First Patient Begins Newly Approved Sickle Cell Gene Therapy
A 12-year-old boy in the Washington, D.C., area faces months of procedures to remedy his disease. “I want to be cured,” he said.
By Gina Kolata and Kenny Holston
A 12-year-old boy in the Washington, D.C., area faces months of procedures to remedy his disease. “I want to be cured,” he said.
By Gina Kolata and Kenny Holston
The president has allowed protest encampments. But they have also disrupted campus life, and he wants the tents down.
By Jeremy W. Peters and Jamie Kelter Davis
The company on Monday reached a tentative contract agreement with unionized employees who said they were willing to disrupt Anna Wintour’s carefully laid plans over stalled negotiations.
By Perri Ormont Blumberg
The market for shares of hot start-ups like SpaceX and Stripe is projected to reach a record $64 billion this year.
By Erin Griffith
The pop superstar performed a final date on her global trek marking four decades of hits: a set on Copacabana Beach before the largest live crowd of her career.
By Flávia Milhorance and Julia Jacobs
The Chicago police said that 68 people had been arrested and charged with trespassing.
By Yan Zhuang
An exploration of the troubled state of horse racing in the U.S.
By Joe Drape
The Chinese leader has carefully chosen three countries — France, Serbia and Hungary — that to varying degrees embrace Beijing’s push for a new global order.
By Roger Cohen and Chris Buckley
For decades, Belgium failed to return the remains of hundreds of people taken by force from former colonies. A draft law could change that, but critics say it is not going far enough.
By Monika Pronczuk and Koba Ryckewaert
Cindy McCain, the director of the World Food Program, said starvation is entrenched in northern Gaza and is “moving its way south.”
By Liam Stack, Aaron Boxerman, Amanda Taub and Ken Belson
The exclusive period for Paramount’s potential merger with Skydance expired without a deal, highlighting the long-debated question of whether exclusivity is a waste of time.
By Lauren Hirsch, Michael J. de la Merced and Ravi Mattu
A maid resists her employers; citizens resist their country.
The automaker led by Elon Musk is no longer planning to take the lead in expanding the number of places to fuel electric vehicles. It’s not clear how quickly other companies will fill the gap.
By Jack Ewing and Ivan Penn
Photos of the Kentucky Derby, which is marking its 150th running.
By Audra Melton and Melissa Hoppert
Advertisement
Nine months after a coup in Niger, Mohamed Bazoum, an ally of France and the U.S., remains locked in the presidential residence, cut off from contact with anyone but his doctor.
By Elian Peltier
This Molière in the Park production doesn’t have the sharp satirical bite of the original.
By Elisabeth Vincentelli
Hope Hicks, once a spokeswoman for Donald J. Trump, broke down in tears on the witness stand as she talked about their time together.
By Ben Protess, Jonah E. Bromwich, Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan
Other states have also considered restrictions, citing concerns about farmers’ livelihoods and food safety, though the product isn’t expected to be widely available for years.
By Dionne Searcey
The killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a Sikh nationalist who had sought a separate state in India and was viewed as a terrorist by New Delhi, set off diplomatic tensions between Canada and India.
By Vjosa Isai
The university said it would hold a celebration at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. More than 100 school-specific graduations and smaller receptions will also take place with tighter security.
By Jill Cowan and Jonathan Wolfe
George Lucas wants them to fade into oblivion. But some fans spent more than a decade digitally restoring the original “Star Wars” trilogy, preserving the movies as they were shown in theaters.
By Sopan Deb
Did you follow the news this week? Take our quiz to see how well you stack up with other Times readers.
To get protesters off campus lawns, Brown University and others have agreed to consider ending investments linked to Israel. But how?
By Santul Nerkar, Rob Copeland and Maureen Farrell
Three long-running satellites will soon be switched off, forcing scientists to figure out how to adjust their views of our changing planet.
By Raymond Zhong
Advertisement
The tiny cabin, one of the few extant examples of a popular 1970s design, had no heat or toilet. But it was theirs for $85,000.
By Julie Lasky
A roundup of precious letters, from gothic characters to minimalist medallions.
By Tilly Macalister-Smith
At U.C.L.A., a few professors helped negotiate with the university. At Columbia, they guarded the encampment. But not all faculty members are on board.
By Anemona Hartocollis
Martha Schwendener covers Tamiko Nishimura’s arresting black-and-white photographs, Tanya Merrill’s playful portraits and Enrique Martínez Celaya’s link to a Spanish master.
By Martha Schwendener, Will Heinrich and Blake Gopnik
Attendees at the annual Frederick Law Olmsted Awards wore their finest fascinators, headbands and bird hats to raise money for the jewel of New York.
