Homelessness Is Especially Hard on Children. Making Music Helps.
Therapists from the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music have found that teaching homeless children to make beats and write songs is a way to heal trauma.
By Andy Newman and
Therapists from the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music have found that teaching homeless children to make beats and write songs is a way to heal trauma.
By Andy Newman and
Kenny DeForest was beloved among his fellow stand-ups. After his sudden death, they came together to grieve — and to confront comedy’s eternal question: Too soon?
By
A new jury would hear from only one or both of the women whom he was convicted of assaulting, in what analysts say will be a much narrower and weaker case.
By Jan Ransom and
After video surfaced on social media, the student, Khymani James, said on Friday that his comments were wrong.
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‘We Locked Eyes, and Her Face Broke Into a Huge Smile’
Missing a morning ritual, an accidental act of recycling and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
Nobody Saw Andy Kim Coming. That’s What He Was Counting On.
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.
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How Louis Cato, Bandleader for ‘The Late Show,’ Spends His Sundays
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.
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At Trump’s Trial, a Window Into the Golden Era of Tabloids
The testimony of David Pecker, the former publisher of The National Enquirer, included stories of celebrity encounters and his own wild journalistic tactics.
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Echoing Their Client, Trump’s Lawyers Pursue an Absolutist Defense
Donald J. Trump demands praise and concedes no faults, denying his lawyers time-honored defense tactics.
By Ben Protess, Jonah E. Bromwich, Maggie Haberman and
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Blade, after a decade of flying passengers to eastern Long Island on helicopters, is getting into the luxury coach business.
By Andrew Zucker
The movie producer won his appeal in New York on Thursday. But his story, at its core, is about work, and it can’t be measured by a criminal court.
By Jodi Kantor
An illustrator in New York City imagines the personalities of some local bookshops and how they might be embodied.
By Aubrey Nolan
Each day before and after court proceedings, the former president stepped out in front of the cameras and offered his version of the case.
By Linda Qiu
The first week of testimony has ended in Donald J. Trump’s criminal trial. Jonah Bromwich, a criminal justice reporter at The New York Times, gives his takeaways.
By Jonah E. Bromwich, Rebecca Suner and Gabriel Blanco
The students had been among more than 100 who were suspended for participating in an encampment at Columbia University.
By Claire Fahy
Harvey Weinstein faced similar sex crimes charges in New York and California, but the arguments used to overturn one case may not help in the other.
By Karen Zraick, Maia Coleman and Lauren Herstik
A tabloid publisher’s testimony dominated a week that began with opening statements setting the stage for the first prosecution of a president.
By Kate Christobek and Jesse McKinley
Donald J. Trump’s lawyer has said he arranged a hush-money payment through First Republic Bank, where Gary Farro worked.
By Michael Rothfeld
Experts say the partisan political context in Washington is a driver behind the spread of protests at American universities even as overseas campuses have stayed relatively calm.
By Amanda Taub
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