T/24-by-section
An index of 213 articles and 5 interactives published over the last 24 hours by NYT.
U.S.
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Trump Administration Sends Harvard a List of Demands to Protect Federal Funds.
The list was similar to one sent to Columbia University last month after the government canceled $400 million to the school. Harvard may have $9 billion on the line.
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Scenes From States Devastated by a Powerful Storm System.
The severe weather stretched from Texas to Ohio, causing tornadoes and flooding across the central United States.
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Amtrak Train Strikes and Kills a Person in Pennsylvania.
Amtrak said one of its trains hit three people on the tracks near Bristol Station. Service between New York’s Penn Station and Philadelphia’s main station was temporarily suspended.
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L.A. Fires Death Toll Rises to 30 After Remains Are Found.
The discovery makes the Palisades and Eaton fires, combined, the second-deadliest wildfires in California’s history.
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Deadly Storm Hits South and Midwest.
After hail, heavy rains and more than 30 tornadoes drenched the region, officials warned that a “generational flooding” disaster was possible.
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Workers Forced to Leave Foreign Policy Center as Trump Presses Shutdown.
About 130 employees of the Wilson Center were told they were being put on leave, just four days after workers for Elon Musk’s team entered the center.
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C.E.O. Choked Man Who Danced Barefoot on Cruise Ship, U.S. Says.
Kenneth D. DeGiorgio, the chief executive of First American Financial, was charged with assault. His lawyers say that the other man was harassing the executive’s wife.
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Trump Supports Proxy Voting for New Parents in Congress, a Blow to Johnson.
The president’s comment was a rare instance in which he and House Speaker Mike Johnson were not on the same side of an issue.
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Tufts Student Held by ICE Asks Court to Return Her Case to Massachusetts.
After being picked up in Massachusetts, Rumeysa Ozturk was moved to a detention center in Louisiana, where the government wants to argue its case to deport her.
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Judge Blocks H.H.S. From Terminating $11 Billion in Public Health Grants.
A coalition of states sued over the Trump administration’s unexpected move to cut off the funds, which they said imperiled everything from childhood vaccination programs to opioid addiction treatment.
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Trump Administration Set to Pause $510 Million for Brown University.
The administration has now targeted five schools’ federal funding as part of a pledge to combat what it considers to be antisemitism on university campuses.
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Trump Likely Violated Order on Deportations, A Federal Judge Says.
The judge, James E. Boasberg, said he was likely to wait until next week to rule on whether the White House was in contempt of court for having ignored his order.
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Mel Gibson’s Gun Rights to Be Restored by Justice Dept.
People familiar with the decision said Mr. Gibson, a supporter of President Trump, would be among 10 people with convictions to get back their gun rights.
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How the Trump Administration Might Target D.E.I. in Public Schools.
A letter from the administration promised to withdraw funding from schools that allow certain D.E.I. programs. But what counts as D.E.I. may prove murky.
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Pentagon Will Review Hegseth’s Use of Signal.
The review started in response to a joint bipartisan request last week from leaders of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
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Chris Pappas Jumps Into 2026 Senate Race in New Hampshire.
Mr. Pappas, a 44-year-old Democratic congressman, is the first major candidate to enter the race to succeed the retiring Senator Jeanne Shaheen.
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Turning Longtime Grievance Into Emergency.
Economists and legal experts question how the strongest economy in the world can be facing a national emergency over the trade deficit.
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Trump’s Pick to Argue at Supreme Court Made His Name in the Culture Wars.
President Trump’s choice for solicitor general, D. John Sauer, has long pushed for restrictions on abortion and access to contraception.
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U.S. Threatens School Funding Over Diversity.
State education officials will be required to verify that they have eliminated all programs that promote diversity, equity and inclusion that the administration deems unlawful, according to a new memo.
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Trump Fires 6 After Meeting With Activist.
During the 30-minute meeting, the far-right activist excoriated National Security Council officials in front of the president and Michael Waltz, the national security adviser.
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Insulin Test Used to Convict Lucy Letby in Babies’ Deaths Was Unreliable, Experts Say.
A new report by neonatal and toxicology experts casts doubt on the test results that were pivotal to the case against the British nurse.
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Trump’s Tariffs Are Latest Sign of His Second-Term Appetite for Risk.
President Trump’s announcement went beyond most predictions, showing a greater willingness to follow his instincts even when critics — and some allies — consider failure a likely outcome.
