When They Warn of Rare Disorders, These Prenatal Tests Are Usually Wrong
| By Audra D. S. Burch, Stephanie Saul, Edgar Sandoval and Mitch Smith The highly contagious variant has already contributed to flight cancellations and staffing shortages. | | | By Sarah Kliff and Aatish Bhatia The false positives aren't mentioned in the brochures for these blood screenings, which are sold by some of the biggest labs in the country. | | | By Choe Sang-Hun After slow gains in women's rights, the country is facing a type of political correctness enforced by young men angry at feminists, saying they undermine opportunity. | | |
| Business By Sarah Lyall In our anger-filled age, when people need to shop or travel or cope with mild disappointment they're "devolving into children." | | | Opinion | The Editorial Board By The Editorial Board Though we yearn for peace and quiet, things in America are far from normal. | | |
| By The Associated Press Officials said they were searching for three people who were feared dead inside their homes after a devastating wildfire that scorched through two Colorado suburbs. | | | By The Associated Press In his first speech as mayor, Eric Adams expressed optimism about the city's pandemic recovery and encouraged vaccinations as a way back to public life. | | | By Reuters and The Associated Press Desmond M. Tutu, a powerful opponent of apartheid and Cape Town's first Black archbishop, was remembered in a modest ceremony scaled down further by pandemic restrictions. | | |
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