1
The possibility of a New York bagel still arouses yearning in trans- planted Easterners. THIS WEEKEND THE MAGAZINE California Bagel Quest By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ The same scene plays out in Robert DeMeola’s Midtown Man- hattan office every few weeks now — not that it ever gets any easier. In walks a director or sen- ior accountant, job offer in hand, threatening to leave for a hedge fund or big bank unless Mr. DeMeola can deliver a raise of 30 percent, sometimes more. “It used to be once a quarter. Now it’s every month,” said Mr. DeMeola, chief operating officer of CohnReznick, a national ac- counting, tax and advisory firm headquartered in New York. “They expect you to negotiate.” For much less senior workers at CohnReznick, even those with a college degree or other postsec- ondary education, it is another story. “We never like to lose someone good, but it’s easy to teach someone those skills, and there are others in the market- place who want those jobs,” Mr. DeMeola said. The very different treatment accorded employees at the very top versus those in the bottom or middle ranks has become a fact of life at corporate offices, law and accounting firms, and other Continued on Page A3 Gap Widening As Top Workers Reap the Raises By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT and MATT APUZZO WASHINGTON Govern- ment investigators said Friday that they had discovered classi- fied information on the private email account that Hillary Rod- ham Clinton used while secretary of state, stating unequivocally that those secrets never should have been stored outside of se- cure government computer sys- tems. Mrs. Clinton has said for months that she kept no classi- fied information on the private server that she set up in her house so she would not have to carry both a personal phone and a work phone. Her campaign said Friday that any government se- crets found on the server had been classified after the fact. But the inspectors general of the State Department and the na- tion’s intelligence agencies said the information they found was classified when it was sent and remains so now. Information is considered classified if its dis- closure would likely harm nation- al security, and such information can be sent or stored only on computer networks with special safeguards. “This classified information never should have been transmit- ted via an unclassified personal system,” Steve A. Linick, the State Department inspector gen- eral, said in a statement signed by him and I. Charles McCul- lough III, the inspector general for the intelligence community. The findings by the two in- spectors general raise new ques- tions about Mrs. Clinton’s use of her personal email at the State Department, a practice that since March has been criticized by her Republican adversaries as well as advocates of open govern- ment, and has made some Demo- crats uneasy. Voters, however, do not appear swayed by the issue, according to polls. In their joint statement, the in- spectors general said the classi- fied information had originated with the nation’s intelligence Clinton Emails Said to Contain Classified Data Unclear if She Knew They Were Secret Continued on Page A14 DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES In Nairobi on an official trip to Africa, President Obama dined between his half sister and his step-grandmother. Page A6. For President in Kenya, a Family Dinner This article is by Campbell Robertson, Richard Pérez-Peña and Alan Blinder. LAFAYETTE, La. — It was about 20 minutes into the 7 p.m. showing of “Trainwreck” when moviegoers heard a couple of pops, like a sound effect glitch. But when the sounds rang out again it became horribly clear that this was something else en- tirely. “From the reflection of the movie, the light, you could see his gun shining,” said Lucas Knep- per, who was seated in the same mostly empty row as the man in the short-sleeve, button-down shirt who had begun firing at the 20 or so people in the theater. “And then you could see the flash coming from the chamber.” Soon two young women lay fa- tally shot, nine other people were wounded, and with that, on Thursday night, Lafayette, which boasts of being the happiest city in the country, joined Chatta- nooga, Tenn.; Charleston, S.C.; Aurora, Colo.; Newtown, Conn., and so many others on the long list of cities scarred by gun vio- lence. The gunman, John Russell Houser, became the latest figure in a gallery of angry men with weapons who walked into a mov- ie theater, a church, a school or a workplace and shattered the lives of people there. Accounts from acquaintances, law