Category Archives: Newspapers

The New York Times – Tuesday, July 11, 2023

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Turkey Clears the Way for Sweden’s Entry to NATO on the Eve of Summit

NATO members will meet this week in Vilnius, Lithuania, a city with a long history of Russian and Soviet domination.

The announcement allows the military alliance to project unity, which is getting harder to sustain as the war in Ukraine goes on.

Flooding Closes Roads and Threatens Towns Through Much of Vermont

Flooding on Main Street in Londonderry, Vt., on Monday.

At least one person died as rain inundated New York’s Hudson Valley and the surrounding areas. In Vermont, rivers were expected to crest on Tuesday.

Putin Met With Mercenary Leaders He Had Called Traitors During Mutiny

The Kremlin’s disclosure of the meeting with Yevgeny V. Prigozhin and other Wagner group commanders hinted at the power they wield, but left many questions unanswered.

For a President and a King, the View From the Top Is Curiously Similar

Despite hints of tension between Washington and London, President Biden and King Charles III share interests and have faced comparable challenges, which might have helped smooth their meeting.

The New York Times – Monday, July 10, 2023

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China and the U.S., Still Adversaries, Are Talking. That’s a Start.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said at a news conference in Beijing that the United States and China would pursue more high-level communication despite “significant disagreements.”

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, after 10 hours of meetings with Chinese officials, said the two sides would pursue “more frequent communication” despite their deep differences.

Far-Right Parties Are Rising to Power Around Europe. Is Spain Next?

The president of the hard-right party Vox, Santiago Abascal, giving a speech at a recent rally in Barcelona, Spain.

As Spain prepares for elections, some liberal European politicians fear that the hard-right Vox party could become the first right-wing party since the Franco era to enter Spain’s national government.

The Case That Could Be Fox’s Next Dominion

Tucker Carlson, before he was sidelined by Fox, repeatedly endorsed a conspiracy theory about an Arizona man, who may sue for defamation. Legal experts say it would be a viable case.

It’s Toxic Slime Time on Florida’s Lake Okeechobee

Huge green blooms are threatening wildlife, pets, people and cities. And algae season is only getting started.

The New York Times – Sunday, July 9, 2023

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Trump and DeSantis Are Battling for Iowa Voters. And for Its Governor, Too.

Kim Reynolds and Ron DeSantis often banter with a degree of familiarity and friendship that Mr. DeSantis rarely flashes with other politicians.

Gov. Kim Reynolds has vowed to be neutral in 2024. But Donald Trump’s team views her as neutral in name only when it comes to Ron DeSantis and his wife.

Where Clarence Thomas Entered an Elite Circle and Opened a Door to the Court

The exclusive Horatio Alger Association brought the justice access to wealthy members and unreported V.I.P. treatment. He, in turn, offered another kind of access.

Americans Tried to Save Elephants in Zambia. Were They the Good Guys?

A visit to a remote conservation park reveals the long-term impact on villagers of a crusade by the novelist Delia Owens and her husband to protect animals from poachers.

Bucha Gets a Remake, but Pain Lingers Behind the Facade

More than a year after Ukrainian forces wrested back Bucha from Russian troops, the town is physically transformed. But so much remains unresolved.

The New York Times Book Review — July 9, 2023

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THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW – JULY 9, 2023: In Too Deep – Laura Trethewey’s “The Deepest Map” plumbs the new world of oceanic exploration, and its dangers; “Fancy Bear Goes Phishing”; Lorrie Moore’s New Novel; Read your way through L.A., and more…

In Too Deep

Laura Trethewey’s “The Deepest Map” explores the new world of oceanic exploration — and its dangers.

By Simon Winchester

In the past days, the world has been riveted by the story of the Titan submersible, which we now know imploded some 1,600 feet from the wreckage of the Titanic, killing all aboard. Beyond the human tragedy — and the macabre fact that James Cameron’s blockbuster is trending online — comes an opportunity for serious reflection.

From ‘Front-Page Girls’ to Newsroom Leaders

“Undaunted,” Brooke Kroeger’s new history of women in journalism, tracks the victories, setbacks and pathbreaking careers that have marked the decades-long fight for gender parity in the field.

This black-and-white photo shows 13 men and one woman in business attire seated around a long oval conference table in a corporate boardroom. On the table are several ashtrays, a couple of folded newspapers and, in front of each person, a sheet of paper. In addition, two men stand behind the seated group, on opposite sides of the table and in front of a wall decorated with a world map.
The New York Times editorial council, photographed in 1951.

By Jane Kamensky

Raise your hand if you’ve heard of Anne O’Hare McCormick. I hadn’t, and as the director of Radcliffe’s Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, which holds peerless collections documenting pioneers in print journalism, I could have, and definitely should have. Brooke Kroeger’s compendious and lively “Undaunted: How Women Changed American Journalism” introduced me to her.

If We Are What We Eat, We Don’t Know Who We Are

In “Ultra-Processed People,” Chris van Tulleken takes a close look at the franken-snacks that barely resemble what they’re imitating.

The New York Times – Saturday, July 8, 2023

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Biden Defends ‘Difficult’ Decision to Send Cluster Munitions to Ukraine

President Biden and his advisers had reservations about supplying cluster munitions to Ukraine, but then decided to provide them to the country.

With Ukraine burning through stockpiles of conventional artillery, President Biden concluded that he had little choice but to provide the weapons.

U.S. Raises Pressure on China to Combat Global Fentanyl Crisis

Plastic bags of fentanyl displayed at the Customs and Border Protection area at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago.

The Biden administration push comes after cooperation on halting the flow of the drug into the United States was derailed by wider geopolitical tensions.

