T/college

  1. Bird Flu Is Suspected After Vulture Carcasses Sat Rotting Outside Ohio School U.S., Today

    The birds lingered for days at a Catholic school near Cincinnati as agencies haggled over who was responsible for removing them. Experts said the public health risk was low.

  2. Nobel Prize for Venezuelan Dissident Draws Criticism World, Today

    María Corina Machado is being honored for her push for democracy even as she backs President Trump’s military buildup and aggressive campaign against Venezuela.

  3. 1 Student Killed and 1 Injured in Kentucky State University Shooting, Officials Say U.S., Today

    The police said a suspect had been arrested after the shooting in Frankfort, Ky. The second student was in critical but stable condition, a university spokesman said.

  4. ‘Come North!’ Canada Makes Play for H-1B Visa Holders With New Talent Drive World, Today

    The government says it will fast-track immigration for U.S. H-1B visa holders and spend more than $1 billion to attract researchers from the United States and the rest of the world.

  5. University of Oklahoma Removes a Teacher It Says Urged Students to Protest U.S., Yesterday

    The protest was over the removal of another instructor, who gave a failing grade on a paper about gender that relied on the Bible as its main source.

  6. A Scholar’s ‘Bombshell’ Questioned Trump’s Power to Fire Officials U.S., Yesterday

    Caleb E. Nelson, a leading originalist law professor, challenged the conventional wisdom of the “unitary executive theory” in an article that was debated in the parties’ briefs ahead of Monday’s arguments.

  7. Agentes de migración van por la familia de la estudiante deportada a Honduras En español, Yesterday

    El padre de Any Lucía López Belloza dijo que agentes migratorios se presentaron en su casa de Austin, Texas, el domingo. Su hija fue deportada a Honduras durante un viaje sorpresa a casa.

  8. Immigration Agents Target Family of Deported College Student U.S., December 7

    The father of Any Lucía Belloza López said agents appeared at his home in Austin, Texas, on Sunday. His daughter, 19, was deported to Honduras during a surprise trip home for Thanksgiving.

  9. Cold Case Inquiries Hampered After Genealogy Site Revisits Terms of Use New York, December 7

    Ancestry’s clarification of a policy has barred those working on unsolved crimes from access to the company’s vast trove of records.

  10. A Right-Wing Playbook to Weaken Colleges from Within Opinion, December 6

    When students are treated like customers, they can demand educators grade accordingly.

  11. Frank Gehry’s Buildings Sound as Marvelous as They Look Arts, December 6

    Gehry, who died on Friday at 96, made an invaluable contribution to classical music by designing spaces with stunning acoustics.

  12. It’s Not Just You. Users Struggle With the Instagram Repost Button. Technology, December 6

    The new repost option, sandwiched between comment and share, has led to consternation and accidental reposts by some users.

  13. Hamilton O. Smith, Who Made a Biotech Breakthrough, Is Dead at 94 Science, December 5

    A Nobel laureate, he identified an enzyme that cuts DNA, laying the groundwork for milestones in scientific research and medicine, like insulin.

  14. My Somali Role Models in Minnesota Opinion, December 5

    Readers react to President Trump’s disparaging comments about Somalis in the U.S. Also: Academic censorship; a prejudice against psychiatric medication.

  15. ICE Arrests Harvard Professor Charged for Shooting a Pellet Gun U.S., December 5

    Carlos Portugal Gouvea, a visiting law professor from Brazil, said he would leave the country rather than be deported, according to federal officials. He was arrested after firing a pellet gun near a synagogue.

  16. Dancing Babies and Toddlers Are Teaching the Pros a Thing or Two Arts, December 5

    Everyone loves tiny dancers. Now some artists are considering why they bring us such joy — and what lessons they might have for grown-ups.

  17. Judge Dismisses Harvard Antisemitism Lawsuit by a Former Student U.S., December 5

    Yoav Segev said he was harassed “for being Jewish and Israeli” during a campus protest in October 2023, an episode that had drawn the attention of Republicans in Washington.

  18. A Growing U.S. Tech Hub Needs Workers. Colleges Try to Keep Up. Business, December 4

    The success of efforts to turn Phoenix into a dominant center of semiconductor manufacturing may hinge on efforts to train local workers.

  19. 18,000 Reasons It’s So Hard to Build a Chip Factory in America Business, December 4

    The transformation of Phoenix into a semiconductor hub by Taiwan’s TSMC illustrates the difficulties of large-scale projects in the United States.

