Said
-
News
Wimbledon Drops Ban on Players From Russia and Belarus
Tennis players from Russia and Belarus will be allowed to compete at Wimbledon this summer after tournament officials reversed a…
-
News
Livestreaming ‘Made All the Difference’ for Some Disabled Art Lovers
When shuttered venues embraced streaming during the pandemic, the arts became more accessible. With live performance back, and streams dwindling,…
-
US
Justice Thomas Failed to Report Real Estate Deal With Texas Billionaire
An investigation by ProPublica revealed a deal worth more than $100,000 between the real estate magnate and the justice.
-
News
Old Friends. New Team. Same Knicks Championship Dream.
Knicks guards Jalen Brunson and Josh Hart were college friends, then took a twisty road to a reunion in the…
-
US
Where the Likely 2024 Presidential Contenders Stand on Abortion
Not quite a year after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, abortion continues to be one of the main…
-
World
Once Shocking, U.S. Spying on Its Allies Draws a Global Shrug
WASHINGTON — The last time a trove of leaked documents exposed U.S. spying operations around the world, the reaction from…
-
Business
Misinformation Defense Worked in 2020, Up to a Point, Study Finds
Nearly 68 million Americans still visited untrustworthy websites 1.5 billion times in a month, according to Stanford researchers, causing concerns…
-
World
An ambulance was called for Navalny, his spokeswoman says, as concerns over his health grow.
Aleksei A. Navalny, the jailed Russian opposition leader, has been suffering from stomach pain so acute that prison officials were…
-
News
At Indian Wells, the Players Have a Playground of Their Own
To protect the Indian Wells Tennis Garden, the tournament’s founder took a “get off my lawn” approach so that tennis…
-
World
Should College Come With Trigger Warnings? At Cornell, It’s a ‘Hard No.’
When the student assembly voted to require faculty to alert students to upsetting educational materials, administrators pushed back.