T/past-week
An index of 1,159 articles and 50 interactives published over the last week by NYT.
U.S.
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Trump Says He Has No Plans to Call Walz After Shootings in Minnesota.
“I think the governor of Minnesota is so whacked out, I’m not calling him,” the president told reporters.
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More U.S. Officials Face Threats as Fears Grow Over Political Violence.
The authorities in at least three states were investigating threats against elected officials. President Trump and U.S. senators were identified as targets.
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First Time in 100 Years: Young Kayakers on a Ride for the Ages.
With dams removed from the Klamath River, a group of Indigenous youth is on a journey to descend the full length, through Oregon and California.
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Haiti Is Using Drones to Fight Gangs. Here’s Why That’s Likely to Be Illegal.
The Haitian government has turned to drones to go after gang leaders who have captured much of the capital. But legal experts say that violates international law.
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Doctor Who Gave Matthew Perry Ketamine Will Plead Guilty, U.S. Says.
Dr. Salvador Plasencia, an urgent care clinic operator in the Los Angeles area, could face up to 40 years in prison in connection with the actor’s 2023 death.
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Minnesota Assassin Posed as Police Officer to Carry Out Shootings.
Impersonating a police officer is a tactic sometimes used by criminals to win victims’ trust, police say.
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Trump and Starmer Agree to Implement Parts of Trade Deal on Cars, Steel and Planes.
The leaders of Britain and the United States announced a deal last month, but it had not been clear when their agreement would go into effect. Britain hailed the announcement as “a huge win.”
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E.P.A. Plans to Reconsider a Ban on Cancer-Causing Asbestos.
The Trump administration’s move sets back a decades-long effort to end the use of the material, which is widely banned in other countries.
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Naval Academy Seeks Dismissal of Lawsuit After Dropping Race-Conscious Admissions.
The academy had argued for years that a diverse officer corps was essential to strong troop morale and national security.
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Federal Official Explains Minnesota Shootings Details.
State and federal officials announced charges, including murder, stalking and firearms offenses against Vance Boelter on Monday, who has been accused of assassinating a Minnesota state lawmaker and injuring another during multiple shootings.
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After Lawmaker’s Death, Democrats Dismiss Concerns Over Balance of Power.
Before Representative Melissa Hortman’s death, the state’s House was evenly divided. The governor has until next February to fill her seat before the next legislative session.
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Trump Mobile Phone Company Announced by President’s Family, but Details Are Murky.
The new company says it will manufacture its Android phone in the United States but it has not said how it could do that.
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Minnesota State Senator Says Accused Gunman Visited Her Street.
State Senator Ann Rest, a Democrat, credited police officers who were proactively checking on her safety with sparing her from an attack.
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Trump Fires Nuclear Safety Board Member Who Led Agency Under Biden.
The dismissal came after President Trump signed several executive orders aimed at cutting safety regulations for nuclear power plants.
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The Minnesota suspect traveled to four lawmakers’ homes on the night of the attacks.
Officials said a man charged with shooting two lawmakers and their spouses was apparently thwarted at two other politicians’ homes.
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Owners of Doomed Nightclub in Dominican Republic Knew Roof Was Shoddy.
The owners of a nightclub in the Dominican Republic where the roof collapsed killing 235 people face a maximum of just two years in prison.
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American Bar Association Sues Trump Administration.
A lawsuit by the lawyers group seeks to stop the president’s efforts to punish law firms.
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Read the Federal Complaint Against the Man Charged in the Minnesota Assassination.
Federal officials described new details about the actions of a man accused in the assassination of a Minnesota lawmaker, along with federal charges against him.
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Here’s why state prosecutors started by charging second-degree murder.
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Fire in Maui Grows to 500 Acres, Prompting Evacuations.
The island was the site of devastating, deadly fires in 2023.
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Minnesota Governor Praises Hoffman Family for ‘Heroic Actions’
Governor Tim Walz of Minnesota commended the family of John A. Hoffman, saying their actions during a gunman’s attack on Saturday saved “countless lives.”
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How the Minnesota Shootings Suspect Was Caught.
A two-day manhunt ended Sunday night as police captured the suspect, Vance Boelter, in a field. No force was used.
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Three People Killed, Including 8-Month-Old, in Shooting at Utah Festival.
The other victims were an 18-year-old man and a 41-year-old woman, the police said. The gunfire stemmed from a verbal altercation.
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Minnesota Manhunt and Arrest: What We Know.
After a gunman killed a lawmaker and wounded another, officials scrambled in what they called the largest manhunt in Minnesota’s history. The suspect was arrested in a rural field on Sunday.
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Slain Minnesota Lawmaker Remembered as Pragmatic Problem Solver.
Colleagues described Representative Melissa Hortman as a skilled, conciliatory lawmaker who was at once steely and warm.
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Immigration Raids Add to Absence Crisis for Schools.
New research shows that after recent deportation sweeps, parents kept their children home — with big impacts on how all students learn.
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Harvard Will Ask a Judge to Block Trump From Barring International Students.
The university is hoping for a broad court order that would keep the White House from using workarounds to prevent foreign enrollment.
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The Army Was the Only Life She Knew. Trump’s Trans Ban Cast Her Out.
Maj. Erica Vandal’s superiors called her “a superb officer.” The president said transgender soldiers like her lack the “honesty,” “humility” and “integrity” to serve.
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Suspect Arrested for Murder of Minnesota Lawmaker.
The arrest of Vance Boelter ended a two-day manhunt after the assassination of State Representative Melissa Hortman and her husband, and the attempted assassination of others.
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Read the document.
Read the charging documents filed against Vance Boelter.
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Suspect in Minnesota Killings Carried a Notebook With Some 70 Targets.
The tally, which included politicians, community and business leaders, and locations for Planned Parenthood, was recovered in a car linked to the attacks.
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‘I’m an American, Bro!’: Latinos Report Raids in Which U.S. Citizenship Is Questioned.
A raid in Montebello, Calif., has stirred fears that federal agents are detaining and racially profiling U.S. citizens of Hispanic descent.
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A Timeline of the Minnesota Shootings.
A manhunt is underway for a man suspected in the killing on Saturday of a state lawmaker and her husband and in the shooting of another lawmaker and his wife. Here is how the events unfolded.
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Many Lawmakers Share Their Home Addresses. Political Violence Is Changing That.
The Minnesota assassination is causing some state legislators to rethink home security and how much personal information they make public.
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How a manhunt works, according to security experts.
The search is ongoing for suspect Vance Boelter, 57, who escaped on foot after a gunfire exchange with local officers.
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Deployed to Meet an ‘Invasion,’ Marines Were Once Invaders of Mexico.
Many Mexican Americans remember that California became part of the United States after a 19th century war that cost Mexico more than half its territory.
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At Least 3 Dead in West Virginia Flash Flooding.
Up to four inches of rain fell in a 30-minute period in Ohio County on Saturday night, destroying homes and submerging vehicles, an official said.
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What We Learned About Amy Coney Barrett’s Supreme Court Decisions.
President Trump appointed Justice Amy Coney Barrett to clinch a conservative legal revolution. But soon after arriving at the Supreme Court, she began surprising her colleagues.
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Power Bills Are Squeezing Georgians. Voters Could Do Something About It.
A special election this week for seats on the state’s utility board will be a rare referendum on residential electric bills, at a time when they have risen sharply across the country.
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How Amy Coney Barrett Is Confounding the Right and the Left.
President Trump appointed her to clinch a conservative legal revolution. But soon after arriving at the Supreme Court, she began surprising her colleagues.
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Justice Barrett: In Her Own Words.
Off the bench, the Supreme Court justice has discussed her judicial and personal philosophies, having a son with Down syndrome and running away from television trucks in high heels.
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This Vermont Town Loves Its Canadian Neighbors. Trump Made Things Complicated.
President Trump’s border crackdown and bid for Canada to become the “51st state” have threatened the relationship between Derby, Vt., and Stanstead, Quebec.
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Trump's Military Parade Met With Nationwide Protests.
The parade celebrated the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army with a procession of troops, weaponry and military vehicles as protesters marched across all 50 states.
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Police Clash With Protesters After Anti-Trump Rally in Downtown Los Angeles.
With the downtown facing an 8 p.m. curfew, the Los Angeles police began using tear gas and crowd-control munitions to break up protests after issuing a dispersal order.
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No Kings protesters nationwide share why they took to the streets.
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The No Kings protests were the work of hundreds of organizations.
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Arrest Made After ‘Credible Threat’ to Texas Lawmakers, Official Says.
The threat came after shootings early Saturday that killed a Minnesota lawmaker and her husband and wounded another Minnesota lawmaker and his wife.
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‘No Kings’ Protests Across the United States.
In Photos and Video
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Minnesota Lawmaker Is Assassinated in Act of ‘Political Violence’
State Representative Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, died in the attack at their home. The assailant also shot and injured another Democratic lawmaker and his wife, officials said.
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Shaquille O’Neal Agrees to Pay $1.8 Million to Settle FTX Class-Action Suit.
Customers of FTX, the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange, accused Mr. O’Neal and other celebrities of illegally promoting it.
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Take Me Out to the … Pope Party. It’s a Ballpark Celebration for Leo.
The program on Saturday in Chicago includes music, prayer, speeches and Pope Leo’s first public address to an American audience.
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Buc-ee’s, a Pit Stop to Refuel Cars, Stomachs and Souls, Spreads Beyond Texas.
The opening of the first location in Mississippi drew the usual cultish enthusiasm for the chain of mega convenience stores.
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How L.A. Ignited a New War Over Immigration.
Los Angeles is home to the country’s largest population of undocumented immigrants. So when President Trump’s immigration raids arrived, many expected trouble.
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What to Know About Early Voting in New York City’s Mayoral Primary.
Registered voters in the city can cast ballots in the Democratic primary for mayor and other races starting on Saturday.
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Trump Supporters Plan Birthday Celebrations.
As others plan protests, Republicans across the country have organized parties to commemorate the president’s 79th birthday and honor the Army.
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Marines, in a Rare Move, Briefly Detain Man in Los Angeles.
The man, who said he was a veteran, was soon released. But the incident calls attention to the operation of troops in a police-like domestic function.
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Over 1,200 protesters have been arrested nationwide this week.
The arrests were conducted by local police as well as Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, who began a large-scale crackdown in Los Angeles last week.
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Local officials warn of steep consequences to protesters who turn violent.
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Protests in L.A. could be ‘unprecedented’ in size on Saturday, police chief says.
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A Democrat in Texas says he was warned against displaying ‘No Kings’ signs at a local parade.
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Park Area Closed to Recover Body of Teen Who Fell Over 50-Foot Waterfall.
Officials said that the body was spotted in Olympic National Park in Washington State on Monday, but that it was pinned behind a surge of water and was hard to reach.
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Once-Powerful Illinois Democrat Sentenced to 7.5 Years in Prison.
Michael J. Madigan, who for decades was one of the most influential Democrats in Illinois politics, was convicted of conspiracy, bribery and wire fraud.
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Jury in Karen Read Trial Begins Deliberations.
The Boston-area woman was accused of killing her police officer boyfriend in 2022.
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Friday’s events are expected to be quieter as protesters prepare for mass weekend demonstrations.
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Marines begin taking over guarding a federal building in Los Angeles.
The general overseeing the military response to the Los Angeles protests said about 200 Marines had been deployed to the Wilshire Federal Building
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The presence of federal agents prompts fears among fans ahead of big soccer matches.
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A Billionaire Island Where Bezos and Kushner Live Is Fighting Over Sewage.
Indian Creek Village, the “Billionaire Bunker” near Miami, couldn’t get approval to discharge its waste into a neighboring town’s sewer lines. So the village quietly persuaded state lawmakers to come to the rescue.
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What to Expect at the Army’s 250th Anniversary Parade.
The event will kick off when Army officials report to President Trump — who turns 79 on the same day — and end when parachutists jump from the sky and present a flag to him.
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National Guard Will Remain in L.A. Until a Legal Challenge Is Heard.
Judge Charles Breyer ordered the administration to return control of the National Guard to the California governor, but an appeals court stayed the extraordinary decision Thursday night.
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Alex Padilla’s Unlikely Moment in the Spotlight.
The senator is known on Capitol Hill for being kind and nerdy. His forcible removal from a news conference resonated as a call to action among Democrats.
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She Confronted a History of Enslavers in Her Family. Here’s What Happened.
Debra Bruno’s story illuminates the often overlooked history of slavery in the North.
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Which Law Enforcement Agencies Are at the Los Angeles Protests?
A Times analysis identified more than a dozen agencies that were on the ground in the past week. See which are represented, the gear they carry and how they interact.
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What We Know About the ‘No Kings’ Protests on Saturday.
Organizers have planned demonstrations in cities and towns across the country on the same day as President Trump’s parade in Washington to celebrate the Army.
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Read the Judge’s Ruling.
A federal judge temporarily blocked the federal government’s mobilization of the California National Guard to protect immigration agents from protesters in Los Angeles.
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After Abrego Garcia’s Deportation, a Maryland Pastor Regrets Supporting Trump.
Most Americans have continued to support President Trump's push for deportations, but there are some early signs of cracks in his Latino support.
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Protests Go Beyond Immigration to Include Array of Left-Wing Causes.
Voices at the demonstrations are often a mix that includes calls for more explicit support for racial justice, Palestinian freedom and socialist politics.
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One Soldier Killed, One Injured in Helicopter Training Mission at Fort Campbell.
The aviation accident, which occurred on Wednesday night, is under investigation, the 101st Airborne Division said.
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How Every House Member Voted on $9 Billion in Proposed Spending Cuts.
House members approved the cuts by a vote of 214 to 212.
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Flights Briefly Grounded at Boston’s Logan Airport After JetBlue Plane Rolls Off Runway.
A JetBlue plane veered into a grassy area after landing, temporarily halting all flights in and out of the airport. There were no injuries, an official said.
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Trump Blocks California E.V. Rules in Latest Move to Rein In the State.
California leaders said the state intends to challenge the move in court, and to find new ways to move drivers toward electric vehicles.
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Supreme Court Sides With Teenager in School Disability Discrimination Case.
Disability rights groups had followed the case closely, warning that arguments by the school district could threaten broader protections for people with disabilities.
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Black and Latino Leaders Condemn Trump’s Use of Military in L.A.
The leaders described President Trump’s actions as a clear attempt to attack communities of color.
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Police on foot and horseback disperse protesters in downtown Los Angeles.
The mood of a downtown march against immigration raids was initially joyous. It soured as the police forced the crowd to splinter.
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Oregon Wildfire Destroys Homes and Forces Evacuations.
The Rowena Fire tripled in size Wednesday evening, destroying 20 homes.
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Church Leaders Shaken After a Man Was Detained in Their Parking Lot.
At a Southern California church, pastors said that they believe a federal immigration raid unfolded on their property with no explanation.
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Courageous or Self-Righteous? Californians Evaluate Newsom’s Speech.
Elected officials, as well as social media influencers, had wide-ranging opinions of the governor’s prime time address warning that democracy is in danger.
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The Rapper Silentó Gets 30 Years in Prison for Fatal Shooting of His Cousin.
The songwriter, whose real name is Ricky Hawk, pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter and three other charges in relation to the killing.
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With communities ‘in fear,’ officials across the L.A. area call on Trump to stop the raids.
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Trump’s Immigration Crackdown Hits California Farms.
Farmworkers hid in fields on Tuesday as word spread that ICE agents were conducting raids in California’s breadbasket, an activist said.
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Where People Are Protesting Against Immigration Raids.
Demonstrations are not only in Los Angeles. They have cropped up in cities across the country.
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Immigrant rights protests spread across the country.
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Homeland Security Says Video Shows ‘Targeted Arrest,’ Not Hit and Run.
Hours after video of agents pinning a car and drawing their weapons circulated on social media, the agency said the driver had punched a federal agent and fled arrest.
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What is the role of the National Guard troops in L.A.?
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Carwashes become easy targets in California’s ICE raids.
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Kennedy Announces Eight New Members of C.D.C. Vaccine Advisory Panel.
The appointments of at least two of the experts are likely to draw an uproar from pro-vaccine groups for their criticism of federal scientists and the Biden administration’s Covid vaccine policies.
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U.S. Argues Against Any Court Order Restricting Use of Troops in L.A.
The filing by the Justice Department came ahead of a hearing scheduled for Thursday afternoon in Federal District Court.
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How many people have been arrested since the L.A. protests began?
Officers have arrested hundreds nationwide, including in Dallas, New York City and Chicago, during protests against immigration raids.
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Hispanic-Serving College Program Is Discriminatory, Lawsuit Argues.
A group behind the Supreme Court case that ended affirmative action is now targeting a federal support for schools that enroll large numbers of Hispanic students.
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Fast-Growing Wildfire Spreads in Southern California.
A wildfire that started on Tuesday afternoon north of the San Bernardino Mountains in Southern California had exploded to more than 4,200 acres by Wednesday morning, officials said.
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5 Months Into Office, No Trump Talk for San Francisco Mayor.
Mayor Daniel Lurie says that he is focused on quality of life issues, not politics, as President Trump targets California in various ways.
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What Happens if ‘Harvard Is Not Harvard’?
If President Trump makes good on all his threats, Harvard may lose much of its influence and prestige. It could also become even harder to afford.
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Where Are Anti-Trump Protests Expected on Wednesday?
Groups announced plans for demonstrations across the country, indicating that the protests that began in Los Angeles will continue to spread.
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Calm in Downtown L.A. as Curfew Takes Effect.
The city’s mayor announced the curfew on Tuesday evening after some protests against the Trump administration’s immigration policies turned unruly.
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L.A. protesters say they are speaking up for immigrant ‘family.’
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Curfew Imposed in Los Angeles.
Some protesters defied the curfew imposed by Mayor Karen Bass as Gov. Gavin Newsom of California criticized President Trump’s deployment of the military to Los Angeles.
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Mexican Flags Have Become Republican Fodder, but Protesters Keep Waving Them.
Images of Los Angeles protesters waving Mexican flags have gone viral in conservative circles this week. Many protesters say they are aware of the political reaction but won’t put their flags away.
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The 2028 Subtext of Newsom’s Speech.
The California governor used a nationally televised address to criticize President Trump and to seize a political moment.
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Texas Governor Will Deploy National Guard to Immigration Protests.
Gov. Greg Abbott, a staunch supporter of President Trump’s immigration agenda, is the first governor to call on the National Guard as protests spread to multiple cities.
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Wildfire Burns Near San Bernardino Mountains.
Firefighters battled the fire as high and dry winds fanned the flames.
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Marines to Join National Guard Troops Protecting ICE Agents in Los Angeles.
A military official said the Marines would be on the city’s streets on Wednesday. A federal judge was set to hear California’s request to limit the use of the soldiers.
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Armed National Guard Troops Aid Immigration Agents on Raids in Los Angeles.
Soldiers mobilized by President Trump protected ICE agents on their raids in Los Angeles. The state of California said the deployment was illegal.
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Full Transcript of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s Speech.
In a prime time address, Gov. Gavin Newsom of California sharply criticized President Trump for sending in the military to handle the protests in Los Angeles.
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Wildfire Near San Bernardino Mountains Prompts Evacuation Orders.
The fire, which was burning near the town of Apple Valley, had exploded to 2,000 acres since starting on Tuesday afternoon.
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L.A. Mayor Bass Declares Emergency and Enacts Curfew.
The curfew affects one square mile in downtown Los Angeles, to stop vandalism and looting in the area.
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Newsom Tells Nation That Trump Is Destroying American Democracy.
Gov. Gavin Newsom of California called on Americans to stand up to President Trump in a nationally televised address.
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Thousands of Protesters March Through Downtown Chicago.
The demonstrators carried signs denouncing federal immigration officials.
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Bass Announces Downtown Curfew to Calm Protests.
The curfew for downtown Los Angeles was set to go into effect from 8 p.m. until 6 a.m., starting Tuesday.
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Yosemite Bans Large Flags From El Capitan, Criminalizing Protests.
Violators could face up to six months in jail under the new rule, which appears to have been formalized last month.
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How Many People Have Been Arrested Since the L.A. Protests Began?
Officers have arrested hundreds nationwide during protests against immigration raids. The demonstrations have remained largely peaceful, though some people have been injured.
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Is 4,700 federal troops a big deployment?
National Guard deployments in response to social unrest are often larger and are requested by local leaders, not challenged by them.
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Demonstrators Gather Outside ICE Headquarters in New York City.
The group rallied near a building that houses an immigration court, which has become a flashpoint amid the arrest of migrants in courthouses.
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Michigan State U. to Pay Nearly $30 Million to 3 Survivors of Campus Shooting.
The three students who survived the attack in 2023 all suffered extensive, life-altering injuries, their lawyers said.
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Southern Baptists Endorse Effort to Overturn Same-Sex Marriage.
The nation’s largest Protestant denomination was motivated by conservative Christians’ success in reversing Roe v. Wade.
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L.A. Protests Prompt Calls for Police Restraint After Journalist Injuries.
The L.A.P.D. and L.A. County Sheriff said they were reviewing incidents in which journalists have been struck by projectiles fired by the police.
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After 2020, Report Urged Caution in Deploying National Guard in L.A.
The city is now facing a real-world test of its policing strategies.
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What we know about the Marine infantry battalion deployed by Trump.
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A lawyer says some immigrants detained in L.A. raids have been deported.
Immigrant rights lawyers said on Tuesday that they had been unable to learn where there clients were being held or how their cases were proceeding. .
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Maps: 3.3-Magnitude Earthquake Strikes Near Los Angeles.
View the location of the quake’s epicenter and aftershocks.
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California seeks to limit the use of military forces deployed to Los Angeles.
A judge set a Thursday hearing on the matter.
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Immigrant Who Prosecutors Say Was Framed for Threat Can Be Freed, Judge Says.
Prosecutors said the undocumented man had been wrongly accused of threatening President Trump. An immigration judge said on Tuesday that he could be released on bond.
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Read California’s Emergency Motion.
Gov. Gavin Newsom filed an emergency motion on Tuesday asking a federal judge to stop the Trump administration from sending Marines and National Guard troops onto the streets of Los Angeles.
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Karen Bass Is Getting a Second Chance to Lead Her City Through a Crisis.
Ms. Bass struggled amid criticism of her initial response to the Los Angeles fires in January. The opposition over President Trump’s immigration raids have offered her an opportunity.
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In Santa Ana, an immigration raid sets off anger.
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Marines Deployed by Trump Over Newsom’s Objections Arrive in L.A. Area.
Hundreds of Marines arrived in the L.A. area, the U.S. Northern Command confirmed on Tuesday. Gov. Gavin Newsom of California has said deploying them on U.S. soil was illegal.
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An Inside Look at How ICE’s Mission Is Expanding.
Hamed Aleaziz, a New York Times immigration reporter, traveled to Miami to observe how immigrant arrest operations have changed under pressure from the Trump administration.
Elections
Politics
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China’s Spy Agencies Are Investing Heavily in A.I., Researchers Say.
A new report comes amid rising concern about how China will use new tools to power covert actions, as Western intelligence services also embrace the technology.
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Appeals Court to Consider on Tuesday if Trump Can Control National Guard in L.A.
A three-judge panel will determine whether National Guard troops can remain under President Trump’s command in Los Angeles as protests against immigration raids continue.
