T/college

  1. An Economist Asked, How Much Should We Spend to Avoid the A.I. Apocalypse? Business, Today

    The question “at first struck me as too open-ended to be usefully addressed by standard economics,” said Charles Jones of Stanford. He took a shot anyway.

  2. America’s Formula for Greatness Is Under Threat Opinion, Today

    Education, open markets, trade and immigration transformed the United States into the world’s dominant power, but each is now being weakened.

  3. Is Your College Football Team Short of Cash? Sports Betting Can Help. Business, Today

    Louisiana lawmakers tried a novel strategy for raising revenue, a model that proponents say might work more broadly.

  4. La misión más reciente de la NASA a Marte es inusual en varios aspectos En español, Today

    ESCAPADE, que se lanzó al espacio el jueves en un cohete de Blue Origin, rompe el molde de cómo suelen desarrollarse las misiones de ciencia planetaria.

  5. Judge Orders Trump Not to Threaten University of California’s Funding U.S., Today

    An extraordinary rebuke to the federal government’s campaign against elite schools, the ruling could upend settlement talks with the university system.

  6. Seneca Soldier and Statesman Can Finally Add Lawyer to His Legacy New York, Yesterday

    Ely Samuel Parker, a Native American who served as an aide to Ulysses S. Grant during the Civil War, was kept from practicing law during his lifetime.

  7. Boston University Student Faces Backlash After He Called ICE on Workers U.S., Yesterday

    The student, the president of the school’s College Republicans club, said he reported immigrant carwash workers. Now he is facing online attacks after nine of the workers were detained.

  8. Former U.Va. President Details Justice Department Pressure That Led to Ouster U.S., Yesterday

    In an extraordinary 12-page letter, James E. Ryan described the pressure campaign leading to his resignation as akin to a “hostage situation.”

  9. Almost Everything About NASA’s Latest Mission to Mars Is Unusual Science, Yesterday

    The ESCAPADE mission, which launched to space on a Blue Origin rocket on Thursday, breaks the mold of how planetary science missions typically come together.

  10. The Next Privacy Battleground Is Inside Your Brain Magazine, Yesterday

    As neural implant technology and A.I. advance at breakneck speeds, do we need a new set of rights to protect our most intimate data — our minds?

  11. A.I. Cheating Rattles Top Universities in South Korea World, Yesterday

    As many elite colleges struggle to adapt to the technology, the nation’s most prestigious universities said dozens of students used artificial intelligence tools to cheat.

  12. Football Coach Who Was Focus of Netflix’s ‘Last Chance U’ Is Shot U.S., Yesterday

    The coaching fixture John Beam was gravely wounded in a shooting at Laney College in Oakland, Calif., a commuter school where he is athletic director, according to a city councilman.

  13. Canada Reaches for Its Economic Past to Find a Future Less Reliant on the U.S. World, November 13

    Prime Minister Mark Carney fast-tracked mines and other natural resource projects to the dismay of some Indigenous groups and many environmentalists.

  14. Texas A&M Tightens Rules on Talking About Race and Gender in Classes U.S., November 13

    The university system will ban advocacy of “race or gender ideology, or topics related to sexual orientation or gender identity” without approval.

  15. Indiana Professor Removed From Class Over White Supremacy Lesson U.S., November 13

    The professor will no longer be able to teach a class on diversity after she showed students a diagram that included the “Make America Great Again” slogan as an example of white supremacy.

  16. New Jersey Accuses Mob-Led Ring of Running Illegal Sports Gambling New York, November 13

    The accusations follow recent federal charges filed against figures from Mafia families accused of running illegal poker games that involved former N.B.A. players.

  17. Dozens Are Hospitalized After Ammonia Leak in Oklahoma U.S., November 13

    Authorities said a tanker truck parked outside a hotel in Weatherford, Okla., was leaking ammonia on Wednesday night, prompting evacuations.

  18. He Helped Cities Anticipate Damage From Storms Climate, November 13

    Austin Becker developed an early warning system to protect critical infrastructure from storms. His project’s funding was eliminated in April.

