With Injury, Justin Fields Is Taking a Big Risk for Ohio State
The dynamics of college football mean that the quarterback will shoulder all of the downsides of playing in the title game after his painful injury in the semifinals. Read more...
Statue of poet Philip Larkin is placed on council's secret racism review list
The poet, who died in 1985, was honoured with astatue at Hull Paragon Interchange railway station in 2010. ButHull City Council has cited it in a review prompted by Black Lives Matter movement. Read more...
One Month Behind, DePaul Starts Its Mens Basketball Season
The program is the last in a major basketball conference to play a game, having dealt with several virus-related pauses. Read more...
DEBORAH ROSS Missing Succession? You'll love these brazen bankers in Industry
DEBORAH ROSS Industry is a drama series following five recent graduates as they set out in the world of investment banking, and already you have two problems with it, as I did. Read more...
In Georgia, Republicans Take Aim at Role of Black Churches in Elections
New proposals by the G.O.P.-controlled Legislature have targeted Sunday voting, part of a raft of measures that could reduce the impact of Black voters in the state. Read more...
Seth Rogen on Pot, Pottery and Ted Cruz
We already knew about the weed and the tweeting, but when did Hollywoods most affable schlub get so into ceramics? Read more...
How Pro-Trump Forces Pushed a Lie About Antifa at the Capitol Riot
On social media, on cable networks and even in the halls of Congress, supporters of Donald J. Trump tried to rewrite history in real time, pushing the fiction that left-wing agitators were to blame for the violence on Jan. 6. Read more...
How Green Are Electric Vehicles?
In short Very green. But plug-in cars still have environmental effects. Heres a guide to the main issues and how they might be addressed. Read more...
Don't feel sorry for us just because we're different
When Jessica Moxham's first child was born with cerebral palsy she felt terrified and on the 'fringe of mainstream family life'. Read more...
Don Letts, Mad Professor Team With Times on Carnival Story
The pandemic has dampened the celebrations worldwide. But a Times special project, which includes an interactive music mixing feature, lets readers get into a party mood. Read more...
Teslas Stock Tumbles Amid Sales Worries and Market Volatility
Investors appear to be reconsidering the high share price as other automakers offer more electric vehicles. Read more...
The Fashion World Promised More Diversity. Heres What We Found.
Tracking an industry where Black representation has been rare. Read more...
Los Angeles County finds fewer cases among health care workers as more get vaccinated.
New cases have fallen sharply among workers in the countys nursing homes and long-term care facilities, which have been hot spots during the pandemic. Read more...
From Kerry Andrew to Lucy Jago, Nick Kent and Mick Herron This week's best new fiction
There's a great deal going on in this emotive novel, and some of its plot pivots on whopping coincidences. Read more...
February 2021 Jobs Report U.S. Economy Added 379,000 Jobs
U.S. employers added 379,000 to their payrolls in February, increasing hopes that vaccinations and reopenings are giving the economic recovery a firmer grip. Read more...
The Performance of Racial Passing
Though Nella Larsens classic 1929 novel is understood to be a tragedy, it also exposes race to be something of a farce. Read more...
British scientists develop new saliva test for Covid-19
Developers of the so-called 'Insight' test from the Wellcome Sanger Institute say their proof-of-concept design could easily be scaled up and would be easier to use than the current swab tests. Read more...
Boris Johnson admits it's 'unlikely' he will record Harry and Meghan's interview with Oprah Winfrey
The Prime Minister said he is focusing on the jabs rollout and the economic recovery during a visit to a vaccination centre in Brent, north London (pictured). Read more...