AGAINST U.S. GOODS BY RAISING TARIFFS CHINA RETALIATES · presentations are on view. PAGE C1...

1
VOL. CLXVIII . . . No. 58,327 © 2019 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2019 U(D54G1D)y+$!z!$!#!} Officials have been trying to deter retaliatory attacks against Muslims after the Easter attacks. PAGE A4 INTERNATIONAL A4-12 Sri Lanka Declares Curfew The musical duo of Megan Mullally, top, and Stephanie Hunt offer sharp, bawdy takes on classic tunes. PAGE C6 ARTS C1-7 Giving Cabaret a Jolt A Times analysis of school shooting data identified hundreds of deaths and injuries across more than 100 episodes since 1970. PAGE A17 NATIONAL A13-18 Dissecting School Shootings The Senate Intelligence Committee’s chairman said Donald Trump Jr. had a chance to cooperate quietly. PAGE A15 Subpoena Followed No-Shows Jason Farago checks in on the event, where more than 100 exhibitions and presentations are on view. PAGE C1 Exploring the Venice Biennale President Trump expressed approval for Prime Minister Viktor Orban and his immigration policies. PAGE A10 Praise for Hungary’s Strongman Doris Day, the freckle-faced movie actress whose irrepressible personality and golden voice made her America’s top box-office star in the early 1960s, died on Monday at her home in Carmel Valley, Calif. She was 97. The Doris Day Animal Founda- tion announced her death. Ms. Day began her career as a big-band vocalist, and she was successful almost from the start: One of her first records, “Senti- mental Journey,” released in 1945, sold more than a million copies, and she went on to have numerous other hits. The bandleader Les Brown, with whom she sang for several years, once said, “As a singer Doris belongs in the com- pany of Bing Crosby and Frank Si- natra.” But it was the movies that made her a star. Between “Romance on the High Seas” in 1948 and “With Six You Get Eggroll” in 1968, she starred in nearly 40 movies. On the screen she turned from the perky girl next door in the 1950s to the wom- an next door in a series of 1960s sex comedies that brought her four first-place rankings in the yearly popularity poll of theater owners, an accomplishment equaled by no other actress ex- cept Shirley Temple. In the 1950s she starred, and most often sang, in comedies (“Teacher’s Pet,” “The Tunnel of Love”), musicals (“Calamity Jane,” “April in Paris,” “The Paja- ma Game”) and melodramas (“Young Man With a Horn,” the Alfred Hitchcock thriller “The Man Who Knew Too Much,” “Love Me or Leave Me”). James Cagney, her co-star in “Love Me or Leave Me,” said Ms. Day had “the ability to project the simple, direct statement of a sim- ple, direct idea without cluttering it.” He compared her performance to Laurette Taylor’s in “The Glass Menagerie” on Broadway in 1945, widely hailed as one of the great- est performances ever given by an American actor. She went on to appear in “Pil- low Talk” (1959), “Lover Come Back” (1961) and “That Touch of Mink” (1962), fast-paced com- edies in which she fended off the advances of Rock Hudson (in the first two films) and Cary Grant (in the third). Those movies, often de- rided today as examples of the re- pressed sexuality of the ’50s, were Movie Star Next Door With a Soothing Refrain: ‘Que Sera, Sera’ By ALJEAN HARMETZ DORIS DAY, 1922-2019 Doris Day fended off the advances of Rock Hudson in the 1959 comedy “Pillow Talk,” which was considered daring at the time. EVERETT COLLECTION Continued on Page A24 Investors are dealing with a painful new reality: The trade war between the United States and China could last indefinitely. That anxiety spread across the stock markets on Monday, as in- vestors around the world tried to divine the potential fallout to eco- nomic growth and corporate prof- its. Bonds and commodities, too, flashed warnings of a slowdown. The stock losses have brought an end to a recent calm that had settled over Wall Street. For months, investors had assumed that the trade war, a major hazard for the global economy, would end soon. Just weeks ago, the S&P 500 reached a record high. That illusion has been shat- tered, as concerns mount about slowing growth and rising costs. China said on Monday that it would increase tariffs on nearly $60 billion of goods, in response to a similar move last week by the Trump administration. The S&P 500 fell 2.4 percent on Monday. It was the American stock benchmark’s worst day since early January. In all, the S&P 500 is down 4.6 percent in May. The drop continued early Tues- day as