  19. Arline Bronzaft, Who Campaigned for a Quieter City, Dies at 89 New York, November 12

    She studied the impact of noise on health and classroom learning and helped impose stricter regulations in New York City.

  20. Virginia’s Governor-Elect Wants a Say Over Leadership at U.Va. U.S., November 12

    Abigail Spanberger, a Democrat, told the university’s board that the choice of a new president, to replace one pushed out by Republicans over the summer, should be delayed until she is in office.

  21. Let the Mind-Control Games Begin! Science, November 12

    Every four years at the Cybathlon, teams of researchers and technology “pilots” compete to see whose brain-computer interface holds the most promise.

  22. All the Canals and Charm of Amsterdam. None of the Crowds. Travel, November 12

    Leiden, a city whose university is often called the Oxford of the Netherlands, features museums, gardens, murals and plenty of ways to stretch your mind.

  23. These Campus Romance Novels Will Make You Swoon Books, November 12

    The explosive potential of those years makes every emotion more intense — and a perfect combo for rich storytelling.

  24. The ‘Lost Sisters’ of the Pleiades Fill the Entire Night Sky Science, November 12

    Astronomers identified more than 3,000 stars associated with the cluster, and there might be even more.

  25. Justice Department to Investigate Protests at Turning Point Event at Berkeley U.S., November 11

    The announcement came a day after protesters confronted attendees of a campus event hosted by Turning Point USA, the conservative group founded by Charlie Kirk.

  26. Justice Dept. Says It Will Investigate U.C. Berkeley Protest Video, November 11

    Demonstrators protested on Monday outside a Turning Point USA event at the University of California, Berkeley. University officials said a “single violent incident” took place. The Justice Department said it would investigate what had happened, citing security concerns.

  27. Nolan Williams, Who Stimulated the Brain to Treat Depression, Dies at 43 Health, November 11

    A neuroscientist, he employed a battery of high-tech tools in devising a fast-acting therapy that targets the area of the brain where depression originates.

  28. Mariners Wanted: Six-Figure Salaries and Months at Sea Business, November 11

    Few American are becoming mariners today, but demand could soon rise because President Trump and a bipartisan group of legislators in Congress want to revitalize the American shipbuilding industry.

  29. Teaching History in the Trump Era Opinion, November 11

    Readers respond to an article about how the teaching of U.S. history is changing. Also: Democratic pragmatism; emergency care at risk.

  30. Accused of Desecration, a Doctor Faces the End of His Life’s Work New York, November 11

    Dr. Masahide Kanayama has devoted his life in Manhattan to medicine and God. He could face five years of hard labor in Japan.

  31. How Canada Lost Decades of Progress in Fighting Measles World, November 10

    The disease was once considered eliminated in Canada, but not any more — there have been more than 5,000 cases in the last 12 months as vaccination rates have fallen.

  32. Democrat’s Win May Upend a Conservative Push in Virginia Universities U.S., November 10

    Supporters of Abigail Spanberger, Virginia’s governor-elect, say they expect her to reverse efforts to impose conservative priorities on the state’s prestigious public university system.

  33. Robert A.M. Stern Is Still Dreaming of a Fresh New York Arts, November 10

    The sharp-tongued architect and professor built Manhattan’s most luxurious towers, but his new book shuttles from Billionaire’s Row to the Bronx. (Plus, what he thinks of Rem and Zaha.)

  34. Make Medical School Three Years Opinion, November 10

    Medicine shouldn’t be a career for the wealthy alone.

  35. The MAHA-Fueled Rise of Natural Family Planning U.S., November 9

    A growing coalition of conservatives are speaking out against hormonal birth control, while promoting a more “natural” alternative.

  36. Israeli Academics Find Themselves Isolated Despite Gaza Cease-Fire World, November 9

    Boycotts of Israeli universities, largely imposed in Europe, have multiplied since the start of the war and reflect Israel’s international isolation over its conduct in Gaza.

