of mayoral race in revised count margins tighten

1
U(D54G1D)y+?!/!&!?!# PHOTOGRAPH BY CARLOS SOYOS AND ADAM FERGUSON Even as the Biden administration faces a political challenge resulting from the number of migrants at the southwest border, those who are there are hoping for a lucky break. A Times photographer, Adam Ferguson, asked some of them to capture a moment in their journey through self-portraits. Above, Carlos Soyos, 34, and his son, Enderson, 8. Page A7. Showing Migrants Through Their Own Lens A day after New York City’s Board of Elections sowed confu- sion in the Democratic mayoral primary by releasing new tallies and then retracting them, it issued a new preliminary tally of votes suggesting that the race between Eric Adams, the primary night leader, and his two closest rivals had tightened significantly. According to Wednesday’s non- binding tally, Mr. Adams led Kathryn Garcia by just 14,755 votes, a margin of around two per- centage points, in the final round. Maya Wiley, who came in second place in the initial vote count, barely trailed Ms. Garcia after the preliminary elimination rounds were completed: Fewer than 350 votes separated the two. But in reality, all of those candi- dates remain in contention, and those numbers could be scram- bled again as the city’s Board of Elections tabulates ranked-choice outcomes that will include roughly 125,000 Democratic ab- sentee ballots, with a fuller result not expected until mid-July. While campaign officials and some New Yorkers were en- grossed in the emerging results, the count was nearly overshad- owed by the vote-tallying debacle that drew national attention and stoked concerns about whether voters would have faith in the city’s electoral process. The fiasco stemmed from an egregious error by the Board of Elections: Roughly 135,000 sam- ple ballots, used to test the city’s new ranked-choice system, had been mistakenly counted. The board was forced to retract the re- sults from a tabulation of ranked- choice preferences, just hours af- ter it had published them on Tues- day. The board on Wednesday even- tually released the results of a sec- ond tally of ranked-choice prefer- ences among Democrats who MARGINS TIGHTEN IN REVISED COUNT OF MAYORAL RACE ADAMS HOLDS SLIM LEAD Appeals for Patience and Reform After Fiasco in New York City By KATIE GLUECK Continued on Page A24 Absentee ballots being tallied in Queens on Wednesday. DAVE SANDERS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES A grand jury in Manhattan has indicted Donald J. Trump’s family business, the Trump Organiza- tion, and one of its top executives in connection with a tax investiga- tion into fringe benefits handed out at the company, people famil- iar with the matter said on Wednesday. The specific charges against the company and its chief financial of- ficer, Allen H. Weisselberg, were not immediately clear. The indict- ment was expected to be unsealed Thursday afternoon after Mr. Weisselberg and lawyers for the Trump Organization appear in court. But prosecutors in the Manhat- tan district attorney’s office have been examining bonuses and lux- ury perks that Mr. Weisselberg re- ceived — including an apartment in Manhattan, leased Mercedes- Benz cars and private-school tu- ition for at least one of his grand- children — and whether taxes should have been paid on those benefits. The indictment is a major devel- opment in the investigation led by the district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance, Jr., who has been conduct- ing a sweeping inquiry into Mr. Trump and his business dealings along with the New York State at- torney general, Letitia James. The charges will deal a blow to Mr. Trump, who has denounced the investigation as political per- secution. Although he could rally supporters around the idea that he is the victim of what he has called a “witch hunt,” defending his company on criminal charges could be an expensive distraction as he considers another presiden- tial run. The indictment will also ampli- fy the pressure that prosecutors have placed on Mr. Weisselberg for months to turn on Mr. Trump and cooperate with their continu- ing investigation. In nearly a half- century of service to Mr. Trump’s family businesses, Mr. Weissel- berg, 73, has survived — and thrived — by anticipating and car- rying out his boss’s dictates in a zealous mission to protect the bot- tom line. Interviews with 18 current and former associates of Mr. Weissel- berg, as well as a review of legal filings, financial records and other documents, paint a portrait of a man whose unflinching devotion to Mr. Trump will now be put to the test. “Allen is a soldier,” said John Burke, a former Trump executive who worked with Mr. Weisselberg in the early 1990s. “Allen was good at doing what Donald wanted him to do.” A bookkeeper by training who grew up in Brooklyn, Mr. Weissel- berg