MUELLER SUBMITS TRUMP INQUIRY FINDINGS · MUELLER SUBMITS TRUMP INQUIRY FINDINGS Attorney General...

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VOL. CLXVIII . . . No. 58,275 © 2019 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 2019 U(D54G1D)y+#!$!]!=!; WASHINGTON — The special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, on Friday delivered a report on his inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 election to Attorney General William P. Barr, bringing to a close an investigation that has consumed the nation and cast a shadow over President Trump for nearly two years. Mr. Barr told congressional leaders in a letter that he may brief them on the special counsel’s “principal conclusions” as early as this weekend, a surprisingly fast turnaround for a report antici- pated for months. The attorney general said he “remained com- mitted to as much transparency as possible.” In an apparent endorsement of an investigation that Mr. Trump has relentlessly attacked as a “witch hunt,” Mr. Barr said Justice Department officials never had to intervene to keep Mr. Mueller from taking an inappropriate or unwarranted step. The depart- ment’s regulations would have re- quired Mr. Barr to inform the lead- ers of the House and Senate Judi- ciary committees about any such interventions in his letter. A senior Justice Department of- ficial said that Mr. Mueller would not recommend new indictments, a statement aimed at ending spec- ulation that Mr. Trump or other key figures might be charged down the line. With department officials em- phasizing that Mr. Mueller’s inqui- ry was over and his office closing, the question for both Mr. Trump’s critics and defenders was whether the prosecutors con- demned the president’s behavior in their report, exonerated him — or neither. The president’s law- yers were already girding for a possible fight over whether they could assert executive privilege to keep parts of the report secret. Since Mr. Mueller’s appoint- ment in May 2017, his team has fo- cused on how Russian operatives sought to sway the outcome of the 2016 presidential race and whether anyone tied to the Trump campaign, wittingly or unwit- tingly, cooperated with them. While the inquiry, started months earlier by the F.B.I., unearthed a far-ranging Russian influence op- eration, no public evidence emerged that the president or his aides illegally assisted it. Nonetheless, the damage to Mr. Trump and those in his circle has been extensive. A half-dozen for- mer Trump aides were indicted or convicted of crimes, mostly for ly- ing to federal investigators or Congress. Others remain under investigation in cases that Mr. Mueller’s office handed off to fed- eral prosecutors in New York and elsewhere. Dozens of Russian intelligence officers or citizens, along with three Russian companies, were charged in cases that are likely to languish in court because the de- fendants cannot be extradited to the United States. Republicans immediately seized upon the news that no more indictments are expected as a vin- dication of Mr. Trump and his campaign. Those reports “con- firm what we’ve known all along: There was never any collusion with Russia,” Representative Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the second-highest-ranking House Republican, said in a statement. Democrats, including some of those hoping to supplant Mr. Trump in the White House in the 2020 election, insisted that Mr. Mueller’s full report be made pub- lic, including the underlying evi- dence. In a joint statement, Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Califor- nia and Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the top Senate Dem- ocrat, warned Mr. Barr not to al- low the White House a “sneak pre- view” of the document. MUELLER SUBMITS TRUMP INQUIRY FINDINGS Attorney General Could Brief Congress in Days on Report’s ‘Principal Conclusions’ Robert S. Mueller III wrapped up a nearly two-year inquiry. DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES By SHARON LaFRANIERE and KATIE BENNER Continued on Page A14 After nearly three years of investigation, after hundreds of interviews and thousands upon thousands of pages of docu- ments, after scores of indict- ments and court hearings and guilty pleas, after endless hours of cable- television and dinner-table spec- ulation, the moment of reckoning has arrived. It will be a reckoning for Presi- dent Trump, to be sure, but also for Robert S. Mueller III, the special counsel, for Congress, for Democrats, for