But she isn’t ready to say “sorry.” Ms. Merkel, once heralded as the most powerful woman in the world, was one of Germany’s ...
Readers discuss the special counsel’s move and whether the cases should have been dismissed. Also: Medicaid; turkeys’ misery; skilled immigrants.
A weekly collection of lesson plans, writing prompts and activities from The Learning Network, a site that helps educators and students teach and learn with The New York Times.
Canadian officials will limit how many new permanent residents it allows amid an expected surge at the northern border.
If you are a faculty or staff member interested in bringing The New York Times to your school, visit the Group Subscriptions Page. New York Times inEducation has been designed as a resource to ...
What “Law & Order” background actors think, a special summer and more reader tales of New York City in this week ... Flipping through pages filled with different sets of handwriting was ...
Pretty much everyone agrees that the cost of living was the election’s big driving factor. And that Joe Biden’s dithering ...
The film has ended, but the names of the many people who worked on it are rolling across the screen. Do you stick around?
Jonathan Swan, senior political correspondent at The Times, explains why these choices ... In every neighborhood in New York City, from Red Hook in Brooklyn to Riverdale in the Bronx, Vice ...
With the Falcon 9 rocket set to fly again, and testing of the Starliner capsule progressing, the agency is seeking to turn the page on a brief, troubled chapter in orbit. The Arizona senator ...
The SEC tiebreaker procedures are 22 pages long. There’s a reason it took so long to announce them. Anyone interested in any light reading, they’re here in all their glory. And after sifting ...
The number of votes cast in presidential elections has always been less than the number of eligible voters. By Stuart A. Thompson Some people have misleadingly claimed that election officials in ...