  37. Medical Helicopter Crashes in Tennessee, Killing One Crew Member U.S., November 9

    Two other crew members were critically injured when the helicopter crashed about 30 miles from Nashville. No patients were on board.

  38. James Watson, Co-Discoverer of the Structure of DNA, Is Dead at 97 Science, November 7

    His decoding the blueprint for life with Francis H.C. Crick made him one of the most important scientists of the 20th century. He wrote a celebrated memoir and later ignited an uproar with racist views.

  39. Cornell Reaches Deal with Trump Administration to Restore Research Funds U.S., November 7

    The Ivy League university had warned of layoffs after the Trump administration stripped it of funds this year. The cuts were among the deepest in higher education.

  40. When a Vietnam Protest on Campus Turned Deadly U.S., November 7

    In May 1970, National Guard troops clashed with students at Kent State University in Ohio. Four students were killed, and nine were injured.

  41. John Cleary, Wounded in Kent State Shooting, Dies at 74 U.S., November 7

    A photo of him lying on the ground and bleeding made the cover of Life magazine after the 1970 shooting.

  42. How Is Trump Changing Colleges and Universities? Tell Us. U.S., November 7

    There has been a shift in campus culture. We want to hear from faculty members across the United States.

  43. Trump Pressure Risks Free Speech at University of California, Judge Warns U.S., November 6

    A federal judge said that faculty members were being affected in their teaching and research by the Trump administration’s pressure campaign.

  44. Stanley Chesley, Class-Action Lawyer Called ‘Master of Disaster,’ Dies at 89 U.S., November 6

    He won billions of dollars for plaintiffs in major suits against corporations but was disbarred for siphoning money from clients.

  45. What We Can Learn From Brain Organoids Science, November 6

    Lab-grown “reductionist replicas” of the human brain are helping scientists understand fetal development and cognitive disorders, including autism. But ethical questions loom.

  46. Un juez reprende al Departamento de Justicia en una audiencia del caso Comey En español, November 6

    El juez federal criticó el miércoles a la fiscala elegida personalmente por el presidente Trump, Lindsey Halligan, por adoptar un enfoque del caso basado en “imputar primero, investigar después”.

  47. Her Research Could Improve Training for Service Dogs Science, November 6

    “This is a type of science that has an impact that most people could see in their homes,” said Erin Hecht, a canine researcher at Harvard. “Now there’s just no money.”

  48. A College Tries to Pitch In and Train Air Traffic Controllers New York, November 6

    In Queens, a college of aeronautics is trying to help meet the need for controllers. I put on a headset and gave the training a try.

  49. Judge Berates Justice Dept. in Its Prosecution of Comey U.S., November 5

    The flashpoint was the Justice Department’s failure to turn over seized communications from a confidant of Mr. Comey’s, Daniel C. Richman, a law professor at Columbia University.

  50. Dehumanizing and Dystopian: How Gen Z-ers See Work Opinion, November 5

    Technology has left them with little autonomy or security in their jobs.

  51. The November 5 Election New Jersey California live blog included one standalone post:
  52. Fugitive Who Faked Abduction Is Found 13 Years Later, Enrolled in N.Y. College U.S., November 4

    Anthony Lennon, a convicted sex offender from Oklahoma, was arrested in Canton, N.Y., where he was studying under an alias, the authorities said.

  53. Two Massachusetts Men Charged in Explosion at Harvard Medical School U.S., November 4

    The predawn blast at a Harvard lab caused minor damage and led to the arrest of Logan David Patterson, 18, and Dominick Frank Cardoza, 20.

  54. Aging N.Y.C. Seminary’s Prayers Are Answered With a Lease by Vanderbilt New York, November 4

    The Tennessee university has promised to make repairs to the General Theological Seminary buildings as it establishes a satellite campus in Chelsea.

  55. The Endless Quest to Compare College Prices Before Applying Your Money, November 4

    Niche is the latest company to help families predict what they might pay. If only colleges would do more.