Republicans, for the news media and, yes, for the system as a whole. The delivery of Mr. Mueller’s report to the Justice Department on Friday marked a turning point that will shape the remainder of Mr. Trump’s presidency and test the viability of American govern- ance. Washington has been waiting for Mr. Mueller’s findings for so long and invested in them so much that it may be hard for what he has delivered to live up to the breathless anticipation. But once released, the Mueller report will transform the political landscape, fueling calls for the president’s impeachment or providing him fodder to claim vindication — or possibly, in this live-in-your-own-reality moment, both at the same time. Democrats on Friday played down the notion that the report would be the final word, fearing that anything less than a bomb- shell would undercut their own drive to investigate Mr. Trump not only on Russia’s election interference but on the myriad other subjects that have drawn their attention. Mr. Trump, for his part, had engaged in a partic- ularly manic Twitter spree lately, assailing the “witch hunt” and the “hoax” and everyone he blames for them, like his fellow Republicans John McCain and Jeff Sessions, in what some had interpreted as a sign of his own anxiety before the special coun- sel’s verdict. But he was reported to appear relieved with early reports on Friday. The fact that Mr. Mueller issued no further indictments as he wrapped up on Friday and never charged any Americans alleging criminal conspiracy between the Trump campaign and Russia emboldened the president’s Republican allies, Turning Point Becomes Test For President By PETER BAKER Continued on Page A15 NEWS ANALYSIS WASHINGTON — The mak- ings of an epic constitutional bat- tle over the executive branch’s power to keep information secret from Congress started to take shape on Friday, as Attorney Gen- eral William P. Barr began to weigh how much to disclose about the findings of the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III. As Mr. Barr officially informed Congress that Mr. Mueller had handed in his long-awaited report about the Trump-Russia investi- gation to the Justice Department, Democrats on Capitol Hill imme- diately reiterated their demands to see the entire document — and more. Democrats have made clear they are also determined to gain access to the Mueller team’s sup- porting evidence and other inves- tigative files, virtually guarantee- ing a fight. “Now that Special Counsel Mueller has submitted his report to the attorney general, it is imper- ative for Mr. Barr to make the full report public and provide its un- derlying documentation and find- ings to Congress,” Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senator Chuck Schu- mer, the Democratic leader, said in a joint statement. In a letter to Congress on Fri- day, Mr. Barr said he might re- lease Mr. Mueller’s principal con- What Should Be Made Public? A Battle Looms By CHARLIE SAVAGE Questions of Executive Privilege and Secrecy Continued on Page A17 Sarai Pridgen had just gotten home from debate practice on Monday evening when she opened her laptop to find her Facebook feed flooded with stories about a staggering statis- tic: Only seven black students had been admitted into Stuyvesant High School, out of 895 spots. The number was causing a wrenching citywide discussion about race and inequality in America’s larg- est school system. Sarai said she felt sickened by the statistic — yet unsurprised. A 16-year-old sophomore, she is one of just 29 black students out of about 3,300 teenagers at Stuyvesant. “I go to this school every day, I walk through the hallways of this school, and I don’t think I see a black person usually through my day,” said Sarai, who lives in Park Slope, Brooklyn. “It wasn’t shock that I felt, it was the same wave of disappointment I feel every time I look at the demographics of this school.” New York is being rocked by a fight over the future of its selec- tive schools, but at Stuyvesant, the admission statistics are espe- cially piercing. For students, it is hard enough being a teenager, bal- ancing grades and homework with social pressures and a bar- rage of Instagram Stories. But imagine being one of the few black and Hispanic students at one of the country’s most selec- tive public schools. The nine black and Hispanic students who gathered for an in- terview after school on Wednes- Fed Up and Pushing for Diversity at Elite School By ELIZA SHAPIRO New York’s Stuyvesant High has few blacks and