T/college

  1. Antisemitic Slurs Disrupt Queens College Zoom Lecture About Israel New York, Today

    As an Israeli professor began to speak, some attendees appeared to switch on their cameras and microphones and started yelling. Instead of their faces, they showed disturbing images.

  2. Fresh Footage Shows Person of Interest in Charlie Kirk’s Shooting Video, Today

    The F.B.I. shared surveillance video of a man running across a roof near where Charlie Kirk was fatally shot at Utah Valley University.

  3. Jerry Seinfeld Compares ‘Free Palestine’ Movement to K.K.K., Report Says U.S., Yesterday

    The comments at a Duke University event this week have rankled student activists, who said they fostered a hostile environment on campus.

  4. El FBI divulga imágenes de una ‘persona de interés’ en la investigación sobre el asesinato de Charlie Kirk En español, Yesterday

    Las imágenes muestran a un hombre con una gorra de béisbol, gafas de sol oscuras y una camiseta negra de manga larga con una imagen que parece incluir, en parte, un dibujo de la bandera estadounidense.

  5. Security at Kirk Event Seemed Light to Those Who Attended U.S., Yesterday

    The problem of protecting campus speakers with polarizing opinions has confounded universities around the country in recent years.

  6. F.B.I. Releases Two Images of ‘Person of Interest’ in Kirk Investigation U.S., Yesterday

    The grainy images show a man wearing a baseball cap, dark sunglasses and a black long-sleeve shirt with an image on it that appears to include, in part, a picture of the American flag.

  7. Testigos del asesinato de Charlie Kirk cuentan lo que vieron En español, Yesterday

    La gente entre la multitud dijo que el disparo no fue muy fuerte y que no todos se dieron cuenta inmediatamente de lo que ocurría.

  8. Lo que sabemos sobre el asesinato de Charlie Kirk En español, Yesterday

    Kirk, de 31 años, fundador de un grupo activista juvenil de derecha, recibió un disparo mientras pronunciaba un discurso en la Universidad de Utah Valley.

  9. Charlie Kirk’s Influence Extended Far Beyond the U.S. World, Yesterday

    The conservative activist had recently spoken at conferences in Asia. His message also resonated in Europe, and especially Britain, which has seen a rise in right-wing ideology.

  10. Major Medical Prizes Given to Cell Biology and Cystic Fibrosis Pioneers Health, Yesterday

    Many winners of the annual Lasker Awards have gone on to win a Nobel Prize in medicine or other fields.

  11. If We Keep This Up, Charlie Kirk Will Not Be the Last to Die Opinion, Yesterday

    An assassin took aim at the American experiment itself.

  12. What We Know About the Fatal Shooting of Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley U.S., Yesterday

    Mr. Kirk, 31, the founder of a right-wing youth activist group, was shot while speaking at the university on Wednesday.

  13. Social Media Falls Into Well Worn Grooves After Charlie Kirk’s Death Style, Yesterday

    A mix of sympathy and blame proliferated in messages posted from figures across the political spectrum.

  14. Charlie Kirk’s Horrific Killing and America’s Worsening Political Violence Opinion, September 10

    This is a moment to turn down the volume and reflect on our political culture.

  15. Education Department Ends Grant Funding Worth $350 Million for Minority-Serving Colleges U.S., September 10

    Education Secretary Linda McMahon said the money supported programs that the administration believes unfairly support minority students.

  16. Maps and Photos: Where and When Charlie Kirk Was Fatally Shot U.S., September 10

    Maps and photos show how the shooting that killed Charlie Kirk on a university campus in Utah unfolded.

  17. Trump and Leaders Across Political Spectrum React to Charlie Kirk Shooting U.S., September 10

    Some politicians called for prayers, while some others immediately cast blame.

  18. ‘A Lot of Blood’: Witnesses Describe the Charlie Kirk Shooting U.S., September 10

    Witnesses in the crowd said that the shot was not very loud and that not everyone had immediately realized what was happening.

  19. El activista Charlie Kirk recibió un disparo letal en Utah En español, September 10

    Kirk, un aliado cercano del presidente Trump, recibió un disparo en el cuello mientras hablaba en un campus universitario.

