Tag Archives: The New York Times

The New York Times — Friday, September 1, 2023

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Justice Thomas Reports Private Trips With Harlan Crow

Justice Clarence Thomas had requested a 90-day extension for his financial disclosures.

Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr. had asked for extensions on their annual forms that show travel, gifts and other financial information.

Proud Boys Lieutenant Sentenced to 17 Years in Jan. 6 Sedition Case

Joseph Biggs, front left, was among those who marched to the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

The penalty for Joseph Biggs is the second longest in more than 1,100 criminal cases stemming from the Capitol attack. Another Proud Boys leader was sentenced to 15 years.

Scorching Heat Is Contributing to Migrant Deaths

Amid a relentless heat wave, some migrants are succumbing to heat exhaustion. More than 500 people have died of various causes this year while trying to cross from Mexico.

At Refuge for Desperate Families, Deadly Fire Was ‘Waiting to Happen’

Johannesburg, with a severe shortage of affordable housing, has hundreds of illegally occupied derelict buildings that officials and housing advocates say have become firetraps.

The New York Times — Thursday, August 31, 2023

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Idalia Brings Surge of Seawater, but Less Damage Than Feared

Damage from Idalia in Horseshoe Beach, Fla., on Wednesday.

The storm, which made landfall in a sparsely populated area, wrecked homes and businesses but was not as fierce as Hurricane Ian last year, which was responsible for 150 deaths.

Decades After Dictatorship, Chile Mounts Search for Hundreds Who Vanished

A commemoration in Santiago, Chile, in July for Chileans who were detained or went missing during the Pinochet dictatorship.

President Gabriel Boric authorized a new national search plan ahead of the 50th anniversary of the coup that toppled the government and led to the disappearance and killing of thousands.

The Fight to Control Big Gay Ice Cream, Which Made the Rainbow Its Brand

A company that rode to success with an inclusive message has shrunk to a single store, as a founder sues a partner he accuses of mismanagement and fraud.

Inflation Has Been Easing Fast, but Wild Cards Lie Ahead

Will inflation continue to slow at a solid pace? Economists are warily watching a few key areas, like housing and cars.

The New York Times — Wednesday, Aug 30, 2023

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U.S. Announces First Drugs Picked for Medicare Price Negotiations

President Biden assailed the pharmaceutical industry over the cost of drugs, saying, “We’re going to keep standing up to Big Pharma, and we’re not going to back down.”

The price negotiation program, established by Democrats as part of the Inflation Reduction Act, is projected to save the government tens of billions of dollars in the coming years.

A.I. Brings the Robot Wingman to Aerial Combat

The Air Force’s pilotless XQ-58A Valkyrie experimental aircraft is run by artificial intelligence.

An Air Force program shows how the Pentagon is starting to embrace the potential of a rapidly emerging technology, with far-reaching implications for war-fighting tactics, military culture and the defense industry.

China’s Economic Outlook: Pep Talks Up Top, Gloom on the Ground

Beijing has characterized concerns about the economic slowdown as being inflated by Western critics. Widespread anxiety and pessimism paint a different picture.

After Losing Their Homes, Lahaina Parents Try to Save Their School Community

Nearly 60 percent of Lahaina students haven’t enrolled in classes after the deadly fire, and families are yearning to rebuild their school network for educational and emotional support.

The New York Times — Tuesday, August 29, 2023

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Not Over Yet: Late-Summer Covid Wave Brings Warning of More to Come

A wave of Covid-19 outbreaks is raising fears about more infections in the fall and winter.

Hospitalizations are still low but have been rising in recent weeks, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Judge Sets Trial Date in March for Trump’s Federal Election Case

Former President Donald J. Trump in Atlanta last week.

Judge Tanya S. Chutkan rejected efforts by the former president’s legal team to postpone the trial until 2026.

To Escape the Heat in Dubai, Head to the Beach at Midnight

In a city where weather that would constitute a deadly heat wave in Europe is just a typical summer day, official “night beaches” have become a popular way to cool down.