rose steadily within the Trump Organization to become perhaps the former president’s most trusted business adviser. Over decades, Mr. Weisselberg’s personal and family life became increasingly fused with the com- pany and with Mr. Trump, who is Panel Indicts Top Executive Under Trump Family Company Also Said to Be Charged This article is by Michael Roth- feld, Jonah E. Bromwich and Ben Protess. Continued on Page A19 Bill Cosby was released from prison Wednesday after the Penn- sylvania Supreme Court over- turned his 2018 conviction for sex- ual assault, a dramatic reversal in one of the first high-profile crimi- nal trials of the #MeToo era. The court’s decision seemed likely to end the Pennsylvania case, legal experts said, and while more than 50 women across the nation have accused Mr. Cosby of sexual assault and misconduct, statutes of limitations in their cases makes further prosecutions unlikely. Mr. Cosby had served three years of a three- to 10-year sen- tence at a maximum-security prison outside Philadelphia when the court ruled that a “non-pros- ecution agreement” with a previ- ous prosecutor meant that Mr. Cosby should not have been charged in the case. Mr. Cosby, 83, returned to his home in suburban Philadelphia Wednesday afternoon where, looking frail and walking slowly, he was helped inside by his lawyer and a spokesman. He flashed a “V” sign as he reached his front door. The court’s decision overturned the first major criminal conviction of the #MeToo era, which came soon after allegations of sexual as- sault had been made against the powerful Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein. The accusa- tions and eventual conviction of Mr. Cosby stunned the nation, painting a disturbing portrait sug- gesting that a man who had brightened America’s living rooms as a beloved father figure had been a sexual predator. The case against Mr. Cosby be- gan with his arrest in 2015 on charges that he had drugged and sexually assaulted a woman at his home in the Philadelphia suburbs 11 years earlier. In April 2018, the jury convicted Mr. Cosby of three counts of aggravated indecent as- sault against Andrea Constand, to whom Mr. Cosby had been a men- tor and who was at the time a Tem- ple University employee. Ms. Constand had praised the guilty verdict at the time, saying, “Truth prevails,” and the National Organization for Women called it “a notice to sexual predators ev- erywhere.” But Mr. Cosby’s law- yers, who had said at the time that allegations against Mr. Weinstein would make it difficult for them to receive a fair trial, later suggested in an appeal that the outcome had been influenced by what they de- scribed as a period of “public panic.” In a statement issued with her lawyers, Ms. Constand said Wednesday that the court’s ruling was “not only disappointing but of concern in that it may discourage those who seek justice for sexual assault in the criminal justice sys- tem from reporting or participat- ing in the prosecution of the as- sailant or may force a victim to choose between filing either a criminal or civil action.” In their 79-page opinion, the Cosby Is Freed After Reversal By State Court Verdict Thrown Out in Major #MeToo Case By GRAHAM BOWLEY and JULIA JACOBS Continued on Page A18 For years before the partial col- lapse of the Champlain Towers South complex near Miami, the condo board wrestled with how to come up with the $15 million needed to fix the building’s dilapi- dated roof, a poorly designed pool deck and crumbling support col- umns. The problem: The homeown- ers’ association had just $800,000 in reserves, and getting the work done meant asking residents to shoulder huge special assess- ments ranging from $80,000 to $200,000 on each home. No one was eager to pay. “The dirtiest words in the com- munity-association industry are ‘special assessment,’” Donna Di- Maggio Berger, a lawyer for the board, said of the effort to get 135 homeowners — of varying means and of multiple nationalities — to agree on a plan to do the repairs. During the prolonged tumult over the needed renovations, sev- eral members of the board had quit in frustration. As Condo Boards Squabble, Disaster May Loom By MIKE BAKER and KIMIKO de FREYTAS-TAMURA Fixes Often Delayed by Fights Over Money Continued on Page A17 BALTIMORE — When Target announced that it was opening a store in Mondawmin, a predomi- nantly Black neighborhood in this city struggling with crime and poverty, it seemed like a ticket to a turnaround. And from the start, it was a practical success and a point of community pride. The store, which opened in 2008, carried gro- ceries, operated a pharmacy and had a Starbucks cafe, the only one in this part of Baltimore’s west side. People came from across the city to shop there, helping to soft- en the Mondawmin area’s reputa- tion for crime and the looting that followed protests