Married, Dating Other People and Happy Exploring trust, jealousy and desire with nonmonogamous couples. By LESLYE DAVIS, ALEXANDRA GARCIA and TAIGE JENSEN
What New Rules on Retirement Savings Mean for Investors Some answers to common questions about the Labor Department’s new rules. By TARA SIEGEL BERNARD
The 2016 Race If Cruz Keeps This Pace, Trump Won’t Get a Majority of Delegates Ted Cruz’s gains among moderate voters in Wisconsin could signal a turning point in the race. By NATE COHN
Essay Airports, Designed for Everyone but the Passenger As big-name architects create airports with ambitious goals in mind, it’s the smaller things — like comfy seating and adequate heating — that are missing. By CHRIS HOLBROOK
On Sports The Unbearable Whiteness of Baseball The sport is no longer America’s favorite pastime. Is it because of the rise of the N.B.A. and the N.F.L., or because of a racially coded obsession with “tradition”? By JAY CASPIAN KANG
Talk Michael Botticelli Is Not in Favor of Legalization The federal drug czar on how recovering from alcoholism taught him to reduce stigmas against addicts and focus on public-health strategies instead. Interview by ANA MARIE COX
Model in Gucci Ad Is Deemed ‘Unhealthily Thin’ by British Regulator The ruling by the Advertising Standards Authority fanned a perennial debate in the fashion industry about what constitutes underweight. By DAN BILEFSKY
Why Upperclassmen Lose Financial Aid After freshman year, grants and scholarships may disappear for any number of reasons — some justified, some not. By ROCHELLE SHARPE
‘American Amnesia,’ by Jacob S. Hacker and Paul Pierson Two political scientists say that Americans’ opinion of federal power has been manipulated and we’re now paying the price. By MATTHEW BISHOP
A Word With: Sterling K. Brown The Breakout Star of ‘The People v. O.J. Simpson’ on the Emotional Finale In Mr. Darden, one of the prosecutors in “The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story,” Mr. Brown has had a breakout role. By SCOTT TOBIAS
Rejected by Colleges, SAT and ACT Gain High School Acceptance Both testing companies have pushed into the market for federally required tests in public schools, offering them even to students who do not plan to go to college. By KATE ZERNIKE
New Jersey University Was Fake, but Visa Fraud Arrests Are Real Federal officials set up the University of Northern New Jersey, which had no real classes, to ensnare brokers who recruited foreigners trying to obtain student visas. By LIZ ROBBINS
Does My Family Own a Painting Looted by Nazis? I’ve spent four years researching an artwork that passed through Nazi hands and now hangs in a relative’s home. The more I dig, the more I find murk. By EVE M. KAHN
Air France Faces Backlash Over Veil Policy on Route to Iran The airline instructed female employees to wear conservative attire while working in Tehran, prompting a union to accuse the company of “an attack on women.” By LIAM STACK
ArtsBeat Museums Plan Exhibitions of Art From Gurlitt Collection The works owned by Cornelius Gurlitt, a reclusive collector whose father amassed the pieces as an art dealer in Nazi Germany, may be on display next winter in Bern, Switzerland, and Bonn, Germany. By ALISON SMALE
Indonesia’s Orangutans Suffer as Fires Rage and Businesses Grow The blazes, an annual occurrence where farmers clear land by burning it, often for palm oil plantations, have led to the relocation and even deaths of some of the apes. By JOE COCHRANE
What’s Driving Trump and Clinton Voters to the Polls Exit polls from the primaries and caucuses show which issues and presidential qualities voters value — or don’t value. By JON HUANG and KAREN YOURISH
Op-Docs ‘A Conversation With Asian-Americans on Race’ Asian-Americans confront stereotypes about their community. By GEETA GANDBHIR and MICHÈLE STEPHENSON
On the Runway Gucci Calls for End to Separation of the Sexes on the Runway The anchor brand of the Kering group will no longer hold different shows for men’s and women’s wear, but will combine them. By VANESSA FRIEDMAN
Op-Ed Contributor What Hulk Hogan’s Gawker Lawsuit Means for Our Privacy A tawdry trial about sex tapes and celebrity shows how we should rethink information in the digital age. By ROBERT LEVINE
