1
U(D54G1D)y+[!:!?!$!# WASHINGTON — President Biden said Monday that he would renominate Jerome H. Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, to another four-year term, opting for policy continuity at a moment of rapid in- flation and economic uncertainty and betting that the Fed will do more to help workers reap the gains of the pandemic recovery. The much-awaited decision was a return to tradition in which the central bank’s top official is re- appointed regardless of partisan identity — a norm bucked by for- mer President Donald J. Trump, who appointed Mr. Powell instead of renominating Janet L. Yellen. While some progressive Demo- crats criticized Mr. Powell’s re- appointment, the move was pri- marily greeted with bipartisan praise that suggested an easy path to confirmation. Mr. Biden also said he planned to nominate Lael Brainard, a Fed governor whom many progres- sive groups had championed to re- place Mr. Powell, to serve as the Fed’s vice chair, a move that helped mollify some criticism on the left. The president and his top aides believe that Mr. Powell has done well in supporting the economy through the pandemic recession and a halting recovery, while amassing credibility by standing up to political pressure from Mr. Trump. But Mr. Biden is also mak- ing a calculated bet that the Fed chair will be more aligned with his views on the economy and, in par- ticular, inflation, than he is with Republicans in the Senate who have demanded quicker action from the Fed to tamp down rising prices. “At this moment, of both enor- PRESIDENT SEEKS TO RETAIN POWELL AS LEADER OF FED RESISTING A SHAKE-UP Betting on Continuity to Stabilize Economy’s Halting Recovery By JEANNA SMIALEK and JIM TANKERSLEY Jerome H. Powell was first appointed by President Trump. NATE PALMER FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A16 WAUKESHA, Wis. — He had been arrested time and again since he was a teenager, accused of battery and domestic abuse and resisting the police. This month, prosecutors in Milwaukee said, he intentionally ran over a woman he knew with a maroon Ford Escape. But Darrell E. Brooks, 39, was quickly freed from jail on bond af- ter prosecutors requested what they now say was an inappropri- ately low bail. By Sunday evening, as a Christmas parade was mak- ing its way through downtown Waukesha, Wis., the police were coming for Mr. Brooks again after receiving a report of a domestic dispute involving a knife. But before Waukesha officers ever reached the site of that dis- pute, a maroon Ford Escape top- pled barriers along the parade route. The police said that Mr. Brooks was the driver, and that he sped toward the marching bands and the smiling families and the troupe of “Dancing Grannies” strolling down Main Street, charg- ing on even as he mowed down children and octogenarians. One police officer fired his gun at Mr. Brooks but quickly stopped, Chief Daniel Thompson said, fearful of hitting someone in the crowd. Five adults died in the vehicle attack and at least 48 people, in- cluding children, were injured, some critically. Within minutes, what the mayor described as “a Norman Rockwell type of Christ- mas parade” in suburban Milwau- kee had become a mass casualty incident, with firefighters who were watching the parade with their families suddenly tending to the wounded on the street. [Page A10.] At a hospital not far from the pa- rade route, off-duty doctors rushed to the emergency room on Sunday night. Among the dead were three members of the Mil- waukee Dancing Grannies, and the husband of a member of that group. “That parade became a night- mare,” Mayor Shawn Reilly said Monday as investigators contin- ued to comb through a downtown that paradegoers had fled in such a hurry that they left coolers, strollers and dozens of lawn chairs behind. “Last night, lives were lost during the middle of what should have been a celebra- tion.” Chief Thompson, of the Wauke- sha police, said there had been no pursuit by officers before Mr. Brooks steered onto the parade route and no indication that the at- tack was motivated by terrorism. While the chief said that Mr. Brooks intentionally struck peo- ple with the vehicle, he was not able to say whether he drove down the parade route in a rush to escape the earlier confrontation or in a fit of fury. Mr. Brooks