BAFFLES EXPERTS SCHOOL THIS FALL - static01.nyt.com · 7/12/2020  · N.J., who serves on the state...

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A tech mogul is paying for a city’s sur- veillance system. It may sound creepy, but Chris Larsen says it’s not. PAGE 1 SUNDAY BUSINESS Security Cameras, My Treat In a new memoir, Colin Jost, a “Satur- day Night Live” star, contemplates a life and a career still in flux. PAGE 10 ARTS & LEISURE ‘A Very Punchable Face’ At peace, the trio formerly known as the Dixie Chicks is returning with its first album in 14 years. PAGE 8 Wide Open Spaces Amid deteriorating economic condi- tions, a rally has left the market richly valued and facing uncertainty. PAGE 11 The Disconnect of a Bounce A trade and military pact would extend Beijing’s reach into the Middle East and undercut the Trump administration’s efforts to isolate Tehran. PAGE 18 INTERNATIONAL 13-18 China and Iran Near Deal China is moving to revamp an educa- tion system in Hong Kong that has given rise to young rebels. PAGE 14 Squelching Student Unrest A Phoenix activist was arrested while supporting Black Lives Matter, but her DACA status put her in peril. PAGE 19 NATIONAL 19-25 Calling ICE on a Protester An all-fiction issue features 29 new short stories from David Mitchell, Kar- en Russell, Tommy Orange, Yiyun Li and others. THE MAGAZINE Inspired by the 14th Century The world is reopening, and differing levels of anxiety can strain relation- ships. Here are some strategies for getting through it all together. PAGE 7 AT HOME Couples Tested by Stress Farhad Manjoo PAGE 4 SUNDAY REVIEW With university plans for reopening that limit dormitory housing and put classes online, at full tuition, many first-genera- tion, low-income students feel that the elite institution has failed them. PAGE 1 SUNDAY STYLES Harvard Minus the Campus Many people wonder if a new wave of unscripted shows about the lives of young social media influencers could captivate the next generation of view- ers. Will the industry bite? PAGE 1 TikTok Stars Eye Reality TV U(D547FD)v+$!{!/!?!" As school districts across the United States consider whether and how to restart in-person classes, their challenge is compli- cated by a pair of fundamental un- certainties: No nation has tried to send children back to school with the virus raging at levels like America’s, and the scientific re- search about transmission in classrooms is limited. The World Health Organization has now concluded that the virus is airborne in crowded, indoor spaces with poor ventilation, a de- scription that fits many American schools. But there is enormous pressure to bring students back — from parents, from pediatricians and child development special- ists, and from President Trump. “I’m just going to say it: It feels like we’re playing Russian roulette with our kids and our staff,” said Robin Cogan, a nurse at the Yorkship School in Camden, N.J., who serves on the state’s committee on reopening schools. Data from around the world clearly shows that children are far less likely to become seriously ill from the coronavirus than adults. But there are big unanswered questions, including how often children become infected and what role they play in transmit- ting the virus. Some research sug- gests younger children are less likely to infect other people than teenagers are, which would make HOW TO RESTART SCHOOL THIS FALL BAFFLES EXPERTS MURKY DATA ON YOUNG U.S. Only Nation to Push Ahead With Infection Still Rampant This article is by Pam Belluck, Apoorva Mandavilli and Benedict Carey. Many schools are unequipped to ventilate spaces properly. AUDRA MELTON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page 8 On an afternoon in early April, while New York City was in the throes of what would be the dead- liest days of the coronavirus pan- demic, Dr. Lorna M. Breen found herself alone in the still of her apartment in Manhattan. She picked up her phone and di- aled her younger sister, Jennifer Feist. The two were just 22 months apart and had the kind of bond that comes from growing up shar- ing a bedroom and wearing matching outfits. Ms. Feist, a law- yer in Charlottesville, Va., was ac- customed to hearing from her sis- ter nearly every day. Lately, their conversations had been bleak. Dr. Breen worked at NewYork- Presbyterian Allen Hospital in Upper Manhattan, where she su- pervised the emergency depart- ment. The unit had become a bru- tal battleground, with supplies de- pleting at a distressing rate and doctors and nurses falling ill. The waiting room was