New York Times
Trilobites: Rock Carvings of Ancient Dogs Getting Taught New Tricks
Engravings in the Saudi desert may be the earliest depictions of human-canine companionship.
New Gene Treatment Effective for Some Leukemia Patients
By genetically altering a patient’s T-cells to attack more than one site on cancer cells, researchers hope to devise better treatments.
Fox Establishes Workplace Culture Panel After Harassment Scandal
As part of a settlement with a shareholder, 21st Century Fox promised to address the culture of a workplace jolted by sexual harassment allegations.
Op-Ed Contributor: Attica: It’s Worse Than We Thought
Was a doctor conducting leprosy experiments on patients without their consent?
Op-Ed Contributor: Charles Manson Was Not a Product of the Counterculture
If anything, he was a harbinger of today’s far right.
Detroit: The Most Exciting City in America?
How a 21st century Detroit navigates the dangers of regeneration is a particularly poignant question on the 50th anniversary of the 1967 Detroit race riots.
If 2018 Is Like 2017, the House Will Be a Tossup
It’s not obvious that the building Democratic wave will be enough to flip control of the chamber.
Uber Strikes Deal With Volvo to Bring Self-Driving Cars to Its Network
Uber has agreed to buy up to 24,000 self-driving Volvos for its ride-hailing network once the technology is production-ready.
Just as in 1980, Zimbabwe’s Celebration May Be Short-Lived
A veteran reporter who was in the country when Robert Mugabe first took power sees disturbing parallels with the current moment of hope and joy.
Glenn Thrush, New York Times Reporter, Accused of Sexual Misconduct
Mr. Thrush, a White House reporter, was suspended by The Times after the website Vox published a report accusing him of acting inappropriately toward women.
Books of The Times: The Story of Appalachia, With Plenty of Villains
Steven Stoll’s “Ramp Hollow” is a powerful and outrage-making analysis of the forces, over centuries, that have shaped the region.
The Checkup: How Not to Talk to a Child Who Is Overweight
Doctors walk a difficult line as they try to discuss the fraught subject of weight without increasing the distress that many children already feel.
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip Celebrate 70 Years of Marriage
Britain’s longest-serving monarch and her husband noted the occasion with the release of new photographic portraits.
Instead of That $5 Water Bottle at Airports, Filling Stations
A growing number of airports are looking for ways to manage crowds, the empty plastic bottles they leave behind and improve the amenities.
Workers Lured to Australia Find Low Pay and Tough Conditions
Many of the country’s more than 900,000 temporary foreign workers make less than minimum wage but feel they can’t complain, a new survey showed.
How to Prepare for Cold and Flu Season
This season spares few between now and spring. Here’s how to build a survival kit to get you through unscathed.
Critic’s Notebook: A Night at the Theater From Your Couch? No Apologies Needed.
Streaming services have more stage offerings than ever — from great actors in early roles to recent Broadway musicals, captured live. Plus “Hamlet” in Lithuanian.
Review: ‘Marvel’s Runaways,’ Where the Supervillains are Mom and Dad
In Hulu’s new series, the makers of “Gossip Girl” tackle a comic-book story that combines teenage soap opera and a paranormal mystery.
Review: A ‘Peter Pan’ That Never Takes Flight
The Bedlam production of the J.M. Barrie classic is both too childish to tell the story properly and too adult to access its wonder.
New York Today: New York Today: How Did the Subways Get So Bad?
Monday: An investigation examining the root of our subway woes, the Secret Science Club, and things to be thankful for.