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[[The New York Times]
Today's Headlines]
Monday, January 2, 2017
IN THIS EMAIL [NYT] [World] | [Business] | [Technology] | [Sports] | [U.S. News] | [Opinion]
Top News
[Nightclub Massacre in Istanbul Exposes Turkey's Deepening Fault Lines]
By TIM ARANGO
The attack on Sunday, which killed at least 39 people, targeted a symbol of a cosmopolitan Istanbul that is increasingly under threat.
[Victims in Istanbul New Year's Attack Came From at Least 12 Countries]
By SEWELL CHAN
Citizens of Belgium, Canada France, India, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Saudi Arabia and Tunisia were among the dead, officials said.
[James Cresswell, a professor at the University of Exeter in England, has turned to less controversial areas of research on bees. Here, a bee is mounted on a wire in a wind tunnel, for research designed to estimate normal bee density.]
Uncertain Harvest
[Scientists Loved and Loathed by an Agrochemical Giant]
By DANNY HAKIM
With corporate funding of research, "There's no scientist who comes out of this unscathed."
For more top news, go to [INYT.com]
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Editors' Picks
[President Obama visited Section 60 of Arlington National Cemetery on Veterans Day in 2009. Section 60 is where many American soldiers killed in Afghanistan and Iraq are buried.]
WORLD
[The Afghan War and the Evolution of Obama]
By MARK LANDLER
A strategy that went from a "good war" to the shorthand "Afghan good enough" reflects the president's coming to terms with what was possible in Afghanistan.
[Vladimir Putin and Angela Merkel in 2012.]
OPINION | Op-Ed | Jochen Bittner
[Angela Merkel, Russia's Next Target]
By JOCHEN BITTNER
With a friend entering the White House, Vladimir Putin can turn his hacking army on Germany. The history of the Cold War can tell us what to expect.
World
[Anshu Jain was a force behind Deutsche Bank's appetite for risk. The bank has agreed to pay $7.2 billion to settle a claim that it pushed toxic mortgages on investors.] [Deutsche Bank Flew and Fell. Some Paid a High Price.]
By LANDON THOMAS Jr.
With its rise as a trading powerhouse, Deutsche got mixed up in some of finance's riskier, and most penalized, gambits.
[Observers during a military exercise involving multiple nations at Camp Adazi in Latvia in 2015.] [U.S. Lending Support to Baltic States Fearing Russia]
By ERIC SCHMITT
Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia are keen to accept help and are shoring up their own modest defense capabilities. But what happens when President-elect Donald J. Trump takes power is an open question.
[Julia and Kevin Garratt gave their account of their arrest and detention in an interview on Dec. 12, nearly three months after being reunited in Canada.] [Couple Held in China Are Free, but 'Even Now We Live Under a Cloud']
By DAN LEVIN
Kevin and Julia Garratt, Christian aid workers who had lived in China off and on for 30 years, are back in Canada, but say they do not feel completely safe.
For more world news, go to [NYTimes.com/World]
Business
[At Google offices in France. ] [What U.S. Tech Giants Face in Europe in 2017]
By MARK SCOTT
Many of Silicon Valley's largest companies face a growing list of regulatory challenges - and potentially large fines - in Europe this coming year.
[A CNN article served up via Google AMP, a method of loading mobile web pages more quickly.] [Google Helping Mobile Publishing? Some Publishers Are Not So Sure]
By DAISUKE WAKABAYASHI
AMP, a method of loading of mobile web pages more quickly, has raised concern among small publishers worried they are losing control of their content.
[Tony Prince, right, and Barrington Oakley, a British D.J. known as Cutmaster Swift, with a Technics turntable. ] [A Turntable Reborn Turns Its Back on Its Hip-Hop Legacy]
By JONATHAN SOBLE
Panasonic has reintroduced its Technics SL-1200, long prized by D.J.s, but is marketing it to a different crowd: audiophiles who won't blink at its $2,800 price tag.
For more business news, go to [INYT.com/Business]
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Sports
[Aitor Karanka, the Middlesbrough manager, at an exhibition match against York City in July. He combs through detailed reports each week while preparing his team for its next Premier League opponent.]
On Soccer
[Battle of Wits Starts Long Before Foot Meets Ball]
By RORY SMITH
Aitor Karanka, Middlesbrough's manager, gets thick dossiers on Premier League opponents each week because survival in England's top flight depends on it.
[Raul Mendoza, the coach of the Chinle, Ariz., boys' basketball team in the Navajo Nation, leading his team against Tuba City on Dec. 14. Chinle lost a taut contest.]
Sports of The Times
[In Navajo Nation, a Basketball Elder Earns Respect]
By MICHAEL POWELL
In a place of poverty, social ills and fractured families, Raul Mendoza, 69, coach of the Chinle, Ariz., Wildcats, is a source of quiet strength for his young players.
[Raiders quarterback Connor Cook replaced Matt McGloin, who left the game with a shoulder injury after four drives.]
On Pro Football
[Raiders Manage to Play Without Derek Carr, but Only Barely]
By BEN SHPIGEL
Their 24-6 loss to the Broncos corroborated all that they tried to dispel over the past week, after Carr's injury ruined his superlative season.
For more sports news, go to [INYT.com/Sports]
U.S. News
[Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, last month. The new Congress will convene on Tuesday.] [With New Congress Poised to Convene, Obama's Policies Are in Peril]
By JENNIFER STEINHAUER
Republicans plan to reserve the first 100 days for top priorities like a push for deregulation and a health care repeal, while Democrats set up roadblocks.
[Anita White, a lifelong resident of Washington, D.C., who is staying in transitional housing at Valley Place Family Apartments. She said she would like to leave the city.] [D.C. Homelessness Doubles National Average as Living Costs Soar]
By NOAH WEILAND
Record housing prices are cited as one cause leaving students and working class people with no where to turn but an overburdened shelter system.
[An excerpt from a journal written by Dylann S. Roof, who was found guilty of killing nine people at Emanuel A.M.E. Church in Charleston, S.C.] [Dylann Roof Himself Rejects Best Defense Against Execution]
By KEVIN SACK and ALAN BLINDER
Mr. Roof, who killed nine black worshipers at a Charleston, S.C., church, will represent himself in the penalty phase of his trial starting Tuesday.
For more U.S. news, go to [NYTimes.com/US]
Opinion
[Turkish police stood guard outside the Reina nightclub in Istanbul on Sunday.]
Op-Ed Contributor
[Istanbul: First Darkness, Then Terror]
By KAYA GENC
The New Year attack reinforces a sense that this nightmare is Turkey's new reality.
[Syrian men making their way through the rubble after an airstrike in Aleppo in September.]
Editorial
[Can Russia Make Peace as Well as War?]
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Vladimir Putin may look like a master tactician now for his role in the Syrian truce, but issues that derailed past cease-fires remain unresolved.
Gray Matter
[How to Become a 'Superager']
By LISA FELDMAN BARRETT
Sudoku isn't enough. You have to push yourself.
For more opinion, go to [INYT.com/Opinion]
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