Looted by Nazis, a 17th-Century Painting Resurfaces. But Not for Long.
The artwork had been missing for 80 years before Dutch journalists spotted it in a real estate listing in Argentina.
The artwork had been missing for 80 years before Dutch journalists spotted it in a real estate listing in Argentina.
Lawyers for the agency’s chief, Susan Monarez, insist that the impasse with Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. can only be resolved by President Trump.
Jeremy Allen White and Jeremy Strong, the stars of “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere,” and the director Scott Cooper on capturing a haunted rock icon.
Amid deep cuts, more than 90 parks have reported problems like lost revenue and cuts to emergency services. One expert called this “a dangerous path.”
The film, from Ivy Meeropol, will play Telluride. But as distributors pull back from nonfiction titles, especially political ones, a release isn’t certain.
With Israel’s expanded assault looming, Zeitoun already resembles other parts of Gaza that have been largely flattened in the war.
The Mississippi Civil Rights Museum put the gun on display days after the federal government released thousands of pages of records on the Till case.
Britain, France and Germany could trigger the reimposition of harsh penalties as the 2015 nuclear deal is soon to expire with nothing to replace it. More talks will follow.
The publication says the time is right to pour all of its resources into its online news operation and get its journalism “in front of the most people.”
Showcasing “American Progress,” John Gast’s tableau of Manifest Destiny, is of a piece with the administration’s desire for a more traditional view of American history.
The strikes near the capital, Damascus, were the latest Israeli military intervention in the country since a new government came to power.
We have the latest on the attack on Annunciation Catholic Church.
President Trump’s attempt to fire Lisa Cook has laid bare the erosion of the Federal Reserve’s independence, which could lead to economic consequences for Americans, The New York Times’s chief economics correspondent explains.
Remnants of a 2,000-year-old sunken city, Canopus, were lifted from waters off Alexandria, Egypt, revealing the city might have been larger than thought.
People across the United States have endured rushed or premature attempts to remove their organs. Some were gasping, crying or showing other signs of life.
Plus, robots for rent.
U.S. and European military officials are increasingly concerned about the flights, even as Russian acts of sabotage have declined.
Worn down by hundreds of days of military service, fewer Israeli reservists are turning up for duty. Others are refusing to fight in a war they no longer believe in.
Children who survive school shootings deal with a host of complex feelings, ranging from anxiety and grief to guilt and shame.
At the U.S. Open, players’ dogs are a key part of the entourage, and they have the run of the place.
After President Trump accused a Federal Reserve governor of mortgage fraud, everyday citizens are waking up to just how much information is out there.
The president’s steep tariffs and erratic moves have turned manufacturing abroad into a minefield, even for entrepreneurs who set up in countries viewed as safe alternatives to China.
Organ donation groups accused of safety lapses are facing multiple investigations, and new policies are underway to protect patients.
Trump’s meddling in our most important economic institutions is so extreme that at times it resembles China’s state-directed capitalism.
A Trump appointee has proposed rewriting a measure that requires companies to clean up “forever chemicals,” documents show. The new version would shift costs from polluters.
Beyond its catchy songs and memorable characters, the Netflix movie does an admirable job of capturing what it’s like to be an adoring fan.
Trump’s budget law effectively undoes much of the good that the Affordable Care Act did in reducing opioid deaths.
Tucked among exclusive real estate, a family’s 18-foot-wide strip of land is not just an oceanside parking spot. It’s their legacy.
A pilot program in six states will use a tactic employed by private insurers that has been heavily criticized for delaying and denying medical care.
Physicians are using the technology for diagnoses and more — but may be losing skills in the process.