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‘A Little Windy’: Trump Drops U.S.-Britain Trade Papers.
President Trump and Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain said on Monday that they had signed a deal that would cut tariffs on commerce between their countries. But there was a tiny mishap.
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Republicans Fight Uphill in Virginia Race That Will Test Anger at Trump.
The Democratic candidate for governor, Abigail Spanberger, is raising far more cash than her Republican rival, Winsome Earle-Sears, in a state where federal work force cuts are being acutely felt.
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White House Eyes Rarely Used Power to Override Congress on Spending.
The president’s top aides have signaled they may seize on a timing quirk in law to cancel enacted funds, setting up a clash over the power of the purse.
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Senate Bill Would Make Deep Cuts to Medicaid, Setting Up Fight With House.
The proposal would salvage some clean-energy tax credits and phase out others more slowly, making up some of the cost by imposing deeper cuts to Medicaid than the House-passed bill would.
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Trump’s Iran Choice: Last-Chance Diplomacy or a Bunker-Busting Bomb.
Iranian officials have warned that U.S. participation in an attack on its facilities will imperil any chance of the nuclear disarmament deal the president insists he is still interested in pursuing.
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How the Trump Era Changed Trump.
The president is still the attention-loving, payback-obsessed main character that he was in 2015. But his four years out of office drove him to turn grievance into vengeance.
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Iran’s Best-Protected Nuclear Site Is Deep Underground.
Only the U.S. military has the 30,000-pound bomb capable of reaching the facility and the bomber that can carry it.
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36 More Countries May Be Added to Trump’s Travel Ban.
The administration gave the nations 60 days to fix concerns, according to a State Department cable. The president already imposed a full or partial ban on citizens of 19 countries.
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Trump’s Cuts to N.I.H. Grants Are Illegal, Federal Judge Rules.
The judge accused the Trump administration of discriminating against minorities and L.G.B.T.Q. people and ordered the government to restore much of the funding.
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Mike Lee Draws Outrage for Posts Blaming Assassination on the Far Left.
The Republican senator from Utah suggested in social media posts that the killings were the work of “Marxists,” and mocked Minnesota’s Democratic governor. He later issued a more sober condemnation of the violence.
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Supreme Court to Hear Case on Subpoena to Anti-Abortion Pregnancy Centers.
The question for the justices is whether the centers may pursue a First Amendment challenge to a state subpoena seeking donor information in federal court.
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‘The Age of Trump’ Enters Its Second Decade.
Ten years after he descended the Trump Tower escalator to announce his campaign for the White House, President Trump has come to dominate his era like few presidents ever have.
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Watchdog Finds Trump Administration Broke Law by Withholding Library Funds.
It is the second time the nonpartisan Government Accountability Office has found the administration illegally impounded funds.
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Business Lobbyists Scramble to Kill $100 Billion ‘Revenge Tax’
Critics contend that the measure will scare off the foreign investment that President Trump wants to attract.
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Trump’s Strategy in Law Firm Cases: Lose, Don’t Appeal, Yet Prevail.
The handful of notable firms that were targeted by the president for punishment but chose to fight have uniformly won. Nine others have nonetheless pledged almost $1 billion in free legal work.
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Equipment Problems Vexed Newark Airport Controllers for Years.
Records show that air traffic controllers handling Newark Liberty International Airport flights have grappled with equipment outages since at least 2023, an anxiety-causing situation they call “plug and pray.”
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The Bureaucrat and the Billionaire: Inside DOGE’s Chaotic Takeover of Social Security.
The drama offers a case study in how Elon Musk’s team sought to run a critical government agency through misinformation and social media blasts — and how longtime employees responded.
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1 Killed in Shooting at a ‘No Kings’ Protest in Salt Lake City.
A bystander was fatally shot after security members at the demonstration confronted a man who was running toward the crowd with an AR-15-style rifle, the police said.
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Randi Weingarten Quits D.N.C. Post in Dispute With Chairman.
In a letter to the party’s chairman, Ken Martin, Ms. Weingarten wrote, “I appear to be out of step with the leadership you are forging.”
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As Trump Returns to G7, Rift With Allies Is Even Deeper.
In 2018, the president called for the group to embrace Russia and stormed out of the summit. Now he is seeking to shrink America’s military role abroad and embarking on a more expansive trade war.
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Close Trump Allies Sponsored the Military Parade, Raising Ethical Concerns.
Federal regulations prohibit government employees from using their public office for private gain.
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‘Trump Inc.’: Filings Show Staff Profited From Being in the President’s Orbit.
A constellation of companies and groups paid President Trump’s supporters before they took jobs in his White House, according to new disclosure statements.
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Syrian General Questioned in Case of Missing American.
The general, Bassam Hassan, is said to have shared grim news about the fate of Austin Tice, an American journalist and former Marine who went missing in 2012.
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The Clintons and Kamala Harris Descend on a Hamptons Wedding of Liberal Royalty.
The wedding of Huma Abedin, a longtime aide to Hillary Clinton, and Alex Soros, the scion of a liberal philanthropic dynasty, drew a rare concentration of wealth and power.
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Takeaways From Trump’s Military Parade in Washington.
The events in the capital were overshadowed by an assassination in Minnesota and turmoil in the Middle East.
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Here’s what to know about Yvette Hoffman, who was wounded in the Minnesota shootings.
She is a former D.J. and an advocate for vulnerable children.
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Like School Shootings, Political Violence Is Becoming Almost Routine.
Threats and violent acts have become part of the political landscape, still shocking but somehow not so surprising.
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Minnesota, Known for Political Civility, Reels After Shooting.
Even as the national political discourse has grown hyperpartisan in recent years, Minnesota had kept a foothold on its own traditions.
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Inside Trump’s Extraordinary Turnaround on Immigration Raids.
President Trump’s decision to pause most raids targeting farms and hospitality workers took many inside the White House by surprise. It came after intensive lobbying by his agriculture secretary.
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Melania Trump Suits Up for the Military Parade.
The first lady’s outfit was fully in line with the controlled and contained public image she had been crafting since the end of her husband’s first term.
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Minnesota Suspect Served on State Board With One of the Victims.
The suspect, Vance Boelter, was appointed more than once to the Workforce Development Board, where he served with State Senator John A. Hoffman, who was shot on Saturday.
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A few hundred gathered to protest Trump in D.C., in the shadow of the parade.
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Husband of slain lawmaker was ‘enthusiastic campaign spouse.’
Mark Hortman and his wife, who was a powerful Democrat in the Minnesota Legislature, were shot and killed on Saturday morning.
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Lawmaker who was fatally shot worked to tighten Minnesota’s gun control measures.
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A military celebration while troops are deployed for protests offers an uncomfortable juxtaposition for the Army.
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Security for the parade in Washington includes miles of anti-scale fencing.
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Here’s how the attacks in Minnesota unfolded early on Saturday.
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Minnesota Gunman May Have Planned to Target ‘No Kings’ Protests, Police Say.
Organizers of the protests said that all of the planned events in the state were canceled after a recommendation from Gov. Tim Walz.
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Why Trump loves a man (or 7,000 of them) in uniform.
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The Army is celebrating with a parade as it faces an uncertain future.
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Minnesota lawmakers are targeted after an acrimonious legislative session.
Melissa Hortman, a Democratic state representative, and her husband were fatally shot on Saturday morning. John A. Hoffman, a state senator, and his wife were also shot.
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The Minnesota shootings are the latest in a string of targeted political attacks.
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Who are the lawmakers who were shot?
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Trump dismisses the prospect of canceling the parade because of weather.
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Washington’s Last Military Parade Came at a Very Different Moment.
The 1991 Victory Parade after the first Gulf War celebrated a lopsided victory against an enemy army in the largest U.S. military operation since Vietnam.
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As Trump Prepares to Celebrate Army’s Founding, His Critics Take to the Streets.
President Trump will hold a military parade the same day as thousands of planned protests in what amounts to a split-screen show of force.
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How to Watch Trump’s Military Parade in Washington.
The New York Times will cover the event in real-time and provide live analysis.
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Here’s what to know about the shooting.
It was not immediately clear who was targeted in the Saturday morning shootings in Champlin and Brooklyn Park, Minn. The police said the gunman may be wearing body armor and impersonating an officer.
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Trump Relishes Troops in American Streets While Shunning Conflict Overseas.
The seemingly disparate postures of recent days speak to the president’s complicated relationship with the military.
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How Trump’s Talk of Protesters Breaks From History.
President Trump has lumped together violent and peaceful protesters when speaking about the demonstrations in Los Angeles. David Sanger, a White House correspondent for The New York Times, explains.
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Trump Shifts Deportation Focus, Pausing Raids on Farms, Hotels and Eateries.
The abrupt pivot on an issue at the heart of Mr. Trump’s presidency suggested his broad immigration crackdown was hurting industries and constituencies he does not want to lose.
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Here Are Some of the Southern California Immigration Raids From the Past Week.
At least five carwashes across Los Angeles County and Orange County have been raided since Sunday, according to one labor group.
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Voice of America Recalls Staff for Iranian Language News Service From Leave.
Most of the staff of Voice of America, the federally funded news network, were put on administrative leave by the Trump administration in March.
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Federal Judge Reinstates Consumer Product Safety Regulators Fired by Trump.
It’s the latest setback for President Trump in his effort to purge perceived political opponents from independent agencies.
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Even Before His Return to the White House, Trump Was Becoming a Crypto Czar.
Financial disclosures for 2024 filed by the president on Friday show that digital coins had already become one of his family’s most successful ventures.
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An exhibition on the Oct. 7 attack on Israel comes to Washington as conflict flares again.
An
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Trump’s Decision to Send Troops to California Is His Do-Over of 2020.
President Trump was talked out of deploying the military to crush the George Floyd protests in 2020. He always regretted it.
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Judge Signals Openness to Granting Bail to Returned Deportee.
Denying the Justice Department’s request to detain the deportee would be a significant rebuke of the Trump administration, which has repeatedly cast him as a dangerous criminal.
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In a Anxious Moment for the Nation, Historians Say This One Is Different.
The country has become a cauldron of anger and unease as it enters a weekend promised to be marked by protests and a military parade.
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Kennedy’s New Vaccine Advisers Helped Lawyers Raise Doubts About Their Safety.
Three of the health secretary’s picks to replace fired members of an influential panel that sets U.S. vaccine policies have filed statements in court flagging concerns about vaccines.
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Republicans Are Divided Over Iran. Will Trump Pick a Side?
President Trump is trapped between the “America First” isolationists and others in his party who are cheering on Israel’s strikes against Iran.
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Trump’s Inaccurate Claims About the L.A. Immigration Protests.
The president claimed, without giving evidence, that the protesters were “paid” agitators, that the Los Angeles police asked for the National Guard, and that swaths of the city were under gang control.
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A U.S. judge in California puts layoff plans at the State Dept. on hold.
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Trump’s $1.1 Billion Public Broadcasting Clawback Faces Pushback in the Senate.
Some Republican senators are voicing concern over the House-passed bill that would rescind $9 billion that Congress already approved, including money for NPR and PBS stations in their states.
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Cuomo and Mamdani Clash in Final N.Y.C. Mayoral Debate.
The two front-runners in the New York City mayor’s race, Andrew M. Cuomo and Zohran Mamdani exchanged attacks over their records and experience.
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Much of Iran’s Nuclear Program Remains After Israel’s Strikes. At Least for Now.
The first phase of the attack did not hit the most likely repository of Iran’s near-bomb-grade nuclear fuel.
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7 Voters on Trump, the Protests and Taking a Stand in L.A.
The tremors of political unrest that shook Los Angeles and several U.S. cities this week have stirred a range of emotions in people — pride, disgust, fear, hope. In interviews with voters, one sentiment that transcended political affiliation seemed to be uncertainty.
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Trump Talks Big on Global Diplomacy, but His Goals Are in Tatters.
The president said he would bring a quick end to the wars in Ukraine and Gaza, and get China to bend on trade and Iran on its nuclear program. Instead, conflict is escalating.
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Army Celebrates With Parade as It Faces an Uncertain Future.
The service is experiencing an identity crisis after 20 years of war, and as the president warns of threats to America from within.
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Judge Blocks Trump Voting Order Requiring Proof of Citizenship.
A judge ruled that President Trump likely exceeded his authority with elections changes that included punishing states that didn’t stop counting ballots after Election Day.
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In L.A., the Divide Between Peace and Violence Is in the Eye of the Beholder.
Los Angeles, a city marked by fiery and full-throated protests, adds a new chapter to that history.
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Senate G.O.P. Includes Expanded Fund for Radiation Victims in Policy Bill.
The provision, long advocated by Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri, would revive and broaden a law for compensating those who developed serious illnesses from government-caused nuclear contamination.
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Top State Department Official Posts, Then Quickly Deletes, Attack on Colleague.
Christopher Landau, the deputy secretary of state, criticized the U.S. ambassador to NATO in a reply to a routine social media post about meetings with foreign diplomats.
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Trump Withdraws From Agreement With Tribes to Protect Salmon.
The Biden administration had brokered a 10-year truce in an extended legal battle with Native American tribes in the Pacific Northwest over dams that had prevented fish from spawning.
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Protesters in Chicago return to the streets.
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At least 22 states join California in its effort to block Trump’s troop deployment.
Washington State, Vermont and others have joined a legal brief backing Gov. Gavin Newsom’s request to block the deployment of California’s National Guard.
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How many people have been arrested in the nationwide anti-ICE protests?
Police have arrested more than 1,000 people in the past week as civil unrest that began after immigration sweeps in Los Angeles spread to cities across the country.
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Missouri joins Texas in assembling National Guard troops.
Texas activated its National Guard earlier this week ahead of protests there. Missouri is following suit, “taking a proactive approach,” its governor says.
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Judge Signals Doubt About Trump’s Use of National Guard to Deal With Protesters.
But Judge Charles Breyer also suggested he was unlikely at this point to restrict the use of active-duty Marines in California.
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Some Protests Calm After Curfews, but Measures Can Have Mixed Results.
Los Angeles and Spokane, Wash., have turned to curfews to control unrest, but past measures, especially in 2020, have not always been effective.
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Trump Steel Tariffs Expanded to Hit Home Appliances.
The move is one of the first times this year that consumer products were specifically targeted with higher import taxes.
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Trump Tells Farmers ‘Changes Are Coming’ to Immigration Crackdown.
President Trump’s statement suggested his sweeping policies were alienating industries he wants to keep in his corner.
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Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida promises a “zero tolerance policy” if protests aren’t peaceful.
Gov. Ron DeSantis promised a “zero tolerance policy.” One sheriff in the state said that officers would kill protesters who throw bricks or point weapons at deputies.
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Democrats in California expressed outrage at a senator’s treatment by law enforcement officers.
Senator Alex Padilla, Democrat of California, was forced to the ground and handcuffed at an event held by the homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem.
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Padilla’s scuffle stirs painful memories of a childhood spent proving his worth.
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Federal agents, joined by Secretary Noem, descend on a California community.
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Democratic senators denounce the rough treatment of one of their own.
Senator Alex Padilla, Democrat of California, was forcibly removed from an event with Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, forced to the floor and handcuffed.
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Senator Padilla Forcibly Removed After Confronting Noem.
Senator Alex Padilla, Democrat of California, was forced to the floor, handcuffed and removed by federal agents after interrupting a news conference by the homeland security secretary Kristi Noem on Thursday.
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Trump, Who Has Likened Himself to a King, Bristles at ‘No Kings’ Protests.
“I don’t feel like a king, I have to go through hell to get stuff approved,” President Trump said of the planned demonstrations against his administration.
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F.A.A. Further Restricts Area Around Reagan Airport to Helicopters.
The agency has taken steps to reduce the risk of midair collisions after a military helicopter struck a commercial flight in January, killing everyone on both crafts.
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Trump’s Immigration P.R. Campaign Enters a New Militarized Phase.
The government’s visuals appear intended to persuade migrants without legal status to leave the country, while also making clear the administration will not tolerate resistance.
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House Votes to Claw Back $9 Billion for Foreign Aid and Public Broadcasting.
The legislation, requested by the White House, would codify spending cuts pursued by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency.
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Another Dozen Migrants Are Transferred to Guantánamo.
About 540 Defense Department employees were staffing the operation, along with 130 homeland security workers.
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Senator Alex Padilla Forcibly Removed and Handcuffed After Interrupting Noem.
Mr. Padilla, Democrat of California, was shoved out of a room and handcuffed after he disrupted Kristi Noem, the Homeland Security secretary, during a news conference.
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G.O.P. Senators Want Fewer Cuts to Food Aid, Teeing Up a Fight with the House.
Republicans whose constituents rely on nutritional assistance worry that cuts to those programs approved by the House will saddle their states with huge costs and harm low-income children.
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Trump Acknowledges Israel Could Attack Iran Soon.
But President Trump cautioned that he does not want Israel to launch an attack while negotiations were going on.
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Senate Confirms Billy Long to Lead I.R.S., Ignoring Troubled Tax Credit History.
The former Republican congressman and auctioneer also had a brief career selling tax credits, including one that the I.R.S. said did not exist and another it said was rife with fraud.
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A Night Out for Trump at the Theater, With a Pocket of Dissent.
Opening night of “Les Misérables” was meant to celebrate the president’s takeover of the Kennedy Center. But he also was forced to encounter his critics.
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Federal Judge Will Hear Arguments Over Troop Deployment in California.
Lawyers for the Trump administration and Gov. Gavin Newsom will make their case in a Thursday afternoon hearing in San Francisco.
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Where are immigration protests expected on Thursday?
Protests that began in Los Angeles have spread throughout the week. These cities across the country are expecting demonstrations on Thursday.
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Rich Gain and Poor Lose in Republican Policy Bill, Budget Office Finds.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office found that the richer Americans were, the more they would benefit from the measure carrying President Trump’s agenda. And the poorest would lose out altogether.
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The Justice Dept. orders prosecutors around the country to be on standby ahead of weekend protests.
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Lawyers for Returned Deportee Seek Sanctions Against Trump Officials.
Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia’s lawyers asked the judge in the case to appoint a special master to investigate the failure by Trump officials to comply with her instructions.
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Supreme Court Revives Suit From Victims of Botched F.B.I. Raid.
Lower courts ruled in favor of agents who had used a battering ram and a flash-bang grenade in mistakenly raiding the home of a Georgia couple.
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How the 2020 George Floyd Protests Are Haunting Democrats in 2025.
No longer demanding cuts to police budgets or straining to show solidarity with protesters, Democrats are taking a far more cautious approach.
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6 Takeaways From Gavin Newsom’s Appearance on ‘The Daily’
The governor bragged about working with ICE in California but said that President Trump was “trying to gin things up to create problems” at protests.
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Republicans in Congress Set to Grill Democratic Governors on Immigration.
Amid unrest in California, Republicans plan to press the governors of other blue states on their immigration policies, including on limiting cooperation with federal enforcement efforts.
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Defense Lawyers for Returned Deportee Ask Judge to Release Him Pretrial.
The request came as lawyers in Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia’s separate civil case were poised to ask a different judge to hold the Trump administration in contempt for sidestepping one of her orders.
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Duffy Backs Safety Audit After Deadly Crash Near National Airport.
An investigation will examine what could have prevented an Army Black Hawk helicopter from ramming into an American Airlines flight on Jan. 29, killing all on board both aircraft.
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David Hogg to Exit D.N.C. After Backlash to His Primary Plan.
Mr. Hogg said he would not run again for vice chair after the party voted for a new election. Democrats have been furious at his plan to challenge the party’s sitting lawmakers in primary races.
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New China Trade ‘Deal’ Takes U.S. Back to Where It Started.
If a handshake agreement holds, it will merely undo some of the damage from the trade war that President Trump started.
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In Trump’s Washington, ‘You Don’t Leave Home Without Your Lawyer’
There’s a lot of work for lawyers in the nation’s capital these days: Over 400 lawsuits have been filed against President Trump’s administration since the start of his second term.
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Suggesting More Troops in More Cities, Trump Bends Military’s Role.
President Trump has expanded domestic use of the armed forces, testing the limits on involving troops at protests and the border.
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No, Not That Lee. Pentagon Finds Black Hero to Rechristen Base Long Named for Robert E.
The Army unveiled a list of seven installations that the Trump administration is reverting, sort of, to earlier names venerating Confederate heroes.
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Kosovo will accept up to 50 deported migrants from America.
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McConnell Tells Hegseth America’s Reputation Is at Stake in Ukraine War.
A testy exchange between a senator who strongly supports Ukraine aid and the defense secretary revealed a deepening split among G.O.P. officials on the war.
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U.S. to Withdraw Diplomats From Iraq Amid Iran Tensions.
The State Department said it had decided to shrink the U.S. “footprint” in Baghdad and the United Kingdom issued a warning about “increased tensions within the region.”
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Trumps to Attend ‘Les Misérables’ at Kennedy Center.
The president and first lady are scheduled to attend the opening night of the musical, one of his favorites, after he seized control of the cultural institution.
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Senate Republicans Want to Trim Some of Trump’s Populist Tax Cuts.
G.O.P. senators are considering whether to further curb the president’s favorite tax cuts as they rewrite key portions of the sprawling domestic agenda bill passed by the House.
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Musk Spoke to Trump Privately Before Posting Message of ‘Regret’
It remains to be seen how Mr. Trump will handle the attempted rapprochement and whether the two men’s relationship can be restored.
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Newsom stokes his feud, portraying himself as the hero to Trump’s ‘Star Wars’ villain.
Gov. Gavin Newsom of California, widely seen as having 2028 aspirations, had taken a conciliatory approach toward right-wing figures in recent months. Now, he’s ramping up the aggressive rhetoric.
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Why California Says Trump’s Military Deployment Is Illegal.
California has sued the Trump administration over its move to deploy troops to Los Angeles. Eric Schmitt, a national security correspondent for The New York Times, explains the laws governing the use of American troops on U.S. soil.
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Fulbright Board Resigns After Accusing Trump Aides of Political Interference.
The board of the prestigious program told the State Department it had no right to cancel scholarships for nearly 200 American professors and researchers.
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Trump’s Pick to Lead the F.A.A. Faces Senate Grilling.
The confirmation hearing for Bryan Bedford, a commercial airline executive, comes as the agency confronts critical staffing shortages and questions about passenger safety.
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Norton, D.C.’s Stalwart in Congress, Clings to Seat Amid Signs of Decline.
Colleagues and friends say the District of Columbia’s 87-year-old nonvoting delegate, a civil-rights leader and veteran of fights over home rule, is struggling to do her job.
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Rubio Is Pressing to Open Sanctions Investigation Into Harvard.
Experts and former officials said it was unusual for a cabinet secretary to try to influence the Treasury Department’s sanctions process to target a domestic entity.
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Under Pressure From the White House, ICE Seeks New Ways to Ramp Up Arrests.
Former officials said the Trump administration’s push for the agency to detain record numbers of undocumented immigrants increases the chances of mistakes.
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Party Politics Is Said to Have Played a Role in Kennedy’s Firing of Vaccine Advisers.
The health secretary cited financial conflicts, but a White House official and someone familiar with his thinking said he was also concerned about ties to Democrats.
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Detention and Deportation As Seen Through a Family Group Chat.
A Venezuelan man’s criminal past made him a target of immigration agents. His family was determined to stay in touch.
