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C M Y K Yxxx,2016-10-09,A,001,Bs-4C,E1 VOL. CLXVI .... No. 57,380 © 2016 The New York Times Company SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2016 WASHINGTON — Donald J. Trump’s campaign was teetering on Saturday after the release of a video in which he speaks of wom- en in vulgar sexual terms, with more Republican leaders calling for him to leave the ticket and de- manding that the party shift focus to down-ballot races. Representative Charles Dent, Republican of Pennsylvania, said on Saturday that the party, which has been helping the Trump cam- paign financially and or- ganizationally, should no longer “defend the indefensible.” He urged the party to abandon Mr. Trump if he refuses to withdraw and focus solely on electing the rest of the ticket. “The priority for the Republican Party has to be protecting our con- gressional majorities,” he said. There were no signs on Satur- day morning that Mr. Trump might heed the mounting calls for him to stand down, nor did party leadership appear willing to aban- don him. People close to the Trump campaign and the Republi- can National Committee roundly denied that there was any effort afoot to ease him from the race. On Saturday morning, Mr. Trump told The Wall Street Jour- nal there was “zero chance I’ll quit” and that the “support I’m getting is unbelievable.” The video released on Friday and recorded in 2005 showed a bus that had Mr. Trump aboard, and included an audio recording LEWD TRUMP TAPE A BREAKING POINT FOR MANY IN G.O.P. ANXIETY DOWN BALLOT Party Says No Operation Is Underway to Push Nominee Aside By JONATHAN MARTIN and ALEXANDER BURNS Continued on Page 27 It was first noticed as a bit of meteorological arcana. An alert from the National Hurricane Cen- ter at 2 p.m. on Sept. 22 noted that a tropical wave had been detected moving off the west coast of Africa but gave it little likelihood of de- veloping into a major storm. Still, develop it did, becoming a textbook example of how storms follow no textbook. It then mush- roomed into the strongest hurri- cane in the Atlantic since Hurri- cane Felix in 2007, killing, by some estimates, more than 800 people in Haiti, slamming into the Bahamas and then skirting a ra- zor’s edge that, had it been a few miles south and west, could have caused catastrophic damage in Florida. By Saturday, it was barely a hurricane, with maximum sus- tained winds of 75 miles per hour, but it still had the potential to bring heavy rain and flooding to the Carolinas. Dieulifaite Derlus, Maria Ageeb, Ed Kelley and Todd Nev- ille had nothing in common — un- til the storm hit, leaving behind stories of disaster and disaster narrowly averted. Here are some of them. Les Cayes, Haiti His family safe, Mr. Derlus care- fully retraced his steps atop the back wall behind his home on Tuesday, making one final trip to save a few valuables. But the wind was too strong, knocking him off the ledge and into the rush of muddy water below. Before he could get up, the wall fell, too, unable to withstand the 145-m.p.h. gusts. It toppled right on top of him. Neighbors spotted Mr. Derlus, 62, and carried him, semicon- scious, from hospital to hospital. Each one turned him away. There were no doctors to help. As he ap- A Hurricane’s Trail of Disaster and Near Misses This article is by Azam Ahmed, Paco Nunez and Alan Blinder. Joe Lovece surveyed the damage to his Ormond Beach, Fla., home after Hurricane Matthew pounded the state on Friday. PHELAN EBENHACK/REUTERS Continued on Page 24 Frank Cabrera was tending his garden and enjoying retirement at home in the Dominican Republic when his phone rang. It was Zabar’s — he was needed at the lox counter. “Every year I know Zabar’s will call me,’’ Mr. Cabrera, 64, said. “They fly me up, pay for my plane ticket.” Mr. Cabrera is not Jewish, but he has always observed the High Holy Days by putting in long hours during the mad holiday rush at Zabar’s, that temple of smoked fish on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. Even after he left the store in 2009, after 26 years, Zabar’s stills summons him, and several other seasoned veterans who have a way with a lox knife, out of retire- ment every fall to satisfy the throngs preparing for Yom Kip- pur. Jerry Sze, 63, a lox cutter who worked at Zabar’s for 30 years, lives much closer, in Queens. He too gets the call. There he was late last week, next to five other lox men wielding long, narrow knives to carve sides of smoked salmon with a sur- geon’s precision. Mr. Sze’s hours vary, but there’s no question about where