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U.S. Starts Charging Chinese Ships to Dock at Its Ports

The measure is aimed at countering China’s dominance of commercial shipbuilding and helping to revitalize the American industry.

© Erin Schaff/The New York Times

COSCO, China’s dominant shipping company, could pay $1.5 billion in fees next year, according to an estimate by HSBC.
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U.S. Starts Charging Chinese Ships to Dock at Its Ports

The measure is aimed at countering China’s dominance of commercial shipbuilding and helping to revitalize the American industry.

© Erin Schaff/The New York Times

COSCO, China’s dominant shipping company, could pay $1.5 billion in fees next year, according to an estimate by HSBC.
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Trump’s Two Minds on China Sow a Chaotic Few Days

The president’s bellicose vow of steep new tariffs, followed quickly by a more conciliatory message, pointed to an internal tug of war over his approach.

© Kenny Holston/The New York Times

President Trump has taken steps to “decouple” the United States from China, but he and his aides have also struck a conciliatory tone in hopes of reaching a trade deal and cementing his self-described role as a master deal maker.
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4 People Arrested in Deadly Mississippi Shooting

The shooting in Leland, Miss., which killed six people, was the deadliest of three across the state over the weekend.

© Brad Vest for The New York Times

The shooting took place around midnight on Friday in Leland, a town in the Mississippi Delta with fewer than 4,000 people, as a large crowd celebrated homecoming weekend.
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As Hostages and Prisoners Return Home, Trump Declares ‘New Dawn’ in Mideast

With Hamas freeing the last 20 living Israeli hostages and Israel releasing some 2,000 Palestinian prisoners, President Trump proclaimed an ‘end’ to the war, but big questions about Gaza’s future remain.

© David Guttenfelder/The New York Times

Israelis celebrated as they watched a live broadcast on Monday in Tel Aviv of hostages being released from Gaza.
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Several News Outlets Reject Pentagon’s Reporting Restrictions

The Washington Post, The New York Times, Newsmax and others said their journalists would not agree to the Defense Department’s policies on news gathering ahead of a Tuesday deadline.

© Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times

The 21-page Pentagon document lays out a number of requirements at odds with First Amendment protections, according to lawyers representing news organizations.
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North Carolina Republicans Plan to Redraw Congressional Map to Add a Seat

The Trump administration has pushed Republican leaders to redraw House district maps before the midterm elections next year. His party already holds 10 of North Carolina’s 14 congressional seats.

© Chris Seward/Associated Press

A fight over congressional maps is nothing new in North Carolina, a politically divided state where the governor’s mansion has long been occupied by Democrats, even as Republicans have controlled the legislature since 2010.
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Cuban Dissident Leader Leaves Prison for Exile in the U.S.

José Daniel Ferrer said long periods in solitary confinement left him feeling buried alive. Secretary of State Marco Rubio welcomed his arrival in Miami.

© Alexandra Garcia/The New York Times

José Daniel Ferrer, a Cuban dissident, photographed in Havana in 2014.
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Madagascar’s President Goes Into Hiding

The move followed weeks of intense and deadly protests against the government of President Andry Rajoelina, who said he would defy growing calls to resign.

© Luis Tato/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Protesters called for more power as they rode atop a military vehicle in Antananarivo, Madagascar, on Monday.
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Diane Keaton Defied Beauty Standards

For many of her fans, she was like a rare bird soaring from bygone days when progress and growing freedoms for women seemed inevitable.

© Bob Grant/Fotos International, via Getty Images

Not only did Diane Keaton resist Hollywood’s objectifying and ageist beauty standards, her boho, free and slightly androgynous style felt very 1970s.
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Milton Esterow, Who Reported on Art Stolen in World War II, Dies at 97

At The New York Times and then ARTnews, which he bought, he brought an investigative edge to stories about artwork looted by the Germans during World War II and the Soviets afterward.

© William E. Sauro/The New York Times

Milton Esterow in 1972, the year he led an investor group in buying ARTnews. He became its editor and publisher.
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A Divided Israel Unites in Joy as Hostages Come Home

With the release from Gaza of the last surviving captives, many Israelis said it was time for the country to heal after years of polarizing war.

© David Guttenfelder/The New York Times

Watching a live broadcast in Tel Aviv as hostages were released from Gaza on Monday.
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Diane Keaton’s Only Documentary Was About the Afterlife

Keaton, who died on Saturday, was an actor, director and producer on multiple films and series. Her sole documentary, “Heaven,” explored popular ideas of the afterlife.

© via Everett Collection

Diane Keaton working on her documentary, “Heaven.” She had a lifelong fascination with the afterlife.
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