T/past-week
An index of 985 articles and 35 interactives published over the last week by NYT.
U.S.
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The First Race of the L.A. Olympics: Buying Tickets.
The winners of a lottery for a presale prioritizing locals often came away with sticker shock. Still, organizers said early sales had “significantly exceeded” those of other Games.
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In a Deep Red Town, Locals Vent Over a Planned ICE Detention Center.
The Tremont, Pa., area has roughly 2,000 residents and limited resources. The Trump administration plans to convert a warehouse there to hold nearly four times as many people.
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Why Manatees Need Humans to Slow Down and Pay Attention.
These gentle giants forage in shallow waters, primarily along the coast of Florida, and often have fatal encounters with boats. What can be done to help them?
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Clean Energy Slate Wins Control of Arizona’s Biggest Utility.
Proponents of renewable power will control the Phoenix area utility’s policymaking for the first time after they won an unusually contentious race that drew attention from national groups.
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U.S. Fertility Rates Drop to Another Record Low.
The fertility rate has been falling since 2007, in large part because of a plunge among teenagers.
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The Fragile Cease-Fire in Iran.
President Trump announced a conditional cease-fire with Israel on Iran, but the fundamental issues that led to the war remain unresolved.
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Hawaii Doctor Convicted of Attempted Manslaughter in Attack on Wife.
Gerhardt Konig, 47, an anesthesiologist from Maui, attacked his wife, Arielle Konig, on a hiking trail near Honolulu, prosecutors said. He claimed it was self-defense.
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Martin Gugino, Activist Shoved by Buffalo Police at 2020 Protest, Dies.
Mr. Gugino, 81, had filed a lawsuit in 2021 against the city of Buffalo and members of its police force after officers fractured his skull at a Black Lives Matter protest.
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Ohio Man Is First to Be Federally Convicted for Deepfake Porn.
James Strahler II, 37, of Columbus, Ohio, had at least 10 victims, according to the authorities. He pleaded guilty to cyberstalking and other charges covered by the Take It Down Act.
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Tennessee Plant Is Fined $3.1 Million After Explosion That Killed 16.
The fine, which comes six months after an explosion at the plant killed 16 people, is the largest ever issued by Tennessee’s occupational safety agency.
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Lawyer for Man Shot by ICE Says He Beat Murder Charge in El Salvador.
The agency had been seeking him in Northern California, saying he was wanted for questioning in that country. On Wednesday, his lawyer said he was a victim of bad law enforcement work.
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Military Families Bear the Burden of War, Again.
Even as a two-week ceasefire takes hold, mothers in multigenerational military families — some veterans themselves — are anxious about what the war in Iran could mean for their children, as they face the uncertainty of another conflict in the Middle East.
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Democrat Wins Mayoral Race in Republican-Leaning Waukesha, Wis.
Alicia Halvensleben, the president of the city’s Common Council, defeated a Republican legislator, continuing a string of Trump-era mayoral wins for Democrats.
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Liberal Judge Wins Race for Wisconsin Supreme Court.
With Judge Chris Taylor’s win, liberals increased their hold on the court. Races for the Wisconsin Supreme Court often draw national attention, but not this year.
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Michigan Woman Missing in the Bahamas After Falling Off a Boat.
Lynette Hooker was traveling with her husband from Hope Town to Elbow Cay on Saturday when she went overboard, the authorities said.
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Iranians in L.A. Watch Fearfully as Trump Threatens a Civilization.
Over half a million U.S. residents are at least partly of Iranian descent. They may have left Iran, but many treasure it still.
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Video Captures Enormous Warehouse Fire Raging Near Los Angeles.
No one was killed or injured in the fire in Ontario, Calif., but a gigantic building was destroyed in an act of arson, officials said.
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Doctor in South Texas Community Detained by Border Patrol.
The Venezuelan doctor, who was forced out of his hospital job by a federal visa pause, was detained by Border Patrol on Monday.
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Enormous Warehouse Fire in California.
A six-alarm fire consumed a 1.2 million square foot warehouse of the paper company Kimberly-Clark in Ontario, Calif.
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Newlywed Wife of U.S. Soldier Released From Immigration Detention.
The couple had gone to the husband’s Army base to complete paperwork so they could move in together. But within hours that plan derailed, and New York Times reporting about the case quickly spread.
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ICE Agents Shoot Into a Car, Injuring a Suspect in Northern California.
A federal official said the agents were pursuing a “wanted gang member” who tried to run one of them over. No confirmation of that account was immediately available.
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An Easter Egg Hunt in a California Park Leads to a Human Skull.
The authorities said they were examining the skull, which a child found in a park in Long Beach on Sunday, to identify the remains.
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Without Elon Musk, Wisconsin’s Supreme Court Race Goes Quiet.
Elections for the Wisconsin Supreme Court have previously brought record-breaking spending and national attention. Tuesday’s race has been a more muted affair.
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Texas Considers Required Reading List for Schools, Which Includes the Bible.
Education officials are planning an overhaul to English and social studies in the nation’s largest Republican led state.
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Offset, Former Migos Rapper, Is Shot Outside Florida Casino.
The former member of the chart-topping Atlanta trio was in stable condition after being shot in Hollywood, Fla., his representative said. The police said they had detained two other people.
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How Trump’s Endorsement in California Could Backfire Against Republicans.
President Trump endorsed Steve Hilton, a Republican, in the governor’s race, which could help Democrats avoid being shut out of the general election.
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Whale That Swam 20 Miles Up Washington River Is Found Dead.
The gray whale, which some locals affectionately named Willapa Willy, was found on Saturday afternoon after first being spotted swimming up the Willapa River last week.
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Map: Minor Earthquake Strikes Near San Diego.
View the location of the quake’s epicenter and shake area.
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Shots Fired at Indianapolis Councilman’s Home, After Vote Backing Data Center.
No one was injured, but the councilman, Ron Gibson, called it “deeply unsettling.”
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Savannah Guthrie Returns to the ‘Today’ Show.
Savannah Guthrie rejoined the “Today” show on Monday, more than two months after her mother’s disappearance in February. Nancy Guthrie, 84, remains missing.
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The California Lake Billed as the ‘Saudi Arabia of Lithium’
Residents of Imperial County, Calif., are in dire need of an economic boost. Experts say the answer lies beneath the Salton Sea, where a lithium trove sits.
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Newly Obtained Video of Minneapolis Shooting Undermines ICE Account.
Prosecutors did not watch video of the nonfatal shooting until weeks after charging the wounded man, an official said.
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International Students Remade a College. What’s Left When They’re Gone?
The Trump administration’s campaign to curtail international students is not just hitting the elite schools targeted by the government.
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ICE Agents Detain Newlywed Spouse of Soldier Training to Deploy.
The 22-year-old wife of an Army staff sergeant came to the U.S. as a toddler. She was taken from a military base where the couple planned to live.
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A Food Pantry Network Suddenly Shuttered, Leaving Thousands Scrambling.
Ruby’s Pantry had 85 locations in communities in Minnesota, Wisconsin, North Dakota and Iowa.
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3 Dead After High Winds Topple Tree During Easter Egg Hunt in Germany.
A 21-year-old woman, her baby and a 16-year-old girl were killed after a nearly 100-foot tree fell in a wooded area in northern Germany, the police said.
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A Harrowing Race Against Time to Find a Downed U.S. Airman in Iran.
For the Iranians, the Air Force colonel whose fighter jet had been shot down was possible leverage. For the U.S. military, finding him was a moral imperative.
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‘Twelve Dollars for Two Gallons’: E.V.s Lure Drivers as Gas Prices Rise.
From the gas pump to the auto show, drivers are talking about electric vehicles.
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$400 Bibles? Luxurious Scripture Is on the Rise.
“This is actually God’s word,” says one collector. “Why not have a really nice copy of it?”
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Their Parents Were Taken by ICE. The Children Had to Raise One Another.
Andrea García and her siblings are carrying on in a home reshaped by fear, loss and new responsibility.
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Judge Pauses Trump Demand for Student Race Data in 17 States.
The Trump administration had said it would collect data from colleges to ensure compliance with a Supreme Court ruling ending affirmative action in admissions.
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At Least 15 Injured After Driver Plows Into a Louisiana Parade.
Some of the pedestrians at the parade in New Iberia, La., were critically hurt, according to the authorities, who said the driver was taken into custody.
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Some Voters Say Congress Is Too Old. These Black Democrats Aren’t Leaving.
As older members of Congress head for the exits amid growing pressure for fresh faces in the Democratic Party, some of the most seasoned Black lawmakers are resisting retirement.
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With Cheers and Tears, Houston Reclaims Its Place as ‘Space City’
The Artemis II mission elicited deep feelings for many Americans, particularly in Houston, the home of mission control.
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Trump’s Immigration Policy Sidelines Foreign Doctors Amid Shortage.
Physicians from 39 countries are being pushed out of U.S. hospitals as a policy blocks their ability to work.
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Arrest of Wisconsin Mosque Leader Was Tied to Trump Antisemitism Campaign.
Immigration lawyers and former federal officials say the case of Salah Sarsour echoes those against other pro-Palestinian activists.
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Dozens of Violations Found at Migrant Detention Camp in Texas.
A review of Camp East Montana in Texas found failures in medical care, disease control and oversight, including improperly documented uses of force.
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Search and Rescue Underway After Iran Downs U.S. Fighter Jet.
Search and rescue efforts continued after a U.S. fighter jet was shot down over Iran. One of the two crew members was rescued, but the fate of the other was unknown.
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Trump Seeks $152 Million to Begin to Turn Alcatraz Back Into a Prison.
The plan faces significant local political opposition and the dilapidated state of the site poses considerable logistical challenges.
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FEMA Official Says He Teleported to Waffle House. Experts Are Dubious.
Gregg Phillips, who is in charge of responding to fires and floods, says the hand of God suddenly and mysteriously moved him to a 24-hour breakfast spot in Rome, Ga.
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Trump Struck Iran. Now Farmers Are Paying the Price.
The economic fallout of the war in Iran is pushing farmers to the brink as the price for fertilizer soars just before planting season. Supply chain disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz are adding new uncertainty to an already struggling farming sector.
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Fight Over Funding Islamic Schools in Texas Exposes G.O.P. Tensions.
As Muslim private schools try to join Texas’ new voucher program, top Republicans have vowed to stop what they call “radical Islamic indoctrination.”
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Gucci Mane Held at Gunpoint, Prompting 2 Rappers’ Arrests.
The hip-hop titan was forced to sign papers releasing a rapper known as Pooh Shiesty from his record contract during an armed confrontation in January at a Dallas music studio, officials said.
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ICE Arrests the Head of Wisconsin’s Largest Islamic Group.
Officials detained Salah Sarsour, the president of the Islamic Society of Milwaukee, on Monday. He is a legal permanent resident, the organization said.
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How Are High California Gas Prices Affecting Your Life?
Tell us how the sharp increase in gas prices is changing how you live and work.
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Wisconsin Universities Chief Defies Board’s Push for Resignation.
Jay Rothman, the president of the state university system, said he had received no explanation for why regents want to oust him.
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A President, the Supreme Court and a Landmark Citizenship Order Collide.
The justices seems poised to rule against the president’s birthright citizenship plan. He is already furious over their decision rejecting his tariffs program.
Elections
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Democrats Pulled Off Their Biggest Shift Yet Among House Specials Since 2024.
Shawn Harris lost by about 12 percentage points in the 14th Congressional District, but he shifted the district 25 points to the left.
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$35 Million or Your Money Back: One Candidate’s Silicon Valley Lifeline.
Tech leaders see Matt Mahan, a moderate Democrat, as their best option in the California governor’s race, but tensions have risen as he has struggled to gain traction in polls.
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Polls in Wisconsin Reflect a More Muted Supreme Court Race.
This year’s election has featured more undecided voters and lower overall awareness compared with recent cycles.
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In Phoenix, Turning Point and Jane Fonda fight for control of a utility.
The Salt River Project is little known beyond Arizona, but Tuesday’s elections at the giant public utility have brought in heavy hitters and tested Turning Point after Charlie Kirk.
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Democrats Hope to Show Strength in a Deep Red Georgia District.
The contest for Marjorie Taylor Greene’s former seat could continue a streak of special election results that have shown a significant shift to the left.
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Georgia Special Election Runoff Results.
Get live results and maps from the 2026 Georgia special election runoffs.
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Wisconsin Spring Election Results.
Get live results and maps from the 2026 Wisconsin spring elections.
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Georgia 14th Congressional District Special Runoff Election Results.
Get live results and maps from the 2026 Georgia 14th Congressional District special runoff election.
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Wisconsin Supreme Court Election Results.
Get live results and maps from the 2026 Wisconsin general election.
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Waukesha Mayor Election Results.
Get live results and maps from the 2026 Waukesha mayor election.
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Where does the data for election estimates come from, and what kind of data do we collect?
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Georgia Lawmakers End Session Without Fixing a Threat to Its Midterm Elections.
The state legislature failed to push back a deadline that requires Georgia to get rid of its current voting system and find a new one — all before November.
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Johnson Wavers on Ending the Shutdown, Reflecting His Weak Hold on Power.
The House speaker first panned, then endorsed, then punted on, then pitched and now is delaying a bill to reopen the Homeland Security Department, showing his vulnerability in the face of party rifts.
Politics
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These Homesteaders Live Off the Land (and Prep for the End of the World).
Homesteading, for all its bucolic imagery, taps into the desire to escape from the disquiet of modern America, where anything can happen.
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How Trump Purged Immigration Judges to Speed Up Deportations.
Judges are ordering an unprecedented number of people deported after coming under significant pressure from the administration to do so or risk losing their jobs.
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Democrats Embrace a Four-Letter Word.
In person, on social media and in campaign ads, Democratic politicians are swearing with glee. It is usually aimed at President Trump.
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No Charges for Wisconsin Mayor Who Removed Ballot Drop Box in 2024.
A special prosecutor said a review of the incident found there was not sufficient evidence to charge Doug Diny, the mayor of Wausau.
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36 Hours of Chaos: The Scramble for a Cease-Fire in Iran.
After careening from one diplomatic extreme to another, President Trump finds himself with a fragile deal that is already showing signs of fraying.
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New Deadline Looms for U.S. and Iran as Truce Wavers.
Fractures were already emerging in the limited cease-fire. Vice President JD Vance will lead a U.S. delegation in talks this weekend.
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Why You Won’t Know Who Is Funding the Midterms.
A lot of the money flowing into the political system is ultimately untraceable.
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White House Secures Foreign Steel for Ballroom Project.
ArcelorMittal, a European steel maker, is donating tens of millions of dollars of foreign steel for President Trump’s new ballroom.
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Trump Administration Investigating L.A. Schools’ Gender Disclosure Policies.
The investigation into the nation’s second-largest school district was prompted by a lawsuit from parents who say the policies contributed to their child’s death.
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With the Cease-Fire in Iran, Here’s Where Trump’s Five War Goals Stand.
On the first day of the pause, Iran fired missiles and launched drones in the region. It said an oil refinery on Lavan Island had been attacked. Israel continued its strikes in Lebanon.
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Once ‘Ultra MAGA’, Trump Supporters Fume About Iran on Truth Social.
A growing chorus of disaffected Trump supporters is sounding off in the replies to his posts on the social media platform he founded.
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California Supreme Court Orders Sheriff to Halt Election Investigation.
Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco, a candidate for governor, had seized ballots from a 2025 special election based on unsubstantiated claims of election irregularities.
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As Trump Swings on Iran, Congress Is Absent and G.O.P. Leaders Mum.
In a week in which President Trump has veered from threatening to wipe out Iranian civilization to declaring a cease-fire, Congress is out of session and lawmakers with the power to declare war are mostly in the dark.
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U.S. Forces Stand Ready to Resume Combat. The President May Not Be as Enthused.
President Trump knows that even if a cease-fire runs out with no final agreement on the issues dividing Washington and Tehran, the political risk of renewing hostilities is high.
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Bondi Won’t Appear on Capitol Hill for Scheduled Epstein Deposition.
Pam Bondi had already been working to avoid testifying before she was fired as attorney general. The House Oversight Committee said she would not honor her subpoena because she was no longer in the post.
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Trump Says He ‘Exceeded’ His Objectives in Iran. But What Did He Accomplish?
President Trump said “we have already met and exceeded” his military objectives. But his goals are largely unresolved.
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Warnings for the G.O.P.: 3 Takeaways From the Elections in Georgia and Wisconsin.
A Republican won Marjorie Taylor Greene’s seat, but Democrats shifted the district 25 points to the left since the 2024 presidential race. Conservative candidates lost in Wisconsin, too.
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Stung by Voters, Republican Legislators Move to Curb Citizen Initiatives.
After citizens in Republican states used ballot measures to protect abortion, expand Medicaid and raise the minimum wage, statehouses are moving to make such initiatives much harder.
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Lawmakers Greet Iran Cease-fire With Relief and More Questions.
Democrats continued to raise serious questions about a path forward while Republican leaders were mostly mum on President Trump’s decision to de-escalate tensions.
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Inside the Race to Find a Downed U.S. Airman in Iran.
Our reporter Helene Cooper walks us through the high-stakes operation to rescue a downed U.S. airman in Iran.
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Republican Wins Special Election to Replace Marjorie Taylor Greene.
Democrats had hoped for a strong showing, but the conservative district in Northwest Georgia elected Clay Fuller after President Trump endorsed him.
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Acting Attorney General Says Only Trump Knows Why Bondi Was Fired.
The acting attorney general, Todd Blanche, said during his first news conference on Tuesday that “nobody has any idea” why President Trump fired Pam Bondi last week.
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Leader of University of Wisconsin System Is Fired by the Board.
Jay O. Rothman’s departure brought an end to a four-year stint as leader of the university system following a public struggle for power.
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Trump’s Iran Threats Look Like Self-Incrimination for Potential War Crimes.
President Trump, in vowing to systematically destroy civilian infrastructure and annihilate Iran’s entire civilization, appears to be creating evidence about his intentions.
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With Threat to Wipe Out Iran’s Civilization, Trump’s Rhetoric Goes Beyond Bluster.
Even if the president does not carry out his threat, his violent rhetoric risks damaging his credibility as a negotiator and the country’s standing in the world.
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To Boost Military Budget, Trump Targets Popular Programs at Home.
Amid the war with Iran, the president has proposed to scale back some of the very programs meant to ease families’ financial burdens.
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As Deadline Nears, Confusion Over U.S.-Iran Talks Swirls Worldwide.
U.S., Iranian, Israeli and other officials offered varying accounts about the state of negotiations between Washington and Tehran.
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Trump’s Threats of War Crimes Intensify Pressure on General Caine.