he stands — the second board, his old position along the counter. “And I know that when he gets here, there will be 18 people wait- ing for him,” Scott Goldshine, the general manager at Zabar’s, said. “They all know he slices paper- thin.” Mr. Goldshine showed text mes- sages on his cellphone from customers asking if Mr. Sze would be cutting for the holidays. One was from Tom Paris, 63, who said that after Mr. Sze retired he shifted his allegiance to James Slicing fish at Zabar’s in Man- hattan this month amid the Jewish High Holy Days. ALEX WROBLEWSKI FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page 23 Lox Masters Answer Call For Ideal Slice By COREY KILGANNON Before the United States permitted a terrifying way of interrogating prisoners, government lawyers and in- telligence officials assured themselves of one crucial outcome. They knew that the methods inflicted on terrorism sus- pects would be painful, shocking and far beyond what the country had ever ac- cepted. But none of it, they concluded, would cause long lasting psychological harm. of a well. In Libya, the radio from a pass- ing car spurs rage in Majid Mokhtar Sasy al-Maghrebi, reminding him of the C.I.A. prison where earsplitting music was just one assault to his senses. And then there is the despair of men who say they are no longer themselves. “I am living this kind of depression,” said Younous Chekkouri, a Moroccan, who fears going outside because he sees faces in crowds as Guantánamo Bay guards. “I’m not normal anymore.” After enduring agonizing treatment in secret C.I.A. prisons around the world or coercive practices at the mili- tary detention camp at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, dozens of detainees devel- oped persistent mental health prob- lems, according to previously undis- closed medical records, government Fifteen years later, it is clear they were wrong. Today in Slovakia, Hussein al-Mar- fadi describes permanent headaches and disturbed sleep, plagued by memo- ries of dogs inside a blackened jail. In Kazakhstan, Lutfi bin Ali is haunted by nightmares of suffocating at the bottom LASTING SCARS U.S. Torture Leaves Legacy of Damaged Minds Younous Chekkouri, imprisoned 13 years, left Guantánamo with no charges against him. Today he imagines guards in the crowds at home in Morocco. BRYAN DENTON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page 18 This article is by Matt Apuzzo, Sheri Fink and James Risen. Ex-Detainees Say Pain Endures After Freedom Is Won For isolated Bhutan, long ruled by a monarch and guided by Buddhist tradi- tions, the formation of its first law school entails striking challenges. PAGE 6 INTERNATIONAL 6-20 Defining the Law in Bhutan At 82, the longtime New Yorker keeps a rock star’s schedule, promoting a new book, stumping for candidates and raising money for her passions. PAGE 34 NEW YORK 34-35 Gloria Steinem Never Stops Former players have sought to redeem themselves in a country where baseball is almost a religion and fixing games was the sport’s original sin. PAGE 1 SPORTSSUNDAY Taiwan Baseball’s Fallen Stars An investment firm bets that a growing middle class in places like India, Paki- stan, Ethiopia and Kenya will be willing to pay for better medical care. PAGE 1 SUNDAY BUSINESS A Global Network of Hospitals Maureen Dowd PAGE 1 SUNDAY REVIEW U(DF47D3)W+&!#!_!#!] For months, Speaker Paul D. Ryan had chosen to remain large- ly silent, hoping that his party’s nominee for president would sim- ply get across the finish line, drag- ging congressional Republicans across with him. But a 2005 recording made pub- lic on Friday of Donald J. Trump speaking in extraordinarily vul- gar terms about women became a new bridge too far across a seem- ingly endless landmass separat- ing civil behavior and Mr. Trump’s campaign for the presidency. Mr. Ryan responded by uninvit- ing Mr. Trump from a rally in his home state, Wisconsin, on Satur- day, and said he was “sickened” by Mr. Trump’s remarks. But Mr. Ryan did not go so far as to with- draw his support for Mr. Trump, which for now keeps him in the po- litical purgatory of endorsing the Republican nominee for president while continually having to say why he finds his remarks and pol- icy positions despicable. The developments come as Re- publicans are trying desperately in the final weeks of a campaign season to maintain their control of the Senate and a firm majority in the House. Many are weighing, based on the particulars of their own states and districts and race Speaker Tested One More Time On His Support By JENNIFER STEINHAUER Continued on Page 27

