T/24-by-section
An index of 162 articles and 6 interactives published over the last 24 hours by NYT.
U.S.
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Pennsylvania School Board Reinstates Gay Author’s Speech Amid Backlash.
The Cumberland Valley School Board reversed its decision to cancel Maulik Pancholy’s speech at a middle school next month after many community members said the actor had been discriminated against because of his sexuality.
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Trump Compares Campus Protests to Violent White Supremacist Rally in Charlottesville.
The former president portrayed largely peaceful pro-Palestinian protests on college campuses as “riots,” saying that “Charlottesville is like a ‘peanut’” in comparison.
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Read the Arizona Election Indictment.
Arizona on Wednesday indicted Rudolph W. Giuliani, Mark Meadows and a number of others who advised Donald J. Trump during the 2020 election, as well as the fake electors who acted on Mr. Trump’s behalf to try to keep him in power despite his loss in the state. Here is the indictment.
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Arizona Charges Giuliani and Other Trump Allies in Election Interference Case.
Those charged included Boris Epshteyn, a top legal strategist for Donald Trump, and fake electors who acted on Mr. Trump’s behalf in Arizona after the 2020 election.
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Campus Protests Over Gaza Intensify Amid Pushback by Universities and Police.
There were more than 120 new arrests as universities moved to prevent pro-Palestinian encampments from taking hold as they have at Columbia University.
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U.K. Publisher Redacts Passage of Rebel Wilson’s Memoir.
The Australian actress and comedian accused Sacha Baron Cohen of inappropriate behavior during filming of a 2016 movie, which he has denied.
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Netanyahu Calls Student Protests Antisemitic and Says They Must Be Quelled.
“What’s happening in America’s college campuses is horrific,” the Israeli prime minister said in a televised statement. “Antisemitic mobs have taken over leading universities.”
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Trump Respects Women, Most Men Say.
Women do not see it that way, and that could matter this fall.
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Hundreds at Harvard Protest Suspension of Pro-Palestinian Group.
Students flooded Harvard Yard, the oldest part of the university’s campus, which officials recently closed to the public. The students set up tents for an “emergency rally.”
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White House says it won’t interfere in decision over Israeli battalion accused of abuse.
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‘Don’t Inject Bleach’: Biden Mocks Trump on Anniversary of Covid Comments.
President Biden has homed in on the infamous moment, which crystallized the chaos of the Trump presidency, as he trolls his political opponent.
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‘Everyone was ready to act.’ At Brown, students are galvanized by nationwide protests.
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Johnson Calls to End Pro-Palestinian Protests, Including by Military Means.
The Republican speaker appeared on Columbia University’s campus to condemn protesters as antisemitic and urge stronger action by the school’s president and President Biden.
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Prosecutor Says Sept. 11 Suspects Can Be Held Past War Crimes Sentence.
The argument, in a pretrial hearing, dealt with the unresolved question of whether a prisoner who completes such a sentence is entitled to release from military detention.
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5 Takeaways From the Supreme Court Arguments on Idaho’s Abortion Ban.
The court’s ruling could extend to at least half a dozen other states that have similarly restrictive bans, and the implications of the case could stretch beyond abortion.
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Authorities Offer $20,000 to Find Person Who Fatally Shot Dolphin.
The dolphin, a juvenile found on a Louisiana beach, had injuries “consistent with being shot with a firearm,” marine officials said.
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In response to protests, Brandeis invited Jewish students to transfer.
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In response to protests, Brandeis invited students to transfer to its campus.
The university’s president, Ronald D. Liebowitz, promised in an open letter that Brandeis would provide an environment “free of harassment and Jew-hatred.”
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Protesters on both sides of the abortion debate clash outside the Supreme Court.
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Columbia’s president, Nemat Shafik, has been at the center of the unrest.
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‘Unborn Child’ or ‘Fetus’: Parsing Word Choices on Abortion at the Supreme Court.
The word choice is not merely a question of semantics but gets to the heart of the ultimate goal of the anti-abortion movement: fetal personhood, and prohibiting abortion entirely.
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Pro-Palestinian Encampments Surface at Campuses Nationwide.
Many students have been demanding that their schools end financial ties to Israel and weapons manufacturers.
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Trump Named as Unindicted Conspirator in Michigan Election Interference Case.