The president’s apocalyptic rhetoric clashes with the responsibility of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to protect the military’s honor.
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Only Trump Knows Why Bondi Was Fired as Attorney General, Blanche Says.
In his first news conference since being elevated to acting attorney general, Todd Blanche said that “nobody has any idea” what led to Pam Bondi’s dismissal other than President Trump.
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What Defines a Civilian Target in War?
It is illegal for any military to target civilians, as President Trump has suggested he would in threats against Iran. But the U.S. has sought significant leeway in defining a civilian target.
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U.S. and Israel Coordinate Strikes on Iran as Trump Turns Up Rhetoric.
U.S. forces launched more than 90 “restrikes” on Kharg Island, Iran’s oil export hub, early on Tuesday but have avoided hitting oil infrastructure.
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‘Definitely a Sham’: As Tariffs Climb, Trade Fraud and Accounting Tricks Proliferate.
U.S. imports from China have shrunk drastically. But billions of dollars of the change appear to be the result of accounting gimmicks and outright fraud.
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6 Takeaways From the Story of Trump’s Decision to Go to War With Iran.
New details from the weeks leading up to the campaign show how President Trump’s alignment with Benjamin Netanyahu and a lack of sustained opposition from his inner circle put the United States on a course to war.
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How Trump Took the U.S. to War With Iran.
In a series of Situation Room meetings, President Trump weighed his instincts against the deep concerns of his vice president and a pessimistic intelligence assessment. Here’s the inside story of how he made the fateful decision.
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What to Watch in the Election to Succeed Marjorie Taylor Greene in Georgia.
Clay Fuller, a Republican allied with President Trump, will face Shawn Harris, a Democrat, in the election to fill the remainder of Ms. Greene’s term after her resignation from Congress.
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Fact-Checking Republicans’ Misleading Claims About Problematic Elections.
President Trump, his administration and G.O.P. lawmakers have claimed widespread issues with mailed ballots and fraudulent voting, but the evidence doesn’t support them.
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There’s a Third Political Party in Arizona. Just Don’t Call It ‘Independent.’
Both the Democratic and Republican parties in Arizona have been locked in a legal battle with a chapter of the group “No Labels” as it tries to rechristen itself.
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Trump Calls Artemis II Astronauts After Their Historic Journey Around the Moon.
The conversation celebrated a small, but significant, step in an ambitious plan for missions to the moon and Mars that Mr. Trump had set early in his first term.
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Hegseth Likens Easter Rescue of U.S. Airman to Resurrection of Jesus Christ.
President Trump also asserted that God supports the American war against Iran “because God is good, and God wants to see people taken care of.”
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Trump Says Iran Cease-Fire Proposal Is ‘Not Good Enough’ as Deadline Approaches.
President Trump has threatened to launch a massive attack targeting bridges, power plants and other civilian facilities by Tuesday evening.
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Trump Escalates Threats to Devastate Iran.
President Trump renewed threats of attacks on Iran if the country does not agree to a deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz by his Tuesday night deadline. The warnings came on Monday as the president gave more details on the rescue of a missing American airman shot down over Iran on Friday.
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Redistricting War Comes Down to Virginia and Florida.
As deadlines approach in the next two weeks, neither is going quite according to the partisan plan.
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6 Takeaways From Trump’s News Conference on Iran.
President Trump described the risky mission to rescue an Air Force colonel whose fighter jet had been shot down, but he offered no clear path out of the war.
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Texas Congressman Accused of Pursuing a Second Subordinate With Lewd Texts.
A news report linked Representative Tony Gonzales of Texas, who has admitted to an affair with an aide, to another series of sexual texts with a different aide, raising a dilemma for the House G.O.P.
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Between Easter Eggs and Bunny Hops, Trump Talks of War and Autopens.
The Easter Bunny was out of earshot as President Trump spoke to reporters about the war in Iran and his predecessor’s mental acuity.
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Trump Administration Pulls Out of Civil Rights Settlements Backing Trans Students.
The Education Department said there was no precedent for the federal government terminating settlements stemming from civil rights investigations into schools.
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Do You Have Questions About a No-Bid Federal Contract? Tell Us Here.
The government is supposed to let many vendors compete for contracts, to get the best deal for taxpayers. We are looking at cases where it did not.
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Supreme Court Clears the Way for Dismissal of Bannon Conviction.
Stephen K. Bannon, a former close aide to President Trump, was convicted for failing to comply with a congressional subpoena related to the investigation into the Jan. 6 attack.
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Republicans Unveil a $342 Million Battle Plan to Keep the Senate.
The main super PAC for Senate Republicans is focusing on eight states, and plans to spend big money to defend G.O.P.-held seats in Alaska, Iowa and Ohio.
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In Race to Replace Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Test for Voters on Iran War.
Tuesday’s special House election runoff in a conservative stretch of Georgia is one of the first to showcase disagreements over the conflict, including within the G.O.P.
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Trump’s Lesson From Risky Rescue: Threaten to Go Harder at Iran.
In an expletive-laced social media post, the president said Iran should open the Strait of Hormuz or he would bomb bridges and power plants.
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How Democrats and Republicans Are Clashing in Week 6 of the Iran War.
A swing-district Republican called the war an “incredible operation,” and President Trump drew backlash from political figures in both parties over a social media post.
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Trump Revels in Threats to Commit War Crimes in Iran.
The president said he would bomb Iran “back to the Stone Ages.” Until this administration, American leaders had insisted they were trying to follow international law in war.
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Stephen Miller Is Still Pursuing His Immigration Agenda, but More Quietly.
The architect of President Trump’s mass deportation campaign wants “a moratorium on immigration from third world countries until we can heal ourselves as a nation.” The chaos in Minneapolis has not pushed him off that course.
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U.S. Rescues Downed Air Force Officer Deep Inside Iran, Trump Says.
An Air Force officer of a F-15E Strike Eagle shot down on Friday by Iran spent a day in hostile territory with little more than a pistol for protection.
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New Attorney General, Same Albatross: Trump’s Quest for Retribution.
The name atop the Justice Department’s organizational chart matters less than the presence of a president whose demands for revenge have become so extreme that even his most obsequious appointees have fallen short.
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Trump Pledged a Quick End to the Iran War, but He Hasn’t Explained How.
President Trump bet that American firepower could cow Iran into compliance. So far, Iran’s leaders have been unwilling to quit.
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A Meat Plant Closed in Nebraska. Then Politics Became a Focus for These Latinos.
Politically disconnected young men, especially Latinos, helped fuel President Trump’s victory, but in this economy, they could move to unconventional candidates like Dan Osborn in Nebraska.
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Trump Directs Officials to Pay All D.H.S. Employees.
The memorandum calls for paying employees at the Coast Guard, Federal Emergency Management Agency and Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency who have gone without pay during a record-long shutdown.
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Trump Contemplates Other Cabinet Changes as He Faces Political Clock.
With the midterms approaching, the president may be running out of time to get new cabinet members confirmed without bipartisan support.
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Trump Administration Celebrates Good Friday in Official Messages.
President Trump and administration officials have extended more pronounced overtures to Christians in public statements and executive orders.
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Trump Goes After Federal Programs He Calls ‘Woke’ in Budget Proposal.
The president’s request for 2027 reflects his preoccupation with eliminating programs that support diversity and civil rights.
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Six Senate Races to Watch as Democrats Grow More Bullish.
It’s still a tall task for the party to win back control. Here’s the latest.
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Iran Is Quickly Repairing Missile Bunkers, U.S. Intelligence Says.
Reports cast doubt on how close the United States is to destroying Iran’s missile capability, a key goal in the war.
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President Trump Makes Contradictory Statements About Strategy for War in Iran.
Since launching the war in Iran on Feb. 28, President Trump has altered his position on regime change and shifted the timeline of operations.
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House Democrat Wages a Lonely Legal Fight Testing Congress’s Power.
Representative LaMonica McIver is facing crushing legal fees and prison time as she seeks to get the Justice Department assault case against her dismissed, citing her legislative prerogatives.
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Justice Alito Was Taken to the Hospital Last Month in Undisclosed Incident.
Supreme Court justices are not required to release information about their health, and the disclosure practices of individual justices have varied.
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U.S. Searches for Crew After Fighter Jet Shot Down Over Iran, U.S. Officials Say.
The fate of the plane’s crew was unclear, as American officials scrambled to mount a search and rescue operation.
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White House Seeks $1.5 Trillion for Defense in New Budget Request.
The massive, proposed increase would be offset in part by steep cuts to domestic programs, some of which the administration describes as wasteful.
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Liberal Group Warns That Trump Could Have Two More Supreme Court Picks.
Demand Justice plans to tie Republicans running for Senate this year to a possible fight to fill vacancies that could emerge on the Supreme Court.
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How Democrats Are Embracing Dark Money.
The left is creating new, obscure nonprofits to funnel hundreds of millions of dollars into politics and advocacy.
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Wealthy Donors Are Hiding Political Money in Secretive Nonprofits.
Using philanthropy for campaign donations is illegal. But an exception for some nonprofits has allowed Democratic billionaires like Bill Gates and Michael Bloomberg to remain anonymous when they want to play politics.
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Pam Bondi Wanted a Graceful Exit. But Trump Wanted Her Gone.
Pam Bondi had a feeling her days as attorney general were numbered. But she didn’t expect President Trump to drop the curtain quite so soon.
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Hegseth Allows Troops to Carry Personal Firearms at Military Bases.
Many shootings at military bases have involved troops bringing guns they purchased onto base grounds and opening fire on fellow service members.
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Trump Says Opening the Strait of Hormuz ‘Should Be Easy.’ Will It?
President Trump is asking U.S. allies to “go to” the Strait of Hormuz “and just take it.” Eric Schmitt, our national security correspondent, explains how difficult it would be to clear the strait by force.
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Hegseth Fires Army Chief Amid Battle With Its Leaders.
Senior Army officers reacted with anger and frustration to news of Gen. Randy George’s dismissal, characterizing it as the latest blow to the service.
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President Trump Fires Pam Bondi as Attorney General.
On Thursday, President Trump announced on social media that Attorney General Pam Bondi would be leaving her role for a new position in the private sector.
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What to Know About the ‘Massive’ Military Bunker Beneath Trump’s Ballroom.
President Trump has been talking about the emergency facility beneath what was once the East Wing, details of which are usually kept secret, as he tries to justify his renovation.
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The Awe of a Moon Launch in an Age of Trump, Turmoil and Tribal Divisions.
The launch of Artemis II captured the tenor of the times in a country that can still do big things but seems forever mired in big problems.
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Justice Dept. Says Trump Doesn’t Need to Hand Over Presidential Records After Office.
The opinion could set the stage for President Trump to refuse to give the National Archives many of his own official documents when he leaves office.
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Blanche, Trump’s Former Defense Lawyer, Steps In as Acting Attorney General.
While it remains unclear how long Todd Blanche will stay in the job, whoever ends up taking over permanently will lead a department that he has shaped in his own image.
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Blanche, Trump’s Former Defense Lawyer, Steps In as Interim Attorney General.
While it remains unclear how long Todd Blanche will stay in the job, whoever ends up taking over permanently will lead a department that he has shaped in his own image.
-
Trump’s Cuts Have Eviscerated Once-Bipartisan Foreign Aid Programs.
Acting mostly with approval from the Republican-led Congress, President Trump clawed back money it had approved for initiatives that enjoyed strong backing from members of both parties.
-
Judge Blocks Deportation of Man Who Was Detained by ICE After Exoneration.
Subramanyam Vedam was set to be freed after his murder conviction was overturned in October. The ruling that he could remain in the United States is a blow to the Trump administration.
-
Planning Commission Approves Trump’s Ballroom, but Legal Roadblocks Remain.
The board had been expected to vote to approve the project last month, but it was delayed after about 32,000 mostly negative comments rolled in from across the country.
-
How Trump Boxed Himself In on Iran.
President Trump faces the possibility that at the end of his own two-to-three week window for wrapping up the war in Iran, nothing much will have changed.
-
War Clarifies Trump’s Spending Priorities: The Military, Not Child Care.
As the White House prepares to release its 2027 budget, President Trump said military protection, not social programs, took precedence.
-
Trump Fires Pam Bondi as Attorney General.
In a social media post, President Trump said he was replacing Ms. Bondi with Todd Blanche, her deputy, on an interim basis.
-
In Birthright Case, Trump’s Likely Loss May Not End the Fight.
The justices gave respectful consideration to what was once a fringe theory and could rule against it on grounds that would allow Congress to return to the question.
-
Lawsuit Challenges Warrantless Searches and Forced Entries by ICE.
A coalition of legal groups claims the Homeland Security Department adopted an unconstitutional policy allowing its agents to enter homes without a judicial warrant.
-
In the Birthright Citizenship Hearing, a Story of Asians Fighting for Rights.
Supreme Court justices and lawyers cited a litany of historic cases that reflect the many times Asians turned to the courts, trying to shape immigration law.
-
Tina Peters, Colorado Election Denier, Has Prison Sentence Overturned.
Ms. Peters, a former county clerk, received a nine-year sentence after being convicted of tampering with voting machines. An appeals court overturned the sentence but did not immediately free her from prison.
-
House Takes No Action on Homeland Security Funding, Prolonging Shutdown.
Even after Speaker Mike Johnson agreed to a deal to fund the Department of Homeland Security without immigration enforcement money, the House failed to take it up amid hard-right opposition.
World
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A Shaky Truce.
Even if the Iran cease-fire holds and the war ends, many believe the world will be worse off than it was before the conflict.
-
Deadline Time.
U.S. and Israeli forces hit targets in Iran as President Trump threatened to wipe out a “whole civilization.”
-
Trump’s Deportation Deals.
The president wants third countries to take migrants who can’t be sent back home. To get that, almost everything is up for negotiation.
-
A Looming Deadline.
We look at the options for reopening the Strait of Hormuz as President Trump escalates his threats.
-
Macron Criticized Trump for War in Iran and for Berating NATO Allies.
President Emmanuel Macron of France on Thursday criticized President Trump for shifting his goals with the war in Iran during a trip through Asia. Mr. Macron also warned that the attacks on NATO were weakening the alliance.
-
The Race for the Future of the Moon.
The Artemis II mission isn’t just about science and exploration. It’s part of a high-stakes space race between the U.S. and China.
-
Britain Says It Will Host Military Talks on Securing Strait of Hormuz.
It was not clear whether the talks, expected to involve dozens of countries, would satisfy President Trump’s demand that other nations take a more active part in the Iran war.
Africa
Americas
Asia Pacific
-
North Korea Tests New Weapons, Drawing Lessons from Iran War.
The country has been leveraging armed conflicts abroad, such as Russia’s war against Ukraine, to bolster its own military capabilities.
-
How War in the Middle East Paralyzed an Asian Food Giant.
Vietnam, the world’s No. 2 rice exporter, cut production as power prices surged. Even with a temporary cease-fire in Iran, worries linger over the world’s food supply.
-
Vietnam Farms Hit by the War in Iran.
The war in Iran, now in a two-week ceasefire, drove up the costs of fertilizer and fuel, pressuring farmers far from the Gulf. Our Vietnam bureau chief, Damien Cave, reports from the Mekong Delta on how the strain on the rice industry is signaling food supply problems and higher prices to come.
-
China Pressed Iran Toward Cease-fire, Iranian Officials Say.
Beijing appeared to have helped push Tehran to accept the two-week deal with the United States, reflecting China’s growing influence and its stake in avoiding a wider war.
-
He Got Rich Buying and Selling Luxury Watches. Was It a Ponzi Scheme?
Dominic Khoo made waves in Singapore as an investor in expensive timepieces. Now many of his clients accuse him of fraud.
-
Kim Jong-un’s Daughter Drives a Tank.
South Korea’s spy agency now believes that Kim Ju-ae has officially been chosen to succeed her father, the North Korean leader, according to South Korean lawmakers briefed on the matter.
-
Kim Jong-un’s Daughter Drives a Tank, and Succession Talk Accelerates.
Images of Kim Ju-ae at the helm of the military vehicle, with her father riding on top, added to speculation that she was being groomed to succeed him as North Korea’s leader.
-
Pakistan Says It Hit a Military Target. Investigations Suggest It Was a Rehab Center.
After the deadliest attack in Afghanistan since the Taliban took over, families searched among photos and remains for signs of their relatives.
-
China Built the World’s Drone Industry. Now It’s Locking Down the Skies.
The Chinese government tightened rules to curb what it described as illegal drone use, but some users say the changes are now restricting too many flights.
-
Deadly Earthquake and Floods Worsen Afghanistan’s Troubles.
Floods have killed at least 77 people this week and destroyed or damaged thousands of homes, and an earthquake on Friday killed a dozen more.
-
Epstein Presented Himself to Indian Tycoon as a Trump White House Insider.
The convicted sex offender gave Anil Ambani information on appointments and foreign policy. Some seemed prescient, though there was no evidence he was close to the administration.
-
High Gas Prices Hamper Holy Week Pilgrimage in the Philippines.
Worshipers have scaled back and adjusted plans for the Visita Iglesia, a Holy Week tradition in which Catholics travel to seven churches in one day for prayer, as the war in Iran has doubled gas prices in the Philippines.
-
How the Fuel Crisis Crimped an Easter Pilgrimage.
Surging gasoline prices in the Philippines have forced some people to cancel or scale back the Visita Iglesia, a Holy Week tradition in which Catholics travel to seven churches.
-
How Do You Count 1.4 Billion People? India Is Trying.
India’s 2027 census will shape how wealth and power is distributed and inform policies around castes and women in the world’s most populous nation.
-
Myanmar Junta Chief Ascends to President, Five Years After Coup.
U Min Aung Hlaing’s elevation to the civilian post is the conclusion of elections in the country, which were stage managed by the military.
-
‘City of Parasites’ or ‘Glamorous Metropolis?’ China’s Cosmopolitan Contradiction.
Shanghai’s many layers of architecture, culture and politics have made it a difficult fit for the Communist Party’s preferred narrative of Chinese victimhood and Western sins.
-
Volunteers in Helicopter Rescue Hiker’s Dog After a Week in the Wilderness.
A hiker in New Zealand fell 180 feet down a waterfall and was evacuated without her dog. A crowd-funded rescue effort reunited them.
Australia
Canada
Europe
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He Made a Gadget to Amuse Pets. Then He Turned to Killer Drones.
An entrepreneur behind drones that make the final strike themselves epitomizes the transformation of Ukraine’s civilian technology industry into a defense powerhouse.
-
In Germany’s East, the Far Right Could Soon Take Power. This Is Its Plan.
In the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt, the Alternative for Germany could win control of the government this fall. Once in power, it has a plan to overhaul German society.
