exits cruise ship virus as throng rush to …...2020/02/17  · c m y k x,2020-02-17,a,001,bsx nx...

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U(D54G1D)y+z!:!#!$!z Airbus is slowly restarting its assembly line in China. General Motors began limited production on Saturday. Toyota followed on Monday morning. Fitfully and painfully — and with some worried prodding from Beijing — China is trying to re- open for business. The world’s second-largest economy practically shut down three weeks ago as a viral out- break sickened tens of thousands of people, unexpectedly length- ening a Chinese holiday. The freeze set off warnings that the global economy could be in jeop- ardy if the world’s pre-eminent manufacturing powerhouse stayed shut for long. Now, as some factories rumble back into action, the monumental task of restarting China is becom- ing clear. China’s efforts to contain the virus are clashing with its push to get the country back to work, requiring the country’s leaders to strike a balance be- tween keeping people safe and getting vital industries back on track. Chinese leaders called this past week for more emphasis on reviv- ing the economy. But many of the factories that have reopened are operating well below capacity, say companies and experts. Quaran- China’s Factories, Immobilized By Disease, Struggle to Reopen By KEITH BRADSHER Continued on Page A7 HILLSIDE, Ill. — Hardis White, 78, could hardly wait to break out of suburbia. He dressed in a flannel shirt, jeans and a Bears cap, strode out of the rectangular bungalow he shares with his wife and daughter and folded his tall frame behind the wheel of his silver Nissan se- dan. Forty minutes away from his suburban neighborhood of Hill- side, he arrived in Chicago, on La- porte Avenue, to see what he had come to see: a handsome brick house with white trim, two stories tall, as solid as the first day he saw it in 1967. For a moment, he gazed at the house. Marvin Gaye played softly on the radio. The grass seemed a little long, he murmured. He put the car back in gear and started back to the suburbs. “I don’t know why I keep com- ing back,” he said. “I guess I just miss the neighborhood.” Some people, lured by nostalgia and curiosity, drive past their old houses now and then. Mr. White does it nearly every day. Today, he is one of the more than 200,000 African-Americans who have moved out of Chicago in the last two decades, though in some ways, he never left. For more than a year, he has taken this daily pil- grimage back to the house on La- porte, to the city where his chil- dren grew up and where two of his daughters still live. The steady exodus of African- Americans has caused alarm and grief in Chicago, the nation’s third largest city, where black people have shaped the history, culture and political life. The population of 2.7 million is still nearly split in thirds among whites, blacks and Latinos, but the balance is shift- ing. Chicago saw its population decline in 2018, the fourth year in a row. Since 2015, almost 50,000 black residents have left. They have been driven out of the city by segregation, gun vio- lence, discriminatory policing, ra- cial disparities in employment, the uneven quality of public schools and frustration at life in Black Families Helped Define Chicago. Why Are They Leaving? By JULIE BOSMAN Hardis White is one of the over 200,000 African-Americans who have moved away from Chicago. TODD HEISLER/THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A10 The cruise ship had been shunned at port after port for fear it might carry the coronavirus, but when the Westerdam arrived in Cambodia on Thursday, the prime minister greeted its passengers with flowers. Amid assurances that the ship was disease free, hundreds of elated passengers disembarked. Some went sightseeing, visiting beaches and restaurants and get- ting massages. Others traveled on to destinations around the world. One, however, did not make it much farther than the thermal scanners at the Kuala Lumpur air- port in Malaysia. The passenger, an American, was stopped on Sat- urday, and later tested positive for the coronavirus. On Sunday, with passengers al- ready headed for destinations on at least three continents, health officials were scrambling to deter- mine how a big a problem they now have — and how to stop it from getting bigger. “We anticipated glitches, but I have to tell you I didn’t anticipate one of this magnitude,” said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. With more than a thousand pas- sengers from the Westerdam headed for home, Dr. Schaffner said, it may