New York Times
Rabwah Journal: Shunned by Pakistan’s Muslims, Ahmadis Find Refuge in a City of Their Own
Rabwah, home to about 70,000 Ahmadis, has a veneer of calm, even affluence, that is at odds with the growing hatred against the sect elsewhere in the country.
Virginia Voting Mess Was Never Supposed to Happen After Bush v. Gore
The state produced a guidebook on questionable ballots after the hanging chads of the 2000 presidential race. But it’s now facing a similar problem.
Do Australians Need a Sugar Intervention?
Since 1990, the number of obese adults in Australia has tripled. Can a region built on the sugar industry turn down the sweets?
Op-Ed Contributor: Sessions Says to Courts: Go Ahead, Jail People Because They’re Poor
Ferguson’s debtors’ prisons devastated its black community. The attorney general wants to keep it that way.
A Year of Style, in Pictures
Remarkable images from 2017, from Donald Trump Jr. to Nicki Minaj to Idris Elba to this one chihuahua.
Opinion: Your Mother’s Maiden Name Is Not a Secret
There has been no shortage of incidents proving that website security questions are far from secure.
Character Study: Running an Indie Bookstore, With Churchillian Resolve
By selling rare Churchill books to wealthy buyers, Barry Singer, 60, has kept his midtown shop open for 34 years.
Vitamin D and Calcium Don’t Prevent Bone Fractures
Researchers found no association of vitamin D or calcium supplements with the frequency of hip, spine or total fractures in older adults.
Op-Ed Contributor: Confessions of a Digital Nazi Hunter
In the wake of Trump’s victory, I built a bot to expose bigots. Then Twitter suspended it — and kept the bigots.
See How the Met Built ‘Tosca,’ Its Biggest Production of the Season
The Metropolitan Opera's army of artisans has been working for a year to bring 19th-century Rome to life in a new production of Puccini's “Tosca.”
Why Every Pop Star Wants a Piece of Starrah
With hits for Drake, Rihanna and Maroon 5, an intensely private woman is the secret queen of streaming.
MoviePass Adds a Million Subscribers, Even if Theaters Aren’t Sold on It
Users can go to the movies once a day for $9.95 a month. While multiplexes doubt that’s sustainable, the chief executive, who slashed the price, says, “We seem to have hit a nerve in America.”
California Today: California Today: Big Issues Loom on the 2018 Ballot
Thursday: Taxes, Palm Springs pools, another Sacramento retirement and rain.
Europe Edition: Ukraine, St Petersburg, Barack Obama: Your Thursday Briefing
Here’s what you need to know to start your day.
Kabul, Roy Moore, Cannabis: Your Thursday Briefing
Here’s what you need to know to start your day.
Travel Tips: How to Make the Most of a Trip to Wine Country
Wine producing regions such as Tuscany and Napa Valley already make for enjoyable vacation destinations, but with a little planning you can get even more from your trip.
South Korea Clamps Down on Bitcoin Trading Amid Market Frenzy
In one of the biggest hubs for virtual currencies, the government said it would no longer let people buy or sell Bitcoin or its rivals anonymously.
In an Era of ‘Forever Wars,’ the Middle East Bureau Manager Who Made Our Coverage Possible
Reporters, photographers and security advisers came and went. Jane Scott-Long stayed.
The Daily: The Vandal and the Mosque: A New Chapter of Forgiveness in Arkansas
The last time I saw Abraham, in the blistering heat of July, everything seemed tenuous. Two weeks before Christmas, things had changed.
New York Today: New York Today: Tony Ruiz, a New Yorker of the Year
Thursday: Honoring a model citizen, preparing for more extreme cold, and goings-on around the city.