Interesting, but many modern websites are quite hostile to such access. This was the first story when I checked it a few seconds ago:
> 35153534: U.S. Is Said to Open Investigation Into Silicon Valley Bank Collapse
> Summary:
> Please enable JS and disable your ad blocker to see this article. Use the weekly Newsquiz to test your knowledge of stories you saw on CNN.com. Today's Daily Discussion includes questions and answers about CNN's coverage of this week's featured news stories. Click here for the questions and Answers section of the post. Back to the page you came from with the newsquiz. You must be logged in to view the page.
> 35153620: The Dawn of Rigour in the Art of Programming
> Summary:
> Donald Knuth is Professor Emeritus of The Art of Computer Programming at Stanford University. Indranath Sengupta and Sudhir Rao engage him in a wide-ranging conversation, starting from his earliest days to the present. Knuthâs own contributions to the world of computing too, have similarly been hailed by experts as seminal and path-breaking, and have stood the stringent test of time. It is perhaps not surprising that computer scientists are the major beneficiaries of mathematical rigour.
Yes.
Usually it requires more scraping strategies for proprietary websites like paid news sites. But for general articles where <p> is used it usually works good.
> 35153534: U.S. Is Said to Open Investigation Into Silicon Valley Bank Collapse
> Summary:
> Please enable JS and disable your ad blocker to see this article. Use the weekly Newsquiz to test your knowledge of stories you saw on CNN.com. Today's Daily Discussion includes questions and answers about CNN's coverage of this week's featured news stories. Click here for the questions and Answers section of the post. Back to the page you came from with the newsquiz. You must be logged in to view the page.
> Key Phrases:
> [ad blocker] [disablejs] [newsquiz] [weekly newsquiz]