1
U(D54G1D)y+[!]!$!$!" As Thanksgiving approaches, millions of Americans are weigh- ing the risk of pandemic travel against the yearning to visit friends and family. But one group seems all but certain to be head- ing home in large numbers just in time for turkey and holiday gath- erings: college students. Since the start of the fall semes- ter, most universities have planned to end in-person classes before Thanksgiving and require students to finish the term re- motely, partly to avoid an ex- pected wave of cold-weather in- fections. That means that in a cou- ple of weeks, hundreds of thou- sands of students will be streaming back to hometowns un- til the spring semester begins. So what are colleges and uni- versities doing to reduce the chances that those students might carry the coronavirus with them? As has been true with so much of the nation’s pandemic re- sponse, the answer is a patchwork of policies, with a minority of schools mandating that students test negative for the coronavirus before they can leave campus — and many more offering little more than optional testing and ad- vice. Indiana University in Bloom- ington — where dozens of frater- nity and sorority houses had to quarantine in September — will open its weekly surveillance test- ing to all of the 42,000 students liv- ing on or near campus. But the testing will be voluntary for most. Pennsylvania State University where off-campus parties Experts Warn of ‘Time Bombs’ As Students Travel for Holiday By SHAWN HUBLER Virus Likely to Spread at Family Gatherings Continued on Page A6 WILMINGTON, Del. — Corona- virus cases surged to a record on Monday, with the United States now averaging 111,000 cases each day for the past week, a grim mile- stone amid rising hospitalizations and deaths that cast a shadow on positive news about the effective- ness of a potential vaccine. As the number of infected Americans passed 10 million and governors struggled to manage the pandemic, President-elect Jo- seph R. Biden Jr. tried on Monday to use his bully pulpit — the only tool at his disposal until he re- places President Trump in 72 days — to plead for Americans to set aside the bitterness of the 2020 election and wear a mask. “It doesn’t matter who you voted for, where you stood before Election Day,” Mr. Biden said in Delaware after announcing a Covid-19 advisory board charged with preparing for quick action once he is inaugurated. “It doesn’t matter your party, your point of view. We can save tens of thou- sands of lives if everyone would just wear a mask for the next few months. Not Democratic or Re- publican lives — American lives.” Hours before Mr. Biden’s re- marks, the drug maker Pfizer an- nounced that an early analysis of its coronavirus vaccine trial sug- gested the vaccine was robustly effective in preventing Covid-19, a promising development that sent stock prices soaring. The world has waited anxiously for any pos- itive sign that there will be an end to the pandemic that has killed more than 1.2 million people worldwide. “It’s extraordinary,” Dr. Antho- ny S. Fauci, the government’s top infectious disease expert, said on CNN. “It is really a big deal.” Mr. Biden called the develop- ment “excellent news” but cau- tioned that the country was still BIDEN CALLS FOR UNITED FRONT AS VIRUS RAGES Urges All Americans to Wear Masks as Hospitals Fill Up By MICHAEL D. SHEAR President-elect Joseph R. Bi- den Jr. moved to take charge. AMR ALFIKY/THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A7 The drug maker Pfizer an- nounced on Monday that an early analysis of its coronavirus vac- cine trial suggested the vaccine was robustly effective in prevent- ing Covid-19, a promising develop- ment as the world has waited anx- iously for any positive news about a pandemic that has killed more than 1.2 million people. Pfizer, which developed the vac- cine with the German drug maker BioNTech, released only sparse details from its clinical trial, based on the first formal review of the data by an outside panel of ex- perts. The company said that the anal- ysis found that the vaccine was more than 90 percent effective in preventing the disease among trial volunteers who had no evi- dence of prior coronavirus infec- tion. If the results hold up, that lev- el of protection would put it on par with highly effective childhood vaccines for diseases such as measles. No serious safety con- cerns have been observed, the company said. Pfizer plans to ask the Food and Drug Administration for emer- gency authorization of the two- dose vaccine later this month, af- ter it has collected the recom- mended two months of safety data. By the end of the year it will have manufactured enough doses