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Today — 4 September 2025NYT | Top Stories

D.C. Sues Trump Administration Over Deployment of National Guard

4 September 2025 at 23:35
The city is challenging the federal government’s authority to send troops into the city for what the president has called a “public safety emergency.”

© Kenny Holston/The New York Times

National Guard members patrolling the National Mall in Washington, D.C., last month.

3 Psychiatric Tools That Could Boost the Brain’s Natural Healing

4 September 2025 at 17:02
They work for depression and P.T.S.D. Could they also help the brain repair itself after a neurologic catastrophe?

© Puwadol Jaturawutthichai/Alamy

Promising contenders for neurorehabilitation include transcranial magnetic stimulation, antidepressant pills and psychedelics, therapies that are better known for treating like depression, P.T.S.D. and obsessive-compulsive disorder.

Whistle-Blower Complaints Detail Tension Over Vaccines at N.I.H.

4 September 2025 at 21:55
Two former agency leaders said the administration’s “hostility” toward vaccines had spread to the agency’s top ranks.

© Michael A. McCoy for The New York Times

The National Institutes of Health headquarters in Bethesda, Md. Watching a resistance to vaccines take root even at the at the N.I.H., a redoubt of vaccine research, alarmed the two scientists.

Giorgio Armani, Italian Fashion Designer, Dies at 91

4 September 2025 at 21:47
He created a male uniform whose feminized form won favor with women. An alliance with movie stars made his name all but synonymous with red-carpet dressing.

© Vittoriano Rastelli/Corbis, via Getty Images

Giorgio Armani, center, preparing his autumn-winter collection in Milan in 1983. His designs offered an alternative form of power dressing.

Morrissey Seeks to Sell His Rights to the Smiths’ Songs

4 September 2025 at 21:01
Citing “malicious associations” with his former bandmates, the lead singer of the 1980s band said he had “no choice” but to sell to protect his health.

© Krista Schlueter for The New York Times

Morrissey performing during a Broadway residency in New York, in 2019. The singer wrote on his website he had “no choice” but to offer up his interests.

Wall Street’s Bet Against the Trump Tariffs

Investors are offering to buy importers’ rights to any refunds of the administration’s levies. It’s a longshot wager that courts will overturn the tariffs.

© Brendan Smialowski/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Could the courts overturn some of President Trump’s tariffs? Some Wall Street firms are betting on that.

After Trump Comments, Hamas Says It’s Ready for Deal on All Hostages

4 September 2025 at 21:36
The Palestinian militant group has expressed similar positions in the past, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel dismissed its statement as “spin” and “nothing new.”

© Ronen Zvulun/Reuters

A rally in Jerusalem on Wednesday to call for the release of hostages still held in Gaza.

ICE Opens Immigrant Detention Center in Louisiana’s Angola Prison

4 September 2025 at 15:36
Critics are questioning the decision to hold immigrants at the maximum-security facility known as Angola, which has a troubled history.

© Pool photo by Gerald Herbert

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem toured the prison on Wednesday.

How Trump Exploits Emergency Declarations to Expand Presidential Power

4 September 2025 at 18:18
We catalog the president’s emergencies to explore how he is using them to remake the government.

© Alex Kent for The New York Times

National Guard members in Washington on Tuesday.

‘Unrestrained’ Chinese Cyberattackers May Have Stolen Data From Almost Every American

4 September 2025 at 16:36
Information collected during the yearslong Salt Typhoon attack could allow Beijing’s intelligence services to track targets from the United States and dozens of other countries.

© Anna Rose Layden for The New York Times

President Trump last week. His phone was among the targets of a sweeping cyberattack last year, during the campaign.

Florida Moves to End Vaccine Mandates, and Trump Battles Wind Farms

Plus, a Chinese coffee giant comes to America.

© Alisha Jucevic for The New York Times

California, Oregon and Washington criticized Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the health secretary, on vaccine policy and announced an alliance. Florida said it was going in a starkly different direction.