the trading day began in Asia, with stocks opening mostly lower. But futures markets sug- gested Wall Street would open higher. Companies in trade-sensitive sectors like agriculture and semi- conductor manufacturing were particularly hard hit. The tech- heavy Nasdaq composite index fell 3.4 percent, its worst decline in 2019. The selling has come even as the American economy continues to show significant momentum: It expanded at a robust 3.2 percent annual rate in the first three months of the year. In April, un- Big Loss for Market, and Fear It’ll Have a Lasting Impact By MATT PHILLIPS Source: Refinitiv THE NEW YORK TIMES 2,800 2,750 2,850 2,900 2,950 April 30 May 1 2 3 6 7 8 9 10 13 S&P 500 since its peak PEAK CLOSE MONDAY’S CLOSE 2,811.87, –2.4% (–4.5% since the peak) ALSTON, England — It was not until Trevor Robinson received a letter notifying him of a missed appointment at the hospital that he realized he had not spoken to another human being in more than six weeks. Mr. Robinson, a 77-year-old re- tired landscape gardener, had spent most of that time alone, sit- ting in his favorite frayed leather recliner looking out the window at the moorland surrounding his cot- tage in the northwestern English county of Cumbria. “When you spend every second by yourself, you lose track of time,” he said as tears trickled down his face. “I feel lonely, very lonely, and bored.” Mr. Robinson’s isolation, shared by thousands of older people in Britain, is the result of a chain of cause-and-effect that stretches from rural Cumbria to the halls of power in London. He used to ride a subsidized bus to town until the lo- cal council discontinued the route. The council was responding to steep budget cutbacks stemming from the Conservative-led gov- ernment’s decade-long austerity program. Even as austerity has sliced through nearly every aspect of British life, the government has protected high-profile benefits for older people, and it has raised the state pension on a more generous basis than previous administra- tions. But a free bus pass is of little use if buses no longer reach you, and many retired people have discov- ered that apparently minor cuts — the elimination of a bus route, or the closing of a tiny health care center, community center or post office — can profoundly upend their lives. The effects are especially pro- nounced in rural areas. The isola- tion of older residents there has emerged as one of the greatest, and largely hidden, costs of local councils’ straitened budgets, with Shrunken Lives and Services In Austerity of Rural England Checking on calves at a farm in Alston, England. In isolated Cumbria, in the northwest, budget cuts have hit people especially hard. LAETITIA VANCON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES By CEYLAN YEGINSU and LAETITIA VANCON BRITAIN’S BIG SQUEEZE The Hidden Cost of Cuts Continued on Page A6 WASHINGTON — At a meet- ing of President Trump’s top na- tional security aides last Thurs- day, Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan presented an updated military plan that envi- sions sending as many as 120,000 troops to the Middle East should Iran attack American forces or ac- celerate work on nuclear weap- ons, administration officials said. The revisions were ordered by hard-liners led by John R. Bolton, Mr. Trump’s national security ad- viser. They do not call for a land in- vasion of Iran, which would re- quire vastly more troops, officials said. The development reflects the influence of Mr. Bolton, one of the administration’s most virulent Iran hawks, whose push for con- frontation with Tehran was ig- nored more than a decade ago by President George W. Bush. It is highly uncertain whether Mr. Trump, who has sought to dis- entangle the United States from Afghanistan and Syria, ultimately would send so many American forces back to the Middle East. It is also unclear whether the president has been briefed on the number of troops or other details in the plans. On Monday, asked about if he was seeking regime change in Iran, Mr. Trump said: “We’ll see what happens with Iran. If they do anything, it would be a very bad mistake.” There are sharp divisions in the administration over how to re- spond to Iran at a time when ten- sions are rising about Iran’s nucle- ar policy and its intentions in the Middle East. Some senior American officials said the plans, even at a very pre- liminary stage, show how danger- ous the threat from Iran has be- come. Others, who are urging a