May Crumble in Summer A Bridge of Federal Relief · lurching away from the strategy that has thus...

1
The safest way to cast a ballot is by mail. But will it be available to all? PAGE 26 THE MAGAZINE Can Democracy Survive? In Thailand’s sweltering capital, resi- dents rushed to newly reopened groomers. Bangkok Dispatch. PAGE 24 INTERNATIONAL 24-26 A Trim for Fluffy Pups, at Last Matt Klapper, an aide to Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey by day, has put his experience as a former ambulance crew chief to use at night. PAGE 27 NATIONAL 27-32 When Medical Duty Calls We may not be thrilled with our house- bound conditions, but what better op- portunity for learning a foreign lan- guage? Many first-rate language tools are free or inexpensive. PAGE 8 AT HOME Speaking in New Tongues New works about the ties that bind, tear us apart and bring us back together. BOOK REVIEW Family Issues A Uighur fighting to free her brother fears Beijing punished him for attend- ing a U.S. leadership program. PAGE 25 Branded ‘an Enemy’ in China Broadway’s “Mrs. Doubtfire” had three performances before the pandemic intervened. The ripple effects. PAGE 4 ARTS & LEISURE A Musical’s Sudden Stop A return to competition for Breanna Stewart, the 2018 M.V.P., from a torn Achilles’ tendon was stalled. PAGE 38 SPORTS 38-39 W.N.B.A. Comeback on Hold We gave disposable cameras to six residents of Evergreen Gardens, a senior home in La Junta, Colo., to docu- ment their pandemic days. PAGE 1 SUNDAY STYLES Life in an Assisted Living Home Tara Isabella Burton PAGE 4 SUNDAY REVIEW U(D547FD)v+=!;!/!$!z A Times analysis lists nearly 100 rules the administration has tried to reverse, often successfully. PAGE 28 Trump’s Rollbacks on Climate WASHINGTON — As the na- tion confronts unemployment lev- els not seen since the Great De- pression, Congress and the Trump administration face a pivotal choice: Continue spending tril- lions trying to shore up busi- nesses and workers, or bet that state reopenings will jump-start the U.S. economy. At least 20 million Americans are unemployed and a large share of the nation’s small businesses are shut and facing possible insol- vency. Policy errors in the coming weeks could turn the 18 million temporary layoffs recorded in April into permanent job losses that could plunge the United States into a deep and protracted recession unrivaled in recent his- tory. Yet the federal government is lurching away from the strategy that has thus far helped slow the spread of the coronavirus and sus- tain people and companies strug- gling during the self-inflicted eco- nomic shutdown. Over the past two months, as consumers and workers retreated and state officials imposed limits on economic activity, President Trump and bipartisan coalitions in the House and Senate have ap- proved $3 trillion in federal spend- ing to help companies, workers and the unemployed. The Federal Reserve has taken extraordinary steps to keep the financial system functioning, buying up govern- ment-backed securities and em- barking on plans to purchase cor- porate and municipal debt to keep credit flowing. Governors have embraced stay-at-home orders in an effort to slow the virus’s spread. Economists and policy experts, including some in the administra- tion, have likened those efforts to building a bridge through the pan- demic recession — one that will carry as many people and compa- nies to the other side of the crisis as possible. But as the virus threatens to haunt the nation and its economy longer than some officials had an- ticipated, Mr. Trump and many Republicans in Congress have grown weary of federal spending to support workers and busi- nesses and have begun urging states to get back to what was con- sidered normal. Even some allies of the presi- dent, though, acknowledge that may be an unrealistic gamble and more wishful thinking than an ac- tual plan. With confirmed infec- tions and deaths projected to con- tinue rising, and limited capacity to test for the virus, many states are expected to keep businesses closed into the summer or longer. And even once things reopen, sim- ply allowing people to walk into a barber shop or a movie theater does not mean they will do so dur- ing a pandemic until a vaccine or effective treatments are available. Economists, including liberals and many conservatives, warn that prematurely ending efforts to aid businesses and workers with- out enacting a new strategy could force the economy into a summer of partial recoveries, rising infec- tion rates and insufficient support for struggling businesses and