over the 2015 death of Freddie Gray, who was fa- tally injured while in city police custody. As an employer, Target seemed to cater to the communi- ty’s needs, making a point of hir- ing Black men and providing an office in the store for a social worker to support the staff. Elijah Cummings, the congressman from Baltimore, was known to Store’s Closing Still Wounds Black Community By MICHAEL CORKERY In Baltimore, a Failed Sign of Revitalization Continued on Page A15 Donald H. Rumsfeld, the secre- tary of defense for Presidents Gerald R. Ford and George W. Bush, who presided over Ameri- ca’s Cold War strategies in the 1970s and, in the new world of ter- rorism decades later, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, died on Tuesday at his home in Taos, N.M. He was 88. The cause was multiple myelo- ma, said Keith Urbahn, a spokes- man for the family. Encores are hardly rare in Washington, but Mr. Rumsfeld had the distinction of being the only defense chief to serve two nonconsecutive terms: 1975 to 1977 under President Ford, and 2001 to 2006 under President Bush. He also was the youngest, at 43, and the oldest, at 74, to hold the post — first in an era of Soviet- American nuclear perils, then in an age of subtler menace by ter- rorists and rogue states. A staunch ally of former Vice President Dick Cheney, who had been his protégé and friend for years, Mr. Rumsfeld was a com- bative infighter who seemed to relish conflicts as he challenged cabinet rivals, members of Con- gress and military orthodoxies. And he was widely regarded in his second tour as the most powerful defense secretary since Robert S. McNamara during the Vietnam War. Like his counterpart of long ago, Mr. Rumsfeld in Iraq waged a costly and divisive war that ulti- mately destroyed his political life and outlived his tenure by many years. But unlike McNamara, who offered mea culpas in a 2003 docu- mentary, “The Fog of War,” Mr. Rumsfeld acknowledged no seri- ous failings and warned in a farewell valedictory at the Penta- gon that quitting Iraq would be a terrible mistake, even though the war, the country learned, had been based on a false premise — that Saddam Hussein, the Iraqi leader, had been harboring weap- ons of mass destruction. Defiant Architect of Tactics in Cold War and Iraq By ROBERT D. McFADDEN Donald H. Rumsfeld in 2006. He was defense secretary twice. STEPHEN CROWLEY/THE NEW YORK TIMES DONALD H. RUMSFELD, 1932-2021 Continued on Page A20 Street performances celebrated the Chocolate Factory Theater as it moved to a new building in Queens. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-6 Moving in Style In Japan, rigid gender norms limit the opportunities for young athletes like Kurumi Mochizuki, above. PAGE A4 INTERNATIONAL A4-13 Girls Face Barriers to Goals Vanessa Friedman takes a look at changes in leadership at some of the world’s top fashion magazines. PAGE D1 THURSDAY STYLES D1-6 A New Guard of Editors A professor in Hong Kong who pushed his students to participate in public affairs now worries that such idealism could cost them their freedom. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-6 The Perils of Protest With a record heat wave in the West and drought-fueled wildfires, the president plans to extend the season for firefight- ers and raise their pay. PAGE A21 NATIONAL A14-21, 24 Biden Pledges Firefighting Aid Questions surrounded Dan Schneider’s exit from Nickelodeon, but he now has several projects in the works. PAGE C1 Hitmaker Plans Return to TV In Europe, Asia and Africa, nations that hoped they had seen the worst of Covid are being battered again. PAGE A6 Variants Fuel Pandemic Surges New York City adopted a $99 billion plan that increases spending on the police, restores service cuts and invests $100 for each kindergartner. PAGE A19 De Blasio’s ‘Recovery Budget’ Allison Mack, an actress known for her role in “Smallville,” was sentenced to three years. She had lured sexual part- ners for the group’s leader. PAGE A14 Prison for Nxivm Figure The N.B.A. playoffs have been ravaged by injuries, and Milwaukee and Atlanta may be without their top stars. PAGE B7 Forced Off the Biggest Stage Relaxed N.C.A.A. policies and new state laws have brought a seismic shift to the campus landscape. PAGE B9 SPORTSTHURSDAY B7-10, 12 It’s Payday for College Athletes Gail Collins PAGE A23 OPINION A22-23 Determining the identity of an enig- matic poster called rg_bunny1 has captivated the scrolling classes. PAGE D1 An Instagram Whodunit TURMOIL The Board of Elections, known for its mishaps, is now under intense scrutiny. PAGE A24 Late Edition VOL. CLXX .... No. 59,106 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JULY 1, 2021 Today, some sunshinne, thunder- storms, not as hot, high 84. Tonight, rain, thunderstorms, low 69. Tomor- row, cooler, showers, thunderstorm, high 75. Weather map, Page B12. $3.00

