T/college

  1. N.Y. Republican in Swing District Gets Rowdy Reception at Town Hall New York, Today

    Representative Mike Lawler, who has promised to hold several town halls as he seeks re-election, was repeatedly heckled by audience members in Rockland County.

  2. Hazing Death in Arizona Leads to Charges for 3 Fraternity Leaders U.S., Yesterday

    Three 20-year-old students in Delta Tau Delta at Northern Arizona University were arrested on Saturday. The fraternity has been suspended.

  3. X.J. Kennedy, a Poet of Wit Who Clung to Rhyme and Meter, Dies at 96 Books, Yesterday

    Spurning the free verse of many of his contemporaries, he held to an older tradition. He also wrote spirited poems for children.

  4. How Trumpworld Sent Opera Packing Opinion, Yesterday

    By forcing an impossible economic model on the Washington National Opera, the Kennedy Center essentially disowned the art form.

  5. Texas vs. Plato: Censorship in the Academy Opinion, Yesterday

    Readers respond to a guest essay about the state’s effort to bar “officially disapproved ideas” from its university classrooms.

  6. Rare Albatross Coasts Above California Waters Far From Home U.S., Yesterday

    The unexpected sighting of a waved albatross, which was thousands of miles from its typical range, earned it a label ornithologists reserve for the unexpected: an avian “vagrant.”

  7. 28 Things to Do in New York City in February Arts, Yesterday

    This month offers a Valentine’s Saturday, a Fat Tuesday and a month of Black history, plus the Harlem Globetrotters and a last call for Gumby.

  8. Childhood Trauma Doesn’t Have to Be a Lifelong Curse Headway, January 31

    Decades after a landmark study showed the lasting health effects of such trauma, researchers are finding ways to guard against enduring harm.

  9. Escape to Alcatraz: Coyote Swims a Mile in Search of New Turf U.S., January 30

    The coyote struggled onto the rocky shore this month. It is the first documented coyote on Alcatraz since the island was transferred to the National Park Service in 1972.

  10. Florida Universities Have Partnered With ICE, Stoking Anxiety Among Students U.S., January 30

    It is rare for schools to work in concert with immigration officials, and it remains unclear if the partnerships have led to deportations.

  11. Texas A&M Ends Women’s Studies and Overhauls Classes Over Race and Gender U.S., January 30

    New policies limiting the teaching of race and gender issues led administrators and professors to change hundreds of courses. School leaders say the rules could hurt A&M’s reputation.

  12. Time to Say Goodbye Opinion, January 30

    After 22 wonderful years, I’ve decided to take the exciting and terrifying step of leaving in order to try to build something new.

  13. Students Are Skipping the Hardest Part of Growing Up Opinion, January 30

    Artificial intelligence is replacing young people's social intuitions.

  14. One Solution for Too Many A’s? Harvard Considers Giving A-Pluses U.S., January 29

    Harvard University has been trying to cut back how many A grades professors give. Now, 53 percent of grades are A’s, down from 60 percent.

  15. Angella Ferguson, a Leader in Sickle Cell Anemia Research, Dies at 100 Health, January 28

    A Black female doctor when that was rare, she developed a diagnostic test for the disease that is still a standard tool, as well as treatment guidelines.

  16. How to Come Together on Immigration Opinion, January 28

    Readers respond to an essay by Representative Mike Lawler, Republican of New York. Also: A suggestion for Columbia’s new president; a “no” from Canada.

  17. When Conservative Politics Hit Cash-Starved Universities Opinion, January 28

    If college education is merely a transaction, educators — and facts — are vulnerable.

  18. Hey, ChatGPT: Where Should I Go to College? Style, January 28

    High schoolers are turning to chatbots for help navigating the college admissions process. Does a virtual college coach know what’s best for students?

  19. How the Online SAT May Be Vulnerable to Cheating U.S., January 28

    Sites in China are selling test questions, and online forums offer software that can bypass test protections, according to tutors and testing experts raising alarms.

  20. Texas Moves to Curtail Visas for Skilled Foreign Workers U.S., January 27

    Gov. Greg Abbott said the state would investigate public agencies and universities that employ those with H-1B visas, a program the Trump administration has also targeted.

  21. Yale Offers Free Tuition to Families With Incomes Under $200,000 U.S., January 27

    Other costs would also be waived for students whose families earn less than $100,000. Yale joins other elite schools offering more generous financial aid, including Penn, Harvard and M.I.T.

