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What do skiing and psychedelics have in common? A surprising analogy reveals how healing may begin in the brain.
Let’s call it: No extraterrestrial is winning the Tour de France. If Pogačar’s performance is approaching perfection, that seems pretty good.
LRT Capital spotlights Crown Castle’s bold fiber divestment to become the only public pure-play U.S. tower firm. See how this ...
Stellantis abandons hydrogen fuel cell development Fast filling times are seductive, but they don't compensate for H2's many drawbacks.
A man once held in the same jail cell as Jeffrey Epstein argued there is “just no way” the disgraced financier and convicted sex offender died by suicide in the cell in 2019. “I spent seven m… ...
Popular sugar substitute linked to brain cell damage and stroke risk Study suggests the sweetener erythritol, often recommended for people with obesity and diabetes, may come with health risks of ...
In what lawmakers say is the final phase-in of a cell phone ban, Ohio schools will now be required to have a policy limiting cell phone use in the classroom.
Scientists reveal how loss of a single enzyme, SDR42E1, rewires vitamin D processing and cell survival, opening new doors for cancer and metabolic therapies.
It's been five years since The Sands of Time Remake was announced, and four since Splinter Cell. We still haven't seen hide nor hair of either.
A version of this article appears in print on July 24, 2025, Section A, Page 19 of the New York edition with the headline: Video Taken by Migrant Shows Overcrowded Cell Where ICE Puts Detainees.