the baltimore sun

Transcription

the baltimore sun
)&'
SPECIAL eNEWSPAPER EDITION
baltimoresun.com
!+$
With updated sports and bonus content
(*#)%"-,'
!
)
!
#
"
%
$
(
'
&
)
)
!
!
TUESDAY
June 14, 2016
Informing more than 1 million Maryland readers weekly in print and online
Price $2. Our 179th year, No. 166
Porter
called
to the
stand
THE FREDDIE GRAY CASE
He says detainee was
cooperative, could
have been seat-belted
By Justin Fenton
and Kevin Rector
The Baltimore Sun
LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN
Buria Hammer, left, hugs Teal Harrison as they hold candles during a vigil held Monday night in an empty lot in Baltimore’s Station
North neighborhood to remember the victims of the nightclub massacre in Orlando, Fla.
ORLANDO SHOOTING
A call for unity in
the face of hatred
Gay, Muslim and Latino groups vow to work together,
as mourners gather at vigils held across Maryland
By Scott Dance, Jonathan
Capriel and Tim Prudente
The Baltimore Sun
Hundreds of people gathered Monday
night on an empty lot in Baltimore’s
Station North to mourn the lives lost in a
shooting rampage at a gay nightclub in
Orlando, Fla.
“Today, we are all LGBT,” said Jabari
Lyles, president of a community center
that helped to organize the vigil. “It’s times
like these when pride is most important.”
The memorial capped a day when gay,
Latino and Muslim leaders in Maryland
pledged a united front against hatred and
violence. A wide spectrum of community
groups called on the nation to spurn both
the homophobia believed to have motivated the attack and the Islamophobia it could
inspire.
“We are not going to allow this massacre, which is not Islamic, to drive a wedge
between the Muslim and LGBT communities,” said Patrick Paschall, executive
See VIGIL, page 8
TRIBUNE NEWSPAPERS
Richie Compton, left, and Erik Winger
kneel at a memorial in Orlando.
Developments
■ Obama going to Orlando to pay
respects to victims on Thursday
■ Orlando killer appears to have been
“homegrown extremist”
■ Clinton, Trump reactions to attack
spotlight differences
■ Shooting victims profiled
COVERAGE, NEWS PGS 6, 8, 9, 15
Youth funds
restored, but
other city cuts
in the offing
The Baltimore Sun
The Baltimore Sun
inside
Work begins to
clear derailment
in Howard Tunnel
By Colin Campbell
and Michael Dresser
By Yvonne Wenger
and Andrew Dunn
Funding for public health services, libraries and housing inspections will be cut
in next year’s budget to free up more than
$4 million for youth programs, Mayor
Stephanie Rawlings-Blake announced
Monday.
Members of the Baltimore City Council
had threatened a government shutdown
unless the mayor included the money for
after-school programs and community
schools in her $2.6 billion budget proposal.
Rawlings-Blake released few details of
the new cuts, saying the administration
“sharpened our pencils and made even
more difficult budget cuts that will directly
impact city services” in response to council
leaders.
“Clearly there is little willingness on the
part of the City Council leadership to enter
into good faith negotiations to get things
done,” the mayor said in a statement.
“Instead they have relied on pointless
rhetoric versus meeting their fiscal obligaSee BUDGET, page 11
Baltimore police Officer William Porter
testified Monday that he saw no indication
that Freddie Gray required immediate
medical attention while being transported
in the back of an arrest van, but he
acknowledged that officers could have
safely secured the 25-year-old detainee
with a seat belt.
Porter was called as a
state witness on the third
day of the trial of Officer
Caesar Goodson Jr., the
driver of the van in which
Gray suffered a fatal injury in April 2015. Goodson, 46, faces charges
including second-degree
murder and manslaugh- Porter
ter.
Prosecutors have said Goodson callously
disregarded Gray’s well-being by failing to
call a medic and failing to secure Gray with
a seat belt — including at the van’s fourth
stop, where he, Porter and Gray were alone.
They also allege Goodson gave Gray what’s
known as a “rough ride,” or an intentionally
See GOODSON, page 6
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN
Aquarium officials say they are looking at sites in Florida and the Caribbean for a
new home for their eight Atlantic bottlenose dolphins.
National Aquarium will move
dolphins to seaside sanctuary
By Lorraine Mirabella
The Baltimore Sun
Baltimore’s National Aquarium will
announce plans this morning to move its
colony of dolphins from its amphitheater pool to the nation’s first oceanside
dolphin sanctuary.
The decision comes after years of
protests by animal activists and others
who consider it inhumane to keep such
large, intelligent animals as performers
in captivity.
The aquarium said it has spent five
years weighing options for the animals,
bridge sports 7 ● lottery news 4
puzzles md. business 5, sports 7 ●
●
which scientists believe display an advanced intellect compared with other
species and can’t fully thrive outside
their natural habitats, where they form
social groups and can swim great
distances.
The 35-year-old Inner Harbor attraction, which opened the Pier 4 Marine
Mammal Pavilion 25 year ago, is exploring seaside sites in Florida and the
Caribbean to create a new home for its
eight Atlantic bottlenose dolphins by
2020. Aquarium officials envision a
first-of-its-kind protected, seaside habiSee DOLPHINS, page 6
CSX crews began uncoupling and removing train cars Monday evening from the
Howard Street Tunnel in Baltimore, starting the process of clearing a derailment that
shut down freight traffic through the city
earlier in the day.
The Cumberland-bound train was carrying a volatile, flammable chemical when 13
cars went off the rails Monday morning, but
authorities said there were no reports of
leaks or injuries.
Work to clear the tunnel was expected to
take more than 24 hours.
“This is going to be a long operation,” said
Bob Maloney, the city’s emergency management director. “The Fire Department identified there was not an immediate threat to
the public. We still consider that to be the
case. We’re prepared if that changes.”
The 124-car train went off the rails near
See TUNNEL, page 11
TODAY’S WEATHER
MOSTLY SUNNY WITH SOME CLOUDS
82 62
HIGH
LOW
Storms possible Wednesday SPORTS PG 8
horoscopes news 7 ● obituaries news 10 ● opinion news 12
tonight on tv md. business 5 ● comics md. business 4
vs
TONIGHT @ 6:30PM
TOMORROW @ 6:30PM
THURSDAY @ 6:30PM
2
THE BALTIMORE SUN |
NEWS
| TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
%$"&'$#!
Suspect faces earlier stabbing charge
Woman accused of killing
mother awaits trial on
charges she stabbed husband
By Alison Knezevich
The Baltimore Sun
The woman accused of fatally stabbing
her mother outside Eastpoint Mall was
awaiting trial on charges she stabbed her
husband in the neck while he slept,
Baltimore County court records show.
Crystal Marie Wagner, 29, is charged
with first-degree murder in the death of
her mother, Malia Delores Wagner, 60, on
Saturday. She is also scheduled to go to
trial in September on charges of attempted
first- and second-degree murder in connection with the stabbing last October of
her husband.
Assistant State’s Attorney Francis Pilarski pointed to that case Monday at a bail
review hearing at District Court in Essex,
where a judge denied bond. Wagner is
being held at the county detention center.
“It’s undoubtedly a no-bail case,” Pilarski said in court.
A public defender representing Crystal
Wagner in the case involving her husband
could not be reached for comment Monday. Wagner does not have an attorney
listed for the case involving her mother.
County police say they have not been
able to determine a motive in the killing of
Malia Wagner.
“Crystal Wagner claims she suffers from
multiple personalities and cannot account
for what one personality does unless she is
‘tuned in’ to that personality,” police wrote
in charging documents. “She claims to be
on several medications for depression,
personality disorder, and being bi-polar.”
Investigators say the Wagners were
leaving the mall Saturday afternoon after
eating at Applebee’s when the daughter
attacked her mother with a knife, stabbing
her several times.
Surveillance footage from the parking
area does not show the entire sequence of
events, but it shows a silver Dodge
Durango appearing to run over Malia
Wagner, according to charging documents.
Police traced the Durango to Malia
Wagner’s home in the 400 block of 52nd
St. in the Colgate area. Blood was found on
the roof of the vehicle and in a wheel well.
Crystal Wagner, who also lived at the
home, was there with other people and
agreed to go to police headquarters in
Towson to be interviewed, charging documents state. During the interview, she
denied going to the vehicle with her
mother after eating at Applebee’s and
denied knowing what happened to her.
In October, she was accused of stabbing
her husband in the neck while he slept on
the couch, court documents show. The
husband told police at the time that she
“suffers from mental disorders and that
she has not been taking her prescribed
medications.”
In that case, Crystal Wagner had been
scheduled to be examined this Thursday
by the state Department of Health and
Mental Hygiene to help determine
whether she was criminally responsible
for her alleged actions and whether she
was competent to stand trial, court documents show.
According to court records, Malia Wagner paid $5,000 to bail her daughter out in
October when she was charged with
trying to kill her husband.
alisonk@baltsun.com
twitter.com/aliknez
Renovation
to start at
Dumbarton
Middle
Work at 60-year-old Towson
building to take two years
at a cost of $28 million
By Rachael Pacella
Baltimore Sun Media Group
KENNETH K. LAM/BALTIMORE SUN
A bird of good omen
Ravens running back Justin Forsett chats with physical education teacher Susan Routson at Runnymede Elementary School outside
Westminster during a visit he and Ravens mascot Poe made to the school to recognize Routson for winning the 2016 M&T Bank
Touchdown for Teachers grand prize. The program honors teachers for service to their schools and their communities.
Memories and tears at vigil for
13-year-old victim of fatal shooting
Dozens gather where
DiAndre Barnes killed
By Jonathan Capriel
The Baltimore Sun
Between the two friends, DiAndre
Barnes was the better football player, said
Abdul Sannie.
“He had the best arm. He could throw
very far,” Abdul, 14, said in their West
Baltimore neighborhood. “We used to play
in a big field through those houses.”
But Abdul, who said he had known
DiAndre since he was 5 years old, will
never find out if he could ever match his
friend’s skills. The 13-year-old was gunned
down Saturday morning in West Baltimore, according to police.
Abdul, along with several dozen people
from the community and the Baltimore
Police Department, gathered Monday at
900 Pennsylvania Ave., where DiAndre
was shot, to honor the teen’s memory.
Abdul, who lives a few blocks from
where DiAndre was shot, said he has
become afraid of his own neighborhood.
DiAndre, who attended Booker T.
Washington Middle School, was killed less
than a half-mile from the school, which is
in the same building as Renaissance
Academy High School. He was shot about
1:30 a.m. Saturday, along with a 21-year-old
man who suffered injuries that were not
life-threatening.
Police would not discuss possible suspects or say whether DiAndre was the
JONATHAN CAPRIEL/BALTIMORE SUN
Mourners arrange candles to form the name of DiAndre Barnes, 13, who was fatally shot
early Saturday in West Baltimore. A 21-year-old man also was injured in the shooting.
target of the attack.
“This happened in a neighborhood that
was a highly populated neighborhood,”
police spokeswoman Detective Nicole
Monroe said. “We have gotten tips, but we
are asking for more.”
DiAndre’s father, Ronnie Barnes, organized the vigil. Standing with his older son,
Ronnie Barnes Jr., he wept as the crowd
prayed.
The killing is a devastating yet familiar
loss for the community.
Ananias Jolley, 17, was stabbed inside
Renaissance Academy in November and
died of his injuries. In January, Renaissance Academy student Darius Bardney,16,
was killed in what police described as an
accidental shooting. The next month, a
former Renaissance student, Daniel Jackson, 17, was killed less than two miles from
the school.
jcapriel@baltsun.com
A $28 million renovation of Dumbarton
Middle School in Towson is scheduled to
begin this month — a project officials say
will transform a school that opened 60
years ago into a 21st-century facility.
“It’s an outstanding school,” said Baltimore County Councilman David Marks,
who represents Towson, “but it has these
lingering … issues.”
Dumbarton, built in 1956, occupies a
20.4-acre site in Rodgers Forge. A 2014
facilities audit conducted by the Baltimore
County public school system identified a
number of problems, including a lack of air
conditioning, and general wear and tear.
The renovation, expected to be completed by April 2018, will include installation of central air conditioning, a new
elevator and upgrades to plumbing, as well
as improvements to the health suite, art and
music classrooms, gym activity rooms,
computer labs and administrative offices.
While construction is underway, students will be moved around within the
school campus, said Pete Dixit, the school
system’s director of physical facilities.
Students will leave one part of the building
for a portable building while work is done,
then move back into the renovated section
upon its completion.
The project drew criticism last year from
some members of the Rodgers Forge
Community Association, who objected to
the planned removal of nine large trees on
the school site. That part of the project has
been changed, and the trees will stay.
Baltimore County schools Superintendent Dallas Dance said officials “worked with
the community to make sure the school
system’s needs and the community’s needs
were met.”
Dance said officials will work to minimize community disruption during the
renovation.
The lack of air conditioning in many
Baltimore County public schools has been a
controversial topic in recent months. Dumbarton has been scheduled get central air
conditioning for some time, but for Aimee
Freeman, president of the school PTSA, it
won’t come soon enough. The renovation
will be completed just months before her
son leaves the school.
“I think that it’s a shame that in this day
and age, in 2016, that so many of the schools
in Baltimore County are not air conditioned,” she said. “I think that’s a basic right
of every child.”
Still, Freeman said the administration at
Dumbarton has done a good job of keeping
parents informed about the project.
Schools officials plan to regularly update
the system’s website, bcps.org, with information on the project. Marks said he is
encouraging officials to hold an open house
this summer so residents can ask questions
about the project.