By Sandra E. Garcia and Amir Hamja
Think vegan lobster rolls and the Swizz Beats and Alicia Keys collection at Brooklyn Museum.
By Nikita Richardson
Through psychotherapy, recounted in a memoir, he learned that he had 11 personalities, or fractured parts of his identity. One of them told of childhood abuse.
By Richard Sandomir
A crackdown on demonstrators at Columbia University in New York spawned a wave of activism at universities across the country, with more than 2,500 arrests or detainments.
The most exciting part of this fair for younger galleries is the chance for viewers to see art from out of town.
By Will Heinrich
She was an enthusiastic supporter of the counterculture. And when she suggested that her brothers rent Mr. Leary a mansion, she made psychedelic history.
By Penelope Green
Advertisement
The Shed welcomes an international survey of painting, textiles and collage to its galleries. Our critic picks his 23 favorite booths.
By Holland Cotter
Soldiers exposed to thousands of low-level blasts from firing weapons like mortars say that they wind up with debilitating symptoms of traumatic brain injury — but no diagnosis.
By Dave Philipps
Justice Juan M. Merchan will consider punishing Donald J. Trump for recent attacks on witnesses and jurors, some of which occurred outside the courtroom.
By Alan Feuer
In states that will help decide control of the White House and Congress, Democrats are campaigning furiously alongside ballot measures to protect abortion rights, putting Republicans on their heels.
By Nick Corasaniti and Nicholas Nehamas
Barry McCarthy took over as C.E.O. in February 2022 to revive Peloton from its late-pandemic slump, but the company has struggled to become profitable.
By J. Edward Moreno
The State Department said Russia had used chloropicrin, a poison gas widely used during World War I, against Ukrainian forces, an act that would violate a global ban signed by Moscow.
By Constant Méheut and Marc Santora
The period rooms in the Park Avenue Armory offer benefits, and challenges, to the exhibitors setting up their booths for the art fair.
By Shivani Vora
The lead prosecutor briefed the judge on the talks in an effort to fend off a claim that members of Congress had unlawfully meddled in the negotiations.
By Carol Rosenberg
School officials in Mount Horeb, Wis., southwest of Madison, said that no one else was harmed and that schools were placed on lockdown.
By Jesus Jiménez and Michael Levenson
The former president called protesters “raging lunatics” and suggested, without evidence, that they were hired to draw attention away from border crossings.
By Michael Gold and Anjali Huynh
Advertisement
She was from Czechoslovakia. He was from the U.S. And after meeting at the 1956 Games and winning gold medals, they married. Love had breached the iron curtain.
By Frank Litsky
Witnesses discussed the salacious and the banal, and the judge warned the defendant he could go to jail.
By Wesley Parnell
In routinely making the uninsured whole, the F.D.I.C. isn’t doing its job, an N.Y.U. professor argues.
By Peter Coy
These are the highlights of what to do and where to go in May if you’re interested in design topics.
By Melissa Feldman
Mayor Eric Adams of New York defended the arrests of nearly 300 protesters and said he would not allow the protests to disrupt the city.
By Emma G. Fitzsimmons, Jeffery C. Mays and Dana Rubinstein
We explain why a cease-fire hasn’t happened.
By Julian E. Barnes
The firm, LaRocca Hornik, has represented Donald Trump’s political operation in numerous suits dating to his first presidential run, including a pregnancy discrimination case in New York.
By Ken Bensinger
A powerful new documentary gives voice to the rape victims of Oct 7.
By Bret Stephens
Republican leaders said they would hold additional hearings with top university administrators and potentially withhold millions of federal dollars from universities that fail to keep Jewish students safe.
By Annie Karni
The expansion would extend largely free health coverage to 200,000 more low-income adults. But hurdles remain, including a likely veto by Gov. Tate Reeves.
By Rick Rojas and Noah Weiland
Advertisement
The singer and songwriter has a delicate, vintage aesthetic that matches her cautious approach to her work. Her fourth album, “Here in the Pitch,” is out Friday.
By Quinn Moreland
Ukraine accused Russia of using a cluster weapon in a civilian area on Monday, killing five people. A strike on Wednesday killed three others, an official said.
By Constant Méheut and John Ismay
Some Republicans who backed the aid encountered little resistance from voters, who were far more willing to embrace it — and less interested in ousting the speaker over it — than their right-wing colleagues.
By Annie Karni and Robert Jimison
As the museum’s new building nears completion, shadowed by controversy, artists respond with new commissions.
By Hilarie M. Sheets
Donald J. Trump had complained about the judge in his Manhattan criminal trial not immediately giving him permission to be away from court on the day of the graduation, May 17.
