Children
-
World
Thursday Briefing
Concerns about Israel’s military objectives.
-
World
Shelter Evictions Will Damage Migrant Children, Schools Warn
About 3,500 migrant families in New York City shelters have received eviction notices. Children will have to change schools or face long commutes.
-
Magazine
My Best Friend Is Bad With Money. Should I Tell His Traveling Companions?
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on whether it’s appropriate to make a financial disclosure on someone else’s behalf.
-
World
U.S. Regulators Propose New Online Privacy Safeguards for Children
The F.T.C. proposed sweeping privacy changes on Wednesday which could curb how social media, game and learning apps use and monetize youngsters’ data.
-
Health
Biden Administration Warns 9 Governors About Medicaid Losses Among Children
Xavier Becerra, the health and human services secretary, suggested that states were doing far too little to make sure that children were not unfairly denied federal insurance.
-
Magazine
Can I Level With My Kids About Santa Claus?
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on whether to tell young children the truth about Christmas myths.
-
Health
Lead Levels in Children’s Applesauce May Be Traced to Cinnamon Additive
The F.D.A. is investigating the sources of cinnamon and other ingredients produced outside the U.S. as the possible cause of lead poisoning in dozens of children. Advocates are urging mandatory testing of lead in food.
-
World
Apology, Tears and Terror: A Former Hostage Recounts a 7-Week Ordeal
The strangest part of her seven-week ordeal, said Chen Goldstein-Almog, formerly an Israeli hostage of Hamas, were the long, almost intimate conversations she had with her captors. They talked about their families, their lives and the extreme danger ...
-
World
Got Time for Milk? An Overwhelmed House, Somehow, Does.
With aid to Ukraine and Israel in limbo, a border deal elusive and a mountain of spending legislation left undone, the House turned its attention to whole milk in schools.
-
World
Australian Court Tosses Conviction of Mother Accused of Killing 4 of Her Children
Kathleen Folbigg had been previously pardoned earlier this year, but the ruling on Thursday quashed her conviction after an inquiry found her children had most likely died of natural causes.