T/24-by-section
An index of 198 articles and 11 interactives published over the last 24 hours by NYT.
U.S.
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Trump Put National Secrets at Risk, Prosecutors Say in Historic Indictment.
The indictment details evidence that the former president placed national security secrets in jeopardy and schemed to thwart the investigation into the matter.
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Chris Christie says he found the case laid out in the indictment ‘devastating.’
The former New Jersey governor and federal prosecutor said he expected criticism from his fellow Republicans to grow.
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Carefully, Backhandedly, DeSantis Comes to Trump’s Defense.
In a speech in North Carolina, Ron DeSantis drew on his experience as a Navy lawyer and suggested that either both Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton should have been indicted — or neither.
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Where Documents Were Found at Mar-a-Lago.
These diagrams show the rooms at Donald J. Trump’s residence where prosecutors say he kept sensitive government documents.
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Indictment politics: A tightrope that other candidates for office have walked.
Prominent politicians, both at home and abroad, have run — and won — while under indictment or investigation.
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A Trump-Appointed Judge Who Showed Him Favor Gets the Documents Case.
The surprise assignment of Judge Aileen Cannon could be a setback for prosecutors as they unveiled a sweeping classified files indictment.
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A special prosecutor with a low profile steps forward for a high-profile moment.
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Federal charges do not bar Trump from running for president.
The 45th president could continue his 2024 campaign even if he were convicted of a felony — though it would be extraordinary.
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See where the indictment says Trump stored classified documents in Mar-a-Lago.
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Biden Names Border Patrol Chief as Immigration Policies Draw Scrutiny.
Jason Owens has been the leader of the Del Rio division in Texas, one of the busiest areas for illegal crossings in the past few years.
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Two Trump Lawyers Quit a Day After His Indictment.
The lawyers, James Trusty and John Rowley, left the former president’s defense team as he faces the most serious legal threat of his career.
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House Republicans are seeking to discredit Trump’s prosecution by weaponizing a former F.B.I. official’s account.
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See the photographic evidence from the indictment.
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‘A disservice to the country’: Asa Hutchinson criticizes Republicans rallying around his rival, Trump.
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Indictment Presents Evidence Trump’s Actions Were More Blatant Than Known.
The accounts in the 49-page indictment provide compelling evidence of a shocking indifference toward some of the country’s most sensitive secrets.
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Republican voters express fealty, and some signs of fatigue, after Trump’s latest indictment.
“This country didn’t vote for an altar boy,” a Trump supporter in Wisconsin said.
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Biden Sticks to ‘Say Nothing’ Strategy on the Trump Indictment.
President Biden and his advisers have concluded that commenting on the indictment would only feed into Republican accusations of a politically motivated prosecution.
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The indictment quotes Trump acknowledging that he had a secret document he was not allowed to declassify.
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If the Trump case goes to trial, here’s what the jury pool could look like.
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Special Counsel Addresses Federal Criminal Charges Against Trump.
Jack Smith, the special counsel, released an indictment detailing the government’s case that former President Donald J. Trump hoarded classified documents after leaving office and obstructed efforts to reclaim them.
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Who Is Walt Nauta, the Other Person Indicted Along With Trump?
Mr. Nauta, as a valet while Mr. Trump was president, had unusual proximity to him, including at meals and on foreign trips.
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Trump may eclipse his Republican rivals as they campaign in the South.
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Fire smoke dimmed the sun. Scientists see research opportunities.
As the sky turned gloomy,
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The Trump Classified Documents Indictment, Annotated.
The indictment unveiled on Friday centers on Donald J. Trump’s handling of sensitive government documents after he left office.
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F.B.I. Investigating Spy Ring’s Political Contributions.
Prosecutors are scrutinizing a series of campaign contributions made by right-wing operatives who were part of a political spying operation based in Wyoming.
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What We Learned From the Trump Indictment.
The indictment said the former president had illegally kept documents concerning “United States nuclear programs; potential vulnerabilities of the United States and its allies to military attack; and plans for possible retaliation in response to a foreign attack.”
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Read the complete indictment here.
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See What Canadian Wildfire Smoke Looked Like in 8 Places This Week.
Imagery from EarthCam shows how smoke from hundreds of wildfires in Canada enveloped cities in the Northeast and Midwest.
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What’s Next in the Trump Documents Case? A Previous Indictment Offers Clues.
