T/nyc

  1. Acru, From the Atomix Team, Serves a Tasting Menu With an Australian Twang Dining, Today

    Grand Army sets up shop in Threes Brewing, Ánimo! brings all-day Mexican breakfast to Midtown and more restaurant news.

  2. City Hall Official Charged With Witness Tampering in Adams Inquiry Metro, Today

    Mohamed Bahi, who resigned Monday from the mayor’s office of community affairs, was accused of instructing witnesses to lie to federal authorities.

  3. Will Trump Get Jail Time? We Looked at Similar Cases to Find Out. Metro, Today

    Donald J. Trump faces sentencing on Nov. 26. The election three weeks earlier may determine not only if he returns to the presidency, but if he ends up behind bars.

  4. School Absences Rise as Special Education Fails Students, Suit Says Metro, Today

    A class-action lawsuit argues that the New York City school system falls short in helping students with emotional disabilities, leaving them to miss too many school days.

  5. Studio Museum in Harlem to Open New Building in Fall 2025 Culture, Today

    The 82,000-square-foot structure on 125th Street will open with a show featuring the artist Tom Lloyd.

  6. Top Deputy Mayor to Eric Adams Resigns, Intensifying Wave of Departures Metro, Today

    Sheena Wright, the first deputy mayor of New York City, became the seventh senior leader to leave City Hall in the past few weeks, as federal investigations into the Adams administration widen.

  7. The Role of New York’s Lauded Looted Art Unit Is Challenged in Court Culture, Today

    The fight is over an Egon Schiele drawing held by the Art Institute of Chicago that the Manhattan district attorney’s office seized as Nazi loot. But it has wider implications.

  8. An Artists’ Squat Fought New York City for Decades. Did It Just Win? Metropolitan, Today

    ABC No Rio was a vital, dangerous and confrontational art space on the Lower East Side. Decades after it opened, it has made a deal with the city for a new building of its own.

  9. In New York on Oct. 7, Honoring the Dead and Calling for an End to War Metro, Today

    In the city, which is home both to the largest Jewish population outside Israel and to thousands of Palestinians, some gathered in protest and others in solemn remembrance.

  10. Do You Know These Books That Were Adapted Into Broadway Flops? Interactive, Yesterday

    Popular literature has often been the source of a big-budget musical, but not every show is a hit. Can you identify these five short-lived productions?

  11. New York Marks the Oct. 7 Anniversary With Vigils and Protests Metro, Yesterday

    New York is home to the largest Jewish community outside Israel, nearly 1 million in the city, and also has about 6,825 residents who identify as Palestinian,

  12. Philip Banks and 2 Other Aides Leave Adams Administration Metro, Yesterday

    Mr. Banks, the deputy mayor for public safety and a close friend of Mayor Eric Adams, resigned. He is among the officials whose phones were seized by investigators.

  13. Campuses Are Calmer, but They Are Not Normal, Students and Faculty Say National, Yesterday

    A year of war in Gaza has left college students and faculty feeling shaken and angry, with the world and with each other.

  14. New Yorkers Are Getting the Message on Storing E-Batteries Metro, Yesterday

    Fewer of the fires are starting indoors, which suggests that New Yorkers are heeding warnings and storing the batteries outside.

  15. Rent Was $325 a Month and the Piano Fit Real Estate, Yesterday

    A couple briefly considered moving to one of the newer market-rate buildings in New York City and paying more for a splashier place. Then they got real.

  16. Add ‘I’m Getting a Little Older’ to the Challenges of Apartment Hunting Real Estate, Yesterday

    Finding a rental is one thing, but moving into it is no picnic either. These days, a “senior move manager” can help streamline the process.

  17. Can a Vegetarian Dine Well in New York? We Put Some Top Menus to the Test. Dining, Yesterday

    Even the city’s best restaurants deal with meat-averse customers in a variety of ways, from discouraging them to welcoming them.

