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Rep. Frederica Wilson on Trump: ‘That Is Not What You Say to a Grieving Widow’
“That is not what you say to a grieving widow,” congresswoman says of president’s comment that soldier “knew what he was signing up for.”
New Talks on Paris Climate Pact Are Set, and That’s Awkward for U.S.
International delegates will gather next month to discuss implementing the Paris agreement, and American negotiators will be there even though the United States has said it will quit the pact.
From Playground to Killing Ground: An ISIS Legacy
The Naem traffic circle in Raqqa teemed with life before the Syrian civil war. Then it came to symbolize death.
In Italian Schools, Reading, Writing and Recognizing Fake News
A new program, aided by companies like Facebook, will aim to teach students how to recognize and stop the sharing of fake news and conspiracy theories.
A Marine Attacked an Iraqi Restaurant. But Was It a Hate Crime or PTSD?
After a Marine attacked an Iraqi restaurant in Portland, Ore., his family said he was provoked by trauma, not hate, and that he needed help, not jail time.
Jann Wenner and His Biographer Have a Falling Out
The Rolling Stone founder seemed to enjoy opening up his life to Joe Hagan. Now that the book is about to come out, they are no longer speaking.
A Trove of Yiddish Artifacts Rescued From the Nazis, and Oblivion
Hidden in a church basement and forgotten, the books and documents recently discovered provide sharp new insights into Jewish life and literature.
Trilobites: It’s One of North America’s Quietest Places. Along Came a Bear.
When scientists salvaged recordings from a remote spot in a national park in Alaska, they heard footsteps, sniffs, huffs, a series of crunches, then silence.
5 Ways to Protect Yourself Against Unexpected Wedding Catastrophe
You’ve planned months and months in advance and now weather, wildfires and other unforeseen events are wreaking havoc. Here’s how you might save the day.
Browsing: Who Doesn’t Like Being First?
Here’s how to get a jump on next season’s trends right now.
Review: ‘Jane’ Is an Absorbing Trip Into the Wild With Jane Goodall
Brett Morgen’s documentary tells her story through footage of Ms. Goodall’s interactions with chimpanzees in what is now Tanzania.
Lack of Sleep Tied to Diabetes in Pregnancy
Women who slept less than 6.25 hours a night were almost three times as likely to have gestational diabetes as those who slept more.
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, a Humanist On and Off the Page
She is the rare novelist to become a public intellectual — as well as a defining voice on race and gender for the digital age.
Scalpel, Sponge, Show Tunes: When Doctors Moonlight as Actors
The Bard Hall Players, a theater company made up of Columbia University medical students, is marking its 50th season with a production of “Into the Woods.”
Live Briefing: Sessions Won’t Detail Conversations With Trump, Frustrating Democratic Senators
Attorney General Jeff Sessions is making his first appearance before the Senate Judiciary Committee as the nation’s top law enforcement officer on Wednesday.
Hear the Martha Argerich Recordings That Inspired 8 Young Pianists
Daniil Trifonov, Khatia Buniatishvili and more talented pianists (and one harpsichordist) share their favorite albums by the great Argentine musician.
Listen to Bach, Transformed for String Quartet
The Borromeo Quartet will perform selections from its transcription of Bach’s “The Well-Tempered Clavier” on Friday at Carnegie Hall.
Op-Ed Contributor: When the Price of Reporting Is a Car Bomb
The murder of Daphne Caruana Galizia in Malta illustrates the stakes for journalists pushing back against power.
Marian Cannon Schlesinger, Author and Eyewitness to History, Dies at 105
A painter, memoirist and daughter of an early feminist, she wrote frankly of the Kennedy White House, where her husband, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., was an adviser.
Op-Ed Contributor: There’s No Good Decision in the Next Big Data Privacy Case
Congress, not the Supreme Court, should decide the fate of data held abroad.