And Failure at Every Level 400,000 Deaths in a Year · 2021. 1. 18. · Gilbert, a Harvard-educated...

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U(D54G1D)y+z![!#!$!# The path to beating the corona- virus was clear, but Kelley Voll- mar had never felt so helpless. As the top health official in Mis- souri’s Jefferson County, Ms. Voll- mar knew a mandate requiring people to wear masks could help save lives. She pressed the gover- nor’s office to issue a statewide or- der, and hospital leaders were making a similar push. Even the White House, at a time when Pres- ident Trump was sometimes mocking people who wore masks, was privately urging the Republi- can governor to impose a man- date. Still, Gov. Mike Parson resisted, and in the suburbs of St. Louis, Ms. Vollmar found herself under attack. A member of the county health board called her a liar. The sheriff announced that he would not enforce a local mandate. After anti-mask activists posted her ad- dress online, Ms. Vollmar in- stalled a security system at her home. “This past year, everything that we’ve done has been questioned,” said Ms. Vollmar, whose own mother, 77, died from complica- tions of the coronavirus in Decem- ber. “It feels like the Lorax from the old Dr. Seuss story: I’m here to save the trees, and nobody is lis- tening.” For nearly the entire pandemic, political polarization and a rejec- tion of science have stymied the United States’ ability to control the coronavirus. That has been clearest and most damaging at the federal level, where Mr. Trump claimed that the virus would “dis- appear,” clashed with his top sci- entists and, in a pivotal failure, ab- dicated responsibility for a pan- demic that required a national ef- fort to defeat it, handing key decisions over to states under the assumption that they would take on the fight and get the country back to business. But governors and local offi- cials who were left in charge of the crisis squandered the little mo- mentum the country had as they sidelined health experts, ignored warnings from their own advisers and, in some cases, stocked their advisory committees with more business representatives than doctors. Nearly one year since the first known coronavirus case in the United States was announced north of Seattle on Jan. 21, 2020, the full extent of the nation’s fail- ures has come into clear view: 400,000 Deaths in a Year And Failure at Every Level With No Unified Virus Plan, States Battled Experts, Lobbyists and the Public This article is by Sarah Mervosh, Mike Baker, Patricia Mazzei and Mark Walker. Protesting lockdowns in Hunt- ington Beach, Calif., last May. BRYAN DENTON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A6 CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: OCTAVIO JONES FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES; BRYAN DENTON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES; CHANG W. LEE/THE NEW YORK TIMES; MADDIE McGARVEY FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Government buildings around the country were fortified and on high alert this weekend, and the number of pro-Trump demonstra- tors was small. Clockwise from top left: St. Paul, Minn.; Lansing, Mich.; the U.S. Capitol, in Washington; Columbus, Ohio. Page A19. A Show of Strength and No-Show Protesters Every morning, Valerie Gilbert, a Harvard-educated writer and actress, wakes up in her Upper East Side apartment; feeds her dog, Milo, and her cats, Marlena and Ce- leste; brews a cup of coffee; and sits down at her oval dining room table. Then, she opens her laptop and begins fighting the global cabal. Ms. Gilbert, 57, is a believer in QAnon, the pro-Trump conspir- acy theory. Like all QAnon faith- ful, she is convinced that the world is run by a satanic group of pedophiles that includes top Democrats and Hollywood elites, and that President Trump has spent years leading a top-secret mission to bring these evildoers to justice. She unspools this web of false- hoods on her Facebook page, where she posts dozens of times a day, often sharing links from right-wing sites like Breitbart and The Epoch Times or QAnon memes she has pulled off Twitter. On a recent day, her feed includ- ed a rant against Covid-19 lock- downs, a grainy meme accusing Congress of “high treason,” a post calling Lady Gaga a Sa- tanist and a claim that “covfefe,” a typo that Mr. Trump acciden- tally tweeted three years ago, was a coded intelligence mes- sage. “I’m the meme queen,” Ms. Gilbert told me. “I