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San Francisco Teachers End Strike After 4 Days

Public schools are expected to reopen on Wednesday for 50,000 students in the city. Teachers demanded higher wages and health care benefits.

© Carlos Barria/Reuters

San Francisco teachers went on strike for the first time since 1979 in pursuit of higher wages and health care benefits.
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U.S. Transfers Thousands of ISIS Prisoners to Iraq From Syria

The moves appear to highlight lingering doubts in Washington about the new Syrian government’s ability to ensure security.

© Orhan Qereman/Reuters

U.S. military vehicles in Qamishli, Syria, escorted buses transporting Islamic State detainees to Iraq this month.
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Indian Man Expected to Plead Guilty to Orchestrating Failed Murder Plot

Nikhil Gupta is accused of plotting to assassinate an American citizen. Prosecutors have argued it mirrors similar efforts against Sikhs, including the killing of one in Canada.

© Sarah Blesener for The New York Times

Nikhil Gupta is accused of plotting to kill Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, pictured here. Prosecutors say that Mr. Gupta is part of a broader series of attacks on Sikhs across the world.
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Congress Jets Off as D.H.S. Shuts Down

Despite a deadlock over funding for the agency, lawmakers left town and left Democratic and White House negotiators to try to work out a deal in their absence.

© Elizabeth Frantz for The New York Times

Congress left Washington for a weeklong recess despite not reaching a deal to fund the Department of Homeland Security.
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Bessent Pushes Senate on Fed Confirmation Amid Backlash Over Criminal Inquiry

President Trump’s effort to get Kevin M. Warsh confirmed as the next Federal Reserve chair has been complicated by a criminal investigation into Jerome H. Powell.

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

The comments by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent underscore the urgency the Trump administration is feeling as it looks to replace the Federal Reserve chair.
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UK Ban on Palestine Action Is Unlawful, Court Finds

The High Court said the ban on Palestine Action as a terrorist group was disproportionate and breached free speech rights. The government said it would appeal, and the ban remained in place for now.

© Kin Cheung/Associated Press

Supporters of Palestine Action protesting on Friday outside the Royal Court of Justice in London.
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At the Winter Olympics

We look at what life is like on the ground in Milan and Cortina.

© Vincent Alban/The New York Times

U.S. women’s hockey fans.
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What It Means to Be a White ‘Race Traitor’

From Schwerner and Goodman to Good and Pretti, white people putting themselves in harm’s way has helped galvanize Americans for justice.

© Tracy Sugarman/Jackson State University, via Getty Images

Demonstrators in Greenville, Miss., in 1964 after the disappearance of three civil rights workers, who were later found dead.
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A D.H.S. Shutdown Looms. Bruised Minnesotans Urge Their Parties to Dig In.

Congressional Democrats say they will approve no money for the Department of Homeland Security without guardrails on immigration agents. Their voters in Minnesota are demanding no less.

© Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

The surge of immigration agents may be receding in Minneapolis, but protesters in the city want Democrats to hold firmly against Homeland Security funding.
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Conspiracy Theories Only Flourish With More Epstein Evidence

The dump of millions of documents has fueled a new wave of speculation, A.I.-generated hoaxes and foreign disinformation.

© Gabriella N. Baez for The New York Times

New emails and documents about Jeffrey Epstein, the convicted sex offender who owned Little Saint James Island, above, have spawned a wave of new conspiracy theories and hoaxes.
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Restaurants Say ICE Presence Imperils Business

In several cities where immigrants are being detained, owners say they’re struggling to stay open as fear keeps customers and workers from leaving home.

© Tony Luong for The New York Times

The dining room at Suya Joint, a Nigerian restaurant in Boston, one of many places that say they have lost business since ICE stepped up immigration enforcement.
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Beyond the Big Cities, ICE Is Rattling Small-Town and Exurban America

Far from the national spotlight, towns like Cornelius, Ore., and Coon Rapids, Minn., are dealing with President Trump’s expanding mass deportation effort, and the effects can be acute.

© Jordan Gale for The New York Times

In Cornelius, Ore., population 14,763, town leaders declared a state of emergency and asked the governor for money to pay for more police to monitor federal agents.
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Iran Turns to Digital Surveillance Tools to Track Down Protesters

As Iranian authorities restore some online services after crushing antigovernment demonstrations, they are using a technological dragnet to target attendees of the protests.

© Getty Images

Antigovernment protesters blocked a road last month in Tehran. Iran is using facial recognition and phone data to track and detain people involved in political opposition activities.
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NJ Transit Could Be Disrupted During Portal North Bridge Construction

Construction on the new Portal North Bridge is expected to disrupt commutes into Manhattan on NJ Transit, PATH and Amtrak trains beginning on Sunday.

© Bryan Anselm for The New York Times

The new Portal North Bridge in Kearny, N.J., is replacing a 116-year-old swing bridge that often gets stuck when it is opened to allow ships to pass.
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