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The New York Times June 22 2016 PDF
The New York Times June 22 2016 PDF
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LOS ANGELES Its the moment that Judith Hill has been replaying in her mind for the last
two months: She was sitting on a
plane with a man she loved, talking, having dinner, when suddenly
he lost consciousness. She
shouted his name: Prince. She
shook him. But he didnt come to.
MAGNANVILLE, France
The first time Larossi Abballa appeared on the radar of French terrorism investigators, the only act
of violence they could pin on him
was killing bunnies.
He had joined a small group of
men, all bent on waging jihad, on a
trip to a snowy forest in northern
France five years ago, when he
was 19. There, they videotaped
themselves slaughtering the rabbits, bought so the men could
grow used to the feel of killing.
When he and seven others were
later arrested, the authorities
found that several of the men had
saved the video of the slaughter
on their cellphones, alongside
footage of soldiers being beheaded, according to French court
records.
Mr.
Abballa
was
eventually convicted on a terrorism charge and spent more than
two years in prison.
In hindsight, it is not hard to see
how that first act of brutality
foreshadowed what happened last
week: Armed with a knife, Mr. Abballa attacked a couple in northern France in the name of the Islamic State and left them to bleed
to death.
But at the time of his arrest in
2011, investigators were not able to
definitively show that he was a
permanent threat to France. After
his prison stint, he was placed under surveillance. Just months after the wiretaps stopped, he committed the double murder last
week.
Killings Drive
New Urgency
To Come Out
By MICHAEL CORKERY
By JULIE TURKEWITZ
INTERNATIONAL A4-9
SPORTSWEDNESDAY B9-13
FAMILY FEUDS
A Chinese bank hired a coach for motivation, but a video of his striking several workers provoked anger. PAGE A7
NEW YORK A16-19
Welcome, Summer
Windows open, backs bared: Readers
shared images of summers start, like
on the Lower East Side, below. PAGE A18
FOOD D1-8
Thomas L. Friedman
PAGE A23
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OBITUARIES
SPORTS
PAGE D1
Lorna Kelly, 70
NEW YORK
Crossword C4
Obituaries A20-21
TV Listings C7
Weather C8
Classified Ads B13
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Corrections
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Judith Hill in Pasadena, Calif., last week. She cant help reliving
the frantic moments when Prince fell unconscious on a flight
from Atlanta to Minnesota. Six days later, he would be dead.
Manhattan on Wednesday. He
was such a warrior, and its inspiring me to be that person, she said.
Ms. Hill has experienced the
loss of a musical superstar before:
Working as a background vocalist
in 2009, she was chosen to duet
with Michael Jackson on This Is
It, his planned concert series in
London. He died less than three
weeks before its start. Ms. Hill
performed an emotional rendition
of Heal the World with a childrens choir at his televised memorial service.
But Michael was different,
she said in another interview late
Prince and Ms. Hill in a screenshot from Back in Time (Behind-The-Scenes at Paisley Park), on her YouTube channel.
T&CO. 2016
PATEK PHILIPPE
CALATRAVA | REF. 5119J
A3
A4
PHOTOGRAPHS ABOVE AND BELOW LEFT BY BRYAN DENTON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES
BAGHDAD JOURNAL
tims groups had asked for Mr. Bemba to be sentenced to the maximum possible penalty, without citing a specific figure.
Mr. Bemba had already been
detained for eight years before
and during his trial, so he would
presumably now have 10 years left
in his sentence if it stands at 18
years. It has been customary at international tribunals to deduct
one-third of the total sentence, so
A5
A6
BRITAIN'S CHOICE
STEFAN WERMUTH/REUTERS
Prime Minister David Cameron on Tuesday, before addressing Thursdays Brexit vote. He faces an uncertain future, even if his Remain campaign wins.
way.
The prime minister presumably
thought it would be an easy win
for the Remain forces, Mr. Fielding added. But its far tighter
than anyone thought, he said,
and rather than a salve on the
Tory party, its made the fever
A political expedient
grows into a risky and
consequential gamble.
worse.
Tim Bale, a professor of politics
at Queen Mary University of London, is slightly less harsh. Its really a binary legacy for Mr. Cameron, he said. It is either one that
ends in almost complete failure or
one that seems pretty respectable
in electoral and policy terms. I
cant think of another prime minister who had so much riding on
one decision.
If the Remain campaign loses,
the chances of him staying on are
pretty remote, Professor Bale
said. He will go down as the person who miscalculated, taking us
out of Europe almost by mistake,
and then shuffled off the stage in
a pretty ignominious exit.
Even if Britain votes to stay in
the bloc, Mr. Bale said, given Mr.
Camerons small parliamentary
majority, the number of hard-line
euroskeptics
and
Cameronhaters, hell be subject to defeats
and blackmail until he steps
down.
There are those who support
the contention that Mr. Cameron
had to call this referendum in the
face of Tory division and the rise of
the U.K. Independence Party and
its leader, Nigel Farage. UKIP was
cutting into the Conservative vote
by arguing, as the Leave campaign does now, that Britain could
limit immigration and control its
own borders only by leaving the
European Union.
Mr. Cameron, who had repeat-
Louise and Leslie Driscoll in London. The younger Ms. Driscoll is the only one in her family who
wants Britain to remain, which reflects a common generational divide on the Brexit issue.
gration, are directly related to the
European Union. Others, like the
shortage of affordable housing,
have little to do with it.
Yet those distinctions are blurring. For many, the referendum is
as much a chance to register displeasure with the countrys direction as it is an opportunity to reject
or embrace Europe. The stance of
some voters is being shaped by
personal experience and anecdote.
There is, for example, a widespread perception that European
citizens are flocking to Britain, especially from Eastern Europe, to
take advantage of its social welfare system.
But Britains welfare system is
not as generous as those of many
other European nations, and
fewer than 7 percent of immigrants receive benefits.
In Ms. Driscolls case, she remembers her grandfather pawning and re-pawning his suit to get
Spankings
At a Bank
In China,
Then Anger
By JAVIER C. HERNNDEZ
An event in May in Pyongyang, North Korea, with relatives of the North Korean waitresses.
usual.
A typical defector takes weeks
or months to flee to the South, often traveling through the jungles
of Southeast Asia with human
traffickers.
By contrast, the waitresses arrived in Seoul the day after they
fled their restaurant in China.
Their former colleagues in North
Korea claimed that the male manager had conspired with the South
Korean authorities and had taken
the women to the South after
telling them that they were being
relocated to a restaurant in Southeast Asia.
South Korea has denied any improper role in the defections.
West Bank as it connects Jerusalem with Israels densely populated coastal plain, injuring three
civilians, including a pregnant
woman.
Palestinian officials identified
the dead teenager as Mahmoud
Rafat Badran, 15, from the village
of Beit Ur al-Tahta, west of Ramallah, and said that two of his brothers, ages 16 and 17, were among
those injured.
Nearby forces acted in order to
protect additional passing vehicles from immediate danger and
fired toward suspects, the military said. From the initial inquiry,
it appears that uninvolved
bystanders were mistakenly hit
during the pursuit.
A military spokeswoman said
later Tuesday that the military police investigation unit was exam-
A7
A8
who first burst into public awareness when, as a just-returned naval officer in Vietnam, he issued
his own famous dissent in 1971 by
demanding before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, How
do you ask a man to be the last
man to die for a mistake?
Perhaps the most remarkable
thing about the meeting was that
five years into the Syrian civil war
after Mr. Obama declared that
chills.
Mr. Kerry knows he is in a race
against time. Not only are more
Syrians dying every day, but his
own leverage in the negotiations
is also waning. Mr. Assad may
well be betting that he can wait out
the end of the Obama administration.
Mr. Kerry publicly insists that is
not the case. Asked last month in
Vienna if Mr. Assad doubted that
there was a Plan B for military
action, Mr. Kerry said, If you
know that hes come to a conclusion theres no Plan B, then hes
come to a conclusion that is totally
without any foundation whatsoever and even dangerous. Dangerous.
Perhaps so, but Mr. Assad, by
now, has most likely both read the
dissent channel cable and heard
Mr. Bidens argument that the
Joint Chiefs do not believe there
are viable military options to force
him into negotiating a peace.
As the eight dissenters left Mr.
Kerrys office, nothing seemed resolved. They all agreed to keep the
details of their conversation private. But they also agreed that
this was not the last word about a
strategy that has left everyone
dissenters, the secretary of state
and the president alike frustrated that nothing has worked.
BAGHDAD JOURNAL
Falluja Transplant
Offering Kebab
And Nostalgia
From Page A4
insurgents loyal to Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, the founder of Al
Qaeda in Iraq, the forerunner of
the Islamic State, were eating
there. After the bombing, a member of Mr. Husseins family defiantly told The Boston Globe that
the mujahedeen and the insurgents prefer my restaurant and
come to me for their three
meals.
Patrick Graham, a Canadian
journalist who covered the Iraq
war, likened Haji Hussein to a
Nova Scotia branch of a popular
Canadian doughnut chain.
It probably had been an insurgent meeting place, he wrote
in an online column last year,
but only in the way that the
local Tim Hortons in Antigonish,
N.S., is a Conservative Party
meeting place. Everyone went to
Haji Hussein, insurgents included.
This being the holy month of
Ramadan, the Baghdad restaurant has been busy lately serving
iftar, the evening meal to break
the days fast. The parking lot is
also a beehive of activity: a
security guard checking cars for
bombs; a man selling balloons to
families; children begging.
As Mr. Hussein, 49, sat down
to chat one recent evening, he
was surrounded by bow-tied
waiters much of the staff from
Falluja now works in the new
place filling the tables with
dishes of mezze, or appetizers, as
Omar Al-Jawoshy contributed reporting.
Waiting for the evening meal to begin at Haji Hussein, with news from the Falluja battle on the television in the background.
At least in his restaurant, Iraq
does not seem hopelessly divided
by sect. Sunnis and Shiites break
their fast at slightly different
times, and as sundown approached one of the televisions
was tuned to a Sunni channel,
the other to Iraqiya, the channel
of the Shiite-led government.
When the call to prayer the
signal that the days fast was
over went out on one, the
Sunnis began eating. Fifteen
minutes or so later, the Shiite
customers began eating.
Anas al-Sarraf, who is perhaps
Baghdads only restaurant critic,
the skewers.
Mr. Mohammed said the secret
to his kebab is fresh lamb, as
opposed to low-quality imported
meats that he said many Iraqi
restaurants use. The family still
raises its own sheep in a government-held area near Falluja, and
usually serves the kebab on the
same day the sheep is slaughtered, or the next day.
We only feed them grass and
special food, he said. We never
let them go out in the open and
eat garbage.
The only other ingredient
mixed with the minced lamb is
MUHAMMAD HAMED/REUTERS
A funeral was held Tuesday north of Amman, Jordan, for one of the soldiers killed at the border.
demilitarized zone that prevents
people from crossing into Jordan
but gives relief agencies a place to
provide assistance to refugees. A
sprawling informal camp on the
Syrian side of the border has
grown to house tens of thousands
of people who fled conflict in
places like Aleppo, Homs and
Palmyra.
Jordan has cited security and
economic concerns tied to the
refugees, some of whom come
from areas controlled by the Is-
Soldiers on patrol in Paris in January. Frances caseload of potential jihadists to monitor is becoming unmanageable, analysts say.
and the Eid al-Adha holiday had
been celebrated two months before, in November.
Needles in a Haystack
While the legal systems may be
different, the United States faced
many of the same problems in
their interactions with Mr. Mateen, who when questioned by the
authorities about earlier threats
of violence insisted that he had
said those things because he was
angry after facing discrimination.
After Mr. Mateens massacre,
James B. Comey, the director of
the F.B.I., said the file on Mr. Mateen had been one of hundreds
and hundreds of cases all across
the country, and compared the
task of weeding out those who are
expressing extremist ideas from
those who may act on those ideas
to looking for needles in a nationwide haystack.
For France, thought to have
among the largest numbers of
suspected Islamic State loyalists
in Europe, the haystack is at least
as big, and some say the caseload
has become unmanageable.
We are in fact drowning in intelligence, said Alain Bauer, a
professor of criminology at the
National Conservatory of Arts
and Crafts in Paris.
He and others said there were
structural problems, including the
fact that Frances so-called S List,
a database of people believed to
have been radicalized, has over
10,000 names and is not ranked according to threat level.
Though most on the list never
commit violence, others have now
been responsible for gruesome
headlines. Eight of the 10 men who
staged the deadliest European
terrorist attack in over a decade
the Paris killings on Nov. 13
were on the S List and several had
spent time behind bars, yet were
able to sneak back into France and
Belgium from Syria. Another suspect on the list, Amedy Coulibaly,
had also been imprisoned on a ter-
A9
Egypt Court
Blocks Plan
For 2 Islands
By NOUR YOUSSEF
The Majid family, refugees from Syria, at their home in Backhammar, Sweden, in April. Sweden,
which took in 160,000 asylum seekers last year, is clamping down with rules on family finances.
against immigration, a stance that
is increasingly resonating with
voters. The Sweden Democrats, a
far-right anti-immigrant party,
won almost 13 percent of the vote
in a 2014 general election, and recent polls show it gaining in
strength.
Morgan Johansson, Swedens
justice and migration minister,
said in a heated parliamentary debate on the issue on Monday that
the countrys system would completely collapse if 200,000 asylum seekers came to Sweden this
A10
At one time, military-style assault rifles like the ones used at a nightclub in
Orlando, Fla., and in other mass shootings represented a relatively small segment of sales for gun manufacturers.
But in recent decades, such guns serve
as one of the two financial pillars of the
firearms industry, along with smaller
handguns that are designed to be concealed, which have been the biggest
driver of sales.
Together, the popularity of the assault
rifles and small handguns highlight how
the industry has changed in recent
decades, as people have increasingly
turned to guns for self-defense and less
for hunting.
The younger generations have fewer
hunters, said Thomas W. Smith, the director of the General Social Survey, an
annual survey conducted by researchers
at the University of Chicago. Hunting is
a traditional activity, and one that is de-
clining in popularity.
Gun makers do not break out weapon
sales other than in broad categories in
which firearms like traditional hunting
rifles are lumped in with assault rifles.
When contacted, Smith & Wesson would
not provide additional information, while
Sturm Ruger did not respond to messages seeking comment. And an industry trade group, the National Shooting
Sports Foundation, did not respond to
emails or phone calls.
Nonetheless,
manufacturers,
in
Daniel Markowski, a bug scientist in a cowboy hat, has a phone that will not stop ringing.
Now that summer has arrived, and with it the
mosquitoes that carry the Zika virus, the
services of the Arkansas-based mosquito
control contractor he works for, Vector Disease Control International, are in great demand.
Its workers, the special forces of mosquito
control, wield sprayers loaded with pesticide,
mostly on behalf of local governments.
Ive had people from literally all over the
country calling, he said. What should we
do?
The federal government is trying to provide some answers. The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention last week released a
time, including Governors Rod R. Blagojevich and George Ryan and former
Representatives Dan Rostenkowski, Jesse L. Jackson Jr. and Mel Reynolds. By
one count, the area has had at least 1,642
includes 11 buildings on a 64-acre complex and houses 687 male inmates of all
security levels. Mr. Hastert has stayed
largely out of public view since his sentencing, when he appeared in a wheelchair amid a crush of news media. He is
required to arrive by 2 p.m. Wednesday.
By policy, the Bureau of Prisons will
not address the circumstances of an individual like Mr. Hastert, who is not in custody. But according to a handbook for inmates, he will be issued standard clothing, laundry bags and bed linens. He can
purchase items like toothpaste, reading
glasses and candy from a commissary.
The facility includes dormitory-style
housing as well as individual cells.
Once he is released from prison, Mr.
Hastert also faces two years of supervised release, which will bar him from
communicating with the former wrestling team members in the case and from
possessing a firearm. He will be required
to participate in a treatment program for
sex offenders.
A11
FREDERICKSBURG, Va.
Women in head scarves slid off
their shoes, stacked them in neat
rows next to the mosques entrance and squeezed together
shoulder to shoulder in the small
prayer space to listen to the
imams sermon.
It was a Friday Prayer like any
other at the Islamic Center of
Fredericksburg until the warning
came from the imam. Less than a
week after the Orlando, Fla.,
nightclub massacre by an American-born Muslim, and after Donald J. Trumps renewed call to bar
Muslims from entering the United
States, Imam Hilal Shah told his
congregation to stay vigilant for
violence against their families and
community.
Were fearful of a backlash,
Imam Shah called out through the
speakers as he mentioned other
attacks by Muslim extremists in
Paris and in San Bernardino, Calif.
Anytime an event takes place
such as what happened in France,
such as what happened in San
Bernardino, such as in Orlando,
we as a Muslim community feel
scared.
The Islamic Center is no stranger to backlash. Home to one of the
many growing American Muslim
communities in Northern Virginia, the center has expanded beyond the capacity of its small
building on Harrison Road. The
center decided last year to move
to a larger mosque, but three days
after the Paris attacks in November, a group of Fredericksburg
residents protested the construction plans at a public hearing.
The center has plenty of company. In nearby Culpeper County,
the board of supervisors voted
against a sewage permit application from a Muslim congregation
to build a mosque on land that cannot support a traditional drain
field, saying the application violated the countys regulations.
The rejection was only the second
of its kind in 20 years; the construction of a new mosque is
stalled until the permit issue has
been resolved.
Members joined Imam Hilal Shah on Friday during the afternoon prayer at the Islamic Center of Fredericksburg in Virginia.
The mosque has 1,200 congregants, who take off their shoes to
enter, but not enough space for all of them to pray together.
ing condition, the House Republican plan says. But the protection
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health insurance, in a way that
some employers are finding objectionable.
Under current law, employees
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expensive coverage, driving up
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A12
CARL
HULSE
Christopher S. Murphy of Connecticut, center, with fellow Democratic senators on Monday after four gun votes failed.
on the line in this election year,
were not willing to cross the
National Rifle Association, which
endorsed a Republican alternative that Democrats branded
unworkable and a sham.
Democrats say they cannot see
themselves voting for any proposal blessed by the gun lobby.
Republicans, as the majority
party in the Senate, were not
about to cede too much authority
to Democrats and allow them to
set the legislative agenda. Republicans were not amused by a
15-hour Democratic filibuster last
week, a maneuver that essentially let the minority party take
WASHINGTON Signaling a
possible breakthrough in the long
stalemate in Congress over tightening the nations gun laws, a bipartisan group of senators called
on Tuesday for banning gun sales
to terrorism suspects on the governments no-fly list.
The proposed measure, while
modest, puts new muscle and momentum behind what would be
one of the few restrictions placed
on gun ownership in the past 20
years.
The push for the compromise
bill, led by Senator Susan Collins,
Republican of Maine, and Senator
Heidi Heitkamp, Democrat of
North Dakota, came a day after
the Senate refused to advance any
of four measures intended to
make it harder for suspected terrorists to buy guns.
Ms. Collins and the lawmakers
who joined her, including Senator
Tim Kaine, Democrat of Virginia,
who is frequently mentioned as a
potential running mate for Hillary
Clinton, voiced deepening exasperation over the failure of Congress to take any action to prevent
shootings like the massacre this
month in Orlando, Fla.
Surely the terrorist attacks in
San Bernardino and Orlando that
took so many lives are a call for
compromise, a plea for bipartisan
action, Ms. Collins said at a news
conference. Essentially, we be-
A breakthrough could
come with a no-fly,
no-buy proposal.
Republican and Democratic Senate supporters of a new gun bill, from left, Lindsey Graham, Bill
Nelson, Susan Collins and Kelly Ayotte. The measure would ban sales to terrorism suspects.
the federal authorities the flexibility to allow a gun purchase by
someone on one of the lists if
needed to safeguard a continuing
investigation.
While leaders in each party expressed pointed misgivings about
the proposal, the Senate majority
leader, Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky, indicated that it
would be likely to get a vote as an
amendment to the Commerce,
Justice, Science appropriations
bill that is being debated on the
Senate floor.
Im going to be working to
make sure she gets a vote on that
proposal, Mr. McConnell said.
To overcome procedural hurdles and win approval, the measure would need the support of 60
senators, and it was not immediately clear that enough Republicans would back it.
Just three of the 54 Senate Republicans Kelly Ayotte of New
Hampshire, Jeff Flake of Arizona,
and Lindsey Graham of South
Carolina attended the news
conference with Ms. Collins, well
nonprofit colleges with low graduation and student loan repayment rates, suggest that the
system often doesnt work.
Thats because higher education is a complicated market. Its
easy to spend $3 on a cup of
coffee that suits your tastes. Its
a lot harder to make smart
choices when you cant experience the college youve chosen
until after youve taken out
expensive, nonrefundable loans.
Even if youre not enticed by
exotic dancers. In a highereducation market that worked
better, FastTrain and Corinthian
wouldnt have existed. Yet they
did.
Given the scale of what went
wrong for many students enrolled in ACICS-accredited colleges, its hard to see how to fix
things without government
action. If the governments committee does intervene, it will
need to establish standards for
what constitutes bad enough
in college accreditation and,
thus, in colleges themselves.
Many accreditors and colleges
would probably prefer this didnt
happen. But given the severity
of the problem, the committee
may have no choice.
0N
A13
TERROR IN ORLANDO
U.S. Offers
Florida Help
With Costs
In Massacre
By FRANCES ROBLES
Carvin Casillas, who regularly danced at Pulse, came out to his parents after the shooting in Florida. He was raised in a church that taught gay people went to hell.
boyfriend.
I dont care what you are, he
recalled his father saying. Youre
my son. I didnt know, but I accept
it.
Mr. Rios had died. A thousand
miles away, his mother, Ms. Merced, 48, learned of her sons death.
And then received a call from his
boyfriend.
During an interview at her
home in Queens, Ms. Merced said
she had thought her son was
straight. She raised him Baptist,
she said, and the two were close.
This is a sinful nature, she said
of homosexuality, still wearing
her ruffled church clothes and
high heels after church on Sunday. But I still would have loved
my son.
In Orlando, Leyda and Mane
Hernandez have struggled to
come to terms with her sons identity since he came out about 10
years ago. I grew up in Puerto
Rico, in the city of Ponce, said
Mane Hernandez, 52, making
fun of gay, gay, gay.
Their son, Enakai Hernandez,
is a 27-year-old artist who had
partied at Pulse for years. On the
weekend of the attack, he was
staying at his parents home in a
gated community here, sick in
bed.
When he woke and the depth of
Weapons
Of Assault
Are Driving
Gun Sales
50
51%
Household
gun ownership
40
30
32%
Hunters
in household*
31%
20
15%
10
0
77
90
00
14
David Barker takes aim with an AR-15 rifle at the Action Target gun shop in Springville, Utah.
benefited
from
legislative
changes. The federal assault rifle
ban expired in 2004, and many
states have passed laws allowing
residents to carry concealed
guns.
Some companies jumped into
the assault rifle business only after the ban expired. Smith & Wesson, for example a company
known for decades for revolvers
started selling the weapons
two years later, in 2006.
Now, Smith & Wesson says it is
a market leader in AR-15-type rifles, offering 44 models. Along
with Sturm Ruger, its principal
competitors include, among others, Remingtons Bushmaster
and Sig Sauer, the manufacturer
of the MCX, the military-style
weapon used in the Orlando
shooting.
Smith & Wesson does not break
down how many AR-type
weapons it sells, said Elizabeth
Sharp, the companys vice president for investor relations. Instead, when it reported results
last Thursday for its most recent
fiscal year ending April 30, it said
only that rifles of all types represented 17.7 percent of its $722.9
million in total sales.
Overall rifle sales, the company
said, represented a 31 percent increase from its previous fiscal
year. In the annual report last
week, Smith & Wesson said the results reflected increased demand for guns since late last
year.
Christopher Krueger, a gun industry analyst at Lake Street
A14
ELECTION
2 016
In a speech on Tuesday in Columbus, Ohio, Hillary Clinton sought to turn Donald J. Trumps business record against him.
made it. So I take this personally.
She added, This is not normal
behavior.
The barrage comes at a perilous
moment for Mr. Trump, who fired
his campaign manager on Monday and faces severe disadvantages in fund-raising and on-theground organization. One supporter introducing Mrs. Clinton
said gleefully that the campaign
had more staff members in Ohio
than Mr. Trump had nationwide.
Although polls often show that
voters see Mrs. Clinton as more
qualified than Mr. Trump on foreign policy, her economic views
have not always been an easy sell.
In the Democratic primary race,
she was dogged by criticism of her
support for trade deals struck during the administrations of her husband and President Obama.
Mr. Trump, posting repeatedly
has been great for me as a businessman, but is bad for the country. I made a fortune off of debt,
will fix U.S.
Mrs. Clinton had taken Mr.
Trump to task for suggesting that
the United States might default on
its debts under his leadership, arguing that Alexander Hamilton,
the first Treasury secretary,
would be rolling in his grave.
The full faith and credit of the
United States is not something
you just gamble away, she said,
predicting that because the global
economy hangs on every word
our president says, even raising
the possibility of a default would
cause a global panic.
