A landmark 1979 study found that depressed people had a more realistic view of their influence over events. New research calls that into question.
Carriage rides have charmed tourists and drawn critics since the 19th century. A horse’s collapse on a Midtown street in August revived calls to ban the industry in New York City.
Britain’s prime minister may limp on, powerless, but she will fall.
A Siena College poll showed Gov. Kathy Hochul with a 11-point lead over her Republican challenger, Lee Zeldin, down from 17 points last month.
We don’t need foreign models to understand America’s authoritarian tendencies.
Records obtained by the House Oversight Committee show the former president’s properties charged more than $1.4 million to agents protecting him and his family.
The longstanding troubles of Credit Suisse recently grabbed the attention of amateur investors whose social media posts sparked fears that the bank was running out of money.
A new study shows that domesticated bananas have genetic markers tying them to three types of wild bananas that have not yet been found.
Democrats should do whatever it takes to block extortion.
We visited five South Asian sweet shops across the United States as they prepare colorful treats for one of their biggest days of the year.
Troubles with Russia’s draft.
In an adaptation from her new memoir, Newsroom Confidential, former Times public editor Margaret Sullivan revisits the “many strange chapters” of the paper’s coverage of the 2016 Democratic nominee.
The Georgia Senate race has become increasingly focused on the private life and alleged hypocrisy of the Republican nominee.
A class of political newcomers with remarkable military records are challenging old ideas about interventionism — and the assumption that electing veterans is a way to bring back bipartisanship.
What the rise of the far-right congresswoman means for the House, the G.O.P. and the nation.
How niche sports offer a pathway to the Ivy League and other elite schools.
Once again the Yankees took an early lead on the road, but this time it held up, forcing a decisive Game 5 on Monday in New York.
Catch a glimpse of a storied tradition in Bosnia and Herzegovina, where, for hundreds of years, divers have leaped from a bridge in the southern city of Mostar.
And you don’t need to do any peeling for Genevieve Ko’s apple crisp.
In her new memoir, “Newsroom Confidential,” Margaret Sullivan argues that traditional ideas about reportorial objectivity need to be re-examined in an era of constant assaults on truth.