Hispanics. CHRISTOPHER LEE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A22 WASHINGTON — President Trump undercut his own Treasury Department on Friday with a sud- den announcement that he had rolled back newly imposed North Korea sanctions, appearing to overrule national security experts as a favor to Kim Jong-un, the North Korean leader. The move, announced on Twit- ter, was a remarkable display of dissension within the Trump ad- ministration. It created confusion at the highest levels of the federal government, just as the presi- dent’s aides were seeking to pres- sure North Korea into returning to negotiations over dismantling its nuclear weapons program. “It was announced today by the U.S. Treasury that additional large scale Sanctions would be added to those already existing Sanctions on North Korea,” Mr. Trump tweeted. “I have today or- dered the withdrawal of those ad- ditional Sanctions!” The Treasury Department an- nounced new sanctions on Friday against Iran and Venezuela, but not North Korea. However, economic penalties were imposed on Thursday on two Chinese shipping companies sus- pected of helping North Korea evade international sanctions. Those penalties, announced with news releases and a White House briefing, were the first imposed against North Korea since late last year and came less than a month after a summit meeting between Mr. Trump and Mr. Kim collapsed in Hanoi, Vietnam, without a deal. It was initially believed that Mr. A Defiant Trump Mutes North Korea Sanctions By ALAN RAPPEPORT Continued on Page A11 President Trump rescinded new penalties affecting North Korea. ED JONES/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE — GETTY IMAGES LONG WAIT Not even the president’s personal lawyer seemed to have any idea what was happening as Friday dragged on. PAGE A18 WHAT’S NEXT? The report has yet to be made public, and the path to its potential release — in whole or in part — is complicated. PAGE A16 Anthony Pellicano, whose case exposed the entertainment world’s underbelly, spent over a decade in prison. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-6 Hollywood Wiretapper Freed Italy will become the first Group of 7 nation to officially join China’s “One Belt, One Road” project, a sign of Bei- jing’s growing influence. PAGE A4 INTERNATIONAL A4-11 Securing a European Foothold Rivers engorged with late-winter rains and snowmelt have overwhelmed flood controls in the Midwest, exposing a piecemeal approach. PAGE A12 NATIONAL A12-20 Anxiety in River Towns Christopher Payne captures the grimy beauty of printing a newspaper at The Times’s Queens plant. SPECIAL SECTION THIS WEEKEND Stop the Presses Recently compiled data on new-car registrations holds ominous signs for the electric-car maker’s sales. PAGE B1 It’s Pothole Season for Tesla No. 13 California, Irvine, earned its first N.C.A.A. tournament win with a 70-64 upset of No. 4 Kansas State. PAGE D3 Bracket-Busting Anteaters President Trump’s call to recognize Israeli sovereignty in the Golan Heights met a muted Arab response. PAGE A9 A Rallying Cry No More Nobody imagined Anthony Comello would ever be charged in the highest- profile mob killing in decades. PAGE A21 NEW YORK A21-22 The Mystery Mob Murder Democrats say President Trump’s daughter and son-in-law may have violated federal records laws. PAGE A13 Private Email, Official Business Bret Stephens PAGE A25 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A24-25 The travel guru Rick Steves wants to save the world — one vacation at a time. THE MAGAZINE Sights to Behold THE NEW YORK TIMES Michael D. Cohen Richard Pinedo Paul Manafort Guilty Charged Key Alex van der Zwaan George Papadopoulos Konstantin V. Kilimnik Michael T. Flynn Rick Gates Roger J. Stone Jr. Thirteen Russian nationals Twelve Russian intelligence officers More than 80 people were involved in lines of inquiry in the Mueller investigation. Seven people were convicted or pleaded guilty and 27 more were indicted, including 26 Russians. Pages A14-17. The Findings So Far An administrator known as a stickler for rules is at the center of U.S.C.’s involvement in a bribe scandal. PAGE D1 SPORTSSATURDAY D1-6 By the Book (or Perhaps Not) The Caped Crusader’s journey to this milestone is filled with many memora- ble crime-fighting moments. PAGE C2 ARTS C1-7 Holy 80th Birthday, Batman! Late Edition Today, some clouds then sunshine, very windy, high 49. Tonight, mostly clear, winds subsiding, low 36. To- morrow, mostly sunny, milder, high 59. Weather map is on Page C8. $3.00