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As El Paso Gunman Faces Sentencing, the Hate That Inspired Him Rises Again.
The lawyer of the white supremacist who slaughtered 23 people in 2019 said his client was inspired by President Trump’s words, the same the president is using today.
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Rubio Visits NATO Amid European Alarm Over Trump’s Agenda.
The secretary of state’s trip comes amid an abrupt shift in relations between the United States and Europe after close cooperation during the Biden era.
World
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Police Shut Area Near Seoul Court as Protesters Amass Before Ruling.
More than 14,000 police officers have been deployed ahead of Friday’s decision by the Constitutional Court in the impeachment case of President Yoon Suk Yeol.
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Here’s the latest.
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Two Top Organizers of Canada’s Trucker Convoy Are Found Guilty.
The case is among the last stemming from the 2022 trucker protests, which spawned many other criminal cases, lawsuits and a public inquiry.
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Israeli Strike Kills Dozens at Gaza City Shelter, Officials Say.
The Israeli military said it was looking into reports about the deaths at a school-turned-shelter, which came as Israel was intensifying its offensive in Gaza to pressure Hamas to release hostages.
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Garbage Strike Leaves Rotting Trash Piling Up in Major British City.
A pay strike by garbage collectors in Birmingham, Britain’s second-largest city, has left 17,000 tons of rotting trash on its streets, raising public health concerns.
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Ex-Yankees Player Brett Gardner’s Son Died From Carbon Monoxide, Officials Say.
Miller Gardner, who was 14, died last month at a resort in Costa Rica.
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Where Trump’s Tariffs Will Hit Hardest.
These economies are deeply reliant on selling goods to the United States, and many of them were hit with especially steep taxes.
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Prince Harry Expresses ‘Relief’ Over U.K. Charity Investigation.
A British regulator said it would examine concerns about Sentebale, the charity Harry co-founded, looking at its chair as well as its trustees.
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‘It Had Teeth’: A 3-Year-Old Discovers Ancient Treasure in Israel.
While on a hike with her family, a child stumbled across a 3,800-year-old Egyptian amulet. It will go on display in an upcoming exhibition.
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How Argentina’s Leader Became Trump’s ‘Favorite President’
Javier Milei of Argentina might not be that useful for the United States on economics or geopolitics — but he can help to fight the culture wars.
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What Is the I.C.C.? What to Know After Hungary’s Move to Withdraw.
Hungary said it would pull out of the International Criminal Court as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel visited the country.
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Europe Has Economic Power. Can It Use It Against Trump’s Tariffs?
European leaders have said they would prefer to negotiate. If that fails, their response could go beyond anything they’ve tried before.
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Israel Hits Syria With New Strikes and Ground Raid as Tensions Soar.
Israel defended the moves as necessary security measures, but Syria accused it of trying to destabilize the country.
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Top Trump Aide Hosts White House Meeting With Kremlin Envoy.
The meeting between Kirill Dmitriev and Steve Witkoff was apparently the first time in years that a senior Russian official had traveled to the United States for talks with an American counterpart.
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Israel Shifts Goal Posts in Gaza War.
In pressing forward with its assault on the territory, Israel hopes to squeeze Hamas into releasing the remaining hostages. But other objectives have emerged.
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Ignoring Protests, Thailand Opens Door to Myanmar’s Military Leader.
Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, who has long been treated like a pariah on the global stage, is visiting Bangkok barely a week after an earthquake that killed at least 3,000 people in his country.
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Britain Tried Everything, Including a Royal Invite. It Got a 10% Tariff.
In spite of a prolonged charm offensive by Prime Minister Keir Starmer, President Trump said that the U.K. would be hit with the universal base rate levied on all countries.
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What Is ‘Qatargate,’ the Latest Furor Embroiling Israel?
Police questioned Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu amid claims that members of his team worked simultaneously for the state of Qatar. He is not a suspect, but two of his media advisers have been arrested.
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Hungary Says It Will Withdraw From I.C.C. as Orban Hosts Netanyahu.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, who is visiting Hungary despite facing an international arrest warrant, praised the move.
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South Korean Actor Denies Dating a Minor.
Kim Soo-hyun, one of Korea’s most famous actors, was in tears as he denied allegations of dating the actress Kim Sae-ron when she was a minor. Ms. Kim, 24, died by suicide this year.