to immunize 15 to 20 million peo- ple, company executives have said. “This is a historical moment,” said Kathrin Jansen, a senior vice president and the head of vaccine research and development at Pfi- zer. “This was a devastating situa- tion, a pandemic, and we have em- barked on a path and a goal that nobody ever has achieved — to come up with a vaccine within a year.” The news comes just days after Joseph R. Biden Jr. clinched a vic- tory over President Trump in the presidential election. Mr. Trump had repeatedly hinted a vaccine would be ready before Election Day, Nov. 3. This fall, Pfizer’s chief executive, Dr. Albert Bourla, fre- quently claimed that the company could have some indication of whether the vaccine worked by October, something that did not come to pass. Stocks surged on the news. The S&P 500 gained 1.2 percent Mon- day, ending the day just short of a high reached in early September. Shares of companies that stand to gain most from the return of nor- mal activity — like airlines and shopping mall operators Vaccine Is Over 90% Effective, Pfizer’s Early Data Says This article is by Katie Thomas, David Gelles and Carl Zimmer. Continued on Page A5 MARK ABRAMSON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES KATHRYN GAMBLE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES From top, diners in New York, ballet students in Iowa and a church service in Texas. The nation is averaging 111,000 new coronavirus cases a day, and over 10 million Americans have been infected. JOEL ANGEL JUAREZ FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Leading Republicans rallied on Monday around President Trump’s refusal to concede the election, declining to challenge the false narrative that it was stol- en from him or to recognize Presi- dent-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory even as party divisions burst into public view. Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the top Republican in Congress, threw his support be- hind Mr. Trump in a sharply worded speech on the Senate floor. He declared that Mr. Trump was “100 percent within his rights” to turn to the legal system to challenge the outcome and hammered Democrats for expect- ing the president to concede. In his first public remarks since Mr. Biden was declared the win- ner, Mr. McConnell celebrated the success of Republicans who won election to the House and the Sen- ate. But in the next breath, he treated the outcome of the presi- dential election — based on the same ballots that elected those Republicans — as unknown. “President Trump is 100 per- cent within his rights to look into allegations of irregularities and weigh his legal options,” said Mr. McConnell, the majority leader. “Let’s not have any lectures about how the president should immedi- ately, cheerfully accept prelimi- nary election results from the same characters who just spent four years refusing to accept the validity of the last election.” In Georgia, where the continu- ing vote count showed Mr. Trump losing the state’s electoral votes, Senators David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler — both Republicans now facing January runoffs to keep their seats — took the extraordi- nary step of calling on the state’s top election official to resign. De- claring Georgia’s handling of the election an “embarrassment” and citing vague “failures” in an echo of Mr. Trump’s evidence-free charges of stolen votes, they said Brad Raffensperger, the Republi- can secretary of state, had failed the state. Mr. Raffensperger bluntly re- jected their calls, declaring the senators’ claims “laughable” and suggesting that they were merely disgruntled because Mr. Trump might lose and their jobs were on the line. The intraparty feuding under- McConnell Impugns Results That Gave G.O.P. Wins, Too By NICHOLAS FANDOS and EMILY COCHRANE Continued on Page A19 WASHINGTON — President Trump fired Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper on Monday, upend- ing the military’s leadership at a time when Mr. Trump’s refusal to concede the election has created a rocky and potentially precarious transition. Mr. Trump announced the deci- sion on Twitter, writing in an abrupt post that Mr. Esper had been “terminated.” The president wrote that he was appointing Christopher C. Miller, whom he described as the “highly respected” director of the Na- tional Counterterrorism Center, to be the acting defense secretary. Mr. Miller will be the fourth offi- cial to lead the Pentagon under Mr. Trump. Two White House officials said later on Monday that Mr. Trump was not finished, and that Christo- pher A. Wray, the F.B.I. director, and Gina Haspel, the C.I.A. direc- tor, could be next