was expected to ap- pear in court on Tuesday after- noon after police referred five counts of first-degree intentional homicide to prosecutors. It was not clear whether he had a lawyer. Suspect Faced Many Charges Before Parade Vehicle Attack Leaves 5 Dead in Wisconsin This article is by Mitch Smith, Dan Simmons, Glenn Thrush and Serge F. Kovaleski. Main Street in Waukesha, Wis., on Monday, the day after a driver toppled barriers and plowed into a crowd at a Christmas parade. MARY MATHIS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A10 BRUSSELS — Austria went into a major lockdown on Monday to try to break the strong fourth wave of Covid spreading across Europe, while the German health minister, Jens Spahn, warned that by the end of this winter “just about everyone in Germany will probably be either vaccinated, re- covered or dead.” “Immunity will be reached,” Mr. Spahn said at a Berlin news con- ference. “The question is whether it’s via vaccination or infection, and we explicitly recommend the path via vaccination.” European governments are toughening their measures against Covid in the face of soar- ing infection rates — more than two million new cases each week, the most since the pandemic be- gan — and popular resistance, with violent protests over the weekend in numerous countries. Tens of thousands of people pro- tested official crackdowns and vaccine requirements in Austria, the Netherlands, Belgium, Den- Anger Fills Europe’s Streets as Lockdowns Spread By STEVEN ERLANGER Protesters Turn Violent as Fourth Wave Hits Continued on Page A8 Widespread flight cancella- tions. Excruciating waits for customer service. Unruly pas- sengers. And that was all before the holi- day travel season. Even in normal times, the days around Thanksgiving are a deli- cate period for the airlines. But this week is the industry’s biggest test since the pandemic began, as millions more Americans — em- boldened by vaccinations and re- luctant to spend another holiday alone — are expected to take to the skies than during last year’s holidays. A lot is riding on the carriers’ ability to pull it off smoothly. “For many people, this will be the first time they’ve gotten to- gether with family, maybe in a year, year and a half, maybe long- er, so it’s very significant,” said Kathleen Bangs, a former com- mercial pilot who is a spokeswom- an for FlightAware, an aviation data provider. “If it goes poorly, One Big Holiday. 20 Million Airline Passengers. By SYDNEY EMBER and NIRAJ CHOKSHI Industry Faces Biggest Test of Pandemic Travelers at John F. Kennedy International Airport. Two million in the U.S. flew on Saturday alone. DESEAN McCLINTON-HOLLAND FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A15 MOSCOW — In the days after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the upheaval and uncertainty that gripped Russia were accompa- nied by a liberating climate of openness, in which free expres- sion, historical examination and political dissent could flourish. But in the two decades since Vladimir V. Putin took power, the government has steadily rolled back those rights. Mr. Putin has tamed the oligarch class, muffled the media, jailed religious groups and dissidents and suppressed po- litical opposition. Now Mr. Putin has set his sights on rewriting the memory of one of the most painful times in Russia’s turbulent history: the era of the gulag, when millions of Russians toiled and died, mostly in the first half of the 20th century. Russian prosecutors are moving to liqui- date the archive and human rights center of Memorial International, the country’s most prominent hu- man rights organization, which is dedicated to the remembrance of those who were persecuted by the Soviet Union’s often-brutal re- gime. Activists and dissidents con- sider the threat to Memorial a wa- tershed moment for independent thinkers in Russia — a sobering example of the government’s de- termination to silence its critics and sanitize the narrative sur- rounding the Soviet Union, which Mr. Putin views as a heady era of Russian influence and power. Mr. Putin is obsessed with “making Russia great again,” said Aleksandr Baunov, editor in chief of the Carnegie Moscow Center’s website. “Putin’s Russia builds it- self on the denial” of the 1990s, with its reforms, self-criticism and social