  56. In Search of the Simpsonville Massacre Science, November 4

    In 1865, two dozen Union soldiers, all formerly enslaved, were ambushed and killed along a road in Kentucky. Archaeologists are still searching for their remains.

  57. Meet the Billionaire Trying to Save College Football From Itself Business, November 3

    Cody Campbell, an oilman, has spent millions paying students to play football at Texas Tech. Now he worries that people like him are ruining college sports.

  58. Moon Duchin on the ‘Mathematical Quagmire’ of Gerrymandering Science, November 3

    Why the challenge of truly representative democracy is so complex.

  59. Explosion at Harvard Building Affected Small Section of Hallway, Officials Say U.S., November 3

    There was no structural damage to the building, they said, as investigators pursued two suspects.

  60. Marcyliena Morgan, Founder of Harvard’s Hip-Hop Archive, Dies at 75 Arts, November 1

    Her university’s vast collection of albums, scholarly essays and other ephemera helped establish rap as a course of serious study on a par with classical music.

  61. ‘Intentional’ Explosion Took Place at Harvard Medical School, Officials Say U.S., November 1

    Two people were seen running from the building afterward, the school said. No injuries were reported, the school police said.

  62. A Rare Visitor to Long Island Is Driving Birders Cuckoo New York, November 1

    A common cuckoo, a species native to Europe and Asia, made several recent appearances in Riverhead, N.Y. The birds have been spotted in a handful of places in the lower 48 states, experts said.

  63. 28 Things to Do in N.Y.C. in November Arts, November 1

    Sure, Tom Turkey looms large this month, but other highlights include a magic show with Muppets, Patti Smith and “Horses,” and wrestling drag queens.

  64. Zoë Wicomb, Acclaimed South African Author, Dies at 76 Books, October 31

    In novels and short stories, she delivered sharp observations of the constraints and contradictions of apartheid and its aftermath.

  65. Indiana University Lifts Ban on Printing News in College Newspaper Business, October 31

    The university faced fierce criticism after it fired the director of student media and said that news coverage could be published only online.

  66. As Shutdown Slows Air Traffic Training, These Schools Are Stepping In U.S., October 31

    New programs cannot turn out the numbers needed to make up for the controller shortfall. But they hope to have a higher success rate than the Federal Aviation Agency’s official academy.

  67. We Need to Rethink How We Think About the Holocaust Opinion, October 31

    Professor Marianne Hirsch on how the way we teach the “crime of all crimes” informs our understanding of Gaza.

  68. He Studied Why Some Female Birds Look Like Males Science, October 30

    Jay Falk explored a fundamental question: How do genes give rise to different bodies? But without funding, “there’s not really a future here.”

  69. Mamdani Holds Onto Strong Lead in Two New Polls Ahead of Election Day New York, October 30

    One poll of likely voters, from Emerson College, showed Zohran Mamdani widening his lead over former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo to 25 percentage points.

  70. Nazi Missiles That Terrorized Britain Are Now Home to Starfish Science, October 30

    Tons of toxic German munitions, dumped in the Baltic and North Seas after World War II, have become an unlikely refuge for marine life, a new study has found.

  71. He Taught a Class on Keanu Reeves in 1994. What Does He Think of ‘Godot’? Style, October 30

    Stephen Prina may have been one of the first to see a deeper pattern in Mr. Reeves’s work.

  72. Illinois Man Charged With Threatening Trump on Social Media U.S., October 30

    Derek Lopez, 27, defended his posts as performance art and free speech, according to an affidavit. The F.B.I. said he continued to use threatening language despite a warning from agents.

  73. Their Professors Caught Them Cheating. They Used A.I. to Apologize. U.S., October 30

    Two professors at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign said they grew suspicious after receiving identical apologies from dozens of students they had accused of academic dishonesty.

  74. Deputies Put Down 5 Escaped Monkeys They Were Wrongly Told Had Covid U.S., October 29

    Three other rhesus monkeys were still on the loose as of Wednesday after the truck carrying them rolled over on a highway in Mississippi, law enforcement officials said.

