T/24-by-section
An index of 168 articles and 5 interactives published over the last 24 hours by NYT.
U.S.
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Saudi Prince Is Said to Push Trump to Continue Iran War in Recent Calls.
Prince Mohammed bin Salman sees a “historic opportunity” to remake the region, according to people briefed by U.S. officials on the conversations.
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34 Former Military Members Were Put on Deportation Track in the Past Year.
The Trump administration has ramped up enforcement against immigrant service members and their families in its wider crackdown.
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Stephen Miller Asks Why Texas Pays to Teach Undocumented Children.
Citing gridlock in Washington, President Trump’s top immigration adviser encouraged Texas lawmakers to lead on conservative priorities.
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A Veterans’ Group Jumps in for a Democrat in an Iowa Senate Race.
VoteVets is the first super PAC to intervene in the race for Josh Turek, a state legislator who was born with spina bifida after his father was exposed to Agent Orange in Vietnam.
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Chavez Revelations Force Teachers to Rethink How They Teach His Legacy.
In classrooms across the country, educators are weighing whether to shift focus from Cesar Chavez to the broader labor movement he helped lead.
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Should You Need to Prove Citizenship to Vote? Ask Kansas.
A Kansas law required a passport, a birth certificate or other proof of citizenship to register, but it was struck down after a court found that around 31,000 eligible voters had been blocked.
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Gregory Bovino’s Final Days: Harsh Words and Few Regrets.
He was the face of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. But as he begins a retirement that was not entirely voluntary, the Border Patrol leader says he did not go far enough.
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Supreme Court Hears Trump Request to Block Asylum Seekers.
A policy of turning back many asylum seekers at the border was rescinded in 2021, but the Justice Department wants the flexibility to reinstate it as a tool for border control.
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Trump, Who Calls Mail-in Voting ‘Cheating,’ Just Voted by Mail.
President Trump has long fixated on mail-in-voting to bolster his baseless claims of widespread voter fraud. But he recently used the method in a Florida special election.
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Senate Confirms Markwayne Mullin as Homeland Security Secretary.
The Senate confirmed Markwayne Mullin to take over the Homeland Security Department in a 54-to-45 vote on Monday.
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See How the LaGuardia Plane Crash Unfolded.
Flight data, video of the crash and imagery of the aftermath reveal how an Air Canada jet collided with a fire truck, killing two people and injuring dozens.
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A Murder Charge in Georgia Exposes Complexities of the Abortion Debate.
A woman who took medication to induce an abortion, and then delivered the baby, was arrested on a murder charge. But on Monday, a state judge expressed deep skepticism about the case.
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When Trump Wants Something Done, He Dispatches ICE to Do It.
President Trump has increasingly used Immigration and Customs Enforcement to push personal and political objectives, and on Monday sent agents to airports across the country to help deal with long security lines.
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Mullin’s Smooth Confirmation Was a Throwback in the Senate.
In choosing Senator Markwayne Mullin, who has warm relationships across the Capitol and the political aisle, President Trump was reverting to a bygone tradition.
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Markwayne Mullin Confirmed as Homeland Security Secretary.
A Cherokee Nation member who has served as Oklahoma’s junior senator, Mr. Mullin will take charge at a pivotal time.
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Trump Claims Victory on Memphis Crime as His Crackdown Draws Protests.
Residents and state officials are divided over whether a crime task force is a welcome fix or an unwanted imposition in a city where crime was already falling.
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Trump’s Ultimatum to Iran Was Almost Up. Then He Found an Offramp.
President Trump postponed his threat to strike power plants in Iran, citing “productive conversations” with the Iranians. But officials said the talks were in an early stage and not substantive.
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‘Don’t Make Any Deal’: Trump Tells Republicans to Hold Firm on Shutdown Talks.
The president is using the standoff over funding the Department of Homeland Security as leverage to pass a strict voter ID bill. Critics say the bill would place an undue burden on eligible voters.
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Boston University Pulls Pride Flags, Raising Free Speech Worries.
The university said the flags broke a rule against hanging signs, a policy embraced by other campuses that cracked down on protests. Professors and others say such rules chill speech.
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Trump Visits Elvis’s Graceland Estate.
Amid a war with Iran, rising gas prices and a government shutdown, the president detoured on a trip to Memphis to visit the king of rock’s mansion.
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Trump Administration Targets Harvard With Two New Investigations.
The inquiries target antisemitism and admissions policies. The university called it retaliation for refusing to give in to the administration’s demands.