be harder than ever to keep the coronavirus outbreak contained to China. “This could be a turning point,” he said. It is unclear how well the pas- sengers were screened before they were allowed off the ship. But the best approach to containing a broader spread of the virus from the Westerdam would be to track down all of the passengers and quarantine them for two weeks, experts said. It won’t be easy. Dr. Peter Rabinowitz, co-direc- tor of the MetaCenter for Pan- demic Preparedness and Global Health Security at University of Washington, said the episode would test the limits of contact tracing, the method used to find people exposed to infection. “It’s really daunting to control a situation like this, now that people have gone all over the world,” Dr. Rabinowitz said. More than 140 passengers from the ship flew to Malaysia, and all but the American woman who tested positive and her husband RUSH TO CONTAIN VIRUS AS THRONG EXITS CRUISE SHIP U.S. CITIZEN IS INFECTED 1,000 Travelers Disperse in Cambodia — Fear of ‘Turning Point’ This article is by Richard C. Pad- dock, Sui-Lee Wee and Roni Caryn Rabin. Continued on Page A8 EVACUATION U.S. citizens leaving the Diamond Princess on Monday in Japan, where it was quarantined for over a week. Page A8. FRANCK ROBICHON/EPA, VIA SHUTTERSTOCK WASHINGTON — The Trump administration’s push to prevent China from dominating the mar- ket for advanced technologies has put it on a collision course with the same American companies it wants to protect. Firms that specialize in micro- chips, artificial intelligence, bio- technology and other industries have grown increasingly alarmed by the administration’s efforts to restrict the flow of technology to China, saying it could drain exper- tise, research and revenue from the United States, ultimately erod- ing America’s advantage. The concerns, which have been simmering for months, have tak- en on new urgency as the Com- merce Department considers adopting a sweeping proposal that would allow the United States to block transactions between American firms and Chinese counterparts. Those rules, on top of new restrictions on Chinese in- vestment in the United States and proposed measures that would prevent American companies from exporting certain products and sharing technology with for- eign nationals, have the tech in- dustry scrambling to respond. The Trump administration’s crackdown has already prompted foreign firms to shun American components and technology over concerns that access to parts they need could be abruptly cut off. American companies are watch- ing warily as the United States considers restricting export li- censes for companies that sell products or share intellectual property with China, including General Electric, which sells air- craft parts to China as part of a joint venture with Safran, a French firm. Administration officials plan to meet Feb. 28 to discuss further re- strictions on China, including whether to block G.E.’s license to sell jet engines and whether to fur- ther curtail the ability of Huawei, the Chinese telecom giant, to have access to American technology. There is growing bipartisan consensus in Washington that Tech Industry Pushes Back On U.S. Rules Businesses Dread Sting From Curbs on China By ANA SWANSON and DAVID McCABE Continued on Page A5 LAS VEGAS — Senator Bernie Sanders is a longtime supporter of “Medicare for all.” “I wrote the damn bill,” he said on a debate stage last summer, and his sup- port for universal health care has helped propel him to the front of the 2020 Democratic field. But in Nevada, where the race heads next, his signature policy is a liability with the largest labor union in the state. And the union has enthusiastic allies in Mr. Sanders’s opponents. On Friday morning, moments after Senator Amy Klobuchar fin- ished a tour of the health care fa- cility run by the culinary workers’ union, she began to lace into Mr. Sanders and his focus on the pro- posal, which would effectively eliminate union members’ current health care system. It is unwise and unrealistic, she argued, to eliminate the private health insurance that millions of Americans now use — or to think such a measure could pass. “Since we’re in Vegas I’d say if your number is not on the wheel, maybe you don’t want to bet on that number,” Ms. Klobuchar said. A night earlier, former Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind., raised the issue at a forum for La- tino voters. “Who are we to tell them that they have to give up those plans?” Mr. Buttigieg said of the culinary workers’ health care coverage. Then there’s Tom Steyer, the