Transcript of MUELLER SUBMITS TRUMP INQUIRY FINDINGS · MUELLER SUBMITS TRUMP INQUIRY FINDINGS Attorney General...

Page 1: MUELLER SUBMITS TRUMP INQUIRY FINDINGS · MUELLER SUBMITS TRUMP INQUIRY FINDINGS Attorney General Could Brief Congress in ... against Iran and Venezuela, but not North Korea. However,

VOL. CLXVIII . . . No. 58,275 © 2019 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 2019

C M Y K Nxxx,2019-03-23,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

U(D54G1D)y+#!$!]!=!;

WASHINGTON — The specialcounsel, Robert S. Mueller III, onFriday delivered a report on hisinquiry into Russian interferencein the 2016 election to AttorneyGeneral William P. Barr, bringingto a close an investigation that hasconsumed the nation and cast ashadow over President Trump fornearly two years.

Mr. Barr told congressionalleaders in a letter that he maybrief them on the special counsel’s“principal conclusions” as earlyas this weekend, a surprisinglyfast turnaround for a report antici-pated for months. The attorneygeneral said he “remained com-mitted to as much transparencyas possible.”

In an apparent endorsement ofan investigation that Mr. Trumphas relentlessly attacked as a“witch hunt,” Mr. Barr said JusticeDepartment officials never had tointervene to keep Mr. Muellerfrom taking an inappropriate orunwarranted step. The depart-ment’s regulations would have re-quired Mr. Barr to inform the lead-ers of the House and Senate Judi-ciary committees about any suchinterventions in his letter.

A senior Justice Department of-ficial said that Mr. Mueller wouldnot recommend new indictments,a statement aimed at ending spec-ulation that Mr. Trump or otherkey figures might be chargeddown the line.

With department officials em-phasizing that Mr. Mueller’s inqui-ry was over and his office closing,the question for both Mr. Trump’scritics and defenders waswhether the prosecutors con-demned the president’s behaviorin their report, exonerated him —or neither. The president’s law-yers were already girding for apossible fight over whether theycould assert executive privilege tokeep parts of the report secret.

Since Mr. Mueller’s appoint-ment in May 2017, his team has fo-cused on how Russian operativessought to sway the outcome of the2016 presidential race andwhether anyone tied to the Trumpcampaign, wittingly or unwit-tingly, cooperated with them.While the inquiry, started monthsearlier by the F.B.I., unearthed afar-ranging Russian influence op-eration, no public evidenceemerged that the president or hisaides illegally assisted it.

Nonetheless, the damage to Mr.Trump and those in his circle hasbeen extensive. A half-dozen for-

mer Trump aides were indicted orconvicted of crimes, mostly for ly-ing to federal investigators orCongress. Others remain underinvestigation in cases that Mr.Mueller’s office handed off to fed-eral prosecutors in New York andelsewhere.

Dozens of Russian intelligenceofficers or citizens, along withthree Russian companies, werecharged in cases that are likely tolanguish in court because the de-fendants cannot be extradited tothe United States.

Republicans immediatelyseized upon the news that no moreindictments are expected as a vin-dication of Mr. Trump and hiscampaign. Those reports “con-firm what we’ve known all along:There was never any collusionwith Russia,” RepresentativeSteve Scalise of Louisiana, thesecond-highest-ranking HouseRepublican, said in a statement.

Democrats, including some ofthose hoping to supplant Mr.Trump in the White House in the2020 election, insisted that Mr.Mueller’s full report be made pub-lic, including the underlying evi-dence. In a joint statement,Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Califor-nia and Senator Chuck Schumerof New York, the top Senate Dem-ocrat, warned Mr. Barr not to al-low the White House a “sneak pre-view” of the document.

MUELLER SUBMITS TRUMP INQUIRY FINDINGSAttorney General Could Brief Congress in

Days on Report’s ‘Principal Conclusions’

Robert S. Mueller III wrappedup a nearly two-year inquiry.

DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES

By SHARON LaFRANIERE and KATIE BENNER

Continued on Page A14

After nearly three years ofinvestigation, after hundreds ofinterviews and thousands uponthousands of pages of docu-ments, after scores of indict-

ments and courthearings and guiltypleas, after endlesshours of cable-

television and dinner-table spec-ulation, the moment of reckoninghas arrived.

It will be a reckoning for Presi-dent Trump, to be sure, but alsofor Robert S. Mueller III, thespecial counsel, for Congress, forDemocrats, for Republicans, forthe news media and, yes, for thesystem as a whole. The deliveryof Mr. Mueller’s report to theJustice Department on Fridaymarked a turning point that willshape the remainder of Mr.Trump’s presidency and test theviability of American govern-ance.

