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Stocks Fall Further as Concern About Tariffs Deepens

Markets in Asia reflected investors’ continued worries about the economic disruption of President Trump’s trade policies.

© Shuji Kajiyama/Associated Press

The Nikkei 225 stock index in Tokyo fell again on Friday after a 2.8 percent drop the day before.
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Trump Claims a Venezuelan Gang Is Invading the United States. He’s Wrong.

The exaggerated government claims and ensuing public concern about Tren de Aragua’s activities in the United States amount to a classic moral panic.

© Agence France-Presse, via El Salvador's Presidency Press Office

Some of the Venezuelans deported from the United States to a maximum-security prison in El Salvador.
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What to Know About South Korea President Yoon’s Impeachment Over Martial Law

The country’s Constitutional Court on Friday upheld the impeachment of Yoon Suk Yeol, dismissing him from office four months after his short-lived imposition of martial law.

© Jun Michael Park for The New York Times

Protesters opposed to Yoon Suk Yeol cheered the Constitutional Court’s decision on Friday to remove him as president.
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They Fought to Save Lives in Myanmar. The Earthquake Claimed Theirs.

Five friends defied the junta to care for people injured in the military coup. One returned from the battlefield to find his four friends among the dead in the March 28 earthquake.

© Sai Aung Main/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

A patient at Mandalay General Hospital, three days after the deadly Myanmar earthquake.
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Gen. Timothy Haugh Ousted as Head of NSA and Cyber Command

No reason was given for the removal of Gen. Timothy D. Haugh, but the far-right activist Laura Loomer had called for his ouster in a meeting with President Trump, an official said.

© Kenny Holston/The New York Times

Gen. Timothy D. Haugh was appointed to his posts by President Joseph R. Biden Jr., a fact that caused the Trump administration to view him skeptically, former officials said.
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Amtrak Train Strikes and Kills 3 People in Pennsylvania

Amtrak said a train hit three members of the same family on a track. Service between New York and Philadelphia was temporarily suspended.

© WPVI

A still image from live television coverage of police officers inspecting a halted Amtrak train in Bristol, Pa., on Thursday.
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John Thornton, Venture Capitalist Who Founded The Texas Tribune, Dies at 59

He founded The Texas Tribune, a model for nonprofit grass-roots news organizations nationwide, and the American Journalism Project, which supports them.

© Erich Schlegel for The New York Times

John Thornton in the newsroom of The Texas Tribune in 2009. He founded it as a nonprofit organization to fill a void in local and regional news coverage.
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C.E.O. Choked Man Who Danced Barefoot on Cruise Ship, U.S. Says

Kenneth D. DeGiorgio, the chief executive of First American Financial, was charged with assault. His lawyers say that the other man was harassing the executive’s wife.

© Horacio Villalobos/Corbis — Getty Images

The Virgin Voyages cruise ship Resilient Lady in 2024. A passenger was arrested on Tuesday after the ship docked in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and faces a federal charge.
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Ex-Yankees Player Brett Gardner’s Son Died From Carbon Monoxide, Officials Say

Miller Gardner, who was 14, died last month at a resort in Costa Rica.

© Seth Wenig/Associated Press

A moment of silence is observed for Miller Gardner, the son of the former New York Yankees player Brett Gardner, before the start of an opening-day baseball game between the Yankees and the Milwaukee Brewers at Yankee Stadium last week.
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Judge Blocks H.H.S. From Terminating $11 Billion in Public Health Grants

A coalition of states sued over the Trump administration’s unexpected move to cut off the funds, which they said imperiled everything from childhood vaccination programs to opioid addiction treatment.

© Jason Andrew for The New York Times

The Department of Health and Human Services in Washington. The department told states that public health funds allocated to them during the Covid-19 pandemic were no longer necessary now that the pandemic emergency was over.
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Trump Administration Probably Violated Court Order on Deportations, Judge Says

The judge, James E. Boasberg, said he was likely to wait until next week to rule on whether the White House was in contempt of court for having ignored his order.

© Erin Schaff/The New York Times

Judge James E. Boasberg said on Thursday that there was a “fair likelihood” that the Trump administration had violated his order to stop deporting Venezuelan migrants to El Salvador under a wartime law.
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Mel Gibson’s Gun Rights to Be Restored by Justice Dept.

People familiar with the decision said Mr. Gibson, a supporter of President Trump, would be among 10 people with convictions to get back their gun rights.

© Chris Pizzello/Associated Press

Mel Gibson in Los Angeles last year. The actor pleaded no contest in 2011 to a battery charge involving his former girlfriend.
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How Might the Trump Administration Target D.E.I. in Public Schools?

A letter from the administration promised to withdraw funding from schools that allow certain D.E.I. programs. But what counts as D.E.I. may prove murky.

© José A. Alvarado Jr. for The New York Times

A Black Studies classroom in New York. Over the past decade, many states, school districts and curriculum publishers created new coursework in Black studies and ethnic studies.
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Trump Just Bet the Farm

Donald Trump is upending a world that has brought peace and stability for 80 years. What is it he doesn’t understand?

© Eric Lee/The New York Times

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Leonardo Patterson, Disgraced Dealer in Latin American Artifacts, Dies at 82

Born into rural poverty, he climbed to the top of the art market. But he fell after being convicted of selling fake and stolen items.

© Uwe Lein/Associated Press

Leonardo Patterson in 2008. When the market for Latin American antiquities took off, he developed a reputation for always having rare, beautiful items. He insisted that they were real and legal, but many experts doubted him.
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Chris Pappas Jumps Into 2026 Senate Race in New Hampshire

Mr. Pappas, a 44-year-old Democratic congressman, is the first major candidate to enter the race to succeed the retiring Senator Jeanne Shaheen.

© Sophie Park/Getty Images

Representative Chris Pappas, Democrat of New Hampshire, was first elected to Congress in 2018.
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Israeli Strike Kills Dozens at Gaza City Shelter, Officials Say

The Israeli military said it was looking into reports about the deaths at a school-turned-shelter, which came as Israel was intensifying its offensive in Gaza to pressure Hamas to release hostages.

© Saher Alghorra for The New York Times

A boy injured in a strike at a school-turned-shelter is carried to a hospital in Gaza City, on Thursday.
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Apple Leads Tech Stock Sell-Off After Trump Tariffs, Falling 9 Percent

The company counts on the sale of devices for three-quarters of its nearly $400 billion in annual revenue, and it makes almost all of its iPhones, iPads and Macs overseas.

© Hilary Swift for The New York Times

Wall Street analysts who follow Apple have been looking for signs that it will be granted a tariff exemption, but so far there is no sign any companies will get one.
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FDA Layoffs Could Raise Drug Costs and Erode Food Safety

Trump cutbacks were supposedly aimed at administrators. But scientists in food and drug-testing labs and policy experts who advance generic drug approvals were also dismissed.

© Gene J. Puskar/Associated Press

Heirloom tomatoes imported from Canada, left, and avocados imported from Mexico in a Pittsburgh market last month. Inspections and testing of imported foods could be affected by the F.D.A. layoffs.
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This A.I. Forecast Predicts Storms Ahead

The A.I. prediction world is torn between optimism and gloom. A report released on Thursday decidedly lands on the side of gloom.

© Ian C. Bates for The New York Times

Daniel Kokotajlo, a former OpenAI researcher, leads the A.I. Futures Project.
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