won’t produce them, but I share a mean meme, and I’m kind of raw.” These are confusing times for followers of QAnon, a deranged conspiracy theory birthed in the bowels of the internet. They were told that Mr. Trump would be re-elected in a landslide, and that Theory Buckles, But QAnon Fan Hangs On Tight KEVIN ROOSE THE SHIFT Continued on Page A17 WASHINGTON — As Presi- dent Trump prepares to leave of- fice in days, a lucrative market for pardons is coming to a head, with some of his allies collecting fees from wealthy felons or their asso- ciates to push the White House for clemency, according to docu- ments and interviews with more than three dozen lobbyists and lawyers. The brisk market for pardons reflects the access peddling that has defined Mr. Trump’s presiden- cy as well as his unorthodox ap- proach to exercising unchecked presidential clemency powers. Pardons and commutations are intended to show mercy to deserv- ing recipients, but Mr. Trump has used many of them to reward per- sonal or political allies. The pardon lobbying heated up as it became clear that Mr. Trump had no recourse for challenging his election defeat, lobbyists and lawyers say. One lobbyist, Brett Tolman, a former federal prosecu- tor who has been advising the White House on pardons and com- mutations, has monetized his clemency work, collecting tens of thousands of dollars, and possibly more, in recent weeks to lobby the White House for clemency for the son of a former Arkansas senator; the founder of the notorious online drug marketplace Silk Road; and a Manhattan socialite who pleaded guilty in a fraud scheme. Mr. Trump’s former personal lawyer John M. Dowd has mar- keted himself to convicted felons as someone who could secure par- dons because of his close relation- ship with the president, accepting tens of thousands of dollars from a wealthy felon and advising him Pardon Season Enriches Allies Of the President By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT and KENNETH P. VOGEL Continued on Page A14 MOSCOW — Aleksei A. Na- valny returned to his home coun- try Sunday, five months after a near-fatal nerve-agent attack, and was arrested at the border, a show of fearlessness by Russia’s most prominent opposition leader and of anxiety by President Vladimir V. Putin. In hours of live-streamed drama that played out in Berlin, in the air and at two Moscow air- ports, Mr. Navalny careened headlong into near-certain deten- tion after deciding to leave the rel- ative safety of Germany, where he had been recovering from last summer’s poisoning. Hundreds of people braved the bitter cold outside Moscow’s Vnukovo Airport to greet Mr. Na- valny, but the low-cost Russian airline he was flying was diverted just before landing to a different Moscow airport. There, at pass- port control, Mr. Navalny was con- fronted by uniformed policemen in black masks. He embraced his wife, Yulia Na- valnaya, before being led away. “I am not afraid,” Mr. Navalny told reporters just before he was detained, standing in front of a neon sign at the airport that por- trayed the Kremlin. “I know that I am in the right and that all the criminal cases against me are fab- ricated.” Mr. Navalny’s arrest had been expected, but the day offered some of the most dramatic images of recent years underlining both Russia’s rising domestic discon- tent and the Kremlin’s jitters over it. Scores of riot police officers in camouflage uniforms and shiny In Battle of Wills With Putin, Navalny Is Jailed in Moscow Return By ANTON TROIANOVSKI and IVAN NECHEPURENKO Aleksei A. Navalny before his flight left Berlin on Sunday. He had been in Germany since August. MSTYSLAV CHERNOV/ASSOCIATED PRESS Continued on Page A12 Immediately after the attack on the U.S. Capitol, all corners of the political spectrum repudiated the mob of President Trump’s sup- porters. Yet within days, promi- nent Republicans, party officials, conservative media voices and rank-and-file voters began mak- ing a rhetorical shift to try to downplay the group’s violent ac- tions. In one of the ultimate don’t-be- lieve-your-eyes moments of the Trump era, these Republicans have retreated to the ranks of mis- information, claiming it was Black Lives Matter protesters and far- left groups like antifa who stormed the Capitol — in spite of the pro-Trump flags and QAnon symbology in the crowd. Others have argued that the attack was no worse than the rioting and loot- ing in cities during the Black Lives Matter movement, often