
Welcome to the Jumble: Inside Brooklyn’s Bike Flea Market
The community of those who love biking in the city keeps growing.
The community of those who love biking in the city keeps growing.
A.I. feels like a runaway train. But we don’t have to let it run over us.
For years, proposals have circulated to stop abuse of the H-1B program. The Trump administration’s big changes largely ignored them.
A generation of students in India pinned hopes and family savings on careers that once soared on H-1B visas allowing work in the United States.
World leaders will discuss how to assist the Rohingya in the world’s largest refugee settlement. But no one living there is attending the conference at the United Nations.
The Latin superstar known for hits including “MIA,” “I Like It” and “Me Porto Bonito” will perform in February in Santa Clara, Calif.
In a phone interview with NBC, Mr. Trump said an investigation of Christopher Wray could be underway, days after the Justice Department’s indictment of James B. Comey.
Mr. Adams served in the New York State Senate and as Brooklyn borough president before becoming mayor of New York City in 2022. Ethical questions have followed him along the way.
The suspect, a 40-year-old man, was killed during the attack, officials said.
The party of President Maia Sandu appeared poised to keep its majority in Parliament, in a vote widely seen as a showdown between Europe and Russia.
The body was found on Sunday at Charlotte Douglas International Airport in the landing gear compartment of a plane that had recently arrived from Europe, the police said.
Lawmakers face a Tuesday deadline to fund the government, which will require them to agree on a spending measure that can win at least 60 votes in the Senate.
The building in Grand Blanc Township served a congregation of about 150 members. And that number was growing, according to a frequent visitor.
In this first edition of The World newsletter, we explore why a president who campaigned against “foreign wars” is sending warships to Venezuela.
Republicans intend to flip a congressional seat in the Kansas City area, but opponents are trying to stop the new map from taking effect.
The quotable, luxury-loving, perpetually mysterious mayor took New Yorkers on a wild and unpredictable ride.
Katrin Bennhold is the host of The World, a New York Times newsletter for readers around the globe. It launches this week.
Congregants and neighbors of the church attacked by a gunman on Sunday said the scene was harrowing.
President Trump’s retribution campaign risks ushering in a cycle of retaliation in which each new administration takes aim at the last one.
President Trump has made Oregon’s largest city a frequent target of both his rhetoric and his policies. Many residents are rolling their eyes.
Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, the man sent to El Salvador in violation of a court order, was transferred from an immigration facility in Virginia, his lawyers said Friday.
Mayor Adams’s campaign was left foundering after repeated scandals, a federal indictment and his courtship of President Trump.
Months after a federal corruption indictment against Mayor Eric Adams of New York was dropped, some of his allies remain under investigation or have been charged with crimes.
Paul Thomas Anderson’s film collected $22.4 million in North America over the weekend, enough for No. 1. But its profitability remains a big question.
A drummer for the 1960s British band the Pretty Things, “the high priest of lunacy” set a high bar for fiery performances and offstage misbehavior.
The police said that multiple people had been injured
The police said that multiple people had been injured in a shooting at a church in Grand Blanc Township, Mich., southwest of Flint. The building was on fire, the authorities said
The state-sponsored Riyadh Comedy Festival will feature Dave Chappelle, Pete Davidson and other top acts. Human Rights Watch says the event aims to obscure the country’s abuses.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth summoned hundreds of generals and admirals from around the world for an unusual gathering.
As the 200th anniversary of the Erie Canal approaches on Oct. 26, organizers are seeking to temper the celebration with an acknowledgment of the waterway’s displacement of Native American communities.