
In a study of unprecedented scope, scientists analyzed every known species of primate to judge how they are faring. Most species are in decline and threatened with extinction.
U.S. intelligence agencies are examining intercepted communications and data in a broad inquiry into the possible association between Russian officials and at least three Trump advisers.
From the moment he is sworn in, Mr. Trump may be in violation of a lease with the federal government.
How Crowds Have Been Counted: Estimating the size of crowds at the Capitol is not easy, and sometimes it can be fraught with controversy. Here’s how the technique has evolved over 150 years.
This year’s preinaugural concert in Washington was not like the star-studded affairs of the past.
Often wary that political protest might harm their careers, many have decided to attend Saturday’s rally.
Over two weeks of hearings, Mr. Trump’s cabinet picks have strongly embraced a deeply conservative approach to governing.
Steven T. Mnuchin, who failed to disclose nearly $100 million in assets, blamed “complicated” forms for “unintentional” lapses.
In the presidential race, Mr. Perry said the agency should be shut. He takes a different view now he has been picked to run it.
At 12:01 p.m. on Friday, workers will swing into action to replace one president’s creature comforts with those of his successor.
The nominee for energy secretary discovers that the job involves overseeing a vast nuclear weapons complex.
His transition has been as peevish as his campaign.
Trump presents an unprecedented threat to American values. Obama should stand up for them.
What’s all this about grizzlies menacing schools?
Many of President Obama’s critics say the United States is in decline. But he leaves the world, and the country, in better shape.
Donald Trump may push us into another war.
For eight years, the president and his family have set an impeccable example, for which we’ll soon feel nostalgia.
Joaquín Guzmán Loera, who twice slipped out of high-security Mexican prisons and into criminal legend, was being extradited to American authorities in New York on Thursday night.
The material sheds additional light on the torture program as the future of the Senate’s classified full report on it hangs in the balance with the Obama presidency ending.
The largest U.S. collector of student loan payments is accused of engaging in the sloppiness and misleading tactics seen in the subprime market.
Yahya Jammeh, Gambia’s leader for 22 years, is refusing to make way for the newly elected president, Adama Barrow, who has yet to enter his own country as president.
Here’s what you need to know at the end of the day.
Here’s what you need to know to start your day.
Dinner on the fly, perfect for a weeknight.
Most sports fans won’t admit it, but they’re probably bandwagoners, too.
Palestinians in the West Bank protested the idea, which even many hard-line Israelis are not keen to embrace, seeing it as a catalyst to more fighting.
Humor and the breaking of the fourth wall helped the film become a surprise contender; and, as Ryan Reynolds said, “It’s like a weird odyssey that grew out of some kind of vision board.”
A Mideast correspondent for The Times tags along with his wife, a storyteller who was invited to Davos as a “Cultural Leader.”
Ms. Peters, who sang with the Metropolitan Opera for 35 years, was 20 when she was catapulted to stardom as a last-minute substitute in “Don Giovanni.” She was 86.
Novak Djokovic, the Australian Open’s No. 2 seed is out, and his former coach, Boris Becker, feels a recent shift in the player’s priorities has affected his intensity.
The Queensbridge Houses, the largest housing project in the United States, was a hotbed of violence a generation ago. But 365 days have passed without a shooting.
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What can you learn from following the footsteps of a fictional character?
We’ve given ourselves time and space to figure out whether the hole in our lives is one that only he could fill.
A show at the Morgan Library & Museum offers a fresh take on the master poet.
Compulsory elections are won in the center. Extremist politicians can’t get traction.
In institution after institution, a pattern of exploitation of society’s most vulnerable members has emerged.
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Joanna Acevedo, 22, had to quit boxing and postpone her dreams to care for her daughter, who was born with a rare condition that has affected her eyesight.
In its 105th year, The New York Times Neediest Cases Fund has provided direct assistance to those struggling in New York and beyond. Donate now »
Industrial Hudson Square is being reinvented as a residential neighborhood — one that’s more or less affordable, for Lower Manhattan.