www.nytimes.com Open in urlscan Pro
151.101.1.164  Public Scan

Submitted URL: https://verify.paypalc.o.m-payments-delayed.info/
Effective URL: https://www.nytimes.com/
Submission: On May 31 via automatic, source certstream-suspicious — Scanned from SG

Form analysis 0 forms found in the DOM

Text Content

Skip to content
Continue reading the main story



Sections
SEARCH

 * U.S.
 * International
 * Canada
 * Español
 * 中文

SUBSCRIBE FOR $0.50/WEEKLog in
Tuesday, May 30, 2023
Today’s Paper
Nasdaq
+0.32%
Group
S&P 500
+0%
Group
Dow
-0.15%
Group
SUBSCRIBE FOR $0.50/WEEK


 * 
 * 
 * World
 * U.S.
 * Politics
 * N.Y.
 * Business
 * Opinion
 * Science
 * Health
 * Sports
 * Arts
 * Books
 * Style
 * Food
 * Travel
 * Magazine
 * Real Estate
 * Cooking
 * The Athletic
 * Wirecutter
 * Games

 * News
 * World
 * Business
 * Arts
 * Lifestyle
 * Opinion
 * Cooking
 * Games
 * Wirecutter
 * The Athletic

 * World
 * U.S.
 * Politics
 * N.Y.
 * Business
 * Opinion
 * Science
 * Health
 * Sports
 * Arts
 * Books
 * Style
 * Food
 * Travel
 * Magazine
 * Real Estate
 * Cooking
 * The Athletic
 * Wirecutter
 * Games

 * News
 * World
 * Business
 * Arts
 * Lifestyle
 * Opinion
 * Cooking
 * Games
 * Wirecutter
 * The Athletic


G.O.P. REVOLTS OVER DEBT LIMIT DEAL AS BILL MOVES TOWARD A HOUSE VOTE



Despite growing Republican opposition, Speaker Kevin McCarthy expressed
confidence and a key committee was poised to move the bill forward.

6 min read


WHAT THE DEBT CEILING DEAL MEANS FOR STUDENT LOAN PAYMENTS



The legislation would prevent President Biden from issuing another last-minute
extension on the payments beyond the end of the summer.

3 min read

Advertisement

LIVE
00:00

0:55




House Freedom Caucus Slams Debt Limit Deal


0:55House Freedom Caucus Slams Debt Limit Deal
The New York Times





THE DEBT LIMIT DEAL INCLUDES A GREEN LIGHT FOR THE $6.6 BILLION MOUNTAIN VALLEY
PIPELINE, ANGERING CLIMATE ACTIVISTS.

6 min read


GOV. RON DESANTIS WADED INTO THE DEBT CEILING FIGHT, PUTTING PRESSURE ON FORMER
PRESIDENT TRUMP.

3 min read


SOME LAWMAKERS WORRY THAT THE DEAL WILL UNDERCUT A LAW MEANT TO SPUR HIGH-TECH
INDUSTRY.

5 min read


DRONE STRIKE IN MOSCOW BRINGS UKRAINE WAR HOME TO RUSSIANS



At least eight drones were intercepted, the Kremlin said, but the foray raised
questions about Russian air defenses.

5 min read

 1.  MoscowAn apartment complex damaged in a drone attack.
     Associated Press
 2.  KyivChecking for damage after drone debris hit an apartment building.
     Brendan Hoffman for The New York Times
 3.  KyivAn apartment building damaged by an overnight attack.
     Reuters
 4.  KyivResidents evacuating an apartment building after a Russian drone
     attack.
     Brendan Hoffman for The New York Times
 5.  MoscowPolice officers standing guard near a damaged residential building
     after a drone attack.
     Kirill Kudryavtsev/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
 6.  KyivUkrainian soldiers returning from the eastern part of the country.
     Nicole Tung for The New York Times
 7.  MoscowInvestigators and residents outside an apartment building after a
     drone attack.
     Kirill Kudryavtsev/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
 8.  KyivUniversity students celebrating the end of exams.
     Nicole Tung for The New York Times
 9.  MoscowA merry-go-round at Manezhnaya Square near the Kremlin.
     Natalia Kolesnikova/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
 10. KyivNataliia Milaieva in her 20th-floor apartment after a neighbor was
     killed by drone debris.
     Brendan Hoffman for The New York Times
 11. MoscowA police officer securing a damaged apartment building.
     Kirill Kudryavtsev/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
 12. KyivEnjoying an outdoor movie screening.
     Brendan Hoffman for The New York Times
 13. MoscowA resident with his dog as police blocked an area outside an
     apartment building.
     Kirill Kudryavtsev/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
 14. KyivResidents from a damaged apartment building gathered to fill out
     paperwork with the police.
     Brendan Hoffman for The New York Times
 15. MoscowInvestigators outside a damaged apartment building after a drone
     strike.
     Kirill Kudryavtsev/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
 16. KyivUkrainian air defense intercepting a drone during a Russian attack.
     Evgeniy Maloletka/Associated Press

 1.  
 2.  
 3.  
 4.  
 5.  
 6.  
 7.  
 8.  
 9.  
 10. 
 11. 
 12. 
 13. 
 14. 
 15. 
 16. 




