1
U(D54G1D)y+%!@!]!#!/ President Uhuru Kenyatta was declared the winner of Tuesday’s election, but his opponent refused to concede. PAGE A5 INTERNATIONAL A4-10 Protests Erupt in Kenya The 55-word Facebook post had a remarkably short life span, es- pecially for one from Daniel S. Loeb, a charter school proponent and activist investor known for his acid-penned missives. Mr. Loeb wrote this week that “hypocrites who pay fealty to powerful union thugs and bosses do more damage to people of color than anyone who has ever donned a hood,” singling out the minority leader of the State Senate, who is African-American. Mr. Loeb, a hedge fund giant and political megadonor, quickly deleted and disavowed the incendiary com- ment after it became public, but the damage was done. Politicians who have long bene- fited from Mr. Loeb’s generosity scurried for cover and distance. And his enemies pounced. Mayor Bill de Blasio and his wife, Chirlane McCray, called on Friday for Mr. Loeb to step down from his post as chairman of Suc- cess Academy, a major charter schools network. Democratic groups in New York and beyond pushed Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo to return the $170,000 he had raised from Mr. Loeb and his wife over the years, including at a fund- raiser two years ago at Mr. Loeb’s Hamptons home. The day’s events captured years of interwoven and lingering grievances that have defined Democratic politics in New York. On one side are left-leaning Dem- ocrats like Mr. de Blasio and the Assembly speaker, Carl M. Heastie, who have traditional ties to the powerful teachers union. On the other are those backed by do- nors who support charter schools, politicians like Mr. Cuomo and Senator Jeffrey D. Klein, the leader of the renegade Independ- ent Democratic Conference. Mr. Loeb’s comment also di- rectly hit on the long-simmering racial tensions in Albany, where Mr. Klein’s group has helped block Senator Andrea Stewart-Cousins, the black lawmaker whom Mr. Loeb attacked in his Facebook New York Democrats, Divided On Race, Reignite Schools Feud By SHANE GOLDMACHER Continued on Page A17 ARLENE GOTTFRIED EYE FOR EVERYDAY LIFE With her camera, Ms. Gottfried roamed New York City to capture striking and often amusing images, in- cluding a woman skipping rope in Brooklyn in 1972. Page D7. ARLENE GOTTFRIED, 1950-2017 On a flight home to New York last week, the jazz musician John Pizzarelli received a text message saying that Barbara Cook, the 89- year-old star of Broadway and cabaret, was in failing health. He and his wife, the singer Jessica Molaskey, had met Ms. Cook a decade earlier at Café Carlyle, one of her musical haunts, and they had become close. Would the cou- ple like to come to her bedside and say their goodbyes? “The first thing I said was, ‘Well, can I bring my guitar?’” Mr. Pizzarelli recalled. In the days before Ms. Cook’s death on Tuesday, friends from her legendary career delivered a fitting farewell: More music. Vanessa Williams and Norm Lew- is, who starred with Ms. Cook in the 2010 Broadway revue “Sond- heim on Sondheim,” were among those who came by her Upper West Side apartment and sang to her. Josh Groban, Hugh Jackman, Audra McDonald, Kelli O’Hara and others sent audio and video recordings full of memories and melodies. Ms. Cook was in and out of con- sciousness, able to recognize voices and respond with a squeeze of the hand. “So often music can kind of con- nect in ways that just speaking can’t,” said Mr. Groban, the singer and recent star of Broadway’s “Natasha, Pierre & the Great As a Cabaret Star Lay Dying, Friends Came to Serenade Her By SOPAN DEB Continued on Page A17 BRIDGEWATER, N.J. — Presi- dent Trump continued to beat war drums on Friday against North Korea and, unexpectedly, said he would consider a military option to deal with an unrelated crisis in Venezuela. But though he de- clared that the armed forces were “locked and loaded,” there were no indications of imminent action in either part of the world. For all the bellicose language emerging from the president’s golf club in Bedminster, N.J., the United States military was taking no visible steps to prepare for a strike against North Korea or Ven- ezuela. The Pentagon reported no new ships being sent toward the Korean Peninsula or forces being mobilized, nor were there moves to begin evacuating any of the tens of thousands of Americans living in South Korea. The contrast between