1
VOL. CLXVII . . . No. 57,916 © 2018 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 2018 U(D54G1D)y+#!%![!=!: Scientists called a study unethical and Chile began an inquiry over a mummy once rumored to be an alien. PAGE A8 INTERNATIONAL A4-10 Research on Mummy Protested The men’s clothing store battles e-com- merce with extra-personal service and new designer labels. (And it doesn’t hurt that Dr. J still loves the place.) PAGE D1 THURSDAY STYLES D1-8 Boyds, a Philadelphia Survivor Baseball opens its new season in an all-or-nothing era that features home runs and strikeouts. PAGE B10 Go Deep or Go Home Gail Collins PAGE A23 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A22-23 WASHINGTON — A lawyer for President Trump broached the idea of Mr. Trump’s pardoning two of his former top advisers, Mi- chael T. Flynn and Paul Manafort, with their lawyers last year, ac- cording to three people with knowledge of the discussions. The discussions came as the special counsel was building cases against both men, and they raise questions about whether the lawyer, John Dowd, who resigned last week, was offering pardons to influence their decisions about whether to plead guilty and co- operate in the investigation. The talks suggest that Mr. Trump’s lawyers were concerned about what Mr. Flynn and Mr. Manafort might reveal were they to make a deal with the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, in exchange for leniency. Mr. Muel- ler’s team could investigate the prospect that Mr. Dowd made par- don offers to thwart the inquiry, al- though legal experts are divided about whether such offers might constitute obstruction of justice. Mr. Dowd’s conversation with Mr. Flynn’s lawyer, Robert K. Kel- ner, occurred sometime after Mr. Dowd took over last summer as the president’s personal lawyer, at a time when a grand jury was hearing evidence against Mr. Flynn on a range of potential crimes. Mr. Flynn, who served as Mr. Trump’s first national security adviser, agreed in late November TRUMP’S LAWYER SAID TO MENTION IDEA OF PARDONS QUESTION OF INFLUENCE Subject Was Raised as Flynn and Manafort Faced Inquiry This article is by Michael S. Schmidt, Jo Becker, Mark Mazzetti, Maggie Haberman and Adam Gold- man. Michael T. Flynn, left, and Paul Manafort were top aides. Continued on Page A16 BEIJING — With a dose of mys- tery and the flair of a showman, North Korea’s young leader, Kim Jong-un, used his debut as an in- ternational statesman on Wednesday to present himself as confident, reasonable — and will- ing to bargain. Mr. Kim’s surprise two-day visit to Beijing, his first known trip abroad since taking power, was ef- fectively a reminder of how much he has set the agenda in the crisis over his nation’s nuclear arsenal — and of what a strong hand he has going into talks, first with President Moon Jae-in of South Korea next month and later with President Trump. Mr. Kim has yet to say what con- cessions he is willing to make, or what he may demand from the United States in return. But he continued to dominate the diplo- matic process, reaffirming his willingness to meet with Mr. Trump and repeating his vague commitment to the denucleariza- tion of the Korean Peninsula in talks with President Xi Jinping of China, according to Xinhua, the Chinese state news agency. During Mr. Trump’s first year in office, Mr. Kim raced ahead with breakthrough tests of missiles ca- pable of hitting the United States mainland and what he claimed was a missile-ready hydrogen bomb. Then he abruptly changed course and used the Winter Olympics to seize the initiative, surprising the world with a rap- prochement with the South and then an offer to meet with Mr. Trump. Through it all, the Trump ad- ministration has been largely rele- gated to reacting and catching up to Mr. Kim. And so it was again this week, when Mr. Kim suddenly showed up in China on an armored train and was shown beaming next to Mr. Xi, whose cooperation has been critical to Mr. Trump’s strategy of “maximum pressure” on the North. The state media in China and North Korea an- nounced the meeting on Wednes- day, after two days of secrecy. In images and in words, Mr. Kim and Mr. Xi signaled that they had repaired the relationship between their countries, which had soured as Mr. Kim had accelerated his nu- clear program and Mr. Xi had re- sponded by endorsing — and en- Visit to China Bolsters Hand Of North Korea Working to Set Agenda Before Nuclear Talks By JANE PERLEZ North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, left, with