is far from over executives fear · 2020. 7. 21. · is a criminal defense lawyer, in-vestigators...

1
U(D54G1D)y+@!"!$!$!z KHOST, Afghanistan — Moti- vated, educated and fresh from finishing police academy in Tur- key, Second Lt. Zala Zazai had stellar qualifications for the job she took in eastern Afghanistan in June. It all mattered little once she started. On social media, she was called a prostitute, and men wrote that her very presence on the force would corrupt Khost Province, where she was posted. Her col- leagues at Police Headquarters — where she was the only female of- ficer on a staff of nearly 500 — tried to intimidate her into wear- ing a conservative head scarf and traditional clothes instead of her uniform, and to hide in back cor- ners of the office away from the public, she said. Shopkeepers ar- rived at the station’s gates with no other business but to get a look at this novelty. Lieutenant Zazai, 21, came home from her first day feeling sick and frightened. She felt so un- safe that she asked her mother, Spesalai, who had accompanied her from Kabul, to stay with her at a shelter deep inside Police Head- quarters. At night, the two women locked the door. During the day, Lieutenant Zazai scrambled to ex- pedite the paperwork for a pistol. “I want to have something to defend myself with,” she said. Helping Afghan women, who were banished to their homes by the Taliban during their govern- ment in the 1990s, became a rally- ing cry for Western involvement in Afghanistan after the U.S. inva- sion in 2001. Two decades later, the rise of a generation of educated, professional Afghan women is an undeniable sign of change. Now, with the possibility of power-sharing talks opening be- tween the Taliban and the Afghan government, many women are worried that the strides they have made are at risk. What adds to their concern is how fragile the gains remain after two decades, where every mundane step is still a daily battle. Even after more than a billion dollars spent on women’s empow- erment projects, the daily reality for women trying to break into For Afghan Women, Fears That Hard-Won Progress Will Vanish By MUJIB MASHAL Second Lt. Zala Zazai with two women who came to her seeking help for domestic violence. KIANA HAYERI FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A11 Roy Den Hollander was a self- described “anti-feminist” lawyer who flooded the courts with seem- ingly frivolous lawsuits that sought to eliminate women’s stud- ies programs and prohibit night- clubs from holding “ladies’ nights.” In one of his most recent cases, he openly seethed against a fed- eral judge in New Jersey, Esther Salas, whom he described in a self-published, 1,700-page book as “a lazy and incompetent Latina judge appointed by Obama.” Mr. Den Hollander left the case, in which he challenged the male- only United States military draft, last summer, telling a lawyer who replaced him that he had terminal cancer. On Sunday afternoon, Mr. Den Hollander showed up at Judge Salas’s home in North Brunswick, N.J., and fired multiple gunshots, killing the judge’s son and seri- ously wounding her husband, who is a criminal defense lawyer, in- vestigators said. The judge, who was in the basement at the time, was not injured. The New York State Police found Mr. Den Hollander’s body near Liberty, N.Y. — about a two- hour drive from the judge’s home — after he shot himself in an ap- parent suicide, officials said. Anti-Feminist Lawyer Suspected In Attack on U.S. Judge’s Family This article is by Nicole Hong, William K. Rashbaum and Mihir Zaveri. Continued on Page A18 President Trump’s weak poll numbers and a surge of Demo- cratic cash flooding key Senate races have jolted top Republicans and intensified talk among party donors and strategists about re- directing money to protect their narrow Senate Republican major- ity amid growing fear of complete Democratic control of Washing- ton in 2021. Almost no one is talking openly about abandoning Mr. Trump at this point. A total collapse at the top of the ticket, Republican strat- egists and donors agree, would only make holding the Senate harder. But maintaining the Senate is an imperative for the G.O.P.: A Democratic Senate could offer a glide path for liberal Supreme Court nominees from a President Biden, or block Mr. Trump’s judges if he won a second term. And right now, Senate Republican incumbents and candidates are losing badly in the money chase not just in the top Senate battle- grounds — states like Maine, Ari- zona, Colorado and North Car- olina — but also in conservative states, such as Montana, where seats are now increasingly