New York Times
Golf Course Becomes a Refuge After the Las Vegas Shooting. Most of the Time.
A.J. McInerney is making his PGA Tour debut at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in Las Vegas, a month after escaping the mass shooting there.
Op-Ed Contributor: We Need the Diversity Visa Lottery
America can’t afford to turn its back on a chance to portray itself as a tolerant nation.
Editors’ Choice: 11 New Books We Recommend This Week
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times.
Trump Abandons Idea of Sending Terrorism Suspect to Guantánamo
But the president’s calls to execute the man accused in the Manhattan truck attack could add a complication that haunts prosecutors in any future trial.
House Democrats Take Demands for Trump Hotel Records to Court
Democrats on the House Oversight Committee invoked an obscure 1928 law to sue the General Services Administration for Trump International Hotel records.
A Weekend of Fear, Hate and Faith in Tennessee
A white supremacist gathering last weekend became a test of resolve for a mosque catering to refugees and a church still reeling from a fatal shooting.
Art Review: Coming Face to Face With Jimmie Durham
The sculptor’s retrospective at the Whitney Museum is a “brilliant, half-century-long act of politically driven self-invention,” our critic writes.
9 Weeks After Harvey, Houston Celebrates World Series Win
Few cheered the Astros’ first World Series title louder than those hit hard by the floodwaters.
Inside Giza’s Great Pyramid, Scientists Discover a Void
Using a technique from particle physics, researchers detected a 100-foot-long space within the monument, but Egyptologists questioned the discovery’s value.
In Raising Rates, Britain’s Central Bank Issues ‘Brexit’ Warning
Britain’s central bank lifted interest rates for the first time in a decade, but also warned of rocky times to come as the country confronts the decision to leave the European Union.
Who Wins and Who Loses From the Republican Tax Plan
The tax plan released by House Republicans on Thursday would reorient big chunks of the American economy, creating winners and losers.
Contributing Op-Ed Writer: Why the World Loves New York
“It’s not a place for children,” my mother said firmly. And my God, was she right!
The Neediest Cases Fund: From Serving the Famous at the Waldorf to Starting Over
When the Waldorf Astoria closed its doors for renovations, Regina Gatewood lost her job. In her 60s, she found herself thrust into the job market.
What Did Bernie Sanders Learn in His Weekend in Canada?
Canadian doctors seem to like their health care system as much as patients do, and Canadians generally appreciate the system’s fairness.
The Food Issue: 10 Tips for Fascinating Table Talk at Your Next Dinner Party
How to make small talk with a stranger, discuss politics with that one relative and other guides to memorable conversation at your next fete.
Who Is Jerome Powell: Trump’s Pick for Fed Chairman
Jerome H. Powell will come to the chairman’s job at the Federal Reserve with a wide-ranging résumé. One thing he lacks: an economics degree.
When Internships Don’t Pay, Some Colleges Will
Employers with a social mission often can’t afford to subsidize interns. Students often can’t afford to work for free. Colleges pitch in.
Wheels: Wheels Drive Auto Industry Forward, in Showrooms and Aftermarket Shops
Be they understated and utilitarian or exotic and outrageous, a fresh set of rims can make any car look new — even a new one.
Op-Ed Contributors: How to End International Tax Competition
To attract investment, nations have an incentive to lower corporate tax rates. But there are mutually beneficial ways to stop this undercutting.
Opinion: The Trump Debate Inside Conservative Citadels
Will the intellectual establishment bow to Rebekah Mercer and Steve Bannon?