  20. Para dominar el Ártico, Canadá pone los ojos en un pueblo famoso por los osos polares En español, December 4

    El pequeño pueblo de Churchill alberga dos de las mayores infraestructuras árticas de Canadá, pero años de abandono las han dejado en mal estado. Mientras crece la rivalidad entre superpotencias en la región, la localidad se prepara para asumir un papel prominente.

  21. Lawsuit Challenges a Nonprofit’s Scholarships for Hispanic Students U.S., December 3

    The plaintiffs, white and Asian students, said they would qualify for scholarships given out by the Hispanic Scholarship Fund, but for their race.

  22. Mel Leipzig, Painter Called the ‘Chekhov of Trenton,’ Dies at 90 Arts, December 3

    He put fellow New Jerseyans at the center of his work, and a critic praised the “mysterious emotional tensions” in his pictures of ordinary people.

  23. Top Journal Retracts Study Predicting Catastrophic Climate Toll Business, December 3

    While growing evidence shows that carbon emissions are harming the economy, the journal Nature found that an outlier paper had deep flaws.

  24. Why Trump and Harvard Have Not Reached a Deal U.S., December 3

    President Trump promised a deal last summer. Other universities have agreed to pay millions to settle with the federal government since then, but Harvard, which was asked to pay much more, has not.

  25. Is This Polar Bear Town Canada’s Key to the Arctic? World, December 3

    The tiny town of Churchill has two of Canada’s largest pieces of Arctic infrastructure, but years of neglect have left them in poor shape amid growing superpower rivalry in the region.

  26. U. of Alabama Suspends Black and Female Student Magazines, Citing D.E.I. Guidance U.S., December 3

    Officials told staff members at two student-run publications, called Nineteen Fifty-Six and Alice, that they were not compliant with Attorney General Pam Bondi’s memo on diversity programs.

  27. College Instructor Put on Leave Over Zero Grade for Gender Essay U.S., December 2

    The essay, written for a psychology class by a University of Oklahoma student, called the idea of multiple genders “demonic.” The instructor said it did not answer the assignment.

  28. The 85-Year-Old Activist Trying to Block the Trump Presidential Library Plan U.S., December 2

    After Marvin Dunn sued, the trustees of Miami Dade College voted for a second time to hand over a prime property for President Trump’s future library. He says he’ll keep fighting.

  29. La palabra del año del diccionario Oxford es ‘rage bait’. Y te podría hacer enojar En español, December 1

    El Oxford English Dictionary busca identificar términos nuevos o emergentes que tengan alguna relevancia social y cultural. En 2025, la indignación está bajo el reflector.

  30. Kai Erikson, Sociologist Who Probed Invisible Scars of Disasters, Dies at 94 Obituaries, December 1

    A professor at Yale, he immersed himself in communities after catastrophic events like Three Mile Island, the Exxon Valdez oil spill and Hurricane Katrina.

  31. Move Over, Computer Science. Students Are Flocking to New A.I. Majors. Technology, December 1

    At M.I.T., a new program called “artificial intelligence and decision-making” is now the second-most-popular undergraduate major.

  32. Viajaba a casa de sus padres por Acción de Gracias y fue deportada a Honduras En español, December 1

    Any Lucía López Belloza, de 19 años, fue detenida por agentes de inmigración en el aeropuerto de Boston antes de un vuelo para sorprender a su familia en Texas. Ahora está en Honduras.

  33. The Oxford 2025 Word of the Year Is ‘Rage Bait’ Arts, November 30

    And if you’re angry about it, that just proves the point.

  34. College Student Is Deported During Trip Home for Thanksgiving U.S., November 30

    Any Lucia López Belloza, 19, was detained by immigration agents at the Boston airport before a flight to surprise her family in Texas for Thanksgiving. She is now in Honduras.

  35. Meet the Millionaire Masters of Early Decision at Colleges Business, November 29

    The enrollment chiefs at Tulane and the University of Chicago attracted many early applicants. Now both of them earn a lot of money.

  36. Female Cardiothoracic Surgeons, Unlocking the Male Fortress Health, November 29

    Less than 10 percent of heart and lung surgeons in the United States are women. At a recent conference, they vowed to change that.

  37. Northwestern Agrees to Deal With Trump Administration U.S., November 29

    The university will pay $75 million to regain its research funding and end investigations, the second highest payment by a school facing pressure from the administration.

  38. Robert A.M. Stern, Architect Who Reinvented Prewar Splendor, Dies at 86 Arts, November 27

    He designed museums, schools and libraries before winning international acclaim late in life for 15 Central Park West in Manhattan, hailed as a rebirth of the luxury apartment building.

