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Showing posts from February, 2021Show all
Glacier Bursts in India, Leaving 150 Missing in Floods
Haiti Braces for Unrest as President Refuses to Step Down
A no-bid contract to track vaccinations leads to frustration and a cease-and-desist letter.
Reaching for that pack of smokes? You aren’t the only one.
Is your vaccine card selfie a gift for scammers? Maybe.
How Tampa, Florida, is preparing for a pandemic Super Bowl.
A San Diego area school district quarantines more than 100 students and staff members just days after reopening.
They died within hours of each other early in the pandemic. Their countries then went down two very different roads.
Carmen Vázquez, a longtime force in the world of L.G.B.T.Q. rights, dies at 72.
In Beleaguered Babylon, Doing Battle Against Time, Water and Modern Civilization
The pandemic is pushing American mothers over the edge.
The week in Covid-19 news: Reassuring data on the AstraZeneca vaccine, 24 states are inoculating teachers and more.
In a late-night ruling, the Supreme Court partly lifts virus restrictions on religious services in California.
With the virus spiking, Cuba imposes an overnight curfew.
Coronavirus testing in the U.S. is declining. Experts aren’t sure why.
Reaching for that pack of smokes? You aren’t the only one.
A no-bid contract to track vaccinations leads to frustration and a cease-and-desist letter.
A flood of emotions, along with a first shot.
How the pandemic silenced New York’s $25 billion Hudson Yards development.
China approves a second Covid-19 vaccine.
Is your vaccine card selfie a gift for scammers? Maybe.
Nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize? Wait Until You Receive It to Brag
To Fight or Hide: Fear Grips Myanmar With Military Back in Charge
In Afghanistan, a Booming Kidney Trade Preys on the Poor
Police Shoot a Street Juggler in Chile, Setting Off Protests
I.C.C. Rules It Has Jurisdiction to Examine Possible Israel War Crimes
Chicago and Philadelphia tell some teachers to return to classrooms or face discipline.
Canada extends its cruise ship ban until 2022, and Alaska’s leaders aren’t happy.
With the virus spiking, Cuba imposes an overnight curfew.
Some states are weighing summer school classes to help students catch up.
With British soccer clubs barred from traveling to Germany, the Champions League is disrupted.
Data from Britain’s rollout show that the vaccines in use are largely safe, a regulator says.
The AstraZeneca vaccine is found to be protective against the coronavirus variant first seen in Britain.
A Talking Owl and Cheery Sounds: Children’s Video Targets Dissent in Hong Kong
In Geopolitical Struggle Over Myanmar, China Has an Edge
Pfizer withdraws an application for emergency authorization of its vaccine in India.
Navalny Back in Court, This Time in Defamation Case
The N.F.L. had more than 700 coronavirus positives, but Seattle’s Seahawks had none.
As virus variants gain a foothold in the U.S., the F.D.A. says it is preparing a plan.
Mass vaccination could blunt epidemic in U.K. in weeks.
Johnson & Johnson’s single-shot vaccine could arrive in the U.S. soon.
In Israel, the vaccine has driven down cases and hospitalizations.
Wisconsin had a mask law. Then it didn’t. Then it did. Stay Tuned.
Seeking shots, ‘vaccine hunters’ cross state lines.
Israel’s Vaccination Results Point a Way Out of Virus Pandemic
Pacific Islands’ Most Important Megaphone Falls Into Discord
Power, Patriotism and 1.4 Billion People:How China Beat the Virus and Roared Back
T Magazine Australia Launching in March
New Zealand will admit refugees again, nearly a year after closing its borders to noncitizens.
A ‘Masculinity Crisis’? China Says the Boys Are Not All Right