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A photo of a man in religious attire leaning against a telescope.

The Pope’s Astronomer

Guy Consolmagno, a Jesuit from Michigan—and a meteorite expert—oversees a team of scientists employed by the Holy See, at the Vatican Observatory. Rebecca Mead travels to Italy to discuss everything from God to the big bang.

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168极速一分钟赛车开奖_极速赛车168体彩号码开奖结果、官方一分钟历史记录 Today’s Mix

The Politics of Fear

As a Presidential candidate, Donald Trump made his world view plain: there was “us” and there was “them.” Once he was in the White House, the fear factor would prevail.

What Is Lost in Luka Dončić’s Glow-Up

The rebrand of the Los Angeles Laker—who appeared on the cover of Men’s Health looking lean, buff, and bronze—makes sense. That doesn’t make it less sad.

The Banal Provocation of Sydney Sweeney’s Jeans

The American Eagle campaign, with its presentation of Americana as a zombie slop of mustangs, denim, and good genes, is lowest-common-denominator stuff.

At the Edge of Life and Death in Ukraine

A new photo book by Eddy van Wessel, with nearly two hundred images taken over the course of three years, offers a visual history of the war’s devastation.

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One gusty day in May of 1997, a mailman trudged down the streets of Fort Greene in Brooklyn and plucked a letter from his bag. It almost flew from his hands, but it didn’t, and he dropped it through the stiff brass mail slot of a sober, liver-colored brownstone, where it lay on the dulled parquet until Lou Orsini, who’d lived forever on the second floor, scooped it up, almost tossed it out with the Panda Garden delivery menus, but didn’t.Continue reading »
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168极速赛车官网开奖、赛车官网的历史结果 The Lede

A daily column on what you need to know.

Treating Gaza’s Collective Trauma

In Gaza, where displaced children play a game called “air strike” and act out death, the lack of mental-health resources has become another emergency.

Searching for the Children of the Disappeared

A new book examines the extraordinary decades-long campaign by Argentinean women to find their grandchildren.

Is Brazil’s Underdog Era Coming to an End?

President Donald Trump has announced a fifty-per-cent tariff on the country’s products, as retaliation for the prosecution of his political ally, Jair Bolsonaro. So far, Brazil has refused to roll over.

Should Police Officers Be More Like U.F.C. Fighters?

Kash Patel, the F.B.I. director, has said that he wants to get mixed-martial-arts fighters to train his field agents. But a version of this is already happening, with law-enforcement agencies embracing Brazilian jiu-jitsu.

What to Do When the Supreme Court Rules the Wrong Way

The blows have been coming weekly, as Trump tries to ransack the Constitution. Yet recent Court history shows that what feels like the end can be a beginning.

“South Park” Skewers a Satire-Proof President

The new season première goes after Trump as never before—and solves a problem that’s plagued comedians since his first term in office.

When ICE Agents Are Waiting Outside the Courtroom

An asylum seeker and her children face the terrifying new reality of immigration hearings.

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The Weekend Essay

Watching the “King of the Hill” Revival from Texas

In the age of MAGA, the show’s small-town values are both a relief and slightly outdated. In the end, will we and the animated characters all live like city people?

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Goings On 168极速赛车开奖记录

Recommendations on what to read, eat, watch, listen to, and more.

The Ambitious Film Deconstructions of Stan Douglas

Hilton Als on the artist’s outstanding show “Ghostlight.” Plus: Michael Schulman lists three cheeky new works that fetishize the old.

Sterling K. Brown’s Upstanding Archetype

Vinson Cunningham reviews Hulu’s soapy “Washington Black,” about an early-nineteenth-century slave who escapes to Halifax, in which Brown rises above the material.

Plays on the Pancake

The flapjack has long been a kingmaker: a killer stack can put a restaurant on the map, secure its legacy, grant it longevity. Helen Rosner picks out three versions around the city that are worthy of attention.

Getting in Marc Maron’s Head

The podcast host recommends three of his recent reads—about the gentrification of punk, what makes a great actor, and the corrosive influence of social media.

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A Critic at Large

Was the Renaissance Real?

We celebrate the period as a golden age of cultural rebirth. But two new books argue that the Renaissance, as we imagine it, is little more than myth.

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极速168开奖官网开奖记录 Dept. of Hoopla

From the mind of Larry David.

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Deep State Diaries

When the Federal Government Eats Itself

After six months of DOGE, vital institutions are in disarray as the civil service braces for new cuts.

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The Critics

The Art World

Worlds in Rooms

Bodies on display, in exhibitions of the work of Sanya Kantarovsky, Lisa Yuskavage, and Johannes Vermeer.

The Front Row

The Enduring Power of “The Rules of the Game”

Jean Renoir’s tragic farce, from 1939, scathingly denounced French society’s frivolity amid threats of war and fascism.

The Theatre

Williams in Williamstown

Jeremy O. Harris, at his first Williamstown Theatre Festival as creative director, turns up the heat under rare works by the great Southern playwright.