President Xi Jinping of China in Beijing this week. KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY Continued on Page A9 SACRAMENTO — Two police officers, 10 minutes, 20 bullets. Another young black man dead, this time in his grandmother’s backyard in California’s capital. In the 10 days since Stephon Clark, 22, was fatally shot by offi- cers investigating a vandalism complaint in his south Sacra- mento neighborhood, protesters have stormed City Hall and taken to the streets in anger. In a city that is mostly white and Latino, the killing, they say, is a sign of a police force that treats black resi- dents with disdain and unfairly targets their neighborhoods. Questions about excessive force hover over the case. A police helicopter was sent to a routine call. Officers fired 20 times at Mr. Clark. The police have also been accused of not giving Mr. Clark, who was unarmed, enough time to put his hands up and of waiting too long to call for medical help. Adding to the scrutiny is the fact that the police muted their body cameras in the minutes after the shooting and can be seen on camera talking animatedly while Mr. Clark lay dead on the ground. The shooting has reignited the kind of protests against police killings that spread over the past several years in cities like Fergu- son, Mo.; Baton Rouge, La.; and Milwaukee. Last week, protesters here shut down traffic on Inter- state 5 and blocked the doors to a Sacramento Kings basketball game. “Everybody knows that we’re getting killed regularly out here; that’s the buildup to this,” said Tanya Faison, who founded the lo- cal chapter of Black Lives Matter. The mood was decidedly hope- ful when Daniel Hahn took over the Police Department as the first black police chief in August. Mr. Hahn defended his department in Police Kill Another Unarmed Black Man, and Another City Seethes By JOSE A. DEL REAL A video still of Stephon Clark, right, after being shot by two Sacramento police officers, left. SACRAMENTO POLICE DEPARTMENT Continued on Page A12 Over 15 years, four women in Lake Oswego, Ore., a wealthy Portland suburb, sought police protection against the same man, court filings show. “He threatened to burn down my house with me in it,” one wom- an wrote in her application for a restraining order. “I don’t know what he’s going to do next,” a sec- ond wrote. “He choked me so hard it left a mark on my throat,” wrote another. “He is scaring my chil- dren and me,” a fourth woman said. Yet the man, Douglas E. Green- berg, remains one of Morgan Stanley’s top financial advisers — and a celebrated member of the wealth management industry. For years, Morgan Stanley ex- ecutives knew about his alleged conduct, according to seven for- mer Morgan Stanley employees. Morgan Stanley received a fed- eral subpoena related to one abuse allegation, according to a lawyer for one of the women. In another instance, a Morgan Stan- ley manager alerted his superior when Mr. Greenberg was charged with violating a restraining order, according to three former employ- ees. Another manager at the firm liked and replied to a Facebook post by one of Mr. Greenberg’s ex- wives in which she described his abuse. On yet another occasion, an official from the bank’s New York headquarters flew to Port- land to investigate, two former employees said. Despite this information, Mor- gan Stanley apparently took no action against Mr. Greenberg. He A Rainmaker in Hot Water: ‘Everybody Knew’ By EMILY FLITTER Broker Faced Claims of Abuse, but Kept Job Continued on Page A14 Mickey Callaway, the Mets’ new manager, is steeped in analytics but known for soothing egos. PAGE B12 SPORTSTHURSDAY B10-17 Hard Data and a Soft Touch “Yerma” at the Park Avenue Armory, with Billie Piper, above, is one of the most compelling plays you’ll ever see, Ben Brantley writes. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-8 Unraveling, Brilliantly They exploit our data and make us unhappy. They spread misinformation and undermine democracy. Kevin Roose asks, is salvation possible? PAGE B1 BUSINESS DAY B1-9 Can Social Media Be Saved? Thousands marched in Paris to mourn a Holocaust survivor who was stabbed and burned in her home. PAGE A7 Honor for a Holocaust Survivor Earl Simmons, known as DMX, got a year in prison and a chance to play his rap in court. PAGE A19 DMX and Judge Are Heard WASHINGTON — The Trump administration is attempting to scale back federal efforts to en- force fair housing laws, freezing enforcement actions against local