bil- lionaire self-funder, who is com- peting aggressively in Nevada and has started airing a commer- cial that says “unions don’t like” Mr. Sanders’s plan and includes a vow to protect “union negotiated plans.” The flurry of attacks against Mr. Sanders in Nevada illustrates his growing strength — and the ur- gency his Democratic rivals feel about the need to stop him from winning the most votes in a third consecutive contest next Satur- day. If no Democrat slows Mr. Sanders in the caucuses here, he will gather what may be unstop- pable momentum heading into next month’s Super Tuesday states. But the offensive against the Vermont senator also highlighted some of his most glaring vulnera- bilities: The culinary union, which represents many of the workers in Las Vegas’s casinos, is opposed to his single-payer plan. And after its leaders stated that opposition, they were met with the sort of scathing and personal invective that critics of Mr. Sanders often re- ceive. Culinary Workers Local 226, which is 60,000 members strong and over half Latino, is perhaps the most powerful force in Demo- It’s Union vs. Sanders Over Hard-Won Benefits By JENNIFER MEDINA and JONATHAN MARTIN ‘Medicare for All’ Plan Lands With a Thud, and Rivals Pounce Continued on Page A13 Japan’s fading towns saw colorful mas- cots as a way to lure tourists, but many are now being quietly killed off. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-7 Too Much of a Cute Thing? The president took the track in his limousine before the Daytona 500, which was postponed by rain. PAGE D4 SPORTSMONDAY D1-6 A Cheer-Filled Lap for Trump Robert Irwin, 91, a master of the Light and Space movement, has created a wondrous show, Lawrence Weschler writes. Above, “Arrowhead.” PAGE C1 ARTS C1-7 Drawing Inside the Lines President Trump has questioned the existence of NPR, and the broadcaster is not taking his threat lightly. PAGE B1 No NPR Tote Bag on His Arm After three decades of chaos, the coun- try’s medics, road-builders and educa- tors are often not government workers, but young volunteers. PAGE A4 INTERNATIONAL A4-8 Somalia’s Civilian Forces The Israeli military said Hamas tried to dupe its troops by posing as women seeking romance. PAGE A5 ‘Catfishing’ as Weapon of War Jewish people, particularly Orthodox Jews, are on edge after an increase in hate crimes against them. PAGE A14 NEW YORK A14-15 ‘Most Visible Jews’ Targeted After days of torrential rain, a 33,000- acre reservoir was swamped, pushing the Pearl River over its banks and forcing evacuations. Officials fear that the worst is still to come. PAGE A12 NATIONAL A9-13 Water Rising in Mississippi In Los Angeles, a nearly 400-acre cam- pus with more than 1,600 housing units represents one of the country’s most ambitious plans to address the home- less crisis among veterans. PAGE A11 A Fresh Start for Veterans David Leonhardt PAGE A19 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A18-19 One frigid morning in January 2019, a New York University stu- dent woke up in her apartment near the school’s Manhattan cam- pus to find a masked man stand- ing over her in bed. He told her not to scream, she told investigators, and then he held her down and raped her. Two months later, the police matched fingerprints found on an unopened condom wrapper in her room to those of a 22-year-old man named Tyler Lockett, who hap- pened to be in jail on charges of having committed three burgla- ries in Brooklyn. What should have been a lucky break for law enforcement, how- ever, soon turned disastrous. In- stead of being charged with rape, Mr. Lockett was released from jail in July and the authorities said he attacked three more women over two weeks before he was caught. Investigators in the New York Police Department’s Special Vic- tims Division made a series of er- rors leading to Mr. Lockett’s re- lease, including failing to inform prosecutors he was a rape suspect after his fingerprints were found, according to several law enforce- ment officials, the student’s mother and a police document. Those errors underscored a longstanding problem identified Trail of Errors Freed Suspect In Rape Case By ASHLEY SOUTHALL Continued on Page A15 Many fans and players don’t think M.L.B.’s penalties went far enough. More ugliness is possible. PAGE D1 Astros Scandal Is Lingering VOL. CLXIX . . . No. 58,606 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2020 Late Edition Today, clouds and some sunshine, high 48. Tonight, increasing clouds, low 35. Tomorrow, rain beginning in the late morning, mild, high 50. Weather map appears on Page B8. $3.00