-
No, Britain Is Not Having a Christian Revival.
A study said church attendance had soared among British young people, a trend reversal that excited religious conservatives around the world. Turns out it wasn’t true.
-
A Cease-Fire for Now in Iran, but a Blow to American Credibility.
Critics wonder if this is America’s “Suez moment,” when a leading power signals the start of its international decline.
-
Greece Plans to Block Social Media for Children Under 15.
Countries including Australia, Spain and others have already passed bans or are working on plans to restrict teenagers’ access to social sites.
-
Even as They Praise Iran Cease-Fire, World Leaders Are Whipsawed by Trump.
Across Europe and the globe, the war has damaged economies, roiled politics and underscored a lack of options in dealing with President Trump’s whims.
-
Ye ‘Should Never Have Been Invited,’ Starmer Says After Barring Rapper From U.K.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government blocked the artist formerly known as Kanye West from entering Britain for the three-day Wireless Festival in July.
-
Ukraine Ramps Up Attacks on Russian Oil, Aiming to Curb Iran War Windfall.
As the Persian Gulf conflict boosts the oil revenue that finances Moscow’s war against Ukraine, Kyiv’s forces are striking at Russia’s ability to refine and ship its crude.
-
Vance to Visit Hungary to Boost Orban Before Election.
A scheduled visit by the American vice president, JD Vance, makes clear that Russia is not the only country invested in a victory for Hungary’s leader, Viktor Orban.
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Why Hungary’s Election Could Swing on Roma Votes.
Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s policies affecting the Roma minority have put those voters in play in upcoming parliamentary elections. In a tight race, they could make the difference.
-
Can a Renovation Breathe New Life Into Paris’s Home for the Dead?
For centuries, the bones of some six million people were buried in the catacombs beneath the city. Curators are trying to preserve and modernize the tunnels while maintaining the spooky ambience.
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Pope Leo Calls for Peace and Condemns Violence on Easter.
During his first Easter address, Pope Leo XIV called for peace and condemned violence. The pope has been increasingly outspoken since the war in Iran began.
-
On Iran, Trump Keeps World Off Balance With Ever-Changing Threats.
Global leaders are struggling in their efforts to find a way to end the American-Israeli war on Iran, and they are spooked about what President Trump might do next.
-
A Hidden Russian Hand in Hungary’s Election? Actually, It’s Quite Open.
Prime Minister Viktor Orban has made hostility to Ukraine a centerpiece of his campaign. Moscow seems determined to repay the favor.
-
A Crucial Weapon in Russia’s Spring Offensive: Leafy Trees.
In the age of drone warfare, Russia is expected to exploit the return of vegetation to help conceal its troops.
-
Epstein in Paris: How a Sex Offender Hustled for Access to France’s Elite.
Jeffrey Epstein spent his last days of freedom in Paris, meeting with influential figures. It was a playbook he used everywhere he lived to stamp a veneer of respectability on a life of sordid criminality.
-
Pepsi Drops Sponsorship of London Music Festival Headlined by Ye.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he was “deeply concerned” that the rapper known for antisemitic and racist comments had been booked to perform at the Wireless Festival.
-
More Than 70 Migrants Feared Dead After Boat Capsizes Off Libya.
Survivors said at least 100 people were on a boat that had left Libya for Europe. Only 32 of those aboard are known to have survived.
-
Former Matador Is Gored to Death Before Annual Bullfight in Spain.
The accident happened before the Corrida Picassiana, an annual event in Malaga that honors the painter Pablo Picasso.
-
Pope Leo Calls for Peace and Warns of a World Indifferent to Violence.
The pontiff’s Easter remarks follow a Palm Sunday homily in which he said God rejected the prayers of “those who wage war.”
-
Three Charged With Arson in Attack on U.K. Jewish Charity’s Ambulances.
Two men and a teenager were arrested this week, the London police said, adding that the March attack had not been declared a terrorist incident.
-
Iranians Seek Respite in Nature Amid the War.
Families gathered for picnics and games this week to mark the end of the Iranian new year holiday, seizing on a brief chance to celebrate.
-
Europe’s Options in the Strait of Hormuz: Few, and Risky.
European leaders and other officials have ideas for bringing shipping back to the strait once the Iran war ends. But none of them are sure bets.
-
In a Holy Thursday Ritual, Pope Leo Returns to Tradition.
Pope Francis washed and kissed the feet of prisoners and refugees. On Thursday, his successor performed the rite of humility and service for priests.
-
Danish Warship Sunk by Britain’s Lord Nelson 225 Years Ago Is Found.
The ship sank during the Battle of Copenhagen, an important moment in Danish and British history, and became the origin of a common saying.
-
Storm Dave Cometh. But Why Is It Called That?
The conventions for naming storms are complicated by a mishmash of rules, national quirks and language barriers.
-
Ancient Artifacts Stolen in Dutch Museum Heist Are Recovered.
The golden helmet of Cotofenesti, a highly regarded artifact from Romania, and two elaborate golden bracelets were taken in January 2025.
Middle East
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Trump Again Hits Out at NATO Over Iran War.
President Trump lashed out after hosting Mark Rutte, NATO’s secretary general, at the White House on Wednesday.
-
Lebanon Mourns After Israeli Barrage Kills at Least 203 People.
The intense bombardment, which Israel said included more than 100 airstrikes in 10 minutes, was a sharp escalation that put pressure on the shaky cease-fire with Iran.
-
Here’s the latest.
-
Disagreement Over Lebanon’s Inclusion in Cease-Fire Threatens to Unravel It.
The U.S. says the deal didn’t include the country, but Iran says it did. Israel is bombarding Lebanon, and Iran wants to show it supports its allies.
-
Here’s What Happened in the War in the Middle East on Wednesday.
The first day of a tentative cease-fire had the region on edge.
-
Is Strait of Hormuz Open Again? Maybe, but Few Ships Are Using It.
There were conflicting reports about the status of the vital shipping waterway in the cease-fire with Iran.
-
Iranians Share Hopes and Fears Over Cease-Fire Deal.
As the cease-fire deal among the U.S., Israel and Iran took hold, residents of Tehran expressed mixed reactions.
-
Vance Says Lebanon Was Never Part of Cease-Fire Deal.
The vice president sought to downplay Israel’s continued bombardment of Lebanon, which he insisted had “nothing to do with” Iran.
-
White House Knew About Pakistan’s Cease-Fire Post on X Before It Was Sent.
Pakistan’s prime minister posted a public plea on X for President Trump to extend his Tuesday evening deadline for Iran. The White House was directly involved in shaping the message.
-
Uncertainty Clouds Cease-Fire as Lebanon and Gulf States Are Struck.
A day after a pause in fighting was announced between the United States and Iran, many questions remained, including the status of the Strait of Hormuz.
-
Gulf Arab nations report a barrage of Iranian attacks since the cease-fire.
-
Israel Escalates Strikes on Lebanon Despite Iran Cease-Fire.
Israel continued its large-scale bombing of Hezbollah targets after saying that a two-week cease-fire with the United States and Iran did not extend to Lebanon.
-
Freed French Citizens Return From Iran: ‘We Were State Hostages’
Cécile Kohler and Jacques Paris spent years in a Tehran prison. An Iranian court convicted them of espionage, charges that France said were baseless.
-
Iran Releases 10 Points It Says Are Basis for Cease-fire Talks.
The plan, which reasserts Iran’s control of the Strait of Hormuz and maintains the country’s right to nuclear enrichment, is not the same as the one President Trump said was a “workable basis” for negotiations.
-
After 5 Weeks of War, What Has Trump Accomplished in Iran?
President Trump said “we have already met and exceeded” his military objectives. But his goals are largely unresolved.
-
Hegseth Demands Iran Turn Over Uranium Stockpiles.
The American defense secretary warned President Trump could still order a commando raid to seize 970 pounds of enriched uranium buried in Isfahan if Iran does not agree.
-
World leaders welcome the Iran cease-fire but want the Strait of Hormuz opened soon.
-
How Pakistan Became Key Mediator Between U.S. and Iran.
Pakistani officials have aggressively courted the Trump administration and made use of their longstanding ties to Iran.
-
Truce Leaves Questions Over Fate of Iran’s Uranium.
President Trump has vowed to stop Tehran from obtaining nuclear weapons, but he has also hinted that the enriched material could stay in Iranian territory.
-
Stuck in ‘Limbo,’ Iranians Take Stock After Six Brutal Weeks.
With a tenuous cease-fire in place, Iranians are left picking up the pieces of their lives. Some fear the government will crack down on its domestic critics.
-
After Cease-Fire, Ship Traffic in Strait of Hormuz Remains Throttled.
A handful of vessels have crossed the crucial waterway since the U.S.-Iran truce began, but shipowners, insurers and others are wary of safe passage.
-
What to Know About the U.S.-Iran Cease-Fire.
The agreement to pause the fighting for two weeks came hours after President Trump threatened to destroy Iran’s “whole civilization.” Much remains uncertain.
-
War Decimated Iran’s Leadership and Pushed Up a New Generation.
Since the killing of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, authority has shifted to the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps. Younger military leaders have come to the fore.
-
Iran Cease-Fire Does Little to Sway Netanyahu’s Critics in Israel.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had already declared victory over Iran once, in June last year. Few Israelis believe that the goals he set this time will be met, either.
-
Gulf Nations Face New Reality, Whether Cease-Fire Holds or Not.
The countries will have to re-evaluate their relationships with Israel, Iran and the United States after a war that has exposed their vulnerability.
-
Israel Says Iran Cease-Fire Does Not Extend to Lebanon.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu contradicted an earlier statement from Pakistan that said the deal included Lebanon, where Israel is at war with the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah.
-
U.S. and Iran Agree to Two-Week Cease-Fire.
President Trump announced a cease-fire deal with Iran on Tuesday, shortly before a deadline for the country to reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face devastating attacks.
-
Hours Before News of Cease-Fire, Pope Leo XIV Issues Strong Rebuke of Trump.
The first U.S.-born pontiff has consistently called for dialogue to resolve the war in the Middle East. He referred to Trump’s Iran threats as ‘truly unacceptable.’
-
Trump Finds Offramp After a Day of Apocalyptic Threats.
President Trump had been under increasing pressure to find a way out after he threatened to wipe out Iran’s civilization on Tuesday night unless Iran reopened the Strait of Hormuz.
-
Iran War Timeline: Key Moments and Attacks.
The United States and Israel attacked Iran on Feb. 28, starting a weekslong war that spread to neighboring countries and rocked global markets.
-
Russia and China Veto Proposed U.N. Resolution to Open the Strait of Hormuz.
The vote came hours before an 8 p.m. deadline set by President Trump to reach a deal to reopen the waterway.
-
Democrats Condemn Trump Threat to End ‘Whole Civilization’
Members in both chambers of Congress said the president was threatening war crimes, and a growing number, questioning his mental fitness, called for his removal.
-
Trump Issues Apocalyptic Threat Against Iran as Pakistan Asks Him to Hold Off Strikes.
A “whole civilization will die tonight,” the president said as he turned up the pressure on Iran’s leaders to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
-
Some Republicans Vent Concern as Party Backs Trump’s Iran Threat.
Senator Ron Johnson said he hoped President Trump was making empty threats, but most in the G.O.P. cheered his warning that Iran’s “whole civilization” would be wiped out.
-
Trump’s Threat to Wipe Out a ‘Whole Civilization’ Appalls Some on the Right.
Marjorie Taylor Greene, Tucker Carlson and Senator Ron Johnson were among those pushing back against President Trump’s threats toward Iran.
-
U.S. Warns of Cyberattacks Tied to Iran on Water and Energy Systems.
The warning did not name specific facilities that had been struck or say whether any damage had been done.
-
Pentagon Stays Mum on School Strike, Even As Trump Boasts of Iran Rescue.
President Trump and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth’s eagerness to recount details of the rescue of a downed airman followed weeks of silence on the deadly Tomahawk missile strike on an Iranian school.
-
Iranian Officials Say Indirect Talks With U.S. Ended After Trump’s Latest Threat.
As the United States’ 8 p.m. deadline to open the Strait of Hormuz approaches, Iran vowed to retaliate if its power plants were attacked.
-
2 French Citizens Detained in Iran for Years Are Freed.
The couple, who had been arrested during a tourist visit in 2022, were accused of spying in a case that galvanized the French public.
-
Gunman Killed in Clash With Police Near Israeli Consulate in Istanbul.
Three armed men clashed with the police in a shootout near the Israeli Consulate in Istanbul on Tuesday. The police killed one of the attackers and wounded the two others, officials said.
-
U.S., Israel and Iran Accelerate Strikes Ahead of Trump’s Deadline.
The United States and Israel are trying to force Iran to open the Strait of Hormuz, according to American and Israel officials.
-
Lebanese Mourn Couple Killed in Israeli Strike, Exposing Rift Over Hezbollah.
The victims had no ties to Hezbollah, and Israel said they were not targets. Many Lebanese are angry with Israel, but also with Hezbollah for embroiling their country in the war.
-
American Journalist Kidnapped in Iraq Is Freed.
The journalist, Shelly Kittleson, was abducted by a militia allied with Iran and held for a week. Iraqi officials say she was freed in exchange for the release of militia members.
-
Britain Reinforces That U.S. Cannot Use British Bases for Attacks on Iran.
The U.K. government underlined its previous stance that the United States could only use British bases for defensive purposes, after President Trump threatened to strike civilian targets.
-
Iranians Voice Shock and Defiance in Face of Trump’s Latest Deadline.
President Trump has threatened devastating attacks if Iran does not reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Some Iranians questioned what had happened to American values.
-
Amid Escalating Threats, U.S. and Iran Float Ideas to End War.
Both countries have offered plans that could form the basis of negotiations. So far, each side’s leaders have publicly dismissed the other side’s proposals.
-
Gunman Killed in Shootout Near Israeli Consulate in Istanbul, Officials Say.
Two other armed men and two police officers were wounded in the clash, the provincial governor said.
-
Weakened and Reluctant, Yemen’s Houthis Belatedly Enter War.
Analysts say their delay in supporting Iran is partly because their capabilities were severely degraded by the U.S.-Israeli campaign last year.
-
Here’s What Happened in the War in the Middle East on Monday.
President Trump escalated his threats ahead of his pending Tuesday deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
-
Iran’s 10-Point Proposal Demands an End to Attacks and Sanctions.
As President Trump’s deadline for new attacks loomed, Iran conveyed its conditions through Pakistani intermediaries.
-
As Trump Deadline Looms, Iran and U.S. Mix Threats With Hints of Deal.
One potential off-ramp appeared when Iran offered a 10-point counterproposal for ending the war that President Trump called a significant step, if “not good enough.”
-
Israel Steps Up Attacks on Lebanon, Killing Dozens.
Sunday was a particularly deadly day, as Israel targeted areas around the country — including a Christian area long regarded as safe by residents.
-
Mapping the scale of the conflict.
-
Iranians Condemn Strike on a Top University.
Government officials and anti-government activists alike denounced the attacks on the Sharif University of Technology in Tehran, the latest Iranian center for higher education to be targeted.
-
Trump’s Board of Peace Gives Hamas Disarmament Deadline.
The demand reflects both the U.S. administration’s eagerness to secure a lasting cease-fire in Gaza and its growing impatience with the Palestinian militant group.
-
Key islands give Iran sway over the Strait of Hormuz.
-
Trump’s Tuesday Deadline for Iran Is His Latest Extension.
The new deadline comes as the president and Iranian leaders have ramped up bombastic threats against one another.
-
At Least 4 Killed in Strike in Northern Israel.
Rescue workers recovered four bodies from a residential building in the port city of Haifa after air defenses failed to intercept an Iranian strike, Israeli officials said.
-
The Latest Blows to Iran’s Leadership.
An Iranian intelligence chief killed overnight on Monday was one of several Iranian officials who occupied their posts for only a few months.
-
Iranian Intelligence Chief Killed in Overnight Attack.
Israel claimed responsibility for the death of Major General Seyed Majid Khademi, the spy chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, the latest senior official to be killed in the war.
-
The Islands That Give Iran Sway Over Hormuz.
A U.S. invasion of islands in the world’s most vital oil corridor would come with extraordinary risks.
-
Here’s What Happened in the War in the Middle East on Sunday.
President Trump taunted Iran on social media, while strikes continued in Iran, Israel, Lebanon and some Gulf states.
-
U.S. Military Rescues Airman Stranded in Iran.
An Air Force officer whose fighter jet was shot down in Iran was rescued by U.S. Special Operations forces in a risky Saturday night mission that took commandos deep into enemy territory, President Trump said on social media early on Sunday.
-
Here’s a Timeline of Trump’s Ultimatums Over the Strait of Hormuz.
President Trump first gave Iran 48 hours to reopen the vital oil shipping route on March 21. The deadline has been reset many times since.
-
How the C.I.A. Helped Locate a U.S. Airman Hiding on an Iranian Ridgeline.
The intelligence agency also executed a deception campaign aimed at drawing Iranian forces away from where the missing Air Force officer was hiding.
-
In New Threats, Trump Seems Emboldened by a Successful Rescue.
In an expletive-filled social media post, Mr. Trump said Iran should open the Strait of Hormuz or he will bomb bridges and power plants.
-
Iran’s Downing of Plane and U.S. Rescue Leave Both Sides Dangerously Emboldened.
After Iran shot down a U.S. plane and U.S. forces pulled off a risky ground operation to extricate a stranded airman, both sides claimed victory. That confidence could fuel further escalation.
-
Interceptor Missiles Save Lives, but Stockpiles Are Dwindling.
Defense systems that shoot projectiles out of the sky have become one of the most important components of warfare, so much so that militaries face a diminishing supply.
-
The Scale of the War in the Middle East in Five Maps.
See how the area of the countries affected by the war compares with other parts of the world.
-
Here’s What Happened in the War in the Middle East on Saturday.
The U.S. military’s search-and-rescue operation for a missing American airman entered its second day. The Israeli military struck a major petrochemical complex in Iran.
-
Israel Strikes Iran’s Largest Petrochemical Complex.
The sprawling complex in the city of Mahshahr was taken offline after strikes hit two utility plants that provided basic services like gas and power, Iranian officials said.
-
Satellite image company restricts Mideast content, citing a U.S. government request.
-
Here’s how two airmen would have ejected from the F-15E.
A step-by-step look at the process by which the two crew members probably ejected from the fighter jet.
-
U.S. Jet Downed Over Iran Was Most Likely Based at U.K. Airfield.
A military analyst identified markings consistent with a squadron based at R.A.F. Lakenheath, one of two British bases that host the largest U.S. fighter jet operation in Europe.