diplomatic resolution to the cur- rent tensions, said it amounts to a scare tactic to warn Iran against new aggressions. European allies who met with White House Reviews Iran Plan For 120,000 Troops if Attacked By ERIC SCHMITT and JULIAN E. BARNES Continued on Page A9 TARIFFS They are poised to hit every conceivable consumer product, and then some. PAGE B4 Continued on Page A10 WASHINGTON — The United States and China intensified their trade dispute on Monday, as Bei- jing said it would increase tariffs on nearly $60 billion worth of American goods and the Trump administration detailed plans to tax nearly every sneaker, comput- er, dress and handbag that China exports to the United States. The escalation thrust the world’s two largest economies back into confrontation. While President Trump said on Monday that he would meet with China’s president, Xi Jinping, next month in Japan, the stakes are only in- creasing as the president contin- ues to taunt and threaten China, causing it to retaliate on American businesses. Financial markets fell on Mon- day after China detailed plans to increase tariffs, with the S&P 500 index down more than 2.4 percent for the day and more than 4 per- cent this month. Shares of compa- nies particularly dependent on trade with China, including Apple and Boeing, fared poorly, and yields on three-month Treasury securities exceeded those on 10- year bonds, a sign that investors may be souring on the outlook for short-term economic growth. China’s Finance Ministry an- nounced Monday that it was rais- ing tariffs on a wide range of American goods to 20 percent or 25 percent from 10 percent. The in- crease will affect the roughly $60 billion in American imports al- ready being taxed as retaliation for Mr. Trump’s previous round of tariffs, including beer, wine, swim- suits, shirts and liquefied natural gas exported to China. The move came after Mr. Trump increased tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese goods to as much as 25 percent on Friday and threatened to move ahead with taxing the remainder of goods that the United States imports from China. The Office of the CHINA RETALIATES BY RAISING TARIFFS AGAINST U.S. GOODS Move Would Affect $60 Billion in Products By ANA SWANSON and KEITH BRADSHER Continued on Page A10 The F.D.A. has taken an industry- friendly approach toward companies using stem cell treatments, with almost no regulatory oversight. PAGE D1 SCIENCE TIMES D1-6 An Unproven Therapy WASHINGTON The Su- preme Court on Monday allowed an enormous antitrust class ac- tion against Apple to move for- ward, saying consumers should be allowed to try to prove that the technology giant had used mo- nopoly power to raise the prices of iPhone apps. The lawsuit is in its early stages, and it must overcome other legal hurdles. But the case brings the most direct legal chal- lenge in the United States to the clout that Apple has built up through its App Store. And it raises questions about how the company has wielded that power, amid a wave of anti-tech senti- ment that has also prompted con- cerns about the dominance of other tech behemoths such as Facebook and Amazon. The court’s 5-to-4 vote featured an unusual alignment of justices, with President Trump’s two ap- pointees on opposite sides. Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh, who joined the court in October, wrote the ma- Antitrust Lawsuit Against Apple Clears Hurdle at Supreme Court By ADAM LIPTAK and JACK NICAS Continued on Page A15 For months, New York and New Jersey were locked in a race to legalize mari- juana, vying for millions in tax revenue and progressive bragging rights. Now efforts have stalled. PAGE A21 NEW YORK A19-21 Slow Going for Pot Legalization Police officials determined that Officer Daniel Pantaleo used a chokehold on Eric Garner, answering one of the cen- tral questions of a long-awaited disci- plinary hearing. PAGE A20 Police Finding in Garner Case Entrepreneurs are seeking investors willing to put money behind a long-shot bet against climate change. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-7 The Fusion Reactor Strategy David Brooks PAGE A22 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A22-23 GULF TENSIONS Claims of attacks on four tankers amplified fears around the Persian Gulf. PAGE A12 Late Edition Today, mostly cloudy, cool, a couple of showers, high 52. Tonight, show- ers early, clearing late, cool, low 45. Tomorrow, partly sunny, milder, high 65. Weather map, Page C8. $3.00