those out of work. In that case, the experts warn, A Bridge of Federal Relief May Crumble in Summer As Losses Mount, Leaders Weigh a Return vs. Approving More Aid (and Debt) By JIM TANKERSLEY Continued on Page 16 The claim was tailor-made for President Trump’s most steadfast backers: Federal guidelines are coaching doctors to mark Covid-19 as the cause of death even when it is not, inflating the pandemic’s death toll. That the claim came from a doc- tor, Scott Jensen, who also hap- pens to be a Republican state sen- ator in Minnesota, made it all the more alluring to the president’s al- lies. Never mind the experts who said that, if anything, the death toll was being vastly under- counted. “SHOCKING,” tweeted Chris Berg, a conservative television show host on KX4, a Fox affiliate in Fargo, N.D., after interviewing Dr. Jensen last month. Soon after, Laura Ingraham, the Fox News host, invited Dr. Jensen onto her show. His assertions were picked up by Infowars, the conspiracy- oriented website founded by Alex Jones. They were shared by fol- lowers of Qanon, who subscribe to a web of vague, baseless theories that a secret cabal in the govern- ment is trying to take down the president. “What is the primary benefit to keep public in mass-hysteria re: Covid-19? Think voting. Are you awake yet?” a Qanon follower known as John the White wrote on Twitter, saying the pandemic was being used to manipulate the elec- torate. The likes of John the White may view the world through the most conspiratorial of lenses, but they are hardly the only people weigh- ing the political impact of the vi- rus’s death toll. With implications for how quickly businesses and their employees return to some- thing like normalcy, the fight to shape the official record is adding a grim new front to the presiden- tial campaign. Since the outset of the crisis, el- ements of the right have sought to bolster the president’s political standing and justify reopening the Disputing the Death Toll to Score Political Points By MATTHEW ROSENBERG and JIM RUTENBERG Rebuffing the Science To Bolster Trump Continued on Page 15 Nearly 190,000 people were tested for the coronavirus in New York City over the past two weeks, a record number. The increase in testing, crucial for curbing the outbreak, came as Mayor Bill de Blasio announced plans to hire a small army of 1,000 disease detec- tives to track down the contacts of every infected New Yorker. The city is also paying for hotels to house people who cannot quar- antine in their cramped apart- ments, and it may use the U.S.T.A. Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Queens for the same purpose. From the State Capitol, Gov. An- drew M. Cuomo has established a framework for reopening the state, based on seven concrete, health-related milestones, and he has asked Bill Gates, the restaura- teur Danny Meyer, the New York Knicks owner James L. Dolan and dozens of other outside advisers Why Reopening New York City Is Still Far Off By J. DAVID GOODMAN and MICHAEL ROTHFELD Continued on Page 12 A closed playground on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. ANDREW SENG FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES WASHINGTON — There have always been two sides to Michael T. Flynn. There was the rebellious teenager who surfed during hurri- canes and spent a night in a re- formatory. Then there was the adult who buckled down, joined the Army and rose to become a three-star general. Mr. Flynn was a lifelong Demo- crat who served President Barack Obama as a top intelligence offi- cer. He also called Mr. Obama a “liar” after being forced out of the job and reinvented himself as a Republican foreign policy adviser. Mr. Flynn criticized retired gen- erals who used their stars “for themselves, for their businesses.” He appeared to do the same thing as a consultant. But the two sides of Mr. Flynn were perhaps never so stark as in the criminal case against him that ended abruptly on Thursday to the astonishment of much of offi- cial Washington. After pleading guilty in 2017 to lying to federal investigators about his contacts with a Russian diplomat, Mr. Flynn cooperated with the special counsel, saying he was “being a good soldier” and earning prosecutors’ praise. Then he recanted his confession and be- gan what some allies saw as a reckless gamble to recast himself as an innocent victim of a justice system run amok. That gamble paid off this week when, in an extraordinary rever- sal, the Justice Department aban- doned his prosecution, saying he never should have been charged. Current and former federal