-
A projectile hit near Iran’s Bushehr nuclear plant, killing a worker.
There was no reported increase in radiation levels. A string of recent attacks near the Persian Gulf facility has fueled fears of a nuclear accident.
-
Missing Airman Raises Concerns That Iran Could Gain Leverage Over the U.S.
Since 1979, Iran has repeatedly used Americans and Europeans detained on its territory to win concessions over more powerful adversaries.
-
‘Iran Is Being Destroyed in Front of Our Eyes’: Tehran Is Gripped by Fear.
Fifteen residents of Tehran said in telephone interviews and text messages that the capital was weathering heavy bombardment Friday.
-
Here’s What Happened in the War in the Middle East on Friday.
An American fighter jet was shot down by Iran for the first time since the start of the war, leading to an urgent search-and-rescue operation for a missing crew member.
-
23 Days in Iraq: U.S. Pilot Shot Down During Invasion Recalls Battle for Survival.
Ronald Young Jr. was in the Army when his Apache Longbow copter went down during the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
-
Iran’s Defenses Have Been Struck, but They Can Still Fire Back.
Iran has sent waves of missiles and drones at Israel and Gulf states in recent weeks and shot down an American fighter jet on Friday.
-
U.S. Searches for Airman After Iran Shoots Down Fighter Jet.
One crew member was rescued. The risky operation to find the second airman came as the United States and Israel struck infrastructure targets in Iran, prompting Iranian retaliation in the Gulf.
-
What We Know About the U.S. Jets That Crashed in the Mideast.
An F-15E Strike Eagle was lost to enemy fire and an A-10 Warthog crashed in the Persian Gulf region on Friday, officials said. A rescue helicopter was also fired upon.
-
What to Know About the F-15E Strike Eagle.
The U.S. military aircraft with a two-person crew was shot down in Iran on Friday.
-
What to know about the F-15E Strike Eagle.
-
Hegseth Says U.S. Troops Are Fighting for Jesus. The Pope Disagrees.
In sharp contrast to the Trump administration’s calls for Christian prayers for the war effort, Pope Leo XIV says military domination is “entirely foreign to the way of Jesus Christ.”
-
What U.S. military pilots are trained to do when they are shot down.
-
Iranian media outlets say helicopters are searching for the crew of the downed jet.
-
Israel plans to seize control of parts of southern Lebanon.
-
More Infrastructure Sites in Gulf Countries Are Attacked.
In Kuwait, an Iranian attack on Friday damaged a power and water desalination plant, officials said. Both sides in the Iran war have ramped up strikes on civilian targets.
-
At War With Iran Again, Some Israelis Fear Conflict Is Becoming Routine.
A majority of Israelis support the war with Iran, but many doubt that it will solve Israel’s long-term security problems. Some also question their prime minister’s assurances and motives.
-
How Israel Is Taking Control of Southern Lebanon.
Israel says it will occupy much of southern Lebanon after its ground invasion. Here’s what the Israeli military presence there looks like now.
-
In Syria, Kidnappings of Women and Girls Fuel a Minority Group’s Fears.
A Times investigation found that abductions of women and girls from Syria’s Alawite minority were more common, and more brutal, than the government has acknowledged.
-
Trump’s Strait of Hormuz Problem.
Our White House reporter Zolan Kanno-Youngs parses some of President Trump’s conflicting messages about the war with Iran.
-
Here’s What Happened in the War in the Middle East on Thursday.
President Trump’s prime-time address received a defiant response from a top leader in Tehran.
-
Macron Voices Europe’s Frustration With Trump as Fighting Rages and Missiles Fly.
President Emmanuel Macron of France expressed disapproval about President Trump’s handling of the war against Iran on Thursday, chastising him for speaking cavalierly in a speech.
-
Iranians hold a nature festival in the shadow of war.
-
A Bid to Use Force to Open Strait of Hormuz Hits U.N. Roadblocks.
Several permanent members of the Security Council opposed the resolution, drafted by Bahrain in coordination with its Gulf neighbors, officials said.
-
Trump Hails Destruction of Iranian Bridge, Warning ‘More to Follow’
Fars, a semiofficial news agency, said eight people had been killed in the attack and dozens wounded.
-
Iran Says It Will Oversee Strait of Hormuz Traffic, Even in Peacetime.
The United States says Iran’s claims to control the strait are illegal, but Tehran has made escalating assertions of authority over the vital waterway.
-
Legal experts express concerns over ‘violations of international law’ in the war.
-
Macron Snaps Back at Trump’s Mockery and Criticism of NATO.
President Emmanuel Macron of France suggested that President Trump’s daily comments on the war in Iran were unserious. “Maybe one shouldn’t speak every day,” Mr. Macron told reporters.
-
Iranian officials come out defiant after Trump’s war speech.
New York
-
Bedbugs on the Subway? He Wants to Know About It.
A state assemblyman’s bill would require the Metropolitan Transportation Authority to disclose when the bugs are found on buses or in the subway.
-
Mamdani Asserts Control Over N.Y.P.D., Saying He Would Overrule Tisch.
Although Mayor Zohran Mamdani often seems to defer to his police commissioner, Jessica Tisch, he insisted that he had the final say in policing matters.
-
Former Sergeant Faces Years in Prison After Throwing Cooler at Bronx Man.
In February, Erik Duran became the first New York Police Department officer in a decade to be found guilty of killing a civilian while on duty.
-
Mamdani Acknowledges ‘Troubling’ Job Losses in 100 Days’ Interview.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani is focused on economic justice. Some budget watchdogs and business leaders want him to concentrate on economic development.
-
Gilgo Beach Killer’s ‘Unusual’ Deal Could Help Solve Other Murders.
Rex Heuermann agreed to talk to behavioral analysts at the F.B.I. when he pleaded guilty. The unit has interviewed Ted Bundy, John Wayne Gacy and Richard Speck.
-
Suspect in Gilgo Beach Murders Pleads Guilty.
Rex Heuermann, the suspect accused in the Gilgo Beach murders, pleaded guilty on Wednesday. The police arrested the 62-year-old in 2023, more than a decade after the first bodies were found.
-
In 20 Minutes, Gilgo Beach Killer Admits to Murdering 8 Women.
As he pleaded guilty on Wednesday, Rex Heuermann gave the same one-word answer each time he was asked how he killed one of his victims.
-
What We Know About the Gilgo Beach Killings.
Rex Heuermann pleaded guilty on Wednesday to the murders of eight women, seven of whom were found near Gilgo Beach on Long Island.
-
Long Island Rail Road Strike Looms, as M.T.A. and Unions Reach Impasse.
Workers could shut down America’s busiest passenger rail service beginning on May 16 if they do not reach a deal with transit officials.
-
Who Are the Women Rex Heuermann Admitted to Killing?
Six of the eight women whom Mr. Heuermann said he killed worked as escorts and advertised on sites like Craigslist and Backpage.
-
Who Is Rex Heuermann, the Man Accused of Killing Seven Women?
Mr. Heuermann was a successful architectural consultant who lived on Long Island with his family. He was arrested in 2023.
-
A $100 Million Plan to Make Studio 54 a First-Class Theater.
The Roundabout Theater Company stages shows in Studio 54, once a famous disco. It doesn’t have a permanent stage or an orchestra pit.
-
How’s He Doing? 13 New Yorkers Weigh In on Mamdani’s First 100 Days.
We talked to voters in neighborhoods where Zohran Mamdani is revered, in areas where he is feared and in diverse parts of the city where opinions differ.
-
Poll Shows Optimism in New York’s Future With Mamdani as Mayor.
A new Marist poll found that about half of New Yorkers approved of Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s job performance, while a larger share of respondents believed the city was moving in the right direction.
-
Defendant in Gilgo Beach Murders May Plead Guilty on Wednesday.
Rex Heuermann, who is charged with murdering seven women dating back to the 1990s, was arrested in 2023 and has pleaded not guilty. His trial is set to start after Labor Day.
-
Gracie Mansion Suspects Wanted to Kill Up to 60 People, U.S. Says.
An indictment charged two men with conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction in the homemade bomb attack near Mayor Zohran Mamdani's residence. It cited dashcam audio in which one said, “I want to start terror bro.”
-
‘D.E.I.’ Was Erased From N.Y.C. Racial Equity Plan to Avoid Conflict With Trump.
The changes came as President Trump has moved to erase diversity, equity and inclusion efforts. A Justice Department official still said the report seemed “fishy/illegal.”
-
Justice Dept.’s Civil Rights Division Is Investigating Star Witness Against Trump.
It was a highly unusual move by Justice Department leadership to direct a case that appears to involve accusations of lying to Congress to a division that normally focuses on civil rights abuses.
-
She Was Once in Foster Care. Now She Will Run Child Welfare in New York.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani chose Rebecca Jones Gaston, who oversaw child welfare efforts for the Biden administration, to lead the Administration for Children’s Services.
-
Can Developers Help Save Public Housing?
The city wants to replace run-down buildings in four Manhattan housing developments with new towers. Some residents are skeptical.
-
How to Build a Rest Stop for Delivery Workers in a Hurry.
A shelter for delivery workers was proposed years ago. Then Mayor Zohran Mamdani decided that it needed to be finished within his first 100 days in office.
-
Mamdani Celebrates Passover at Progressive ‘Seder in the Street’
The mayor has observed the Passover holiday in several ways in recent days, including a left-wing event on Monday. He planned to hold a Seder for city workers in the evening at Gracie Mansion.
-
These Whales Live, and Sing, Near New York Harbor in Spring.
Scientists who recorded whale songs learned that the New York Bight, at the entrance to the harbor, attracts sei whales. Ships pose a risk to them.
-
Mamdani Moves to Link Affordability Agenda With Racial Equity.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who has been taking steps to try to strengthen his ties with Black voters, is issuing two reports that focus on the ways nonwhite New Yorkers are being left behind.
-
How a Family of 3 Lives on $25,000 in Corona, Queens.
Anup Baniya, an Uber driver, works long hours, six days a week, spending most of his earnings on car expenses and essentials for his 7-month-old son.
-
Sharpton Moves Longtime Civil Rights Group to New Home in Harlem.
The Rev. Al Sharpton wants to leave his mark in the face of gentrification, which he says has diluted Harlem’s political power.
-
Someone Changed His Party Registration. He Thinks He Knows Why.
Andrew Hevesi, a lifelong Democrat and New York State assemblyman from Queens, was told his voter registration had been changed without his knowledge. He has a culprit in mind.
-
After 53 Years, This New Jersey Town’s Fight to Secede Is Over. Kind of.
South Seaside Park on the Jersey Shore has just succeeded in leaving Berkeley Township and joining its neighbor, Seaside Park, but there are still more challenges ahead.
-
Uber and Trial Lawyers Spar Over New Yorkers’ Auto Insurance Premiums.
A powerful lawyers’ association is opposing a bill that would cap damages, but the ride-share company has spent millions lobbying state lawmakers to lower rates, some of the highest in the country.
-
‘The Two of Them Looked at Each Other and Burst Into Laughter ’
Learning a memory trick at a bus stop, a lost neighborhood recalled and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
-
Fight Escalates Over Plan to Demolish and Rebuild N.Y.C. Public Housing.
The city thinks four developments in Chelsea are too run-down to be saved, and wants to rebuild them, adding mixed-income housing. Some residents are opposed.
-
She Wanted Her Hair Done for a Special Day. She Left the Salon in Tears.
A Black woman is pushing for changes in the hair industry after claiming in a lawsuit that she and her 7-year-old were turned away from an Ulta Beauty salon in Manhattan because of their hair texture.
-
Stray Bullet That Killed Baby Girl in Brooklyn Also Grazed Brother.
Two men have been arrested in connection to a shooting on Wednesday that killed an infant. One was charged with murder, attempted murder and assault.
-
Preschool Instructor Charged With Sexually Assaulting Children.
A 43-year-old man was accused of abusing “multiple” children over an 11-year period in South Jersey, and prosecutors fear there could be more victims, given his employment.
-
The Neighbor Who Has No Problem Fighting With Mayor Mamdani.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani and the City Council speaker, Julie Menin, both live on the Upper East Side. They are sparring over different approaches to balancing a $5.4 billion deficit.
-
Why Wallace Shawn Stepped in to Play ‘the Other Woman’
When an actress in Shawn’s play “What We Did Before Our Moth Days” got Covid, he took on the role.
-
Students Are Disciplined Over Antisemitic Posts Targeting Hockey Rivals.
A Connecticut high school said that it was aware of the Instagram posts and that antisemitism is “repugnant and antithetical to our values as a school.”
-
Investigators Said to Look at Whether LaGuardia Controller Stepped Away.
Officials are said to be examining whether a controller had to use an emergency phone just before the crash at LaGuardia. They have yet to determine the cause of the crash and are also focusing on other avenues.
Business
-
Fed’s Inflation Woes Preceded the War With Iran.
An energy shock stemming from the fighting has added a layer of complexity to the Federal Reserve’s decision-making around interest rates.
-
How Iran’s Information War Machine Operates Online.
In just 69 minutes, Iran took advantage of a global network of accounts and media channels to spread its narrative around the world.
-
Markets Have Faced a Year of Chaos and Still Done Awfully Well.
Most stock investors have lost money during the Iran war, but returns have been splendid for the year since the “Liberation Day” tariff announcement.
-
A Must for the Next Food Craze? Be ‘Social Media Gorgeous.’
The ascent of ube has little to do with the purple yam’s taste or Filipino origins. It’s the color, flavor experts say.
-
Oil Prices Edge Higher as Confidence in Cease-Fire Wavers.
Investors were in a more sober mood after sharp moves on the previous day.
-
What to Know About the Strait of Hormuz Under the Cease-Fire.
Vessels are wary of passing the coast of Iran in the strait, given the fragile agreement, and the number of ships traveling through it has even dropped.
-
Fed Minutes Show Officials in No Rush to Cut as Iran War Scrambled Outlook.
The conflict in the Middle East has left the Federal Reserve braced for higher inflation, with more officials open to the possibility of rate increases.
-
Adam Back Denies He Is Satoshi Nakamoto in Response to Times Investigation.
“Dr. Adam Back has consistently stated that he is not Satoshi Nakamoto,” his company said in a statement. “What is not speculative is Adam’s foundational contribution to Bitcoin.”
-
Amazon and U.S. Postal Service Reach New Deal on Deliveries After Year of Talks.
Amazon will cut the volume of packages it ships through the Postal Service by 20 percent under a tentative new deal that will preserve a crucial source of income for the agency.
-
Oil Is Sliding but Gasoline Might Not Follow Quickly.
The energy industry refers to the behavior of gasoline prices as “up like a rocket, down like a feather.”
-
Delta Expects Strong Profit Despite Higher Fuel Costs.
The airline said demand for tickets remained very strong despite the effects of the war in Iran.
-
Unraveling the Mystery Behind Bitcoin’s Creator.
Our investigative reporter John Carreyrou spent 18 months digging through the archives of online cryptography communities in search of the identity of Satoshi Nakamoto, the anonymous inventor of bitcoin.
-
Oil Prices Plunge and Stocks Surge After Cease-Fire Deal.
Markets reacted positively after the United States and Iran reached a last-minute cease-fire agreement.
-
My Quest to Solve Bitcoin’s Great Mystery.
Bitcoin’s creator has hidden behind the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto for 17 years. But a trail of clues buried deep in crypto lore led to a 55-year-old computer scientist named Adam Back.
-
4 Takeaways From Our Search for Bitcoin’s Creator.
Here’s what we found suggesting that Adam Back invented Bitcoin.
-
How China Built Its Vast Natural Gas Stockpile.
Natural gas is hard to store, but China has found a way to do it, while also developing alternate suppliers and expanding production at home.
-
Gulf Backers Invest $24 Billion in Paramount’s Deal for Warner Bros.
Despite speculation that the Iran war could scuttle commitments from Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern countries, their investments have been secured.
-
Companies See Opening for Deals Despite Market Volatility.
Bankers say companies are braving higher oil prices and whipsawing stock prices to seize on the willingness of federal antitrust enforcers to approve mergers.
-
Justice Dept. Resolves Broadway Touring Company Investigation.
Broadway Across America will not be prosecuted after acknowledging it signed a noncompete agreement with another presenter, the agency said.
-
Oil Prices Jump as Trump’s Deadline for Deal Draws Near.
President Trump's Tuesday evening deadline for a deal approached after he rejected a cease-fire proposal as “not good enough.”
-
BNY and Robinhood Will Help Run ‘Trump Accounts’ for Children.
The new tax-sheltered savings and investment accounts will start accepting deposits this summer.
-
A New Oil Shock Accelerates Return to Nuclear Power.
Shocks to natural gas supplies are spurring countries in Asia and elsewhere to rethink their rejection of nuclear energy after the 2011 disaster in Fukushima, Japan.
-
Oil Rises Slightly After Trump’s Latest Threats on Iran.
President Trump taunted Iranian leaders on Sunday, threatening to escalate attacks if the Strait of Hormuz was not reopened.
-
This Is Not China’s War, but Beijing Started Preparing for It Years Ago.
Long concerned about geopolitical crises, China redoubled efforts to secure energy security when President Trump started raising the stakes in his first term.
-
China Mourned an Education Influencer. The Grief Was a Quiet Revolt.
Zhang Xuefeng helped people navigate the country’s unforgiving higher education system. The public outpouring after his death was a quiet rebuke to the punishing process.
-
OPEC Plus Warns of Slow Recovery After War in Iran.
The group of influential oil exporters also said it was increasing its production quotas, a largely symbolic move.
-
Despite Poor Reviews, ‘The Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ Is a Megahit.
The animated sequel was expected to collect about $371 million worldwide over its first five days in theaters. “Kids love the movie,” a box office analyst said.
-
Hockey Rinks Turn to Plastic Ice as Planet Warms.
Some environmentalists question using plastic to address rising temperatures.
-
New Owner of Historic Shopping Plaza Pitches a $1.5 Billion Rescue Plan.
The Country Club Plaza’s sale and turnaround plans come at a consequential economic time for Kansas City, Mo., which will soon lose the Chiefs football team.
-
My Husband Can’t Get a Job. Should I Divorce Him?
Plus, whether to use A.I. to get ahead at work — if you think the technology is evil.
-
Trump Budget Does Little to Address Nation’s Fiscal Challenges.
While the federal deficit has started to shrink under President Trump, his plans could make the long-term situation worse.
-
Student Debt Burdened Them, So They Moved Abroad and Stopped Paying.
A record number of student loan borrowers are in delinquency and default. Some are making the drastic decision to leave the country and abandon their loans.
-
‘Under Protest,’ Raw Dairy Farm Recalls Cheddar Linked to 9 E. Coli Cases.