  20. The September 10 Charlie Kirk Shot Utah live blog included one standalone post:
  21. Harvard Is Told Research Money Could Flow Again, for Now U.S., September 10

    After a court victory, Harvard researchers were told some grants were being restored. But the battle over whether the government can halt the money is probably not over.

  22. An Artist Who’s Been Using the Same Woodblock for Over 15 Years T Magazine, September 10

    Chakaia Booker discusses printmaking and evolving old patterns.

  23. Texas Professor Fired After Accusations of Teaching ‘Gender Ideology’ U.S., September 10

    Two administrators also lost their posts at Texas A&M, an example of how Republican policies meant to curb liberal ideas are reaching into university classrooms.

  24. Gaza War Turns New Yorkers Against Israel, With Mayor’s Race as Backdrop New York, September 10

    More New Yorkers say their sympathies lie with Palestinians rather than Israel in the long-running conflict in Gaza, according to a New York Times/Siena poll.

  25. Princeton Student Held by Iran-Backed Militia Is Released, Trump Says World, September 9

    Israel and Iraq confirmed the release of Elizabeth Tsurkov, a Russian-Israeli graduate student at Princeton who was kidnapped in Iraq in 2023 by the militant group Kataib Hezbollah.

  26. Andrew Huse, Historian of the Cuban Sandwich, Dies at 52 Food, September 9

    He investigated which city of Cuban immigrants might have created the celebrated sandwich, Tampa or Miami. His finding was not altogether surprising.

  27. Shows Created by Women Rise Sharply, but Only on Streaming TV Business, September 9

    Far more shows on streaming services are being created by women, a new study found. That number on broadcast networks, though, remained stagnant.

  28. Mamdani Leads Cuomo Head-to-Head, With a Turnout Twist The Upshot, September 9

    The Times/Siena poll shows Mamdani would have an edge among likely voters, but Cuomo would lead among all registered voters.

  29. Mamdani Holds Huge Lead in Mayor’s Race, Times/Siena Poll Finds New York, September 9

    Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic nominee in the New York City mayoral race, is way ahead of his three rivals, but his lead would diminish considerably if the field shrank to a two-man race.

  30. Toplines: September 2025 Times/Siena Poll of Registered Voters in New York City Interactive, September 9

    Results of a New York Times/Siena College poll of 1,284 registered voters in New York City conducted from Sept. 2 to 6, 2025.

  31. Cross-Tabs: September 2025 Times/Siena Poll of the New York City Mayoral Election Interactive, September 9

    Zohran Mamdani leads in the New York City mayoral race, with 46 percent among the likely electorate, according to a New York Times/Siena College poll conducted from Sept. 2 to 6, 2025.

  32. Cross-Tabs: September 2025 Times/Siena Poll of Registered Voters in New York City Interactive, September 9

    Results of a New York Times/Siena College poll of 1,284 registered voters in New York City conducted from Sept. 2 to 6, 2025.

  33. Man Killed Retired Auburn Professor at Alabama Dog Park, Police Say U.S., September 8

    Harold Rashad Dabney III was arrested Sunday on two counts of capital murder in the death of Dr. Julie Schnuelle, 59, a veterinarian and mother whose body was found in a dog park on Saturday.

  34. Will We Follow Trump to Fantasyland? Opinion, September 8

    We’ve traveled far beyond political spin.

  35. We Are Watching a Scientific Superpower Destroy Itself Opinion, September 8

    As China threatens to overtake U.S. leadership in science and technology, America has responded by sabotaging its own engines of progress.

  36. 6 Autumn Strolls in 6 Vibrant Cities Travel, September 8

    No need to travel to the countryside for leaf peeping. Here’s a collection of North American urban walks that will immerse you in the colors of fall.

  37. West Point Alumni Group Cancels Award Honoring Tom Hanks U.S., September 8

    The group was to bestow the Sylvanus Thayer Award on the actor, but it said it was canceling the event to focus on preparing academy cadets for the future.