Transcript of AGAINST U.S. GOODS BY RAISING TARIFFS CHINA RETALIATES · presentations are on view. PAGE C1...

VOL. CLXVIII . . . No. 58,327 © 2019 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2019

C M Y K Nxxx,2019-05-14,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

U(D54G1D)y+$!z!$!#!}

Officials have been trying to deterretaliatory attacks against Muslimsafter the Easter attacks. PAGE A4

INTERNATIONAL A4-12

Sri Lanka Declares CurfewThe musical duo of Megan Mullally, top,and Stephanie Hunt offer sharp, bawdytakes on classic tunes. PAGE C6

ARTS C1-7

Giving Cabaret a Jolt

A Times analysis of school shootingdata identified hundreds of deaths andinjuries across more than 100 episodessince 1970. PAGE A17

NATIONAL A13-18

Dissecting School Shootings

The Senate Intelligence Committee’schairman said Donald Trump Jr. had achance to cooperate quietly. PAGE A15

Subpoena Followed No-Shows

Jason Farago checks in on the event,where more than 100 exhibitions andpresentations are on view. PAGE C1

Exploring the Venice BiennalePresident Trump expressed approvalfor Prime Minister Viktor Orban andhis immigration policies. PAGE A10

Praise for Hungary’s Strongman

Doris Day, the freckle-facedmovie actress whose irrepressiblepersonality and golden voicemade her America’s top box-officestar in the early 1960s, died onMonday at her home in CarmelValley, Calif. She was 97.

The Doris Day Animal Founda-tion announced her death.

Ms. Day began her career as abig-band vocalist, and she wassuccessful almost from the start:One of her first records, “Senti-mental Journey,” released in 1945,sold more than a million copies,and she went on to have numerousother hits. The bandleader LesBrown, with whom she sang forseveral years, once said, “As asinger Doris belongs in the com-pany of Bing Crosby and Frank Si-natra.”

But it was the movies that madeher a star.

Between “Romance on the HighSeas” in 1948 and “With Six YouGet Eggroll” in 1968, she starredin nearly 40 movies. On the screen

she turned from the perky girlnext door in the 1950s to the wom-an next door in a series of 1960ssex comedies that brought herfour first-place rankings in the

yearly popularity poll of theaterowners, an accomplishmentequaled by no other actress ex-cept Shirley Temple.

In the 1950s she starred, and

most often sang, in comedies(“Teacher’s Pet,” “The Tunnel ofLove”), musicals (“CalamityJane,” “April in Paris,” “The Paja-ma Game”) and melodramas(“Young Man With a Horn,” theAlfred Hitchcock thriller “TheMan Who Knew Too Much,” “LoveMe or Leave Me”).

James Cagney, her co-star in“Love Me or Leave Me,” said Ms.Day had “the ability to project thesimple, direct statement of a sim-ple, direct idea without clutteringit.” He compared her performanceto Laurette Taylor’s in “The GlassMenagerie” on Broadway in 1945,widely hailed as one of the great-est performances ever given byan American actor.

She went on to appear in “Pil-low Talk” (1959), “Lover ComeBack” (1961) and “That Touch ofMink” (1962), fast-paced com-edies in which she fended off theadvances of Rock Hudson (in thefirst two films) and Cary Grant (inthe third). Those movies, often de-rided today as examples of the re-pressed sexuality of the ’50s, were

Movie Star Next Door With a Soothing Refrain: ‘Que Sera, Sera’By ALJEAN HARMETZ

DORIS DAY, 1922-2019

Doris Day fended off the advances of Rock Hudson in the 1959comedy “Pillow Talk,” which was considered daring at the time.

EVERETT COLLECTION

Continued on Page A24

Investors are dealing with apainful new reality: The trade warbetween the United States andChina could last indefinitely.

That anxiety spread across thestock markets on Monday, as in-vestors around the world tried todivine the potential fallout to eco-nomic growth and corporate prof-its. Bonds and commodities, too,flashed warnings of a slowdown.

The stock losses have broughtan end to a recent calm that hadsettled over Wall Street. Formonths, investors had assumedthat the trade war, a major hazardfor the global economy, would endsoon. Just weeks ago, the S&P 500reached a record high.

That illusion has been shat-tered, as concerns mount aboutslowing growth and rising costs.China said on Monday that itwould increase tariffs on nearly$60 billion of goods, in response toa similar move last week by theTrump administration.

The S&P 500 fell 2.4 percent onMonday. It was the Americanstock benchmark’s worst daysince early January. In all, theS&P 500 is down 4.6 percent inMay.

The drop continued early Tues-day as the trading day began inAsia, with stocks opening mostlylower. But futures markets sug-gested Wall Street would openhigher.