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Page 1: EXITS CRUISE SHIP VIRUS AS THRONG RUSH TO …...2020/02/17  · C M Y K x,2020-02-17,A,001,Bsx Nx -4C,E2 U(D54G1D)y+z!:!#!$!z Airbus is slowly restarting its assembly line in China

C M Y K Nxxx,2020-02-17,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

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

Airbus is slowly restarting itsassembly line in China. GeneralMotors began limited productionon Saturday. Toyota followed onMonday morning.

Fitfully and painfully — andwith some worried prodding fromBeijing — China is trying to re-open for business.

The world’s second-largesteconomy practically shut downthree weeks ago as a viral out-break sickened tens of thousandsof people, unexpectedly length-ening a Chinese holiday. Thefreeze set off warnings that theglobal economy could be in jeop-ardy if the world’s pre-eminentmanufacturing powerhouse

stayed shut for long.Now, as some factories rumble

back into action, the monumentaltask of restarting China is becom-ing clear. China’s efforts to containthe virus are clashing with itspush to get the country back towork, requiring the country’sleaders to strike a balance be-tween keeping people safe andgetting vital industries back ontrack.

Chinese leaders called this pastweek for more emphasis on reviv-ing the economy. But many of thefactories that have reopened areoperating well below capacity, saycompanies and experts. Quaran-

China’s Factories, ImmobilizedBy Disease, Struggle to Reopen

By KEITH BRADSHER

Continued on Page A7

HILLSIDE, Ill. — Hardis White,78, could hardly wait to break outof suburbia.

He dressed in a flannel shirt,jeans and a Bears cap, strode outof the rectangular bungalow heshares with his wife and daughterand folded his tall frame behindthe wheel of his silver Nissan se-dan.

Forty minutes away from hissuburban neighborhood of Hill-side, he arrived in Chicago, on La-porte Avenue, to see what he hadcome to see: a handsome brickhouse with white trim, two storiestall, as solid as the first day he sawit in 1967.

For a moment, he gazed at thehouse. Marvin Gaye played softlyon the radio. The grass seemed alittle long, he murmured. He putthe car back in gear and startedback to the suburbs.

“I don’t know why I keep com-ing back,” he said. “I guess I justmiss the neighborhood.”

Some people, lured by nostalgiaand curiosity, drive past their oldhouses now and then. Mr. Whitedoes it nearly every day.

Today, he is one of the more than200,000 African-Americans whohave moved out of Chicago in thelast two decades, though in someways, he never left. For more thana year, he has taken this daily pil-

grimage back to the house on La-porte, to the city where his chil-dren grew up and where two of hisdaughters still live.

The steady exodus of African-Americans has caused alarm andgrief in Chicago, the nation’s thirdlargest city, where black people

have shaped the history, cultureand political life. The population of2.7 million is still nearly split inthirds among whites, blacks andLatinos, but the balance is shift-ing. Chicago saw its populationdecline in 2018, the fourth year in arow. Since 2015, almost 50,000

black residents have left.They have been driven out of

the city by segregation, gun vio-lence, discriminatory policing, ra-cial disparities in employment,the uneven quality of publicschools and frustration at life in

Black Families Helped Define Chicago. Why Are They Leaving?By JULIE BOSMAN

Hardis White is one of the over 200,000 African-Americans who have moved away from Chicago.TODD HEISLER/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A10

The cruise ship had beenshunned at port after port for fearit might carry the coronavirus, butwhen the Westerdam arrived inCambodia on Thursday, the primeminister greeted its passengerswith flowers.

Amid assurances that the shipwas disease free, hundreds ofelated passengers disembarked.Some went sightseeing, visitingbeaches and restaurants and get-ting massages. Others traveled onto destinations around the world.

One, however, did not make itmuch farther than the thermalscanners at the Kuala Lumpur air-port in Malaysia. The passenger,an American, was stopped on Sat-urday, and later tested positive forthe coronavirus.

On Sunday, with passengers al-ready headed for destinations onat least three continents, healthofficials were scrambling to deter-mine how a big a problem theynow have — and how to stop itfrom getting bigger.

“We anticipated glitches, but Ihave to tell you I didn’t anticipateone of this magnitude,” said Dr.William Schaffner, an infectiousdisease specialist at VanderbiltUniversity Medical Center.

With more than a thousand pas-sengers from the Westerdamheaded for home, Dr. Schaffnersaid, it may be harder than ever tokeep the coronavirus outbreakcontained to China.

“This could be a turning point,”he said.

It is unclear how well the pas-sengers were screened beforethey were allowed off the ship. Butthe best approach to containing abroader spread of the virus fromthe Westerdam would be to trackdown all of the passengers andquarantine them for two weeks,experts said.