  38. David Baltimore, Nobel-Winning Molecular Biologist, Dies at 87 Science, September 7

    He was only 37 when he made a discovery that challenged the existing tenets of biology and led to an understanding of retroviruses and viruses, including H.I.V.,

  39. Authorities Point to Cable Disconnecting in First Report on Lisbon Funicular Crash World, September 6

    Portuguese authorities released a highly anticipated preliminary report into the disaster, which killed 16 people this week.

  40. Brené Brown Doesn’t Want to Be Your Self-Help Guru Anymore Magazine, September 6

    The author and podcaster wants to apply her old ideas about vulnerability and empathy to the workplace.

  41. Settlement Talks Stall Between Harvard and the Trump Administration U.S., September 6

    One major reason is said to be an emerging divide within the administration over whether the current framework is too favorable to Harvard.

  42. At George Mason University, Trump Has Found an Unbending Adversary U.S., September 6

    Gregory Washington, George Mason’s first Black president, runs a university that prizes diversity. That has made him a target of the Trump administration.

  43. What Has the Trump Administration Gotten From Law Firms and Universities? Interactive, September 6

    A recent ruling against the Trump administration’s federal funding cuts was a temporary win for Harvard. But a dozen other institutions already struck deals with the government involving millions of dollars in payments and commitments to prioritize causes championed by the president.

  44. Joseph McNeil, Young Spark in a Civil Rights Battle, Dies at 83 U.S., September 5

    He and his classmates from a historically Black college in Greensboro, N.C., desegregated a Woolworth’s lunch counter in 1960, inspiring similar protests across the nation.

  45. A. James Hudspeth, Who Unlocked Mysteries Behind Hearing, Dies at 79 Science, September 5

    He was pivotal in discovering how sound waves are converted into signals that the brain can perceive as a whisper, a symphony or a thunderclap.

  46. The FAFSA Form Is Coming on Time This Year. For a Change. Your Money, September 5

    The federal form, used to determine financial aid, will be available to the public on Oct. 1. Technical glitches that delayed the form for the past two years are said to have been resolved.

  47. A.I. School Is in Session: Two Takes on the Future of Education Podcasts, September 5

    “I think that A.I. is going to help break, in a sense, the university model that has anyway reached a certain kind of end game,” says the Princeton professor D. Graham Burnett.

  48. ‘Gridlock Sam’ Gives Back New York, September 5

    Samuel Schwartz, a former city transportation official and longtime columnist writing about New York traffic, is donating $1 million to start a transportation research center at Hunter College.

  49. I Was a D.E.I. Skeptic. Here’s What Changed My Mind. Opinion, September 5

    It’s about more than figuring out the right or wrong answers to questions.

  50. ‘Something Is Wrong With My Brain’: A Police Officer’s Descent U.S., September 5

    Brent Simpson is the first police officer known to have C.T.E. He showed signs of the disease in the last few years of his life.

  51. At Harvard, Judge’s Ruling on Funding Gives Students One More Thing to Ponder U.S., September 5

    Many students were cautiously hopeful after a judge said the Trump administration could not freeze research funding to the university. But they also had other things on their minds.

  52. College Board Cancels Tool for Finding Low-Income High Achievers U.S., September 4

    After the Trump administration criticized the use of what it called “racial proxies,” the group behind the SAT shut down a way for universities to identify promising applicants from disadvantaged communities.

  53. Harvard Won Its Money Back, but Will It Actually Get It? U.S., September 4

    A judge ruled that the Trump administration broke the law in canceling billions in federal funds for Harvard. Whether the money is returned matters for the rest of higher education.

  54. The Tik Tok Famous Chef Keeping a Sorority Fed Food, September 4

    Kevin Ashton found job satisfaction mentoring sorority sisters at the University of Nevada, Reno.

  55. Northwestern’s President Will Resign After University Faced Republican Pressure U.S., September 4

    The president, Michael Schill, will step down after months of turbulence, including Trump administration cuts of $790 million to the university’s research funds.

  56. Edgar Feuchtwanger, Who Wrote About Being Hitler’s Neighbor, Dies at 100 World, September 4

    He and his Jewish family lived across the street from the German leader in the 1930s. He later became a British professor and historian.

  57. Trump Administration Targets Financial Relief for Undocumented Students U.S., September 4

    The Justice Department has challenged several states that offer in-state tuition to unauthorized immigrants, contending that the policies discriminate against U.S. citizens.

