7. The pandemic mostly scuttled the 2020 fall TV season, but networks presented 16 new scripted series in the fall of 2019. How many are still on the air?
Last spring, more than a quarter of American students ended the school year still learning remotely, full time or part time. nyti.ms/39mpphn
First graders who were 4 when the pandemic began and missed kindergarten are arriving at school having never before stepped foot in a classroom. nyti.ms/2XJePyN
But this fall, the nation’s education system has roared back to life, in defiance of the alarming Delta variant surge. High school hallways are again packed with teenagers, masked and unmasked. nyti.ms/2XJePyN
When Iran's top nuclear scientist was assassinated there were conflicting reports about what happened, most of them wrong. nyti.ms/3hMhIFR
Some reports cited teams of assassins jumping out with machine guns, exploding trucks, a big gun battle with his bodyguards. The craziest was that the assassin was a killer robot. nyti.ms/3zmgkja
Now an exclusive New York Times report tells what really happened on a lonely country road in eastern Iran that day – how the operation was planned and the events leading up to it. nyti.ms/3zmgkja
The Empire State Building once symbolized an urban way of working and New York’s resilience. In the pandemic’s second year, that legacy, and the future of the world’s most famous skyscraper, is in doubt.
"It's always going to haunt me." Before Jan. 6, the Capitol seemed almost impenetrable — a symbol of a secure democracy. For many, it's now tinged with trauma, anger and sadness.
We spoke to people who were there during the riot. Here's what they said. nyti.ms/39dty7q
As the mob breached the Capitol, Alisa La, who was working as a close aide to Speaker Nancy Pelosi, barricaded herself with her colleagues in a room in Pelosi’s Capitol office suite, hiding in the dark as rioters loudly ransacked it. nyti.ms/3ErowT1
Before heading to the Senate chamber to vote against the challenge to Arizona’s election results, Senator Lisa Murkowski, Republican of Alaska, stopped in her "hideaway" office in the basement of the Capitol. nyti.ms/3ErowT1
It can be hard to remember, but at one point, flying was considered part of a vacation, not just the means to get to it. Today’s flying environment, 20 years after Sept. 11, can be boiled down to one overriding motivation: just get through it. nyti.ms/3z3xOAM
Airlines lost tens of billions of dollars in the years following the attacks, leading to cuts in staffing and customer comfort that are still around. Airline seats are narrower than ever, and average legroom has shrunk several inches. nyti.ms/3A6yK8O
Airports’ focus on security intensified. One architect said American airports feel “starved of resources” compared to those in Asia, for instance, where there’s a “generosity of space” to put passengers at ease. nyti.ms/3A6yK8O
Nearly 3,000 lives were lost in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, but countless others who were shaped by that day have died since.
On the 20th anniversary of 9/11, here are some of their stories. nyti.ms/3leh6tI
When the towers fell, most people streamed uptown. But Charles Cook, a retiree in Harlem, walked nearly 10 miles downtown to ground zero, where he dug through the rubble by hand in search of survivors.
He also helped in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.nyti.ms/3E2BFly
Marya Columbia responded to the attacks the only way she knew how: by playing music.
A violinist, she performed at St. Paul’s Chapel, an informal respite station for rescue workers located two blocks from where the towers had stood. nyti.ms/3BVsm4J