in line to be fired. Removing these senior officials — in effect decapitating the nation’s national security bureaucracy — would be without parallel by an outgoing president who has just lost re-election. Democrats and national securi- ty veterans said it was a volatile move in the uncertain time be- tween administrations, particu- larly by a president who has made clear that he does not want to give up power and that he would be re- asserting his waning authority over the most powerful agencies of the government. Trump Fires Esper Amid Fears Of a Purge at Security Agencies This article is by Helene Cooper, Eric Schmitt and Maggie Ha- berman. F.B.I. and C.I.A. Heads Could Be Next to Go Continued on Page A21 WASHINGTON — President- elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. makes no secret of the speed with which he plans to bury “America First” as a guiding principle of the nation’s foreign policy. He says he will re-enter the Iran nuclear deal, assuming the Irani- ans are willing to reverse course and observe its limits. He would sign up for another five years of the only surviving nuclear arms treaty with Russia and double down on American commitments to NATO after four years of threats from President Trump to withdraw from the alli- ance, which guided the West through the Cold War. At the same time, Mr. Biden says he will make Russia “pay a price” for what he says have been disruptions and attempts to influ- ence elections — including his own. But mostly, Mr. Biden said in a statement to The New York Times, he wants to bring an end to a slogan that came to define a United States that built walls and made working with allies an after- thought — and, in Mr. Biden’s view, undermined any chance of forging a common international approach to fighting a pandemic that has cost more than 1.2 million lives. “Tragically, the one place Don- ald Trump has made ‘America First’ is his failed response to the coronavirus: We’re 4 percent of the world’s population, yet have had 20 percent of the deaths,” Mr. Biden said days before the elec- tion. “On top of Trump embracing Looking to End ‘America First’ And Re-engage With the World By DAVID E. SANGER Biden’s Strategies on a Global Approach Continued on Page A16 The responses to deadly recent attacks in Austria and France show a complex relationship with Islam. PAGE A8 INTERNATIONAL A8-10 Europe’s Politics of Terrorism The ways that our four-legged friends grow and age may provide potentially useful similarities with people. PAGE D1 SCIENCE TIMES D1-8 Seeking Answers in Dog Years With control of the Senate unclear, liberal Democrats are trying to figure out how to achieve policy goals through a Biden White House. PAGE A11 ELECTION 2020 A11-20 Progressives Mobilize Major indexes climbed steadily on news of Pfizer’s heartening progress on a coronavirus vaccine and Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s victory. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-6 Markets Heave Sigh of Relief Dave Grohl of the Foo Fighters and Nandi Bushell, a 10-year-old prodigy, have spread joy on social media. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-6 One Very Epic Drum Battle Many of President Trump’s 100-plus rollbacks of environmental regulations can be reversed, but damage to the climate may be forever. PAGE A13 Trump’s Climate Legacy The Israeli prime minister has made closeness to President Trump central to his political appeal. Things will change in a Biden administration. PAGE A17 A Comedown for Netanyahu The United Arab Emirates has loosened alcohol limits and reduced the sway of Islamic law over foreigners. PAGE A10 Emirates Overhauls Laws Some lawyers at firms that have filed election lawsuits said they feared un- dermining the system. PAGE B1 Trump’s Suits Sow Discomfort Tiger Woods, despite his back pain, is expected to contend for a record-tying sixth Masters victory. PAGE B7 SPORTSTUESDAY B7-9 Defiantly Dominant at Augusta Acousticians monitor the ocean’s mys- terious realms for habitat clues thou- sands of feet below the surface. PAGE D1 Soundscapes of the Deep A researcher found overlooked evidence that Alexander Hamilton bought, sold and personally owned slaves. PAGE C1 History’s Eyes on Him, Opened Bret Stephens PAGE A22 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A22-23 Late Edition VOL. CLXX .... No. 58,873 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2020 BARR WADES IN The attorney general freed prosecutors to open voter fraud inquiries. PAGE A19 Today, partly cloudy after patchy fog, warm, high 72. Tonight, mostly cloudy, mild, low 62. Tomorrow, mostly cloudy, rain later, high 70. Weather map appears on Page B12. $3.00