  22. Democrats Have to Be More Than the Anti-Trump Party Opinion, January 27

    The moment is ripe to deal a debilitating blow to Trumpism and the MAGA movement. But who can deliver it?

  23. Los admiradores de Trump le dan el beneficio de la duda en política exterior En español, January 27

    Donde algunos republicanos ven un abandono de las normas y alianzas de posguerra, los seguidores de Trump alaban a un presidente que revive el espíritu de Theodore Roosevelt.

  24. An Academic and a Dealmaker Takes on the Challenge of Running Columbia New York, January 27

    Jennifer Mnookin forged compromises with protesters and politicians at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Now, she faces her biggest test.

  25. Winter Storm Debilitates the South, Encasing Cities in Ice and Snow Weather, January 27

    The forecasts had predicted that the storm could be among the worst in a generation to hit the region. By Monday, it was clear that is exactly what happened.

  26. Thomas Fogarty, 91, Who Helped Revolutionize Vascular Surgery, Dies Science, January 26

    Drawing on his love of fly-fishing, he developed a balloon catheter that removes blood clots from patients’ limbs in a minimally invasive way. It has saved millions of lives.

  27. On Foreign Policy, Trump’s Fans Give Him the Benefit of the Doubt U.S., January 26

    At least so far, President Trump has managed to bring along even those conservative supporters who are skeptical of foreign interventions.

  28. 430,000-Year-Old Wooden Tools Are the Oldest Ever Found Science, January 26

    The finding, along with the discovery of a 500,000-year-old hammer made of bone, indicates that our human ancestors were making tools even earlier than archaeologists thought.

  29. Searching for Memories of a Brother Lost to an Institution Times Insider, January 26

    A Times reporter covering the disability community set out to explore a dark moment in history, and found a man looking for a brother he never knew.

  30. Voters See a Middle-Class Lifestyle as Drifting Out of Reach, Poll Finds U.S., January 26

    Concerns about the affordability of education, housing, health care, having a family and retirement are driving economic anxieties, a New York Times/Siena poll found.

  31. Columbia Selects University of Wisconsin Chancellor as Its President New York, January 25

    Jennifer Mnookin has led the flagship campus of the state university system since 2022.

  32. Why Campuses Are Still Failing at Free Speech Opinion, January 25

    Readers respond to a guest essay by a student at Harvard. Also: Our phone choices; falling behind China on energy.

  33. How College Can Tear Us Apart Opinion, January 25

    If illiberalism is the problem, what is the cure?

  34. The Emotions President Trump Evokes Interactive, January 24

    We asked voters to describe their emotions about President Trump’s second term so far. Most spoke of happiness or hostility.

  35. John Brodie, a Star Quarterback for the 49ers, Dies at 90 Obituaries, January 24

    He endured years of frustration before emerging as the N.F.L.’s most valuable player.

  36. Couple Receive $200,000 Settlement After ‘Pungent’ Indian Food Complaint U.S., January 23

    The University of Colorado, Boulder, denied liability in the civil rights lawsuit, which the couple filed after a comment about a dish that one of them was heating in an office microwave.

  37. Esta pluma es una obra maestra de la naturaleza En español, January 23

    Puede que sean diminutas, pero las filoplumas permiten vuelos de miles de kilómetros sin escalas.

  38. Voters Are Split on Deportations but Disapprove of ICE, Poll Finds U.S., January 23

    While roughly half of voters support President Trump’s handling of the border between the United States and Mexico, a sizable majority says that ICE’s tactics have “gone too far.”

  39. D.H.S. Cited Foreign Students’ Writings and Protests Before Their Arrests U.S., January 23

    Documents unsealed by a federal judge on Thursday include dossiers that investigators prepared on pro-Palestinian student activists before they were targeted for deportation.

  40. The Voters Who Have Taken a U-Turn on Trump The Upshot, January 22

    One year later, the second Trump coalition has come apart, a Times/Siena poll finds.

  41. Cross-Tabs: January 2026 Times/Siena National Poll of Registered Voters Interactive, January 22

    Results of a nationwide New York Times/Siena poll of 1,625 registered voters conducted from Jan. 12 to 17, 2026.

  42. Who Gets to Borrow (and Charge) Over $100,000 for Graduate School Business, January 22

    Two different nursing school programs in Ohio offer a glimpse into what may happen when federal student borrowing has limits.

  43. Toplines: January 2026 Times/Siena National Poll of Registered Voters Interactive, January 22

    Results of a nationwide New York Times/Siena poll of 1,625 registered voters conducted from Jan. 12 to 17, 2026.