By Matthew Haag
The White House wants federal agencies to keep climate change in mind as they decide whether to approve major projects.
By Coral Davenport
Sammy’s Roumanian Steakhouse returns after an extended Covid closure, Mission Chinese pops up at Cha Kee and more restaurant news.
By Florence Fabricant
Six decades ago, Mr. Dwight’s shot at becoming the first Black astronaut in space was thwarted by racism and politics. Now, at 90, he’s finally going up.
By Matt Richtel
Could a better understanding of how infants acquire language help us build smarter A.I. models?
By Oliver Whang
There have been few political consequences for many Republicans accused of helping Trump try to overturn the 2020 election.
By Jess Bidgood
Advertisement
Three of the four were part of a U.S. Marshals task force. The felon whom they sought was also killed.
By Sopan Deb, Livia Albeck-Ripka, Eduardo Medina and Remy Tumin
Dessert lovers from Chile to Pakistan to Fiji claim it as a national treat. How did it get there from the woods of Germany?
By Priya Krishna
If old-school public-service journalism can make it anywhere, it can make it here.
By Margaret Renkl
A new legal standard is gaining traction among conservative judges — one that might turn back the clock on drag shows, gun restrictions and more.
By Emily Bazelon
You may have trouble finding accommodations or tickets to events in Paris, but other destinations around France are hosting sports like soccer, sailing, basketball and surfing.
By Sophie Stuber
The White House Correspondents’ Association dinner has occasionally featured some great stand-up comedy. This “S.N.L.” veteran’s set will not join that list.
By Jason Zinoman
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada and his Liberal Party are facing increasing unpopularity in an era of right-wing ascendancy.
By Stephen Marche
International development agencies have been meeting with Middle East business interests and urban planners to map out an economic future for the territory.
By Peter S. Goodman
Fueled by the public’s love of reality TV and desire to view luxury homes, real estate agents are chasing fame as fervently as they chase deals.
By Debra Kamin
Assets held by baby boomers are changing hands, but that doesn’t mean their millennial heirs will be set for life.
By Martha C. White
Advertisement
An infant was among those killed, officials said. Parts of five states — Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Missouri and Texas — were under a tornado watch on Sunday.
By Emmett Lindner, Judson Jones and Yan Zhuang
Israel says the number of trucks entering the enclave has doubled to an average of 400 a day. The U.N. disputes that, but agrees that the pace of deliveries has quickened.
By Isabel Kershner, Raja Abdulrahim, Adam Rasgon and Troy Closson
Some colleges that initiated police crackdowns on pro-Palestinian protests have since taken a different tack. Others have defended the move. Hundreds have been arrested.
By Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Alan Blinder and Neelam Bohra
The progressive Democrat from a rural, mostly white Wisconsin district is highlighting that it is not just young people of color who are concerned about the war.
By Robert Jimison
Educational institutions across the United States are spending more money to renovate museums and make them a more integral part of learning.
By Alina Tugend
Voice of Baceprot has electrified audiences and built a large following in Indonesia. The group is also winning fans overseas.
By Sui-Lee Wee and Nyimas Laula
Before Mr. Cato gets ready for his week with Stephen Colbert, he’s playing games with his daughter, hiding in hoodies and making music of his own.
By Tammy LaGorce
Mr. Kim, the New Jersey congressman, has become the odds-on favorite to win Robert Menendez’s Senate seat. His strategy? Don’t ask anyone for permission.
By Christopher Maag
As the well-connected pastor of the Glide Memorial Church in the blighted Tenderloin district, he preached a “radically inclusive” gospel in serving people in need.
By Richard Sandomir
The appearance allowed President Biden to tell the stories of love and loss that have defined his public image.
By Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Katie Rogers
Advertisement
He heralded stock options and golden parachutes as a professor at Harvard Business School, influencing a generation of Wall Street executives.
By Michael S. Rosenwald
The revival of a 2006 work by Thomas Jolly, the director masterminding the opening ceremony at the Paris Olympics, shows his gift for visual flamboyance.
By Laura Cappelle
Her distinctive prose and sharp eye were tuned to an outsider’s frequency, telling us about ourselves in essays that are almost reflexively skeptical. Here’s where to start.
By Alissa Wilkinson
The Games were revived from an ancient Greek spectacle, but an exhibition timed for the Paris Olympics argues that France’s fascination with the ancient world played an outsized role.
By Emily LaBarge
After Covid ruined high school graduation for the class of 2020, the response to campus protests might upend their college commencements.
By Callie Holtermann, Sandra E. Garcia and Frank Rojas
Vuong Dinh Hue’s departure comes amid a growing anticorruption push and weeks after Vietnam’s president resigned.
By Sui-Lee Wee
Advertisement
Advertisement