At one point, she ridiculed Mr.
Trumps suggestion that he could
sell off Americas assets if necessary.
Even if we sold all our aircraft
National
Briefing
NORTHWEST
Washington: No Charges
In Immigrants Killing
Daniel Markowski searched the surroundings of an abandoned hotel in St. Croix for larvae.
and relatively little crowding.
A study comparing Laredo,
Tex., with its twin just across the
border in Mexico essentially
the same city separated by a river
found the incidence of dengue
fever was eight times higher on
the Mexican side, even though the
mosquitoes that carry it were
more abundant in Texas. Researchers attributed the Texas advantage to air-conditioning, windows that shut and less crowding
within houses.
Everything weve seen from
dengue and chikungunya suggests that it will not be a severe
problem in the continental
United States, Dr. Frieden said.
Our best guess is that well see
a singleton case that we wont be
able to identify the source for, and
possibly some clusters maybe
in
the
Florida
Keys
or
Brownsville in Texas.
Still, he noted that Puerto Rico,
an American territory, was facing
a public health crisis because of
the virus, with potentially dozens
to hundreds of infected infants
with microcephaly.
WEST
ELECTION
A15
2 016
A Trump rally in The Woodlands, Tex. Donald J. Trump had just over $1 million in May; Hillary Clinton had about $42 million.
tended for the public.
Charles Spies, a Republican
election lawyer who advised the
super PAC that supported Jeb
Bush, said Mr. Trump would have
to put in an enormous amount of
his own money to jump-start his
campaign and win over big
donors. He suggested an appropriate figure would be $100 million
to $200 million.
Mr. Spies said Mr. Trump should
also forgive the loans he had made
to his campaign, to reassure contributors that he would not use
their money to repay himself. Mr.
Trump has already raised eyebrows among party donors by
spending freely to hold campaign
events at properties he owns, and
for the cost of flights on his private
jet.
For donors to invest in his cam-
paign, hes got to show that hes investing in it also, Mr. Spies said.
Hes got to have $500 million to
run a bare-bones campaign, and
that would mean getting outspent
by Hillary Clinton and her allies,
between two and three to one.
Dwight Schar, a former finance
chairman of the Republican National Committee, said Mr.
Trumps grim predicament came
as little surprise. Mr. Trump never
courted party donors during the
primary season and accused them
of seeking to buy influence in government, boasting that as a
wealthy man he would be immune
to their entreaties.
I think Mr. Trump has got all
the money, so he doesnt need any
financing, said Mr. Schar, who
said he was undecided about
whether to back Mr. Trump or
Donald J. Trump dominated the Republican presidential primaries with relatively little
money and few staff members. As his campaign shifts to the general election, some of his
allies and donors have raised concerns about whether such a lean operation can
effectively compete against Hillary Clinton, the presumptive Democratic nominee.
Vendors include a
candidates family,
buildings and planes.
required by law to account for his
spending this way to prevent his
companies from making illegal
corporate donations to his campaign. In 2015, about $2.7 million
was paid to at least seven companies Mr. Trump owns or to people
who work for his real estate and
branding empire, repaying them
for services provided to his campaign.
In May, the biggest-ticket item
was Mr. Trumps use of the Mar-aLago Club, his Florida resort,
which was paid $423,000. The
campaign paid $350,000 to TAG
Air for his private airplanes,
$125,000 to Trump Restaurants
$40
Money raised
in May
2000 Bush
Gore
$ 7
8
$ 4
6
30
2004 Bush
Kerry
63
29
13
31
20
2008 McCain
Obama
32
43
17
22
2012 Romney 17
Obama 110
16
30
2016 Trump
Clinton
3
20
Donald J. Trump after speaking last week at a campaign rally in Greensboro, N.C.
1
42
Trump 69
Clinton 685
Clinton
Sanders
10
Trump
Jan.
Feb.
April
May
March
A16
Minnie Mouse tried to lure pedestrians inside an activity zone on Tuesday, the first day that
new rules restricting Times Square performers to working inside the zones went into effect.
Transportation Department to
create new rules for pedestrian
plazas.
In recent weeks, workers began
painting the teal activity zones
in Times Square between 42nd
and 47th Streets. Costumed characters and ticket sellers are supposed to stay in the 8-by-50-foot
boxes when they solicit money.
Passers-by are directed to walk in
pedestrian flow zones. Signs remind tourists that tips are optional. If performers break the
rules, they can be issued a criminal summons or even be arrested.
As sunshine spilled across the
busy plazas on Tuesday afternoon,
tourists
occasionally
Continued on Page A19
Favors at Fort Surrender: A Long History, but Perhaps a More Sordid Twist
New York, like most places of human
habitation, has a long history of bribery,
but until now the literature did not
reveal any documented episodes in
which the graft was packaged as
Christmas presents and
delivered by two Orthodox
Jewish businessmen
dressed up as elves.
But now we know there
ABOUT
were at least two such
NEW YORK
instances, if a criminal
complaint filed in federal court this
week can be trusted. It charged three
New York police commanders with
serving as errand boys for the businessmen.
Mayor Bill de Blasio had absolutely
nothing to do with the Christmas presents, but it is his unique fate to have
taken political contributions from the
two businessmen. The federal complaint lays out a dynamic in which gifts
and bribes were provided by the men to
JIM
DWYER
Email: [email protected]
Twitter: @jimdwyernyt
THE NEW YORK TIMES NEW YORK WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2016
0N
A17
Woman Charged in Kayak Killing Didnt Understand Her Rights, Lawyer Says
By NATE SCHWEBER
and LISA W. FODERARO
it, and she stated yes, Mr. DeQuarto said. I remember her
reading the piece of paper and
writing it onto a piece of paper, the
Miranda warning.
During the interrogation, Ms.
Graswald admitted to removing
the drain plug of the kayak that belonged to her fianc, Vincent Viafore, and also tampering with his
paddle. Mr. Viafore, 46, drowned
on April 19, 2015, when his kayak
capsized in rough water on the
Hudson River.
The Miranda warning is usually
read to suspects at the start of a
police interrogation. It alerts
them to their right to remain silent
and to obtain a lawyer, and is intended to preserve the admissibility of evidence at trial.
The Miranda rights get their
name from a case involving
Ernesto Arturo Miranda, a laborer whose confession led to his
conviction for armed robbery, kidnapping and rape. His appeal resulted in a landmark Supreme
Court ruling in 1966 that said suspects must be informed of their
right to legal representation and
against self-incrimination.
Gabriel Maldonado, 65, is among Green Gems volunteer gardeners. It looks like a jungle, he said. It never looks like this.
returned to Mr. McCrae, who is
known locally as Mr. James, and
the garden, as Mr. Jamess Garden. The breeze that this garden
gives off ooh! said Jazzy Johnson, 38, a neighbor. You leave
your problems outside, you leave
your problems down the block. I
really, really pray he gets his garden back. Its the communitys.
Mr. McCrae said he was planning to sue the city to regain the
right to run the garden. These
are my diamonds, these flowers,
these trees, he said. Now all I get
to do is walk up and down on the
sidewalk saying to myself, This is
the world we live in.
As the gardens future is decided, the rabbits and the chickens have been moved to a narrow
vacant lot behind Green Gem. The
space was lent by a neighbor to
the gardenless gardeners, who
still show up every day. When
they arrived three weeks ago, the
scrap of land was also a junkyard.
Now eggplant is growing.
Mr. Youngren
declined
to
comment. Attempts to reach
Mr.
Jackson
and Mr. Perkins
by phone were
unsuccessful.
The investigation began in
Kordell
2014,
when
Jackson
agents with the
federal Bureau
of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives noticed irregularities in the records of the store,
Jackson Guns and Ammo in Henrietta, and alerted the State Police,
according to a joint news release
from the state attorney general
and the State Police superintendent.
According to the release, investigators began tracking weapons
sold from the store and found that
more than 100 were illegal under
the SAFE Act, which is formally
the Secure Ammunition and
Firearms Enforcement Act of
2013. About 10 of the weapons
would have been illegal even be-
A18
THE NEW YORK TIMES NEW YORK WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2016
3 P.M.
Governors Island
2:47 P.M.
Kevin Lu @sweatengine
8:37 P.M.
9:07 A.M.
Welcome, Summer
New York City was treated to an unimpeachably lovely day on Monday, the first day of summer. The New York Times asked people to document
their day with photographs and share them on Instagram and via email. Here are some of the best, selected from more than 1,200 submissions.
4:47 P.M.
Chelsea, Manhattan
6:30 P.M.
5:50 A.M.
8:40 P.M.
Williamsburg, Brooklyn
10:08 P.M.
5:06 P.M.
THE NEW YORK TIMES NEW YORK WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2016
A19
Reining in costumed
characters and others
after complaints from
pedestrians.
sion was hers.
We dont feel like were being
harassed, Ms. Smith said.
As he walked through Times
Square, Alex Diner said the performers did not bother him. He
works in the neighborhood and
believes the area has become too
clean and too organized.
Were getting to a point
wheres its getting sterile, and Im
not thrilled with that, said Mr.
Diner, 38, who works in finance
and lives in Manhattan.
Once emblematic of a seedier
era in the city, Times Square has
Costumed characters stayed behind a line on Tuesday in Times Square. Im going to respect the
rules for the moment, said Victor Aldea, who was dressed as Olaf from the movie Frozen.
A20
ing auctioned.
But as the years progressed,
she grew discontented. For one
thing, she later said, she felt a
spiritual void, and auctioneering
no longer felt correct.
For another, the outspoken,
bohemian Ms. Kelly had never
quite fit in at the august, venerable Sothebys. She could talk a
blue streak (a fine attribute for an
auctioneer) but could also sport a
gleeful pink streak in her hair
(less so).
For part of her time there, as
she wrote in a self-published
spiritual memoir, In the Footsteps of the Camel (2010), she
was also in the grip of alcoholism.
And so, in the early 1980s, by
more or less mutual consent, Ms.
Kelly and Sothebys parted company. Though she had stopped
drinking by then, it was clear that
so staid a milieu could not contain
her sartorial, tonsorial and vocal
energies.
She decamped, unbidden, for
India and Mother Teresa, the first
in a series of charitable endeavors
that occupied her ever after.
The daughter of Edward Nelson
Murphy, a police sergeant, and the
former Iris Minnie Hicks, Lorna
Clare Murphy was born on Aug.
12, 1945, in Isleworth, West London. As a girl, she was passionately interested in dance.
She first came to New York at 18,
as an au pair, supervising four
children under 7. A few years later
she returned to the city permanently, determined to succeed as a
modern dancer, supporting herself through secretarial work.
Lorna Kelly, at Sothebys in 1980, was one of the first female fine-art auctioneers in the world.
she would need to leave the
gallery world, with its exquisite
material comforts, behind.
In Calcutta, she tended terminally ill patients under the tutelage of Mother Teresa, who came
to terms with the nail polish and,
intrigued, became a lifelong
friend.
Shed never had an auctioneer
fall into her motherhouse before,
Ms. Kelly later said in a video interview.
Ms. Kelly returned to India
many times. She also traveled to
Senegal, where she vaccinated
thousands of children. In Cairo,
she ministered to impoverished
residents of a vast garbage dump;
Romaine.
Her death, in Manhattan from a
stroke, was confirmed by Christopher Peregrin, a longtime friend.
Besides her 2010 book, Ms.
Kelly also wrote the memoir The
Camel Knows the Way, first selfpublished in 1998.
Of all the rigors she faced in her
work overseas, it was a domestic
undertaking that, for the voluble
Ms. Kelly, very likely proved the
keenest test of her spiritual commitment.
As The Times reported in a 1991
profile, she once traveled to a Buddhist retreat in upstate New York,
where she spent the next 100 days
in complete silence.
out that Mr. Myers had not actually read any, he answered, It
doesnt matter, youre in the air.
Mr. Berkson died on Thursday
in San Francisco. He was 76. The
cause was a heart attack, said his
stepdaughter, Nina Lewallen Hufford.
William Craig Berkson was
born on Aug. 30, 1939, in Manhattan. The family was glamorous.
His father, Seymour, was the publisher of The New York JournalAmerican, a Hearst newspaper.
His mother, Eleanor Lambert,
was a celebrated fashion publicist,
A familiar figure at
ease in a heady milieu
in Manhattan.
the creator of the International
Best Dressed List and New York
Fashion Week.
The Berksons apartment, on
Fifth Avenue overlooking Central
Park, was the setting for an endless round of cocktail parties populated by celebrity journalists,
film stars and fashionistas.
Through the front door walked
Judy Garland, Cecil Beaton, Janet
Gaynor, the swashbuckling journalist Bob Considine and the husband-and-wife radio and television hosts Jinx Falkenburg and
Tex McCrary.
I remember answering the
GERARD MALANGA
Benote Groult, 96, French Feminist and Writer Whose Books Explored Womens Liberation
By KIMIKO DE FREYTAS-TAMURA
Benote Groult in a 1993 photograph. She was in her 40s when she began a writing career.
counter in a train or on a plane,
Ms. Groult said in an interview
that was included as a chapter in
her 2008 autobiography, My Escape. (The title, she said, was a
nod to her emancipation from the
constraints of marriage and social
conventions driven by men.)
By her own account Ms. Groult
was a late bloomer, as both an author and a feminist. Having taught
Latin and worked in radio while
raising children, she was in her
40s when she began a writing career and in her 50s when she embraced feminism.
But once she took up those pursuits, she went all out, proving to
be a prolific writer and an ardent
I discovered that
freedom isnt just
picked up naturally.
Women in France won the right
to vote only in 1945, when Ms.
Groult was 25, and she spent a
good part of her life without contraceptives, resorting instead to
numerous illegal abortions.
In a recent interview with the
newspaper Ouest-France, Ms.
Groult reflected on her novel
about Olympe de Gouges. She was
asked what advice that feminist
would have for women today.
She would have said: Dont
get married, its not worth divorcing. Stay free and write what you
want, in words that are yours,
she replied. But many women, she
added, would find that advice difficult to follow even today.
Olympe de Gouges could have
avoided the guillotine and chosen
a safer but oppressed life, Ms.
Groult said. Yet she braved all
the conventions, and God knows
that was hard.
A21
Jack Fuller won a Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing at The Chicago Tribune and later became Tribune Publishings president.
journalism and bad journalism.
In What Is Happening to
News, Mr. Fuller wrote that the
Times Mirror purchase was an attempt to compete with the internet on a national scale. He acknowledged that the effort to meld
different news media cultures had
been difficult, but added that the
Tribune Companys creation of a
nationwide web-based classified
business had been more successful.
Still, competition with online
news sites for advertisers and
readers, coupled with a business
downturn, prompted chief executives at the Tribune Company and
other corporate parents to demand even more draconian economies. Rather than impose them,
Mr. Fuller, among other editors
and publishers, quit.
Deaths
Deaths
A protest in Timisoara, Romania, on Dec. 23, 1989. Rebels executed the dictator on Dec. 25.
Victor Stanculescu, an agile former Romanian general who arranged the escape of the Communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu in
1989, then joined the insurgent
government and engineered Mr.
Ceausescus trial and execution
three days later, died on Sunday in
Saftica in northern Romania. He
was 88.
His death was announced by his
lawyer, Catalin Dancu.
General Stanculescu (pronounced stahn-kul-ESS-ko) was
first deputy defense minister
when he was dispatched by Mr.
Ceausescu to Timisoara, in western Romania, to suppress a prodemocracy protest.
But after ordering security
forces to fire on unarmed dissidents on Dec. 17, 1989, Mr. Ceausescu, the countrys last Communist leader and its brutally Stalinist head of state for two decades,
lost control of his army as the revolt spread. Nearly 100 civilians
were killed in Timisoara alone.
Bay, Eugene
Goldstein, Lolita
Wamsler, Karl
Bodzin, Annette
Haimowitz, Patricia
Wyman, M. Richard
Cheston, Morris
Kantro, Beatrice
Zeigerman, David
Cohen, Charles
Leiderman, Abraham
Findlay, Stella
Pratt, Carol
Foa, Linda
Seinfeld, Evelyn
BAYEugene A.,
83, passed away on June 18,
2016 in New York. Born in
1933 to Eugene Albert Bay
and Helene Carlin Bay in New
York City, he graduated from
Phillips Academy Andover
and The University of Pennsylvania. He served in the
U.S. Marine Corps from 19571960. A legendary advertising
and publishing executive,
Gene Bay served as publisher of Field & Stream Magazine. Later at Gene Bay
Associates he pioneered the
transformation of fishing and
hunting
programming
to
mainstream
media
with
ESPN
Outdoors.
Trustee
Emeritus of The Statue of
Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation, a lifetime member and
former governor of the New
York Athletic Club, and from
the Polo Grounds to MetLife
Stadium, a life-long New York
Football Giants season ticket
holder. Predeceased by his
brother, John M. Bay, he is
survived by his beloved wife
of 53 years, Deidre Lesage
Bay, his children Willow Bay
and husband Robert A. Iger,
Kacey Bay and husband Nick
Pappas, and Eric M. Bay and
his seven grandchildren: Max
and William Iger, Carlin and
Nicholas Pappas, Savannah,
Isabella and Emma Bay. Memorial Visitation will be held
at Frank E. Campbell The
Funeral Chapel, 81st Street
and Madison Avenue, on
Thursday from 5pm-8pm.
Prayer Service will take place
at 7pm. A Funeral Mass will
be held at St. Thomas More
Church, 65 East 89th Street,
on Friday 10am. In lieu of
flowers, donations may be
made In Memory of Gene
Bay to Mary Manning Walsh
Nursing Home, 1339 York
Avenue, NY 10021.
BODZINAnnette G.,
88. Preceded in death by her
husband, Paul, and son,
Robert, and survived by her
daughters, Kate Scheinman
and Wendy Kadens. May her
memory be for a blessing.
CHESTONMorris Jr.,
The board of directors and
staff of the Garden Conservancy mourn the loss of our
former Vice President of the
Board - a legal expert, avid
horticulturist, philanthropist,
civic leader, and dear friend.
His commitment to community service extended from
health and cultural organizations in Philadelphia to state
and national organizations.
Morris was co-leader of our
endowment campaign, host
of garden-study tours and
Open Days at his homes in
Pennsylvania and Maine, and
wise and witty counselor for
many of our programs. We
send our deepest condolences to Cynthia and all of his
family and friends.
COHENCharles.
Charles passed away June 19,
2016 at the age of 81. While
professionally a periodontist
and implantologist, he was a
true Renaissance man. Eagle
Scout, Order of the Arrow,
birder, photographer, sculptor, painter, archaeologist, he
was a lifelong student and
teacher. He was past president of the Mohegan Park
Jewish Center where he was
for many years the shofar
blower. At Congregation Kehillat Jeshurun, he was a
charter member of the Chevra Kadisha, past president of
the Men's Club and longtime
lyricist for the KJ players. He
is survived by his loving wife,
Ellen Dede, his children Deena (Sammy) Zimmerman,
Matthew (Sharon Koren) Cohen, Jessica (Richard) Langer and twelve grandchildren. He will be greatly
missed.
FINDLAYStella M.,
69, of Greenwich, Connecticut
died on June 16, 2016 at home.
Born in Manchester, England
on July 14, 1946, she was the
daughter of the late James
Morris and Theresa Hayes
Morris. She is survived by beloved husband David Findlay,
cherished
children:
son
James
Findlay,
daughter
Alexandra Young and sonin-law Bruce Young, brother
Michael Morris and sister
Rita Lamb. Mrs. Findlay was
a member of Ocean Reef
Club, The Milbrook Club, and
Card Sound Golf Club. A memorial service will be held on
Friday, June 24, 2016 at noon
at The Milbrook Club in
Greenwich, Connecticut. In
lieu of flowers, memorial
contributions may be made
to the NYU Langone Medical
Center Faculty & Friends
Campaign (referencing Ruth
Oratz, M.D. (F/C 416107)) at
www.nyulangone.org/give/
facultyandfriends.
FOALinda.
The Women's Forum of New
York records with sorrow the
death of our member Linda
Foa, a renowned expert in
Design Journalism and Marketing. Deepest sympathy is
extended to her family and
colleagues at the Architects
& Designers building, where
she served as Marketing
Director.
Carolyn Carter, President;
Rita B. Crotty, Executive Dir.
GOLDSTEINLolita E.,
died peacefully in her Manhattan apartment on June 21
following a short battle with
cancer. An inspirational nonagenarian, she was fluent in
many languages and taught
French at Riverdale Country
School for three decades. A
beloved member of the extended families of her late
husband Melvin S. Goldstein
and of her late sister Carmen
Magalhaes (nee Eshborn),
she is survived by sister-inlaw and brother-in-law Eileen
and Milton Putterman, and
by sixty-one nieces, nephews,
grandnieces, grandnephews,
great-grandnieces and greatgrandnephews. In lieu of
flowers, donations may be
made in her memory to
American Associates of Ben
Gurion University.
GOLDSTEINLolita E.
The board and staff of American Associates, Ben-Gurion
University of the Negev
(AABGU) are deeply saddened by the loss of our dear
friend, Lolita E. Goldstein, a
devoted Zionist and kindhearted woman of valor, who
was instantly loved by everyone she met. Her contagious
enthusiasm, compassion and
abundant joy for the students,
faculty and projects of BenGurion University of the Negev (BGU), and her friendship with the staff and leadership of both AABGU and BGU
filled our hearts with love.
Lolita will be sorely missed.
We extend our profound condolences to Lolita's sister-inlaw, Eileen Putterman, and
her husband, Mickey; to Lolita's eight nieces and nephews; to her large extended
family in the U.S., Portugal
and Israel; and to the hundreds of friends, students and
countless others who had
come to cherish her and
whom she had inspired.
Lloyd Goldman, President
Lite Sabin, Chair,
Grtr. NY Reg.
Doron Krakow, EVP
Kevin M. Leopold,
N.E. Exec. Dir.
HAIMOWITZPatricia
Hurley. Pat died peacefully at
home June 20. Loving wife,
mother, and stepmother. A
bright star in the public relations firmament for more
than a half century, notably
at St. Vincent's Hospital Manhattan, 1960-1972, then as
partner in Hurley & Haimowitz Public Relations. Funeral
mass Thursday 10am, St. Augustine Church, 116 Sixth
Ave., Brooklyn.
KANTROBeatrice Bunny,
of Boca Raton, FL passed
away on June 21, 2016, one
month before her 86th birthday. Beloved wife of the late
Ira Sonny, mother to Scott,
Mark, Meryl and Millie. Beloved grandmother of Matthew, Lauren, Jason, Ben and
Harris and beloved aunt to
many. Born to Hyman and
Minnie on July 6, 1930 in
Brooklyn, NY. Bunny was a
passionate advocate for the
Cancer Care organization
and served as President of
her local Chapter. Her loving
warmth, generosity and huge
heart for her family will be
sorely missed as we continue
life's journey with her always
in our thoughts.
The Kantro Family
LEIDERMANAbraham
Al, 98, of Palm Beach, FL
and Great Neck, NY June 19,
2016. Beloved husband (73
years) of the late Lillian; father of Michael (Hermine),
Beth (Martin Statfeld) and
the late Robert; grandfather
of Jill (Robert Cohen), Eric
(Natalie), Jenna (Aaron Harris) and Dani (Todd Elkins);
great-grandfather of Anna
Ray Harris and Rocket Lee
Cohen; brother of Bernice
Fein and the late Ralph Leiderman; successful businessman and volunteer extraordinaire, he loved friends,
jokes, ice cream and deli (but
not together), and his family
most of all.
PRATTCarol H.,
on June 20, 2016 of East Norwich, NY. Beloved wife of
Hon. George C. Pratt, U.S. Circuit Judge, Second Circuit
Court of Appeals (retired).
Loving mother of George
(Charlotte), Lise Pratt, Marcy
(James) Burke and Duffy
(Yanzi). Dear grandmother
of Jessica Wilde, Elizabeth
(Jason) Tea, Clayton (Katy)
Pratt, Dylan (Lizzie) Pratt
and Elijah Pratt and greatgrandmother
of
Charles
Wilde, Clementine Pratt and
Samson Pratt. Reposing at
the Beney Funeral Home, 79
Berry Hill Road, Syosset, NY.
Visiting: Wednesday, 7-9pm
and Thursday 2-4 and 7-9pm.
Funeral Service Friday, 10am
at The Community Church of
Syosset, 36 Church Street,
Syosset, NY. In lieu of flowers, donations to the Carol
Pratt Memorial Fund, The
Community
Church
of
Syosset.
Deaths
SEINFELDEvelyn.
It is with profound sadness
that we announce the loss of
Evelyn Seinfeld, 68, on Monday, June 20, 2016, after a courageous battle with cancer.