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Surfers Take What They Can Get in Hong Kong’s Unexciting Waters.
The scene in the Chinese territory is concentrated at a few beaches with inconsistent swell. One intrepid surfer says it’s all about “turning nothing into something.”
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The Hindu Nation Was Fake. But Its Land Grab in Bolivia Was Real.
Emissaries of the “United States of Kailasa,” led by a fugitive holy man, were deported after negotiating 1,000-year deals with Indigenous groups.
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How Ukraine’s Environment Became a Casualty of Russia’s War.
Russia’s war in Ukraine has decimated the environment, causing floods, wildfires and pollution. An extensive legal effort now underway in Ukraine is seeking justice for the long-lasting ecological harm. To capture the ecological damage of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Brendan Hoffman, a New York Times photographer, visited much of the front line over four months of reporting.
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Netanyahu Arrives in Hungary, Finding a Rare Welcome in Europe.
The visit comes as the Israeli prime minister faces an arrest warrant against him by the International Criminal Court.
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Accusations Fly in South Korean Dating Scandal After Actress’s Suicide.
The death of the actress Kim Sae-ron has plunged her former boyfriend, the superstar actor Kim Soo-hyun, into the biggest crisis of his career.
New York
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Police Officers Are Suspended After a Car Chase Ends in a Fatal Fire.
The driver of a Honda CRV was found dead in a burning car in Upper Manhattan. The Police Department put new restrictions on automobile pursuits three months ago.
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Fake Doctor Is Charged After ‘Butt Lift’ Surgery Leaves Woman Near Death.
Felipe Hoyos Foronda, who advertised cosmetic surgery services on social media, tried to flee the country after the procedure went wrong, according to an internal police report.
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Murders and Shootings Tumble in New York City in First Quarter of Year.
The number of shootings in the first three months of 2025 was the lowest since 1994, but rape numbers were up and more children were shot, according to police statistics.
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Curveball From Adams Further Complicates a Tangled Race for Mayor.
What do a once-indicted mayor, a former governor and the Guardian Angels founder have in common? They all may be on the November ballot in the New York City mayor’s race.
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Adams to Run as Independent, Skirting Primary for 2nd Term.
Mayor Eric Adams faced an uphill battle in the June 24 Democratic primary, which has drawn a crowded field of candidates. He will run for re-election as an independent instead.
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What Permanent Supportive Housing Can, and Can’t, Do for New Yorkers.
The housing model provides a stable residence that formerly homeless people with mental illness and addictions can’t “fail out” of, though some describe feeling stuck.
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A Swastika, a Tesla and a Debate Over the Limits of Hate Crime Law.
Is it a hate crime for people to draw a swastika on a Tesla if they believe Elon Musk is a Nazi?
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How Online Rage Invaded a 151-Year-Old Intellectual Retreat.
Charges of antisemitism and liberal bias, and dismay over cuts to the opera budget, have led to a small mutiny at Chautauqua Institution. And this was after the attack on Salman Rushdie.
Business
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Lawsuit Challenges Trump’s Legal Rationale for Tariffs on China.
A nonprofit group said the president misapplied a law in imposing those levies and portrayed its filing as the first lawsuit to challenge the Trump administration over its tariffs.
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Why your can of beer might get more expensive.
The Trump administration will impose a 25 percent tariff on all imported beer that comes in cans starting Friday, part of sweeping measures against foreign steel and aluminum.
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In Worst Stock Market in Years, Slow and Boring Has Eased the Pain.
People have avoided huge losses by holding old-fashioned, well-balanced investments, an approach our columnist is banking on for the future.
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New Levies’ Rationale and the Potential Impact.
The president announced sweeping tariffs on Wednesday in an effort to reset global trading relationships. Here’s what you need to know.
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Oil Producers Follow Trump’s Tariffs With a Surprise Increase.
Saudi Arabia and other members of the OPEC Plus group accelerated their program to put more oil on the market, adding to a sharp fall in prices.
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Volkswagen to Add ‘Import Fee’ to Cars Sold in U.S.
The company’s move is one of the first and clearest examples of automakers using price increases to deal with the 25 percent tariffs President Trump imposed on car and auto parts imports.
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Mexico’s leader unveils a plan to blunt tariffs by increasing domestic production of food, energy and textiles.
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Future of TikTok’s Ownership Is Uncertain as Deadline for Sale Nears.