  18. 4 Charged in Manhattan Assault on Former Gov. David Paterson Metro, October 6

    Two adults and two boys, ages 12 and 13, were charged in the attack on the former New York governor and his stepson, the police said.

  19. Do Careerism and College Mix? Letters, October 6

    Readers respond to a guest essay by a recent college graduate. Also: New York City’s new outdoor dining program; how immigrants built America.

  20. A Cryptic Letter With a Clear Warning Insider, October 6

    A domestic terrorist group sent a note to The New York Times admitting to detonating a bomb in Queens.

  21. The 3 Brothers at the Center of the Bribery Inquiry Rocking City Hall Metro, October 6

    David Banks and Philip Banks III eclipsed their younger brother by rising to help run New York City. Then federal prosecutors seized the phones of all three men.

  22. ‘I Was on an Uptown 1 Coming Home From My Job at a SoHo Restaurant’ Metropolitan, October 6

    A briny snack on the subway, love in the air in Park Slope and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.

  23. Former Gov. David Paterson of New York Assaulted in Manhattan Express, October 5

    Mr. Paterson and his stepson suffered minor injuries in a street attack on Friday. The former governor was not believed to have been targeted in the assault, the police said.

  24. Pro-Palestinian Group Is Relentless in Its Criticism of Israel, and It Isn’t Backing Down National, October 5

    Within Our Lifetime, a group formed by New York students, has galvanized pro-Palestinian activists who are calling for the end of Israel — and facing accusations of antisemitism.

  25. Can Hudson Square Reinvent Itself as New York City’s Next Hot Neighborhood? Business, October 5

    Once known as a gritty, industrial area on Manhattan’s West Side, Hudson Square is now trying to lure new tenants and businesses, and create its own identity.

  26. How a Gardener at a Brooklyn Park Spends Her Sundays Metropolitan, October 5

    Eve Brooks, the gardener at Herbert Von King Park, spends her day tending to her pet turtle, listening to Sam Cooke and getting down in the dirt at the park.

  27. Big Business Saw an Ally in Eric Adams, and Overlooked His Issues Metro, October 5

    New York’s business community threw its support behind Mr. Adams, and continued backing him even as his legal problems began to threaten the governance of the city.

  28. 69 Percent of New Yorkers Think Eric Adams Should Resign, Poll Shows Metro, October 4

    Just 26 percent of New York City residents approve of the mayor and a majority want him to step down, according to a poll taken after his indictment on corruption charges.

  29. 5 Things to Do This Weekend Interactive, October 4

    A selection of entertainment highlights this weekend, including the sequel “Joker: Folie à Deux.”

  30. Democrats Have a Corruption Problem. They Can’t Keep Ignoring It. Op Ed, October 4

    For the sake of their electoral fortunes and the country, Democrats must show voters a plan to curb corruption — including within their own ranks.

  31. Oliver Sacks Archive Heads to the New York Public Library Culture, October 4

    The voluminous papers of the celebrated neurologist include letters, notebooks, drafts and other traces of a man who couldn’t stop writing.

  32. A Death in Childbirth Raises New Questions About a Hospital Metro, October 4

    Bevorlin Garcia Barrios, 24, is the third woman to die during childbirth at Woodhull Medical Center in Brooklyn since 2020.

  33. Why Eric Adams Is Nothing Like David Dinkins Metropolitan, October 4

    Facing a raft of corruption charges, New York’s second Black mayor is flattering himself by invoking the fate of its first.

  34. Some Evidence in Adams Case Involves Classified Material, U.S. Says Metro, October 4

    In a letter to the judge handling the Eric Adams corruption case, federal prosecutors said there was evidence that could damage national security if exposed in open court.

  35. Sometimes the Best Restaurant Is Inside the Grocery Store Dining, October 3

    New York City is teeming with independent groceries that have nailed the hot bar, the deli counter and the takeaway item.

  36. From One Nonagenarian Artist to Another, a Tip of the Hat Culture, October 3

    Alex Katz admired a Mark di Suvero sculpture and gave it to the Brooklyn Museum. It now has pride of place in the museum’s 200th anniversary celebration.

