For the majority of human history, most people didn’t go to school. Formal education was a privilege for the Alexander the Greats of the world …
Continue readingSchool Is for Merit
In 1982, as a 5-foot-0 teen at Morgantown High School in the foothills of West Virginia’s Appalachians, I stepped forward at our annual sports …
Continue readingSchool Is for Making Citizens
Why do we have public schools? To make young people into educated, productive adults, of course. But public schools are also for making Americans …
Continue readingPlease Don’t Make a Tolkien Cinematic Universe
In the months leading up to its premiere this Friday, Amazon Prime’s “The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power” has prompted both excitement and …
Continue readingThe Mets Pull One Back in a Fun Win Over the Dodgers
On a shelf in his spare locker at Citi Field, Brandon Nimmo has a baseball with a series of markings by Wayne Kirby, the Mets’ first base coach …
Continue readingIn Mexico, a Company and a Community Tied Together with a Single Thread
This article is part of our Design special section on how looks, materials and even creators evolve. The way Ana Holschneider explained it …
Continue readingWhy Do Some People in New Jersey Suddenly Have Bags and Bags of Bags?
Nicole Kramaritsch of Roxbury, N.J., has 46 bags just sitting in her garage. Brian Otto has 101 of them, so many that he’s considering sewing …
Continue readingPortugal Could Hold an Answer for a Europe Captive to Russian Gas
Portugal has no coal mines, oil wells or gas fields. Its impressive hydropower production has been crippled this year by drought. And its long …
Continue readingCollege Football Is Back. Don’t Even Try That Fake Slide.
For all that does not seem to change in college football — Alabama around the top of the polls, hype about Texas, Kirk Ferentz as Iowa’s coach …
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