law enforcement officials expressed disbelief and dismay, calling the move an unprecedented blow to the Justice Department’s integri- ty and independence. Former President Barack Obama, in re- marks to former members of his administration, said he feared that “not just institutional norms, but our basic understanding of rule of law is at risk.” Mr. Flynn transformed his case into a political cause that res- onated in the conservative echo chamber. Led by his lawyer, Sid- ney Powell, and Representative Devin Nunes, Republican of Cali- fornia and a close ally of the presi- dent’s, Mr. Flynn’s backers worked to wipe away the mistrust of some Republicans over his co- operation with law enforcement and turn him into a right-wing Surprise Ruling: Latest Reversal In Flynn’s Life By SHARON LaFRANIERE and JULIAN E. BARNES Continued on Page 31 To hop on the train, any train, earbuds intact, alone in the crowd on the way somewhere else. To walk out of the Metropolitan Mu- seum of Art, exhausted as if from a march. The sweet-potato fries and a beer at Tubby Hook Tavern in In- wood; the coffee-cart guy on West 40th Street who remembers you take it black. Sunday Mass and the bakery af- ter. Seeing old friends in the syna- gogue. Play dates. The High Line. Hugs. Ask New Yorkers what they miss most, nearly two months into isolation. To hear their answers is to witness a perfect version of the city built from the ground up, a place refracted through a lens of loss, where the best parts are huge and the annoyances become all but invisible. The cheap seats in the outfield, the shouting to be heard at happy hour. Meeting cousins with a soccer ball in Brooklyn Bridge Park. The din of the theater as you scan the Play- bill before the lights go down. “I miss my gym equipment,” said Barbara James of Brooklyn Heights. “The lamb over rice from the food cart by my office, at Seventh and 49th,” said Chris Meredith of East Harlem. “Just everything,” sighed a po- lice officer sitting behind the wheel of his vehicle in Williams- burg, Brooklyn, last week. “I miss everything.” In normal times, in Big Apple, city-that-never-sleeps times, peo- ple flew in from all over the world to see and do the things locals could do on any given Tuesday. To have that access cut off for so long, with its return yet unforeseen, is Deep Yearning For Hometown Lost to a Virus By MICHAEL WILSON Continued on Page 14 ANDREW SENG FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Outside the Metropolitan Museum of Art last week. Tourism is one of the factors complicating the return of New York to normalcy. Culture, Waiting to Be Revisited Richard Penniman, better known as Little Richard, who combined the sacred shouts of the black church and the profane sounds of the blues to create some of the world’s first and most influ- ential rock ’n’ roll records, died on Saturday morning. He was 87. His son, Danny Jones Penni- man, said the cause was cancer but did not say where he died. Little Richard did not invent rock ’n’ roll. Other musicians had already been mining a similar vein by the time he recorded his first hit, “Tutti Frutti” — a raucous song about sex, its lyrics cleaned up but its meaning hard to miss — in a New Orleans recording studio in September 1955. Chuck Berry and Fats Domino had reached the pop Top 10, Bo Diddley had topped the rhythm-and-blues charts, and Elvis Presley had been making records for a year. But Little Richard, delving deeply into the wellsprings of gospel music and the blues, pounding the piano furiously and screaming as if for his very life, raised the energy level several notches and created something not quite like any music that had been heard before — something new, thrilling and more than a lit- An Electrifying Link From R&B to Rock ’n’ Roll By TIM WEINER Little Richard in 2007. His onstage flamboyance was a touchstone for artists like James Brown. HIROYUKI ITO FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES LITTLE RICHARD, 1932-2020 Continued on Page 34 A mysterious illness linked to the coro- navirus has sickened 73 other children in New York, the governor said. PAGE 23 TRACKING AN OUTBREAK 4-23 3 Children Die of Syndrome QUARANTINES Three health czars, including Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, may have been exposed. PAGE 16 Late Edition VOL. CLXIX . . . No. 58,689 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2020 Today, some sunshine, then increas- ing clouds, breezy, cool, high 62. To- night, mostly cloudy, low 48. Tomor- row, a few showers, breezy, high 60. Weather map appears on Page 30. $6.00