  37. Penny Minimized Duration of Chokehold During Questioning, Video Shows Metro, October 3

    Daniel Penny’s subway-car struggle with Jordan Neely, who was homeless, ended in Mr. Neely’s death. Mr. Penny’s lawyers are asking a judge to exclude video of his discussing the encounter.

  38. Brooklyn Museum at 200 Celebrates Beauty and Art’s Hidden History Weekend, October 3

    A new American wing draws on feminist and racially and ethnically diverse thinking to spotlight 400 exceptional works in its collection.

  39. Seeking Some (Relative) Peace and Quiet in Brooklyn for Less Than $800,000 Interactive, October 3

    After arriving from California, a Manhattan-based lawyer found the Upper West Side too loud and crowded. Would her budget be enough for some outdoor space in Brooklyn?

  40. A Bartender, a Firefighter and a Giuliani Walk Onto a Fairway Styles, October 3

    The Brooklyn Open golf tournament attracts players whose backgrounds are as varied as their swings.

  41. A Midcentury Midtown Landmark Metro, October 3

    A clothing retailer moving into a modernist building on Fifth Avenue is seeking to make changes, including relocating an art installation. A preservationist has raised concerns.

  42. Homes for Sale in Manhattan and the Bronx Real Estate, October 3

    This week’s properties are in Greenwich Village, Gramercy Park and Kingsbridge.

  43. Lee Bul, South Korea’s Provocateur, Ruffles the Met’s Staid Niches Weekend, October 3

    The artist for the fifth Facade Commission created Cubist sculptures that look forward and backward. The question is what more the Met can do going forward.

  44. This Artist Once Spent a Year in a Cage. Now He’s Trying to Enjoy Himself. T Style, October 3

    With his extreme performance art, Tehching Hsieh gave the word endurance new meaning. In retirement, he’s working on cementing his legacy.

  45. Another Woman Dies During Childbirth at a Troubled Brooklyn Hospital Metro, October 3

    After the death of a 24-year-old woman, Woodhull Hospital could face questions, for the third time since 2020, about the safety of its labor and delivery floor.

  46. Why Deaths From E-Bike Fires Are Declining in New York City Metro, October 3

    Though the fires are occurring about as frequently as they were last year, fewer are happening inside buildings. And there are signs that new safety measures are having an effect.

  47. Treasurer for Little-Known Brooklyn Candidate Is Charged in Fraud Scheme Metro, October 3

    Erlene King sent thousands of dollars to associates and told them to distribute the funds to others who would then donate to the campaign she worked for, federal prosecutors said.

  48. Eugene Gold, Brooklyn D.A. Who Led the ‘Son of Sam’ Case, Dies at 100 Obits, October 2

    He prosecuted high-profile cases in the 1970s and championed Soviet Jews, but, after retiring, he ran afoul of the law himself, charged with a sex offense.

  49. What Starts Conversation at a Brooklyn Girl Dinner? Styles, October 2

    Inside an intimate gathering with New York’s creative crust to celebrate a colorful shoe.

  50. Her Pension Checks Vanished. The Doorman Stole Them, Prosecutors Say. Metro, October 2

    A doorman at a building near Columbia University was charged with taking nearly $500,000 from a 91-year-old former resident while she lived in a nursing home.

  51. Penn Station Takes Up Two Blocks. Railroads Say They Must Have More. Metro, October 2

    After studying other ways to double capacity at the busy transit hub, the railroads that use it say they have concluded that it needs to be expanded.

  52. What Black Voters Are Saying About Eric Adams Since His Indictment Metro, October 2

    Some Black New Yorkers are sticking by the mayor’s side after he was charged with bribery. Many expressed disappointment in him.

  53. Police See No Trace of a Serial Killer in Brooklyn. But 3 Deaths Chill Nightlife. Express, October 2

    As rumors spin on social media, revelers in one of New York City’s most popular neighborhoods for nightlife are on higher alert.