Raw Farm, a dairy producer in California, denies that its products have caused the outbreak, which has sickened people in three states.
-
United to Offer No-Frills Fares in Its Premium Cabins.
United is introducing restrictive base fares in its most profitable cabins: premium economy and business class.
-
Big Banks Seeking a Piece of SpaceX’s I.P.O. Must Subscribe to Elon Musk’s Grok.
Mr. Musk is requiring Wall Street firms to purchase subscriptions to his A.I. chatbot if they want to advise on one of the largest initial public offerings in history.
-
Why Is the Labor Market Stuck?
Our chief economics correspondent, Ben Casselman, describes how a “low-hire, low-fire” labor market has left American job-seekers in a bind.
-
Economists Once Dismissed the A.I. Job Threat, but Not Anymore.
Artificial intelligence hasn’t disrupted the labor market, economists say, but they are increasingly convinced that it will — and that policymakers are unprepared.
-
Skilled Foreign Workers Think About Leaving the U.S.
As the Trump administration cracks down on the H-1B visa program, which allows skilled workers like software engineers to work in the United States, foreign professionals are debating whether to stay and build careers or quit the American Dream.
-
Hershey’s Promises to Use Only Real Chocolate After Backlash.
The change follows weeks of complaints from a grandson of the Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup inventor and other vocal consumers.
-
Republicans Seek Protections for Oil Giants Against Climate Lawsuits.
Utah passed a law to insulate oil companies against efforts to make them pay for their role in global warming. A nationwide version is in the works.
-
Blue Owl, Ailing Private Credit Firm, Reveals Even More Troubles.
Investors in the struggling Wall Street lender put in record requests to get their money back.
-
Mortgage Rates Climb for 5th Week as Iran War Weighs on U.S. Housing Market.
The average rate on a 30-year mortgage in the United States jumped to 6.46 percent, making it harder for buyers to afford homes.
-
Bad, Very Bad and Much Worse: Pick a Forecast for the War and Economy.
A merely bad outlook might be good enough for the markets, our columnist says.
-
Tesla Sales Rise as $4-a-Gallon Gas Revives Interest in E.V.s.
The repeal of tax credits last year sent electric vehicle sales plummeting. But with gas prices soaring, consumers are taking another, cautious, look.
DealBook
Economy
Energy & Environment
Media
Your Money
Technology
-
Federal Court Denies Anthropic’s Motion to Lift ‘Supply Chain Risk’ Label.
The ruling was a setback for the artificial intelligence start-up in its battle with the Defense Department over the use of A.I. in warfare.
-
Meta Unveils New A.I. Model, Its First From the Superintelligence Lab.
The model, Muse Spark, performed better than Meta’s previous A.I. models but lags rivals on coding ability.
-
Anthropic Claims Its New A.I. Model, Mythos, Is a Cybersecurity ‘Reckoning’
The company said on Tuesday that it was holding back on releasing the new technology but was working with 40 companies to explore how it could prevent cyberattacks.
-
How Accurate Are Google’s A.I. Overviews?
The company’s A.I.-generated answers look authoritative, but they draw on an array of sources, from trustworthy sites to Facebook posts.
-
A.I. Is on Its Way to Upending Cybersecurity.
With new systems from companies like Anthropic and OpenAI, hackers can attack with greater speed. The defense is more A.I.
-
The Big Bang: A.I. Has Created a Code Overload.
Companies are scrambling to deal with the glut.
-
What Teens Are Doing With Those Role-Playing Chatbots.
Harassing bots with “funny violence.” Confiding about a broken heart. Chatting with a block of cheese. Filling a void of loneliness.
-
Uber and Lyft Offer Gas Price Relief, but Drivers Say It’s Not Enough.
As fuel costs go up, making a living as a gig driver is harder than ever.
-
How iPhones Found Their Way Into Space.
The astronauts traveling in the Artemis II spacecraft were allowed to take smartphones with them. Sadly, they can’t connect to the internet.
-
OpenAI Buys Streaming Show ‘TBPN,’ Aiming to Change Narrative on A.I.
OpenAI said the deal would help it “create a space for a real, constructive conversation about the changes A.I. creates.”
Obituaries
-
Jim Whittaker, First American to Reach Everest’s Summit, Dies at 97.
As an executive with the outdoor-supply retailer REI and an experienced climber, he conquered Mount Everest in 1963, when fewer than 10 people were known to have done so.
-
Craig Reedie, Who Fought Doping in Global Sport, Dies at 84.
He led the World Anti-Doping Agency when Russia’s state-sponsored doping system was exposed a decade ago. He received blowback for the agency’s response.
-
Nathan Farb, 85, Dies; Photographed Hippies, Siberians and Mountains.
His camera captured subjects as diverse as New York City during the Summer of Love in 1967, Siberia under Soviet rule and the Adirondacks in upstate New York.
-
Norman Bussel, Who Chronicled Veterans’ Unseen Traumas, Dies at 102.
After a grueling year in a German prison camp during World War II, he endured crushing nightmares and survivor guilt back home, leading him to spread the word about veterans’ suffering.
-
Linda Dresner, Old-School Guru of Avant-Garde Fashion, Dies at 88.
Her minimalist gallery-like store on Park Avenue was a destination for generations of moneyed New Yorkers and helped change the way clothing is sold.
-
Peter Schrag Dies at 94; Wrote of Dangers of California’s Populist Streak.
His best-received book explored the state’s infatuation with voter initiatives, which were sometimes pushed with anti-immigrant fervor.
-
Ronald H. Spector, Who Traced Social History in Books on War, Dies at 83.
A Vietnam veteran-turned-academic historian, he drew acclaim for portraying conflicts from the perspectives of generals as well as grunts on all sides, both in Vietnam and in World War II.
-
Mary Rand, Pioneering Track and Field Olympian, Dies at 86.
At the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, she became the first British woman to win a gold medal in track and field, and the first to win three medals in one Games.
-
Tom Valenti, Who Made Lamb Shanks a Showstopper, Dies at 67.
At Ouest, on the Upper West Side, and other Manhattan restaurants, he served robust dishes in a style he called “haute cuisine with the grandma gene.”
-
William F. Murphy, Led Diocese and Weathered Abuse Scandal, Dies at 85.
While serving as a Long Island bishop, his earlier tenure in Boston came under scrutiny during investigations of sex-abuse allegations involving pedophile priests.
Africa
Art & Design
Cultura
Dance
Environment
Media
Music
-
Wayne Perkins, Guitarist to the Stars, Dies at 74.
Mr. Perkins worked with Bob Marley, Joni Mitchell and many others, almost joined the Rolling Stones and turned down an offer from Lynyrd Skynyrd.
-
Joe Conzo Sr., Guardian of Tito Puente’s Legacy, Dies at 83.
He went from being a fan of the “Mambo King” to becoming his manager and personal historian. Later, he kept alive memories of a bygone era of New York Latino culture.
-
Elisabeth Waldo Dies at 107; Fused Indigenous and Western Sounds.
A classically-trained violinist, she incorporated traditional instruments native to Latin America in Western-style scores to create an atmospheric hybrid.
-
Dolores Keane, Singer Known as the ‘Soul of Ireland,’ Dies at 72.
She sang of homesickness and longing, and often collaborated with American musicians like John Prine and Emmylou Harris.
Briefing
-
What Will End the War?
We look at the state of the cease-fire.
-
The U.S.-Iran Cease-Fire Is Being Tested.
Also, a Times investigation seeks to unmask Bitcoin’s creator. Here’s the latest at the end of Wednesday.
-
The Good List: 6 Things to Add Joy to Your Day.
Indispensable emoji, undesirable friends and show notes for your life.
-
A Near Miss.
We look at the cease-fire and the discussions that led to war.
-
Trump Announces Iran Cease-Fire.
Plus, Britain bars Ye over antisemitism. Here’s the latest at the end of Tuesday.
-
The Far Side.
The Artemis II crew has gone farther from Earth than anyone has ever been.
-
Artemis II Astronauts Go Farther From Earth Than Ever Before.
Also, Trump threatens to attack Iran’s power plants and bridges. Here’s the latest at the end of Monday.
-
Asked and Answered.
Today we take on more reader questions about the news.
-
Is Christianity Making a Comeback?
Some see Easter Sunday’s packed pews and overflowing chapels as a sign of a religious revival. But experts are urging caution.
-
Easter, Passover, and Artemis II.
The holidays and the moon launch each tell a redemption story. Why do those stories keep appearing, again and again?
-
Living Space.
We don’t have to travel to the moon to gain some of the insight that astronauts do.
-
One of Two Americans Rescued After Iran Downs a U.S. Jet.
Also, job growth rebounded in March. Here’s the latest at the end of Friday.
-
The Human Cost of War.
Our colleague spent two months in Kyiv.
-
The New York Times News Quiz, April 3, 2026.
Did you follow the news this week? Take our quiz to see how well you stack up with other Times readers.
-
Trump Fires His Attorney General.
Also, France’s president voices European frustration with the U.S. leader. Here’s the latest at the end of Thursday.
Podcasts
-
Sarah Goldberg Is TV’s Secret Weapon.
This week Wesley Morris wants you to pay attention to the actress Sarah Goldberg, who stars in the new series “The Audacity” after her memorable turn with Bill Hader in “Barry.”
-
Fcukers Cares About Not Caring.
On this edition of the “Popcast” Song of the Week, our critic Jon Caramanica unpacks the eye-roll, hair-toss, neo-electroclash single “If You Wanna Party, Come Over to My House” by Fcukers.
-
Ada Limón’s ‘Literary Theory’
Recently on the “Book Review” podcast, the former poet laureate Ada Limón treated us to a reading of her poem “Literary Theory.”
-
My Husband’s Breakdown Was My Breakthrough.
Stefanie Gunning had to reach her lowest point to realize what she needed for herself.
-
Hard Fork Full Episode 188.
Last week, two separate juries held social media companies liable for harming young users. We unpack what these landmark decisions mean — not only for the future of social platforms like Meta and YouTube, but also for A.I. chatbots. Then, Sebastian Mallaby, the author of “The Infinity Machine,” joins us to talk about the three years he spent with Demis Hassabis and those closest to Google DeepMind. And finally, we catch up on some of our favorite tech headlines from the week with a round of HatGPT.
-
‘Instructions on Not Giving Up’
On a recent episode of the “Book Review” podcast, the former poet laureate Ada Limón made the case for why poetry matters and read two poems, including this one called “Instructions on Not Giving Up.”
-
Andy Weir on the End of 'Project Hail Mary'.
*SPOILER ALERT* We asked Times readers and listeners of the “Book Review” podcast what questions they had for Andy Weir. Many wanted to know why he ended his book “Project Hail Mary” the way he did. Andy explains.
-
The Cases That Could Change Social Media Forever.
Two important cases could open the floodgates for people to sue social media platforms, by cracking open Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. Casey Newton and Kevin Roose dive into why, and how, on the “Hard Fork” podcast. Listen to the full conversation at youtube.com/hardfork.
-
Harry Styles Gave Us the Album of the Spring.
Wesley Morris on why Harry Styles’s new album is the perfect spring soundtrack.
-
The New Laettner, Golf’s Soul and Athletes Stuck in the Wrong Era.
Has the greatest moment in N.C.A.A. history officially been dethroned?
-
YouTube’s C.E.O. on Free Speech and the Platform’s Policies.
What is the responsibility of a platform like YouTube — which is now the leading way Americans watch video — to elevate truth over misinformation? On “The Interview,” YouTube’s chief executive, Neal Mohan, says he believes the answer lies in the platform’s principle of free speech reflected in its community guidelines.
-
YouTube’s C.E.O. on Its Settlement to Fund Trump’s Ballroom.
On “The Interview,” Neal Mohan, YouTube’s C.E.O., talks about the platform’s decision to reinstate Donald Trump’s account and the company’s $25 million settlement with Mr. Trump and others whose accounts were suspended after the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol.
-
The Future of Addictive Design + Going Deep at DeepMind + HatGPT.
“The platforms should be absolutely begging Congress to regulate them, because the alternative is they get sued into oblivion by a bunch of law firms.”
-
23 Books We Are Looking Forward to This Spring.
The Book Review editors discuss fiction and nonfiction that caught their eye. Plus, Ada Limón on the power of poetry.
-
Robert Pattinson and Zendaya on Love’s Warning Signs.
Robert Pattinson and Zendaya, stars of the film “The Drama,” discuss knowing whether a relationship is right with the “Modern Love” host, Anna Martin.
The Daily
The Headlines
-
A ‘Messy’ Cease-Fire, and a 15-Year Sentence for the ‘Ketamine Queen’
Plus, the latest country planning to ban social media for teens.
-
Trump Backs Down on Iran, and an A.I. ‘Reckoning’
Plus, the great pistachio gamble.
-
Trump Threatens ‘Complete Demolition’ by Midnight, and Dark Money Flows Into Midterms.
Plus, a look behind the moon.
-
Inside the Race to Save a U.S. Airman in Iran, and Artemis II Heads Behind the Moon.
Plus, Ye’s attempted comeback prompts backlash.
-
‘The Headlines’ News Quiz: Apr. 3, 2026.
Following the news? Tracy Mumford has some questions for you.
-
How Pam Bondi Got Fired, and a Flood of Deadly New Drugs.
Plus, your Friday news quiz.
Science
-
Artemis II Astronauts Get a Break After Journey Around the Moon.
The crew of the NASA mission had a quiet day as they flew home toward Earth.
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Houston, We Have No Problem. But We Do Have a Lot of ‘Moon Joy.’
While science can seem colorless and plain, NASA’s lunar crew members have brought expressiveness and emotion about their journey to mission control and the public.
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First Photos From NASA Moon Flyby Show Setting Earth and Eclipse.
The White House and NASA released imagery captured by the cameras of the four astronauts of the Artemis II mission.
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The hundreds of mementos aboard Artemis II include a flag that never made it to the moon.
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The crew will see a solar eclipse while on the far side of the moon.
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NASA Isn’t Going to Dark Side of the Moon.
Scientists prefer to call the backside of the moon its “far” side.
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As the astronauts lose contact with Earth, NASA isn’t worried.
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How to Follow NASA’s Artemis II Around the Far Side of the Moon.
The astronauts will head into a communications blackout at 6:44 p.m. Eastern time as they become the first people to travel around the moon since 1972.
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The Artemis II crew breaks a distance record.
Three Americans and one Canadian traveling on NASA’s Orion spacecraft surpassed a milestone set by the crew of Apollo 13 in 1970.
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Astronauts Dedicate Moon Crater to Carroll Wiseman, Wife of NASA Commander.
The crew shared an emotional moment with mission control and the family of Reid Wiseman, whose wife, Carroll, died in 2020, on the ground in Houston.
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Human eyes are seeing the far side of the moon for the first time in a long time.
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This is the most important science experiment aboard Artemis II.
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This is the Artemis II moon menu.
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NASA Families Don’t Go to the Moon, but They’re on the Mission, Too.
For the families of the Artemis II astronauts, the mission “begins at assignment.”
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NASA’s Artemis II Moon Mission: Everything You Need to Know.
The journey around the moon of three Americans and one Canadian is going into its sixth day, but it’s not too late to get caught up on it.
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NASA Artemis II Astronauts Race Into Moon’s Embrace After Quiet Easter.
Ahead of a lunar flyby on Monday, the crew celebrated the astronaut Jeremy Hansen’s first spaceflight and got a special message from Charlie Duke, the Apollo 16 moonwalker.
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NASA Astronauts Are Closer to Moon Than Earth on Artemis II Day 4.
The astronauts said they had lost track of which day it is on Earth on their transit to the moon.
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Artemis II Pilot Took a Test Drive on the Way to the Moon.
Victor Glover, a former Navy test pilot, carefully maneuvered the Orion capsule in space around a discarded rocket stage. The demonstration is crucial for future moon landing missions.
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NASA Unveils 1st Earth Photos From Artemis II: ‘You Look Beautiful.’
The pictures were released on the third day of the first mission since 1972 to send people around the moon.
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Artemis II’s commander had a message for one of his oldest friends.
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The Artemis II crew’s spacecraft feels bigger on the inside than you might think.
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On Day 2, the astronauts begin their journey to the moon.
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After a long Wednesday, NASA launched its mission back to the moon.
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How the Artemis Astronauts Plan to Live in Space for 10 Days.
On the Artemis II mission, four astronauts will work, exercise and sleep in a capsule that is about the size of two minivans for 10 days. In April 2025, National Geographic worked with NASA to film the astronauts at an Orion space capsule model in Houston.
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He Studied How to Transport Blood to Wounded Marines.
Peter Frazier’s lab at Cornell worked to improve how blood was stored and transported for armed forces. Then he received a stop-work order.
Space & Cosmos
Climate
The Upshot
Opinion
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Are These Woke Words Dead Yet?
On “The Opinions,” the editor Nadja Spiegelman and two culture critics debate which “woke” words are alive, dead or dying.
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Twists and Turns in the Iran War.
Readers respond to news articles about the Iran cease-fire and the road to war. Also: Betting on matters of life and death.
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Human Writers Who Rage Against A.I.
Readers discuss the ways writing and artificial intelligence don’t mix. Also: A degraded civil culture.
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Who Really Controls Your Health Care?
In the first episode of Times Opinion’s new series “Divided,” a doctor and a former insurance executive confront a central question: Do insurance companies prioritize profit over patient care?
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Why the Strait of Hormuz Is Iran’s Trump Card.
On “The Opinions,” the columnist David French says that no matter how much havoc Trump wreaks on Iranian targets, as long as they maintain control of the Strait of Hormuz, Iran can keep going.
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‘Stop This Madness’: Time to Rein In Trump’s Reckless Conduct.
Readers react to President Trump’s increasingly bellicose rhetoric. Also: Two moon missions, 58 years apart.
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Not Just for Rock Stars: Playing in the Band.
Readers respond to “Change Your Life. Start a Band,” an Opinion guest essay by Hugo Lindgren. Also: Bruce Springsteen’s art.
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Memories of the ‘Last, Best Time to Be a Kid’
Readers react to Sarah Wildman’s guest essay about the free-range childhood depicted in the Rob Reiner film “Stand by Me.”
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Why This Tax Day Is Even Harder and More Annoying Than Usual.
Tax preparation companies and Republicans are pursuing their shared interest in torturing taxpayers
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All the President’s Wars — at Home and Abroad.
From Tehran to the Supreme Court, a look at Trump’s relentless battles.
-
What if Iran Wins This War?
If Iran wins this war, victory “will be tremendously emboldening for a regime that has been very dangerous even at its weaker moments,” Suzanne Maloney, the director of foreign policy at the Brookings Institution, argues on “The Ezra Klein Show.”
