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Smoke, Jazz Gallery, Roulette, JOHJASZ
It seems like just yesterday the trumpeter and composer Jeremy Pelt, was a young musician first arriving in New York City looking to make his way through the competitive jazz waters.

NYC jails death count rises as Rikers' closure receives new roadmap
Two people died in or immediately after NYC Department of Correction (DOC) custody this past week as the city jail population surpassed 7,000.

After sterling World Championships, sledder Mystique Ro looks towards the Olympics
The 2026 Olympic Winter Games are less than a year away, and after podium finishes at the recent International Bobsled and Skeleton Federation (IBSF) World Championships in Lake Placid, U.S. skeleton athlete Mystique Ro is feeling inspired. She earned a silver medal in women's skeleton and a gold medal in skeleton mixed team partnering with Austin Florian.

March Madness becomes sadness for St. John’s after loss to Arkansas
As the final seconds ticked away in the St. John’s men’s basketball team’s season, this past Saturday, RJ Luis Jr. and Kadary Richmond sat on the bench, their faces marked by disappointment, but for different reasons.

Pandemic solutions: COVID-19 sheds light on systemic biases Black physicians face
Is the United States prepared for the next pandemic? Bird flu cases are on the rise, newly elected President Donald Trump recently removed the United States from the World Health Organization, and Robert F. Kennedy, who has a history of propagating vaccine misinformation, and attempted to suppress COVID-19 vaccine authorizations during the pandemic, is now running the Department of Health and Human Services.

Despite the $4M allocation of funds to the city's public schools, arts education advocates say it is not enough
The executive director of the NYC Arts in Education Roundtable, Kimberly Olsen, recently called on the City Council and mayor to prioritize funding for arts education in NYC schools and communities during a recent City Council hearing.

Q&A with mayoral candidate State Senator Zellnor Myrie
New York State Senator Zellnor Myrie, 38, is a candidate in this year's crowded mayoral race against the incumbent Eric Adams.

AmNews wins multiple NY Press Assoc. Awards
The New York Amsterdam News was once again recognized by its own citywide, I peers, this time by the New York Press Association.

Secretary Rubio comes calling amid policy concerns from Caricom
The plethora of requests for a senior U.S. official to meet with Caribbean Community leaders to discuss radical policy changes from Washington have been rewarded with a swing through the region by Secretary of State Marco Rubio this week.

The Knicks are holding steady with the East's No. 3 spot still unsettled
The NBA Eastern Conference's No. 1 and No. 2 postseason seeds have been virtu-ally determined, although their order is still undecided. When the league's sched-ule tipped-off last night (Wednesday), the Cleveland Cavaliers sat atop of the East at 58-14 followed by the Boston Celtics, which were 53-19, a five-game divide.

ANATOMY of a Fall
Inside the first week—and final hours—of the Harris campaign

TRIAL BY FIRE
Los Angeles is said to have no seasons, but what it does have is what Joan Didion called \"the weather of catastrophe, of apocalypse.\" Photojournalist STUART PALLEY turned his camera on this year's wildfires and shares his account of devastation and resilience

Style DRIVER
FASHION-FORWARD SIMONE ASHLEY REVS UP FOR A ROLE IN BRAD PITT'S SUMMER BLOCKBUSTER F1

TONI COLLETTE
The actor and Mickey 17 star on travel regrets, acupuncture, and jumping into the ocean

A fine vintage
High above Manhattan, a sophisticated 1920s penthouse gets a sensitive makeover by Markham Roberts

The Science of Bird Poop
An expert breaks down the complex chemicals of bird waste BY EMILY HANNEMANN

Heart and Soul
Pierce & Ward designs a stellar, sweeping collection for West Elm

Time's Arrow
An intimate falling-in-and-out-of-love musical, The Last Five Years, arrives on Broadway-with star power to spare.

Soft Side
Louis Vuitton revives a range of early textile designs by French architect Charlotte Perriand as luxe pillows and blankets

THE LIFE AQUATIC
For designer Charlotte Biltgen and her family,

New Plants for 2025
Stunning fresh picks for your beds and containers BY WENDY HELFENBAUM

Heralds of Spring
Snapshots of the energetic songbirds that captured readers' hearts

MEMBERS ONLY
A new crop of ultracurated wellness clubs is targeting loneliness and longevity in one go.

THE FAMILY BUSINESS
Together, Oren and Tal Alexander formed one of America's premier real estate teams, with billions of dollars in sales. Alon, Oren's twin, helped run their father's private-security firm. Now they await criminal trial in a Brooklyn jail, facing multiple accusations of rape and assault from women across the country.

Inside Man
Branden Jacobs-Jenkins's newest play on Broadway, Purpose, is another funny, heady, irreverent excavation into the psyche of an American family. Marley Marius meets its creator and cast.

SHADOW PLAY
With the help of architect Kazuyo Sejima, a young couple sets up house in a century-old Kyoto machiya

SHORTSTOP SUPERNOVAS
Gunnar Henderson, Bobby Witt Jr. and Elly De La Cruz form 'The Threequel' at shortstop, evoking past trios and influencing future generations with their power, athleticism and versatility

LIGHT LANDSCAPE, LIFE
David Hockney's paintings can be read as his life story. But a new exhibition at Paris's Fondation Louis Vuitton also shows us just how much he taught us to see.

IN THE MIX
MINING COOPER HEWITT'S VAST COLLECTION, MUSEUM DIRECTOR MARIA NICANOR FOREGROUNDS 30 CENTURIES OF GREAT DESIGN FOR THE PUBLIC

SECRET GARDEN
LUSHLY PLANTED WITH ROSES, A WALLED SPACE OFFERS REPOSE AMID A SPRAWLING HISTORIC LANDSCAPE ON THE HUDSON RIVER