the heated words and the lack of ap- parent preparations suggested that Mr. Trump may still be count- ing on a resolution to the standoff with North Korea as it works to develop a nuclear arsenal capable of reaching the United States. Af- ter escalating his rhetoric against AS WORLD WAITS, PRESIDENT WARNS FORCES ARE READY ‘LOCKED AND LOADED’ Strain With North Korea and Venezuela, but No Sign of Action By PETER BAKER President Trump met with his national security team Friday. AL DRAGO FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A9 AUGUSTA, Ga. — “Fire and fury”? Eugene Yu could not have said it better himself. Mr. Yu, 62, who immigrated here from South Korea, is an American citizen, a United States Army veteran and a staunch sup- porter of President Trump. Like many conservatives in and around this midsize Southern city — home to the Masters golf tour- nament and an important Na- tional Security Agency cryptol- ogy center — he was not scared, but rather thrilled this week when President Trump used those exact words to threaten the North Kore- an government. That, Mr. Yu said, is the only kind of language a dictatorship understands. “All of these North Korean ex- perts in Washington — if they are so expert on the North Korean is- sue, we would have never been dealing with this today,” Mr. Yu said Thursday from his table at a busy Golden Corral cafeteria. “We should have been dealing with this 10 years ago. They’re still saying, ‘We’ve got to have six-party talks, we’ve got to give this, we’ve got to have that.’ We’ve had enough.” Criticism of Mr. Trump’s em- phatic language came this week from foreign leaders, policy ex- perts, some Washington Republi- cans, including Senator John Mc- Cain of Arizona, and others, who called it a break with decades of carefully measured American di- plomatic language in dealing with the volatile situation on the Kore- an Peninsula. However, what many grass-roots American con- servatives heard was not a brash provocation, but a brave and un- equivocal calling out of a bully. That feeling was widespread among dozens of Republicans en- countered this week. Many said they were pleased that Mr. Trump was sticking to the kind of blunt, bracing talk that they heard on the campaign trail. Most of them said they did not relish the idea of any armed con- frontation with North Korea, al- though a few said they felt pro- tected by the vastness of America. “It doesn’t concern me,” said Zach Lozier, who was tucking into a barbecue dinner with his family Thursday at the Morgan County Fair in Brush, Colo. “We live in the Conservatives Revel in ‘Fury’ In Trump’s Talk Fans See Kept Promises in Fierce Language By RICHARD FAUSSET Continued on Page A10 WASHINGTON — When ca- reer employees of the Envi- ronmental Protection Agency are summoned to a meeting with the agency’s administrator, Scott Pruitt, at agency headquarters, they no longer can count on easy access to the floor where his office is, according to interviews with employees of the federal agency. Doors to the floor are now fre- quently locked, and employees have to have an escort to gain en- trance. Some employees say they are also told to leave behind their cell- phones when they meet with Mr. Pruitt, and are sometimes told not to take notes. Mr. Pruitt, according to the em- ployees, who requested ano- nymity out of fear of losing their jobs, often makes important phone calls from other offices rather than use the phone in his of- fice, and he is accompanied, even at E.P.A. headquarters, by armed guards, the first head of the agency to ever request round-the- clock security. A former Oklahoma attorney general who built his career suing the E.P.A., and whose LinkedIn profile still describes him as “a leading advocate against the EPA’s activist agenda,” Mr. Pruitt has made it clear that he sees his mission to be dismantling the agency’s policies — and even por- tions of the institution itself. But as he works to roll back reg- ulations, close offices and elimi- nate staff at the agency charged with protecting the nation’s envi- ronment and public health, Mr. Pruitt is taking extraordinary measures to conceal his actions, according to interviews with more than 20 current and former agency employees. Together with a small group of political appointees, many with backgrounds, like his, in Okla- homa politics, and with advice from industry lobbyists, Mr. Pruitt has taken aim at an