enforcement officials and court records portrayed Mr. Houser, 59, of Phenix City, Ala., who also took his own life, as a man with a diffuse collection of troubles and grievances — per- sonal, political and social — who had a particular anger for wom- en, liberals, the government and a changing world. Because he had been accused of both domestic violence and so- liciting arson, though never suc- cessfully prosecuted, he was de- nied a permit to carry a con- cealed pistol. His family repeat- edly described him as violent and mentally ill; his mental health had been called into question go- ing back decades, and he spent time in a hospital receiving psy- chiatric care. He vandalized the house he was evicted from last year, and tampered with the gas lines in a way that could have caused a fire or explosion. Given his history, he should not have been allowed to own a gun, said Sheriff Heath D. Taylor of Russell County, where Mr. Hous- er lived. President Obama has said re- peatedly that each mass shooting cries out for stricter controls to keep mentally ill people and criminals from obtaining guns, Another Angry Face in the Gunmen’s Gallery Continued on Page A12 SILENCE AMONG CANDIDATES The recent mass shootings have not resonated on the presidential campaign trail. Page A11. By KEN BELSON SAN DIEGO — Junior Seau’s induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame was always going to be awkward, a chance to cele- brate a marquee player known for his bone-crushing career while not dwelling on the injuries that might have precipitated his death. When his induction was an- nounced at the Super Bowl, his family rejoiced and started think- ing about what to say at the cere- mony in Canton, Ohio, on Aug. 8. Seau had told them that if he ever made it, he wanted his daughter, Sydney, to introduce him. But the Hall of Fame does not plan to let Sydney or anyone else speak on Seau’s behalf. Instead, it will show a video commemorat- ing his career, while avoiding questions about his suicide in 2012 at age 43 and the subsequent diagnosis of traumatic brain inju- ry that doctors said they believed was brought on by hits to his head. Nor will the video mention the lawsuit that Seau’s family has filed against the N.F.L., which is trying to curb injuries in active players and address brain dis- ease among its almost 20,000 re- tired players. To the Hall of Fame officials, simply showing the video, which will not invoke Seau’s suicide, will keep the focus on his playing days. To his family still grappling with his death, though, the deci- sion diminishes the tribute to one of the sport’s best linebackers and a highly regarded figure in Southern California, where he grew up and played most of his career. “It’s frustrating because the in- duction is for my father and for the other players, but then to not be able to speak, it’s painful,” Sydney said. “I just want to give the speech he would have given. It wasn’t going to be about this mess. My speech was solely about him.” The Hall said Seau’s brain inju- ry and suicide had nothing to do with its decision to show only a video, but Seau’s death continues to haunt the N.F.L., which collab- orates with the Hall on the in- duction ceremony and for years denied any link between repeat- NO SUICIDE TALK AT N.F.L. FUNCTION Seau’s Family Is Denied Speech at Induction Continued on Page D6 DIGITALGLOBE VIA GOOGLE EARTH BROKE OUT El Chapo escaped the Altipla- no maximum-security prison this month. ESCAPED The drug kingpin’s first escape was from Puente Grande prison in 2001. 3 OF A KIND The Matamoros lockup has an almost identical layout to the other two. By WILLIAM NEUMAN MEXICO CITY — Ever since the powerful drug lord known as El Chapo escaped from a maxi- mum-security prison through a mile-long tunnel that opened right into the shower of his cell, Mexico has been wondering how his accomplices got their hands on the blueprints to operate with such pinpoint precision. The answer could be quite sim- ple: They may have had them for years. It turns out that the prison is a virtual replica of another lockup that El Chapo, whose real name is Joaquín Guzmán Loera, broke out of in 2001 in an almost equally audacious escape. In other words, he essentially broke out of the same prison twice. The authorities believe that for his first escape — by some ac- counts, he sneaked out in a laun- dry cart — Mr. Guzmán had the help of a top prison security offi- cial who went on to become a trusted member of his Sinaloa cartel. Investigators think that the confederate, Dámaso López, may have taken a copy of the blue- prints for the other prison when he left his job around