  39. Extreme Measures for the Fentanyl Crisis Opinion, November 27

    Readers respond to a guest essay about America’s fentanyl problem. Also: A dark echo at Penn.

  40. ¿Cómo llegaron a sus sitios los gigantes de la isla de Pascua? Caminando, según un estudio En español, November 26

    Durante siglos, los eruditos se han sentido desconcertados por el movimiento de las figuras monolíticas de Rapa Nui. Un estudio reciente demostró una técnica plausible para su traslado.

  41. Northwestern University Nears Deal to Resolve Its Conflict With the White House U.S., November 26

    The school, one of several to face pressure campaigns from the Trump administration, would pay a $75 million fine and have its research funding restored under terms of the agreement being discussed.

  42. Did the Giant Heads of Easter Island Once Walk? Science, November 26

    Scholars have long debated how the massive stone figures of Rapa Nui got to where they stand today. A new study offers one possible explanation.

  43. ¿Cómo afectan al intestino los alimentos ultraprocesados? En español, November 26

    Los estudios los han relacionado con el cáncer colorrectal y otras afecciones digestivas.

  44. Tatiana Schlossberg’s Profile in Courage Opinion, November 25

    Readers express sorrow about her cancer and dismay at her cousin’s actions as health secretary. Also: Revenge prosecutions; Mark Kelly; donors to universities.

  45. Iranian Professor in Oklahoma Released 3 Days After His Detention by ICE U.S., November 25

    Vahid Abedini, who colleagues said was in the United States on an H-1B visa, was arrested on his way to a conference in Washington. It was unclear why.

  46. I’m a Professor. A.I. Has Changed My Classroom, but Not for the Worse. Magazine, November 25

    My students’ easy access to chatbots forced me to make humanities instruction even more human.

  47. ¿Qué tan saludable es la calabaza? En español, November 25

    Tenemos buenas noticias sobre este ingrediente clásico del otoño.

  48. An Auto Holy Grail: Motors That Don’t Rely on Chinese Rare Earths Business, November 24

    Weary of being captive to geopolitics, car companies are looking for ways to replace powerful rare-earth magnets in electric motors.

  49. How Do Ultraprocessed Foods Affect the Gut? Well, November 24

    Studies have linked them to colorectal cancer and other digestive conditions.

  50. Living, Breathing, Seeing and Teaching Theater Theater, November 24

    James Bundy leads the theater program at Yale while directing his own revival of “Hedda Gabler.” He told us about a week in his cultural life.

  51. Wealthy People Have Always Shaped Universities. This Time Is Different. U.S., November 24

    A new set of billionaires with an interest in higher education has helped oust college presidents and even assisted the Trump administration in its effort to overhaul the industry.

  52. How the Elite Behave When No One Is Watching: Inside the Epstein Emails Opinion, November 23

    This power elite was already used to ignoring the powerless. Redeeming a disgraced sex offender was a logical next step.

  53. Pabst, Pamphlets and a Petition: A Harvard-Yale Tailgate in the Trump Era U.S., November 23

    Students and alumni set aside rivalries at the 141st Harvard-Yale football game on Saturday to summon support against attacks on higher education under the Trump administration.

  54. Solange Knowles Wants to Lend You a Book Style, November 22

    The Grammy winner, now a scholar in residence at U.S.C., is expanding a one-of-a-kind library featuring rare books by writers of color. (Just mind the due date.)

  55. Remedies for the Burdens of Medical School Opinion, November 22

    Readers respond to a guest essay proposing a shortened three-year course of study for aspiring doctors.

  56. The War of the Rose Bowl U.S., November 22

    The storied stadium is at the center of a battle between Pasadena and U.C.L.A. that’s about money, nostalgia, geography and so much more.

  57. Texas A&M Was Wrong to Fire Professor Over Gender Lesson, Panel Rules U.S., November 22

    The firing put the school at the center of national debates over gender identity and academic freedom. A faculty panel ruled unanimously against the termination.

  58. Federal Suit Seeking Names of Some Jewish Employees at Penn Sparks Backlash U.S., November 22

    The Trump administration says it needs the information to investigate antisemitism and accuses the university of flouting a subpoena.

  59. Mark Mellman, 70, Dies; Helped Democrats Understand Their Voters U.S., November 22

    A pollster and political strategist, he was a key figure in John Kerry’s 2004 presidential campaign and used his prominence to speak out in defense of Israel.

  60. The Professors Who Stayed Close With Epstein U.S., November 21

    Even as the disgraced financier’s crimes were revealed, newly released emails show how academics at top universities stuck by Jeffrey Epstein, often seeking his help and offering it in return.

