime Stories for Grown-Ups
Melissa Kirsch    For those past the age of a parental tuck in, audiobooks might provide a soothing analogue.
    11h31
Most Major Crimes Are Down. Why Are Assaults Up?
Maria Cramer and Chelsia Rose Marcius    Homicides, rapes and shootings in New York City have decreased, but the number of assaults has remained stubbornly high.
    13h56
Columbia Students Who Were Arrested Face Uncertain Consequences
Troy Closson and Anna Betts    Students who occupied a tent encampment to protest the war in Gaza say they may not be allowed to complete the semester. That did not dampen their commitment.
    00h06
Scientists Fault Federal Response to Bird Flu Outbreaks on Dairy Farms
Apoorva Mandavilli and Emily Anthes    Testing for H N infection has been limited, and the outbreak was never confined. But asymptomatic cows in North Carolina may require a reassessment.
19  avril     09h03
What to Do When Your 401(k) Leaves Something to Be Desired
Mark Miller    Over the course of a career, the high fees and a lower quality menu of investment options found in some plans can shrink your balance significantly.