The video app is barreling toward a Saturday deadline to change its ownership under federal law or face a ban in the United States.
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Canada’s Prime Minister Puts Tariffs on U.S.-Made Cars and Predicts Global Upheaval.
Mark Carney, a former central banker, also called on “like-minded countries” to form a new trading order without the United States.
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Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers says he would have quit over Trump’s tariffs plan.
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Fed expectations diverge sharply as Trump’s trade war upends forecasts.
Splits are emerging about when the central bank will be able to lower interest rates again.
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Trump’s De Minimis Order Poised to Upend E-Commerce.
The loophole has allowed retailers to send goods from China directly to U.S. shoppers without paying tariffs. Closing it could raise consumer prices.
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Trump’s tariffs deliver a blow to Nike’s bet on Vietnam.
Nike thought Vietnam would be a cheaper and less fraught zone for manufacturing than China. Now, all bets are off.
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Tariff Storm May Upset Job Market.
The U.S. economy has largely withstood inflation and high interest rates. But tariffs could bring new price increases and put a damper on hiring.
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How Much Will Trump’s Tariffs Cost U.S. Importers?
It will cost an extra $714 billion in tariffs to bring shoes, TVs and all other imports into the United States, a new analysis of trade data shows.
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Stocks of Consumer Brands Hit Hard by Tariffs.
Many sportswear brands shifted production away from China to avoid tariffs imposed years ago, but now they face punishing levies targeting alternative manufacturing hubs.
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Vanity Fair’s Top Editor Is Departing After Seven Years.
Ms. Jones has led the gilded magazine of culture, business and politics since 2017.
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Mexico’s president says her country was given ‘preferential treatment’ in the new U.S. tariffs announcement.
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Vietnam’s prime minister urges calm as the shock of high U.S. tariffs sinks in.
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Capital One Deal for Discover Clears a Justice Dept. Hurdle.
The department, during the Biden administration, initially said it had concerns about the merger of two of the largest credit card companies in the U.S.
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An app helps Italians to shop local after Trump imposes tariffs.
By reading country-of-origin information, the app helps consumers make better decisions, its proposers say.
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More Penguins Than People: Trump Imposes Tariffs on Remote Islands.
Some of the more sparsely populated territories in the world that do little trade with the United States have been caught up in the trade war.
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Trump’s Tariffs Hit Garment Makers in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka Hard.
The industry supplies low-cost clothing to the United States, and is a crucial part of the Asian countries’ economies.
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Trump’s Trade War Risks Forfeiting America’s Economic Primacy.
The United States has steered an economic order for 80 years based on trade and trust, making the country the world’s financial superpower. That vision is now blurred.
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Lists of tariffs issued by the White House show two different figures for some countries.
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Ford Offers Discounts on Cars and Trucks as Auto Tariffs Kick In.
The company said it would offer customers the same prices it offers its employees on most of its vehicles.
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Apple Stock Plunges 9%, Leading a Tech Sell-Off.
The company counts on the sale of devices for three-quarters of its nearly $400 billion in annual revenue, and it makes almost all of its iPhones, iPads and Macs overseas.
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As Wall Street sags, Lutnick says American markets will eventually do ‘extremely well.’
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Fact-Checking Trump’s Claim About Egg Prices.
As he announced sweeping tariffs, President Trump claimed there had been a large decline in the price of eggs. That’s not the whole picture.
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Fact-checking Trump’s claim about egg prices.
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Price of Oil Falls Sharply on Fears Over Tariffs, as Do Metal Prices.
The combination of lower oil prices and higher costs for essential materials like steel pipe threatens to squeeze domestic oil and gas producers.
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Tariffs Don’t Apply to Chips, But Taiwan Remains Wary.
The chip companies in Taiwan, the center of the global supply chain, are expected to face pressure from Washington to invest more in the U.S.
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Trump Took a Wrecking Ball to Southeast Asia’s Role as an Alternative to China.
Punishing tariffs on Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand and others in the region threaten their position as major manufacturing hubs for the American market.
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How Countries Responded to Trump’s Tariffs.
China vowed countermeasures and the E.U. promised a unified response, while Britain and Japan refrained from immediate retaliation.
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The Fallout From Trump’s Reign of Tariffs.
Global markets were in a tailspin on Thursday as policymakers and trade partners expressed dismay over president’s latest trade-war salvo.