governments and businesses, in- cluding Facebook, while sidelin- ing officials who have ag- gressively pursued civil rights cases. The policy shift, detailed in in- terviews with 20 current and for- mer Department of Housing and Urban Development officials and in internal agency emails, is meant to roll back the Obama ad- ministration’s attempts to reverse decades of racial, ethnic and in- come segregation in federally subsidized housing and develop- ment projects. The move co- incides with the decision this month by Ben Carson, the secre- tary of housing and urban devel- opment, to strike the words “inclu- sive” and “free from discrimina- tion” from HUD’s mission state- ment. But Mr. Carson dismissed the idea he was abandoning the agen- cy’s fair housing mission as “non- sense” in a memo to the depart- ment’s staff earlier this year, and reiterated that point during recent congressional hearings. A spokes- man for the agency, Jereon Brown, said any programmatic changes are part of the routine re- calibration undertaken from ad- ministration to administration, rather than a philosophical shift. Advocates for the poor and ca- reer HUD officials say that Mr. Carson, a retired neurosurgeon, and his political appointees have begun weakening the depart- ment’s fair housing division at a critical moment. The agency now has its greatest leverage to right past wrongs thanks to the $28 bil- lion in disaster recovery Commu- nity Development Block Grants that Congress has appropriated to rebuild the Gulf Coast and Puerto Rico after Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria. In an email in November, a top HUD official relayed the news that the head of the Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity division, Anna Maria Farías, had ordered a hold on about a half-dozen fair housing investigations given the highest priority under Mr. Car- son’s most recent predecessor, Julián Castro. The freeze would be HUD Retreats On Enforcing Housing Law Bias Investigations Are Frozen Under Carson By GLENN THRUSH Continued on Page A15 WASHINGTON — After weeks of uncertainty atop the Depart- ment of Veterans Affairs, Presi- dent Trump dismissed its secre- tary, David J. Shulkin, on Wednes- day and announced he would re- place him with the White House physician, Dr. Ronny L. Jackson, a rear admiral in the Navy. If confirmed, Dr. Jackson, a ca- reer Naval officer who has no real experience running a large bu- reaucracy, would inherit a set of challenges that have bedeviled Democratic and Republican ad- ministrations alike. The depart- ment, the federal government’s second largest, has been bur- dened for years by aging infra- structure, an inefficient health care system and an unwieldy 360,000-person work force. He could also quickly face cru- cial, multibillion-dollar decisions over the replacement of its out- dated computerized records sys- tem and legislation that would ease the rules around veterans seeking private health care at government expense. The announcement punctuated what has been a rapid fall from fa- vor for Dr. Shulkin, a politically moderate former hospital execu- tive who delivered Mr. Trump a string of bipartisan legislative vic- tories at a time when he was struggling to find them. But in his final weeks, he struggled to fight off attempts by more conservative administration officials to have him removed and was dogged by an unflattering inspector general report on his overseas travel that undermined his relationship with the president. Dr. Shulkin’s departure was the latest chapter in the remaking of Mr. Trump’s team of senior advis- ers, a shake-up that has led to the replacement of the secretary of state, the director of the C.I.A. and the national security adviser, along with White House aides. In the midst of that turmoil, Dr. Jackson, 50, who was named to his current position by President V.A. Chief Is Shown the Door, And In Comes Trump’s Doctor By NICHOLAS FANDOS and MAGGIE HABERMAN Continued on Page A13 Progressive activists are targeting eight breakaway Democrats in the State Senate who have helped Republicans control the chamber. PAGE A20 NEW YORK A18-21 Albany Rebels Feel the Heat Democrats need to hold what they have, and wrest 24 seats from the Re- publicans to gain a majority. PAGE A11 NATIONAL A11-17 Road to Control the House Late Edition Today, cloudy, showers in spots, high 54. Tonight, cloudy, a few showers late, low 50. Tomorrow, cloudy most of the time, rain tapering off, high 62. Weather map appears on Page B16. $3.00