  44. Barbara Aronstein Black, a First as a Law School Dean, Dies at 92 U.S., January 21

    A legal historian, she broke a gender barrier as the first woman to lead an Ivy League law school, serving as dean of Columbia Law from 1986 to 1991.

  45. En América Latina, el rechazo a Maduro apaga las protestas por la incursión de EE. UU. En español, January 21

    Varios sondeos muestran que la mayoría de los latinoamericanos encuestados respaldaron la intervención.

  46. In Latin America, Loathing of Maduro Smothers Outcry Over U.S. Raid World, January 21

    Several polls show that a majority of Latin Americans who were questioned endorsed the intervention, suggesting a shift, at least for now, from ideology to pragmatism.

  47. Inside Trump’s Campaign to Tame Higher Education U.S., January 21

    Donald J. Trump has unleashed the power of the presidency against American colleges, with mixed results.

  48. Penn Calls Government’s Demand for Lists of Jewish Staff ‘Disconcerting’ U.S., January 20

    The federal government has sued the University of Pennsylvania for information on its Jewish employees. The university said the request recalls a “frightening” history.

  49. Nature’s Super Feather Science, January 20

    Filoplumes may be tiny, but these hairlike feathers enable nonstop flights that span thousands of miles.

  50. How Trump Made Life Difficult for International Students and Wisconsin U.S., January 19

    Last fall, the number of new international undergraduates fell by 25 percent compared to the previous year. That drop poses financial and competitive challenges.

  51. A Tennessee Dean Had ‘Zero Sympathy’ for Charlie Kirk. She Was Fired. U.S., January 19

    Laura Sosh-Lightsy’s punishment reflects the new power dynamics in the free-speech debate, especially in red states.

  52. Columbia University’s Strained Peace: Fewer Protests and Sealed Gates U.S., January 19

    The Trump administration has pushed universities all over the country to act against student protesters.

  53. Indiana Judge and His Wife Are Shot at Their Suburban Home U.S., January 19

    The police in Lafayette, Ind., said they were investigating the nonfatal shootings of a Tippecanoe County Superior Court judge and his wife on Sunday.

  54. Search of Reporter’s Home Tests Law With Roots in a Campus Paper’s Suit U.S., January 19

    The Stanford Daily lost a 1978 Supreme Court case over the search of its newsroom. But a bipartisan backlash prompted a federal law protecting journalists.

  55. Mamdani Said He’d Make Buses Faster and Free. Now It’s This Guy’s Job to Do It. New York, January 18

    Mike Flynn, a former intern who rose to the top of the agency, will be under a microscope, but far from the spotlight.

  56. One Year of Trump. The Time to Act Is Now, While We Still Can. Opinion, January 18

    The United States is broken, but not in every way.

  57. Virginia’s New Governor Moves Swiftly to Overhaul State University Boards U.S., January 18

    Abigail Spanberger, a Democrat, appointed new board members at three state schools, hours after she was sworn in as Virginia’s first female governor.

  58. ¿Cuba puede sobrevivir sin el petróleo de Venezuela? En español, January 17

    El presidente Trump detuvo los envíos de petróleo venezolano a Cuba, y los expertos afirman que se avecina un desastre. El petróleo alimenta su red eléctrica y, sin suministros alternativos, el país se sumirá en una prolongada oscuridad.

  59. Joel Primack, Physicist Who Helped Explain the Cosmos, Dies at 80 Science, January 17

    A professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz, he was a key contributor to a landmark paper that laid out how the universe came to look like it does today.

  60. Can Cuba Survive Without Venezuela’s Oil? World, January 17

    President Trump stopped Venezuelan oil shipments to Cuba, and experts say disaster looms. Oil fuels its electric grid and without alternative supplies the country will plunge into extended darkness.

  61. A.I. Is Coming to Class. These Professors Want to Ease Your Worries. New York, January 17

    Even as some instructors remain fervently opposed to chatbots, other writing and English professors are trying to improve them.

  62. Judge Recommends U.S. Issue Visa to Student Who Was Deported in Error U.S., January 16

    A federal prosecutor apologized this week, saying an ICE officer made a “mistake” in deporting Any Lucia López Belloza, a college freshman in Massachusetts, to Honduras.

  63. Some U.Va. Board Members Asked to Resign as a Democratic Governor Takes Power U.S., January 16

    After months of upheaval at the state’s flagship university, a new Democratic governor appeared ready to shake up the school’s leadership.