the time of Mr. Guzmán’s earlier escape, a senior Mexican law enforcement official said. And since the layout of the two prisons is virtually identical, those blueprints could have come in handy when planning this month’s breakout. The official said that Mr. López was now a prime suspect in the hunt for the people who planned and carried out this month’s es- cape. Beyond the possible blue- prints, Mr. López is believed to have close knowledge of the lay- out of the prisons and security procedures. The tunnel makers may have also had the GPS co- ordinates for Mr. Guzmán’s Prison ‘Chapo’ Fled Has Replicas (He Escaped One of Them, Too) Continued on Page A6 Layouts Virtual Match — Breakout in ’01 Set Stage Scientists have been able to see the atmos- phere of Pluto, backlit by the sun, in photos from the New Horizons mis- sion. They found molecules in its atmosphere have fallen by half in two years. PAGE A13 NATIONAL A11-16 Shining More Light on Pluto American officials said they would not object if Jonathan J. Pollard, an Ameri- can convicted of spying for Israel, was granted parole in November. PAGE A10 INTERNATIONAL A4-10 U.S. Won’t Block Release of Spy The editor and cultural critic had long ties with Interview magazine, The New Yorker and Vanity Fair. She was 63. PAGE B8 OBITUARIES B7-8 Ingrid Sischy Is Dead Concern that computer hackers could gain control of its vehicles led Fiat Chrysler to a first-of-its-kind recall to re- pair a computer vulnerability. PAGE B1 BUSINESS DAY B1-6 A Car Recall, for Software As Bernie Sanders runs for president, his Brooklyn background is a point of pride to some in the borough. PAGE A15 Sanders Is a Brooklyn Boy To try to pre-empt an attack, Turkey carried out airstrikes on three Islamic State targets inside Syria. PAGE A10 Turkey Strikes ISIS in Syria A new drug that can sharply lower cho- lesterol is likely to heat up the debate on fast-rising drug prices. PAGE B1 Costly Cholesterol Remedy In the Alps, Chris Froome’s lead was cut by 32 seconds going into the next-to-last stage of the Tour de France. PAGE D5 SPORTSSATURDAY D1-6 Steeper Climb for Tour Leader Joe Nocera PAGE A21 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21 A former writer for “The Daily Show” recalled a debate he and the host, Jon Stewart, had in 2011 about race. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-7 A ‘Daily Show’ Dispute on Race By MARK MAZZETTI and DAVID E. SANGER WASHINGTON — American officials are concerned that the Chinese government could use the stolen records of millions of federal workers and contractors to piece together the identities of intelligence officers secretly posted in China over the years. The potential exposure of the intelligence officers could pre- vent a large cadre of American spies from ever being posted abroad again, current and former intelligence officials said. It would be a significant setback for intelligence agencies already concerned that a recent data breach at the Office of Personnel Management is a major windfall for Chinese espionage efforts. In the days after the breach of records of millions of federal workers and contractors became public last month, some officials in the Obama administration said that the theft was not as damag- ing as it might have been because the Chinese hackers did not gain access to the identities of Ameri- can undercover spies. The records of the C.I.A. and some other intelligence agencies, they said, were never part of the personnel office’s databases, and were protected during the breach. Officials said intelligence agencies were taking steps to try to mitigate the damage, but it is unclear what they are specifi- cally doing. But intelligence and congres- sional officials now say there is great concern that the hackers — who government officials are now reluctant to say publicly were working for the Chinese government — could still use the vast trove of information to iden- tify American spies by a process of elimination. By combining the stolen data with information they U.S. FEARS DATA TAKEN IN HACKING MAY EXPOSE SPIES PROCESS OF ELIMINATION Trove for China Could Drive Officers From Overseas Postings Continued on Page A10 The space housing the Four Seasons restaurant will be taken over by young trendsetters. PAGE A17 NEW YORK A17-19 A Dining Space’s New Faces VOL. CLXIV ... No. 56,938 © 2015 The New York Times NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 25, 2015 Late Edition Today, sun, low humidity, high 86. Tonight, variably cloudy, a shower late, low 71. Tomorrow, more hu- mid, an afternoon thunderstorm, high 86. Weather map, Page C8. $2.50 U(D54G1D)y+@!"!]!#!,

