Rock stars and other performers figured prominently in the crowds and the clothes at Paris Fashion Week.
She and Noel Furie had just come out as lesbians when they opened an unusual gathering place for women in Connecticut. Nearly half a century later, it is still thriving.
A storm soaking the state on Wednesday and Thursday is bringing new danger to the area hit by wildfires earlier this year.
Earth’s shadow will block most of the light that illuminates the lunar surface, creating what is known as a blood moon.
Georgia’s government sparked an uproar by announcing that a port project on the Black Sea will be awarded to a company from China after canceling a contract with a consortium that included Western firms.
The pope has emerged as an increasingly lonely moral voice against perilous global trends like nationalism and populism.
The Government tried to save Detroit. Now it’s letting Washington wither.
Elon Musk, the company’s chief executive, is fast losing out to Chinese electric carmakers in Tesla’s second-most-important market.
By signing deals with India’s two biggest telecom players, the tech tycoon and Trump adviser has improved his odds of breaking into an enormous market.
Syria’s interim president has said that millions would return after President Bashar al-Assad’s ouster, but many houses and other buildings were destroyed in 13 years of civil war.
The trip comes as President Trump looks to secure the Russian leader’s support for a 30-day cease-fire.
President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia is weighing a 30-day cease-fire proposal from the United States and Ukraine.
People who endured the longest Covid restrictions in the world are still grappling with what they lost: their loved ones, their livelihoods, their dignity.
Fewer people leaving the city and more foreign newcomers have helped erase pandemic losses, new census data shows.
The French president’s prescriptions for “strategic autonomy” and a European force for Ukraine are suddenly timely in a world with a less dependable America.
Europe had been banking on a United States that wanted to make a deal on tariffs and trade. With little progress in that direction, it’s reluctantly starting to hit back.
Many conservative websites have either ignored the recent stock declines or framed them in a positive way.
The administration’s whipsawing moves are leaving investors guessing. The risk is that this uncertainty comes at a real cost to the economy.
The president offers many reasons for imposing tariffs, including revenue, leverage over competitors and job creation. But history suggests a more complex history.
Plus, an explosive new Facebook memoir.