up for grabs. Five of the most endangered Republican senators up for re- election were out-raised by a com- bined $18.5 million in the second quarter by their Democratic chal- lengers, recent campaign filings show. The private discussions about whether to shift resources toward imperiled Republican Senate can- didates reflect a mix of factors: a lack of confidence that Mr. Trump will beat Joseph R. Biden Jr.; fear that the president is already a drag on down-ballot candidates; desire to maintain a G.O.P. “fire- wall” on Capitol Hill if Mr. Biden prevails; and the belief that money is not among Mr. Trump’s myriad problems. A series of national polls last week showed Mr. Trump stuck double digits behind Mr. Biden, who now tops 50 percent in many surveys. The president has more than three months to rebound, of course, and he is flush with cash G.O.P. Donors Are Scrambling To Save Senate Party’s Focus Shifts as Trump Slips in Polls By SHANE GOLDMACHER Continued on Page A19 The Queens Hospital Center emergency department has a ca- pacity of 60, but on its worst night of the coronavirus pandemic, more than 180 patients lay on stretchers in the observation bays and hallways. Alarms rang inces- santly as exhausted doctors rushed from crisis to crisis. Less than four miles away, a temporary hospital opened the next morning, on April 10. The fa- cility, which was built at the U.S.T.A. Billie Jean King National Tennis Center to relieve the city’s overwhelmed hospitals, had hun- dreds of beds and scores of medi- cal professionals trained to treat virus patients. But in the entire month that the site remained open, it treated just three patients from the Queens Hospital Center emergency de- partment, records show. Overall, the field hospital cost more than $52 million and served only 79 pa- tients. The pandemic has presented unique challenges for officials grappling with a fast-moving and largely unpredictable foe. But the story of the Billie Jean King facili- ty illustrates the missteps made at Red Tape Left Hospital Idling In a Hot Zone By BRIAN M. ROSENTHAL Continued on Page A8 With coronavirus cases around the country on the rise and states rolling back their reopening plans, many of the nation's top business leaders are steeling themselves for a period of prolonged eco- nomic disruption and the prospect of a slow, halting recovery. “I’m less optimistic today than I was 30 days ago,” said Arne Sorenson, chief executive of Mar- riott International. “The virus is in so many different markets of the United States.” Mr. Sorenson’s outlook, like those of many chief executives, has worsened in recent weeks as virus cases have spiked in the South and the West, leading some states to close businesses that had previously been allowed to open. He said that after bookings at Marriott’s hotels rose in early July, they had fallen again. “The last week was weaker than the week before,” Mr. Sorenson said. While retail sales have mostly rebounded to pre-crisis levels and the stock markets remain buoy- ant, business leaders and econo- mists still see serious cause for concern. Tens of millions of Amer- icans are out of work. Important parts of the economy — including live sports, movie theaters and many tourist attractions — re- main largely shuttered. Business districts are still primarily empty as people continue working from home. And as the virus spreads, new lockdowns could cause fur- ther economic disruptions. Already, there are signs the re- covery is losing momentum. Air travel had been on the rise, with the Transportation Security Administration reporting a steady increase in passengers at Ameri- can airports. But Ed Bastian, the chief executive of Delta Air Lines, suggested that momentum had sputtered in recent days. “I have a more cautious view than I did four weeks ago,” Mr. Bastian said. “While the T.S.A. numbers have continued to slowly tick up, the reality is that the cash that people are willing to commit to future travel decisions has stalled. The fear that the virus has created in the South has put peo- ple more into a stay-at-home men- tality than we’d seen before.” Many chief executives said they were broadly in favor of reopening the economy, arguing that it was vital for people to be at work. “We will need to open up, but it has to be done safely and prop- erly,” said Jamie Dimon, chief ex- EXECUTIVES FEAR ECONOMIC AGONY IS FAR FROM OVER VIRUS’S RISE DIMS HOPES Business Leaders Brace for a Slow, Halting Recovery By DAVID GELLES Continued on Page A7 By century’s end, the animals could become nearly extinct as sea ice van- ishes, scientists say. PAGE A12 INTERNATIONAL A10-12 Grim Outlook for Polar Bears The usually tourist-packed Berkshires confront a summer without the festival that anchors the season. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-6 Tanglewood, Minus the Music They buzz. They hover. Sometimes they sting. Some even help us. How much do you really know about these so-called pests that are our neighbors? PAGE D1 SCIENCE TIMES D1-8 Sharing Summer With Wasps Urban centers, with a dynamism that feeds innovation, have long been resil- ient. But the pandemic could drive a shift away from density. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-6 Crossroads for Cities? Three labs reported a good immune response in vaccinated subjects, but one researcher cautioned: “There is still a long way to go.” PAGE A6 TRACKING AN OUTBREAK A4-9 Promising Results on Vaccine Michelle Goldberg PAGE A21 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21 The famed discount department store Tati is shutting in Paris, and its Barbès neighborhood is in mourning. PAGE A10 Losing a Bastion of Bargains Concerns are raised about a potential Russian-linked bid to use disinformation against Joseph R. Biden Jr. PAGE A19 NATIONAL A14-19 Democrats Fear a Foreign Plot Fary is a leading figure in the country’s stand-up scene. Recently, though, being funny has taken a back seat. PAGE C1 French Comic Takes On Racism Major League Baseball is set to open in empty stadiums this week. But an independent league has played games since early July, with fans. PAGE B7 SPORTSTUESDAY B7-9 Beating Out the Big Leagues EVE EDELHEIT FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES A swimming club at The Villages in Florida kept its distance. The virus has arrived at the sprawling retirement community. Page A7. As Cases Soar, a Community Rolls On WASHINGTON — President Trump plans to deploy federal law enforcement to Chicago and threatened on Monday to send agents to other major cities — all controlled by Democrats. Governors and other officials reacted angrily to the president’s move, calling it an election-year ploy as they squared off over crime, civil liberties and local con- trol that has spread from Port- land, Ore., across the country. With camouflage-clad agents already sweeping through the streets of Portland, more units were poised to head to Chicago, and Mr. Trump suggested that he would follow suit in New York, Philadelphia, Detroit and other urban centers. Governors and other officials compared his ac- tions to authoritarianism and vowed to pursue legislation or lawsuits to stop him. The president cast the con- frontation in overtly political terms as he seeks an issue that would gain traction with voters at a time when many of his own sup- porters have soured on his leader- ship amid a deadly pandemic and economic collapse. Trailing badly in the polls with just over 100 days until the election in November, Mr. Trump assailed the “liberal Demo- crats” running American cities and tied the issue to his presump- tive fall opponent, former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. “I’m going to do something — that, I can tell you,” Mr. Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. “Be- cause we’re not going to let New York and Chicago and Philadel- phia and Detroit and Baltimore and all of these — Oakland is a mess. We’re not going to let this happen in our country. All run by liberal Democrats.” The president portrayed the na- tion’s cities as out of control. “Look at what’s going on — all run by Democrats, all run by very lib- eral Democrats. All run, really, by radical left,” Mr. Trump said. He added: “If Biden got in, that would be true for the country. The whole country would go to hell. And we’re not going to let it go to hell.” Democrats said the president was the one out of control. Senator Jeff Merkley of Oregon said he would introduce legislation to lim- it the role of federal agents in cit- ies like Portland. “This isn’t just an Oregon crisis,” he said. “It’s an Trump Threatens to Use Force in Major Cities This article is by Peter Baker, Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Monica Davey. Democrats Push Back, Calling His Tactics ‘Authoritarian’ Continued on Page A17 Congressional Republicans and the White House are coalescing around a $1 trillion virus relief package. PAGE A9 G.O.P.’s Opening Offer Late Edition VOL. CLXIX .... No. 58,761 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 2020 Today, hot, evening showers or heavy thunderstorms, high 97. To- night, showers or thunderstorms early, low 76. Tomorrow, cloudy, hot, high 90. Weather map on Page A22. $3.00

