1
U(D54G1D)y+%!$![!#!_ WASHINGTON — President Trump embraced a proposal on Wednesday to slash legal immi- gration to the United States in half within a decade by sharply cur- tailing the ability of American citi- zens and legal residents to bring family members into the country. The plan would enact the most far-reaching changes to the sys- tem of legal immigration in dec- ades and represents the presi- dent’s latest effort to stem the flow of newcomers to the United States. Since taking office, he has barred many visitors from select Muslim-majority countries, lim- ited the influx of refugees, in- creased immigration arrests and pressed to build a wall along the southern border. In asking Congress to curb legal immigration, Mr. Trump intensi- fied a debate about national iden- tity, economic growth, worker fairness and American values that animated his campaign last year. Critics said the proposal would un- dercut the fundamental vision of the United States as a haven for the poor and huddled masses, while the president and his allies said the country had taken in too many low-skilled immigrants for too long to the detriment of Ameri- can workers. “This legislation will not only restore our competitive edge in the 21st century, but it will restore the sacred bonds of trust between America and its citizens,” Mr. Trump said at a White House event alongside two Republican senators sponsoring the bill. “This legislation demonstrates our com- passion for struggling American families who deserve an immigra- tion system that puts their needs first and that puts America first.” In throwing his weight behind a bill, Mr. Trump added one more long-odds priority to a legislative agenda already packed with them in the wake of the defeat of legisla- tion to repeal and replace Presi- dent Barack Obama’s health care program. The president has al- ready vowed to overhaul the tax code and rebuild the nation’s roads, airports and other infra- structure. But by endorsing legal immi- gration cuts, a move he has long supported, Mr. Trump returned to a theme that has defined his short political career and excites his conservative base at a time when his poll numbers continue to sink. Just 33 percent of Americans ap- proved of his performance in the latest Quinnipiac University sur- vey, the lowest rating of his presi- dency, and down from 40 percent a month ago. Democrats and some Republi- cans quickly criticized the move. “Instead of catching criminals, Trump wants to tear apart com- munities and punish immigrant families that are making valuable contributions to our economy,” said Tom Perez, the chairman of the Democratic National Commit- PRESIDENT BACKS A PLAN TO CURTAIL LEGAL MIGRATION 50% CUTS BY 10TH YEAR Less Emphasis on Family Bonds and More on Skills and Talents By PETER BAKER Continued on Page A13 Scientists for the first time have successfully edited genes in hu- man embryos to repair a common and serious disease-causing mu- tation, producing apparently healthy embryos, according to a study published on Wednesday. The research marks a major milestone and, while a long way from clinical use, it raises the prospect that gene editing may one day protect babies from a va- riety of hereditary conditions. But the achievement is also an example of human genetic engi- neering, once feared and unthink- able, and is sure to renew ethical concerns that some might try to design babies with certain traits, like greater intelligence or athleti- cism. Scientists have long feared the unforeseen medical conse- quences of making inherited changes to human DNA. The cul- tural implications may be just as disturbing: Some experts have warned that unregulated genetic engineering may lead to a new form of eugenics, in which people with means pay to have children with enhanced traits even as those with disabilities are deval- ued. The study, published in the jour- nal Nature, comes just months af- ter a national scientific committee recommended new guidelines for modifying embryos, easing blan- ket proscriptions but urging the technique be used only for dire medical problems. “We’ve always said in the past gene editing shouldn’t be done, mostly because it couldn’t be done safely,” said Richard Hynes, a can- cer researcher at the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology who SCIENTISTS REPAIR A RISKY MUTATION IN HUMAN EMBRYO MILESTONE IN RESEARCH Hope for Hereditary Ills, but Certain to Renew Ethical Concerns By PAM BELLUCK HANNAH MCKAY/REUTERS Prince Philip, 96, at his final solo event Wednesday before retiring from his official duties as Queen Elizabeth II’s consort. Page A5. A Different Sort of Brexit Embryos after gene editing and rounds of cell division. SHOUKHRAT MITALIPOV Continued on Page A14 Despite the disorder in Wash- ington — with a revolving door at the White House and roadblocks on Capitol Hill — Wall Street and corporate America are booming. The disconnect was evident Wednesday, as the Dow Jones in- dustrial average passed the 22,000 mark, a new high. At the same time, blue chips like Apple, Caterpillar and U.S. Steel have all reported strong earnings in re- cent weeks that surpassed ana- lysts’ forecasts. “None of the soap opera in Washington matters,” said Frank Sullivan, chief executive of RPM International, a Cleveland-based maker of specialty coatings and sealants like Rust-Oleum. “No- body in business cares about who talked to who in Russia.” What does matter, Mr. Sullivan said, is stronger global demand in heavy industries like mining and oil and gas, a weaker dollar that helps exporters, and a lighter reg- ulatory touch by the new adminis- tration. The initial stock market rally that followed Mr. Trump’s victory in November — the so-called Trump bump — was fueled by op- timism among investors that long- sought action on tax reform and infrastructure spending might fi- nally be at hand. Few analysts are so sanguine now, especially after Republicans could not agree last month on how to repeal the Affordable Care Act, Wall Street, Climbing Sharply, Skips Washington’s ‘Soap Opera’ By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ Continued on Page A14 WASHINGTON — The end came quickly for one of the costli- est covert action programs in the history of the C.I.A. During a White House briefing early last month, the C.I.A. direc- tor, Mike Pompeo, recommended to President Trump that he shut down a four-year-old effort to arm and train Syrian rebels. The presi- dent swiftly ended the program. The rebel army was by then a shell, hollowed out by more than a year of bombing by Russian planes and confined to ever- shrinking patches of Syria that government troops had not recon- quered. Critics in Congress had complained for years about the costs — more than $1 billion over the life of the program — and re- ports that some of the C.I.A.-sup- plied weapons had ended up in the hands of a rebel group tied to Al Qaeda further sapped political support for the program. While critics of Mr. Trump have argued that he ended the program to curry favor with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, there were in fact dim views of the effort in both the Trump and Obama White Houses — a rare confluence of opinion on national security pol- icy. The shuttering of the C.I.A. pro- gram, one of the most expensive efforts to arm and train rebels since the agency’s program ar- ming the mujahedeen in Af- ghanistan during the 1980s, has forced a reckoning over its suc- Under Trump, Shell of a Force In Syria Swiftly Lost C.I.A. Aid This article is by Mark Mazzetti, Adam Goldman and Michael S. Schmidt. Continued on Page A9 ELAINE THOMPSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Applicants lined up outside a job fair at an Amazon fulfillment center in Kent, Wash., held as part of the company’s first Jobs Day, intended to help fill 50,000 positions nationwide. Page B1. At Amazon, a Prime Day for Job Seekers By most standards, Austin Jia holds an enviable position. A ris- ing sophomore at Duke, Mr. Jia at- tends one of the top universities in the country, setting him up for suc- cess. But with his high G.P.A., nearly perfect SAT score and activities — debate team, tennis captain and state orchestra — Mr. Jia believes he should have had a fair shot at Harvard, Princeton, Columbia and the University of Pennsylva- nia. Those Ivy League colleges re- jected him after he applied in the fall of 2015. It was particularly disturbing, Mr. Jia said, when classmates with lower scores than his — but who were not Asian-American, like him — were admitted to those