U(D54G1D)y+[!]!$!$!...2020/11/10  · C M Y K x,2020-11-10,A,001,Bsx Nx -4C,E1 U(D54G1D)y+[!]!$!$!" As Thanksgiving approaches, millions of Americans are weigh-ing the risk of pandemic

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    U(D54G1D)y+[!]!$!$!"

    As Thanksgiving approaches,millions of Americans are weigh-ing the risk of pandemic travelagainst the yearning to visitfriends and family. But one groupseems all but certain to be head-ing home in large numbers just intime for turkey and holiday gath-erings: college students.

    Since the start of the fall semes-ter, most universities haveplanned to end in-person classesbefore Thanksgiving and requirestudents to finish the term re-motely, partly to avoid an ex-pected wave of cold-weather in-fections. That means that in a cou-ple of weeks, hundreds of thou-sands of students will bestreaming back to hometowns un-til the spring semester begins.

    So what are colleges and uni-versities doing to reduce thechances that those students mightcarry the coronavirus with them?

    As has been true with so muchof the nation’s pandemic re-sponse, the answer is a patchworkof policies, with a minority ofschools mandating that studentstest negative for the coronavirusbefore they can leave campus —and many more offering littlemore than optional testing and ad-vice.

    Indiana University in Bloom-ington — where dozens of frater-nity and sorority houses had toquarantine in September — willopen its weekly surveillance test-ing to all of the 42,000 students liv-ing on or near campus. But thetesting will be voluntary for most.

    Pennsylvania State University— where off-campus parties

    Experts Warn of ‘Time Bombs’As Students Travel for Holiday

    By SHAWN HUBLER Virus Likely to Spreadat Family Gatherings

    Continued on Page A6

    WILMINGTON, Del. — Corona-virus cases surged to a record onMonday, with the United Statesnow averaging 111,000 cases eachday for the past week, a grim mile-stone amid rising hospitalizationsand deaths that cast a shadow onpositive news about the effective-ness of a potential vaccine.

    As the number of infectedAmericans passed 10 million andgovernors struggled to managethe pandemic, President-elect Jo-seph R. Biden Jr. tried on Mondayto use his bully pulpit — the onlytool at his disposal until he re-places President Trump in 72 days— to plead for Americans to setaside the bitterness of the 2020election and wear a mask.

    “It doesn’t matter who youvoted for, where you stood before

    Election Day,” Mr. Biden said inDelaware after announcing aCovid-19 advisory board chargedwith preparing for quick actiononce he is inaugurated. “It doesn’tmatter your party, your point ofview. We can save tens of thou-sands of lives if everyone wouldjust wear a mask for the next fewmonths. Not Democratic or Re-publican lives — American lives.”

    Hours before Mr. Biden’s re-marks, the drug maker Pfizer an-nounced that an early analysis ofits coronavirus vaccine trial sug-gested the vaccine was robustlyeffective in preventing Covid-19, apromising development that sentstock prices soaring. The worldhas waited anxiously for any pos-itive sign that there will be an endto the pandemic that has killedmore than 1.2 million peopleworldwide.

    “It’s extraordinary,” Dr. Antho-ny S. Fauci, the government’s topinfectious disease expert, said onCNN. “It is really a big deal.”

    Mr. Biden called the develop-ment “excellent news” but cau-tioned that the country was still

    BIDEN CALLS FOR UNITED FRONT AS VIRUS RAGESUrges All Americans

    to Wear Masks asHospitals Fill Up

    By MICHAEL D. SHEAR

    President-elect Joseph R. Bi-den Jr. moved to take charge.

    AMR ALFIKY/THE NEW YORK TIMES

    Continued on Page A7

    The drug maker Pfizer an-nounced on Monday that an earlyanalysis of its coronavirus vac-cine trial suggested the vaccinewas robustly effective in prevent-ing Covid-19, a promising develop-ment as the world has waited anx-iously for any positive news abouta pandemic that has killed morethan 1.2 million people.

    Pfizer, which developed the vac-cine with the German drug makerBioNTech, released only sparsedetails from its clinical trial, basedon the first formal review of thedata by an outside panel of ex-perts.

    The company said that the anal-ysis found that the vaccine wasmore than 90 percent effective inpreventing the disease amongtrial volunteers who had no evi-dence of prior coronavirus infec-tion. If the results hold up, that lev-el of protection would put it on parwith highly effective childhoodvaccines for diseases such asmeasles. No serious safety con-cerns have been observed, thecompany said.

    Pfizer plans to ask the Food andDrug Administration for emer-gency authorization of the two-dose vaccine later this month, af-ter it has collected the recom-mended two months of safetydata. By the end of the year it willhave manufactured enough dosesto immunize 15 to 20 million peo-ple, company executives havesaid.

    “This is a historical moment,”said Kathrin Jansen, a senior vicepresident and the head of vaccineresearch and development at Pfi-zer. “This was a devastating situa-tion, a pandemic, and we have em-barked on a path and a goal thatnobody ever has achieved — tocome up with a vaccine within ayear.”

