Sunday, May 30, 2021

Your Weekend Briefing

Memorial Day, Capitol Hill, French Open

Welcome to the Weekend Briefing. We're covering a more normal Memorial Day weekend, a surge in gun ownership and your summer reading list.

Robert F. Bukaty/Associated Press

1. The U.S. is heading into its second pandemic summer, but the mood is brightening.

For this Memorial Day weekend, parades and barbecues — canceled last year as the country was nearing 100,000 deaths from the coronavirus — are back on.

More than half of all adults in the U.S. have now been fully vaccinated. About 23,000 new infections are being reported daily, the lowest number in nearly a year. Travel is back, and so is congestion (which is making some traffic reporters very happy). If you're on the road this weekend, pack patience and sunblock. Above, on the road in Kennebunk, Maine.

While the pace of vaccinations in the U.S. has slowed, the nation is getting closer to President Biden's goal of vaccinating 70 percent of adults by July 4. The biggest gains in recent weeks have been made in vaccinating children who are 12 to 15 years old, according to a Times analysis.

But for many, the pandemic has left deep scars. In New York City, a teenage brother and sister were orphaned by Covid-19. They're rebuilding their lives, unearthing courage from sorrow.

Jason Andrew for The New York Times

2. Key questions about the Jan. 6 riot may never be answered now that congressional Republicans have blocked an independent inquiry.

The public may never know precisely what President Donald Trump and members of his administration did or said as a throng of his supporters stormed the Capitol while Congress met to formalize President Biden's victory; why security officials were so unprepared for the breach; or the extent of the role of Republican lawmakers in planning the "Stop the Steal" rally that turned into a deadly attack.

Instead, Republican senators moved to shift an unwelcome spotlight away from Trump and the complicity of many G.O.P. lawmakers in amplifying his false claims of widespread voter fraud. Republicans have argued that the existing investigations will address what happened. But they have strict limits.

Matthew Busch for The New York Times

3. Gun purchases surged during the pandemic — a fifth of them by first-time owners — and the pace hasn't slowed.

While gun sales have been climbing for decades, Americans have been on an unusual, prolonged buying spree fueled by the pandemic, the protests last summer and the fears they both stoked. A record 1.2 million background checks were conducted in a single week this spring.

In Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott is expected to sign a wide-ranging bill that would allow virtually anyone over the age of 21 to carry a handgun — no permit required. It's part of a string of Republican-led initiatives that the State Legislature has pushed through during its most conservative session in modern history. Next up: a voting bill that critics say will make Texas "the most difficult place to vote in the country."

4. A Russian-speaking gang has become the face of global cybercrime. We got an inside look.

The ransomware attack on Colonial Pipeline by the gang known as DarkSide cast a spotlight on a rapidly expanding criminal industry based primarily in Russia. Now, even small-time criminal syndicates and low-skilled hackers can pose a potential national security threat.

Ransomware is easily obtained off the shelf, and virtually anyone can load it into a compromised computer system using YouTube tutorials or with the help of groups like DarkSide. Customer support is included. A glimpse into DarkSide's secret communications reveals a criminal operation that is pulling in millions of dollars in ransom payments each month.

Peter DaSilva for The New York Times

5. Have you tried to buy a new house recently? Best of luck.

Tired of being cooped up, eager to take advantage of low interest rates and increasingly willing to move two or more hours from the urban core, buyers have propelled new home construction to its highest level since 2006. Home builders now risk losing business because they can't supply enough inventory.

In California, some residents have moved out of big cities in search of more space and lower prices, creating hot spots in the suburbs and the once-sleepy exurbs. Above, a new subdivision in Lathrop, Calif.

Our columnist explains how to win a bidding war before it even starts.

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Sarah M Vasquez for The New York Times

6. School officials ranked Dalee Sullivan third in her class. She disagreed and took her high school to court.

Sullivan, a recent graduate in Alpine, Texas, could not find an affordable lawyer, so she represented herself in court, arguing that school officials had made errors in tabulating grade-point averages. "I have all the facts," she said. "And no one knows it as well as I know it."

The judge ruled that the dispute needed to go through the school district's grievance process, and if Sullivan were not pleased with the outcome, the judge told her, she could come back to court.

Graduation season brings myriad advice during commencement remarks. Here are 14 excerpts from speeches around the country, from the founder of Reddit to Dr. Anthony Fauci.

Darko Vojinovic/Associated Press

7. The Big Three are all playing for history at the French Open.

Through a quirk in the sport's seeding system, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic, above, and Roger Federer are almost guaranteed to meet on the way to the men's final at Roland Garros. But at this singular moment in their careers, with Federer and Nadal tied at 20 Grand Slam wins each and Djokovic close behind with 18, only Djokovic is so intently focused on the numbers.

Here are some matches to watch in the first round. Naomi Osaka plays Patricia Maria Tig this morning. Osaka plans to skip news conferences during the tournament to keep focused and protect her mental health.