Ivy League institutions. “My gut reaction was that I was super disillusioned by how the whole system was set up,” Mr. Jia, 19, said. Students like Mr. Jia are now the subject of a lawsuit accusing Harvard of discriminating against Asian-Americans in admissions by imposing a penalty for their Asians Become Focus of Battle On Admissions By ANEMONA HARTOCOLLIS and STEPHANIE SAUL Continued on Page A11 WASHINGTON — Sometimes he just wants to know how he’s do- ing, like a maître d’ checking in af- ter a meal. “How’s this playing?” President Trump asked Fox News’s Sean Hannity over dinner in the private residence of the White House the other night, a few hours after visiting Wisconsin to announce a deal to create thou- sands of new factory jobs. Often he’s effusive. “I love you, Jim,” Mr. Trump told Jim DeMint, the former Heritage Foundation president, during a small gather- ing of conservative leaders in the Oval Office in March. And often he delivers. Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, pressed Mr. Trump for months to make the statement he issued last week saying transgender people would be barred from the military. “I’ve been to the White House I don’t know how many more times in the first six months this year than I was during the entire Bush ad- ministration,” Mr. Perkins said. Mr. Trump has strained rela- tions with a lot of people these days — members of his own party in Congress, the 55-plus percent of Americans who say they disap- prove of his performance, his at- torney general, his recently ousted communications director and chief of staff. But through all the drama and dismay, one group has never really wavered: the leaders of the conservative move- ment. This is no accident. Mr. Trump and members of his administra- tion have spent their first six months in office cultivating and strengthening ties to the move- ment’s key groups and players with a level of attention and care Bluster, Chaos and Warm Embrace of the Right By JEREMY W. PETERS As Allies Stray, Trump Keeps Conservative Groups Close Continued on Page A12 Indonesian islanders who have hunted whales for centuries bristle at out- siders’ efforts at conservation. PAGE A6 Regulating a Whaling Life The president signed legislation impos- ing sanctions on Russia and limiting his authority to lift them, but called some provisions unconstitutional. PAGE A8 INTERNATIONAL A4-9 Trump Approves Russia Bill Hasidic Jewish families are establishing outposts in unexpected places, unnerv- ing some residents there. PAGE A17 Jersey City’s Wary Welcome Basketball courts in Brooklyn were officially dedicated to the rapper, who was killed in 1997. PAGE A15 NEW YORK A15-17 Courts for the Notorious B.I.G. With the Trump administration set to accuse China of violations of intellectual property, Washington is likely to find global trade rules favor Beijing. PAGE B1 BUSINESS DAY B1-8 Taking On China Over Tech More than 3,500 workers will decide on unionization this week at a Nissan plant in Mississippi. PAGE B1 Racially Charged Union Vote Paris Saint-Germain is poised to more than double the soccer transfer record to acquire Barcelona’s Neymar. PAGE B9 SPORTSTHURSDAY B9-13 One Move, $263 Million With his new album, “Verisimilitude,” Tyshawn Sorey continues to defy stand- ard definitions of what a composer and musician is supposed to be. PAGE C2 ARTS C1-8 Jazz and Improvisation at Play R. James Woolsey PAGE A19 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A18-19 Striking out on his own, Matthew Williams, a former collaborator of Kanye West and Lady Gaga, uprooted his family and moved to Italy. PAGE D1 THURSDAY STYLES D1-6 Renaissance Man Ara Parseghian took over an Irish program that had been in decline for years, and led it to national titles in 1966 and 1973. He was 94. PAGE B14 OBITUARIES B14-16 A Notre Dame Football Savior The White House is removing hard- liners from the National Security Coun- cil, upsetting conservatives. PAGE A10 NATIONAL A10-14 A Shake-Up of the N.S.C. Late Edition VOL. CLXVI . . . No. 57,678 © 2017 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 2017 Today, clouds and sunshine, after- noon showers or thunderstorms, hu- mid, high 86. Tonight, patchy clouds, humid, low 72. Tomorrow, sunny, high 84. Weather map, Page A20. $2.50