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The Tough Choice Facing Trump in the Iran Nuclear Talks.
The president now confronts the reality that stopping Iran’s drive toward a bomb may require letting it continue to make some nuclear fuel.
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Trump Says Army Bases Will Revert to Confederate Names.
The move would reverse a yearslong effort to remove names and symbols honoring the Confederacy from the military.
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Democrats Enter Risky Political Terrain as Protests Grip California.
Scenes of unrest in Southern California, stoked by President Trump as he tries to deport more immigrants, have left Democratic leaders worried the confrontation elevates a losing issue for the party.
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House Republicans Move to Put Their Stamp on D.C. as Budget Fix Languishes.
The House passed bills imposing voting and policing policies on the District of Columbia, but the G.O.P. has refused to consider a measure to restore hundreds of millions of dollars of its funding.
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Justice Dept. to Take Narrow Approach to Prosecuting Corporate Bribery Abroad.
Officials said the move was made to align enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act with the broader goal of increasing the country’s ability to compete overseas.
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Democrats Grill N.I.H. Leader on Cuts: Who Is Calling the Shots?
Senators criticized the head of the National Institutes of Health for not taking responsibility for Trump administration cuts to research funding.
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Justice Dept. Seeks to Pause Ruling Ordering Due Process for Deported Venezuelans.
The emergency request came a day before the Trump administration was supposed to outline how to allow nearly 140 Venezuelans deported to El Salvador to challenge their expulsion.
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Consumer Bureau Official Quits, Citing ‘Attack’ on Agency’s Mission.
The Trump administration has frozen the agency’s work and abandoned most of its lawsuits against banks and lenders.
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A Look at the Crackdown On the L.A. Protests.
Livia Albeck-Ripka, a New York Times reporter based in Los Angeles, describes how she was one of the reporters struck by crowd control munitions. Experts say that some aggressive measures used by the authorities in the Los Angeles protests have violated their own policies, federal policies and injunctions put into place after the George Floyd protests.
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Trump Threatens Any Protesters at Military Parade With ‘Very Big Force’
“I haven’t even heard about a protest,” at the Saturday event in Washington celebrating the Army, he said, but “this is people that hate our country.”
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The Welfare Queen Is Back, but With a Video Game Console in Hand.
Republicans targeting safety net programs once invoked women they claimed were living lavishly on government funds. Now as they seek to pare back Medicaid, the imagery has changed — but not the argument.
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Can Anyone Replace Elon Musk?
Joe Gebbia, a close friend of Mr. Musk’s, is expected to be a part of a small council of advisers that will oversee the Department of Government Efficiency.
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Hegseth Defends Deployment of Troops to Los Angeles at Testy Hearing.
The defense secretary also suggested in his testimony to a House panel that the use of the National Guard for homeland defense would expand under President Trump.
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Fetterman Calls California Protests ‘Anarchy’ as He Criticizes Democrats.
The Pennsylvania senator warned that his party would lose “the moral high ground” if it did not go further in condemning acts of destruction or violence, which local officials said were under control.
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Military Parade Marches Into Political Maelstrom as Troops Deploy to L.A.
President Trump’s decision to send troops into an American city comes just days before a rare military display in the nation’s capital.
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Trump Declares Dubious Emergencies to Amass Power, Scholars Say.
In disputes over protests, deportations and tariffs, the president has invoked statutes that may not provide him with the authority he claims.
World
Africa
Americas
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In Mexico, Thousands Ran for Office, Few Voted and One Party Dominated It All.
Low turnout and fears over democratic backsliding marked Mexico’s shift to electing judges, which opens the way for the Morena party to dominate courts.
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In a Mexico Border Town Famed for Crossings, ‘There Are No Migrants’
Tijuana long served as a gateway for legal and illegal crossings between Mexico and Southern California. But its shelters have now thinned out and migrants have left its streets.
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Mexico’s President Says Her Flag Should Not Fly Over Protests That Turn Violent.
On Friday, President Claudia Sheinbaum of Mexico broadly criticized images of disturbances on U.S. streets that featured the Mexican flag as a “provocation.”
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U.S. Urges Americans to Steer Clear of Nicaragua.
Despite a flurry of positive reports in the travel press, U.S. officials say Americans should avoid Nicaragua because it’s an authoritarian regime.
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In L.A.’s Little Tokyo, Protests Draw Sympathy and Frustration.
Business owners and locals in Little Tokyo say they are conflicted: frustrated as they scrub graffiti and clean up after looting, but also holding a deep sense of solidarity with anti-immigration raid protesters and their cause.
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What We Know About the L.A. Protests So Far.
The Trump administration is facing legal challenges to its deployment of Marines and National Guard troops to Los Angeles. Shawn Hubler, the Los Angeles bureau chief for The New York Times, talks with Katrin Bennhold, a senior writer, about what she’s seen on the ground in the city.
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Owner in Dominican Nightclub Roof Collapse Is Arrested.
After the collapse killed 236 people, an employee came forward with evidence the owners had been warned the roof posed a danger.
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A Political Titan in Argentina Is Sentenced to Prison.
The Supreme Court confirmed a corruption conviction against Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, a former president, cementing a six-year sentence and blocking a planned political comeback.
Asia Pacific
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North Korea’s Pandemic ‘Miracle’ Was a Deadly Lie, Report Says.
Officials drastically understated outbreaks and deaths, depriving citizens of help, two U.S. research groups report, citing interviews with people inside North Korea.
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‘There Was No Time to Run’: Caught in the Inferno of The Air India Crash.
Akash Patni, 14, was dropping off lunch for his mother, who ran a tea stall, when an Air India plane crashed into a nearby building, taking his life and the family’s main source of income.
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U.S. Investigators Arrive at Scene of India’s Plane Disaster.
Officials said they had found the cockpit voice recorder that may provide crucial clues about what caused the Air India flight to crash, killing at least 270 people.
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Can This Not-Particularly-Cute Elf Make China Cool?
China has long struggled to improve its image, especially in the West. It may be scoring some victories now.
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Heat of Air India Crash Hinders DNA Identification, Agonizing Relatives.
Three days after the crash, only 35 bodies had been handed over to relatives from an overall official death toll of 270.
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A Takeoff, a Mayday Call, and Two Pilots Who Never Made it Home.
One pilot on the ill-fated Air India flight was planning to retire. His co-pilot’s career was just getting started. Their final flight lasted seconds.
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Investigators Comb Wreckage for Clues to the Air India Crash.
The flight data recorder has been recovered and should shed some light on the cause of the disaster, which killed at least 269 people.
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Relatives of Air India Crash Victims Seek Answers.
Rizwan Vahora lost three relatives on the Air India flight that crashed in Ahmedabad, India. His family was among the many grieving and waiting for answers about loved ones.
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Sole Survivor of India Plane Crash Recounts How He Survived.
Viswash Kumar Ramesh was one of 242 people on the 787-8 Dreamliner that went down shortly after takeoff in Ahmedabad, India, and the only known survivor.
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Lives Lost in India Crash: Expectant Grandparents, a Boy Selling Tea.
At the hospital in Ahmedabad, family members were giving DNA samples, waiting for official confirmation of their loss in the Air India disaster, and remembering their loved ones.
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How the Man in Seat 11A Became a Plane Crash’s Sole Survivor.
Viswash Kumar Ramesh was one of 242 people on the 787-8 Dreamliner that went down shortly after takeoff in Ahmedabad, India. Somehow, he walked away.
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Grieving Relatives of India Air Crash Victims Wait for Bodies to Be Identified.
Families lined up for hours to give DNA samples so the authorities could match names to victims of Thursday’s crash, which killed at least 269 people.
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‘They Come at You’: The Grandmothers Playing Rough at a Kids’ Sport.
The Ah Ma Flippa Ball team (ah ma means grandmother) is one example of how Singapore is encouraging its growing population of seniors to stay active.
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‘I Don’t Know How I Am Alive,’ Air India Crash Survivor Tells Family.
Viswash Kumar Ramesh, 38, who sustained multiple injuries, a doctor said, was the only passenger out of 242 people on board the plane to walk away.
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Hundreds Dead in the Fiery Crash of an Air India Jet.
The London-bound Boeing Dreamliner went down moments after takeoff in Ahmedabad, India, with 242 people aboard. Dozens more on the ground perished as the plane exploded on the campus of a medical college.
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A whistle-blower’s lawyers call on the F.A.A. to release a report on the 787 Dreamliner.
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How the Air India Crash Compares With Other Deadly Plane Disasters.
Plane travel is statistically one of the safest modes of travel. But when things goes wrong, the results are often disastrous.
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For recovery and investigation of Air India crash, authorities contend with the risk of struck sites collapsing.
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How the Air India Plane Crashed: Maps and Photos.
Maps show how an Air India flight carrying 242 passengers and crew members crashed in the city of Ahmedabad shortly after taking off.
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Chaos and Carnage at Air India Crash Site.
Firefighters raced to douse smoking buildings as emergency workers recovered bodies after a deadly passenger plane crash in India.
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London-Bound Air India Passenger Plane Crashes With 242 Onboard.
The flight crashed in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad shortly after taking off for London Gatwick Airport.
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Air India’s New Owners Have Been Trying to Upgrade and Expand the Carrier.
The Tata Group, which bought the airline three years ago, has been trying to improve operations at a time of great change in India’s aviation market.
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Japan Says Chinese Fighter Jet Flew Too Close to Its Military Plane.
The maneuvers over international waters in the Pacific last weekend prompted Japanese officials to warn China not to repeat them and risk a collision.
-
What We Know About a Passenger Plane Crash in Western India.
An Air India passenger plane traveling with 242 people to London from Ahmedabad, in the western Indian state of Gujarat, crashed on Thursday.
-
The Art of the Stall: China’s Strategy for Dealing With Trump.
Beijing has gained time to build up its own strengths by drawing out negotiations with the United States, using its chokehold over critical minerals.
-
London-Bound Passenger Plane Crashes in Western India.
Emergency crews were at the scene after an Air India plane with more than 200 people on board crashed near the airport in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad, according to India’s civil aviation minister.
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As the Dalai Lama Turns 90, His Exiled Nation Faces a Moment of Truth.
The Tibetan spiritual leader has vowed to reveal a succession plan when his birthday is celebrated on July 6. He may get creative to thwart Chinese interference.
-
Pentagon Is Reviewing Deal to Equip Australia With Nuclear Submarines.
The 2021 pact, meant to help counter China’s ambitions in the Asia Pacific, will be examined to ensure that it meets “America First criteria,” a U.S. official said.
-
South Korea Turns Off Speakers Blasting K-Pop Into North Korea.
Lee Jae-myung, the new president of South Korea, said he would stop the propaganda broadcasts by his predecessor that raised tensions with Seoul’s neighboring foe.
-
Hong Kong Outlaws a Video Game, Saying It Promotes ‘Armed Revolution’
The war strategy game allows players to represent fighters from Taiwan, Hong Kong and other places in plots to overthrow China’s Communist Party.
-
China Sends Two Aircraft Carriers Into the Pacific for the First Time.
By sending warships beyond Japan, the Chinese Navy is demonstrating its ability to project sea and air power far past its home waters.
Canada
Europe
-
Starmer Picks Up Trump’s Papers, and 2 Small Political Wins.
The British prime minister scrambled at President Trump’s feet in a viral moment, but he may be happier than the other Group of 7 leaders with his moment in the sun.
-
Trump Says Macron ‘Always Gets It Wrong’ as They Clash Over Mideast.
In an angry post on social media, President Trump suggested that President Emmanuel Macron of France was a publicity seeker with no clue about American plans in the Israel-Iran conflict.
-
Russian Drone and Missile Strikes on Kyiv Kill at Least 14.
It was one of the deadliest attacks on the Ukrainian capital in months that came as Moscow has intensified air assaults on the city.
-
U.K. to Collect Ethnicity Data on All Suspects in Child Sexual Abuse Cases.
A review of Britain’s so-called grooming gangs scandal had recommended the move, saying that an information “vacuum” had allowed people to “sow and spread hatred.”
-
Ukraine Takes First Step Toward Carrying Out Minerals Deal With U.S.
The government is trying to show the Trump administration that it can deliver on the agreement.
-
Turning a Page, Germans Try Celebrating Their Recent Veterans.
In a changed world, Germany’s government is trying to recruit more soldiers. A first step? Getting citizens to appreciate their military again.
-
MI6 Names Its First Female Chief, Career Spy Blaise Metreweli.
A former “Q,” she will be the first woman to lead Britain’s foreign intelligence service in the agency’s 116-year history.
-
Britain Agrees to Open New Inquiry Into Child Sex Abuse.
Britain’s prime minister reverses his position on the need for a national investigation into the abuse scandal, after criticism by Elon Musk.
-
2 Men Are Sentenced in Theft of Golden Toilet.
The men were sentenced to two to four years for their roles in the 2019 theft of an 18-carat artwork at Winston Churchill’s ancestral home.
-
British Gujaratis Gather to Mourn Those Who Died in India Crash.
Members of the large Gujarati diaspora in the U.K. have planned events at temples and community centers to remember loved ones and support the bereaved.
-
Russia’s Summer Offensive in Ukraine Gains Ground With New Tactics.
Russia is advancing around Kostyantynivka and in the Sumy region with small, fast-moving units as both sides try a new tactic of using motorcycles and civilian cars to quickly cross open terrain.
-
A Dream Wedding for Jeff Bezos in Venice? No Way, Locals Say.
The lavish nuptials, scheduled for this month, have raised the hackles of some residents exasperated by their city becoming a playground for the rich.
-
In a German City Long Home to American Troops, Trump Era Tests Ties.
While the German government frets over the sudden chill in relations with the United States, residents around American bases hope that ties are too tight to cut easily.
-
‘I Didn’t Really Believe It’: Shock and Grief in U.K. Over Air India Crash.
The fatal flight was bound for England, where family and friends of the 241 victims on board, including 52 British nationals, were left searching for answers.
-
Trump Leaves European Leaders Praying for a Low-Drama Summit.
After President Trump blew up a G7 gathering in Canada in 2018, European leaders will meet with him there once more. They are hoping to avoid conflict.
-
Pope Leo Says He’ll Canonize First Millennial Saint in September.
Carlo Acutis, an Italian teenager, was meant to be made a saint in April, but the ceremony was postponed because of Pope Francis’ death.
-
Russian Forces Expand Fighting to a New Region of Eastern Ukraine.
It’s the first time in three years of war that Russian troops have entered the Dnipropetrovsk region, a sign of battlefield momentum.
-
Scenes From the India Plane Disaster.
A passenger flight traveling from Ahmedabad, a city in western India, to London crashed shortly after takeoff.
-
Picture Begins to Emerge of Gunman Who Killed 10 at Austrian School.
Officials were investigating how an apparently troubled man had passed the psychological test required to buy firearms.
-
Northern Ireland Struck by Anti-Immigrant Violence for Third Night.
Rioters clashed with police in Ballymena and across County Antrim as masked groups set fire to a leisure center in Larne, where families had been temporarily settled in emergency housing.
-
A Syrian Committee for Civil Peace Angers Those Demanding Justice.
Syria’s new leaders founded a group that cooperates with former Assad supporters to foster stability. It has set off a backlash from the government’s support base.
-
Poland’s Prime Minister Wins Confidence Vote in Parliament.
Donald Tusk called the vote to seek endorsement of his government after a political opponent won the presidency.
-
Houses and Cars Torched in Second Night of Unrest in Northern Ireland.
The recent unrest in the Northern Irish town of Ballymena followed a protest over a sexual assault case in the town.
-
Anti-Immigrant Rioting Stretches Into Second Night in Northern Ireland.
Homes, businesses and cars were attacked and 17 police officers were injured during violence in Ballymena and several other areas.
-
Austria Has Lots of Guns, Little Gun Violence, and New Questions.
The deadliest school shooting in the nation’s recent history has prompted some gun enthusiasts to worry about the prospect of stricter ownership laws.
-
Amid Russian Strikes, a Remote Corner of Ukraine Beckons.
The region of Transcarpathia has seen hardly any Russian attacks over the past three years. “We don’t have the same experience of war,” a resident said.
-
Russian Drone Barrage Kills 3 in Ukraine’s Second-Largest City.
The assault continued Moscow’s stepped-up drone and missile attacks, which have been ratcheting up for months with nightly bombardments on regions and cities in Ukraine.
-
Bound for Mecca, These Pilgrims Rode From Spain on Horses — and on Instagram.
The journey took about seven months and was closely followed, and financially supported, by followers on social media.
-
A Cutting French Senator Becomes Trump’s European Nemesis.
In biting verbal assaults viewed by millions, Claude Malhuret has issued a scathing critique of the American president, bringing a lifetime of experience to bear.
-
‘We’re Just Speechless’: Austria Mourns After Deadly School Rampage.
A former student killed 10 people and then himself in a mass shooting on Tuesday, the police said. It was one of the worst such attacks in Europe in the past decade.
-
Protest Over Sexual Assault Case in Northern Ireland Turns Violent.
Officials said they were investigating the attacks on businesses and houses in Ballymena as racially motivated.
-
Teaching Assistant Stabbed to Death at a School in France.
The stabbing happened during a bag search, which had been set up as part of a government effort to address concerns about increased violence in schools.
-
Former Student Kills At Least Nine People in Austria School Shooting.
The police said the gunman also died in an apparent suicide following the attack in Graz, Austria.
-
Khaby Lame, World’s Most Popular TikToker, Is Forced to Leave U.S.
Amid President Trump’s crackdown on immigration, agents detained Mr. Lame, 25, for overstaying a visa, and he left the country. Another Gen Z influencer took credit.
Middle East
-
Despite Close Ties With Iran, Russia Stands Aside as Israel Attacks.
Analysts say the Kremlin is prioritizing its own war against Ukraine, as well as its relations with Gulf nations that don’t want to see a stronger Iran.
-
Trump Offers Mixed Messages on Israel-Iran War.
President Trump’s contradictory comments left Israelis and Iranians trying to understand whether and how the U.S. would intervene.
-
As World Turns Focus to Iran, Lethal Violence Flares at Gaza Aid Sites.
The ongoing bloodshed in Gaza is drawing less attention with the international community distracted by the new regional conflict between Israel and Iran.
-
Israel claims it killed Iran’s top military commander, again.
Israeli c
-
Which Countries Have Issued Travel Advisories for Israel and Iran?
Both countries have closed their airspaces, leaving few options for citizens of other countries seeking to leave.
-
Here’s the latest.
-
As Other Arab States Condemn Israeli Attacks on Iran, Syria Is Notably Silent.
Syria was once among the closest allies of the Islamic republic, but the new government resents Tehran’s support for the Assad regime and has pledged not to allow attacks on Israel from its territory.
-
Trump Leaves G7 Early After Tehran Evacuation Warning.
White House officials said the president left the two-day summit early to deal with the escalating conflict between Iran and Israel.
-
Israel Widens Attacks Against Iran, Striking Broadcaster.
Israel’s escalated offensive indicates that its aims go beyond dismantling Iran’s nuclear program.
-
Trump Will Not Sign G7 Statement on Iran and Israel, Official Says.
A White House official said President Trump had decided not to sign onto a statement drafted for Group of 7 allies that urges restraint from both Israel and Iran, which have been trading attacks for days.
-
As Iran Fires at Israel, Palestinians Get Caught in the Crossfire.
Roughly 80 pieces of missiles have fallen on Palestinian communities since the start of the Israel-Iran confrontation on Friday, according to the Palestinian authorities.
-
Israeli Strike Hits Iranian State TV Broadcaster.
Black smoke billowed from the Iranian state TV headquarters after an Israeli strike hit the building on Monday. The attack comes as the fighting between Israel and Iran show no signs of slowing down.
-
Democrat Seeks to Limit Trump’s War Powers Amid Middle East Escalation.
A resolution by Senator Tim Kaine of Virginia would require congressional approval before U.S. troops could engage in hostilities against Iran. He said Americans don’t want another “forever war.”
-
Israel attacks Iran’s state television, live on the air.
-
‘Where Can I Go?’ Iranians Weigh Escaping Tehran.
In a city under attack, residents encounter gas stations that are closing because there is no fuel, and disruptions to internet and phone service.
-
Iran Has Sustained Blow After Blow Since October 2023.
Iran is often portrayed as one of the world’s most dangerous actors. But with attacks on its defenses, nuclear sites and proxy militias, Israel has exposed a compromised and weakened adversary.
-
Walls Are Put Up Around Israeli Displays at French Weapons Show.
Israel called the move “outrageous.” A French official said Israeli companies were defying an agreement not to display so-called offensive weapons.
-
Iran’s nuclear sites have not been damaged further, the U.N.’s atomic agency says.
-
‘We couldn’t breathe’: An Israeli city wakes up to carnage.
Petah Tikva, in central Israel, suffered some of the worst damage after Iran fired a huge wave of ballistic missiles overnight.
-
What Is Iran’s Quds Force?
The group is one of the most powerful and shadowy arms of Iran’s military, and it has long been on the front line of a shadow conflict with Israel.
-
Tens of Thousands of Stranded Israelis Face Weeks Away from Home.
The surprise attack on Iran has meant airspace is closed to civilian air traffic, leaving citizens stuck overseas indefinitely.
-
With No Clear Off-Ramp, Israel’s War With Iran May Last Weeks, Not Days.
Israel and Iran both have little incentive to stop and no obvious route to outright victory. Much depends on President Trump.
-
France’s Acute Palestinian Dilemma.
The French-Israeli relationship has always been turbulent, but the prospect that President Emmanuel Macron may recognize a Palestinian state has brought tension to a new level.
-
Iran-Israel Strikes Continue Into Fourth Day.
Iran’s deadly strike on Monday hit Israeli residential buildings and energy infrastructure, while Israel said it targeted the Quds Force military command centers.
-
Iranian Strikes Kill at Least 8 in Israel as Conflict Enters Fourth Day.
Dozens of others were injured overnight across Israel, the authorities said. Israel was striking military sites in Iran and the four-day-old conflict showed no sign of slowing.
-
Iranians turn to one another amid a dearth of official guidance.
-
Israel appears to have destroyed a refueling plane in Iran’s far east, satellite imagery and video shows.
-
Israel and Iran Trade Attacks as Toll From Conflict Mounts.
The path to diplomacy appeared to narrow after officials called off talks that had been set for Sunday between Tehran and Washington on Iran’s nuclear program.
-
Israel Launches New Round of Strikes at Iran.
A spokesman for Israel’s military said Israel was not ceasing its attacks on Iran “for a moment,” after the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps of Iran said that it would escalate attacks if Israel continued to carrying out strikes.
-
Iran’s air defenses were diminished in rounds of conflict, giving Israel greater aerial freedom.
-
Israel Diminished Iran’s Air Defenses in Rounds of Strikes.
Since last year, Israel forces have repeatedly hit Iran’s defenses. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that Israel had worked to “peel off the layers of protection” of Iranian defenses.
-
As Bombs Land in Israel and Iran, New Yorkers Fear for Their Loved Ones.
The conflict, the most intense fighting between the two countries in decades, has been met in the United States with feelings of “frustration and helplessness,” as well as heartbreak.
-
‘Life Feels Like It Is on Hold’: Some Iranians Brace for a Long Fight.
Some Iranian citizens’ early hopes that the conflict would be short-lived were giving way to fear that the violence will not end soon.
