New
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Food
A Cult ‘Hiding in Plain Sight’ Amid the New York Brownstones
In “The Sullivanians,” Alexander Stille recalls the heyday of an experiment in communal living that blurred the boundaries between therapists,…
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World
Israel Eases West Bank Settlement Rules, Clearing Way for New Homes
The change could accelerate the construction of thousands of new houses in the occupied territory and puts a far-right minister…
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World
How Local Officials Seek Revenge on Their Hometown Newspapers
When coverage upsets them, towns and counties are revoking newspapers’ lucrative contracts to print public notices.
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Sports
Alabama Basketball Manager Says He, Not Player, Was at Deadly Shooting
A freshman player sued The Times after it placed him at a crime scene. The newspaper will correct its coverage.
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World
Boris Johnson, Out of Parliament, Is a Columnist Again
Britain’s former prime minister, who quit as a lawmaker in the face of a possible suspension for misleading statements about…
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World
Tunisians Mourn a Hard-Fought Freedom Rapidly Slipping Away
When reflecting on their Arab Spring revolution, Tunisians often say that freedom of expression was the only concrete achievement. As…
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World
Ivan Menezes, Who Led a Liquor Giant, Dies at 63
As chief executive of Diageo for a decade, he presented alcohol as an attainable luxury and helped brands like Smirnoff,…
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World
Facing Crisis, Egypt’s Leader Tries New Tack: Talking to Opponents
The rare — and tightly constrained — outreach is a sign that President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi may be feeling the…
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World
How Trump Plans to Beat His Indictment, Politically
The former president keeps consolidating Republican support, but the legal peril is the greatest he has ever faced and adds…
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World
Newspapers Printed Unabomber’s Manifesto in 1995. It’s Still Fiercely Debated.
It wouldn’t be the last time the media would grapple with whether to publish something that might inspire others to…