IN HUMAN EMBRYO LEGAL MIGRATION A RISKY MUTATION A … · Jim, Mr. Trump told Jim DeMint, the former Heritage Foundation president, during a small gather-ing of conservative leaders

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Page 1: IN HUMAN EMBRYO LEGAL MIGRATION A RISKY MUTATION A … · Jim, Mr. Trump told Jim DeMint, the former Heritage Foundation president, during a small gather-ing of conservative leaders

C M Y K Nxxx,2017-08-03,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

U(D54G1D)y+%!$![!#!_

WASHINGTON — PresidentTrump embraced a proposal onWednesday to slash legal immi-gration to the United States in halfwithin a decade by sharply cur-tailing the ability of American citi-zens and legal residents to bringfamily members into the country.

The plan would enact the mostfar-reaching changes to the sys-tem of legal immigration in dec-ades and represents the presi-dent’s latest effort to stem the flowof newcomers to the UnitedStates. Since taking office, he hasbarred many visitors from selectMuslim-majority countries, lim-ited the influx of refugees, in-creased immigration arrests andpressed to build a wall along thesouthern border.

In asking Congress to curb legalimmigration, Mr. Trump intensi-fied a debate about national iden-tity, economic growth, workerfairness and American values thatanimated his campaign last year.Critics said the proposal would un-dercut the fundamental vision ofthe United States as a haven forthe poor and huddled masses,while the president and his alliessaid the country had taken in toomany low-skilled immigrants fortoo long to the detriment of Ameri-can workers.

“This legislation will not onlyrestore our competitive edge inthe 21st century, but it will restorethe sacred bonds of trust betweenAmerica and its citizens,” Mr.Trump said at a White Houseevent alongside two Republicansenators sponsoring the bill. “Thislegislation demonstrates our com-passion for struggling Americanfamilies who deserve an immigra-tion system that puts their needsfirst and that puts America first.”

In throwing his weight behind abill, Mr. Trump added one morelong-odds priority to a legislativeagenda already packed with themin the wake of the defeat of legisla-tion to repeal and replace Presi-dent Barack Obama’s health careprogram. The president has al-ready vowed to overhaul the taxcode and rebuild the nation’sroads, airports and other infra-structure.

But by endorsing legal immi-gration cuts, a move he has longsupported, Mr. Trump returned toa theme that has defined his shortpolitical career and excites hisconservative base at a time whenhis poll numbers continue to sink.Just 33 percent of Americans ap-proved of his performance in thelatest Quinnipiac University sur-vey, the lowest rating of his presi-dency, and down from 40 percent amonth ago.

Democrats and some Republi-cans quickly criticized the move.“Instead of catching criminals,Trump wants to tear apart com-munities and punish immigrantfamilies that are making valuablecontributions to our economy,”said Tom Perez, the chairman ofthe Democratic National Commit-

PRESIDENT BACKSA PLAN TO CURTAIL

LEGAL MIGRATION

50% CUTS BY 10TH YEAR

Less Emphasis on FamilyBonds and More onSkills and Talents

By PETER BAKER

Continued on Page A13

Scientists for the first time havesuccessfully edited genes in hu-man embryos to repair a commonand serious disease-causing mu-tation, producing apparentlyhealthy embryos, according to astudy published on Wednesday.

The research marks a majormilestone and, while a long wayfrom clinical use, it raises theprospect that gene editing mayone day protect babies from a va-riety of hereditary conditions.

But the achievement is also anexample of human genetic engi-neering, once feared and unthink-able, and is sure to renew ethicalconcerns that some might try todesign babies with certain traits,like greater intelligence or athleti-cism.

Scientists have long feared theunforeseen medical conse-quences of making inheritedchanges to human DNA. The cul-tural implications may be just asdisturbing: Some experts havewarned that unregulated geneticengineering may lead to a newform of eugenics, in which peoplewith means pay to have childrenwith enhanced traits even asthose with disabilities are deval-ued.

The study, published in the jour-nal Nature, comes just months af-ter a national scientific committeerecommended new guidelines formodifying embryos, easing blan-ket proscriptions but urging thetechnique be used only for diremedical problems.

“We’ve always said in the pastgene editing shouldn’t be done,mostly because it couldn’t be donesafely,” said Richard Hynes, a can-cer researcher at the Massachu-setts Institute of Technology who

SCIENTISTS REPAIRA RISKY MUTATION IN HUMAN EMBRYO

MILESTONE IN RESEARCH

Hope for Hereditary Ills,but Certain to Renew

Ethical Concerns

By PAM BELLUCK

HANNAH MCKAY/REUTERS

Prince Philip, 96, at his final solo event Wednesday before retiring from his official duties as Queen Elizabeth II’s consort. Page A5.A Different Sort of Brexit

Embryos after gene editingand rounds of cell division.