A Forced Kiss, and a Reckoning With Sexism in Spain

The nonconsensual kiss that Luis Rubiales, the president of Spain’s soccer federation, pressed on Jennifer Hermoso has come to embody the generational fault line between a culture of machismo and more recent progressivism.

The New York Times — Monday, August 28, 2023

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Trump and His Co-Defendants in Georgia Are Already at Odds

The Fulton County Courthouse in Georgia this month.

Some defendants have already sought to move the case to federal court, while others are seeking speedy or separate trials.

Leaderless and Exposed, Russia’s Wagner Faces an Uncertain Future

People in Moscow paid their respects this weekend at a makeshift memorial for Yevgeny Prigozhin, head of the Wagner mercenary group, and others killed last week.

It could be hard for the Kremlin to find a way to neutralize the mercenary group after Yevgeny Prigozhin’s death while retaining its fighting power and geopolitical links.

An Inside Look at Covid’s Lasting Damage to the Lungs

President of Powerful Realtors Group Is Accused of Sexual Harassment

An employee described a “culture of fear” at the National Association of Realtors, a powerful nonprofit that controls access to nearly every U.S. home listing.

The New York Times — Sunday, August 27, 2023

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Covid Closed the Nation’s Schools. Cleaner Air Can Keep Them Open.

An open window in a classroom at East High, one of Denver’s oldest public schools. A coronavirus outbreak that began in November 2021 sickened more than 500 students, and one staff member died.

Scientists and educators are searching for ways to improve air quality in the nation’s often dilapidated school buildings.

Ukraine Is Still Grappling With the Battlefield Prigozhin Left Behind

A makeshift memorial for Yevgeny V. Prigozhin in Saint Petersburg, Russia, on Friday.

He shored up Russian forces at their most vulnerable and drew Ukraine into a costly fight for Bakhmut, giving Moscow time to build defenses that are slowing Ukraine’s counteroffensive.

In Push to Modernize Cairo, Cultural Gems and Green Spaces Razed

The Egyptian government has demolished historic tombs, cultural centers, artisan workshops and gardens in pursuit of large-scale urban renewal.

Bob Barker, Longtime Host of ‘The Price Is Right,’ Dies at 99

The winner of numerous Emmy Awards, he was almost as well known for his advocacy of animal rights as he was for his half a century as a daytime television fixture.

The New York Times — Saturday, August 26, 2023

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A Crisis of Confidence Is Gripping China’s Economy

A partly constructed amusement park, part of Country Garden’s Ten Mile Bay project in Nantong, China.

China’s economy, which once seemed unstoppable, is plagued by a series of problems, and a growing lack of faith in the future is verging on despair.

With Prigozhin’s Death, Putin Projects a Message of Power

President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia during a ceremony on the anniversary of the Battle of Kursk on Wednesday. Mr. Putin has been eager to convey his dominance in the wake of the Wagner rebellion.

The Kremlin appears to be sending the signal that no degree of effectiveness can protect someone from punishment for disloyalty.

Among the 388 Listed as Missing in Maui: Survivors Lost in the Paperwork

Hawaii officials released their first list of missing people, prompting friends — and even some of those named — to come forward with their whereabouts.

Judge Allows Missouri’s Ban on Youth Gender Medicine to Take Effect

A state judge in Missouri on Friday denied a request to temporarily block a state law passed this year that restricts gender-related medical treatments for minors. The ruling was issued by Missouri Circuit Court Judge Steven Ohmer, three days before the ban is set to go into effect. A legal challenge to the ban brought by civil rights groups is ongoing.

The New York Times Book Review – August 27, 2023

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THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW (August 27, 2023) The new issue features: James McBride’s Latest Is a Murder Mystery Inside a Great American Novel; The First Chinese American Movie Star and the Cost of Glittering Fame, and more…

James McBride’s Latest Is a Murder Mystery Inside a Great American Novel

“The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store” opens with the discovery of a skeleton in a well, and then flashes back to explore its connection to a town’s Black, Jewish and immigrant history.