    The news comes just days afterJoseph R. Biden Jr. clinched a vic-tory over President Trump in thepresidential election. Mr. Trumphad repeatedly hinted a vaccinewould be ready before ElectionDay, Nov. 3. This fall, Pfizer’s chiefexecutive, Dr. Albert Bourla, fre-quently claimed that the companycould have some indication ofwhether the vaccine worked byOctober, something that did notcome to pass.

    Stocks surged on the news. TheS&P 500 gained 1.2 percent Mon-day, ending the day just short of ahigh reached in early September.Shares of companies that stand togain most from the return of nor-mal activity — like airlines andshopping mall operators —

    Vaccine Is Over 90%Effective, Pfizer’sEarly Data Says

    This article is by Katie Thomas,David Gelles and Carl Zimmer.

    Continued on Page A5

    MARK ABRAMSON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

    KATHRYN GAMBLE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

    From top, diners in New York, ballet students in Iowa and a church service in Texas. The nation isaveraging 111,000 new coronavirus cases a day, and over 10 million Americans have been infected.

    JOEL ANGEL JUAREZ FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

    Leading Republicans rallied onMonday around PresidentTrump’s refusal to concede theelection, declining to challengethe false narrative that it was stol-en from him or to recognize Presi-dent-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’svictory even as party divisionsburst into public view.

    Senator Mitch McConnell ofKentucky, the top Republican inCongress, threw his support be-hind Mr. Trump in a sharplyworded speech on the Senatefloor. He declared that Mr. Trumpwas “100 percent within hisrights” to turn to the legal systemto challenge the outcome andhammered Democrats for expect-ing the president to concede.

    In his first public remarks sinceMr. Biden was declared the win-ner, Mr. McConnell celebrated thesuccess of Republicans who wonelection to the House and the Sen-ate. But in the next breath, hetreated the outcome of the presi-dential election — based on thesame ballots that elected thoseRepublicans — as unknown.

    “President Trump is 100 per-cent within his rights to look intoallegations of irregularities andweigh his legal options,” said Mr.McConnell, the majority leader.“Let’s not have any lectures abouthow the president should immedi-ately, cheerfully accept prelimi-nary election results from thesame characters who just spentfour years refusing to accept thevalidity of the last election.”

    In Georgia, where the continu-ing vote count showed Mr. Trumplosing the state’s electoral votes,Senators David Perdue and KellyLoeffler — both Republicans nowfacing January runoffs to keeptheir seats — took the extraordi-nary step of calling on the state’stop election official to resign. De-claring Georgia’s handling of theelection an “embarrassment” andciting vague “failures” in an echoof Mr. Trump’s evidence-freecharges of stolen votes, they saidBrad Raffensperger, the Republi-can secretary of state, had failedthe state.

    Mr. Raffensperger bluntly re-jected their calls, declaring thesenators’ claims “laughable” andsuggesting that they were merelydisgruntled because Mr. Trumpmight lose and their jobs were onthe line.

    The intraparty feuding under-

    McConnell ImpugnsResults That GaveG.O.P. Wins, Too

    By NICHOLAS FANDOSand EMILY COCHRANE

    Continued on Page A19

    WASHINGTON — PresidentTrump fired Defense SecretaryMark T. Esper on Monday, upend-ing the military’s leadership at atime when Mr. Trump’s refusal toconcede the election has created arocky and potentially precarioustransition.

    Mr. Trump announced the deci-sion on Twitter, writing in anabrupt post that Mr. Esper hadbeen “terminated.”

    The president wrote that he wasappointing Christopher C. Miller,whom he described as the “highlyrespected” director of the Na-tional Counterterrorism Center, tobe the acting defense secretary.Mr. Miller will be the fourth offi-cial to lead the Pentagon underMr. Trump.

    Two White House officials saidlater on Monday that Mr. Trump

    was not finished, and that Christo-pher A. Wray, the F.B.I. director,and Gina Haspel, the C.I.A. direc-tor, could be next in line to be fired.Removing these senior officials —in effect decapitating the nation’snational security bureaucracy —would be without parallel by anoutgoing president who has justlost re-election.

    Democrats and national securi-ty veterans said it was a volatilemove in the uncertain time be-tween administrations, particu-larly by a president who has madeclear that he does not want to giveup power and that he would be re-asserting his waning authorityover the most powerful agenciesof the government.