  64. Washington National Opera Finds a Stage Outside the Kennedy Center Arts, January 16

    Spring performances of “Treemonisha” and “The Crucible” will be held at George Washington University.

  65. U.S. Says It Erred in Deporting Student Traveling for Thanksgiving U.S., January 16

    The Trump administration acknowledged it mistakenly deported a college student to Honduras despite a court order barring the removal. But the government has not moved to drop the case.

  66. Humanities Endowment Awarding Millions to Western Civilization Programs Arts, January 15

    The National Endowment for the Humanities is giving more than $40 million to programs that have been embraced by conservatives as a counterweight to liberal-dominated academia.

  67. Judge Proposes Restricting Deportation of Scores of Noncitizen Academics U.S., January 15

    In a case over the First Amendment rights of noncitizen scholars, a federal judge proposed extending protections to members of two academic groups behind a lawsuit.

  68. Las universidades chinas suben en las clasificaciones mundiales; las de EE. UU. retroceden En español, January 15

    Harvard sigue dominando, aunque ha caído al puesto 3 en una lista que mide el rendimiento académico. Otras universidades estadounidenses se rezagan con respecto a sus homólogas mundiales.

  69. Arkansas Rescinds Choice of Law School Dean Over Transgender Stance U.S., January 15

    The University of Arkansas withdrew a job offer to a legal scholar after state officials learned that she had signed a legal brief concerning transgender athletes, lawmakers said.

  70. Jim Hartung, Gymnast Who Helped Deliver U.S. Gold, Dies at 65 Sports, January 15

    In an upset victory over China at the 1984 Olympics, he and five others became the only American men ever to win the gold medal in the gymnastics team competition.

  71. Appeals Court Opens the Door to Mahmoud Khalil’s Rearrest New York, January 15

    Any new detention would not come immediately, and Mr. Khalil’s lawyers plan to appeal. But the ruling is a major blow to Mr. Khalil, a Columbia graduate and prominent figure in the pro-Palestinian movement.

  72. Diosdado Cabello, la pieza incómoda en la transición política en Venezuela En español, January 15

    Cabello, ministro del Interior de Venezuela, está acusado por fiscales estadounidenses de narcotráfico y vinculado a la represión en su país, pero sigue siendo una figura poderosa.

  73. Judge to Weigh Next Steps in Student Activist Deportations Case U.S., January 15

    The hearing on Thursday followed up on the court’s sweeping finding in September that noncitizen students had the same free speech rights as citizens.

  74. Maduro’s Enforcer Faces an Uneasy Transition, and a Bounty on His Head World, January 15

    Diosdado Cabello, Venezuela’s interior minister, is accused by U.S. prosecutors of drug trafficking and is linked to repression at home, yet remains a powerful figure.

  75. Chinese Universities Surge in Global Rankings as U.S. Schools Slip U.S., January 15

    Harvard still dominates, though it fell to No. 3 on a list measuring academic output. Other American universities are falling farther behind their global peers.

  76. Caught Between Superpowers, Canada Seeks a New Path in Beijing World, January 14

    The prime minister is seeking new markets for Canadian goods and to mend relations with China after years of deep acrimony between the two nations.

  77. Justice Kavanaugh May Bring a Coach’s Perspective to the Case U.S., January 13

    The justice, a sports buff, has coached girls’ basketball teams for many years and has often reflected on the role such mentoring can play.

  78. Number of Trans Athletes Affected by Bans Is Low, but the Debate Is Broad U.S., January 13

    The people who support barring trans girls from girls’ sports say the debate affects not just transgender athletes but whole teams and sports.

  79. 2 Students Behind Challenges to Trans Athlete Laws U.S., January 13

    One sued to join her middle school girls’ cross-country team in West Virginia and the other to join the women’s track and cross-country teams at her university in Idaho.

  80. Supreme Court to Hear Challenges to State Bans on Transgender Athletes U.S., January 13

    The outcome of a pair of cases on Tuesday could affect laws in 27 states that prohibit transgender girls from joining girls’ and women’s sports teams.

  81. What Seniors Are Writing About in Their College Admissions Essays U.S., January 13

    Some students are still mentioning their race or immigrant status as the Trump administration cracks down on diversity efforts. But many are avoiding sensitive aspects of their identity.

  82. The Lie That Elite Colleges, and a Nation, Wanted to Believe Books, January 13

    “Miracle Children” details how a Louisiana school exploited the demand for stories of Black trauma.