An investigator said in court that former President Donald J. Trump and some of his aides conspired with fake electors to overturn his 2020 defeat in Michigan.
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Inside the week that shook Columbia’s campus and reverberated across the nation.
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What’s next: A decision will probably land in late June.
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Bucking G.O.P. Isolationists, McConnell Was Linchpin in Winning Ukraine Aid.
The leader said he often “felt like I was the only Reagan Republican left” as he pushed back on rising forces in his party arguing against American intervention in foreign affairs.
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Trump’s Immunity Claim Joins His Plans to Increase Executive Power.
The former president is asking the Supreme Court to put the presidency above criminal law as he pursues a broader agenda of expanding the office’s power should he win the election.
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In Immunity Case, Trump Can Lose in Ways That Amount to a Win.
After the justices hear arguments on Thursday, how they decide may be just as important as what they decide.
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Here are the latest developments.
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Biden Says Aid Bill for Ukraine and Israel Will ‘Make the World Safer’
President Biden signed an aid package for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan after it received bipartisan support in Congress.
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NATO Puts on a Show of Force in the Shadow of Russia’s War.
The alliance’s largest exercises offer a preview of what the opening of a Great Power conflict could look like. How it ends is a different story.
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U.S. Secretly Shipped New Long-Range Missiles to Ukraine.
Ukrainian forces for the first time used a longer-range version of weapons known as ATACMS, striking an airfield in Crimea and Russian troops in southeastern Ukraine.
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The Columbia president’s congressional testimony last week promised ‘consequences.’
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Maternity care suffers as abortion laws drive obstetricians from red states.
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The Biden administration considers the federal EMTALA law key to preserving abortion access.
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What to Make of the ‘Zombie Vote’ Against Donald Trump.
Votes for dropout candidates, such as Nikki Haley, have been features of past election cycles, too.
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‘It’s Just Agony’: A Suburban Family Mourns Nearly 200 Gaza Relatives.
Adam and Ola Abo Sheriah absorb a loss few of their friends and neighbors in New Jersey can imagine, and scramble to help surviving family members in Gaza while trying to get their kids to school on time.
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Abortion restrictions have changed the medical care in emergency rooms, too.
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Homeless Georgians Could Face Hurdles to Voting Under New Legislation.
A provision in an election bill would bar homeless voters from receiving mail-in ballots and election information at shelters or other temporary addresses.
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The Supreme Court said it was done with abortion. Its docket says otherwise.
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The consequences of the court’s decision could reverberate beyond Idaho.
The case is the first time the justices have examined a state law criminalizing abortion since they overruled Roe v. Wade.
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The federal law came about in part because of how pregnant women were treated in emergency rooms.
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What is EMTALA and what does it do?
The federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, known as EMTALA, requires hospitals to provide medically necessary care to stabilize patients in emergency situations.
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21 states have restricted or banned abortion since Roe v. Wade was overturned.
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Here’s the latest on the aid.
The $95.3 billion aid package
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Biden Says Weapons Will Flow to Ukraine Within Hours as He Signs Aid Bill.
The $95.3 billion measure comes after months of gridlock in Congress that put the centerpiece of President Biden’s foreign policy in jeopardy.
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We’re Adding New Songs to Our California Soundtrack.
Our playlist reflects the breadth and diversity of the Golden State.
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New Nutrition Guidelines Put Less Sugar and Salt on the Menu for School Meals.
The Agriculture Department finalized a new rule to bring the meals more in line with federal dietary standards.
World
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These Issues Are Testing the U.S.-China Thaw.
Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken is in China this week as tensions have risen over trade, security, Russia’s war on Ukraine and the Middle East crisis.
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What to Know About Venice’s Fees for Day Trips.
Venice is trying to mitigate overtourism with a small fee on busy days. City leaders hope it will make visitors more aware of the city’s fragility.
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Flooding Inundates Kenya, Killing at Least 32 and Displacing Thousands.
The rain also killed farm animals and destroyed thousands of acres of crops.
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After $15 Billion in Military Aid, Israel Calls Alliance With U.S. ‘Ironclad’
The money from Washington, which includes $5 billion to replenish Israel’s defenses and $1 billion for Gazan civilians, comes as Israel readies to invade Rafah.
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Biden signs aid bill, reaffirming his commitment to Israel.
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Thursday Briefing: Israel Seems Poised to Invade Rafah.