C M Y K - nytimes.com · 9.10.2016 · meteorological arcana. An alert from the National Hurricane Cen- ... A LEX WROBLEWSKI FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page 23 Lox Masters

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C M Y K Yxxx,2016-10-09,A,001,Bs-4C,E1

VOL. CLXVI . . . . No. 57,380 © 2016 The New York Times Company SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2016

WASHINGTON — Donald J.Trump’s campaign was teeteringon Saturday after the release of avideo in which he speaks of wom-en in vulgar sexual terms, withmore Republican leaders callingfor him to leave the ticket and de-manding that the party shift focusto down-ballot races.

Representative Charles Dent,Republican of Pennsylvania, saidon Saturday that the party, whichhas been helping the Trump cam-paign financially and or-ganizationally, should no longer“defend the indefensible.” Heurged the party to abandon Mr.Trump if he refuses to withdrawand focus solely on electing therest of the ticket.

“The priority for the RepublicanParty has to be protecting our con-gressional majorities,” he said.

There were no signs on Satur-day morning that Mr. Trumpmight heed the mounting calls forhim to stand down, nor did partyleadership appear willing to aban-don him. People close to theTrump campaign and the Republi-can National Committee roundlydenied that there was any effortafoot to ease him from the race.

On Saturday morning, Mr.Trump told The Wall Street Jour-nal there was “zero chance I’llquit” and that the “support I’mgetting is unbelievable.”

The video released on Fridayand recorded in 2005 showed abus that had Mr. Trump aboard,and included an audio recording

LEWD TRUMP TAPEA BREAKING POINTFOR MANY IN G.O.P.

ANXIETY DOWN BALLOT

Party Says No OperationIs Underway to Push

Nominee Aside

By JONATHAN MARTINand ALEXANDER BURNS

Continued on Page 27

It was first noticed as a bit ofmeteorological arcana. An alertfrom the National Hurricane Cen-ter at 2 p.m. on Sept. 22 noted thata tropical wave had been detectedmoving off the west coast of Africabut gave it little likelihood of de-veloping into a major storm.

Still, develop it did, becoming atextbook example of how stormsfollow no textbook. It then mush-roomed into the strongest hurri-cane in the Atlantic since Hurri-cane Felix in 2007, killing, by someestimates, more than 800 peoplein Haiti, slamming into theBahamas and then skirting a ra-zor’s edge that, had it been a fewmiles south and west, could havecaused catastrophic damage inFlorida.

By Saturday, it was barely ahurricane, with maximum sus-tained winds of 75 miles per hour,but it still had the potential tobring heavy rain and flooding tothe Carolinas.

Dieulifaite Derlus, MariaAgeeb, Ed Kelley and Todd Nev-ille had nothing in common — un-til the storm hit, leaving behindstories of disaster and disasternarrowly averted. Here are someof them.

Les Cayes, Haiti

His family safe, Mr. Derlus care-fully retraced his steps atop theback wall behind his home onTuesday, making one final trip tosave a few valuables. But the windwas too strong, knocking him offthe ledge and into the rush ofmuddy water below.

Before he could get up, the wallfell, too, unable to withstand the145-m.p.h. gusts. It toppled righton top of him.

Neighbors spotted Mr. Derlus,62, and carried him, semicon-scious, from hospital to hospital.Each one turned him away. Therewere no doctors to help. As he ap-

A Hurricane’s Trail of Disaster and Near MissesThis article is by Azam Ahmed,

Paco Nunez and Alan Blinder.

Joe Lovece surveyed the damage to his Ormond Beach, Fla.,home after Hurricane Matthew pounded the state on Friday.

PHELAN EBENHACK/REUTERS

Continued on Page 24

Frank Cabrera was tending hisgarden and enjoying retirement athome in the Dominican Republicwhen his phone rang.

It was Zabar’s — he was neededat the lox counter.

“Every year I know Zabar’s willcall me,’’ Mr. Cabrera, 64, said.“They fly me up, pay for my planeticket.”

Mr. Cabrera is not Jewish, buthe has always observed the HighHoly Days by putting in longhours during the mad holidayrush at Zabar’s, that temple ofsmoked fish on the Upper WestSide of Manhattan.

Even after he left the store in2009, after 26 years, Zabar’s stillssummons him, and several otherseasoned veterans who have away with a lox knife, out of retire-ment every fall to satisfy thethrongs preparing for Yom Kip-pur.

Jerry Sze, 63, a lox cutter whoworked at Zabar’s for 30 years,lives much closer, in Queens. Hetoo gets the call.

There he was late last week,next to five other lox men wieldinglong, narrow knives to carve sidesof smoked salmon with a sur-geon’s precision.

Mr. Sze’s hours vary, but there’sno question about where hestands — the second board, his oldposition along the counter.

