Author: News Room

When Is Neurodiversity an Excuse for Rudeness?

Pay Parity, at Last?During my annual evaluation last week, my boss admitted that two senior managers, including myself, have been paid less for years than our peers with similar experience and backgrounds. I’ve been with the company for 12 years, starting as a junior manager and working my way up to a senior role for most of the past nine years.I feel gutted knowing that, despite my hard work and consistently stellar reviews, I’ve been underpaid for so long.My former boss, who swapped roles with my current boss and is now our vice, is likely responsible for this, but my…

Read More
38 Injured After ‘Unexpected Aircraft Movement’ on a United Flight

Thirty-eight people were injured on a United Airlines flight that was headed this week to Washington, D.C., from Lagos, Nigeria, officials in Nigeria said, after the plane experienced what the airline described as “a technical issue and an unexpected aircraft movement.”Six people were treated at a hospital for their injuries, the Nigerian authorities and the airline said.United described the injuries to the six people as “minor,” though the Nigerian authorities described them as “serious.” The Nigerian authorities also said 32 others on the flight had minor injuries.Video and images on social media show the distress and disarray on the plane,…

Read More
Financial Advice on Social Media Is Growing. And Risky.

Amy Ryan was panicking about her savings when she went online for advice. It was April 2020, and the stock market had plunged, draining a nest egg that she had built up over the years.Ms. Ryan, a 43-year-old sales engineer from Wales, had dumped her portfolio in the crash and was afraid of losing even more. Looking for guidance, she found Kevin Paffrath, a prolific finance influencer who discussed the economy and investing on his Meet Kevin YouTube channel.“At the time, I was not really well educated in buying and selling shares,” she said, adding that she felt reassured that…

Read More
Should Sports be a College Major? Some, including Nike, Say Yes

For decades, a small but passionate group of academics has offered a potential balm for the fraught relationship between athletics and education at major universities: Allow students to major in sports.One such educator is David Hollander, a clinical professor at New York University’s School of Professional Studies. He has spent years espousing the intellectual value of basketball — positionless play, he says, can teach entrepreneurial thinking, and fast breaks can teach interpersonal communication. Mr. Hollander lobbied for the Catholic Church to name a patron saint of basketball (it did) and helped convince the United Nations to declare Dec. 21 World…

Read More
As Trump’s Immigration Crackdown Looms, Restaurants’ Undocumented Workers Fear the Worst

As the Trump administration rolls out its changes to the immigration system, fear is surging in the food-service industry as it braces itself for a promised crackdown on unauthorized workers.Immigrant labor, both authorized and unauthorized, is integral to the staffing and running of restaurants in the United States. In a 2024 data brief, the National Restaurant Association reported that 21 percent of restaurant workers in the United States were immigrants. That figure does not include unauthorized workers, however; the Center for Migration Studies has estimated they number an additional one million employees.Under the new administration, proprietors and workers are preparing…

Read More
Inside the  Billion Industry Transforming Marijuana

An email obtained by The Times shows that one committee leader, Representative Sharon Wylie, a supporter of the industry, shared a draft of the bill with a cannabis lobbyist. “Thank you for being open to the compromise approach,” she wrote.In an interview, Ms. Wylie said that “the jury’s still out” on the potential harms of cannabis, and that regulated business brings revenue to the state.Ms. Davis is not giving up. She plans to introduce legislation to another committee this month that would prohibit all concentrates exceeding 35 percent THC, with exemptions for medical use.“The industry needs limits,” she said.METHODOLOGYThe New…

Read More
The Surveillance Tools That Could Power Trump’s Immigration Crackdown

Apps and ankle monitors that track asylum seekers in real time wherever they go. Databases packed with personal information like fingerprints and faces. Investigative tools that can break into locked phones and search through gigabytes of emails, text messages and other files.These are pieces of a technology arsenal available to President Trump as he aims to crack down on illegal immigration and carry out the largest deportation operation in American history. To do so, his administration can tap a stockpile of tools built up by Democrats and Republicans that is nearly unmatched in the Western world, according to an analysis…

Read More
Crafting a Haggis for American Tastes (and Import Restrictions)

When Scottish Americans and Scottish expats sit down on Saturday night to celebrate the birthday of the 18th-century poet Robert Burns, the traditional haggis will probably not be up to purist standards.Haggis, the savory Scottish dish of boiled sheep innards, oatmeal and spices, can be a real haggis, many argue, only if it includes a key ingredient: sheep lung, which is used in the stuffing. In the United States, which bans imports of haggis with sheep lung, some Americans of Scottish heritage have turned to the black market to get their hands on the real thing.Now Macsween, one of the…

Read More
The Cheat Sheet on Trump’s First Week

During his first week in office, President Trump issued a barrage of executive orders, signing sweeping directives on immigration, D.E.I., energy policy, trade, TikTok and more. The blizzard of activity — some of which is bound to be challenged in court — was overwhelming. Here’s our cheat sheet.Tariffs and the economyPresident Trump had long threatened to enact tariffs on Day 1 in office. Five days and dozens of executive orders later, there’s surprisingly little to show.The good news: That’s delighted market watchers. The S&P 500 hit a fresh record this week, bolstered by a slew of solid corporate earnings, and…

Read More
Barry Sternlicht Is Bringing Back the Starwood Hotel Brand

Barry Sternlicht made a fortune building Starwood Hotels and Resorts, which birthed successful brands like W Hotels, into a giant of the travel industry.Now he wants to do it all again — under the Starwood name.Mr. Sternlicht is resurrecting the Starwood Hotels brand starting in February, nine years after the previous company was sold to Marriott in a $13 billion deal that created the biggest hotel chain in the world. His current hotel company, SH Hotels & Resorts, will take on the Starwood name.The move is a sign that Mr. Sternlicht, 64, wants to reassert himself as a force in…

Read More