Washington has been waitingfor Mr. Mueller’s findings for solong and invested in them somuch that it may be hard forwhat he has delivered to live upto the breathless anticipation.But once released, the Muellerreport will transform the politicallandscape, fueling calls for thepresident’s impeachment orproviding him fodder to claimvindication — or possibly, in thislive-in-your-own-reality moment,both at the same time.

Democrats on Friday playeddown the notion that the reportwould be the final word, fearingthat anything less than a bomb-shell would undercut their owndrive to investigate Mr. Trumpnot only on Russia’s electioninterference but on the myriadother subjects that have drawntheir attention. Mr. Trump, forhis part, had engaged in a partic-ularly manic Twitter spree lately,assailing the “witch hunt” andthe “hoax” and everyone heblames for them, like his fellowRepublicans John McCain andJeff Sessions, in what some hadinterpreted as a sign of his ownanxiety before the special coun-sel’s verdict. But he was reportedto appear relieved with earlyreports on Friday.

The fact that Mr. Muellerissued no further indictments ashe wrapped up on Friday andnever charged any Americansalleging criminal conspiracybetween the Trump campaignand Russia emboldened thepresident’s Republican allies,

Turning PointBecomes Test

For PresidentBy PETER BAKER

Continued on Page A15

NEWSANALYSIS

WASHINGTON — The mak-ings of an epic constitutional bat-tle over the executive branch’spower to keep information secretfrom Congress started to takeshape on Friday, as Attorney Gen-eral William P. Barr began toweigh how much to disclose aboutthe findings of the special counsel,Robert S. Mueller III.

As Mr. Barr officially informedCongress that Mr. Mueller hadhanded in his long-awaited report

about the Trump-Russia investi-gation to the Justice Department,Democrats on Capitol Hill imme-diately reiterated their demandsto see the entire document — andmore.

Democrats have made clearthey are also determined to gainaccess to the Mueller team’s sup-porting evidence and other inves-

tigative files, virtually guarantee-ing a fight.

“Now that Special CounselMueller has submitted his reportto the attorney general, it is imper-ative for Mr. Barr to make the fullreport public and provide its un-derlying documentation and find-ings to Congress,” Speaker NancyPelosi and Senator Chuck Schu-mer, the Democratic leader, said ina joint statement.

In a letter to Congress on Fri-day, Mr. Barr said he might re-lease Mr. Mueller’s principal con-

What Should Be Made Public? A Battle LoomsBy CHARLIE SAVAGE Questions of Executive

Privilege and Secrecy

Continued on Page A17

Sarai Pridgen had just gottenhome from debate practice onMonday evening when sheopened her laptop to find herFacebook feed flooded withstories about a staggering statis-tic: Only seven black students hadbeen admitted into StuyvesantHigh School, out of 895 spots. Thenumber was causing a wrenchingcitywide discussion about raceand inequality in America’s larg-est school system.

Sarai said she felt sickened bythe statistic — yet unsurprised. A16-year-old sophomore, she is oneof just 29 black students out ofabout 3,300 teenagers atStuyvesant.

“I go to this school every day, Iwalk through the hallways of thisschool, and I don’t think I see ablack person usually through myday,” said Sarai, who lives in ParkSlope, Brooklyn. “It wasn’t shockthat I felt, it was the same wave of

disappointment I feel every time Ilook at the demographics of thisschool.”

New York is being rocked by afight over the future of its selec-tive schools, but at Stuyvesant,the admission statistics are espe-cially piercing. For students, it ishard enough being a teenager, bal-ancing grades and homework

with social pressures and a bar-rage of Instagram Stories.

But imagine being one of thefew black and Hispanic studentsat one of the country’s most selec-tive public schools.

The nine black and Hispanicstudents who gathered for an in-terview after school on Wednes-

Fed Up and Pushing for Diversity at Elite SchoolBy ELIZA SHAPIRO

New York’s Stuyvesant High has few blacks and Hispanics.CHRISTOPHER LEE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A22

WASHINGTON — PresidentTrump undercut his own TreasuryDepartment on Friday with a sud-den announcement that he hadrolled back newly imposed NorthKorea sanctions, appearing tooverrule national security expertsas a favor to Kim Jong-un, theNorth Korean leader.