Upload: others

Post on 23-Oct-2021

0 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: OF MAYORAL RACE IN REVISED COUNT MARGINS TIGHTEN

C M Y K Nxxx,2021-07-01,A,001,Bs-4C,E1

U(D54G1D)y+?!/!&!?!#

PHOTOGRAPH BY CARLOS SOYOS AND ADAM FERGUSON

Even as the Biden administration faces a political challenge resulting from the number ofmigrants at the southwest border, those who are there are hoping for a lucky break. A Times

photographer, Adam Ferguson, asked some of them to capture a moment in their journeythrough self-portraits. Above, Carlos Soyos, 34, and his son, Enderson, 8. Page A7.

Showing Migrants Through Their Own Lens

A day after New York City’sBoard of Elections sowed confu-sion in the Democratic mayoralprimary by releasing new talliesand then retracting them, it issueda new preliminary tally of votessuggesting that the race betweenEric Adams, the primary nightleader, and his two closest rivalshad tightened significantly.

According to Wednesday’s non-binding tally, Mr. Adams ledKathryn Garcia by just 14,755votes, a margin of around two per-centage points, in the final round.Maya Wiley, who came in secondplace in the initial vote count,barely trailed Ms. Garcia after thepreliminary elimination roundswere completed: Fewer than 350votes separated the two.

But in reality, all of those candi-dates remain in contention, andthose numbers could be scram-

bled again as the city’s Board ofElections tabulates ranked-choiceoutcomes that will includeroughly 125,000 Democratic ab-sentee ballots, with a fuller resultnot expected until mid-July.

While campaign officials andsome New Yorkers were en-grossed in the emerging results,the count was nearly overshad-owed by the vote-tallying debaclethat drew national attention andstoked concerns about whethervoters would have faith in thecity’s electoral process.

The fiasco stemmed from anegregious error by the Board ofElections: Roughly 135,000 sam-ple ballots, used to test the city’snew ranked-choice system, hadbeen mistakenly counted. Theboard was forced to retract the re-sults from a tabulation of ranked-choice preferences, just hours af-ter it had published them on Tues-day.

The board on Wednesday even-tually released the results of a sec-ond tally of ranked-choice prefer-ences among Democrats who

MARGINS TIGHTENIN REVISED COUNTOF MAYORAL RACE

ADAMS HOLDS SLIM LEAD

Appeals for Patience andReform After Fiasco

in New York City

By KATIE GLUECK

Continued on Page A24

Absentee ballots being talliedin Queens on Wednesday.