It is unclear what federal authorities will do when Mr. Trump surrenders on Tuesday and all eyes will be on a Florida courthouse.
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Pence hedges his dismissal of Trump’s indictment, while other rivals rush to his defense.
Mike Pence, the former vice president and current presidential candidate, put the onus on the attorney general, Merrick B. Garland, to silence those in the G.O.P. who believe the charges are without merit.
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Trump is pressing ahead with campaign events in Georgia and North Carolina.
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House Republicans Rally Behind Trump, Seeking to Discredit Indictment.
The former president’s allies adopted his false narrative, attacking President Biden and federal law enforcement while trying to undercut the inquiry that led to 37 charges against him.
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Two of Trump’s Lawyers Leave His Legal Team a Day After His Indictment.
The former president said in a Truth Social post that James Trusty and John Rowley will no longer represent him in the documents case. They called it “an honor” to represent him.
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Investor Linked to Paxton’s Impeachment Is Charged With Lying to Lenders.
Nate Paul, the real estate investor at the center of the impeachment case against the attorney general of Texas, Ken Paxton, has been jailed at the request of the F.B.I.
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With pandemic fears fresh, airborne anxieties are nothing new.
Wildfire smoke brought eerie echoes of the worst days of the coronavirus pandemic for many this week.
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Fresh from a pandemic, airborne anxieties are nothing new.
Wildfire smoke brought eerie echoes of the worst days of the coronavirus pandemic for many this week.
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Trump-Appointed Judge Is Said to Be Handling Documents Case.
It was not clear whether the judge, Aileen M. Cannon, would remain assigned for the entirety of the case. A higher court criticized some of her rulings in the investigation.
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Trump was recorded saying he knew he had a classified document.
The recording, confirmed by a person briefed on the matter, is expected to be a critical piece of evidence in the case against him that the special counsel Jack Smith brought this week.
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While Downtown Flounders, This San Francisco Neighborhood Is Thriving.
The Outer Sunset’s success reflects how some cities have evolved during the pandemic.
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Pandemic experience has helped groups protect the homeless from wildfire smoke.
Organizations have stressed that the needs of the unhoused are deeply tied to public health issues, the need for affordable housing and access to medical care.
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At Trump’s club in Bedminster, N.J., it was a familiar drill for the former president.
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‘The Daily’ looks at what the indictment means for Trump and Biden.
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Here’s Where the Smoke from Canada’s Wildfires Will Linger on Friday.
The breath of fresh air that everyone has been hoping for should come Saturday for much of the United States.
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Trump assailed Hillary Clinton for her handling of sensitive information. That issue now threatens his 2024 campaign.
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Here’s the latest on the charges Trump is facing.
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Western Canada’s dry spring creates prime wildfire conditions.
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Here’s the latest on Canada’s wildfires and the effects of the smoke in North America.
As the weekend approache
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For G.O.P. Rivals, an Unhappy Task: Defend the Man Dominating Them in the Polls.
The pressure on Republicans was quick: line up behind Donald Trump or risk looking like they weren’t on Team G.O.P. at a moment of heightened tribal politics.
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A Puzzle in Arizona’s Boom Towns: How to Keep Growing With Less Water.
The state announced new limits to construction because of water shortages, changing the course of development.
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Special Counsel Avoided One Risk but Took on Another by Bringing Trump Case in Miami.
The decision to file charges in Florida instead of Washington avoided a legal fight over venue, but the case appears to have been assigned to a Trump appointee who has shown him favor.
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Justice Department Charges Trump in Documents Case.
The indictment, handed up by a grand jury in Miami, is the first time a former U.S. president has faced federal charges.
World
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What to Know About Canada’s Exceptional Wildfire Season.
Wild fires started earlier, are higher in number and spread across much of the country, burning millions of acres as climate change turns more of the country’s forest into a tinderbox.
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4 Missing Children Found Alive After 40 Days in Colombian Jungle.
Rescuers had been searching for the children — aged 13, 9, 4 and 1 — ever since they survived a plane crash that killed the three adults on board.
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About 27 Killed, Mostly Children, When Mortar Shell Explodes in Somalia.
A previously unexploded mortar shell went off as children were playing around it in a city in southern Somalia.
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Canada’s Ability to Prevent Forest Fires Lags Behind the Need.
Provincial firefighting agencies are stretched thin, there is no national agency and it’s hard to get approval for controlled burns — factors that have exacerbated recent outbreaks.