Companies in trade-sensitivesectors like agriculture and semi-conductor manufacturing wereparticularly hard hit. The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite indexfell 3.4 percent, its worst decline in2019.

The selling has come even asthe American economy continuesto show significant momentum: Itexpanded at a robust 3.2 percentannual rate in the first threemonths of the year. In April, un-

Big Loss for Market,and Fear It’ll Havea Lasting Impact

By MATT PHILLIPS

Source: Refinitiv THE NEW YORK TIMES

2,800

2,750

2,850

2,900

2,950

April 30 May 1 2 3 6 7 8 9 10 13

S&P 500 since its peakPEAK

CLOSE

MONDAY’S CLOSE

2,811.87, –2.4%

(–4.5% since the peak)

ALSTON, England — It was notuntil Trevor Robinson received aletter notifying him of a missedappointment at the hospital thathe realized he had not spoken toanother human being in morethan six weeks.

Mr. Robinson, a 77-year-old re-tired landscape gardener, hadspent most of that time alone, sit-ting in his favorite frayed leatherrecliner looking out the window atthe moorland surrounding his cot-tage in the northwestern Englishcounty of Cumbria.

“When you spend every secondby yourself, you lose track oftime,” he said as tears trickleddown his face. “I feel lonely, verylonely, and bored.”

Mr. Robinson’s isolation, sharedby thousands of older people inBritain, is the result of a chain ofcause-and-effect that stretchesfrom rural Cumbria to the halls ofpower in London. He used to ride asubsidized bus to town until the lo-cal council discontinued the route.The council was responding to

steep budget cutbacks stemmingfrom the Conservative-led gov-ernment’s decade-long austerityprogram.

Even as austerity has slicedthrough nearly every aspect ofBritish life, the government hasprotected high-profile benefits forolder people, and it has raised thestate pension on a more generousbasis than previous administra-tions.

But a free bus pass is of little useif buses no longer reach you, andmany retired people have discov-ered that apparently minor cuts —the elimination of a bus route, orthe closing of a tiny health carecenter, community center or postoffice — can profoundly upendtheir lives.

The effects are especially pro-nounced in rural areas. The isola-tion of older residents there hasemerged as one of the greatest,and largely hidden, costs of localcouncils’ straitened budgets, with

Shrunken Lives and Services In Austerity of Rural England

Checking on calves at a farm in Alston, England. In isolated Cumbria, in the northwest, budget cuts have hit people especially hard.LAETITIA VANCON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

By CEYLAN YEGINSUand LAETITIA VANCON

BRITAIN’S BIG SQUEEZE

The Hidden Cost of Cuts

Continued on Page A6

WASHINGTON — At a meet-ing of President Trump’s top na-tional security aides last Thurs-day, Acting Defense SecretaryPatrick Shanahan presented anupdated military plan that envi-sions sending as many as 120,000troops to the Middle East shouldIran attack American forces or ac-celerate work on nuclear weap-ons, administration officials said.

The revisions were ordered byhard-liners led by John R. Bolton,Mr. Trump’s national security ad-viser. They do not call for a land in-vasion of Iran, which would re-quire vastly more troops, officialssaid.

The development reflects theinfluence of Mr. Bolton, one of theadministration’s most virulentIran hawks, whose push for con-frontation with Tehran was ig-nored more than a decade ago byPresident George W. Bush.

It is highly uncertain whetherMr. Trump, who has sought to dis-entangle the United States fromAfghanistan and Syria, ultimatelywould send so many Americanforces back to the Middle East.

It is also unclear whether thepresident has been briefed on thenumber of troops or other detailsin the plans. On Monday, askedabout if he was seeking regimechange in Iran, Mr. Trump said:“We’ll see what happens withIran. If they do anything, it wouldbe a very bad mistake.”

There are sharp divisions in theadministration over how to re-spond to Iran at a time when ten-sions are rising about Iran’s nucle-ar policy and its intentions in theMiddle East.

Some senior American officialssaid the plans, even at a very pre-liminary stage, show how danger-ous the threat from Iran has be-come. Others, who are urging adiplomatic resolution to the cur-rent tensions, said it amounts to ascare tactic to warn Iran againstnew aggressions.