DAVE SANDERS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

A grand jury in Manhattan hasindicted Donald J. Trump’s familybusiness, the Trump Organiza-tion, and one of its top executivesin connection with a tax investiga-tion into fringe benefits handedout at the company, people famil-iar with the matter said onWednesday.

The specific charges against thecompany and its chief financial of-ficer, Allen H. Weisselberg, werenot immediately clear. The indict-ment was expected to be unsealedThursday afternoon after Mr.Weisselberg and lawyers for theTrump Organization appear incourt.

But prosecutors in the Manhat-tan district attorney’s office havebeen examining bonuses and lux-ury perks that Mr. Weisselberg re-ceived — including an apartmentin Manhattan, leased Mercedes-Benz cars and private-school tu-ition for at least one of his grand-children — and whether taxesshould have been paid on thosebenefits.

The indictment is a major devel-opment in the investigation led bythe district attorney, Cyrus R.Vance, Jr., who has been conduct-ing a sweeping inquiry into Mr.Trump and his business dealingsalong with the New York State at-torney general, Letitia James.

The charges will deal a blow toMr. Trump, who has denouncedthe investigation as political per-secution. Although he could rallysupporters around the idea thathe is the victim of what he hascalled a “witch hunt,” defendinghis company on criminal chargescould be an expensive distractionas he considers another presiden-tial run.

The indictment will also ampli-fy the pressure that prosecutorshave placed on Mr. Weisselbergfor months to turn on Mr. Trumpand cooperate with their continu-ing investigation. In nearly a half-century of service to Mr. Trump’sfamily businesses, Mr. Weissel-berg, 73, has survived — andthrived — by anticipating and car-rying out his boss’s dictates in azealous mission to protect the bot-tom line.

Interviews with 18 current andformer associates of Mr. Weissel-berg, as well as a review of legalfilings, financial records and otherdocuments, paint a portrait of aman whose unflinching devotionto Mr. Trump will now be put to thetest.

“Allen is a soldier,” said JohnBurke, a former Trump executivewho worked with Mr. Weisselbergin the early 1990s. “Allen was goodat doing what Donald wanted himto do.”

A bookkeeper by training whogrew up in Brooklyn, Mr. Weissel-berg rose steadily within theTrump Organization to becomeperhaps the former president’smost trusted business adviser.Over decades, Mr. Weisselberg’spersonal and family life becameincreasingly fused with the com-pany and with Mr. Trump, who is

Panel IndictsTop Executive

Under Trump

Family Company Also Said to Be Charged

This article is by Michael Roth-feld, Jonah E. Bromwich and BenProtess.

Continued on Page A19

Bill Cosby was released fromprison Wednesday after the Penn-sylvania Supreme Court over-turned his 2018 conviction for sex-ual assault, a dramatic reversal inone of the first high-profile crimi-nal trials of the #MeToo era.

The court’s decision seemedlikely to end the Pennsylvaniacase, legal experts said, and whilemore than 50 women across thenation have accused Mr. Cosby ofsexual assault and misconduct,statutes of limitations in theircases makes further prosecutionsunlikely.

Mr. Cosby had served threeyears of a three- to 10-year sen-tence at a maximum-securityprison outside Philadelphia whenthe court ruled that a “non-pros-ecution agreement” with a previ-ous prosecutor meant that Mr.Cosby should not have beencharged in the case.

Mr. Cosby, 83, returned to hishome in suburban PhiladelphiaWednesday afternoon where,looking frail and walking slowly,he was helped inside by his lawyerand a spokesman. He flashed a“V” sign as he reached his frontdoor.

The court’s decision overturnedthe first major criminal convictionof the #MeToo era, which camesoon after allegations of sexual as-sault had been made against thepowerful Hollywood producerHarvey Weinstein. The accusa-tions and eventual conviction ofMr. Cosby stunned the nation,painting a disturbing portrait sug-gesting that a man who hadbrightened America’s livingrooms as a beloved father figurehad been a sexual predator.