It won’t be easy.Dr. Peter Rabinowitz, co-direc-

tor of the MetaCenter for Pan-demic Preparedness and GlobalHealth Security at University ofWashington, said the episodewould test the limits of contacttracing, the method used to findpeople exposed to infection.

“It’s really daunting to control asituation like this, now that peoplehave gone all over the world,” Dr.Rabinowitz said.

More than 140 passengers fromthe ship flew to Malaysia, and allbut the American woman whotested positive and her husband

RUSH TO CONTAINVIRUS AS THRONGEXITS CRUISE SHIP

U.S. CITIZEN IS INFECTED

1,000 Travelers Dispersein Cambodia — Fear

of ‘Turning Point’

This article is by Richard C. Pad-dock, Sui-Lee Wee and Roni CarynRabin.

Continued on Page A8

EVACUATION U.S. citizens leaving the Diamond Princess on Monday in Japan, where it was quarantined for over a week. Page A8.FRANCK ROBICHON/EPA, VIA SHUTTERSTOCK

WASHINGTON — The Trumpadministration’s push to preventChina from dominating the mar-ket for advanced technologies hasput it on a collision course with thesame American companies itwants to protect.

Firms that specialize in micro-chips, artificial intelligence, bio-technology and other industrieshave grown increasingly alarmedby the administration’s efforts torestrict the flow of technology toChina, saying it could drain exper-tise, research and revenue fromthe United States, ultimately erod-ing America’s advantage.

The concerns, which have beensimmering for months, have tak-en on new urgency as the Com-merce Department considersadopting a sweeping proposalthat would allow the United Statesto block transactions betweenAmerican firms and Chinesecounterparts. Those rules, on topof new restrictions on Chinese in-vestment in the United States andproposed measures that wouldprevent American companiesfrom exporting certain productsand sharing technology with for-eign nationals, have the tech in-dustry scrambling to respond.

The Trump administration’scrackdown has already promptedforeign firms to shun Americancomponents and technology overconcerns that access to parts theyneed could be abruptly cut off.American companies are watch-ing warily as the United Statesconsiders restricting export li-censes for companies that sellproducts or share intellectualproperty with China, includingGeneral Electric, which sells air-craft parts to China as part of ajoint venture with Safran, aFrench firm.

Administration officials plan tomeet Feb. 28 to discuss further re-strictions on China, includingwhether to block G.E.’s license tosell jet engines and whether to fur-ther curtail the ability of Huawei,the Chinese telecom giant, to haveaccess to American technology.

There is growing bipartisanconsensus in Washington that

Tech IndustryPushes BackOn U.S. Rules

Businesses Dread StingFrom Curbs on China

By ANA SWANSONand DAVID McCABE

Continued on Page A5

LAS VEGAS — Senator BernieSanders is a longtime supporter of“Medicare for all.” “I wrote thedamn bill,” he said on a debatestage last summer, and his sup-port for universal health care hashelped propel him to the front ofthe 2020 Democratic field.

But in Nevada, where the raceheads next, his signature policy isa liability with the largest laborunion in the state. And the unionhas enthusiastic allies in Mr.Sanders’s opponents.

On Friday morning, momentsafter Senator Amy Klobuchar fin-ished a tour of the health care fa-cility run by the culinary workers’union, she began to lace into Mr.Sanders and his focus on the pro-posal, which would effectivelyeliminate union members’ currenthealth care system.

It is unwise and unrealistic, sheargued, to eliminate the privatehealth insurance that millions ofAmericans now use — or to think

such a measure could pass.“Since we’re in Vegas I’d say if

your number is not on the wheel,maybe you don’t want to bet onthat number,” Ms. Klobuchar said.

A night earlier, former MayorPete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind.,raised the issue at a forum for La-tino voters. “Who are we to tellthem that they have to give upthose plans?” Mr. Buttigieg said ofthe culinary workers’ health carecoverage.

Then there’s Tom Steyer, the bil-lionaire self-funder, who is com-peting aggressively in Nevadaand has started airing a commer-cial that says “unions don’t like”Mr. Sanders’s plan and includes avow to protect “union negotiatedplans.”