and economic upheaval, Mr. Baunov said, because to him it represents the time in recent his- tory when Russia was its weakest. Eliminating Memorial, Mr. Baunov said, would help Mr. Putin suppress a forensic examination of one of Russia’s most shameful periods, even as descendants of Putin Tries to Erase History of Gulag Atrocities By VALERIE HOPKINS Russian Rights Group Is in Cross Hairs Over Its Work Continued on Page A6 An eight-month investigation by the New York State Assembly found “overwhelming evidence” that former Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo engaged in sexual har- assment while in office, corrobo- rating a damning investigation by the state attorney general that Mr. Cuomo has repeatedly tried to dis- credit. The investigation also found that Mr. Cuomo abused his power to help produce what would be- come a $5.1 million pandemic memoir, providing new details about just how much of the gover- nor’s staff was used to help him write, publish and promote his book. The Assembly inquiry was meant to create a road map for po- tential impeachment proceedings against Mr. Cuomo, a three-term governor whose unrelenting style of leadership engendered varying amounts of fear, respect and ani- mus. But that prospect was ren- dered moot after he resigned in disgrace in August, a week after the release of the attorney gener- al’s report, which concluded that he had sexually harassed 11 wom- en. After Mr. Cuomo stepped down, Carl E. Heastie, the Assembly speaker and a longtime ally of the former governor’s, moved to sus- pend the Assembly investigation, contending that lawmakers lacked the constitutional author- ity to impeach an official no longer in office. But Mr. Heastie reversed course after facing an immediate bipartisan backlash from lawmak- ers who argued that the Assembly should, at minimum, finish the Assembly Adds To the Findings Against Cuomo By GRACE ASHFORD and LUIS FERRÉ-SADURNÍ Continued on Page A14 VICE CHAIR Lael Brainard, a longtime Washington insider, is tapped as the No. 2. PAGE B1 The installation of a sculpture by Frank Stella, above, serves as a homecoming for the 85-year-old artist. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-6 A Return to Ground Zero Social media has worsened a migrant crisis in Belarus, helping smugglers profit off the desperate. PAGE A6 INTERNATIONAL A4-8 Fake News Targets Migrants The discovery of an ancient tusk sug- gests the ocean floor could be covered in paleontological treasures. PAGE D1 SCIENCE TIMES D1-8 Deep Research Researchers at a Seattle A.I. lab say they have built a system that makes ethical judgments. But decisions are as knotty as they are for humans. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-5 Can Machines Learn Morality? Paul Krugman PAGE A19 OPINION A18-19 A revolution in research and treatment is finding new ways to help those suf- fering from chronic pain. PAGE D4 Healing a World of Hurt The director Paul Thomas Anderson tells why he returned to his home turf for his film “Licorice Pizza.” PAGE C1 Back in the Valley The tennis star Peng Shuai was unable to break through China’s resistance to sexual assault allegations. PAGE A4 ‘Golden Flower’ Goes Silent Beyond Alex Rodriguez and David Ortiz are other compelling first-time candi- dates, our columnist writes. PAGE B6 SPORTS B6-10 Up for the Hall of Fame Elizabeth Holmes, founder of the blood- testing start-up Theranos, redirected blame at her fraud trial. PAGE B1 Holmes Takes the Stand Prosecutors raised the question of race as a motive as closing arguments were made in the trial of three men accused of murdering Ahmaud Arbery. PAGE A12 NATIONAL A9-17 Closing Pitches in Arbery Case The Justice Department will pay out $130 million over the F.B.I.’s failure to investigate fully two tips before a 2018 school massacre in Florida. PAGE A16 Money for Parkland Victims The Trump allies Roger J. Stone Jr. and Alex Jones were among five people summoned on Monday by the House panel investigating the riot. PAGE A11 More Jan. 6 Subpoenas Late Edition VOL. CLXXI .... No. 59,251 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2021 Today, partly sunny, blustery, cold, high 42. Tonight, mostly clear, wind slowly diminishing, low 32. Tomor- row, sunshine, chilly, a light breeze, high 44. Weather map, Page B10. $3.00