She was predeceased by her
mother, Libby Seinfeld, father, Louis Seinfeld, and brother, Melvyn Seinfeld. She is
survived by loving twin sister
Phyllis Feinberg of Dobbs
Ferry, NY, and sister and
brother-in-law Bernice and
Norman Colten of Ocean, NJ;
devoted nieces Rachel Feldman of Bergenfield, NJ, Jennifer Colten of Arlington, VA,
and Marissa Kaplan-Dobbs,
Lee Miuccio, and nephew
Jake Kaplan, all of Brooklyn,
NY;
proud
great - nieces
Malka and Esther Feldman,
Grace Miuccio, and Ruby
Dobbs; and great-nephews
Jack Miuccio, Simcha, Yosef,
and Moshe Feldman. A lifelong resident of Brooklyn,
NY, Evelyn advocated for
125,000 employees of the City
of New York as the director
of research and negotiations
for DC37. She retired after
over 40 years in public service. Evelyn was fiercely dedicated to improving the lives
of others, as evidenced by
her success as a contract negotiator and enforcer. She enjoyed spending time with her
family and cherished friends,
especially when coffee and
New York Times crossword
puzzles were involved. She
was a source of comfort and
guidance to all who knew her,
and her memory will live on
in those inspired by her generosity of spirit. Donations in
Evelyn's name may be made
to Congregation Sons of Israel, 1 Poplar Place, Ocean,
New Jersey 07712 or Jobs
with Justice at www.jwj.org.
WAMSLERDr. Karl
Maximilian Friedrich, beloved and revered father and
father - in - law of Bettina
Wamsler
and
Christian
Bechtle, Susanne Wamsler
and Paul Singer, Irene Banning and Jack Banning, Caroline A. Wamsler and DeWayne N. Phillips, and Pauline
Wamsler and David J. Sales
died peacefully surrounded
by his family at his home in
Pocking, Germany on Saturday, June 18, 2016. He is also
survived by his twelve grandchildren: Clara, Luisa, Christopher, Johanna, Inga, Kaspar, Marie, George, Charlotte, Schuyler, Karl and Sophia. His commanding intellect, pervasive charm, love of
family, and unfailing belief in
a good world informed a life
of integrity and extraordinary
achievements. He was the
rock of his family and an example for all who knew him.
The burial and requiem will
be held in Pocking, St. Pius
on June 29, 2016. Services
are being made by Zirngibl
Funeral Home, Hanfelder
Str., 53, Starnberg 82319.
(+49.8151.36140).
WYMANM. Richard.
We mourn the passing of our
dear friend. You will be sorely
missed.
All Your Friends at The
Admirals Cove Gin Game
ZEIGERMANDavid.
The
Board of Governors and
Membership of Montammy
Golf Club express their deepest sorrow at the passing of
their beloved member and
extend their heartfelt sympathy to the entire family.
Scott Tesser,
President
A22
ADOLPH S. OCHS
ORVIL E. DRYFOOS
Publisher 1896-1935
Publisher 1935-1961
Publisher 1961-1963
Publisher 1963-1992
ILLUSTRATION BY ERIK CARTER; PHOTOS BY THE NEW YORK TIMES AND NOAA PHOTO LIBRARY
to express the importance of not forgetting about us. We do not exist only in the
wake of tragedy. We are fighting for our
rights daily, fighting against a government that overlooks us and against the
perceptions of a public that doesnt know
how to feel about us.
If you want to stand with us, do more
than just declare your hashtagged support. Help us fight discrimination by embracing love, in the many forms in which
it comes. Be an ally, stand up in your community, in the voting booth, and, yes, on
social media. Do not let these issues fade
from view, because if we do, we are inviting another Orlando.
ABIGAIL FOX
Traverse City, Mich.
TO THE EDITOR:
The Orlando tragedy allows us the opportunity to observe the destructive intersection of the private self-loathing and
instability of a handful of Muslim young
adults and the siren call of ISIS and other
extremist groups communicated by social media and the internet. Such groups
offer these young Muslims struggling
with internal pain and confusion the opportunity to believe that they have found
coherence. For some it offers the ability to
believe that they are heroic Muslim fighters.
Most eventually turn away from Islamic extremism. But a small number,
such as the Boston Marathon bombers
and Orlando gunman, actually carry out
terrorist acts in some cases without
even having direct contact with these
extremist groups.
The identification of those who will act
on ISISs preaching is difficult. But the
Muslim community must focus on identifying those young members who develop
and sustain an interest in ISIS.
The Muslim community, supported by
the greater society, can and must develop
culturally sensitive means of aiding these
young people. ISIS will then have no place
in their lives.
SIDNEY WEISSMAN
Chicago
The writer is a professor of clinical psychiatry at the Feinberg School of Medicine,
Northwestern University.
TO THE EDITOR:
TO THE EDITOR:
TO THE EDITOR:
NEWS
EDITORIAL
BUSINESS
Britains
Pro-Brexit
Press
By Martin Fletcher
LONDON
A23
Op-Art
THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
Another Age
Of Discovery
what he wants.
Still, not every passage can speak to every person. Hillary
Clinton began her second bid for president at an age when such
mountainous ambition is generally in decline. In a magazine
article titled Life at Sixty-Seven, Theodore Dreiser wrote,
Fame, success, power, $500 million, world leadership well, if
they should arrive, I might not exactly take to cover, but as for
lying awake nights craving them as in my youth I did well, I
really dont care to any more.
Nonetheless, the simple fact remains that age informs who
we are. That fact is as relatable to our presidents as it is to the
rest of us. And as we wait to see how age might shape a Trump
or Clinton presidency, here is a sampling of observations about
age that speak to the experiences of our last six presidents. 0
The countrys
newspapers have trashed
the E.U. for decades.
often won important arguments on, say,
the creation of the single market, were almost invariably killed.
The European Union can be meddlesome, arrogant and incompetent, but seldom was the British reader told how it had
secured peace on the Continent, broken up
cartels or forced member states to clean
up their rivers and beaches.
British newspapers portrayal of the
European Union in the lead-up to the referendum has likewise been negative. A
few papers have backed the Remain campaign, but the biggest broadsheet (The
Telegraph), the biggest midmarket paper
(The Daily Mail) and the biggest tabloid
(The Sun) have thrown themselves
shamelessly behind Brexit.
They have peddled the myths that Britain pays 350 million pounds a week (about
$500 million) to the European Union; that
millions of Turks will invade Britain because Turkey is about to be offered European Union membership; that immigrants are destroying our social services;
and that post-Brexit, Britain will enjoy
continued access to Europes single market without automatically allowing in European Union workers.
Some samples from recent Daily Mail
headlines give the flavor: Were from Europe: Let Us In!; Ten Bombshells the
E.U.s Keeping Secret Until After Youve
Voted; Greediest Snouts in the E.U.
Trough. Formally endorsing Brexit on
June 13, The Sun, a mainstay of the xenophobic press, declared: If we stay, Britain
will be engulfed in a few short years by
this relentlessly expanding German-dominated federal state.
Loughborough Universitys Center for
Research in Communication and Culture
has calculated that 82 percent of newspaper articles about the referendum favor
Brexit when circulation and strength of
papers endorsements are taken into account. InFacts, a pro-Remain group that
campaigns for accurate journalism, has
filed 19 complaints with the Independent
Press Standards Organization, Britains
print media watchdog, leading to five corrections, with rulings awaited on the rest.
The watchdog said a headline in The Sun
proclaiming, Queen Backs Brexit was
significantly misleading.
It is often said that newspapers no longer matter. But they do matter when the
contest is so close and shoppers see headlines like BeLeave in Britain emblazoned across the front pages of tabloids
whenever they visit their supermarket.
They matter if they have collectively and
individually misled their readers for
decades.
The upshot is that Mr. Johnson and his
fellow Brexit proponents are now campaigning against the caricature of the European Union that he himself helped create. They are asking the British people to
part with a monster about as real as the
one in Loch Ness. Mr. Johnson may be
witty and amusing, but he is extremely
dangerous. What began as a bit of a joke
could inflict terrible damage on his country.
0
Joshua Prager, the author of 100 Years: Wisdom From Famous Writers on Every Year of Your Life, is writing a book on Roe v.
Wade. Lauren Tamaki is a designer and illustrator.
friends tell me theyd rather die than resort to violence, I tell them fine, Ill light a
candle at your vigil. Its your choice. But
those are the stakes. Dont kid yourself
otherwise.
I used to have reservations about people carrying guns in bars. But 12 states
allow concealed carry in bars, and I
havent heard any reports of increased
violence in those places. Now I cant help
wondering how many victims in Orlando
might have been saved if a few people inside the nightclub had had concealed
carry permits, and been able to fight
back.
Many L.G.B.T. people view guns as
evil immoral killing machines that
should be heavily regulated, if not
eradicated. Thats because they hear
about guns only when the story ends
tragically, or when they see them used in
violent movies.
But every day, Americans use guns to
defend themselves, and they dont even
have to pull the trigger. The mere appearance of a firearm can save their life.
Just last week, Tom G. Palmer, now a
senior fellow at the Cato Institute, wrote
in an op-ed article in The New York Daily
News about an episode in his 20s when
he flashed his pistol at a group of men
who were threatening to kill him because
he was gay and they retreated.
This is a call to L.G.B.T. people to take
their own defense seriously, and to question the left-leaning institutions that tell
them guns are bad, and should be left to
the professionals. Become a professional. Youre allowed. Thats what the
Second Amendment is for. We can fight
back when our lives depend on it.
0
A24
B1
letter to states and cities saying they recommend everyone follow their lead. But
it is only a recommendation.
The F.A.A. stopped short of giving a
green light to package delivery, a goal of
Amazon and Google, which have pushed
regulators to create rules that would allow them to transfer part of their groundbased delivery systems to the sky. The
new guidelines mandate that a commer-
IMAGES BY SUPERCELL
In Game
Deal,
A Dash
For Cash
Tencents acquisition of Supercell
could be lucrative, if it can hold on
to devoted fans of Clash of Clans.
EDUARDO
PORTER
Musk Aims
To Shore Up
SolarCity
By Buying It
By MICHAEL J. de la MERCED
and PETER EAVIS
Elon Musk has built an ambitious business empire on three pillars: electric cars, solar energy
and space travel.
Now, the billionaire entrepreneur is trying to shore up his embattled solar panel provider by
merging it with the electric carmaker.
His Tesla Motors said on Tuesday that it had offered to buy SolarCity in an all-stock deal, one
that could value the latter at as
much as $2.8 billion. The aim, Mr.
Musk argues, is to create a renewable-energy giant, collecting
clean electricity and putting it to
work propelling cars.
But the transaction highlights
the unusual moves that Mr. Musk
continues to make to support the
various arms of his empire, where
he is the largest shareholder of
each company.
He has taken out loans to buy up
shares in Tesla and SolarCity,
some backed by his personal
stock holdings in both companies
a risky move that leaves him
exposed to margin calls if their
stock prices slide too far. He has
defended the practice as low-risk
to other shareholders, given the
sheer size of his personal net
worth of more than $10 billion.
In Mr. Musks view, putting
Tesla and SolarCity together is
only logical.
We need to achieve a tight integration of the products, he told
reporters in a conference call on
Tuesday. I think its an obvious
thing to do.
An agreement is some time
away, if one is ever reached. But
shareholders in SolarCity pushed
the companys stock up 19 percent
in after-hours trading, to $25.26.
Shares of Tesla, however, tumbled
Continued on Page 4
The Death
Of an Actor
Highlights
A Jeep Issue
By CHRISTOPHER JENSEN
B2
By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ
Battling a stubbornly
slow recovery full of
short-term challenges.
Janet L. Yellen, chairwoman of the Federal Reserve Bank, reported to the Senate Banking Committee on Capitol Hill on Tuesday.
In the question-and-answer
portion of the hearing, Ms. Yellen
termed productivity gains disappointing, and pointed out that
business investment had been
similarly weak during the recovery. She added that the productivity issue was something Congress
needed to address by improving
polices for workplace training and
taking on other issues.
Ms. Yellens appearance was
part of two days of testimony before Congress that the Fed leader
is required to present twice each
year. Another session is scheduled
on Wednesday before the House
Financial Services Committee.
Her previous testimony on
monetary policy was in February,
so this weeks appearance before
Congress is Ms. Yellens last be-
17,875
17,850
17,825
Previous close
17,804.87
17,800
10 a.m.
Noon
Source: Reuters
2 p.m.
4 p.m.
THE NEW YORK TIMES
B3
At left, new signs warn of alligators and snakes on a closed section of beach near a Walt Disney World hotel in Orlando. Right, fireworks over the newly opened Shanghai Disney Resort last week.
NEWS ANALYSIS
A high-flying hedge fund manager at Visium Asset Management, who was charged last week
with insider trading, has died, apparently the victim of a suicide.
The manager, Sanjay Valvani,
was discovered on Monday by his
wife in their brownstone in Brooklyn Heights, a New York police official said. Mr. Valvani was found
face down on the bedroom floor
with a cut to his neck, the official
said. He left a note, and a knife
was found near his body. He was
44.
The death brought the governments case against Mr. Valvani to
a shocking end. Last week, he was
accused of using confidential information from a former Food and
Drug Administration official to
reap $32 million in illegal gains.
Days after the charges, Visiums founder, Jacob Gottlieb, announced that he was shuttering
the multibillion-dollar hedge fund
and selling one of its funds to AllianceBernstein.
In a statement, Barry H. Berke,
a lawyer for Mr. Valvani, called his
death a horrible tragedy that is
difficult to comprehend.
We hope for the sake of his
family and his memory that it will
not be forgotten that the charges
against him were only unproven
accusations and he had always
Susan Beachy contributed research.
Accused of using
insider information to
reap $32 million.
and Christopher Plaford, once a
colleague of Mr. Valvani who also
traded on inside information, have
pleaded guilty.
A lawyer for Stefan Lumiere,
the third employee named in the
governments case, declined to
comment. Mr. Lumiere, a former
brother-in-law to Mr. Gottlieb, was
accused of mismarking securities
with Mr. Plaford.
During the governments investigation of Mr. Lumiere, prosecutors in a criminal complaint said
that one broker under scrutiny
died last summer before charges
were brought.
The investigation of Visium
harked back to a crackdown on insider trading in the nearly $3 trillion hedge fund industry that began with the arrest in 2009 of Raj
Rajaratnam, the co-founder of the
Galleon Group hedge fund.
In the months and years that
followed, prosecutors working for
Preet Bharara, the United States
attorney for the Southern District
of New York, racked up more than
80 convictions on insider trading
charges. The convictions sent a
wave of fear through the hedge
fund industry and led some to call
Mr. Bharara the new sheriff of
Wall Street.
But chinks in Mr. Bhararas armor began to emerge in late 2014,
when a federal appeals court
threw out the convictions of two
hedge fund managers and made it
more difficult for prosecutors to
bring insider trading cases when
there was no clear benefit provided to the source of the inside information about a company. The
appellate court ruled that prosecutors must show the source of
an inside tip received a benefit of
some consequence, although the
court was vague as to what that
must be.
The appellate ruling, which the
United States Supreme Court declined to review, later led Mr. Bharara to toss out nearly a dozen
other convictions and guilty pleas.
For a time, the court ruling appeared to have blunted the Manhattan offices pursuit of insider
LUCAS JACKSON/REUTERS
trading cases.
But the charges against Mr. Valvani and his former colleagues at
Visium dispelled any thought that
hedge funds would no longer be a
focus of Mr. Bhararas office.
Legal specialists said on Tuesday that they did not expect the
death to cause prosecutors and
Mr. Bharara to back away if they
believed wrongdoing had occurred.
I dont think hes going to lose
sleep over it because it comes with
the territory, Thomas A. Sporkin,
a lawyer at BuckleySandler and a
former Securities and Exchange
Commission enforcement lawyer,
said of Mr. Bharara.
Mr. Bhararas office declined to
comment on Mr. Valvanis death.
The son of Indian immigrants,
Mr. Valvani grew up in Kalamazoo, Mich. After graduating from
the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill, he spent four years
working as a health care consultant before receiving an M.B.A.
from Duke University, according
to a profile on the schools website
and I didnt go until I was a parent, he said. You now have that
same dynamic here in China that
existed in the 50s and 60s in the
United States, as people started
looking for more leisure activities. Its palpable.
In Shanghai, Disneys rides are
fully updated technological marvels no more jerky animatronics in Pirates of the Caribbean, which is now fully digital,
with boats controlled by underwater magnets and Imax-style
screens with video. In another
difference from Disneys domestic parks, even rank-and-file
cashiers and hotel maids seem
thrilled to be there. When they
waved and chirped, Have a
magical day! they appeared to
mean it, rather than just repeating a corporate mantra.
On an especially difficult week
for Disney in the United States,
Shanghai proved that the companys pixie dust still works the
same way it used to in a more
innocent age. Even if you have to
go to the other side of the world
to find it.
A plan intended to
meet Californias
energy goals.
The Diablo Canyon Power Plant, near San Luis Obispo, is the
last of Californias operating nuclear plants.
down.
But the plan for Diablo Canyon,
which began operating in 1985 and
stirred controversy from the start,
is aimed at avoiding that, its proponents say. Gavin Newsom, the
lieutenant governor, helped jumpstart discussions on closing the
plant as a member of the State
Lands Commission, in part to allow for a slower, greener transition. The sudden closure of San
Onofre, which ultimately led to not
only significant job losses but also
led to significant greenhouse gas
emissions that recent example
B4
Musks Tesla
Aims to Buy
His SolarCity
From First Business Page
more than 13 percent, to $190.59.
Both companies have been
growing fast, but have also consumed enormous amounts of cash
to pursue their goals.
Of the two, SolarCity where
Mr. Musk is chairman and his
cousin, the co-founder Lyndon
Rive, is chief executive has
been the more troubled, buffeted
by changes in the regulations on
the solar energy industry. While
an important federal tax credit
was extended, local policies have
cut into the savings that solar
providers have promised.
Mr. Musk said putting the two
companies together made more
sense after Tesla began introducing rechargeable batteries for
home use that can store electricity
and smooth out fluctuations in
power grids. Other renewable energy companies have also focused
on home storage products.
Analysts have commented that
Teslas main business may be in
batteries, particularly as it builds
out its $5 billion Gigafactory
near Reno, Nev.
The world does not lack for automotive companies, Mr. Musk
said in Tuesdays press call. The
world lacks for sustainable energy companies.
Yet some green energy companies have run aground. Both
SunEdison and Abengoa, big renewable energy providers, have
filed for bankruptcy.
SolarCitys troubles have left
the company with a crushing $2.6
billion in long-term debt and
growing losses. Last year, interest
payments on its debt equaled
nearly a quarter of its sales.
Shares of the energy company
A move toward a
holistic sustainable
energy company.
have fallen 63 percent over the
last 12 months, closing on Tuesday
at $21.19 nearly a third of its 52week high. The business ended
Tuesday with a market value of
just over $2 billion.
Last year, SolarCitys operations used up $790 million of cash,
and the company spent $1.8 billion
on equipment. In total, then, SolarCitys free cash flow, obtained
by adding those two numbers,
was a negative $2.6 billion.
Tesla has had a better run of
news over the last year, including
promising presale numbers for
the coming Model 3 sedan.
Still, Tesla shares, once a Wall
Street darling, have fallen 16 percent over the last 12 months, valuing the company at $32.7 billion.
Tesla may be able to help SolarCity generate more cash or reduce its cash consumption. But
bolstering the business model of
SolarCity would be difficult.
And a struggling SolarCity
could be a burden on Tesla, which
is also using up cash fast. Teslas
free cash flow last year was a negative $2.2 billion. In theory, then, a
combination of Tesla and SolarCity would have burned nearly
$5 billion last year.
Investors are willing to lend to,
or buy the stock of, a high-growth
company consuming a lot of cash
if they believe it will eventually
generate healthy cash flows.
But if investors balk, the company has to rely on its cash reserves. Together, Tesla and SolarCity had $1.8 billion on hand at
the end of the first quarter. That
would soon get used up if a TeslaSolarCity were still consuming
nearly $5 billion of cash annually.
STEFAN WERMUTH/REUTERS
Supporters of Britain remaining in the European Union on the river Thames last week.
proof that they were right not to
join, said Giancarlo Corsetti, a
professor of macroeconomics at
the University of Cambridge.
Britons have more control
over immigration than the Leave
campaign would have them
believe. Refugee policies are
decided in London. And it was
Whats needed is
democracy on a
European scale.
the Labour government of Tony
Blair that chose not to take advantage of a seven-year phase-in
period to limit the entry of citizens of new members from
Eastern Europe. Many of the
Polish plumbers that so inflamed
the British populace showed up
because Britain unlike, say,
Germany chose to let them in
straight away.
Immigration, however, can
easily be deployed as an argument to leave the rest of Europe.
More than half the 333,000 immigrants who arrived in Britain last
year were E.U. citizens, free to be
there as a matter of right under
European law.
The Leave campaign made
an argument that the only way to
reduce this part of immigration
is to leave the E.U., noted Jacob
Funk Kirkegaard, an expert on
immigration at the Peterson
Institute for International Economics in Washington. And they
struck a chord with the electorate.
Dealing with hundreds of
thousands of refugees fleeing
war will never be easy. But Europes reaction was notoriously
unproductive. The E.U.s institutions again appeared irrelevant,
as governments retrenched into
their corners and failed to devise
a collective, burden-sharing
approach.
In May, a group of European
An Actors Death Highlights a Known Issue With Jeeps and Other Vehicles
From First Business Page
gation and recall are taking too
long, Clarence Ditlow, executive
director of the Center for Auto
Safety, a consumer advocacy
group, said on Tuesday.
There was no sense of urgency
on Chryslers part or N.H.T.S.A.s
part given the potential for death
or injury, he said in an interview,
referring to the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration.
Last August officials at the
highway safety administration
told Fiat Chrysler that it was investigating complaints from 14
owners of some of Fiat Chryslers
most popular models. The owners
said their vehicles had rolled
away in some cases causing accidents and injuries when they
left the vehicles, thinking they
were safely in the parking gear.
As I stepped out, the vehicle
started moving backwards and
the driver door struck me, knocking me to the ground on my back,
a Jeep Grand Cherokee owner
from Morganton, N.C., wrote to
safety officials last summer. The
left front tire rolled over my pelvic
area, causing serious injury.
Details of Fiat Chryslers subsequent discussions with the safety
agency still are not publicly avail-
A recall appears to
involve how drivers
responded to a design.
In general terms, one would
want to conduct a substantial
number of trials with what I would
call nave users, people who are
among the population of people
who could be customers but who
are not engineers, not people familiar with the development
process, he said in an interview.
But something did not work in
the case of Fiat Chryslers shifter,
he said.
We can look at that as a failure
of process, a failure to anticipate
employees would receive longterm incentive plans. Such an offer, analysts said, would signal
that Tencent realizes that it owes
the value of the companys games
to the number of players and to
Supercells design prowess.
The acquisition also represents the latest push by large internet companies into the fastgrowing mobile gaming industry,
which had a combined revenue of
almost $35 billion last year, according to Newzoo.
Companies like Supercell and
Rovio, a Finnish counterpart that
is behind the Angry Birds franchise, were once able to create hit
after hit with smartphone games.
But the increased competition for
consumers attention, analysts
say, has made it more difficult to
break through with new games.
Faced with such cutthroat rivalries, independent gaming studios are being taken over by
larger companies that can outspend the competition. Mobile
gaming has become such a big
business that even established
players like Supercell need flush
financial backers to fund their expansion.
You need very deep pockets
to play in this field, said Mr. War-
LEHTIKUVA/REUTERS
B5
HARRY CAMPBELL
YUYA SHINO/REUTERS
SoftBanks chief executive, Masayoshi Son, stood before a screen showing Nikesh Arora in 2014. Mr. Arora is leaving the company.
which aspire to be its Amazon and
Airbnb.
Recently, SoftBank has been
selling assets and raising cash, a
pattern that has been a prelude to
big, strategic deals. On Tuesday it
sealed an agreement to sell its majority stake in Supercell, the developer of Clash of Clans and
other mobile games, to Chinas
Tencent Holdings for about $8.6
billion. It also recently sold about
$10 billion of shares in Alibaba.
Expectations for Mr. Arora had
been high. Besides his Google
pedigree, he had been unusually
well paid.
In his first six months at SoftBank, Mr. Arora earned 16.6 billion
yen, or $159 million at current exchange rates, including a signing
bonus, according to company disclosures. That made him one of
the best compensated executives
in the world during that period,
and one of the highest paid execu-
Energy Transfer Shares Surge After Comments During Merger Trial With Williams
By LESLIE PICKER
GEORGETOWN, Del. In
March, Brad Whitehurst, head of
tax at Energy Transfer, the pipeline operator, discovered there
might be a problem with the $38
billion merger his company had
signed with the Williams Companies six months earlier. He had
misunderstood the terms of the
deal, and with the rapid decline of
Energy Transfers shares in the
intervening months, the transaction no longer appeared to be taxfree.
The problem was that the completion of the merger required the
assurance that it would not incur a
tax liability.
Mr. Whitehurst immediately
called Latham & Watkins, Energy
Transfers outside legal counsel.
