Diane Keaton Was the Definition of a Style Icon
Her legacy will include the ways she shaped fashion, rather than allowing fashion to shape her.
Her legacy will include the ways she shaped fashion, rather than allowing fashion to shape her.
Broad restrictions could cause supply interruptions for arms makers, as well as manufacturers in the semiconductor, automotive and other sectors.
What’s happening is shocking. It can get worse.
The star’s emotional transparency and expressive eyes helped us see the Corleones as both fascinating and repellent, just as her character did.
The Qatari prime minister told The New York Times that Gaza war mediators decided to delay talks on more difficult issues so a hostage-prisoner swap could be concluded quickly.
While he is trying to sell it as a strategic win, the peace deal contradicts many of his coalition’s goals.
Week by week, the federal campaign to ramp up immigration enforcement in the Chicago area has created fear and inflamed tensions.
Rama Duwaji moved to the city to pursue a career in art, met a guy named Zohran Mamdani online, married him, and now could become the city’s first lady before her 30th birthday.
Blazes that firefighters thought had died but then later came roaring back to life have become increasingly common, heightening scrutiny of how first-responders put out wildfires.
Four people were in critical condition after an early-morning shooting that left at least 20 people injured on Sunday in St. Helena, S.C., according to the Beaufort County Sheriff’s Office.
A film argues that an American icon may have made his best music in some of his lowest moments.
Isolated confrontations have intensified over the past week into the sharpest escalation of violence between the two countries in years.
Dishonest presidents should be entitled to no deference at all.
Our culture is amok with binaries. We have two major parties, just two, and they are forever opposed.
Israel’s advocates fear that its conduct of the war has cost it the support of an entire generation of U.S. voters.
Under the first phase of the new cease-fire deal, all living hostages in Gaza are expected to be released in the next 24 hours in exchange for about 2,000 Palestinians imprisoned by Israel.
A telecommunications blackout and restrictions on social media have further isolated Afghans who rely on the internet as a lifeline.
Controllers missing work was widely cited as the reason the last shutdown came to an end. But that assumption might have been overblown, according to controllers, aviation safety experts and congressional aides.
The disaster caused by a predicted large earthquake in the Pacific Northwest could be compounded by shaking along the San Andreas fault in California, scientists warned.
Federal layoffs and an end to diversity initiatives have weakened a historically strong labor market for Black workers.
U.S. strikes on boats that President Trump says are drug smugglers have unsettled America’s biggest trading partner, where powerful criminal groups produce and smuggle drugs.
A New York Times investigation points to a coordinated campaign of destruction during last month’s unrest. An official inquiry is underway but answers are growing harder to find.
There is little information in court filings about the dozen plaintiffs who challenged the state’s voting map as an illegal racial gerrymander.
In rural Texas, just 40 miles apart, a paramedic and a former small-town mayor got caught up on two sides of a digital “civil war.”
Peter Jackson, the chief executive of Flutter Entertainment, FanDuel’s parent company, is fighting for attention as online gambling spreads across the United States.
The maligned sculpture — “weird,” “odd,” “bizarre” — is no longer a working fountain or a skateboarding mecca. But its supporters consider it an important city symbol.
The Hungarian leader has secured power by keeping control over the news media. Now, a political opponent is starting to show the limits of his tactics.
Every three months, closed-door meetings of the billionaires who own N.F.L. teams become displays of status, beefs and sometimes Trump-induced headaches.
Long criminalized as the raw material for cocaine, coca is woven into Bolivian life. The government is lobbying the U.N. to ease international restrictions.
Patients’ mental health problems can make transplant decisions even more fraught.