Chicago’s Uprising Against ICE, and 80,000 Stolen Phones
Plus, there may be lead in your protein supplements.
Plus, there may be lead in your protein supplements.
Largely used by naval forces for more than 40 years, Ukraine could receive a newly developed land-based launcher to strike Moscow and beyond.
Montana is defending the actions of law enforcement officers who did not have a warrant when they responded to a possibly suicidal Army veteran.
The researcher Eliezer Yudkowsky argues that we should be very afraid of artificial intelligence’s existential risks.
The singer, songwriter and producer’s 2000 album was the result of years in the studio listening to inspiring music, jamming and rediscovering his artistic purpose.
If the justices decide that lawmakers cannot consider race in drafting maps, redistricting could result in congressional seats flipping from blue to red throughout the country.
The war might have ended, one lawyer argues, but the occupation remains.
Brazilian farmers are lobbying to roll back deforestation restrictions in order to sell more soybeans to the huge Chinese market.
Protesters say their anger reflects a lack of economic opportunity on a continent with the world’s youngest population.
Astoria, Ore., the setting of the classic 1985 teen movie, invites fans to follow their inner adventurer and explore a scenic corner of the Northwest.
The film touches on #MeToo and cancel culture, but the star and director wanted audiences to make up their own minds.
A shuttered plant is reimagined as Manresa Wilds, an example of an old facility repurposed to solve a new century’s problems.
One of America’s most iconic ’90s skate spots has now been rebuilt in — of all places — Malmo, Sweden.
In Greenville this year, leaders imposed a strict curfew to curb gun violence. So far, the approach is working, even as some question how far a city should go to fight crime.
Analysts say they are unsure what the Trump administration hopes to get out of its gifts and concessions to Belarus’s autocratic leader, a close ally of Russia.
A deep sense of unease has gripped Iran since American and Israeli airstrikes in June, but on a recent visit to the capital, we found that many Iranians seemed to be just trying to get by.
The best safeguard against tyranny is a legion of people who believe in an authority higher than any political program.
A pivotal political leader who helped usher in multiparty democracy, he ran unsuccessfully for the presidency five times.
Former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has criticized Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani over his past support for decriminalizing prostitution. Mr. Mamdani’s campaign has not emphasized the issue.
“The Late Show” host called President Trump’s photo the “worst Georgia O’Keeffe ever.”
An American bailout can carry the country only so far.
Videos surfaced last week showing the former congresswoman belittling a television reporter and berating an aide. Porter, who is running for California governor, pledged to do better.
About 80,000 phones were stolen in the British capital last year. The police are finally discovering where many of them went.
“I’m not going to deny the reality — there’s no good explanation,” the interior minister said of how the 20 inmates had slipped out, perhaps over a period of time.
Residents have begun forming volunteer groups to monitor their neighborhoods for federal immigration agents. Others honk their horns or blow whistles when they see agents nearby.
President Trump presented the medal to Charlie Kirk’s widow, Erika, on what would have been his 32nd birthday.
The Times is looking for examples of interactions between federal immigration agents and residents across the country.
The district attorney is searching for witnesses and plans to ask the Supreme Court to consider the Etan Patz case. A defense lawyer for the man accused in the killing says they’re dawdling.
Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic front-runner in the New York City mayor’s race, appeared with Gov. Kathy Hochul for the first time since she endorsed him last month.
A statistical analysis of an infamous indentation in a sidewalk suggested a 99 percent likelihood that another rodent made the mark.