


HARPER’S MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘How Seniors Became America’s Ruling Class’…
Confronting America’s gerontocratic crisis by Samuel Moyn
Rehearsing for humanity’s future on Mars by Elena Saavedra Buckley
On love, shit, and parking by Kristin Dombek

TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT: The latest issue features ‘The many faces of Shakespeare’….
China, America and the danger of war By Philip Zelikow
Discovering exactly what Shakespeare owned By Lucy Munro
Blake Morrison’s guide to life writing By Joyce Carol Oates
Writing about others as a means to write about yourself By Catherine Taylor

President Trump told Fox Business that the war was “close to over.” Iran threatened to expand its influence over shipping routes if a U.S. blockade continued.
In a thinly veiled critique of President Trump and the war in Iran, Xi Jinping said the world could not risk reverting “to the law of the jungle.”
The vice president, who is Catholic, took issue with Pope Leo XIV’s statement that disciples of Christ never side with “those who once wielded the sword and today drop bombs.”

A look at the sights, sounds, and characters that put the University on the frontlines of history
Before his heroic death, General Joseph Warren was dubbed “the greatest incendiary in all of America.”
College students broke hearts and windows during their year in exile.
Darby Vassall, an enslaved child freed after the Battle of Bunker Hill, dedicated his life to fighting for liberty.

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Your Heart In Flames’ – A radical new take on Cardiovascular Disease could save lives…
Immune system overreactions may be the true culprit of cardiac illness—and lifesaving drugs can calm them down

Ship-tracking data showed that several vessels, including some that had been docked at Iranian ports, had moved through the strait as the U.S. military began its blockade.
As the war in Iran extends into its seventh week and a truce feels shaky, many Americans expressed bewilderment about a conflict that came with little warning.
Viktor Orban, the Hungarian prime minister, and his right-wing playbook were embraced by parts of the American right. Now some are worried by his defeat.

From the first day of his Presidency, Trump has posed an emergency to both his country and the world. By David Remnick
High-speed accidents, crooked lawyers, and poor people desperate for cash—it was the kind of scheme that could have been cooked up only in the Big Easy. By Patrick Radden Keefe
New scholarship reconsiders the apostle who turned a Jewish sect into a world religion—and whose legacy remains contested two millennia later.
By Adam Gopnik

The U.S. said it would block ships entering or exiting Iranian ports or coastal areas starting at 10 a.m. Eastern today.
The regime in Iran has not changed and the nuclear and missile threats have not been eliminated, leaving many Israelis to wonder what this was all for.
Pope Leo XIV said he was unafraid of the Trump administration, hours after President Trump lashed out at the pontiff on social media, calling him too liberal and “weak on crime.”
Prime Minister Viktor Orban has stymied the European Union for years. With the victory of Hungary’s opposition party, that could begin to change.
Viktor Orban’s pro-Moscow tilt cemented his reputation in Kyiv as a spoiler. Now, Ukraine hopes a 90-billion-euro loan he blocked will be disbursed.

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE: The 4.12.26 Issue features Katie Engelhart on people considered in vegetative states; C.J. Chivers on how Russian weaponized the cold in the war with Ukraine; Willy Staley on meme culture; and Coralie Kraft on MAHA teens; and more.
New research is upending what we thought about the consciousness of patients, leaving families with agonizing choices.
Inside one Kyiv neighborhood as it braved the harshest conditions since World War II. By C.J. Chivers
Disillusioned with doctors, they went on a search for answers. They found supplements and a lot of red meat. By Coralie Kraft
From our jokes and slang to the White House’s policy messaging, internet “brain rot” has escaped our phones to take over … well, everything. By Willy Staley