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What if Trump Just Walked Away From Iran?
Iran will become “the toll collector at the gulf” if Trump preemptively walks away from the conflict in Iran, Suzanne Maloney, the director of foreign policy at the Brookings Institution, argues on “The Ezra Klein Show.”
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Why Iranians Believe They Have the Upper Hand.
Iran believes time is on its side, and that the West isn’t ready for the economic shock of a blocked Strait of Hormuz, warns Suzanne Maloney, the director of foreign policy at the Brookings Institution.
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Our First Moon Colony Will Be Filled With Garbage.
Forget futuristic glass domes filled with plants and high-tech infrastructure, Jared Isaacman, the head of NASA, says of humanity’s first space colonies. In reality, because of the cost of travel, they will most likely be scrappy bases surrounded by garbage.
-
The Rise and Fall of Pam Bondi.
Readers react to President Trump’s firing of the attorney general. Also: A.I. and therapy.
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Why Iran Believes It Has the Upper Hand.
The Iran expert Suzanne Maloney explains how Iran views the war, and why the United States is losing.
-
Did Jesus Rise From the Dead?
A case of mistaken identity, or a profound experience of grief? The religious scholar Bart Ehrman argues that the earliest accounts of Jesus’ Resurrection might be rooted in the way we process loss.
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How Jesus Altered the World’s Conscience.
It might sound obvious now, but helping your neighbor wasn’t always seen as a moral imperative. The New Testament scholar Bart Ehrman explains how Jesus’ teachings shape the way we all view our role in society today.
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Trump’s Positive Thinking Won’t End This War.
President Trump’s Wednesday night address about the war in Iran is evidence of how poorly his war of choice is going, the columnist Jamelle Bouie argues.
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How Did Trump’s Iran Speech Fare?
Readers respond to President Trump’s speech on the war. Also: Asian Americans at risk; civic eduction for the 250th; a veteran’s view.
Op-Ed
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How Ben Sasse Is Living Now That He Is Dying.
The former senator wants to heal the America he’s leaving behind.
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Trump Is Tearing at the Soul of the Military.
If an unlawful order comes from the president himself, to whom does the soldier appeal?
-
Hillary Clinton: Fixing Affordability Starts With Families.
Our children will pay the price for the president’s indifference.
-
This May Be the Most Important Medical Story of the Decade.
We can’t let the most important medical achievement of a decade slip through our fingers.
-
Trump Wants Orban to Win. That’s Why He Might Not.
Viktor Orban’s 16-year rule could be coming to a close.
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I Studied the Economic Fallout From World War I. This Could Be Worse Than We Expect.
Even if this cease-fire holds, the war’s shocks may last for years.
-
NASA Flew by the Moon, but Behind the Scenes, Its Science Is a Chaotic Mess.
Without science, the stunning images of Earth from space are only pretty pictures.
-
The 100-Year-Old Bank That Could Solve Our Housing Crisis.
The Federal Home Loan Bank needs to offer more loans.
-
Deepfake Nudes Are Haunting America’s Teens.
But a new set of lawsuits may finally hold tech companies accountable.
-
Did Wokeness Leave Us Worse Off?
The debate over words we can and can’t say.
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We Are Witnessing the Rise of a New Aristocracy.
A.I. will further enrich the winners and impoverish the losers, with inevitable societal impacts.
-
The Last Thing Democrats Need Is More Policy Plans.
Democrats need to become a real political party again — and that’s no easy feat.
-
Anthropic’s Restraint Is a Terrifying Warning Sign.
The rapid advance of artificial intelligence is happening now.
-
Idealism Can Get Us to Space. Only Commerce Can Keep Us There.
We’re racing a civilizational clock.
-
The Iranian Advantage Is an Illusion.
And in Tehran, the truth should be clear.
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Our Vacations. Our Food. Our Mortgages. The Iran War Will Change Our Lives.
The disruptions caused by the Iran war will significantly impact our cost of living.
-
Trump Hasn’t Given Up on His ‘Unrequited Love’ for Putin.
The president’s deference to authoritarian leaders has profoundly corrupted American foreign policy.
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No Shy Person Left Behind.
American democracy has a personality problem.
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Now We Know What a Modern War Looks Like.
The war in Iran is a real-time case study in the changing character of modern warfare.
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Health Insurance Companies Care About You. Agree or Disagree?
We put a doctor and a former insurance executive in a room.
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How Much Humiliation Can JD Vance Take?
The vice president gets saddled with the Iran war and eroding popularity.
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The Fire in the West Bank Is Burning Hotter, Out of Sight.
An Israeli law aiming capital punishment at Palestinians but not Jewish settlers is immoral, unconstitutional and part of a larger effort to suppress rights.
-
I’ve Covered Women in the Workplace for 15 Years. Something Alarming Is Happening.
As women are erased from the narrative, injustices against them go unnoticed.
-
This Is Starting to Look Like a Slow-Motion Bank Run.
The cockroaches are starting to emerge.
-
Don’t Blame College Students for Feeling Adrift. I’m Right There With Them.
We’re supposed to give students a map. I don’t even know the terrain.
-
Enough With the Nepo Candidates, Democrats.
Democrats smother their best message — change — when they try to reserve public offices for relatives and cronies.
-
What’s the Point of Sending People Into Space? An Astronaut, Scientist and Journalist Debate.
Should we just send robots?
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It’s Called Silicon Sampling, and It’s Going to Ruin Public Opinion Polling.
Instead of navigating the obstacles to conduct polls with human respondents, pollsters are running A.I. simulations instead. Why?
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San Francisco Sobers Up.
San Francisco gets its act together.
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The War Is Turning Iran Into a Major World Power.
Its newfound might derives from its control the Strait of Hormuz.
-
Iran Is Ending the Dream of Remote-Controlled War.
A.I.’s significant targeting improvements aren’t enough to overcome geography in Iran.
-
The Light That Changed My Life.
The light that changed my life.
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Want to Change? Maybe Stop Trying So Hard.
The self-transformation industry sells control. Real change is messier.
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Always Be Posting: The New Rules for Democratic Candidates.
Is this a great way to audition and select our leaders, especially for executive offices? Not particularly.
-
Women Need Treatment for Hot Flashes. Why Is This So Hard?
Hormone patches are in scarce supply because of increased demand — that’s mostly a good thing.
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Resurrection Is Everywhere.
Marriages, careers, reputations, financial stability and dreams can all die. But that’s not the end of the story.
-
Pam and Kristi, Kicked to the Curb.
Trump girls gone wild — or just gone.
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Trump’s Relentless, ‘Utterly Incoherent’ Battles.
From Tehran to the Supreme Court, a look at Trump’s relentless battles.
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Trump Needs Smarter Sycophants.
Loyal losers don’t go very far with this president.
-
Trump May Be Turning Iran Into Another North Korea.
As one expert puts it, this war is “an operational success but a huge strategic failure.”
-
‘Cats’ Were Always Meant to Vogue.
I was onstage for the first Broadway version of ‘Cats.’ A new reimagining showed me something about the show I never expected.
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Finish the Job: How Trump Can Still Win in Iran.
Our strength and leverage over events in Iran are growing, not diminishing.
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Trump Has Lost Control of Events in Iran.
The pain inflicted on Iran has not forced it into submission. It is not clear what will.
-
Is It Legal to Bully the Supreme Court?
It may be a new world, but “it’s the same Constitution.”
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Why Does Gavin Newsom Sound Like a Right-Wing Troll?
He seems to have concluded that progressive models of manliness are passé.
-
The Epstein Emails Show #MeToo Never Stood a Chance.
The files reveal the mechanics of doubt that the #MeToo movement had to contend with.
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Trump: The Art of the Verb.
There is a morality to verbs, especially in political speech.
-
How Giorgia Meloni Fell to Earth.
For more than three years, Giorgia Meloni’s leadership of Italy has seemed unshakable. Now she suddenly seems vulnerable.
-
The Singular Failure of Pam Bondi.
The core of Mr. Trump’s dissatisfaction with the attorney general was apparently her failure to serve his need for revenge against his enemies.
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No Plan. No Allies. No End in Sight.
The president failed to provide any meaningful strategy on the two central issues that define the war on Iran: reopening the Strait of Hormuz and what to do about that country’s uranium.
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Eloquence Has Grown Passé. Let’s Bring it Back into Fashion.
Being authentic or relatable shouldn’t mean being inarticulate.
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Trump Has No Idea How to Clean Up His Own Mess.
His speech told us very little, at least explicitly, but revealed quite a lot.
Arts
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‘Burnout Paradise’ Takes Its Running Time Literally.
In the Off Broadway show, “Burnout Paradise” performers run on treadmills while doing various tasks. The show, and its actors, are slated to run at Astor Place Theater through June 28.
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Dealer Who Sold Ketamine to Matthew Perry Is Sentenced to 15 Years.
Prosecutors say Jasveen Sangha’s customers knew her as the Ketamine Queen. She sold the ketamine that killed the “Friends” star in 2023.
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Nathan Farb’s Roving Lens.
An immersion in the wide-ranging work of a photographer who has died at 85.
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Europe’s Museums Confront the (Literal) Skeletons in Their Closets.
Institutions are grappling with the human remains in their collections that were used to justify debunked theories about race.
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Presto! In Chicago, a High-End Magic Palace Appears.
The entrepreneur Glen Tullman is betting people want to dress up and watch magicians in a luxury setting. Either it will work or $50 million will go poof.
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After 11 Years in Court, Heir Reclaims a Modigliani Looted by the Nazis.
A judge ruled against a holding company controlled by David Nahmad, the billionaire art dealer, which had bought the work at auction in 1996.
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Has Nintendo Solved Its Princess Problem?
As the company releases the sequel “The Super Mario Galaxy Movie,” the need for narrative has meant a new focus on its sparse cast of female characters.
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Art Gallery Shows to See in April.
This week in Newly Reviewed, Travis Diehl covers Pat Oleszko’s burlesque street theater, Paul Chan’s inflatables, David Armstrong’s calm curiosity and Torbjorn Rodland’s subtle awkwardness.
Art & Design
Dance
Music
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5 Classical Music Albums You Can Listen to Right Now.
The latest recording from Pygmalion, Messiaen’s “Quartet for the End of Time” and works written for Anne-Sophie Mutter are among our selections.
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A Stroke and a Coma Couldn’t Stop Rock’s Big Booster.
Matt Pinfield, the D.J. and onetime MTV host, returned to the music world months after using up yet another of his “nine lives.”
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Two Titans of Classical Americana Come to Carnegie Hall.
Recent performances by the Orchestra of St. Luke’s and the Philadelphia Orchestra offered music by Duke Ellington and John Adams.
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5 Minutes That Will Make You Love Detroit Jazz.
The city’s music is spiritual, searching and defiantly local, even when it spreads worldwide. Hear tracks from Yusef Lateef, Geri Allen, James Carter and other Detroit jazz greats.
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9 Ethereal, Emotional, Chaotic and Goofy Cloud-Rap Gems.
A quick guide to the underground genre, featuring fakemink, Bladee, Yung Lean and more.
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Review: Seeing a School Shooting on America’s Biggest Opera Stage.
Kaija Saariaho’s “Innocence,” a powerful and kaleidoscopic depiction of mass violence and its aftermath, has arrived at the Metropolitan Opera.
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U.K. Bars Ye Over Antisemitism, Months Before Major Festival Performances.
The BBC reported that entry to the country was being denied to the rapper formerly known as Kanye West. The festival he was due to headline is now canceled.
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Irvine Wanted a New Concert Venue. But Not on Live Nation’s Terms.
As the company’s antitrust trial continues, one incident involving an amphitheater shows how it clashed not with another industry titan, but a small city.
-
Is This Bach’s Most Underrated Music?
The sprawling organ collection “Clavier-Übung III” is not as widely known as it should be. An excellent new recording could change that.
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How Did Black Music Take Over the World? Let Melvin Gibbs Explain.
Since the late ’70s, the bassist has worked to map a musical route that mirrored the trans-Atlantic slave trade and birthed nearly all of American popular music.
-
The Volcano Lover: An Anarchic Young Composer’s Masterpiece.
Simon Hanes, a leading musician in New York’s downtown scene, has recorded his “Gargantua,” a work for 15 musicians that nods to volcanoes, Rabelais and Dante.
-
9 Songs We’re Talking About This Week.
U2 surprises with an Easter EP, and Anne Hathaway puts out a convincingly delivered pop song that boasts FKA twigs as a writer.
-
With Polka Dots and Microtones, Angine de Poitrine Has Gone Viral.
The virtuosic rock duo from Quebec releases its second album, “Vol. II,” this week.
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Ex-Turnstile Guitarist Charged With Attempted Murder of Bandmate’s Father.
Brady Ebert, a founding member of the Baltimore hardcore punk band, hit the father of Brendan Yates, the group’s lead vocalist, with his car, the police said.
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Ye Takes the Stage in L.A., Hoping to Wash Away His Sins.
After years of antisemitic behavior, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West performed at SoFi Stadium for his first full live show in the United States since 2021.
Television
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In ‘The Testaments,’ Teen Girls See Gilead Differently.
Chase Infiniti and Lucy Halliday explore the fierce potential and peril of adolescent girls in Hulu’s follow-up to “The Handmaid’s Tale.”
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‘The Boys’ Got Bigger Than Ever. That Seemed Like the Time to End It.
“I really just wanted to go out on top,” said Eric Kripke, whose sex-and-violence-soaked superhero satire just began its fifth and final season.
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True Crime Streaming: In ‘A Friend, a Murderer,’ the Killer Was Close.
This docuseries offers a rarely heard perspective, as three friends discuss the complex experience of learning that the violent killer terrorizing their community was part of their tight-knit group.
-
Stephen Colbert Skewers Trump’s ‘Double-Sided’ Cease-Fire.
“The Late Show” host asked if being double-sided wasn’t a prerequisite: “I believe there’s a word for a single-sided cease-fire and it’s ‘murder.’”
-
Sam Levinson Talks Tragedy, the Internet and the End of ‘Euphoria’
Ahead of the Season 3 premiere on Sunday, the show’s creator discussed his reputation, the loss of Angus Cloud and the soul-searching that followed.
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Frankie Muniz Refuses to Stay in His Lane.
At 40, he is a father, a NASCAR driver and back as the star of a “Malcolm in the Middle” revival. “I have unfinished business,” he said.
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Late Night Puzzles Over Trump’s ‘Mixed Message’ on Iran.
“Everyone, most notably the people of Iran, were wondering if their civilization was going to die tonight. Well, good news, it didn’t,” Jimmy Kimmel said after a cease-fire was announced.
-
Taylor Frankie Paul Details Abuse Allegations in Custody Battle.
The reality star and her former boyfriend, Dakota Mortensen, have filed dueling court petitions that paint each other as the main aggressor in a recent altercation.
-
Netflix Explores a Buzzy Chess Cheating Scandal.
“Untold,” a sports documentary series, recounts a notorious match between two grandmasters and the cheating accusations that rocked the chess world and beyond.
-
Stephen Colbert Says Trump Went ‘100 Percent Cage-Free Crazy’ for Easter.
Late night hosts mocked the president’s expletive-filled ultimatum to Iran, posted on Easter Sunday morning.
-
As Savannah Guthrie Returns, No News Can Be the Hardest News.
With her mother still missing, the “Today” host’s comeback was a rare TV example of learning to live with not knowing.
-
‘Euphoria,’ Plus 8 Things to Watch on TV This Week.
The HBO show returns after a long hiatus. And the March Madness final airs.
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‘The Comeback’ Season 3, Episode 3: The Aww-Ick.
This week’s episode suggests that Lisa Kudrow and Michael Patrick King don’t mind mixing in a little sentiment with their satire.
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On ‘S.N.L.,’ Bondi Boasts of Being ‘First Woman Ever Fired as Attorney General’
Ashley Padilla was both Pam Bondi and Kristi Noem on “Saturday Night Live,” with Tina Fey, Candice Bergen and Melissa McCarthy. Jack Black and Jack White were host and musical guest.
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‘Hacks’ Has the Last Laugh.
As the HBO comedy finished production earlier this year, a photographer captured some of the final days on set and the showrunners looked back on its award-winning run.
-
Regé-Jean Page on the Album He Considers Flawless.
“It’s raw, real, sensitive, strong, vulnerable, righteous, romantic, genius,” said the “Bridgerton” actor, who stars in the new film “You, Me & Tuscany.”
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On ‘Company Retreat,’ Anthony Norman Finished the Job.
The unwitting hero of this Amazon prank comedy series acted heroically in the final episode.
-
Late Night Says Goodbye to Pam Bondi.
President Trump is “on a bit of a firing spree,” Jimmy Fallon said on “The Tonight Show” on Thursday, adding, “Ironically, the only staffer who has immunity is RFK Jr.”
-
‘The Pitt’ Season 2 Episode 13 Recap: Should He Stay or Should He Go?
Dr. Robby finally says what his colleagues had been thinking.
-
Danish Shows to Watch While We’re Still at Peace.
The protector of Greenland also makes very entertaining TV.
Theater
Books
Book Review
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If You Love ‘The Pitt,’ You’ll Love These Books.
Memoirs from the front lines capture the high-octane pace, roller coaster stakes and unforgettable personalities of emergency medicine.
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A Teenager Plunged to His Death. A Reporter Found More to the Story.
A new book by Patrick Radden Keefe retraces the secret life of a 19-year-old Londoner who fell in with a gangster underworld.
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A Poet Who Embraced Recklessness, in Surreal Swerves and Zigzags.
Dean Young’s posthumous collection, “Creature Feature,” applies his characteristically giddy sense of unraveling to his own life and ill health.
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7 Writers, 1 Island and a Dash of Murder.
In this novel, a group of authors race to finish a mystery manuscript, only to find themselves part of a lethal plot.
-
To Topple the Patriarchy, These Women Have Sex With Vegetables.
The Polish best seller “Hexes of the Deadwood Forest” is like a post-porn fever dream of Eastern European magic realism crossed with a plant-based “Joy of Sex.”
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All Aboard a Nostalgia Cruise, With a Blast From the Boy Band Past.
In Emma Straub’s latest novel, “American Fantasy,” a pop group’s midlife return provides fodder for both comedy and redemption on the high seas.
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A Child Soldier Turned His Past Into Swashbuckling Comics.
“Corto Maltese,” Hugo Pratt’s influential 1967 graphic novel, returns, with just as much to say about childhood during wartime.
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Do You Recognize These Novels From Their Characters?
Try this short quiz to see how many titles and people you can pair up from five classic books.
-
A New Orleans Heroine Who’s Uneasy in the Big Easy.