-
In Bat Yam, south of Tel Aviv, Iran’s missile barrages killed at least six people.
Most of those confirmed dead were women and children, according to the authorities, although they have yet to name the victims publicly.
-
Who is the new head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps?
-
Israel bombs Yemen, targeting a top Houthi military leader.
-
Diplomacy With Iran Is Damaged, Not Dead.
The push to do a deal on the country’s nuclear program could be revived, even after the Israeli strikes scuppered the latest round of talks.
-
Israel’s Attack in Iran Echoes Its Strategy Against Hezbollah.
Israel decimated the group’s leadership last fall and degraded its military capabilities. Can the same strategy work against a far more powerful foe?
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Even as Israel Blitzes Tehran, It Fears Iran’s Destructive Missiles.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel presented Iran’s sophisticated ballistic missiles as a critical threat to Israel’s survival.
-
Two Major Energy Facilities in Tehran Hit in Israeli Strikes.
Across Iran’s capital, flames and smoke covered the sky.
-
Putin condemns Israel’s attack in call with Trump and offers to mediate.
-
‘I Was Afraid I’d Die’: Iran’s Missiles Rained Down on Tel Aviv.
At least three people were killed and scores were wounded during an aerial battle over Tel Aviv, as Iranian missiles rained down and Israeli rockets attempted to intercept them.
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‘I was afraid I’d die.’ Iran’s missiles rain down on Tel Aviv and its suburbs.
At least three people were killed and scores were wounded during an aerial battle over Tel Aviv, as Iranian missiles rained down and Israeli rockets attempted to intercept them.
-
Israel Expands Attack to Include Iran’s Oil and Gas Industry.
Iran has been battling an acute energy crisis for months because of gas shortages, and repairing any damage would both be costly and take significant time.
-
Defying Calls for De-Escalation, Israel and Iran Exchange Deadly Fire.
As Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to fight “as long as it takes,” Iran fired missiles at Israel, and Israeli warplanes attacked air defenses around Tehran.
-
First Ukraine, Now Israel: Drone Smuggling Is Potent New War Weapon.
Launching weapons from within their territory forces adversaries to look not only outward but also inside for threats, one expert said.
-
What’s Going On in the Middle East?
In sweeping attacks that started Friday, Israel struck at the regime in Tehran, hitting Iranian nuclear and military assets. Iran retaliated with barrages of ballistic missiles and drones. It is the most intense fighting in decades between the two heavily armed countries. To understand what’s happening in the region, Katrin Bennhold, a New York Times senior writer, spoke with Patrick Kingsley, the Jerusalem bureau chief.
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Gazans Worry Israel-Iran Conflict Will Shift World’s Attention From Their Plight.
While Israel and Iran trade attacks, Palestinians in Gaza have been struggling to find food, connect to the internet and survive airstrikes.
-
Conference on Palestinian Statehood Postponed Amid Israel-Iran Fighting.
President Emmanuel Macron of France said the exchange of strikes between Israel and Iran had made it impossible.
-
Israel Takes Aim at Iran’s Capital in 2nd Day of Strikes.
Israel targeted a major airport in the capital used for both military and civilian purposes, while Iran attacked Israel with waves of ballistic missiles.
-
The airspace closings over Iran and Israel have affected thousands of flights.
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The West Bank is in the firing line without shelters or air-raid sirens.
-
Will the U.S. and Iran Meet for More Nuclear Talks?
The two sides were due to meet for a sixth round of negotiations on Sunday. Tehran suggested that it had not yet decided whether to participate, given Israel’s attack on its nuclear infrastructure.
-
How the Israel-Iran Conflict Could Spiral Into More Turmoil.
Israel’s leader and President Trump appeared to bet they can persevere, but other world leaders warned of unintended outcomes in a volatile region.
-
A Miscalculation by Iran Led to Israeli Strikes’ Extensive Toll, Officials Say.
Interviews with half a dozen senior Iranian officials show that they were not expecting Israel to strike before another round of talks.
-
In one underground bomb shelter, Israelis huddle, and wait.
Dozens of Israelis hurried to safety when a barrage of Iranian missiles penetrated Israel’s skies
-
Iranians Describe Israel’s Attacks in Voice Memos and Calls.
Iranians recalled scenes of confusion and fear, explosions in the night and how they, their friends and neighbors experienced Israel’s widespread attacks.
-
Iran Launches Retaliatory Strikes Against Israel.
Iran fired ballistic missiles that struck at least seven sites around Tel Aviv on Friday night, injuring dozens of Israelis. The move was a retaliation to the Israeli attacks on Iranian nuclear sites and military leaders.
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Israel destroyed part of Iran’s premier weapons facility, the head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog said.
-
In a diplomatic scramble, world leaders urge restraint between Israel and Iran.
-
Iran Retaliates and Israel Vows More Strikes After Devastating Attack.
Waves of Israeli airstrikes hit two nuclear enrichment sites, multiple military bases, and military scientists and commanders. Iran replied with a barrage of missiles and drones.
-
How Does Israel Defend Against Iran’s Missiles?
Iran launched dozens of missiles on Friday and hit several sites in Israel, after waves of Israeli strikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities and military leaders.
-
How is Israel protecting its critical sites from Iranian retaliation?
-
Israel’s Strikes on Iran Divide Congress, Drawing Praise and Concern.
Republicans and some Democrats offered strong support for Israel’s move, but many Democrats called for de-escalation and warned of the consequences of a broader war.
-
At a Weak Moment, Iran Weighs Difficult Options in Responding to Israel.
An aggressive counterattack risks escalation. But giving in to U.S. and Israeli demands is an unlikely alternative.
-
Israel’s next target is Fordo, a nuclear site hidden in a mountain.
-
The U.S. is positioning warships to help protect Israel and American forces from Iranian strikes.
-
Israel’s Allies Voice Less Support and More Concern After Latest Attack on Iran.
The reaction was noticeably different on Friday than it was after the last time Israel attacked Iran, when several countries provided backup and resources.
-
Mideast Tense as Long Anticipated Israel-Iran Conflict Sinks Hopes for Détente.
Israel’s attacks on Iran renewed fears of war between the countries and immediately threatened the region’s economy.
-
Striking the Heart of the Iranian Regime, Netanyahu Looks to His Legacy.
Israel has long fought a shadow war with Iran while avoiding all-out conflict. Now Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is risking it all in pursuit of a conclusive victory.
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An extensive Israeli intelligence effort underpinned the Iran strikes.
-
Israeli Strikes Targeted Some of Iran’s Most Important Nuclear Facilities.
Iran’s nuclear centers are spread across the country. Here are the sites Israel appears to have attacked.
-
Trump Says Iran ‘Must Make a Deal, Before There Is Nothing Left’
In his first public comments on the Israeli strikes against Iran, the U.S. president said Tehran had brought the destruction on itself and must continue nuclear talks.
-
Israel’s Strike on Iran Comes at a Moment of Weakness for Iran’s Proxies.
Iran’s “Axis of Resistance,” the network of militias it has fostered in the Middle East to help it fight Israel, has become seriously degraded, experts say.
-
With Iranian drones on the way, Jerusalem residents rush out to shop.
-
Residents of Tehran Awake to Devastation.
After a terrifying night filled with loud explosions, long lines were forming at gas stations and grocery stores were filling up as Iranians prepared uncertain times.
-
Israel Strikes Iran.
Smoke billowed from buildings and a nuclear-enrichment site in Iran as Israel launched an assault on the country to stymie its nuclear program.
-
Israel’s Strikes on Iran’s Nuclear Program: Maps and Photos.
The Israeli military said it struck Iran early on Friday morning, attacking dozens of targets, including nuclear sites, and killing top Iranian military officials and scientists.
-
These Are the Top Iranian Generals and Scientists Killed by Israel.
Maj. Gen. Mohammad Bagheri, the chief of staff of Iran’s armed forces, was the most senior leader among the dead, according to Iranian state media.
-
Israel’s Ambition: Destroy the Heart of Iran’s Nuclear Program.
It may take days, or weeks, to assess how far Israel has set back Iran’s atomic capabilities.
-
Israel Killed Iran’s Top Chain of Command in One Night.
The Israeli strikes killed at least three of Iran’s top military commanders, as well as nuclear scientists and other leadership figures.
-
U.S. Says It Was Not Involved in Israeli Strikes on Iran.
President Trump has said he would like to negotiate a deal with Tehran over its nuclear program but had also acknowledged that Israel might attack Iran first.
-
Netanyahu says fighting with Iran will continue as long as Israel deems necessary.
-
Netanyahu Says It Will Fight Iran as Long as Necessary.
Israel hit nuclear facilities, air defense batteries, and killed top military officials and scientists.
-
What to Know About Israel’s Strikes on Iran’s Nuclear Program.
Israel’s military struck Tehran and other targets early Friday morning, raising fears of a broader war. The U.S. said it was not involved in the strikes.
-
After striking Iran, Israel braces for retaliation.
-
Why Israel May Be Considering an Attack on Iran.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to prevent Tehran, “one way or the other,” from building a nuclear bomb.
-
U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem Braces for Possible Israeli Strike on Iran.
The diplomatic mission restricted the movement of employees and their families a day after the United States withdrew diplomats from Iraq.
-
U.N. Watchdog Rules That Iran Is Not Complying With Nuclear Obligations.
The International Atomic Energy Agency decision comes as American and European officials say they believe that Israel is preparing to launch a military attack on Iran.
-
Gaza Aid Group Says Hamas Attacked Its Palestinian Workers.
The group, which has been harshly criticized by the U.N. and other aid providers, said at least five people had died in an attack on one of its buses.
-
Israel Says It Recovered the Remains of Two Hostages in Gaza.
Yair Yaakov was kidnapped by Islamic Jihad in the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks on Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. The other hostage will be named later, the Israeli military said.
-
Inside the Struggle to Find Food in Gaza.
Aid agencies say Gaza faces the threat of widespread starvation in the wake of the 80-day Israeli blockade on food deliveries that ended in mid-May. Two young Gazans, Salem Madhat Alaydi and Aya Ehab Zaid, describe what it is like to fight hunger.
-
Ambulance Crew and Photographer Among Latest Casualties in Gaza.
Three paramedics and a photographer with them were killed late Monday in northern Gaza. The Israeli military said it was reviewing claims by health authorities in Gaza that the crew was killed in an Israeli strike while responding to an earlier incident.
-
U.S. Ambassador to Israel Questions Policy on Palestinian State.
The envoy, Mike Huckabee, said in media interviews that “Muslim countries” should build a Palestinian state on their territory, which would be a sharp departure from decades of U.S. foreign policy.
-
Netanyahu Under Pressure as Ultra-Orthodox Parties Threaten to Dissolve Parliament.
The Israeli prime minister’s coalition partners may back an opposition motion over rules that exempt religious students from serving in the military.
-
Israel Deports Greta Thunberg After Intercepting Gaza Aid Boat.
The Israeli Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday that it would deport four activists who were detained aboard an aid ship bound for Gaza, including the environmental campaigner Greta Thunberg.
-
Palestinian Authority President Says Hamas Must Exit Gaza.
Mahmoud Abbas gave assurances to President Emmanuel Macron of France, who has set conditions for possible recognition of a Palestinian state at a U.N. conference next week.
New York
-
Who Really Invented Basketball?
The official story is that Dr. James Naismith invented basketball in Springfield, Mass., in 1891. But what about the teenager tossing cabbages in upstate New York a year earlier?
-
Bernie Sanders Will Endorse Zohran Mamdani for N.Y.C. Mayor.
Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont will back Mr. Mamdani, joining Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in endorsing the front-runner of progressives.
-
Why a Teacher of the Year Is Giving His Prize Money Away.
Alhassan Susso, who teaches in the Bronx, is funding a teaching prize in Gambia, his home country, after the State Department canceled a grant program.
-
A Senator’s Fall From Grace Ends in a Grim Federal Lockup.
For decades, Robert Menendez, 71, was one of New Jersey’s most influential Democrats. He is expected to start serving an 11-year sentence on Tuesday.
-
They Said She Was Home-Schooled. She Said She Was Locked in a Dog Crate.
A teenage girl fled her home last month after what she said was years of abuse. Prosecutors called what had happened to her “beyond heinous.”
-
Banned From YouTube, but Welcomed by Eric Adams at Gracie Mansion.
Mayor Adams did an hourlong interview with Sneako, a streamer who has made remarks many consider antisemitic. The conservative influencer Amber Rose was also present.
-
Negotiation or Capitulation? How Columbia Got Off Trump’s Hot Seat.
The university has largely complied with the administration’s demands, but has adjusted them in meaningful ways. One department offers a window into that effort.
-
Mamdani and Blake Will Cross-Endorse in N.Y.C. Mayor’s Race.
Zohran Mamdani, a front-runner in the New York City mayor’s race, will announce a second cross-endorsement with Michael Blake, a former state lawmaker.
-
Curtain Call for Arts Group at Landmark Church?
A group backed by Mark Ruffalo and other celebrities faces eviction from West Park Presbyterian Church, which may be replaced by luxury housing.
-
2 of 4 Men Who Escaped From Immigration Detention Center Are Caught.
The men had been on the lam for three days after breaking out of the Delaney Hall Detention Center in Newark.
-
Cuomo and Mamdani Vie for Support as Early Voters Flock to the Polls.
Former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and Zohran Mamdani, the two front-runners in the Democratic mayoral primary in New York City, delivered closing-stage speeches.
-
What New York City Apartment Hunters Can’t Live Without.
A punishing housing market has conditioned some people to have low expectations, but others aren’t afraid to be demanding.
-
‘I Had Only Gone a Few Blocks When It Started to Drizzle’
Betting against rain in Forest Hills, unusual pets in Central Park and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
-
The ’70s Performance Artist Who Became a Hero to ‘Garbage Men’
A new documentary explores the life and work of Mierle Laderman Ukeles, who compared the indignities suffered by women to those endured by sanitation workers, forced to clean up messes they didn’t make.
-
Inside the Tumult That Led 4 Men to Escape from a Migrant Facility.
Conditions had been deteriorating at Delaney Hall in Newark for days. Detainees complained about erratic meals and crowded conditions. Then their frustrations boiled over.
-
How a Sneaker Designer Spends His Day Transforming Nikes.
Andy Martinez, founder of the shoe brand &e, goes running with friends before scouring New York City thrift shops for the coolest cowboy boots.
-
Former Cuomo Campaign Adviser Led Chinese State Oil Company.
Larry He, who served as Mr. Cuomo’s Asian outreach director, held senior posts at a multibillion-dollar firm owned by China but omitted the experience from his résumé.
-
Public Defender Is Charged With Smuggling THC-Laced Paper Into Rikers.
Bernardo Caceres was at New York City’s jail complex to meet with a client when an envelope he had drew the attention of a Correction Department dog, officials said.
-
Judge Blocks ICE Plan to Open Rikers Office Indefinitely.
The decision is a blow to Mayor Eric Adams, who sought to help the Trump administration expand its immigration crackdown.
-
Bloomberg Gives $5 Million to Pro-Cuomo Super PAC as Primary Nears.
The contribution by Michael R. Bloomberg is the largest to a super PAC in the New York City mayor’s race this year and follows his endorsement of Andrew M. Cuomo for mayor.
-
10 Questions With Bill de Blasio About Andrew Cuomo’s Run for Mayor.
Former Mayor Bill de Blasio said in a searing interview that his political nemesis, Andrew M. Cuomo, should not be mayor of New York City.
-
Andrew Cuomo for Mayor? Bill de Blasio Has Thoughts, None of Them Good.
In a candid interview, former Mayor Bill de Blasio strenuously argued that former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo should not be elected to lead New York City: “He is a vindictive person,” Mr. de Blasio said.
-
Ex-New York Assembly Candidate Charged With Campaign Finance Fraud.
Dao Yin was charged after a New York Times investigation revealed that he reported receiving campaign contributions from people who said they had not made them.
-
Mamdani and Lander Will Cross-Endorse Each Other in N.Y.C. Mayor’s Race.
Zohran Mamdani and Brad Lander, the two leading progressive candidates in the race, hope their partnership will help them leverage the ranked-choice voting system to defeat Andrew M. Cuomo.
-
ICE Says It Has No Immediate Plans to Release Mahmoud Khalil.
A federal judge ruled this week that the government cannot hold the Columbia University graduate under the rarely invoked law it used to detain him.
-
These Robots Do Windows.
Ozmo, a system for washing windows, is safer and faster than humans, its company president says.
-
10 Questions With Zellnor Myrie.
Zellnor Myrie, a state senator from Brooklyn who is running for mayor, visited The New York Times for an interview.
-
In N.Y.C. Mayor’s Race, Top Democrats Take On Trump and Their Own Party.
The primary has taken on national implications, with the top two candidates tapping into Democratic voters’ hunger for a fight.
-
How an Exonerated Man Lost the Chance to Tell His Story.
Timothy Mucciante, a former lawyer convicted of fraud, helped exonerate Anthony Broadwater of rape in 2021. Soon after, their friendship fell apart.
-
Inside the Jury Room at the Weinstein Trial, Rancor and Recrimination.
As the panelists deliberated over whether the former Hollywood mogul should be convicted of sex crimes for a second time in Manhattan, accusations began to fly.
-
5 Takeaways From the Democrats’ Final N.Y.C. Mayoral Debate.
The two front-runners in the New York City mayor’s race, Andrew M. Cuomo and Zohran Mamdani, traded barbs over their records, immigration and a host of other issues.
-
Law Enforcement Officers Respond to Reports of Unrest at Migrant Facility.
Detainees at Delaney Hall in Newark had complained about meager amounts of food and water over the past day.
-
At Debate, Cuomo Says Trump ‘Cannot Win a Fight’ With Him on Immigration.
As Democratic mayoral candidates vowed to protect New York’s immigrants, Brad Lander, the city comptroller, confronted former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo over his use of the term “illegal immigrants.”
-
New York Police to Pay $1 Million to Settle Discrimination Case.
Two plaintiffs had accused the police of systemic discrimination against victims of sexual assault.
-
‘I Have Never Had to Resign in Disgrace,’ Mamdani Tells Cuomo.
Zohran Mamdani sought to draw a sharp distinction between himself and the former New York governor as the two front-runners traded barbed criticisms early in the mayoral debate.
-
Michael Blake and Jessica Ramos won’t be at the debate. Here’s why.
-
As they highlight affordability agendas, candidates will focus on what can be done quickly.
-
Adrienne Adams Will Be the Only Woman Onstage at the Mayoral Debate.
Ms. Adams, the City Council speaker, is running on a platform of competence without drama. (And no, she is not related to Mayor Eric Adams.)
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The primary has narrowed into a two-person race.
-
Trump Administration Sues New York Over Law Barring ICE From Courthouses.
State lawmakers passed the ban in 2020 when President Trump in his first term escalated arrests of undocumented immigrants at state and local courts.
-
Father Charged in Death of Boy, 2, Found in River Under an N.Y.C. Bridge.
On Wednesday, police divers pulled the body of Montrell Williams from the East River.
-
Cuomo and Mamdani Trade Attacks Over Trump Ahead of Debate.
The two front-runners in the New York City mayor’s race are using President Trump and the volatile immigration protests in Los Angeles as late-stage campaign issues.
-
For the Sheep of Governors Island, a Final New York Summer.
The five animals are back for a fifth season to munch on invasive species, but they won’t be needed next year.
-
10 Questions With Scott Stringer.
Scott Stringer, the former New York City comptroller who is running for mayor, visited The New York Times for an interview.
-
After a Wild Day in Court, Weinstein Jurors Will Resume Deliberations.
On Wednesday, the jury convicted Harvey Weinstein of one felony sex crime. The judge sent jurors home to cool off after their discussions devolved into threats and yelling.
-
Inside a Courthouse, Chaos and Tears as Trump Accelerates Deportations.
Immigration courtrooms in New York City have emerged as a flashpoint, with masked agents making surprise arrests of immigrants who have appeared for routine hearings and check-ins.
-
Mamdani’s Delicate Quest to Become New York City’s First Muslim Mayor.
As he leans into his Muslim faith, Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani’s positions on the Israel-Gaza war have drawn criticism from across the political spectrum.
-
Cuomo Wins Endorsement From a Former Governor Who Once Backed Adams.
Andrew M. Cuomo was backed on Wednesday by former Gov. David Paterson, a former rival who is now an ally in Mr. Cuomo’s bid to become mayor of New York City.
-
Scheme to Take Torture Victim’s Crypto Went Back Months, Prosecutors Say.
Two cryptocurrency investors met three times with the victim, a longtime friend, demanding his electronic devices and the passkey to an account worth millions of dollars.
-
Judge Opens Door to Releasing Mahmoud Khalil as Soon as This Week.
Mr. Khalil, a legal permanent resident, has been held in Louisiana for more than three months. The judge suggested he could be released as early as Friday unless the government successfully appeals.
-
Jury Convicts Weinstein in Second New York Sex Crimes Trial.
The conviction, on a charge of first-degree criminal sexual act, was handed down in a mixed verdict that acquitted Harvey Weinstein of a second count of the same crime.
-
Why the case against Weinstein was relatively narrow.
-
Trump Fights to Move Appeal of Hush-Money Conviction to Federal Court.
The president’s lawyers argued that a Supreme Court ruling on presidential immunity justified moving an appeal of his conviction in Manhattan to U.S. jurisdiction.
-
Jurors weighed Weinstein’s fate in a changed climate.
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Jury in Weinstein Trial Was Ordered to Cool Down Amid Shouting and Threats.
Harvey Weinstein said infighting in the jury was denying him a fair trial.
-
A Timeline of the Harvey Weinstein Case.
A model reported to the police in 2015 that the producer had groped her. Allegations of sexual misconduct piled up in the ensuing years.
-
After N.Y. Verdict, Weinstein’s Prior California Conviction Still Stands.
Harvey Weinstein was convicted of sex crimes in Los Angeles in 2022 and sentenced to 16 years in prison. His lawyer has promised to appeal.
-
The trial required witnesses to repeat harrowing testimony.
-
Weinstein’s Declining Health Loomed Over His Second Trial.
Harvey Weinstein, once an imposing force in Hollywood, has been in poor health in recent years, according to his lawyers.
-
Founder of N.Y.C. Public Defender Office Is Charged With Fraud.
Lori Zeno, who helped start the Queens Defenders, and her husband were accused of taking money from the organization for luxury vacations and a penthouse apartment.
-
Tourists on the Tram? Roosevelt Islanders Are Fed Up.
Social media attention has brought sightseers to the tram, creating long waits for residents who take the tram to and from home.
-
10 Questions With Brad Lander.
Brad Lander, the New York City comptroller who is running for mayor, visited The New York Times for an interview.
-
Republicans Prep for an All-Out Race to Flip New Jersey, With Trump’s Help.
Democrats, on their heels after President Trump’s victory, see the state as the “perfect place to counterpunch.”
-
She Relishes Being Trump’s Nemesis. Now He Is Out for Revenge.
Letitia James, the New York attorney general, won a fraud judgment against President Trump’s business and has challenged his policies in court. Now she is a target of his Justice Department.
-
Mikie Sherrill Wins the Democratic Primary for Governor of New Jersey.
Ms. Sherrill, the only woman in a six-candidate race for the Democratic nomination, emphasized her service as a U.S. Navy helicopter pilot.