  75. Florida Universities to Stop Hiring Foreign H-1B Workers Under DeSantis Plan U.S., October 29

    The governor’s announcement follows a Trump administration plan to charge institutions $100,000 to bring in workers from other countries using the visas.

  76. Edward J. Blakely, 87, Dies; Hired to Oversee Katrina Recovery in New Orleans Climate, October 29

    An urban planner who specialized in disaster recovery, he was brought in to revive the city after the 2005 storm. The task proved larger than one man could handle.

  77. Facing Crisis, Talladega College Sells Its Art Treasures Arts, October 29

    An H.B.C.U.’s remarkable Hale Woodruff murals commemorating Black history have been bought by an art museum and two foundations. But the college says it is not completely letting go.

  78. What College Students Are Worried About Right Now U.S., October 29

    As political battles upend college campuses, we asked dozens of students what is on their minds as they plan for the future. Politics was only part of it.

  79. A.I. Threatens Our Ability to Understand the World Opinion, October 29

    Artificial intelligence threatens students’ most basic skills. If they lose their ability to understand what they read, will they lose their ability to think?

  80. Following in the Footsteps of Charlie Kirk? Style, October 28

    In a crowded field of would-be successors, Brilyn Hollyhand hopes to capture the minds of young conservatives across America.

  81. What Zohran Mamdani Learned as an Africana Studies Major at Bowdoin U.S., October 28

    The mayoral candidate has said his education was formative. But critics say that his degree exemplifies how colleges steep students in leftist dogma.

  82. The Perimenopause Whisper Network Style, October 28

    For some women, it feels like the only way to get medical care is to know someone who knows someone who can Whatsapp your book club group chat.

  83. Hurricane Hunters Found Something in Melissa’s Eye: Trapped Birds Weather, October 28

    The news “underscores the profound ecological toll that Hurricane Melissa will have on Jamaica’s biodiversity,” said one expert on the island.

  84. A Student Publication at Harvard Invoked Hitler. Now It Has Been Suspended. U.S., October 27

    The Harvard Salient, a conservative outlet, used a phrase that echoed a speech given by Hitler. Its board paused its operations over material it called “reprehensible, abusive and demeaning.”

  85. New College of Florida, a Conservative Bulwark, Will Sign Trump’s ‘Compact’ U.S., October 27

    The school, once a progressive college, was remade by Gov. Ron DeSantis’s administration. Now, it is the first school to agree to the Trump administration’s list of demands.

  86. Jill Lepore: ‘Most Forms of Tyranny Do Come to an End’ Opinion, October 27

    The Harvard historian on why change requires “determination and imagination.”

  87. How Politics Is Changing the Way History Is Taught U.S., October 27

    History lessons are being wiped from the internet, and California is retreating from ethnic studies, as education swings away from curriculums that are seen as too progressive.

  88. The Anatomy of a Canadian City’s Fight Over Fluoride World, October 27

    A contentious vote over the return of fluoride to Calgary’s water was supposed to settle a decades-long debate. But the battle on both sides remains as polarized as ever.

  89. ‘I’m Shocked, Shocked to Find That Gambling Is Going On in Here’ Opinion, October 26

    The N.B.A. should have known this was coming.

  90. An Early-Decision Student Backed Out of Tulane. Tulane Punished the High School. Business, October 26

    In an unusual move, the university imposed a one-year ban on Colorado Academy for early-decision applications, which carry a commitment to attend.

  91. Big Tech Makes Cal State Its A.I. Training Ground Technology, October 26

    Spurred by titans like Amazon and OpenAI, California State wants to become the nation’s “largest A.I.-empowered” university.

  92. Rutgers Fraternity Is Closed After Student Is Injured in Hazing Episode New York, October 25

    The Alpha Sigma Phi national organization permanently shut down its Rutgers chapter after concluding that hazing had occurred when a student was critically hurt this month.

  93. New York Is the Center of Basketball. And Basketball Betting Scandals. New York, October 25

    Point shaving. Gambling rings. Illegal poker games. Prosecutors in New York have seen it all.