European allies who met with

White House Reviews Iran PlanFor 120,000 Troops if Attacked

By ERIC SCHMITT and JULIAN E. BARNES

Continued on Page A9

TARIFFS They are poised to hitevery conceivable consumerproduct, and then some. PAGE B4

Continued on Page A10

WASHINGTON — The UnitedStates and China intensified theirtrade dispute on Monday, as Bei-jing said it would increase tariffson nearly $60 billion worth ofAmerican goods and the Trumpadministration detailed plans totax nearly every sneaker, comput-er, dress and handbag that Chinaexports to the United States.

The escalation thrust theworld’s two largest economiesback into confrontation. WhilePresident Trump said on Mondaythat he would meet with China’spresident, Xi Jinping, next monthin Japan, the stakes are only in-creasing as the president contin-ues to taunt and threaten China,causing it to retaliate on Americanbusinesses.

Financial markets fell on Mon-day after China detailed plans toincrease tariffs, with the S&P 500index down more than 2.4 percentfor the day and more than 4 per-cent this month. Shares of compa-nies particularly dependent ontrade with China, including Appleand Boeing, fared poorly, andyields on three-month Treasurysecurities exceeded those on 10-year bonds, a sign that investorsmay be souring on the outlook forshort-term economic growth.

China’s Finance Ministry an-nounced Monday that it was rais-ing tariffs on a wide range ofAmerican goods to 20 percent or25 percent from 10 percent. The in-crease will affect the roughly $60billion in American imports al-ready being taxed as retaliationfor Mr. Trump’s previous round oftariffs, including beer, wine, swim-suits, shirts and liquefied naturalgas exported to China.

The move came after Mr.Trump increased tariffs on $200billion of Chinese goods to asmuch as 25 percent on Friday andthreatened to move ahead withtaxing the remainder of goodsthat the United States importsfrom China. The Office of the

CHINA RETALIATESBY RAISING TARIFFSAGAINST U.S. GOODS

Move Would Affect$60 Billion in

Products

By ANA SWANSONand KEITH BRADSHER

Continued on Page A10

The F.D.A. has taken an industry-friendly approach toward companiesusing stem cell treatments, with almostno regulatory oversight. PAGE D1

SCIENCE TIMES D1-6

An Unproven Therapy

WASHINGTON — The Su-preme Court on Monday allowedan enormous antitrust class ac-tion against Apple to move for-ward, saying consumers shouldbe allowed to try to prove that thetechnology giant had used mo-nopoly power to raise the prices ofiPhone apps.

The lawsuit is in its earlystages, and it must overcomeother legal hurdles. But the casebrings the most direct legal chal-lenge in the United States to theclout that Apple has built up

through its App Store. And itraises questions about how thecompany has wielded that power,amid a wave of anti-tech senti-ment that has also prompted con-cerns about the dominance ofother tech behemoths such asFacebook and Amazon.

The court’s 5-to-4 vote featuredan unusual alignment of justices,with President Trump’s two ap-pointees on opposite sides. JusticeBrett M. Kavanaugh, who joinedthe court in October, wrote the ma-

Antitrust Lawsuit Against Apple Clears Hurdle at Supreme Court

By ADAM LIPTAK and JACK NICAS

Continued on Page A15

For months, New York and New Jerseywere locked in a race to legalize mari-juana, vying for millions in tax revenueand progressive bragging rights. Nowefforts have stalled. PAGE A21

NEW YORK A19-21

Slow Going for Pot Legalization

Police officials determined that OfficerDaniel Pantaleo used a chokehold onEric Garner, answering one of the cen-tral questions of a long-awaited disci-plinary hearing. PAGE A20

Police Finding in Garner Case

Entrepreneurs are seeking investorswilling to put money behind a long-shotbet against climate change. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-7

The Fusion Reactor Strategy

David Brooks PAGE A22

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A22-23

GULF TENSIONS Claims of attackson four tankers amplified fearsaround the Persian Gulf. PAGE A12

Late EditionToday, mostly cloudy, cool, a coupleof showers, high 52. Tonight, show-ers early, clearing late, cool, low 45.Tomorrow, partly sunny, milder,high 65. Weather map, Page C8.

$3.00