B6
SQUARE FEET
RECENT SALE
$3.3 million
132-03 Jamaica Avenue (at 132nd
Street)
Richmond Hill, Queens
Two local investors, who usually
buy Queens properties mainly in
Jackson Heights, have bought this
5,400-square-foot single-story
retail building on a 12,500-squarefoot lot. The space is now occupied
by a laundromat with 15 years left
on its lease, and a convenience
store. It includes a drive-through
parking lot, and offers 32,000
buildable square feet for future
redevelopment. The cap rate is
about 4 percent.
BUYERS: Mina Farah and Farhad
Reja of F.R.M.F. Liberty Avenue
Two Family Limited Partnership
SELLER: C.R. Bros. Realty Corp.
BROKER: Ira Sherman, Greiner-Maltz
Company of New York
RECENT LEASE
$82.50/sq. ft.
$99,000 approximate annual rent
$180/sq. ft.
$477,000 approximate annual rent
Email: [email protected]
Two years ago, the online fashion retailer Gwynnie Bee had outgrown its
Long Island City headquarters. But
when larger options in the Flatiron district and Downtown Brooklyn proved too
expensive, the companys chief executive, Christine Hunsicker, decided to double down on the Queens neighborhood
that is increasingly attracting New York
fashion companies.
Gwynnie Bee, a clothing rental service
for plus-size women, moved about a mile
last June, to the Factory, a one-millionsquare-foot warehouse at 30-30 47th Avenue.
Unlike Manhattan, the traditional
fashion hub, and Brooklyn, the hip alternative, Long Island City is drawing more
in the clothing industry because of its
convenient 10-minute subway ride to the
garment district in Midtown and low
rent. For years, rents have been rising in
Manhattan, and now that Brooklyn has
established itself among fashion designers as a worthy alternative, rents are rising there, too. So developers are turning
aging Long Island City warehouses into
airy, modern spaces where tenants can
design, assemble, distribute and photograph their merchandise.
This is just in its infancy, said Jeffrey
I. Peck, an executive managing director
of Savills Studley, who is working with
three fashion companies looking to lease
space in the neighborhood. Brooklyn
started it, in that you dont need to be located in Manhattan anymore. But I think
Long Island City, with its transportation
advantage, is quickly rising and becoming not only acceptable, but desirable.
Price is of course a factor. In Long Island City, the average asking rent for office space was $33 a square foot at the
end of the first quarter of the year, compared with $56 a square foot in the garment district or $73 a square foot for
prime areas in Midtown, said Joseph J.
Sollazzo, a real estate economist for the
CoStar Group. Tenants in the garment
district have faced steep rent increases
since mid-2010, when the average asking
rent was $38 a square foot.
Weve seen very dramatic rent
growth in the garment district, Mr. Sollazzo said, referring to rents between
West 30th and West 42nd streets from
5th Avenue to the Hudson River, an area
that includes Penn Plaza, compared to
Midtown as a whole.
Brooklyn is no bargain, either. In
Downtown Brooklyn, the average asking
rent was around $40 a square foot during
the first quarter. New or renovated properties like Dumbo Heights and Empire
Stores command more than $70 a square
foot, Mr. Sollazzo said.
Brooklyn was so much more expensive than Long Island City I mean so
much more expensive, said Ms. Hunsicker, who started Gwynnie Bee in her
Alphabet City apartment in 2011.
At the 90-year-old Factory in Long Island City, which was once a Macys warehouse, asking rents range from $40 to
$45 a square foot.
Fashion companies are noticing. In
April, J. Crew leased 60,000 square feet
for its Madewell division, moving from
the East Village. In January, Polo Ralph
Lauren leased about 19,000 square feet to
use as a photo studio for its products.
And last August, Macys leased some
150,000 square feet, reclaiming a section
that had once been the department
stores fur vault, according to Newmark
Grubb Knight Frank, the leasing agent
for the Factory.
Atlas Capital, which owns the Factory
with Square Mile Capital Management
and Invesco Real Estate, bought the deteriorating building in 2014, intending to
Top, prospective tenants tour the Factory in Long Island City. Across 47th
Avenue, the Falchi Building, above, offers a ground-floor marketplace.
renovate it and market it to tenants in the
technology and creative industries that
might be drawn to the rapidly changing
neighborhood. Atlas is restoring the facade and mechanical systems, and adding a 4,000-square-foot lounge to the
lobby, part of a $25 million investment.
We turned away tenants that we didnt think were the right mix or right profile, said Brian S. Waterman, a vice
chairman for Newmark Grubb Knight
Frank. We were looking to create a
Chelsea, meatpacking feel.
One advantage for Long Island City is
its proximity to Manhattan. With a dozen
subway stations serving seven train
lines, two Long Island Rail Road stations
and access to the Queensboro Bridge
and Queens-Midtown Tunnel, the trip
can be as short as five minutes in places.
But it feels far away. Much of the area
lacks the shops, restaurants and bars
that make a neighborhood an appealing
place to work, or hang out afterward. So
developers are trying to make warehouse lobbies feel like destinations.
Consider the Falchi Building across
the street from the Factory. In 2012,
Jamestown Properties bought the build-
BANKRUPTCY
AUCTION
BANKRUPTCY AUCTION
USBC SDNY Re: Alrose Allegria, LLC Case #15-11760 (SHL) & Alrose King David, LLC Case #16-10536 (SHL) Jointly Administered
LUXURY HOTEL
Fully Operating
Oyster Bay
Cove, NY
5 Bed/5.5 Bath
on 2.24 acres
Sea Cliff, NY
MaltzAuctions.com 516.349.7022
Nassau/Suffolk
RETAIL
SPACE
(200)
OfficesManhattan
rfr.com
rfrspace.com
Alexander Chudnoff
212 418 2622
[email protected]
Mitchell Konsker
212 812 5766
[email protected]
Dan Turkewitz
212 418 2689
[email protected]
Diana Biasotti
212 812 5751
[email protected]
Oliver Katcher
212 812 5720
[email protected]
AJ Camhi
212 308 0700
[email protected]
105
Manhattan
205
620 SF to 8,620 SF
Owner Management
212-843-5400
Floor Plans on Website
www.HilsonManagement.com
Brooklyn
221
230
COMMERCIAL &
INDUSTRIAL
PROPERTIES
COMMERCIAL
LOTS &
ACREAGE
(700)
Nassau/Suffolk
717
(300)
Queens
327
B7
Goodbye, Password.
Now a Fingerprint
Gets Bank Clients In.
From Page A1
numbers, Social Security numbers
and
other
personal
identifiers have fallen into the
hands of criminals, rendering
those identifiers increasingly ineffective at protecting accounts.
And
while
thieves
could
eventually find ways to steal biometric data, banks are convinced
they offer more protection.
We believe the password is dying, said Tom Shaw, vice president for enterprise financial
crimes management at USAA,
which is based in San Antonio.
We realized we have to get away
from personal identification information because of the growing
number of data breaches.
Long regarded as the stuff of
science fiction, biometrics have
been tested by big banks for
decades, but have only recently
become sufficiently accurate and
cost effective to use in a big way. It
has taken a great deal of trial and
error: With many of the early
prototypes, a facial scan could be
foiled by bad lighting, and voice
recognition could be scuttled by
background noise or laryngitis.
Before smartphones became
ubiquitous, there was an even bigger obstacle: To capture a finger
image or scan an eyeball, a bank
would have to pay to distribute the
necessary technology to tens of
millions of customers. A few tried,
Above, Secil Watson, head of wholesale internet solutions at Wells Fargo, used an eye scanner, left, to enter her bank account.
what amount to long, hard-to-predict numerical sequences
based on a scan of a persons fingerprint or eyeballs.
It is possible that the thieves
could use the biometric templates
to steal money, but the banks say
they have worked to develop additional safeguards. With some
voice authentication systems,
banks use certain prompts to
prove it is a living customer and
not a recording. Many eye scans
require customers to blink or
move their eyes to prevent a thief
from using a photo to gain access.
Wells Fargo has been working
with EyeVerify, a start-up in Kansas City, Mo., to develop its eye
scan feature, which is being tested
with a small group of corporate
customers. The technology creates a map of the veins in the
whites of an eye.
To log into an account, a
customer taps open a Wells Fargo
app on a smartphone. When
prompted, the customers eyes
are lined up with a pair of yellow
circles on the phone screen. If
they match, the customer
typically a chief financial officer
or other top executive gains instant access to the account and
An attempt to stop
hackers from stealing
personal data from
millions of clients.
though generally considered secure, these tokens can be a hassle
to carry around.
For now, Wells Fargo is offering
eye scans among the most foolproof biometric technologies, according to security experts only
to select corporate customers, for
whom the stakes are arguably
higher because there is potentially so much money involved.
It is harder to take someones
eyeball than someones user ID
B8
MARKET GAUGES
S.& P.
U
500
DOW
U
INDUSTRIALS
2,088.90
+5.65
NASDAQ
U
COMPOSITE
17,829.73
+24.86
4,843.76
+6.55
3-MONTH TREND
CRUDE
OIL D
1.71%
+0.03
10-YEAR
TREASURY YIELD U
THE
D
EURO
$1,270.50
$19.50
3-MONTH TREND
+10%
GOLD
D
(N.Y.)
$49.85
$0.11
$1.1251
$0.0054
3-MONTH TREND
+10%
+10%
5,200
2,200
+ 5%
19,000
+ 5%
5,000
+ 5%
2,100
18,000
4,800
0%
0%
0%
2,000
17,000
4,600
5%
5%
5%
1,900
4,400
Apr.
May
16,000
June
Apr.
May
June
Apr.
May
June
When the index follows a white line, it is changing at a constant pace; when it moves into a lighter band, the rate of change is faster.
Close
Chg
52-Wk
% Chg
YTD
% Chg
Index
DOW JONES
Close
%
Chg
Chg
52-Wk
% Chg
YTD
% Chg
Stock (TICKER)
17829.73
7649.29
683.66
6264.70
+ 24.86 + 0.14
23.33 0.30
+ 1.14 + 0.17 +
+ 1.65 + 0.03
1.03
9.07
20.01
0.16
+
+
+
+
2.32
1.87
18.32
4.79
Nasdaq 100
Composite
Industrials
Banks
Insurance
Other Finance
Telecommunications
Computer
100 Stocks
500 Stocks
Mid-Cap 400
Small-Cap 600
922.05
2088.90
1494.67
708.28
+
+
2.78
5.65
0.31
1.76
+
+
0.30
0.27
0.02
0.25
0.60
1.00
3.00
3.81
+
+
+
+
1.17
2.20
6.87
5.44
NYSE Comp.
Tech/Media/Telecom
Energy
Financial
Healthcare
10490.78
7626.70
10663.70
6041.68
12398.98
+
+
+
+
+
40.75
36.76
129.63
41.15
15.81
+
+
+
+
+
0.39
0.48
1.23
0.69
0.13
4.97
2.07
10.95
11.13
6.10
+
+
+
3.42
6.40
14.13
4.19
0.11
4413.40
4843.76
4188.88
2770.42
7484.18
5644.59
263.76
2537.04
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
13.25
6.55
0.30
6.82
45.41
12.40
0.29
18.83
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
0.30
0.14
0.01
0.25
0.61
0.22
0.11
0.75
2.22
5.34
1.15
3.72
8.60
5.89
5.55
1.25
+
+
+
3.92
3.27
2.14
2.90
3.60
1.11
5.10
2.65
Volume
(100)
Stock (TICKER)
2347.44
21616.30
4682.93
1153.87
89.25
699.40
66.71
170.90
+ 9.68 + 0.41
+ 93.88 + 0.44
6.68 0.14
3.83 0.33
1.77 1.94 +
+ 2.32 + 0.33
+ 0.27 + 0.41
+ 1.41 + 0.83
2.76
3.27
4.03
10.18
33.91
3.31
14.66
16.02
+
+
+
+
+
+
9.23
2.12
7.44
1.58
97.02
5.41
8.72
8.35
Close
%
Chg
Chg
Volume
(100)
Stock (TICKER)
20 TOP GAINERS
13.62
21.67
13.22
30.94
5.45
95.91
15.09
51.19
11.61
21.64
18.79
34.75
12.75
10.03
19.16
39.99
41.07
28.77
114.38
28.29
OTHER INDEXES
American Exch
Wilshire 5000
Value Line Arith
Russell 2000
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NEW YORK
STOCK EXCHANGE
%
Chg
Chg
20 MOST ACTIVE
NASDAQ
Industrials
Transportation
Utilities
Composite
Close
+0.08
0.65
0.20
+0.11
+0.35
+0.81
+0.61
+1.12
+0.06
0.88
+0.69
+0.25
+0.43
0.15
0.60
+0.26
+0.29
0.03
+1.01
+0.13
+0.6
2.9
1.5
+0.4
+6.9
+0.9
+4.2
+2.2
+0.5
3.9
+3.8
+0.7
+3.5
1.5
3.0
+0.7
+0.7
0.1
+0.9
+0.5
736370
367911
367107
360317
358227
353509
343526
340756
288138
281988
261728
253566
250596
225952
211304
201107
199354
190951
189965
174272
Close
%
Chg
Chg
Volume
(100)
20 TOP LOSERS
8.22
36.88
7.22
19.99
45.46
10.26
57.48
6.68
8.85
5.45
10.81
20.49
8.90
6.88
7.87
14.33
9.70
16.47
30.84
11.15
+1.45
+4.54
+0.82
+2.23
+5.02
+0.87
+4.80
+0.51
+0.59
+0.35
+0.66
+1.25
+0.53
+0.41
+0.46
+0.77
+0.51
+0.85
+1.55
+0.56
+21.4
+14.0
+12.8
+12.6
+12.4
+9.3
+9.1
+8.3
+7.1
+6.9
+6.5
+6.5
+6.3
+6.3
+6.2
+5.7
+5.5
+5.4
+5.3
+5.3
13.28
8.36
28.31
22.31
13.14
10.02
16.62
9.99
12.96
12.44
11.63
13.43
13.24
18.01
13.20
27.59
15.74
17.83
25.16
23.35
53298
12574
7141
3601
23864
6015
9863
412
545
358227
300
4402
1542
567
9695
14328
113601
4916
5603
49175
3.26
1.88
3.66
2.37
1.34
0.99
1.44
0.85
1.04
0.99
0.92
1.03
1.01
1.37
1.00
2.09
1.16
1.30
1.83
1.69
19.7
18.4
11.4
9.6
9.3
9.0
8.0
7.8
7.4
7.4
7.3
7.1
7.1
7.1
7.0
7.0
6.9
6.8
6.8
6.7
19020
3458
30349
63320
909
5018
3331
63723
1597
1573
1841
3819
1770
125
2054
3615
41390
656
8962
3882
Stock (TICKER)
Stock (TICKER)
3M (MMM)
Abbott (ABT)
AbbVie (ABBV)
Accenture (ACN)
AIG (AIG)
Allergan (AGN)
Allstate (ALL)
Alphabet (GOOGL)
Alphabet (GOOG)
Altria Gro (MO)
Amazon.com (AMZN)
American E (AXP)
Amgen (AMGN)
Anadarko P (APC)
Apple (AAPL)
AT&T (T)
Bank of Am (BAC)
Berkshire (BRKb)
Biogen (BIIB)
BlackRock (BLK)
Boeing (BA)
BONY Mello (BK)
Bristol-My (BMY)
Capital On (COF)
Caterpilla (CAT)
Celgene (CELG)
134.00
36.00
45.45
88.43
50.20
195.50
54.12
539.54
515.18
47.41
425.57
50.27
130.09
28.16
89.47
30.97
10.99
123.55
232.99
275.00
102.10
32.20
51.82
58.49
56.36
92.98
171.37
37.73
59.98
119.43
53.79
231.55
66.80
708.88
695.94
66.18
715.82
62.29
149.42
55.51
95.91
41.07
13.62
143.53
233.00
348.00
131.52
40.44
71.25
64.25
76.49
96.86
Chevron (CVX)
Cisco Syst (CSCO)
Citigroup (C)
Coca- Cola (KO)
Colgate (CL)
Comcast (CMCSA)
ConocoPhil (COP)
Costco Who (COST)
CVS Health (CVS)
Devon Ener (DVN)
Dow (DOW)
Du Pont (DD)
Eli Lilly (LLY)
EMC US (EMC)
Emerson El (EMR)
Exelon (EXC)
Exxon Mobi (XOM)
Facebook (FB)
FedEx (FDX)
Ford Motor (F)
GE (GE)
General Dy (GD)
Gilead Sci (GILD)
GM (GM)
Goldman Sa (GS)
Halliburto (HAL)
69.58
22.46
34.52
36.56
50.84
50.01
31.05
117.03
81.37
18.07
35.11
47.11
67.88
22.66
41.25
25.09
66.55
72.00
119.71
10.44
19.37
121.61
81.28
24.62
139.05
27.64
103.24
28.77
42.92
45.13
71.80
62.54
44.80
157.20
93.21
38.19
53.27
67.55
72.57
27.74
53.15
34.76
91.53
114.38
163.95
13.22
30.94
139.41
81.79
29.51
148.35
44.62
92.17
87.00
116.90
24.87
81.79
50.07
11.20
181.91
62.62
74.61
87.50
55.54
45.69
35.00
39.72
35.88
81.22
21.16
47.25
64.51
58.24
33.13
30.00
76.48
28.25
76.54
172.80
51.74
71.60
120.33
64.93
340.34
69.48
810.35
789.87
66.75
731.50
81.92
181.81
82.69
132.97
41.31
18.48
148.03
420.99
369.33
150.59
45.45
75.12
92.10
88.81
140.72
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
0.14
0.02
0.13
0.38
0.06
3.71
0.23
2.75
2.23
0.30
1.81
0.01
1.23
0.66
0.81
0.29
0.08
1.86
4.39
0.43
1.23
0.02
0.29
0.03
0.06
2.43
+
+
+
+
7.32
24.59
14.46
21.14
14.05
24.64
0.78
26.66
N.A.
32.92
64.07
23.34
7.89
32.28
24.84
17.21
22.04
1.41
44.20
3.05
9.73
6.97
6.25
28.07
13.35
18.97
+
+
+
+
13.8
16.0
1.3
14.3
13.2
25.9
7.6
8.9
N.A.
13.7
5.9
10.4
8.0
14.3
8.9
19.4
19.1
8.7
23.9
2.2
9.0
1.9
3.6
11.0
12.6
19.1
104.26
29.49
60.95
47.13
72.72
64.99
63.55
169.73
113.65
61.79
57.10
75.72
92.85
28.77
58.64
35.95
91.64
121.08
177.65
15.84
32.05
153.76
123.37
36.88
218.77
46.69
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
0.63
0.03
0.12
0.15
0.16
0.08
0.11
0.72
0.02
0.87
0.20
0.00
0.71
0.02
0.21
0.32
0.41
1.01
0.52
0.20
0.11
1.51
1.20
0.14
0.60
0.83
+
+
+
+
+
+
2.94
0.59
24.64
11.49
6.78
2.58
28.41
12.13
12.18
37.75
0.32
1.60
12.48
1.61
8.77
4.07
7.47
34.98
6.99
12.62
12.84
4.10
32.68
18.46
31.48
1.16
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
14.8
6.0
17.1
5.1
7.8
10.8
4.1
2.7
4.7
19.3
3.5
1.4
13.9
8.0
11.1
25.2
17.4
9.3
10.0
6.2
0.7
1.5
19.2
13.2
17.7
31.1
127.74
117.30
154.05
32.32
116.18
62.95
18.79
238.55
78.33
95.11
122.63
84.59
56.25
42.73
51.19
44.48
107.68
26.20
54.77
85.01
77.16
39.99
36.16
104.08
34.75
100.85
137.82
118.53
173.78
35.59
117.74
70.61
40.28
245.37
80.76
101.76
131.96
86.31
60.07
58.23
56.85
48.58
114.70
41.04
68.19
98.75
79.75
42.06
42.55
106.94
36.46
102.55
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
0.12
0.24
0.44
0.15
0.36
0.58
0.69
0.09
0.26
0.76
0.79
0.12
0.11
0.21
1.12
0.25
1.03
0.30
0.41
0.64
1.06
0.26
0.70
0.71
0.25
0.70
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
12.97
11.32
8.16
0.19
16.08
8.72
52.61
24.19
11.44
0.32
26.59
9.56
4.39
25.48
10.73
8.36
5.82
34.25
2.58
8.40
2.03
3.62
N.A.
+ 8.87
+ 1.28
+ 21.32
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
3.4
13.3
11.9
6.2
13.1
4.7
25.9
9.9
3.0
2.3
3.8
10.0
6.5
11.4
7.7
0.8
9.3
17.6
12.4
0.5
14.2
9.5
0.1
4.2
7.7
14.7
Stock (TICKER)
Priceline (PCLN)
Procter Ga (PG)
Qualcomm (QCOM)
Raytheon (RTN)
Schlumberg (SLB)
Simon Prop (SPG)
Southern C (SO)
Starbucks (SBUX)
Synchrony (SYF)
Target (TGT)
Texas Inst (TXN)
Time Warne (TWX)
Twenty-Fir (FOX)
Twenty-Fir (FOXA)
Union Paci (UNP)
United Par (UPS)
UnitedHeal (UNH)
US Bancorp (USB)
UTC (UTX)
Verizon (VZ)
Visa (V)
WalMart (WMT)
Walgreens (WBA)
Walt Disne (DIS)
Wells Farg (WFC)
954
65.02
42.24
95.32
59.60
170.99
41.40
42.05
23.74
65.50
43.49
55.53
22.65
22.66
67.06
87.30
95.00
37.07
83.39
38.06
60.00
56.30
71.50
86.25
44.50
1477
83.87
67.63
137.34
88.12
214.80
51.79
64.00
36.40
85.81
62.59
91.34
33.66
34.70
102.74
107.32
140.89
46.26
115.78
54.49
81.73
74.14
97.30
122.08
58.77
1343
83.41
53.88
134.59
78.52
208.43
50.90
55.81
25.85
68.30
62.04
71.81
28.59
28.80
87.65
106.67
138.19
41.37
101.57
54.10
77.33
71.46
83.20
98.82
47.23
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
1.09
0.37
0.01
0.21
0.93
1.47
0.04
0.43
0.30
0.31
0.03
0.83
0.35
0.39
0.44
0.57
0.33
0.15
0.13
0.34
0.01
0.36
0.27
0.75
0.30
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
16.75
3.68
20.02
33.72
9.72
18.07
19.74
3.54
21.45
18.91
11.78
18.42
13.34
13.44
13.59
5.21
14.92
8.03
11.89
13.82
11.93
1.83
5.19
12.96
18.44
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
5.3
5.0
7.8
8.1
12.6
7.2
8.8
7.0
15.0
5.9
13.2
11.0
5.0
6.0
12.1
10.9
17.5
3.1
5.7
17.1
0.3
16.6
2.3
6.0
13.1
indicates stocks
Prices shown are for regular trading for the New York Stock Exchange and the American Stock Exchange which runs from 9:30 a.m., Eastern time, through the close of the Pacific Exchange, at 4:30 p.m. For the Nasdaq stock market, it is through 4 p.m. Close Last trade of the day in regular trading. +
or
that reached a new 52-week high or low. Change Difference between last trade and previous days price in regular trading. or indicates stocks that rose or fell at least 4 percent. indicates stocks that traded 1 percent or more of their outstanding shares. n Stock was a new issue in the last year.
GOVERNMENT BONDS
FINRA-BLOOMBERG
CORPORATE BOND INDEXES
FINRA-BLOOMBERG
CORPORATE BOND INDEXES
10%
+10%
10
2
0
2015
20
2015
Yest.
All
Investment High
Issues
Grade
Yield
8
6
Yield Curve
Market Breadth
7,704
3,305
3,910
141
430
90
23,655
5,237
2,139
2,893
51
266
48
14,544
Conv
2,289
1,089
926
82
156
40
8,299
178
77
91
8
8
2
812
Key Rates
1-mo. ago
1-yr. ago
4%
10-year Treas.
2-year Treas.
4%
Prime Rate
Fed Funds
Mat.
1
Maturity
0
3
5 10
Months
Rate
2015
2016
Years
Credit Rating
Moodys S&P
Coupon%
Maturity
Fitch
1.250
1.300
4.650
1.350
0.921
6.450
1.150
1.750
1.846
4.500
Mar18
Jul16
Oct25
Jul16
Mar17
Jan19
May17
Nov17
May17
Oct24
Aaa
Aa3
Baa3
Aa3
Aaa
Baa2
Baa2
Baa2
A2
Baa3
NR
A+
BBB
A+
AA+
BBB
A
A
A
BBB
5.875
8.375
5.625
9.875
5.750
7.500
3.550
2.900
7.250
5.450
Aug26
May21
May24
Aug19
Jun44
Nov22
Mar22
Jul26
Sep21
Mar43
NR
NR
NR
Caa2
Ba1
Ca
B1
NR
Caa1
B1
CCC+
BB
CCC
BB
BB
BB
BB
NR
BB+
NR
BBB
B
BB
B+
BBB
1.250
1.000
2.625
1.000
0.500
0.750
4.250
1.500
5.875
0.875
May18
Dec18
May41
Mar18
Nov19
Mar43
Aug19
Mar19
Jul21
Jun21
NR
NR
NR
NR
BBB
BB+
BBB
BBB+
BB+
BB
NR
NR
BB
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
Price
High
Low
Last
Chg
Yld%
99.970
100.055
99.852
100.066
100.190
111.332
100.052
100.798
100.925
101.800
99.950
100.053
97.345
100.000
100.051
111.207
100.000
100.039
100.378
97.104
99.950
100.054
97.828
100.000
100.051
111.332
100.052
100.400
100.378
98.030
0.010
0.001
0.175
0.061
0.106
0.570
0.011
0.037
0.324
0.760
1.279
0.452
4.943
1.342
0.850
1.891
1.091
1.453
1.404
4.789
100.500
104.625
100.750
103.625
83.000
37.625
89.150
100.318
83.500
79.800
99.750
102.250
99.750
103.500
81.750
33.725
84.500
99.859
81.220
75.185
100.125
103.000
100.500
103.500
82.625
37.625
87.500
99.954
83.125
78.475
100.125
0.125
100.500
0.050
0.815
0.324
1.000
0.175
1.125
0.975
N.A.