NO SUICIDE TALK Another Angry Face in the Gunmen’s Gallery · 7/25/2015  · Another Angry Face in the Gunmen’s Gallery Continued on Page A12 SILENCE AMONG CANDIDATES The recent

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Page 1: NO SUICIDE TALK Another Angry Face in the Gunmen’s Gallery · 7/25/2015  · Another Angry Face in the Gunmen’s Gallery Continued on Page A12 SILENCE AMONG CANDIDATES The recent

The possibility ofa New York bagelstill arousesyearning in trans-planted Easterners.

THIS WEEKEND

THE MAGAZINE

CaliforniaBagel Quest

By NELSON D. SCHWARTZ

The same scene plays out inRobert DeMeola’s Midtown Man-hattan office every few weeksnow — not that it ever gets anyeasier. In walks a director or sen-ior accountant, job offer in hand,threatening to leave for a hedgefund or big bank unless Mr.DeMeola can deliver a raise of 30percent, sometimes more.

“It used to be once a quarter.Now it’s every month,” said Mr.DeMeola, chief operating officerof CohnReznick, a national ac-counting, tax and advisory firmheadquartered in New York.“They expect you to negotiate.”

For much less senior workersat CohnReznick, even those witha college degree or other postsec-ondary education, it is anotherstory. “We never like to losesomeone good, but it’s easy toteach someone those skills, andthere are others in the market-place who want those jobs,” Mr.DeMeola said.

The very different treatmentaccorded employees at the verytop versus those in the bottom ormiddle ranks has become a factof life at corporate offices, lawand accounting firms, and other

Continued on Page A3

Gap Widening

As Top Workers

Reap the Raises

By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDTand MATT APUZZO

WASHINGTON — Govern-ment investigators said Fridaythat they had discovered classi-fied information on the privateemail account that Hillary Rod-ham Clinton used while secretaryof state, stating unequivocallythat those secrets never shouldhave been stored outside of se-cure government computer sys-tems.

Mrs. Clinton has said formonths that she kept no classi-fied information on the privateserver that she set up in herhouse so she would not have tocarry both a personal phone anda work phone. Her campaign saidFriday that any government se-crets found on the server hadbeen classified after the fact.

But the inspectors general ofthe State Department and the na-tion’s intelligence agencies saidthe information they found wasclassified when it was sent andremains so now. Information isconsidered classified if its dis-closure would likely harm nation-al security, and such informationcan be sent or stored only oncomputer networks with specialsafeguards.

“This classified informationnever should have been transmit-ted via an unclassified personalsystem,” Steve A. Linick, theState Department inspector gen-eral, said in a statement signedby him and I. Charles McCul-lough III, the inspector generalfor the intelligence community.

The findings by the two in-spectors general raise new ques-tions about Mrs. Clinton’s use ofher personal email at the StateDepartment, a practice that sinceMarch has been criticized by herRepublican adversaries as wellas advocates of open govern-ment, and has made some Demo-crats uneasy. Voters, however, donot appear swayed by the issue,according to polls.

In their joint statement, the in-spectors general said the classi-fied information had originatedwith the nation’s intelligence

Clinton EmailsSaid to ContainClassified Data

Unclear if She Knew

They Were Secret

Continued on Page A14

DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES

In Nairobi on an official trip to Africa, President Obama dined between his half sister and his step-grandmother. Page A6.

For President in Kenya, a Family Dinner

This article is by CampbellRobertson, Richard Pérez-Peñaand Alan Blinder.

LAFAYETTE, La. — It wasabout 20 minutes into the 7 p.m.showing of “Trainwreck” whenmoviegoers heard a couple ofpops, like a sound effect glitch.But when the sounds rang outagain it became horribly clearthat this was something else en-tirely.

“From the reflection of themovie, the light, you could see hisgun shining,” said Lucas Knep-per, who was seated in the samemostly empty row as the man inthe short-sleeve, button-downshirt who had begun firing at the20 or so people in the theater.“And then you could see the flashcoming from the chamber.”

Soon two young women lay fa-tally shot, nine other people werewounded, and with that, onThursday night, Lafayette, whichboasts of being the happiest city

in the country, joined Chatta-nooga, Tenn.; Charleston, S.C.;Aurora, Colo.; Newtown, Conn.,and so many others on the longlist of cities scarred by gun vio-lence. The gunman, John RussellHouser, became the latest figurein a gallery of angry men withweapons who walked into a mov-ie theater, a church, a school or aworkplace and shattered thelives of people there.

Accounts from acquaintances,law enforcement officials andcourt records portrayed Mr.Houser, 59, of Phenix City, Ala.,who also took his own life, as aman with a diffuse collection oftroubles and grievances — per-sonal, political and social — whohad a particular anger for wom-en, liberals, the government and

a changing world. Because he had been accused

of both domestic violence and so-liciting arson, though never suc-cessfully prosecuted, he was de-nied a permit to carry a con-cealed pistol. His family repeat-edly described him as violent andmentally ill; his mental healthhad been called into question go-ing back decades, and he spenttime in a hospital receiving psy-chiatric care. He vandalized thehouse he was evicted from lastyear, and tampered with the gaslines in a way that could havecaused a fire or explosion.

