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The E.P.A Chief Wanted a Climate Science Debate. Trump’s Chief of Staff Stopped Him.

The idea for a military-style exercise to question climate science encountered widespread resistance within the administration, officials said.

A Problem for High Schools: More Cars, and Nowhere to Park Them

In wealthy Long Island communities, luxury cars have become a standard gift for teenagers. But most schools do not have the space to accommodate them.

Washington Memo: The President and the Porn Star: A Story’s Slow Rise Above the Din

For nearly two months, Stormy Daniels has not been the biggest story out of the Trump White House. Is that changing?

The Saturday Profile: He Wouldn’t Become an Informant. Now He’s Headed for Prison.

Ahmad Sheikhzadeh had worked as a consultant to Iran’s United Nations mission for years, and it was no secret. Life changed when federal agents arrested him in 2016.

Why Is Louis Farrakhan Back in the News?

Critics are condemning a Women’s March organizer and a congressman for their defense of the Nation of Islam leader, known for his incendiary and anti-Semitic rhetoric.

News Analysis: Secret Tunnels, Mobile Missiles and Many Warheads: Verifying North Korean Disarmament Poses Challenges

North Korea has tested six nuclear weapons and, according to American intelligence agencies, has 20 to 60 more.

California Today: California Today: Is the Long-Looming Pension Crisis Already Here?

Friday: David Crane on pension solutions, more jousting between President Trump and California leaders, and a proposal to raise the minimum gun age.

A Quiet Exodus: Why Blacks are Leaving White Evangelical Churches

Megachurches around the country were trying to racially integrate and finding some success. Then came the 2016 election.

U.S. Added 313,000 Jobs in February. Here’s What That Means.

The data is the last major economic report before the Federal Reserve decides whether to increase the benchmark interest rate later this month.

New Contemporary Art Institute Reverberates in Richmond’s Historic Landscape

The center, which will open in April, takes a bold look at race and other social issues that still resonate in the region as well as the nation.

At the Crossroads of Church and Race, a Reporter Glimpses His Childhood

When Campbell Robertson set out to find why black worshipers were leaving white-majority churches, he recalled the little Baptist church he grew up in.

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