IDEA OF PARDONS SAID TO MENTION · 29.03.2018  · idea of Mr. Trump s pardoning two of his former top advisers, Mi-chael T. Flynn and Paul Manafort, with their lawyers last year,

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Page 1: IDEA OF PARDONS SAID TO MENTION · 29.03.2018  · idea of Mr. Trump s pardoning two of his former top advisers, Mi-chael T. Flynn and Paul Manafort, with their lawyers last year,

VOL. CLXVII . . . No. 57,916 © 2018 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 2018

C M Y K Nxxx,2018-03-29,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

U(D54G1D)y+#!%![!=!:

Scientists called a study unethical andChile began an inquiry over a mummyonce rumored to be an alien. PAGE A8

INTERNATIONAL A4-10

Research on Mummy ProtestedThe men’s clothing store battles e-com-merce with extra-personal service andnew designer labels. (And it doesn’t hurtthat Dr. J still loves the place.) PAGE D1

THURSDAY STYLES D1-8

Boyds, a Philadelphia Survivor

Baseball opens its new season in anall-or-nothing era that features homeruns and strikeouts. PAGE B10

Go Deep or Go Home

Gail Collins PAGE A23

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A22-23

WASHINGTON — A lawyer forPresident Trump broached theidea of Mr. Trump’s pardoning twoof his former top advisers, Mi-chael T. Flynn and Paul Manafort,with their lawyers last year, ac-cording to three people withknowledge of the discussions.

The discussions came as thespecial counsel was buildingcases against both men, and theyraise questions about whether thelawyer, John Dowd, who resignedlast week, was offering pardons toinfluence their decisions aboutwhether to plead guilty and co-operate in the investigation.

The talks suggest that Mr.Trump’s lawyers were concernedabout what Mr. Flynn and Mr.

Manafort might reveal were theyto make a deal with the specialcounsel, Robert S. Mueller III, inexchange for leniency. Mr. Muel-ler’s team could investigate theprospect that Mr. Dowd made par-don offers to thwart the inquiry, al-though legal experts are dividedabout whether such offers mightconstitute obstruction of justice.

Mr. Dowd’s conversation withMr. Flynn’s lawyer, Robert K. Kel-ner, occurred sometime after Mr.Dowd took over last summer asthe president’s personal lawyer, ata time when a grand jury washearing evidence against Mr.Flynn on a range of potentialcrimes. Mr. Flynn, who served asMr. Trump’s first national securityadviser, agreed in late November

TRUMP’S LAWYERSAID TO MENTIONIDEA OF PARDONS

QUESTION OF INFLUENCE

Subject Was Raised asFlynn and Manafort

Faced Inquiry

This article is by Michael S.Schmidt, Jo Becker, Mark Mazzetti,Maggie Haberman and Adam Gold-man.

Michael T. Flynn, left, andPaul Manafort were top aides.

Continued on Page A16

BEIJING — With a dose of mys-tery and the flair of a showman,North Korea’s young leader, KimJong-un, used his debut as an in-ternational statesman onWednesday to present himself asconfident, reasonable — and will-ing to bargain.

Mr. Kim’s surprise two-day visitto Beijing, his first known tripabroad since taking power, was ef-fectively a reminder of how muchhe has set the agenda in the crisisover his nation’s nuclear arsenal— and of what a strong hand hehas going into talks, first withPresident Moon Jae-in of SouthKorea next month and later withPresident Trump.

Mr. Kim has yet to say what con-cessions he is willing to make, orwhat he may demand from theUnited States in return. But hecontinued to dominate the diplo-matic process, reaffirming hiswillingness to meet with Mr.Trump and repeating his vaguecommitment to the denucleariza-tion of the Korean Peninsula intalks with President Xi Jinping ofChina, according to Xinhua, theChinese state news agency.

During Mr. Trump’s first year inoffice, Mr. Kim raced ahead withbreakthrough tests of missiles ca-pable of hitting the United Statesmainland and what he claimedwas a missile-ready hydrogenbomb. Then he abruptly changedcourse and used the WinterOlympics to seize the initiative,surprising the world with a rap-prochement with the South andthen an offer to meet with Mr.Trump.

Through it all, the Trump ad-ministration has been largely rele-gated to reacting and catching upto Mr. Kim. And so it was againthis week, when Mr. Kim suddenlyshowed up in China on an armoredtrain and was shown beamingnext to Mr. Xi, whose cooperationhas been critical to Mr. Trump’sstrategy of “maximum pressure”on the North. The state media inChina and North Korea an-nounced the meeting on Wednes-day, after two days of secrecy.

In images and in words, Mr. Kimand Mr. Xi signaled that they hadrepaired the relationship betweentheir countries, which had souredas Mr. Kim had accelerated his nu-clear program and Mr. Xi had re-sponded by endorsing — and en-

Visit to ChinaBolsters HandOf North Korea

Working to Set AgendaBefore Nuclear Talks

By JANE PERLEZ

North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, left, with President Xi Jinping of China in Beijing this week.KOREAN CENTRAL NEWS AGENCY

Continued on Page A9

SACRAMENTO — Two policeofficers, 10 minutes, 20 bullets.Another young black man dead,this time in his grandmother’sbackyard in California’s capital.