perpetually overcrowded. The sick were dying unnoticed. Ms. Feist had taken to sleeping next to her phone in case her sis- ter needed her after a late shift. When Dr. Breen called this time, she sounded odd. Her voice was distant, as if she was in shock. “I don’t know what to do,” she said. “I can’t get out of the chair.” Dr. Breen was a consummate overachiever, one who directed her life with assurance. When she graduated from med- ical school, she insisted on study- With an E.R. Doctor’s Suicide, The Virus Took Another Life This article is by Corina Knoll, Ali Watkins and Michael Rothfeld. Continued on Page 10 Dr. Lorna M. Breen BOGOTÁ, Colombia — Sandra Abello grew up poor, left school at 11 and spent her teenage years scrubbing floors as a live-in maid. But by this year, something re- markable had happened. Ms. Abello, now 39, finally had a home in a decent neighborhood. One of her daughters, Karol, was about to finish high school. An- other, Nicol, was turning 15, and they were planning a party with a big dress and many guests. They were saving for a washing ma- chine. Ms. Abello was proud of all she had accomplished. Then the pandemic hit, and Ms. Abello lost her cleaning work. By May, she had been evicted, forcing her to move her children into a tin shed in an illegal settlement high above the city. At night, a bitter cold pushed its way in. A lifetime of effort had evaporated in a mat- ter of weeks. Ms. Abello’s oldest daughter, Karol, an aspiring nurse, called it the “great regression.” Not long ago, Colombia, and Latin America more broadly, were in the middle of a history-making transformation: The scourge of inequality was shrinking as never before. Over the past 20 years, millions of families had marched out of poverty in one of the most unequal regions on earth. The gap between rich and poor in Latin America fell to its lowest point on record. Now, the pandemic is threat- ening to reverse those gains like nothing else in recent history, economists say, potentially up- ending politics and entire socie- ties for years to come. We — two reporters and a pho- tographer with The New York Times — wanted to understand what this meant for the region’s future, and in particular for the families that had been so central to that march toward economic equality. So we began to drive, packing the car with masks and traveling more than 1,000 miles from Co- lombia’s capital to the northeast- ern border and back, interviewing dozens of people about the way the pandemic was changing the course of their lives. As we went, leaving the moun- In Pandemic, for Colombia’s Poor, ‘Hope Is Over’ By JULIE TURKEWITZ and SOFÍA VILLAMIL Amado Daversa, 9, waiting in Bucaramanga, Colombia, for a bus to take him and his mother, Roraima, to the Venezuelan border. FEDERICO RIOS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page 16 CAMDEN, N.J. — As officials across the United States face de- mands to transform policing, many have turned to a small New Jersey city that did what some ac- tivists are calling for elsewhere: dismantled its police force and built a new one that stresses a less confrontational approach toward residents who are mostly Black and Latino. The Camden Police Depart- ment’s efforts to reduce its use of force have made it one of the most compelling turnaround stories in U.S. law enforcement. The changes have led to a stark reduc- tion in the number of excessive- force complaints against the po- lice and have helped drive down the murder rate in what was once one of America’s most dangerous cities. “If you’re looking to be a high- speed operator, we’re probably not the right department,” said the current chief, Joseph Wysocki, re- ferring to the type of officer he does not want to attract. “If you’re looking to be a guardian figure in your neighborhood, this is for you.” Still, even as many other com- munities look to Camden as a tem- plate for reform, it is far from a neat model. The disbanding of its old force seven years ago was prompted not by a desire to rethink policing, but by dire finances, a public safety crisis and a political power play meant to break the police offi- The City That Fired Its Whole Police Department By JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN and KEVIN ARMSTRONG Camden, N.J., was one of the country’s riskiest cities until it disbanded and rebuilt its police force. HANNAH YOON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page 20 WASHINGTON — With Presi- dent Trump’s poll numbers sliding in traditional battlegrounds as well as conservative-leaning states, and