  58. What Is College Like for You? U.S., September 3

    Higher education is in flux, and students are adjusting to a lot of changes.

  59. Judge Rules Trump Administration Illegally Canceled Harvard Funding U.S., September 3

    The ruling was a victory for the university in its battle with President Trump, but the judge’s decision may not be the final word.

  60. Judge Issues Ruling Helpful to Harvard in Case Against Trump U.S., September 3

    Harvard had sued the Trump administration in an effort to restore billions in research funds that the government canceled this spring.

  61. Can Trump Build or Just Demolish? We’re About to Find Out. Opinion, September 3

    What comes next?

  62. The Endangered Frog That Lives Next to an Amazon Warehouse New York, September 3

    The Atlantic coast leopard frog, first identified in an industrial section of Staten Island in 2012, is now on the state’s endangered species list. Conservation groups see an opportunity.

  63. Nemat Shafik, Columbia President During Protests, Takes Another Tough Job World, September 3

    Dr. Shafik, who came under fire for her handling of pro-Palestinian campus protests last year, is now the chief economic adviser to Britain’s prime minister.

  64. Cue the Sun: This Lab Recreates Hot, Sweaty Days to Test Humans Climate, September 2

    Our reporter hits the treadmill to understand how scientists study extreme heat.

  65. Applying to College in the Age of Racial Trauma Opinion, September 1

    The new, higher premium placed on college application essays that focus on racially traumatic experiences produces numerous undesirable consequences.

  66. California’s Potent Legal Weed Is Booming in Britain, Less Legally World, September 1

    High-strength, California-grown marijuana is so popular in the U.K. that large quantities are being illegally smuggled on passenger flights, officials say.

  67. Lee Roy Jordan, Ferocious Linebacker for the Dallas Cowboys, Dies at 84 Obituaries, August 31

    He was a favorite of Coach Bear Bryant at the University of Alabama, then helped make the Cowboys “America’s Team.”

  68. An Online Group Says It’s Behind a Campus Swatting Wave U.S., August 30

    Members of the group offered on Telegram to draw armed officers to schools, malls and airports, though their claims are unverified. Such false emergency calls have disrupted campus life in recent days.

  69. Margaret W. Rossiter, 81, Dies; Wrote Women Scientists Into History Science, August 29

    In her groundbreaking trilogy, “Women Scientists in America,” she told the stories of numerous accomplished but largely invisible women.

  70. International Student Enrollments Stay Steady at Columbia and Princeton U.S., August 29

    But Black student enrollment is lower at the two universities after years of turmoil in elite higher education.

  71. Joan Mellen, Whose Bobby Knight Biography Sparked Debate, Dies at 83 Books, August 28

    Some sportswriters accused her of “deifying” Indiana’s irascible basketball coach. A professor of English, she also wrote about Marilyn Monroe and the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

  72. Is Jordon Hudson a ‘Gold Digger’? She Wants the Trademark. Style, August 28

    Bill Belichick’s girlfriend has applied for numerous trademarks, including one seemingly critical of herself. Is she embracing the jokes?

  73. 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.

  74. La dieta mediterránea reduce el riesgo de diabetes, según un estudio En español, August 27

    Pruebas sólidas sugieren que seguir este régimen, reducir las calorías y hacer ejercicio disminuye las probabilidades de desarrollar diabetes en las personas con factores de riesgo metabólico.

  75. In Every Tree, a Trillion Tiny Lives Science, August 27

    Scientists have found that a single tree can be home to a trillion microbial cells — an invisible ecosystem that is only beginning to be understood.

  76. Hay una crisis de estudiantes haciendo trampa con la IA. Las universidades deben cambiar En español, August 27

    Como la IA ha hecho que el esfuerzo mental de escribir y resolver problemas sea opcional, las universidades necesitan nuevas formas de exigir el trabajo indispensable para aprender.

  77. Trump Says He Welcomes Chinese Students, as His Administration Blocks Them U.S., August 26

    The president has praised Chinese students several times. But his policies are making it more difficult for students from China to come to the United States.