exagger- ating the unrest last summer while minimizing a mob’s attempt to overturn an election. The shift is revealing about how conspiracy theories, deflection and political incentives play off one another in Mr. Trump’s G.O.P. For a brief time, Republican offi- cials seemed perhaps open to grappling with what their party’s leader had wrought — violence in the name of their Electoral Col- lege fight. But any window of re- flection now seems to be closing as Republicans try to pass blame and to compare last summer’s lawlessness, which was con- Republicans Spin Capitol Attack With Barrage of Misinformation By ASTEAD W. HERNDON Continued on Page A16 In the two weeks since a raging mob stormed the Capitol, Presi- dent Trump has shown no sign that he believes he shares respon- sibility for the worst incursion on the halls of Congress in more than two centuries. Shielding him fur- ther, his loyalists have started shifting blame for the attack to an array of distracting boogeymen: far-left anti-fascists, Black Lives Matter activists, even vague con- spiracies of a setup involving Vice President Mike Pence. But one group of people has al- ready come forward and directly implicated Mr. Trump in the riot at the Capitol: some of his own sup- porters who were arrested while taking part in it. In court papers and interviews, at least four pro- Trump rioters have said they joined the march that spiraled into violence in part because the presi- dent encouraged them to do so. In the past few days, a retired firefighter charged with assault- ing members of the Capitol Police force told a friend he went to the building following “the presi- dent’s instructions,” according to a criminal complaint, and a Texas real estate agent accused of breaching the building told a re- porter that by protesting in Wash- ington, she had “answered the call of my president.” A Virginia man has told the F.B.I. that he and his cousin marched on the Capitol because Mr. Trump said “something about taking Pennsylvania Avenue.” And a lawyer for the so-called QAnon Shaman — who invaded the building in a Viking costume — said that Mr. Trump was culpa- ble and that he planned to ask the White House for a pardon. We Just Followed Trump’s Cue, Several Accused in Rioting Say By ALAN FEUER and NICOLE HONG Continued on Page A16 FOX NEWS The network amplified lies that radicalized Trump sup- porters, Ben Smith writes. PAGE B1 Phil Spector generated a string of pop hits in the 1960s. However, in 2009, he was convicted of murder and sentenced to 19 years to life. He was 81. PAGE D8 OBITUARIES D6-8 Influential Music Producer The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s speeches have a particular resonance after a tumultuous year. PAGE A13 NATIONAL A13-19, 22 King’s Words Still Reverberate A new wave of violence and a growing uncertainty about the country’s future have left Kabul on edge. PAGE A9 INTERNATIONAL A9-12 Fear in the Afghan Capital Deaths nationwide were 18 percent higher than normal from March 15 to Dec. 26, an analysis of data from the C.D.C. shows. PAGE A4 TRACKING AN OUTBREAK A4-8 400,000 Excess Deaths in U.S. Adrienne Kennedy’s plays are never easy, but a four-play retrospective reminds us they’re worth the effort, Maya Phillips writes. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-6 Exploring Black Identity Facebook was going to compete with Google on ad sales, but a deal changed that, court documents say. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-5 Tech Giants’ Secret Deal A look at President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s 28 cabinet nominees and senior advisers. PAGE A22 The New Inner Circle Deliveries of the exercise bikes have been delayed, sometimes by months, angering new customers. PAGE B1 Where’s That Peloton? A group of up to 7,000 migrants hopes to reach the United States, where asy- lum rules may later change. PAGE A10 Guatemala Battles Caravan Kara Swisher PAGE A21 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21 With Patrick Mahomes injured, Chad Henne sealed Kansas City’s win over Cleveland. Tampa Bay beat New Orleans in the other N.F.L. playoff game. PAGE D3 SPORTSMONDAY D1-4 Chiefs and Buccaneers Advance Late Edition VOL. CLXX . . . No. 58,942 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 2021 Today, blustery, partial sunshine, high 44. Tonight, mainly clear skies, chilly, low 32. Tomorrow, sunshine, patchy clouds, seasonable, high 41. Weather map appears on Page B6. $3.00