Critics at Large

Late Night’s Last Laugh

The cancellation of “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” raised eyebrows, but the genre is not what it was in Johnny Carson’s heyday. What does it still have to offer us?

Postscript

How Tom Lehrer Escaped the Transience of Satire

The late songwriter’s targets are mostly forgotten—so why do new generations keep discovering him?

Photo Booth

Teen-Agers in Their Bedrooms, Before the Age of Selfies

Adrienne Salinger’s cult photography book from the nineties makes a comeback.

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Peruse a gallery ofcartoons from the issue »

What We’re Reading

A deeply researched biography of Clint Eastwood’s career that reveals fascinating truth; a biting novel that explores the wonders and limitations of technology; a history that digs into the daily lives of Renaissance luminaries to explore a tangle of delusion and fakery; and more.

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168极速赛车 一分钟极速赛车 —— 168开奖app官网版下载-168开奖官方开奖网站查询 Flash Fiction

A series of very short stories for the summer.

“Split Brain”

Right thinks we are a good person. Left does not.

“The Grass at Airports”

In parks and gardens abundant in plants and flowers, the grass is nothing more than a backdrop.

“Double Time for Pat Hobby”

On the day that Pat met Jim Dasterson in the barrier, he had less than a dollar in one pocket and an ounce of gin in the other.

“Dedication”

“After my father stopped breathing, God bless his memory, I covered his body up in blankets—and kept studying.”

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Takes

Revisiting John Hersey’s “Hiroshima”

His monumental report changed history, journalism, and me.

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Our Columnists

Economic Reality Bites Trump and His Protectionist Trade Policies

The White House promised that tariffs would make America boom. But job growth has stalled and the President has been reduced to firing an official scorekeeper.

On Trump, Gaza, and the Perils of a Blank Check for Israel

Is the President flip-flopping on Israel's war, or just muddling through?

Stacks of Cash

Presidential libraries preserve the records—and burnish the legacies—of America’s heads of state. Are they also corruption rackets?

How the Israeli Right Explains the Aid Disaster It Created

The fiercest defenders of Netanyahu’s war in Gaza continue to insist that Palestinians aren’t starving.

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Persons of Interest

The Musician Bringing the Bagpipes Into the Avant-Garde

Brìghde Chaimbeul frees her instrument from the confines of kitsch.

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Ideas

Israel’s Zones of Denial

Amid national euphoria over the bombing of Iran—and the largely ignored devastation in Gaza—a question lurks: What is the country becoming?

The Flood Will Come

The deaths in Texas are a tragic testament to the force of a raging river. Flood-stricken Vermont has a radical plan to counter the threat it faces.

Is Lunch the Best Meal?

From power lunches to liquid lunches, notes on the underappreciated charms of the midday repast.

Second Life

Some kinds of madness may now be suddenly cured. What happens to the newly sane?

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Books

Mind the Racial Wealth Gap

After six decades of civil-rights efforts, that disparity remains unchanged. Programs meant to close it haven’t made a dent, and there’s reason to doubt that even reparations would deliver a lasting fix. Have we been focussing on the wrong things?

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Persons of Interest

Howard Lutnick, Trump’s Tariff Czar, Wants the World to Pay Up

Malcolm-Jamal Warner and the Lessons of Theo Huxtable

How Eva Victor Reimagined the Trauma Plot

Zohran Mamdani and Mahmoud Khalil Are in on the Joke

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Dept. of Labor

“No Tax on Tips” Is an Industry Plant

Donald Trump’s “populist” policy is backed by the National Restaurant Association—probably because it won’t stop establishments from paying servers below the minimum wage.

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Puzzles & Games

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The Crossword

A puzzle that ranges in difficulty, with the occasional theme.

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The Mini

A bite-size crossword, for a quick diversion.

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Laugh Lines

Can you place the cartoons in chronological order?

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Cartoon Caption Contest

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Name Drop

Can you guess the notable person in six clues or fewer?

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In Case You Missed It

What I Inherited from My Criminal Great-Grandparents
In working through the Winter case files, I often felt pinpricks of déjà vu: an exact turn of phrase, an absurdly specific expenditure.
Notes on Bed Rest
I spent months limiting my movement, to protect a high-risk pregnancy. How did it change me?
Is the U.S. Ready for the Next War?
With global conflicts increasingly shaped by drones and A.I., the American military risks losing its dominance.
What Will Become of the C.I.A.?
The covert agency has long believed in the power of knowing one’s enemy. But these days the threats are coming from above.
A Reporter at Large

Mexico’s Molar City Could Transform My Smile. Did I Want It To?

More than a thousand dentists have set up shop in Los Algodones. Their patients are mostly Americans who can’t afford the U.S.’s dental care.

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The Talk of the Town

Make-Believe Dept.

Trump’s Birthday Parade Was a Hollywood Job

Rome Postcard

Dolce & Gabbana’s Spartacus Moment

The Literary Life

The Joy of Cooking (for Gertrude Stein)

The Pictures

From “I, Tonya” to Chris Farley, Pound by Pound

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Shouts & Murmurs

Cartoons, comics, and other funny stuff. Sign up for the Humor newsletter.

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