money pouring into Democratic campaigns, Joseph R. Biden Jr. is facing rising pressure to expand his ambitions, compete aggressively in more states and press his party’s advantage down the ballot. In a series of phone calls, Demo- cratic lawmakers and party offi- cials have lobbied Mr. Biden and his top aides to seize what they be- lieve could be a singular opportu- nity not only to defeat Mr. Trump but to rout him and discredit what they believe is his dangerous style of racial demagogy. This election, the officials ar- gue, offers the provocative possi- bility of a new path to the presi- dency through fast-changing states like Georgia and Texas, and a chance to install a generation of lawmakers who can cement Dem- ocratic control of Congress and help redraw legislative maps fol- lowing this year’s census. Mr. Biden’s campaign, though, is so far hewing to a more conser- vative path. It is focused mostly on a handful of traditional battle- grounds, where it is only now scal- ing up and naming top aides de- spite having claimed the nomina- tion in April. At the moment, Mr. Biden is air- ing TV ads in just six states, all of which Mr. Trump won four years ago: Michigan, Wisconsin, Penn- sylvania, Arizona, North Carolina and Florida. The campaign includ- ed perennially close Florida only after some deliberations about whether it was worth the hefty price tag, and when Mr. Trump’s struggles with older populations made it clearly competitive, ac- cording to Democrats familiar with their discussions. The campaign’s reluctance to pursue a more expansive strategy owes in part to the calendar: Mr. Biden’s aides want to see where the race stands closer to Novem- ber before they broaden their fo- cus and commit to multimillion- dollar investments, aware that no swing states, let alone Republi- can-leaning states, have actually been locked up. Yet they are increasingly bump- ing up against a party embold- ened by an extraordinary conver- gence of events. Mr. Trump’s mis- handling of the pandemic, his self- defeating rhetorical eruptions Biden Is Urged To Make a Play For More States By JONATHAN MARTIN Continued on Page 22 Months before F.B.I. agents arrived in darkness at his Flor- ida home to take him into cus- tody, Roger J. Stone Jr. promised that he would remain loyal to his longtime friend. “I will never roll on Donald Trump,” he said. He did not, and Mr. Stone is now a free man. The president’s decision on Friday to commute Mr. Stone’s prison sentence for impeding a congressional inquiry and other crimes was extraordinary be- cause federal prosecutors had suspected that Mr. Stone could shed light on whether Mr. Trump had lied to them under oath or illegally obstructed justice. Even Mr. Stone suggested a possible quid pro quo, telling a journalist hours before the announcement that he hoped for clemency be- cause Mr. Trump knew he had resisted intense pressure from prosecutors to cooperate. It was the latest example of how Mr. Trump has managed to bend America’s legal machinery to his advantage and undermine a criminal investigation that has dominated so much of his presi- dency. A jury determined that Mr. Stone, 67, was guilty of seven felonies, including witness tam- pering and lying to federal au- thorities, and a judge sentenced him to 40 months in prison. But to some, his brazen taunting of F.B.I. agents, prosecutors and a federal judge for the past three years indicated that he knew how the story would end: His friend Mr. Trump would rescue him. Mr. Stone has always de- scribed the special counsel inves- tigation as bogus. And he has said he refused to help prosecu- tors because he would not “bear false witness” or “make up lies” about Mr. Trump — not because he was covering up any wrong- doing. But recently unsealed portions of the report by Robert S. Muel- ler III, the special counsel who investigated Russia’s election interference and has insistently refused to go beyond what was in his report, underscore why in- vestigators were so eager to gain his cooperation. The passages show that prosecutors suspected that the president had lied to them in written answers when he Trump Repays Aide’s Loyalty With a Rescue Latest Case of Bending Justice to His Ends By SHARON LaFRANIERE and MARK MAZZETTI Continued on Page 25 NEWS ANALYSIS Late Edition VOL. CLXIX . . . No. 58,752 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2020 Today, partly sunny, very warm, less humid, high 89. Tonight, partly cloudy, warm, low 75. Tomorrow, heavy afternoon thunderstorms, high 87. Weather map, Page 24. $6.00