Transcript of And Failure at Every Level 400,000 Deaths in a Year · 2021. 1. 18. · Gilbert, a Harvard-educated...

  • C M Y K Nxxx,2021-01-18,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

    U(D54G1D)y+z![!#!$!#

    The path to beating the corona-virus was clear, but Kelley Voll-mar had never felt so helpless.

    As the top health official in Mis-souri’s Jefferson County, Ms. Voll-mar knew a mandate requiringpeople to wear masks could helpsave lives. She pressed the gover-nor’s office to issue a statewide or-der, and hospital leaders weremaking a similar push. Even theWhite House, at a time when Pres-ident Trump was sometimesmocking people who wore masks,was privately urging the Republi-can governor to impose a man-date.

    Still, Gov. Mike Parson resisted,and in the suburbs of St. Louis,Ms. Vollmar found herself underattack. A member of the countyhealth board called her a liar. Thesheriff announced that he wouldnot enforce a local mandate. Afteranti-mask activists posted her ad-dress online, Ms. Vollmar in-stalled a security system at herhome.

    “This past year, everything thatwe’ve done has been questioned,”said Ms. Vollmar, whose ownmother, 77, died from complica-tions of the coronavirus in Decem-ber. “It feels like the Lorax fromthe old Dr. Seuss story: I’m here tosave the trees, and nobody is lis-tening.”

    For nearly the entire pandemic,political polarization and a rejec-tion of science have stymied theUnited States’ ability to controlthe coronavirus. That has beenclearest and most damaging at the

    federal level, where Mr. Trumpclaimed that the virus would “dis-appear,” clashed with his top sci-entists and, in a pivotal failure, ab-dicated responsibility for a pan-demic that required a national ef-fort to defeat it, handing keydecisions over to states under theassumption that they would takeon the fight and get the countryback to business.

    But governors and local offi-cials who were left in charge of thecrisis squandered the little mo-mentum the country had as theysidelined health experts, ignoredwarnings from their own advisersand, in some cases, stocked theiradvisory committees with morebusiness representatives thandoctors.

    Nearly one year since the firstknown coronavirus case in theUnited States was announcednorth of Seattle on Jan. 21, 2020,the full extent of the nation’s fail-ures has come into clear view:

    400,000 Deaths in a Year And Failure at Every Level

    With No Unified Virus Plan, States BattledExperts, Lobbyists and the Public

    This article is by Sarah Mervosh,Mike Baker, Patricia Mazzei andMark Walker.

    Protesting lockdowns in Hunt-ington Beach, Calif., last May.

    BRYAN DENTON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

    Continued on Page A6CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: OCTAVIO JONES FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES; BRYAN DENTON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES; CHANG W. LEE/THE NEW YORK TIMES; MADDIE McGARVEY FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

    Government buildings around the country were fortified and on high alert this weekend, and the number of pro-Trump demonstra-tors was small. Clockwise from top left: St. Paul, Minn.; Lansing, Mich.; the U.S. Capitol, in Washington; Columbus, Ohio. Page A19.

    A Show of Strength and No-Show Protesters

    Every morning, ValerieGilbert, a Harvard-educatedwriter and actress, wakes up inher Upper East Side apartment;feeds her dog, Milo, and her cats,

    Marlena and Ce-leste; brews a cupof coffee; and sitsdown at her ovaldining room table.

    Then, she opensher laptop and begins fightingthe global cabal.

    Ms. Gilbert, 57, is a believer inQAnon, the pro-Trump conspir-acy theory. Like all QAnon faith-ful, she is convinced that theworld is run by a satanic groupof pedophiles that includes topDemocrats and Hollywood elites,and that President Trump hasspent years leading a top-secretmission to bring these evildoersto justice.

    She unspools this web of false-hoods on her Facebook page,where she posts dozens of timesa day, often sharing links fromright-wing sites like Breitbartand The Epoch Times or QAnonmemes she has pulled off Twitter.On a recent day, her feed includ-ed a rant against Covid-19 lock-downs, a grainy meme accusingCongress of “high treason,” apost calling Lady Gaga a Sa-tanist and a claim that “covfefe,”a typo that Mr. Trump acciden-tally tweeted three years ago,was a coded intelligence mes-sage.

    “I’m the meme queen,” Ms.Gilbert told me. “I won’t producethem, but I share a mean meme,and I’m kind of raw.”

    These are confusing times forfollowers of QAnon, a derangedconspiracy theory birthed in thebowels of the internet. They weretold that Mr. Trump would bere-elected in a landslide, and that

    Theory Buckles,But QAnon FanHangs On Tight

    KEVINROOSE

    THE SHIFT

    Continued on Page A17

    WASHINGTON — As Presi-dent Trump prepares to leave of-fice in days, a lucrative market forpardons is coming to a head, withsome of his allies collecting feesfrom wealthy felons or their asso-ciates to push the White House forclemency, according to docu-ments and interviews with morethan three dozen lobbyists andlawyers.