agency whose policies have been developed and enforced by thousands of the E.P.A.’s career scientists and pol- icy experts, many of whom work in the same building. “There’s a feeling of paranoia in the agency — employees feel like there’s been a hostile takeover and the guy in charge is treating them like enemies,” said Christo- pher Sellers, an expert in envi- ronmental history at Stony Brook University, who this spring con- ducted an interview survey with about 40 E.P.A. employees. Such tensions are not unusual in federal agencies when an elec- tion leads to a change in the party in control of the White House. But Staff Tells of Rampant Secrecy at Pruitt’s E.P.A. By CORAL DAVENPORT and ERIC LIPTON Continued on Page A13 Mission to Weaken an Agency Once Known for Transparency TOM BRENNER/THE NEW YORK TIMES President Trump’s office was under construction on Friday, part of the roughly two-week, $3.4 million renovation of the West Wing. Reshaping the Oval Office SHANGHAI — Facebook and many of its apps have been blocked in China for years. To change that, Mark Zuckerberg has made a big point of meeting with Chinese politicians, reading stodgy Communist Party propa- ganda, studying Mandarin and — perhaps more daunting — speak- ing it in public. Now the social network is try- ing a different way into China: by authorizing the release of a new app there that does not carry the Facebook name. Facebook approved the May de- but of a photo-sharing app, called Colorful Balloons, in China, ac- cording to a person with knowl- edge of the company’s plans, who declined to be named because the information is politically sensi- tive. The app, which has not previ- ously been reported, shares the look, function and feel of Face- book’s Moments app. It was re- leased through a separate local company and without any hint that the social network is affiliated with it. The stealthy and anonymous release of an app by a major for- eign technology company in China is unprecedented. It shows the desperation — and frustration Facebook Uses A Stealth App To Enter China By PAUL MOZUR Continued on Page A7 Google encourages employees to speak up in internal forums, but the recent controversy over a memo on diversity highlights the practice’s perils. PAGE B1 A Test for Openness at Google As sales continued to fall, Wall Street’s patience wore thin. J. C. Penney shares dropped 16 percent, hitting their lowest price in a decade. PAGE B3 Flailing Retailers Roil Investors The interior secretary is reviewing 27 national monuments to see if they were created through overreach. PAGE A15 NATIONAL A11-15 Monuments Up for Review A protest by white nationalists against the removal of a statue of Robert E. Lee has Charlottesville, Va., on edge for a weekend of potential violence. PAGE A12 Bracing for Another Rally New York’s subway system is old and dirty. Shanghai’s is new and clean. But trips on it may take longer. PAGE A16 NEW YORK A16-17, 20 China Model: New York Transit Allbirds, a start-up that makes sneaker- like shoes out of wool and castor bean oil, has created the latest footwear craze in Silicon Valley. PAGE B1 BUSINESS DAY B1-6 Trendy Among Techies The N.F.L., levying a six-game penalty, said Ezekiel Elliott’s behavior reflected “a lack of respect for women.” PAGE D1 SPORTSSATURDAY D1-6 Cowboys’ Elliott Is Suspended Tom Brokaw PAGE A19 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A18-19 Five directors of horror films share the objects that inspired terror in their childhoods. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-6 What Makes You Tremble? “Mayhem,” a memoir of a family’s addiction, raises questions of catharsis versus privacy in recovery. PAGE C1 A Tragedy and a Feud A hard-right group’s ship hired to dis- rupt migrant rescues stalled, but re- fused a migrant aid boat’s help. PAGE A4 Migrant Foes Founder at Sea A group including the ex-Yankee Derek Jeter is said to have agreed to buy the team for nearly $1.2 billion. PAGE D2 Jeter Group in Marlins Deal VENEZUELA BRISTLES Aides said President Trump refused to take a phone call from a concerned Venezuelan president. PAGE A8 Late Edition VOL. CLXVI . . . No. 57,687 © 2017 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SATURDAY, AUGUST 12, 2017 Today, mostly cloudy, a few showers and thunderstorms, high 78. To- night, mostly cloudy, low 68. Tomor- row, sunshine and clouds, high 82. Weather map appears on Page D8. $2.50