Transcript of BAFFLES EXPERTS SCHOOL THIS FALL - static01.nyt.com · 7/12/2020  · N.J., who serves on the state...

Page 1: BAFFLES EXPERTS SCHOOL THIS FALL - static01.nyt.com · 7/12/2020  · N.J., who serves on the state s committee on reopening schools. Data from around the world clearly shows that

C M Y K Nxxx,2020-07-12,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

A tech mogul is paying for a city’s sur-veillance system. It may sound creepy,but Chris Larsen says it’s not. PAGE 1

SUNDAY BUSINESS

Security Cameras, My TreatIn a new memoir, Colin Jost, a “Satur-day Night Live” star, contemplates a lifeand a career still in flux. PAGE 10

ARTS & LEISURE

‘A Very Punchable Face’

At peace, the trio formerly known asthe Dixie Chicks is returning with itsfirst album in 14 years. PAGE 8

Wide Open SpacesAmid deteriorating economic condi-tions, a rally has left the market richlyvalued and facing uncertainty. PAGE 11

The Disconnect of a Bounce

A trade and military pact would extendBeijing’s reach into the Middle East andundercut the Trump administration’sefforts to isolate Tehran. PAGE 18

INTERNATIONAL 13-18

China and Iran Near Deal

China is moving to revamp an educa-tion system in Hong Kong that hasgiven rise to young rebels. PAGE 14

Squelching Student Unrest

A Phoenix activist was arrested whilesupporting Black Lives Matter, but herDACA status put her in peril. PAGE 19

NATIONAL 19-25

Calling ICE on a Protester

An all-fiction issue features 29 newshort stories from David Mitchell, Kar-en Russell, Tommy Orange, Yiyun Liand others.

THE MAGAZINE

Inspired by the 14th Century

The world is reopening, and differinglevels of anxiety can strain relation-ships. Here are some strategies forgetting through it all together. PAGE 7

AT HOME

Couples Tested by Stress

Farhad Manjoo PAGE 4

SUNDAY REVIEW

With university plans for reopening thatlimit dormitory housing and put classesonline, at full tuition, many first-genera-tion, low-income students feel that theelite institution has failed them. PAGE 1

SUNDAY STYLES

Harvard Minus the Campus

Many people wonder if a new wave ofunscripted shows about the lives ofyoung social media influencers couldcaptivate the next generation of view-ers. Will the industry bite? PAGE 1

TikTok Stars Eye Reality TV

U(D547FD)v+$!{!/!?!"

As school districts across theUnited States consider whetherand how to restart in-personclasses, their challenge is compli-cated by a pair of fundamental un-certainties: No nation has tried tosend children back to school withthe virus raging at levels likeAmerica’s, and the scientific re-search about transmission inclassrooms is limited.

The World Health Organizationhas now concluded that the virusis airborne in crowded, indoorspaces with poor ventilation, a de-scription that fits many Americanschools. But there is enormouspressure to bring students back —from parents, from pediatriciansand child development special-ists, and from President Trump.

“I’m just going to say it: It feelslike we’re playing Russianroulette with our kids and ourstaff,” said Robin Cogan, a nurse atthe Yorkship School in Camden,N.J., who serves on the state’scommittee on reopening schools.

Data from around the worldclearly shows that children are farless likely to become seriously illfrom the coronavirus than adults.But there are big unansweredquestions, including how oftenchildren become infected andwhat role they play in transmit-ting the virus. Some research sug-gests younger children are lesslikely to infect other people thanteenagers are, which would make

HOW TO RESTARTSCHOOL THIS FALLBAFFLES EXPERTS

MURKY DATA ON YOUNG

U.S. Only Nation to PushAhead With Infection

Still Rampant

This article is by Pam Belluck,Apoorva Mandavilli and BenedictCarey.

Many schools are unequippedto ventilate spaces properly.

AUDRA MELTON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page 8

On an afternoon in early April,while New York City was in thethroes of what would be the dead-liest days of the coronavirus pan-demic, Dr. Lorna M. Breen foundherself alone in the still of herapartment in Manhattan.

She picked up her phone and di-aled her younger sister, JenniferFeist.

The two were just 22 monthsapart and had the kind of bondthat comes from growing up shar-ing a bedroom and wearingmatching outfits. Ms. Feist, a law-yer in Charlottesville, Va., was ac-customed to hearing from her sis-ter nearly every day.

Lately, their conversations hadbeen bleak.

Dr. Breen worked at NewYork-Presbyterian Allen Hospital inUpper Manhattan, where she su-pervised the emergency depart-ment. The unit had become a bru-

tal battleground, with supplies de-pleting at a distressing rate anddoctors and nurses falling ill. Thewaiting room was perpetuallyovercrowded. The sick were dyingunnoticed.