Chesapeake ‘dead zone’ projected at near-average size this year
By Christina Jedra
Baltimore Sun Media Group
Scientists estimate the low-oxygen “dead
zone” in the Chesapeake Bay this year will
be roughly the volume of 2.3 million
Olympic-size swimming pools — about
average.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration announced Monday that
the hypoxic, or low-oxygen, zone will be
about 1.58 cubic miles in volume, close to
the long-term average since 1950.
Such low oxygen levels “are insufficient
to support most marine life and habitats in
near-bottom waters and threaten the Bay’s
production of crabs, oysters and other
fisheries,” NOAA said in a statement.
Nitrogen and phosphorus pollution,
which comes in part from sources such as
farm runoff and wastewater, contributes to
algae blooms that are a major cause of such
dead zones. The blooms deplete the water
of oxygen.
There has been a recent trend toward
less hypoxia later in the summer, which
may be the result of reductions in nutrient
pollution, said Donald Boesch, president of
the University of Maryland Center for
Environmental Science.
“But it’s no reason to be complacent — we
have a long way to go to finish the job,”
Boesch said.
The U.S. Geological Survey estimates
that the Susquehanna River contributed
66.2 million pounds of nitrogen to the bay
from January to May, 17 percent below the
average, NOAA said.
“The link between Susquehanna pollu-
tion and the dead zone underscores the
importance of reducing nitrogen pollution
from Pennsylvania,” said Beth McGee, a
senior scientist with Chesapeake Bay Foundation.
She said the foundation “believes that an
average-sized dead zone is still unacceptable. … Pennsylvania and the other bay
states must implement the plans they
developed to reduce pollution and restore
water quality in local rivers, streams and the
Chesapeake Bay.”
MARYLAND
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 |
NEWS
3
| THE BALTIMORE SUN
Incidents highlight city’s dirt-biker problems
Officials voice frustration
after two injury accidents
By Jesse Coburn
The Baltimore Sun
Wesley Ford heard their engines before
he saw them: a pack of dirt bikers tearing
down East Pratt Street at the Inner Harbor
on Friday night, heading directly for Ford
and his friend.
The light was red, but the riders were
traveling upward of 60 mph, Ford said, and
showed no signs of slowing down.
“I was extremely panicked,” said Ford, 17,
who remembered freezing in the middle of
the crosswalk and covering his head as the
pack raced through the red light.
He came out unscathed, but his friend
was not so lucky. She remained in the
hospital Monday, where she is being treated
for injuries suffered when one of the dirt
bike riders ran into her before speeding off.
In another incident Friday, a driver was
assaulted after colliding with a dirt biker in
Southwest Baltimore, according to police.
The pair of incidents highlight the city’s
continuing struggle to corral dirt bikers,
who regularly ride through the city in large
packs, popping wheelies and flouting traffic
laws.
Dirt bikes are banned on city streets.
City Council members voiced frustration
Monday about the weekend incidents, as
more details became available.
“The dirt bike issue is getting out of
hand,” City Council President Bernard C.
“Jack” Young said.
The woman, an 18-year-old high school
senior from Northern Virginia, suffered a
skull fracture and a traumatic brain injury,
according to her mother, Yvette Coffman.
Her daughter and Ford, who attend high
school together and expect to graduate this
month, were in Baltimore to attend the
Beyonce concert at M&T Bank Stadium.
Coffman, 58, said her daughter will make
a full recovery, but it will take time. She
asked that her daughter not be named for
privacy reasons.
“She has weeks ahead of her,” Coffman
37 Baltimore teens and young
adults to get GED certificates
Program serves students
who had problems in school
By Andrew Dunn
The Baltimore Sun
A city-funded initiative will graduate 37
teenagers and young adults Wednesday
from alternative education centers operated in East and West Baltimore.
The centers, run by the Mayor’s Office of
Employment Development, serve students
who faced challenges in a typical school
environment. The students will graduate
with Maryland high school diplomas
earned through the General Educational
Development exam, or GED, said Ernest
Dorsey, assistant director for youth services.
Some of the barriers this year’s graduates
faced included unstable housing, limited
support systems and early parenthood,
officials said.
Twenty-four students will come from the
Westside YO Center in the SandtownWinchester neighborhood, and13 will come
from the Eastside Center in the Broadway
East neighborhood.
The figure represents a return to typical
commencement figures for the school after
graduating just 16 in 2015 from the two
centers. The two centers had 36 graduates
in 2014, 34 in 2013 and 28 in 2012.
Dorsey said the drop in graduates in 2015
came after a major change to the GED
program.
“We’re just beginning to turn the curve
now in instructors beginning to understand
the new GED exam, and young people
beginning to understand the new GED,”
Dorsey said.
The centers were started through federal
funding from a Youth Opportunity Grant in
2000 from the U.S. Department of Labor.
The short-term grant was stretched into
funding for Baltimore for six to seven years,
said Brice Freeman, a spokesman for the
centers.
The students’ graduation is set for 6 p.m.
Wednesday at Shriver Hall on the Johns
Hopkins University’s Homewood campus.
Calvin G. Butler Jr., CEO of Baltimore Gas
and Electric Co., will be the main speaker.
adunn@baltsun.com
CORRECTIONS
The Baltimore Sun is committed to providing fair and accurate coverage. Readers who have
concerns or comments are encouraged to call us at 800-829-8000.
PLUMBING

HEATING

said. “And she has really suffered this past
weekend.”
The teens had driven through traffic for
three hours to make it to the show, Ford
said, even skipping senior prom.
Instead, Ford spent the evening at the
hospital with his friend before his parents
picked him up to take him home.
“We’re really huge fans” of Beyonce, Ford
said. “It was really disappointing.”
Police spokesman Jeremy Silbert said
Monday that officers are still trying to
identify the rider.
Hours after the Inner Harbor accident,
police responded to the 1500 block of S.
Monroe St. in the Carroll-Camden Industrial Area, where they found the injured
driver and the dirt biker from the second
incident. The biker’s leg was broken, police
said.
Both were hospitalized, according to a
police statement. Police have not named the
dirt biker, who will face traffic charges.
Police said the dirt biker’s companion,
who has not been identified, assaulted the
driver.
Police have a “no-pursue policy” when it
comes to the riders, according to Detective
Nicole Monroe, a police spokeswoman. “It’s
just not worth it,” Monroe said, citing the
potential threat a police chase could pose to
pedestrians and property.
Instead, police use other tactics to curtail
the illegal rides, which have previously
included shutting down traffic lanes on
streets where bikers have congregated.
“We’re going to stay the course,” Monroe
said.
Young expressed shock at the violence
that accompanied the second incident
Friday night.
“This is what you think would happen in
places like Iraq,” he said. “Not in Baltimore,
not in the U.S.A. We need to send a clear
message that this is not going to be
tolerated.”
“It’s just sad and angering,” said Councilman Brandon M. Scott.
Baltimore Sun reporter Yvonne Wenger
contributed to this article
jcoburn@baltsun.com
twitter.com/Jesse_Coburn
DAN RODRICKS’ PODCAST
ROUGHLY SPEAKING
■ Featured on the podcast:
Dan interviews Stefanie DeLuca, co-author of a 10-year study
of 150 young adults who were
born to parents who lived in
Baltimore’s public housing
projects.
THE BALTIMORE SUN MEDIA GROUP
The Baltimore Sun Media Group, a Tribune Publishing Company, 501 N. Calvert Street, Baltimore,
MD 21278, publishes The Baltimore Sun (ISSN 1943-9504) daily, baltimoresun.com, 30 community
newspapers and magazines, and a growing portfolio of print and online products. In print and
online, The Baltimore Sun reaches more than 1 million Maryland readers each week, making it the
region’s most widely read source of news and information.
Subscribe to the newspaper, comment or relay concerns by calling 888-539-1280 or emailing customersatisfaction@baltsun.com. Purchase a digital subscription at baltimoresun.com/digital and register to comment on articles at baltimoresun.com/register.
To replace missing or damaged papers, please call between 6 a.m. and 10 a.m. on weekdays or 8
a.m. and noon on weekends and holidays.
Circulation/customer service 888-539-1280 or
e-mail customersatisfaction@baltsun.com
Sunstore 410-332-6800
Advertising 410-332-6300
Classified 888-539-7700
Main number 410-332-6000
News 410-332-6100
Sports 410-332-6200
Features 410-332-6156
Photography 410-332-6945
Maryland Voices 410-332-6227
Periodicals postage paid
at Baltimore, MD (USPS
526-100). Postmaster: Send
address changes to The
Baltimore Sun, P.O. Box 17162,
Baltimore MD 21202-17162.
100 PERCENT OF OUR NEWSPRINT CONTAINS RECYCLED PAPER
AIR CONDITIONING

DRAIN CLEANING
Locally
Owned and
Operated
4 SIGNS
WATER HEATER
It May Be Time
To Replace Your
► NOT HOT ENOUGH! If your water won’t get hot enough,
or if frequent thermostat adjustments are necessary.
► RUNS OUT TOO FAST! Does it seem like you’re running
out of hot water during the middle of your shower?
LIMITED TIME OFFER
40 GAL. NATURAL GAS OR
50 GAL. ELECTRIC WATER HEATER
FOR ONLY PRICE INCLUDES:
$949
► AO Smith Water Heater
► Professional Installation
► 10-Year Parts & Labor Warranty
Expires: 6/30/16
Offer: 344324 (Gas)
344325 (Electric)
Coupon must be presented at time of service. May not be
combined with any other offer. Offer valid only in Maryland.
HorizonServices.com
© 2016 By Horizon Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
MD Master HVACR contractor Lic. # 47186, MD Master Plumber/Gas Fitter Lic. # 63739 – David Geiger.
► MAKES NOISE! This can be a number of problems -- none of
which are good. A new water heater will run quiet and smooth.
► LEAKS! If you see a leak, call a professional! Even a small
leak can easily turn into a flood and damage your home.
HOT WATER TODAY
*
OR YOU DON’T PAY!
If you are having an issue with your water heater, call us by 4 PM
and we will guarantee "Hot Water Today or You Don't Pay."* No other
local plumber can restore your hot water faster than Horizon Services.
*Call for details. Residential only; gas or electric water heater tank replacement;
up to a 50 gallon tank; customer must call by 4 PM on weekdays, excludes mobile homes.
Baltimore, Howard, Harford, Carroll & Cecil Counties
(410) 205-1203
®
4
THE BALTIMORE SUN | TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
Man, woman dead after
shooting in Aberdeen
MARYLAND
D
Northwood in the case. He was being held without bail at the Baltimore County Detention Center. Thomas was found in a room at Knights Inn,
police said. Thomas and the victim didn’t know
each other, police said, and the reason for the
shooting remains unknown.
—Tim Prudente
Two people are dead after a shooting early Monday in Aberdeen, police said. Aberdeen police officers responded to the first block of E. Bel Air
Ave. at 3:15 a.m. Monday for a report of shots fired,
according to Officer Jason Neidig, a department
spokesman. A woman was pronounced dead at
the scene, and a critically injured man was taken
to Maryland Shock Trauma Center, where he was
pronounced dead. The victims were identified as
Jumal Rodale Dudley, 43, of the 2100 block of Williams Drive in Havre de Grace and Taneisha Chenay Smothers, 31, of the first block of Osborne
Road in Aberdeen. No suspects have been identified. Police have determined the victims knew
each other but did not say whether police believe
the victims knew their assailant.
— Sean Welsh, Bryna Zumer and David Anderson,
Baltimore Sun Media Group
City Council passes senior
property tax credit
The Baltimore City Council unanimously approved a new property tax credit for low-income
seniors Monday. The credit will apply to Baltimore homeowners who are at least 62 years old,
have an annual income of less than $40,000, and
have owned their homes for at least a decade. Despite objections from the city’s Department of Finance, which said the break would cost up to $4
million annually, Mayor Stephanie RawlingsBlake said she would sign the bill if the council
passed it. The bill passed on a voice vote with no
objections. Councilman Nick Mosby was absent.
— Andrew Dunn
Baltimore native to become
Navy’s top enlisted sailor
A Baltimore-born sailor who built his career in
intelligence is set to become the Navy’s top enlisted official. Fleet Master Chief Steven S. Giordano is to be sworn in as master chief petty officer
of the Navy in September. He will advise Chief of
Naval Operations Adm. John M. Richardson on
issues affecting enlisted sailors. Richardson announced Giordano’s selection at an event in
Rhode Island. Giordano enlisted in the Navy in
1989 and received intelligence training. He deployed to Bahrain during the 1991 Gulf War and
has served on ships and submarines across Europe and the Pacific. He is currently assigned to
Naples, Italy, as fleet master chief for naval forces
in Europe and Africa.
— Ian Duncan
LOTTERY
Yesterday’s numbers and recent drawings.
MARYLAND
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Day Daily
552 Pick 4
8035
Night Daily 888 Pick 4
8317
5 Card Cash
7♣ 8♥ J♠ 7♠ 4♥
Bonus
Match 5
09 18 19 31 37/13
Multi-Match,
June 13
07 12 13 20 28 36
Day D.C. 3 636 D.C. 4
Night D.C. 3 925 D.C. 4
Day D.C. 5
Night D.C. 5
DELAWARE
Mega Millions,
June 10
34 61 66 67 68/7
Hot Lotto,
June 11
02 23 24 25 45/6
Powerball,
June 11
20 27 36 41 58/7
Cash4Life,
June 13
35 40 51 55 60/01
MegaMillions: There was no winner in Friday’s drawing. Tonight’s
jackpot is an estimated $293 million.