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It’s a Chaotic Moment in America. That’s Not What Republicans Need.
A national mood of unease and anxiety ahead of major elections is rarely good for the party in power.
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Tracking Wait Times at Major U.S. Airports.
Travelers are facing long lines at airport security as the partial government shutdown has strained T.S.A. staffing. The New York Times is tracking the latest available wait times across the country.
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Supreme Court Rejects Appeal From Death Row Inmate Seeking DNA Testing.
Rodney Reed’s quest over the last decade to obtain DNA testing to try to prove his innocence has attracted wide attention.
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Pentagon Officials Weigh Deployment of Airborne Troops for Iran War.
The combat forces would come from a brigade of about 3,000 soldiers capable of deploying anywhere in the world within 18 hours.
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One deeply red state, Alaska, may have the most at stake in a mail-in ballots case.
The nation’s most remote state relies on boats and planes to administer elections, and balloting is often at the mercy of extreme weather.
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The justices are taking on a series of other election disputes this term.
The challenge to Mississippi’s mail-in ballot rules is one of several cases involving voting and elections.
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Voice of America Journalists Sue, Saying Trump Officials Interfered in Coverage.
The journalists said in the complaint that the administration was trying to force them to be a “mouthpiece” and that one official demanded “loyalty” if reporters wanted to “keep their jobs.”
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Judges’ partisan affiliations predicted their votes in the case.
Fifteen members of the federal appeals court in New Orleans participated, splitting exactly as the parties of the presidents who named them would suggest.
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ICE Agents Fan Out at Airports Across the U.S.
The agents were sent to help understaffed T.S.A. teams manage long security lines. But early on Monday, it was unclear what impact they were having.
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Mail voting began with the armed forces. How will this case affect them?
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Here’s How the Supreme Court’s Decision on Mail-In Ballots Could Affect Elections.
The court is hearing a case on one state’s law that allow ballots to count if they are postmarked by Election Day but arrive days after. More than a dozen states have similar rules.
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The mail-in ballot rules have divided Republicans in Mississippi.
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Here are the lawyers arguing the late ballots case at the Supreme Court.
World
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Take Shorter Showers: South Korea Kicks Off an Energy-Saving Drive.
President Lee Jae Myung called on the public to cooperate, likening the energy supply disruption caused by the Iran war to the Asian financial crisis and the pandemic.
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Afghanistan Frees American Detainee Amid Mounting U.S. Pressure.
Dennis Walter Coyle, a researcher held since last year, was released weeks after the United States declared Afghanistan a “state sponsor of wrongful detention.”
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Danes Vote, With Trump on Their Minds.
President Trump’s threats to take Greenland away from Denmark have lifted Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen, who appeared the front-runner as polls opened.
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Government Cuts Gut the Memory of Argentina’s Dirty War.
Fifty years after the military dictatorship, Argentina’s government is defunding human rights groups and promoting a revisionist account of the junta’s crimes.
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Dozens Dead After Colombian Military Plane Crashes.
A military aircraft crashed on Monday shortly after taking off from Puerto Leguízamo, Colombia, killing more than 60 people and injuring dozens of others, officials said.
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Europe Clinches Critical Mineral Access With Australian Trade Deal.
The European Union and Australia have shaken hands on a trade deal that would improve access to aluminum, lithium and other critical minerals for the 27-nation bloc.
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Map: 7.5-Magnitude Earthquake Shakes the South Pacific Ocean.
View the location of the quake’s epicenter and shake area.
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Ukraine Spent Big to Shield Energy Industry From Drones. Is the Mideast Next?
With the use of electronic jamming systems and interceptor drones, the Ukrainian national oil and gas company may be a model for others.
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Trump Sours on British Leader Over Iran War: ‘What If Donald Shouts at Me?’
President Trump once called Prime Minister Keir Starmer a friend. But Mr. Starmer’s decision not to join the attacks on Iran has led to merciless mocking by the president.
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Pakistan Dials Up Its Information War.
New, friendly media operations and expanded state-run television are pushing Pakistan’s message while independent news outlets face repression.
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How Kim Jong-un Is Using the Iran War to Justify His Nuclear Arsenal.
He delivered a lengthy speech at his country’s rubber-stamp Parliament, declaring that his nuclear power will shield his country from American hostility.
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Celebrity Left-Wing Streamer Defends Cuba Mission.
Hasan Piker helped bring attention to a mission delivering humanitarian aid to Cuba. The group was criticized for staying in an upscale hotel as Cubans faced another blackout.