  83. Leaders of Historians’ Group Veto Resolutions Critical of Israel Arts, January 12

    The executive council of the American Historical Association said the resolutions, including one accusing Israel of ‘scholasticide’ in Gaza, would put the group at risk.

  84. University of Michigan Picks Syracuse Leader as Its Next President U.S., January 12

    Kent D. Syverud will become the fifth person to run Michigan since the start of 2022, inheriting a school that also has debated diversity.

  85. F.D.A. Decisions on Abortion Pill Were Based on Science, New Analysis Finds Health, January 12

    A study of more than 5,000 pages of agency documents on mifepristone over 12 years found that agency leaders almost always followed the evidence-based recommendations of scientists.

  86. If You Can’t Teach Plato in a Philosophy Class, What Can You Teach? Opinion, January 12

    An ancient classic is canceled in Texas.

  87. A West Virginia Law Bars One Trans Athlete. Her Case Could Affect the Country. U.S., January 12

    The Supreme Court on Tuesday will hear a case that could affect laws in 27 states that bar transgender athletes from joining girls’ and women’s sports teams.

  88. Richard Codey, Former New Jersey Governor, Dies at 79 New York, January 11

    He was the longest serving legislator in New Jersey, while also running an insurance company and funeral home and coaching youth basketball.

  89. Who Was Renee Good, the Woman Killed by an ICE Agent in Minneapolis? U.S., January 11

    Ms. Good, 37, was a poet and a mother who grew up in Colorado. Her wife said the couple had “stopped to support our neighbors” when Ms. Good was shot.

  90. When American Violence Becomes Too Much for Families Opinion, January 10

    I asked why so many women were considering leaving the country. The guns, several responded.

  91. The Century-Old Lie at the Heart of the Attention Economy Opinion, January 10

    It started in a laboratory. No one could have predicted where it would end.

  92. George Saunders Is No Saint (Despite What You May Have Heard) Magazine, January 10

    The celebrated author on the challenges of being kind, the benefits of meditation and the reality check of death.

  93. For These Tribal Nations, Water Is a Through Line. And Now, a Threat. U.S., January 10

    Warming seas and increased flooding threaten a way of life for Native Americans who have called the Pacific Northwest coast their home for generations.

  94. Handing Out Free Tickets, Mamdani Says Theater Should Not Be ‘a Luxury’ Theater, January 9

    The mayor said a new initiative by the Under the Radar festival exemplified an arts affordability agenda that he intends to pursue.

  95. Venezuela entierra a las víctimas de la incursión de EE. UU. En español, January 9

    La muerte tocó a las puertas de varias familias que, relacionadas o no con el régimen del depuesto presidente Maduro, se convirtieron en daño colateral de una operación militar.

  96. Jerome Lowenstein, 92, Dies; Teaching Doctor With a Literary Sideline Books, January 9

    When not guiding students in a compassionate approach to patient care, he led a tiny publishing imprint that put out a much-rejected debut novel that won a surprise Pulitzer Prize.

  97. These Picture Books Are Ready for Their Close-Up Books, January 9

    Pioneered by Edward Steichen, Lewis W. Hine and Tana Hoban, photographically illustrated “concept” books have never had a more potentially receptive audience.

  98. Venezuela Mourns the Dozens Who Died in U.S. Operation World, January 9

    For all Venezuelans, the nighttime raid opened a period of deep uncertainty. For the families of those killed, it meant the grim task of burying their relatives.

  99. Families of Slain Idaho Students Sue the University the Killer Attended U.S., January 9

    A new lawsuit claims that Washington State University, where Bryan Kohberger was a Ph.D. student, failed to take decisive action on earlier complaints that he was stalking women.

  100. Renee Good’s Time at Old Dominion Included an Award-Winning Poem U.S., January 9

    “What I saw in her work was a writer that was trying to illuminate the lives of others,” a faculty member recalled.

  101. Cooper Union Settles Jewish Students’ Suit and Alters Protest Policies New York, January 8

    The New York City college had been accused of tolerating discrimination against those who believe in Zionism following a pro-Palestinian protest that trapped students inside a library.

  102. University of California Reports Record Enrollment Despite Trump Pressure U.S., January 8

    Enrollment increased to more than 301,000 as the system prepared for a budget debate in Sacramento.

  103. The Brown Shooting Suspect’s Descent From Brilliant Friend to Angry Loner U.S., January 8

    After Claudio Neves Valente was accused of killing two Brown students and a M.I.T. professor, former classmates recalled how he yearned to go to M.I.T. himself and failed, adding to his growing list of resentments.

