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21 min 19 sec ago
Chaplains offer crucial spiritual care to patients pondering eternal questions.
The tennis star’s case affirms the dangers of engaging with China.
Disrupted circadian rhythms throw off our body clocks. Hangovers may arise when a tired brain and an overworked liver struggle to reconnect.
He understands that the American president can’t draw red lines unless he is willing to enforce them.
The expiration of Trump’s tax cuts next year gives Congress the chance to write an even more pro-growth code.
Markets give the thumb’s down to British Labour’s new tax-and-spend budget blowout.
Volkswagen considers shuttering three plants, the result of electric vehicle mandates.
Traditional Democrats are deserting the party, she was unprepared, and she has no clear message.
The latest NFIB employer survey finds that small firms are still searching for workers.
The actor stars alongside Kieran Culkin in his film about two cousins who visit Poland in the wake of their grandmother’s death, pairing the melancholy of middle age with the horrors of the Holocaust.
Marie Curie’s life of discovery, the rise of the automobile, a great painter’s years of poverty and more books highlighted by our reviewers.
Perhaps the vice president expects too much from the addled president.
At home, she’s no centrist. Abroad, she seems unprepared for the dangers ahead.
Consumers are still riding high, but business investment disappoints.
She wants to help, but the former President’s campaign wants to focus on the ‘bro’ vote.
The Supreme Court allows the state to clean up its voter rolls.
Starmer’s first budget breaks his promise not to tax lower incomes.
Universities welcome U.N. Hamas apologist Francesca Albanese.
Shale is crucial to the U.S. economy, and it allows Washington to buttress our allies across the globe.
Both sides warn of an apocalypse if they lose. But there’s plenty of life left in Lady Liberty.
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