The move, announced on Twit-ter, was a remarkable display ofdissension within the Trump ad-ministration. It created confusionat the highest levels of the federalgovernment, just as the presi-dent’s aides were seeking to pres-sure North Korea into returning tonegotiations over dismantling itsnuclear weapons program.

“It was announced today by theU.S. Treasury that additionallarge scale Sanctions would beadded to those already existingSanctions on North Korea,” Mr.Trump tweeted. “I have today or-dered the withdrawal of those ad-

ditional Sanctions!”The Treasury Department an-

nounced new sanctions on Fridayagainst Iran and Venezuela, butnot North Korea.

However, economic penaltieswere imposed on Thursday on twoChinese shipping companies sus-pected of helping North Koreaevade international sanctions.

Those penalties, announced withnews releases and a White Housebriefing, were the first imposedagainst North Korea since late lastyear and came less than a monthafter a summit meeting betweenMr. Trump and Mr. Kim collapsedin Hanoi, Vietnam, without a deal.

It was initially believed that Mr.

A Defiant Trump Mutes North Korea SanctionsBy ALAN RAPPEPORT

Continued on Page A11

President Trump rescinded new penalties affecting North Korea.ED JONES/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE — GETTY IMAGES

LONG WAIT Not even the president’s personal lawyer seemed to haveany idea what was happening as Friday dragged on. PAGE A18

WHAT’S NEXT? The report has yet to be made public, and the path toits potential release — in whole or in part — is complicated. PAGE A16

Anthony Pellicano, whose case exposedthe entertainment world’s underbelly,spent over a decade in prison. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-6

Hollywood Wiretapper FreedItaly will become the first Group of 7nation to officially join China’s “OneBelt, One Road” project, a sign of Bei-jing’s growing influence. PAGE A4

INTERNATIONAL A4-11

Securing a European FootholdRivers engorged with late-winter rainsand snowmelt have overwhelmed floodcontrols in the Midwest, exposing apiecemeal approach. PAGE A12

NATIONAL A12-20

Anxiety in River TownsChristopher Payne captures the grimybeauty of printing a newspaper at TheTimes’s Queens plant. SPECIAL SECTION

THIS WEEKEND

Stop the Presses

Recently compiled data on new-carregistrations holds ominous signs forthe electric-car maker’s sales. PAGE B1

It’s Pothole Season for TeslaNo. 13 California, Irvine, earned its firstN.C.A.A. tournament win with a 70-64upset of No. 4 Kansas State. PAGE D3

Bracket-Busting Anteaters

President Trump’s call to recognizeIsraeli sovereignty in the Golan Heightsmet a muted Arab response. PAGE A9

A Rallying Cry No More

Nobody imagined Anthony Comellowould ever be charged in the highest-profile mob killing in decades. PAGE A21

NEW YORK A21-22

The Mystery Mob Murder

Democrats say President Trump’sdaughter and son-in-law may haveviolated federal records laws. PAGE A13

Private Email, Official Business

Bret Stephens PAGE A25

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A24-25

The travel guru Rick Steves wants tosave the world — one vacation at atime. THE MAGAZINE

Sights to Behold

THE NEW YORK TIMES

Michael D. Cohen Richard PinedoPaul Manafort

Guilty

Charged

Key

Alex van der ZwaanGeorge Papadopoulos

Konstantin V. Kilimnik

Michael T. Flynn

Rick Gates

Roger J. Stone Jr.

Thirteen Russian nationals Twelve Russian

intelligence officers

More than 80 people were involved in lines of inquiry in the Mueller investigation. Seven peoplewere convicted or pleaded guilty and 27 more were indicted, including 26 Russians. Pages A14-17.

The Findings So Far

An administrator known as a sticklerfor rules is at the center of U.S.C.’sinvolvement in a bribe scandal. PAGE D1

SPORTSSATURDAY D1-6

By the Book (or Perhaps Not)

The Caped Crusader’s journey to thismilestone is filled with many memora-ble crime-fighting moments. PAGE C2

ARTS C1-7

Holy 80th Birthday, Batman!

Late EditionToday, some clouds then sunshine,very windy, high 49. Tonight, mostlyclear, winds subsiding, low 36. To-morrow, mostly sunny, milder, high59. Weather map is on Page C8.

$3.00