Given his history, he should nothave been allowed to own a gun,said Sheriff Heath D. Taylor ofRussell County, where Mr. Hous-er lived.

President Obama has said re-peatedly that each mass shootingcries out for stricter controls tokeep mentally ill people andcriminals from obtaining guns,

Another Angry Face in the Gunmen’s Gallery

Continued on Page A12

SILENCE AMONG CANDIDATES

The recent mass shootings havenot resonated on the presidentialcampaign trail. Page A11.

By KEN BELSON

SAN DIEGO — Junior Seau’sinduction into the Pro FootballHall of Fame was always going tobe awkward, a chance to cele-brate a marquee player knownfor his bone-crushing careerwhile not dwelling on the injuriesthat might have precipitated hisdeath.

When his induction was an-nounced at the Super Bowl, hisfamily rejoiced and started think-ing about what to say at the cere-mony in Canton, Ohio, on Aug. 8.Seau had told them that if he evermade it, he wanted his daughter,Sydney, to introduce him.

But the Hall of Fame does notplan to let Sydney or anyone elsespeak on Seau’s behalf. Instead,it will show a video commemorat-ing his career, while avoidingquestions about his suicide in2012 at age 43 and the subsequentdiagnosis of traumatic brain inju-ry that doctors said they believedwas brought on by hits to hishead.

Nor will the video mention thelawsuit that Seau’s family hasfiled against the N.F.L., which istrying to curb injuries in activeplayers and address brain dis-ease among its almost 20,000 re-tired players.

To the Hall of Fame officials,simply showing the video, whichwill not invoke Seau’s suicide,will keep the focus on his playingdays. To his family still grapplingwith his death, though, the deci-sion diminishes the tribute to oneof the sport’s best linebackersand a highly regarded figure inSouthern California, where hegrew up and played most of hiscareer.

“It’s frustrating because the in-duction is for my father and forthe other players, but then to notbe able to speak, it’s painful,”Sydney said. “I just want to givethe speech he would have given.It wasn’t going to be about thismess. My speech was solelyabout him.”

The Hall said Seau’s brain inju-ry and suicide had nothing to dowith its decision to show only avideo, but Seau’s death continuesto haunt the N.F.L., which collab-orates with the Hall on the in-duction ceremony and for yearsdenied any link between repeat-

NO SUICIDE TALKAT N.F.L. FUNCTION

Seau’s Family Is Denied

Speech at Induction

Continued on Page D6

DIGITALGLOBE VIA GOOGLE EARTH

BROKE OUT El Chapo escaped the Altipla-no maximum-security prison this month.

ESCAPED The drug kingpin’s first escapewas from Puente Grande prison in 2001.

3 OF A KIND The Matamoros lockup has analmost identical layout to the other two.

By WILLIAM NEUMAN

MEXICO CITY — Ever sincethe powerful drug lord known asEl Chapo escaped from a maxi-mum-security prison through amile-long tunnel that openedright into the shower of his cell,Mexico has been wondering howhis accomplices got their handson the blueprints to operate withsuch pinpoint precision.

The answer could be quite sim-ple: They may have had them foryears.

It turns out that the prison is a

virtual replica of another lockupthat El Chapo, whose real nameis Joaquín Guzmán Loera, brokeout of in 2001 in an almost equallyaudacious escape.

In other words, he essentiallybroke out of the same prisontwice.

The authorities believe that forhis first escape — by some ac-counts, he sneaked out in a laun-dry cart — Mr. Guzmán had thehelp of a top prison security offi-cial who went on to become atrusted member of his Sinaloacartel.

Investigators think that the

confederate, Dámaso López, mayhave taken a copy of the blue-prints for the other prison whenhe left his job around the time ofMr. Guzmán’s earlier escape, asenior Mexican law enforcementofficial said.

And since the layout of the two

prisons is virtually identical,those blueprints could have comein handy when planning thismonth’s breakout.

