An improvised network of volunteers has sprung up to locate and rescue people who did not evacuate for Tropical Storm Florence. Fierce rains were likely to produce “catastrophic flash flooding and prolonged significant river flooding,” the National Hurricane Center said. Nonprofits have mobilized to help those affected by Typhoon Mangkhut, which has pummeled the Philippines. The president and the healthy economy have become countervailing forces, with his self-inflicted wounds obscuring the Republican message, and buoying Democrats Among the surprises this primary season were several high-profile upsets from the left. The Times asked some of the strategists and candidates behind these wins to break them down. Officials say that the president has soured on his defense secretary, and that Mr. Mattis is increasingly weary of capricious demands from his boss. To evade taxes, many shell companies are headed by “nominee directors” who can be homeless people or even victims of identity theft. Mr. Manafort agreed to give up three Manhattan apartments, including one in Trump Tower, a brownstone townhouse in Brooklyn and a 10-bedroom home in the Hamptons. California tries a new tack on gun violence. What you didn’t see on Miss America. Maya Rudolph on mastering impressions. And King Kong takes the stage. America’s immigration laws vs. America’s people. Consumer genetic tests aren’t error-proof. This is a story about an African nation’s fatal disregard of its minority population. It is also a story about the muddled sludge of colonial history. The president may be shunned nearly everywhere but at the bottom of the world he has finally found a loyal mate. A new survey reveals the Republican Party's religious divide. Stop obsessing over ideology. It's about personality. Seth Klarman was once the biggest donor to the Republican Party in New England. This year he’s giving some $20 million to Democrats. The generation that graduated into the recession is not to blame. I never made as much progress learning jazz as I did online. Was it the technology? Ms. Washington, the first African-American female staff photographer for The New York Times, knew how to keep her cool even in tense situations. After a shrine for her daughter was removed, Evelyn Rodriguez confronted a nearby driver, a friend said. They argued. The driver sped off and ran her over. Amar Ramasar, one of the company’s stars, and Zachary Catazaro were implicated in a lawsuit that has roiled the company. Juan David Ortiz, a federal Customs and Border Protection supervisor, was arrested on Saturday after a woman who said she had escaped helped the authorities find him, officials said. An Ohio boy isn’t expected to live until Christmas, so his neighbors decorated their homes, sent holiday cards and planned a parade with Santa for him. The chaotic aftermath of the still-unexplained gas leak gave rise Saturday to an unusual sight, displaced residents lugging their belongings in wagons and bags slung over their shoulders. There were plenty of announcements at a major climate conference in San Francisco, but not enough of what one researcher called the “exponential changes” still needed. Since leaving Prime Minister Theresa May’s government, Mr. Johnson, who would like her job, has displayed his skill at causing uproars while seeming affable. From New Haven to Senegal and Shanghai, female architects — many running their own firms — are invigorating the design of buildings and cities. Dueling dealers! $1,000 T-shirts! Homemade fruit spreads! In the age of eBay, the Rose Bowl market’s still got it. More Recent Articles |
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