Hot Lotto: There was no winner
in Saturday’s drawing. Wedneday’s jackpot is an estimated
$3.38 million.
Powerball: There was no winner
in Saturday’s drawing. Wednesday’s jackpot is an estimated
$153 million.
Day Daily
748 Play 4
6040
Night Daily 449 Play 4
5527
Multi-Win,
June 13
08 20 26 31 32 33
PENNSYLVANIA
Edgewood man, 27, charged
in Perry Hall shooting
Day Pick 3 349 Pick 4
3402
Night Pick 3 763 Pick 4
5369
Treasure Hunt
01 10 12 19 27
Match 6,
June 13
01 05 17 20 40 43
Cash 5
05 14 22 28 38
A 27-year-old man from Edgewood has been
charged with attempted murder in a shooting two
weeks ago in Perry Hall, police said Monday.
Gregory Nealy is being held without bail at the
Baltimore County Detention Center. Police were
called to the 5000 block of Forge Road about 11:15
p.m. May 29 for the shooting. A 32-year-old man
had been sitting in his car when, police said, Nealy
approached and shot the man multiple times. The
victim was hospitalized; his condition was not
available Monday.
— Tim Prudente
MULTISTATE GAMES
Maryland’s
news station
Coverage of the day’s
stories, breaking news
and First Warning
weather WJZ at
4 p.m.,
5 p.m., 6 p.m.
and 11 p.m.
Baltimore man, 28, charged
with attempted murder
A 28-year-old man from Northeast Baltimore has
been charged with attempted murder in a shooting early Saturday in Woodlawn, police said. Just
before 5 a.m. Saturday, a 32-year-old man was
shot in the upper body outside Knights Inn Baltimore West on Security Boulevard, police said. Investigators learned the victim had been standing
with a friend outside the inn when he was approached and shot once, police said. The victim
was hospitalized and has since been released. Police arrested Clayton Thomas Jr. of New
9118
7125
21473
24466
Granite Countertops
Buy Direct & Save Up To 30%
NATION
Court won’t hear
citizenship case
Suit had sought
status change for
American Samoans
By David G. Savage
Tribune Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — The
Supreme Court turned
down an appeal on Monday
from American Samoans
who said they deserved the
right to be U.S. citizens at
birth.
The court’s action leaves
in place a law adopted in
1900 that says people born
in American Samoa will be
considered “nationals”
who owe allegiance to the
United States but not citizens with the right to vote
and hold public office.
Acting without comment, the justices refused
to review a U.S. appeals
court ruling that said it is
up to Congress, not the
courts, to change the legal
status of American Samoans. Currently, all people
born in the 50 states and
the other U.S. territories,
including Guam and
Puerto Rico, become U.S.
citizens at birth.
The lawsuit brought by
five Samoan plaintiffs
pointed to the 14th Amendment adopted after the
Civil War, which declares
that all people “born or
naturalized in the United
States” shall be U.S. citizens.
During the 20th century,
Congress extended citizenship rights to the people of
the other territories, except
for the people of American
Samoa.
The timing of the appeal
may have played a role in its
dismissal. Since the death
of Justice Antonin Scalia in
February, the eight justices
have granted review of only
a handful of new cases, and
most of those arose because
the lower courts had split
on an issue of law.
JON ELSWICK/AP
Justices wouldn’t review a ruling that said it is up to Congress to change the legal status of American Samoans.
High court rules against Puerto Rico
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court ruled Monday
that Puerto Rico can’t restructure more than $20 billion
in public debt as it tries to overcome a decadelong economic crisis.
The 5-2 ruling said that federal bankruptcy law bars
Puerto Rico from enacting its own law to restructure the
debt of its financially ailing public utilities. The decision
means the U.S. territory must wait for Congress to pass
debt-relief legislation that would address its fiscal woes.
Puerto Rico lawmakers passed the law in 2014 to help
cash-strapped utilities meet obligations to bondholders
and creditors. Puerto Rico argued that it could enact its
own measures since the island is precluded from using
bankruptcy law. But the Supreme Court upheld lower
court rulings that struck down the law.
The commonwealth is mired in recession and cannot
pay $72 billion in public debt.
— Associated Press
On Monday, the court
said it had denied review in
more than 100 pending
appeals, including Tuana v.
United States, the Samoans’ case.
Separately Monday, the
court left in place the
Obama administration’s
anti-pollution rules that require power plants to
sharply restrict emissions
of mercury and other toxic
chemicals. The justices
turned away an appeal
from Michigan and 19
other Republican-led
states, which contended
the rules were too costly
and illegal.
Last year, Scalia spoke
for a 5-4 ruling that re-
buked the Environmental
Protection Agency for failing to conduct a costbenefit analysis before publishing the long-delayed
rules. That decision, however, stopped short of striking down the new rules,
which had just taken effect.
Earlier this year, the EPA
published its cost-benefit
analysis. Michigan’s attorney general appealed, arguing the rules should be put
on hold while further legal
challenges go forward.
But the court said Monday it would not hear the
latest appeal in Michigan v.
EPA.
dsavage@tribune.com
This Week’s
Deals
SAVE 50%
ON BRICK OVEN PIZZA,
GOLF FOR 2 & MORE
DealHere brings you deep daily discounts to local
restaurants, spas, and businesses in Baltimore.
0% Financing for 12 months
only
2,999
$
• up to 40 sq. ft. of granite countertop
• removal & disposal of old countertop
• 3 edge option (1/4 beveled,
¼ bullnose, & eased)
• new under mount stainless steel sink
(single or double)
• new stainless steel faucet
(pull out spray-single hole)
• plumbing hook up
• level A & B granite
(35 colors to choose from)
Free single bowl vanity top 48
No Hidden Fees, No Surprises
Expires: 6/30/16
only
999
$
50% OFF Golf for 2 + Cart
50% OFF Authentic Indian Cuisine
50% OFF Seafood, Steaks
& More
50% OFF Fresh Seafood, Pasta
& More
50% OFF Kebabs, Curry & More
50% OFF Brick Oven Pizza
& More
glass mosaic
tile backsplash
Up to 20 sq. ft.
includes
materials installation
Expires: 6/30/16
We will beat any price
from Lowe’s or Home Depot
Call us for a free in-home estimate
410-874-9821
Mon.–Fri. 9am–6pm • Sat. 10am-4pm
Ask About Our Cabinets!
MHIC#126186
To get our
special offers
Go to DealHere.com
and start saving today!
NATION & WORLD
NEWS BRIEFING
Tribune Newspapers and news services
Court vacates $1.8M award
to Ventura in ‘Sniper’ lawsuit
MINNEAPOLIS — A
federal appeals court on
Monday threw out $1.8
million in damages awarded to former Minnesota
Gov. Jesse Ventura, who
said he was defamed by the
late author Chris Kyle in
the best-selling book
“American Sniper.”
The 8th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals also sent
a portion of the case —
Ventura’s defamation
claim — back to the district
court for a new trial.
In “American Sniper,”
Kyle described decking
Ventura at a California bar
in 2006 after Ventura
made offensive comments
about SEALs, including
that the SEALs “deserve to
lose a few” in Iraq.
Ventura, a former SEAL,
sued. He testified that he
never made the statements
and that the confrontation
never happened. Kyle, who
was killed in 2013 by a
troubled veteran, gave
videotaped testimony before his death that his story
was true.
Karzai skeptical military action
can resolve Afghan conflict
The United States
should limit its military
mission in Afghanistan to
supporting local forces and
should intensify pressure
on Pakistan to jump-start
peace talks with the Taliban, Afghanistan’s former
president said.
Hamid Karzai, who
ruled Afghanistan with
Western backing from
2001 to 2014, sounded a
note of skepticism about
recent changes to the U.S.
military mission in Af-
ghanistan, which reflect
ongoing insecurity and the
strength of the Taliban.
“I don’t think military
means will bring us
(peace),” Karzai said. “We
did it for the last 14 years
and it didn’t bring us that,
so how do we know ...
military action will bring
us that now?”
U.S. officials say that
President Barack Obama
has approved more aggressive air and ground action
against the Taliban.
Sentencing hearing begins for
Oscar Pistorius in murder case
PRETORIA, South Africa — Oscar Pistorius is a
“broken” man whose mental state has deteriorated
over the last two years and
he should be hospitalized
and not jailed, a clinical
psychologist testified for
his defense Monday on the
opening day of the former
double-amputee track
star’s sentencing hearing
for murdering girlfriend
Reeva Steenkamp.
Pistorius is under house
arrest after serving one
year of a five-year sentence
after being found guilty in
2014 of manslaughter for
killing Steenkamp in 2013.
But the manslaughter conviction was overturned last
year by South Africa’s Supreme Court, which convicted Pistorius of the
more serious charge of
murder, which carries
longer jail sentences.
Pistorius’ lawyers are
arguing for some leniency
from a judge when she
decides his sentence.
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 |
NATO sending
4 battalions to
Poland and
Baltic nations
BRUSSELS — NATO’s
chief announced Monday
that the alliance will agree
this week to send four
multinational battalions to
the Baltic states and Poland to boost their defenses against Russia.
Jens Stoltenberg, the
NATO secretary-general,
said alliance defense ministers will formally approve the deployment
drafted by NATO military
planners at a meeting
Tuesday in Brussels.
Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland, four of
NATO’s members that feel
most threatened by Russia,
will each be reinforced by
“a robust multinational
battalion,” Stoltenberg told
a news conference.
There was no immediate reaction from Moscow.
The Kremlin has accused
NATO of moving more and
more military forces close
to its borders and vowed to
do what it takes to protect
Russia’s national security
and interests.
Student loan forgiveness: The Obama admin-
istration is trying to make it
easier for students who
have been misled or defrauded by colleges to have
their loans forgiven. A rule
proposed Monday would
lay out a clear relief process for borrowers who
believe they were deceived
in order to enroll in a
school.
Easing access to government records: Con-
gress on Monday sent
President Barack Obama
legislation making it easier
to obtain government records. The bipartisan bill
would require federal
agencies to consider release of info under a “presumption of openness” as
opposed to a presumption
the info is secret.
SIMELA PANTZARTZI/EPA
Migrants in Athens, Greece, wait to preregister Monday for a U.N. asylum program.
Greece clears refugee camps,
transports migrants to shelter
THESSALONIKI,
Greece — Police detained
34 volunteers in northern
Greece on Monday while
clearing makeshift migrant
camps along the border
with Macedonia.
Scores of riot police
were deployed as 1,065
Syrians and 58 Iraqis were
ordered out of where they
were living around a gas
station near the Greek border with Macedonia and
moved by bus to a shelter
near the northern city of
Thessaloniki.
The detained volunteers
— all non-Greeks who had
been helping migrants
with food distribution and
other basic needs — were
all released without charge
following identification
checks at a nearby police
station, authorities said.
Journalists were not allowed access to the site
during the police operation.
Greece has continued to
expand shelter space to
house stranded refugees
and migrants. Authorities
said a site previously used
to store grain had been
modified by the army and
was being used as a shelter
where the migrants were
being taken.
Around 3,000 refugees
and migrants were camped
at the border at three sites
after authorities cleared a
huge makeshift camp at
Idomeni last month.
More than 50,000 migrants remain stranded in
Greece after European
border closings and an
agreement reached in
March between the European Union and Turkey to
deport newly arrived migrants.
In the Greek capital,
refugees at government
shelters housed in a
sprawling former sports
complex for the 2004 Athens Olympics began registering for asylum Monday.
“They had not intended
to apply for international
protection in Greece, but
due to the circumstances
they have been, so to speak,
trapped,” a Greek Asylum
Service official said.
Armed man held in Calif. was on probation in Ind.
LOS ANGELES — An
Indiana man arrested over
the weekend in California
with three assault rifles
and ammunition in his car
was forbidden from leaving his home state as part
of probation stemming
from a case in which he
pointed a gun at neighbors,
according to authorities
and court records.
Investigators on Monday were trying to determine whether James Wesley Howell had any plans
to use the weapons. The
20-year-old told police
that he was in the area to
attend a gay pride event in
West Hollywood that
draws hundreds of thou-
sands of people.
Howell, of Jeffersonville, Ind., was arrested in
Santa Monica after residents called police to report suspicious behavior
by a man who parked his
car facing the wrong way.
When officers arrived,
they saw an assault rifle on
Howell’s passenger seat.
- EDUCATIONAL ADVERTISEMENT -
NEWS
| THE BALTIMORE SUN
- EDUCATIONAL ADVERTISEMENT -
Why Haven’t Senior
Homeowners Been
Told These Facts?
Better read this if you own a home in
the U.S. and were born before 1954.
It’s a well-known fact that for
many senior citizens in the U.S.
their home is their single biggest
asset, often accounting for more
than 50% of their total net worth.
Yet, according to new data
from the National Reverse
Mortgage Lenders Association,
senior homeowners in the U.S.
are now sitting on more than
5 trillion dollars of unused home
equity.1 With people now living
longer than ever before and home
prices back up again, ignoring this
“hidden wealth” may prove to be
short sighted.
All things considered, it’s not
surprising that more than a million
homeowners have already used a
government-insured Home Equity
Conversion Mortgage or “HECM”
(more commonly known today as
a reverse mortgage loan) to turn
their home equity into extra cash
for retirement.
However, today, there are still
millions of eligible homeowners
who could benefit from this FHAinsured loan but may simply not be
aware of this “retirement secret.”
