Trump’s Soft Spot for Dreamers Alienates Immigration Hard-Liners Mr. Trump’s sympathetic remarks about young immigrants and inaction on the program that shields them have caused rifts in the White House and angered his Republican base. By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS and JENNIFER STEINHAUER
Homeless Find a Champion in Canada’s Medicine Hat A small town leads the charge on a strategy embraced across Canada allowing homeless people begin to address their other challenges only after they have secured shelter. By CRAIG S. SMITH
TimesVideo Carnival Opens in Brazil Brazil kicked off its first night of Carnival on Friday. While Rio de Janeiro held large festivities, smaller cities opted to forgo the annual celebration in light of the current recession. By DAPHNE RUSTOW
For Commerce Pick Wilbur Ross, ‘Inherently Bad’ Deals Paid Off Mr. Ross, who amassed a fortune with help from trade deals like Nafta, has vowed to tear up those deals if confirmed as commerce secretary. By AZAM AHMED and ELISABETH MALKIN
Trilobites ‘Ring of Fire’ Solar Eclipse Will Cross Southern Hemisphere on Sunday Known as an annular eclipse, it occurs when the moon moves in between the sun and the Earth but is too far to completely block the sun as it would during a total solar eclipse. By NICHOLAS ST. FLEUR
Canada Today: South Korean Hockey, Biking to the Border and Medicine Hat’s Money Medicine Hat, Alberta, has plans to set up a sovereign fund with its oil and gas revenue, a shift as it becomes a leader in renewable energy. By IAN AUSTEN
TimesVideo A Deadly Peace in Colombia as FARC Disarms Colombia’s FARC rebels are taking the first steps to end their decades-long rebellion. But the lands the group ruled are now up for grabs, and locals fear those who may seize control. By TOBY MUSE, FEDERICO RIOS and BEN LAFFIN
Fleeing U.S. for Asylum, and Handcuffed in Canada The scene at a border crossing in Quebec provided a snapshot of those who are leaving the United States and entering Canada illegally. By CHRISTINE HAUSER
Amazon Deforestation, Once Tamed, Comes Roaring Back A decade after the “Save the Rainforest” movement captured the world’s imagination, Cargill and other food giants are pushing deeper into the wilderness. By HIROKO TABUCHI, CLAIRE RIGBY and JEREMY WHITE
As Kelly and Tillerson Visit Mexico, Their Reassurances Differ From Trump’s Stance Top U.S. officials held a news conference in Mexico City as policy announcements from the White House continue to enrage the Mexican public. By AZAM AHMED, GARDINER HARRIS and RON NIXON
Ecuador to Hold Runoff in Tense Presidential Election Lenín Moreno won 39.4 percent of votes on Sunday, just short of the 40 percent threshold needed for an outright victory. He will face Guillermo Lasson in April. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rex Tillerson Arrives in Mexico Facing Twin Threats to Relations President Trump’s orders to deport immigrants in the United States illegally and an effort to review all American aid to Mexico complicate the secretary of state’s task. By GARDINER HARRIS and KIRK SEMPLE
Xochimilco Journal An Aquatic Paradise in Mexico, Pushed to the Edge of Extinction Experts say that the exploitation of wetlands in southern Mexico City could lead to the destruction of the area’s bucolic canals within a few years. By VICTORIA BURNETT
Sous-Vide Gefilte Fish? A Chef’s Argentine-Jewish Cuisine Tomás Kalika, who will soon open his second Buenos Aires restaurant, is giving diaspora cooking a tasting-menu (and Argentine) twist. By TEJAL RAO
Trying to Stanch Trinidad’s Flow of Young Recruits to ISIS Officials in Trinidad and Tobago are scrambling to close a pipeline that has sent a steady stream of Muslims to Syria to take up arms for the Islamic State. By FRANCES ROBLES
Reporter’s Notebook Deep in Brazil’s Amazon, Exploring the Ruins of Ford’s Fantasyland The town of Fordlândia, founded in 1928 by Henry Ford, stands as a crumbling testament to the folly of trying to bend the jungle to the will of man. By SIMON ROMERO
Bomb Explodes Near Colombia Bullring, Injuring Dozens of Officers A homemade device left in a sewer exploded in Bogotá on Sunday, the authorities said, injuring two dozen police officers and two civilians.