From Paris to Porto: At the Champions League final in Portugal, Chelsea beat Manchester City to pick up the biggest prize in European soccer.

Ryan Gillett

8. Summer is almost here. We've got books, movies and peach pie to help you enjoy it.

Nail-biting thrillers. An Antarctic ghost story. A trip to 19th-century England. Our editors and reviewers have picked 73 books for your summer reading list. And we've compiled a list of audio options, too, for your next road trip.

Perhaps you're missing the big-screen experience? "The excitement of being back, however tinged by free-floating nervousness, can't be downplayed," one devoted moviegoer writes. Here are some noteworthy films scheduled for release this summer.

And our Food reporters and editors are unanimous: The best time of year to cook and eat is summer, when cool smashed cucumbers break through the heat and you might eat one too many hot dogs (but it's summer, so who cares). They shared their dream summer recipes.

Darryl Cheng

9. Your snake plant and Pothos are not the only ones out of control.

After a long winter and spring, your plants could use a little love — or maybe a complete overhaul. Our garden expert talked to Darryl Cheng, better known as @houseplantjournal, about bringing new plants to life from old by finding the right light and propagation.

"There are lots of ways to succeed," Cheng said. "If you are the kind of person who can figure out how a system works, and then experiment within it, you can succeed."

If you're taking your houseplants outside for the summer, a gardening website recently ranked the best (and worst) cities in which to tend to your plants in the nude.

10. And finally, great reads for a long weekend.

Magic's greatest card trick. A 70-year-old cold case in Australia. The "talking" dog of TikTok. Enjoy these stories and more in The Weekender.

Our editors also suggest these 10 new books, DMX's posthumous all-star track and other new songs, the return of "Meerkat Manor," and the season finale of "Still Processing."

Did you follow the news this week? Test your knowledge. And here's the front page of our Sunday paper, the Sunday Review from Opinion and today's Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee. If you're in the mood to play more, find all our games here.

Hope you enjoy a leisurely week.

Your Weekend Briefing is published Sundays at 6:30 a.m. Eastern.

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Friday, May 28, 2021

The Morning: Fixing what highways destroyed

Plus a $116.5 million giveaway to vaccinated California residents

Good morning. Highways destroyed hundreds of urban neighborhoods. What's the solution?

The Santa Monica Freeway extends west from downtown Los Angeles through West Adams.Google Earth

The destruction of Sugar Hill

By the 1940s, the Los Angeles neighborhood of West Adams was turning into a thriving, racially integrated community.

Black residents were moving in, thanks in part to an early legal victory against the covenants that had restricted homeownership to white families. One of the residents involved in the case was Hattie McDaniel, the "Gone with the Wind" actor known for throwing parties at her West Adams house that drew stars like Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Clark Gable and Lena Horne. Eventually, the neighborhood came to be known as Sugar Hill, a tribute to the Harlem neighborhood of the same name.

But in the 1950s, the residents of Los Angeles's Sugar Hill began to hear alarming news: City planners were thinking about building a highway through the neighborhood. Local civil rights leaders pleaded with officials to choose a different route, without success. Soon, the Santa Monica Freeway — what would become the westernmost stretch of Interstate 10 — would destroy the old Sugar Hill.

Similar stories occurred hundreds of times across the country in the 1950s and '60s. Even as the nation's new highway system was fueling the long post-World War II economic boom, it was doing so at the expense of downtown communities. Those neighborhoods were disproportionately Black, and many have never recovered. There was a saying at the time: "white men's roads through Black men's homes."

As my colleague Nadja Popovich writes:

White Americans increasingly fled cities altogether, following newly built roads to the growing suburbs. But Black residents were largely barred from doing the same. Government policies denied them access to federally backed mortgages and private discrimination narrowed the options further.

In effect, that left many Black residents living along the highways' paths.

Shawn Dunwoody, a Rochester, N.Y., artist and community organizer, on the Union Street corridor, which replaced a highway built in the 1950s.Mustafa Hussain for The New York Times

Highway removal

Rochester, N.Y., is removing a downtown highway built in the 1950s and trying to stitch a neighborhood back together. Syracuse, N.Y.; Detroit; and New Haven, Conn., have committed to replacing stretches of highway with walkable neighborhoods. Residents in Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Denver, New Orleans, New York, Oakland and Seattle are asking city officials to do the same.

To support these efforts, President Biden's infrastructure proposal includes $20 billion that would help reconnect neighborhoods divided by highways. His transportation secretary, Pete Buttigieg, has called the issue a top priority for the department.

The future of the country's highway system is about much more than those neighborhoods, too. It will also affect public health and climate change. And the debate is happening at a fascinating moment: Many of the midcentury highways are reaching the end of their life span, and attitudes toward transportation are shifting.

