
A Dining Room With a Scenic View
The textile designer Rebecca Atwood went big on color, patterns and textures when her family moved to Charleston, S.C., from Brooklyn.
By Sydney Gore and Donaven Doughty

The textile designer Rebecca Atwood went big on color, patterns and textures when her family moved to Charleston, S.C., from Brooklyn.
By Sydney Gore and Donaven Doughty

Though Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, has seen an exodus of Black residents over the past 15 years, one woman hopes to create a beacon for her community.
By Dodai Stewart and Nicky Quamina-Woo

One million residents of Guangdong, in southern China, were evacuated before the powerful storm made landfall on Wednesday. At least 21 people have been killed along its path this week.
By Tiffany May, David Pierson, Xinyun Wu and Berry Wang

A federal jury convicted Ryan Routh, an itinerant building contractor, of attempting to assassinate a major presidential candidate last September.
By David C. Adams and Patricia Mazzei

The death of Abdulaziz Al Asheikh, Saudi Arabia’s most senior cleric, was the symbolic end of an era as the kingdom transforms.
By Vivian Nereim

Silicon Valley start-ups said they were concerned they would be disproportionately hurt by the new visa fee for skilled foreign workers, given their limited resources.
By Ryan Mac and Natallie Rocha

A volcanic eruption in 2010 put the island nation on millions of travelers’ maps. But is the country’s culture now at risk?
By Stefano Montali

On an uneven but sometimes inspired second album, the rapper is pugnacious, reflective and rarely short on charisma.
By Lindsay Zoladz

While the Argentine hiker and entrepreneur, Matias Augusto Travizano, was descending the mountain, he fell down a glacier, the authorities said.
By Christine Hauser and Lucía Cholakian Herrera

The Trump administration had halted construction on the $6.2 billion Revolution Wind project, prompting its developer to sue.
By Brad Plumer and Lisa Friedman

The Metropolitan Opera opened its season with a superficial adaptation of Michael Chabon’s novel “The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay.”
By Joshua Barone

The Northeast Supply Enhancement pipeline, which would deliver natural gas into the New York City area, has been shot down three times because of environmental concerns. Supporters hope the fourth time is the charm.
By Hilary Howard

Alaa Abd El Fattah, a British-Egyptian dual citizen, was imprisoned for most of the past 12 years as a dissident. He and his mother went on hunger strike to press for his release.
By Vivian Yee

The Trump administration has clarified its new visa policy, but corporate bosses are still trying to sort through the fallout.
By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Bernhard Warner, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Niko Gallogly, Bianca Pallaro, Marty Swant, Ian Mount and Vivienne Walt
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With her rallying cry for gender equality turning 30 this year, Mrs. Clinton says President Trump and autocratic leaders abroad are steadily dismantling decades of progress.
By Lisa Lerer

A new exhibition in Italy puts the spotlight on Fra Angelico, whose reputation for piety vied with his undeniable artistic talents.
By Elisabetta Povoledo

A new program will put manufactured homes at the center of a statewide effort to make housing more affordable.
By Ronda Kaysen

Inexpensive airfare and a house swap made a last-minute family trip to French Polynesia an unexpected bargain, with funds left over for splurges.
By Freda Moon

President Trump’s 39 percent tariff on Switzerland has forced some companies to consider whether they could produce in the United States while still retaining their Swiss identity.
By Liz Alderman

Despite their high salaries, some tech workers, lawyers and financiers are concerned by New York’s rising cost of living, and are betting on Zohran Mamdani for mayor.
By Niko Gallogly and Bianca Pallaro

At The Times and elsewhere, she combined recipe writing with reporting on topics like consumer protection and food safety. Her torte was a longtime fan favorite.
By William Grimes

A liberal group that was spun off from a network funded by George Soros is looking to build off 2024 victories in Florida to help elect candidates to school boards and other local offices.
By Nick Corasaniti

After Russian drones entered Poland, the country scrambled to shoot them down. Western officials concluded that the incursion was to probe their defenses.
By Michael Schwirtz

Whether states can find the money in their budgets — billions of dollars in some cases — will have wide-ranging, and likely uneven, consequences for some 42 million recipients.
By Linda Qiu
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A row of converted 19th-century buildings filled with artists in the 1990s and transformed Red Hook. Now the work of more than 500 artists may be lost.
By Cassidy Jensen, John Leland and Dakota Santiago

The Department of Defense will force reporters to pledge not to gather or use any information that had not been formally authorized for release, or risk losing their credential to cover the military.
By Ken Bensinger

The fictional gastro pub at the heart of a new Netflix series is largely inspired by the Spotted Pig, the V.I.P. spot rocked by a sexual harassment scandal.
By Julia Moskin

