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What’s Next |
Good Afternoon Welcome to What’s Next, a Sunday newsletter from the folks who deliver your essential weekday What’s News briefing. We won’t overload you: just a quick look at the week ahead and great stories you ought not miss. |
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| The work week is coming. Be ready. |
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New spending battles loom. The protracted impasse following the longest government shutdown in U.S. history was just a prelude to other fiscal fights looming for the White House and Congress. |
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U.S.-China trade talks continue in Washington. Both sides hope to hash out the framework for a deal, with the goal of clinching a final agreement at a future meeting between President Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping. |
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Aid for Venezuelans arrives, setting up showdown. U.S. military aircraft carrying food and supplies arrived over the weekend as the Trump administration steps up pressure to oust President Nicolás Maduro. |
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| What to know about the new tax law now that you're doing your taxes |
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Join WSJ journalists Laura Saunders, Richard Rubin and Geoffrey Rogow for a 30-minute call on how to navigate the tax landscape. Register here. |
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| Long reads and smart WSJ analysis curated by our editors |
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The rise and tragic fall of a tech genius. Colin Kroll shot to startup fame as the whiz behind Vine and HQ Trivia. Friends saw him as a gentle, endearingly awkward soul, but he also fought with colleagues, attracted bad press for his behavior at work and struggled with life in a fast lane. |
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Tyson Foods wants to reinvent itself. The company produces 1 in every 5 pounds of the total beef, pork and chicken produced in the country each day. Now it wants to move into artisanal sausages and microwavable eggs. |
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The science of better meetings. You can’t abolish office gatherings, but you can make them shorter, smaller and smarter. Here's how. |
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We run tips like this every Monday in our "Be a Boss" feature on our Snapchat Discover channel. Follow us. |
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Serial Killer Jeffrey Dahmer Sentenced After a failed attempt at an insanity plea, Milwaukee serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer was convicted of 15 murders of young men and boys and sentenced to 15 terms of life imprisonment. He was later sentenced to a 16th term for an additional homicide committed in Ohio. Dahmer committed his series of murders from 1978 until his final arrest in 1991, when he was caught after a potential victim escaped. Two years after his conviction, Dahmer was beaten to death in prison. |
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