The Headlines - Gunman Storms New York Skyscraper, and Harvard Weighs $500 Million Deal
Episode Date: July 29, 2025Plus, when the peanut M&M was in trouble. On Today’s Episode:Investigators Focus on Whether Midtown Gunman Was Targeting N.F.L. Offices, by Francesca Regalado, Ed Shanahan, Chelsia Rose Marcius, Ma...ria Cramer and Matthew HaagFor Trump, Starvation in Gaza Tests His Foreign Policy Approach, by Luke Broadwater and Michael D. ShearTariffs on Medicines From Europe Stand to Cost Drugmakers Billions, by Rebecca RobbinsHarvard Is Said to Be Open to Spending Up to $500 Million to Resolve Trump Dispute, by Michael C. Bender, Alan Blinder and Michael S. SchmidtTehran Is at Risk of Running Out of Water Within Weeks, by Farnaz Fassihi, Sanam Mahoozi and Leily NikounazarHow an M&M Sparked the Search for the Next Perfect Peanut, by Kim SeversonTune in every weekday morning. To get our full audio journalism and storytelling experience, download the New York Times Audio app — available to Times news subscribers on iOS — and sign up for our weekly newsletter.Tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com.
Transcript
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today is Tuesday, July 29th.
Here's what we're covering.
This is a devastating night for our city, for our police department.
Pure evil came to the heart of our city and struck innocent people. In New York City, a gunman walked into a Park Avenue skyscraper on Monday and opened fire,
killing four people. on Park Avenue between 51st and 52nd streets. Officials say he entered the lobby around 6.30 p.m.
carrying an assault-style rifle.
He began shooting, killing a New York City police officer
working security and two others.
The gunman then walked to an elevator,
let a woman step off of it unharmed,
and took it up to the offices of the real estate firm
that owns the building.
There, he shot and killed one more person and then himself.
The shooter is believed to be Shane Tamora, a 27-year-old male with a Las Vegas address.
Police say the man, who they believe acted alone, drove from Las Vegas to New York over
the weekend and arrived in the city just hours before the shooting. Officials say he had
a gun license in Nevada and that law enforcement there said he had a quote,
"'documented mental health history.'"
It's unclear what his motive was,
but New York Mayor Eric Adams said this morning
that authorities have reason to believe
he was focused on the NFL,
which has offices in the building.
The mayor said they found a note on the gunman
that mentioned the league.
One NFL employee was seriously injured in the shooting
and is in stable condition,
according to the league's commissioner.
Chaos also broke out at the site
of another mass shooting yesterday in Reno, Nevada.
Yesterday morning, a gunman opened fire
outside a casino there,
wounding six people and killing at least three.
Police exchanged fire with the gunman,
who officials have yet to identify.
They said he was taken to the hospital
in critical condition.
His motive is not clear.
Now, three quick updates on the Trump administration.
Mr. President, Prime Minister Netanyahu said
there's no starvation in Gaza.
Do you agree with that assessment?
I don't know.
I mean, based on television, I would say not particularly, because those children were
very hungry.
But yesterday, after largely deflecting on the issue, President Trump acknowledged that
people in Gaza are facing starvation.
I mean, some of those kids are, that's real starvation stuff.
I see it. And you can't fake that. starvation. It was a notable shift from Trump's earlier comments on the war, in which he's
complained that he hasn't been thanked enough about aid the U.S. has sent, and he's mostly
avoided talking about humanitarian issues, even as global outrage over the hunger crisis
has grown. In his remarks on Monday, Trump made a vague promise
about opening new food distribution sites in Gaza,
but the administration hasn't put forward any specifics.
Next, on the economic front,
the impact of the administration's recent trade deal
with Europe is coming into focus.
The 15% tariff on most goods from the EU kicks in next month, including on pharmaceuticals,
which are Europe's number one export to the U.S.
Nearly all major drug makers have EU factories, and they make more than 40% of brand-name
drugs Americans use, like Ozempic, Botox, and the cancer drug Keytruda.
President Trump has said he wants to boost domestic drug production.
In the meantime, the new tariffs will add billions of dollars in expenses for pharmaceutical
companies. Many of those companies are expected to try and pass on some of those costs
to employers and government programs like Medicare.
And some insurance companies are already planning to raise premiums because of the
tariffs. And the Times has learned that Harvard has signaled
that it's willing to spend as much as $500 million
to end its ongoing standoff with the White House.
The school has been under increasing pressure
from the government amid the administration's claims
of anti-Semitism on campus
and its broader assault on higher education.
Last week, Columbia agreed to pay a $200 million fine to defuse its own clash with the administration.
President Trump has demanded privately that Harvard pay far more.
The country of Iran is in the grips of a water crisis, and officials in Tehran are predicting
that the capital city's water supply will run completely dry within weeks. The deepest reservoirs
have shrunk to shallow ponds, and residents are scrambling to fill up any containers they can find,
all while the temperatures hit 120 degrees or more. One utility company announced that in Tehran,
where millions of residents
live or work in high-rise buildings, there's not enough water pressure for water to get
above the second floor. Environmental experts say the crisis stems from an ongoing drought,
the worst in decades, but also from overdevelopment, construction of too many dams, and draining
groundwater for farming. Parts of Iran are actually sinking at alarming rates as water aquifers have been sucked up.
In Tehran, some areas of the city are sinking 12 inches a year.
For Iranians, who've also faced a months-long energy shortage with daily power cuts and a 12-day
war with Israel this summer, the water shortage is the latest blow.
In interviews with the Times,
some Iranians said they were questioning
whether the government is capable of handling
the overlapping crises.
And they said it feels like their country is in freefall.
[♪ music playing on video game console.png.com.au.jpg.]
And finally...
[♪ music playing on video game console.png.au.jpg.]s, the peanut M&M was in trouble.
There was a flood of complaints that the peanuts inside the chocolate candy coating were going
rancid, and Mars, the company behind the candy, knew it needed to do something.
So it went looking for a new kind of peanut.
It backed research at the University of Georgia and gave scientists there a wish list.
Mars wanted a peanut that stayed fresh longer.
It also wanted the peanut to be perfectly symmetrical.
And flavor-wise, the company wanted just a hint of bitterness to bounce the sweet of
the chocolate.
Researchers pulled it off, producing the Georgia O9b, which became the go-to peanut in peanut M&Ms.
Now, though, Mars has gone back to the university because it has a new problem.
The company wants a more resilient plant to deal with the effects of climate change,
which has brought waves of disease and pests that are threatening the world's peanut supply.
Notably, unlike other food giants whose research into modifying crops stays private and proprietary,
Mars takes a different approach.
The company doesn't lock down its discoveries with things like patents.
It basically makes them open source.
That dates back to the 1940s when its founder,
Forrest Mars Sr., said the company's success
should benefit everyone.
So if the new effort works,
it could help farmers in the U.S. and around the world
by saving them millions in lost harvests,
in addition to saving the peanut M&M.
Those are the headlines.
Today on The Daily, more on President Trump's trade deal with the EU,
including the blowback that it's caused in Europe.
That's up next if you're listening in the New York Times app,
or you can listen wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Tracy Mumford. We'll be back tomorrow.