Showing results for: group (page 203)
A girl’s skeleton in the museum: On runaways, the Jersey Shore and a cold case that haunted me
Erin Keane
She was labeled New Jersey Skeleton 1972, but everyone called her "Sandy"
As midterms near, immigrants and voters of color being targeted with rampant misinformation
Areeba Shah
Voting rights groups fight back against widespread misinformation aimed at foreign-language voters and others
A federal prisoner’s gruesome and shameful mistreatment — and why it was all too typical
Austin Sarat
Frederick Bardell wasn't much of a hero — but no convict deserves a death sentence by slow medical torture
Greg Abbott accused of “patronage system” as mega-donors score access — and cushy appointments
Patrick Svitek, Carla Astudillo, Zach Despart, Kate McGee
Abbott donors enjoy access, appointments to boards and commissions and a chance to bend his ear
Is social media ready for midterm election misinformation? Experts grade Facebook, TikTok, Twitter
Dam Hee Kim, Anjana Susarla, Scott Shackelford
Social media networks crack down — but the companies vary in their approaches and effectiveness
Abigail Disney’s dream: Living wages for workers
Peter Hong
Disney co-founder's granddaughter imagines more equitable America, starting with better pay for Disney park workers
Starved of new talent: Young people are steering clear of oil jobs
Kate Yoder
Who wants to work for the brands that brought you climate change?
These elections “are the most important in our lifetime”: Democracy advocate on America’s choice
Chauncey DeVega
Brad Woodhouse of the Defend Democracy Project: These are no ordinary midterms; they'll determine America's future
Rent going up? One company’s secret algorithm could be why
Heather Vogell, Haru Coryne, Ryan Little
RealPage’s YieldStar software helps landlords set prices for apartments across the U.S. as rents soar
Why does marijuana make it hard to remember stuff?
Troy Farah
The idea that pot affects short-term memory is a stoner trope. Here's what we know about cannabis and memory
25 years ago, “I Know What You Did Last Summer” told the future of teen trauma onscreen
Alison Stine
The 1997 teen horror film was trying to warn us all along about the legacy of violence
This election isn’t about inflation or abortion. It’s about whether democracy can survive
Heather Digby Parton
Of course the economy and reproductive rights are important. But in the shadow of fascism, they almost don't matter
Kanye may not like books, but hip-hop fosters a love of literature
A.D. Carson
Writing and reciting seemingly spontaneous rap lyrics on the spot – requires levels of verbal intelligence
Do conservatives really have an empathy deficit? This is what social science says
Mary Elizabeth Williams
A new study on pandemic behavior finds another link between ideology and empathy
“U.S. Jews have to get their act together,” says the former president of the United States
Kelly McClure
"No president has done more for Israel than I have," says Trump
Murder, she edited: In PBS’ “Magpie Murders,” Lesley Manville is a publishing world mystery sleuth
Hanh Nguyen
Lesley Manville spoke to reporters about her cool character, busy career and needing more roles for women over 50
Deep brain stimulation can be life-altering for OCD sufferers
Rachel A. Davis
A group of OCD sufferers sees hope in an emerging modern treatment called deep brain stimulation
The inauspicious arrival of Bruce Springsteen
Brendan Sainsbury
Before "Born to Run" gained Springsteen attention, he released two underappreciated albums 50 years ago
Trump’s Truth Social rant called “sharply self-incriminating”: Now it’s up to DOJ
Jessica Corbett
Trump's rambling 14-page response to Jan. 6 subpoena is "powerfully incriminating evidence," says one expert
I won big on “Jeopardy!” So why does it still haunt me?
Steve Moulds
The day I became a "Jeopardy!" champ was perfect. It wasn’t until I got home that I started having trouble sleeping
“The Rings of Power” shows us a new side of Middle-earth: girlfriends
Alison Stine
"Lord of the Rings" was a bromance. The prequel has that rarest of relationships: girls being good for each other
How a legendary Harvard swim coach became an international fugitive
Irvin Muchnick
Swimming is plagued with sexual abuse scandals — but none as strange as the saga of Joe Bernal (aka Hugo Calderon)
Alzheimer’s might not be primarily a brain disease: new theory suggests it’s an autoimmune condition
Donald Weaver
A group of neuroscience researchers think Alzheimer's is an autoimmune condition — could this lead to a cure?
What’s in a name: Kurdish martyr Jîna Amini and the struggle for culture and history
Samaa Khullar
A young Kurdish woman made famous in death still has a lesson to teach us: Call her by her name
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