Starting next year, girls can decide whether to become a Girl Scout or a Boy Scout. But a handful of girls — kind of secretly — have already made that decision. How one 10-year-old girl got a head start into joining a boys-only club. And why her twin sister decided to stay with the girls. Guests: Elsa Moock, who joined the Boy Scouts last year, her twin sister, Clio, and their father, Alastair. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.
The Mother Who Changed: A Story of Dementia
The Hybrid Worker Malaise
Why the G.O.P. Nomination Fight Is Now (All But) Over
The Shadowy Story of Oppenheimer and Congress
The Rules of War
The Sunday Read: ‘Podcasters Took Up Her Sister’s Murder Investigation. Then They Turned on Her’
The Fishermen Who Could End Federal Regulation as We Know It
What the Houthis Really Want
The Messy Fight Over the SAT
Trump’s Domination and the Battle for No. 2 in Iowa
The Sunday Read: ‘How an Ordinary Football Game Turns Into the Most Spectacular Thing on TV’
In Iowa, Two Friends Debate DeSantis vs. Trump
The Threat of a Wider War in the Middle East
Trump’s Case for Total Immunity
The Afterlife of a Gun
The Wild World of Money in College Football
The Sunday Read: ‘Ghosts on the Glacier’
A Confusing New World for College Applicants
Why Are So Many More Pedestrians Dying in the U.S.?
Biden’s 2024 Playbook
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