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World
Jiang Zemin, Leader Who Guided China Into Global Market, Dies at 96
Mr. Jiang, a wily and garrulous politician, presided over a decade of meteoric economic growth in the post-Tiananmen era.
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World
Bending Gender’s Rules, in Life and in German Grammar
The victory of Kim de l’Horizon, a nonbinary writer, in a top literary prize stirred a debate about how the…
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News
Christian Pulisic, on the Mend, Says He’ll Play on Saturday
Pulisic was injured scoring the winning goal for the U.S. against Iran on Tuesday.
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World
In ‘Mandela: The Lost Tapes,’ a Veteran Journalist Finds Himself
Richard Stengel, a former Time editor who ghostwrote Nelson Mandela’s memoir, revisits their long-ago conversations for a new podcast.
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Finance
Walmart Sued by Employee Who Says She Complained About Gunman
A lawsuit claims the retailer was warned months ago about “threatening” behavior by the worker who the police say opened…
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US
Judge Will Decide Whether DeSantis Went Too Far in Ousting Prosecutor
Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida suspended Andrew H. Warren, the state attorney in Tampa, who had vowed not to criminalize…
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Arts
A Night With FunkFlex, New York Rap Historian and Booster
What happens when various generations of rappers end up in the same room? The radio D.J. and local connector, craving…
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News
The World Cup continues for the U.S. Will Christian Pulisic be part of it?
DOHA, Qatar — The job for the United States soccer team was simple, really: Win. The stakes and the stage…
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World
A ‘Bridge to the West’ Dies in Belarus, as Moscow Seeks More Help in Ukraine
Vladimir Makei, a former foreign minister who led failed efforts to improve relations with the West, died over the weekend.…
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News
How the Supreme Court Is Erasing Consequential Decisions in the Lower Courts
The Supreme Court is increasingly setting aside legally significant decisions from the lower courts as if they had never happened,…