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In Her 90s, a Painter Finally Confronts Her Nazi Trauma

Cornelia Foss, better known as a confidante to other artists than as an artist herself, has put aside landscape painting for something far more visceral.

© Laila Stevens for The New York Times

Cornelia Foss in the art studio of her Manhattan apartment.
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Charles Norman Shay, Tribal Elder and World War II Hero, Dies at 101

As a 19-year-old medic, he won a Silver Star for his service during D-Day. Later, in the Korean War, he earned a Bronze Star.

© Virginia Mayo/Associated Press

Charles Norman Shay at Omaha Beach in Normandy, France, in 2019. “I saw there were many wounded men who were floundering in the water,” he said, recalling D-Day. “And I knew that if nobody went to help them, they were doomed to die.”
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After Years of Debate, Vatican Says No to Women Deacons, at Least for Now

But a papal commission examining the question said further study was required, and advised that women should be given other leadership roles in the Catholic Church.

© Diego Ibarra Sanchez for The New York Times

Pope Leo XIV in Beirut in November. Some campaigners had hoped that the Vatican, under Leo’s leadership, might allow for the inclusion of women in the lowest rungs of the church ministerial hierarchy.
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Bipartisan House Group Proposes Long-Shot Health Care Plan

Republicans and Democrats released a two-year plan to scale back and extend expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies, but it faces long odds in the G.O.P.-led House.

© Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

Representative Jen Kiggans is the leading Republican on the proposal to extend A.C.A. subsidies.
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Suspect Arrested in Inquiry Into Pipe Bombs in D.C. Ahead of Jan. 6 Riot

The suspect was described as a 30-year-old man from Prince William County, Va., and his arrest could ultimately provide an answer to one of the mysteries arising from the Jan. 6. attack.

© EPA, via Shutterstock

A photograph released by the F.B.I. shows the person suspected of placing two pipe bombs on Capitol Hill the night before Jan. 6, 2021.
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A.I. Deal Making Is Getting Faster

Investors are deciding within 15 minutes whether to shovel millions into A.I. start-ups and taking entrepreneurs weight lifting and rock climbing to get deals done.

© Poppy Lynch for The New York Times

Colin Roberts, left, and Vivek Nair, the founders of Multifactor, an A.I. start-up, fielded interest from more than 250 investors and raised more money than planned.
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Her Roof Was About to Be Fixed. Then Immigration Agents Showed Up.

The Trump administration’s deportation agenda is reverberating beyond immigrant communities as agents begin fanning out around New Orleans.

© Ryan Murphy/Getty Images

The agents, including several from the Border Patrol, had shown up and tried to detain the men, but they refused to get down from the roof.
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Spain Sees Itself as a Beacon for Immigrants. So Do Many Latin Americans.

The government presents its migrant policy as a welcoming alternative to U.S. crackdowns. But activists say those arriving on boats from Africa are excluded from that embrace.

© Michael Robinson Chávez for The New York Times

Luz Fanny Arce Campiño in the restaurant she works in, in Paiporta, Spain, in October.
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Groups Express Anixety as Trump Threatens to Derail U.S.-Mexico-Canada Trade Pact

Hearings that began Wednesday in Washington reflected anxiety over the future of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade pact and whether the president could end up scrapping it.

© Doug Mills/The New York Times

Though President Trump negotiated and signed the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, he said this year that he wanted to make it a “much better deal.”
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Putin Must Have Authorized Novichok Poisoning in Salisbury, UK Inquiry Finds

The death of a British woman from Novichok was the result of a botched assassination attempt on a former Russian spy, an official report said on Thursday.

© Jack Taylor/Getty Images

A police cordon around the residential area where Dawn Sturgess was exposed to the Novichok nerve agent in Salisbury, England, in 2018.
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Deadly Attacks in Gaza Test Cease-Fire as Body of Another Captive Is Returned

Israel launched a military strike after it said Hamas militants attacked its soldiers, the latest clashes in the two months since a truce was signed.

© Bashar Taleb/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The site of an Israeli strike on an encampment in Khan Younis, Gaza. A Palestinian health official said the attack killed at least six people and injured many more.
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Poll Suggests Voters May Blame Republicans More if Affordable Care Act Subsidies Go Away

About half of people covered under the Affordable Care Act say that if their health costs spike, it will have a “major impact” on how they vote in the 2026 midterm elections, a survey found.

© Anna Rose Layden for The New York Times

If the Senate doesn’t vote to extend expanded Obamacare subsidies, many Americans will see their health expenses rise by about $1,000 next year.
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Immigrants’ Fears

We explain how Afghan refugees in America are experiencing the fallout from a D.C. shooting.

© Adriana Zehbrauskas for The New York Times

Mirwais Daudzai
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F.D.A. Orders Recall of More than 1.5 Million Bags of Shredded Cheese

A warning over shredded cheese is the latest of hundreds in the U.S. food system. Understanding recalls can help shoppers determine what’s truly dangerous.

© Roberto Machado Noa/LightRocket, via Getty Images

The bags of cheese included blends of mozzarella, provolone and asiago, and had been distributed to grocery stores like Target and Walmart in over 30 states and Puerto Rico.
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