Fight or Flight: Transgender Care Bans Leave Families and Doctors Scrambling

Laws in 20 states have left the fate of clinics in doubt and families with transgender children searching for medical care across state lines.17h ago

They Fell in Love in a Video Game. Now Both Are in Jail.

The barrier-breaking romance of a Pakistani woman and an Indian man has led to criminal charges and nationalist intrigue.

The New York Times – Friday, July 7, 2023

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Biden Weighs Giving Ukraine Weapons Banned by Many U.S. Allies

President Biden appeared on the verge of providing the munitions to Ukrainian forces.

Ukraine is seeking cluster munitions, which are known to cause grievous injuries to civilians, as its ammunition supply runs low.

U.S. Is Destroying the Last of Its Once-Vast Chemical Weapons Arsenal

Decades behind its initial schedule, the dangerous job of eliminating the world’s only remaining declared stockpile of lethal chemical munitions will be completed as soon as Friday.

New Federal Decisions Make Alzheimer’s Drug Leqembi Widely Accessible

The F.D.A. gave full approval to the drug, but added a black-box warning about safety risks. Medicare said it would cover most of the high cost.

How Tom Brady’s Crypto Ambitions Collided With Reality

The superstar quarterback is among the celebrities dealing with the fallout from the crypto crash. Others, like Taylor Swift, escaped.

The New York Times – Thursday, July 6, 2023

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Ruling Puts Social Media at Crossroads of Disinformation and Free Speech

The government’s actions at the heart of the case were intended largely as public health measures.

The case, which could alter how the government battles disinformation, is a flashpoint in a broader effort by conservatives to document what they contend is a liberal conspiracy to silence their views.

‘Dig, Dig, Dig’: A Russian Soldier’s Story

A soldier seen from the knees down, in uniform and boots, on a stained tiled floor.

An inmate hoped to start over with a clean slate by fighting in Ukraine. Instead, he was confronted by the drudgery of trench work and the terror of battle. “You’re going in as meat,” he said he was told.

The Surprising Striver in the World’s Space Business

With at least 140 registered space-tech start-ups, India stands to transform the planet’s connection to the final frontier.

China Took Her Husband. She Was Left to Uncover His Secret Cause.

He was brilliant, quirky and intensely private — and also, she now suspects, an anonymous dissident blogger who had won fame for years of evading the surveillance state.

The New York Times – Wednesday, July 5, 2023

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Putin, Xi and Modi Meet on Camera, but With No Signs of Greater Unity

A news broadcast in Beijing showed Xi Jinping and other participants of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization virtual summit on Tuesday.

At a virtual summit meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, the leaders of Russia, China and India each focused on their own driving issues.

Yellen’s China Visit Aims to Ease Tensions Amid Deep Divisions

Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen at a cabinet meeting with President Biden at the White House last month. Ms. Yellen begins a four-day trip to China on Thursday.

Mutual skepticism between the United States and China over a wide range of economic and security issues has festered in recent years.

Biden Sidesteps Any Notion That He’s a ‘Flaming Woke Warrior’

Despite his alliance with abortion-rights supporters and L.G.B.T.Q. advocates, the president has deftly avoided becoming enmeshed in battles over hotly contested social issues.

Federal Judge Limits Biden Officials’ Contacts With Social Media Sites

The order came in a lawsuit filed by the attorneys general of Missouri and Louisiana, who claim the administration is trying to silence its critics.

The New York Times – Tuesday, July 4, 2023

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Israel Launches Biggest Air Attack on West Bank in Nearly Two Decades

Palestinians run for cover during an Israeli raid in a densely populated area of the occupied West Bank.

Israel said it used drone-fired missiles and ground troops against militant targets in the Jenin refugee camp. The assault killed at least eight Palestinians, the Palestinian health ministry said.

American Cities Have a Conversion Problem, and It’s Not Just Offices

Piles of regulations, or “kludge,” and a culture of “no” are limiting the ability to turn building blocks into something new.

It’s Getting Hard to Stage a School Play Without Political Drama

At a time when lawmakers and parents are seeking to restrict what can and cannot be taught in classrooms, many teachers are seeing efforts to limit what can be staged in their auditoriums.

The Mystery That Ended Two Women’s World Cup Dreams

An assault case that rattled one of France’s best soccer teams remains unresolved despite a series of arrests. Its main characters have paid a heavy price.

The New York Times – Monday, July 3, 2023

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A Climate Laggard in America’s Industrial Heartland Has a Plan to Change, Fast

The silhouette of a person, back to the camera, with a fishing rod extended toward a river. A second rod is propped up on its own nearby. On the other side of the river is an industrial complex, with smokestacks, buildings and electrical towers.

Lawmakers in Michigan have long fought tough pollution controls. But the toll of flooding, lost crops and damage to the Great Lakes appears to be changing minds.

As 2024 Voting Battles Heat Up, North Carolina G.O.P. Presses Forward

North Carolina has grown increasingly competitive in recent elections. Donald J. Trump won the state by just over a percentage point in 2020.

Republicans, whose edge in the state has narrowed in recent years, have gone on offense politically, leading to clashes over voting access and control over elections.

Cracking Down on Dissent, Russia Seeds a Surveillance Supply Chain

An illustration shows, on the left, an image of Vladimir Putin’s face on a red background and, on the right, a hand holding a mobile phone.

Russia is incubating a cottage industry of new digital surveillance tools to suppress domestic opposition to the war in Ukraine. The tech may also be sold overseas.

A Rubik’s Cube, Thick Socks and Giddy Anticipation: The Last Hours of the Titan

Five voyagers climbed into the Titan submersible in hopes of joining the select few who have seen the wreck of the Titanic up close. But within hours, their text messages stopped coming.