  94. With Power Move on Rare Earths, China Plays Both Victim and Bully World, October 24

    In weaponizing its dominance over the crucial minerals, Beijing is using tactics that it once denounced, potentially alienating nations it wants to court.

  95. Who Is Terry Rozier? New York, October 23

    The only active N.B.A. player named in two indictments was Mr. Rozier, a versatile veteran who first drew the attention of gambling investigators in 2023.

  96. The Rot Creeping Into Our Minds Opinion, October 23

    Yes, Trump is assaulting democracy, but what worries me more is what has happened to the rest of us — the loss of the convictions and norms that undergird democracy.

  97. Phyllis Trible, Who Studied Bible Through Feminist Lens, Dies at 92 Books, October 23

    An influential scholar, she challenged centuries of biblical interpretation that presumed that women were unequal to men in the eyes of God.

  98. Ruth A. Lawrence, Doctor Who Championed Breastfeeding, Is Dead at 101 Health, October 23

    As a pediatrician, she helped elevate breastfeeding from a medical afterthought to a specialty of its own. As a mother of nine, she practiced what she preached.

  99. Some of the Greatest American Music You’ve Never Heard Of Opinion, October 23

    Why has the genius of these Black innovators been consigned to academic conferences?

  100. Harvard Records an Increase in Asian Students and a Drop in Black Students U.S., October 23

    The shift mirrors trends at other elite schools after a ban on affirmative action. The Trump administration has said it wants to scrutinize demographics to ensure schools aren’t using racial preferences.

  101. Esta granja solar en Alaska también produce comida En español, October 23

    Este proyecto de prueba se diseñó para combinar granjas de alimentos y solares, una práctica denominada “agrivoltaica”, como modelo para otras comunidades que buscan seguridad energética y alimentaria.

  102. Jackie Ferrara, Artist Who Brought Mystery to Minimalism, Dies at 95 Arts, October 22

    While others made sleek metallic sculptures, she favored humble materials like lumber and glue. The Times called her “one of our most gifted and inventive sculptors.”

  103. University of Virginia Makes Deal With White House to Halt Investigations U.S., October 22

    The Justice Department had been scrutinizing one of the nation’s premier public universities over accusations of civil rights violations.

  104. Google’s Quantum Computer Makes a Big Technical Leap Technology, October 22

    Designed to accelerate advances in medicine and other fields, the tech giant’s quantum algorithm runs 13,000 times as fast as software written for a traditional supercomputer.

  105. What’s Lost When Liberal Arts Schools Close Opinion, October 22

    Small colleges secure the fraying social fabric that holds towns together.

  106. Colleges Face a Reckoning: Is a Degree Really Necessary? U.S., October 22

    Wyoming is one of many states that embraced a campaign to encourage more people to enroll in higher education. Some leaders and students wonder if it was a mistake.

  107. This Solar Farm in Alaska Provides Something Extra: Free Food Climate, October 22

    Produce and power are both costly in the state. So researchers are testing ways to address both issues using the same land.

  108. With Cease-Fire, Some Pro-Palestinian Protesters Look Back, Ruefully U.S., October 21

    Activists welcome the truce. But the backlash to their demonstrations, some said, offered sobering lessons about power and politics.

  109. Man Who Wrote ‘So I Raped You’ Is Sentenced to 2 to 4 Years in Prison U.S., October 21

    Ian Cleary sent Facebook messages to Shannon Keeler six years after he sexually assaulted her when they were college students in Pennsylvania, prosecutors said.

  110. The Costs of Protecting Campus Speech Opinion, October 21

    Readers respond to a guest essay by Danielle Sassoon about her experience at N.Y.U. Also: A crackdown on science; a plea to the former presidents.

  111. White House Moves Toward Settlement With First Public University U.S., October 21

    The Trump administration is closing in on a deal with the University of Virginia, four months after government pressure forced the school’s previous president to resign.