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Battles Rage as Ukraine Tries to Retake Russian-Occupied Territory.
Military analysts and U.S. officials said it was too soon to judge the success of Ukraine’s offensive, which is looking for weaknesses to exploit, in the face of fierce resistance.
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A top U.N. official defends the organization’s response to flooding in Ukraine.
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Ukrainian drones strike cities in Russian border, governors say.
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Firefighters Battle Blazes in British Columbia.
Tens of thousands of people have been displaced by wildfires burning across Canada.
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Here Is How to Help More Than 20,000 Canadians Displaced by Wildfires.
Federal and provincial governments have pledged to match donations to the Canadian Red Cross for those affected by wildfires in Nova Scotia, Alberta and the Northwest Territories.
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Wildfires have displaced more than 20,000 Canadians. Here’s how to help.
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A Nova Scotia firefighter recounts the worst wildfire he’s ever seen.
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Boris Johnson Resigns From Parliament.
The former prime minister quit after getting a confidential report about whether he had lied to lawmakers about lockdown-breaking parties.
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Summer could bring a severe wildfire season to Canada.
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Canada’s wildfire fighting system is stretched thin.
A system that normally relies on sharing people and aircraft between province is under stress as fires spread across Canada.
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Indigenous cultural burning practices can offer lessons for future fires.
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Firefighters from around the world are coming to Canada’s aid.
More than 1,100 firefighters from other countries have been dispatched across Canada from places as far away as South Africa and Australia.
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Pope Francis and Silvio Berlusconi Both Hospitalized in Italy.
The health conditions of two of Italy’s most prominent octogenarians have in recent years often kept the country in suspense.
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U.S. announces another $2.1 billion in weapons to Ukraine.
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Russia has erected by far the most fortifications in the Zaporizhzhia region, a report finds.
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A Surprising Supreme Court Decision’s History With the American South.
To understand the significance of this week’s U.S. Supreme Court ruling, books about the Deep South’s changes in the 20th century are critical to read.
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Putin claims Ukrainian counteroffensive so far has failed.
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An urban firefighter volunteers to help his burning province, Quebec.
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Russian volunteers say they have been blocked from helping areas hit hard by dam disaster.
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French firefighters arrive in Quebec as blaze threatens city.
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Canada should focus more on preventing wildfires, experts say.
As it runs up huge bills fighting wildfires, Canada spends comparatively little on preventing them.
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In Serbia, a Strongman Under Fire Hails Himself as Defender of the Nation.
President Aleksandar Vucic, who has been the target of protests in Belgrade, has been playing up his role defending Serbs in Kosovo, where tensions have recently flared.
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Battle rages in Ukraine’s southeast as Zelensky and Putin each claim the upper hand.
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A drone factory that Iran is helping Russia build could be operational next year, the U.S. says.
Washington is trying to raise the pressure on Tehran and make it more difficult to complete the work on the factory, which would enable Russia’s military to produce drones domestically.
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U.S. Official Says Spy Satellites Detected Explosion Just Before Dam Collapse.
U.S. spy agencies still do not have any solid evidence to determine who caused the destruction, the senior administration official said.
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Four Australian Shows and Movies for Your Watchlist.
Love stories, survival reality and stop motion animation: What we’re enjoying.
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Macron Meets Victims and ‘Backpack Hero’ After Stabbing Attack in France.
Two adults and four children were injured in the assault, which shocked the country and could have been worse if not for the intervention of a 24-year-old man known only as Henri.
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An Everest Climber Had ‘No Energy, No Oxygen, Nothing.’ A Sherpa Saved Him.
The arduous six-hour rescue in May came during an especially deadly spring climbing season on the world’s highest mountain.
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Sweden says it will allow NATO troops on its soil even before joining the alliance.
NATO is more optimistic that Turkey will approve Sweden’s membership before or soon after an alliance summit next month.
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Dam’s Destruction Reshapes Ukraine, but Not Arc of the War.
The main thrust of the Ukrainian counteroffensive is expected in the Zaporizhzhia and Donetsk regions, not along the Dnipro River, where the fighting quickly resumed after the disaster.
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A climate columnist for The Times discusses the smoke on today’s episode of ‘The Daily.’
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A Rising India Is Also, in One Remote Pocket, a Blood-Soaked War Zone.