  78. A Spate of Fake Shooting Calls Disrupts College Campuses U.S., August 26

    As students arrive on campus for fall classes, several universities have locked down their campuses after reports of mass shootings that turned out to be false.

  79. Democratic Party Scraps Resolutions on Israel and Gaza After Fraught Debate U.S., August 26

    The measures were almost entirely symbolic, yet laid bare the broader fault lines dividing and shaping the party nearly two years after the war began.

  80. 21 Cheap, Easy Recipes You Can Cook in Your College Dorm Food, August 26

    Peanut butter noodles, microwave Nutella cake and more one-pan wonders and no-cook recipes with super-short ingredient lists to save you a trip to the dining hall.

  81. The University’s Best Weapon Against A.I.: The 14th Century Opinion, August 26

    Since A.I. has made the mental effort of writing and problem solving optional, universities need new ways to require the work needed for learning.

  82. Civil Debate Is Still Possible on Campus. We Proved It at Harvard. Opinion, August 26

    The solution is deceptively simple.

  83. The Street-Corner Sensors That Track Flooding in Real Time New York, August 26

    Hundreds of sensors placed throughout New York City measure water as it rises, then send the data to an interactive map available to the public.

  84. Mediterranean Diet Reduces Diabetes Risk, Study Shows Well, August 25

    Strong evidence suggests that following the diet, cutting calories and exercising lowers the chances of developing diabetes for those with metabolic risk factors.

  85. Trump Isn’t Fixing America’s Campuses. He’s Bleeding Them Dry. Opinion, August 25

    Take it from an eyewitness: Our colleges don’t deserve this.

  86. Law Firm Pressures Brown University to Erase Research on Anti-Wind Groups Climate, August 25

    The firm, which represents opponents of offshore wind, said it would complain to Brown’s federal and private funding sources.

  87. The Typical College Student Is Not Who You Think It Is U.S., August 25

    As a fight over the future of elite higher education consumes university leaders and politicians, most college students live in a very different world with very different challenges.

  88. Columbia Got Most of Its Research Funding Back. The Damage Goes Deeper. New York, August 25

    While the university was able to strike a deal with the Trump administration, the national outlook for federal science funding remains bleak.

  89. Prohibí los teléfonos en mi aula universitaria. A los estudiantes les encantó En español, August 24

    Volvamos a los viejos tiempos, cuando los estudiantes solo tenían celulares con tapa y aprendían más.

  90. Harvard Is Making Changes Trump Officials Want, Even Without a Deal U.S., August 23

    Harvard has sued, fighting the Trump administration’s demands. But the university has also enacted a host of items on the White House wish list.

  91. Stephen Shore Started Taking Photos at 8 Years Old and Never Stopped Arts, August 23

    Shore’s new book, “Early Work,” hints at the towering figure he would become in photography, a master of elegantly prosaic scenes.

  92. Education Department Backs Away From Program for Hispanic-Serving Colleges U.S., August 22

    The federal program supports universities with high numbers of Latino students. Trump officials said they wouldn’t defend it against a lawsuit, which could effectively end the program.

  93. Trump Officials Demand Apology From George Mason President Over Diversity U.S., August 22

    The Education Department said an investigation had found the public university and Gregory Washington, its first Black president, had supported diversity programs it views as discriminatory.

  94. Howard University President to Step Down This Month U.S., August 22

    The historically Black university has faced the possibility of a Trump administration budget cut, and students were outraged over billing troubles.

  95. Was Head-Binding an Ancient Way to Get a Leg Up? Science, August 22

    For some cultures, the practice of cranial deformation may have offered individuals a path to privilege later in their lives.

  96. A Critic of Universities Is Rallying to Defend Them in the Trump Era Arts, August 22

    The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression has long been a critic of progressive campus culture. Now it’s taking on new, and surprising, targets.

  97. Police Respond to Active Shooter Report at Villanova University U.S., August 21

    The report drew a large police response to the university’s campus northwest of Philadelphia, and students were told to shelter in place.

  98. ‘Cruel Hoax’ at Villanova Spreads Panic During Student Orientation U.S., August 21

    The false report of a gunman drew a large police response to the university’s campus northwest of Philadelphia, where freshmen and their parents were told to shelter in place.

