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Health
A Sweet Squash Offering for Día de los Muertos
In many Latin American countries, families attract their ancestors in cemeteries with the spiced, syrupy dessert ayote en miel.
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Arts
Review: An African Choir’s Disillusioning Journey to the West
Gregory Maqoma and Thuthuka Sibisi’s “Broken Chord” considers the 19th-century tour of a group of South African singers to England…
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Tech
Cameo to the Moon, and Back
A start-up that offers fans a way to buy personalized videos from celebrities was supercharged by pandemic boredom and venture…
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Magazine
A Treehouse Builder Who Celebrates Impermanence
“CAN YOU FEEL it swaying?” Takashi Kobayashi asks, 30 feet or so up a camphor tree growing in the cramped…
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Arts
Movement and Memory: Dance Love and Dance Rejection in Ireland
Michael Keegan-Dolan has collaborated with his partner Rachel Poirier on “How to Be a Dancer in 72,000 Easy Lessons,” coming…
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Arts
A Filmmaker’s Fraught Specialty: Women at Work and the Men Who Scare Them
Kitty Green’s movies, “The Assistant” and now “The Royal Hotel,” address gender dynamics in familiar, but menacing, environments.
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Tech
F.C.C. Moves Toward Restoring Net Neutrality Rules, Igniting Regulatory Fight
The News The Federal Communications Commission voted on Thursday to move forward on a proposal to restore open internet rules,…
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World
Judge Won’t Let Alex Jones Use Bankruptcy to Avoid Sandy Hook Damages
A Texas court ruling means the Infowars broadcaster must pay most of the $1.4 billion he owes Sandy Hook families,…
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Health
The Agony and Ecstasy of Home Winemaking
An estimated 500,000 hobbyists in North American are making wine with purchased grapes, juice, even berries. Some even grow their…
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Arts
Review: Ballet Theater Revisits Its Past With a Hit and Two Misses
Susan Jaffe presents her first New York season as American Ballet Theater’s leader, starting with a program of Alexei Ratmansky,…