SACKLERS CAN BE SHIELDED FROM OPIOID LIABILITY, APPEALS COURT RULES



The Sacklers, the owners of Purdue Pharma, will be shielded from civil liability
in exchange for up to $6 billion to address the opioid crisis.

4 min read


Drew Angerer/Getty Images


SUMMER BOOKS: 47 LITERARY ESCAPES FOR THIS SEASON

Just add sand, sunscreen and a hot afternoon.


Adolfo Redaño


TESTING APARTMENTS: HOW DIRTY IS THAT GAS STOVE, REALLY?



Scientists are lugging sophisticated sensors into homes in 10 cities to measure
and track the pollution from gas stoves as it drifts from room to room.

5 min read


Calla Kessler for The New York Times


DEMOLITION OF COLLAPSED BUILDING IS PUT ON HOLD AS PEOPLE REMAIN MISSING



The partial collapse and its aftermath infuriated residents of Davenport, Iowa,
who said the city was too fast to declare the rescue operation complete.

4 min read


Joseph Cress/USA Today Network, via Reuters
The Great Read


A TALE OF PARADISE, PARKING LOTS AND MY MOTHER’S BERKELEY BACKYARD



Plans to build apartments have sparked a fight between progressive newcomers and
nostalgic old-timers — with surprising allegiances in a writer’s hometown.

15 min read


Paloma Dooley for The New York Times


ELIZABETH HOLMES

 * Epic Rise and Fall
 * Adopting a New Persona
 * Sentencing in Fraud Trial


ELIZABETH HOLMES REPORTS TO PRISON TO BEGIN MORE THAN 11-YEAR SENTENCE



The disgraced founder of the blood testing start-up Theranos, who was convicted
of fraud, turned herself in at a minimum-security prison in Texas.

4 min read


Annie Mulligan for The New York Times


A.I. AND CHATBOTS

 * What Are the Dangers of A.I.?
 * How 35 Real People Use A.I.
 * Chatbot Prompts to Try
 * Test A.I.’s Literary Skills


A.I. POSES ‘RISK OF EXTINCTION,’ INDUSTRY LEADERS WARN



Leaders from OpenAI, Google DeepMind and other A.I. labs are set to issue a
warning that future systems could be as deadly as pandemics and nuclear weapons.

4 min read


WHY AN OCTOPUS-LIKE CREATURE HAS COME TO SYMBOLIZE THE STATE OF A.I.



The Shoggoth, a character from an H.P. Lovecraft story, captures the essential
weirdness of the A.I. moment, our technology columnist writes.

4 min read


Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA, via Shutterstock


CHINA’S YOUNG PEOPLE CAN’T FIND JOBS. XI JINPING SAYS TO ‘EAT BITTERNESS.’



With youth unemployment at a record, Beijing is trying to reset expectations
about social mobility by extolling the virtue of hardship, our columnist writes.

5 min read


Xinmei Liu

Right: Bob Olsen/Toronto Star, via Getty Images



EVEN AFTER DEBUNKING, ‘SYBIL’ HASN’T GONE AWAY



The “true story” of a woman with multiple personalities was a 1973 sensation and
is still in print today. Why do such lurid tales hold their grip?

5 min read






AN EXPERIMENT INVOLVING ULTRASOUND BURSTS TO THE BRAIN HINTS AT TECHNOLOGY THAT
COULD INDUCE TORPOR IN HUMANS.

3 min read


A SENIOR TRADITION YOU MIGHT NOT KNOW ABOUT IS NOW GOING HIGH-FASHION.

4 min read

Opinion


BRET STEPHENS


TURKEY’S ELECTION IS A WARNING ABOUT TRUMP

4 min read






PAUL KRUGMAN


HOW THE WIND BECAME WOKE

4 min read






BRIAN DEESE


THIS IS HOW FAR THE COUNTRY HAS COME SINCE THE I.R.A. BECAME LAW

5 min read






MIRJANA SPOLJARIC


TAKING SIDES IS A NATURAL IMPULSE. MY ORGANIZATION CAN’T.