Behind ABC’s decision was a display of how influential members of the Trump administration have become in shaping how media companies operate.
By Keith Collins and Raj Saha

A champion of contemporary art, she was the museum’s president for 11 years. She also founded the Art for Justice Fund, donating $100 million.
By William Grimes

A new report finds that scores dropped the most for those age 18 to 29. Here’s how to deal with a drop in your score.
By Ann Carrns

The sides of buildings have become an unexpected source of conflict as street artists, advertisers and residents debate what New York should look like.
By T.M. Brown and Shuran Huang

The Mayor’s Management Report, a trove of statistics about crime rates, public health and many other issues, arrived at the tail end of Mayor Eric Adams’s re-election campaign.
By Andy Newman

Mr. Musk spent the summer at his artificial intelligence start-up xAI, trying to match the runaway success of OpenAI. The result was chaos.
By Cade Metz, Kate Conger and Ryan Mac

Its chief executive called the E.U. regulations one part of a “very misguided effort to kill oil.” His words followed comments by Trump administration officials criticizing Europe’s climate policies.
By Rebecca F. Elliott and Somini Sengupta
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Mr. Khalil is not in imminent danger of deportation, but his situation has grown more dire as the Trump administration continues its efforts to remove him from the country.
By Jonah E. Bromwich

Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic mayoral nominee in New York City, received messages calling him a terrorist and telling him he was unwelcome in the U.S.
By Maria Cramer and Taylor Robinson

The actor stars alongside America Ferrera in a high-tension drama from the director Paul Greengrass that revisits the deadly 2018 Camp Fire.
By Manohla Dargis

The card, which will cost $895 a year, leans even further into lifestyle and travel benefits that are attractive to younger generations.
By Christine Chung

Plus: maximalist jewelry, textiles designed by Sheila Hicks and more recommendations.

The members voted against the combination shot for measles, mumps, rubella and chickenpox. Guidelines on vaccines given separately to prevent those infections remain unchanged.
By Apoorva Mandavilli

A pattern of getting rid of statistics has emerged that echoes the president’s first term, when he suggested if the nation stopped testing for Covid, it would have few cases.
By Maxine Joselow

Thousands of dollars in potential tax savings are available — but only through the end of the year.
By Rachel Wharton

“For the next couple of days, he’s bangin’ their mash,” Stephen Colbert said on Wednesday.
By Trish Bendix

After rejecting a G.O.P.-written plan to keep federal funding flowing, Democrats released a counteroffer that would add more than $1 trillion in health spending.
By Catie Edmondson
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The seating chart at the state dinner for President Trump was a cross-section of the rich and the powerful hoping to get on his good side.
By Shawn McCreesh and Maggie Haberman

The continent’s far right is claiming the activist as a martyr. Our colleague Jason Horowitz explains why.
By Katrin Bennhold

Two other officers were injured in the shooting in York County, and the person who fired on the officers was also dead, officials said.
By Campbell Robertson and Pooja Salhotra

Whether they’re showing in New York or London, these six designers are on the rise.
By Jameson Montgomery

Her dish isn’t lazy at all, but is generous and unhurried, with time turning tomatoes, wine and bone-in meat into a rich, glossy sauce.
By Melissa Clark

With hundreds of thousands of Palestinians still in the city, the Israeli military said it was opening another temporary evacuation route. The U.N. warned that food supplies in northern Gaza would soon run out.
By Cassandra Vinograd, Rawan Sheikh Ahmad, Gabby Sobelman and Liam Stack

The president’s voters wanted to have it both ways. Reality said no.
By Jamelle Bouie

The quiet farming and second-home community is undergoing a renaissance and has had an uptick in home buyers from Brooklyn.
By Heather Senison and Lauren Lancaster

The man, 37, was hiking near Dragontail Peak, a rugged region of the Alpine Lakes Wilderness.
By Hannah Ziegler

A pioneer of contemporary basketry, he used plant material from his backyard to create ingenious forms that blurred the line between art and craft.
By Penelope Green
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Restaurants simply open when they can open now — but that’s not stopping our restaurant reporters from celebrating what’s to come.
By Florence Fabricant, Becky Hughes and Luke Fortney

Senator Bill Cassidy, a Republican physician and vaccine proponent who is facing a primary challenge from the right, has a fraught relationship with the health secretary.
By Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Megan Mineiro

The judge overseeing the case against Mr. Mangione said the evidence underpinning two of the most serious counts, one of which charged him with first-degree murder, was “legally insufficient.”
By Hurubie Meko and Jonah E. Bromwich

Mr. Walz raised his national profile with a run for vice president. He has suggested that an additional term as governor would rule out the prospect of him running for president in 2028.
By Ernesto Londoño

We look at the fight over free speech.
By Adam B. Kushner

The Kirk crackdown is underway.
By Thomas B. Edsall
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