Last Vestiges of Russia's Free Press Fall Under Kremlin Pressure
| By Michael Schwirtz and Richard Pérez-Peña Defiant Ukrainians slowed the invasion, but Russian forces gained ground in the south, and the Kremlin insisted the week-old campaign was "going according to plan." | | | By Anton Troianovski and Valeriya Safronova "Everything that's not propaganda is being eliminated," a Nobel Prize winning editor said as Russian authorities moved to control the narrative in the Ukraine war. | | | By Eric Schmitt, Helene Cooper and Julian E. Barnes Ukrainian troops have mounted a stiffer-than-expected opposition to a superior force in the early days of the war. But U.S. officials say it may not last. | | |
| World | Brazil Dispatch By Jack Nicas After Brazil's biggest party was effectively canceled for the second straight year, a group of artists rallied to play on despite police orders. | | | Opinion | guest essay By Henry Louis Gates Jr. and Andrew S. Curran In the 18th century, "scientific" myths about race sought to divide people into separate groups. Today, new DNA science is revealing just how connected we really are. | | |
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