Home » Archives by category » New York Times (Page 3092)

Eli Lilly Will Sell Half-Price Version of Humalog, Its Popular Insulin

The drugmaker’s decision to sell a generic version comes with the industry under pressure to do something about rising list prices.

Pressed by Climate Activists, Senate Democrats to ‘Go on Offense’

Senator Chuck Schumer says Senate Democrats plan daily floor speeches on climate change, a special select committee and climate legislation to run on next year — and enact in 2021.

Nonfiction: Growing Up With Murder All Around

Alex Kotlowitz’s “An American Summer” describes life on Chicago’s meanest streets.

Sidebar: Precedent, Meet Clarence Thomas. You May Not Get Along.

Justice Thomas has written more than 250 opinions scrutinizing precedents, calling for their reconsideration or suggesting that they be overruled.

Nursing Homes Are Closing Across Rural America, Scattering Residents

As financial pressures have forced scores of small-town nursing homes to shut down, their residents often must relocate far from their families to find care.

On Politics: Behind the Failed Trump-Kim Summit

President Trump made a bet that his personality and view of himself as a skilled dealmaker would succeed where other presidents had failed.

Tornadoes Kill at Least 23 in Alabama, Official Says

The tornadoes that struck Alabama, Georgia and Florida on Sunday uprooted trees and blasted through homes, video and photographs showed.

Rand Paul Opposes Trump’s Emergency Declaration, Likely Providing Decisive Vote

Mr. Paul is the fourth Senate Republican to back a measure to block the president’s attempt to use emergency powers to fund a wall, appearing to give it the support to pass.

Not ‘My Grandfather’s Boy Scout Troop’: It’s Now for Girls, Too

As of Feb. 1, the Boy Scouts of America began accepting girls into all its ranks for the first time in its 109-year history.

As Enrollment Slips, Alternative Colleges Ask: Is There Room for Us?

Experimental schools like Hampshire College were once the cutting edge of academia. But as demands change and tuitions rise, many face unsettling futures.

A Blast of Snow and Bitter Cold Across the Nation. Oh, Goody.

March is getting off to a stormy start, with snow and frigid temperatures from the Rockies to the Northeast, trying the patience of a nation with winter fatigue.

Recent Comments