The flurry of attacks against Mr.Sanders in Nevada illustrates hisgrowing strength — and the ur-gency his Democratic rivals feelabout the need to stop him fromwinning the most votes in a thirdconsecutive contest next Satur-day. If no Democrat slows Mr.Sanders in the caucuses here, hewill gather what may be unstop-pable momentum heading intonext month’s Super Tuesdaystates.

But the offensive against theVermont senator also highlightedsome of his most glaring vulnera-bilities: The culinary union, whichrepresents many of the workers inLas Vegas’s casinos, is opposed tohis single-payer plan. And after itsleaders stated that opposition,they were met with the sort ofscathing and personal invectivethat critics of Mr. Sanders often re-ceive.

Culinary Workers Local 226,which is 60,000 members strongand over half Latino, is perhapsthe most powerful force in Demo-

It’s Union vs. Sanders Over Hard-Won BenefitsBy JENNIFER MEDINA

and JONATHAN MARTIN‘Medicare for All’ Plan

Lands With a Thud,and Rivals Pounce

Continued on Page A13

Japan’s fading towns saw colorful mas-cots as a way to lure tourists, but manyare now being quietly killed off. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-7

Too Much of a Cute Thing?The president took the track in hislimousine before the Daytona 500,which was postponed by rain. PAGE D4

SPORTSMONDAY D1-6

A Cheer-Filled Lap for TrumpRobert Irwin, 91, a master of the Lightand Space movement, has created awondrous show, Lawrence Weschlerwrites. Above, “Arrowhead.” PAGE C1

ARTS C1-7

Drawing Inside the Lines

President Trump has questioned theexistence of NPR, and the broadcasteris not taking his threat lightly. PAGE B1

No NPR Tote Bag on His Arm

After three decades of chaos, the coun-try’s medics, road-builders and educa-tors are often not government workers,but young volunteers. PAGE A4

INTERNATIONAL A4-8

Somalia’s Civilian Forces

The Israeli military said Hamas tried todupe its troops by posing as womenseeking romance. PAGE A5

‘Catfishing’ as Weapon of War

Jewish people, particularly OrthodoxJews, are on edge after an increase inhate crimes against them. PAGE A14

NEW YORK A14-15

‘Most Visible Jews’ Targeted

After days of torrential rain, a 33,000-acre reservoir was swamped, pushingthe Pearl River over its banks andforcing evacuations. Officials fear thatthe worst is still to come. PAGE A12

NATIONAL A9-13

Water Rising in Mississippi

In Los Angeles, a nearly 400-acre cam-pus with more than 1,600 housing unitsrepresents one of the country’s mostambitious plans to address the home-less crisis among veterans. PAGE A11

A Fresh Start for Veterans

David Leonhardt PAGE A19

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A18-19

One frigid morning in January2019, a New York University stu-dent woke up in her apartmentnear the school’s Manhattan cam-pus to find a masked man stand-ing over her in bed. He told her notto scream, she told investigators,and then he held her down andraped her.

Two months later, the policematched fingerprints found on anunopened condom wrapper in herroom to those of a 22-year-old mannamed Tyler Lockett, who hap-pened to be in jail on charges ofhaving committed three burgla-ries in Brooklyn.

What should have been a luckybreak for law enforcement, how-ever, soon turned disastrous. In-stead of being charged with rape,Mr. Lockett was released from jailin July and the authorities said heattacked three more women overtwo weeks before he was caught.

Investigators in the New YorkPolice Department’s Special Vic-tims Division made a series of er-rors leading to Mr. Lockett’s re-lease, including failing to informprosecutors he was a rape suspectafter his fingerprints were found,according to several law enforce-ment officials, the student’smother and a police document.

Those errors underscored alongstanding problem identified

Trail of ErrorsFreed Suspect

In Rape Case

By ASHLEY SOUTHALL

Continued on Page A15

Many fans and players don’t thinkM.L.B.’s penalties went far enough.More ugliness is possible. PAGE D1

Astros Scandal Is Lingering

VOL. CLXIX . . . No. 58,606 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2020

Late EditionToday, clouds and some sunshine,high 48. Tonight, increasing clouds,low 35. Tomorrow, rain beginning inthe late morning, mild, high 50.Weather map appears on Page B8.

$3.00