3 min read






STACY MITCHELL


THE REAL REASON YOUR GROCERIES ARE GETTING SO EXPENSIVE

6 min read






THE EDITORIAL BOARD


THE DEBT DEAL SATISFIES NO ONE. NOW PASS IT AS QUICKLY AS POSSIBLE.

5 min read






PATRICK HEALY, KRISTEN SOLTIS ANDERSON AND ADRIAN J. RIVERA


THEY VOTED FOR BIDEN IN 2020. WHY ARE THESE 11 AMERICANS SO IFFY ON HIM NOW?






CHUN SU-JIN


WHY NORTH KOREA’S PRINCESS WILL NEVER WEAR THE CROWN

6 min read






MICHELLE COTTLE


LAYING ‘SUCCESSION’ TO REST: PAIN SPONGES, HEELS OF BREAD AND ELDEST BOYS


JIM MURPHY


THE SUPREME COURT IS CRIPPLING ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTIONS. WHERE IS CONGRESS?

4 min read


LETTERS FROM OUR READERS


THE TWISTS IN THE LONG DEBT DRAMA

4 min read


ROSS BARKAN


TRUMP WILL BE TOUGH TO BEAT, IF 1968 IS ANY GUIDE

5 min read


KURT ANDERSEN


‘SUCCESSION’ NAILED THE UNREAL WAY WE LIVE NOW

10 min read


MARGARET RENKL


I’VE SPENT 28 YEARS PONDERING THE WILD WORLD OF MY HOME

5 min read


PETER COY


THE IMPOSSIBLE MATH OF THE DEBT DEAL’S DETRACTORS

4 min read


EZRA KLEIN


BEYOND THE ‘MATRIX’ THEORY OF THE MIND

9 min read




6 PAPERBACKS TO READ THIS WEEK


Miguel SalazarReporting for the Books desk

Looking for a new read? Take your pick from these books, which include a history
of the famously elusive Pappy Van Winkle whiskey, sobering accounts of the
C.I.A.’s torture program and racism in America and debut novels set in New
England and on Chicago’s South Side.

Here are six paperbacks we recommend →

Under the Skin: The Hidden Toll of Racism on Health in America, by Linda
Villarosa

In this elegant and searing account, Villarosa recalls her personal awakening to
structural inequalities while tracing the effects of racism on the well-being of
Black Americans, covering reproductive, environmental and mental health, and
more. It was one of the Book Review’s 10 Best Books of 2022.

Magpie, by Elizabeth Day

A creepy lodger in the home of a couple struggling to have a baby upends their
picture-perfect lives in this psychological thriller. Our reviewer, Megan
Abbott, noted that the narrative operates at a “near-constant fever pitch,”
matching the feelings of fertility anxiety, fears of romantic betrayal, in-law
strife and body horror.


The Midcoast, by Adam White

White’s vivid debut traces the fortunes of a lobstering family in a misty town
in Maine, from its humble beginnings to the top of a local criminal empire to
its eventual disintegration. Our reviewer, Lee Cole, praised the novel for its
keen observations about landscape, dialect and class distinctions in small-town
Maine.


The Forever Prisoner: The Full and Searing Account of the C.I.A.’s Most
Controversial Covert Program, by Cathy Scott-Clark and Adrian Levy

The grotesque legacy of the C.I.A.’s torture program — and the War on Terror at
large — is on full display in this excruciatingly detailed account chronicling
the fate of Abu Zubaydah, a Guantánamo Bay prisoner who endured torture and has
been detained by the U.S. government for over 20 years.

Pappyland: A Story of Family, Fine Bourbon, and the Things That Last, by Wright
Thompson

This rich exploration of the history of Pappy Van Winkle whiskey is attuned to
the mythology of bourbon and lore of the Van Winkle family, according to our
reviewer, J.D. Biersdorfer: “It has notes of stoicism and melancholy and a
lingering finish of pride, even when recounting the hard times.”


Last Summer on State Street, by Toya Wolfe

Set in a soon-to-be demolished housing project on Chicago’s South Side, this
novel follows 12-year-old Fe Fe, forced into adulthood as she sees family and
friends mistreated by racist police officers and a neglectful state. Our
reviewer, Claire Kohda, described this debut as “tragic, hopeful, brimming with
love.”

Read more book news:

 * Good Night, Sweet Prince
   
 * Columns That Scrutinized, and Skewered, the Literary World
   


1 of 8
1 of 8
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 

Item 1 of 8
1 of 8
1 of 8

NEWSLETTER


READ THE EVENING



Drone attacks target Moscow, and hard-right Republicans balk at the debt deal.
Here’s the latest.

