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Harvard Won Its Money Back, but Will It Actually Get It?

A judge ruled that the Trump administration broke the law in canceling billions in federal funds for Harvard. Whether the money is returned matters for the rest of higher education.

© Sophie Park for The New York Times

A court ruling this week was a victory for Harvard in its fight with the Trump administration, but the battle between the two sides is most likely not over.
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After Boat Strike, Rubio Says U.S. Will Help Other Nations ‘Blow Up’ Crime Groups

The Trump administration aims to carry out more violent strikes against drug cartels, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said as he met with Ecuador’s president.

© Pool photo by Jacquelyn Martin

Secretary of State Marco Rubio, left, with President Daniel Noboa of Ecuador at the presidential palace in Quito. The two countries discussed taking on criminal groups.
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Trump Claims the Power to Summarily Kill Suspected Drug Smugglers

The move to treat criminals as if they were wartime combatants escalated an administration pattern of using military force for law enforcement tasks at home and abroad.

© Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times

President Trump is claiming the extraordinary power to shift maritime counterdrug efforts from law enforcement rules to wartime rules.
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After Afghanistan Earthquake, Women Tell of Being Shunned by Male Rescuers

A prohibition on contact between unrelated women and men meant many women’s wounds went untended and some were left trapped under rubble after a deadly earthquake, witnesses said.

© Agence France-Presse via Getty Images

“It felt like women were invisible,” one volunteer said after witnessing rescue efforts in eastern Afghanistan.
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President of Northwestern, a School Attacked by the G.O.P., Will Resign

The university’s president, Michael Schill, said he would step down following months of turbulence, including Trump administration cuts of $790 million from the university’s research funds.

© Shuran Huang for The New York Times

Michael Schill, president of Northwestern University, at a House Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington last year.
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Health Care Costs for Workers Begin to Climb

A survey shows employers expect a sharp increase in benefit costs for next year, and many will want workers to shoulder more of the burden.

© Arin Yoon/Reuters

Rising health care costs expected in the next year worry some experts, who fear some employees will skip or delay medical care because they can no longer afford it.
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Edgar Feuchtwanger, Who Wrote About Being Hitler’s Neighbor, Dies at 100

He and his Jewish family lived across the street from the German leader in the 1930s. He later became a British professor and historian.

© Nicole Bengiveno/The New York Times

Edgar Feuchtwanger in 2016. A British historian, he wrote a book late in life about growing up in Munich across the street from Adolf Hitler.
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Who Are the Five New ‘S.N.L.’ Cast Members Joining Season 51?

Please Don’t Destroy will stop making videos for the show as Ben Marshall joins the cast. Watch clips of him and the other new additions.

© Kyle Dubiel/NBC, via Getty Images

From left, Martin Herlihy, Ben Marshall and John Higgins have made video shorts for ”S.N.L.” as Please Don’t Destroy since 2021. Now Marshall is joining the cast.
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On Epstein Files, Women Lead the G.O.P. Resistance to Trump

The Republican rift over whether to demand greater transparency in the case has once again highlighted a gender divide in the male-dominated party.

© Eric Lee for The New York Times

Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, Republican of Georgia and a Trump ally, has backed a bill that would require the release of files on Jeffrey Epstein.
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In Yellowstone, Migratory Bison Reawaken a Landscape

A recent study hints at the potential benefits of restoring bison to an ecosystem.

© Jacob Frank/National Park Service

Bison grazing near the Roosevelt Arch of Yellowstone National Park in Gardiner, Mont. Yellowstone is home to the last migratory herd — migratory bison are otherwise functionally extinct in their former range.
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Whistle-Blower Complaints Detail Tension Over Vaccines at N.I.H.

Two former agency leaders said the administration’s “hostility” toward vaccines had spread to the agency’s top ranks.

© Michael A. McCoy for The New York Times

The National Institutes of Health headquarters in Bethesda, Md. Watching a resistance to vaccines take root even at the at the N.I.H., a redoubt of vaccine research, alarmed the two scientists.
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