Transcript of May Crumble in Summer A Bridge of Federal Relief · lurching away from the strategy that has thus...

Page 1: May Crumble in Summer A Bridge of Federal Relief · lurching away from the strategy that has thus far helped slow the ... Mr. Flynn was a lifelong Demo-crat who served President Barack

C M Y K Nxxx,2020-05-10,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

The safest way to cast a ballot is by mail.But will it be available to all? PAGE 26

THE MAGAZINE

Can Democracy Survive?In Thailand’s sweltering capital, resi-dents rushed to newly reopenedgroomers. Bangkok Dispatch. PAGE 24

INTERNATIONAL 24-26

A Trim for Fluffy Pups, at Last

Matt Klapper, an aide to Senator CoryBooker of New Jersey by day, has puthis experience as a former ambulancecrew chief to use at night. PAGE 27

NATIONAL 27-32

When Medical Duty CallsWe may not be thrilled with our house-bound conditions, but what better op-portunity for learning a foreign lan-guage? Many first-rate language toolsare free or inexpensive. PAGE 8

AT HOME

Speaking in New Tongues

New works about the ties that bind, tearus apart and bring us back together.

BOOK REVIEW

Family IssuesA Uighur fighting to free her brotherfears Beijing punished him for attend-ing a U.S. leadership program. PAGE 25

Branded ‘an Enemy’ in China

Broadway’s “Mrs. Doubtfire” had threeperformances before the pandemicintervened. The ripple effects. PAGE 4

ARTS & LEISURE

A Musical’s Sudden Stop

A return to competition for BreannaStewart, the 2018 M.V.P., from a tornAchilles’ tendon was stalled. PAGE 38

SPORTS 38-39

W.N.B.A. Comeback on Hold

We gave disposable cameras to sixresidents of Evergreen Gardens, asenior home in La Junta, Colo., to docu-ment their pandemic days. PAGE 1

SUNDAY STYLES

Life in an Assisted Living Home

Tara Isabella Burton PAGE 4

SUNDAY REVIEWU(D547FD)v+=!;!/!$!z

A Times analysis lists nearly 100 rulesthe administration has tried to reverse,often successfully. PAGE 28

Trump’s Rollbacks on Climate

WASHINGTON — As the na-tion confronts unemployment lev-els not seen since the Great De-pression, Congress and the Trumpadministration face a pivotalchoice: Continue spending tril-lions trying to shore up busi-nesses and workers, or bet thatstate reopenings will jump-startthe U.S. economy.

At least 20 million Americansare unemployed and a large shareof the nation’s small businessesare shut and facing possible insol-vency. Policy errors in the comingweeks could turn the 18 milliontemporary layoffs recorded inApril into permanent job lossesthat could plunge the UnitedStates into a deep and protractedrecession unrivaled in recent his-tory.

Yet the federal government islurching away from the strategythat has thus far helped slow thespread of the coronavirus and sus-tain people and companies strug-gling during the self-inflicted eco-nomic shutdown.

Over the past two months, asconsumers and workers retreatedand state officials imposed limitson economic activity, PresidentTrump and bipartisan coalitionsin the House and Senate have ap-proved $3 trillion in federal spend-ing to help companies, workersand the unemployed. The FederalReserve has taken extraordinarysteps to keep the financial systemfunctioning, buying up govern-ment-backed securities and em-barking on plans to purchase cor-porate and municipal debt to keepcredit flowing. Governors haveembraced stay-at-home orders inan effort to slow the virus’s

spread.Economists and policy experts,

including some in the administra-tion, have likened those efforts tobuilding a bridge through the pan-demic recession — one that willcarry as many people and compa-nies to the other side of the crisisas possible.

But as the virus threatens tohaunt the nation and its economylonger than some officials had an-ticipated, Mr. Trump and manyRepublicans in Congress havegrown weary of federal spendingto support workers and busi-nesses and have begun urgingstates to get back to what was con-sidered normal.

Even some allies of the presi-dent, though, acknowledge thatmay be an unrealistic gamble andmore wishful thinking than an ac-tual plan. With confirmed infec-tions and deaths projected to con-tinue rising, and limited capacityto test for the virus, many statesare expected to keep businessesclosed into the summer or longer.And even once things reopen, sim-ply allowing people to walk into abarber shop or a movie theaterdoes not mean they will do so dur-ing a pandemic until a vaccine oreffective treatments are available.

Economists, including liberalsand many conservatives, warnthat prematurely ending efforts toaid businesses and workers with-out enacting a new strategy couldforce the economy into a summerof partial recoveries, rising infec-tion rates and insufficient supportfor struggling businesses andthose out of work.