An outburst of ethnic hatreds has fractured an ancient kingdom and turned neighbors into enemies.
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Can He Fix ‘Palace of Scaffolding’ in Time for Belgium’s 200th Birthday?
For an architect trying to renovate his beloved but crumbling Palace of Justice in Brussels, once the largest building in the world, the design challenges pale compared with the political ones.
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Two are killed in Russian shelling in the flood zone, Ukrainian officials say.
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They Spoke Up for Free Speech. Now They Are Being Sued for Defamation.
In Thailand, companies and people in positions of power often use libel suits to intimidate and punish activists and critics.
New York
Business
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What Do Binance.US’s New Rules on Trading Dollars Mean for Customers?
The company said that it would no longer allow trades with U.S. dollars on its platform. Customers were urged to withdraw funds by Tuesday.
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The Big Number: 13.
The head of CNN, Chris Licht, was ousted on Wednesday after just 13 months on the job.
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Energy Tax Credits, Meant to Help U.S. Suppliers, May Be Hard to Get.
The Inflation Reduction Act contains tax breaks for solar and wind companies to buy American equipment. Qualifying won’t be easy.
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Ben Bernanke Talks About Bank Runs, Inflation, A.I., Market Bubbles and More.
The former Fed chairman shared his thoughts with our columnist.
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What Trump’s Latest Indictment Means for the 2024 Race.
The former president, who faces seven criminal charges for mishandling classified documents, is expected to surrender to authorities next week.
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What All the Single Ladies (and Men) Say About the Economy.
A major jeweler claims the pandemic may have prevented people from meeting their future fiancés, cutting demand for engagement rings. Inflation and anxiety among shoppers haven’t helped.
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China, Its Economy Flagging, Prods Consumers to Save Less and Spend More.
China’s largest state-run banks lowered interest rates on deposits, reflecting a growing concern that the economy has not rebounded as strongly as expected.
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Energy Drinks Are Surging. So Are Their Caffeine Levels.
More companies are pushing low-calorie, sugar-free beverages they say are healthy. Some servings have nearly the same level of caffeine as a six-pack of Coca-Cola.
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Binance Halts Trading in Dollars on Its U.S. Exchange.
Banks have signaled that they will stop working with the company’s American branch, it said, after the Securities and Exchange Commission sued it this week.
Your Money
Technology
Sports
Obituaries
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Helen Thorington, Who Brought Sonic Art to the Airwaves, Dies at 94.
A pioneer in radio art and, later internet art, she created a blend of synthesizer compositions and found sounds that opened new artistic terrain.
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Harald zur Hausen, 87, Nobelist Who Found Cause of Cervical Cancer, Dies.
When he proposed that the human papillomavirus caused cervical cancer, he was ridiculed. He persevered, and today a vaccine exists.
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William E. Spriggs, Economist Who Pushed for Racial Justice, Dies at 68.
An educator who served in the Obama administration, he championed workers, especially Black workers, and challenged his profession’s racial assumptions.
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Overlooked No More: Lou Sullivan, Author and Transgender Activist.
In diaries, articles and letters, he pushed for the medical community’s acceptance of men who were assigned female at birth and identified as gay.
Briefing
Podcasts
Science
Climate
Opinion
Arts
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Comedian’s Malaysia Joke Prompts Threats and a Diplomatic Incident.
Jocelyn Chia’s line about the 2014 missing airliner was part of a Comedy Cellar set in April. But when video was posted this week, outrage poured in.
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First Favorite Songs Are Like Sonic Baby Pictures.
How a minor 1989 George Harrison single from the “Lethal Weapon 2” soundtrack opened a young listener’s ears.
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A Russian Pianist Speaks Out Against the War From Home.
Polina Osetinskaya, a critic of the invasion who has stayed in Moscow even as the government cracks down on dissent, will play a Baroque program in New York.
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Hannah Gadsby’s Picasso Show Was Meant to Ignite Debate. And It Did.
The Brooklyn Museum invited the Australian comedian to help organize a show on Picasso’s troubling life and artistic lens. The reaction was strong.
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Review: The Philharmonic Journeys From Ocean to Desert.
The orchestra’s final program of the season featured the New York premiere of John Luther Adams’s “Become Desert.”
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PinkPantheress’s Bittersweet ‘Barbie’ Tune, and 11 More New Songs.
Hear tracks from Rosalía, L’Rain, Romy and others.