Some homeowners think HECM
loans sound “too good to be true.”
After all, you get the cash you
need out of your home but you
have no more monthly mortgage
payments.
NO MONTHLY MORTGAGE
PAYMENTS?2 EXTRA CASH?
FACT: In 1988, President
Reagan signed the FHA
Reverse Mortgage bill into law.
That’s a shame because HECM
reverse mortgages are helping
many senior homeowners live a
better life.
In fact, a recent survey by
American Advisors Group (AAG),
the nation’s number one HECM
lender, found that over 90% of
their clients are satisfied with their
reverse mortgages.
While these special loans are
not for everyone, they can be a real
lifesaver for senior homeowners
like Betty Carter, who recently took
out a HECM loan with AAG so that
she could finally get the extra cash
she needed to fix up her house.
“With the help of AAG, I have been
able to repair my home’s foundation
that I had been putting off for several
years, refinish the hardwood floors,
paint the interior and will have the
exterior painted within a few days. My
house is starting to look like my home
again and it feels good,” says Carter.
The cash from a HECM loan
can be used for any worthwhile
purpose. Many people use the
money to save on interest charges
by paying off credit cards or
other high-interest loans. Other
common uses include making
home improvements, paying off
medical bills or helping other
family members. Some people
need the extra cash for everyday
expenses while others simply use
it as a “safety net” for financial
emergencies.
If you’re a homeowner age 62
or older, you owe it to yourself to
learn more so that you can make an
informed decision. Homeowners
who are interested in learning
more can request a free 2016 HECM
Reverse Mortgage Information
Kit and free Educational DVD by
calling American Advisors Group
toll-free at 1-(800) 841-6741.
At no cost or obligation, the
professionals at AAG can help you
find out if you qualify and also
answer common questions such
as:
1. What is the government’s role?
2. How much money might I get?
3. Who owns the home after I
take out a HECM loan?
It’s a fact: no monthly mortgage
payments are required with a
reverse mortgage loan;2 the
homeowners only have to pay
for maintenance, property taxes,
homeowner’s insurance and, if
required, their HOA fees.
Another fact many are not aware
of is that HECM reverse mortgages
first took hold when President
Reagan signed the FHA Reverse
Mortgage Bill into law 28 years
ago in order to help senior citizens
remain in their homes.
Today, HECM loans are simply an
effective way for homeowners 62
and older to get the extra cash they
need to enjoy their retirement.
Although today’s HECM reverse
mortgages have been improved
to provide even greater financial
protection for homeowners, there
are still many misconceptions.
For example, a lot of people
mistakenly believe the home
must be paid off in full in order
to qualify for a HECM reverse
mortgage loan, which is not the
case. In fact, one key benefit of
a HECM is that it automatically
pays off your existing mortgage,
which frees up cash flow, a huge
blessing for seniors living on
a fixed income. Unfortunately,
many senior homeowners who
could benefit from a HECM loan
You may be pleasantly surprised
don’t even bother to get more
by
what you discover when you call
information because of rumors
AAG for more information today.
they’ve heard.
1
The aggregate value of homes owned by seniors increased their share of home equity to $5.76 trillion according to the
National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association. Source: http://reversemortgagedaily.com/2015/12/27/u-s-seniors-homeequity-rockets-to-5-76-trillion/. 2If you qualify and your loan is approved, a HECM Reverse Mortgage must pay off your
existing mortgage(s). With a HECM/Reverse Mortgage, no monthly mortgage payment is required. A reverse mortgage
increases the principal mortgage loan amount and decreases home equity (it is a negative amortization loan). AAG
works with other lenders and financial institutions that offer reverse mortgages. To process your request for a reverse
mortgage, AAG may forward your contact information to such lenders for your consideration of reverse mortgage programs that they offer.
Borrowers are responsible for paying property taxes and homeowner’s insurance (which may be substantial). We do not
establish an escrow account for disbursements of these payments. A set-aside account can be set up to pay taxes and
insurance and may be required in some cases. Borrowers must occupy home as their primary residence and pay for
ongoing maintenance; otherwise the loan becomes due and payable. The loan also becomes due and payable when
the last borrower, or eligible non-borrowing surviving spouse, dies, sells the home, permanently moves out, defaults
on taxes or insurance payments, or does not otherwise comply with the loan terms. NMLS# 9392 (www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org). American Advisors Group (AAG) is headquartered at 3800 W. Chapman Ave., 3rd & 7th Floors, Orange
CA, 92868. V04052016
Rated
A+
These materials are not from HUD or FHA and were not approved by HUD or a government agency
5
6
THE BALTIMORE SUN |
NEWS
ORLANDO SHOOTING
| TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
Gunman’s father known for rambling political videos
By Lynne O’Donnell
Associated Press
KABUL, Afghanistan —
The father of the Orlando
nightclub gunman came to
the U.S. from Afghanistan
more than 30 years ago and
has made a series of rambling political videos about
his former homeland, even
once describing himself as
its “revolutionary president.”
Seddique Mir Mateen
maintained a high profile on
social media in the U.S. but
is a mystery to Afghan
authorities. Some government departments ran
background and security
checks Monday and found
no trace of him, an official
said.
Mateen met with reporters Monday at his home in
Port St. Lucie, Fla., and
called the massacre by his
son, Omar Mateen, “the act
of a terrorist.”
The deadly weekend attack shocked the family, the
father said, and went
against what he had taught
TRIBUNE NEWSPAPERS
Seddique Mir Mateen called
the attack by his son, Omar,
“the act of a terrorist.”
his son. The elder Mateen
also said that if he had
known what the 29-yearold was planning, he would
have arrested him himself.
In a Facebook video
posted after the killings,
Mateen said: “I don’t know
what caused him to shoot
last night.”
“On the issue of homosexuality, it can be punished
only by God, it is not the
business of a person. But he
(Omar) has killed those
people, and I am so saddened,” he added.
The elder Mateen is a life
insurance salesman who
started a group in 2010
called Durand Jirga Inc.,
according to Qasim Tarin, a
businessman from California who was a Durand Jirga
board member. The name
refers to the Durand Line,
the long-disputed border
established by the British
that is between Afghanistan
and Pakistan.
He apparently left Afghanistan after the 1979
invasion by the Soviet
Union.
With constant turnover
in Afghanistan government
departments in the past 15
years, there appears to be no
record of Mateen. Efforts
were made to find out about
his past, “but we haven’t
found a clue,” according to
an official in the Afghan
intelligence agency, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to talk to reporters.
But Kabul-based political
analyst Ahmad Saeedi said
Mateen, who is about 70, is
from the eastern province
of Laghman and was living
in the capital when he left 31
years ago for the U.S.
FROM PAGE ONE
Porter says Gray was docile, could have been safely seat-belted
GOODSON, From page 1
Porter said on the stand Monday that he
told Goodson that Gray should be taken to a
hospital. But he also said he never observed
any serious injury to Gray. After the van’s
fourth stop — a time when the medical
examiner has determined Gray was already
seriously injured — Porter said, Gray used
his legs to support his weight as Porter
helped him up.
Prosecutors have previously accused
Porter of lying, and on Monday played clips
of Porter’s original statement to investigators to show that his account has changed.
Porter said he had merely clarified his
original comments and that there was no
fundamental change in his account.
The prosecution’s timeline alleges that
Gray was hurt between the second and
fourth stops the van made, and Schatzow
said in opening statements that Goodson
gave Gray a “rough ride,” a term for driving
the van in a way that tosses the detainee
around in the back.
Before the fourth stop, Goodson made an
unexplained stop and looked into the back
of the van at Gray. Then he radioed for
backup, prompting Porter to visit the scene.
Porter testified at his own trial that
Goodson gave no explanation for why he
summoned help, which Schatzow said
strained credibility. Porter reiterated Monday that the two officers had no discussion
before opening the doors to look in on Gray.
“What, if anything, did you ask him about
why he had sought assistance?” Schatzow
asked.
“I didn’t ask him,” Porter said.
Porter testified that Gray was face down
on the van floor, and Porter asked him,
turbulent transport.
Goodson is the only one of the six
Baltimore officers charged in Gray’s arrest
and death who never provided police
investigators with a statement, and he has
the right not to testify at his trial. In
compelling Porter to take the stand, prosecutors have sought to establish what he
and Goodson discussed regarding Gray’s
condition and his request for a medic.
They succeeded in getting Porter to
testify that Goodson, as the van driver, was
primarily responsible for Gray, and that
Gray was not combative — even docile — as
he requested help during a later stop.
“Did you have the opportunity to seatbelt him?” Chief Deputy State’s Attorney
Michael Schatzow asked Porter.
The officer sighed and paused before
responding: “I guess so.”
Gray died of his injuries on April 19, 2015,
a week after his arrest. His death touched
off citywide protests against police brutality, and rioting, looting and arson broke out
on the day of his funeral.
Goodson faces the most serious charges
of the six officers in the case. All have
pleaded not guilty.
Porter is the second officer charged in the
case to be called to testify against a fellow
officer with his own charges pending — a
rare move allowed after a review by the
state’s highest court. Porter was tried first,
in December, in a case that ended in a
mistrial after jurors failed to reach a
unanimous decision on any of the charges
against him. Porter is scheduled to be
retried this year.
“What’s up?” Gray responded, “Help,” and
asked to be helped up to the bench inside
the van. Porter said he climbed in and
helped Gray onto a bench.
Schatzow had Porter read portions of a
transcript of his interview with investigators last year, in which he did not say that
Gray was able to get up with Porter’s
assistance.
Porter testified Monday there was “no
possible way I could lift a 150-pound man in
that tiny compartment” alone, and said he
hadn’t been more specific in his initial
interview because he wasn’t asked.
One of Goodson’s attorneys, Matthew
Fraling, asked Porter why he didn’t call for a
medic for Gray.
“I didn’t see any immediate medical
distress from Mr. Gray,” Porter said.
But Porter’s testimony that Gray was
docile and cooperative and could have been
safely secured with a seat belt was a blow to
the defense, who in opening statements
described Gray’s earlier interaction with
police as making it too risky for officers to
get close enough to him to fasten a seat belt.
However, defense attorney Andrew Jay
Graham also said the use of seat belts in
transport vans was generally rare.
Prosecutors on Monday also called a
neurosurgeon, Dr. Morris Marc Soriano,
who said that Gray’s injuries between the
second and fourth stop, while catastrophic,
could have allowed him to continue communicating with police officers at the later
stops. At Porter’s trial, Soriano said accessory muscles would allow Gray to keep
breathing despite his rapidly deteriorating
physical condition.
Prosecutors also called Detective Michael Boyd, a member of the Baltimore
Police Department’s Force Investigation
Team that investigated Gray’s death. They
had Boyd walk through a series of city
surveillance videos from the day of Gray’s
arrest, identifying individuals and the path
of the van as it traveled through the city. At
one point, prosecutors played a video of
Goodson stopping the van and walking to
the rear before getting back in and driving
off — a stop that lasted seconds.
Boyd was still on the stand when Judge
Barry G. Williams excused him, to resume
his testimony at 9:30 a.m. today.
Before concluding the proceedings, Williams noted that prosecutors submitted
evidence Monday that they had not previously shared with the defense. The move
followed a motion filed by the defense last
week calling for dismissal of the case after
learning prosecutors had never turned over
evidence about a meeting they had last year
with a key witness in the case, Donta Allen.
Allen was the arrestee placed in the back of
the van with Gray during the final leg of
Gray’s transport.
Williams had excoriated prosecutors,
saying the evidence was clearly favorable to
Goodson and should have been turned over
to the defense. He stopped short of
sanctioning them but gave them until
Monday to deliver any additional evidence.
Defense lawyers are now reviewing the
latest information to see whether they need
to file any additional motions, Williams
said.
jfenton@baltsun.com
twitter.com/justin_fenton
Dolphins headed for sanctuary
DOLPHINS, From page 1
tat where the dolphins still would be cared
for by humans.
“We now know more about dolphins and
their care, and we believe that the National
Aquarium is uniquely positioned to use that
knowledge to implement positive change,”
John Racanelli, the aquarium’s CEO, said in
the announcement.
The aquarium entered the debate over
the merits of keeping animals in captivity
when it said two years ago it was considering eliminating the popular Dolphin Discovery amphitheater exhibit and moving
the eight mammals to a sanctuary.
At the time, some visitors were surprised
to learn of a potential move for animals they
had grown up watching and brought their
children to see. The aquarium stopped
offering a stunt-filled dolphin show about
four years ago and instead allowed visitors
to observe the animals in the pool and
interacting with trainers.
The aquarium is one of Baltimore’s
biggest tourist attractions and draws 1.3
million visitors a year.
The facility launched a comprehensive
planning effort in 2013 dubbed BLUEprint
aiming to balance audience expectations
with a conservation organization’s responsibility to rescue, protect and care for
aquatic life. The aquarium’s staff and board
weighed whether to rebuild the existing
marine mammal pavilion in a more naturalistic style or move the dolphins to another
facility.
In an opinion piece appearing today in
The Baltimore Sun, Racanelli said the
decision is in the best interest of the
dolphins as well as of an institution that has
evolved from a sea life attraction to aquatic
conservation group. The nonprofit group
did not announce the sanctuary’s expected
cost but said it is seeking philanthropic
investments to fund the project.
“We would be obviously very supportive
of a decision that would result in the
1-800-SLEEPYS
dolphins being moved to a sanctuary,” said
Emily Hovermale, Maryland state director
of the Humane Society of the U.S. “We’ve
partnered on legislation with the aquarium
in the past and found them to be a great
advocate for animal welfare. This is a
positive step forward.”