  54. Doug Wheeler’s Celestial Wonder, Now Gallery-Size Culture, October 2

    Paint, plastic and flashbulbs: What the visionary artist achieves with those materials is astounding in its effect.

  55. Is R.T.O. Finally a Reality? Metro, October 2

    There are some signs of resurging office attendance since Labor Day, and some companies are demanding that workers show up five days a week.

  56. Prosecutors Warn of More Charges and Defendants in Adams Graft Case Metro, October 2

    Eric Adams, the New York City mayor, appeared before Judge Dale E. Ho as he fights off federal charges that he accepted luxury travel in exchange for favors.

  57. He Called 311 on the Police. They Called Back Making Dolphin Sounds. Metro, October 1

    Officer Brendan Sullivan was hit with a fine for harassing a Brooklyn resident who had complained about illegally parked police cruisers.

  58. Halloween in New York: Things to Do in October Weekend, October 1

    The Village Halloween Parade will feature a “cat lady” section, and the New York Botanical Garden has a Tim Burton light installation, plus much more.

  59. The October 1 Thepoint live blog included one standalone post:
  60. Alicia Keys, LaChanze and Kristin Chenoweth Gather to Support Black Theater Styles, October 1

    The stage stars were among more than 600 people who turned out for an evening of dinner and performances to benefit Black Theater United.

  61. Adams Holds a News Conference, Alone and Without His Walkout Music Metro, October 1

    Mayor Eric Adams, now under federal indictment, turned his weekly news conference into a solo act, with no introductory music and no aides by his side.

  62. Donna Henes,‘Urban Shaman’ Who Heralded the Seasons, Dies at 79 Obits, October 1

    Her solstice and equinox celebrations might involve an egg-balancing ritual and bonfires, all to remind modern New Yorkers of their humble place in the cosmos.

  63. Andrew Tarlow Crosses the East River to Manhattan for Borgo Dining, October 1

    The menu for this trattoria stretches the boundaries of Italy’s boot.

  64. Adams Accuses Prosecutors of Leaking Investigation Details to News Media Metro, October 1

    In a court filing Tuesday morning, lawyers for Mayor Eric Adams asked a judge to hold a hearing about what they said were grand jury secrecy violations.

  65. New Children’s Museum of Manhattan to Open in 2028 Culture, October 1

    Laurie M. Tisch has donated $50 million to the $300 million capital campaign for a new location on Central Park West.

  66. The Bryant Park Grill Is Fighting to Survive Metro, October 1

    The restaurant, a big contributor to the revitalization of the Midtown park, may not get its lease renewed.

  67. Looking to Meet Your Neighbors? Get on the Tennis Courts. Magazine, October 1

    A different way to understand your community — and yourself.

  68. At 75, Charles Atlas Is Coming of Age as an Artist Arts & Leisure, October 1

    “About Time,” a retrospective opening in Boston, comes at a time of radical change for a pioneer of media dance.

  69. Behind School Bus Mess, a 45-Year-Old Contract That’s Hard to Change Metro, October 1

    Students across New York City are waiting up to an hour for school buses, as a driver shortage and conflict over a contract hamstring the city’s ability to find a solution.

  70. Adams Confidant Steps Down Amid Federal Corruption Investigations Metro, October 1

    Few people in city government were closer to Mayor Eric Adams than Timothy Pearson, who had a role in handling migrant shelter contracts.

  71. Fire Dept. Chief to Plead Guilty to Bribery Charge, U.S. Says Metro, September 30

    Brian E. Cordasco was one of two former high-ranking officials arrested earlier this month and charged with soliciting and receiving bribes to speed up safety approvals.

  72. Internet Drug Ring Tricked Buyers With Fake and Deadly Pills, U.S. Says Metro, September 30

    The drugs, which resembled real pharmaceuticals, killed nine people, prosecutors said. They were laced with fentanyl and methamphetamine.

  73. Inmates Are Charged in Killings at Federal Jail in Brooklyn Metro, September 30

    Federal prosecutors charged nine inmates at the troubled Metropolitan Detention Center in two killings and several assaults. One guard was charged in a shooting.