Ms. Feist had taken to sleepingnext to her phone in case her sis-

ter needed herafter a lateshift.

When Dr.Breen calledthis time, shesounded odd.Her voice wasdistant, as if shewas in shock.

“I don’t knowwhat to do,” she

said. “I can’t get out of the chair.”Dr. Breen was a consummate

overachiever, one who directedher life with assurance.

When she graduated from med-ical school, she insisted on study-

With an E.R. Doctor’s Suicide, The Virus Took Another Life

This article is by Corina Knoll, AliWatkins and Michael Rothfeld.

Continued on Page 10

Dr. LornaM. Breen

BOGOTÁ, Colombia — SandraAbello grew up poor, left school at11 and spent her teenage yearsscrubbing floors as a live-in maid.But by this year, something re-markable had happened.

Ms. Abello, now 39, finally had ahome in a decent neighborhood.One of her daughters, Karol, wasabout to finish high school. An-other, Nicol, was turning 15, andthey were planning a party with abig dress and many guests. Theywere saving for a washing ma-chine. Ms. Abello was proud of allshe had accomplished.

Then the pandemic hit, and Ms.Abello lost her cleaning work. ByMay, she had been evicted, forcing

her to move her children into a tinshed in an illegal settlement highabove the city. At night, a bittercold pushed its way in. A lifetimeof effort had evaporated in a mat-ter of weeks.

Ms. Abello’s oldest daughter,Karol, an aspiring nurse, called itthe “great regression.”

Not long ago, Colombia, andLatin America more broadly, werein the middle of a history-makingtransformation: The scourge ofinequality was shrinking as neverbefore. Over the past 20 years,millions of families had marchedout of poverty in one of the mostunequal regions on earth. The gapbetween rich and poor in LatinAmerica fell to its lowest point onrecord.

Now, the pandemic is threat-ening to reverse those gains like

nothing else in recent history,economists say, potentially up-ending politics and entire socie-ties for years to come.

We — two reporters and a pho-tographer with The New YorkTimes — wanted to understandwhat this meant for the region’sfuture, and in particular for thefamilies that had been so centralto that march toward economicequality.

So we began to drive, packingthe car with masks and travelingmore than 1,000 miles from Co-lombia’s capital to the northeast-ern border and back, interviewingdozens of people about the waythe pandemic was changing thecourse of their lives.

As we went, leaving the moun-

In Pandemic, for Colombia’s Poor, ‘Hope Is Over’By JULIE TURKEWITZand SOFÍA VILLAMIL

Amado Daversa, 9, waiting in Bucaramanga, Colombia, for a bus to take him and his mother, Roraima, to the Venezuelan border.FEDERICO RIOS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page 16

CAMDEN, N.J. — As officialsacross the United States face de-mands to transform policing,many have turned to a small NewJersey city that did what some ac-tivists are calling for elsewhere:dismantled its police force andbuilt a new one that stresses a lessconfrontational approach towardresidents who are mostly Blackand Latino.

The Camden Police Depart-

ment’s efforts to reduce its use offorce have made it one of the mostcompelling turnaround stories inU.S. law enforcement. Thechanges have led to a stark reduc-tion in the number of excessive-force complaints against the po-lice and have helped drive downthe murder rate in what was onceone of America’s most dangerouscities.

“If you’re looking to be a high-speed operator, we’re probablynot the right department,” said thecurrent chief, Joseph Wysocki, re-ferring to the type of officer he

does not want to attract. “If you’relooking to be a guardian figure inyour neighborhood, this is foryou.”

Still, even as many other com-munities look to Camden as a tem-plate for reform, it is far from aneat model.

The disbanding of its old forceseven years ago was promptednot by a desire to rethink policing,but by dire finances, a publicsafety crisis and a political powerplay meant to break the police offi-

The City That Fired Its Whole Police DepartmentBy JOSEPH GOLDSTEINand KEVIN ARMSTRONG

Camden, N.J., was one of the country’s riskiest cities until it disbanded and rebuilt its police force.HANNAH YOON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page 20

WASHINGTON — With Presi-dent Trump’s poll numbers slidingin traditional battlegrounds aswell as conservative-leaningstates, and money pouring intoDemocratic campaigns, Joseph R.Biden Jr. is facing rising pressureto expand his ambitions, competeaggressively in more states andpress his party’s advantage downthe ballot.