AS LEADER OF FED TO RETAIN POWELL PRESIDENT SEEKS

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C M Y K Nxxx,2021-11-23,A,001,Bs-4C,E1

U(D54G1D)y+[!:!?!$!#

WASHINGTON — PresidentBiden said Monday that he wouldrenominate Jerome H. Powell, theFederal Reserve chair, to anotherfour-year term, opting for policycontinuity at a moment of rapid in-flation and economic uncertaintyand betting that the Fed will domore to help workers reap thegains of the pandemic recovery.

The much-awaited decision wasa return to tradition in which thecentral bank’s top official is re-appointed regardless of partisanidentity — a norm bucked by for-mer President Donald J. Trump,who appointed Mr. Powell insteadof renominating Janet L. Yellen.

While some progressive Demo-crats criticized Mr. Powell’s re-appointment, the move was pri-marily greeted with bipartisanpraise that suggested an easy

path to confirmation.Mr. Biden also said he planned

to nominate Lael Brainard, a Fedgovernor whom many progres-sive groups had championed to re-place Mr. Powell, to serve as theFed’s vice chair, a move thathelped mollify some criticism onthe left.

The president and his top aidesbelieve that Mr. Powell has donewell in supporting the economythrough the pandemic recessionand a halting recovery, whileamassing credibility by standingup to political pressure from Mr.Trump. But Mr. Biden is also mak-ing a calculated bet that the Fedchair will be more aligned with hisviews on the economy and, in par-ticular, inflation, than he is withRepublicans in the Senate whohave demanded quicker actionfrom the Fed to tamp down risingprices.

“At this moment, of both enor-

PRESIDENT SEEKSTO RETAIN POWELLAS LEADER OF FED

RESISTING A SHAKE-UP

Betting on Continuity toStabilize Economy’s

Halting Recovery

By JEANNA SMIALEKand JIM TANKERSLEY

Jerome H. Powell was firstappointed by President Trump.

NATE PALMER FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A16

WAUKESHA, Wis. — He hadbeen arrested time and againsince he was a teenager, accusedof battery and domestic abuse andresisting the police. This month,prosecutors in Milwaukee said, heintentionally ran over a woman heknew with a maroon Ford Escape.

But Darrell E. Brooks, 39, wasquickly freed from jail on bond af-ter prosecutors requested whatthey now say was an inappropri-ately low bail. By Sunday evening,as a Christmas parade was mak-ing its way through downtownWaukesha, Wis., the police werecoming for Mr. Brooks again afterreceiving a report of a domesticdispute involving a knife.

But before Waukesha officersever reached the site of that dis-pute, a maroon Ford Escape top-pled barriers along the paraderoute. The police said that Mr.Brooks was the driver, and that hesped toward the marching bandsand the smiling families and thetroupe of “Dancing Grannies”strolling down Main Street, charg-ing on even as he mowed downchildren and octogenarians. Onepolice officer fired his gun at Mr.Brooks but quickly stopped, ChiefDaniel Thompson said, fearful ofhitting someone in the crowd.

Five adults died in the vehicleattack and at least 48 people, in-cluding children, were injured,some critically. Within minutes,what the mayor described as “aNorman Rockwell type of Christ-mas parade” in suburban Milwau-kee had become a mass casualtyincident, with firefighters whowere watching the parade withtheir families suddenly tendingto the wounded on the street.[Page A10.]

At a hospital not far from the pa-rade route, off-duty doctorsrushed to the emergency room onSunday night. Among the deadwere three members of the Mil-waukee Dancing Grannies, andthe husband of a member of thatgroup.

“That parade became a night-mare,” Mayor Shawn Reilly saidMonday as investigators contin-ued to comb through a downtownthat paradegoers had fled in sucha hurry that they left coolers,strollers and dozens of lawnchairs behind. “Last night, liveswere lost during the middle ofwhat should have been a celebra-tion.”

Chief Thompson, of the Wauke-sha police, said there had been nopursuit by officers before Mr.Brooks steered onto the paraderoute and no indication that the at-tack was motivated by terrorism.While the chief said that Mr.Brooks intentionally struck peo-ple with the vehicle, he was notable to say whether he drovedown the parade route in a rush toescape the earlier confrontationor in a fit of fury.

Mr. Brooks was expected to ap-pear in court on Tuesday after-noon after police referred fivecounts of first-degree intentionalhomicide to prosecutors. It wasnot clear whether he had a lawyer.

