‘You Have to Be Girl-Power Tough’: Pageant Competitors Weigh in on Miss America
Miss South Carolina, Ms. Senior Florida and other titleholders reflect on beauty pageants and the changes coming to Miss America.
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Miss South Carolina, Ms. Senior Florida and other titleholders reflect on beauty pageants and the changes coming to Miss America.
By JOSEPHINE SEDGWICK
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Several readers responded to the news of Kate Spade’s death on Tuesday by talking about their experiences with suicidal depression and the loss of friends and relatives.
By LELA MOORE
The HBO show changed New York by making new New Yorkers. These are the stories of our “Sex and the City” dreams — and nightmares.
By BEN WIDDICOMBE and THE NEW YORK TIMES
“Newsrooms are the most beautiful, deeply flawed places,” Mr. Baquet said.“We make mistakes. When we catch them, we own up to them.”
By MARIE TESSIER
Our journalists and top newsroom lawyer will answer questions about our recent investigation into internal Islamic State files taken from Iraq.
By LARA TAKENAGA
A column on J. Marion Sims drew impassioned responses from readers, several arguing that the doctor has been needlessly vilified by modern observers.
By GINIA BELLAFANTE
Scores of readers, not to mention a few colleagues, contacted our standards desk urgently to point out what they believed was an embarrassing typo.
By PHILIP B. CORBETT
Our 52 Places Traveler answers readers’ questions about the journey so far and traveling alone, as a woman.
By JADA YUAN
Charlie Savage, a Times Washington correspondent, explains the legality and ethics of publishing confidential and/or classified information.
By CHARLIE SAVAGE
Part data scientists, part investigative journalists, our best-seller list editors apply rigorous standards of inclusion to sales reports from tens of thousands of stores across the United States.
By BEST-SELLER LISTS STAFF
Rogene Jacquette, The Times’s corrections editor, explains our process for correcting mistakes.
By ROGENE JACQUETTE
Pete Wells, The Times’s restaurant critic, answers frequently asked questions about our guidelines for judging a meal.
By PETE WELLS
Dos and don’ts for submitting your nuptials to The Times.
By RACHEL NUWER
Not only would a previously undisclosed prosecution report surface more than a decade after it was written, but as fate would have it, I would be in it.
By BARRY MEIER
We request your full attention as our editors demonstrate the safety features of this Travel section.
By LYNDA RICHARDSON
Danial Adkison, a senior staff editor on the paper’s Print Hub, is witty and succinct in English — and six other languages, too.
By EMMA MCALEAVY
I had climbed to the roof of our apartment building to see what the day might bring. Suddenly, I realized that the faraway hill was no ordinary hill.
By WILLIAM J. BROAD
A conversation with the Qwerty Ensemble about how journalism and music overlap.
By DANIEL J. WAKIN
What makes for a good morning? Experts have lots of advice. But what do you actually do? Here are some tips from real people.
By LELA MOORE
Drug users and relatives of people with addiction respond to a recent Times examination of overdose cases where prosecutors filed homicide charges against loved ones.
By ROSA GOLDENSOHN
After a string of episodes in which black people were treated unjustly while simply going about their business, we asked readers to tell us their stories.
By NICOLE PHILLIP
Our fashion-forward and royal-obsessed readers imagine Meghan Markle’s bridal gown.
By JOSEPHINE SEDGWICK
In honor of the royal wedding, we asked readers to share their tips for a happy marriage. Here’s what you said.
By MICHELLE L. DOZOIS