-
With Trump’s Help, Jack Ciattarelli Wins G.O.P. Nomination for Governor.
Mr. Ciattarelli, a former state assemblyman, is running his third campaign for governor of New Jersey.
-
Michael Bloomberg Endorses Andrew Cuomo for Mayor.
Former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg is backing former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo for mayor of New York City.
-
Adams Team Works Behind Scenes to Try to Sway Rabbis Against Cuomo.
An aide to Mayor Eric Adams is pushing Orthodox Jewish leaders to withhold endorsements in the New York City mayoral primary.
-
N.Y.P.D’s Cooperation With ICE Must Be Investigated, City Council Says.
The Council made reference to concerns about whether the police had violated New York’s sanctuary laws by sharing information with federal authorities.
-
Is Jessica Ramos Gone and Forgotten? Not Quite.
Plus: The second and final debate of the Democratic primary for mayor is Thursday, but Michael Blake, a breakout performer from the first, won’t be onstage.
Business
-
Kraft Heinz to Eliminate All Chemical Dyes Over Next 2 Years.
The maker of Kool-Aid and Jell-O announced the change two months after Robert F. Kennedy Jr. moved to ban artificial food dyes.
-
Fed’s ‘Wait and See’ Approach Is Intact as New Risks Cloud Economic Outlook.
The central bank is set to hold interest rates steady for its fourth straight meeting, a pause that could be extended through the summer.
-
China Is Unleashing a New Export Shock on the World.
As President Trump’s tariffs close off the U.S. market, Chinese goods are flooding countries from Southeast Asia to Europe to Latin America.
-
MyPillow Founder Mike Lindell Defamed Election Security Expert, Jury Finds.
He was ordered to pay $2.3 million in damages to Eric Coomer, a former employee of Dominion Voting Systems.
-
French Luxury Giant Kering Taps Auto Executive as Its New Leader.
The former chief executive of the carmaker Renault will replace Francois-Henri Pinault as the struggling company seeks a turnaround.
-
Oil Prices Drop, but Iran-Israel Conflict Raises Many Risks.
Industry experts are examining possible scenarios, including one in which the price of oil doubles this year.
-
Toymakers Team Up With Artists for Tariff-Proof Toys.
Seeking adult fans with money to spend, companies like Mattel and Lego are working with artists to make exclusive — and expensive — versions of their products.
-
Stocks Trade Cautiously as Investors Watch Oil Prices.
As Israel and Iran exchanged more attacks, stock markets mostly rose even as worries remained about possible oil supply interruptions.
-
An Eighth-Generation Oyster Farmer Sees Hope in Britain’s Trade Deal.
Brexit had complicated many of Britain’s food exports to Europe. A new trade deal between the U.K. and the E.U. could make them easier, including for shellfish farmers.
-
How a Tiny Community Got Caught Up in Trump’s Attacks on Canada.
The enclave of Point Roberts, Wash., once thrived with a mix of Americans and Canadians. Now the border checks are a hassle, the community is isolated and businesses are withering.
-
How to Draw Down Your Retirement Savings When the Markets Are Gyrating.
Savers with accounts like 401(k)s and I.R.A.s are required to make withdrawals starting at a certain age. Here’s how to handle that during an unpredictable stock market.
-
A Town’s Single Largest Taxpayer Is Also Its Biggest Headache.
An empty shell for years, the mall in Lanesborough, Mass., shows how difficult it is to redevelop malls in smaller towns.
-
Iran’s Vital Oil Industry Is Vulnerable in an Escalating Conflict.
The country’s exports mostly come from Kharg Island in the Persian Gulf. But Israel’s energy facilities are also at risk.
-
Wait, People Are Bringing Their Whole Family to Job Interviews?
And kicking off their shoes? Plus, when it’s OK to correct your employees’ grammar.
-
Air India’s New Owners Were Trying to Revamp Carrier Before Crash.
Management installed by the Tata Group had spent three years struggling to undo a reputation for shoddy operations earned during decades of state ownership.
-
U.S. Steel and Nippon Steel Say Their ‘Partnership’ Is Sealed.
The companies said they had entered into an agreement with the U.S. government to alleviate any national security concerns.
-
India Plane Crash: What Investigators Might Examine.
Investigators will examine many things, including what the pilots did and whether critical plane systems worked as they are supposed to.
-
What’s the Deal? Nippon’s Bid for U.S. Steel Becomes a Merger Mystery.
President Trump’s foray into the takeover could reshape the future of foreign investment in the United States.
-
Willkie Farr Partners, Unhappy With the Firm’s Deal With Trump, Depart for Cooley.
The departures are the latest fallout for firms that cut deals with President Trump to avoid executive orders.
-
There’s a Good Chance Crypto Is Spreading in Your Retirement Account.
Bitcoin and other digital assets are quietly growing in many nest eggs, with the encouragement of the Trump administration. Hidden risks are mounting, our columnist says.
-
New Fees on Floating Garages Are Trump’s Latest Effort to Revive U.S. Shipbuilding.
President Trump is targeting special foreign-made vessels called ro-ros, which transport vehicles, but the fees could raise the price of cars up to $300.
-
Chinese Labor Rights Group Led by Former Tiananmen Protest Leader Closes.
The China Labor Bulletin, founded by Han Dongfang, tracked factory closures and worker protests in China. It cited financial difficulties for its dissolution.
-
TPG, Sequoia and Others Invest $250 Million in Elon Musk’s xAI.
Two dozen venture capital firms and other investors are investing in xAI, the artificial intelligence and social media company.
-
F.T.C. May Put Unusual Condition on Ad Mega Merger: No Boycotting.
The Federal Trade Commission is considering restrictions on Omnicom and Interpublic to prevent the combined company from refusing to place ads on platforms for political reasons.
-
What Caused the Air India Crash? Experts Study Video of Plane’s Descent.
Safety experts said investigators would be looking at why and how the plane started descending during its take off.
-
Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner Raised Safety Concerns but Had Never Crashed Before.
There are more than 1,100 of the jets in service today. Air India flies nearly three dozen of them.
-
Boeing 787 Crash Brings Fresh Scrutiny to Plane Maker’s Safety Record.
The accident happened just weeks after the company cut a deal with the U.S. government to avoid taking criminal responsibility for a pair of deadly crashes in 2018 and 2019.
-
Charging Electric Cars, a Bane of Their Owners, May Be Improving.
It is becoming easier to find fast chargers for electric vehicles, and they are more likely to work — and not just for Teslas.
-
How Washington Has Tried to Control China’s Tech.
Under three presidential administrations, officials in Washington have used export controls to hold back China’s access to advanced technology.
-
The House’s Policy Bill Would Lose Money. Could Trump’s Tariffs Replace It?
The short answer is probably not, according to multiple forecasters.
-
Britain Allocates Hundreds of Billions to Bolster Its Economy.
Rachel Reeves, the chancellor of the Exchequer, broke down public spending plans, including more money for the military, public transport and affordable housing.
-
U.S. Inflation Remains Muted, With Limited Effects From Tariffs.
The Consumer Price Index rose 2.4 percent in May, from a year ago, a reading that reflects only the initial impact of President Trump’s tariffs.
-
China Walks a Line in U.S. Trade Talks, Trying Not to Overplay Its Hand.
China has leverage it can use by limiting access to its rare earth supplies, but it does not want to sacrifice its reputation as a reliable supplier.
-
Musk Expresses ‘Regret’ Over His Criticisms of Trump.
President Trump and Elon Musk traded social media barbs last week. Mr. Trump has said that he has no interest in repairing the relationship with his former adviser.
-
To Shake Russian Gas, Germany Pushes to Ship It in From Anywhere Else.
The country, like others across Europe, is building more facilities to handle an increase in imports of liquefied natural gas, much of it from the United States.
-
Federal Court Agrees to Continue Trump’s Tariffs as Appeal Gets Underway.
The appeals court’s decision delivered an important but interim victory for the Trump administration.
-
23andMe Customers Did Not Expect Their DNA Data Would Be Sold, Lawsuit Claims.
The genetic-testing company, which collected DNA data from users, is for sale in bankruptcy court. Now, 27 states and the District of Columbia oppose selling the data without express consent.
-
Yale Is Rushing to Sell Billions in Private Equity Investments.
The university is selling multiple stakes in private equity funds as the industry struggles and President Trump targets Ivy-League Institutions.
DealBook
Economy
Energy & Environment
Media
-
It’s Official: Streaming Is Now the King of TV.
In May, more Americans watched television on streaming than on cable and network television combined, Nielsen said. It is the first time that has happened over a full month.
-
What Was Terry Moran Thinking?
In his first interview since losing his job at ABC News, the longtime TV correspondent, newly popular on Substack, says he does not regret his social media post criticizing the Trump administration.
-
‘How to Train Your Dragon’ Tops Box Office With $83 Million.
The movie had stronger-than-expected ticket sales over the weekend, becoming the third PG-rated, live-action hit in three months.
-
Fox News Hosts Gushed Over the Parade, With No Protests in Sight.
Cable networks covered President Trump’s Army parade on a busy day of protests, a political assassination and Middle East strikes. ABC, CBS and NBC aired other programming on their affiliates.
-
Trump’s Military Parade Is Designed for TV, but It Won’t Be on Every Channel.
A minor-league football championship game will air on ABC. Fox News, CNN and C-SPAN will carry the four-hour festivities live.
-
Washington Post Names Adam O’Neal as Opinion Editor.
Mr. O’Neal, a correspondent for The Economist, will be in charge of championing “personal liberties and free markets,” the section’s new direction laid out by Jeff Bezos.
-
Disney and Universal Sue A.I. Firm for Copyright Infringement.
The suit, against Midjourney, is the first time major Hollywood companies have sued over A.I.-generated images.
-
New York Times Names Co-Chief Restaurant Critics.
The pair, Ligaya Mishan and Tejal Rao, are part of an effort to expand starred restaurant reviews across the country, the company said.
-
ABC Says Terry Moran, Suspended for Social Media Posts, Will Not Return.
ABC News suspended Mr. Moran on Sunday after he wrote on X that Stephen Miller, the deputy White House chief of staff, was “a world-class hater.”
-
A Familiar On-Air Face Amid the L.A. Protests: Dr. Phil.
Oprah Winfrey’s psychologist sidekick made appearances before and after immigration raids, and interviewed President Trump’s border czar for his fledgling TV network.
-
Vanity Fair Names Mark Guiducci as Its Top Editor.
Mr. Guiducci, 36, fills a role recently vacated by Radhika Jones, who led the magazine for seven years.
Your Money
Technology
-
Lawmakers Demand Palantir Provide Information About U.S. Contracts.
Ten Democratic lawmakers sent a letter to the tech company this week asking about its expanding contracts under the Trump administration.
-
The Trumps Promote a New Crypto Venture: Bitcoin Mining.
The debut of American Bitcoin, a mining firm backed by Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., has heightened the ethical concerns swirling around the Trump presidency.
-
WhatsApp Introduces Ads in Its App.
They will appear in only one part of the Meta-owned messaging service, it said. The move is potentially lucrative, while raising questions about user privacy.
-
Meta Is Building a Superintelligence Lab. What Is That?
Mark Zuckerberg has reorganized his company’s ambitions around a hypothetical future that is suddenly the talk of Silicon Valley.
-
They Asked an A.I. Chatbot Questions. The Answers Sent Them Spiraling.
Generative A.I. chatbots are going down conspiratorial rabbit holes and endorsing wild, mystical belief systems. For some people, conversations with the technology can deeply distort reality.
-
Meta Invests $14.3 Billion in Scale AI to Kick-Start Superintelligence Lab.
Meta is making its first major minority investment in an outside company as it tries to catch up to a growing field of artificial intelligence rivals.
-
This A.I. Company Wants to Take Your Job.
Mechanize, a San Francisco start-up, is building artificial intelligence tools to automate white-collar jobs “as fast as possible.”
-
Los Angeles Protests Amplified by Influencers and Online Creators.
Creators such as Cam Higby, who is conservative, have sometimes outnumbered traditional media outlets at the immigration protests. Their posts have gone viral.
Personal Tech
Sports
Obituaries
-
Nina Kuscsik, Marathoner Who Broke Gender Barriers, Dies at 86.
Overcoming male resistance, she became the first woman to enter the New York City Marathon and the first official female winner of the Boston event.
-
Ralph J. Lamberti Jr., Former Staten Island Borough President, Dies at 90.
He served from 1984 to 1989, and sought to maintain checks and balances in city government to prevent against what he called “an imperial mayor.”
-
Beuford Smith, Photographer Who Chronicled Black Life, Dies at 89.
He was a prominent member of the Kamoinge Workshop, a collective that nurtured Black photographers at a time when they were marginalized by the mainstream.
-
Leonard A. Lauder, Philanthropist and Cosmetics Heir, Dies at 92.
He was best known for his success in business, notably the international beauty company he built with his mother, Estée Lauder. But he was also an influential art patron.
-
Norma Swenson, an Author of ‘Our Bodies, Ourselves,’ Dies at 93.
She was a proponent of natural childbirth when she joined the group that produced the candid guide to women’s health. It became a cultural touchstone and a global best seller.
-
Alex Polikoff, Who Won a Marathon Housing Segregation Case, Dies at 98.
He notched a victory in a Supreme Court decision against the City of Chicago in 1976. He then spent over 40 years making sure the ruling was enforced.
-
Joel Shapiro, Celebrated Post-Minimalist Sculptor, Dies at 83.
His stick-figure sculptures conveyed a surprising depth of emotion, hinting at the threat of imbalance. He also produced more than 30 large-scale commissions.
-
Marthe Cohn, a Wartime Jewish Nurse Who Spied for the French, Dies at 105.
Fluent in German and passing as an Aryan, she once crossed into Germany, uncovered Nazi military secrets and nursed a wounded, and deceived, SS officer.
-
Dara Birnbaum, 78, Dies; Video Was Her Medium and Her Message.
As early as the 1970s, she demonstrated that mass media was fair game as artistic material, and that its power could be turned against itself.
-
Sunjay Kapur, Businessman and Ex-Husband of Bollywood Star, Dies at 53.
Mr. Kapur, who died of a heart attack after playing in a polo match in England, was formerly married to the Bollywood star Karisma Kapoor.
-
Amanda Feilding, Eccentric Countess Who Backed Psychedelic Meds, Dies at 82.
She was ridiculed for drilling a hole in her skull to increase blood flow, but her foundation’s research into the therapeutic use of counterculture drugs proved visionary.
-
Enzo Staiola, Who Starred in ‘Bicycle Thieves’ as a Child, Dies at 85.
Discovered on the street in Rome, he had a brush with stardom when he was cast in what many consider one of the greatest films of all time.
-
John Wells, 64, Who Fled New York for the Solitude of the Desert, Dies.
A fashion photographer, he built a do-it-yourself life on 40 lonely acres in West Texas, living like a modern-day Thoreau and telling millions of his experience on a blog.
-
Beach Boys’ Brian Wilson Dies at 82.
Brian Wilson, leader and chief songwriter of The Beach Boys, wrote several hits in the 1960s, a musical counterpart to the myth of Southern California as paradise.
-
John L. Young, 89, Dies; Pioneered Posting Classified Documents Online.
His site, Cryptome, was a precursor to WikiLeaks, and in some ways bolder in its no-holds-barred approach to exposing government secrets.
-
Niede Guidon, 92, Archaeologist Who Preserved Prehistoric Rock Art, Dies.
Her work in Brazil challenged the prevailing theory of when humans first arrived in the Americas and led to the development of a forgotten corner of the country.
-
Barbara Holdridge, Whose Record Label Foretold Audiobooks, Dies at 95.
Beginning with a reading by Dylan Thomas, she and a friend found unlikely commercial success in the 1950s with recordings of famous writers reciting their work.
Americas
América Latina
Art & Design
Baseball
DealBook
Media
Music
-
Foday Musa Suso, 75, Dies; Ambitious Ambassador for West African Music.
A master of the kora who worked with Herbie Hancock and Philip Glass, his career was powered as much by experimentation as by reverence for tradition.
-
Arthur Hamilton, Who Wrote the Enduring ‘Cry Me a River,’ Dies at 98.
A hit for Julie London in 1955, it was later recorded by — among many others — Ella Fitzgerald, Barbra Streisand and Michael Bublé, who praised it for its “darkness.”
-
Wayne Lewis, Singer With the R&B Mainstay Atlantic Starr, Dies at 68.
The group reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1987 with the ballad “Always” and went on to leave a lasting impression on modern-day artists.
-
Rigmor Newman, Behind-the-Scenes Fixture of the Jazz World, Dies at 86.
She was a concert promoter, a nightclub impresario and the producer of an award-winning 1992 film about the Nicholas Brothers dance duo.
-
James Lowe, Rock Outsider With the Electric Prunes, Dies at 82.
His band’s output ranged from the 1966 psychedelic hit “I Had Too Much to Dream (Last Night)” to what he called a “Catholic Mass done in rock veneer.”
Television
Briefing
-
The Israel-Iran Conflict.
Israel doesn’t believe in diplomacy when it comes to Iran. But military intervention has its problems, too.
-
Tuesday Briefing.
A fifth day of attacks.
-
Israel Attacked Iran’s State TV.
Also, the suspect in the Minnesota killings could face the death penalty. Here’s the latest at the end of Monday.
-
Tuesday Briefing: Israel Attacked Iranian State TV.
Plus, China’s soft-power toy.
-
A Minnesota Manhunt Ends.
Plus, we look at the independence of Amy Coney Barrett.
-
Monday Briefing: Iran-Israel Conflict Continues.
Plus, the Dalai Lama’s succession.
-
Monday Briefing: Israel and Iran Traded Missile Strikes.
Plus, the Dalai Lama’s succession.
-
Sharing the Secrets of Travel.
Plus, the latest on the manhunt for the Minnesota gunman.
-
Israel and Iran’s Escalation.
Plus, Trump’s military parade, and some advice for finding calm in the chaos.
-
Iran Retaliated Against Israel With a Barrage of missiles.
Also, Washington prepares for a major military parade. Here’s the latest at the end of Friday.
-
Israel Attacks Iran.
Plus, we explain what to look for during Trump’s military parade.
-
The New York Times News Quiz, June 13, 2024.
Did you follow the news this week? Take our quiz to see how well you stack up with other Times readers.
-
Friday Briefing.
In a major attack, Israel has struck Iran’s nuclear program.
-
One Person Survived a Fiery Plane Crash in India.
Also, federal agents handcuffed a senator and forced him to the floor. Here’s the latest at the end of Thursday.
-
Friday Briefing: Air India Crash Killed More Than 260 People.
Plus, the pope’s diverse family tree.
-
Cuomo’s Comeback.
We explore the former governor’s campaign, the field of competitors and what it all means for Democrats.
-
Thursday Briefing.
Stepping away from a U.S.-China trade war.
-
Weinstein Was Convicted in His Retrial.
Also, the U.S. is planning to withdraw diplomats from Iraq. Here’s the latest at the end of Wednesday.
-
Thursday Briefing: A Look at the U.S.-China Trade Deal.
Plus, is A.I. coming for your job?
-
The Protests Spread.
In cities across the country, people are rebuking President Trump’s immigration policies.
-
Wednesday Briefing.
The deployment of troops to Los Angeles.
-
Hegseth Defended Troop Deployment to Los Angeles.
Also, a school shooting in Austria was among Europe’s worst. Here’s the latest at the end of Tuesday.
-
Wednesday Briefing: Why U.S. Troops Are in Los Angeles.
Plus, the travel writer’s dilemma.
Podcasts
The Daily
The Headlines
-
Trump Cuts G7 Trip Short Over Iran, and Senate Republicans Propose Steep Medicaid Cuts.
Plus, streaming’s TV takeover.
-
Manhunt Ends for Minnesota Suspect, and Israel-Iran Conflict Ramps Up.
Plus, Pope Leo’s hometown shout-out.
-
Israel’s Stunning Attack on Iran, and India Plane Crash Survivor Speaks.
Plus, Friday’s news quiz.
-
Passenger Plane Crashes in India, and Israel Appears Ready to Attack Iran.
Plus, remembering the Beach Boys’ Brian Wilson.
-
Protests Over Immigration Raids Spread, and Austria Reels From Rare School Shooting.
Plus, a big moment for K-pop fans.
Science
-
Bat Cave Footage Offers Clues to How Viruses Leap Between Species.
Video from a national park in Uganda depicted a parade of predatory species feeding on and dispersing fruit bats that are known natural reservoirs of infectious diseases.
-
To Protest Budget Cuts, Young Scientists Try Letters to the Editor.
Hundreds of graduate students are writing to their hometown newspapers to defend their research, as the Trump administration drastically reduces science funding.
-
Sotheby’s to Auction a Ceratosaurus, With Millions and More on the Line.
The 150-million-year-old specimen is valued at up to $6 million. Some paleontologists worry this auction and earlier ones are driving fossil market speculators.
-
What the Golden Ratio Says About Your Bellybutton.
The secret beauty in apples, stars and the center of you.
-
Radiation Risk From Israel’s Strikes on Iran Nuclear Sites Is Low, for Now.
The radiological threat from the targets of the earliest attacks are relatively minor.
-
Traveling the Cosmos With Carter Emmart, One Last Time.
For nearly three decades he has created mesmerizing planetarium shows at the American Museum of Natural History. But other galaxies await.
-
Shining a Light on the World of Tiny Proteins.
From viruses to humans, life makes microproteins that have evaded discovery until now.
-
Russian Scientist Released After Four Months in Federal Custody.
Kseniia Petrova, a Harvard researcher, still faces criminal charges for failing to declare scientific samples she was carrying in her suitcase.
-
People Can Be Identified by Breathing Patterns Alone, Scientists Find.
Every breath you take, they really may be watching you.
-
Google and U.S. Experts Join on A.I. Hurricane Forecasts.
The National Hurricane Center will experiment with the company’s DeepMind program to enhance the work of its expert meteorologists.
-
Early Humans Settled in Cities. Bedbugs Followed Them.
A new study suggests that bedbugs were the first urban pest, and their population thrived in that environment. For the bloodsucking insects, it’s been the perfect 13,000-year-long marriage.
-
This Elusive Antarctic Squid Was Seen for the First Time.
An expedition in the Southern Ocean captured video of a rare species of deep-sea cephalopod. Until now, it had been found only in fishing nets and in the bellies of seabirds.
-
First-Ever Images of Sun’s South Pole Released by European Mission.
Visuals from the European Space Agency’s Solar Orbiter reveal chaotic solar magnetism in the solar polar region. Even better images are expected in the years ahead.
Space & Cosmos
Climate
-
Is Fake Grass Safe? A Manufacturer Sues to Stop a Discussion.
Four experts were sued for defamation ahead of a seminar where they planned to talk about research into the potential health risks on playgrounds and sports fields nationwide.
-
Many Hoped Senate Republicans Would Save Clean Energy. They Mostly Didn’t.
A Senate tax package softens some blows imposed on renewables by a House version of the bill. But it still terminates many credits for clean power.
-
Pangolins Should Receive Endangered Protections, U.S. Officials Say.
The armored mammals are trafficked for their scales and meat.
-
Will Trump End the First Federal Heat Protections for Workers?
As workplace deaths from heat increase, OSHA will debate the future of the first federal rules to protect workers from extreme heat.
-
At U.N. Conference, Countries Inch Toward Ocean Protection Goal.