Also, details of the U.S. aid package to Ukraine and Taylor Swift’s new album.
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Enduring Mayhem: Images From Year 3 of the War in Ukraine.
A photographic chronicle of the third year of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
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Spain’s Leader Says He’s Considering Resigning as Wife Faces Investigation.
Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez put his public duties on hold. He said an inquiry into alleged influence peddling by his wife was politically motivated.
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Famine could begin in Gaza within weeks if more aid doesn’t get in, the W.F.P. warns.
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Hersh Goldberg-Polin, an Israeli American Hostage, Is Seen in Hamas Video.
The video appeared to be the first time that Mr. Goldberg-Polin, who was grievously injured in the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attack, has been seen alive since he was taken captive.
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Hersh Goldberg-Polin, an Israeli-American Hostage, Is Seen in a Hamas Video.
The video appeared to be the first time that Mr. Goldberg-Polin, who was grievously injured in the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attack, has been seen alive since he was taken captive.
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The Only Girls’ Team in a Boys’ Soccer League Has Gone Undefeated.
The Queens Park Ladies, an under-12 soccer team in Bournemouth, England, hopes to inspire younger girls to get into the sport after a dominant season against the boys.
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With Temperatures Soaring, Gazans Swelter in Makeshift Tents.
The tents that failed to keep out the cold when many Gazans first fled their homes have now become suffocating as highs surpass 100 degrees Fahrenheit.
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The International Date Line Is ‘Pretty Arbitrary.’ Here’s Why.
That squiggly line through the Pacific where days begin and end has no legal authority and technically doesn’t exist.
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Australian Journalist Says She Was Pushed Out of India.
Avani Dias said that she had been denied a visa renewal for weeks because of her reporting on the Sikh separatist movement. Indian officials disputed her account.
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Myanmar’s Junta Recaptures Town That Was a Significant Gain for Rebels.
Resistance soldiers were forced to leave Myawaddy, a key trading center on the border with Thailand, weeks after capturing it.
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Israel says it is deploying two more brigades to Gaza.
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Athens Turns Orange Under a Saharan Dust Cloud.
In Photos
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After U.N. Report, Germany Says It Will Resume Funding for UNRWA.
The announcement was likely to further strain Germany’s longstanding ties with Israel, which have deteriorated because of differences over the war in Gaza.
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Horses Run Loose Through Central London in Surreal Spectacle.
A number of runaway army horses galloped through London on Wednesday morning, causing alarm and injuring pedestrians. All of the animals were eventually recovered.
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Israel’s foreign minister thanks the Senate for passing a hard-fought aid bill.
New York
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Trump Case Testimony Expected to Turn to Hush-Money Deal With Porn Star.
David Pecker, the former publisher of The National Enquirer, will be back on the stand and is likely to discuss the publication’s contact with Stormy Daniels.
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The Links Between Trump and 3 Hush-Money Deals.
Here’s how key figures involved in making hush-money payoffs on behalf of Donald J. Trump are connected.
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Undercover Sex Sting Leads to Charges Against School Crossing Guard.
Jared Jeridore, who worked near a Queens school, was arrested after complaints about him led the police to have an officer pose as a teenage girl, officials said.
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On Columbia’s Lawn, the Curtain Rises on a Day of Political Theater.
At Columbia University, protesters were undeterred, and even relaxed, as a phalanx of congressional leaders showed up and told them to “stop the nonsense.”
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Mayor Adams Walks Back Budget Cuts Many Saw as Unnecessary.
The mayor released a revised $111.6 billion budget, which included $2.3 billion that would restore some funding for schools and cultural institutions.
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Five Moments That Have Defined Donald Trump’s Trial So Far.
Trials are wars of words. These are some of the most memorable that have been spoken as a jury hears the criminal case against Donald J. Trump.
Business
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Mining Giant BHP Makes $39 Billion Bid for Rival Anglo American.
The deal would create one of the largest copper miners at a time when demand is soaring for the metal used for many green technologies.
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N.F.L. Draft Is Like Super Bowl for City of Detroit.
Places that are not usual sites for the league’s marquee game are jumping at the chance to be the host of its three-day draft.
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Blinken Tours China to Promote Some Ties, While the U.S. Severs Others.
Tensions over economic ties are running high, threatening to disrupt a fragile cooperation between the U.S. and China.