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Why Did Trump Spare Russia From New Tariffs?
The Trump administration says sanctions imposed on Moscow mean the U.S. does little trade with Russia, but questions persist about the motivations.
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New Threat Rises for Germany’s Stagnant Economy.
President Trump’s trade war adds another challenge to the incoming government’s attempts to revive Europe’s biggest economy.
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TARIFF SHOCK WAVES CIRCLE THE GLOBE.
Not even America’s closest trading partners were spared by a policy broadside that spooked investors and left policymakers scrambling to formulate responses.
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Trump Is Promising a Manufacturing Renaissance. Is That Even Possible?
The president says “jobs and factories will come roaring back” because of his trade policies, but the economic story of the American 21st century has also been shaped by the deliberate pursuit of freer trade.
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Japan Lacks a ‘Viable Option’ for Retaliating to Trump’s Tariffs.
Japan has refrained from talk of striking back at U.S. tariffs. Trade experts say that is because its inflation-strained economy limits its options.
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China assails Trump’s new tariffs and vows retaliation.
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Auto Tariffs Take Effect, Putting Pressure on New Car Prices.
President Trump says the tariffs will encourage investment in U.S. factories, but analysts say car buyers will have to pay thousands more.
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China Will Face at Least 54 Percent Tariffs With Trump’s New Order.
The 34 percent tariff announced on Wednesday is in addition to two rounds of import taxes the president already imposed since January.
Technology
Obituaries
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John Thornton, 59, Dies; Financier Helped Revive Local Journalism.
An idealist, he founded The Texas Tribune, a model for nonprofit grass-roots news organizations nationwide, and the American Journalism Project, which supports them.
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Leonardo Patterson, 82, Disgraced Dealer in Latin American Artifacts, Dies.
Born into rural poverty, he climbed to the top of the art market. But he fell after being convicted of selling fake and stolen items.
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Paul McDonough, Whose Photographs Evoked Street Life, Dies at 84.
His candid black-and-white images, prosaic yet provocative, captured the faces of a wide range of New Yorkers. He also took occasional side trips to the West.
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Overlooked No More: Katharine McCormick, Force Behind the Birth Control Pill.
She used her wealth strategically to expand opportunities for women, underwriting the development of the pill and supporting the suffrage movement.
Briefing
Podcasts
Science
Climate
Opinion
Arts
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Groups Are Informed That Federal Humanities Grants Are Canceled.
Letters informed grant recipients that funds from the National Endowment for the Humanities would be redirected to furthering “the president’s agenda.”
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Ask Your Doctor if Death Is Right for You.
This anime series on Adult Swim is filled with fantastic fight sequences but also deeper musings about the nature of existence and divinity.
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What to See in N.Y.C. Galleries in April.
This week in Newly Reviewed, Travis Diehl covers Kianja Strobert’s silver benches, Anna-Bella Papp’s elegant clay slabs and Amanda Rodriguez’s playful watercolors.
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In ‘The Bondsman,’ Kevin Bacon Goes to Hell and Back.
The actor stars as the title character in this new horror comedy series, playing a man charged with tracking down escaped demons.
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Judge Declines to Revoke Young Thug’s Probation After Social Media Post.
The district attorney’s office in Fulton County, Ga., had cited a post in which the rapper referred to a gang investigator as the “Biggest liar in the DA office.”
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A Lo-o-o-ong Gestation In the U.S.A.
The singer and songwriter announced a boxed set featuring 83 songs, of which 74 have never been officially released in any form.
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What to Do in New York City in April.
Looking for something to do in New York? Catch Kylie Minogue at Madison Square Garden or celebrate the debut solo album from the centenarian Marshall Allen.
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Trump’s Order Puts the Smithsonian’s Chief in the Hot Seat.
The president’s executive order demanding change at the institution presents a perilous test for Lonnie G. Bunch III, its secretary, whom the White House calls a partisan Democrat.
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Everything We Ask of Art Is in These Marbles.
The 2,000-year-old Torlonia collection of Roman sculptures, now at the Art Institute of Chicago, has the urgency of the greatest contemporary art.
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Olga Smirnova, a da Vinci of Ballet, Settles Into a New Life, New Rep.
The former Bolshoi star, the most high-profile dancer to leave Russia, is making a career at the Dutch National Ballet, where she is refining her intensity.
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The ‘Monstrous Beauty’ of Pretty Porcelains.
