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Schools say the Trump administration’s cuts to higher education are forcing them to consider extreme cost-cutting measures, even as more students than ever are heading to college this year.
There’s very little cooking involved.
With “defund the police” still in New Yorkers’ ears, getting traction in the mayor’s race was complicated.
When we move on too quickly from an attack, we normalize it.
At this year’s edition of Art Basel, European arts leaders worried about tariffs, whether to loan their art and if they needed to re-evaluate their relationships with American institutions.
Three directors are credited for Pixar’s latest film, but not all are listed onscreen at the same time. Here’s the back story.
This month’s picks include a full-throttle vampire movie, a heartbreaking ghost story, a creature-feature comedy and more.
A conversation with Mihir Zaveri, who covers housing in New York, on whether landlords have a right to grouse about their income even as rents rise.
Whether you’re a casual moviegoer or an avid buff, our reviewers think these films are worth knowing about.
Women are coerced into needless hysterectomies and girls are pushed into child marriages. After a court ruling and a Times investigation, things may be changing.
The director Dean DeBlois narrates a sequence from his live-action film, starring Mason Thames as Hiccup.
In a new documentary, “Marlee Matlin: Not Alone Anymore,” the star reflects on the joy, and pain, of being Hollywood’s first Oscar-winning Deaf actress.
I believe in medical science, but when my husband had cancer, I found myself trying to cure him with holy water and MAHA-like remedies.
The era of corporate allyship with the L.G.B.T. community is over. Maybe that’s a good thing.
A loophole in Trump’s policy bill encourages offshoring.
Would “Jaws,” the first blockbuster, be greenlit today? Probably not. Alissa Wilkinson, a New York Times film critic, breaks down why.
County Cork, Ireland’s southernmost county, has rustic architectural gems, stately Georgian homes, and 19th-century rowhouses overlooking Cork Harbour.
A new book of photographs captures the landscapes, buildings and faces along the route that once conveyed untold wealth between Europe and China.
Now 20 years old, this love story about two sheepherders is being rereleased in theaters. Here’s a look at what it meant to pop culture, then and now.