The official said that Mr. Lópezwas now a prime suspect in thehunt for the people who plannedand carried out this month’s es-cape. Beyond the possible blue-prints, Mr. López is believed tohave close knowledge of the lay-out of the prisons and securityprocedures. The tunnel makersmay have also had the GPS co-ordinates for Mr. Guzmán’s

Prison ‘Chapo’ Fled Has Replicas (He Escaped One of Them, Too)

Continued on Page A6

Layouts Virtual Match

— Breakout in ’01

Set Stage

Scientists havebeen able tosee the atmos-phere of Pluto,backlit by thesun, in photosfrom the NewHorizons mis-sion. Theyfound molecules in its atmosphere havefallen by half in two years. PAGE A13

NATIONAL A11-16

Shining More Light on PlutoAmerican officials said they would notobject if Jonathan J. Pollard, an Ameri-can convicted of spying for Israel, wasgranted parole in November. PAGE A10

INTERNATIONAL A4-10

U.S.Won’t BlockRelease ofSpyThe editor andcultural critichad long tieswith Interviewmagazine, TheNew Yorkerand VanityFair. She was63. PAGE B8

OBITUARIES B7-8

Ingrid Sischy Is DeadConcern that computer hackers couldgain control of its vehicles led FiatChrysler to a first-of-its-kind recall to re-pair a computer vulnerability. PAGE B1

BUSINESS DAY B1-6

A Car Recall, for Software

As Bernie Sanders runs for president,his Brooklyn background is a point ofpride to some in the borough. PAGE A15

Sanders Is a Brooklyn Boy

To try to pre-empt an attack, Turkeycarried out airstrikes on three IslamicState targets inside Syria. PAGE A10

Turkey Strikes ISIS in SyriaA new drug that can sharply lower cho-lesterol is likely to heat up the debate onfast-rising drug prices. PAGE B1

Costly Cholesterol Remedy

In the Alps, Chris Froome’s lead was cutby 32 seconds going into the next-to-laststage of the Tour de France. PAGE D5

SPORTSSATURDAY D1-6

Steeper Climb for Tour Leader

Joe Nocera PAGE A21

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21

A former writer for “The Daily Show”recalled a debate he and the host, JonStewart, had in 2011 about race. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-7

A ‘Daily Show’ Dispute on Race

By MARK MAZZETTI and DAVID E. SANGER

WASHINGTON — Americanofficials are concerned that theChinese government could usethe stolen records of millions offederal workers and contractorsto piece together the identities ofintelligence officers secretlyposted in China over the years.

The potential exposure of theintelligence officers could pre-vent a large cadre of Americanspies from ever being postedabroad again, current and formerintelligence officials said. Itwould be a significant setback forintelligence agencies alreadyconcerned that a recent databreach at the Office of PersonnelManagement is a major windfallfor Chinese espionage efforts.

In the days after the breach ofrecords of millions of federalworkers and contractors becamepublic last month, some officialsin the Obama administration saidthat the theft was not as damag-ing as it might have been becausethe Chinese hackers did not gainaccess to the identities of Ameri-can undercover spies.

The records of the C.I.A. andsome other intelligence agencies,they said, were never part of thepersonnel office’s databases, andwere protected during thebreach. Officials said intelligenceagencies were taking steps to tryto mitigate the damage, but it isunclear what they are specifi-cally doing.

But intelligence and congres-sional officials now say there isgreat concern that the hackers —who government officials arenow reluctant to say publiclywere working for the Chinesegovernment — could still use thevast trove of information to iden-tify American spies by a processof elimination. By combining thestolen data with information they

U.S. FEARS DATATAKEN IN HACKINGMAY EXPOSE SPIES

PROCESS OF ELIMINATION

Trove for China Could

Drive Officers From

Overseas Postings

Continued on Page A10

The space housing the Four Seasonsrestaurant will be taken over by youngtrendsetters. PAGE A17

NEW YORK A17-19

A Dining Space’s New Faces

VOL. CLXIV . . . No. 56,938 © 2015 The New York Times NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 25, 2015

Late EditionToday, sun, low humidity, high 86.Tonight, variably cloudy, a showerlate, low 71. Tomorrow, more hu-mid, an afternoon thunderstorm,high 86. Weather map, Page C8.

$2.50

U(D54G1D)y+@!"!]!#!,

C M Y K Nxxx,2015-07-25,A,001,Bs-BK,E2