A show at the Met offers a feminist revision of Chinoiserie, a decorative style that swept through Europe in the age of empires and seeded stereotypes of Asian women.
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A Memoir of Music, and Much More.
The band’s singer and bassist recounts his personal struggles and the dramatic ins and outs of the trio’s history in a new memoir, “Fahrenheit-182.”
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Late Night Debriefs After a ‘Tariff-fying’ Day at the White House.
Stephen Colbert said that, thanks to President Trump, “America is finally free from the tyranny of being able to buy stuff from other countries.”
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A 600-Year-Old Masterpiece Gets Some Much-Needed Love.
After three doctors fell in love with a fresco by Fra Angelico, they pledged to restore it so it could get its due when a blockbuster exhibition opens this fall.
Theater
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‘Dorian Gray’ Takes a Digital Turn.
Sarah Snook, camera operators and other crew members bring to life multitudes on Broadway via an elaborate synthesis of live action, live video and recorded video.
Books
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Two of Us.
T Bone Burnett reviews Ian Leslie’s “John & Paul,” which explores the partnership of “two extraordinarily gifted young men.”
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7 New Books We Recommend This Week.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
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Reginald Dwayne Betts.
It’s called “Doggerel” for a reason: “These are poems that speak to everyone, that pun and riff and make fun of themselves a bit as they reveal something about the world.”
Movies
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Just a Sweet Old Lady (Although Be on Alert).
With her kind eyes and guileless smile, Hélène Vincent plays a sweet old French lady. But looks can be deceiving in this François Ozon film.
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‘The Luckiest Man in America’ Review: Taking a Game Show for a Spin.
Paul Walter Hauser stars as a real-life contestant on “Press Your Luck” who pulled off an improbable trick.
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‘Hell of a Summer’ Review: Shallow Cuts.
Summer camp counselors run afoul of a masked killer in this limp, uninspired slasher throwback from Finn Wolfhard and Billy Bryk.
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‘Henry Fonda for President’ Review: A Legend and His Contradictions.
Fonda was the embodiment of America, the director Alexander Horwath posits in this documentary.
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‘Freaky Tales’ Review: Totally Oakland.
Misogyny and racism get their butts spanked in this bold, messy celebration of the Bay Area in the 1980s.
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‘A Nice Indian Boy’ Review: Meet-Cute at a Hindu Temple.
Thanks to the instant chemistry between Karan Soni and Jonathan Groff, the film pulls off their whirlwind romance.
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‘The Martial Artist’ Review: Tap Out.
In this overwrought action film by Shaz Khan, a mixed martial artist’s career is upended when his brother is killed.
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‘Love Hotel’ Review: Finding Space for Beauty in the Bleakness.
A Shinji Somai contribution to a narrow soft-core subgenre crushes together the anonymity and violence, desire and trauma, that bind lives of alienation.
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Running Out of Time and Sense in New Jersey.
Ryan J. Sloan’s brooding thriller is a murky tale about an isolated woman, with many shades of Schrader, Nolan and Cronenberg.
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‘Eric LaRue’ Review: When Pain Won’t Stay Quiet.
Judy Greer stars in a searing drama about the mother of a school shooter and all the things we try not to say.
Food
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Grocery Shoppers Will Feel the Tariffs First in the Produce Aisle.
Higher prices could also be coming soon for seafood, sugar and coffee. But it may be a while before importers and retailers can gauge the effects of the new fees.
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For Wine, Tariffs Mean Fear, Uncertainty and Higher Prices.
American consumers are likely to see fewer choices on the shelves, and small producers may be the hardest hit.
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More Grocery Stores That Are Also Great Restaurants.
It’s round two back at markets that have the best prepared foods for the days you’re not quite feeling restaurants.
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A Chef’s Favorite Dessert Is Also the Easiest to Make.
Custard-soaked malva pudding, a beloved South African treat, is the cake for right now.
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I Just Want to Eat Bread for Dinner.
And with these crouton-heavy salads, hearty dips and easy-enough pizzas, I can.
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Quickly, Sticky Toffee Pudding.
Ali Slagle’s genius recipe for microwave sticky toffee pudding takes only 10 minutes, from start to finish.
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How About a Dash of Respect for the Daiquiri?
The ice-cold Cuban cocktail is revered by bartenders. So why don’t they sell more of them?
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Easter Eggs Are So Expensive Americans Are Dyeing Potatoes.
