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Magazine

Maps That Tell Their Own Stories

Oculi Mundi, a new online collection, shares the artistry of early creators.

World

Chinese Mourn the Death of a Premier, and the Loss of Economic Hope

An outpouring on social media for Li Keqiang, the former premier who died Friday, reflected public grief for an era…

World

Johnson Faces the Same Spending Dilemmas That Plagued McCarthy

The newly installed Republican speaker opposed the bill to avert a government shutdown and has been against continued U.S. funding…

World

Denmark Aims a Wrecking Ball at ‘Non-Western’ Neighborhoods

A government program is using demolition and relocation to remake neighborhoods with “non-Western” immigrants, poverty or crime.

World

She Heeded Biden’s Warning to Migrants. Will She Regret It?

They live in a rusty shack with no running water, hiding from the violence just outside their door, haunted by…

Finance

New Normal or No Normal? How Economists Got It Wrong for 3 Years.

Economists first underestimated inflation, then underestimated consumers and the labor market. The key question is why.

News

When Siskel and Ebert Were the Names Above the Title

In “Opposable Thumbs,” Matt Singer recalls the risky business of putting newspaper movie critics on TV — and the “combustible…

Magazine

A Spark That Ignited in a Brooklyn Kitchen and Continued Around the World

When Jirair Ratevosian, a Congressional candidate, and Micheal Ighodaro, an activist and filmmaker, first met, both were so busy with…

Science

If You’ve Ever Heard a Voice That Wasn’t There, This Could Be Why

With a ghostly finger in a lab, researchers coaxed people to hear phantom voices.

Science

When Female Frogs Face the Mating Ball, They Pretend to Croak

Female frogs have evolved a variety of tactics to avoid the advances of overeager males, proving they’re not defenseless and…

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