Thursday, July 10, 2014 • Vol. 16--No. 356 • 22 of 31

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rity.

• 6. HOW THE SAGA OF EX-NEW ORLEANS MAYOR ENDED
• The tumultuous odyssey of Ray Nagin comes to a close with a federal judge sentencing him to 10 years in prison for corruption.

• 7. EGYPTIAN CINEMA HOPES FOR A NEW WAVE
• The 170-seat Zawya theater is geared toward generating a market for alternative, international or independent films in Egypt, where one of the world's oldest movie industries has fallen into decline.

• 8. BURY ME IN THE BRONX
• Jazz enthusiasts are just dying to get into the Woodlawn Cemetery to take their final resting place alongside the likes of Duke Ellington, Celia Cruz and Miles Davis. Demand is so high, thousands of plots are being added.

• 9. SURVEY: RAPES NOT INVESTIGATED AT 2 IN 5 COLLEGES
• A lack of coordination between many campuses and local law enforcement in handling sexual assaults is cited as a reason.

• 10. ARGENTINA REACHES WORLD CUP FINAL FOR FIFTH TIME
• The Latin American team will play Germany on Sunday after beating the Netherlands 4-2 in the semifinals.



AP News in Brief
Obama seeks to shift political pressure over border crisis back to Republicans

• AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -- Faced with a potentially awkward scene at the Texas-Mexico border, President Barack Obama sought to recast the political debate over a flood of young migrants as a question of Republican willingness to tackle the problem, not his decision to skip a chance to view the crisis first-hand.
• Obama turned to one of his chief critics, Texas' Republican Gov. Rick Perry, to try to make his point.

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