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Page 1: IS FAR FROM OVER EXECUTIVES FEAR · 2020. 7. 21. · is a criminal defense lawyer, in-vestigators said. The judge, who was in the basement at the time, was not injured. The New York

C M Y K Nxxx,2020-07-21,A,001,Bs-4C,E1

U(D54G1D)y+@!"!$!$!z

KHOST, Afghanistan — Moti-vated, educated and fresh fromfinishing police academy in Tur-key, Second Lt. Zala Zazai hadstellar qualifications for the jobshe took in eastern Afghanistan inJune. It all mattered little once shestarted.

On social media, she was calleda prostitute, and men wrote thather very presence on the forcewould corrupt Khost Province,where she was posted. Her col-leagues at Police Headquarters —where she was the only female of-ficer on a staff of nearly 500 —tried to intimidate her into wear-ing a conservative head scarf andtraditional clothes instead of heruniform, and to hide in back cor-ners of the office away from thepublic, she said. Shopkeepers ar-rived at the station’s gates with noother business but to get a look atthis novelty.

Lieutenant Zazai, 21, camehome from her first day feelingsick and frightened. She felt so un-safe that she asked her mother,Spesalai, who had accompaniedher from Kabul, to stay with her ata shelter deep inside Police Head-quarters. At night, the two womenlocked the door. During the day,Lieutenant Zazai scrambled to ex-pedite the paperwork for a pistol.

“I want to have something todefend myself with,” she said.

Helping Afghan women, whowere banished to their homes bythe Taliban during their govern-ment in the 1990s, became a rally-ing cry for Western involvementin Afghanistan after the U.S. inva-sion in 2001. Two decades later, the

rise of a generation of educated,professional Afghan women is anundeniable sign of change.

Now, with the possibility ofpower-sharing talks opening be-tween the Taliban and the Afghangovernment, many women areworried that the strides they havemade are at risk. What adds to

their concern is how fragile thegains remain after two decades,where every mundane step is stilla daily battle.

Even after more than a billiondollars spent on women’s empow-erment projects, the daily realityfor women trying to break into

For Afghan Women, Fears That Hard-Won Progress Will VanishBy MUJIB MASHAL

Second Lt. Zala Zazai with two women who came to her seeking help for domestic violence.KIANA HAYERI FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A11

Roy Den Hollander was a self-described “anti-feminist” lawyerwho flooded the courts with seem-ingly frivolous lawsuits thatsought to eliminate women’s stud-ies programs and prohibit night-clubs from holding “ladies’nights.”

In one of his most recent cases,he openly seethed against a fed-eral judge in New Jersey, EstherSalas, whom he described in aself-published, 1,700-page book as“a lazy and incompetent Latinajudge appointed by Obama.”

Mr. Den Hollander left the case,in which he challenged the male-

only United States military draft,last summer, telling a lawyer whoreplaced him that he had terminalcancer.

On Sunday afternoon, Mr. DenHollander showed up at JudgeSalas’s home in North Brunswick,N.J., and fired multiple gunshots,killing the judge’s son and seri-ously wounding her husband, whois a criminal defense lawyer, in-vestigators said. The judge, whowas in the basement at the time,was not injured.

The New York State Policefound Mr. Den Hollander’s bodynear Liberty, N.Y. — about a two-hour drive from the judge’s home— after he shot himself in an ap-parent suicide, officials said.

Anti-Feminist Lawyer SuspectedIn Attack on U.S. Judge’s Family

This article is by Nicole Hong,William K. Rashbaum and MihirZaveri.

Continued on Page A18

President Trump’s weak pollnumbers and a surge of Demo-cratic cash flooding key Senateraces have jolted top Republicansand intensified talk among partydonors and strategists about re-directing money to protect theirnarrow Senate Republican major-ity amid growing fear of completeDemocratic control of Washing-ton in 2021.

Almost no one is talking openlyabout abandoning Mr. Trump atthis point. A total collapse at thetop of the ticket, Republican strat-egists and donors agree, wouldonly make holding the Senateharder.

But maintaining the Senate isan imperative for the G.O.P.: ADemocratic Senate could offer aglide path for liberal SupremeCourt nominees from a PresidentBiden, or block Mr. Trump’sjudges if he won a second term.And right now, Senate Republicanincumbents and candidates arelosing badly in the money chasenot just in the top Senate battle-grounds — states like Maine, Ari-zona, Colorado and North Car-olina — but also in conservativestates, such as Montana, whereseats are now increasingly up forgrabs.

Five of the most endangeredRepublican senators up for re-election were out-raised by a com-bined $18.5 million in the secondquarter by their Democratic chal-lengers, recent campaign filingsshow.