  112. All but 2 Universities Decline a Trump Offer of Preferential Funding U.S., October 20

    One of the two, Vanderbilt University, signaled it had reservations.

  113. Why Are More Retirees Going Back to College? Real Estate, October 20

    At Arizona State University, residents pay about $500,000 in entrance fees to live on campus and take classes alongside undergraduates.

  114. Trump’s Crackdown on Chinese Students Ignores a Startling New Reality Opinion, October 19

    Shutting out China’s best minds will only push them into a homegrown Chinese research ecosystem that is eclipsing American universities.

  115. Elección presidencial en Bolivia: esto hay que saber En español, October 19

    Los bolivianos elegirán su presidente en la segunda vuelta del domingo, que enfrenta a dos candidatos conservadores que prometen mejorar la economía y restaurar la confianza de la nación en el gobierno.

  116. Bolivia Heads to the Polls: Here’s What to Know World, October 19

    Bolivians will vote for president in Sunday’s runoff, which pits two conservative candidates promising to improve the economy and restore confidence in the nation’s governance.

  117. Can a University From Tennessee Help Accelerate Growth in West Palm Beach? Business, October 19

    At a time of financial and enrollment uncertainty in higher education, Vanderbilt University, along with other schools, has forged ahead with expansion.

  118. Far From Gaza, a Palestinian Enclave Thrives, Even as War Feels Near New York, October 19

    Fifteen miles west of Manhattan, in Paterson, N.J., a community is directly, and often painfully, connected to a conflict half a world away.

  119. Chen Ning Yang, Nobel-Winning Physicist, Is Dead at 103 Science, October 18

    He and a colleague, Tsung-Dao Lee, created a sensation in 1956 by proposing that one of the four forces of nature might violate a law of physics.

  120. How Southern Politics Shaped Trumpism Opinion, October 18

    Three Southern Opinion columnists on the region and its outsize role in national politics.

  121. White House’s Aggressive Tactics Are Complicating Its Education Agenda U.S., October 18

    The Trump administration alienated many elite schools in its latest effort to overhaul higher education, so it looked elsewhere for allies.

  122. 10 Injured in Balcony Collapse in Cincinnati U.S., October 18

    People gathered at a house near the University of Cincinnati tumbled to the ground from a third-floor balcony, the fire department said. One person was in critical condition.

  123. Chevron en Venezuela: entre los beneficios económicos y las críticas políticas En español, October 18

    Chevron goza de una influencia inusual en la Venezuela socialista, lo que le permite al coloso energético beneficiarse de lo que pueda surgir de la crisis entre Washington y Caracas.

  124. Trump Seeks to Build a Triumphal Arch in Washington for Nation’s 250th Birthday U.S., October 17

    The arch will stand in the middle of the traffic roundabout at the end of Arlington Memorial Bridge, across from the Lincoln Memorial.

  125. University of Virginia Won’t Join White House’s Compact for Colleges U.S., October 17

    It was the fifth school in a matter of days to refuse an offer of preferential funding treatment from the government, even as the White House has threatened schools that do not sign up.

  126. No Water, No Power: The Misery That Fueled Madagascar’s Youth World, October 17

    The young people who toppled the government are now confronting questions about what’s next, and who will deliver on their demands.

  127. How a U.S. Oil Giant Became a Pillar of Venezuela’s Fragile Economy World, October 17

    Chevron enjoys unusual sway in socialist-led Venezuela, positioning the energy colossus to gain from whatever comes of the crisis between Washington and Caracas.

  128. Want to Know What You’ll Pay for College? There’s a Fast New Calculator for That. Your Money, October 17

    Nearly two dozen private colleges are offering an online tool that factors in need-based grants and scholarships to estimate students’ actual costs.

  129. Dispute Over Indiana College Newspaper Draws Censorship Accusations Business, October 17

    The administration at Indiana University Bloomington fired the adviser to the paper and barred the publication from putting out a print edition.

  130. Universities Are Standing Up to Trump U.S., October 17

    A White House proposal for special funding treatment crossed a line for several schools. Some say it feels like a turning point in the federal government’s battle with higher education.