Suspect Faced Many Charges Before Parade

Vehicle Attack Leaves5 Dead in Wisconsin

This article is by Mitch Smith,Dan Simmons, Glenn Thrush andSerge F. Kovaleski.

Main Street in Waukesha, Wis., on Monday, the day after a driver toppled barriers and plowed into a crowd at a Christmas parade.MARY MATHIS FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A10

BRUSSELS — Austria wentinto a major lockdown on Mondayto try to break the strong fourthwave of Covid spreading acrossEurope, while the German healthminister, Jens Spahn, warned thatby the end of this winter “justabout everyone in Germany willprobably be either vaccinated, re-covered or dead.”

“Immunity will be reached,” Mr.

Spahn said at a Berlin news con-ference. “The question is whetherit’s via vaccination or infection,and we explicitly recommend thepath via vaccination.”

European governments are

toughening their measuresagainst Covid in the face of soar-ing infection rates — more thantwo million new cases each week,the most since the pandemic be-gan — and popular resistance,with violent protests over theweekend in numerous countries.

Tens of thousands of people pro-tested official crackdowns andvaccine requirements in Austria,the Netherlands, Belgium, Den-

Anger Fills Europe’s Streets as Lockdowns SpreadBy STEVEN ERLANGER Protesters Turn Violent

as Fourth Wave Hits

Continued on Page A8

Widespread flight cancella-tions. Excruciating waits forcustomer service. Unruly pas-sengers.

And that was all before the holi-day travel season.

Even in normal times, the daysaround Thanksgiving are a deli-cate period for the airlines. Butthis week is the industry’s biggest

test since the pandemic began, asmillions more Americans — em-boldened by vaccinations and re-luctant to spend another holidayalone — are expected to take tothe skies than during last year’s

holidays.A lot is riding on the carriers’

ability to pull it off smoothly.“For many people, this will be

the first time they’ve gotten to-gether with family, maybe in ayear, year and a half, maybe long-er, so it’s very significant,” saidKathleen Bangs, a former com-mercial pilot who is a spokeswom-an for FlightAware, an aviationdata provider. “If it goes poorly,

One Big Holiday. 20 Million Airline Passengers.By SYDNEY EMBERand NIRAJ CHOKSHI

Industry Faces BiggestTest of Pandemic

Travelers at John F. Kennedy International Airport. Two million in the U.S. flew on Saturday alone.DESEAN McCLINTON-HOLLAND FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A15

MOSCOW — In the days afterthe collapse of the Soviet Union,the upheaval and uncertainty thatgripped Russia were accompa-nied by a liberating climate ofopenness, in which free expres-sion, historical examination andpolitical dissent could flourish.

But in the two decades sinceVladimir V. Putin took power, thegovernment has steadily rolledback those rights. Mr. Putin hastamed the oligarch class, muffledthe media, jailed religious groupsand dissidents and suppressed po-litical opposition.

Now Mr. Putin has set his sightson rewriting the memory of one ofthe most painful times in Russia’sturbulent history: the era of thegulag, when millions of Russians

toiled and died, mostly in the firsthalf of the 20th century. Russianprosecutors are moving to liqui-date the archive and human rightscenter of Memorial International,the country’s most prominent hu-man rights organization, which isdedicated to the remembrance ofthose who were persecuted by theSoviet Union’s often-brutal re-gime.

Activists and dissidents con-sider the threat to Memorial a wa-tershed moment for independentthinkers in Russia — a sobering

example of the government’s de-termination to silence its criticsand sanitize the narrative sur-rounding the Soviet Union, whichMr. Putin views as a heady era ofRussian influence and power.

Mr. Putin is obsessed with“making Russia great again,” saidAleksandr Baunov, editor in chiefof the Carnegie Moscow Center’swebsite. “Putin’s Russia builds it-self on the denial” of the 1990s,with its reforms, self-criticism andsocial and economic upheaval, Mr.Baunov said, because to him itrepresents the time in recent his-tory when Russia was its weakest.

