Biden Signs Final Bill to Fund the Government, Ending Shutdown Fears
The president signed a $1.2 trillion spending package that passed early on Saturday morning, narrowly avoiding a shutdown.
The president signed a $1.2 trillion spending package that passed early on Saturday morning, narrowly avoiding a shutdown.
For more than seven decades, Laurent de Brunhoff painted the adventures of the world’s most beloved elephant.
“They know they can’t control the online world,” one expert on the royal family said about the recent spate of revelations about the health of Catherine and King Charles III.
Beyond the surface-level nonsense of the “great replacement” theory lies a more subtle issue.
In a visit to the Rafah border crossing, Secretary General António Guterres called for an immediate cease-fire and expressed solidarity with Palestinians in the territory.
A total eclipse will pass directly over the city next month, and as many as a million visitors are expected to visit.
The N.Y.U. professor Jonathan Haidt became a favorite in Silicon Valley for his work on what he called the “coddling” of young people. Now, he has an idea for fixing Gen Z.
What will it take for a culture sick with its own wolfish appetite for self-exposure to try to get better?
Prosecutors compare their new fight against Apple to the seminal case against Windows in the 1990s.
The things we break, and the ones we can’t fix.
Does President Biden expect to win on a Jan. 6 strategy alone?
Many expressed compassion for Catherine, Princess of Wales, a woman who has spent much of the past two decades with every aspect of her life scrutinized.
What happens when we re-encounter cultural artifacts that were deeply important to us and they’ve changed, or we have, or both?
The concert hall massacre near Moscow raised Russian memories of other attacks, most related to the wars against Chechen separatists in the 1990s and 2000s that helped enable the rise of Vladimir V. Putin.
The Republican Senate candidate in Arizona, who has been an election denier and Trump supporter, is seeking to appeal to establishment Republicans.
Music lovers stood in the cold this week for a first crack at tickets to Tanglewood, a beloved outdoor venue where the Boston Symphony Orchestra plays all summer long.
A financial firm told an account owner that it had turned over her money to the state. When she filed a claim, something strange happened.
The Texas governor, Greg Abbott, has spent $10 billion building his own border security network. In Eagle Pass, where it has been concentrated, far fewer migrants have been crossing this year.
“The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store” has been a runaway critical and commercial success. When you’ve been David all your life, everything changes “when you become Goliath.”
The supermodel opens up about life in Miami and her new cookbook, “Nourish.”
The Affordable Connectivity Program, a $14.2 billion federal effort to make internet service more affordable, is expected to run out of funding this spring.
He’s also still working through his childhood trauma. Considering his musical’s legacy, he sees a story about how “we prevail ultimately, by turning toward the light.”
With hand tools and bare hands, families and rescuers continue to search broken buildings for missing friends and relatives.
Survey data shows more of them believe he acted criminally.
Legislators and activists are rallying to squeeze the NY HEAT Act into the state budget by the April 1 deadline.