“And I know that when he getshere, there will be 18 people wait-ing for him,” Scott Goldshine, thegeneral manager at Zabar’s, said.“They all know he slices paper-thin.”

Mr. Goldshine showed text mes-sages on his cellphone fromcustomers asking if Mr. Sze wouldbe cutting for the holidays. Onewas from Tom Paris, 63, who saidthat after Mr. Sze retired heshifted his allegiance to James

Slicing fish at Zabar’s in Man-hattan this month amid theJewish High Holy Days.

ALEX WROBLEWSKI FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page 23

Lox MastersAnswer CallFor Ideal Slice

By COREY KILGANNON

Before the United States permitted aterrifying way of interrogatingprisoners, government lawyers and in-telligence officials assured themselvesof one crucial outcome. They knew thatthe methods inflicted on terrorism sus-pects would be painful, shocking and farbeyond what the country had ever ac-cepted. But none of it, they concluded,would cause long lasting psychologicalharm.

of a well. In Libya, the radio from a pass-ing car spurs rage in Majid MokhtarSasy al-Maghrebi, reminding him of theC.I.A. prison where earsplitting musicwas just one assault to his senses.

And then there is the despair of menwho say they are no longer themselves.“I am living this kind of depression,”

said Younous Chekkouri, a Moroccan,who fears going outside because he seesfaces in crowds as Guantánamo Bayguards. “I’m not normal anymore.”

After enduring agonizing treatmentin secret C.I.A. prisons around theworld or coercive practices at the mili-tary detention camp at GuantánamoBay, Cuba, dozens of detainees devel-oped persistent mental health prob-lems, according to previously undis-closed medical records, government

Fifteen years later, it is clear theywere wrong.

Today in Slovakia, Hussein al-Mar-fadi describes permanent headachesand disturbed sleep, plagued by memo-ries of dogs inside a blackened jail. InKazakhstan, Lutfi bin Ali is haunted bynightmares of suffocating at the bottom

L A S T I N G S C A R S

U.S. Torture Leaves Legacy of Damaged Minds

Younous Chekkouri, imprisoned 13 years, left Guantánamo with no charges against him. Today he imagines guards in the crowds at home in Morocco.BRYAN DENTON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page 18

This article is by Matt Apuzzo, SheriFink and James Risen. Ex-Detainees Say Pain Endures After Freedom Is Won

For isolated Bhutan, long ruled by amonarch and guided by Buddhist tradi-tions, the formation of its first lawschool entails striking challenges. PAGE 6

INTERNATIONAL 6-20

Defining the Law in BhutanAt 82, the longtime New Yorker keeps arock star’s schedule, promoting a newbook, stumping for candidates andraising money for her passions. PAGE 34

NEW YORK 34-35

Gloria Steinem Never StopsFormer players have sought to redeemthemselves in a country where baseballis almost a religion and fixing gameswas the sport’s original sin. PAGE 1

SPORTSSUNDAY

Taiwan Baseball’s Fallen StarsAn investment firm bets that a growingmiddle class in places like India, Paki-stan, Ethiopia and Kenya will be willingto pay for better medical care. PAGE 1

SUNDAY BUSINESS

A Global Network of Hospitals Maureen Dowd PAGE 1

SUNDAY REVIEW

U(DF47D3)W+&!#!_!#!]

For months, Speaker Paul D.Ryan had chosen to remain large-ly silent, hoping that his party’snominee for president would sim-ply get across the finish line, drag-ging congressional Republicansacross with him.

But a 2005 recording made pub-lic on Friday of Donald J. Trumpspeaking in extraordinarily vul-gar terms about women became anew bridge too far across a seem-ingly endless landmass separat-ing civil behavior and Mr. Trump’scampaign for the presidency.

Mr. Ryan responded by uninvit-ing Mr. Trump from a rally in hishome state, Wisconsin, on Satur-day, and said he was “sickened”by Mr. Trump’s remarks. But Mr.Ryan did not go so far as to with-draw his support for Mr. Trump,which for now keeps him in the po-litical purgatory of endorsing theRepublican nominee for presidentwhile continually having to saywhy he finds his remarks and pol-icy positions despicable.

The developments come as Re-publicans are trying desperatelyin the final weeks of a campaignseason to maintain their control ofthe Senate and a firm majority inthe House. Many are weighing,based on the particulars of theirown states and districts and race

Speaker TestedOne More TimeOn His Support

By JENNIFER STEINHAUER

Continued on Page 27