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There Is No TikTok in China, but There Is Douyin. Here’s What It Is.
ByteDance owns both TikTok and Douyin, and although TikTok has more users around the world, Douyin is the company’s cash cow and a China mainstay.
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Europe’s Policymakers Get Ready to Lower Rates, Regardless of the Fed.
European Central Bank governors are highlighting cooler inflation as a sign the bank could cut interest rates before the Federal Reserve.
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McKinsey Is Under Criminal Investigation for Its Opioid Work.
Federal prosecutors are examining the consulting company’s role in helping “turbocharge” the sale of painkillers like OxyContin.
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College Protesters Make Divestment From Israel a Rallying Cry.
The campaign is likely to have a negligible impact on the companies or Israel, but activists see divestment as a clear way to force colleges to take action on the issue.
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Solar Companies Seek New U.S. Tariffs on Asian Imports.
Firms warn that China uses its neighbors to skirt existing levies, depressing prices and threatening U.S. investments.
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Business Groups Sue to Stop F.T.C. From Banning Noncompete Clauses.
The lawsuits contend the F.T.C. does not have the authority to prohibit companies from limiting their employees’ ability to work for rivals.
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Inside the Crisis at NPR.
Listeners are tuning out. Sponsorship revenue has dipped. A diversity push has generated internal turmoil. Can America’s public radio network turn things around?
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Robert Kraft’s Fight Against Antisemitism Began Long Before Oct. 7.
The New England Patriots owner said this week that he was “no longer comfortable supporting” Columbia University, his alma mater, which has been disrupted by protests.
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Starbucks and Union Restart Contract Talks After Bitter Standoff.
The company and Workers United, which represents more than 10,000 of the chain’s employees, broke off negotiation nearly a year ago.
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Boeing Loses $355 Million in Latest Quarter.
The manufacturer has had to slow production of its popular 737 Max planes after a hole blew open on a jet during an Alaska Airlines flight in January.
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Who Stands to Gain from a TikTok Ban.
The Senate has finally passed a law that could bar the video-sharing app in the U.S., leaving some tech giants in pole position to profit — or pounce.
Technology
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‘To the Future’: Saudi Arabia Spends Big to Become an A.I. Superpower.
The oil-rich kingdom is plowing money into glitzy events, computing power and artificial intelligence research, putting it in the middle of an escalating U.S.-China struggle for technological influence.
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Meta’s Profits More Than Double, While Spending on A.I. Rises.
The owner of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp continued to grow, even as it said it would spend billions of dollars more on artificial intelligence.
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On TikTok, Resignation and Frustration After Potential Ban of App.
While Congress says the social app is a security threat, critics of the law targeting it say it shows how out of step lawmakers are with young people.
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Binance Founder Should Get 3 Years in Prison, Prosecutors Say.
Lawyers for Changpeng Zhao, the founder of the crypto exchange Binance, countered that he should receive no prison time.
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Elon Musk Clashes With Australian Court Over Violent Videos on X.
Mr. Musk’s defiance over removing content is testing the boundaries of international legal systems.
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‘Thunder Run’: Behind Lawmakers’ Secretive Push to Pass the TikTok Bill.
A tiny group of lawmakers huddled in private about a year ago, aiming to keep the discussions away from TikTok lobbyists while bulletproofing a bill that could ban the app.
Obituaries
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Alfonso Chardy, Who Helped Expose Iran-Contra Scandal, Dies at 72.
A Miami Herald correspondent, he powered a team that won a Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting and helped snare three other Pulitzers for the paper.
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Donald M. Payne Jr., 65, New Jersey Representative in Sixth Term, Is Dead.
A Newark Democrat, he succeeded his father, who was the first Black member of his state’s congressional delegation.
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Carrie Robbins, Costume Designer for Dozens of Broadway Shows, Dies at 81.
She made a classic wig and poodle skirt for “Grease” (using a bath mat and a toilet cover) and turned actors into Spanish inquisitors, British highwaymen and more.
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Helen Vendler, ‘Colossus’ of Poetry Criticism, Dies at 90.
In the poetry marketplace, her praise had reputation-making power, while her disapproval could be withering.
Briefing
Podcasts
Science
Climate
Opinion
Arts
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Jimmy Kimmel Dunks on Trump’s Billion-Dollar Stock Bonus.