Public opposition to keeping dolphins
and whales in captivity has grown, as more
attention has been focused on the issue.
Various dolphin movies and TV shows and
the 1993 move “Free Willy” about an orca
trapped at a theme park helped spark public
sympathy. Later documentaries, including
“The Cove” about the killing of dolphins in
Japan and “Blackfish” about orcas in
captivity after the killing of a Sea World
trainer in 2010, stoked the interest.
Just last month, protesters gathered
outside the National Aquarium for the
international Empty the Tanks Worldwide
event, in which protests were planned at 61
locations in 22 countries. Protesters held
signs that said “Captivity kills” and “Empty
the tanks.”
Sea World recently announced plans to
stop breeding orcas and to make changes to
allow animals to be kept in more natural
environment. And Ringling Brothers and
Barnum & Bailey Circus sent its last
performing elephants into retirement in
May.
“That needs to continue,” Hovermale,
said. “There shouldn’t be things like
entertainment shows where animals are
forced to perform unnatural acts — things
they wouldn’t do in their natural environments. Continuous improvement in that
area is definitely essential.”
Though progress is being made, Hovermale said, abusive practices continue, such
as the smaller circuses that force elephants
to perform on cue.
Relocating the dolphins to a sanctuary
would be a groundbreaking step, said
Heather Rally, a veterinarian for the PETA
Foundation, who has been following the
•
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN
Aquarium officials envision a first-of-its-kind protected, seaside habitat where the dolphins still would be cared for by humans.
aquarium’s years of study.
“We know we cannot keep these animals
happy and healthy in captivity,” Rally said.
Bottlenose dolphins are “highly intelligent,” she said, and can suffer psychological
damage and develop abnormal, repetitive
behaviors when inhibited by confined
spaces. That can lead to heightened aggression and bullying.
“We just know at this point in our
evolution we cannot keep them happy and
healthy in concrete tanks,” Rally said. “We
need to find another solution. ... Taking an
animal out of its natural habitat and putting
it in an unnatural enclosure where it’s
unhealthy and unhappy and putting it on
display for children is sending negative
messages for children.”
While the aquarium said it has not
identified a site for the sanctuary, it is
looking to build an outdoor, seawater
facility in a tropical year-round climate,
close to where dolphins exist in the wild.
The ideal site would be much larger than
the current home, with stimuli such as
marine plants and fish. A site selection team
will evaluate locations based on those
criteria and the potential for providing
lifetime customized care for each dolphin.
While many animals and fish thrive in
zoos or aquatic centers, large, social animals
such as elephants and dolphins run into
trouble in confined areas, said Temple
Grandin, a professor of animal science at
Colorado State University.
“They can’t form big social groups,”
Grandin said. “Their life is all about social
relationships — they form lifelong social
bonds. Lots of other animals are just fine. A
lot of small animals do fine in zoos.
Aquarium fish are just fine.”
But she believes a balance needs to be
struck between animal welfare and providing the public, especially children, with a
real connection to animals.
To encourage education about and interest in animals, “I think people actually need
to see animals to make a connection,”
Grandin said.
Baltimore Sun reporter Natalie Sherman
contributed to this article.
lorraine.mirabella@baltsun.com
SLEEPYS.COM
RU Y!
THSDA
W E
NOEDN
The Only Mattress Professionals
W
®
BIGGEST
SALE
PLUS FREE DELIVERY!
with any Tempur-Pedic, Serta I-comfort,
Sealy Posturepedic Hybrid or All-New
ZuZu mattress purchase.
Check Out Our News Blogs
baltimoresun.com/blogs
ENTERTAINMENT
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 |
TAURUS April 20-May 20
Don’t make a mess with your moolah.
If you are in a rush to be a trendsetter or
give in to impulse buying you could
throw good money after bad. Sidestep
unnecessary expenditures and avoid
making crucial commitments.
GEMINI May 21-June 20
Someone may be swept off their feet
by your pure animal magnetism. It may
be tempting to dump an existing
relationship for a new playmate. Satisfaction may elude you if you start a new
relationship or sign a contract.
CANCER June 21-July 22
Make truth and beauty a reality. You
don’t need to tell a lie to put a positive
spin on your job, hobby, relationship or
financial situation. You will work best in
a quiet place where you can give free
rein to creativity.
LEO July 23-Aug. 22
Share and share alike. You may be
persuaded to chip in and contribute to
the group pot by the feeling it is a moral
obligation. Communication can be important to your career so don’t ignore a
phone call, email, or message.
VIRGO Aug. 23-Sept. 22
Be a friend and others will be friendly.
At the same time, do not read too much
into anyone’s offer of undying love. If
you do not allow intimacy to develop too
quickly a new relationship can grow.
LIBRA Sept. 23-Oct. 22
Your emotional armor may need
polishing. Even your closest companions may seem deliberately antagonistic
and could target a few of your sensitive
spots. Avoid making any crucial changes, promises or decisions.
SCORPIO Oct. 23-Nov. 21
Lounge around on your most com-
fortable laurels. Avoid initiating any
new projects or investments. You and
your partners will benefit people who
offer encouragement, reassurance, or
uncompensated assistance.
THEO WARGO/GETTY
Big night for Tonys: CBS’
Tony Awards broadcast on
Sunday drew 8.73 million
viewers, up 35 percent
from last year, according to
preliminary ratings from
the Nielsen Co. It is the
largest audience for the
show since 2001. James
Corden, above, host of
CBS’ “The Late Late
Show,” presided over the
ceremony.
SAGITTARIUS Nov. 22-Dec. 21
You may feel you have the most even
when you have the least. An intense
desire to succeed may force your hand
or cause overconfidence. You could
easily clash with the very people who
could help you the most.
CAPRICORN Dec. 22-Jan. 19
It is easy to exceed everyone’s expectations. Actions can speak louder than
words and will drown out controversy.
Go all-out to make your sweetie proud
or to get recognition on the job for a job
well done.
AQUARIUS Jan. 20-Feb. 18
Crying over spilt milk will not refill
the bottle. If the tried and true hasn’t
worked in the past you might be disloyal
to those who urge you to stick with the
tried and true. Try some new and less
traditional tactics.
PISCES Feb. 19-March 20
Work to dispel rumors of trust issues.
Boost your reputation by showing
others that you are committed to
helping them achieve their own happiness or success. Don’t be upset if
relevant facts and figures are briefly
obscured.
IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY:
Throughout the coming six to eight
weeks it will pay to remember that a
little acorn can grow to a mighty oak.
New connections and group activities
can open some doors for you and help
you widen your horizons. People who
have your best interests at heart will be
drawn closer. Take advantage of any
opportunity that sprouts up in August,
but don’t be extravagant. You may be too
restless for your own good and relationships may temporarily be rocky. Remain
rooted to the tried and true. Your best
bet is to wait until February to make a
major change or to break off an existing
relationship.
— Tribune Media Services
Go to baltimoresun.com/horoscopes to get a peek at tomorrow’s
horoscope. To get ideas and inspiration for things to do, or to sign up for The
Baltimore Sun’s Weekend Watch newsletter, go to baltimoresun.com/events.
RANDY HOLMES/ABC
Bill Murray to get
Mark Twain Prize
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing
Arts announced Monday in Washington that Bill
Murray, 65, will be this year’s recipient of the Mark
Twain Prize for American Humor. The award goes to
those who influence society in the tradition of Samuel
Clemens, the writer, satirist and social commentator
better known as Mark Twain.
“I’m honored by the award and by its timing,” Murray said in a statement. “I believe Mark Twain has
rolled over in his grave so much for so long, that this
news won’t disturb his peace.”
Like past Twain prize recipients, including Tina
Fey, Will Ferrell and last year’s winner, Eddie Murphy,
Murray first gained prominence for his work on “Saturday Night Live.” He joined the cast in 1977, replacing
the beloved Chevy Chase, and he overcame audience
skepticism by creating the iconic character Nick the
Lounge Singer.
His first starring movie role was in “Meatballs”
(1979), and he scored a major hit the following year
with the anarchic golf comedy “Caddyshack.”
“Bill Murray has charmed us with unforgettable
performances from an eclectic cast of characters that
have become ingrained in our cultural vernacular,”
Kennedy Center President Deborah Rutter said. “His
unique brand of humor seems to defy time itself —
always remaining relevant and relatable to new audiences — much like our award’s namesake.”
In 2003, Murray, in one of his many serious roles,
garnered the best reviews of his career and racked up
award after award — but not an Oscar — for his soulful
turn in Sofia Coppola’s “Lost in Translation.”
Murray will accept the prize, first handed out in
1998, at an Oct. 23 gala at the Kennedy Center.
— Associated Press
DONATE YOUR CAR
Net Proceeds Benefiting
Children’s Hospitals
in Maryland
Over $2,000,000 Raised Locally, Free Vehicle/Boat Pickup ANYWHERE,
We Accept All, Vehicles Running or Not, Fully Tax Deductible
Call: (443) 438-1622
L N
W IF EW
AR ET
RA IM
NT E
Y
On a Stannah Stairlift
ANNE ARUNDEL
COUNTY NORTH
BOW-TIE CINEMAS
ANNAPOLIS MALL
1020 Annapolis Mall
Annapolis
410-224-1145
www.bowtiecinemas.com
BOW-TIE CINEMAS
HARBOUR CENTER
2474 Solomons Island Rd
Annapolis Harbour
Shopping Center
410-224-1145
www.bowtiecinemas.com
CINEMARK
EGYPTIAN 24
7000 Arundel Mills Circle
Arundel Mills Mall
800-FANDANGO-2156
cinemark.com
Make climbing stairs
easy again with the
world’s top selling
stairlift in your home.
Stannah is simply the
best solution for any
straight, curved or
spiral stairway.
Regal Entertainment Group
7900 Governor Ritchie Hwy
410-760-3300
800-FANDANGO-571#
www.REGmovies.com
Call For A Free Home
Survey
REGAL
WAUGH CHAPEL
STADUIM 12
HOYTS CINEMA
WEST NURSERY 14
1591 West Nursery Road,
Linthicum
410-850-8999
westnurserycinemas.com
UA MARLEY
STATION 8
Regal Entertainment Group
1419 S. Main Chapel Way
410-541-7160
800-FANDANGO
www.REGmovies.com
825-1
1440
410-8
6300 Falls Road, Baltimore, MD 21209
800-825-1440 • bedcomobility.com
Emotional Adele: E!
News reports that Adele
couldn’t hold back the
tears at the start of her
concert Sunday in Antwerp, Belgium, where she
dedicated her performance
to those killed during
Sunday’s LGBTQ-targeted
shooting in Orlando, Fla.
“The LGBTQ community,
they’re like my soul mates.
… I don’t know why I’m
crying already because
most of this tonight is
pretty miserable because
my songs are ... miserable. I
do have two songs that
sound happy, but they’re
not.”
Creator of beehive
passes: Margaret Vinci
Heldt, who became a hairstyling celebrity after she
created the famous beehive hairdo in 1960, died
Friday at age 98 in a senior
citizens facility in the
Chicago area. The beehive
— a tall, conical woman’s
hairstyle — became a cultural phenomenon during
the 1960s and evolved into
a style worn for decades as
Hollywood’s starlets
walked red carpets.
June 14 birthdays: Ac-
tress Marla Gibbs is 85.
Singer Janet Lennon is 70.
Drummer Alan White is 67.
Actor Eddie Mekka is 64.
Actor Will Patton is 62.
Singer Boy George is 55.
Actress Yasmine Bleeth is
48. Actor Kevin McHale is
28.
MOVIE THEATRES
CDF’s
GLIDE UPSTAIRS
7
Tribune news services
What’s in your future?
WheelsForWishesMD.org
| THE BALTIMORE SUN
CELEBRITIES
Horoscopes
ARIES March 21-April 19
Stand out in the crowd by being
overtly original. While everyone else
struggles to keep relationships on an
even keel, you have the energy to strike
out on your own. Your blunt and honest
approach carves out a better path.
NEWS
BALTIMORE CITY
THE CHARLES
1711 N. Charles Street
Baltimore
410-727-FILM
thecharles.com
LANDMARK
HARBOR EAST
MARYLAND POLITICS
645 S. President Street
Baltimore
410-624-2622
LandmarkTheatres.com
YOUR SOURCE OF NEWS AND GOSSIP FROM
THE MASON-DIXON LINE TO THE POTOMAC
MARYLAND
SCIENCE CENTER
601 Light Street
Baltimore, MD 21230
410-685-5225
ROTUNDA
CINEMAS
R/C HOLLYWOOD
MOVIES 4
711 W. 40th Street
Baltimore
410-235-5554
5509 Oregon Avenue
Arbutus
410-242-1188
www.rctheatres.com
THE SENATOR
THEATRE
CARROLL COUNTY
5904 York Road
Baltimore
thesenatortheatre.com
REGAL
WESTMINSTER 9
BALTIMORE COUNTY
EAST
AMC
WHITE MARSH 16
White Marsh Blvd. & I-95
North at The Avenue at White
Marsh
800-FANDANGO-738#
www.moviewatcher.com
BELTWAY MOVIES 6
7660 Belair Road
Fullerton
410-882-5911
EASTPOINT 10
CINEMAS
7938 Eastern Avenue
Baltimore, MD 21224
410-284-3100
BALTIMORE COUNTY
NORTH
REGAL HUNT
VALLEY STADIUM 12
Regal Entertainment Group
1511 McCormick Road
800-FANDANGO-456#
www.REGmovies.com
BALTIMORE COUNTY
NORTHWEST
AMC
OWINGS MILLS 17
Owings Mills Town Center
Mill Run Circle
888-262-4386
www.moviewatcher.com
BALTIMORE COUNTY
WEST
AMC
SECURITY SQUARE 8
1717 Rolling Road
410-265-6911
www.moviewatcher.com
Regal Entertainment Group
400 North Center Street
410-857-1410
800-FANDANGO-458#
www.REGmovies.com
HARFORD COUNTY
FLAGSHIP CINEMAS
CHURCHVILLE
Campus Hills Shopping Ctr.