The well-born protagonist of Nancy Lemann’s novel “The Oyster Diaries” returns home and immediately feels like an outsider.
-
What Does Judaism Look Like Without Zionism?
In “Here Where We Live Is Our Country,” Molly Crabapple tells the story of a Jewish labor movement that fought antisemitism and nationalism with equal fervor.
-
Tradwife or Trainwreck?
In Caro Claire Burke’s novel, “Yesteryear,” a homesteading momfluencer can no longer hide the scandal swirling just below the surface.
-
Police Procedurals: A Starter Pack.
These novels marry good mysteries with unforgettable characters and the twists and turns of the investigative process to deliver page-turning thrills.
-
Unmissable New Thriller Novels.
Our columnist on the month’s best new releases.
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Does This Come in Pink Margarine? A Surprising History of Color Names.
The lexicographer Kory Stamper’s “True Color” is a sneakily insightful philosophical treatise on what it means to define anything at all.
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Picture Book Characters Who Just Don’t Wanna.
Matt Phelan’s bear cub named Bartleby and Scott Rothman’s judgy bunny aren’t wicked or misbehaved. Like our reviewer, they simply prefer not to.
-
5 New Books We Love This Week.
Reading recommendations from critics and editors at The New York Times.
Movies
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‘The Travel Companion’ Review: Friendship, Insecurely Fastened.
A struggling documentarian sublimates his hurt over his roommate’s new girlfriend into his fixation on losing airline perks.
-
‘Outcome’ Review: A Washed-Up Star’s Apology Tour.
Keanu Reeves plays an actor covering up a sordid past in this misguided film directed by Jonah Hill.
-
‘Newborn’ Review: After Solitary Confinement, New Horrors Await.
The writer-director Nate Parker focuses on the societal costs of imprisonment in this drama starring David Oyelowo as a Queens dad who goes upstate on a family trip.
-
‘Hamlet’ Review: (In)action Hero.
This version reimagines Shakespeare’s play for the screen with an appealing dynamism, set within a well-to-do South Asian family in London.
-
‘Fiume o Morte!’ Review: Scenes From a Mini Dictatorship.
In this documentary, Igor Bezinovic casts nonactors to restage major episodes from when an Italian poet turned strongman ruled a city in what became Croatia.
-
‘The Christophers’ Review: Fine Art, Frayed Artists.
Ian McKellen and Michaela Coel are terrific in Steven Soderbergh’s sharp-eyed take on art and money.
-
‘Faces of Death’ Review: Is It Real? Does It Matter?
A meta-remake of the 1978 horror cult classic is more about how we watch than what we watch.
-
‘Bunnylovr’ Review: Run, Rabbit.
A young woman struggles with the pitfalls of an extremely online life in this confident and meandering debut feature.
-
This Film Festival Should Be Better Known.
Year in and year out, New Directors/New Films showcases inspired work worth your attention. The latest edition is especially impressive.
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‘Faces of Death’ Set the Bar for Hardcore Horror. It’s Baaack.
A remake of the cult horror movie raises questions about the approach to viewing disturbing videos in a new era.
-
‘The Drama’ Has a Shocking Plot Twist. Share Your Reaction.
The sort-of rom-com stars Zendaya and Robert Pattinson as an engaged couple whose relationship is upended by a revelation that has divided audiences.
-
How Plausible Is ‘Project Hail Mary’? Astrophysicists Have Thoughts.
Based on hard science fiction, a genre that prioritizes scientific accuracy, the blockbuster gets a lot right but misses a few things, experts say.
-
Five International Movies to Stream Now.
This month’s picks include a feminist coming-of-age tale from India, a documentary about grasshopper harvesting in Uganda, a queer fable from Brazil and more.
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His Film Is Intended to Provoke Both Supporters and Opponents of Israel.
The director Nadav Lapid uses his work to confront his discomfort with nationalism in his home country, never more so than in “Yes.”
-
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.
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‘Jimmy & the Demons’ Captures an Artist at Work on His Grand Finale.
The impish but thoughtful James Grashow, his sculpture and his long marriage are the subjects of Cindy Meehl’s film.
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Blake Lively’s Retaliation Case Heads to Trial Without Harassment Claims.
A federal judge tossed the actress’s sexual harassment claims against Justin Baldoni in a split decision that sets the stage for a contentious trial.
-
‘The Blue Trail’ Review: A Drifting Journey Into Freedom.
In an imaginary Brazil, where older people are forcibly removed from society, a resolute 77-year-old seeks her independence in the Amazon.
Food
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Is There a Perfect Way to Cook Eggs?
The chef Yotam Ottolenghi has some thoughts.
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Chicken With Rhubarb and Red Onion and Honey.
Savory meets tangy meets sweet in this Melissa Clark stunner.
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Dujjonku (Dubai Chocolate Chewy Cookies).
Dujjonku, a portmanteau of “Dubai” and “jjondeuk” (the Korean word for chewy), spread like wildfire in Gimpo, South Korea. The confection, which is less a cookie than a truffle with the crunchy pistachio cream filling of Dubai chocolate, wrapped in marshmallow and dusted with cocoa powder.
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Restaurant Review: Mawn in South Philadelphia.
Why is It so hard to get into this Cambodian restaurant in Philly? Chalk it up to Mawn’s intriguing menu — mostly Asian, but with nods (funnel cakes!) to the city’s other culinary riches.
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Bomdong Bibimbap (Spring Cabbage, Rice and Eggs).
The main character in this quick fridge-raid bibimbap is bomdong, a tender Korean spring cabbage that might be hard to find outside of the peninsular country (though a Korean grocery store may carry it). In its place, you can use the inner leaves of a Napa cabbage. You also can use a sturdy lettuce, such as Little Gem or even romaine.
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Thai Basil Chicken Dumplings With Rice Paper Wrappers.
The signature hot, sour, salty, sweet flavor profile of Thai food takes the form of super-savory dumplings with a chile-spiked dipping sauce. Formed into little round patties, these resemble a pan-fried dim sum dumpling filled with garlic chives.
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Earl Grey Chocolate Tart.
This simple no-bake tart has a delightfully complex flavor: the aromatic pairing of toasted coconut and bright Earl Grey, alongside the double whammy of nostalgic milk chocolate and grounding dark chocolate.
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Chicken and Saffron Rice With Pomegranate Salsa.
This is chicken and rice dish makes for a striking one-pan meal thanks to the combination of saffron, pistachios and pomegranates. Baking the rice in this way will also give you tahdig (crispy rice) around the bottom and edges of the pan.
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Hudson Local Leans Toward Luxury With a Jean Georges Alum.
The daiquiri is the star at Echo Lake, Vietnamese flavors are showcased at After Eden and more restaurant news.
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Food Influencing Gets a Feel-Good Refresh.
Audiences and restaurant owners have soured on predictable voice overs and pay-for-play reviews.
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The Five Weeknight Dishes in My Current Rotation.
Including a bean-based Japanese curry, Genevieve Ko’s dan dan noodles and our very beloved chicken shawarma.
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In Tech-Heavy Seattle, a Tiny Restaurant With Analog Thrills.
At Off Alley, the chef Evan Leichtling builds sumptuous dishes from odds and ends of the Pacific Northwest.
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7 Ways to Make the Best Scrambled Eggs of Your Life.
This fast, reliable staple can be even more delicious with these seven surprising hacks.
-
Hilary Duff Shares Her Favorite Sick-Day Soup.
The singer visited The New York Times kitchen studio to share her family’s cure for the sniffles.
-
A Speedier Pasta Primavera.
Ready in 20 minutes, it’s filled with all the seasonal vegetables I like best: asparagus, two kinds of peas (sugar snap and English) and delicate spring onions.
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Simple Bread Pudding, Spring Vegetables Every Which Way and Hot Cross Buns.
Happy Easter, happy spring and happy Sunday.
-
For People With Autism, Can Restaurant Kitchens Be a Haven?
Culinary jobs have the potential to be a perfect fit, and a new effort is afoot to help autistic workers land them.
-
How to Make Perfect, Golden Chicken Schnitzel.
Sue Li shares tips for a puffy, airy crust and pairs her schnitzel with a fresh cucumber salad full of parsley and dill.
-
Easy, Breezy Springtime Desserts.
It’s time for simple showstoppers like toasted coconut rum balls and blueberry, lemon and almond cake.
-
Lights, Camera, Crafty: The Woman Who Feeds the Movie Crews.
Watch Concetta Scottodicarlo in action, as she feeds the cast and crew of a film production.
-
Bran Muffins Can Be Tender and Moist. Here’s How.
The natural nutty sweetness of wheat bran shines in these tender muffins, sticky with honey and dates.
-
Here It Is, Our Best Carrot Cake.
Dorie Greenspan’s luscious cake serves up spring, with five stars and over 10,000 reviews.
-
Are You in a Restaurant Gap Relationship?
You check Resy by the hour. Your date couldn’t care less. A misalignment in dining tastes is the ultimate test of compatibility.
-
If You Love a Great Restaurant Dupe, This One’s For You.
Why wait in line when you can enjoy equally great food somewhere else?
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Say Peas.
Frozen peas star in a very green baked risotto, a spring tofu soup and a ricotta frittata.
-
This Spicy Citrus-Marinated Fish Is, to Quote Our Readers, ‘SO GOOD!’
I need this mix of quick-roasted fish, pico de gallo and creamy avocado, and I need it now.
Wine, Beer & Cocktails
-
How to Find Great Values in Wine.
Costs are rising, but with exploration and understanding one’s own limits it’s still possible to maximize quality at the right price.
Style
-
A Magazine for Earthlings Who Dream of Outer Space.
Space Junk is a new publication from the fashion editor Jack Mills.
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The Heir to a Legacy of Glamorous Shoes.
First ladies and movie stars wore Herbert Levine shoes before the label closed in 1975. A Levine superfan is reviving it for a new generation.
-
Gen Z Is Using A.I., but Doesn’t Feel Great About It.
A new study from Gallup found that young adults have grown less hopeful and more angry about artificial intelligence.
-
Hasan Piker Can Stream, but Can He Stump?
The progressive and popular Twitch streamer, who is controversial with some Democrats, tests his political influence on the 2026 campaign trail.
-
Poking Around Athena Calderone’s Lavish New Home With Martha Stewart.
The lifestyle influencer behind the brand EyeSwoon hosted a housewarming at her new home in TriBeCa.
-
My In-Laws Invited Us to Join Them on a Cruise. What’s an Introvert to Do?
Dreading the diminished opportunities for alone time during a weeklong cruise with her extended family, a reader looks for a graceful way out.
-
The Hamptons Has a Bird Flu Problem.
This winter, hundreds of dead geese fell around Georgica Pond. No one knew how to dispose of the infected bodies, so a local landscaper just winged it.
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Tiny Love Stories: ‘Oh, to Be Loved Like That!’
Modern Love in miniature, featuring reader-submitted stories of no more than 100 words.
-
Not Your Average Sweater and Jeans.
Shoulder pads and denim flaps made wardrobe basics look less ordinary.
-
You, Too, Can Walk Like a Model.
Mandy Lieveld teaches the leggiest people on earth how to use their limbs for fashion. Can she help an average woman like me?
-
Melania Trump’s Unexpected Easter Look.
The first lady makes a statement in Ralph Lauren at the annual egg toss.
-
Make Way for ‘A Twink and a Redhead’
Grant Gibbs and Ashley Gill have gained quite an online following with their outlandish comedy. Now they’re taking it on the road.
-
What Should I Wear to a College Graduation?
It can be tricky to look nice without stealing the spotlight. Our critic has some tips on dressing as smart as the graduate.
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Is There Anything Left to Learn About the Manosphere?
In a new Netflix documentary, the filmmaker Louis Theroux exposes the motivations of men who populate a dark online ecosystem.
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Gray Skies but Pastels Aplenty at the Easter Parade.
April showers brought silk flowers on Sunday as New Yorkers promenaded along Fifth Avenue in Manhattan for the annual Easter Parade and Bonnet Festival.
-
A Wedding Weekend, No Spouse Required.
For some single women, milestone birthday parties offer the celebratory feel of a wedding, without the marriage.
-
What Were Bob Dylan and John Lennon Really Saying in the Back of That Limo?
A film scene of Dylan and Lennon at a low moment in 1966 has held a grim fascination for fans. Beneath the repartee, a touchy issue was at stake.
-
A Tradwife Wakes Up in 1805 ….
“Yesteryear,” a debut novel about an influencer who is transported to the early 19th century, lands the author Caro Claire Burke in the middle of the culture wars.
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A Yearlong Wedding Plan — for Your Skin.
For a growing number of brides, wedding planning also means months of aesthetic treatments, from injections to fillers and lasers.
-
‘The Drama’ and the Secrets That Can Unravel a Relationship.
In the new film, a shocking revelation upends the lives of a couple played by Zendaya and Robert Pattinson, raising the question: Are some betrayals simply unforgivable?
-
How Far Would You Go to Learn From Werner Herzog?
In January, 50 artists from all over the world were chosen to shoot shorts in the Azores, guided by the iconic filmmaker. They just had to find $10,000 and airfare to get there.
-
They Re-Planned Their Wedding in 10 Days.
After cartel violence erupted in Mexico, just weeks before their wedding in Punta Mita, Lauren Futterman and Tyler Olson quickly decided to move the ceremony to California.
-
May I End My Life With You?
My friend made the weightiest decision possible while staying at my home. I struggled with what it meant.
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First the Hora, Then the Hora Loca.
Dani Roldan and Michael Wexler brought their families together, blending Jewish and Colombian traditions at their Miami wedding.
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After They Finally Met, Their ‘Rom-Com Story’ Began.
Jacqueline Lobel and Michka Bengio started dating during the pandemic, though the two had briefly connected a few years before.
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He Likes the Mets, She the Yankees. That’s Where Their Differences End.
After connecting online, Lisa Tarantino and Billy Peeker bonded over their Long Island upbringings and their love of movies, breweries and baseball.
-
Is Alix Earle the Right Face for a Skin Care Brand?
Critics of Reale Actives, Ms. Earle’s new skin care line, suggest that the TikTok star’s past use of prescription acne treatments makes her an odd fit to sell consumer skin care products.
Love
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What’s Your Wedding Style? Take Our Quiz to Find Out.
From a secret elopement in the mountains to a weeklong blowout beach bash, every couple has a different idea on how they want to say “I do.” This quiz is designed to help you decide which wedding style feels most like you.
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How to Plan Your Wedding.
Planning a celebration of this magnitude can be stressful. We created a guide that simplifies the process, helps you track major tasks and offers expert tips to help with decision making.
Magazine
T Magazine
Travel
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36 Hours in Hoi An, Vietnam.
Find timeworn architecture, tea ceremonies, modern dining and a world-class circus beneath a bamboo dome on Vietnam’s central coast.
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The Click That Cost $11,000 and Other Travel Pitfalls.
Shady hotel booking sites, misleading customer service numbers and hacked airline loyalty accounts have snared travelers. Here’s how to avoid getting scammed.
-
Sites Unseen: What Travel Is Like for Those Who Can’t See.
A writer joined a 10-day journey through northern India — on a tour designed for the visually impaired. Here’s what he learned.
-
Think Airfares Are High? Brace Yourself for Bag Fees and Fuel Surcharges.
American and Canadian airlines, squeezed by surging fuel costs from the war in Iran, are adding “sticky” new bag fees and surcharges, on top of higher fares.
-
Tucson: A City for Outdoor Lovers.
Owls, oases and the Milky Way reward adventure seekers in and around this Arizona city in the Sonoran Desert.
-
No Lines, No ‘Regular’ People: Flying Ultra-Luxury From Paris.
A writer reports from inside the premium bubble, where there’s no such thing as too much, petty annoyances are nonexistent and the real world never intrudes.
-
JetBlue Raises Checked Bag Fees as Fuel Costs Soar.
The airline, which now charges up to $59 for one checked bag on a domestic flight, could influence other carriers strained by the war in Iran.
Real Estate
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Two Midwesterners Found Their Oasis in the New Mexico Desert.
With about $350,000 to spend, a couple looked for a home in Albuquerque that could handle their pets, plants, and one serious rock collection.
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Homes for Sale in Connecticut and New York.
This week’s properties are a four-bedroom in Danbury, Conn., and a three-bedroom co-op in Irvington, N.Y.
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Homes for Sale in Manhattan andQueens.
This week’s properties are in Greenwich Village, the Upper East Side and Astoria.
-
What’s Really the Best Time to Buy a Home?
In a fiercely competitive market, knowing the seasonal inventory patterns could help your chances.
-
$2 Million Homes in Georgia, Pennsylvania and Florida.
A midcentury home in Savannah, Ga., a farmhouse in Carversville, Pa., and a 1928 house in West Palm Beach, Fla.
-
A Stylish Kitchen Where a Custom Fridge Sets the Tone.
In Matilda Goad’s Victorian terrace house, the kitchen is the first room you see. She designed it to make a good impression.
-
In Search of Career Prospects, Young New Yorkers Turn to Construction.
Facing a bleak job market and fears around artificial intelligence, young workers are lining up for a shot to develop skills and secure jobs in the trades.
-
Trina Turk Lists Her Midcentury-Modern Palm Springs Flip.
The fashion designer lent her signature “color and print and optimism” to the home, now on the market for $3.495 million.
-
What’s in a Can of Paint, and Why Does Some Paint Cost So Much?
Choosing interior latex paint is tricky. Here’s how to know what you’re getting.
-
A Seattle House Where the Work Never Stops.
A landscape designer has been adding personality to his Craftsman-style home for more than 15 years with no plans to stop iterating.
-
$850,000 Homes in California.
A condominium in a Spanish Revival-style complex in Los Angeles, a Craftsman house in Long Beach and a home from 1924 in Oakland.
-
A Couple Moves to Queens and Brings Along Their Dining App.
After living in Madrid and growing their restaurant-finding platform, Alexandra Papadopoulos and David Martin Suarez found an apartment in Long Island City.
-
Can I Trust a Landlord to Protect My Financial Information?
Without pay stubs, retirees must share detailed private data with landlords. But will they keep the information safe?
-
‘Summer House’ Mansion on the Market for $5.65 Million.
The Sag Harbor, N.Y., home has hosted the reality TV show for the last five seasons.
-
Designs for New York’s A.D.U.s Are Here. These Are Our Favorites.
Eleven preapproved architectural plans could speed up construction and help provide a solution to the housing crisis.
-
A Visit to the Unabomber Cabin, 30 Years After the Arrest.
A complicated piece of American heritage and culture sits intact in the F.B.I. headquarters.
-
$650,000 Homes in Portugal.