  74. Sean Combs Will Try Another Appeal of Judge’s Decision to Deny Bail Culture, September 30

    Mr. Combs is in a Brooklyn jail awaiting trial on federal charges of sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy.

  75. Breaking Up With China Is Hard to Do Op Ed, September 30

    For many U.S. companies, Chinese partnership may be too important to quit.

  76. Why Adams’s Successor in Brooklyn Returned 10 Gold Tea Sets From Turkey Metro, September 30

    Antonio Reynoso, the Brooklyn borough president, said he declined or returned gifts from Turkey and met with F.B.I. officials who said to be wary of such gifts.

  77. Adams’s Lawyers Ask Judge to Dismiss Federal Bribery Charge Against Him Metro, September 30

    Lawyers for Mayor Eric Adams of New York filed a 25-page memo arguing that the conduct described in the indictment against him did not meet the definition of bribery.

  78. As the Mayor Is Indicted, the Council Passes Rat Birth Control Metro, September 30

    During a momentous week, the business of government went on at the City Council, which approved bills on jaywalking and rats.

  79. ‘The Power Broker’ Is Magisterial. It Is Also Flawed. Op Ed, September 30

    We need to recapture faith in government to be a great builder again.

  80. N.Y.C. Streets Won’t Be Like This Forever (for Better or Worse) Metro, September 30

    New York City is constantly changing, opening the door to both new battles over traffic and radical solutions.

  81. Cómo ver el debate entre JD Vance y Tim Walz En español, September 29

    El encuentro entre los candidatos a la vicepresidencia se transmitirá por CBS News el 1 de octubre. The New York Times lo tendrá disponible junto con comentarios y análisis en tiempo real de los periodistas.

  82. Top Adams Aides Get Married as Investigation Swirls Around Them Metro, September 29

    Eric Adams’s schools chancellor and first deputy mayor married in Martha’s Vineyard this weekend. Both have had their phones seized by federal investigators.

  83. The Forgotten Dealer Who Discovered Picasso and Matisse Culture, September 29

    A show at the Grey Art Museum re-establishes Berthe Weill as a guiding light of the Parisian avant-garde. Her rediscovery has been led by women.

  84. In Adams Indictment, Legal Experts See Strengths, Potential Pitfalls Metro, September 29

    Prosecutors pursuing corruption charges against Mayor Eric Adams appear to have some solid evidence, but winning a conviction is far from a given, experts say.

  85. Meet the Star of Sushi-Con: A 400-Pound Tuna Metro, September 29

    At an all-you-can-eat Japanese food expo in Manhattan, thousands lined up to witness the ceremonial carving of an enormous bluefin tuna — and try a sample.

  86. ‘I Was at a Business Lunch at a Well-Regarded Restaurant’ Metropolitan, September 29

    A question before ordering, a children’s oasis in Bay Ridge and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.

  87. A Scrappy Downtown Radio Station Returns From the Dead, Again Metro, September 29

    Frank Prisinzano and Jorge Parreira have resurrected East Village Radio, an underground institution, after shuttering it roughly a decade ago.

  88. No Turkish Delight for New York’s Mayor Op Ed, September 28

    The latest worm in the Big Apple.

  89. The Indictment of Eric Adams Shouldn’t Surprise Us Op Ed, September 28

    Eric Adams is accused of injecting foreign funds directly into his election campaigns, compromising not only the mayor’s office but also American elections.

  90. An Artist Whose Subjects Step Out of His Paintings Styles, September 28

    Adam Dressner, a lawyer turned portrait artist, began painting eccentric New Yorkers a few years ago. Many of them made an appearance at a recent exhibition.

  91. Humble Roots Helped Make Him Mayor. A Love of Luxury May Bring Him Down. Metro, September 28

    Mayor Eric Adams was elected partly on the strength of his origin story, a narrative that shrouded questions of his character, judgment and associates.