In that case, the experts warn,

A Bridge of Federal ReliefMay Crumble in Summer

As Losses Mount, Leaders Weigh a Returnvs. Approving More Aid (and Debt)

By JIM TANKERSLEY

Continued on Page 16

The claim was tailor-made forPresident Trump’s most steadfastbackers: Federal guidelines arecoaching doctors to markCovid-19 as the cause of deatheven when it is not, inflating thepandemic’s death toll.

That the claim came from a doc-tor, Scott Jensen, who also hap-pens to be a Republican state sen-ator in Minnesota, made it all themore alluring to the president’s al-lies. Never mind the experts whosaid that, if anything, the deathtoll was being vastly under-counted.

“SHOCKING,” tweeted ChrisBerg, a conservative televisionshow host on KX4, a Fox affiliatein Fargo, N.D., after interviewingDr. Jensen last month. Soon after,

Laura Ingraham, the Fox Newshost, invited Dr. Jensen onto hershow. His assertions were pickedup by Infowars, the conspiracy-oriented website founded by AlexJones. They were shared by fol-lowers of Qanon, who subscribe toa web of vague, baseless theoriesthat a secret cabal in the govern-ment is trying to take down thepresident.

“What is the primary benefit tokeep public in mass-hysteria re:Covid-19? Think voting. Are youawake yet?” a Qanon followerknown as John the White wrote onTwitter, saying the pandemic was

being used to manipulate the elec-torate.

The likes of John the White mayview the world through the mostconspiratorial of lenses, but theyare hardly the only people weigh-ing the political impact of the vi-rus’s death toll. With implicationsfor how quickly businesses andtheir employees return to some-thing like normalcy, the fight toshape the official record is addinga grim new front to the presiden-tial campaign.

Since the outset of the crisis, el-ements of the right have sought tobolster the president’s politicalstanding and justify reopening the

Disputing the Death Toll to Score Political PointsBy MATTHEW ROSENBERG

and JIM RUTENBERGRebuffing the Science

To Bolster Trump

Continued on Page 15

Nearly 190,000 people weretested for the coronavirus in NewYork City over the past two weeks,a record number. The increase intesting, crucial for curbing theoutbreak, came as Mayor Bill deBlasio announced plans to hire asmall army of 1,000 disease detec-tives to track down the contacts ofevery infected New Yorker.

The city is also paying for hotelsto house people who cannot quar-antine in their cramped apart-ments, and it may use the U.S.T.A.Billie Jean King National TennisCenter in Queens for the samepurpose.

From the State Capitol, Gov. An-drew M. Cuomo has established aframework for reopening thestate, based on seven concrete,health-related milestones, and hehas asked Bill Gates, the restaura-teur Danny Meyer, the New YorkKnicks owner James L. Dolan anddozens of other outside advisers

Why Reopening New York City Is Still Far Off

By J. DAVID GOODMANand MICHAEL ROTHFELD

Continued on Page 12

A closed playground on theUpper East Side of Manhattan.

ANDREW SENG FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

WASHINGTON — There havealways been two sides to MichaelT. Flynn. There was the rebelliousteenager who surfed during hurri-canes and spent a night in a re-formatory. Then there was theadult who buckled down, joinedthe Army and rose to become athree-star general.

Mr. Flynn was a lifelong Demo-crat who served President BarackObama as a top intelligence offi-cer. He also called Mr. Obama a“liar” after being forced out of thejob and reinvented himself as aRepublican foreign policy adviser.

Mr. Flynn criticized retired gen-erals who used their stars “forthemselves, for their businesses.”He appeared to do the same thingas a consultant.

But the two sides of Mr. Flynnwere perhaps never so stark as inthe criminal case against him thatended abruptly on Thursday tothe astonishment of much of offi-cial Washington.

After pleading guilty in 2017 tolying to federal investigatorsabout his contacts with a Russiandiplomat, Mr. Flynn cooperatedwith the special counsel, saying hewas “being a good soldier” andearning prosecutors’ praise. Thenhe recanted his confession and be-gan what some allies saw as areckless gamble to recast himselfas an innocent victim of a justicesystem run amok.

That gamble paid off this weekwhen, in an extraordinary rever-sal, the Justice Department aban-doned his prosecution, saying henever should have been charged.Current and former federal lawenforcement officials expresseddisbelief and dismay, calling themove an unprecedented blow tothe Justice Department’s integri-ty and independence. FormerPresident Barack Obama, in re-marks to former members of hisadministration, said he fearedthat “not just institutional norms,but our basic understanding ofrule of law is at risk.”