FORCES ARE READY PRESIDENT WARNS AS … 12, 2017 · President Uhuru Kenyatta was declared ... cess Academy, a major charter schools network. ... to the powerful teachers union. On

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C M Y K Nxxx,2017-08-12,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

U(D54G1D)y+%!@!]!#!/

President Uhuru Kenyatta was declaredthe winner of Tuesday’s election, but hisopponent refused to concede. PAGE A5

INTERNATIONAL A4-10

Protests Erupt in Kenya

The 55-word Facebook post hada remarkably short life span, es-pecially for one from Daniel S.Loeb, a charter school proponentand activist investor known forhis acid-penned missives.

Mr. Loeb wrote this week that“hypocrites who pay fealty topowerful union thugs and bossesdo more damage to people of colorthan anyone who has ever donneda hood,” singling out the minorityleader of the State Senate, who isAfrican-American. Mr. Loeb, ahedge fund giant and politicalmegadonor, quickly deleted anddisavowed the incendiary com-ment after it became public, butthe damage was done.

Politicians who have long bene-fited from Mr. Loeb’s generosityscurried for cover and distance.And his enemies pounced.

Mayor Bill de Blasio and hiswife, Chirlane McCray, called onFriday for Mr. Loeb to step downfrom his post as chairman of Suc-cess Academy, a major charterschools network. Democraticgroups in New York and beyond

pushed Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo toreturn the $170,000 he had raisedfrom Mr. Loeb and his wife overthe years, including at a fund-raiser two years ago at Mr. Loeb’sHamptons home.

The day’s events capturedyears of interwoven and lingeringgrievances that have definedDemocratic politics in New York.On one side are left-leaning Dem-ocrats like Mr. de Blasio and theAssembly speaker, Carl M.Heastie, who have traditional tiesto the powerful teachers union. Onthe other are those backed by do-nors who support charter schools,politicians like Mr. Cuomo andSenator Jeffrey D. Klein, theleader of the renegade Independ-ent Democratic Conference.

Mr. Loeb’s comment also di-rectly hit on the long-simmeringracial tensions in Albany, whereMr. Klein’s group has helped blockSenator Andrea Stewart-Cousins,the black lawmaker whom Mr.Loeb attacked in his Facebook

New York Democrats, DividedOn Race, Reignite Schools Feud

By SHANE GOLDMACHER

Continued on Page A17

ARLENE GOTTFRIED

EYE FOR EVERYDAY LIFE With her camera, Ms. Gottfried roamedNew York City to capture striking and often amusing images, in-cluding a woman skipping rope in Brooklyn in 1972. Page D7.

ARLENE GOTTFRIED, 1950-2017

On a flight home to New Yorklast week, the jazz musician JohnPizzarelli received a text messagesaying that Barbara Cook, the 89-year-old star of Broadway andcabaret, was in failing health. Heand his wife, the singer JessicaMolaskey, had met Ms. Cook adecade earlier at Café Carlyle, oneof her musical haunts, and theyhad become close. Would the cou-ple like to come to her bedside andsay their goodbyes?

“The first thing I said was,‘Well, can I bring my guitar?’” Mr.Pizzarelli recalled.

In the days before Ms. Cook’sdeath on Tuesday, friends fromher legendary career delivered afitting farewell: More music.Vanessa Williams and Norm Lew-

is, who starred with Ms. Cook inthe 2010 Broadway revue “Sond-heim on Sondheim,” were amongthose who came by her UpperWest Side apartment and sang toher. Josh Groban, Hugh Jackman,Audra McDonald, Kelli O’Haraand others sent audio and videorecordings full of memories andmelodies.

Ms. Cook was in and out of con-sciousness, able to recognizevoices and respond with a squeezeof the hand.

“So often music can kind of con-nect in ways that just speakingcan’t,” said Mr. Groban, the singerand recent star of Broadway’s“Natasha, Pierre & the Great

As a Cabaret Star Lay Dying,Friends Came to Serenade Her

By SOPAN DEB

Continued on Page A17

BRIDGEWATER, N.J. — Presi-dent Trump continued to beat wardrums on Friday against NorthKorea and, unexpectedly, said hewould consider a military optionto deal with an unrelated crisis inVenezuela. But though he de-clared that the armed forces were“locked and loaded,” there wereno indications of imminent actionin either part of the world.

For all the bellicose languageemerging from the president’sgolf club in Bedminster, N.J., theUnited States military was takingno visible steps to prepare for astrike against North Korea or Ven-ezuela. The Pentagon reported nonew ships being sent toward the

Korean Peninsula or forces beingmobilized, nor were there movesto begin evacuating any of thetens of thousands of Americansliving in South Korea.

