Today in Black History: Author John Howard Griffin, who posed as a Black man for his seminal book on southern racism,"Black Like Me," was born in 1920.
The New York Times
National
Transition Team Ordered to Save Files Related to Russia Inquiry
Editorial: Taking Trump’s Self-Dealing to Court
Mueller, Once Above the Fray, Is Now in the Thick of It
Gunman’s Violent Spree Shakes a Liberal Enclave
In Quick Reversal, Southern Baptists Denounce White Nationalists
Editorial: Mr. Trump, Afghanistan Is Your War Now
Scuttling Obama Legacy, Trump Will Crack Down on Cuba
Global Cautionary Tales for Trump’s Infrastructure Plan
Seattle Storm Take Progressive Tack With Planned Parenthood Partnership
Jury Sees Body Camera Footage of Fatal Shooting by Police Officer
Pennsylvania Lawsuit Says House Redistricting Is Partisan Gerrymander
Local
De Blasio’s Plan to Create 100,000 Jobs: Find 40,000, and Keep Eyes Open
With Largest Staff Ever, New York City Reimagines How It Works
Hudson Yards Offered a Payday for the Subway, but We Got Offices
8 Years of Rust Show as New York Senate Ethics Panel Finally Meets
Paladino Sues School Board Trying to Remove Him
Philly.com
His freedom at stake, DA Seth Williams' federal bribery and fraud trial starts Monday
Under fire, SRC moves to shut 2 Philly charters
Clout: Local 98 hires ex-DA candidate Jack O'Neill
On deadline, Philly City Council reaches consensus on Rebuild
The Star-Ledger
NJEA: Democrats' school funding deal is a 'sick scheme'
Trump chemical safety cuts put Frelinghuysen on the hot seat | Editorial
Public worker unions not sold on Christie's lottery-pension fix
Christie says N.J. economy is better. Here's what voters think.
Rutgers appoints new leader for Board of Governors
The Cleveland Plain Dealer
Ohio budget bill would expand wrongful conviction payouts
Trump's 'religious freedom' executive order isn't winning over black ministers in Cleveland
Health groups put "a face to Medicaid" in national anti-AHCA campaign kickoff
Huntington vows to restore scores of jobs, expand significantly in Akron
The Chicago Tribune
Preckwinkle to seek third term as Cook County Board president, but not the mayor's office
Pressure for budget deal builds as Rauner calls special session, Cullerton says no stopgap
2016 Cook County property tax rates: Look up your town, estimate your bill
COMMENTARY: A father — wrongly imprisoned for 22 years — reconnects with his children
The Los Angeles Times
Gunman with rifle opens fire at LAPD near South L.A. park, prompting massive search
Editorial: Trump is dropping out of the Paris agreement, but the rest of us don't have to
Here's how $183 billion in taxpayer dollars will be spent in California's new budget
The Detroit Free Press
Riley: Schuette calls Flint probe most comprehensive, won't charge Snyder
What you need to know about University of Michigan's free tuition plan
Program to give small Detroit neighborhood businesses help with facade improvements
Vitti: Detroit schools not 'apologetic' as it recruits students from shuttered charters
The Washington Post
Trump lashes out after reports of obstruction probe; Pence hires a lawyer
Pence’s balancing act as Trump’s No. 2 shows signs of strain amid White House turmoil
Q&A: Trump is officially under investigation. How did we get here?
Special counsel looks into Jared Kushner’s business dealings
With each puff, a wider socioeconomic gap: The rich stopped smoking, the poor didn’t
Trump said foreign leaders wouldn’t laugh at the U.S. Now they’re laughing at him.
GOP aims to bring health-care bill to Senate floor by end of June — even as disagreements threaten to derail it
Analysis: More states are registering voters automatically. Here’s how that affects voting.
UPS gunman filed a workplace grievance three months before deadly shooting rampage
Bowser says she will not investigate evidence of illegal leak in contracting process
McAuliffe to turn over list of restored felons to settle suit from state prosecutor
USA Today
Special counsel Mueller investigating Jared Kushner's finances, Washington Post reports
Texas' newly signed Sandra Bland Act sets example for rest of the nation
Some clips might require your registering for the paper's website. Sites like The Chicago Tribune are free while The New York Times and others have a pay wall that will allow you to see a specific number of articles per month for free and require a paid subscription for further reading.