  61. La batalla por la privacidad en nuestro cerebro En español, November 21

    Una tecnología que puede leer las mentes, y tal vez incluso cambiarlas.

  62. Las empresas tecnológicas desean acceso directo a tu cerebro En español, November 21

    La tecnología de IA y los implantes neuronales avanzan a velocidades vertiginosas. ¿Necesitamos nuevas legislaciones para proteger nuestro ser más íntimo?

  63. The Basketball Star Who Accidentally Became a Country Music Heartthrob New York, November 21

    As a boy in Brooklyn, Adrien Nunez dreamed of playing in the N.B.A. He got close, but it turns out he had a gift for singing at the top of his lungs in his car.

  64. Researcher’s Smuggling Arrest Casts Light on Dispute Over Chinese Students World, November 21

    As some lawmakers press U.S. universities to curtail ties with China, a postdoctoral student’s prosecution raises questions about how big the danger actually is.

  65. Justice Dept. Sues California Over College Benefits for Undocumented Students U.S., November 21

    The lawsuit is the third filed by the Justice Department against the state in a week.

  66. The Privacy Battle in Our Brains World, November 20

    My colleague talks about technology that can actually read our minds — and maybe even change them.

  67. Stephen Anderson, Linguist Who Refuted Doctor Dolittle, Dies at 82 Science, November 20

    In “Doctor Dolittle’s Delusion,” he argued that language is a biological system unique to humans, despite the widespread belief to the contrary.

  68. Home Prices on a Warming Planet Climate, November 20

    New research shows that climate change is beginning to erode home prices in the most disaster-prone areas of the United States. Here’s what to know.

  69. MacKenzie Scott Expands Giving Spree to Tribal Colleges U.S., November 20

    The billionaire philanthropist is steering millions of dollars toward tribal schools, after the Trump administration proposed a significant federal funding cut.

  70. Lawrence Summers deja sus clases en Harvard mientras se investiga su relación con Epstein En español, November 20

    Además, el también expresidente de la universidad se ha separado de sus cargos en el Centro Mossavar-Rahmani y el consejo de OpenAI.

  71. Marjorie Taylor Greene Was Not on Our Bingo Card Opinion, November 20

    Have we been selling her short? Is she paving the way to the after-Trump?

  72. Lawrence Summers Has Come Back From Scandals. Will This Be His Last? U.S., November 20

    The former Harvard president has come back from controversy before, but revelations in new Epstein emails are threatening his omnipresence in public life.

  73. Arrest Is Made in 1991 Texas Murder After Students Step In U.S., November 20

    Criminology students from the University of Texas at Arlington re-examined the case of Cynthia Gonzalez, whose body was found south of Fort Worth. Their work led to an arrest this month.

  74. College Radio Keeps Its Cool Style, November 20

    Against the odds, campus broadcasts remain a space of discovery, for students and listeners alike. Especially at KXLU in Los Angeles.

  75. She Studied How to Protect Children From Pollution and Heat Climate, November 20

    “There was no warning, no conversation,” said Jane Clougherty, an environmental health scientist, who had a federal grant canceled earlier this year.

  76. El talento chino sigue impulsando el avance de la IA en Silicon Valley En español, November 20

    Aunque algunos ejecutivos de California pintan a China como el enemigo, los profesionales del país asiático siguen desempeñando un papel importante en la investigación estadounidense.

  77. Lawrence Summers to Stop Teaching at Harvard While It Investigates His Epstein Ties U.S., November 20

    The former Harvard president had previously stepped down from other positions following revelations about his longtime connections to Jeffrey Epstein.

  78. Do You Use A.I. for College Application Advice? Style, November 19

    We want to hear about it.

  79. How Rural Kids Got Left Behind Opinion, November 19

    We need to support working-class kids before the 21st century abandons them completely.

  80. How Americans Feel About Immigrants and Immigration Polls, November 19

    A review of polls of the general public shows how opinions on immigration vary widely based on the details included in poll questions.

  81. At This College, the English Dept. Is Out. ‘Human Narratives’ Is In. New York, November 19

    At Montclair State University in New Jersey, a departmental restructuring plan is igniting concerns about the future of the humanities.

  82. Harvard Opens New Investigation Into Summers and Epstein U.S., November 19

    The university is reviewing newly released emails between convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and former Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers, among other people at the institution.

  83. Smoking Weed Could Lead to Less Drinking, New Study Suggests Well, November 19

    In a makeshift bar on a college campus, researchers studied how smoking cannabis affected alcohol consumption.