SHOUKHRAT MITALIPOV

Continued on Page A14

Despite the disorder in Wash-ington — with a revolving door atthe White House and roadblockson Capitol Hill — Wall Street andcorporate America are booming.

The disconnect was evidentWednesday, as the Dow Jones in-dustrial average passed the22,000 mark, a new high. At the

same time, blue chips like Apple,Caterpillar and U.S. Steel have allreported strong earnings in re-cent weeks that surpassed ana-lysts’ forecasts.

“None of the soap opera inWashington matters,” said FrankSullivan, chief executive of RPMInternational, a Cleveland-basedmaker of specialty coatings andsealants like Rust-Oleum. “No-

body in business cares about whotalked to who in Russia.”

What does matter, Mr. Sullivansaid, is stronger global demand inheavy industries like mining andoil and gas, a weaker dollar thathelps exporters, and a lighter reg-ulatory touch by the new adminis-tration.

The initial stock market rallythat followed Mr. Trump’s victory

in November — the so-calledTrump bump — was fueled by op-timism among investors that long-sought action on tax reform andinfrastructure spending might fi-nally be at hand.

Few analysts are so sanguinenow, especially after Republicanscould not agree last month on howto repeal the Affordable Care Act,

Wall Street, Climbing Sharply, Skips Washington’s ‘Soap Opera’By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ

Continued on Page A14

WASHINGTON — The endcame quickly for one of the costli-est covert action programs in thehistory of the C.I.A.

During a White House briefingearly last month, the C.I.A. direc-tor, Mike Pompeo, recommendedto President Trump that he shutdown a four-year-old effort to armand train Syrian rebels. The presi-dent swiftly ended the program.

The rebel army was by then ashell, hollowed out by more than ayear of bombing by Russianplanes and confined to ever-shrinking patches of Syria thatgovernment troops had not recon-quered. Critics in Congress hadcomplained for years about thecosts — more than $1 billion over

the life of the program — and re-ports that some of the C.I.A.-sup-plied weapons had ended up in thehands of a rebel group tied to AlQaeda further sapped politicalsupport for the program.

While critics of Mr. Trump haveargued that he ended the programto curry favor with PresidentVladimir V. Putin of Russia, therewere in fact dim views of the effortin both the Trump and ObamaWhite Houses — a rare confluenceof opinion on national security pol-icy.

The shuttering of the C.I.A. pro-gram, one of the most expensiveefforts to arm and train rebelssince the agency’s program ar-ming the mujahedeen in Af-ghanistan during the 1980s, hasforced a reckoning over its suc-

Under Trump, Shell of a ForceIn Syria Swiftly Lost C.I.A. Aid

This article is by Mark Mazzetti,Adam Goldman and Michael S.Schmidt.

Continued on Page A9

ELAINE THOMPSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Applicants lined up outside a job fair at an Amazon fulfillment center in Kent, Wash., held as partof the company’s first Jobs Day, intended to help fill 50,000 positions nationwide. Page B1.

At Amazon, a Prime Day for Job Seekers

By most standards, Austin Jiaholds an enviable position. A ris-ing sophomore at Duke, Mr. Jia at-tends one of the top universities inthe country, setting him up for suc-cess.

But with his high G.P.A., nearlyperfect SAT score and activities —debate team, tennis captain andstate orchestra — Mr. Jia believeshe should have had a fair shot atHarvard, Princeton, Columbiaand the University of Pennsylva-nia. Those Ivy League colleges re-jected him after he applied in thefall of 2015.

It was particularly disturbing,Mr. Jia said, when classmateswith lower scores than his — butwho were not Asian-American,like him — were admitted to thoseIvy League institutions.

“My gut reaction was that I wassuper disillusioned by how thewhole system was set up,” Mr. Jia,19, said.