7.629
N.A.
2.685
7.201
29.925
6.190
N.A.
11.645
7.290
147.310
238.010
250.752
148.160
99.050
109.114
146.924
99.750
115.301
79.000
145.250
233.110
248.000
143.000
98.000
108.924
145.034
98.500
113.000
78.000
145.530
235.357
249.375
147.029
98.980
109.106
146.891
99.186
115.275
79.000
1.180
1.643
0.625
1.479
0.020
0.356
1.234
0.339
1.900
0.000
17.891
31.607
1.985
20.356
0.809
0.566
8.461
1.807
2.608
5.832
INVESTMENT GRADE
AAA
AA
NR
NR
BBB
A
NR
A
NR
HIGH YIELD
CONSUMER RATES
B+
B2
NR
NR
NR
NR
NR
ECONOMIC INDICATORS
Foreign Currency
in Dollars
AMERICAS
Argentina (Peso)
Bolivia (Boliviano)
Brazil (Real)
Canada (Dollar)
Chile (Peso)
Colombia (Peso)
Dom. Rep. (Peso)
El Salvador (Colon)
Guatemala (Quetzal)
Honduras (Lempira)
Mexico (Peso)
Nicaragua (Cordoba)
Paraguay (Guarani)
Peru (New Sol)
Uruguay (New Peso)
Venezuela (Bolivar)
EUROPE
Britain (Pound)
Czech Rep (Koruna)
Denmark (Krone)
Europe (Euro)
Hungary (Forint)
Yesterday
Tuesday
Friday
Year
Ago
0.38%
3.50
2.69
3.90
3.72
4.29
2.86
3.17
2.81
0.13%
3.25
3.19
3.77
4.18
4.35
3.16
3.45
2.66
4.38%
4.32
4.14
4.11
0.25%
0.24
0.33
0.55
0.74
1.42
9 10
5-YEAR HISTORY
Industrial Production
+4%
Change from
previous year
May 16
Apr. 16
.0718
.1468
.2928
.7803
.0015
.0003
.0219
.1147
.1311
.0441
.0537
.0356
.0002
.3046
.0327
.1003
1.4645
.0416
.1512
1.1251
.0036
Dollars in
Foreign Currency
13.9370
6.8100
3.4153
1.2815
675.60
2974.2
45.7500
8.7220
7.6300
22.6700
18.6160
28.0800
5668.4
3.2827
30.6000
9.9750
.6828
24.0440
6.6137
.8888
279.58
1.4%
1.2
Future
Corn
Soybeans
Wheat
Live Cattle
Hogs-Lean
Cocoa
Coffee
Sugar-World
Monetary
units per
Exchange quantity
CBT
CBT
CBT
Foreign Currency
in Dollars
0.28
0.41
0.27
0.40
+0.02
+0.03
0.26
0.38
99.72
100.84
99.23
99.72
99.73
100.84
99.25
99.73
0.54
0.14
0.28
0.56
0.74
1.17
1.68
2.49
|
1]
1|
2
101.66
0.29 -0.27
103.59
0.34
0.22
124.46
0.41
0.48
102.43
0.68
0.89
Source: Thomson Reuters
$1 = 0.8888
0.95
0.90
0.85
0.80
2016
2015
Norway (Krone)
Poland (Zloty)
Russia (Ruble)
Sweden (Krona)
Switzerland (Franc)
Turkey (Lira)
.1203
.2559
.0157
.1208
1.0399
.3438
8.3109
3.9077
63.8905
8.2791
.9616
2.9083
Dollars in
Foreign Currency
ASIA/PACIFIC
Australia (Dollar)
China (Yuan)
Hong Kong (Dollar)
India (Rupee)
Japan (Yen)
Malaysia (Ringgit)
New Zealand (Dollar)
Pakistan (Rupee)
Philippines (Peso)
Singapore (Dollar)
So. Korea (Won)
Taiwan (Dollar)
Thailand (Baht)
Vietnam (Dong)
.7444
.1518
.1289
.0148
.0095
.2480
.7116
.0096
.0216
.7448
.0009
.0311
.0284
.00004
1.3434
6.5893
7.7592
67.6135
104.73
4.0320
1.4053
104.57
46.3200
1.3427
1152.1
32.1580
35.2100
22322
MIDDLE EAST/AFRICA
Bahrain (Dinar)
Egypt (Pound)
Iran (Rial)
Israel (Shekel)
Jordan (Dinar)
Kenya (Shilling)
Kuwait (Dinar)
2.6579
.1126
.00003
.2593
1.4130
.0099
3.3183
.3762
8.8799
30110
3.8561
.7077
101.00
.3014
CME
CME
NYBOT
NYBOT
NYBOT
COMX
COMX
COMX
NYMX
NYMX
NYMX
Lifetime
High
Low
Date
582.75 351.25
1216.00 859.50
732.00 449.50
151.50 113.73
88.90
71.08
3406.00 2645.00
231.20 115.35
20.15
11.37
Jul
Jul
Jul
Jun
Jul
Jul
Jul
Jun
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
16
25.00
10.25
14.50
0.55
0.22
25.00
1.00
0.45
242,949
148,156
75,771
8,815
35,296
417
8,382
104,966
$/oz
$/oz
$/lb
$/bbl
$/gal
$/mil.btu
1977.30 1047.20
18.05
14.81
2.93
1.95
90.58
32.22
2.77
0.94
7.30
1.94
Jun
Jun
Jun
Aug
Jun
Jun
16
16
16
16
16
16
19.50
0.19
+ 0.02
0.11
0.01
+ 0.02
606
56
853
459,768
61,600
105,062
May 16
Apr. 16
4
92.6
94.7
9 10
% Total Returns
120
40
11
16
2.0
Monthly
Seasonally adjusted
1.0
11
16
9 10
Leading Indicators
3.29%
3.22
+8%
Change from
previous year
0% 1
9 10
0.32%
0.29
0.36
0.59
0.79
1.46
*Credit ratings: good, FICO score 660-749; excellent, FICO score 750-850.
Apr. 16
+1.9%
March 16 +1.9
110
100
90
2016
Lebanon (Pound)
Saudi Arabia (Riyal)
So. Africa (Rand)
U.A.E (Dirham)
.0007
.2667
.0680
.2723
11
16
Open
High
Low
Settle
Change
Open
Interest
Crude Oil
$70
$48.85 a barrel
60
50
40
30
2016
2015
1.0
Type
YTD
1 Yr
% Total Returns
Exp. Assets
5 Yr* Ratio
(mil.$)
LARGEST FUNDS
Type
YTD
1 Yr
Exp. Assets
5 Yr* Ratio
Source: Bankrate.com
0.0
11
16
(mil.$)
LEADERS
EM
EM
EM
EM
EM
EM
EM
ES
EM
EM
DP
PJ
PJ
JS
PJ
DP
ES
EM
EM
ES
EM
EM
EM
+2.3
+2.0
+11.5
+5.6
+8.1
+4.9
+6.0
0.6
+11.0
+4.8
+4.9
+2.4
+0.2
+5.2
+5.5
*
3.3
+3.9
+5.3
4.7
+2.9
+3.2
+6.9
12.1
7.6
10.1
13.9
7.4
10.8
4.0
9.5
8.0
6.6
3.3
6.8
9.5
+5.4
3.0
6.6
9.9
11.1
11.6
10.6
16.2
9.0
10.7
1.1
+0.9
2.7
3.4
1.4
1.9
+1.8
+2.6
4.6
1.6
+6.0
+4.7
+2.0
+11.0
+3.5
+3.6
+5.0
0.5
4.5
+4.1
3.7
+3.1
3.7
+3.6
162
10.3
162
0.5
151
1.08
1.04
1.10
0.15
1.24
0.87
1.31
0.12
0.91
1.03
1.05
1.07
0.94
0.99
1.09
0.12
0.95
1.64
1.77
1.05
1.51
1.20
1.02
12,929
10,882
8,558
7,864
7,785
7,410
6,576
3,860
3,766
2,804
2,665
2,576
2,483
2,094
1,985
1,874
1,431
1,399
1,386
1,292
1,262
1,232
1,219
JS
JS
JS
JS
ES
DP
PJ
DP
EI
JS
DP
EI
+8.3
+5.3
+5.2
+6.8
+3.3
+3.9
+5.5
+2.0
+2.4
0.9
+4.9
+0.3
+7.6
+5.9
+5.4
+5.2
+2.9
0.8
3.0
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.3
3.3
+12.1
+12.1
+11.0
+8.7
+8.0
+7.7
+3.5
+5.2
+4.2
+4.3
+6.0
+7.4
1.27
0.97
0.99
1.05
1.44
1.17
1.09
1.11
1.69
0.79
1.05
1.11
59
547
2,094
367
215
644
1,985
477
56
357
2,665
1,077
LAGGARDS
Fidelity China Region(FHKCX)
Matthews China Investor(MCHFX)
Oberweis China Opportunities(OBCHX)
Guinness Atkinson China & Hong Kong(ICHKX)
Columbia Greater China A(NGCAX)
Neuberger Berman Greater China Eq Inst(NCEIX)
Templeton Frontier Markets A(TFMAX)
Templeton China World A(TCWAX)
State Street Disciplined Em Mkts Eq N(SSEMX)
Ivy Emerging Markets Equity A(IPOAX)
Pioneer Emerging Markets A(PEMFX)
Acadian Emerging Markets Instl(AEMGX)
CH
CH
CH
CH
CH
CH
EM
CH
EM
EM
EM
EM
9.8
15.3
13.0
6.4
9.7
9.8
+1.2
1.1
0.7
+2.7
+3.2
+2.9
28.4
27.2
26.6
22.7
21.9
21.4
19.2
18.5
18.2
16.5
16.3
16.2
+2.4
3.5
+3.5
3.9
+0.4
NA
3.9
2.9
5.8
2.0
8.3
3.7
0.96
1.14
1.95
1.53
1.60
1.52
2.15
1.91
1.25
1.50
1.95
1.51
957
552
102
58
57
86
59
182
104
347
70
1,262
*Annualized. Leaders and Laggards are among funds with at least $50 million in assets, and include no more than one class of any fund. Todays fund types: CH-China Region. DP-Divers.
Pacific Asia. EI-India Equity. EM-Divers. Emerging Mkt.. ES-Europe Stock. JS-Japan Stock. LS-Latin America Stock. PJ-Pacific Asia ex-Japan. NA-Not Available. YTD-Year to date. Spotlight tables
rotate on a 2-week basis.
Source: Morningstar
Apr. 16
0.62
March 16 0.53
1505.5
3.7501
14.7074
3.6724
Inventory-Sales Ratio
Apr. 16
1.40
March 16 1.41
120
Key to exchanges: CBT-Chicago Board of Trade. CME-Chicago Mercantile Exchange. CMX-Comex division of NYM. KC-Kansas City Board of Trade. NYBOT-New York Board of
Trade. NYM-New York Mercantile Exchange. Open interest is the number of contracts outstanding.
Source: Thomson Reuters
16
Conference Board
survey
$1 = 104.73
11
Consumer Confidence
2015
/bushel
/bushel
/bushel
/lb
/lb
$/ton
/lb
/lb
0% 1
3.27%
3.26
4.01%
3.94
4.56
4.56
0% 1
0% 1
Yield
FUTURES
Gold
Silver
Hi Grade Copper
Light Sweet Crude
Heating Oil
Natural Gas
1-year range
Home Equity
$75K line good credit*
$75K line excel. credit*
$75K loan good credit*
$75K loan excel. credit*
Chg
CONVERTIBLES
Federal funds
Prime rate
15-yr fixed
15-yr fixed jumbo
30-yr fixed
30-yr fixed jumbo
5/1 adj. rate
5/1 adj. rate jumbo
1-year adj. rate
Ask
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Most Active
Home
Mortgages
Bid
0
30
Date
T-BILLS
3-mo. Sep 16
6-mo. Dec 16
Information on all United States stocks, plus bonds, mutual funds, commodities and foreign stocks along
with analysis of industry sectors and stock indexes: nytimes.com/markets
0N
B9
DENIS BALIBOUSE/REUTERS
Thomas Bach, the I.O.C. president, at a meeting Tuesday, called for making
the global antidoping system independent from sports organizations.
Jamess
Story
Completes
Its Arc
By MARC TRACY
Lionel Messi scoring on a free kick to give Argentina a 2-0 first-half lead over the United States in a Copa Amrica semifinal.
Ezequiel Lavezzi (22) after he opened the scoring three minutes into the game.
Messi assisted on the goal, and on Argentinas final score, in the 86th minute.
years, since the 1993 Copa Amrica.
For all his talent and all his championship
success at the club level with Barcelona,
Messi has never won a major international
tournament with Argentina. But he has
come agonizingly close. The Argentines lost
in the final at the 2014 World Cup and the
2015 Copa Amrica, so Sundays final will be
Messis third chance in three years.
The Americans had been hoping for one
of the biggest upsets in their history but
B10
BASEBALL
As Lineup Sags, Mets Weigh Help From Inside, Outside and Their Past
By JAMES WAGNER
Mets starting pitcher Bartolo Colon was hit on the right thumb by Whit Merrifields first-inning grounder. Colon then left the game.
better-hitting dArnaud, who had
been out since late April because
of a rotator-cuff injury in his
throwing shoulder. Third baseman David Wright (neck) and
first baseman Lucas Duda (back)
remain on the disabled list.
There are only a few things
that really we can do to change the
team profile, and thats kind of at
the margins, Alderson said. In
that sense, focusing on one or two
players is inappropriate. Right
C A L E N DA R
TENNIS
ROEHAMPTON, England
Ashleigh Barty had her teenage
breakthroughs at Wimbledon
years ago. On Tuesday, she was
happy just to have a spot in the
outermost ring of the tournament.
Its just a massive bonus that
were here, Barty said after winning her first qualifying match, 7-6
(3), 6-3, against Lu Jia-Jing on
Tuesday.
Here, for now, is the Bank of
England Sports Centre, the auxiliary site used for Wimbledon qualifying, with three wins and three
and a half miles standing between
players and entry into the prestigious All-England Club.
Barty, an Australian, made a
name for herself on the main stage
at a young age. She won the junior
Wimbledon title in 2011 when she
was 15 and reached the final in
womens doubles two years later.
But she walked away from tennis in September 2014. She no
longer enjoyed the game, the
global travel and the workload required at the top levels.
After 18 months away, which included a stint in professional
cricket, Barty, now 20, returned,
playing several small doubles
tournaments in Australia in Feb-
that told me that shes pretty serious, Tyzzer said. From a long
way back, shes in a different
place: enjoying it, happy, looking
forward to it.
A full-fledged singles comeback
began three weeks ago at a small
grass-court tournament in Eastbourne on the coast of the English
Channel.
Without a ranking, Barty won
six matches through qualifying
and the main draw, impressing
organizers of the WTA event in
Nottingham, which gave her a
wild card into qualifying. She won
five matches there, losing to topseeded Karolina Pliskova, who is
ranked 17th in the world, in two
tiebreaker sets in a quarterfinal.
Tyzzer said Bartys initiative in
this stage of her career, which she
refers to as 2.0, had been vital to
her success.
This time its on her terms,
Tyzzer said. Before, she was just
talented and kept going with it
and didnt really make a choice
about tennis. She walked away
and has now made a choice that
yeah, I actually want to play. And
thats the way its been on the
road; its exactly that. Shes enjoying it; shes loving being back;
shes enjoying competing and
playing. The results are showing it
a bit.
While the early returns on her
work have been exciting, Barty
hopes to remain committed to the
process rather than the results.
This year were using as a development year, she said. Every
single match, win, lose or draw,
theres something that we can improve on, and its about us addressing that straight after the
match. I know from today weve
got a lot to work on. Its going to be
good to get back out there and
have another crack tomorrow.
Barty speaks of her tennis in the
first-person plural more than
most tennis players, a sign of her
comfort in team environments,
like the one she relished in cricket.
Tyzzer said Barty flourished with
other Australian players like
Daria Gavrilova and Samantha
Stosur training alongside her in
Melbourne.
Thats probably the hardest
thing in tennis: A lot of time,
youre out there on your own,
Tyzzer said. She feels like shes
got a lot of support, and Tennis
Australia has been great. Having
all the girls around has been really
good, and she enjoys that side of it.
But still, in the end of the day,
youre out there competing on
your own.
TV Highlights
Baseball
Noon
1:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
4:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m.
10:00 p.m.
Baseball / College
7:00 p.m.
Basketball / W.N.B.A.
Noon
Golf
(Thurs) 5:30 a.m.
Soccer
11:30 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
2:30 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
8:00 p.m.
10:00 p.m.
Atlanta at Miami
MLB
Kansas City at Mets
SNY
Colorado at Yankees
YES
St. Louis at Chicago Cubs
MLB
Chicago White Sox at Boston
MLB
Washington at Los Angeles Dodgers
ESPN
N.C.A.A. World Series, Arizona vs. U.C. Santa Barbara ESPN
Liberty at Atlanta
MSG, NBA TV
B.M.W. Open, first round
GOLF
UEFA European Championships, Hungary vs. Portugal ESPN
UEFA European Championships, Iceland vs. Austria ESPN2
UEFA European Championships, Italy vs. Ireland
ESPN
UEFA European Championships, Sweden vs. Belgium ESPN2
Copa Amrica Centenario, Colombia vs. Chile
FS1
M.L.S., Red Bulls at Salt Lake
MSG
This Week
HOME
AWAY
METS
YANKEES
LIBERTY
THU
6/23
FRI
6/24
SAT
6/25
SUN
6/26
WED
6/22
ATLANTA
ATLANTA
ATLANTA
1 p.m.
7 p.m.
SNY
SNY
7 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
TUE
6/28
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
SNY
FOX
CH.11
SNY
SNY
COLORADO
MINNESOTA
MINNESOTA
MINNESOTA
TEXAS
TEXAS
1 p.m.
7 p.m.
1 p.m.
1 p.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
YES
YES
CH.11
YES
YES
YES
ATLANTA
CHICAGO
PHOENIX
Noon
7:30 p.m.
3 p.m.
MSG
MSG, NBA TV
MSG, NBA TV
N.Y.C.F.C.
7:30 p.m.
MON
6/27
WASHINGTON WASHINGTON
SEATTLE
5 P.M. SATURDAY
ESPN
RED BULLS
SALT LAKE
10 P.M. WEDNESDAY
MSG
B11
P R O B A S K E T B A L L N. B . A . F I N A L S
HARVEY
ARATON
LeBron James,
above left, and
Kevin Love after
the Cavaliers
won their first
title Sunday, and
Randy Brown,
far left, and
Michael Jordan
after the Bulls
won in 1996.
MICHAEL CONROY/ASSOCIATED PRESS
ESSAY
A Stars Story
Completes Its Arc
From First Sports Page
home.
Throughout his sentimental
education, to borrow the title of
one of those novels, James has
satisfied each of its conventions
as if he were checking items off a
grocery list.
He grew up in Akron, Ohio,
near Cleveland. In the early
stage of his career with the
Cavaliers, when a Nike billboard
in downtown Cleveland declared,
We Are All Witnesses, his
incredible gifts and the opportunity to write a storybook ending
left him feeling pressured and
stifled.
In 2010, James beat a path for
Miami trailed by burning
jerseys, a nasty letter by the
owner Dan Gilbert of the
Cavaliers, and a book labeling
him The Whore of Akron
and won two N.B.A. titles with
the Heat.
Without the experiences I had
there, I wouldnt be able to do
what Im doing today, James
wrote in a Sports Illustrated
essay upon his return to Cleveland in 2014, confirming the
necessity of the Miami part of
the tale.
But James clarified that
merely returning did not close
the loop. Whats most important
for me, he wrote, is bringing
B12
S C O R E B OA R D
Supporting a ruling
against Russia, with a
suggested change.
Russias Federal Security Service
tampered with doping samples and
intimidated drug testers.
Responding to an outcry from athletes wanting broader inquiries, Mr.
Bach on Tuesday called on the 27 other
organizations overseeing summer
Olympic sports from gymnastics to
weight lifting to individually scrutinize athletes from Russia and Kenya
and assess their ability to compete in
Rio in six weeks.
The allegations against Russia and
Kenya, he said, put very serious
doubts on the presumption of innocence for athletes coming from these
countries.
The I.A.A.F. noted on Tuesday that a
majority of athletes from Kenya competed in track and field. The organization said that Kenyas runners were
subject to rigorous testing and that
their doping samples had been exam-
BASEBALL
SOCCER
A.L. STANDINGS
East
Pct
GB
Baltimore
40
30 .571
Boston
39
31 .557
Toronto
39
34 .534
2{
Yankees
34
36 .486
Tampa Bay
31
38 .449
8{
Central
Pct
GB
Cleveland
40
30 .571
Kansas City
38
32 .543
Detroit
36
35 .507
4{
Chicago
35
36 .493
5{
Minnesota
22
48 .314
18
West
Texas
46
Pct
GB
26 .639
Seattle
36
35 .507
9{
Houston
36
36 .500
10
Los Angeles
31
40 .437 14{
Oakland
28
41 .406 16{
TUESDAY
Colorado 8, Yankees 4
Mets 2, Kansas City 1
San Diego 10, Baltimore 7
Arizona 4, Toronto 2
Chicago White Sox 3, Boston 1
Detroit 4, Seattle 2
Cleveland 6, Tampa Bay 0
Cincinnati 8, Texas 2
Houston 3, L.A. Angels 2
Minnesota 14, Philadelphia 10
Milwaukee at Oakland
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
N.L. STANDINGS
East
Pct
GB
Washington
43
28 .606
Mets
37
32 .536
Miami
37
34 .521
Philadelphia
30
42 .417 13{
Atlanta
24
46 .343 18{
Central
Pct
GB
Chicago
47
22 .681
St. Louis
37
33 .529 10{
Pittsburgh
34
37 .479
Milwaukee
31
39 .443 16{
Cincinnati
28
43 .394
West
14
20
Pct
GB
San Francisco
45
27 .625
Los Angeles
39
33 .542
Colorado
34
36 .486
10
Julia Reinprecht of the United States, left, and Kelly Jonker of the Netherlands battled for the ball
during the F.I.H. Womens Hockey Champions Trophy tournament in London. The Dutch team won, 4-1.
LOOSE BALL
P RO B ASKETBA L L
COPA AMRICA
A.L. LEADERS
BATTINGBogaerts,
Boston,
.347;
Altuve, Houston, .343; Ortiz, Boston, .339;
Martinez, Detroit, .326; Nunez, Minnesota,
.321; Machado, Baltimore, .317; Lindor,
Cleveland, .314; Hosmer, Kansas City, .314;
Desmond, Texas, .312; Escobar, Anaheim,
.310.
RUNSBetts, Boston, 61; Donaldson,
Toronto, 60; Kinsler, Detroit, 58; Bogaerts,
Boston, 55; Davis, Baltimore, 51; Cano,
Seattle, 51; Desmond, Texas, 51; Altuve,
Houston, 50; Machado, Baltimore, 50;
Springer, Houston, 47; Trout, Anaheim, 47.
RBIEncarnacion, Toronto, 61; Ortiz,
Boston, 59; Cano, Seattle, 53; Trumbo,
Baltimore, 51; Betts, Boston, 50; Napoli,
Cleveland, 49; Beltran, New York, 48;
Trout, Anaheim, 47; Donaldson, Toronto,
46; Bogaerts, Boston, 46; Cruz, Seattle, 46;
Seager, Seattle, 46; Desmond, Texas, 46.
HITSBogaerts, Boston, 100; Altuve,
Houston, 95; Betts, Boston, 88; Desmond,
Texas, 87; Machado, Baltimore, 86; Cano,
Seattle, 86; Kinsler, Detroit, 84; Lindor,
Cleveland, 83; Cabrera, Detroit, 83;
Pedroia, Boston, 83.
DOUBLESOrtiz, Boston, 29; Machado,
Baltimore, 27; Altuve, Houston, 21;
Shaw, Boston, 20; Bogaerts, Boston, 20;
Desmond, Texas, 19; Pedroia, Boston, 19;
Martinez, Detroit, 19; Lawrie, Chicago, 19;
Longoria, Tampa Bay, 18.
