Gunman kills 2 in Austria:

VIENNA — A gunman fired shots early Sunday into a small crowd attending an open air concert organized by a local motorcycle club, killing two people and wounding 11 others before shooting himself to death, police said. Witnesses said panic broke out as the first shots rang out, with many in the crowd running into nearby woods or onto a freeway close to the venue in Austria’s westernmost Vorarlberg province, according to Florian Kasseroler, mayor of the town Nenzing.

British PM would meet Trump:

LONDON — British Prime Minister David Cameron said Sunday that he’d be happy to meet Donald Trump if he becomes the Republican presidential candidate. But the British leader repeated his claim that Trump’s proposal for a temporary ban on Muslims entering the United States is “wrong and divisive.” Cameron said it was “a very dangerous thing to say” because it makes no distinction between the peaceful Muslim majority and a minority of extremists.

Israeli Cabinet OKs new gas deal:

JERUSALEM — Israel’s Cabinet has approved a new deal with a consortium of natural gas developers after the country’s Supreme Court rejected the previous agreement. The new deal changes a clause that would have prevented Israel from making significant regulatory changes for the next ten years. The Supreme Court struck down the deal over that clause and gave Israel a year to address its objections. Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz said Sunday that the deal offers the U.S.-Israeli gas companies stability while allowing Israel more regulatory flexibility. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has made the gas deal the centerpiece of his economic policy.

Israeli defense minister resigns:

TEL AVIV, Israel — Israel’s defense minister officially stepped down on Sunday, capping a tumultuous week of politics that is expected to result in the replacement of the former military chief with an inexperienced hard-liner in the sensitive post. Moshe Yaalon’s departure cleared the way for Avigdor Lieberman, one of Israel’s most polarizing politicians, to take over as defense chief. Yaalon angrily announced his resignation on Friday, saying the government has been taken over by “extremist and dangerous elements.”

Mount Everest climbers missing:

KATHMANDU, Nepal — Two Indian climbers have gone missing on Mount Everest, an expedition organizer said Sunday, a day after two deaths from apparent altitude sickness were reported, underscoring the risks on the world’s highest mountain. Paresh Nath and Goutam Ghosh have been missing since Saturday, said Wangchu Sherpa of the Trekking Camp Nepal agency in Kathmandu. They were last seen near the Everest summit. Two of their companions who fell sick were being helped down the mountain, Sherpa said. About 30 climbers have developed frostbite or become sick near the summit in recent days. Most of the sick climbers suffered frostbite while attempting to reach the summit or on their descent, Mountaineering Department official Gyanendra Shrestha said.

Dozens injured in bus crash:

HIGHLAND, Calif. — A shuttle bus carrying about two dozen women returning from a church retreat overturned Sunday on a highway in Southern California’s San Bernardino Mountains, leaving two critically injured, four with moderate injuries and 20 with minor injuries, authorities said. It was one of several buses carrying about 200 women who were returning from an annual mountain retreat to their church in Downey, California, a church official said. All of the victims are expected to survive.

Navajo farm has no irrigation:

The largest farm on the Navajo Nation has been without water for more than a week after a pipeline break, endangering food crops worth millions of dollars and threatening jobs. Most of the crops on the land managed by the Navajo Agricultural Products Industry near Farmington, New Mexico, were planted just before the concrete pipe failed, cutting off water to 72,000 acres of farmland. Officials have pegged June 11 as the date to have repairs completed, with water flowing through a canal system days later. In the meantime, they’re holding out hope that the skies will stay cloudy and enough moisture will fall to sustain the plants in the desert.