In the 10 days since StephonClark, 22, was fatally shot by offi-cers investigating a vandalismcomplaint in his south Sacra-mento neighborhood, protestershave stormed City Hall and takento the streets in anger. In a citythat is mostly white and Latino,the killing, they say, is a sign of apolice force that treats black resi-dents with disdain and unfairlytargets their neighborhoods.

Questions about excessiveforce hover over the case. A policehelicopter was sent to a routinecall. Officers fired 20 times at Mr.Clark. The police have also beenaccused of not giving Mr. Clark,who was unarmed, enough time toput his hands up and of waiting toolong to call for medical help.

Adding to the scrutiny is thefact that the police muted theirbody cameras in the minutes afterthe shooting and can be seen oncamera talking animatedly whileMr. Clark lay dead on the ground.

The shooting has reignited thekind of protests against policekillings that spread over the pastseveral years in cities like Fergu-son, Mo.; Baton Rouge, La.; andMilwaukee. Last week, protestershere shut down traffic on Inter-

state 5 and blocked the doors to aSacramento Kings basketballgame.

“Everybody knows that we’regetting killed regularly out here;that’s the buildup to this,” saidTanya Faison, who founded the lo-

cal chapter of Black Lives Matter.The mood was decidedly hope-

ful when Daniel Hahn took overthe Police Department as the firstblack police chief in August. Mr.Hahn defended his department in

Police Kill Another Unarmed Black Man, and Another City SeethesBy JOSE A. DEL REAL

A video still of Stephon Clark, right, after being shot by two Sacramento police officers, left.SACRAMENTO POLICE DEPARTMENT

Continued on Page A12

Over 15 years, four women inLake Oswego, Ore., a wealthyPortland suburb, sought policeprotection against the same man,court filings show.

“He threatened to burn downmy house with me in it,” one wom-an wrote in her application for arestraining order. “I don’t knowwhat he’s going to do next,” a sec-ond wrote. “He choked me so hardit left a mark on my throat,” wroteanother. “He is scaring my chil-dren and me,” a fourth womansaid.

Yet the man, Douglas E. Green-

berg, remains one of MorganStanley’s top financial advisers —and a celebrated member of thewealth management industry.

For years, Morgan Stanley ex-ecutives knew about his allegedconduct, according to seven for-mer Morgan Stanley employees.

Morgan Stanley received a fed-eral subpoena related to oneabuse allegation, according to alawyer for one of the women. In

another instance, a Morgan Stan-ley manager alerted his superiorwhen Mr. Greenberg was chargedwith violating a restraining order,according to three former employ-ees. Another manager at the firmliked and replied to a Facebookpost by one of Mr. Greenberg’s ex-wives in which she described hisabuse. On yet another occasion,an official from the bank’s NewYork headquarters flew to Port-land to investigate, two formeremployees said.

Despite this information, Mor-gan Stanley apparently took noaction against Mr. Greenberg. He

A Rainmaker in Hot Water: ‘Everybody Knew’By EMILY FLITTER Broker Faced Claims of

Abuse, but Kept Job

Continued on Page A14

Mickey Callaway, the Mets’ newmanager, is steeped in analytics butknown for soothing egos. PAGE B12

SPORTSTHURSDAY B10-17

Hard Data and a Soft Touch“Yerma” at the Park Avenue Armory,with Billie Piper, above, is one of themost compelling plays you’ll ever see,Ben Brantley writes. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-8

Unraveling, Brilliantly

They exploit our data and make usunhappy. They spread misinformationand undermine democracy. Kevin Rooseasks, is salvation possible? PAGE B1

BUSINESS DAY B1-9

Can Social Media Be Saved?

Thousands marched in Paris to mourn aHolocaust survivor who was stabbedand burned in her home. PAGE A7

Honor for a Holocaust Survivor

Earl Simmons, known as DMX, got ayear in prison and a chance to play hisrap in court. PAGE A19

DMX and Judge Are Heard

WASHINGTON — The Trumpadministration is attempting toscale back federal efforts to en-force fair housing laws, freezingenforcement actions against localgovernments and businesses, in-cluding Facebook, while sidelin-ing officials who have ag-gressively pursued civil rightscases.