  99. The August 21 Villanova Active Shooter live blog included one standalone post:
  100. 4 Surprising Ways Healthy Heart Habits Benefit Your Whole Body Well, August 21

    A new review shows that the benefits of cardiovascular health extend from head to toe.

  101. I Banned Phones in My College Classroom. Students Loved It. Opinion, August 21

    Let’s go back to the good old days when students had only flip phones and were learning more.

  102. How Trump Is Forcing Foes to Pay Up U.S., August 20

    President Trump is getting universities, trading partners and law firms to agree to spend big on his terms, often to end fights he picked.

  103. Gabbard Plan Would Shrink Intelligence Center Focused on Election Threats U.S., August 20

    Two other centers focusing on cybersecurity and chemical, biological and nuclear threats would also be reduced, and the National Intelligence University would be eliminated.

  104. Oklahoma Proposes ‘America First Test’ for Teachers From New York and California Education, August 20

    The test is meant to filter out teachers who hold views “antithetical” to Oklahoma values.

  105. Las medidas de Trump alejan a muchos estudiantes internacionales de EE. UU. En español, August 20

    Los estudiantes de algunos países no podrán ir a clase este otoño debido a la prohibición de entrar en EE. UU. Unos no consiguen citas para el visado. Otros simplemente tienen miedo.

  106. These Moms Want to Design Your Dorm Room Real Estate, August 20

    Influencers are making money online by recommending dorm products and designs to families, who spend thousands of dollars on back-to-college shopping.

  107. Trump’s Tactics Mean Many International Students Won’t Make It to Campus U.S., August 20

    Students from some countries won’t make it to class this fall because of President Trump’s travel ban. Others can’t get visa appointments. Some are simply scared. Universities are panicking.

  108. The American University Is in Crisis. Not for the First Time. Books, August 20

    Political challenges to elite colleges have long been a feature of life in the United States. A 1963 book helps show us why.

  109. Rodrigo Moya, fotógrafo de la desigualdad y los conflictos en América Latina, muere a los 91 años En español, August 20

    Documentó la pobreza y las protestas de los años cincuenta y sesenta, y creó imágenes imborrables del Che Guevara y Gabriel García Márquez.

  110. Rodrigo Moya, Who Photographed a Changing Latin America, Dies at 91 Arts, August 19

    He documented poverty and protest in the 1950s and ’60s, and he created indelible images of Che Guevara and Gabriel García Márquez.

  111. Trump Wants Universities to Show Him the Money, or No Deal U.S., August 19

    President Trump has personally stipulated that hefty financial penalties be part of agreements his administration is negotiating with the elite universities. Critics call it extortion.

  112. Once a Source of Life and Renewal, Monsoon Brings Death to Pakistan World, August 19

    With villages swept away and Pakistan’s largest city assailed by monsoon floods, climate change has brought a catastrophic new normal to the country.

  113. Richard Lee, Activist Who Founded a Pot ‘University,’ Dies at 62 U.S., August 19

    After he was paralyzed in an accident, his use of marijuana for medical purposes led him to become one of the nation’s most influential cannabis activists.

  114. A Long Sunrise Walk to Start the School Year New York, August 19

    In an annual tradition at the Pratt Institute, first-year students will get to know one another while walking from their campus across the Brooklyn Bridge.

  115. Seeking Tales and Sipping Whiskey in a Shack Floating Down the Bayou U.S., August 19

    The shanty boat was bound for New Orleans, but the destination mattered less than the challenges, chance encounters and lessons learned along the way.

  116. How ‘Skibidi’ and ‘Tradwife’ Were Added to the Cambridge Dictionary Style, August 18

    The terms, which started as online slang, are expected to have staying power.

  117. Frank Savage, 87, Business Leader Entangled in Enron Scandal, Is Dead Business, August 15

    He was one of the relatively few Black Americans to reach the upper echelons of global finance. He was also a competitive sailor.

  118. Robin Lakoff, Expert on Language and Gender, Is Dead at 82 U.S., August 15

    In arguing that language enforces the power imbalance between the sexes, she inspired an entire academic field.