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Here’s What Happened in the War in the Middle East on Monday.
Conflicting signals about whether any negotiations to end the fighting were in progress created confusion.
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Trump Says U.S. Is Negotiating End to War, but Iranians Push Back.
“Very, very strong talks,” President Trump claimed. Fake news, replied an Iranian parliamentary leader.
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Iran Negotiations — or Not?
President Trump’s shifting statements don’t necessarily signal an end in sight to the war, but they do buy him some time.
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Attack on Jewish Ambulance Service Being Investigated as Hate Crime.
On Monday, four ambulances belonging to a Jewish nonprofit were set on fire. The police said that they were assessing a claim of a video claiming responsibility for the attack and were investigating the incident as an antisemitic hate crime.
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Trump Delays Deadline for Strikes on Iranian Energy Infrastructure.
President Trump said the U.S. would put off any attacks on Iranian energy infrastructure for five days, citing “very strong” talks with Iran toward ending the war. Iran disputed Mr. Trump’s claim that there had been progress made in negotiations.
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Trump Delays Energy Strikes, but Iran’s Infrastructure is Already Battered.
U.S. and Israeli attacks on power plants and other civilian infrastructure risk escalating the conflict across the region, and angering Iranians who oppose the government.
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Energy Crisis Will Not Be Resolved Quickly if War Ends, I.E.A. Chief Warns.
Fatih Birol, the leader of the International Energy Agency, said the Iran war was a bigger crisis that the two oil shocks in the 1970s combined.
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Colombian Military Plane Crash Injures 48 People.
A military transport aircraft was involved in an accident as it took off from southern Colombia, according to the authorities. The military was still investigating the cause.
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Israel Says Its Own Artillery Killed a Farmer, Not a Hezbollah Rocket.
Ofer Moskovitz, 60, an avocado farmer in a kibbutz on Israel’s border with Lebanon, was killed Sunday when the car he was riding in was hit.
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Iran attempted to attack a far-off military base.
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Polls Predict Close Finish in Italian Referendum Seen as Test of Meloni.
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni is pushing for an overhaul of the judiciary. After a two-day vote, early projections indicated that her opponents had the edge.
New York
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Here’s the latest.
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LaGuardia Delays Expected to Last for Days After Runway Crash.
The runway where a fire truck struck an Air Canada plane will remain closed as investigators clear debris and gather evidence.
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What Went Wrong at LaGuardia?
The investigation into the crash that killed two pilots will include an examination of the black boxes.
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As More People Visit New York City, Foreign Tourists Are Turning Away.
The number of international visitors to New York City decreased by 3 percent last year as President Trump pursued an aggressive foreign policy agenda.
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Firefighter Released From Hospital After LaGuardia Accident.
Two firefighters were injured when an Air Canada plane hit the truck they were in on Sunday. One of them remained in the hospital on Monday.
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In LaGuardia Crash That Killed 2, Call to ‘Stop!’ Came Too Late.
A collision between an Air Canada Express jet and a fire truck on Sunday night left two pilots dead and dozens injured.
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T.S.A. Staffing Shortage Delayed Arrival of Some LaGuardia Crash Investigators.
One specialist was caught in a three-hour line for security at a Houston airport, the chairwoman of the National Transportation Safety Board said.
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F.A.A. Is Investigating if Another Jet’s Issue Distracted a Controller.
Two controllers were said to be working at LaGuardia Airport’s control center at the time of the crash that killed two pilots, and one had been dealing with an odor on a United Airlines plane.
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For Canadians, Another Reason to Avoid Traveling to the U.S.
The collision between an Air Canada jet and a fire truck in New York brought the shortcomings of U.S. traffic control in focus.
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Video Testimony of Former DOGE Employees Can Remain Online, Judge Rules.
The viral deposition videos, posted online as part of a lawsuit, had been taken down because complaints that the employees were being harassed.
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A fatal crash at LaGuardia, 34 years ago to the day.
The last crash at LaGuardia Airport
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Passenger Jet and Fire Truck Crash at LaGuardia Airport, Leaving 2 Dead.
The two pilots of a Air Canada Express jet were killed after a collision with a Port Authority fire truck on Sunday at LaGuardia Airport in New York.
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Passengers Prepared for a Rough Landing Before Crash at LaGuardia.
A flight attendant was ejected from the airplane, a passenger said, but the people onboard still managed to open an emergency door and evacuate themselves from the plane.
