Colombia Rebel Ends Presidential Campaign, in Blow to Peace Process Rodrigo Londoño, a former rebel commander known widely by his alias, Timochenko, exited the race after undergoing heart surgery. By NICHOLAS CASEY
International Women’s Day 2018: Beyond #MeToo, With Pride, Protests and Pressure There was a keen awareness of a sense of urgency and a shift on issues of gender parity, women’s treatment in the workplace and sexual dynamics. By ELISABETTA POVOLEDO, RAPHAEL MINDER and YONETTE JOSEPH
OVERLOOKED Overlooked No More: Belkis Ayón, a Cuban Printmaker Inspired by a Secret Male Society a Secret Male Society By SANDRA E. GARCIA
Kushner Meets With Mexican President, Underscoring Shift in U.S. Diplomacy Public fights with Mexico, vows to end relations with Cuba and a high-profile exit from a trade deal have signaled a sharp change in America’s approach in the region. By AZAM AHMED and NICHOLAS CASEY
Pope Paves Way for Sainthood for Paul VI and Archbishop Óscar Romero Francis approved decrees confirming miracles attributed to Paul VI, who led the Catholic Church through years of turmoil, and the slain Salvadoran archbishop, who defended the poor. By GAIA PIANIGIANI
Tech We’re Using How Canada’s Tech Scene Is Thriving (Including the Instant Pot) Ian Austen, a correspondent in Canada for The New York Times, chronicles the ups and downs of the country’s high-tech industry. By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Is Leonard Cohen the New Secular Saint of Montreal? More than a year after his death, the poet, novelist and singer-songwriter is experiencing a cultural resurgence in the city of his birth. By DAN BILEFSKY
Chile’s Oscar for ‘A Fantastic Woman’ Bolsters Gender Identity Bill The performance by Daniela Vega in the film has given a face and a voice to the plight of Chile’s transgender community. By ERNESTO LONDOÑO and PASCALE BONNEFOY
A High-Rise Hotel in Panama Says No to Trump Name With a hammer and a crowbar, the Trump name was pried off a Panama City hotel amid a contentious dispute between the Trump Organization and the hotel's majority owner. By ROBIN LINDSAY and KIRK SEMPLE
Sonja Bata, Whose Museum of Shoes Tells a Story, Dies at 91 The Bata Shoe Museum, which she founded in Toronto, contains thousands of items spanning 4,500 years of footwear history. By BONNIE WERTHEIM
Panama Hotel Owner Declares Victory and Trump’s Name Is Removed Within hours of seizing the administrative offices of the Trump International Hotel and Tower in Panama City, the letters T-R-U-M-P were pried off. By KIRK SEMPLE, STEVE EDER and BEN PROTESS
Trilobites This Hummingbird Chirps Like an Insect. Can It Hear Its Own Sound? A South American hummingbird’s noise is well above the normal hearing range of most birds, perhaps to stand out amid the din of other species in its habitat. By DOUGLAS QUENQUA
Montreal Journal In Montreal, a Berlin Wall of the Mind? The city, an emblem of a bilingual, multicultural Canada, nevertheless remains buffeted by the cultural battles of the past. By DAN BILEFSKY
Global Health Yellow Fever Circles Brazil’s Huge Cities With an outbreak in its second year, officials are trying to vaccinate 23 million people against the virus. The government was slow to act, critics say. By SHASTA DARLINGTON and DONALD G. McNEIL Jr
Thugs, Leeches, Shouting and Shoving at Trump Hotel in Panama The new owner of the Trump International Hotel in Panama City wants the Trump brand gone. The president’s family business refuses. The standoff has not been pretty. By KIRK SEMPLE, BEN PROTESS and STEVE EDER
Honduras Police Arrest Executive in Killing of Berta Cáceres, Indigenous Activist Roberto David Castillo Mejia, who was the executive president of a company building a dam that Ms. Cáceres opposed, was detained as he was about to fly to Houston. By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Stung by U.S. Tariff Plan, Canada Takes a Deep Breath Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, conscious of how much his country’s economy relies on the United States, remained calm and firm. By CATHERINE PORTER and IAN AUSTEN
Hitting the Road in Quebec and Looking for Your Guidance: The Canada Letter Dan Bilefsky, who has returned to his Montreal birthplace to become part of the The New York Times’s Canada team, is taking a road trip to reacquaint himself with Quebec. By IAN AUSTEN
E.U. Leader Threatens to Retaliate With Tariffs on Bourbon and Bluejeans Government and industry officials around the world warned of an escalating trade war, but President Trump doubled down on his vow, tweeting, “Trade wars are good, and easy to win.” By MELISSA EDDY and CHAD BRAY
Venezuela Delays Presidential Vote, but Opposition Still Plans a Boycott The government said the election, originally scheduled for April 22, would be postponed until May 20. By NICHOLAS CASEY