The private discussions aboutwhether to shift resources towardimperiled Republican Senate can-didates reflect a mix of factors: alack of confidence that Mr. Trumpwill beat Joseph R. Biden Jr.; fearthat the president is already adrag on down-ballot candidates;desire to maintain a G.O.P. “fire-wall” on Capitol Hill if Mr. Bidenprevails; and the belief thatmoney is not among Mr. Trump’smyriad problems.

A series of national polls lastweek showed Mr. Trump stuckdouble digits behind Mr. Biden,who now tops 50 percent in manysurveys. The president has morethan three months to rebound, ofcourse, and he is flush with cash

G.O.P. DonorsAre ScramblingTo Save Senate

Party’s Focus Shifts asTrump Slips in Polls

By SHANE GOLDMACHER

Continued on Page A19

The Queens Hospital Centeremergency department has a ca-pacity of 60, but on its worst nightof the coronavirus pandemic,more than 180 patients lay onstretchers in the observation baysand hallways. Alarms rang inces-santly as exhausted doctorsrushed from crisis to crisis.

Less than four miles away, atemporary hospital opened thenext morning, on April 10. The fa-cility, which was built at theU.S.T.A. Billie Jean King NationalTennis Center to relieve the city’soverwhelmed hospitals, had hun-dreds of beds and scores of medi-cal professionals trained to treatvirus patients.

But in the entire month that thesite remained open, it treated justthree patients from the QueensHospital Center emergency de-partment, records show. Overall,the field hospital cost more than$52 million and served only 79 pa-tients.

The pandemic has presentedunique challenges for officialsgrappling with a fast-moving andlargely unpredictable foe. But thestory of the Billie Jean King facili-ty illustrates the missteps made at

Red Tape LeftHospital Idling

In a Hot Zone

By BRIAN M. ROSENTHAL

Continued on Page A8

With coronavirus cases aroundthe country on the rise and statesrolling back their reopening plans,many of the nation's top businessleaders are steeling themselvesfor a period of prolonged eco-nomic disruption and the prospectof a slow, halting recovery.

“I’m less optimistic today than Iwas 30 days ago,” said ArneSorenson, chief executive of Mar-riott International. “The virus is inso many different markets of theUnited States.”

Mr. Sorenson’s outlook, likethose of many chief executives,has worsened in recent weeks asvirus cases have spiked in theSouth and the West, leading somestates to close businesses that hadpreviously been allowed to open.

He said that after bookings atMarriott’s hotels rose in earlyJuly, they had fallen again. “Thelast week was weaker than theweek before,” Mr. Sorenson said.

While retail sales have mostlyrebounded to pre-crisis levels andthe stock markets remain buoy-ant, business leaders and econo-mists still see serious cause forconcern. Tens of millions of Amer-icans are out of work. Importantparts of the economy — includinglive sports, movie theaters andmany tourist attractions — re-main largely shuttered. Businessdistricts are still primarily emptyas people continue working fromhome. And as the virus spreads,new lockdowns could cause fur-ther economic disruptions.

Already, there are signs the re-covery is losing momentum.

Air travel had been on the rise,with the Transportation SecurityAdministration reporting a steadyincrease in passengers at Ameri-can airports. But Ed Bastian, thechief executive of Delta Air Lines,suggested that momentum hadsputtered in recent days.

“I have a more cautious viewthan I did four weeks ago,” Mr.Bastian said. “While the T.S.A.numbers have continued to slowlytick up, the reality is that the cashthat people are willing to committo future travel decisions hasstalled. The fear that the virus hascreated in the South has put peo-ple more into a stay-at-home men-tality than we’d seen before.”

Many chief executives said theywere broadly in favor of reopeningthe economy, arguing that it wasvital for people to be at work.