TRIPLESEaton, Chicago, 7; Bradley Jr.,
Boston, 6; Ellsbury, New York, 5; Burns,
Oakland, 4; Betts, Boston, 4; Donaldson,
Toronto, 4; Miller, Tampa Bay, 4; Buxton,
Minnesota, 3; Aoki, Seattle, 3; Correa,
Houston, 3; Swihart, Boston, 3; Andrus,
Texas, 3; Naquin, Cleveland, 3.
HOME RUNSTrumbo, Baltimore, 20;
Frazier, Chicago, 19; Cano, Seattle, 19;
Beltran, New York, 18; Ortiz, Boston,
18; Encarnacion, Toronto, 18; Longoria,
Tampa Bay, 18; Machado, Baltimore, 17;
Donaldson, Toronto, 17; Davis, Baltimore,
16; Cruz, Seattle, 16; Davis, Oakland, 16.
STOLEN BASESDavis, Cleveland, 21;
Altuve, Houston, 18; Nunez, Minnesota, 16;
Desmond, Texas, 13; Burns, Oakland, 13;
Ellsbury, New York, 12; Lindor, Cleveland,
12; Betts, Boston, 11; Gardner, New York,
11; Dyson, Kansas City, 11.
PITCHINGSale, Chicago, 11-2; Tillman,
Baltimore, 10-1; Zimmermann, Detroit, 9-3;
Tomlin, Cleveland, 8-1; Hill, Oakland, 8-3;
Happ, Toronto, 8-3; Fister, Houston, 8-3;
Wright, Boston, 8-4; Porcello, Boston, 8-2;
Salazar, Cleveland, 8-3.
Arizona
34
39 .466 11{
N.L. LEADERS
San Diego
30
42 .417
BATTINGMurphy,
Washington,
.356; Marte, Pittsburgh, .333; Ramos,
Washington, .333; Ozuna, Miami, .322;
Prado, Miami, .321; LeMahieu, Colorado,
.318; Yelich, Miami, .317; Zobrist, Chicago,
.316; Braun, Milwaukee, .315; Lucroy,
Milwaukee, .311; Gonzalez, Colorado, .311.
RUNSBryant, Chicago, 52; Zobrist,
Chicago, 48; Arenado, Colorado, 48; Myers,
San Diego, 46; Seager, Los Angeles, 46;
Gonzalez, Colorado, 46; Carpenter, St.
Louis, 45; Ozuna, Miami, 44; Polanco,
Pittsburgh, 44; Diaz, St. Louis, 44.
RBIArenado, Colorado, 57; Rizzo,
Chicago, 53; Bruce, Cincinnati, 51; Duvall,
Cincinnati, 48; Bryant, Chicago, 48; Kemp,
San Diego, 47; Murphy, Washington, 46;
Story, Colorado, 46; Lamb, Arizona, 45;
Goldschmidt, Arizona, 45.
HITSMurphy, Washington, 93; Segura,
Arizona, 87; Prado, Miami, 84; Ozuna,
Miami, 84; Marte, Pittsburgh, 83; Gonzalez,
Colorado, 82; Jay, San Diego, 80; Seager,
Los Angeles, 79; Myers, San Diego,
79; Arenado, Colorado, 76; Herrera,
Philadelphia, 76; Villar, Milwaukee, 76.
DOUBLESJay, San Diego, 24; Polanco,
Pittsburgh, 23; Carpenter, St. Louis, 21;
Parra, Colorado, 20; Fowler, Chicago, 19;
Murphy, Washington, 19; Yelich, Miami, 19;
LeMahieu, Colorado, 18; Marte, Pittsburgh,
18; Cozart, Cincinnati, 18.
TRIPLESBruce, Cincinnati, 6; LeMahieu,
Colorado, 5; Story, Colorado, 4; Blanco,
San Francisco, 4; Peralta, Arizona, 4;
Smith, Atlanta, 4; Panik, San Francisco, 4;
Hernandez, Philadelphia, 4; Ozuna, Miami,
4; Owings, Arizona, 4; Granderson, New
York, 4; Carpenter, St. Louis, 4; Segura,
Arizona, 4.
HOME RUNSArenado, Colorado, 20;
Duvall, Cincinnati, 20; Carter, Milwaukee,
18; Story, Colorado, 18; Cespedes, New
York, 17; Bryant, Chicago, 17; Rizzo,
Chicago, 17; Moss, St. Louis, 16; Myers,
San Diego, 16; Gonzalez, Colorado, 15;
Bruce, Cincinnati, 15; Kemp, San Diego, 15;
Seager, Los Angeles, 15; Ozuna, Miami, 15.
STOLEN BASESVillar, Milwaukee, 25;
Marte, Pittsburgh, 20; Hamilton, Cincinnati,
16; Upton Jr., San Diego, 15; Smith,
Atlanta, 14.
15
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
ROCKIES 8, YANKEES 4
Colorado
ab
Blackmon cf
5
LeMahieu 2b
5
Arenado 3b
4
Gonzalez rf
4
Story ss
4
Descalso dh
5
Reynolds 1b
5
Raburn lf
4
Barnes lf
1
Wolters c
5
Totals
42
New York
ab
Gardner lf
3
Beltran rf
5
Rodriguez dh
3
McCann c
4
Castro 2b
4
Gregorius ss
4
Headley 3b
4
Hicks cf
4
Refsnyder 1b
4
Totals
35
Colorado
310
New York
110
r h bi bb so avg.
3 2 2 0 2 .295
2 3 0 0 1 .324
2 3 3 0 0 .295
1 3 1 1 0 .317
0 1 0 1 1 .264
0 1 0 0 2 .368
0 1 2 0 1 .288
0 1 0 0 2 .246
0 0 0 0 1 .162
0 0 0 0 3 .194
8 15 8 2 13
r h bi bb so avg.
2 2 0 2 0 .258
0 2 0 0 1 .286
0 0 1 0 1 .216
0 1 0 0 3 .219
1 1 0 0 1 .250
1 2 1 0 1 .286
0 0 0 0 2 .250
0 0 0 0 2 .214
0 2 0 0 0 .300
4 10 2 2 11
112 0008 15 2
011 0004 10 2
METS 2, ROYALS 1
Kansas City ab
Merrifield 2b
4
Escobar ss
4
Hosmer 1b
4
Cain cf
4
Perez c
4
Orlando rf
4
Cuthbert 3b
3
Eibner lf
4
Kennedy p
1
Morales ph
1
Gee p
0
C.Colon ph
1
Hochevar p
0
Herrera p
0
Totals
34
New York
ab
Granderson rf
3
Cabrera ss
4
Cespedes cf
4
Walker 2b
4
Loney 1b
4
Flores 3b
2
Goeddel p
0
Kelly ph
1
Blevins p
0
Reed p
0
De Aza ph
1
Familia p
0
Conforto lf
2
dArnaud c
3
B.Colon p
0
Robles p
1
Johnson 3b
1
Totals
30
Kansas City 000
New York
100
r
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
r
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
h
0
2
0
1
0
2
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
7
h
1
1
2
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
6
010
100
bi bb so avg.
0 0 1 .323
0 0 0 .246
0 0 3 .309
0 0 1 .287
0 0 0 .301
0 0 1 .357
0 1 1 .270
1 0 2 .303
0 0 1 .000
0 0 0 .225
0 0 0
--0 0 1 .279
0 0 0
--0 0 0
--1 1 11
bi bb so avg.
0 1 1 .224
1 0 0 .265
1 0 1 .284
0 0 1 .261
0 0 0 .292
0 0 0 .236
0 0 0
--0 0 0 .148
0 0 0
--0 0 0
--0 0 1 .167
0 0 0
--0 1 0 .229
0 0 1 .184
0 0 0 .120
0 0 1 .000
0 0 0 .320
2 2 6
0001 7 0
00x2 6 1
M.L.S. STANDINGS
EAST
Philadelphia
Red Bulls
NYCFC
Montreal
Toronto FC
New England
D.C. United
Orlando City
Columbus
Chicago
WEST
Colorado
FC Dallas
Real Salt Lake
Kansas City
Vancouver
Los Angeles
San Jose
Portland
Seattle
Houston
W
6
7
5
5
5
4
4
3
3
2
W
9
8
7
6
6
5
5
5
5
3
L
4
7
5
4
5
4
6
3
5
6
L
2
5
4
8
7
3
4
6
8
7
T Pts GF GA
5 23 23 19
1 22 26 20
6 21 25 31
5 20 22 20
4 19 15 15
7 19 21 26
5 17 14 16
8 17 25 23
6 15 18 21
5 11 11 16
T Pts GF GA
4 31 19 11
4 28 24 24
3 24 25 23
3 21 16 18
3 21 24 27
6 21 27 17
6 21 18 18
5 20 25 27
1 16 13 17
5 14 20 22
Wednesday's Games
Red Bulls at Real Salt Lake, 10 p.m.
Chicago at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Colorado at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
PRO BASKETBALL
N.B.A. DRAFT ORDER
Draft: Thursday, June 23, Brooklyn, N.Y.
FIRST ROUND
1. Philadelphia
2. LA Lakers
3. Boston (from Brooklyn)
4. Phoenix
5. Minnesota
6. New Orleans
7. Denver (from New York)
8. Sacramento
9. Toronto (from Denver via New York)
10. Milwaukee
11. Orlando
12. Utah
13. Phoenix (from Washington)
14. Chicago
15. Denver (from Houston)
16. Boston (from Dallas)
17. Memphis
18. Detroit
19. Denver (from Portland)
20. Indiana
21. Atlanta
22. Charlotte
23. Boston
24. Philadelphia (from Miami via Cleveland)
25. LA Clippers
26. Philadelphia (from Oklahoma City via
Denver and Cleveland)
27. Toronto
28. Phoenix (from Cleveland via Boston)
29. San Antonio
30. Golden State
SECOND ROUND
31. Boston (from Philadelphia via Miami)
32. LA Lakers
33. LA Clippers (from Brooklyn)
34. Phoenix
35. Boston (from Minnesota via Phoenix)
36. Milwaukee (from New Orleans via
Sacramento)
37. Houston (from New York via
Sacramento and Portland)
38. Milwaukee
39. New Orleans (from Denver via
Philadelphia)
40. New Orleans (from Sacramento)
41. Orlando
42. Utah
43. Houston
44. Atlanta (from Washington)
45. Boston (from Memphis via Dallas)
46. Dallas
47. Orlando (from Chicago)
48. Chicago (from Portland via Cleveland)
49. Detroit
50. Indiana
51. Boston (from Miami)
52. Utah (from Boston via Memphis)
53. Denver (from Charlotte via Oklahoma
City)
54. Atlanta
55. Brooklyn (from LA Clippers)
56. Denver (from Oklahoma City)
57. Memphis (from Toronto)
58. Boston (from Cleveland)
59. Sacramento (from San Antonio)
60. Utah (from Golden State)
W.N.B.A. STANDINGS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
Atlanta
8
4 .667
Liberty
8
4 .667
Chicago
6
7 .462
Washington
6
7 .462
Indiana
5
8 .385
Connecticut
3
10 .231
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W
L
Pct
Minnesota
13
0 1.000
Los Angeles
11
1 .917
Dallas
6
7 .462
Phoenix
4
9 .308
Seattle
4
9 .308
San Antonio
2
10 .167
Tuesday's Games
Minnesota 72, Los Angeles 69
Chicago 81, San Antonio 75
Phoenix 90, Dallas 100
Wednesday's Games
Liberty at Atlanta, 12 p.m.
Indiana at Washington, 7 p.m.
GB
2{
2{
3{
5{
GB
1{
7
9
9
10{
TENNIS
AEGON OPEN
Nottingham Tennis Center
NOTTINGHAM, ENGLAND
Singles, First Round
Damir Dzumhur, Bosnia-Herzegovina, d. Denis
Istomin, Uzbekistan, 1-6, 7-6 (4), 6-4.
Second Round
Gilles Muller (8), Luxembourg, d. Jiri Vesely,
Czech Republic, 7-6 (2), 6-2. Sam Querrey (5),
United States, d. Ernesto Escobedo, United
States, 6-4, 6-4. Benjamin Becker, Germany,
d. Guido Pella (13), Argentina, 3-6, 6-1, 6-3. Dudi
Sela, Israel, d. Joao Sousa (3), Portugal, 6-3, 7-6
(3). Marcos Baghdatis (9), Cyprus, d. Evgeny
Donskoy, Russia, 7-5, 6-2. Mikhail Youzhny,
Russia, d. Pablo Carreno Busta (10), Spain,
6-1, 6-4. Adrian Mannarino, France, d. Paolo
Lorenzi (12), Italy, 6-2, 6-2. Fernando Verdasco
(14), Spain, d. Victor Estrella Burgos, Dominican
Republic, 6-1, 4-6, 6-3. Alexandr Dolgopolov
(4), Ukraine, d. Kyle Edmund, Britain, 6-4, 7-6
(5). Andreas Seppi (7), Italy, d. Malek Jaziri,
Tunisia, 7-5, 6-3. Frank Dancevic, Canada, d.
Mikhail Kukushkin (15), Kazakhstan, 4-6, 7-6 (4),
7-6 (2). Vasek Pospisil (11), Canada, d. Damir
Dzumhur, Bosnia-Herzegovina, 6-1, 6-4. Daniel
Evans, Britain, d. Ricardas Berankis (16),
Lithuania, 2-6, 7-6 (3), 6-2. Steve Johnson (6),
United States, d. John Millman, Australia, 6-2,
6-2. Kevin Anderson (1), South Africa, d. Ivan
Dodig, Croatia, 6-3, 6-7 (5), 6-3. Pablo Cuevas
(2), Uruguay, d. Stephane Robert, France, 6-4,
7-6 (3).
AEGON INTERNATIONAL
Devonshire Park
EASTBOURNE, ENGLAND
Singles, First Round
Kateryna Bondarenko, Ukraine, d. Yulia
Putintseva, Kazakhstan, 6-2, 4-6, 6-4. Mirjana
Lucic-Baroni, Croatia, d. Denisa Allertova,
Czech Republic, 6-4, 6-2. Lesia Tsurenko,
Ukraine, d. Zhang Shuai, China, 6-1, 7-6 (3).
Madison Brengle, United States, d. Alison
Van Uytvanck, Belgium, 6-7 (4), 7-6 (4), 6-2.
Daria Gavrilova, Australia, d. Anna Karolina
Schmiedlova, Slovakia, 6-1, 7-5. Misaki Doi,
Japan, d. Polona Hercog, Slovenia, 6-4, 6-4.
Anna-Lena Friedsam, Germany, d. Anett
Kontaveit, Estonia, 6-7 (3), 6-4, 6-4.
Second Round
Petra Kvitova (5), Czech Republic, d.
Timea Babos, Hungary, 6-4, 7-6 (5). Kristina
Mladenovic, France, d. Timea Bacsinszky
(4), Switzerland, 6-1, 7-5. Eugenie Bouchard,
Canada, d. Irina-Camelia Begu (15), Romania,
6-3, 6-1. Dominika Cibulkova (12), Slovakia,
d. Jelena Ostapenko, Latvia, 6-3, 6-3. Caroline
Wozniacki, Denmark, d. Sam Stosur (7),
Australia, 6-2, 6-1. Agnieszka Radwanska (1),
Poland, d. Mirjana Lucic-Baroni, Croatia, 6-4,
2-1, retired. Ekaterina Makarova, Russia, d.
Roberta Vinci (2), Italy, 4-6, 6-4, 6-3. Kateryna
Bondarenko, Ukraine, d. Svetlana Kuznetsova
(6), Russia, 2-6, 6-4, 7-5. Misaki Doi, Japan,
d. Carla Suarez Navarro (8), Spain, 3-6, 6-4,
6-1. Monica Puig, Puerto Rico, d. Ana Konjuh,
Croatia, 6-1, 5-3, retired. Johanna Konta
(11), Britain, d. Lesia Tsurenko, Ukraine,
7-6 (4), 6-1. Karolina Pliskova (10), Czech
Republic, d. Daria Gavrilova, Australia, 6-2, 6-2.
Madison Brengle, United States, d. Anastasia
Pavlyuchenkova (14), Russia, 6-4, 6-3. Andrea
Petkovic, Germany, d. Sara Errani (13), Italy,
6-1, 3-6, 6-4. Anna-Lena Friedsam, Germany,
d. Lucie Safarova (16), Czech Republic, 7-6 (5),
6-4. Elena Vesnina, Russia, d. Belinda Bencic
(3), Switzerland, 7-6 (4), 7-6 (5).
B13
0N
SOCCER
EURO 2016
CROATIA 2, SPAIN 1
Unbeaten Streak
Dating to 04 Ends
Croatia came from behind to
beat Spain, the two-time defending champion, by 2-1 on
Tuesday in Bordeaux, France,
and finish atop Group D at the
European Championships.
An 87th-minute goal by Ivan
Perisic ended an unbeaten run
by Spain at the championships
that stretched to 2004.
Spain will meet Italy in the
round of 16, at Stade de France
in St.-Denis on Monday a
repeat of the 2012 final, which
Spain won by 4-0. Croatia will
play a third-place team in the
northern French city Lens on
Saturday.
Striker lvaro Morata put
Spain ahead in the seventh
minute, redirecting the ball into
the net after a shot by midfielder Cesc Fbregas.
After Perisic delivered a
cross from the left, Nikola
Kalinic tied the score just before halftime with a back-heel
flick that beat Spain goalkeeper David de Gea at the
near post.
Spain had a chance to retake
the lead, but Sergio Ramos had
a penalty kick saved by Croatia
goalkeeper Danijel Subasic in
the 72nd minute.
It proved to be a costly miss
as Perisic finished off a fast
counterattack with a low leftfooted shot that beat de Gea at
his near post.
Both teams entered the
match guaranteed a spot in the
knockout stage. However, both
teams wanted to win because
the runner-up in the group
would have to meet Italy. (AP)
TURKEY 2, CZECH REPUBLIC 0
Ibrahimovic to End
International Career
Zlatan Ibrahimovic said he
would retire from international
competition after the European
Championships.
Ibrahimovic, a 34-year-old
striker, said ahead of Swedens
final group game, against Belgium on Wednesday, that it
would be his last for his country if the team was eliminated.
The last game for Sweden
in Euro will be my last game
with Sweden, so I hope it will
not be tomorrow, he said.
Even if Sweden loses and
fails to qualify for the knockout
stages, Ibrahimovic said, he
will not be disappointed with
his international career.
Im very proud to be captain of Sweden and what I
achieved, he said.
He added that he would not
participate in this summers
Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro.
(AP)
Mario Gmez, who had the only goal of Tuesdays game, playing the ball in Germanys win over Northern Ireland, which still advanced to the Euros round of 16.
MARSHAL /
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SALES
(3650)
GLENWOOD
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Striker Gonzalo Higuan scored Argentinas third goal off a rebound of a save by United States goalkeeper Brad Guzan.
As soon as he tapped the ball in
Messis direction, Lavezzi broke
in the opposite direction toward
the goal, and Messi, with one exquisite touch, chipped a floating
ball back into the box.
Lavezzi was all alone there, and
he headed the ball over Guzan and
into the goal.
Before the first ball of the Copa
Amrica Centenario was kicked
this month, Klinsmann set a
straightforward target for the
United States mens team: reach
the semifinals. It was an ambitious but realistic pursuit, even for
a country whose history in the
Copa had been sporadic at best.
The United States achieved
Klinsmanns objective by beating
Ecuador in a quarterfinal last
week, but awaiting the Americans
in the semifinals was an opponent
with a much more impressive pedigree and a much more talented
roster.
At the end of the day you get
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SANTA BARBARA, Calif. On one of their earliest dates, the comedians Natasha Leggero and
Moshe Kasher knew they were meant for each other.
During that fateful assignation, Ms. Leggero was
searching Mr. Kashers car for a lost cigarette when
she instead found a pair of womens underwear
not hers.
Mr. Kasher, who acknowledged that they belonged to a previous paramour, said that he could still
remember his panicked reaction.
All of my focus was on going, like: What? I dont
know what those are, he said over a recent dinner
with Ms. Leggero here. I dont know what objects
For Author,
A Pulitzer
Provides
No Peace
American
History,
Viewed
From Below
By DAVID STREITFELD
DWIGHT
GARNER
A scene from Hamog, Ralston Jovers film about four Filipino street kids, at the New York Asian Film Festival.
MIKE
HALE
The comedians
and newlyweds
Moshe Kasher
and Natasha
Leggero at the
San Ysidro
Ranch in Santa
Barbara, Calif.,
a spot on their
Honeymoon
Tour.
White Trash
The 400-Year
Untold History
of Class in
America
Nancy Isenberg
Illustrated. 460
pages. Viking. $28
C2
GLENN
KENNY
KRYSTAL DOWNS/CARTUNA
From the Back Row to the Front Row at the Asian Film Festival
REALITY ENTERTAINMENT
John Lloyd Cruz, center, in Honor Thy Father, Erik Mattis feature about a man with a past who hopes to go straight when he takes part in his father-in-laws church-based investment scheme.
From First Arts Page
productions. Mr. Jamier agrees
with me on that, writing, I feel
theres a different energy, or vibe
perhaps, an innocence thats
specific to these films. Here, a
few highlights:
HAMOG Nowhere is the Southeast Asian film energy more
evident than in Ralston Jovers
film, Hamog (Haze), which
will be the festivals centerpiece
presentation on July 1. A Filipino
descendant of Hector Babencos
great muckraking Brazilian
drama, Pixote, the film focuses
on four street kids who sleep in
an abandoned drain pipe lined
with cardboard and rob drivers
stuck in Manilas epic traffic
jams. Alternately tragic, bittersweet and frightening, the film
traces the consequences for the
kids when a shakedown of a taxi
driver goes sideways.
Like Pixote, Hamog builds
considerable power, despite its
narrative stumbles. It kills off its
most engaging character just as
the story seems to get started,
and after spending a half-hour on
a moving and detailed account of
how to procure a funeral for an
unclaimed child, it circles back
and starts over again, picking up
a second story line that it had
seemed to drop.
But Mr. Jover never bores you
the awkwardness and occasional purple streak in his
screenplay are more than made
up for by the zest of his direction,
Pipo Domagass fluid
cinematography and gripping
performances from a pair of child
actors, Bon Andrew Lentejas and
Sunny Suwanmethanon in the Thai romantic comedy Heart Attack aka Freelance (2015).
Therese Malvar.
HONOR THY FATHER Erik Mat-
Taking Flight With the Birds, in a Melodic Arc From Sunrise to Midnight
ALDEBURGH, England
Like most musicians, pianists
tend to be nocturnal animals,
their natural habitat the concert
hall at 7:30 p.m. So it was curious
Sunday at the
Aldeburgh Festival
here to find PierreLaurent Aimard up
with the lark (in
MUSIC
every sense),
REVIEW
performing at 4:30
a.m., as the sun rose over the
poetically bleak Suffolk marshes
that surround Snape Maltings
Concert Hall.
The vista was part of the experience, because Mr. Aimard
wasnt actually inside the hall
but in a gallery above it looking out on nature with a bleary-
MICHAEL
WHITE
Aldeburgh Festival
Snape Maltings Concert Hall
suite comprising 13 studies of key
avian artists, with others in the
background as supporting talent.
Breathing life into these studies isnt easy. In the wrong hands
they are less the soaring creatures Messiaen sought, and more
like road kill, with a jarringly
repetitive insistence that suggests neurosis.
Mr. Aimard, though, has good
credentials, as a pupil of Yvonne
Loriod, Messiaens wife, muse
and dedicatee of the Catalogue.
And in these Aldeburgh readings
he was masterful, with an inci-
MOSCOW
Pavel
V.
Dmitrichenko, the dancer released from prison after being
convicted of engineering an acid
attack that exposed the hidden intrigues of the Bolshoi Ballet,
asked to meet outside the theater
where he had so spectacularly
fallen from grace, and where he already envisions his return. With
the famous facade glowing pink in
the soft light of a summer evening,
Mr. Dmitrichenko looked around
and pronounced himself entirely
at home.
I always forget the bad things,
he said at the start of a two-hour
interview recently, his first since
being released. It seems like I
was working here just yesterday.
Those years passed as a single
bad dream.
In
December
2013,
Mr.
Dmitrichenko was sentenced to
six years in prison for plotting an
attack on Sergei Filin, the Bolshois artistic director, in January
of that year. Last month he was released early for good behavior.
The dancer, 32, with green eyes
and an unruly shock of dishwater
blond hair, looked fit if somewhat
chunkier than in his halcyon days
as a Bolshoi soloist. He gained
fame for playing villains including
Ivan the Terrible in the ballet of
the same name and Von Rothbart
in Swan Lake. He said he was
drawn to the type.
Those roles were very strong
Arts, Briefly
MICHAEL PAULSON
wake of the scandal, told the Russian media that Mr. Dmitrichenko
could audition like anybody else if
he wanted to return to the company.
