New York Times
Chrysler Pacifica Owners Say Minivans Suddenly Shut Off
No crashes or injuries have been linked to the issue, but more than 50 complaints have been filed. The automaker sees no sign of a consistent problem.
The Neediest Cases Fund: Even Her Shopping Trips Require a Chaperone, So She Makes Them Last
Alice Brunn, 79, lost her vision in her 60s and can’t leave home unattended. When her son takes her out, she plans several stops along the way.
Jana Novotna, Czech Winner of Wimbledon, Dies at 49
Ms. Novotna won a total of 17 Grand Slam titles, 16 of them in doubles and mixed doubles. The tribulations of her singles career, however, came to define her.
Paris Journal: A Brothel, Repurposed and Restored, Reveals Another Paris
Hidden for decades behind crude wooden boards, an ornate ceramic frieze at the former Aux Belles Poules tells a story of the city’s once-thriving sex business.
Advertising: Pizza Is Partisan, and Advertisers Are Still Adjusting
With the country so divided on so many issues, companies are increasingly finding themselves in the middle of controversies. They’re realizing it may be the new normal.
Editorial: Why Is New York Full of Empty Stores?
All these dead spaces hurt, and neighborhoods have a right to protect themselves.
Op-Ed Contributors: The Hypocrisy of Evo Morales
The president of Bolivia’s supporters claim that term limits undermine his human rights.
Remembering Azzedine Alaïa: The Designer Who Took Time
Almost alone in today’s fashion industry, he understood the value of time to the creative mind and the struggle it took to follow his own direction.
California Today: California Today: Cleaning Up Fire Damage in Santa Rosa
Monday: Crews in white protective suits are clearing wildfire debris, Charles Manson dies, and get ready for turkey trots and Thanksgiving dinners.
Behind Mugabe’s Rapid Fall: A Firing, a Feud and a First Lady
Robert Mugabe’s rule in Zimbabwe went unchallenged for 37 years, but in just a few days, he was largely stripped of power. The chain of events leading to his fall started with firing a vice president.
Kenya Court Upholds President’s Election Win
Justices dismissed two petitions to overturn the victory last month by Uhuru Kenyatta, a decision that came after a weekend of unrest.
Charles Manson, Keystone XL, Jana Novotna: Your Monday Briefing
Here’s what you need to know to start your day.
Personal Health: Clearing Up the Confusion About Salt
Excess sodium is responsible for most cases of hypertension, a leading risk factor for heart attacks, strokes and kidney failure.
Wanderlust: A Guide to Cap Ferret, the Cape Cod of France
The beachy headland west of Bordeaux forgoes glamour for the simpler things: surfing, fishermen’s cottages and freshly shucked oysters.
Op-Ed Contributor: Nafta’s Renegotiation Risks National Security
It’s not worth jeopardizing advances in United States security and hemispheric stability.
The Stone: The Climate Crisis? It’s Capitalism, Stupid
The work of saving the planet is not technical, it’s political.
The Daily: Listen to ‘The Daily’: How Trump Is Reshaping the Judiciary
Republican lawyers and lawmakers are working together to install conservative judges at a rate not seen in decades.
The New Health Care: How I Lost Weight and Learned to Love Thanksgiving Again
When we moralize about food, we remove joy from eating and forget the benefits of moderation.
Rites of Passage: My Vagina Is Terrific. Your Opinion About It Is Not.
I dared to discuss my anatomy. Men couldn’t handle it.
Feature: The Coast Guard’s ‘Floating Guantánamos’
In an expansion of the war on drugs, the U.S. Coast Guard is targeting low-level smugglers in international waters — shackling them on ships for weeks or even months before arraignment in American courts.