The case against Mr. Cosby be-gan with his arrest in 2015 oncharges that he had drugged andsexually assaulted a woman at hishome in the Philadelphia suburbs11 years earlier. In April 2018, thejury convicted Mr. Cosby of threecounts of aggravated indecent as-sault against Andrea Constand, towhom Mr. Cosby had been a men-tor and who was at the time a Tem-ple University employee.

Ms. Constand had praised theguilty verdict at the time, saying,“Truth prevails,” and the NationalOrganization for Women called it“a notice to sexual predators ev-erywhere.” But Mr. Cosby’s law-yers, who had said at the time thatallegations against Mr. Weinsteinwould make it difficult for them toreceive a fair trial, later suggestedin an appeal that the outcome hadbeen influenced by what they de-scribed as a period of “publicpanic.”

In a statement issued with herlawyers, Ms. Constand saidWednesday that the court’s rulingwas “not only disappointing but ofconcern in that it may discouragethose who seek justice for sexualassault in the criminal justice sys-tem from reporting or participat-ing in the prosecution of the as-sailant or may force a victim tochoose between filing either acriminal or civil action.”

In their 79-page opinion, the

Cosby Is FreedAfter ReversalBy State Court

Verdict Thrown Out inMajor #MeToo Case

By GRAHAM BOWLEY and JULIA JACOBS

Continued on Page A18

For years before the partial col-lapse of the Champlain TowersSouth complex near Miami, thecondo board wrestled with how tocome up with the $15 millionneeded to fix the building’s dilapi-dated roof, a poorly designed pooldeck and crumbling support col-umns.

The problem: The homeown-

ers’ association had just $800,000in reserves, and getting the workdone meant asking residents toshoulder huge special assess-ments ranging from $80,000 to$200,000 on each home. No onewas eager to pay.

“The dirtiest words in the com-munity-association industry are‘special assessment,’” Donna Di-Maggio Berger, a lawyer for theboard, said of the effort to get 135homeowners — of varying meansand of multiple nationalities — toagree on a plan to do the repairs.

During the prolonged tumultover the needed renovations, sev-eral members of the board hadquit in frustration.

As Condo Boards Squabble, Disaster May LoomBy MIKE BAKER and

KIMIKO de FREYTAS-TAMURAFixes Often Delayed by

Fights Over Money

Continued on Page A17

BALTIMORE — When Targetannounced that it was opening astore in Mondawmin, a predomi-nantly Black neighborhood in thiscity struggling with crime andpoverty, it seemed like a ticket to aturnaround.

And from the start, it was apractical success and a point ofcommunity pride. The store,which opened in 2008, carried gro-

ceries, operated a pharmacy andhad a Starbucks cafe, the only onein this part of Baltimore’s westside.

People came from across thecity to shop there, helping to soft-en the Mondawmin area’s reputa-

tion for crime and the looting thatfollowed protests over the 2015death of Freddie Gray, who was fa-tally injured while in city policecustody. As an employer, Targetseemed to cater to the communi-ty’s needs, making a point of hir-ing Black men and providing anoffice in the store for a socialworker to support the staff. ElijahCummings, the congressmanfrom Baltimore, was known to

Store’s Closing Still Wounds Black CommunityBy MICHAEL CORKERY In Baltimore, a Failed

Sign of Revitalization

Continued on Page A15

Donald H. Rumsfeld, the secre-tary of defense for PresidentsGerald R. Ford and George W.Bush, who presided over Ameri-ca’s Cold War strategies in the1970s and, in the new world of ter-rorism decades later, the wars inAfghanistan and Iraq, died onTuesday at his home in Taos, N.M.He was 88.

The cause was multiple myelo-ma, said Keith Urbahn, a spokes-man for the family.