This week’s properties include a duplex in Almada, a modern apartment in Lisbon and rowhouse in Porto.
Health
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The Fast-Changing Chemistry of New, Dangerous Drugs.
Today’s illicit chemists can quickly cook up drugs far more dangerous than fentanyl.
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Inside a One-Man Workshop for Ultrapotent Drugs.
Times reporters were given access to a small operation on the frontier of illicit drugs.
-
Patients Are Using Chatbots to Fight Medical Bills, With Mixed Results.
While chatbots like Claude and ChatGPT can help narrow the information divide between patients and providers, they can also dispense flawed advice.
-
How Psychedelics Affect the Brain.
An analysis of hundreds of images from several studies shows how hallucinogenic drugs drive activity in various regions of the brain.
-
Idaho Cut Services for People With Schizophrenia. Then the Deaths Began.
Eliminating outreach to people with severe mental illness set off such a cascade of bad outcomes that Idaho has scrambled to reverse the cuts.
-
Federal Agency Unveils Three Potential Osteoarthritis Treatments.
With funding from ARPA-H, three teams of researchers have regrown bone and cartilage, even entire knees, in animal studies. Human trials are not far off.
-
Trump’s Foreign Aid Overhaul Sent Millions More Dollars to Big U.S.-Based Contractors.
While organizations in the developing world were nearly shut out, the big aid agencies DOGE had called wasteful received huge infusions of cash, a new analysis found.
-
For Many Patients Leaving the I.C.U., the Struggle Has Only Just Begun.
A long stay in intensive care can bring physical, cognitive and mental health challenges that can take months or longer to resolve.
-
H.H.S. Takes a First Step Toward Restoring Vaccine Advisory Committee.
A federal judge last month questioned the legitimacy of the panel and overturned its recent work. A notice suggests that it may be revived on Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s terms.
Well
Family
Mind
Move
Times Insider
Corrections
-
Corrections: April 9, 2026.
Corrections that appeared in print on Thursday, April 9, 2026.
-
Quote of the Day: Lack of Snowpack Spells Dry Summer for West.
Quotation of the Day for Thursday, April 9, 2026.
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Corrections: April 8, 2026.
Corrections that appeared in print on Wednesday, April 8, 2026.
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Quote of the Day: LATE DELIBERATION AS TRUMP ISSUES OMINOUS THREATS.
Quotation of the Day for Wednesday, April 8, 2026.
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Quote of the Day: Artemis II Astronauts Reach New Frontier in Human Travel.
Quotation of the Day for Tuesday, April 7, 2026.
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Corrections: April 7, 2026.
Corrections that appeared in print on Tuesday, April 7, 2026.
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No Corrections: April 6, 2026.
No corrections appeared in print on Monday, April 6, 2026.
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No Corrections: April 5, 2026.
No corrections appeared in print on Sunday, April 5, 2026.
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Corrections: April 4, 2026.
Corrections that appeared in print on Saturday, April 4, 2026.
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Quote of the Day: First to Be Disrupted By A.I.? Its Creators.
Quotation of the Day for Monday, April 6, 2026.
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Quote of the Day: How a Man, His Brother and A.I. Built a $1.8 Billion Company.
Quotation of the Day for Sunday, April 5, 2026.
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Quote of the Day: The Mystifying Drunken Episodes of Teetotalers.
Quotation of the Day for Saturday, April 4, 2026.
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Quote of the Day: MACRON IS VOICE FOR FRUSTRATION OVER WAR IN IRAN.
Quotation of the Day for Friday, April 3, 2026.
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Corrections: April 3, 2026.
Corrections that appeared in print on Friday, April 3, 2026.
The Learning Network
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Are You a Fan of Film Adaptations of Video Games?
If so, which game would you most like to see on the big screen?
-
R.V. Trip.
Tell us a story, real or made up, that is inspired by this image.
-
Word of the Day: sonorous.
This word has appeared in 15 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
-
Do You Have Any Cross-Generational Relationships?
An experiment connecting college students with retirees aims to bridge a generational divide. How can younger and older adults benefit from talking to one another?
-
Making Friends.
What is your best advice when it comes to friendship?
-
Word of the Day: expiate.
This word has appeared in two articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
-
‘Going Against the Grain’: Agri-Cultural Revolution in SoCal’s Heartland.
Caden Shepard Choi, 17, the winner of our teen photo essay contest shows us an earthy side of her Orange County hometown.
-
The Runners-Up of Our ‘Local Lens’ Photo Essay Contest.
A look at eight fascinating hometowns around the world, as documented by teenagers there.
-
The Winners of Our ‘Local Lens’ Student Photo Essay Contest.
From 1,423 teen entries, we are featuring nine extraordinary pieces. Take a look.
-
Do You Like Amusement Parks?
Six Flags announced plans to close some of its parks. What would it mean for you if your local amusement park shut down?
-
‘Our Bright Blue Planet’
Have you seen this image this week? What is your reaction?
-
Word of the Day: contiguous.
This word has appeared in 44 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
-
Student News Quiz for March 31-April 6.
Have you been paying attention to current events recently? See how many of these 10 questions you can get right.
-
What Do You Think About the U.S. Sending Astronauts to the Moon Again?
A NASA mission is taking four astronauts around the moon and back for the first time in 50 years. Will it make a difference in the world?
-
Word of the Day: filial.
This word has appeared in 14 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
-
Who Are the ‘Human Mood-Lifters’ in Your Life?
Are there people you know whose genuine cheerfulness never fails to put you in a good mood? What can the rest of us learn from them?
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A Sneeze.
What do you think this image is communicating?
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Word of the Day: inculcate.
This word has appeared in 11 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
-
What’s Going On in This Picture? | April 13, 2026.
Look closely at this image, stripped of its caption, and join the moderated conversation about what you and other students see.
-
What Students Are Saying About Screens in School.
Teenagers react to New York Times reporting that shows technology has become ingrained in classrooms since the pandemic.
-
Would You Want a Robot Teacher?
The first lady, Melania Trump, believes that more children should be educated by “humanoid educators.” Do you agree?
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Chatting.
Tell us a story, real or made up, that is inspired by this image.
Lesson Plans
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A Lesson Plan About the War With Iran.
Through Times articles, photos, videos, graphics, podcasts and more, we invite students to explore what is happening in the war and how we got here.
En español
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Palabra del día: ‘sonorous’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 16 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
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Lugares invisibles: cómo es viajar para quienes no ven.
Un escritor emprendió un viaje de 10 días por el norte de la India, en una excursión diseñada para discapacitados visuales. Esto es lo que aprendió.
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Trump da marcha atrás, pero aún hay dudas sobre Irán y el estrecho de Ormuz.
El alto al fuego fue, sin duda, una victoria táctica en la cuerda floja. Pero no resuelve ninguno de los problemas fundamentales que llevaron a la guerra.
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¿Las cocinas de los restaurantes pueden ser un refugio para las personas con autismo?
Las cocinas profesionales son conocidas desde hace tiempo como refugios para personas con discapacidades neurológicas y del desarrollo. Hay una iniciativa que quiere ayudar en el proceso de integración.
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La ansiedad no me deja dormir. ¿Cómo puedo conciliar el sueño?
Consultamos a cuatro expertos en estrés y sus efectos en el sueño sobre cómo controlar las preocupaciones que no te dejan dormir.
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Palabra del día: ‘expiate’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 2 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
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Shelly Kittleson, periodista de EE. UU. secuestrada en Irak, es liberada.
La periodista estadounidense fue secuestrada por una milicia aliada de Irán y retenida durante una semana. Funcionarios iraquíes afirman que fue liberada a cambio de la puesta en libertad de miembros de la milicia.
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Palabra del día: ‘contiguous’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 44 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
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Palabra del día: ‘filial’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 14 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
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Creativo, rápido y nada ‘tonto’: cómo es tener dislexia.
Hasta un 20 por ciento de los estadounidenses presentan dislexia, un trastorno del aprendizaje que no está relacionado con el cociente intelectual.
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Cuando la carne se vuelve ideología.
De políticas públicas a redes sociales, la carne de res se presenta hoy como símbolo de salud y valores, más allá de la nutrición.
-
Lo que un mes de terapia de luz roja hizo en mi mente.
Los famosos están obsesionados. Juran que les aporta un pelo más grueso y una piel perfecta. Pero, ¿y si el mayor efecto de la luz roja fuera más extraño que eso?
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Cómo reducir tu exposición a los pesticidas.
La ciencia no acaba de entender los riesgos para la salud de muchos productos químicos. Aquí te damos algunas sugerencias de cómo protegerte cuando preparas tus alimentos o fumigas contra plagas.
-
4 consejos para animarte a escribir cartas a mano.
No necesitas una caligrafía perfecta. Aquí tienes algunas formas de crear el hábito.
-
Para evitar un desequilibrio muscular, hay que variar el ejercicio.
Realizar repetidamente el mismo tipo de actividad, ya sea correr, levantar peso o sentarse, puede tener graves inconvenientes.
-
Lo que hay que saber sobre el ‘enorme’ búnker militar bajo el salón de baile de Trump.
Los detalles de la instalación subterránea suelen ser secretos. Pero ahora que el proyecto del presidente se enfrenta a desafíos legales, Trump ha hablado más abiertamente del búnker
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Cuba anuncia el indulto a más de 2000 presos.
El gobierno cubano dijo que las liberaciones eran un gesto humanitario en Semana Santa. No estaba claro si estaban relacionadas con las negociaciones en curso entre Cuba y Estados Unidos.
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Reseña de ‘Super Mario Galaxy: la película’: no tan súper.
La secuela del megaéxito de taquilla no aguanta lo suficiente como para dejarnos disfrutar de lo bueno.
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Palabra del día: ‘inculcate’
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 12 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
América Latina
Ciencia y Tecnología
Cultura
Estados Unidos
Estilos de Vida
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Tú también puedes caminar como modelo.
Cualquiera puede proyectar seguridad y aplomo si cae en las manos de la instructora correcta.
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Así es volar desde París en un avión de ultralujo.
En La Première, el servicio transatlántico de primera clase de Air France, nada es considerado un exceso y cada nuevo capricho parece más suntuoso que el anterior.
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Por qué las carreras Hyrox ahora son las predilectas del atleta común.
La carrera ha experimentado un crecimiento masivo en los últimos años. ¿Qué está impulsando su popularidad?
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¿Qué es la ‘brecha gastronómica’ y cómo afecta las relaciones?
La comida puede sembrar las semillas del amor, pero un cortejo también puede ahogarse en un abismo gustativo.
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Una forma sencilla de hacer tu entrenamiento más intenso.
Si tu rutina de ejercicio te parece aburrida, prueba a añadir un poco de altura a tus ejercicios habituales.
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¿Tu rutina de entrenamiento es muy predecible?
La primavera es un buen momento para modificar tu rutina, lo que tiene grandes beneficios para la fuerza y la resistencia, a la vez que mantiene las cosas interesantes.
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¿Es ‘monogamia unilateral’ o simplemente infidelidad?
Los expertos en relaciones dicen que es posible que una relación abierta sea asimétrica: en un momento dado, una persona puede practicar la parte “abierta” más que la otra. Pero el contexto es clave.
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Nadie me había tocado en cuatro años. Escribiendo, volví a la vida.
Era 14 años menor que yo, y ‘skater’. ¿Por qué no invitarlo a pasar?
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Las influentes de talla grande que disfrutan Disney World.
Cinco mujeres disfrutan de las atracciones en uno de los parques más famosos a nivel mundial sin que su peso sea un impedimento.
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Solteros y felices: por qué cada vez menos estadounidenses deciden casarse.
La soltería ya no es vista como un fracaso en EE. UU., y vivir juntos o enfocarse en la independencia personal se ha convertido en una alternativa legítima.
Mundo
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Una tregua inestable en Irán.
Aunque el alto al fuego se mantenga y la guerra termine, muchos creen que el mundo quedará en peor estado que antes del conflicto.
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Un soplo de vida para el hogar de los muertos en París.
Los huesos de cerca de seis millones de personas yacen en las catacumbas que han sido visitadas a lo largo de siglos, pero es hora de reacomodarlos para conservar el lúgubre legado de la capital francesa.
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Lo que hay que saber sobre el alto al fuego entre EE. UU. e Irán.
El acuerdo de pausar los combates durante dos semanas se produjo horas después de que el presidente Trump amenazara con destruir la civilización iraní. Aún queda mucho por saber.
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Irán presenta 10 puntos que dice son la base para las pláticas de alto al fuego.
El plan, que reafirma el control de Irán sobre el estrecho de Ormuz y mantiene el derecho del país al enriquecimiento nuclear, no es el mismo que el que el presidente Trump dijo que era una “base viable” para las negociaciones.
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Elogios, alivio y el agobio: los líderes mundiales reaccionan al alto al fuego en Irán.
En Europa y en todo el mundo, la guerra ha dañado las economías, ha agitado la política y ha puesto de relieve la falta de opciones para hacer frente a los caprichos del presidente Trump.
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El papa León XIV lanzó una dura reprimenda a Trump.
El primer pontífice nacido en EE. UU. ha hecho un llamado constante al diálogo en Medio Oriente. Se refirió a las amenazas de Trump a Irán como “verdaderamente inaceptables”.
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Alto al fuego en Irán.
El anuncio del acuerdo de un alto al fuego de dos semanas se hizo 90 minutos antes de que venciera el plazo fijado por el presidente Trump.
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Imágenes de la hija de Kim Jong-un en un tanque avivan debates de sucesión.
El video y las fotografías de Kim Ju-ae al timón del vehículo militar, con su padre a bordo sobre la coraza, alimentaron las especulaciones de que está siendo preparada para sucederlo como líder de Corea del Norte.
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La propuesta de 10 puntos de Irán exige el fin de los ataques y las sanciones.
A medida que se acercaba la fecha límite del presidente Trump para nuevos ataques, Irán transmitió sus condiciones a través de intermediarios paquistaníes.
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Hegseth compara el rescate de un aviador de EE. UU. con la resurrección de Jesús.
El presidente Trump también afirmó que Dios apoya la guerra estadounidense contra Irán “porque Dios es bueno, y Dios quiere que se cuide a la gente”.
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Trump lanza serias amenazas a Irán mientras se vence su plazo para Ormuz.
El presidente de EE. UU. advirtió que “toda una civilización morirá esta noche” si Irán no llega a un acuerdo para reabrir el estrecho de Ormuz antes de las 8:00 p. m. hora del Este.
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Trump, el negociador de deportaciones.
El presidente quiere que terceros países reciban a los migrantes que no pueden ser devueltos a sus patrias. Para conseguirlo, casi todo está sujeto a negociación.
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Trump quiere hacer tratos de deportación. Los autócratas están dispuestos a escuchar.
La Casa Blanca ha convertido las deportaciones, un asunto interno emblemático, en una pieza importante de la política exterior. Esto es lo que sabemos sobre el programa.
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Cerca del plazo de Trump, Irán y EE. UU. mezclan amenazas con indicios de un acuerdo.
Una contrapropuesta de Irán de 10 puntos para poner fin a la guerra representa una posible salida. El presidente Trump la calificó como un paso significativo, pero “no suficiente”.
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¿Cómo se cuentan 1400 millones de personas? India lo está intentando.
El censo de India de 2027 determinará cómo se distribuyen la riqueza y el poder e informará sobre las políticas relativas a las castas y las mujeres en la nación más poblada del mundo.
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Un torero retirado muere tras ser embestido por un toro en Málaga.
El accidente ocurrió antes de la Corrida Picassiana, un evento anual en Málaga que rinde homenaje al pintor Pablo Picasso.
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Hegseth dice que los soldados de EE. UU. luchan por Jesús. El papa León no está de acuerdo.
En un agudo contraste con los llamamientos del gobierno de Trump a las oraciones cristianas por el esfuerzo de guerra, el papa León XIV dice que la dominación militar es “totalmente ajena al camino de Jesucristo”.
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El aviador desaparecido suscita preocupaciones de que Irán obtenga una ventaja sobre EE. UU.
Desde 1979, Irán ha utilizado en repetidas ocasiones a estadounidenses y europeos detenidos en su territorio para obtener concesiones frente a adversarios más poderosos.
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La gasolina cara limita esta tradición de Semana Santa.
El aumento de los precios del combustible en Filipinas ha obligado a algunas personas a cancelar o reducir la Visita Iglesia, una costumbre de Semana Santa en la que los católicos viajan a siete iglesias.
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Lo que sabemos sobre el avión de combate de EE. UU. derribado por Irán.
Un helicóptero de rescate también fue atacado y otro avión militar de la Fuerza Aérea, un A-10 Warthog, se estrelló el viernes en la región del golfo Pérsico.
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Macron le responde a Trump y refleja la molestia de Europa por Irán.
El presidente de Francia, Emmanuel Macron, criticó al presidente Trump por lo que calificó de una actitud poco seria ante la guerra en Irán y sus ataques constantes contra la OTAN.
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La carrera por el futuro de la Luna.
La misión Artemis II no solo tiene que ver con la ciencia y la exploración. También forma parte de una crucial carrera espacial entre EE. UU. y China.
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Trump enfrenta una encrucijada en Irán.
El presidente de EE. UU. corre el riesgo de que al final de las dos a tres semanas que dio como plazo para acabar con la guerra en Irán, no haya cambiado gran cosa.
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Connections Companion No. 1,034.
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Strands Sidekick No. 768.
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Wordle Review No. 1,756.
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To an Extreme Degree.
Barbara Lin encourages us to play with our food.
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Connections Companion No. 1,033.
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Strands Sidekick No. 767.
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Wordle Review No. 1,755.
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Spelling Bee Forum.
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Caviar, Essentially.
Philippe Monfiston makes an elegant debut.
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Connections Companion No. 1,032.
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Strands Sidekick No. 766.
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Wordle Review No. 1,754.
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Organ Meats.
This debut from Adryel W. Robles Ojeda will set you free.
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Connections Companion No. 1,031.
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Strands Sidekick No. 765.
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Wordle Review No. 1,753.
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Period to Live Through.
Log on for a new puzzle from John Ewbank.
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Connections Companion No. 1,030.
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Wordle Review No. 1,752.
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Strands Sidekick No. 764.
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Badvertising.
Samuel A. Donaldson brandishes a sharp Sunday puzzle.
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Wordle Review No. 1,751.
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Connections Companion No. 1,029.
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Strands Sidekick No. 763.
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Chart-Toppers.
Royce Ferguson’s latest Saturday puzzle drops some sick beats.
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Wordle Review No. 1,750.
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Strands Sidekick No. 762.
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Connections Companion No. 1,028.
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Swimmer’s Assignment.
Carolyn Davies Lynch and Brian Callahan open our solving weekend.
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