On Campus The Soul-Crushing Student Essay A freshman finally asks the clarifying question: “Do you mean we can write with the word ‘I’?” By SCOTT KORB
Exposures The Real Cost of Cheap Shirts Factory workers in Bangladesh toil for low wages and under precarious conditions to make clothing worn worldwide. By DANIEL RODRIGUES and CLÁUDIA BRANDÃO
Editorial An Opioid Crisis Foretold History supplies precedents and lessons for the opioid epidemic raging in America today — but we seem to have largely forgotten both. By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Contributing Op-Ed Writer Despairing on Earth Day? Read This Over time, mass migration to cities could be a driver of environmental progress. By RICHARD CONNIFF
Opinion The Business Deals That Could Imperil Trump Forget Stormy Daniels. The business records subpoenaed by Robert Mueller might be Donald Trump’s greatest legal headache. By PETER FRITSCH and GLENN R. SIMPSON
What Hospitals Can Teach the Police Medical professionals know how to de-escalate volatile situations. By DOUGLAS STARR
Opinion Adapting to American Decline The United States is losing its influence as its relative power erodes. How should it manage the transition without destabilizing everyone else? By CHRISTOPHER A. PREBLE
An American Woman Quits Smiling Appearing happy is a cultural expectation. And I was tired of it. By LISA KO
Op-Ed Columnist The Republicans’ Big Senate Mess A convict in West Virginia, bondage in Missouri and a wacky contest for control of the chamber. By FRANK BRUNI
Opinion States Are Doing What Scott Pruitt Won’t The federal government may ignore the environment, but we can’t afford to. By SHARON LERNER
Op-Ed Columnist Barbara Bush: Fake Pearls, Real Heart With the blunt and plain-spoken and often funny Barbara Bush, you always knew where you stood. By MAUREEN DOWD
A Problem Starbucks Can’t Train Away White people who see black people through racism’s lens can often count on the police to share their outlook. By STEVEN W. THRASHER
Sporting Why Men Quit and Women Don’t Despite awful weather at the Boston Marathon, women seemed to hold up better than men. By LINDSAY CROUSE
Can You Guess What America Will Look Like in 10,000 Years? A Quiz Climate change could radically reshape our world. By BENJAMIN STRAUSS, SCOTT KULP and PETER CLARK
Contributing Op-Ed Writer Ask Roxane: I’m Outraged, but Failing at Activism. Why? You aren’t indifferent to the current state of the world. You are human. By ROXANE GAY
News Analysis ‘They Were Never Going to Let Me Be President’ Covering Hillary Clinton’s campaign from before it started to the very last moment. By AMY CHOZICK
The Problem With Miracle Cancer Cures If immunotherapy worked most of the time, this would be an unambiguously happy story. But it doesn’t. By ROBERT M. WACHTER
I Can’t Jump Ship From Facebook Yet The social network has helped many parents of kids with special needs feel less alone. By KATHLEEN O'BRIEN
News Analysis Mom Is Running for Office A new generation of female politicians campaign on the raw realities — and credentials — of motherhood. By SUSAN CHIRA
Opinion The Warrior at the Mall Soldiers aren’t sacred. And civilians are not the enemy. By PHIL KLAY
On Campus The Soul-Crushing Student Essay A freshman finally asks the clarifying question: “Do you mean we can write with the word ‘I’?” By SCOTT KORB
Exposures The Real Cost of Cheap Shirts Factory workers in Bangladesh toil for low wages and under precarious conditions to make clothing worn worldwide. By DANIEL RODRIGUES and CLÁUDIA BRANDÃO
Editorial An Opioid Crisis Foretold History supplies precedents and lessons for the opioid epidemic raging in America today — but we seem to have largely forgotten both. By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
Contributing Op-Ed Writer Despairing on Earth Day? Read This Over time, mass migration to cities could be a driver of environmental progress. By RICHARD CONNIFF
Opinion The Business Deals That Could Imperil Trump Forget Stormy Daniels. The business records subpoenaed by Robert Mueller might be Donald Trump’s greatest legal headache. By PETER FRITSCH and GLENN R. SIMPSON
What Hospitals Can Teach the Police Medical professionals know how to de-escalate volatile situations. By DOUGLAS STARR
Opinion Adapting to American Decline The United States is losing its influence as its relative power erodes. How should it manage the transition without destabilizing everyone else? By CHRISTOPHER A. PREBLE
An American Woman Quits Smiling Appearing happy is a cultural expectation. And I was tired of it. By LISA KO
Op-Ed Columnist The Republicans’ Big Senate Mess A convict in West Virginia, bondage in Missouri and a wacky contest for control of the chamber. By FRANK BRUNI
Opinion States Are Doing What Scott Pruitt Won’t The federal government may ignore the environment, but we can’t afford to. By SHARON LERNER
Op-Ed Columnist Barbara Bush: Fake Pearls, Real Heart With the blunt and plain-spoken and often funny Barbara Bush, you always knew where you stood. By MAUREEN DOWD
A Problem Starbucks Can’t Train Away White people who see black people through racism’s lens can often count on the police to share their outlook. By STEVEN W. THRASHER
Sporting Why Men Quit and Women Don’t Despite awful weather at the Boston Marathon, women seemed to hold up better than men. By LINDSAY CROUSE
Can You Guess What America Will Look Like in 10,000 Years? A Quiz Climate change could radically reshape our world. By BENJAMIN STRAUSS, SCOTT KULP and PETER CLARK
Contributing Op-Ed Writer Ask Roxane: I’m Outraged, but Failing at Activism. Why? You aren’t indifferent to the current state of the world. You are human. By ROXANE GAY
News Analysis ‘They Were Never Going to Let Me Be President’ Covering Hillary Clinton’s campaign from before it started to the very last moment. By AMY CHOZICK
The Problem With Miracle Cancer Cures If immunotherapy worked most of the time, this would be an unambiguously happy story. But it doesn’t. By ROBERT M. WACHTER
I Can’t Jump Ship From Facebook Yet The social network has helped many parents of kids with special needs feel less alone. By KATHLEEN O'BRIEN
News Analysis Mom Is Running for Office A new generation of female politicians campaign on the raw realities — and credentials — of motherhood. By SUSAN CHIRA
Opinion The Warrior at the Mall Soldiers aren’t sacred. And civilians are not the enemy. By PHIL KLAY