By Danez Smith

A few weeks ago, around the same time I was working on this review, I visited the Guggenheim with my fiancé. The exhibition on display as we trekked up the museum’s famous spiral was “Measuring Infinity,” a marvelous retrospective on the work of the great Venezuelan artist Gego. A German Jew who fled Nazi persecution in Europe, Gego arrived in Venezuela in 1939 and went on to become one of the most important artists to emerge from Latin America in the 20th century. Her work speaks to a deep curiosity about the interrelation of shapes, things and the dimensions created by those relationships.

The First Chinese American Movie Star and the Cost of Glittering Fame

This is a black-and-white photograph of the actress Anna May Wong. She is wearing a heavily embroidered dress and looking down, with her chin resting on one of her hands. She has blunt-cut bangs, and the rest of her hair is hidden by a giant scarf wrapped over her head.

A new biography of Anna May Wong, “Daughter of the Dragon,” is intended as a form of reclamation and subversion.


By Jennifer Szalai

It was, according to the film historian Kevin Brownlow, “one of the most racist films ever made in America.” “Old San Francisco” (1927) featured a white actor playing a Chinese villain passing as a white man (got that?) who plans to sell an innocent white girl into white slavery until he is conveniently crushed by an earthquake. Before his grisly end he is aided in his nefarious scheme by an Asian character identified only as “a flower of the Orient,” played by an ingénue named Anna May Wong.

Views: The New York Times Magazine – August 27, 2023

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THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE (August 27, 2023) – In this week’s cover story, Jen Percy reports on what people misunderstand about rape. Plus, the case that could unravel an art dynasty and a Harvard professor who is also an alien hunter.

What People Misunderstand About Rape

A photo illustration of a woman in a black-and-white collage.

Sexual assault often goes unpunished when victims fail to fight back. But investigators, psychologists and biologists all describe freezing as an involuntary response to trauma.

By Jen Percy

There’s a lingua franca that women use, a repeated vocabulary to describe what they experience and think during a sexual assault. Variations of “freezing” are often part of that vocabulary. But the word has so many referents in its colloquial usage that it’s hard to know precisely what it means to each person saying it.

“I just absolutely froze,” Brooke Shields said in the documentary “Pretty Baby,” describing how she felt when being raped. “And I just thought, Stay alive and get out.”

The Inheritance Case That Could Unravel an Art Dynasty

How a widow’s legal fight against the Wildenstein family of France has threatened their storied collection — and revealed the underbelly of the global art market.

By Rachel Corbett

Twenty years ago, a glamorous platinum-blond widow arrived at the Paris law office of Claude Dumont Beghi in tears. Someone was trying to take her horses — her “babies” — away, and she needed a lawyer to stop them.

The New York Times — Friday, August 25, 2023

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Trump Surrenders at Atlanta Jail in Georgia Election Interference Case

Former President Donald J. Trump as he arrived in Atlanta on Thursday.

Mr. Trump spent about 20 minutes at the jail, getting fingerprinted and having his mug shot taken for the first time in the four criminal cases he has faced this year.

Blast Likely Downed Jet and Killed Prigozhin, U.S. Officials Say

Part of a crashed private jet near the village of Kuzhenkino, Russia, on Thursday.

The officials stressed that multiple theories about what brought down a plane in Russia were still being explored. President Putin acknowledged the incident and spoke about Yevgeny Prigozhin in the past tense.

At First Debate, a Glimpse of Trumpism Without Trump

At times onstage, Republican rivals could imagine the primary race was about issues, ideology and biography. Then reality set in.

‘Let Them Work’: N.Y. Governor Pushes Biden to Speed Up Migrant Permits

In a shift in tone, Gov. Kathy Hochul criticized the White House for failing to help the state deal with the continuing influx of migrants into New York.