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Magazine
The Bakers Reimagining Traditional Jewish Pastries
THE SCHNECKEN AT Edith’s, a Jewish deli in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, gleam with sugary glaze or drip with buttery icing, depending…
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Business
Britain Wants Its Early Retirees Back, but Their Days Are ‘Never Boring’
The country’s work force is smaller than it was before the pandemic, sapping economic potential. The government is going to…
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News
Diana Shnaider Is Mixing College Tennis With the Pro Tour, for Now
A freshman at North Carolina State, Shnaider, a Russian, is the first woman ranked in the top 100 of the…
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Magazine
Who Are You Wearing? For Costume Designers, the Answer May Be ‘Me.’
The five Oscar nominees for costume design approach red-carpet fashion with an eye toward storytelling.
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US
Highest Heating Costs in Years Strain Many in New England
RUMFORD, Maine — As early March battered western Maine with a pair of back-to-back snowstorms, and the heating oil in…
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News
For Asian Film Stars, a Hard-Won Triumph 100 Years in the Making
As a mixed Asian kid growing up in the suburbs of Southern California in the 1990s, I was always searching…
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Magazine
What on Earth Is a BORG?
Many college students seem to love this alcohol-heavy concoction. College officials, not so much.
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Magazine
An Artist Returns After a ‘Long Wilderness’
Claudette Johnson emerged in Thatcher-era England as a prominent Black feminist, only to fall into obscurity. Now, she’s having her…
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US
More Black Women Run for Office, but Prospects Fade the Higher They Go
A Black woman has never been a governor, and only two have been senators. Despite progress at lower levels of…
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News
‘Crumbs From the Table of Joy’ Review: Dreams on the Cusp of Womanhood
In Keen Company’s revival of Lynn Nottage’s 1995 play, a Black girl comes of age amid the churn of social…