Students like Mr. Jia are nowthe subject of a lawsuit accusingHarvard of discriminating againstAsian-Americans in admissionsby imposing a penalty for their

Asians BecomeFocus of BattleOn Admissions

By ANEMONA HARTOCOLLISand STEPHANIE SAUL

Continued on Page A11

WASHINGTON — Sometimeshe just wants to know how he’s do-ing, like a maître d’ checking in af-ter a meal. “How’s this playing?”President Trump asked FoxNews’s Sean Hannity over dinnerin the private residence of theWhite House the other night, a fewhours after visiting Wisconsin toannounce a deal to create thou-sands of new factory jobs.

Often he’s effusive. “I love you,Jim,” Mr. Trump told Jim DeMint,the former Heritage Foundationpresident, during a small gather-ing of conservative leaders in theOval Office in March.

And often he delivers. Tony

Perkins, president of the FamilyResearch Council, pressed Mr.Trump for months to make thestatement he issued last weeksaying transgender people wouldbe barred from the military. “I’vebeen to the White House I don’tknow how many more times in thefirst six months this year than Iwas during the entire Bush ad-ministration,” Mr. Perkins said.

Mr. Trump has strained rela-

tions with a lot of people thesedays — members of his own partyin Congress, the 55-plus percent ofAmericans who say they disap-prove of his performance, his at-torney general, his recentlyousted communications directorand chief of staff. But through allthe drama and dismay, one grouphas never really wavered: theleaders of the conservative move-ment.

This is no accident. Mr. Trumpand members of his administra-tion have spent their first sixmonths in office cultivating andstrengthening ties to the move-ment’s key groups and playerswith a level of attention and care

Bluster, Chaos and Warm Embrace of the RightBy JEREMY W. PETERS As Allies Stray, Trump

Keeps ConservativeGroups Close

Continued on Page A12

Indonesian islanders who have huntedwhales for centuries bristle at out-siders’ efforts at conservation. PAGE A6

Regulating a Whaling Life

The president signed legislation impos-ing sanctions on Russia and limiting hisauthority to lift them, but called someprovisions unconstitutional. PAGE A8

INTERNATIONAL A4-9

Trump Approves Russia Bill

Hasidic Jewish families are establishingoutposts in unexpected places, unnerv-ing some residents there. PAGE A17

Jersey City’s Wary Welcome

Basketball courts in Brooklyn wereofficially dedicated to the rapper, whowas killed in 1997. PAGE A15

NEW YORK A15-17

Courts for the Notorious B.I.G.

With the Trump administration set toaccuse China of violations of intellectualproperty, Washington is likely to findglobal trade rules favor Beijing. PAGE B1

BUSINESS DAY B1-8

Taking On China Over Tech

More than 3,500 workers will decide onunionization this week at a Nissan plantin Mississippi. PAGE B1

Racially Charged Union Vote

Paris Saint-Germain is poised to morethan double the soccer transfer recordto acquire Barcelona’s Neymar. PAGE B9

SPORTSTHURSDAY B9-13

One Move, $263 Million

With his new album, “Verisimilitude,”Tyshawn Sorey continues to defy stand-ard definitions of what a composer andmusician is supposed to be. PAGE C2

ARTS C1-8

Jazz and Improvisation at Play

R. James Woolsey PAGE A19

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A18-19

Striking out on his own, MatthewWilliams, a former collaborator ofKanye West and Lady Gaga, uprootedhis family and moved to Italy. PAGE D1

THURSDAY STYLES D1-6

Renaissance ManAra Parseghian took over an Irishprogram that had been in decline foryears, and led it to national titles in 1966and 1973. He was 94. PAGE B14

OBITUARIES B14-16

A Notre Dame Football Savior

The White House is removing hard-liners from the National Security Coun-cil, upsetting conservatives. PAGE A10

NATIONAL A10-14

A Shake-Up of the N.S.C.

Late Edition

VOL. CLXVI . . . No. 57,678 © 2017 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 2017

Today, clouds and sunshine, after-noon showers or thunderstorms, hu-mid, high 86. Tonight, patchy clouds,humid, low 72. Tomorrow, sunny,high 84. Weather map, Page A20.

$2.50