The theater is evidently trying
put the scandal in the past. The
Bolshoi held a news conference in
March to unveil a sweeping history of the institution in Russian
and English commissioned from
the New York-based writer Solomon Volkov to mark its 240th anniversary. The documentary Bolshoi Babylon was released in December.
The
scandal
inevitably
No day is complete
without
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THU
BLUE NOTE
JAZZ FESTIVAL
PLAYING LECUONA
C3
C4
Dance in Review
Ephrat Asherie
Riff this Riff that
River to River Festival
Ephrat Asheries Riff this Riff
that, which rolled through the
Atrium Plaza at 180 Maiden Lane
on Monday afternoon (it repeated Tuesday), opens on an
uncharacteristically subdued
note a point made clear by the
wild ride that follows.
Six dancers, some sitting,
some standing, congregate
around a row of wooden stools
and gaze at Ousmane Wiles as he
eases forward into space and
crouches, spinning back to them
before dashing away again with
sliding feet in reverse. He stops
in place and snaps his fingers.
Soon, the others ease away from
the stools too and join in to create a percussive suite of bodies.
Ms. Asherie started out in
ballet, but like for many who
came of age in the 1990s, hip-hop
took hold. There are no obvious
sign of classical dance in Riff
this, but Ms. Asherie makes
space for just about everything
else. Dance forms from tap to
swing and vogueing are knitted together throughout this
production.
Ms. Asheries movement
phrases compact bursts of
choreography with rapid-fire
The River to River Festival
continues through June 26;
rivertorivernyc.com.
DARIAL SNEED
The six performers of Riff this Riff that employing rapid-fire changes in rhythm at the River to River Festival in Manhattan.
BROADWAY
Remarkable! A Triumph! -AP
PERFORMANCES TODAY AT 2 & 8
ALADDIN
DANNY BURSTEIN
JESSICA HECHT
LAST 7 PERFORMANCES!
BEST MUSICAL REVIVAL
2015 TONY AWARD WINNER
Today at 2 & 8, Tomorrow at 7
Lincoln Center Theater presents
RODGERS & HAMMERSTEIN'S
FINDING NEVERLAND
Today at 2 & 8
WINNER! 4 2015 TONY AWARDS
INCLUDING BEST CHOREOGRAPHY
AN AMERICAN IN PARIS
KINKY BOOTS
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Today at 2 & 7
DISNEY presents
OSLO
Will Rawls
The Planet-Eaters: Seconds
River to River Festival,
through Wednesday
Many artists describe what
they do as interdisciplinary or
multidisciplinary, but Will Rawls,
in the program notes for his
work The Planet-Eaters: Sec-
THE PHANTOM OF
THE OPERA
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Winner of 9 Tony Awards
including BEST MUSICAL!
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MATILDA
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Groups of 10+ Call 877-536-3437
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Mo, Tu, Th, Fr 8; Sa 2:30 & 8; Su 2:30 & 7
Ambassador Theatre (+) 219 W. 49th St.
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FINAL WEEKS!
A KNOCKOUT! The New York Times
THE EFFECT
OFFBROADWAY
E X T E N D E D THRU JULY 17!
John Legend & Get Lifted Film Co present
Scandal's Joe Morton in
Today At 2 & 8 - Exhilarating!
A crackerjack cast. - Time Out NY
CAGNEY
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The Revolution is Born Again.-NY1
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KenKen
Answers to
Previous Puzzles
ACROSS
41
1 Airline
with
flying boats in
the 1930s-40s
6 Certain war zone
correspondent
11 Rocks Bon Jovi
14 Virus in 2014
news
15 Decorative fabric
16 Cry with an
epiphany
17 What NOTICING
can anagram to
19 California wine,
for short
20 Leave in a huff
21 Hummers
instrument
23 Scratch up
24 Creditors
holdings
26 Question a
magician wont
answer
29 What MEDITATE
can anagram to
34 Bring out
36 Opticians display
37 Geraints
beloved, in
Arthurian legend
38 Mucky ground
39 Sired, biblically
40 Wrinkly citrus
42
43
44
47
48
49
51
53
58
59
62
63
64
65
66
67
Pitch-black
Home of the first
Dole plantation
Pooped out
What MARTINET
can anagram to
___ judicata
Boots on
the ground
advocates
Witty rejoinder
Botanists study
Talismans, or
the curses they
protect against
Source of the
Beverly Hillbillies
wealth
What SKILLETS
can anagram to
Headlinedelivering org.
Bottled water
brand
Remove from
memory
Predator of
elephants, in
myth
Hub
Stood on the
hind legs, with
up
DOWN
1 Cribbage
14
Fill the grid with digits so as not to repeat a digit in any row or column, and so that the digits within each
heavily outlined box will produce the target number shown, by using addition, subtraction, multiplication
or division, as indicated in the box. A 4x4 grid will use the digits 1-4. A 6x6 grid will use 1-6.
For solving tips and more KenKen puzzles: www.nytimes.com/kenken. For feedback: [email protected]
KenKen is a registered trademark of Nextoy, LLC. Copyright 2016 www.KENKEN.com. All rights reserved.
A
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17
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S T A
T A R I S T
O C I O U S
T A U P E
26
11
18
27
28
24
29
30
35
56
57
40
43
45
46
48
47
49
52
53
60
33
37
42
44
32
22
31
39
41
13
25
36
38
12
19
21
34
51
10
16
23
50
54
55
58
59
62
63
64
65
66
67
61
6/22/16
2 Not
very much
18
3 Taboo
4 Function
under
Clock on an
iPhone
5 Like
Lake Mead
6 Ides
rebuke
worth
debating
markers
C
U
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L
20
22
24
25
26
7 Not
15
8 Recyclables
A R O M
S U P E
P E T I
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A G T
F R A G
R A M O
A B A B
I L L I
D E E
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A D A P
V A L I
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S A S S
holder
9 Peytons
10
11
12
13
27
28
gridiron
brother
30
Knocked to the
canvas
31
Groundbreaking
Al Jolson title
role
32
33
35
39
David
Copperfield wife
Poker order
Dorothy of
Road movies
Smithsonian,
e.g.: Abbr.
Leave no escape
for
Like a merino
Sleep-deprived
employee,
maybe
Pirelli patterns
Arachnid leg
count
Poohs creator
Cuts and pastes
Shoulder-slung
synthesizer
Knock on the
noodle
43
Do a slow burn
45
Come alive
46
Poker
announcement
50
Prefix meaning
51-Down
51
Near-impossible
N.F.L. point total
52
Fat removal,
briefly
53
Twin of Jacob
54
U-Haul rentals
55
Orbital period
56
Choice word
57
Flexible Flyer,
e.g.
60
61
Online subscriptions: Todays puzzle and more than 9,000 past puzzles,
nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).
Read about and comment on each puzzle: nytimes.com/wordplay.
Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.
C5
DANNY FELD
Ms. Peretti, who married the comedian Jordan Peele (Key & Peele) this
year, said Ms. Leggero and Mr. Kashers
ceremony was so enjoyable that it made
her question her decision to elope with
Mr. Peele.
It was bittersweet, going to a fun wedding, Ms. Peretti said. You go, Ugh, are
A war doesnt end simply because we say it does, and a war isnt simply the things
that happen on the battlefield. To me, war is a much more expansive beast.
VIET THANH NGUYEN
C6
NEIL
GENZLINGER
American Gothic Virginia Madsen and Jamey Sheridan in this series, starting Wednesday night on CBS.
MINDY STRICKE
Nancy Isenberg
radar, yet Ms. Isenberg writes in
her Palin section: When you
turn an election into a three-ring
circus, theres always a chance
the dancing bear will win.
Throughout this volume, there
is an awareness of a cruel aspect
of our moral complexion. Americans not only scrambled to get
ahead, she writes, they needed
someone to look down on. Gore
Vidal put this another way: It is
Film Club
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San Andreas (2015). Dwayne
Suited (2016). Six clients get measured and fitted for . Vacation (2015). Ed Helms, Christina Applegate. Rusty Any Given
Pitch Perfect 2 (2015). Anna KendJohnson, Carla Gugino. (PG-13) (6) new clothes at Bindle & Keep.
Griswold returns to Walley World. Very funny. (R) (9:20) Wednesday
rick, Rebel Wilson. (PG-13)
Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem
The Specialist (1994). Sylvester Stallone. Hit man, gorgeous new client Outcast All Alone Now. Kyle con- . Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (2014). Andy Ser(2007). Steven Pasquale. (R) (6:30) and other troubles. Celebrity photo session with special effects. (R) (8:05) fronts an unusual possession. (MA) kis, Jason Clarke. (PG-13) (10:50)
. The Stanford Prison Experiment Shaft (2000). Samuel L. Jackson, Vanessa L. Williams. Hes back, tracking Miami Vice (2006). Colin Farrell, Jamie Foxx. Detectives Crockett and
. Reservoir Dogs
(2015). Billy Crudup. (R) (6:10)
a sociopath. Empty-headed sequel-remake hybrid, full of cliches. (R) (8:15) Tubbs take on drug lords in South Florida. Dazzling, and sometimes daft. (R) (1992). (R) (12:15)
. The Manchurian Candidate (2004). Denzel Washington. Gulf war vets, power-broker
Meet the Hitlers (2014). The relationship between
Masters of Sex Phallic Victories. Masters of Sex
mom, mind-breaking memories. At once clever and silly, satirical and disturbing. (R) (7:15) names and identity.
Masters accepts Libbys offer of help. Manhigh. (MA)
Wild Hogs (2007). Tim Allen, John Travolta. Four friends embark on a
Outlander Vengeance Is Mine.
The Girlfriend
The Girlfriend
The Walk (2015). Joseph Gordon-Levitt. Philippe Petit
motorcycle trip. One long Im not gay! joke. (PG-13) (7:15)
Claire has an unexpected reunion. Experience (MA) Experience (MA) walks on a tightrope between the twin towers. (PG)
. No Country for Old Men (2007).
True Grit (1969). Kim Darby, John Guarding Tess (1994). Nicolas Cage. Feisty ex-first
Me, Myself & Irene (2000). State trooper with two personalities, via
Wayne. (G) (5:50)
lady and young aide. Starts funny, then fumbles. (PG-13) Farrelly brothers. Flagrant bad taste in the service of decency. (R) (9:40) Tommy Lee Jones. (R) (11:40)
.
.
Shooter (2007).
Cool Runnings (1993). Leon. Jamaican bobsled
Pride (2007). Terrence Howard, Bernie Mac. Swim coach organizes an Kate & Leopold (2001). Meg Ryan, Hugh Jackman.
(R) (5:15)
team at 1988 Olympics. Buoyant fantasy. (PG) (7:20) all-black team in 1970s Philadelphia. Corny, but your heart will leap. (PG) (PG-13)
CABLE
7:00
A&E
AHC
AMC
APL
7:30
Duck Dynasty
Duck Dynasty
(PG)
(PG)
Nazis vs. Aliens (PG)
Happy Gilmore (1996). Adam Sandler,
Christopher McDonald. (PG-13) (6)
Treehouse: Out on a Limb
BBCA
CMT
Last-Standing
CN
Last-Standing
8:00
8:30
9:00
9:30
Last-Standing
Last-Standing
CSPAN
COM
11:00
11:30
12:00
Last-Standing
Capitol Hill
Capitol Hill
E!
ELREY
ESPN
College Baseball N.C.A.A. World Series, Arizona vs. UC Santa Barbara. Game 9.
ESPN2
DIS
DIY
DSC
30 for 30
American Ninja (1985). G.I. vs. arms dealer in the Philippines. (R)
Amer. Ninja 2
SportsCenter
SportsCenter
ESQTV
Car Matchmaker Car Matchmaker Car Matchmaker Car Matchmaker This Is Mike Stud (14)
FOOD
Chopped (G)
Diners, Drive
Hannity (N)
FS1
Postgame
FUSE
FXX
Hates Chris
Hates Chris
Hates Chris
Tapped Out (2014). Teen enters martial-arts tournament to face parents killer. (R)
Big Freedia
Transcendent
Set Up (2011). (R)
2012 (2009). John Cusack, Chiwetel White House Down (2013). Channing Tatum, Jamie Foxx. Working-class hero saves world as we know it.
White House Down (2013). Working-class hero saves
Ejiofor. (PG-13) (4:30)
Less idiotic than youd think. (PG-13)
world as we know it. Less idiotic than youd think.
Night at the Museum (2006). Ben Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (2009). Ben Stiller.
Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (2009). Ben Stiller, Robin Williams.
Stiller, Carla Gugino. (PG) (5:30)
Museum exhibits come to life, again. Pleasant and innocuous. (PG)
Museum exhibits come to life, again. Pleasant and innocuous. (PG) (10:12)
. Captain Phillips (2013). Tom Hanks. Somali pirates take U.S. freighter hostage. Shattering. (PG-13)
. Captain Phillips (2013). Tom Hanks. (PG-13)
Pacific Rim (2013). (PG-13) (5)
FYI
Tiny House
GOLF
School of Golf
GSN
Family Feud
Family Feud
Family Feud
Family Feud
HALL
Last-Standing
Last-Standing
Last-Standing
Last-Standing
HGTV
FXM
HIST
HLN
ID
IFC
LIFE
LMN
Tiny House
Tiny House
Tiny House
Feherty
7:00
7:30
8:00
Diners, Drive
What Women
Chopped (G)
Cutthroat Kitchen (N) (G)
The OReilly Factor (N)
The Kelly File (N)
Susteren (N)
FREEFRM . The Waterboy (1998). (PG-13) (6) Young & Hungry Baby Daddy (N) Guilt Pilot. (14)
FOXNEWS On the Record With Greta Van
FX
Diners, Drive
Diners, Drive
The OReilly Factor
Cutthroat K.
The Kelly File
Lizzie McGuire
Tiny House
Tiny House
Tiny House
Tiny House
House Hunting
Champion
Champion
Champion
Champion
P.G.A. of America
Champion
Family Feud
Family Feud
The Middle (PG) The Middle (PG) The Middle (PG) The Middle (PG) Golden Girls
Golden Girls
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:30
MLB
MSG
MSGPL
MSNBC Hardball With Chris Matthews (N) All In With Chris Hayes (N)
Pregame
11:30
Rachel Maddow
Chall. Rivals
Friends (PG)
Friends (14)
Dora, Friends
NGEO
NICK
NICKJR
Bubble Guppies Bubble Guppies Shimmer, Shine Wallykazam! (Y) Peppa Pig (Y)
NY1
OVA
. A Few Good Men (1992). Marines and code on trial. Hard-breathing and familiar, with juicy Nicholson. (R)
OWN
The Haves and the Have Nots (14) Greenleaf A Time to Heal. (14)
OXY
The Call
News
Friends (PG)
. The Client (1994). Grisham lawyers, mobsters, endangered boy. Three fine performances.
Greenleaf (14)
O How to Build
SNY
50 Great Mets
SPIKE
Life or Debt Till Debt Do Us Part. Life or Debt Distrust Fund. (PG)
STZENF
TRAV
Adventures of Elmo
The Wilderness Family, Part 2 (1978). Robert Logan. (G) (8:04)
Bonanza: The Return (1993, TVF). (PG) (9:51)
Big Top Pee-wee (1988). (PG) (11:25)
. Traffic (2000). Michael Douglas, Don Cheadle. Soderberghs scathing overview of international drug trade
Cleverman Sun and Moon. Waruu Breaking Bad Phoenix. (14)
Breaking Bad
and largely futile war against it. Great, gripping squall of a film. (R)
demands Koen use his powers. (N) (11:05)
ABQ. (12:09)
. The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe Land of the Lost (2009). Will Ferrell, Anna Friel. Paleontologist is sucked The Warriors Way (2010). Morose.swordsman protects
(2005). Tilda Swinton, Georgie Henley. (PG) (6)
into another reality. A cultural throwaway. (PG-13)
princess in wild West. The good, the sad and the ugly.
Seinfeld The
Seinfeld The
The Big Bang
The Big Bang
The Big Bang
The Big Bang
The Big Bang
The Big Bang
Conan Norman Reedus; Al Madri- 2 Broke Girls
Trip. (Part 2 of 2) Cheever Letters. Theory (PG)
Theory (PG)
Theory (PG)
Theory (PG)
Theory (PG)
Theory (PG)
gal. (N) (14)
(14)
.
.
The Time of Your Life (1948).
Abe Lincoln in Illinois (1940). Raymond Massey, Ruth Gordon. Faith- A Man for All Seasons (1966). Paul Scofield, Robert Shaw. Lord Chancel- . Marat/Sade
James Cagney, William Bendix. (6) ful, first-rate version of Sherwoods pensive play. Impressive Massey.
lor vs. Henry VIII. Towering drama, masterfully expanded from the stage. (G) (1967). (12:15)
My Big Fat Fabulous Life (PG)
My Big Fat Fabulous Life
My Big Fat Fabulous Life (N) (PG) I Am Jazz (N) (14) (10:01)
My Big Fat Fabulous Life (11:02) I Am Jazz (14)
Castle Den of Thieves. Beckett
Castle Food to Die For. A chef is Castle Overkill. Beckett invites
Major Crimes Present Tense. A
Major Crimes N.S.F.W. Rustys
CSI: NY Stuck
connects with a new detective. (PG) found frozen to death. (PG)
Demming to assist. (PG)
teenage girl vanishes. (14)
biological mother returns. (14)
on You. (14)
Expedition Unknown (PG)
Expedition Unknown (PG)
Expedition Unknown (N) (PG)
Expedition Unknown (PG)
Expedition Unknown (PG)
Expedition Un.
TRU
Carbonaro Eff.
TCM
TLC
TNT
Carbonaro Eff.
Carbonaro Eff.
Carbonaro Eff.
How to Build
SportsNite
Carbonaro Eff.
Carbonaro Eff.
Carbonaro Eff.
SportsNite
Carbonaro Eff.
Carbonaro Eff.
Serengeti
SportsNite
Cops (14)
Carbonaro Eff.
Carbonaro Eff.
WGN-A
Andy Griffith
George Lopez George Lopez Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Lopez (N) (PG) The Soul Man
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Royal Pains Home Sick. Eddie
Decaying Morality. (14)
Undercover Mother. (14)
Granting Immunity. (14)
makes a medical decision. (N) (PG)
Friday After Next (2002). Ice Cube, Mike Epps. (R)
White Chicks (2004). Shawn Wayans, Marlon Wayans. (PG-13)
Law & Order Mega. A helicopter Law & Order Surrender Dorothy. Law & Order Untitled. A womans Law & Order Narcosis. Strangled
crash kills six. (14)
(14)
corpse is missing the hands. (14)
Asian-American stripper. (14)
Person of Interest Get Carter.
Person of Interest (14)
Person of Interest Super. (14)
Person of Interest Legacy. (14)
YES
CenterStage
USA
VH1
WE
WHATS STREAMING
SMITH
TBS
SYFY
12:00
Fight Sports
NBCS
SUN
WHATS ON TV
Golden Girls
Brother vs.
American Pickers (PG) (12:03)
Forensic Files
The Perfect Murder (14)
Maron Shrink
and Kink. (MA)
Family That
Preys
911 Nightmare
(2015).
Tiny House
MTV
House Hunting
11:00
. Hairspray (2007). Teenage Baltimorean strives to in- . Hairspray (2007). John Travolta, Nikki Blonsky. Teenage Baltimorean strives to integrate TV dance show.
tegrate TV dance show. You cant stop the beat. (PG) (6) You cant stop the beat. (PG) (8:45)
M.L.B. Regional Coverage.
M.L.B. Tonight
LOGO
Steve Austins
News (6:30)
Bunkd (G)
CUNY
WHATS ON WEDNESDAY
COOK
CNN
10:30
Duck Dynasty
Duck Dynasty
Duck Dynasty
Duck Dynasty
Duck Dynasty
Duck Dynasty
Wahlburgers:
Wahlburgers:
Duck Dynasty
(PG) (8:03)
(PG)
(PG) (9:03)
Wild Wild Pest. (PG) (10:01)
(PG) (10:32)
Extra Helping (N) Extra Helping (N) (PG) (12:06)
The UFO Cover-Up (PG)
Nazi UFO Conspiracy (PG)
Chasing Conspiracies (N) (PG)
The UFO Cover-Up (PG)
Nazi UFO Con.
Alice in Wonderland (2010). Johnny Depp, Mia Wasikowska. Live action-animated. Tim
The Sorcerers Apprentice (2010). Nicolas Cage, Jay Baruchel. Physics
Burtons take on Alice. Garish and periodically amusing. (PG)
major becomes wizards protg. Grindingly mediocre. (PG)
Treehouse Masters (PG)
Treehouse Masters (PG) (9:01)
Treehouse Masters (PG) (10:02) Treehouse Masters (PG) (11:03) Treehouse Mstr
CNBC
10:00
C7
Yankeeography
Ratings:
(Y)All children
(Y7) Directed to older children
(G) General audience
C8
Weather Report
50s
Vancou
uver
uv
Winnipeg
eg
60s
0s Seattle
Que
ue c
uebec
Spo
pokane
pok
k
60s
60s
s
Portla
and
70s
Eugen
en
ne
Hele
ena
70s
s
Bismarck
Billings
Bois
B
ise
Minneapolis
n
s
Sioux
u Falls
Reno
80s
Cheyenne
T
Topeka
Colorado
C
do
Sprin
ngs
Las
Vegas
Vega
100+
100+
00
00
Nashville
e
Birmingham
m
Ft. Worth
J
Jacksonville
80s
Mo
Mobile
Baton
o Rouge
San Antonio
Orleans
90s
70s
s
Miami
Nassau
80s Monterrey
Mo
80s
60s
s
50s
50
s
Fairbanks
irbanks
rbanks
70s
<0
0s
10s
An horage
Anchorage
orage
50s
SATURDAY
SUNDAY ..............................Some sunshine
Tampa
a
Corpus Christi
C
90
0s
50s
5
0s
s
O
Orlando
Ne
90s New
Hou
ouston
Hilo
80s
Jackson
n
100
00+
Atlanta
90s
Dallas
Honolulu
70s
Charlotte
Columb
bia
Tucson
20s
Juneau
eau
u
COLD
60s
WARM
STATIONARY COMPLEX
COLD
FRONTS
30s
40s
50s
60s
70s
Normal
highs
80
N
Norfolk
Memphis
Little Rock
Albuquerque
buquerque
El Paso
80s
Charleston
arle
arles
e
Louisv
Louisville
Raleigh
gh
Lubbock
70
0s
Richm
chmond
100+
Santa Fe
Phoenix
Ph
enix
Phi
Philadelphia
Wash
Washington
ash
Wichita
Oklahoma City
Oklaho
Oklah
Sa
Sa
San
an
n Diego
o
Pittsburgh
Sprin
ringfield
rin
gfi
St. Louis
uis
70s
70s
Los
Lo
os Ange
geles
Kansas
City
90 F S S M T W T F S S
Har
Hartford
a
Indianapolis
i
90s
Fresno
sno
o
Cleveland
Chicago
go
o
TODAY
Bos
Boston
New York
N
Des Moin
D
Moiness
Denver
M
Ma
Manchester
Detro
oit
Omaha
Omah
Salt Lakk
ke
City
Sa
an
n Fra
Fran
Francisco
co
Burlington
n on
Albany
Buffalo
Milwaukkee
Casper
L
Por
Portland
Ottawa
Toronto
To
St. Paul
S
70s
H
Halifax
60s
0s
s
Record
highs
60s
Mon
on
ontreal
Fargo
Pierre
Metropolitan Forecast
60s
s
50s
Regina
Meteorology by AccuWeather
80s
90s
70
Normal
lows
60
Record
lows
100+
Actual
High
HIGH LOW
MOSTLY
CLOUDY
PRESSURE
SHOWERS T-STORMS
RAIN
FLURRIES
SNOW
ICE
Low
PRECIPITATION
National Forecast
Metropolitan Almanac
Cities
High/low temperatures for the 16 hours ended at 4
p.m. yesterday, Eastern time, and precipitation (in
inches) for the 16 hours ended at 4 p.m. yesterday.
Expected conditions for today and tomorrow.
C ....................... Clouds
F ............................ Fog
H .......................... Haze
I............................... Ice
PC........... Partly cloudy
R ........................... Rain
Sh ................... Showers
N.Y.C. region
New York City
Bridgeport
Caldwell
Danbury
Islip
Newark
Trenton
White Plains
United States
Albany
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Austin
Baltimore
Baton Rouge
Birmingham
Boise
Boston
Buffalo
Burlington
Casper
Charlotte
Chattanooga
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Colorado Springs
Columbus
Concord, N.H.