  104. Can A.I. Match Molière’s Wit? These Researchers Think So. Theater, January 8

    Scholars and artists at Sorbonne University trained artificial intelligence to imitate the French playwright’s themes, structures and sense of humor. The result is a new play.

  105. University to Pay $500,000 to Professor It Fired Over Charlie Kirk Post U.S., January 7

    Austin Peay State University in Tennessee also reinstated Darren Michael, a tenured acting professor whose post about Mr. Kirk’s killing inflamed conservatives.

  106. Texas A&M, Under New Curriculum Limits, Warns Professor Not to Teach Plato U.S., January 7

    The university is reviewing courses under new rules restricting teaching about race and gender. Administrators told a philosophy professor to cut some lessons on Plato to comply.

  107. El increíble viaje de Brian Cox: de rockero a físico de partículas En español, January 7

    Antes llenaba estadios con su música. Ahora explica las complejidades del universo a una nueva generación bombardeada por la desinformación.

  108. Want to Have Better Sex This Year? Here’s How. Podcasts, January 7

    After 15 years teaching a class about sex, the most popular course at the University of Washington, this professor shares her most important takeaways.

  109. Suspect in Brown and M.I.T. Killings Discussed Attacks in Videos, Officials Say U.S., January 6

    Claudio Neves Valente, who is accused of killing two students at Brown and an M.I.T. professor, left rambling descriptions of the shootings.

  110. Caltech, a Science Powerhouse, Hires a Communicator as Its New President U.S., January 6

    Ray Jayawardhana, the incoming president, is an astrophysicist, but leaders at the California Institute of Technology also praised his credentials as a communicator at a time when science is under attack.

  111. Trump Is Pushing a Culture War That Knows No Bounds Opinion, January 6

    The president is deploying his domineering tactics in unexpected places.

  112. Optimism About Nuclear Energy Is Rising Again. Will It Last? Business, January 6

    Companies like Kairos Energy are building new types of reactors with the encouragement of the Trump administration, but their success is far from assured.

  113. At Middlebury, She Hoped to Start Fresh. In Trump’s America, It Seemed Impossible. U.S., January 5

    Lia Smith was a senior at Middlebury College, a transgender woman and, for a time, an athlete on the school’s diving team. But she struggled to feel accepted, and in October, she took her own life.

  114. Winter Storms Ease Drought in California, for Now U.S., January 4

    Experts say that it’s too early to tell what will happen during the rest of the state’s rainy season, but that extreme drought is unlikely.

  115. How the Pandemic Lockdowns Changed a Songbird’s Beak Science, December 15

    For ecologists, the Covid-19 pandemic has presented a remarkable natural experiment in what can happen to wild animals when humans stay home.

  116. 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.

  117. 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.

  118. 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.

  119. 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.

  120. 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.

  121. 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.

  122. 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.

  123. 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.

  124. 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.

  125. 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.

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

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

  127. 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.

  128. 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.

  129. 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.

  130. 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.

  131. 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.

  132. 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.

  133. 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.

  134. 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.

  135. 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.

  136. 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.

  137. 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.

  138. 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.

  139. 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.

  140. 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.

  141. 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.

  142. The June 30 Student Loans Supreme Court Biden live blog included one standalone post:
  143. 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.

  144. 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.

  145. What the Debt Ceiling Deal Means for Student Loan Payments Washington, May 30

    The legislation would prevent President Biden from issuing another last-minute extension on the payments beyond the end of the summer.

  146. Rosalind Franklin and Unsung Women in Science Letters, May 9

    Dr. Franklin and giving credit to women for their scientific contributions. Also: New College of Florida; Black unemployment; housing solutions; Covid risks.

  147. After Long Delay, Moderna Pays N.I.H. for Covid Vaccine Technique Science, February 23

    Moderna has paid $400 million to the government for a chemical technique key to its vaccine. But the parties are still locked in a high-stakes dispute over a different patent.

  148. Three Years Into Covid, We Still Don’t Know How to Talk About It Interactive, February 22

    Most Americans think they know the story of the pandemic. But when a writer immersed himself in a Covid oral-history project, he realized how much we’re still missing.

  149. Opening Up Jobs for Those Without a College Degree Letters, February 7

    Readers react to an editorial urging employers to consider skills and experience, not just degrees. Also: Long Covid; Trump, RINO; online romance scams.

  150. Students Lost One-Third of a School Year to Pandemic, Study Finds Science, January 30

    Learning delays and regressions were most severe in developing countries and among children from low-income backgrounds. And students still haven’t caught up.