  84. The Growing Cost of Having Ties to Epstein Business, November 18

    Larry Summers, a former Treasury secretary, is stepping back from public commitments. It’s the latest fallout for an associate of Jeffrey Epstein.

  85. ‘We Need to Be Worried’: Three University Leaders on the Fate of Higher Education in the Trump Era Opinion, November 18

    The view from Dartmouth, the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Wesleyan.

  86. Larry Summers, ‘Ashamed’ Over Epstein Ties, Steps Back From Public Commitments U.S., November 18

    New emails showed that Dr. Summers, a former Harvard president, had stayed in touch with Jeffrey Epstein for years after Mr. Epstein faced sex trafficking charges.

  87. MacKenzie Scott Gives $700 Million to Historically Black Colleges U.S., November 17

    The donations to over a dozen schools come as the Trump administration is directing more funds to the historically Black institutions, too.

  88. Worker Error Is Faulted After Israeli-Born Canadian Hits Passport Snag World, November 17

    A student in Montreal, who was born in Kfar Saba, Israel, said she was initially told she could not list Israel as her birth country on her passport.

  89. Las inscripciones de nuevos estudiantes internacionales caen en EE. UU. En español, November 17

    El número total de estudiantes internacionales inscritos en universidades estadounidenses, incluidos los que se matricularon en años anteriores, solo descendió ligeramente.

  90. A Touchdown, Then Tragedy, for a Man Who ‘Gave All He Could Give’ U.S., November 17

    Marshawn Kneeland spent nearly all of his 24 years working to get to the N.F.L. He died two days after scoring his first touchdown.

  91. Chaos at the Justice Department Briefing, November 17

    President Trump has transformed the agency. We look at what’s happening on the inside.

  92. New International Student Enrollments Plummeted This Fall, Survey Finds U.S., November 17

    The overall number of international students enrolled in U.S. colleges and universities, including those who enrolled in prior years or who are working after graduation, fell only slightly.

  93. ¡Que empiecen los juegos de control mental! En español, November 16

    Cada cuatro años, en el Cibatlón, equipos de investigadores y “pilotos” tecnológicos compiten para ver qué interfaz cerebro-computador es más prometedora.

  94. Church and College Leaders Work to Free a Detained Afghan Student New York, November 16

    When Ali Faqirzada was detained after a routine asylum hearing in New York, officials from Bard College and the Episcopal Diocese tapped their networks to help.

  95. What’s More Dangerous than India’s Frequent Heat Waves? Heat Stress. World, November 16

    Women who face long-term heat exposure in workplaces and homes are finding it takes a heavy toll on their health and income.

  96. An Economist Asked, How Much Should We Spend to Avoid the A.I. Apocalypse? Business, November 15

    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.

  97. America’s Formula for Greatness Is Under Threat Opinion, November 15

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

  98. Is Your College Football Team Short of Cash? Sports Betting Can Help. Business, November 15

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

  99. La misión más reciente de la NASA a Marte es inusual en varios aspectos En español, November 15

    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.

  100. Judge Orders Trump Not to Threaten University of California’s Funding U.S., November 15

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

  101. Seneca Soldier and Statesman Can Finally Add Lawyer to His Legacy New York, November 14

    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.

  102. Boston University Student Faces Backlash After He Called ICE on Workers U.S., November 14

    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.

  103. Former U.Va. President Details Justice Department Pressure That Led to Ouster U.S., November 14

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

  104. Almost Everything About NASA’s Latest Mission to Mars Is Unusual Science, November 14

    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.

  105. The Next Privacy Battleground Is Inside Your Brain Magazine, November 14

    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?

  106. A.I. Cheating Rattles Top Universities in South Korea World, November 14

    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.

  107. Football Coach Who Was Focus of Netflix’s ‘Last Chance U’ Is Shot U.S., November 14

    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.

  108. 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.

  109. 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.

  110. 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.

  111. 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.

  112. 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.

  113. 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.

  114. 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.

  115. 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.

  116. 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.

  117. 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.

  118. 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.

  119. 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.

  120. 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.

  121. 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.

  122. 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.

  123. 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.

  124. 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.

  125. 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.

  126. 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.

  127. 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.

  128. 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.)

  129. Make Medical School Three Years Opinion, November 10

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

  130. 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.

  131. 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.

  132. 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.

  133. 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.

  134. 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.

  135. 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.

  136. 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.

  137. 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.

  138. 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.

  139. 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.

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

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

  141. 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.

  142. 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.

  143. 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.

  144. 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.

  145. 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.

  146. 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.

  147. 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.

  148. 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.

  149. 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.

  150. 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.