    Trump Fires Esper Amid FearsOf a Purge at Security Agencies

    This article is by Helene Cooper,Eric Schmitt and Maggie Ha-berman.

    F.B.I. and C.I.A. HeadsCould Be Next to Go

    Continued on Page A21

    WASHINGTON — President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. makes nosecret of the speed with which heplans to bury “America First” as aguiding principle of the nation’sforeign policy.

    He says he will re-enter the Irannuclear deal, assuming the Irani-ans are willing to reverse courseand observe its limits.

    He would sign up for anotherfive years of the only survivingnuclear arms treaty with Russiaand double down on Americancommitments to NATO after fouryears of threats from PresidentTrump to withdraw from the alli-ance, which guided the Westthrough the Cold War.

    At the same time, Mr. Bidensays he will make Russia “pay aprice” for what he says have beendisruptions and attempts to influ-ence elections — including hisown.

    But mostly, Mr. Biden said in astatement to The New YorkTimes, he wants to bring an end toa slogan that came to define aUnited States that built walls andmade working with allies an after-thought — and, in Mr. Biden’sview, undermined any chance offorging a common internationalapproach to fighting a pandemicthat has cost more than 1.2 millionlives.

    “Tragically, the one place Don-ald Trump has made ‘AmericaFirst’ is his failed response to thecoronavirus: We’re 4 percent ofthe world’s population, yet havehad 20 percent of the deaths,” Mr.Biden said days before the elec-tion. “On top of Trump embracing

    Looking to End ‘America First’And Re-engage With the World

    By DAVID E. SANGER Biden’s Strategies on aGlobal Approach

    Continued on Page A16

    The responses to deadly recent attacksin Austria and France show a complexrelationship with Islam. PAGE A8

    INTERNATIONAL A8-10

    Europe’s Politics of TerrorismThe ways that our four-legged friendsgrow and age may provide potentiallyuseful similarities with people. PAGE D1

    SCIENCE TIMES D1-8

    Seeking Answers in Dog Years

    With control of the Senate unclear,liberal Democrats are trying to figureout how to achieve policy goals througha Biden White House. PAGE A11

    ELECTION 2020 A11-20

    Progressives MobilizeMajor indexes climbed steadily on newsof Pfizer’s heartening progress on acoronavirus vaccine and Joseph R.Biden Jr.’s victory. PAGE B1

    BUSINESS B1-6

    Markets Heave Sigh of ReliefDave Grohl of the Foo Fighters andNandi Bushell, a 10-year-old prodigy,have spread joy on social media. PAGE C1

    ARTS C1-6

    One Very Epic Drum Battle

    Many of President Trump’s 100-plusrollbacks of environmental regulationscan be reversed, but damage to theclimate may be forever. PAGE A13

    Trump’s Climate Legacy

    The Israeli prime minister has madecloseness to President Trump central tohis political appeal. Things will changein a Biden administration. PAGE A17

    A Comedown for Netanyahu

    The United Arab Emirates has loosenedalcohol limits and reduced the sway ofIslamic law over foreigners. PAGE A10

    Emirates Overhauls Laws

    Some lawyers at firms that have filedelection lawsuits said they feared un-dermining the system. PAGE B1

    Trump’s Suits Sow Discomfort

    Tiger Woods, despite his back pain, isexpected to contend for a record-tyingsixth Masters victory. PAGE B7

    SPORTSTUESDAY B7-9

    Defiantly Dominant at AugustaAcousticians monitor the ocean’s mys-terious realms for habitat clues thou-sands of feet below the surface. PAGE D1

    Soundscapes of the Deep

    A researcher found overlooked evidencethat Alexander Hamilton bought, soldand personally owned slaves. PAGE C1

    History’s Eyes on Him, Opened

    Bret Stephens PAGE A22EDITORIAL, OP-ED A22-23

    Late Edition

    VOL. CLXX . . . . No. 58,873 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2020

    BARR WADES IN The attorneygeneral freed prosecutors to openvoter fraud inquiries. PAGE A19

    Today, partly cloudy after patchyfog, warm, high 72. Tonight, mostlycloudy, mild, low 62. Tomorrow,mostly cloudy, rain later, high 70.Weather map appears on Page B12.

    $3.00