The Latest World How Trump's sweeping new travel ban may affect the many nations it targets President Trump announces a sweeping travel ban on citizens from 12 countries, with restrictions on seven others -- evoking the "Muslim ban" Trump introduced during his first term. Eyder Peralta Education Volunteers are helping save climate data — which teachers rely on — before it's lost As the Trump administration removes climate-related data and tools from agency websites, teachers are left scrambling to fix lesson plans. But, a volunteer effort is archiving much of the lost data. Molly Enking Health Washington state doctors, lawmakers question federal changes to Covid vaccine recs Experts worry new federal Covid vaccine guidance advice runs contrary to science and could lead to fewer people getting vaccinated. Eilís O'Neill Arts & Life Here to Help: A man's decades-long history with Habitat for Humanity Gerard Van de Werken is a volunteer with Habitat for Humanity Austin, a non-profit housing organization. For our series, Here to Help, he discusses his decades-long history with the organization. Ashley Brown Arts & Life Fans drive massive Nintendo Switch 2 launch; other consumers play the waiting game Criticized for its high cost but still selling out nearly everywhere, Nintendo's sequel to their popular Switch console releases as a trade war squeezes the video game industry. https://www.stern.nyu.edu/faculty/bio/joost-vandreunen https://superjoost.substack.com/p/gamings-counter-cycle James Mastromarino Economy Trump's tariffs could cut deficit by $2.8 trillion over next decade — with caveats Forecasters at the Congressional Budget Office say President Trump's tariffs could shave $2.8 trillion off the federal debt if they remain in place for a decade. That's a big if. Scott Horsley Sports New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge is closing in on a .400 batting average Aaron Judge of the New York Yankees has had a great season and is closing in on one of baseball's rarest batting milestones: breaking .400. The last player to do it was Ted Williams in 1941. Steve Futterman National Air traffic overhaul obstacles The fragile state of the U.S. air traffic control system was easy to see during the recent outages in Newark. But it will be a lot harder to make up for decades of underinvestment and other mistakes. Joel Rose 'She Who Dared,' an opera about women in the civil rights movement, opens in Chicago A new opera tells the story of the Black women who organized in Alabama leading up to the Montgomery bus boycott. Courtney Kueppers A single mother of eight in Gaza is running out of ways to cope A single mother in Gaza describes what hunger looks like for her and her eight children under Israeli restrictions on aid. Aya Batrawy Prev 913 of 1650 Next Sponsored
World How Trump's sweeping new travel ban may affect the many nations it targets President Trump announces a sweeping travel ban on citizens from 12 countries, with restrictions on seven others -- evoking the "Muslim ban" Trump introduced during his first term. Eyder Peralta
Education Volunteers are helping save climate data — which teachers rely on — before it's lost As the Trump administration removes climate-related data and tools from agency websites, teachers are left scrambling to fix lesson plans. But, a volunteer effort is archiving much of the lost data. Molly Enking
Health Washington state doctors, lawmakers question federal changes to Covid vaccine recs Experts worry new federal Covid vaccine guidance advice runs contrary to science and could lead to fewer people getting vaccinated. Eilís O'Neill
Arts & Life Here to Help: A man's decades-long history with Habitat for Humanity Gerard Van de Werken is a volunteer with Habitat for Humanity Austin, a non-profit housing organization. For our series, Here to Help, he discusses his decades-long history with the organization. Ashley Brown
Arts & Life Fans drive massive Nintendo Switch 2 launch; other consumers play the waiting game Criticized for its high cost but still selling out nearly everywhere, Nintendo's sequel to their popular Switch console releases as a trade war squeezes the video game industry. https://www.stern.nyu.edu/faculty/bio/joost-vandreunen https://superjoost.substack.com/p/gamings-counter-cycle James Mastromarino
Economy Trump's tariffs could cut deficit by $2.8 trillion over next decade — with caveats Forecasters at the Congressional Budget Office say President Trump's tariffs could shave $2.8 trillion off the federal debt if they remain in place for a decade. That's a big if. Scott Horsley
Sports New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge is closing in on a .400 batting average Aaron Judge of the New York Yankees has had a great season and is closing in on one of baseball's rarest batting milestones: breaking .400. The last player to do it was Ted Williams in 1941. Steve Futterman
National Air traffic overhaul obstacles The fragile state of the U.S. air traffic control system was easy to see during the recent outages in Newark. But it will be a lot harder to make up for decades of underinvestment and other mistakes. Joel Rose
'She Who Dared,' an opera about women in the civil rights movement, opens in Chicago A new opera tells the story of the Black women who organized in Alabama leading up to the Montgomery bus boycott. Courtney Kueppers
A single mother of eight in Gaza is running out of ways to cope A single mother in Gaza describes what hunger looks like for her and her eight children under Israeli restrictions on aid. Aya Batrawy