More than 20 new marine protected areas in coastal waters were announced at the third U.N. ocean conference this week. Experts say thousands more are needed.
-
National Parks Are Told to Delete Content That ‘Disparages Americans’
Internal documents reviewed by The New York Times say that “negative” information at parks and other national site must be removed or covered by Sept. 17.
-
How Is Extreme Heat Affecting Air Travel?
Hot weather influences aircraft performance. We asked experts what it means for safety.
-
Study Shows Mercury Levels in Arctic Wildlife Could Rise for Centuries.
Even as global emissions plateau, new research shows that wildlife in the Arctic is exposed to rising levels, posing a risk to those who eat it.
-
Head of FEMA Command Center Quits After Trump Says He’ll Phase Out the Agency.
The official, Jeremy Greenberg, was in charge of coordinating the national response to major disasters.
-
Soaring Temperatures Threaten Crops, So Scientists Are Looking to Alter the Plants.
Genetically altering crops may be key to helping them adapt to extreme temperatures. But shrinking funds and social acceptance stand in the way.
-
A Scandal-Plagued Meatpacking Giant Comes to the U.S. Stock Market.
JBS, the biggest meatpacker in the world, is set to go public on the New York Stock Exchange this week.
-
A G.O.P. Plan to Sell Public Land Is Back. This Time, It’s Millions of Acres.
Senate Republicans want to sell the land to build more housing in the West, but the idea is contentious even within their own party.
-
Submarines Are Hard to Detect. Climate Change Might Make It Even Harder.
Sound is the primary means of tracking subs in vast ocean expanses, and research shows that it’s behaving differently as the seas warm.
-
E.P.A. Axes Biden’s Climate and Pollution Limits on Power Plants.
Lee Zeldin, the E.P.A. administrator, said erasing regulations would produce jobs and lower electricity costs. He called efforts to fight climate change “a cult.”
-
World Bank Ends Its Ban on Funding Nuclear Power Projects.
The decision, a major reversal, could help poorer nations industrialize, cut planet-warming emissions and boost U.S. competitiveness on next-generation reactors.
-
Why Rooftop Solar Could Crash Under the G.O.P. Tax Bill.
Federal tax breaks have fueled a boom. The House bill would end that immediately.
-
Carbon Capture Comes Back Down to Earth.
Billions have been invested in technologies to remove carbon dioxide from the sky in recent years. But Trump’s policies have clouded the outlook.
-
Document Shows E.P.A. Plans to Loosen Limits on Mercury From Power Plants.
The agency plans to weaken limits on toxic emissions from power plants while also scrapping restrictions on planet-warming greenhouse gases.
The Upshot
Opinion
-
On Immigration, Trump Runs Into Reality.
The president changed his deportation policy last week. The result reflects an ad hoc compromise that governs U.S. immigration policy.
-
Scenes From the ‘No Kings’ Rallies and the Military Parade.
Readers reflect on the anti-Trump demonstrations and the military parade on Saturday. Also: Transgender troops.
-
Our Advice to Voters in a Vexing Race for New York Mayor.
New Yorkers deserve better than the status quo.
-
The Freedom Rides Museum Still Exists — For Now.
That it was even considered for sale should concern anyone who cares about preserving our history.
-
A Daunting Task for Democrats.
Readers respond to a column by David Brooks about the Democratic Party. Also: A litmus test for federal workers; principled Republicans.
-
Look at the Ukraine War to Understand Why Israel Struck Iran.
Israel’s imperative to set back Iran’s nuclear program became clearer after two events in 2022 and 2023.
-
Antisemitism Is an Urgent Problem. Too Many People Are Making Excuses.
Both the right and the left deserve blame for the rise in anti-Jewish hatred.
-
What International Students Bring to Campuses.
Readers respond to a guest essay about the effects of having foreign students at American universities.
-
What Political Story Would We Tell About a Mamdani Victory?
Four years ago, when Eric Adams was elected, it seemed to be a signal for Democratic politics. Here’s what a democratic socialist’s win could mean.
-
Dimming America’s Beacons to the World.
Readers respond to articles about setbacks to the Fulbright program and Voice of America. Also: Senator Alex Padilla, handcuffed.
-
13 Young Gen Z-ers on Whether America’s Best Days Are Behind It.
The group discuss early adulthood, Donald Trump, artificial intelligence and more.
-
Why Trump’s Immigration Crackdown Defines the Right.
A historian of conservatism explains what holds a fractious coalition together.
-
Will Trump Show Restraint in the Middle East?
Israel’s decision to strike Iran carries with it a lot of risks for the region and for the United States.
-
The Undermining of Science in America.
Readers respond to articles about the Trump administration’s assault on science. Also: The coming military parade in Washington.
-
The Biggest Issues Facing New York City Right Now.
From housing to public safety, if the city is going to be a better place to live, the next mayor must address these key issues.
-
Who Should Lead New York?
15 experts on the city picked the best mayoral candidate ahead of the Democratic primary.
-
The Changing Politics of Anti-Trump Protest.
Today’s anti-ICE, pro-immigration demonstrators are dragging the burden of how politics worked under Joe Biden’s presidency.
-
‘I Am Not Cowed’: Voices on the Protests.
Readers discuss the Los Angeles protests and the “No Kings” rallies to be held on Saturday. Also: Leaving the Republican Party; younger Democratic candidates.
-
Ocean Vuong on Becoming a Father to His Brother.
Three weeks after my mother died, my brother moved in with me. In our grief I emerged as a kind of father.
-
Let Us Praise Teachers, Not Devalue Them.
Readers respond to a guest essay about the essential role of teachers. Also: Standing up to President Trump; homeless boomers.
Op-Ed
-
How to Beat Back Trump on Trans Rights — and Much Else.
Representative Sarah McBride reckons with the trans rights movement’s shortcomings, and how to win hearts and minds through a politics of grace.
-
Trump Is Daring Us to Impeach Him Again.
There are many legitimate reasons to try Trump a third time. Don’t hold your breath.
-
Only Nonviolence Will Beat Trump.
What makes successful (or unsuccessful) protests.
-
This Bill Will Return Us to an Era of Economic Chaos.
America’s banking woes in the early 19th century illustrate what could happen if the Genius Act becomes law.
-
‘We’re Taking a Leap of Faith.’ 15 New Yorkers Assess the Candidates for Mayor.
One candidate stood out as a clear top choice.
-
Trump Has Reawakened the Resistance.
Huge protests dwarf the administration’s sad military parade.
-
The Smart Way for Trump to End the Israel-Iran War.
President Trump has a chance to create the best opportunity for stabilizing the Middle East in decades, if he is up to it.
-
Political Violence Is Rising. This Is What We Can Do to Stop It.
Bipartisan denunciations are surprisingly effective.
-
It’s Not Just Trump Voters. Both Parties Are in Denial.
The sociologist Arlie Hochschild studies Trump country. She explains why a decade of chaos still hasn’t shaken his base.
-
When Rights Erode for Some of Us, Something Corrodes in All of Us.
In Trump’s America, what is citizenship worth?
-
Our Bridges Are Old, Our Grid Is on the Fritz and Soon America Will Be Obsolete.
It’s not just the older infrastructure that’s in need of repair and replacement. It’s also the new systems the 21st century demands.
-
Charisma Rules the World.
And it has nothing to do with charm.
-
$4,785. That’s How Much It Costs to Be a Sports Fan Now.
The major sports leagues are destroying one of our few remaining sources of shared community.
-
Political Violence Came to Minnesota. It Didn’t Start There.
Unfortunately, Americans of all stripes are coming to see violence as a legitimate means of expressing dissent.
-
An American Fight With Mexico Won’t Go Well.
Deteriorating into a combative relationship with Mexico would almost certainly worsen problems over trade and cartels, and inflame further protests.
-
Millions of Americans Like Trump Better in Theory Than in Practice.
Why the president wins, loses and wins again.
-
Trump Wants You to Get Used to This.
The president wants to get Americans used to seeing the armed forces in a new light.
-
A Bold Idea to Raise the Birthrate: Make Parenting Less Torturous.
At least we know what’s definitely not working.
-
What My Dad Gave Me.
I think my dad thought that had he had boys, fatherhood would have been different.
-
China Revoked My Visa, and Came to Regret It.
Canceling the visas of Chinese students in the United States is a horrible idea.
-
Trump Is Not Winning in Los Angeles.
The polling is surprisingly clear on this.
-
Protest Is Underrated.
We can’t forget what protests are supposed to do: bring change over time.
-
A U.S. War With Iran Would Be a Catastrophe.
America must not get dragged into a war with Iran.
-
Why Do Dads Want to Be Gods When They Can Just Be Good Huggers?
Fatherhood should revolve around listening and accompanying, not teaching.
-
A New Story Is Emerging About Dementia.
The tragic narrative sounds different depending on who’s telling it.
-
Why the Euthanasia Slope Is Slippery.
Canada’s assisted suicide law should tell us something about the bill that New York’s Legislature just passed.
-
Israel Had the Courage to Do What Needed to Be Done.
All the other options have run their course.
-
How to Think About What’s Happening With Iran and Israel.
There are a number of factors to consider as we make sense of what’s happening with Iran and Israel — and the possibility for very good and very bad outcomes.
-
I Ran the L.A.P.D. I Know What Happens When Troops Are Sent to American Cities.
Dispatching troops risks escalation, tragic error and lasting damage to public confidence.
-
Progressives Need a Global Movement.
To counter the authoritarian threat, the left must develop a clear picture of the world it wants to create.
-
This Is How the Protests Could Break Trump’s Deportation Machine.
The protests are shining a light on what was once in the shadows.
-
Obama Isn’t Going to Save You.
We no longer have the country that made Obama possible.
-
9 Candidates, 5 Boroughs, 8 Million Handshakes.
Despite New York’s image as a center of wealth and power, the battle for its leadership felt intensely local, as though it were a small-town race.
-
The One Area Where Trump’s N.I.H. Cuts Might Actually Make Sense.
Health disparities research needs a reboot.
-
A Train Station Taught Me What Education Is For.
From any angle, Michigan Central Station is a revelation.
-
Inside Our Voters’ Guide to New York’s Democratic Primary.
We asked New Yorkers to rate the mayoral candidates. Here’s why.
-
Elizabeth Warren: Trump Is Right About This One Thing.
The debt ceiling is a political cudgel that serves no economic function. It’s time to abolish it.
-
Big Tech Is Finally Losing.
The courts are starting to rein in Big Tech.
-
Red-State Universities Will Get Hit by Trump’s Cuts, Too.
The president’s assault on academic research won’t affect just blue-state elites.
-
Trump’s Budget: Supercharged ICE, Vouchers and a Warming Planet.
Trump’s budget tells us three unhappy truths about America.
-
Trump Wants the Military to Be More Like Trump.
Donald Trump’s Fort Bragg speech was the latest in a string of high-profile efforts to reshape the military more in his own likeness.
-
Gen Z Is Barely Holding On to the American Dream.
They’re still clinging on, but at the bottom rung of the ladder.
-
Ehud Olmert on Israel’s Catastrophic War in Gaza.
The former prime minister of Israel discusses why he believes Israel’s war in Gaza can no longer be justified.
-
The Military May Find Itself in an Impossible Situation.
Law and ethics can be at odds.
-
It’s Code Red for Vaccines.
How to make sense of all the vaccine policy changes.
-
OpenAI Seems to Be Making a Very Familiar, Very Cynical Choice.
Wait for the part where they tell us they’re doing it for our sake.
-
Trump Wants to Be a Strongman, but He’s Actually a Weak Man.
He is still dangerous, though.
-
This Israeli Government Is a Danger to Jews Everywhere.
The price will be high if people don’t resist Netanyahu’s ugly, nihilistic Gaza policy.
-
Three Opinion Writers on the L.A. Protests and Trump’s Spectacle of Control.
Michelle Cottle, David French and Tressie McMillan Cottom dissect Trump’s reach for power.
-
Trump’s Flawed Message to Los Angeles.
If you want to radicalize a population, there is no faster way than to use disproportionate force against civilians.
Arts
-
The Fantasy of Breaching the Tech Bro’s Retreat.
We cannot escape the influence of the technological elite — and now, in tales like ‘Mountainhead” and “Careless People,” we imagine that they cannot escape us.
-
Generation Alpha’s FarmVille Is Growing Like Crazy in Roblox.
On Saturday, more than 16 million people were planting seeds and collecting exotic pets within Grow a Garden at the same time. Many were not yet teenagers.
-
150 Years of Scribbles at the Art Students League.
Long a center of artistic development for New Yorkers big and small, the League celebrates its sesquicentenary this year with a dream-themed ball.
-
At National History Day, Students Get Competitive About the Past.
Americans are fighting about history. This past week, thousands of students from across the country came together to celebrate it.
-
A Mecca for Black History Turns 100.
The New York Public Library’s Schomburg Center celebrates its beginnings, at a moment when Black history is under attack.
-
Lovable Misfits Make an Unfinished Game So Satisfying.
The first chapter of Deltarune was released in 2018, and there are still more to come. But speeding to a quick ending is not the point.
-
Mario Kart World’s Journeys Are Smooth and Unremarkable.
There’s an exciting new endurance race that combines several tracks and eliminates drivers after each checkpoint. But it’s a racing world without any oil drips or skid marks.
-
To Stoke Soccer Fans, Men in Blazers Will Host Shows at World Cup Sites.
Borrowing a page from ESPN’s “College GameDay,” the podcast company will have live pregame coverage from eight U.S. host cities during the 2026 World Cup.
Art & Design
-
Louvre Staff’s Work Stoppage Shutters Museum for Hours.
Visitors were left stranded outside in Paris on Monday after a monthly union meeting led to a wildcat strike over workplace conditions and crowding.
-
Crowning New York’s Top ‘Pigeon’
Thousands of people gathered on the High Line on Saturday for Pigeon Fest, inspired by an artist’s sculpture and an appreciation for the city’s most resilient birds.
-
A Decade of Bruising Labor. A 6-Mile Work of Land Art.
Andy Goldsworthy, the British land artist, said he may never make a work like “Hanging Stones” again.
-
Smithsonian Museum Director Trump Said He Fired Decides to Step Down.
The Smithsonian has said it retains power over personnel decisions, but Kim Sajet, the longtime director of the National Portrait Gallery, has decided to leave anyway.
-
Can Video Art Bring Young Audiences to Galleries? A New Venue Hopes So.
A museum veteran and a financier are planning Canyon, an organization on the Lower East Side that will focus on video, audio and performance art when it opens next year.
-
Stolen From Buddhist Monks, Sacred Painting Is Returned by Chicago Museum.
Korean officials discovered the painting in the Smart Museum’s collection at the University of Chicago. It was stolen from a temple nearly 35 years ago.
-
Diane Arbus, Everything Everywhere All at Once.
How do you show 450 Arbus photos? In a maze of an exhibit at the Park Avenue Armory. Our critic suggests taking them on one at a time.
-
Documenting Life on Both Sides of the South African Color Line.
David Goldblatt photographed the societal warping that apartheid inflicted, drawn to “the quiet and commonplace where nothing ‘happened’ and yet all was contained.”
-
The Thrilling Evidence of Jane Austen’s Imagination.
Spirited (and gossipy) letters and manuscripts at the Morgan Library and Museum puncture myths about the writer’s rise to literary fame.
-
A Gem of Himalayan Art Gleams in a New Setting.
The Rubin Museum Tibetan Buddhist Shrine Room is reopening at the Brooklyn Museum, where it features both familiar treasures and some not seen in 10 years.
Dance
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Does It Matter How a Cello Is Held? It’s a Centuries-Old Debate.
Historical response to the cello endpin, which anchors the instrument to the floor, has alternated between acceptance and pushback.
-
Gonzalo Garcia Appointed Artistic Director of Miami City Ballet.
Garcia, a former principal at New York City Ballet and San Francisco Ballet, takes over as Miami City celebrates its 40th anniversary.
-
‘Floating Ballerina Vibes’: The Hypnotic Allure of Indoor Skydiving.
Athletes who fly in wind tunnels are capitalizing on the creative possibilities of this young sport.
-
‘Tacos de Lengua’ Review: Finding the Rhythm of the Night.
At the Chocolate Factory Theater in Queens on Friday, Martita Abril’s performance expressed life on the border from multiple angles.
-
The Best Dance of 2025, So Far.
Our critics picked 10 performances that have offered a robust alternative to the here and now with a tonic of beauty, rage and wisdom.
-
Heels, Flesh and Fashion: A Dancer, Wild and Free, Finds Her Way.
Lexee Smith, who works closely with Addison Rae, is an outlier: a commercial dance artist with an experimental bent.
-
Hamburg Ballet’s Artistic Director Leaves After Just 10 Months.
Weeks after dancers accused Demis Volpi of creating a “toxic working environment” at the company, he has agreed to depart.
Music
-
An Experimental Music Collective Arrives at Lincoln Center.
The American Modern Opera Company is taking over Lincoln Center for a five-week residency. It is both a milestone and a homecoming for these artists.
-
Judge in Sean Combs Trial Dismisses Juror Over ‘Lack of Candor’
The juror, who said he lives in the Bronx, later said he moved to New Jersey. The mogul’s lawyers said his removal would reduce the diversity of the jury.
-
One of Opera’s Most In-Demand Provocateurs Puts Down Roots.
Stefan Herheim, the artistic leader of Theater an der Wien in Vienna, is wrapping up his first season inside the newly renovated theater.
-
The Question for the Sean Combs Jurors: What Qualifies as Coercion?
The jury will be asked to determine if two women who engaged in marathon sex sessions with escorts did so willingly or because they were under threat.
-
Ye Briefly Visits Sean Combs Trial in Support of Music Mogul.
The rapper formerly known as Kanye West has been one of the few celebrities to publicly defend Mr. Combs, who is charged with sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy.
-
The Musical Mysteries Brian Wilson Left Behind.
The Beach Boys mastermind has been the subject of pop scholarship and major boxed sets, but some corners of his oeuvre remain unreleased.
-
Remembering Sly Stone and Brian Wilson.
A conversation about two pop visionaries whose lives, careers and legacies only grew more complex over time.
-
Review: Macheath, Polly and the Gang Wash Up in Five Points.
At Little Island, “The Counterfeit Opera” falls short of its wildly successful historical models.
-
Brian Wilson Wrote the California Dream, but He Didn’t Live It.
An artist nearly synonymous with Los Angeles made his name crafting songs playing up his home state’s beachy vibes. His inner life, however, was anything but sunny.
-
Paul McCartney, Carole King and Others Pay Tribute to Brian Wilson.
Wilson, whose death was announced on Wednesday, leaves behind an immense musical legacy that spans several decades. King and others share how his music shaped them.
-
The Met Opera’s ‘Diva Whisperer’ Takes Her Last Bow.
Suzi Gomez-Pizzo, who is retiring as a wardrobe supervisor at the opera house after 18 years, has been a confidante and cheerleader to the stars.
-
Sean Combs’s Ex-Girlfriend Will Return for 22nd Hour of Testimony.
“Jane,” taking the stand under a pseudonym, is expected to face her final questions from the mogul’s lawyers on Thursday.
-
Brian Wilson and Sly Stone: Pop World Builders Dogged by Darkness.
Two of music’s powerful visionaries died this week. The songs they meticulously constructed offered an escape their makers struggled to realize in their own lives.
-
Turning VHS Tapes of Gay Men’s Choruses Into a Powerful Celebration.
Matthew Leifheit’s “No Time at All,” culled from recordings made at the height of the AIDS crisis, plays through speakers nestled in the New York City AIDS Memorial.
-
How the Beach Boys’ ‘Pet Sounds’ Entered the Pop Music Pantheon. (Eventually.).
Brian Wilson’s 1966 masterpiece is now considered a crowning achievement of music. The album’s reputation grew over time.
-
Brian Wilson: A Life in Pictures.
The Beach Boys leader was one of pop music’s most acclaimed visionaries, whose creative success was tempered by personal battles.
-
Did Bob Dylan Help Announce an Album From MGK?
The pop-punk star’s trailer for “Lost Americana” features a familiar voice narrating about a “quest to reclaim the authentic essence of American freedom.”
-
Brian Wilson: 12 Essential Songs.
The Beach Boys leader, whose death was announced on Wednesday, was a brilliant writer, arranger and producer whose ambitions propelled his band — and contemporaries like the Beatles — into the future.
-
Brian Wilson, Pop Auteur and Leader of the Beach Boys, Dies at 82.
A hitmaker elevated and burdened by the label of genius, he transcended the breezy surf genre to create complex harmonies and intricate soundscapes in the studio.
-
Sean Combs’s Defense to Analyze ‘Hotel Night’ Texts With ‘Jane’
The music mogul’s lawyers have started walking his former girlfriend — now a government witness — through a voluminous history of text and audio messages.
-
The Pint-Size Singers Hoping to Be Opera Stars.
The Metropolitan Opera Children’s Chorus has long been an elite training ground for young singers. Getting in requires grit, personality and a soaring voice.
-
Brandee Younger Has a New Secret Weapon: Alice Coltrane’s Harp.
The harpist, composer and bandleader plays it on her latest album, “Gadabout Season,” a persuasive argument for the vast potential of her instrument.
-
BTS Members RM and V Are Discharged From the Military.
RM and V of BTS emerged from a base in Chuncheon, South Korea, and gave fans a brief saxophone performance.
-
K-Pop Fans’ Wait Is Almost Over as BTS Members Leave the Army.
RM and V emerged from a base in South Korea on Wednesday in fatigues. Three other members of the hugely popular boy band will finish their national service this month.
-
Touch Grass With an Unexpected 10-Song Nature-Bathing Playlist.
Explore the outdoors however you see fit with a soundtrack of Doechii, Remi Wolf, Erykah Badu and more.
-
The Most Open-Eared Festival in America Is Ojai.
Birds joined in for the blissed-out sounds of concerts organized by the adventurous flutist Claire Chase at the Ojai Music Festival in California.
-
Doechii Criticizes Trump While Accepting BET Award.
The rapper drew attention to the president deploying the military against protesters in Los Angeles and said it was her responsibility as an artist to speak up for all oppressed people.
-
How the Bay Area Shaped Sly Stone.
One of the key figures in American music in the late ’60s got his professional start in the Bay Area. These are some of the spots that were crucial to his career.
Television
-
The Best TV Shows of 2025, So Far.
Returning hits like “Severance” and “The White Lotus” inspired plenty of chatter, but did they make our top TV list?
-
Late Night Thinks Trump’s Military Parade Was Kind of Dull.
It was “basically a $50 million version of when a 5-year-old shows you every car in his Hot Wheels collection,” Jimmy Kimmel said on Monday.
-
‘We Were Liars,’ Plus 7 Things to Watch on TV This Week.
The adaptation of E. Lockhart’s Y.A. horror novel comes to Prime Video, and “The Gilded Age” returns for a third season.
-
Trump’s Parade Drafted the Army Into a War of Images.
After a week of stunning and sobering TV-news scenes, the brassy Trumpy production was a surreal viewing experience.
-
Arnold Schwarzenegger Is Busy Caring for a Pony, Pig, Donkey and Malamute.
The longtime actor, now starring in “FUBAR,” on his many animals, good cigars and wanting his kids to outshine him.
-
Late Night Reviews Trump’s Night at the Theater.