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New Top Prosecutor Named in Embattled U.S. Attorney’s Office.
Federal judges appointed Robert Frazer to run New Jersey’s U.S. attorney’s office, which has been in disarray over the past year because of uncertainty about who was in charge.
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N.Y.U. Professors Go on Strike, Seeking Better Pay and Job Protections.
About 950 full-time faculty members who are not on the tenure track walked out. The university told students that classes would continue.
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Air Traffic Audio Appears to Show Tower Was Dealing With Incident Before Crash.
Several minutes after the collision, a controller told the pilot of a Frontier jet that “we were dealing with an emergency earlier,” according to audio reviewed by The New York Times.
Business
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Investors Question Whether Quick Peace in Iran Is Possible.
Global markets are under pressure again amid doubts that the fighting in the Middle East can end anytime soon.
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Young Graduates Face the Grimmest Job Market in Years.
Artificial intelligence could reshape work, but for now a low-hire, low-fire labor market is the main impediment for young people seeking employment.
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Reality TV Confronts a Harsh TV Reality.
The number of unscripted series has plummeted by a third since 2022. As the industry rapidly changes, an era is quietly vanishing.
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Oil Prices Rise a Day After 10% Plunge.
President Trump had set off a drastic market reaction on Monday by backing away from a threat to strike Iranian energy infrastructure.
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Pentagon Adopts New Limits for Journalists After Court Loss.
The Defense Department said it would close the Pentagon’s work area for journalists, among other changes, after a judge found the existing media policy unconstitutional.
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Trump Faces Blowback on Easing Iran Oil Sanctions.
President Trump once assailed the Obama administration for making cash payments to Iran. Now he supports sanctions relief that could give the country a $14 billion windfall.
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Trump Sets Up ‘Pax Silica’ Fund to Reduce Global Dependencies.
Trump officials said on Monday that the war in Iran had emphasized the need to reduce vulnerabilities for energy and technology.
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For Western Oil Companies, War in Iran Means Bigger Profits, and Risks.
American and European oil and gas companies are expected to earn a lot more as prices surge but are worried about the future.
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Warren Requests Information From MrBeast About Crypto and Children.
The world’s most popular YouTube celebrity, who markets to children and has bragged about crypto trades, is getting into banking. Senator Elizabeth Warren has concerns.
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China Eases Planned Increase to Gas Prices for 300 Million Drivers.
In China, where half of new cars are electric vehicles or hybrids, a vast population still depends on gas. The government stepped in on Monday to “mitigate” the pain of surging costs.
Technology
Obituaries
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Valerie Perrine, Screen Siren Who Won Critical Acclaim, Dies at 82.
Known early on for skin-baring temptress roles, she later earned rave reviews, a Cannes award and an Oscar nomination for her performance in the Lenny Bruce biopic “Lenny.”
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Catherine T. Nolan, State Assembly Powerhouse From Queens, Dies at 67.
With nearly four decades in Albany, often leading key committees as a Democrat, she was an early supporter of liberal causes such as labor rights and abortion protections.
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Brian Doherty, 57, Dies; Chronicled Libertarians and Other Outsiders.
Fascinated by the fringes, he wrote a definitive history of libertarianism and books about underground comics and the Burning Man festival.
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Lilias Folan, Who Brought Yoga to Middle America, Dies at 90.
With her bright leotards and soothing, welcoming tone, she helped to demystify a discipline that many Americans in the 1970s viewed as a counterculture practice.
Briefing
Podcasts
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A New Phase of the War in Iran, and the Latest on the LaGuardia Plane Crash.
Plus, how dancing the tango can help patients with Parkinson’s disease.
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How China Made Itself Tariff-Proof.
Huge investments in factory equipment and artificial intelligence have given Beijing an edge in car manufacturing and other industries.
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Richard Gadd on the ‘Whole Messy Complicated Subject’ of Manhood.
Richard Gadd, the creator and star of the 2024 hit show “Baby Reindeer,” has a new series, “Half Man.” On “The Interview,” he discussed how both shows offer unflinching explorations of sexual confusion, tortured masculinity, emotional abuse and the impact of trauma (with some dark laughs thrown in).
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Richard Gadd on Bulking Up for ‘Half Man’ and His Body Insecurity.
Richard Gadd, the creator and star of “Baby Reindeer,” plays an alpha male character in his new show, “Half Man.” On “The Interview,” he talked about his physical transformation for the role and the self-consciousness he feels about his body.
