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NASCAR Star’s Plane Had Several Instrument Failures Before Crash

The successive problems appeared to overwhelm the pilots, who were experienced but not authorized to fly the type of jet they were operating alone, according to federal safety investigators.

© NTSB, via Reuters

National Transportation Safety Board investigators examining the wreckage of a Cessna jet that crashed and killed former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle in Statesville, N.C., last month.
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Co-Stars and Fans Pay Tribute to Catherine O’Hara

Videos and photos filled social media as fans shared their favorite scenes from O’Hara’s acting career and co-stars memorialized her.

© Danny Moloshok/Reuters

Catherine O’Hara in 2019. The actress died this week at the age of 71.
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Texas May Be Losing Its Grip as America’s Fastest-Growing State

Long accustomed to rapid growth, Texas saw the overall number of people moving from other states sink to its lowest level in two decades, census estimates show.

© Desiree Rios for The New York Times

The Stockyards in Fort Worth. A slowdown in population growth is more pronounced in Texas than in any other state except Florida, the Census Bureau estimates.
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Grids Are Surviving the Storm. But the Next 5 Years Could Be Rough.

A group that monitors the U.S. electricity system warns that grid reliability is “worsening” and blackout risks are rising for millions of people.

© Tamir Kalifa for The New York Times

A crew working to restore power in Austin, Texas, in 2021, after a major storm.
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In a Bid to Kick-Start Growth, Britain Turns to China

Buffeted by tariffs and trade tensions, Prime Minister Keir Starmer took British business leaders to China and emerged with deals on visas and Scotch whisky, as well as pledges to deepen ties.

© Carl Court/Getty Images

Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain, left, with President Xi Jinping of China, in Beijing on Thursday.
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Trump Picks Kevin Warsh as Next Fed Chair

If confirmed by the Senate, Kevin M. Warsh, a former governor at the central bank, will replace Jerome H. Powell, whose term as chair ends in May.

© Tierney L. Cross/Bloomberg

Kevin M. Warsh, a former Federal Reserve governor, was also a front-runner to lead the central bank during President Trump’s first term.
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Grids Are Surviving the Storm. But the Next 5 Years Could Be Rough.

A group that monitors the U.S. electricity system warns that grid reliability is “worsening” and blackout risks are rising for millions of people.

© Tamir Kalifa for The New York Times

A crew working to restore power in Austin, Texas, in 2021, after a major storm.
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Texas A&M Ends Women’s Studies and Overhauls Hundreds of Classes on Race and Gender

New policies limiting the teaching of race and gender issues led administrators and professors to change hundreds of courses. School leaders say the rules could hurt A&M’s reputation.

© Annie Mulligan for The New York Times

Texas A&M University’s new policy to limit teaching about race and gender has led to debates on campus about academic freedom.
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Is the ‘Influencer Right’ at Odds With Trump Over Minnesota?

A vocal group of Trump supporters broke with the president when he appeared to backpedal on his immigration crackdown in Minneapolis. Is it a rift, or just a passing mood?

© From left, Jason Andrew for The New York Times; Jim Watson/AFP — Getty Images; Jason Davis/Getty Images; John Locher/Associated Press; Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times

From left, Stephen K. Bannon, Nick Sortor, Matt Walsh, Andrew Kolvet and Nicholas Fuentes, who criticized President Trump after he appeared to temper his immigration crackdown in Minneapolis.
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Tesla’s Model S, Soon to Be History, Changed the Auto Industry

The company’s chief executive, Elon Musk, said this week that it would stop making the car, an electric pioneer in 2012, as well as the Model X.

© Philip Cheung for The New York Times

“The Model S was a breakthrough and ushered in quite a number of technologies people hadn’t seen before,” said Sam Abuelsamid, an executive at Telemetry, a Detroit communications and research firm.
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What It’s Like to Live With One of Psychiatry’s Most Misunderstood Diagnoses

Spurred by her past struggles with dissociative identity disorder, she has devoted her professional life to studying it.

© Haruka Sakaguchi for The New York Times

The psychiatrist and researcher Milissa Kaufman. Although her personal experience with dissociative identity disorder shaped her career, she was for years reluctant to discuss her experience with it publicly.
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The Secret Sauce in ‘Heated Rivalry’? Canada.

The global television phenomenon is full of Canadian iconography and subsidized by Canadian taxpayers. On Thursday, it came home to celebrate.

© Cole Burston for The New York Times

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and Heated Rivalry actor Hudson Williams on the red carpet at a conference for the Canadian Media Producers Association in Ottawa on Thursday.
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