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Popcast Mailbag! Frank Ocean, Peso Pluma, A.I. Grimes and More.
You asked, we answered your questions about the weight of following a smash single and the persistence of genre.
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Private Dances: Lotto Royale Offers a ‘Door to an Experience’
River to River Festival presents an art experiment in which audience members and dance artists, paired randomly, meet for one-on-one performances.
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A New Hiroshi Sugimoto Sculpture in San Francisco Reaches for Infinity.
His sliver of an artwork, “Point of Infinity,” marks the start of the city’s Treasure Island Art Program.
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Pride, Illustrated: 6 Comics and Graphic Novels to Read This June.
These recent, new and upcoming books with L.G.B.T.Q. characters offer adventure stories, personal recollections, a riff on a famous novel and more.
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The ‘Haunting’ of Gary Simmons.
In new shows in Chicago and London, the artist uses ghostly erasure lines to look at ideas about race — forcing us to confront the images before they slip away.
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5 Things to Do This Weekend.
Selections from the Weekend section, including predictions for who will win the Tony Awards on Sunday night.
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A Landscape of Organized Chaos: Nigerian Photographers at MoMA.
The museum’s first group show focusing on West Africa is a wide-ranging exhibition with history, nuance and grit.
Theater
Books
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Summer Book Preview and 9 Thrillers to Read.
Gilbert Cruz is joined by The Times’s thriller columnist, Sarah Lyall, to talk about some great suspenseful titles to check out this summer. And the editor Joumana Khatib gives her picks for books to look out for between now and Labor Day.
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6 New Paperbacks to Read This Week.
Recommended reading from the Book Review, featuring titles by Chelsea Manning, Werner Herzog, and more.
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She Gave the ‘Father of Gynecology’ His Prowess, Against Her Will.
“Say Anarcha” is J.C. Hallman’s meticulous biography of the enslaved woman who suffered unimaginable horrors at the hands of a lauded doctor.
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Following the Bloodlines.
In new crime novels from Victoria Kielland, James Wolff, Katie Siegel and Michael McGarrity, the past is hard to shake.
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Newly Published, From the Scientific Method to Éric Vuillard.
A selection of recently published books.
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Can You Find the Hidden Titles of These 12 Books About Broadway Icons?
As you wait for the Tony Awards to start, try your hand at this literary title-search puzzle.
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24 Works of Fiction to Read This Summer.
A sequel to Colson Whitehead’s “Harlem Shuffle,” new stories from Jamel Brinkley, a debut novel about a teenager who worked for Andy Warhol — and more.
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14 Nonfiction Books to Read This Summer.
Biographies of Anna May Wong and Alice Marble, a deep-sea exploration, a history of the race to the North Pole: Here’s what to watch for this season.
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Counting on Conversation.
Five new counting books all share one essential strategy: to start a conversation.
Movies
Food
Style
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A Sex-Shaming Rant About Margaritas Accidentally Became the Song of the Summer.
Angel Laketa Moore, a comedian and actor, remixed a sexually explicit Evangelical sermon.
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Love Letter: An Old Woman Raising Three Little Children.
“What if I abandon them again by dying?”
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What Wedding Night Sex?
If you fell asleep on the big night, don’t worry. So did many other (still) happily married couples.
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What Does Gay Pride Smell Like?
Candle makers offer tie-ins with whiffs of ginger, warm woods and bergamot. Sniff, sniff, sniff.
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What Steve Martin, Sigourney Weaver and Others Wore to Party.
At the New York Botanical Garden and a colorful gathering at MoMA, attendees showed off flashy pastels and florals.
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Not Your Father’s Pinball Arcade. But Maybe Your Mother’s.
Belles & Chimes, a pinball league “run by women, for women,” makes some noise in a pastime where women were once consigned largely to the display cases.
Magazine
Travel
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This Is Ischia’s Moment in the Sun.
The Italian island, long in the shadow of its fashionable neighbor, Capri, is newly chic, but remains deeply authentic, with rocky harbors more likely to dock fishing boats than megayachts.
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From Martha’s Vineyard to Cleveland: Celebrating the Day Slavery Ended.
Juneteenth will be commemorated across the United States on June 19 with music, art, food and fireworks. We highlight programs in five places, including Galveston, Texas, known as the birthplace of the holiday.
Real Estate
Health
Well
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Corrections
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