Home » Archives by category » New York Times (Page 3279)

Brett Favre and Soulja Boy Unwittingly Record Videos With Coded Anti-Semitism

Mr. Favre, the rapper Soulja Boy Tell ’Em and the comedian Andy Dick answered similar requests on Cameo, which allows fans to pay celebrities for personalized video messages.

California Today: California Today: Victories, Then Scandal. What’s Next for Democrats?

Monday: The future of the California Democratic Party, allegations of racism at Tesla and a heartwarming wedding.

OPEC, China, France: Your Monday Briefing

Here’s what you need to know.

After a California Wildfire, New and Old Homeless Populations Collide

Butte County already had 2,000 homeless people and a crisis on its hands before the Camp Fire’s devastation added tens of thousands more to their ranks.

The Placenta, an Afterthought No Longer

An ephemeral organ, long dismissed merely as afterbirth, increasingly is viewed as critical to understanding the health and course of pregnancy.

Americans Value Equality at Work More Than Equality at Home

A study finds broad support for gender equality, but a disparity in people’s views of gender roles in public and private.

In the Blink of an Eye, a Hunt for Oil Threatens Pristine Alaska

For decades, opposition to drilling has left the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge off limits. Now the Trump administration is hurriedly clearing the way for oil exploration.

Drilling in the Arctic: Questions for a Polar Bear Expert

The Trump administration is reversing a longstanding ban on oil exploration on the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The area is home to about 900 polar bears, which are already struggling because of climate change. Can they withsta…

The Race for Alaskan Oil: 6 Key Takeaways

For more than a generation, opposition to drilling has left a 19-million-acre wildlife refuge in Alaska largely unscathed. But the region is on the cusp of major change as Washington speedily rolls back protections.

On Politics: A Trade War Truce

The United States and China paused their economic battle, and lawmakers considered postponing a fight over a spending bill to mourn a former president.

Washington Memo: A Kinder, Gentler Nation? Maybe for a Few Days

The death of George Bush has quieted a raucous political system as it honors him for a civility it no longer possesses. But history shows that’s unlikely to last.

Recent Comments