  92. The Not-So-Brief History of Scandal Among New York City Mayors Metro, September 28

    Mayor Eric Adams is the first modern-era New York City mayor to be indicted. But A. Oakey Hall, his little-known predecessor, faced criminal charges 150 years earlier.

  93. Amid Lebanon Strike, Defiant Netanyahu Declares Israel Is ‘Winning’ Washington, September 28

    The Israeli prime minister castigated Israel’s critics and the United Nations itself during his visit to New York for the U.N. General Assembly.

  94. Vuelos baratos y mensajes borrados: 10 claves de la acusación contra Eric Adams En español, September 27

    La acusación contra el alcalde de Nueva York incluye revelaciones que van de lo gracioso a lo espeluznante.

  95. Iconic New York City Novels Video, September 27

    September marks the 50th anniversary of “The Power Broker,” Robert Caro’s biography of Robert Moses. Leah Greenblatt, an editor at The New York Times Book Review, recommends some of her other favorite New York City books.

  96. Mayor Adams Pleads Not Guilty as New Yorkers Contemplate What Comes Next Metro, September 27

    Mayor Eric Adams, muted but defiant, said he was innocent of bribery and other charges, and his lawyer attacked the prosecution’s case.

  97. Agents Seize Phones From Adams’s Top Adviser and Subpoena Her Metro, September 27

    Ingrid Lewis-Martin has been close to Mayor Eric Adams for decades, and has cultivated a reputation as a ruthless political actor.

  98. Big Business Backed Mayor Eric Adams. Now It Waits to Learn His Fate. Metro, September 27

    New York’s business sector is concerned that the possible removal of Mr. Adams from office would leave it without one of its biggest boosters.

  99. The Indictment of Mayor Eric Adams Letters, September 27

    Readers react to the corruption charges against New York’s mayor. Also: A path for Iran; the state of speech on campus; a tally of Trump insults.

  100. In Less Than 20 Minutes, Eric Adams Formally Enters Legal Limbo Metro, September 27

    During his arraignment, New York’s typically lively mayor was stoic and stone-faced. Months of legal entanglements lie ahead.

  101. Adams Lawyer Alex Spiro Has a Long Roster of Celebrity Clients Metro, September 27

    The former prosecutor represented the owner of the New England Patriots and is now Elon Musk’s personal lawyer.

  102. D.A. Employee Threatened to Blow Up Queens Migrant Shelter, Police Say Metro, September 27

    The employee, Derek Klever, told a witness that he was fed up with migrants partying at the shelter across from his apartment, according to court documents. “This is a war,” he said.

  103. Divisions Emerge Over Whether Adams Should Resign Metro, September 27

    Amid the growing calls for Mayor Eric Adams’s resignation, some have taken the opposite tack.

  104. The Most Galling Part of the Whole Eric Adams Affair Op Ed, September 27

    With all its talent, how did the city end up with a mayor accused of being an incessant petty grifter?

  105. The Criminal Indictment of New York City’s Mayor The Daily, September 27

    Eric Adams accepted free airline tickets, lavish overseas accommodation and illegal foreign campaign donations, prosecutors said.

  106. 5 Things to Do This Weekend Interactive, September 27

    A selection of entertainment highlights this weekend, including Francis Ford Coppola’s “Megalopolis.”

  107. Rubin Museum’s Tibetan Shrine Will Move to Brooklyn Museum Culture, September 27

    The collection of art and ritual objects will move to the Brooklyn Museum for six years starting in June after the Rubin closes its building to focus on traveling exhibitions and long-term loans.

  108. This ‘Real Housewife’ Is Back for More Styles, September 27

    Jessel Taank hits a fashion week party — with Pavit in tow — and pours tequila behind a bar.

  109. The Charges Against Mayor Adams Metro, September 27

    In a 57-page indictment, federal prosecutors outlined a pattern of corruption that they said began years before Mr. Adams became mayor and continued after he took office.