The contrast between theheated words and the lack of ap-parent preparations suggestedthat Mr. Trump may still be count-ing on a resolution to the standoffwith North Korea as it works todevelop a nuclear arsenal capableof reaching the United States. Af-ter escalating his rhetoric against

AS WORLD WAITS,PRESIDENT WARNS FORCES ARE READY

‘LOCKED AND LOADED’

Strain With North Korea and Venezuela, but No Sign of Action

By PETER BAKER

President Trump met with hisnational security team Friday.

AL DRAGO FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A9

AUGUSTA, Ga. — “Fire andfury”? Eugene Yu could not havesaid it better himself.

Mr. Yu, 62, who immigratedhere from South Korea, is anAmerican citizen, a United StatesArmy veteran and a staunch sup-porter of President Trump. Likemany conservatives in andaround this midsize Southern city— home to the Masters golf tour-nament and an important Na-tional Security Agency cryptol-ogy center — he was not scared,but rather thrilled this week whenPresident Trump used those exactwords to threaten the North Kore-an government.

That, Mr. Yu said, is the onlykind of language a dictatorshipunderstands.

“All of these North Korean ex-perts in Washington — if they areso expert on the North Korean is-sue, we would have never beendealing with this today,” Mr. Yusaid Thursday from his table at abusy Golden Corral cafeteria. “Weshould have been dealing with this10 years ago. They’re still saying,‘We’ve got to have six-party talks,we’ve got to give this, we’ve got tohave that.’ We’ve had enough.”

Criticism of Mr. Trump’s em-phatic language came this weekfrom foreign leaders, policy ex-perts, some Washington Republi-cans, including Senator John Mc-Cain of Arizona, and others, whocalled it a break with decades ofcarefully measured American di-plomatic language in dealing withthe volatile situation on the Kore-an Peninsula. However, whatmany grass-roots American con-servatives heard was not a brashprovocation, but a brave and un-equivocal calling out of a bully.

That feeling was widespreadamong dozens of Republicans en-countered this week. Many saidthey were pleased that Mr. Trumpwas sticking to the kind of blunt,bracing talk that they heard on thecampaign trail.

Most of them said they did notrelish the idea of any armed con-frontation with North Korea, al-though a few said they felt pro-tected by the vastness of America.

“It doesn’t concern me,” saidZach Lozier, who was tucking intoa barbecue dinner with his familyThursday at the Morgan CountyFair in Brush, Colo. “We live in the

ConservativesRevel in ‘Fury’In Trump’s Talk

Fans See Kept Promisesin Fierce Language

By RICHARD FAUSSET

Continued on Page A10

WASHINGTON — When ca-reer employees of the Envi-ronmental Protection Agency aresummoned to a meeting with theagency’s administrator, ScottPruitt, at agency headquarters,they no longer can count on easyaccess to the floor where his officeis, according to interviews withemployees of the federal agency.

Doors to the floor are now fre-quently locked, and employeeshave to have an escort to gain en-trance.

Some employees say they arealso told to leave behind their cell-phones when they meet with Mr.Pruitt, and are sometimes told notto take notes.

Mr. Pruitt, according to the em-ployees, who requested ano-nymity out of fear of losing theirjobs, often makes importantphone calls from other officesrather than use the phone in his of-fice, and he is accompanied, evenat E.P.A. headquarters, by armedguards, the first head of theagency to ever request round-the-clock security.

A former Oklahoma attorneygeneral who built his career suingthe E.P.A., and whose LinkedInprofile still describes him as “aleading advocate against theEPA’s activist agenda,” Mr. Pruitthas made it clear that he sees hismission to be dismantling theagency’s policies — and even por-tions of the institution itself.

But as he works to roll back reg-ulations, close offices and elimi-nate staff at the agency chargedwith protecting the nation’s envi-ronment and public health, Mr.Pruitt is taking extraordinarymeasures to conceal his actions,according to interviews with morethan 20 current and formeragency employees.

Together with a small group ofpolitical appointees, many withbackgrounds, like his, in Okla-homa politics, and with advice

from industry lobbyists, Mr. Pruitthas taken aim at an agency whosepolicies have been developed andenforced by thousands of theE.P.A.’s career scientists and pol-icy experts, many of whom workin the same building.

