
Jonathan Wolfe
Reporter at The New York Times
Reporter @nytimes. Read me in our Virus Briefing newsletter. Write me at [email protected].
Articles
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3 days ago |
nytimes.com | Jonathan Wolfe
Francis was a deeply religious child in Buenos Aires. The first pontiff from Latin America tried to create a more welcoming church. 1936Pope Francis was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio on Dec. 17, 1936, in Buenos Aires. His parents were immigrants from Italy, and he was the eldest of five siblings. As a boy, he was intelligent, deeply religious and loved to dance the tango.
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6 days ago |
nytimes.com | Jonathan Wolfe
President Trump said on Thursday that the shooting at Florida State University in Tallahassee that killed two people and injured six was a "shame," but suggested that it would not prompt him to support any new gun control legislation. "These things are terrible, but the gun doesn't do the shooting - the people do," Mr. Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. "It's, you know, a phrase that's used probably too often.
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6 days ago |
nytimes.com | Jonathan Wolfe
Noise complaints led the authorities to halt street performances in Leicester Square. Some miss the music, others found the noise "bloody annoying." For generations, street musicians have provided the soundtrack for Leicester Square, a tourist hub in London's West End, where the likes of Rod Stewart and George Michael busked before becoming superstars. Now the city is changing its tune.
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1 week ago |
nytimes.com | Jonathan Wolfe
"They knew his name," Mr. Hall said. The men then pushed Ms. Sullivan to the ground, grabbed Mr. Sullivan and took off with him in his vehicle, Mr. Hall said. His vehicle was found abandoned a few hours later. After his abduction, Mr. Sullivan's kidnappers made a ransom demand, Mr. Fumba said, but he declined to give details because he said the case was still under investigation.
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1 week ago |
nytimes.com | Jonathan Wolfe
The response from the elephants was a defensive position known as " bunching," and is a typical reaction to threats, said Joyce Poole, a conservation biologist with a doctorate in elephant behavior from Cambridge University. "They feel more secure when they are close together," she said. When bunched, elephants often have their tusks pointed out, ears extended, eyes opened wide and trunks out, trying to smell potential threats.
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