Bel Air
410-734-9000
www.flagshipcinemas.com
www.movietickets.com
REGAL BEL AIR
STADIUM 14
Regal Entertainment Group
409 Constant Friendship Blvd.
Abingdon
410-569-8276
800-FANDANGO-247#
www.REGmovies.com
HOWARD COUNTY
AMC
COLUMBIA 14
The Mall in Columbia
10300 Patuxent Pkwy.
410-423-0510
www.moviewatcher.com
UA SNOWDEN SQ
STADIUM 14
Regal Entertainment Group
9161 Commerce Center Drive
410-872-0670
800-FANDANGO-570#
www.REGmovies.com
PRINCE GEORGE’S
COUNTY
RIVERTOWNE
6075 Oxon Hill Road
Oxon Hill, MD 20745
410-727-3456
www.moviewatcher.com
PIKES THEATRE
921 Reisterstown Road
Pikesville
410-580-2909
horizoncinemas.com
marylandsciencecenter.org
baltimoresun.com/blogs
For movie listings & show times,
visit: www.baltimoresun.com/movietimes
8
THE BALTIMORE SUN |
NEWS
| TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
ORLANDO SHOOTING
eNEWSPAPER UPDATE
What makes AR-type guns popular?
By Laura J. Nelson
and James Rufus
Koren
Tribune Newspapers
LOS ANGELES — Attackers who carried out
some of the most highprofile mass shootings in
U.S. history, including Sunday’s massacre at a gay club
in Orlando, Fla., have favored semi-automatic rifles
that fire as fast as the
shooter can pull the trigger.
The AR-15 and similar
military-style rifles have be-
come increasingly popular
in the U.S., where gun enthusiasts find them lightweight and easy to handle.
Semi-automatic rifles fire
one bullet each time the
trigger is pulled. But AR-15style rifles can be converted
into assault weapons, meaning one pull of the trigger
releases a continuous
stream of bullets. Police
have not said whether the
rifle used in Orlando had
been modified.
The mass shooters at
Newtown, Conn., in 2012
and San Bernardino, Calif.,
in 2015 used AR-15-style
rifles.
“It stays on target, it’s
very accurate and it’s devastatingly lethal,” said Jay
Wachtel, a retired Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms
and Explosives agent and a
lecturer at California State
University at Fullerton.
Some states limit the capacity of magazines that can
be used with AR-15 rifles,
but Florida does not.
On Sunday, Omar Mateen burst into the Pulse
club carrying what federal
authorities described as a 9
mm pistol and a “.223caliber AR type rifle.”
The forefather of the
AR-15 was designed in the
1950s by a former Marine,
who later sold the design to
Colt. The rifle, later dubbed
the M-16, was widely used
by the U.S. military during
the Vietnam War.
The rifle was modified
slightly and released to the
civilian market in the 1960s.
The rifle’s design was
tweaked during a 20-year
RICH PEDRONCELLI/AP 2012
The AR-15 assault rifle, of which three variations are
shown, is “devastatingly lethal.”
federal ban on some assaultstyle weapons, and sales
soared when the law ex-
pired in 2004.
laura.nelson@tribpub.com
In Baltimore, an impassioned call for unity to oppose hatred
VIGIL, From page 1
director of FreeState Legal
Project, a legal advocate for
low-income LGBT Marylanders.
Many victims of the Florida massacre were Hispanic
and gay.
“Not only is it the biggest
mass shooting in United
States history, but it targeted the Latin night, the
LGBT community,” said Lillian Amaya, a founder of
IRIS Baltimore, a Latino
LGBT group that formed in
February. “You’re talking
about a hate crime that has
multiple complexities. ... It’s
just so much.”
Orlando police said 29year-old Omar Mateen, a
New York-born resident of
St. Lucie County, Fla., called
911 and pledged allegiance
to the terrorist group
known as ISIS before he
turned an assault rifle and
handgun on revelers at a
Latin music-themed party
at Pulse, a popular club. He
killed at least 49 people and
wounded 53 others before
he died in a shootout with
officers, authorities said.
Nationally, calls for healing were joined by pitched
political sparring over security and gun control. Republican presidential candidate
Donald Trump repeated
calls to ban Muslims from
entering the country, while
Democrat Hillary Clinton
stressed defeating “the bar-
LLOYD FOX/BALTIMORE SUN
Hundreds attend a vigil Monday night in Baltimore’s Station North to honor the memory of those killed and
wounded early Sunday in an Orlando, Fla., club.
barity we face from radical
jihadists.”
In Maryland, mourners
gathered at events around
the state, from churches in
Rockville and Columbia to
McKeldin Mall at the University of Maryland, College
Park.
At the Baltimore vigil,
Mayor Stephanie RawlingsBlake said the gathering
revealed “a ministry of support” for the LGBT community in Baltimore.
“Being here is speaking
volumes about who we are
as Baltimoreans,” the mayor
said.
Police Commissioner
Kevin Davis said Sunday’s
attack “targeted the LGBT
community in a horrific
way. ... We stand with you.
We’ll do our very best to
protect you.”
Davis also announced
Monday night that the department was offering security assessments for the
city’s LGBT bars and nightclubs. Officers can advise on
security plans and surveillance systems, Davis said.
There are no immediate
threats against clubs in Baltimore, Davis said. But after
the shooting in Orlando, he
said, “We are reminded of
our vulnerabilities and that
such evil acts can occur
anywhere.”
Businesses owners interested in an assessment may
contact Lt. Jeffrey Shorter:
Jeffrey.Shorter@Baltimorepolice.org
Gays, lesbians and transgender people and their
allies found the attack particularly heinous because
clubs such as Pulse have
long been safe gathering
spaces.
“Frankly, many of us in
Baltimore are as numbed as
we are hurt, as we are
routinely forced to confront
hatred and violence every
day as other parts of our
identity interact with society’s systems,” said Lyles,
president of the GLBT
Community Center of Baltimore and Central Maryland.
The center and other
groups organized Monday
night’s vigil, at Charles
Street and North Avenue,
with a goal to unify people
who typically might have
little interaction but are
equally devastated by the
tragedy.
They expressed concern
not only about violence
against gays, lesbians and
transgender people, but
against Muslims because of
a backlash against Islamic
extremism.
Amaya and Alfredo Santiago were among the founding members of IRIS Baltimore seeking to build a
bridge between Baltimore’s
Latino and LGBT communities. In light of the tragedy
in Orlando, they sought to
also connect with local
Muslims.
“As a proud Latino gay
man, I don’t blame this on
my Muslim brothers and
sisters,” Alfredo Santiago
said at an event Monday
morning in Mount Vernon
with the Council on American-Islamic Relations.
Sen. Richard Madaleno,
an openly gay member of
the Maryland Senate, joined
the groups in stressing that
neither the shooter nor ISIS
represent Islam or its followers. He said the attacks
should not shake ties the
LGBT community has with
the Muslim community.
“ISIS have killed far more
Muslims around the world
than Americans and other
Westerners,” Madaleno
said. “This is not about
Islam, this is a group of
sociopaths.”
Members of the Islamic
council also condemned the
massacre.
“The LGBTQ community has been one of the
strongest allies against Islamophobia,” said Zainab
Chaudry, council spokesperson. “For them to be
targeted by an individual
who is believed to be Muslim is especially horrific.
“We do not condone this
violence, and we are not
going to stay silent while
this type of homophobia is
taking place,” Chaudry said.
Organizations vowed to
continue helping communities heal in the coming days.
IRIS Baltimore invited people to come to the next
meeting of its monthly support group at 6 p.m. Friday
at Familia Adelante in Highlandtown.
At Chase Brexton Health
Care in Mount Vernon,
therapists attended Monday’s vigil to connect peoplewith mental health resources.
“What we’re going to try
to do for most of this week is
completely open up and
make ourselves available to
community members who
need an ear to listen, some
space to process everything
going on and need to not
feel alone,” said Nate Sweeney, executive director of
Chase Brexton’s LGBT
Health Resource Center.
Donna Yaffe, a psychologist for the health center,
said the unity displayed
Monday could help with the
grieving process.
“There are so many different kinds of groups of
people that are persecuted
and hated for their differences,” Yaffe said. “People
need to be embraced for
their differences and not
hated for their differences.”
The Associated Press and
Tribune Newspapers contributed to this article.
sdance@baltsun.com
twitter.com/ssdance
JOIN THE TRIBUTE!
Maryland Public Television
LZ Maryland
Vietnam Veterans Salute
Sat., June 18 and Sun., June 19
(doors open 9:30 am daily)
Maryland State Fairgrounds, Timonium, MD
• SSolemn
l
ceremonies
i iin ttribute
ib t tto Vi
Vietnam
t
veterans
t
• Concerts by The Association, The Lovin’ Spoonful,
The Motortown All-Stars
• US Air Force Band ensembles & Bob Hope USO-style Show
• Exciting climax to 1000-rider motorcycle Honor Ride
• 140-ft. walk-on/sign-on Southeast Asia map
• The Wall That Heals replica of DC Vietnam Veterans Memorial
• Veteran Services Village
• Military aircraft/vehicles/equipment displays
• Family-friendly “basic training” obstacle course,
arts & crafts ... and many more features indoors and out!
Tickets:
Veterans/active military/Gold Star families - FREE
Others over age 12 - $5 for full weekend admission
Order online mpt.org/lzmaryland or buy at gate (cash only!)
Tickets available now at Wegmans Food Markets (MD only).
mpt.org/lzmaryland
410-581-4292 or
800-522-8915
ORLANDO SHOOTING
eNEWSPAPER UPDATE
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 |
NEWS
| THE BALTIMORE SUN
9
Victims in Orlando mourned
FBI delves into
shooter’s history,
phone for clues
Tribune Newspapers
and news services
ORLANDO, Fla. — Orlando mourned the 49 people killed in Sunday’s attack
on a gay nightclub, as the
White House and the FBI
portrayed the killer Monday
as an apparent “homegrown
extremist” who espoused
support for a jumble of
often-conflicting Islamic organizations.
Vigils and makeshift memorials to the victims of the
deadliest mass shooting in
U.S. history began to take
shape not just across Florida
and the United States but
around the world as well, as
counterterrorism authorities delved into gunman
Omar Mateen’s background.
Wielding a semi-automatic rifle and a handgun,
Mateen, a 29-year-old
American-born Muslim,
opened fire at the crowded
Pulse nightclub in Orlando
early Sunday.
He was killed in a gunbattle with a SWAT team
after police used explosives
and a small armored vehicle
to punch a hole in a wall and
allow dozens of clubgoers to
escape, police said.
The tragedy shocked the
nation and cast a pall over
Orlando, known around the
globe as the home of Walt
Disney World and other
theme parks.
“We will not be defined
by the act of a cowardly
hater,” Mayor Buddy Dyer
WILL DICKEY/FLORIDA TIMES-UNION
Mourners grieve during a vigil in Jacksonville, Fla., on Monday for the victims of the nightclub massacre in Orlando.
vowed. “We will be defined
by how we respond.”
FBI agents scrambled
Monday to recover data
from Mateen’s electronic
media — cellphones, computers and other devices —
hoping to find clues to what
sparked the massacre and
whether he has contacts
with any known extremists,
according to current and
former FBI officials.
This phase of the investigation — a deep dive
into Mateen’s planning, contacts, communications and
other evidence — will take at
least a few weeks.
FBI Tampa Special Agent
in Charge Paul Wysopal said
“hundreds” of leads were
being pursued.
President Barack Obama,
who will travel to Orlando
on Thursday, said the gunman appeared to be motivated by extremist propaganda
online, saying that authorities have not found any
links connecting this attacker with other radical
groups.
Obama called the shoot-
ing a case of “homegrown
extremism” on Monday, saying that the gunman appeared to be “inspired by
various extremist information that was disseminated
over the internet.”
“We see no clear evidence
that he was directed externally,” Obama said during
remarks in the Oval Office.
“It does appear that at the
last minute, he announced
allegiance to ISIL. But there
is no evidence so far that he
was in fact directed by ISIL,
and at this stage there’s no
direct evidence that he was
part of a larger plot.”
ISIL is one of the acronyms for the Islamic State.
FBI Director James Comey said that Mateen had
“strong indications of radicalization” and was probably inspired by foreign terrorist organizations.
He said Mateen had three
911 conversations during the
attack and not only pledged
loyalty to the Islamic State
but also expressed solidarity
with the Tsarnaev brothers,
who carried out the Boston
Marathon bombing, and a
suicide bomber who died in
Syria on behalf of the Nusra
Front, a group at odds with
the Islamic State.
A few years ago, Mateen
also expressed support for
both al-Qaida and Hezbollah, which is a bitter enemy
of Islamic State, Comey
noted.
As the investigation
moved forward, yellow police tape cordoned off the
Pulse club.
