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Magazine
Before Goop, There Was Suzanne Somers
Of all the sunny blondes of the 1970s, Suzanne Somers was the sunniest. She had the face, the figure, the…
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News
Facing Risky Options for Gaza Hostages, U.S. Turns to Longtime Mediator
Hamas is believed to hold at least 199 people in Gaza, a dense territory descending into a chaotic crisis, where…
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News
Architecture’s ‘Young Savior’ Rebooted After the Bottom Fell Out
Joshua Ramus really doesn’t want to talk about Rem Koolhaas anymore. Seventeen years ago Ramus, then 36, a diligent, buzz-cut…
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News
Ukraine Said to Use Powerful New Missiles for First Time
Ukrainian forces attacked two key Russian air bases behind enemy lines on Tuesday, with Western officials saying that long-range missiles…
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Real Estate
He Wanted a Comfortable Apartment With Room for All of His Art
The Tacoma condo hadn’t been touched in 40 years, and the pandemic made renovating tricky. But it turned out so…
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News
Momentous Shift Looms for Poland as Governing Party Looks Set to Be Ousted
An expected liberal coalition would probably reverse deeply conservative policies at home and diminish Poland’s role abroad as a beacon…
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Magazine
A Paris Dining Space With One Motto: Come Hungry
Plus: kids’ furniture, boozy desserts and more from T’s cultural compendium.
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Magazine
What Happens When an Artist’s Technology Becomes Obsolete?
Curators and conservators are working to save — and update — art made with aging hardware.
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News
To Restore Order, a Troubled Dance Company Calls on a Storyteller
Christian Spuck, a choreographer of narrative ballets, has taken the helm at the Staatsballett Berlin after years of strife for…
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News
Is It a Moral Awakening or Just One Man’s Midlife Crisis?
In Rupert Thomson’s new novel, “Dartmouth Park,” the sound of a mundane beep triggers in one man what may be…