Lost Lives, Lost Culture: The Forgotten History of Indigenous Boarding Schools
| By Catherine Porter Claude Joseph was the country's leader in the aftermath of President Jovenel Moïse's assassination. He will hand power to Ariel Henry and join a new unity government intended to keep Haiti stable. | | | By Rukmini Callimachi and Sharon Chischilly Thousands of Native American children attended U.S. boarding schools designed to "civilize the savage." Many died. Many who lived are reclaiming their identity. | | | By Henry Fountain Unpredictable winds, fire clouds that spawn lightning, and flames that leap over firebreaks are confounding efforts to fight the blaze, which is sweeping through southern Oregon. | | |
| The Upshot By Josh Katz, Kevin Quealy and Tyler Kepner Strikeouts have decreased and on-base percentage has risen — midseason changes without parallel in decades of baseball in the majors. | | | Opinion | Guest Essay By Margaret Renkl I just don't get it. | | |
| By The Associated Press Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain defended his decision to lift almost all of England's pandemic restrictions in an address from his country house where he was in quarantine after a Covid-19 exposure. | | | By The Associated Press The Biden administration said it would evacuate almost 2,500 Afghans who helped the U.S. government during the 20-year war and who now face reprisals from the Taliban to an Army base in Virginia, pending approval of their visas. | | | By Reuters President Biden hosted King Abdullah II of Jordan at the White House on Monday, the first Arab leader to visit during his presidency, in a sign of strengthening ties after a rocky relationship with the Trump administration. | | |
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