Dallas-Ft. Worth
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
El Paso
Fargo
Hartford
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Jackson
Jacksonville
Kansas City
Key West
Las Vegas
Lexington
Yesterday
86/ 72 Tr
86/ 66 0.09
87/ 68 0.04
84/ 63 0.04
86/ 68 0.04
91/ 70 0.04
88/ 69 0.04
86/ 65 0.04
S ............................. Sun
Sn ....................... Snow
SS......... Snow showers
T .......... Thunderstorms
Tr ........................ Trace
W ....................... Windy
.............. Not available
Today
85/ 65 S
82/ 62 S
86/ 60 S
81/ 54 S
81/ 61 S
87/ 64 S
87/ 63 S
82/ 59 S
Yesterday
Today
81/ 53 0.04 76/ 51 PC
97/ 71 0
100/ 72 T
67/ 51 0
70/ 57 S
90/ 72 0
91/ 72 PC
80/ 68 0.04 82/ 68 S
95/ 73 0
95/ 72 PC
91/ 66 0.82 86/ 67 S
89/ 72 0
89/ 72 S
91/ 71 0
93/ 71 PC
83/ 55 0
92/ 59 S
87/ 62 0.04 79/ 60 PC
77/ 58 0
74/ 58 PC
77/ 58 0.20 73/ 55 T
98/ 48 0
86/ 51 S
93/ 70 0
93/ 73 PC
91/ 72 0
94/ 73 PC
83/ 63 0
78/ 66 T
87/ 62 0.25 82/ 74 T
84/ 64 0
83/ 67 C
96/ 65 0
87/ 59 PC
88/ 61 0.45 81/ 69 T
85/ 52 0.04 77/ 51 PC
97/ 79 0
97/ 78 S
95/ 61 0
83/ 62 PC
87/ 71 0.15 95/ 67 PC
84/ 61 0
82/ 66 T
98/ 76 0
103/ 77 PC
85/ 60 0
76/ 54 T
87/ 57 0.04 81/ 56 S
85/ 73 0.01 84/ 73 Sh
93/ 75 0
92/ 76 T
86/ 64 0.25 82/ 75 T
92/ 72 0
92/ 71 PC
87/ 66 0
93/ 70 PC
94/ 76 0.05 98/ 72 PC
85/ 79 0.04 88/ 80 Sh
112/ 86 0
113/ 85 PC
89/ 65 0.28 86/ 75 T
Tomorrow
78/ 62 R
76/ 60 R
78/ 57 R
73/ 53 R
76/ 60 R
80/ 62 R
81/ 60 T
76/ 58 R
Tomorrow
69/ 51 R
98/ 71 T
69/ 56 S
92/ 76 S
81/ 65 T
94/ 74 S
89/ 65 T
90/ 73 PC
92/ 73 S
88/ 57 S
71/ 57 R
74/ 53 R
74/ 56 Sh
93/ 58 C
95/ 76 PC
95/ 74 S
74/ 57 PC
89/ 64 T
79/ 62 R
85/ 58 T
86/ 62 R
72/ 50 R
96/ 77 S
89/ 62 PC
85/ 64 C
77/ 57 PC
105/ 80 PC
80/ 60 PC
71/ 54 R
84/ 74 Sh
96/ 75 S
87/ 64 T
93/ 73 S
95/ 72 S
92/ 68 PC
89/ 80 T
110/ 83 PC
90/ 66 T
TRACK
OF LOW
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Memphis
Miami
Milwaukee
Mpls.-St. Paul
Nashville
New Orleans
Norfolk
Oklahoma City
Omaha
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, Me.
Portland, Ore.
Providence
Raleigh
Reno
Richmond
Rochester
Sacramento
Salt Lake City
San Antonio
San Diego
San Francisco
San Jose
San Juan
Seattle
Sioux Falls
Spokane
St. Louis
St. Thomas
Syracuse
Tampa
Toledo
Tucson
Tulsa
Virginia Beach
Washington
Wichita
Wilmington, Del.
96/
87/
89/
95/
81/
83/
83/
91/
90/
88/
96/
89/
88/
88/
112/
84/
85/
74/
86/
90/
95/
90/
81/
99/
97/
94/
80/
75/
87/
88/
71/
86/
76/
90/
92/
76/
88/
85/
109/
96/
89/
91/
99/
86/
78
65
71
77
78
62
64
75
75
74
74
75
72
68
87
60
55
54
62
71
60
70
57
59
65
75
69
55
57
77
54
66
52
78
81
56
75
58
79
78
74
71
75
65
0.04
0
0.11
0
1.13
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.60
0
0.34
0
0.19
0.04
0
0.04
0
0
Tr
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.13
0.01
0
0
0.12
0.03
0.15
0
0
0
0
0
0.04
0
0.10
96/
82/
89/
96/
90/
74/
79/
96/
90/
89/
97/
93/
93/
86/
113/
82/
76/
75/
82/
93/
95/
89/
77/
94/
95/
95/
76/
71/
83/
89/
69/
87/
80/
100/
91/
73/
91/
82/
108/
97/
88/
88/
100/
86/
79
61
78
79
80
61
58
76
75
73
74
64
74
68
88
66
54
57
59
72
58
70
57
58
71
74
66
55
57
79
55
58
57
83
81
54
77
66
80
80
73
70
76
66
S
PC
T
PC
T
T
T
PC
S
S
S
PC
S
S
PC
PC
PC
PC
S
PC
S
S
PC
S
PC
PC
PC
PC
S
PC
PC
T
S
PC
PC
PC
S
T
T
PC
S
S
PC
S
96/
82/
92/
95/
90/
71/
78/
94/
91/
94/
96/
87/
93/
86/
113/
80/
72/
66/
74/
97/
90/
96/
73/
92/
95/
94/
76/
73/
82/
89/
65/
80/
73/
96/
90/
71/
91/
80/
108/
97/
91/
91/
94/
83/
79
60
70
80
78
58
61
74
76
71
75
68
76
63
87
60
52
55
56
74
57
68
51
58
71
75
65
57
58
79
53
64
51
72
81
50
79
56
81
78
72
66
76
61
S
PC
T
S
T
PC
PC
C
S
PC
S
PC
T
T
PC
T
Sh
Sh
R
PC
S
T
R
S
PC
PC
PC
S
S
PC
Sh
PC
PC
PC
PC
R
T
C
PC
PC
PC
T
T
T
Africa
Algiers
Cairo
Cape Town
Dakar
Johannesburg
Nairobi
Tunis
Yesterday
Today
79/ 54 0
85/ 58 S
100/ 76 0
102/ 76 S
59/ 40 0
64/ 41 S
82/ 76 0
83/ 74 PC
68/ 41 0
61/ 39 S
64/ 58 0.22 66/ 55 C
79/ 63 0
81/ 65 PC
Tomorrow
86/ 61 S
102/ 76 S
71/ 47 PC
83/ 74 S
62/ 39 S
69/ 54 C
85/ 69 S
Asia/Pacific
Baghdad
Bangkok
Beijing
Damascus
Hong Kong
Jakarta
Jerusalem
Karachi
Manila
Mumbai
Yesterday
Today
111/ 83 0
111/ 82 S
90/ 75 0.27 91/ 79 C
95/ 71 0.19 99/ 72 T
104/ 69 0
103/ 69 S
92/ 82 0.05 92/ 81 PC
93/ 74 0.10 90/ 77 T
91/ 69 0
88/ 70 S
90/ 82 0
93/ 83 PC
95/ 81 0.09 91/ 79 T
88/ 79 0.38 88/ 79 R
Tomorrow
113/ 83 S
89/ 79 T
99/ 73 C
104/ 69 S
92/ 83 PC
90/ 76 T
89/ 71 S
92/ 83 PC
93/ 80 T
88/ 79 Sh
83
83
66
79
78
57
81
76
72
Forecast
range
High
New Delhi
Riyadh
Seoul
Shanghai
Singapore
Sydney
Taipei
Tehran
Tokyo
99/
106/
81/
92/
88/
66/
93/
96/
77/
0.22 100/ 82 T
0
108/ 85 S
0
88/ 71 PC
0.08 92/ 78 C
0.07 88/ 79 T
0
68/ 49 S
0
95/ 80 T
0
93/ 71 S
0.56 79/ 68 C
98/
109/
88/
92/
88/
65/
94/
91/
77/
85
87
68
79
78
54
80
69
69
PC
S
PC
T
C
S
T
PC
R
Europe
Amsterdam
Athens
Berlin
Brussels
Budapest
Copenhagen
Dublin
Edinburgh
Frankfurt
Geneva
Helsinki
Istanbul
Kiev
Lisbon
London
Madrid
Moscow
Nice
Oslo
Paris
Prague
Rome
St. Petersburg
Stockholm
Vienna
Warsaw
Yesterday
70/ 57 0.48
100/ 77 0
73/ 58 0.09
68/ 58 0.13
84/ 58 0
68/ 59 0.69
66/ 50 0
68/ 49 0
73/ 56 0.20
72/ 58 0.16
72/ 46 0
92/ 74 0
90/ 68 0
86/ 65 0
69/ 56 0
93/ 62 0
82/ 57 0.01
73/ 64 0
72/ 57 0.14
72/ 61 0.12
72/ 54 0
79/ 57 0
68/ 61 0.08
70/ 53 0.03
77/ 56 0
77/ 54 0
Today
76/ 66 T
93/ 78 PC
78/ 59 PC
79/ 66 T
88/ 65 T
70/ 60 Sh
66/ 49 C
66/ 51 C
79/ 61 PC
83/ 61 T
71/ 52 PC
87/ 72 S
85/ 67 T
84/ 63 S
73/ 61 T
96/ 65 S
75/ 58 PC
78/ 70 S
71/ 54 PC
82/ 69 T
77/ 58 PC
85/ 66 S
70/ 56 PC
73/ 57 PC
82/ 61 PC
79/ 59 PC
Tomorrow
77/ 64 T
91/ 77 PC
87/ 67 PC
83/ 66 T
90/ 67 PC
73/ 65 T
65/ 49 Sh
65/ 51 Sh
88/ 67 S
87/ 64 S
70/ 54 Sh
87/ 73 S
81/ 63 T
81/ 61 S
74/ 57 T
94/ 64 S
76/ 59 C
82/ 73 S
74/ 59 PC
85/ 65 S
85/ 62 PC
86/ 67 T
73/ 57 PC
74/ 59 Sh
87/ 67 PC
85/ 64 PC
North America
Acapulco
Bermuda
Edmonton
Guadalajara
Havana
Kingston
Martinique
Mexico City
Monterrey
Montreal
Nassau
Panama City
Quebec City
Santo Domingo
Toronto
Vancouver
Winnipeg
Yesterday
92/ 77 0.20
79/ 72 0.28
69/ 48 0.01
77/ 63 0.20
90/ 70 0
88/ 79 0.11
88/ 77 0.45
69/ 56 0.40
89/ 70 0
75/ 64 0
88/ 78 0.08
82/ 75 0.03
69/ 61 0.16
82/ 72 0.21
78/ 59 0
65/ 55 0
71/ 51 0
Today
90/ 79 T
81/ 75 PC
76/ 51 PC
81/ 61 T
90/ 74 PC
91/ 78 T
87/ 76 PC
72/ 53 T
91/ 67 PC
74/ 57 PC
90/ 79 PC
87/ 73 T
70/ 53 T
87/ 72 T
76/ 57 PC
67/ 55 C
72/ 50 C
Tomorrow
89/ 78 T
80/ 75 Sh
73/ 51 T
82/ 61 T
91/ 74 PC
90/ 77 T
87/ 77 Sh
73/ 53 T
94/ 68 S
78/ 57 PC
91/ 77 PC
87/ 75 T
74/ 48 C
88/ 72 T
76/ 57 S
65/ 55 C
81/ 62 S
South America
Buenos Aires
Caracas
Lima
Quito
Recife
Rio de Janeiro
Santiago
Yesterday
55/ 32 0
89/ 75 0.11
66/ 60 0
69/ 50 0
84/ 73 0.02
73/ 66 0.03
66/ 34 0
Today
60/ 42 F
89/ 77 PC
72/ 61 PC
72/ 52 T
83/ 72 C
75/ 66 R
63/ 37 F
Tomorrow
62/ 45 PC
88/ 78 PC
72/ 61 PC
72/ 51 T
82/ 73 PC
75/ 65 C
56/ 33 F
Temperature
Low
86
4 p.m.
90
Normal
high 81
80
70
72
8 a.m.
60
MON.
Normal
low 65
50
12
a.m.
6
a.m.
Humidity
YESTERDAY
Record
low 49
(1897)
4
p.m.
Air pressure
12
4
p.m. p.m.
Yesterday ................................................................... 14
So far this month ...................................................... 137
So far this season (since January 1)........................ 256
Normal to date for the season ................................. 194
Trends
Last
Temperature
Average
Below
Above
Precipitation
Average
Below
Above
10 days
30 days
90 days
365 days
Recreational Forecast
Sun, Moon and Planets
Last Quarter
New
First Quarter
Full
Todays forecast
June 27
Sun
RISE
SET
NEXT R
Jupiter
Saturn
R
S
S
R
July 4
7:02 a.m.
5:25 a.m.
8:31 p.m.
5:25 a.m.
11:34 a.m.
12:27 a.m.
4:24 a.m.
6:47 p.m.
July 11
July 19
6:58 p.m.
Moon
S
R
S
Mars
S
R
Venus
R
S
7:36 a.m.
10:07 p.m.
8:36 a.m.
3:01 a.m.
5:29 p.m.
5:44 a.m.
8:51 p.m.
Boating
From Montauk Point to Sandy Hook, N.J., out to 20
nautical miles, including Long Island Sound and New
York Harbor.
Wind will be from the north at 5-10 knots. Waves will
be 2-4 feet on the ocean and a foot or less on Long
Island Sound and on New York Harbor. Visibility will
largely be clear to the horizon.
High Tides
Atlantic City ................... 9:31 a.m. .............. 9:45 p.m.
Barnegat Inlet ................ 9:45 a.m. .............. 9:56 p.m.
The Battery .................. 10:22 a.m. ............ 10:20 p.m.
Beach Haven ............... 11:11 a.m. ............ 11:21 p.m.
Bridgeport ................... 12:59 a.m. .............. 1:34 p.m.
City Island .................... 12:38 a.m. .............. 1:12 p.m.
Fire Island Lt. ............... 10:39 a.m. ............ 10:49 p.m.
Montauk Point .............. 11:23 a.m. ............ 11:26 p.m.
Northport ..................... 12:58 a.m. .............. 1:30 p.m.
Port Washington .......... 12:44 a.m. .............. 1:17 p.m.
Sandy Hook ................... 9:53 a.m. ............ 10:03 p.m.
Shinnecock Inlet ............ 9:43 a.m. .............. 9:58 p.m.
Stamford ........................ 1:02 a.m. .............. 1:37 p.m.
Tarrytown .................... 12:11 p.m. .......................... --Willets Point ................. 12:39 a.m. .............. 1:16 p.m.
Kennebunkport
71/53 A p.m. thundershower
Cape Cod
77/57 Partly sunny
50s
60s
70s
80s
80
Color bands
indicate water
temperature.
2 CITY KITCHEN
5 RESTAURANTS
5 HUNGRY CITY
RESTAURANTS
RECIPES
WINE
SPIRITS
D1
By JULIA MOSKIN
SAN TERENZIANO, Italy On a May afternoon, when the weather was unable to
decide between sun and showers, the dedication of pork lovers here in this central Italian town was sorely tested. Again and
again, rain arrived; the crowd scattered.
But again and again, as the sun returned,
they poured back into the town square,
appetites renewed for more porchetta: the
aromatic, ancient whole pig roast that a
crowd of hundreds had gathered to celebrate. It was the last day of Porchettiamo, a
new festival devoted to porchetta, and a few
CHRIS WARDE-JONES FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES
A Little Bubble,
A Little Blush
The spritz could be this
summers most versatile drink,
and ros is winning over more
wine lovers than ever. Page 7
ganic farmer.
In May, Ms. Pingree led a coalition of organic industry leaders, chefs and investors
on a five-day trip here. Their mission, in
part, was to encourage Cuban officials to resist the enticements of larger, more conventional American food and farming interests
and persuade Cubans to protect and extend
the small-scale organic practices that are already a part of their daily life.
Cuba, it turns out, is a rare oasis of organic
and sustainable agriculture. For reasons of
politics, geography and philosophy, the nation was forced to abandon much of its largescale, chemical-based farming and replace
CONTINUED ON PAGE D4
D2
MELISSA CLARK
A GOOD APPETITE
. ....................................................................................................................................................................................
1
1
DAVID TANIS
tablespoon honey
teaspoon cayenne
teaspoon grated lime zest
teaspoon freshly grated ginger
garlic clove, grated on a Microplane or
finely minced
teaspoon kosher salt
teaspoon ground black pepper
pound cleaned extra-large shrimp,
patted very dry with paper towels
tablespoon very cold butter, cubed
Lime wedges, for serving
jalapeo, halved, seeded and very
thinly sliced, for serving
CITY KITCHEN
.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
STRAWBERRY CASSATA
TIME: 1 HOURS, PLUS CHILLING
YIELD: 8 TO 10 SERVINGS
D3
Front Burner
FLO RE NCE FABRI CANT
TO LUNCH
TO SIP
A True Rye
From Canadian Club
A Biscuit Sandwich,
Sweet or Savory
These biscuits, with that classic,
sweetly metallic flavor, are puffy
and square, as if one parent were
a Parker House roll. They come
from Guerneville in Sonoma
County, Calif., where they brought
fame to the Big Bottom Market, a
tiny offshoot of which has opened
on the Upper West Side. Order
them with butter and jam,
whipped cream and berries,
pulled pork or even smoked salmon and crme frache to enjoy
TO SIMMER
TO SEASON
A Pepper Mill
To Light Up Summer
Whimsy and practicality make
this pepper mill a winning house
gift for that coveted beach weekend. Or treat yourself instead; it
would be a great addition to the
summer buffet table. The pepper
mill functions well and is easy to
fill: Lighthouse Pepper Mill,
$49.95, Crate and Barrel stores,
crateandbarrel.com.
Food in Art,
And on the Plate
FLORENCE FABRICANT
HEADLINER BKW
Brooklyn Winery, one of several in the borough, makes its wines in
Williamsburg from grapes cultivated in upstate New York and California. It has a rustic tasting room serving light food. And now the owners, Brian Leventhal, above left, and John Stires, above right, have
opened a full restaurant with a skylight, radiating beams and colorful
tilework. The chef, Michael Gordon, center, who worked at Bouley,
Asiate and Savory, is producing wine-friendly fare like a chilled shiitake soup, hanger steak with red wine sauce, and pan-roasted skate.
The restaurant serves only its own wines: 747 Franklin Avenue (Sterling Place), Crown Heights, Brooklyn, 718-399-1700, bkwnyc.com.
OPENING
much in the Northeast, and I dont really understand why, he said. In the South,
cooked oysters are huge.
To make his rendition of poached oysters,
Mr. Canora heats up a pan of heavy cream,
butter from grass-fed cows, dry sherry,
sherry vinegar, Worcestershire sauce,
spring onions and spring garlic from the
Greenmarket and wild wakame seaweed
from the Atlantic.
When that beurre fondue has come to a
boil, he takes the pan off the heat and slides
in raw oysters with their liquor. I let the residual heat warm the oysters, he said.
They plump up and get warm and become
really succulent.
Topped with fresh herbs and sourdough
croutons, the dish calls out for bread to be
dunked in the buttery sauce after the oysters are finished off. Mr. Canora says the secret weapon in the sauce is the wakame.
Oysters and seaweed, they obviously go
really well together, he said.
Seaweed is intricately woven into the
menu at Zadies. I almost called it an oyster
and seaweed room, Mr. Canora said. I
thought that would be cute and cool. I kind
of wimped out and didnt do that.
D4
Everybody is
adequately sober about
the realities of this.
more than half remains fallow. It is unclear
how much of the produce Cuba grows would
qualify as organic under United States
standards.
Still, a cohesive organic movement is
growing. By its own estimates, Cuba has almost 400,000 urban farms, among them
about 10,000 small organic ones. The government continues to turn land over to independent farmers to lease, although it requires most to grow food for the state.
For the group of organic true believers
who traveled here in May, the dream is to
help Cuba stay loyal to a sustainable style of
agriculture that rejects chemicals and genetic modification. They point to an incentive: an American market hungry and
willing to pay a premium for organic
produce.
Although only 5 percent of all food sold in
America is organic, those sales last year
grew three times as fast as those of the overall food market, according to the Organic
Trade Association. Cuba offers a new source
to feed the demand for organic sugar, honey,
fruit and other raw ingredients.
Yet Cuba also offers 11 million potential
new customers for conventional agriculture. Just days after Ms. Pingrees group
left, the U.S. Agriculture Coalition for Cuba,
which had already been working in the
country, returned.
Founded in 2015 to promote normalizing
American relations with Cuba, the group
has more than 100 members, including corporations like Butterball and Cargill, commodity associations like corn refiners and
soy growers, and several state farm bureaus.
The delegation returned home holding an
agreement with Cubas Grupo Empresarial
Agrcola to re-establish Cuba as a market for
American agricultural products. In a followup stroke, Gov. Jay Nixon of Missouri announced on May 30 that Cuba had accepted
a 20-ton donation of long-grain rice grown in
his state. The last official shipment of United
States rice to Cuba was in 2008.
Although many in the organic industry
see the coalition as a threat to their cause, its
leaders say they share the same goal: to
help Cuba feed itself and improve its agricultural practices.
Theres not tension, because at the end of
the day, this is about how the Cuban farmer
RESTAURANTS
D5
PETE WELLS
GRNAUER BISTRO
1578 FIRST AVENUE (EAST 82ND STREET ), UPPER
EAST SIDE; 212-988-1077; GRUNAUERNYC.COM
.......................................................................................
HUNGRY CITY
LIGAYA MISHAN
DISTRICT SAIGON
37-15 BROADWAY (38TH STREET ), ASTORIA, QUEENS;
718-956-0007; DISTRICTMOTNYC.COM
.......................................................................................
deering sweetness.
The best dishes favor salt, like shrimp
deep-fried in the shell and given a lashing of
butter in the wok, or ground lamb shoulder
bundled in peppery leaves that the Vietnamese call la lot. These could almost be
dolmades; the Liens use lamb instead of the
classic beef as a salute to Astorias Greek
population.
Father and son are attentive to ingredients. Suon nuong is made with a thicker
D6
grows wild here, and its pollen has the refreshing whiff of dried sage, with notes of
saffron, lemon and fennel seed.
To foreigners, Umbria and its food are often overshadowed by the high profile of
Tuscany, which lies just to the west. But in
Italy, Umbria is fondly called il cuore verde
dItalia, the green heart of Italy, for its fertile soil and ancient agricultural traditions.
Pork from its green hills and deep forests
has been prized since pre-Roman times.
Today, if you spend time poking around
Umbrias pig farms, prosciutto makers and
pork festivals, you will be regaled by theories about how the region came to be the
epicenter of pork butchery in Italy.
Among them: In Preci, Benedictine
monks flourished as healers from the 13th
century, building a rare library of anatomy
texts and a renowned infirmary. They
taught their skills to locals who were al-
. ....................................................................................................................................................................................
OUTDOOR PORCHETTA
TIME: ABOUT 5 HOURS
YIELD: 15 TO 20 SERVINGS
D7
PHOTOGRAPHS BY PABLO ENRIQUEZ FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES; JIM WILSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES (CALI SPRITZ)
.......................................................................................
ICE QUEEN
ADAPTED FROM NATASHA DAVID, NITECAP, NEW YORK
YIELD: 1 DRINK
Cucumber slice
1 ounces white rum, preferably
Plantation 3 Stars
ounce fresh lime juice
ounce simple syrup
1 teaspoon crme de menthe, preferably
Giffard Menthe Pastille
1 ounce dry sparkling wine such as
prosecco or cava
Lime twist, for garnish
Gently muddle cucumber at bottom of a
cocktail shaker. Add rum, lime juice, simple
syrup and crme de menthe, and fill
three-quarters full with ice. Shake until chilled,
about 15 seconds.Strain into a coupe glass.
Top with sparkling wine and garnish with lime
twist.
.......................................................................................
.......................................................................................
LA QUEBRADA SPRITZ
CALI SPRITZ
HOUSE,BUSHWICK, BROOKLYN
YIELD: 1 DRINK
YIELD: 1 DRINK
LARRY WOOD
Sacha Lichine said the ros market is in its infancy in the United States.
ting started.
The total market for ros wine in the
United States increased by 56.4 percent last
year over 2014. Ross from Provence, considered some of the best, accounted for
more than half the total.
But back in the beginning, Mr. Lichine
said, he was simply looking to do something different.
I thought about making dry, elegant
ross, and theyve turned out to be the new
wave, he said. I wanted to make a difference in the industry.
He sold Chteau Prieur-Lichine, the
fourth-growth estate he had inherited from
his father, the esteemed winery owner and
writer Alexis Lichine, and decamped from
Margaux to Provence and Chteau dEsclans.
What distinguishes todays ross from
the often-candied blush bottles of the
past, he said, is finesse. They are light yet
floral, he said, with some richness, and the
paler the better, a style that has conferred
prestige.
A popular ros de Provence, Chteau
Pigoudet, is nearly colorless; it could be
mistaken for white wine. Theres even a California ros called Summer Water.
But tint is no indication of flavor.
This month in the village of Gordes in
Provence, I conducted a tasting of eight
D8