Extreme Heat Puts Life on Hold in Britain, a Land Not Built for It
| By Julie Bosman, Thomas Fuller and Edgar Sandoval BA.5, a highly transmissible variant, is dominating a surge of new infections. Many health officials say the wave is cause for caution, not alarm. | | | By Mark Landler In a country more accustomed to temperate weather, a brutal heat wave tested Britain's infrastructure and forced millions to choose between a Stygian commute or a stifling home office. | | | By Alan Rappeport and Jim Tankersley Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen's signature achievement is in jeopardy if the United States cannot ratify the tax agreement that she brokered. | | |
| Travel | The World Through a Lens By Marta Giaccone A photographer traveled across America on one of Amtrak's long-distance train routes. Here's what she saw. | | | Opinion | Michelle Cottle By Michelle Cottle Kansas stands as the first big post-Roe political test for abortion. It's an intense, complicated fight, with the odds stacked against reproductive-rights supporters. | | |
| By The New York Times Brittany Sinitch, who taught at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, said her students had been writing Valentine's Day cards to one another when she heard gunshots in the school's hallway. | | | By The Associated Press The police said an armed bystander shot and killed the 20-year-old gunman within two minutes after the gunman had opened fire on diners inside a mall food court in Greenwood, Ind. | | | By Reuters and The Associated Press People in London tried to stay cool as temperatures approached a national record high, with even hotter weather expected soon. | | |
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