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News
We Thought We Had Spotted an Exotic Bloom. It Was the Vividly Colored Remains of a Soda Bottle.
It is springtime, and I want to turn to thoughts of love. In my case, love of this world, love…
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Books
She Started With a 39-Cent Camera. She Ended Up in Magazines.
A posthumous release from the famed photographer Ruth Orkin casts a female gaze on subjects both ordinary and iconic.
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World
In New Zealand, Experiencing the Miracle of Flight Anew
The country's domestic airlines play a crucial role in connectivity. But for the casual flier, even the journey is captivating.
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News
Bill Jorgensen, Authoritative New York TV Newsman, Dies at 96
Getting his start in the Midwest, he was best known for leading the New York broadcast “The 10 O’Clock News.”
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Business
Biden Administration Announces Rules Aimed at Expanding Electric Vehicles
The regulations would require automakers to sell more electric vehicles and hybrids by gradually tightening limits on tailpipe pollution.
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News
A New Building Aims to Be a Good Neighbor in Low-Rise Brooklyn
The architect of Bergen, in Boerum Hill, is Frida Escobedo, who recently landed the commission to redesign a wing of…
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News
Mount Sinai and UnitedHealthcare Reach Insurance Deal
The end of the dispute means that Mount Sinai patients with UnitedHealthcare won’t need to find new doctors.
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News
Why Another University Might Benefit New York
According to a think tank’s analysis, another private college would attract the young talent that helps the city’s economy.
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News
2 Schools Clash as One Shrinks and the Other Gains Migrant Students
The schools share a building in Manhattan, but their paths forward have diverged as they contend with two major crises…
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World
The Foreign Language That Changed My Teenage Son’s Life
Even as a little kid, my son Max had a way of immersing himself in the subjects he cared about.…