Married, Dating Other People and Happy Exploring trust, jealousy and desire with nonmonogamous couples. By LESLYE DAVIS, ALEXANDRA GARCIA and TAIGE JENSEN
What New Rules on Retirement Savings Mean for Investors Some answers to common questions about the Labor Department’s new rules. By TARA SIEGEL BERNARD
The 2016 Race If Cruz Keeps This Pace, Trump Won’t Get a Majority of Delegates Ted Cruz’s gains among moderate voters in Wisconsin could signal a turning point in the race. By NATE COHN
Essay Airports, Designed for Everyone but the Passenger As big-name architects create airports with ambitious goals in mind, it’s the smaller things — like comfy seating and adequate heating — that are missing. By CHRIS HOLBROOK
On Sports The Unbearable Whiteness of Baseball The sport is no longer America’s favorite pastime. Is it because of the rise of the N.B.A. and the N.F.L., or because of a racially coded obsession with “tradition”? By JAY CASPIAN KANG
Talk Michael Botticelli Is Not in Favor of Legalization The federal drug czar on how recovering from alcoholism taught him to reduce stigmas against addicts and focus on public-health strategies instead. Interview by ANA MARIE COX
Model in Gucci Ad Is Deemed ‘Unhealthily Thin’ by British Regulator The ruling by the Advertising Standards Authority fanned a perennial debate in the fashion industry about what constitutes underweight. By DAN BILEFSKY
Why Upperclassmen Lose Financial Aid After freshman year, grants and scholarships may disappear for any number of reasons — some justified, some not. By ROCHELLE SHARPE
‘American Amnesia,’ by Jacob S. Hacker and Paul Pierson Two political scientists say that Americans’ opinion of federal power has been manipulated and we’re now paying the price. By MATTHEW BISHOP
A Word With: Sterling K. Brown The Breakout Star of ‘The People v. O.J. Simpson’ on the Emotional Finale In Mr. Darden, one of the prosecutors in “The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story,” Mr. Brown has had a breakout role. By SCOTT TOBIAS
Rejected by Colleges, SAT and ACT Gain High School Acceptance Both testing companies have pushed into the market for federally required tests in public schools, offering them even to students who do not plan to go to college. By KATE ZERNIKE
New Jersey University Was Fake, but Visa Fraud Arrests Are Real Federal officials set up the University of Northern New Jersey, which had no real classes, to ensnare brokers who recruited foreigners trying to obtain student visas. By LIZ ROBBINS
Does My Family Own a Painting Looted by Nazis? I’ve spent four years researching an artwork that passed through Nazi hands and now hangs in a relative’s home. The more I dig, the more I find murk. By EVE M. KAHN
Air France Faces Backlash Over Veil Policy on Route to Iran The airline instructed female employees to wear conservative attire while working in Tehran, prompting a union to accuse the company of “an attack on women.” By LIAM STACK
ArtsBeat Museums Plan Exhibitions of Art From Gurlitt Collection The works owned by Cornelius Gurlitt, a reclusive collector whose father amassed the pieces as an art dealer in Nazi Germany, may be on display next winter in Bern, Switzerland, and Bonn, Germany. By ALISON SMALE
Indonesia’s Orangutans Suffer as Fires Rage and Businesses Grow The blazes, an annual occurrence where farmers clear land by burning it, often for palm oil plantations, have led to the relocation and even deaths of some of the apes. By JOE COCHRANE
What’s Driving Trump and Clinton Voters to the Polls Exit polls from the primaries and caucuses show which issues and presidential qualities voters value — or don’t value. By JON HUANG and KAREN YOURISH
Op-Docs ‘A Conversation With Asian-Americans on Race’ Asian-Americans confront stereotypes about their community. By GEETA GANDBHIR and MICHÈLE STEPHENSON
On the Runway Gucci Calls for End to Separation of the Sexes on the Runway The anchor brand of the Kering group will no longer hold different shows for men’s and women’s wear, but will combine them. By VANESSA FRIEDMAN
Op-Ed Contributor What Hulk Hogan’s Gawker Lawsuit Means for Our Privacy A tawdry trial about sex tapes and celebrity shows how we should rethink information in the digital age. By ROBERT LEVINE