“There was blood all over
the street. You can see where
people were dragged,” said
Patty Sheehan, Orlando’s
first openly gay city commissioner, pointing toward the
building and grimacing.
Sheehan knows the
owner of the club and a
bartender who witnessed
the shooting and they described details to her.
“When the police went in,
they told people, ‘Raise your
hand if you’re alive,’ ”she
said. “Some of the living
covered themselves with the
dead.”
At least 53 people were
wounded during the rampage, with many still hospitalized Monday.
However, hospital officials said they are “very
optimistic” that victims being treated at Orlando Regional Medical Center will
recover.
The hospital said many
survivors had “multiple
high-velocity” gunshot
wounds but added that
many in the intensive care
unit no longer need ventilators to breathe and medical
staff no longer need to give
“major amounts of blood” to
shooting victims.
Stories of victims
told by loved ones
By Nomaan Merchant
and Tammy Webber
Associated Press
A gunman wielding an
assault-type rifle and a
handgun opened fire inside
a crowded gay nightclub in
Orlando, Fla., early Sunday,
leaving at least 49 people
dead in the worst mass
shooting in U.S. history.
Here are the stories of
some of the victims.
Mercedez Marisol Flores,
26, went to Pulse nightclub
almost every weekend, Flores’ sister-in-law said Monday, often with her best
friend, Amanda Alvear.
Both women died in the
shooting.
“She was very outgoing,”
Nancy Flores said of Mercedez, who worked at Target, studied at Valencia College and wanted to become a
party planner.
Luis Omar Ocasio-Capo
wanted to be a star.
The 20-year-old dancer
was working at Starbucks
while studying theater and
would have auditioned on
Tuesday for a play, said his
sister, Belinette OcasioCapo.
“He was one of the most
amazing dancers,” she said.
“He would always call me
and say, ‘I’m going to be the
next Hollywood star.’ He
really did want to make it
and be known.
“Now his name ended up
being all around the world
like he wanted — just not this
way.”
Jonathan Camuy , 25,
moved to Central Florida
from his native Puerto Rico
to work for the Spanishlanguage television network
Telemundo.
He was on the production
team for “La Voz Kids,” a
talent show for young singers in its fourth season.
He had previously
worked for the network in
Puerto Rico.
“Jonathan was an extremely hard-working individual, full of life, enthusiastic and with a great personality,” the network said in
a statement. “He will be
missed dearly.”
Peter O. Gonzalez-Cruz,
22, known among family and
friends as “Ommy,” was always the life of the party.
“Peter makes a difference
everywhere he goes,” said
his aunt, Sonia Cruz. “He
was a happy person. If Peter
is not at the party, no one
wants to go.”
Gonzalez-Cruz went to
Pulse on Saturday night with
his best friend, Gilberto Ramon Silva Menendez. After
news of the mass shooting
emerged, Cruz said she held
out hope for hours that her
nephew would turn up in a
hospital bed.
But late Sunday afternoon, she was told he was
among those killed.
Juan Ramon Guerrero, 22,
told his cousin, Robert Guerrero, he was gay about two
years ago, but he was worried about how the rest of his
family would react. He did
not tell them until just before
the beginning of this year.
“They were very accepting,” said Guerrero, 19. “As
long as he was happy, they
were OK with it.”
Guerrero said that his
cousin worked as a telemarketer and that in recent
months he started attending
the University of Central
Florida.
“He was always this
amazing person, (and) he
was like a big brother to me,”
he said of his cousin.
CAROLYN COLE/TRIBUNE NEWSPAPERS
Danielle Irigoyen joins others Monday in mourning victims of Sunday’s shooting in Orlando,
Fla., where a gunman opened fire inside a gay nightclub and killed at least 49 people.
Tevin Eugene Crosby’s inspirational posts on Facebook — “2016 will be the best
year ever” — represented his
drive for success.
Chavis Crosby told the
Orlando Sentinel that his
brother was ambitious and
hard-working.
“Whatever goal he had in
mind, he worked hard,”
Crosby said. “Whether alone
or on a team, he worked on
that goal.”
Tevin Crosby, 25, was director of operations for a
Michigan marketing firm.
“He was definitely a good
person and a good brother to
me,” he said.
Stanley Almodovar III’s
mother had prepared a tomato-and-cheese dip for
him to eat when he came
home from his night out.
Instead, Rosalie Ramos
was awakened by a call at 2
a.m. Sunday telling her
something had happened.
Ramos told the Orlando
Sentinel her son, 23, a pharmacy technician, posted a
Snapchat video of himself
singing and laughing on his
way to Pulse. “I wish I had
that (video) to remember
him forever,” she said.
Kimberly Morris ,
37,
moved to Orlando just
months ago and had taken a
job at Pulse nightclub as a
bouncer, the Orlando Sentinel reported.
“She was so excited,” exgirlfriend Starr Shelton told
the newspaper. “She’d just
started working there and
told me how she was thrilled
to get more involved in the
LGBT community there.”
“I can’t think of a time
when I did not see a smile on
her face,” friend Narvell
Benning told the Orlando
Sentinel.
Florida attack prompts tale of two policies
By Noah Bierman
and Evan Halper
Tribune Newspapers
CLEVELAND — The candidates didn’t take the requisite timeout from the presidential campaign trail. They
didn’t announce that this
week was for healing only.
The body count, in fact, was
not even final before the
massacre in Orlando, Fla.,
had become as politically
charged as it was horrific.
The deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history became the
launching point Monday for
what was already expected
to be one of the country’s
nastier presidential campaigns, coming the week that
Hillary Clinton and Donald
Trump were set to turn their
attention entirely to each
other and building their
cases in battleground states.
Instead, the attack that
killed 49 people forced them
ANALYSIS
to confront the anxieties set
off by yet another gruesome
mass murder — and another
perpetrator who was of Islamic faith.
Trump focused relentlessly on immigration as the
root cause of the massacre,
saying that “the only reason
the killer was in America in
the first place was because
we allowed his family to
come here.” His unrestrained
broadsides on immigrants,
Muslim nations, even the
motivations of President Barack Obama — at one point
Trump seemed to question
whether the president had
terrorist affiliations — defied,
as usual, political convention.
Clinton delivered a nuanced speech with multiple
policy proposals, emphasizing the need for the country
to unite and avoid scape-
goating Muslims. “Our open,
diverse society is an asset in
the struggle against terrorism, not a liability,” she said,
while warning that installing
an unsteady hand with xenophobic tendencies in the
White House is among the
most dangerous things
voters could do.
Trump accused Clinton of
mismanagement, political
correctness and designing an
Obama administration immigration policy culpable for
the killings in San Bernardino, Calif., and now Orlando. He appeared to expand his proposed ban on
Muslims entering the country to an even bigger group of
people, those from any “areas
of the world where there’s a
proven history of terrorism”
against the U.S. and its allies.
“Why does Hillary Clinton want to bring people here
— in vast numbers — who
reject our values?” Trump
Trump revoking paper’s credentials
Donald Trump said Monday his presidential campaign
is revoking credentials provided to The Washington Post.
Trump wrote on his Facebook that the move was “based
on the incredibly inaccurate coverage and reporting of the
record setting Trump campaign.”
He faulted the Post for a headline posted Monday that
he said read, “Donald Trump suggests President Obama
was involved with Orlando shooting.” The headline on the
article Monday afternoon read, “Donald Trump seems to
connect President Obama to Orlando shooting.”
— Associated Press
asked, citing no evidence that
Clinton wants to do so. He
also suggested that Clinton,
who enjoys broad support
from LGBT groups and
women, is no friend of either.
“Clinton wants to allow
radical Islamic terrorists to
pour into our country — they
enslave women, and they
murder gays,” he said.
Clinton’s response since
Orlando has been measured.
In Cleveland, she delivered a
speech much like the ones
she gave following the attacks last year in Paris and
San Bernardino, in which she
soberly laid out a plan for
fighting Islamic State and
sought to rally voters to
embrace diversity in these
moments.
“Whatever we learn about
this killer and his motives ...
we know already the barbar-
ity we face from radical
jihadists is profound,” Clinton said. “The attack in
Orlando makes it even more
clear we cannot contain this
threat. We must defeat it.”
The candidates did attempt to take some semblance of a break from politics in deference to the victims of Orlando and their
families. Clinton postponed
fundraisers Monday and a
major campaign rally with
Obama in Wisconsin on
Wednesday. It was moved to
next week. Trump canceled
his Monday evening campaign rally.
But Clinton’s declaration
that “today is not a day for
politics,” hardly held true.
There was no avoiding it.
Noah Bierman reported from
Manchester, N.H., and Evan
Halper from Cleveland.
nbierman@tribpub.com
10
THE BALTIMORE SUN | TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
OBITUARIES
Helen M. Passano
The philanthropist and community volunteer’s interests
ranged from educational institutions to hospitals
By Frederick N. Rasmussen
something, there was no stopping her. She
loved Notre Dame and helped move it
forward,” she said.
Helen M. Passano, a retired chemist and
When Notre Dame undertook a restoraphilanthropist who led the restoration of tion in 2001 of the chapel in Theresa Hall,
the chapel at Notre Dame of Maryland the project was funded by a $2 million gift
University and served on the board of from Ms. Passano and her husband and
Roland Park Country School, died Thurs- their family. The original sanctuary had
day at Gilchrist Hospice Care in Towson of been marred by a 1960s modernization
acute myeloid leukemia.
when air conditioning was installed. The
The longtime Tuscany-Canterbury resi- original building had been designed in 1886
dent was 68.
by the noted Baltimore architectural firm of
Marylou Yam, president of Notre Dame, Baldwin & Pennington.
said the institution was “deeply saddened
“I remember loving the new chapel,” Ms.
by the passing of Helen Passano. As an Passano told The Baltimore Sun in a 2001
alumna, Helen was a shining example of a interview. “We were cool. We got air
fearless Notre Dame woman.
conditioning. We thought we were moving
“She was a loyal, enthusiastic champion forward with a contemporary space. But
of Notre Dame and a generous benefactor guess what? We were moving back. It’s time
whose formidable presence and tireless to bring it back to its original glory.”
efforts will be missed,” said Dr. Yam.
“When she was a member of the
“Helen’s enduring legacy on our campus, institutional advancement committee, she
including the lovely Marikle Chapel of the always gave good advice,” said Dr. SeurAnnunciation in memory and honor of her kamp. “I just can’t say enough good about
parents, will continue to
Helen.”
have an impact in perpetuMs. Passano was a
ity.”
member of the board at
“Helen was a wonderful
Roland Park Country
woman. She was vibrant,
School from 1998 to 2004.
energetic and smart as a
“If you asked Helen to
whip,” said Jean Waller
do something, you knew it
Brune, head of Roland Park
would be done beautifully.
Country School. “She was a
She organized our first
wonderful mother and
post-prom party, which
grandmother.”
has been the model ever
The daughter of Henry
since,” said Ms. Brune.
John Marikle, a Connecti“She had a generous heart,
cut State Police officer, and
and she and Mac helped
Wanda Mildred Marikle, a Helen M. Passano led restora- raise money to build our
homemaker, Helen Cather- tion of the chapel at Notre
athletic center. She always
ine Marikle was born in Dame of Maryland University.
had so much energy and I
New London, Conn.
always just loved being
She was a graduate of Norwich Free around her.”
Academy in Norwich, Conn, and came to
Elaine E. Born and Ms. Passano worked
what was then the College of Notre Dame of together as members of the Women’s Board
Maryland in 1964. There, she earned a at Johns Hopkins Hospital when Ms. Born
bachelor’s degree in chemistry in 1969.
was president.
She met her future husband, Edward
“Helen had a real love for the Baltimore
Magruder “Mac” Passano Jr., who became community. ... I just can’t image the
vice chairman and secretary of Waverly Women’s Board at Hopkins without her.
Press.
She was gracious, fun and well-organized,”
“She came to Baltimore from Connecti- said Ms. Born.
cut for college in 1964, met my dad, and
Ms. Passano often served as co-chair of
never left,” a daughter, Tamara “Tammy” the hospital Women’s Board’s annual BestPassano Wiggs of Ruxton, wrote in an Dressed Sale and Boutique, held in the
email.
Carriage House on the grounds of the
In 1978, she obtained a master’s degree in Evergreen Museum & Library on North
administrative science from the Johns Charles Street.
Hopkins University.
“We price to sell,” Ms. Passano told The
Ms. Passano launched her career in 1969 Sun in 2012. “We won’t help ourselves if we
with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration make things too high.”
and worked as a research chemist until
In addition to the University of Maryland
retiring in 1979.
School of Medicine and the Calvert School,
After stepping away from her profes- the couple and their family gave $1 million
sional career, she devoted her time to to support the Hopkins Downtown Center
philanthropy and community activism.
— the lobby is named after them.
“Baltimore was truly her home, and she
Ms. Passano was an avid tennis and
spent her life volunteering, raising money bridge player and enjoyed spending time at
and giving back to the community,” he a second home on Groton Long Point,
daughter said.
Conn.
For 17 years she served on the board of
She was a member of the Baltimore
trustees of Notre Dame and chaired its Country Club, L’Hirondelle Club, Mount
institutional advancement committee.
Vernon Club, Stonington Country Club and
She was capital campaign chair and the Groton Long Point Yacht Club.
board member at Roland Park Country
Ms. Passano was a communicant of the
School, and was still a member of the Roman Catholic Cathedral of Mary Our
Women’s Board at Johns Hopkins Hospital Queen, 5200 N. Charles St., where a Mass of
at her death.