  119. Tribal Colleges Rely on Federal Funding. Their Leaders Fear the Trump Years. U.S., August 15

    As the Trump administration has publicly targeted elite universities, it has also quietly pursued funding cuts for the nation’s tribal colleges, which rely on federal dollars to operate.

  120. Un arqueólogo sueco navegó 3 años en barcos tradicionales para estudiar a los marinos vikingos En español, August 15

    Greer Jarret hizo 26 viajes para trazar las rutas que siguieron los navegantes en la era vikinga. A lo largo del trayecto descubrió rutas perdidas y puertos comerciales ocultos.

  121. Thousands Ask Harvard Not to ‘Give in’ and Pay Fine to Trump U.S., August 15

    In a petition, alumni, faculty and members of the public asked Harvard to stand up to the White House. The school has signaled a willingness to pay $500 million to restore research funds.

  122. Phil Knight, Ex-Nike Chief, and His Wife Pledge $2 Billion to Oregon Cancer Center U.S., August 15

    Oregon Health & Science University said the couple’s donation would be the largest single gift to a higher-learning institution in the United States.

  123. America’s New Segregation Opinion, August 14

    To be one nation, we have to embrace ground-up social change.

  124. Margaret Boden, Philosopher of Artificial Intelligence, Dies at 88 Science, August 14

    A cognitive scientist, she used the language of computers to explore the nature of human thought and creativity, offering prescient insights about A.I.

  125. As Trump Pushes International Students Away, Asian Schools Scoop Them Up Business, August 14

    The president’s hostility toward foreign students has made American higher education a riskier proposition for them. Other countries are eager to capitalize.

  126. 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.

  127. 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.

  128. 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.

  129. 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.

  130. 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.

  131. 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.

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

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

  133. 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.

  134. 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.

  135. 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.

  136. 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.

  137. 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.

  138. 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.

  139. 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.

  140. New York Is Planning to Shutter a Major Brooklyn Teaching Hospital Metro, January 20

    Officials said some services would be transferred from University Hospital at Downstate to nearby facilities, and others, including primary care, could be expanded.

  141. What Costs $1,000 Per Student and Might Help Children Learn to Read? National, December 4

    A new study found that California schools got positive results from a targeted investment in the science of reading — even with the challenges of pandemic recovery.

  142. More States Now Require Financial Literacy Classes in High Schools Business, December 1

    The surge in offerings is a response to the pandemic, which revealed glaring income inequality, as well as inflation and the resumption of student loan payments, an expert said.

  143. Lab Leak Fight Casts Chill Over Virology Research Science, October 16

    Scientists doing “gain-of-function” research said that heightened fears of lab leaks are stalling studies that could thwart the next pandemic virus.

  144. Can Civics Lessons for the Young Help Mend Society? Letters, September 20

    Readers react to a guest essay by educators at Stanford. Also: The new Senate dress code; Ron DeSantis and vaccines.

  145. Luring Theater Audiences Back After Covid Letters, September 10

    Readers discuss the decline in theater subscribers after the pandemic. Also: Northern Ireland; food allergies; a Covid playmate; anti-China bias.

  146. Faulty Oxygen Readings Delayed Care to Black and Hispanic Covid Patients, Study Finds Science, August 24

    Pulse oximeters measuring oxygen in the blood often inflated the levels for dark-skinned Covid patients, who then experienced delayed care or an increased risk of hospital readmission, researchers found.

  147. How Ron DeSantis Joined the ‘Ruling Class’ — and Turned Against It Investigative, August 20

    Over the years, Mr. DeSantis embraced and exploited his Ivy League credentials. Now he is reframing his experiences at Yale and Harvard to wage a vengeful political war.

  148. The June 30 Student Loans Supreme Court Biden live blog included one standalone post:
  149. Anthony Fauci Will Join Faculty at Georgetown University Express, June 27

    Dr. Fauci was the federal government’s top infectious disease expert for decades, and helped steer the U.S. response to Covid-19.

  150. Dr. Ashish Jha, White House Covid Coordinator, Set to Depart This Month Washington, June 8

    Dr. Jha, who oversaw the Biden administration’s pandemic response as it wound down, will return to his post as dean of the School of Public Health at Brown University.