Debates, D.C. Baseball, and Arnold Schwarzenegger

A summary of the best reads found behind the paywall of The New York Times.

This article is from the archive of our partner .

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."

This article is from the archive of our partner The Wire.