Jimmy Kimmel said that Trump “going to see ‘Les Misérables’ right now is like Kanye going to ‘Fiddler on the Roof.’”
-
‘And Just Like That …’ Season 3, Episode 3 Recap: An Expensive Date.
Carrie flies to Virginia for a lunch with her “boyfriend,” Aidan. Seema tags along. It is unclear why either is really going.
-
‘The Survivors’ Is a Polished and Potent Murder Mystery.
Based on the book by Jane Harper, this six-part Australian drama takes place in a coastal Tasmanian town, where the bodies keep surfacing.
-
Trump’s New ‘Apprentice’ Boardroom: The Oval Office.
The stately room has long been a site of diplomacy. But the reality-star president often does not come there to make friends.
-
Ananda Lewis, ’90s MTV Star, Dies at 52.
She said last year that her breast cancer, which she was diagnosed with in 2019, had progressed to Stage 4.
-
Late Night Pokes Fun at Trump’s Idiotic Idiom.
Hosts ripped into his comment during a speech to troops about former President Joe Biden never having been “the sharpest bulb.”
-
‘Families Like Ours’ Review: Emptying Denmark.
In Thomas Vinterberg’s series on Netflix, climate change forces a country to close, and everyone has to leave.
-
Jimmy Kimmel Calls Trump an ‘Arsonist With a Hose’
The L.A.-based host said the city’s problem was the president, not the protests: “We have more so-called ‘unrest’ here when one of our teams wins a championship.”
-
‘Taskmaster’ Is a Mischievous, Unpredictable British Panel Show.
The American comedian Jason Mantzoukas is a contestant this season, and his gleeful maniac persona fits perfectly.
Theater
-
How ‘Passengers’ Retooled After a Performer’s Injury.
The company presenting the train travel-themed show at the Perelman Performing Arts Center faced a stressful predicament when a performer was suddenly sidelined.
-
Casting Is the Brightest Light of Two Molière Shows.
Red Bull Theater’s smart “The Imaginary Invalid” and Taylor Mac’s dismaying “Prosperous Fools” attempt to engage with the French writer’s comedy.
-
Broadway Shows Closing Soon: ‘Dorian Gray,’ ‘Sunset Boulevard’ and More.
Catch two Tony-winning performances, Sarah Snook in the Oscar Wilde classic and Nicole Scherzinger as Norma Desmond, before these productions and others wrap up.
-
Review: Jean Smart, Gritty and Poetic in ‘Call Me Izzy’
The “Hacks” star returns to Broadway after 25 years in a triumph for her, if not for the old-fashioned, flowery play about spouse abuse.
-
‘Angry Alan’ Review: John Krasinski Explores the Manosphere.
In an Off Broadway play, the former Jim Halpert of Dunder Mifflin dives into a darker world of male grievance.
-
Broadway Dreams Were Dashed, Then Rob Madge Knocked on Some Doors.
The British performer is bringing “My Son’s a Queer (but What Can You Do?)” to City Center this week, after an earlier run was canceled.
-
Broadway Musical ‘Smash’ to Close After Tonys Disappointment.
The musical, which follows a group of theater artists putting on a show about Marilyn Monroe, opened in April to mixed reviews. It has struggled at the box office.
-
How ‘Maybe Happy Ending’ Overcame a Shaky Start and Won Big at the Tonys.
Broadway’s best musical winner had to delay its opening last fall and was selling poorly. But strong word-of-mouth and reviews helped this quirky show triumph.
-
Billy Porter in ‘La Cage aux Folles’ Highlights City Center Season.
Also in the lineup: “Bat Boy: The Musical” and a production of “The Wild Party.”
Books
Book Review
-
In ‘Not My Type,’ E. Jean Carroll Gets the Last Gab About the Trump Trials.
Her lawyers urged that she keep her testimony short. With legal victories in hand, she’s sharing her life story, and what it was like on the stand.
-
You Know the Novelist. Now Meet Toni Morrison the Editor.
In her new book, “Toni at Random,” Dana A. Williams highlights the groundbreaking writer’s time working in publishing.
-
A Prep School Predator Haunts Joyce Carol Oates’s New Novel.
“Fox” details the devastation wrought by a manipulative English teacher who sexually abuses his students.
-
They Were Enemies in War. Now Their Grandkids Are in Love.
In Heather Clark’s novel, “The Scrapbook,” an American girl meets a German boy and falls head over heels — and headfirst into a history of fascism.
-
The Memory of a Teenage Golden Child Ripples Across Generations.
Michelle Huneven’s novel “Bug Hollow” begins with a tragedy in 1970s California. The ramifications are felt across three countries and five decades.
-
Do You Know the Novels That Inspired These Big Movies?
Many influential action movies have been based on books. Find out how many you know in this short quiz.
-
Her Job Was Real. So Why Did Her Work Feel So Fake?
Leigh Claire La Berge’s memoir looks back at her stint as a consultant for a Fortune 500 company at the turn of the millennium: “Is this how companies are put together?”
-
This Epic Gay Novel of Life on the Road Is Back in Print.
Joe Westmoreland captures the pleasures and pains of American wanderlust in his forgotten classic “Tramps Like Us.”
-
A Laugh-Out-Loud Funny Novel About the Civil War.
Dennard Dayle’s satirical new book, “How to Dodge a Cannonball,” follows a white flag-bearer pretending to be a Black soldier.
-
A Relationship Breaks in Two. So Does the Book That Explains Why.
Catherine Lacey’s “The Möbius Book” is both an elliptical novella and a seething memoir. Decoding the connections is at once frustrating and exhilarating.
-
She’s a Snail Hunter, a Mail-Order Bride and a Kidnapper.
That is, until war breaks out. “Endling,” by Maria Reva, is an ambitious whirlwind of a novel, set in Ukraine on the brink of disaster.
-
In Two New Books, the Chef Definitely Recommends Something Gay.
John Birdsall’s “What Is Queer Food?” and Erik Piepenburg’s “Dining Out” both seek to define the place of cuisine in queer culture, history and expression.
-
In a New Book, E. Jean Carroll Chronicles Her Legal Battles With Trump.
“Not My Type: One Woman vs. a President” includes reflections on being asked to testify about her sex life, as well as the thrill of winning two lawsuits.
-
50 Years After ‘Jaws’ Terrified Filmgoers, a Reporter Looks Back.
The culture critic Brian Raftery, who wrote about “Jaws” for the Book Review last year, discusses the movie’s anniversary with Gilbert Cruz.
-
Be Careful What You Wish For.
Two children’s novels take a gimlet-eyed look at the price of gifts with “no strings attached.”
-
7 New Books We Recommend This Week.
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
-
Going Deep Into the World of D.I.Y. Submarine Builders.
In “Submersed,” Matthew Gavin Frank takes on the undersea universe of amateur submarine enthusiasts — and one obsession turned deadly.
-
Wally Lamb’s Guilty Pleasure Is a History of Mad Magazine.
His go-to classic is by Joseph Campbell, and he admires “Brothers and Keepers” and “The New Jim Crow” on incarceration. “The River Is Waiting” is his new novel.
-
The Best Romance Novels of the Year So Far.
Looking for a swoony, feel-good read? Our romance columnist will be updating this list all year.
-
The Joy of Reading One Poem in Many Different Translations.
Poetry and translation are both about picking the just-right word. But reading multiple translations makes an implicit case for celebrating abundance and variety.
-
The Book Nearly Died With Him in the Amazon. But the Story Endured.
Killed in the rainforest he hoped to help save, the journalist Dom Phillips left behind an unfinished manuscript. Those who knew him carried it forward.
Movies
-
‘Sally’ Review: Rocket Woman.
The remarkable life of the first American woman in space is profiled in this diverting but tame documentary.
-
The ‘How to Train Your Dragon’ Star Mason Thames Is Still Freaking Out.
As Hiccup, the 17-year-old actor is shouldering the weight of Universal’s new live-action franchise — and living out his childhood fantasy.
-
Inside Universal’s Big Bet on ‘How to Train Your Dragon’
In an era of skepticism around live-action remakes, Universal believes audiences will take flight with Hiccup and Toothless again.
-
Five Action Movies to Stream Now.
This month’s picks include a gaslit mother, a hungry shark, vengeful French cops, and more.
-
7 Father’s Day Movies to Watch in Theaters.
Whether you’re in the mood for dragons or a new Wes Anderson, theaters this weekend are filled with fatherly flicks.
-
Watch Dakota Johnson and Pedro Pascal Spark in ‘Materialists’
The writer and director Celine Song narrates a sequence from her film, which also features Chris Evans.
-
8 New Movies Our Critics Are Talking About This Week.
Whether you’re a casual moviegoer or an avid buff, our reviewers think these films are worth knowing about.
-
‘Prime Minister’ Examines a New Zealand Leader and a Global Issue.
The film is a memoir of sorts for Jacinda Ardern, who governed at a time of multiple disasters. But it was misinformation that proved hardest to cope with.
-
How Much Are You Worth Romantically? This Director Has Thoughts.
Celine Song’s new “Materialists” takes a deep look at love and value via a rom-com, a genre that she argues is wrongfully dismissed: “What is more important than love?”
-
‘Materialists’ | Anatomy of a Scene.
Celine Song narrates a sequence from her film featuring Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans.
-
‘Sex’ Review: Two Men Talk About and Around the Subject.
A chimney sweep and his colleague get deep on the roofs of Oslo in Dag Johan Haugerud’s curious meditation on marriage and masculinity.
-
‘Tatami’ Review: A Bitter Fight, Both on and Off the Mat.
A flinty Iranian judoka competing in the World Judo Championships is menaced by her government in this absorbing political thriller.
-
‘Deep Cover’ Review: Fighting Crime With Improv.
Three hapless comics, played by Orlando Bloom, Bryce Dallas Howard and Nick Mohammed, infiltrate the criminal underworld.
-
‘Echo Valley’ Review: Mother Knows Best, Daughter Does Worst.
A stellar cast led by Julianne Moore is unable to breathe life into this unsuccessful blend of maternal drama and crime caper.
-
‘Will’ Review: Heartache and Hope in Harlem.
In Jessie Maple’s restored 1981 drama, the first feature-length film by a Black woman, a heroin addict mentors a young boy and tries to find his footing.
-
‘Meeting With Pol Pot’ Review: Snapshots of Totalitarianism.
The director Rithy Panh dramatizes events from 1978, when a group of outsiders was allowed to enter Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge.
-
‘Materialists’ Review: When Dakota Met Pedro (and Chris).
The director Celine Song follows up her “Past Lives” with a side-eyeing update on the rom-com, starring Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans.
-
‘How to Train Your Dragon’ Review: The Return of Hiccup and Toothless.
This live action remake of the 2010 animated film is religiously faithful to the original. The result is exhilarating at times, if somewhat mechanical.
-
Tom Hiddleston Dances Up a Storm: ‘I Just Wanted It to Fly’
In “The Life of Chuck,” the actor known for spontaneous eruptions of joyful movement, lets loose with a feast of footwork.
-
John C. Reilly Wants to Talk to You About Love.
The actor’s passion project is a cabaret act in which he sings the standards. “It might sound Pollyanna-ish,” he says, but his goal is to connect.
-
Pop Culture Takes Up Smoking Again.
From movies and TV shows to music, the habit is no longer taboo. It’s even being celebrated for the way it makes characters look cool or powerful.
-
‘Titan: The OceanGate Disaster’ Review: A Company’s Failures.
Netflix’s documentary about the catastrophe uses familiar techniques to spotlight the faulty judgment of Stockton Rush, who ran OceanGate.
-
How ‘Ballerina’ Set People on Fire.
Ana de Armas wields a flamethrower in “From the World of John Wick: Ballerina” and torches, well, a lot. Here’s how they made that sequence come to life. (And yes, the flames are mostly real.)
Food
-
In an Era of Upheavals, Los Angeles Restaurants Are Banding Together.
Through Covid, protests, strikes and fires, the Independent Hospitality Coalition is helping local business navigate a volatile civic landscape.
-
Here Are the 2025 James Beard Restaurant Award Winners.
Toni Tipton-Martin, Jungsik Yim and the restaurateurs behind Le Veau d’Or were among the top honorees.
-
A Weeknight Spaghetti With Extra Oomph.
Preserved lemon adds its salty, fermented punch to a seven-ingredient pasta.
-
The Pizza Interview: Chris Evans and Dakota Johnson.
The two stars of the movie “Materialists,” visited The New York Times Cooking studio to make pizzas and talk love triangles.
-
100 Easy Summer Recipes for Right Now.
Because worrying about dinner should be the last thing on your mind.
-
BBQ Chicken Is Always the Move.
Crisp and succulent, great with slaw, one of the best summertime feeds.
-
Dive Into Butter Swim Biscuits.
Eat them with ham. Eat them with jam. Add pimento cheese. Just make them, please.
-
The Rice Hack That Fuels My Family.
A dry skillet and patience are all you need to transform leftover rice into a meal, Eric Kim writes.
-
Pierre Franey’s Five-Star Grilled Swordfish.
It’s been a hit with Times readers since its publication in 1993.
-
They’re Gentle. They’re Seasonal. They’re Soft Boy Cooks.
Hide your tomatoes: These charismatic chefs are on social media, a counter to the harder-edged chefs.
-
Where to Celebrate a 40th Birthday, and Other Reader Questions.
Dinner and a show at Lincoln Center? Date night on a budget? We have suggestions.
-
All About That Basil.
Not just for garnish, this do-it-all herb transforms simple dishes into weeknight winners.
-
This Dinner Has Been Right in Front of You All This Time.
Chile-crisp chickpea rice bowls are effortless, lovable and come together with things you most likely already have.
-
This Super Summery Dinner Party Is Meant for Luxuriating.
Crab cakes, chilled cucumber-spinach soup and a light melon granita are the ideal antidote for sultry evenings, David Tanis writes.
-
Meet Our New Restaurant Critics.
We asked how they read menus, stay fit, eat at home and celebrate with their families.
-
Intensely Flavored and Supremely Comforting.
Yewande Komolafe’s versatile take on Ghanaian light soup replenishes and restores.
-
The Times Has Appointed Two Chief Restaurant Critics. Here’s How That Will Work.
Tejal Rao and Ligaya Mishan will expand restaurant coverage nationally for The Times.
-
Chez Nous Brings a New French Energy to the Marlton Hotel.
Foursome offers Turkish cuisine, Victoria Blamey becomes the culinary director for Il Buco Alimentari and Il Buco al Mare and more news.
-
Seven Ingredients or Fewer, Because Summer.
Pork meatballs with ginger and fish sauce, crispy lime-butter chicken and creamy miso pasta require little shopping.
Style
-
Why Is Everybody ‘Crashing Out’?
Adrenaline rising? Patience waning? Gen Z embraces a slang term for familiar feelings.
-
A Stylish Mash-Up of Baggy and Groovy.
Siblings’ distinct fashion senses blended nicely together.
-
Shop Cats Run the City.
A wholesome and delightful video series conducts “interviews” with the feline occupants of New York’s delis and bodegas.
-
The ‘Hot Fellas’ Bakery Was Real, at Least for One Weekend.
Generations of “Sex and the City” fans turned up for an event in which a Manhattan cafe transformed itself into the bakery from HBO Max’s “And Just Like That …”
-
Leonard Lauder Was Beauty’s Original Influencer.
It’s possible Kylie Jenner and Hailey Bieber would not have become cosmetic moguls without him.
-
Is It OK for Me to Wear Camo in This Political Climate?
With wars in Ukraine and the Middle East and political unrest in the United States, borrowing military aesthetics for fashion is a loaded choice. Our critic explains why she’s shifted her stance on the topic.
-
Javier Bardem Doesn’t Drive. But He Knows How to Swerve.
The Oscar-winning actor may be starring alongside Brad Pitt in the summer blockbuster “F1: The Movie,” but his career has been harder to categorize.
-
Why This Father-Daughter Wedding Tradition Endures.
Brides reflect on the moment their fathers walked them down the aisle — a ritual that has evolved but continues to hold deep meaning.
-
Sabrina Carpenter’s Album Art Is a Trap.
The image of the pop star on her knees seems designed to provoke. Is it regressive or just retro?
-
How Should a Modern-Day Father Be?
On a work day in Midtown Manhattan, dads attended an event about the future of fatherhood. (It was organized by moms.)
-
A Launch Party for Hosh, and a Celebration of Native American Culture.
The lifestyle brand brought artists, models and performers together at a downtown Manhattan event that included creating art on the spot.
-
Why Trump Loves a Man in Uniform.
As thousands of soldiers prepare to march in President Trump’s military parade, what exactly will we see?
-
Oh No, They Think He’s My Husband.
My father and I were the only non-couple on the couples cruise.
-
Building Things Together Became Their ‘Love Language’
Van Bloys and Joe Whited, who met at a party 13 years ago, built a solid foundation in their relationship through real estate projects.
-
A Celebration With Big ‘Jamaican-Nigerian Energy’
Kunle Apampa, who is Nigerian, and Nia Mitchell, who is Jamaican, infused both of their cultures into their wedding festivities.
-
What’s Black and White and Began with a Message on LinkedIn?
Colette Laxton and Mark Curry use the two-color scheme for the packaging on the products for their company, the Inkey List, and as a philosophy for their relationship — “total honesty always,” as she put it.
-
They Fell in Love to the Soundtrack of R&B.
Debra Robinson and Andre Galloway bonded over love songs. At Sismas, a holiday event, their favorite song, “Good Luck Charm” by Jagged Edge, signaled a new chapter in their relationship.
-
Like His Music, Brian Wilson’s Style Was Deceptively Complex.
In Pendleton shirts and khakis, Mr. Wilson and the Beach Boys showed the world what easy Southern California living looked like.
-
La Dolce Vita, the Valentino Way.
Archival photographs, fashion layouts and anecdotes from celebrity clients: A new book is devoted to all things Valentino.
-
Instagram Wants Gen Z. What Does Gen Z Want From Instagram?
Young people are using Instagram for everything except the app’s original function.
-
The ‘Sultan of Sequins’ Gets Another Look.
Bob Mackie sizes up his legacy at a new exhibit of his fashion sketches for divas past and present.
-
Audrey Gelman’s World Isn’t Millennial Pink Anymore.
The Wing’s creator is taking another stab at shaping the tastes of her peers, this time with a pastoral inn — and more hotels on the way.
-
Can the Woman Behind Reformation Strike Gold Twice?
Five years after leaving Reformation, Yael Aflalo is back with a new fashion line — and some thoughts about the future of luxury.
-
The Silliest Display of Wealth in ‘Mountainhead’
It’s called a turbot pot — turbotière, if you’re fancy — and it’s almost certainly not in stock.
-
Tiny Love Stories: ‘I’m So Aware of Our Age Gap ’
Modern Love in miniature, featuring reader-submitted stories of no more than 100 words.
-
They’re Chic, They’re Quiet, and They Might Be Filled With Mold.
Midea’s recall of 1.7 million air-conditioners is causing frustration and confusion among its design-conscious user base.
-
Rating the ‘Romantic Value’ of New York’s Single Men.
To promote its new film “Materialists,” A24 worked with the New York Stock Exchange to sort participants by attributes like income, height and homeownership.
-
My Best Friend Ghosted Me, and I’m Devastated. Help!
After nearly a decade of close friendship, a reader is hurt and mystified by the radio silence from a woman who was in her wedding party just a year ago.
-
Want More Excitement From the N.B.A.? Try the Korean Broadcast.
A pair of over-the-top announcers have become social media stars in the United States for their reactions during the N.B.A. finals.
-
What’s Bold, Bald and Coming to a Stadium Near You?
Pitbull, the Miami rapper, has inspired young fans with his distinctive look. So much so that they’re copying it.
-
Did She or Didn’t She? She Did, and She’ll Tell You Exactly How.
The paradigm shifts as women like Kylie Jenner invert the Pygmalion story.
-
11 Unforgettable Looks at the BET Awards.
Y2K fashion, big hats, simulated nudity and more.
-
Sly Stone’s Fabulous Style.
It wasn’t just about the fringe and the bling.
Love
Magazine
-
A.I. Might Take Your Job. Here Are 22 New Ones It Could Give You.
In a few key areas, humans will be more essential than ever.
-
Everyone Is Using A.I. for Everything. Is That Bad?
Either way, let’s not be in denial about it.
-
A.I. Is Poised to Rewrite History. Literally.
The technology’s ability to read and summarize text is already making it a useful tool for scholarship. How will it change the stories we tell about the past?
-
Should I Tell My Sister What Our Brother Did to Me?
I long to share my story with someone I love who might understand.
-
Lisa Murkowski Says ‘It’s Dangerous for Us in the Legislative Branch’
The senator from Alaska reflects on her many years in Washington and what is happening in the country right now.
-
He Has Months Left. His Son Hopes an A.I. Version of Him Can Live On.
After Peter Listro was diagnosed with blood cancer, his family decided to make a virtual avatar they can talk to after his death.
-
Is There a Wrong Way to Make Paella?
A ruling on how to properly prepare the iconic Spanish dish.
-
Is Biography the One A.I.-Proof Genre?
Each age has its own way of drawing the arc of a human life. Ours is concerned with its unpredictability.
-
Five Key Discoveries in the Family Tree of Pope Leo XIV.
We went back 500 years and found his connection to some fascinating people.
-
The Family Tree of Robert Francis Prevost, Pope Leo XIV.
This chart was prepared by Henry Louis Gates Jr., American Ancestors and the Cuban Genealogy Club of Miami. It reflects the best-known research as of the time of publication. Design by Nick Sheedy.
-
We Traced Pope Leo XIV’s Ancestry Back 500 Years. Here’s What We Found.
Noblemen, enslaved people, freedom fighters, slaveowners: what the complex family tree of the first American pontiff reveals.
-
I Had an Affair With a Politician Who Denies Being Gay. Do I Keep His Secret?
Is what happened between us my story to tell?
-
The Strange Rise of the Before-and-After Tragedy Meme.
Online, people pair ordinary bits of video with news of the life-changing shocks that followed. It can be unnerving — or surprisingly moving.
-
How a D.C. Prep-School Kid Became Hollywood’s Most Dependable Bruiser.
Jon Bernthal’s strange journey taught him to bring a surprising softness to his tough-guy characters.
-
The Spaghetti ‘Pretty Much Every Kid Loves’
Spaghetti Napolitan, a Japanese favorite that’s stained and seasoned with ketchup, grows up — just a little.
-
TikTok Bots, MAGA Outrage and the Very Online Fight for Romania’s Future.
It started with a Russian influence campaign and a canceled vote. Then the American right showed up.
T Magazine
Travel
-
Chase Sapphire Leapfrogs Amex Platinum With a New $795 Annual Fee.
The price jump is part of an ongoing shift for credit card companies and airlines toward premium rewards and high-end travelers.
-
Visiting the Storm-Battered Blue Ridge Parkway? Here’s What to Know.
The 469-mile route known as “America’s favorite drive” has mostly reopened nine months after Hurricane Helene, but there are still detours and closures to watch out for.
-
A Caribbean ‘Promised Land’ Where the Beaches Go On Forever.
In Las Terrenas, a lush corner of the Dominican Republic, the ceviche practically swims into your bowl, and the soft sand and palm trees seem to have no end.
-
Protests in Europe Target Mass Tourism With Squirt Guns and Roller Bags.