  110. An Artists’ Refuge in Greenwich Village Is Listed for $25 Million Real Estate, September 27

    The townhouse, on West 11th Street, was the childhood home of the author Isabel Fonseca and, earlier, the residence of the sculptor Daniel Chester French.

  111. As Adams’s Fate Hangs in the Balance, Cuomo Waits in the Shadows Metro, September 27

    The uncertainty surrounding Mayor Eric Adams has fueled rampant speculation that former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo may enter the mayor’s race.

  112. Legal Fight to Revive Congestion Pricing Can Proceed, Judge Rules Metro, September 27

    A New York judge rejected a motion by lawyers for Gov. Kathy Hochul to dismiss lawsuits challenging her decision to halt the tolling program.

  113. Thousands Protest in Manhattan Ahead of Netanyahu’s U.N. Speech Metro, September 27

    About a dozen people were arrested as demonstrators moved through the streets, condemning the Israeli prime minister over the country’s strikes on Lebanon and Gaza.

  114. ¿Quién es Eric Adams?: algunos datos sobre el desconcertante alcalde de Nueva York En español, September 27

    Muchas cosas sobre esta singular figura pública que ha dirigido la ciudad durante los tres últimos años siguen sin entenderse. Ahora ha sido acusado de cargos federales.

  115. City Investigators Seize Cash From New York Sheriff’s Office Metro, September 27

    The Department of Investigation is looking into whether Sheriff Anthony Miranda’s agency improperly took money from cannabis stores that it raided, closed and padlocked.

  116. Cheap Flights and Deleted Texts: 10 Takeaways From the Adams Indictment Metro, September 26

    The indictment against Mayor Eric Adams includes revelations that range from the amusing to the horrifying.

  117. JD Vance to Address Major Republican Donors Just Before Debate Politics, September 26

    As part of his trip to New York City for the vice-presidential debate next week, Mr. Vance will speak to the American Opportunity Alliance, a network of major G.O.P. contributors.

  118. Mayor Adams, Confronted With Detailed Graft Charges, Says He Won’t Quit Metro, September 26

    Mr. Adams accepted free airline tickets, lavish overseas accommodations and illegal foreign campaign donations, prosecutors said. He denied the charges.

  119. The Greatest City in the World, Some Really Lousy Mayors Op Ed, September 26

    You have to go way back to the days of the secular saint Fiorello La Guardia to come up with a New York mayor unencumbered by significant baggage.

  120. Eric Adams Should Resign Op Ed, September 26

    The federal indictment reveals how the city’s leader repeatedly failed in his duty to uphold the public trust.

  121. New York City Mayor Charged in Bribery and Fraud Scheme Video, September 26

    Federal prosecutors say Mayor Eric Adams of New York took illegal campaign contributions and luxury travel benefits from foreign actors and used his power to help Turkey.

  122. Have We Hit Peak Hand Roll Yet? Dining, September 26

    There are at least a dozen spots in New York City, but some sushi hand rolls are better than others.

  123. Can Eric Adams Survive a Foreign Bribery Scandal? Metro, September 26

    Mr. Adams is the first sitting mayor in modern New York City history to be charged with a crime.

  124. The September 26 Eric Adams Indicted News live blog included two standalone posts:
  125. What Eric Adams and Donald Trump Have in Common Metropolitan, September 26

    The mayor and the former president may have some different political beliefs, but their personality and style — and now perhaps their legal paths — are aligned.

  126. Lloyd Macklowe, Leading Purveyor of Art Nouveau, Is Dead at 90 Obits, September 26

    He and his wife began buying pieces to furnish their apartment. They wound up with a museum-quality collection and a pre-eminent retail business.

  127. A Brief History of Ethical Concerns Involving Eric Adams Metro, September 26

    The mayor has been investigated repeatedly during his two decades in politics.

  128. The Manhattan Building at the Center of the Charges Against Adams Metro, September 26

    The lavish Turkevi Center, built by the Turkish government, was opened despite defects in its fire safety system. Prosecutors say Eric Adams pressured fire department officials to look the other way.

