FILTER RESULTS
FILTER RESULTS
close.svg
Search Result for “passport”

Showing 1 - 6 of 6

WORLD

What to know about the new gender rules for US passports

New York Times, Published on 08/11/2025

» NEW YORK — The Supreme Court on Thursday allowed the Donald Trump administration to stop issuing passports that reflect the gender identity of transgender, nonbinary and intersex Americans.

WORLD

Panic, bribes, ditched cars and a dash on foot: Portraits of flight from Russia

New York Times, Published on 01/10/2022

» DARIALI, Georgia: They are bus drivers, programmers, photographers, bankers. They have driven for hours, bribed their way through many police checkpoints — spending a month’s wages in some cases — and then waited at the border, most of them for days, in a traffic jam that stretched for miles.

WORLD

Nonbinary airline passengers ask: What’s gender got to do with it?

New York Times, Published on 25/06/2022

» In late May, chef Silver Cousler flew to Miami from Asheville, North Carolina, to have a “last hurrah” party before getting married and a new restaurant opening. While booking the flight, Cousler, who identifies as nonbinary and uses the pronoun “they,” felt like they had “a split-personality disorder” when the Delta Air Lines website required them to choose either “male” or “female.”

LIFE

Hotel that put American in jail gets new Tripadvisor label

New York Times, Published on 12/11/2020

» The resort hotel in Thailand got its public apology. The unhappy American guest who spent two nights in jail for criticising the hotel online got his criminal charges dropped. But it was Tripadvisor, the giant online travel review platform, that got the last word.

WORLD

Ghosn flirted with Hollywood, then delivered a plot twist

New York Times, Published on 03/01/2020

» TOKYO: Carlos Ghosn, the fallen head of the Nissan-Renault auto alliance, didn’t know much about making movies, but he seemed willing to learn.

WORLD

14m visitors to US face social-media screening

New York Times, Published on 31/03/2018

» Nearly all applicants for a visa to enter the United States -- an estimated 14.7 million people a year -- will be asked to submit their social-media usernames for the past five years, under proposed rules that the State Department issued Friday.