In a series of phone calls, Demo-cratic lawmakers and party offi-cials have lobbied Mr. Biden andhis top aides to seize what they be-lieve could be a singular opportu-nity not only to defeat Mr. Trumpbut to rout him and discredit whatthey believe is his dangerous styleof racial demagogy.

This election, the officials ar-gue, offers the provocative possi-bility of a new path to the presi-dency through fast-changingstates like Georgia and Texas, anda chance to install a generation oflawmakers who can cement Dem-ocratic control of Congress andhelp redraw legislative maps fol-lowing this year’s census.

Mr. Biden’s campaign, though,is so far hewing to a more conser-vative path. It is focused mostlyon a handful of traditional battle-grounds, where it is only now scal-ing up and naming top aides de-spite having claimed the nomina-tion in April.

At the moment, Mr. Biden is air-ing TV ads in just six states, all ofwhich Mr. Trump won four yearsago: Michigan, Wisconsin, Penn-sylvania, Arizona, North Carolinaand Florida. The campaign includ-ed perennially close Florida onlyafter some deliberations aboutwhether it was worth the heftyprice tag, and when Mr. Trump’sstruggles with older populationsmade it clearly competitive, ac-cording to Democrats familiarwith their discussions.

The campaign’s reluctance topursue a more expansive strategyowes in part to the calendar: Mr.Biden’s aides want to see wherethe race stands closer to Novem-ber before they broaden their fo-cus and commit to multimillion-dollar investments, aware that noswing states, let alone Republi-can-leaning states, have actuallybeen locked up.

Yet they are increasingly bump-ing up against a party embold-ened by an extraordinary conver-gence of events. Mr. Trump’s mis-handling of the pandemic, his self-defeating rhetorical eruptions

Biden Is UrgedTo Make a PlayFor More States

By JONATHAN MARTIN

Continued on Page 22

Months before F.B.I. agentsarrived in darkness at his Flor-ida home to take him into cus-tody, Roger J. Stone Jr. promisedthat he would remain loyal to his

longtime friend. “Iwill never roll onDonald Trump,” hesaid.

He did not, andMr. Stone is now a free man.

The president’s decision onFriday to commute Mr. Stone’sprison sentence for impeding acongressional inquiry and othercrimes was extraordinary be-cause federal prosecutors hadsuspected that Mr. Stone couldshed light on whether Mr. Trumphad lied to them under oath orillegally obstructed justice. EvenMr. Stone suggested a possiblequid pro quo, telling a journalisthours before the announcementthat he hoped for clemency be-cause Mr. Trump knew he hadresisted intense pressure fromprosecutors to cooperate.

It was the latest example ofhow Mr. Trump has managed tobend America’s legal machineryto his advantage and underminea criminal investigation that hasdominated so much of his presi-dency.

A jury determined that Mr.Stone, 67, was guilty of sevenfelonies, including witness tam-pering and lying to federal au-thorities, and a judge sentencedhim to 40 months in prison. Butto some, his brazen taunting ofF.B.I. agents, prosecutors and afederal judge for the past threeyears indicated that he knewhow the story would end: Hisfriend Mr. Trump would rescuehim.

Mr. Stone has always de-scribed the special counsel inves-tigation as bogus. And he hassaid he refused to help prosecu-tors because he would not “bearfalse witness” or “make up lies”about Mr. Trump — not becausehe was covering up any wrong-doing.

But recently unsealed portionsof the report by Robert S. Muel-ler III, the special counsel whoinvestigated Russia’s electioninterference and has insistentlyrefused to go beyond what was inhis report, underscore why in-vestigators were so eager to gainhis cooperation. The passagesshow that prosecutors suspectedthat the president had lied tothem in written answers when he

Trump RepaysAide’s LoyaltyWith a Rescue

Latest Case of BendingJustice to His Ends

By SHARON LaFRANIEREand MARK MAZZETTI

Continued on Page 25

NEWSANALYSIS

Late Edition

VOL. CLXIX . . . No. 58,752 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2020

Today, partly sunny, very warm, lesshumid, high 89. Tonight, partlycloudy, warm, low 75. Tomorrow,heavy afternoon thunderstorms,high 87. Weather map, Page 24.

$6.00