Encores are hardly rare inWashington, but Mr. Rumsfeldhad the distinction of being theonly defense chief to serve twononconsecutive terms: 1975 to1977 under President Ford, and2001 to 2006 under PresidentBush. He also was the youngest,at 43, and the oldest, at 74, to holdthe post — first in an era of Soviet-American nuclear perils, then inan age of subtler menace by ter-rorists and rogue states.

A staunch ally of former VicePresident Dick Cheney, who hadbeen his protégé and friend foryears, Mr. Rumsfeld was a com-bative infighter who seemed torelish conflicts as he challenged

cabinet rivals, members of Con-gress and military orthodoxies.And he was widely regarded in hissecond tour as the most powerfuldefense secretary since Robert S.McNamara during the VietnamWar.

Like his counterpart of longago, Mr. Rumsfeld in Iraq waged acostly and divisive war that ulti-mately destroyed his political lifeand outlived his tenure by manyyears. But unlike McNamara, who

offered mea culpas in a 2003 docu-mentary, “The Fog of War,” Mr.Rumsfeld acknowledged no seri-ous failings and warned in afarewell valedictory at the Penta-gon that quitting Iraq would be aterrible mistake, even though thewar, the country learned, hadbeen based on a false premise —that Saddam Hussein, the Iraqileader, had been harboring weap-ons of mass destruction.

Defiant Architect of Tactics in Cold War and IraqBy ROBERT D. McFADDEN

Donald H. Rumsfeld in 2006. He was defense secretary twice.STEPHEN CROWLEY/THE NEW YORK TIMES

DONALD H. RUMSFELD, 1932-2021

Continued on Page A20

Street performances celebrated theChocolate Factory Theater as it movedto a new building in Queens. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-6

Moving in StyleIn Japan, rigid gender norms limit theopportunities for young athletes likeKurumi Mochizuki, above. PAGE A4

INTERNATIONAL A4-13

Girls Face Barriers to Goals

Vanessa Friedman takes a look atchanges in leadership at some of theworld’s top fashion magazines. PAGE D1

THURSDAY STYLES D1-6

A New Guard of EditorsA professor in Hong Kong who pushedhis students to participate in publicaffairs now worries that such idealismcould cost them their freedom. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-6

The Perils of ProtestWith a record heat wave in the West anddrought-fueled wildfires, the presidentplans to extend the season for firefight-ers and raise their pay. PAGE A21

NATIONAL A14-21, 24

Biden Pledges Firefighting Aid

Questions surrounded Dan Schneider’sexit from Nickelodeon, but he now hasseveral projects in the works. PAGE C1

Hitmaker Plans Return to TVIn Europe, Asia and Africa, nations thathoped they had seen the worst of Covidare being battered again. PAGE A6

Variants Fuel Pandemic Surges

New York City adopted a $99 billionplan that increases spending on thepolice, restores service cuts and invests$100 for each kindergartner. PAGE A19

De Blasio’s ‘Recovery Budget’

Allison Mack, an actress known for herrole in “Smallville,” was sentenced tothree years. She had lured sexual part-ners for the group’s leader. PAGE A14

Prison for Nxivm Figure

The N.B.A. playoffs have been ravagedby injuries, and Milwaukee and Atlantamay be without their top stars. PAGE B7

Forced Off the Biggest Stage

Relaxed N.C.A.A. policies and new statelaws have brought a seismic shift to thecampus landscape. PAGE B9

SPORTSTHURSDAY B7-10, 12

It’s Payday for College Athletes

Gail Collins PAGE A23

OPINION A22-23

Determining the identity of an enig-matic poster called rg_bunny1 hascaptivated the scrolling classes. PAGE D1

An Instagram Whodunit

TURMOIL The Board of Elections,known for its mishaps, is nowunder intense scrutiny. PAGE A24

Late Edition

VOL. CLXX . . . . No. 59,106 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JULY 1, 2021

Today, some sunshinne, thunder-storms, not as hot, high 84. Tonight,rain, thunderstorms, low 69. Tomor-row, cooler, showers, thunderstorm,high 75. Weather map, Page B12.

$3.00