Ecuador Votes as Latin America’s Left Sags, a Generation of Icons Gone An election without Rafael Correa, the longtime leftist leader of Ecuador, is one more step away from a movement that once swept the continent. By NICHOLAS CASEY and MAGGY AYALA
Trump’s Dual Roles Collide With Openings in Dubai and Vancouver Two new developments highlight the complications created when the president of the United States owns a sprawling real estate company. By BEN HUBBARD, ERIC LIPTON, DAN LEVIN and RICHARD C. PADDOCK
Canada Today: Asylum Seekers, Conservative Choices and Your Thoughts The immigration order by President Trump has upset many Canadians, increased and illegal entry into Canada from the United States and spooked Canadians planning to visit its southern neighbor. By IAN AUSTEN
Trump’s Soft Spot for Dreamers Alienates Immigration Hard-Liners Mr. Trump’s sympathetic remarks about young immigrants and inaction on the program that shields them have caused rifts in the White House and angered his Republican base. By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS and JENNIFER STEINHAUER
Homeless Find a Champion in Canada’s Medicine Hat A small town leads the charge on a strategy embraced across Canada allowing homeless people begin to address their other challenges only after they have secured shelter. By CRAIG S. SMITH
TimesVideo Carnival Opens in Brazil Brazil kicked off its first night of Carnival on Friday. While Rio de Janeiro held large festivities, smaller cities opted to forgo the annual celebration in light of the current recession. By DAPHNE RUSTOW
For Commerce Pick Wilbur Ross, ‘Inherently Bad’ Deals Paid Off Mr. Ross, who amassed a fortune with help from trade deals like Nafta, has vowed to tear up those deals if confirmed as commerce secretary. By AZAM AHMED and ELISABETH MALKIN
Trilobites ‘Ring of Fire’ Solar Eclipse Will Cross Southern Hemisphere on Sunday Known as an annular eclipse, it occurs when the moon moves in between the sun and the Earth but is too far to completely block the sun as it would during a total solar eclipse. By NICHOLAS ST. FLEUR
Canada Today: South Korean Hockey, Biking to the Border and Medicine Hat’s Money Medicine Hat, Alberta, has plans to set up a sovereign fund with its oil and gas revenue, a shift as it becomes a leader in renewable energy. By IAN AUSTEN
TimesVideo A Deadly Peace in Colombia as FARC Disarms Colombia’s FARC rebels are taking the first steps to end their decades-long rebellion. But the lands the group ruled are now up for grabs, and locals fear those who may seize control. By TOBY MUSE, FEDERICO RIOS and BEN LAFFIN
Fleeing U.S. for Asylum, and Handcuffed in Canada The scene at a border crossing in Quebec provided a snapshot of those who are leaving the United States and entering Canada illegally. By CHRISTINE HAUSER
Amazon Deforestation, Once Tamed, Comes Roaring Back A decade after the “Save the Rainforest” movement captured the world’s imagination, Cargill and other food giants are pushing deeper into the wilderness. By HIROKO TABUCHI, CLAIRE RIGBY and JEREMY WHITE
As Kelly and Tillerson Visit Mexico, Their Reassurances Differ From Trump’s Stance Top U.S. officials held a news conference in Mexico City as policy announcements from the White House continue to enrage the Mexican public. By AZAM AHMED, GARDINER HARRIS and RON NIXON
Ecuador to Hold Runoff in Tense Presidential Election Lenín Moreno won 39.4 percent of votes on Sunday, just short of the 40 percent threshold needed for an outright victory. He will face Guillermo Lasson in April. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rex Tillerson Arrives in Mexico Facing Twin Threats to Relations President Trump’s orders to deport immigrants in the United States illegally and an effort to review all American aid to Mexico complicate the secretary of state’s task. By GARDINER HARRIS and KIRK SEMPLE
Xochimilco Journal An Aquatic Paradise in Mexico, Pushed to the Edge of Extinction Experts say that the exploitation of wetlands in southern Mexico City could lead to the destruction of the area’s bucolic canals within a few years. By VICTORIA BURNETT
Sous-Vide Gefilte Fish? A Chef’s Argentine-Jewish Cuisine Tomás Kalika, who will soon open his second Buenos Aires restaurant, is giving diaspora cooking a tasting-menu (and Argentine) twist. By TEJAL RAO
Trying to Stanch Trinidad’s Flow of Young Recruits to ISIS Officials in Trinidad and Tobago are scrambling to close a pipeline that has sent a steady stream of Muslims to Syria to take up arms for the Islamic State. By FRANCES ROBLES
Reporter’s Notebook Deep in Brazil’s Amazon, Exploring the Ruins of Ford’s Fantasyland The town of Fordlândia, founded in 1928 by Henry Ford, stands as a crumbling testament to the folly of trying to bend the jungle to the will of man. By SIMON ROMERO
Bomb Explodes Near Colombia Bullring, Injuring Dozens of Officers A homemade device left in a sewer exploded in Bogotá on Sunday, the authorities said, injuring two dozen police officers and two civilians.
Ecuador Votes as Latin America’s Left Sags, a Generation of Icons Gone An election without Rafael Correa, the longtime leftist leader of Ecuador, is one more step away from a movement that once swept the continent. By NICHOLAS CASEY and MAGGY AYALA
Trump’s Dual Roles Collide With Openings in Dubai and Vancouver Two new developments highlight the complications created when the president of the United States owns a sprawling real estate company. By BEN HUBBARD, ERIC LIPTON, DAN LEVIN and RICHARD C. PADDOCK
Canada Today: Asylum Seekers, Conservative Choices and Your Thoughts The immigration order by President Trump has upset many Canadians, increased and illegal entry into Canada from the United States and spooked Canadians planning to visit its southern neighbor. By IAN AUSTEN