Colombia Rebel Ends Presidential Campaign, in Blow to Peace Process Rodrigo Londoño, a former rebel commander known widely by his alias, Timochenko, exited the race after undergoing heart surgery. By NICHOLAS CASEY
International Women’s Day 2018: Beyond #MeToo, With Pride, Protests and Pressure There was a keen awareness of a sense of urgency and a shift on issues of gender parity, women’s treatment in the workplace and sexual dynamics. By ELISABETTA POVOLEDO, RAPHAEL MINDER and YONETTE JOSEPH
OVERLOOKED Overlooked No More: Belkis Ayón, a Cuban Printmaker Inspired by a Secret Male Society a Secret Male Society By SANDRA E. GARCIA
Kushner Meets With Mexican President, Underscoring Shift in U.S. Diplomacy Public fights with Mexico, vows to end relations with Cuba and a high-profile exit from a trade deal have signaled a sharp change in America’s approach in the region. By AZAM AHMED and NICHOLAS CASEY
Pope Paves Way for Sainthood for Paul VI and Archbishop Óscar Romero Francis approved decrees confirming miracles attributed to Paul VI, who led the Catholic Church through years of turmoil, and the slain Salvadoran archbishop, who defended the poor. By GAIA PIANIGIANI
Tech We’re Using How Canada’s Tech Scene Is Thriving (Including the Instant Pot) Ian Austen, a correspondent in Canada for The New York Times, chronicles the ups and downs of the country’s high-tech industry. By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Is Leonard Cohen the New Secular Saint of Montreal? More than a year after his death, the poet, novelist and singer-songwriter is experiencing a cultural resurgence in the city of his birth. By DAN BILEFSKY
Chile’s Oscar for ‘A Fantastic Woman’ Bolsters Gender Identity Bill The performance by Daniela Vega in the film has given a face and a voice to the plight of Chile’s transgender community. By ERNESTO LONDOÑO and PASCALE BONNEFOY
A High-Rise Hotel in Panama Says No to Trump Name With a hammer and a crowbar, the Trump name was pried off a Panama City hotel amid a contentious dispute between the Trump Organization and the hotel's majority owner. By ROBIN LINDSAY and KIRK SEMPLE
Sonja Bata, Whose Museum of Shoes Tells a Story, Dies at 91 The Bata Shoe Museum, which she founded in Toronto, contains thousands of items spanning 4,500 years of footwear history. By BONNIE WERTHEIM
Panama Hotel Owner Declares Victory and Trump’s Name Is Removed Within hours of seizing the administrative offices of the Trump International Hotel and Tower in Panama City, the letters T-R-U-M-P were pried off. By KIRK SEMPLE, STEVE EDER and BEN PROTESS
Trilobites This Hummingbird Chirps Like an Insect. Can It Hear Its Own Sound? A South American hummingbird’s noise is well above the normal hearing range of most birds, perhaps to stand out amid the din of other species in its habitat. By DOUGLAS QUENQUA
Montreal Journal In Montreal, a Berlin Wall of the Mind? The city, an emblem of a bilingual, multicultural Canada, nevertheless remains buffeted by the cultural battles of the past. By DAN BILEFSKY
Global Health Yellow Fever Circles Brazil’s Huge Cities With an outbreak in its second year, officials are trying to vaccinate 23 million people against the virus. The government was slow to act, critics say. By SHASTA DARLINGTON and DONALD G. McNEIL Jr
Thugs, Leeches, Shouting and Shoving at Trump Hotel in Panama The new owner of the Trump International Hotel in Panama City wants the Trump brand gone. The president’s family business refuses. The standoff has not been pretty. By KIRK SEMPLE, BEN PROTESS and STEVE EDER
Honduras Police Arrest Executive in Killing of Berta Cáceres, Indigenous Activist Roberto David Castillo Mejia, who was the executive president of a company building a dam that Ms. Cáceres opposed, was detained as he was about to fly to Houston. By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Stung by U.S. Tariff Plan, Canada Takes a Deep Breath Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, conscious of how much his country’s economy relies on the United States, remained calm and firm. By CATHERINE PORTER and IAN AUSTEN
Hitting the Road in Quebec and Looking for Your Guidance: The Canada Letter Dan Bilefsky, who has returned to his Montreal birthplace to become part of the The New York Times’s Canada team, is taking a road trip to reacquaint himself with Quebec. By IAN AUSTEN
E.U. Leader Threatens to Retaliate With Tariffs on Bourbon and Bluejeans Government and industry officials around the world warned of an escalating trade war, but President Trump doubled down on his vow, tweeting, “Trade wars are good, and easy to win.” By MELISSA EDDY and CHAD BRAY
Venezuela Delays Presidential Vote, but Opposition Still Plans a Boycott The government said the election, originally scheduled for April 22, would be postponed until May 20. By NICHOLAS CASEY