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Kimmel, Covfefe, ‘Wonder Woman’: Washington’s Views on Pop Culture in 2017
Two Times reporters shared their analysis of how pop culture looks from inside the White House.
The First Time: Jenna Fischer: The First Time I Was Paid to Act
They were just a few lines in a sex-ed video. But they helped launch the career of the star of “The Office.”
New York Today: New York Today: A Kwanzaa Tradition on a Harlem Stage
Tuesday: A visit to a rehearsal for an annual holiday dance, an exhibition on mummies, and a Broadway anniversary.
Op-Ed Columnist: Editors Speak: A 2017 Reading List
I asked top editors at more than 20 publications to recommend one piece they had published this year.
Cross-Border Clashes in Kashmir Leave 7 Soldiers Dead
On the same day Pakistan allowed an Indian accused of spying a visit from his family, three Pakistani soldiers were killed in Kashmir.
Don Hogan Charles, Lauded Photographer of Civil Rights Era, Dies at 79
Mr. Charles, the first black photographer to be hired by The New York Times, took pictures of Malcolm X, Coretta Scott King and Muhammad Ali.
California Today: California Today: Dark Depictions of a Sunny State
Tuesday: California-as-Disaster, recreational marijuana, tax problems and the Formosa Cafe lives.
9 New Fashion Brands We Discovered This Year
From maximalist pajamas to subversive Swedish men’s wear, T featured a range of emerging brands in 2017. Here, a roundup of some that still have us talking.
Global Health: Measles Deaths Fall to a Record Low Worldwide
Thanks to vaccines, the disease — which not long ago killed over 2 million children a year — now kills fewer than 100,000, the W.H.O. reported.
Vietnam '67: Bombing the Ho Chi Minh Trail
No matter how many times we attacked it, the North Vietnamese transit network remained. In the end, it’s how they won.
Otherworldly: From ‘Frankenstein’ to Nora Roberts in 200 Years
New releases in speculative fiction include a viral dystopia, a fantasy kingdom ruled by magic, a lesbian pulp noir satire and a classic revisited.
Economic Scene: Incomes Grew After Past Tax Cuts, but Guess Whose
While the well-to-do did even better than before, average income for Americans on the bottom half of the scale actually shrank under Presidents Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush.
Laundry Day Around the World
From handwashing to laundromats, people in different parts of the world gather together to do laundry. Enter those spaces in 360 video.
Nonfiction: Waves of Destruction, Physical and Spiritual, Buffet Japan
In “Ghosts of the Tsunami,” Richard Lloyd Parry probes the emotional effects of the catastrophe that killed thousands of men, women and children.
The Last Taushiro
Amadeo García García is the last man to speak his language. When he goes, an entire culture will disappear. We went to find him.
Peru in Uproar After Fujimori, a Rights Violator, Gets Medical Pardon
Former President Alberto Fujimori was not eligible for such treatment because of the nature of his crimes, legal experts in Peru said.
ScienceTake: How It Works: The Large Mouth of the Largemouth Bass
The bones in the legendary maw of the largemouth bass function according to a well-known engineering model, scientists have found.
Coyotes Are Colonizing Cities. Step Forward the Urban Hunter.
The pursuit of the predator in settings like strip malls, residential streets and parks is igniting a debate over the benefits and dangers of urban hunting.
All the New Gestures You’re About to Learn on the iPhone X
What to do without that home button.
One Man’s Stand Against Junk Food as Diabetes Climbs Across India
India is “sitting on a volcano” of diabetes. A father’s effort to ban junk food sales in and near schools aims to change what children eat.