“We will need to open up, but ithas to be done safely and prop-erly,” said Jamie Dimon, chief ex-

EXECUTIVES FEARECONOMIC AGONYIS FAR FROM OVER

VIRUS’S RISE DIMS HOPES

Business Leaders Bracefor a Slow, Halting

Recovery

By DAVID GELLES

Continued on Page A7

By century’s end, the animals couldbecome nearly extinct as sea ice van-ishes, scientists say. PAGE A12

INTERNATIONAL A10-12

Grim Outlook for Polar BearsThe usually tourist-packed Berkshiresconfront a summer without the festivalthat anchors the season. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-6

Tanglewood, Minus the MusicThey buzz. They hover. Sometimes theysting. Some even help us. How much doyou really know about these so-calledpests that are our neighbors? PAGE D1

SCIENCE TIMES D1-8

Sharing Summer With Wasps

Urban centers, with a dynamism thatfeeds innovation, have long been resil-ient. But the pandemic could drive ashift away from density. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-6

Crossroads for Cities?Three labs reported a good immuneresponse in vaccinated subjects, butone researcher cautioned: “There isstill a long way to go.” PAGE A6

TRACKING AN OUTBREAK A4-9

Promising Results on Vaccine

Michelle Goldberg PAGE A21

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21The famed discount department storeTati is shutting in Paris, and its Barbèsneighborhood is in mourning. PAGE A10

Losing a Bastion of BargainsConcerns are raised about a potentialRussian-linked bid to use disinformationagainst Joseph R. Biden Jr. PAGE A19

NATIONAL A14-19

Democrats Fear a Foreign PlotFary is a leading figure in the country’sstand-up scene. Recently, though, beingfunny has taken a back seat. PAGE C1

French Comic Takes On Racism

Major League Baseball is set to open inempty stadiums this week. But anindependent league has played gamessince early July, with fans. PAGE B7

SPORTSTUESDAY B7-9

Beating Out the Big Leagues

EVE EDELHEIT FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

A swimming club at The Villages in Florida kept its distance. The virus has arrived at the sprawling retirement community. Page A7.As Cases Soar, a Community Rolls On

WASHINGTON — PresidentTrump plans to deploy federal lawenforcement to Chicago andthreatened on Monday to sendagents to other major cities — allcontrolled by Democrats.

Governors and other officialsreacted angrily to the president’smove, calling it an election-yearploy as they squared off overcrime, civil liberties and local con-trol that has spread from Port-land, Ore., across the country.

With camouflage-clad agentsalready sweeping through thestreets of Portland, more unitswere poised to head to Chicago,and Mr. Trump suggested that hewould follow suit in New York,Philadelphia, Detroit and otherurban centers. Governors andother officials compared his ac-tions to authoritarianism and

vowed to pursue legislation orlawsuits to stop him.

The president cast the con-frontation in overtly politicalterms as he seeks an issue thatwould gain traction with voters ata time when many of his own sup-porters have soured on his leader-ship amid a deadly pandemic andeconomic collapse. Trailing badlyin the polls with just over 100 daysuntil the election in November, Mr.Trump assailed the “liberal Demo-crats” running American citiesand tied the issue to his presump-tive fall opponent, former VicePresident Joseph R. Biden Jr.

“I’m going to do something —

that, I can tell you,” Mr. Trump toldreporters in the Oval Office. “Be-cause we’re not going to let NewYork and Chicago and Philadel-phia and Detroit and Baltimoreand all of these — Oakland is amess. We’re not going to let thishappen in our country. All run byliberal Democrats.”

The president portrayed the na-tion’s cities as out of control.“Look at what’s going on — all runby Democrats, all run by very lib-eral Democrats. All run, really, byradical left,” Mr. Trump said. Headded: “If Biden got in, that wouldbe true for the country. The wholecountry would go to hell. Andwe’re not going to let it go to hell.”

Democrats said the presidentwas the one out of control. SenatorJeff Merkley of Oregon said hewould introduce legislation to lim-it the role of federal agents in cit-ies like Portland. “This isn’t justan Oregon crisis,” he said. “It’s an

Trump Threatens to Use Force in Major CitiesThis article is by Peter Baker,

Zolan Kanno-Youngs and MonicaDavey.

Democrats Push Back,Calling His Tactics

‘Authoritarian’

Continued on Page A17

Congressional Republicans and theWhite House are coalescing around a$1 trillion virus relief package. PAGE A9

G.O.P.’s Opening Offer

Late Edition

VOL. CLXIX . . . . No. 58,761 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 2020

Today, hot, evening showers orheavy thunderstorms, high 97. To-night, showers or thunderstormsearly, low 76. Tomorrow, cloudy, hot,high 90. Weather map on Page A22.

$3.00