In Italy, Portugal and Spain, activists used water pistols and a “noisy stroll” of suitcases to draw attention to rising housing costs and the environmental toll of tourism.
-
Is There a Safest Seat in a Plane Crash? We Asked Experts.
With all eyes on the sole survivor of Air India Flight 171, aviation insiders say that in an air catastrophe, “all bets are off” and seat choice matters little.
-
Traveling to Europe? Here’s What to Expect From Tourism Protests on June 15.
On Sunday, activists in Barcelona, Lisbon and other hot spots plan to take to the streets to voice their concerns about “touristification.”
-
36 Hours in East London.
Now a hub for the trend-conscious set, East London hasn’t lost its industrial roots and vibrant immigrant communities.
-
9 Places to Celebrate Juneteenth This Year.
The federal holiday, celebrated on June 19, is embraced as a nationwide celebration of Black history. Here’s how and where to partake.
-
‘By Appointment Only’ in New York: 6 Hidden Shops Worth Visiting.
Hand-forged armor. Prehistoric bones. Music that’s never been digitized. This isn’t retail — it’s an invitation-only obsession.
-
30 Delightful Hotels in Europe Under $300 a Night.
We scoured the hotel scene in the heart of popular cities in search of stylish lodgings that won’t break the bank. Here’s the best of what we found.
-
Sumba Is Not Bali. That Is the Point.
Just an hour away from the more famous vacation spot, the island does not have traffic jams, digital nomads or DJ parties. It does have deserted beaches, surfing spots and a low-key charm.
Real Estate
-
Inside Mara Brock Akil’s Writing Retreat on the Lower East Side.
The television writer and producer wrote her adaptation of Judy Blume’s “Forever” inside the Manhattan condo.
-
Is There a Difference Between Architects, Designers and Decorators?
The answer is a resounding ‘Yes’ in many instances, but exceptions can creep in based on professional education, geography and the scope of a project.
-
Why You Should Wait to Renovate.
When it comes to home renovations, patience is the most practical virtue.
-
$3.5 Million Homes in California.
A hilltop house in San Luis Obispo, a midcentury modern home in Kentfield and a post-and-beam house in Los Angeles.
-
‘By Chance, Did You Win a Cottage in Ireland?’
For one American, who spent $12.67 on three raffle tickets in December and then forgot about it, the answer turned out to be yes.
-
I Want to Use a Co-op as a Pied-à-Terre. Do I Need to Tell the Board?
It depends on the building’s governing documents, but most co-ops don’t look kindly on visitors coming and going.
-
$1.4 Million Homes in Valencia, Spain.
Spain’s third-largest city offers stylish condos and seaside villas.
-
Disillusioned With Finance, She Gave the Furniture Business a Try.
For Josefina Londono, a career move after reconnecting with her family’s furniture business also called for a move to a new Brooklyn apartment.
-
California Opens Investigation Into State Farm.
The state’s insurance regulator says the volume of complaints against the company following this year’s catastrophic wildfires in Los Angeles prompted the inquiry.
-
An American Takes the Long Route to a Life in Canada.
After a couple of false starts, a Connecticut native overcame the red tape and moved to Montreal with her daughter. Which condo was the right fit?
-
I Scream, You Scream. They Don’t Scream for Ice Cream.
The Museum of Ice Cream in SoHo wants to expand its hours and liquor operations, but nearby residents say the exhibition space already detracts from their quality of life.
-
Homes for Sale in Manhattan and Staten Island.
This week’s properties are in Turtle Bay, Lenox Hill and Tompkinsville.
-
Homes for Sale in New York and New Jersey.
This week’s properties are a five-bedroom house in Ardsley, N.Y., and a four-bedroom in Upper Saddle River, N.J.
-
How Long Did Mom and Dad Save for Their Down Payment?
Not as long as their children must. Getting to 20 percent down is a lot harder these days.
-
$365,000 Homes in Texas, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania.
A bungalow in Elgin, a Craftsman in Oklahoma City and a cottage in Lancaster.
-
What to Do When There’s a Mouse in Your First House.
With no landlord or manager to call, new homeowners may find themselves dealing with pests for the first time. Here’s how to handle them.
-
Alexander Brothers Accused of Sex Crimes Against Another Woman.
Oren and Tal Alexander, the luxury real estate brokers, as well Oren’s twin Alon Alexander, are now charged with sex crimes against seven women.
Health
Well
Eat
Family
Move
Times Insider
Corrections
-
Corrections: June 17, 2025.
Corrections that appeared in print on Tuesday, June 17, 2025.
-
Quote of the Day: Gas, Barbecue and Cowhide Rugs: A Texas-Size Pit Stop Spreads.
Quotation of the Day for Tuesday, June 17, 2025.
-
No Corrections: June 16, 2025.
No corrections appeared in print on Monday, June 16, 2025.
-
Quote of the Day: Love and Value via the Rom-Com.
Quotation of the Day for Monday, June 16, 2025.
-
Quote of the Day: Minnesota Teens Are Fighting Climate Anxiety With Shovels.
Quote of the Day for Sunday, June 15, 2025
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Corrections: June 15, 2025.
Corrections that appeared in print on Sunday, June 15, 2025.
-
Corrections: June 14, 2025.
Corrections that appeared in print on Saturday, June 14, 2025.
-
Quote of the Day: Race at Le Mans Is Long. So Are the Preparations.
Quotation of the Day for Saturday, June 14, 2025.
-
Corrections: June 13, 2025.
Corrections that appeared in print on Friday, June 13, 2025.
-
Quote of the Day: ‘Oasis’ in the Mountains Beckons the War-Weary.
Quotation of the Day for Friday, June 13, 2025.
-
Corrections: June 12, 2025.
Corrections that appeared in print on Thursday, June 12, 2025.
-
Quote of the Day: Beach Boys Lead Who Molded Carefree Sun-and-Surf Sound.
Quotation of the Day for Thursday, June 12, 2025.
-
Corrections: June 11, 2025.
Corrections that appeared in print on Wednesday, June 11, 2025.
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Quote of the Day: Extremely Lifelike Dolls Cause a Frenzy in Brazil.
Quotation of the Day for Wednesday, June 11, 2025.
The Learning Network
Special Series
En español
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Monitoreo de la tormenta tropical Erick, en vivo.
Consulta la trayectoria probable y las horas de llegada de los vientos de Erick.
-
Palabra del día: ‘topple’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 255 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
-
Palabra del día: ‘ebullient’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 102 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
-
Mapa: un sismo de magnitud 5,6 sacude Lima, Perú.
Mira la localización del epicentro del sismo y el área de movimiento.
-
Haz la prueba de potencia de 30 segundos.
Para mantenerte sano a medida que envejeces, no solo necesitas fuerza y equilibrio, sino potencia. Aquí te decimos cómo puedes saber cuánta tienes.
-
La fortuita muerte de mi padre, el cazador de nazis.
Era el fiscal estrella de la Oficina de Investigaciones Especiales, pero el trabajo de su vida no tuvo relación con las circunstancias de su asesinato. ¿Qué significa buscar justicia por su muerte?
-
En busca de las raíces del papa León XIV.
Antepasados nobles, esclavizados, luchadores por la libertad, esclavistas: lo que revela el complejo árbol genealógico del primer pontífice estadounidense.
-
Monitoreo de la tormenta tropical Dalila, en vivo.
Consulta la trayectoria probable y las horas de llegada de los vientos de Dalila.
-
El mundo con los ojos en Israel e Irán.
Y otras 4 noticias de una semana convulsa.
-
Palabra del día: ‘aspirant’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 15 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
-
¿Quieres hacerte más fuerte y evitar lesiones? Prueba esto.
Centrarse en ejercicios excéntricos —en los que los músculos se extienden en lugar de contraerse— aumenta la fuerza y la musculatura, al tiempo que refuerza los tendones.
-
Día 5: Una forma fácil de mantener la inspiración.
Hoy probaremos algo nuevo.
-
El choque aéreo en India vuelve a poner bajo la lupa a Boeing.
Los aviones Boeing 787 Dreamliner han sido objeto de un mayor escrutinio después de que denunciantes expresaran su preocupación por problemas de fabricación y calidad que datan de años.
-
Las mejores canciones de 2025 hasta ahora.
Diez canciones que desafían los límites, desatan emociones y prenden la fiesta del barrio.
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Relojes suizos y pianos japoneses: las importaciones de las que más depende EE. UU. de 140 países.
El producto de cada país que constituye el mayor porcentaje de importación de Estados Unidos.
-
Palabra del día: ‘stultify’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en dos artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
-
Día 4: Un truco sencillo para tener mejores ideas.
Hoy vamos a pensar en grande con un juego divertido.
-
¿Se operó o no se operó? Sí, y te va a decir exactamente qué se hizo.
El paradigma cultural cambia cuando mujeres como Kylie Jenner aceptan sin disimulos sus procedimientos estéticos.
-
Palabra del día: ‘intransigent’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 24 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
-
Día 3: Domina el arte de soñar despierto.
Hoy vamos a perdernos en nuestros pensamientos.
-
Meta reorganiza sus esfuerzos de IA con un laboratorio de ‘superinteligencia’
El laboratorio, que incluirá al fundador de Scale AI, Alexandr Wang, forma parte de los proyectos de inteligencia artificial bajo el mandato de Mark Zuckerberg.
América Latina
Ciencia y Tecnología
Cultura
-
Reseña de ‘Amores materialistas’: una comedia romántica de esta época.
Celine Song, directora de “Vidas pasadas”, lleva a cabo una renovación de la comedia romántica en esta película protagonizada por Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal y Chris Evans.
-
Jon Bernthal, el tipo rudo más confiable de Hollywood.
La peculiar trayectoria de Bernthal le enseñó a aportar una sorprendente sensibilidad a los hombres duros que interpreta.
-
El Despacho Oval es el nuevo escenario de ‘El aprendiz’ de Trump.
En sus dramáticas reuniones con otros líderes mundiales, el presidente de EE. UU. ha creado un “reality show” en plena Casa Blanca, adaptado a su gusto por la atención y el drama.
-
Pitbull y la moda de las gorras calvas.
El rapero de Miami ha inspirado a jóvenes fans con su peculiar look. Tanto así que muchos se disfrazan como él al asistir a sus conciertos.
-
Brian Wilson en 12 canciones esenciales.
El líder de los Beach Boys, cuya muerte se dio a conocer el miércoles, fue un brillante escritor, arreglista y productor cuyas ambiciones impulsaron a su banda —y a contemporáneos como los Beatles— hacia el futuro.
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Brian Wilson, mítico líder de The Beach Boys, muere a los 82 años.
Creador de éxitos, músico prestigioso y un artista agobiado por la etiqueta de genio, Wilson trascendió el género surf para crear complejas armonías e intrincados paisajes sonoros en el estudio.
Estados Unidos
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Las redadas migratorias agravan la crisis de ausentismo escolar.
Una nueva investigación sugiere que las redadas pueden perjudicar el rendimiento de los alumnos y alterar el funcionamiento de las escuelas, incluso cuando no se producen en ellas o sus alrededores.
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El médico que administró ketamina a Matthew Perry se declarará culpable, según documentos judiciales.
Salvador Plasencia, operador de una clínica de atención urgente en la zona de Los Ángeles, podría enfrentarse a una pena de hasta 40 años de prisión en relación con la muerte del actor en 2023.
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Los latinos denuncian redadas en las que se cuestiona su ciudadanía estadounidense.
Una redada en Montebello, California, ha suscitado el temor de que los agentes federales estén deteniendo y tomando en cuenta criterios raciales de los ciudadanos estadounidenses de origen hispano.
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Así fue la captura del sospechoso del tiroteo en Minnesota.
Una persecución de dos días terminó el domingo por la noche cuando la policía capturó al sospechoso, Vance Boelter, en las afueras de Minneapolis.
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Trump recula en dos tipos de redadas de inmigración.
La decisión de suspender la mayoría de las redadas contra granjas y trabajadores de la hostelería tomó por sorpresa a muchos dentro de la Casa Blanca. Se produjo tras la intensa presión ejercida por su secretaria de Agricultura.
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Las conclusiones del desfile militar de Trump en Washington.
Los acontecimientos en la capital se vieron eclipsados por un asesinato en Minnesota y la agitación en Medio Oriente.
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El sospechoso del ataque en Minnesota trabajó con una de las víctimas.
El sospechoso, Vance Boelter, fue nombrado más de una vez miembro de la Junta de Desarrollo de la Fuerza Laboral, donde trabajó con el senador estatal John Hoffman, quien fue tiroteado el sábado.
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Una legisladora de Minnesota es asesinada en un acto de ‘violencia política selectiva’
Un hombre armado vestido de policía mató a Melissa Hortman, representante estatal demócrata, y a su marido en su domicilio, dijo el gobernador Tim Walz. Un senador estatal y su esposa resultaron heridos en otro ataque.
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‘No Kings’: lo que sabemos sobre las protestas contra Trump del sábado.
Los organizadores han planeado manifestaciones a lo largo de todo el país el mismo día que el desfile del presidente Donald Trump en Washington.
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El uso de Trump de la Guardia Nacional queda en el limbo tras los fallos judiciales.
El juez Charles Breyer ordenó al gobierno que devolviera el control de la Guardia Nacional al gobernador de California. Pero un tribunal de apelaciones acordó suspender la sentencia mientras revisa el caso.
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Así es como el senador Alex Padilla fue expulsado de la conferencia de Kristi Noem.
El demócrata por California fue sacado a empujones de una sala y esposado tras intentar interrogar a la secretaria de Seguridad Nacional de EE. UU. durante una rueda de prensa.
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El silencioso hundimiento del hombre que casi mata a Trump.
Thomas Crooks sufrió una transformación gradual y casi desapercibida, al pasar de ser un dócil estudiante de ingeniería que criticaba la polarización política a un atacante disciplinado que intentaba construir bombas.
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Dónde ha habido protestas contra las redadas migratorias.
Las manifestaciones no son solo en Los Ángeles. Han surgido en ciudades de todo el país.
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La campaña mediática de Trump sobre migración entra en una nueva fase militarizada.
Las imágenes gubernamentales parecen destinadas a persuadir a los migrantes sin estatus legal para que abandonen el país, al tiempo que dejan claro que las autoridades no tolerarán manifestaciones de resistencia.
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A los 100 años, esta psicóloga sigue escuchando a sus pacientes.
Pero como empieza a fallarle la memoria, se enfrenta a una difícil decisión.
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El nuevo ‘acuerdo’ comercial entre China y EE. UU. no es lo que parece.
Si el acuerdo verbal entre los dos países se mantiene, solo reparará parte del daño de la guerra comercial que inició el presidente de EE. UU.
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Musk llamó a Trump antes de publicar su mensaje de ‘arrepentimiento’
Queda por ver cómo gestionará Trump el intento de reconciliación y si la relación entre ambos hombres puede restablecerse.
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ICE implementa nuevos métodos para detener a las personas migrantes, ante la presión del gobierno de Trump.
Antiguos funcionarios dijeron que la presión del gobierno de Trump para que la agencia detenga a un número récord de inmigrantes indocumentados aumenta las posibilidades de cometer errores.
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En el juicio a Weinstein hubo tensiones entre miembros del jurado.
Harvey Weinstein dijo que las luchas internas del jurado no le permitían tener un juicio justo.
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La bandera de México, un arma política de doble filo.
Las imágenes de banderas mexicanas en las protestas contra las redadas se han hecho virales. Muchos manifestantes dicen estar conscientes de la reacción política entre los conservadores, pero no piensan dejar de ondearlas.
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Khaby Lame, el tiktoker más popular del mundo, es detenido y expulsado de EE. UU.
En medio de la ofensiva migratoria del presidente Trump, agentes detuvieron a Lame, de 25 años, por exceder el plazo de su visa, y abandonó el país.
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Musk expresa ‘arrepentimiento’ por sus críticas a Trump.
Ambos intercambiaron duras críticas en las redes sociales la semana pasada. Trump ha dicho que no tiene ningún interés en reparar la relación con su antiguo asesor.
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Newsom afirma en un discurso que Trump está destruyendo la democracia de EE. UU.
En un mensaje televisado a nivel nacional, el gobernador de California, Gavin Newsom, pidió a los estadounidenses que se enfrentaran al presidente.
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Trump declara emergencias cuestionables para acumular poder, según los académicos.
En disputas sobre protestas, deportaciones y aranceles, el presidente ha invocado estatutos que es posible que no le proporcionen la autoridad que reclama.
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Trump advierte que se responderá con ‘gran fuerza’ a quienes protesten contra el desfile militar.
“Ni siquiera he oído hablar de una protesta” en el acto del sábado en Washington para celebrar al ejército, dijo, pero “se trata de gente que odia a nuestro país”.
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La detención y la deportación vistas a través de un chat familiar.
El pasado delictivo de un venezolano lo puso en la mira de las autoridades migratorias de EE. UU. Sin embargo, su familia estaba decidida a mantener el contacto.
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Waymo limita su servicio en San Francisco al extenderse las protestas.
El lunes la empresa de taxis autónomos empezó a restringir de manera preventiva los viajes a las zonas donde puedan reunirse los manifestantes.
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Kennedy retira a todos los expertos del panel de vacunas de los CDC.
El secretario de Salud de EE. UU. decidió “jubilar” a los 17 miembros de un comité que toma decisiones importantes sobre quiénes reciben inmunizaciones, incluidas las vacunas infantiles.
Estilos de Vida
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El MI6 nombra a su primera jefa, la espía de carrera Blaise Metreweli.
Una ex “Q” será la primera mujer que dirija el servicio de inteligencia exterior británico en los 116 años de historia de la agencia.
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La colonia menonita que se asoció con una empresa de diamantes.
Casi 60 menonitas, la mayoría procedentes de México, forman una comunidad que se ha establecido en Angola, lo que ha causado preocupación en los habitantes de la zona.
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¿Los Labubu pueden lograr que China sea ‘cool’?
China lleva mucho tiempo luchando por mejorar su imagen, especialmente en Occidente. Puede que ahora esté logrando su cometido gracias a un muñeco de belleza cuestionable.
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Sin una salida clara, la guerra entre Israel e Irán podría durar semanas.
Ninguno de los dos países tiene grandes incentivos para detenerse, y no hay ninguna vía obvia hacia la victoria absoluta. Mucho dependerá del presidente Trump.
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Un despegue, una llamada de auxilio y dos pilotos de Air India que no volvieron a casa.
Uno de los pilotos del vuelo 171 que se estrelló poco después de despegar planeaba jubilarse. La carrera de su copiloto acababa de empezar. El último vuelo de ambos duró segundos.
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Las abuelas que juegan rudo un deporte de niños.
Un equipo de ‘flippa ball’ de adultas mayores en Singapur es un ejemplo de cómo el país está animando a su creciente población de la tercera edad a mantenerse activa.
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Europa protesta contra el turismo de masas.
En Italia, Portugal y España, los activistas utilizaron pistolas de agua y un “paseo ruidoso” de maletas para llamar la atención sobre el aumento del costo de la vivienda y el impacto medioambiental del turismo.
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Cumbre del Grupo de los 7: lo que hay que saber.
Aunque la agenda incluye los incendios forestales, la economía mundial y Ucrania, la mayoría de los líderes asistirán con el objetivo de reunirse con Trump y evitar cualquier desavenencia.
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Irán sopesa opciones para responder a Israel. Todas implican grandes riesgos.
Un contraataque agresivo implica el riesgo de una escalada. Pero ceder a las exigencias de EE. UU. e Israel es una alternativa poco probable.
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El papa León dice que canonizará a Carlo Acutis en septiembre.
La ceremonia para nombrar al primer santo milénial se pospuso debido a la muerte del papa Francisco.
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El único sobreviviente del choque de Air India tuvo un escape casi milagroso.
Viswash Kumar Ramesh era una de las 242 personas del 787-8 Dreamliner que se estrelló poco después de despegar de Ahmedabad, India. De algún modo, salió vivo.
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Lo que hay que saber sobre los ataques de Israel a Irán.
Israel atacó Teherán a primera hora del viernes y mató a muchos de los principales líderes militares y científicos del país. Estados Unidos dijo que no había participado en los ataques.
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¿Viajas a Europa? Ten en cuenta las protestas por el turismo del 15 de junio.
El domingo, activistas de varias ciudades del sur de Europa tienen previsto salir a las calles para expresar su preocupación por la “turistificación”.
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Israel atacó a Irán el viernes por la madrugada.
El gobierno israelí lleva semanas preparando un ataque contra las instalaciones nucleares de Irán.
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‘No sé cómo sigo vivo’, le dijo a su familia el superviviente del choque de Air india.
Viswash Kumar Ramesh, de 38 años, que sufrió múltiples heridas, según dijo un médico, fue el único pasajero que salió vivo de entre las 242 personas que iban a bordo del avión.
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Unos estudiantes de medicina almorzaban cuando el avión de Air India chocó contra su comedor.
Los bomberos se apresuraron a apagar los edificios mientras los equipos de emergencia recuperaban cuerpos tras la colisión mortal de un avión de pasajeros en India.
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El arte de la evasión: la estrategia de China para tratar con Trump.
Pekín ha usado el control que tiene sobre los minerales críticos y ha prolongado las conversaciones con Estados Unidos para evitar los temas más espinosos y fortalecerse.
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Israel parece listo para atacar Irán, según funcionarios estadounidenses y europeos.
El aumento de las tensiones viene tras meses de presión por parte del primer ministro israelí, Benjamín Netanyahu, para que EE. UU. aproveche lo que Israel considera un momento de vulnerabilidad iraní.
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Choque aéreo en India: esto es lo que sabemos del avión de pasajeros.
Un avión de Air India que viajaba con 242 personas a Londres desde el occidente de India se estrelló el jueves.
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Mientras Trump aleja a los países aliados, ellos estrechan relaciones sin EE. UU.
Preocupados por el cambio de las prioridades estadounidenses, algunos de los socios tradicionales de Estados Unidos se han enfocado en fortalecer sus lazos con otros países.
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El rehén que encontró a Dios en los túneles de Hamás en Gaza.
Así fue como Omer Shem Tov, quien tenía 20 años y no era particularmente religioso cuando fue tomado como rehén, sobrevivió a 505 días en cautiverio.
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Wordle Review No. 1,460.
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Connections Companion No. 738.
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Spelling Bee Forum.
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Reason for Overtime.
Tarun Krishnamurthy finds a few sweet spots.
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Wordle Review No. 1,459.
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Connections Companion No. 737.
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Sticky Stuff.
Jill Rafaloff and Michelle Sontarp start from the beginning.
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Wordle Review No. 1,458.
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Connections Companion No. 736.
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Tossing and Turning.
Adam Wagner and Rebecca Goldstein’s puzzle will flip you like a pancake.
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Wordle Review No. 1,457.
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Connections Companion No. 735.
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Gentle Nudge.
Solvers finally get a solo Saturday puzzle from Barbara Lin, and it rocks.
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Wordle Review No. 1,456.
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Connections Companion No. 734.
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Light Shower.
Evan Mulvihill makes his New York Times Crossword debut with some great stacked entries.
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Connections Companion No. 733.
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Wordle Review No. 1,455.
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Daniel Bodily’s puzzle scores.
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Connections Companion No. 732.
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Wordle Review No. 1,454.
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Sam Koperwas and Jeff Chen go splitsies.
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