“There’s a feeling of paranoia inthe agency — employees feel likethere’s been a hostile takeoverand the guy in charge is treatingthem like enemies,” said Christo-pher Sellers, an expert in envi-ronmental history at Stony BrookUniversity, who this spring con-ducted an interview survey withabout 40 E.P.A. employees.

Such tensions are not unusualin federal agencies when an elec-tion leads to a change in the partyin control of the White House. But

Staff Tells of Rampant Secrecy at Pruitt’s E.P.A.By CORAL DAVENPORT

and ERIC LIPTON

Continued on Page A13

Mission to Weaken an Agency Once Known

for Transparency

TOM BRENNER/THE NEW YORK TIMES

President Trump’s office was under construction on Friday, part of the roughly two-week, $3.4 million renovation of the West Wing.Reshaping the Oval Office

SHANGHAI — Facebook andmany of its apps have beenblocked in China for years. Tochange that, Mark Zuckerberghas made a big point of meetingwith Chinese politicians, readingstodgy Communist Party propa-ganda, studying Mandarin and —perhaps more daunting — speak-ing it in public.

Now the social network is try-ing a different way into China: byauthorizing the release of a newapp there that does not carry theFacebook name.

Facebook approved the May de-but of a photo-sharing app, calledColorful Balloons, in China, ac-cording to a person with knowl-edge of the company’s plans, whodeclined to be named because theinformation is politically sensi-tive. The app, which has not previ-ously been reported, shares thelook, function and feel of Face-book’s Moments app. It was re-leased through a separate localcompany and without any hintthat the social network is affiliatedwith it.

The stealthy and anonymousrelease of an app by a major for-eign technology company inChina is unprecedented. It showsthe desperation — and frustration

Facebook UsesA Stealth AppTo Enter China

By PAUL MOZUR

Continued on Page A7

Google encourages employees to speakup in internal forums, but the recentcontroversy over a memo on diversityhighlights the practice’s perils. PAGE B1

A Test for Openness at Google

As sales continued to fall, Wall Street’spatience wore thin. J. C. Penney sharesdropped 16 percent, hitting their lowestprice in a decade. PAGE B3

Flailing Retailers Roil Investors

The interior secretary is reviewing 27national monuments to see if they werecreated through overreach. PAGE A15

NATIONAL A11-15

Monuments Up for Review

A protest by white nationalists againstthe removal of a statue of Robert E. Leehas Charlottesville, Va., on edge for aweekend of potential violence. PAGE A12

Bracing for Another Rally

New York’s subway system is old anddirty. Shanghai’s is new and clean. Buttrips on it may take longer. PAGE A16

NEW YORK A16-17, 20

China Model: New York Transit

Allbirds, a start-up that makes sneaker-like shoes out of wool and castor beanoil, has created the latest footwearcraze in Silicon Valley. PAGE B1

BUSINESS DAY B1-6

Trendy Among Techies

The N.F.L., levying a six-game penalty,said Ezekiel Elliott’s behavior reflected“a lack of respect for women.” PAGE D1

SPORTSSATURDAY D1-6

Cowboys’ Elliott Is Suspended

Tom Brokaw PAGE A19

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A18-19

Five directors of horror films share theobjects that inspired terror in theirchildhoods. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-6

What Makes You Tremble?

“Mayhem,” a memoir of a family’saddiction, raises questions of catharsisversus privacy in recovery. PAGE C1

A Tragedy and a Feud

A hard-right group’s ship hired to dis-rupt migrant rescues stalled, but re-fused a migrant aid boat’s help. PAGE A4

Migrant Foes Founder at SeaA group including the ex-Yankee DerekJeter is said to have agreed to buy theteam for nearly $1.2 billion. PAGE D2

Jeter Group in Marlins Deal

VENEZUELA BRISTLES Aides saidPresident Trump refused to take aphone call from a concernedVenezuelan president. PAGE A8

Late Edition

VOL. CLXVI . . . No. 57,687 © 2017 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SATURDAY, AUGUST 12, 2017

Today, mostly cloudy, a few showersand thunderstorms, high 78. To-night, mostly cloudy, low 68. Tomor-row, sunshine and clouds, high 82.Weather map appears on Page D8.

$2.50