EditorialAn installation view of Josh Kline’s “Energy Drip,” 2013 at the Whitney Museum in New York on April 25, 2023. (Karsten Moran/The New York Times)
EditorialAn installation view of Josh Kline’s “Energy Drip,” 2013 at the Whitney Museum in New York on April 25, 2023. (Karsten Moran/The New York Times)
EditorialAn installation view of Josh Kline’s “Energy Drip,” 2013 at the Whitney Museum in New York on April 25, 2023. (Karsten Moran/The New York Times)
EditorialAn installation view of Josh Kline’s “Energy Drip,” 2013 at the Whitney Museum in New York on April 25, 2023. (Karsten Moran/The New York Times)
EditorialAn installation view of Josh Kline’s “Energy Drip,” 2013 at the Whitney Museum in New York on April 25, 2023. (Karsten Moran/The New York Times)
EditorialUkraine: A military hospital in the newly liberated city of Lyman is used as a stabilization point for wounded Ukrainian soldiers and civilians.
EditorialFran?ois Pétorin, a farmer, with his new drip irrigation system that will be connected to the reservoir in Saint-Saturnin-du-Bois, France, Nov. 8, 2022. (Andrea Mantovani/The New York Times)
EditorialRobert York, a forest ecologist with U.C. Berkeley, uses a drip torch to initiate a prescribed burn at the university’s Blodgett Forest Research Station in El Dorado County, Calif., on May 14, 2022. (Andri Tambunan/The New York Times)
EditorialMargarita Rivera, a Ph.D. student at U.C. Irvine, uses a drip torch during a prescribed burn at Blodgett Forest Research Station in Georgetown, Calif., May 14, 2022. (Andri Tambunan/The New York Times)
EditorialA Modoc National Forest firefighter uses a drip torch to ignite a prescribed burn in Alturas, Calif., on May 11, 2021. (Max Whittaker/The New York Times)
Editorial“In some ways this worldview has been vindicated — the work of science brought forth vaccines with startling rapidity, while vaccine resistance has led to many unnecessary deaths. In other ways, the Covid era has offered case studies in why so many people mistrust official science — like the drip-drip-drip of information that has taken the so-called lab-leak theory of Covid’s origins from censored conspiracy theory to plausible and mainstream hypothesis,” writes The New York Times columnist Ross Douthat. (Aidan Koch/The New York Times)
EditorialKasim Reed stands for a portrait in Atlanta on Sept. 16, 2021. The former Atlanta mayor who fell off the political map in 2018 amid scandal in his administration, has returned to the spotlight with an unlikely bid for a third term. (Nicole Craine/The New York Times)
EditorialA mascot uniform drip-dries at the stadium of the Somerset Patriots, a New York Yankees Class AA affiliate, in Bridgewater, N.J., Sept. 9, 2021. (Brian Fraser/The New York Times)
EditorialA drip irrigation pool, which uses less water than the traditional flood irrigation drawn from acequias, or irrigation canals, in Pecos, N.M., April 27, 2021. (Ramsay de Give/The New York Times)
EditorialJames Brogan, a Modoc National Forest fuels technician, ignited a prescribed burn with a drip torch on May 11, 2021, near Alturas, Calif. (Max Whittaker/The New York Times)
EditorialEllen Friedman, who runs the Compton Foundation, which decided in 2018 to spend all its assets within seven years, at her home in San Francisco, Jan. 16, 2020. (Bryan Meltz/The New York Times)