  129. Adams Denounces Charges, as Protesters Denounce Him Metro, September 26

    At a news conference outside Gracie Mansion, attempts by Mayor Eric Adams to defend himself against a federal indictment were interrupted by people shouting “disgrace.”

  130. The Two Ways Eric Adams Could Be Forced From Office Metro, September 26

    The New York City Charter includes provisions that could be used to remove the mayor against his will if he chooses not to step down.

  131. Mayor Adams’s Indictment Leaves City Hall Leaderless Op Ed, September 26

    It is the low point of a failed mayoralty.

  132. What to Know About Damian Williams, the Man Prosecuting Eric Adams Metro, September 26

    Mr. Williams already had a compelling biography, but the first-ever indictment of a New York City mayor has added an astonishing new chapter to his life’s story.

  133. Frank Coppa, Who Turned Against a Mobster Family, Dies at 82 Obits, September 26

    His decision to describe murders to the F.B.I. led at least 10 other members of the Bonanno family to do the same and ultimately immobilized a mafia family.

  134. Who Is Eric Adams: New York’s Baffling, Boundless Mayor Metro, September 26

    So much about the singular, ever-present figure leading the city for the last three years remains head-scratching.

  135. Here Are the Charges Eric Adams Faces, Annotated Interactive, September 26

    The Times annotated the indictment.

  136. These Are the Charges Against Eric Adams Metro, September 26

    A federal indictment accuses Mr. Adams of crimes dating back a decade, including bribery conspiracy, fraud and soliciting illegal foreign campaign donations.

  137. These Are the N.Y.C. Officials Who Resigned Ahead of the Adams Indictment Metro, September 26

    The police commissioner and the schools chancellor were among those who said they would leave the administration.

  138. Eric Adams Is Indicted, and Florida Braces for Hurricane Helene Podcasts, September 26

    Plus, the “snackification” of the American diet.

  139. A King of Cool Casual’s Next Act Styles, September 26

    With a new store, Steven Alan is trying to reconjure the magic of the boutique that put him on the fashion map.

  140. Everyone Looks Good in Black and White Styles, September 26

    A photo booth on Manhattan’s Lower East Side is drawing long lines of young people who yearn for physical media.

  141. Mayor Eric Adams Is Indicted Metro, September 26

    The mayor, who ran for office on a promise to rein in crime, has been federally charged after a corruption investigation.

  142. Homes for Sale in Manhattan and Brooklyn Real Estate, September 26

    This week’s properties are in Midtown, the West Village and Williamsburg.

  143. At the Whitney, a Stirring Ailey Tribute Moves Dance to the Edge Weekend, September 26

    Music’s in the air, and there’s painting and sculpture in imaginative variety as an art museum gives rare treatment to an ephemeral medium.

  144. As Adams Faces Calls to Resign, Jumaane Williams May Play a Pivotal Role Metro, September 26

    Mr. Williams, New York City’s public advocate, would become acting mayor if Eric Adams resigns. He says he is prepared for that moment.

  145. A Plan to Fund High School Newspapers Seeks to Revive Student Journalism Metro, September 26

    Just 27 percent of public high schools in New York City have a newspaper. A local nonprofit is offering a solution.

  146. With Eric Adams Indicted, What Happens Next? Metro, September 26

    New York voters cannot recall the mayor and he is not required to resign, but Gov. Kathy Hochul has the power to remove him. She would be in uncharted territory.

  147. In Defiant Video, Adams Calls Any Charges Against Him ‘Entirely False’ Metro, September 26

    Mayor Eric Adams released a video vowing to fight the charges he faces and said he would request an immediate trial.

  148. Who Is Running for New York City Mayor in the Democratic Primary? Metro, September 26

    Mayor Eric Adams is currently running for re-election in a competitive primary next June. Already, four prominent Democrats are facing off against him.

  149. Mayor Eric Adams Vows to Fight Federal Indictment Against Him Video, September 26

    In a videotaped speech, Mr. Adams said any charges against him would be “false” and said that he will continue to lead as mayor of the city.