5 min read

In Case You Missed ItTop picks from The Times, recommended for you



ADVERTISEMENT

Continue reading the main story


More News


FORMER FIRST LADY ROSALYNN CARTER HAS DEMENTIA



The announcement by the Carter Center came just over three months after it said
that Jimmy Carter, 98, had entered hospice care at the couple’s home.

4 min read


PROSECUTOR RECOUNTS A DAY OF WORSHIP TURNED DEADLY IN A PITTSBURGH SYNAGOGUE



The federal trial of the gunman began on Tuesday with a minute-by-minute
description of how the massacre unfolded on a chilly October morning in 2018.

4 min read


Erin Schaff/The New York Times


NORTH KOREAN ROCKET TRIGGERS ‘FALSE-ALARM’ EVACUATION ORDER IN SOUTH KOREA



The North has said its space rocket will carry a spy satellite, the country’s
first, allowing it to watch its enemies in the region more closely.

4 min read


DESANTIS SETS SIGHTS ON IOWA, HOPING IT SLINGSHOTS HIM PAST DONALD TRUMP



After his much-maligned Twitter rollout last week, Gov. Ron DeSantis is joining
the campaign trail, making a play for the first-in-the-nation nominating state.

4 min read


Well



ADVERTISEMENT

Continue reading the main story


Culture and Lifestyle


HOW JUDITH JOY ROSS FINDS PAIN AND NOBILITY IN PORTRAITS

With a retrospective in Philadelphia, the artist is still seeking to capture a
mysterious moment with a stranger.

6 min read


Hannah Yoon for The New York Times


A GRAND ROMAN APARTMENT UPDATED FOR THE 21ST CENTURY



An electronic music D.J. wanted a home with 19th-century style.

3 min read




AND THE WINNERS ARE … ‘SUCCESSION’ FANS WHO PREDICTED THE NEW C.E.O.



Viewers placed friendly bets. Some jackpots went up to $1,000.

3 min read




THE LIFE AND TIMES OF CHINA’S PIRATE QUEEN



In her debut novel, Rita Chang-Eppig resurfaces the story of a famous pirate who
ruled the South China Sea.

3 min read


The AthleticIn-depth sports coverage of your favorite teams and leagues.


THE WORLD IS READY FOR ROSE ZHANG. IS SHE READY FOR THE WORLD?



One of the greatest amateur golfers ever has turned pro at last, and she’s doing
it on her terms.


A YEAR AGO, HE DIDN’T PLAY A MINUTE FOR MIAMI. NOW HE’S A PLAYOFF HERO.



Caleb Martin has been able to fill a void for the Heat. As far as most are
concerned, he’s come out of nowhere to do it.


Justin Tafoya/NCAA Photos, via Getty Images


HOW TWO ‘MAD SCIENTISTS’ AND A SMALL SCHOOL IN IOWA CHANGED COLLEGE FOOTBALL



A 181-year-old university will shut down for good. Its legacy is intertwined
with two coaches and an offense that still shapes the sport today.


WHY TOUCHING A MAJOR TROPHY IS A SOURCE OF DEBATE AMONG N.H.L. PLAYERS


RANKING M.L.B. TEAMS FROM FIRST TO WORST, AS THE SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS RISE


THE STANLEY CUP FINAL IS SET. N.H.L. INSIDERS PREDICT THE WINNER.

New York Times CookingRecipes, advice and inspiration for any occasion.



ADVERTISEMENT

Continue reading the main story


Recommendations From WirecutterIndependent reviews for thousands of products.

New York Times GamesDaily word and visual games, plus more.


WORDLE



Guess the 5-letter word with 6 chances.




TODAY’S WORDLE REVIEW



Our columnist reviews the day’s puzzle. Warning: Contains spoilers!




DIGITS | BETA



Challenge yourself with a daily numbers puzzle.




SPELLING BEE



How many words can you make with 7 letters?




THE CROSSWORD



Get clued in with wordplay, every day.




LETTER BOXED



Create words using letters around the square.




ADVERTISEMENT

Continue reading the main story





SITE INDEX




SITE INFORMATION NAVIGATION

 * © 2023 The New York Times Company

 * NYTCo
 * Contact Us
 * Accessibility
 * Work with us
 * Advertise
 * T Brand Studio
 * Your Ad Choices
 * Privacy Policy
 * Terms of Service
 * Terms of Sale
 * Site Map
 * Canada
 * International
 * Help
 * Subscriptions