    The brisk market for pardonsreflects the access peddling thathas defined Mr. Trump’s presiden-cy as well as his unorthodox ap-proach to exercising uncheckedpresidential clemency powers.Pardons and commutations areintended to show mercy to deserv-ing recipients, but Mr. Trump hasused many of them to reward per-sonal or political allies.

    The pardon lobbying heated upas it became clear that Mr. Trumphad no recourse for challenginghis election defeat, lobbyists andlawyers say. One lobbyist, BrettTolman, a former federal prosecu-tor who has been advising theWhite House on pardons and com-mutations, has monetized hisclemency work, collecting tens ofthousands of dollars, and possiblymore, in recent weeks to lobby theWhite House for clemency for theson of a former Arkansas senator;the founder of the notorious onlinedrug marketplace Silk Road; anda Manhattan socialite whopleaded guilty in a fraud scheme.

    Mr. Trump’s former personallawyer John M. Dowd has mar-keted himself to convicted felonsas someone who could secure par-dons because of his close relation-ship with the president, acceptingtens of thousands of dollars from awealthy felon and advising him

    Pardon SeasonEnriches AlliesOf the President

    By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDTand KENNETH P. VOGEL

    Continued on Page A14

    MOSCOW — Aleksei A. Na-valny returned to his home coun-try Sunday, five months after anear-fatal nerve-agent attack, andwas arrested at the border, a showof fearlessness by Russia’s mostprominent opposition leader andof anxiety by President VladimirV. Putin.

    In hours of live-streameddrama that played out in Berlin, inthe air and at two Moscow air-ports, Mr. Navalny careenedheadlong into near-certain deten-tion after deciding to leave the rel-ative safety of Germany, where hehad been recovering from lastsummer’s poisoning.

    Hundreds of people braved thebitter cold outside Moscow’sVnukovo Airport to greet Mr. Na-valny, but the low-cost Russianairline he was flying was divertedjust before landing to a differentMoscow airport. There, at pass-port control, Mr. Navalny was con-fronted by uniformed policemenin black masks.

    He embraced his wife, Yulia Na-valnaya, before being led away.

    “I am not afraid,” Mr. Navalnytold reporters just before he wasdetained, standing in front of aneon sign at the airport that por-trayed the Kremlin. “I know that Iam in the right and that all the

    criminal cases against me are fab-ricated.”

    Mr. Navalny’s arrest had beenexpected, but the day offeredsome of the most dramatic imagesof recent years underlining both

    Russia’s rising domestic discon-tent and the Kremlin’s jitters overit.

    Scores of riot police officers incamouflage uniforms and shiny

    In Battle of Wills With Putin, Navalny Is Jailed in Moscow ReturnBy ANTON TROIANOVSKI

    and IVAN NECHEPURENKO

    Aleksei A. Navalny before his flight left Berlin on Sunday. He had been in Germany since August.MSTYSLAV CHERNOV/ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Continued on Page A12

    Immediately after the attack onthe U.S. Capitol, all corners of thepolitical spectrum repudiated themob of President Trump’s sup-porters. Yet within days, promi-nent Republicans, party officials,conservative media voices andrank-and-file voters began mak-ing a rhetorical shift to try todownplay the group’s violent ac-tions.

    In one of the ultimate don’t-be-lieve-your-eyes moments of theTrump era, these Republicanshave retreated to the ranks of mis-information, claiming it was BlackLives Matter protesters and far-left groups like antifa whostormed the Capitol — in spite ofthe pro-Trump flags and QAnonsymbology in the crowd. Othershave argued that the attack wasno worse than the rioting and loot-ing in cities during the Black Lives

    Matter movement, often exagger-ating the unrest last summerwhile minimizing a mob’s attemptto overturn an election.

