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Business
Twitter Suspensions Draw International Outrage
After Elon Musk’s Twitter suspends journalists, lawmakers and press freedom advocates fire back, threatening sanctions and fines.
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Health
Opposition to School Vaccine Mandates Has Grown Significantly, Study Finds
A third of parents now feel they should be the ones to decide whether to get their children immunized against measles, mumps and other childhood diseases.
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World
The Left’s Fever Is Breaking
It’s no secret that many left-wing activist groups and nonprofits, roiled by the reckonings over sexual harassment and racial justice of the past few years, have become internally dysfunctional. In June the Intercept’s Ryan Grim wrote about the toll ...
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World
Will ChatGPT Make Me Irrelevant?
Like every other journalist I know, I often and unabashedly ask for help. Friends give me ideas. Colleagues give me phrases. Editors suggest what to keep, what to cut and where a key detail belongs. My field of vision is only so wide, my brain only ...
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Health
Grant Wahl Died of a Burst Blood Vessel, His Family Says
An autopsy in New York showed that the journalist had a tear in the ascending aorta, a large vessel that carries blood from the heart.
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Magazine
Fluent in the Language of Style
For over three decades, Judith Thurman has captured the often ineffable pull of fashion and beauty like few others.
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Politics
Hawaii Volcanoes Mauna Loa and Kilauea Stop Erupting
Mauna Loa, the world’s biggest active volcano, became a spectacle for locals and tourists after it erupted recently for the first time in 38 years.
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World
Morocco Has Given the Arab World Something to Cheer for Again
AMMAN, Jordan — Morocco’s stunning performance in the World Cup, its progress to a semifinal game with France and the worldwide elation it has engendered captures a special moment for Moroccans and many others from the Arab world and beyond. This is ...
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Sports
As Regents Ready U.C.L.A. Decision, Emails Show Little Public Support
Emails obtained through a records request showed backlash to U.C.L.A.’s planned move to the Big Ten among alumni and parents.
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World
Two Groups Quietly Spent $32 Million Rallying Voters Behind Voting Rights
The money largely went to state and local organizations that often focused on turning out young voters and people of color, including with messages about threats to freedom and democracy.