John Deere, a U.S. Icon, Is Undermined by Tariffs and Struggling Farmers

4 September 2025 at 17:14
The tractor maker said that sales were down and that higher metal tariffs would cost it $600 million, while American farmers face dwindling overseas demand for some crops.

© Dustin Miller for The New York Times

John Deere said it expected its 2025 sales for large agricultural machinery, the source of most of its revenue, to fall 15 to 20 percent.

In Tariff Standoff With Trump, China Boycotts American Soybeans

4 September 2025 at 17:21
U.S. farmers need to sell their incoming crop, and China needs to buy it in case its main alternative, Brazil, has a flood or drought. But their trade war prevents a deal.

© Andrea Verdelli for The New York Times

A soybean field outside a village near Harbin, in Heilongjiang Province in northeastern China.

Russia Wants ‘Security Guarantees’ Too. Here’s What They Look Like.

4 September 2025 at 18:14
The Kremlin’s vision of national security comes at the expense of Ukrainian sovereignty, underlining the challenges of striking a peace deal.

© Tyler Hicks/The New York Times

A soldier with Ukraine’s 42nd Separate Mechanized Brigade in the Kharkiv region, in May. Russia wants limits on the size and capabilities of the Ukrainian military.

Trump Administration Targets Financial Relief for Undocumented Students

4 September 2025 at 17:02
The Justice Department has challenged several states that offer in-state tuition to unauthorized immigrants, contending that the policies discriminate against U.S. citizens.

© Ilana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times

Shortly after the Trump administration challenged Texas, a federal judge ruled that a state law offering undocumented students access to in-state tuition was “invalid.”

Stephen Miran, Trump’s Fed Pick, to Face Grilling From Lawmakers

4 September 2025 at 17:04
Stephen Miran, who served as one of the president’s top economic advisers, will have to reconcile his past criticism of the central bank with his new responsibilities if he becomes a governor.

© Doug Mills/The New York Times

Stephen Miran is testifying in front of the Senate Banking Committee as lawmakers consider whether to confirm him as the newest member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.

Inside Trump’s Unorthodox Climate Attacks in Courts Nationwide

4 September 2025 at 17:00
The administration is cranking up efforts to kill state laws and legal cases that would force fossil-fuel companies to pay for climate damage.

© Hilary Swift for The New York Times

Flood damage in Vermont in 2023. The administration has sued the state over its climate superfund law.

She Decides Who’s Famous Enough for Free U.S. Open Tickets

Every year, Amanda Wight makes sure that a steady stream of A-listers get to see the world’s best tennis players — and be seen by millions on TV.

Amanda Wight at the U.S. Open this year. A lifelong sports fan, she now manages the tournament’s celebrity promotional program.

Can Trump Just Do Whatever He Wants by Declaring Emergencies?

4 September 2025 at 23:36
He’s exploiting a diabolical problem in our legal system to expand presidential power.

© Alex Kent for The New York Times

President Trump declared an emergency in Washington D.C. to deploy National Guard and federal agents to patrol the streets.

Vetements Takes Its Trademark Fight to U.S. Supreme Court

4 September 2025 at 17:04
Why does Veuve Clicquot get a U.S. trademark while Vetements — home of the packing-tape minidress, no less! — does not? Its lawyers want to know.

© Peter White/Getty Images

Travis Scott and Gigi Hadid walking the runway during the Vetements show at Paris Fashion Week last year.

Are New York Coffee Drinkers Finally Done With Starbucks?

By: Tim Balk
4 September 2025 at 22:44
Luckin Coffee, a dominant chain from China, arrived in the city in June vowing to inject “new vitality” into American coffee culture.

© John Taggart for The New York Times

Luckin Coffee has opened four shops in Manhattan this summer, including one on Sixth Avenue in the NoMad neighborhood.
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