    The shift is revealing about howconspiracy theories, deflectionand political incentives play offone another in Mr. Trump’s G.O.P.For a brief time, Republican offi-cials seemed perhaps open tograppling with what their party’sleader had wrought — violence inthe name of their Electoral Col-lege fight. But any window of re-flection now seems to be closingas Republicans try to pass blameand to compare last summer’slawlessness, which was con-

    Republicans Spin Capitol AttackWith Barrage of Misinformation

    By ASTEAD W. HERNDON

    Continued on Page A16

    In the two weeks since a ragingmob stormed the Capitol, Presi-dent Trump has shown no signthat he believes he shares respon-sibility for the worst incursion onthe halls of Congress in more thantwo centuries. Shielding him fur-ther, his loyalists have startedshifting blame for the attack to anarray of distracting boogeymen:far-left anti-fascists, Black LivesMatter activists, even vague con-spiracies of a setup involving VicePresident Mike Pence.

    But one group of people has al-ready come forward and directlyimplicated Mr. Trump in the riot atthe Capitol: some of his own sup-porters who were arrested whiletaking part in it. In court papersand interviews, at least four pro-Trump rioters have said theyjoined the march that spiraled intoviolence in part because the presi-dent encouraged them to do so.

    In the past few days, a retiredfirefighter charged with assault-ing members of the Capitol Policeforce told a friend he went to thebuilding following “the presi-dent’s instructions,” according toa criminal complaint, and a Texasreal estate agent accused ofbreaching the building told a re-porter that by protesting in Wash-ington, she had “answered the callof my president.”

    A Virginia man has told theF.B.I. that he and his cousinmarched on the Capitol becauseMr. Trump said “something abouttaking Pennsylvania Avenue.”And a lawyer for the so-calledQAnon Shaman — who invadedthe building in a Viking costume— said that Mr. Trump was culpa-ble and that he planned to ask theWhite House for a pardon.

    We Just Followed Trump’s Cue,Several Accused in Rioting Say

    By ALAN FEUER and NICOLE HONG

    Continued on Page A16

    FOX NEWS The network amplifiedlies that radicalized Trump sup-porters, Ben Smith writes. PAGE B1

    Phil Spector generated a string of pophits in the 1960s. However, in 2009, hewas convicted of murder and sentencedto 19 years to life. He was 81. PAGE D8

    OBITUARIES D6-8

    Influential Music ProducerThe Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’sspeeches have a particular resonanceafter a tumultuous year. PAGE A13

    NATIONAL A13-19, 22

    King’s Words Still ReverberateA new wave of violence and a growinguncertainty about the country’s futurehave left Kabul on edge. PAGE A9

    INTERNATIONAL A9-12

    Fear in the Afghan Capital

    Deaths nationwide were 18 percenthigher than normal from March 15 toDec. 26, an analysis of data from theC.D.C. shows. PAGE A4

    TRACKING AN OUTBREAK A4-8

    400,000 Excess Deaths in U.S.Adrienne Kennedy’s plays are nevereasy, but a four-play retrospectivereminds us they’re worth the effort,Maya Phillips writes. PAGE C1

    ARTS C1-6

    Exploring Black Identity

    Facebook was going to compete withGoogle on ad sales, but a deal changedthat, court documents say. PAGE B1

    BUSINESS B1-5

    Tech Giants’ Secret Deal

    A look at President-elect Joseph R.Biden Jr.’s 28 cabinet nominees andsenior advisers. PAGE A22

    The New Inner CircleDeliveries of the exercise bikes havebeen delayed, sometimes by months,angering new customers. PAGE B1

    Where’s That Peloton?A group of up to 7,000 migrants hopesto reach the United States, where asy-lum rules may later change. PAGE A10

    Guatemala Battles Caravan

    Kara Swisher PAGE A21EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21

    With Patrick Mahomes injured, ChadHenne sealed Kansas City’s win overCleveland. Tampa Bay beat New Orleansin the other N.F.L. playoff game. PAGE D3

    SPORTSMONDAY D1-4

    Chiefs and Buccaneers Advance

    Late Edition

    VOL. CLXX . . . No. 58,942 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 2021

    Today, blustery, partial sunshine,high 44. Tonight, mainly clear skies,chilly, low 32. Tomorrow, sunshine,patchy clouds, seasonable, high 41.Weather map appears on Page B6.

    $3.00