The automobile remains the dominant way that Americans move around, and that will not change anytime soon. Mass transit is not a realistic option in less populated places. But it is realistic in cities, and more city residents and planners are starting to question whether they want major highways running through their neighborhoods.

One telling statistic comes from Michael Sivak of Sivak Applied Research: After decades of uninterrupted increases, the number of miles driven each year by the average American peaked in 2004.

"As recently as a decade ago," said Peter Norton, a University of Virginia historian, "every transportation problem was a problem to be solved with new roads." That's not always the case anymore.

On the same topic, Noah Smith of Bloomberg Opinion writes: "It's difficult to overstate the damage that we did to our cities by putting giant highways right through the middle of neighborhoods. But San Francisco has shown that highways can be taken out and relocated. We can fix what we broke."

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THE LATEST NEWS

Politics
International News
President Emmanuel Macron of France, center, at the Kigali Genocide Memorial in Rwanda yesterday.Jean Bizimana/Reuters
Other Big Stories
Opinions: Cyberdefense

After Colonial Pipeline, how can the U.S. prevent the next ransomware attack?

Centralize defenses. The government should help protect companies that control critical infrastructure, Sean Joyce, a former F.B.I. official, argues in The Washington Post.

Improve "security hygiene." Simpler steps, like multifactor authentication, can prevent many intrusions, The Verge's Justine Calma explains.

Ban cryptocurrency, which has been a boon to extortionist hackers, Lee Reiners argues in The Wall Street Journal. "It all has got to go," Business Insider's Linette Lopez writes.

Morning Reads

The ghost of Exit 8: Rather than surrender his land, a Vermont farmer burned himself and his farm. His legend lives on.

Modern Love: A lifetime of a mother's love in one cardboard box.

A Times classic: How New Yawkers tawk.

Lives Lived: Kay Tobin Lahusen and her longtime partner were at the forefront of the gay-rights movement, helping organize protests well before the Stonewall uprising. Lahusen died at 91.

ADVERTISEMENT

ARTS AND IDEAS

Knicks fans at Madison Square Garden this week.Pool photo by Elsa

The N.B.A. goes home

The N.B.A. playoffs have begun, and the games will be a big part of Memorial Day weekend for many people. Here are some major story lines:

Fans are back. Last year, the playoffs took place inside empty gyms at Walt Disney World. This year, vaccinated fans are packing arenas and bringing energy back to the games. (And a few are misbehaving.) It's a sign that the country is "sloughing off, however tentatively, the raw pain of the last year," Kurt Streeter writes in The Times.

New York is back. New York and Atlanta are basketball-mad cities whose teams have struggled for most of the 21st century. Now the Knicks and the Hawks — both with exciting young players — are tied at one game apiece in a first-round series. And the Knicks aren't even New York's best team: The star-filled Brooklyn Nets are.

Is LeBron back? The Los Angeles Lakers are the defending champions, but their stars — LeBron James and Anthony Davis — were hurt for much of this season. The team is the No. 7 seed (out of eight) in the Western Conference — a position from which no team has won a title.

Trust the process. The Philadelphia 76ers angered many fans by deliberately assembling a bad team for several seasons, which allowed them to draft top college players. The approach came to be known as "the process," and now it's paying off. Led by Joel Embiid — a dominant center with a sharp wit — the 76ers are the top seed in the Eastern Conference.

The next stars. Away from the big coastal markets, young stars have thrived this season, and one or more could define these playoffs. They include Devin Booker of the Phoenix Suns, Nikola Jokic of the Denver Nuggets, Ja Morant of the Memphis Grizzlies and Luka Doncic of the Dallas Mavericks.

PLAY, WATCH, EAT

What to Cook
Sam Kaplan for The New York Times

Watermelon granita: Minimal effort, refreshing results. If you're searching for Memorial Day recipes, we've got you covered.

What to Watch

Summer blockbusters are back. Find out how the latest "Fast and the Furious" film pulled off its mind-boggling stunts, how Emma Stone prepared for playing the villain in "Cruella," and about Colman Domingo's star turn in "Zola."

What to Listen to

A nun's reminder of mortality and more stories read aloud by the Times journalists who wrote them.

What to Read

"Shape" by the mathematician Jordan Ellenberg makes geometry entertaining. Really.

Take the News Quiz

This week's News Quiz is here. See how well you do compared with other Times readers.

Late Night
Now Time to Play

The pangram from yesterday's Spelling Bee was painful. Here is today's puzzle — or you can play online.

Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Lose one's hair (four letters).

If you're in the mood to play more, find all our games here.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. The Morning will be off for the holiday on Monday. See you Tuesday. — David

P.S. On Sunday, The Times will publish the final edition of "At Home," the print section created during the pandemic. On Tuesday, the Metro section will return.

There's no episode of "The Daily." Instead, listen to the new Times podcast "Day X," about an alleged plot to bring down the German government. On the Modern Love podcast, a meet cute at birth.

Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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