“Donald Trump somehow made a lot of money from a company that makes none,” Kimmel said.
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Getty Museum Agrees to Return Ancient Bronze Head to Turkey.
The museum did not detail its exact reasoning but said it had received information from New York investigators who consider the artifact to have been looted.
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Chicago Museum Says Investigators Have No Evidence Art Was Looted.
In a court filing, the Art Institute of Chicago fought Manhattan prosecutors’ efforts to seize an important Egon Schiele drawing, denying that the Nazis had stolen it.
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Vehicle Crash That Injured Film Crew Was Caught on Video.
The collision on the set of “The Pickup” is under investigation. Video shows an armored truck and an S.U.V. veering off a road before the truck flips onto the smaller vehicle.
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Review: Noche Flamenca, Raising the Dead With Goya.
In “Searching for Goya,” at the Joyce Theater, the troupe uses the painter’s images as frames for flamenco dances.
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Long-Lost Klimt Painting Sells for $37 Million at Auction.
The portrait was left unfinished in the painter’s studio when he died, and questions persist over the identity of the subject and what happened to the painting during Nazi rule in Austria.
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Is New York Improv Back? I Went on a One-Week Binge to Find Out.
The pandemic dealt a major blow to the once-thriving comedy form, but a new energy can be seen in performances throughout the city.
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Review: John Adams’s ‘El Niño’ Arrives at the Met in Lush Glory.
The opera-oratorio, an alternate Nativity story, featured a flurry of Met debuts, including the director Lileana Blain-Cruz and the conductor Marin Alsop.
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Cristian Macelaru, Decorated Maestro, to Lead Cincinnati Symphony.
He will begin a four-year term as the orchestra’s music director in the 2025-26 season, succeeding Louis Langrée.
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What’s in Our Queue? ‘The X-Files’ and More.
I’m an editor that works primarily with breaking and trending news. Here are a few things I have been enjoying.
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The Venice Biennale and the Art of Turning Backward.
Every art institution now speaks of progress, justice, transformation. What if all those words hide a more old-fashioned aim?
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Turner Prize Shortlist Leans In to Artists’ Identities.
This year’s four nominees are Claudette Johnson, Jasleen Kaur, Pio Abad and Delaine Le Bas, whose works draw on personal history and cultural interpretations.
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‘So Far From Ukraine’: A Princely Dancer Finds a Home in Miami.
Stanislav Olshanskyi has had to battle homesickness and adjust to Miami City Ballet’s style: quick, light, constantly in motion. He’s also the prince in “Swan Lake.”
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En español
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Se descubren fragmentos del virus de la gripe aviar en la leche.
La leche no supone prácticamente ningún riesgo para los consumidores, según los expertos. Pero el hallazgo sugiere que el brote en vacas lecheras es más amplio de lo que se sabía.
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‘Járkov es inquebrantable’: así se vive la guerra en una ciudad de Ucrania.
Para los residentes de la segunda ciudad más grande de Ucrania, los ataques diarios de Rusia han intensificado los temores, pero no han paralizado la vida.
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¿Por qué los adultos más jóvenes están desarrollando esta afección cardiaca tan común?
Nuevas investigaciones sugieren que la fibrilación auricular puede ser más frecuente, y más peligrosa, en personas menores de 65 años de lo que se pensaba.
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El Congreso de EE. UU. aprobó un proyecto de ley que podría prohibir TikTok. ¿Qué sigue ahora?
Después de que Biden firme el proyecto de ley para forzar la venta de la aplicación o prohibirla, la legislación se enfrentará a desafíos judiciales, a la escasez de compradores y a la hostilidad del gobierno chino.
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Pedro Sánchez plantea su renuncia.
El presidente del gobierno de España suspendió su agenda pública hasta la próxima semana, luego de que un juzgado ordenó investigar a la esposa de Sánchez por presunto tráfico de influencias.
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El equipo de ciberseguridad de los Juegos Olímpicos de París está seguro de una cosa: serán atacados.
“Seremos atacados”, dijo el responsable de la lucha contra las ciberamenazas. Para prepararse, los organizadores pagan recompensas a los “hackers” que descubren vulnerabilidades.
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Un poquito de tierra es bueno para tu salud.
Coge un puñado de tierra o haz senderismo en un camino enlodado: puede beneficiarte en mucho, desde tu ánimo hasta tu microbioma.
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