  131. Thanks a Lot, Boomers Opinion, October 17

    The postwar generation had a good run. Now we’re all paying for it.

  132. Jeffrey Meldrum, Scholar Who Stalked Bigfoot, Dies at 67 Science, October 16

    His willingness to bring scientific rigor to Sasquatch studies earned him the gratitude of enthusiasts and the withering scorn of debunkers.

  133. Penn Becomes Latest University to Reject White House Deal U.S., October 16

    Penn is the third school to say no to the Trump administration’s offer of federal funding preferences in exchange for complying with certain requirements, such as protecting conservative voices.

  134. Covid Shots Protect Pregnant Women, but Getting Them Now Can Be Hard Well, October 2

    The vaccines are proven to help protect pregnant women and their babies. But regulatory chaos and mixed messaging have made for a confusing landscape.

  135. On Covid and Autism, Trump Strays From the Science U.S., September 23

    President Trump has used his position of authority to dole out flawed medical advice dating back to his first term, when he mused about injecting bleach to kill off the coronavirus.

  136. F.D.A. Approves Covid Shots With New Restrictions Health, August 27

    The agency’s fall recommendations underscore the goals of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to limit access to the vaccines, which he has long opposed.

  137. Has America Given Up on Children’s Learning? U.S., May 10

    Politicians used to care how much students learn. Now, to find a defense of educational excellence, we have to look beyond politics.

  138. La derecha en EE. UU. sigue defendiendo a la ivermectina En español, April 1

    El fármaco se ha convertido en una especie de símbolo de resistencia a lo que algunos en el movimiento MAGA describen como una élite corrupta.

  139. Why the Right Still Embraces Ivermectin National, March 31

    Five years after the pandemic began, interest in the anti-parasitic drug is rising again as right-wing influencers promote it — and spread misinformation about it.

  140. Medical Research at Columbia Is Imperiled After Trump Terminates Funding Metro, March 18

    Dozens of medical and scientific studies are ending or at risk of ending, leaving researchers scrambling to find alternative funding.

  141. California Historical Society to Dissolve and Transfer Collections to Stanford Culture, January 28

    The society faced financial challenges that were exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic. Its nearly 600,000 items stretch back before the Gold Rush.

  142. Do Careerism and College Mix? Letters, October 6

    Readers respond to a guest essay by a recent college graduate. Also: New York City’s new outdoor dining program; how immigrants built America.

  143. MAGA vs. Science Is No Contest Op Ed, September 11

    A substantial number of Republican voters are losing faith in science.

  144. Student Loan Borrowers Owe $1.6 Trillion. Nearly Half Aren’t Paying. Business, July 2

    Millions of people are overdue on their federal loans or still have them paused — and court rulings keep upending collection efforts.

  145. Schools Got a Record $190 Billion in Pandemic Aid. Did It Work? National, June 26

    Two new studies suggest that the largest single federal investment in U.S. schools improved student test scores, but only modestly.

  146. The One Thing Voters Remember About Trump Interactive, May 11

    We asked voters for the one thing they remembered most about the Trump era. Few of them cited major events like the pandemic and Jan. 6.

  147. Why Another University Might Benefit New York Metro, March 19

    According to a think tank’s analysis, another private college would attract the young talent that helps the city’s economy.

  148. Investing in Caregivers and Nursing Homes Letters, March 14

    Two readers call for more federal funding for care of the sick and the elderly. Also: Data on drivers; Covid lessons; diversity in college admissions.

  149. Long Covid May Lead to Measurable Cognitive Decline, Study Finds Science, February 28

    People with long Covid symptoms scored slightly lower on a cognitive test than people who had recovered. But long Covid patients who eventually got better scored as well as those whose symptoms did not last long.

  150. A Fern’s ‘Zombie’ Fronds Sprout Unusual Roots Science, February 25

    In the Panamanian rainforest, scientists found the first known plant species to transform decaying tissue into a new source of nutrients.