With costs high and supplies short, people are getting creative with Easter egg traditions.
Style
T Magazine
Travel
Real Estate
Health
Well
Times Insider
Corrections
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Corrections.
Corrections that appeared in print on Friday, April 4, 2025.
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Corrections.
Corrections that appeared in print on Thursday, April 3, 2025.
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Quote of the Day.
Quotation of the Day for Thursday, March 3, 2025.
Crosswords & Games
The Learning Network
En español
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La guerra comercial genera ‘máximo pesimismo’ en los mercados mientras las acciones se desploman.
El S&P 500 cayó casi un 5 por ciento el jueves, su peor caída desde junio de 2020, mientras los aranceles del presidente Trump, más elevados de lo esperado, desencadenan de nuevo la inquietud económica.
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Acabo de ver el futuro, y no estaba en Estados Unidos.
El mensaje de Pekín a EE. UU. es: no les tenemos miedo. Ustedes no son quienes creen que son, y nosotros no somos quienes creen que somos.
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Claudia Sheinbaum dice que México recibió un ‘trato preferencial’ en los aranceles de Trump.
La presidenta de México aplaudió que las exportaciones de su país no se vieran afectadas por los aranceles anunciados el miércoles por el presidente Donald Trump.
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10 cosas que puedes hacer por tu cerebro.
Les pedimos a neurólogos y neurocientíficos que compartieran sus mejores consejos para proteger tu cerebro del deterioro. He aquí lo que nos dijeron.
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Estos son los países con los aranceles más altos.
El presidente Trump dio a conocer unos aranceles radicales que incluyen medidas sobre decenas de países.
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Cómo es que Javier Milei se convirtió en el ‘presidente favorito’ de Trump.
Tal vez el presidente de Argentina no sea tan útil para Estados Unidos en economía o geopolítica, pero puede ayudarle a combatir las guerras culturales.
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El mundo evalúa las consecuencias económicas de los aranceles de Trump.
Donald Trump ha elevado los derechos de importación estadounidenses a sus niveles más altos en más de un siglo. Aliados y adversarios se esfuerzan por entenderlo.
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Los aranceles a los autos entran en vigor e impactan en los precios de los vehículos nuevos.
El presidente Trump dice que los aranceles fomentarán la inversión en fábricas estadounidenses, pero según analistas los compradores de automóviles pagarán miles de dólares más.
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En España se desata una carrera por los últimos visados de oro.
El año pasado, el gobierno español anunció que dejaría de expedir visados por inversión, con el fin de combatir una crisis inmobiliaria que había puesto los alquileres y los precios de la vivienda fuera del alcance de muchos españoles.
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¿Puedes llevarte las técnicas de felicidad de Finlandia a casa?
La agencia de turismo del país, utiliza la clasificación de la felicidad para atraer a los viajeros, pero también da lecciones sencillas de cómo llevar la experiencia a casa.
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Lecciones sobre el caos fronterizo, cortesía de una histórica prohibición del tequila.
La amenaza de Trump de imponer aranceles a México socava su intención declarada de eliminar el “caos” en la frontera sur de Estados Unidos.
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Las ventas mundiales de Tesla caen en medio de las reacciones contra Musk.
La implicación de Musk en la política de derecha contribuyó a una caída del 13 por ciento en las entregas en el primer trimestre, incluyendo fuertes descensos en lugares favorables a los vehículos eléctricos como Noruega.
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Word of the Day: flaxen.
Esta palabra ha aparecido en cinco artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
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Por qué los viejos amigos sacan a relucir nuestro peor yo adolescente.
“The White Lotus” expone un fenómeno común en los grupos de amigos de décadas: nadie cambia nunca.
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China practica nuevas maniobras que podrían facilitar una invasión a Taiwán.
Unas embarcaciones que forman un largo puente desde aguas más profundas hasta la costa podrían ampliar las opciones de China para desembarcar en Taiwán.
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Selena: una guia visual de su look.
Desde su enterizo morado hasta su labial rojo, estos son los atuendos y accesorios más icónicos de Selena.
Weather
Automobiles
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How Musk’s Politics Are Hurting Tesla.
After Election Day, investors initially thought that Elon Musk’s close association with President Trump would help Tesla. Jack Ewing, a reporter who covers the electric vehicle industry, describes how, instead, Tesla’s stock gains have evaporated ...