News
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Frederick P. Brooks Jr., Computer Design Innovator, Dies at 91
Frederick P. Brooks Jr., whose innovative work in computer design and software engineering helped shape the field of computer science,…
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The World Took a Bold, Toothless Step Forward on Climate Justice
The United Nations climate conference that concluded last weekend in Sharm el Sheikh, Egypt, did not appear, at the outset,…
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‘White Noise’ Review: Toxic Events, Airborne and Domestic
Late in “White Noise,” after the ecological disaster known as the “airborne toxic event,” on the heels of a professional…
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‘Devotion’ Review: An Airman in Reflection
“Devotion,” directed by J.D. Dillard, recounts the landmark career of Ensign Jesse L. Brown, the son of a Mississippi sharecropper…
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Pablo Eisenberg, Fierce Critic of Aloof Philanthropies, Dies at 90
Pablo Eisenberg was only 7 years old in 1939 when he boarded an American-bound liner with his parents and younger…
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A Nick Cave Survey With Plenty of Bells but No Whistles
In 1992, when Nick Cave made his first soundsuit, the ornate, full-body garments for which he is best known, it…
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Review: In ‘The Hours,’ Prima Donnas and Emotions Soar
“The Hours” — a new opera based on the 1998 novel and the 2002 film it inspired — features a…
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The Soaring Legacy of Pablo Milanés
Pablo Milanés, who died in Madrid this week at 79, left behind a body of work that was deeply personal…
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Black Can Be Even More Beautiful
To say “Black is beautiful” now, in certain areas of the country, is to state the obvious. In other places…
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‘The Swimmers’ Review: Overcoming the Greatest Challenges
In most movies, an emotional triumph at the Olympics would be the principal goal for a protagonist. In “The Swimmers,”…