Eliminating Memorial, Mr.Baunov said, would help Mr. Putinsuppress a forensic examinationof one of Russia’s most shamefulperiods, even as descendants of

Putin Tries to Erase History of Gulag AtrocitiesBy VALERIE HOPKINS Russian Rights Group

Is in Cross HairsOver Its Work

Continued on Page A6

An eight-month investigationby the New York State Assemblyfound “overwhelming evidence”that former Gov. Andrew M.Cuomo engaged in sexual har-assment while in office, corrobo-rating a damning investigation bythe state attorney general that Mr.Cuomo has repeatedly tried to dis-credit.

The investigation also foundthat Mr. Cuomo abused his powerto help produce what would be-come a $5.1 million pandemicmemoir, providing new detailsabout just how much of the gover-nor’s staff was used to help himwrite, publish and promote hisbook.

The Assembly inquiry wasmeant to create a road map for po-tential impeachment proceedingsagainst Mr. Cuomo, a three-termgovernor whose unrelenting styleof leadership engendered varyingamounts of fear, respect and ani-mus. But that prospect was ren-dered moot after he resigned indisgrace in August, a week afterthe release of the attorney gener-al’s report, which concluded thathe had sexually harassed 11 wom-en.

After Mr. Cuomo stepped down,Carl E. Heastie, the Assemblyspeaker and a longtime ally of theformer governor’s, moved to sus-pend the Assembly investigation,contending that lawmakerslacked the constitutional author-ity to impeach an official no longerin office.

But Mr. Heastie reversedcourse after facing an immediatebipartisan backlash from lawmak-ers who argued that the Assemblyshould, at minimum, finish the

Assembly AddsTo the FindingsAgainst Cuomo

By GRACE ASHFORDand LUIS FERRÉ-SADURNÍ

Continued on Page A14

VICE CHAIR Lael Brainard, alongtime Washington insider,is tapped as the No. 2. PAGE B1

The installation of a sculpture by FrankStella, above, serves as a homecomingfor the 85-year-old artist. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-6

A Return to Ground ZeroSocial media has worsened a migrantcrisis in Belarus, helping smugglersprofit off the desperate. PAGE A6

INTERNATIONAL A4-8

Fake News Targets Migrants

The discovery of an ancient tusk sug-gests the ocean floor could be coveredin paleontological treasures. PAGE D1

SCIENCE TIMES D1-8

Deep ResearchResearchers at a Seattle A.I. lab saythey have built a system that makesethical judgments. But decisions are asknotty as they are for humans. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-5

Can Machines Learn Morality?

Paul Krugman PAGE A19

OPINION A18-19

A revolution in research and treatmentis finding new ways to help those suf-fering from chronic pain. PAGE D4

Healing a World of Hurt

The director Paul Thomas Andersontells why he returned to his home turffor his film “Licorice Pizza.” PAGE C1

Back in the ValleyThe tennis star Peng Shuai was unableto break through China’s resistance tosexual assault allegations. PAGE A4

‘Golden Flower’ Goes SilentBeyond Alex Rodriguez and David Ortizare other compelling first-time candi-dates, our columnist writes. PAGE B6

SPORTS B6-10

Up for the Hall of Fame

Elizabeth Holmes, founder of the blood-testing start-up Theranos, redirectedblame at her fraud trial. PAGE B1

Holmes Takes the Stand

Prosecutors raised the question of raceas a motive as closing arguments weremade in the trial of three men accusedof murdering Ahmaud Arbery. PAGE A12

NATIONAL A9-17

Closing Pitches in Arbery Case

The Justice Department will pay out$130 million over the F.B.I.’s failure toinvestigate fully two tips before a 2018school massacre in Florida. PAGE A16

Money for Parkland Victims

The Trump allies Roger J. Stone Jr. andAlex Jones were among five peoplesummoned on Monday by the Housepanel investigating the riot. PAGE A11

More Jan. 6 Subpoenas

Late Edition

VOL. CLXXI . . . . No. 59,251 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 2021

Today, partly sunny, blustery, cold,high 42. Tonight, mostly clear, windslowly diminishing, low 32. Tomor-row, sunshine, chilly, a light breeze,high 44. Weather map, Page B10.

$3.00