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Richard Gadd Felt ‘Disconnected From Life’ After Sexual Abuse.
Richard Gadd, the creator and star of the Netflix hit show “Baby Reindeer,” talks about the aftermath of sexual abuse and how he turned to art to help him find meaning in his life, on “The Interview.”
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En español
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Palabra del día: ‘pedantic’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 24 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
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Los recortes del gobierno de Argentina socavan la memoria de dictadura.
Cincuenta años después de la dictadura militar, el gobierno argentino está quitando financiamiento a los grupos de derechos humanos y promoviendo un relato revisionista de los crímenes de la Junta.
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Negociaciones con Irán, ¿sí o no?
Las cambiantes declaraciones del presidente Trump no necesariamente indican que se acerca el fin de la guerra, pero le dan algo de tiempo.
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Agentes del ICE ya patrullan aeropuertos en EE. UU.: lo que hay que saber.
El despliegue ocurre en medio de la disputa por el financiamiento del Departamento de Seguridad Nacional, que ha provocado cierres, largas filas y vuelos perdidos.
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Agentes de IA: son divertidos y útiles, pero no les des tu tarjeta de crédito.
Los nuevos bots de IA pueden hacer algo más que chatear. Pueden editar archivos, enviar correos electrónicos, reservar viajes y también causar problemas.
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El renacimiento de la modesta papa rellena en Inglaterra.
Este platillo, todo un clásico británico, vuelve a estar de moda gracias a las redes sociales.
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Cómo Epstein ayudó a un multimillonario a resolver sus problemas con las mujeres.
El titán de Wall Street Leon Black pagó a Jeffrey Epstein 170 millones de dólares por lo que, según él, era trabajo fiscal y patrimonial. Pero sus servicios fueron más allá.
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Guía de una organizadora profesional para una limpieza general.
Acaba con el desorden, deshazte de objetos sentimentales y crea un hogar que refleje quien eres ahora.
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La primera ministra de Dinamarca que se enfrentó a Trump busca un tercer mandato.
Mette Frederiksen es la fuerza política más importante que Dinamarca ha visto en décadas. La crisis de Groenlandia le dio energía, pero algunos votantes ya quieren un cambio.
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Palabra del día: ‘acclimate’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 154 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
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Los pasajeros del avión que chocó en LaGuardia se prepararon para un aterrizaje difícil antes de la coalición.
Una asistente de vuelo fue expulsada del avión, pero los pasajeros lograron abrir una puerta de emergencia y evacuar por su cuenta.
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¿La seguridad de Chappell Roan hizo llorar a una niña?
La cantante ha negado las acusaciones del incidente, que ocurrió en Brasil y ha suscitado un acalorado debate en internet.
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Trump cometió un error de cálculo crucial sobre Irán.
Estados Unidos no debería librar una guerra como esta.
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Trump aplaza los ataques a la infraestructura energética iraní.
Los ataques de Estados Unidos e Israel contra las centrales eléctricas y otras infraestructuras civiles podrían intensificar el conflicto en toda la región y enfurecer a los iraníes que se oponen al gobierno.
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Un avión militar de Colombia se estrella en el sur del país.
Un avión de transporte militar “sufrió un trágico accidente” cuando despegaba del sur de Colombia, según las autoridades. El número de víctimas no estaba claro.
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Israel pensó que podría provocar una rebelión en Irán. No ha sucedido.
Las esperanzas del presidente Trump de que un plan israelí desencadene un levantamiento en Irán y acabe rápido con la guerra no se han cumplido hasta ahora.
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Los ataques militares a la infraestructura de energía podrían prolongar el choque económico.
Una nueva fase dirigida contra las infraestructuras de petróleo y gas en el golfo Pérsico amenaza con perjudicar a empresas y clientes de todo el mundo durante meses o incluso años.
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Hegseth invoca un propósito divino para justificar el poder militar de EE. UU.
El secretario de Defensa estadounidense, Pete Hegseth, ha dotado las acciones militares en el extranjero de un fundamento moral cristiano.
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Trump habla de salir de Irán. ¿Lo hará?
Muchos de los objetivos bélicos originales del presidente de EE. UU. siguen sin cumplirse. No es donde esperaba encontrarse después de tres semanas de guerra.
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Lo que sabemos del choque mortal de un avión en el aeropuerto de LaGuardia.
Dos pilotos murieron y decenas de personas resultaron heridas cuando un avión colisionó con un camión de bomberos en la pista.
Gameplay