The policy shift, detailed in in-terviews with 20 current and for-mer Department of Housing andUrban Development officials andin internal agency emails, ismeant to roll back the Obama ad-ministration’s attempts to reversedecades of racial, ethnic and in-come segregation in federallysubsidized housing and develop-ment projects. The move co-incides with the decision thismonth by Ben Carson, the secre-tary of housing and urban devel-opment, to strike the words “inclu-sive” and “free from discrimina-tion” from HUD’s mission state-ment.

But Mr. Carson dismissed theidea he was abandoning the agen-cy’s fair housing mission as “non-sense” in a memo to the depart-ment’s staff earlier this year, andreiterated that point during recentcongressional hearings. A spokes-man for the agency, JereonBrown, said any programmaticchanges are part of the routine re-calibration undertaken from ad-ministration to administration,rather than a philosophical shift.

Advocates for the poor and ca-reer HUD officials say that Mr.Carson, a retired neurosurgeon,and his political appointees havebegun weakening the depart-ment’s fair housing division at acritical moment. The agency nowhas its greatest leverage to rightpast wrongs thanks to the $28 bil-lion in disaster recovery Commu-nity Development Block Grantsthat Congress has appropriated torebuild the Gulf Coast and PuertoRico after Hurricanes Harvey,Irma and Maria.

In an email in November, a topHUD official relayed the newsthat the head of the Fair Housingand Equal Opportunity division,Anna Maria Farías, had ordered ahold on about a half-dozen fairhousing investigations given thehighest priority under Mr. Car-son’s most recent predecessor,Julián Castro. The freeze would be

HUD RetreatsOn Enforcing

Housing Law

Bias Investigations AreFrozen Under Carson

By GLENN THRUSH

Continued on Page A15

WASHINGTON — After weeksof uncertainty atop the Depart-ment of Veterans Affairs, Presi-dent Trump dismissed its secre-tary, David J. Shulkin, on Wednes-day and announced he would re-place him with the White Housephysician, Dr. Ronny L. Jackson, arear admiral in the Navy.

If confirmed, Dr. Jackson, a ca-reer Naval officer who has no realexperience running a large bu-reaucracy, would inherit a set ofchallenges that have bedeviledDemocratic and Republican ad-ministrations alike. The depart-ment, the federal government’ssecond largest, has been bur-dened for years by aging infra-structure, an inefficient healthcare system and an unwieldy360,000-person work force.

He could also quickly face cru-cial, multibillion-dollar decisionsover the replacement of its out-dated computerized records sys-tem and legislation that wouldease the rules around veteransseeking private health care at

government expense.The announcement punctuated

what has been a rapid fall from fa-vor for Dr. Shulkin, a politicallymoderate former hospital execu-tive who delivered Mr. Trump astring of bipartisan legislative vic-tories at a time when he wasstruggling to find them. But in hisfinal weeks, he struggled to fightoff attempts by more conservativeadministration officials to havehim removed and was dogged byan unflattering inspector generalreport on his overseas travel thatundermined his relationship withthe president.

Dr. Shulkin’s departure was thelatest chapter in the remaking ofMr. Trump’s team of senior advis-ers, a shake-up that has led to thereplacement of the secretary ofstate, the director of the C.I.A. andthe national security adviser,along with White House aides.

In the midst of that turmoil, Dr.Jackson, 50, who was named to hiscurrent position by President

V.A. Chief Is Shown the Door,And In Comes Trump’s Doctor

By NICHOLAS FANDOS and MAGGIE HABERMAN

Continued on Page A13

Progressive activists are targeting eightbreakaway Democrats in the StateSenate who have helped Republicanscontrol the chamber. PAGE A20

NEW YORK A18-21

Albany Rebels Feel the Heat

Democrats need to hold what theyhave, and wrest 24 seats from the Re-publicans to gain a majority. PAGE A11

NATIONAL A11-17

Road to Control the House

Late EditionToday, cloudy, showers in spots, high54. Tonight, cloudy, a few showerslate, low 50. Tomorrow, cloudy mostof the time, rain tapering off, high 62.Weather map appears on Page B16.

$3.00