Mr. Flynn transformed his caseinto a political cause that res-onated in the conservative echochamber. Led by his lawyer, Sid-ney Powell, and RepresentativeDevin Nunes, Republican of Cali-fornia and a close ally of the presi-dent’s, Mr. Flynn’s backersworked to wipe away the mistrustof some Republicans over his co-operation with law enforcementand turn him into a right-wing

Surprise Ruling:Latest Reversal

In Flynn’s LifeBy SHARON LaFRANIERE

and JULIAN E. BARNES

Continued on Page 31

To hop on the train, any train,earbuds intact, alone in the crowdon the way somewhere else. Towalk out of the Metropolitan Mu-seum of Art, exhausted as if from amarch. The sweet-potato fries anda beer at Tubby Hook Tavern in In-wood; the coffee-cart guy on West40th Street who remembers youtake it black.

Sunday Mass and the bakery af-ter. Seeing old friends in the syna-gogue. Play dates. The High Line.Hugs.

Ask New Yorkers what theymiss most, nearly two months intoisolation. To hear their answers isto witness a perfect version of thecity built from the ground up, aplace refracted through a lens ofloss, where the best parts arehuge and the annoyances becomeall but invisible. The cheap seatsin the outfield, the shouting to beheard at happy hour. Meetingcousins with a soccer ball inBrooklyn Bridge Park. The din ofthe theater as you scan the Play-bill before the lights go down.

“I miss my gym equipment,”said Barbara James of BrooklynHeights.

“The lamb over rice from thefood cart by my office, at Seventhand 49th,” said Chris Meredith ofEast Harlem.

“Just everything,” sighed a po-lice officer sitting behind thewheel of his vehicle in Williams-burg, Brooklyn, last week. “I misseverything.”

In normal times, in Big Apple,city-that-never-sleeps times, peo-ple flew in from all over the worldto see and do the things localscould do on any given Tuesday. Tohave that access cut off for so long,with its return yet unforeseen, is

Deep YearningFor Hometown

Lost to a VirusBy MICHAEL WILSON

Continued on Page 14

ANDREW SENG FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Outside the Metropolitan Museum of Art last week. Tourism is one of the factors complicating the return of New York to normalcy.Culture, Waiting to Be Revisited

Richard Penniman, betterknown as Little Richard, whocombined the sacred shouts of theblack church and the profanesounds of the blues to create someof the world’s first and most influ-ential rock ’n’ roll records, died onSaturday morning. He was 87.

His son, Danny Jones Penni-man, said the cause was cancer

but did not say where he died.Little Richard did not invent

rock ’n’ roll. Other musicians hadalready been mining a similarvein by the time he recorded hisfirst hit, “Tutti Frutti” — a raucoussong about sex, its lyrics cleanedup but its meaning hard to miss —in a New Orleans recording studioin September 1955. Chuck Berryand Fats Domino had reached thepop Top 10, Bo Diddley had toppedthe rhythm-and-blues charts, and

Elvis Presley had been makingrecords for a year.

But Little Richard, delvingdeeply into the wellsprings ofgospel music and the blues,pounding the piano furiously andscreaming as if for his very life,raised the energy level severalnotches and created somethingnot quite like any music that hadbeen heard before — somethingnew, thrilling and more than a lit-

An Electrifying Link From R&B to Rock ’n’ RollBy TIM WEINER

Little Richard in 2007. His onstage flamboyance was a touchstone for artists like James Brown.HIROYUKI ITO FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

LITTLE RICHARD, 1932-2020

Continued on Page 34

A mysterious illness linked to the coro-navirus has sickened 73 other childrenin New York, the governor said. PAGE 23

TRACKING AN OUTBREAK 4-23

3 Children Die of Syndrome

QUARANTINES Three health czars,including Dr. Anthony S. Fauci,may have been exposed. PAGE 16

Late Edition

VOL. CLXIX . . . No. 58,689 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2020

Today, some sunshine, then increas-ing clouds, breezy, cool, high 62. To-night, mostly cloudy, low 48. Tomor-row, a few showers, breezy, high 60.Weather map appears on Page 30.

$6.00