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Facebook Job Ads Raise Concerns About Age Discrimination
The ability to aim a message at a particular audience has been a crucial marketing tool, but may be at odds with laws against bias in hiring.
Editorial: Congress Refuses to Do Right by Children’s Health Care
The Children’s Health Insurance Program is in limbo while Republicans rejoice at a tax cut of more than $1 trillion for the rich.
Op-Ed Contributor: The Real Coup Plot Is Trump’s
The president and his allies in the news media and the Republican Party are overthrowing the rule of law and the truth.
Op-Ed Contributor: Why Holiday Stories Matter
A recent study of hunter-gatherers reminds us that our fictions are more than entertainments.
Glenn Thrush, Suspended Times Reporter, to Resume Work but Won’t Cover White House
Mr. Thrush, who was accused of inappropriate sexual behavior, will no longer cover the White House when he returns from his suspension in late January, The Times said.
Pence’s Christmas Pilgrimage Is Canceled. His Next Mideast Move Is Complicated.
Vice President Mike Pence planned to meet with Christian leaders in the Middle East but several canceled after President Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.
State of the Art: What the Tax Bill Fails to Address: Technology’s Tsunami
Technology is changing everything about how Americans work, but the industry is left largely unscathed by the Republican tax bill that Congress took up this week.
Republican Party, Jerusalem, Uber: Your Wednesday Evening Briefing
Here’s what you need to know at the end of the day.
How Cuts in Basic Subway Upkeep Can Make Your Commute Miserable
Decisions to scale back routine maintenance turned this year into the subway’s worst since the 1970s.
Chuck Close Apologizes After Accusations of Sexual Harassment
Several women complained that the celebrated artist, known for his outsize portraits, asked them to pose naked and made inappropriate sexual comments.
Mistrial Declared in Bundy Armed Standoff Case
The judge said prosecutors had improperly withheld evidence from the defense in the case, which stemmed from an armed standoff over grazing rights in 2014.
Researchers Warn of a Spreading Fungus Deadly to Snakes
Bats and frogs and salamanders have all been hit hard by white nose syndrome and chytrid fungi. Now scientists are warning that snakes worldwide are at risk from a new fungal disease.
McKayla Maroney Says USA Gymnastics Forced Confidentiality in Sexual Abuse Settlement
The settlement was described in a lawsuit filed by Maroney against the U.S. Olympic Committee, USA Gymnastics and Michigan State.
In Protests of Net Neutrality Repeal, Teenage Voices Stood Out
Young people who have grown up knowing only an open internet organized rallies, streamed the F.C.C. vote in class — and say they plan to keep fighting.
Cardinal Law and the U.S.-Rome Sex Abuse Divide
Our correspondent, who reported for The Boston Globe from Rome during the “Spotlight” series, reflects on the disgraced archbishop.
Review: ‘Pitch Perfect 3’ Keeps the Songs but Loses the Plot
The latest entry in this movie series fares best when its director treats it as a fantastical buddy comedy.
Amtrak Inquiry Will Focus on Driver Distraction and Excessive Speed
The revelation that a passenger train was speeding before a fatal crash in Washington State has once again focused attention on technology that can automatically slow trains.
Contributing Op-Ed Writer: The Trojan Horse in the Tax Bill
Paul Ryan gets what he wanted.
Beavers Emerge as Agents of Arctic Destruction
Climate change may be enabling beavers to move deeper into the Arctic. And as they move, they magnify climate change’s effects.
Bernard Law, Powerful Cardinal Disgraced by Priest Abuse Scandal, Dies at 86
His stature as archbishop of Boston and America’s senior Roman Catholic prelate was shattered by revelations that he had protected child molesters for years.