Debates, D.C. Baseball, and Arnold Schwarzenegger
A summary of the best reads found behind the paywall of The New York Times.
Now that The New York Times pay wall is live, you only get 10 free clicks a month. For those worried about hitting their limit, we're taking a look through the paper each morning to find the stories that can make your clicks count.
Top Stories: In Israel, descendants of Holocaust survivors are tattooing their family members' numbers on their bodies.
Politics: Looking back at debates shows just how much candidates need to accomplish to change the tide of a race.
World: The U.S. could have overestimated the effectiveness of security at the diplomatic mission in Benghazi because of response to a bombing in June.
U.S.: Ole Miss commemorates a troubled time in its history with the program "Opening the Closed Society."
New York: As Governor Cuomo's administration starts over on the regulatory practice that will choose whether or not to approve fracking, he gets praise from environmentalists and pushback from industry.
Media & Advertising: David Carr on media bias.
Technology: Microsoft is working to get high school students more interested in computer science.
Sports: The Washington National's Davey Johnson "has given his sport a tremendous gift: he has reintroduced winning baseball to the nation’s capital."
Opinion: Max Frankel on Punch Sulzberger.
Books: Janet Maslin reviews Arnold Schwarzenegger's memoir Total Recall, which she says "is a puffy portrait of the author as master conniver. Nothing in his upward progress seems to have happened in an innocent way."
Art & Design: In an effort to take back antiquities, Turkey has drawn the ire of some of the world's big museums "which call the campaign cultural blackmail."