Christian burial will be offered at 10:30 a.m.
“Helen was a member of the board at today.
Notre Dame as long as I was president —
In addition to her husband of 44 years
and I worked here 15 years. In fact, she was and her daughter, she is survived by two
on the committee that interviewed me and other daughters, Catherine Passano
gave me a dinner,” said Mary Pat Seurkamp, McDonnell of Green Spring Valley and
who was president of the college from 1997 Sarah Passano Meech of Barrington, R.I.; a
until her retirement in 2012.
sister, Mary Ann Soltys of Juneau, Alaska;
“She was generous, committed and and nine grandchildren.
passionate, and when she set her mind to frasmussen@baltsun.com
Index
CHORNYEI Paul
CLARK Leah
DAVIS Robert H.
DUNCAN Mary Anne
ERNEST SR. Gerald
FULTON Dorothy
HILLIARD Anne C.
HOFMEISTER Donald Lee
KEAY Gloria M.
LAYTON Irwin A.
LEMONS Reba L.
LEWIS Vanessa
MEEKS JR. Capt. Ret. Roger R.
MEFFORD Mary Stella
MILLER S.J. Rev. William T.
MYERS JR. Irvin A.
NICOLETTE JR. John Anthony
NOVAK Marcia E.
SAMBROOK Donald
SCHWARTZMAN Florence
SMITH Sister Georgine Marie
TACCHETTI Florence J.
TEGLER Bunny
_____________________________
TO VIEW DEATH NOTICES
ONLINE VISIT BALTIMORESUN.COM
MARYLAND’S ONLINE COMMUNITY
http://www.baltimoresun.com
OR ON YOUR MOBILE PHONE
mobile.baltimoresun.com
The Baltimore Sun
Americo E. Gambo, video firm owner
Americo E. “Rick” Gambo, a former
automobile salesman who later founded a
television production company, died Friday
of a stroke at WellSpan York Hospital in
York, Pa. He was 73.
The son of Americo J. Gambo, a construction company owner, and Barbara J.
Gambo, a homemaker, Americo Ernest
Gambo was born in Brooklyn, N.Y., and
moved to Roland Park with his family,
relatives said.
After graduating in 1962 from Calvert
Hall High School, he and partner James
“Buzz” Cusack, who now owns the Charles
and Senator theatres, opened an automobile body and paint shop on 25th Street.
After the business closed a year later, Mr.
Gambo started selling cars for Sherwood
Chrysler Plymouth, and later for Timonium
Chrysler Plymouth and Dulaney Lincoln
Mercury.
He was general manager of Len Stollers
Hilltop Lincoln Mercury when he established KNG Video in 1981 and began
videotaping weddings. He then switched to
TV commercials, shows and event produc-
Sympathy
Elegant Flowers & Gifts
Since 1934
tion for Baltimore advertising agencies,
cable TV and local TV stations.
From 1984 to 1986, he worked for Bob
Pivick TV & Radio Productions, and in 1986
founded CCAV which he operated until
closing the business in 1993.
In recent years, he had been a consultant
to Jomar Productions, a TV production
company that is owned and operated by his
two sons. The former Parkton resident
moved to New Freedom, Pa., recently.
His wife of 42 years, the former Frances
Chambers died in 2011.
He was a member of Our Lady of Grace
Roman Catholic Church and the Knights of
Columbus Council 9815.
A Mass of Christian burial will be offered
at his church, 18310 Middletown Road,
Parkton, at 10 a.m. today. .
Mr. Gambo is survived by his two sons,
Mark Gambo of Timonium and John
Gambo of New Freedom; a daughter,
Stephanie Gambo of Cockeysville; a sister,
Barbara Dorsch of Upperco; and four
grandchildren.
— Frederick N. Rasmussen
DEATH / LODGE NOTICES
Chornyei, Paul
On June 13, 2016 Paul Devoted son of Frank Chornyei
and the late Eve Chornyei; Brother of Linda Pohuski
and husband Michael; Uncle of Jacqueline Robbins
and the late Geoffrey Robbins II. Visit Gonce Funeral
Service P.A. 4001 Ritchie Highway on Wednesday
3 to 5 and 7 to 9 P.M. Service Thursday 12:00 P.M.
Interment Glen Haven Memorial Park.
Goncefuneralservice.com
Clark, leah
On June 7, 2016, Leah Grace Clark (nee Givens) of Owings Mills, beloved wife of the late Frank H. Clark, Sr.
Mother of Frank H. Clark, Jr. and the late Dorothy Jean
Molesworth. Grandmother of Christina L. Rosenblatt
and her husband David, Stephanie Clark, Elizabeth
Toon and her husband William and Charlie Wheeler
and his wife Danielle. Great Grandmother of Brandon
and Abigail Rosenblatt, Jordan and William Harbaugh,
Emmalynne, William, Jr. Savannah, James, and Preston Toon, Lukas, Jackson and Olivia Wheeler. Sister of
Johnny Givens and his wife Sadie. Mother in law of
the late James A. Molesworth and Shirley L. Clark. Also
predeceased by five sisters and one brother.
Friends may call at Eline Funeral Home, 11824 Reisterstown Road (at Franklin Blvd.) on Thursday, June
16, 2016 from 3-5 and 7-9 pm. Funeral Service will be
held on Friday, June 17, 2016 at 10:00am at the funeral
home. Interment Dulaney Valley Memorial Gardens. In
lieu of flowers, please make donations to Hampstead
Baptist Church, 328 Hanover Pike, Hampstead, MD
21074. Condolences may be sent to www.ElineFuneralHome.com
Davis, Robert H.
Robert H. Davis was born
October 2, 1920, in Ancon, Canal
Zone, Panama, and passed
quietly on June 11, 2016. His
deceased parents were Gavin
Hart and Margaret Davis of
Yeadon, Pennsylvania.
After
graduation
from
Yeadon High School in 1937,
he was selected to attend
the Pennsylvania Maritime
Academy (PMA) which was later
folded into the United States
Merchant Marine Academy. In June 1940 he graduated
from the PMA and entered the Navy with the rank of
Ensign. He was released from the Navy in October
1945 with the rank of LtCDR, ultimately retiring in
1960 with the rank of Captain from the Naval Reserve.
During WWII he participated in seven major naval
engagements: Occupation of Iceland; Landing in
North Africa; (2) Landing at Guadalcanal; Landing at
Bougainville; Landing at Munda; and the Landing at
Okinawa.
Returning to civilian life after the war, he attended
the Wharton School of Business at the University of
Pennsylvania. His employers were The Insurance
Company of North America, Camden Trust Company,
and finally Commercial Credit Company of Baltimore.
Ultimately, he was the President of Commercial Credit
Supply Corporation.
In 1989 he was predeceased by his wife, Margaret
Willard Davis, of Timonium, Maryland. He is survived
by his sons: Robert W. Davis and his wife Alice of
Marietta, Georgia; Gregory Hart Davis of Towson,
Maryland. Gavin Hart Davis II and his wife Becky of
Addison, Texas; Julie Davis Fisher and her husband
Matthew of Falls Church, Virginia; and Paige Davis
Turbeville and her husband Wesley of London,
England are the surviving grandchildren. There is one
Great Grandchild – Julianna Hart Turbeville of London,
England.
Of the many professional and private associations
he belonged to, he was most proud of The Fernwood
Lodge #543 of the Free and Accepted Masons
of Yeadon, Pennsylvania and The Elks #2273 of
Plantation, Florida.
A Graveside Service will be held at Dulaney Valley
Memorial Gardens, Timonium, MD on Thursday, June
16th at 11:00 AM.
www.ruckfuneralhomes.com
Duncan, Mary anne
On June 9, 2016 Mary Anne
Duncan (nee Pilo) beloved wife
of Barry A. Duncan; devoted
mother of Kelli Schlossenberg
and her husband Lenny, Jeffrey
Duncan and his wife Tracey and
Gregory Duncan and his wife
Bridget. She was a loving grandmother to Megan, Lindsey, Jackson, Lily, Lucas and Tess. She
is also survived by sisters Jean
Girvan and Sylvia Bahr.
Mary Anne retired from Verizon
Communications in the year 2000 as a Senior Engineer / Project Manager. She then began a second 10
year career as the Office Manager for Catholic Charities, Villa Maria Behavioral Health Clinic where she
loved helping the clients and their families.
Receiving of friends Saturday, June 18, 2016 from
12:30 to 1:30 PM at the family owned Ruck Towson
Funeral Home, Inc., 1050 York Road (Beltway exit 26)
followed by a Memorial service in the funeral home
chapel. Private Interment.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be
given to the Carroll County Humane Society 2517 Littlestown Pike Westminster, Maryland 21158.
ErnEst, sr., Gerald
On June 12, 2016 Gerald L. Ernest, Sr. devoted husband
of Leila M. Ernest. Beloved father of Gerald L. Ernest
Jr. and his wife Teresa, Cindy Ernest and the late
Martin E. Ernest. Cherished brother of William, Robert,
Joseph, Michael, David, and the late John, Charles, and
James Ernest. Also survived by 4 grandchildren and 1
great grandchild.
Friends may call on Wednesday from 3:00 to 5:00
and 7:00 to 9:00 PM at the Stallings Funeral Home,
P.A. where funeral services will be held that evening
at 8:00 PM. Burial of cremains will take place on
Monday, June 20, 1:00 PM at Glen Haven Memorial
Park. In lieu of flowers memorial contributions may
be made to Hospice of Frederick County PO Box 1799
Frederick, MD 21702. For online condolences please
visit www.stallingsfh.com.
Fulton, Dorothy
Dorothy Bean Fulton, 94, of Towson, passed away on
Sunday, June 5, 2016 at Loch Raven Center. Dorothy was born on August 30, 1921 in Annapolis, MD,
daughter of the late Robert Clinton Bean and Belinda
(Tydings) Bean. She was a graduate of Annapolis High
School. She is survived by one daughter, Linda Fulton
Atwell, of Hawaii; two grandchildren, Michael Atwell
of Annapolis, and Kristy Elliott Oechsle of Ohio; one
sister, Kathryn Bean deFries, of Towson; many nieces,
nephews, great-nieces and great-nephews; and her
husband’s cousin, Richard (Dick) Fulton, of Towson.
She was pre-deceased by her husband, Allan Wirt
Fulton, Jr., her daughter, Barbara Fulton Brubaker, and
her sister, Elizabeth Bean Sunderland. Memorial donations for Dorothy may be made to Gilchrist Hospice,
555 West Towsontown Blvd, Towson, MD 21204.
HiLLiArD, Anne C.
On June 12, 2016,Anne C. Hilliard of Sykesville, beloved
wife of the late Thomas Hilliard Jr., devoted mother
of Thomas (Joy) Hilliard III, and Judith “Judi” (Stephen)
Filar, loving grandmother of Lisa O’Malley, Stephen
Filar III, and Troy Hilliard, and dear great grandmother
of Christopher Filar, David O’Malley, Bethany O’Malley,
and Patrick Filar; she was predeceased by her siblings,
William Brady, Florence Brady, and Helen Yelton.
The family will receive friends on Wednesday from
2-4 pm and 6-8 pm at the Haight Funeral Home &
Chapel, 6416 Sykesville Rd., Sykesville.
Funeral liturgy will be held on Thursday at 1:00 PM
at St. Joseph Catholic Community, 915 Liberty Rd.
Eldersburg. Interment in Lake View Memorial Park,
Sykesville.
www.haightfuneralhome.com
Hofmeister, Donald Lee
Donald Hofmeister, 76, of Taneytown, MD. On
Saturday, June 11, 2016. Devoted husband of Patricia
“Pat” (nee Dey) Hofmeister. Beloved father of Donna
Furlan (Bryan) and Debora McDonald (Neil). Loving
grandfather of Dalton. Beloved brother of Walter
Hofmeister, Jr. Navy veteran. Retired from IBM.
Funeral Thursday, June 16, 2016 at Myers-Durboraw
Funeral Home, 136 E. Baltimore St., Taneytown, MD.
Visitation Wednesday 2-4 & 6-8 p.m. at the funeral
home. In lieu of flowers, memorials to www.uso.org/
Donate. Online condolences at:
www.myersdurborawfh.com
keay, Gloria M.
On June 11, 2016, Gloria M. Keay, of Towson; dear sister of Francis “Mike” Keay and the late Norman “Bill”
Keay and Ann L. Schlee.
Family and friends will honor Gloria’s life at the family owned Evans Funeral Chapel and Cremation Services – Parkville, 8800 Harford Rd. on Thursday, June
16 from 10 to 11AM, at which time a funeral service
will begin. Interment Moreland Memorial Park. Memorial contributions in Gloria’s name may be made to
Maryland SPCA. Memory tributes may be sent to the
family at www.evansfuneralchapel.com.
Layton, Irwin a.
On June 13, 2016, Irwin A. Layton; devoted husband
of Marsha Layton (nee Rothenberg); loving stepfather of Amy (Jimmy) Kuntz and David (Shari) Fuller;
dear brother of Howard Layton; cherished son of the
late Sylvia and Victor Layton; adored grandfather of
Elizabeth and Lexi Kuntz and Dylan and Hudson Fuller.
Services at SOL LEVINSON & BROS., INC., 8900
Reisterstown Road, at Mount Wilson Lane on
Wednesday, June 15, at 3 pm. Please omit flowers.
Contributions in his memory may be sent to Seasons
Hospice Foundation, 6934 Aviation Blvd, Suite N-R,
Glen Burnie, MD 21061 or the charity of your choice.
In mourning at 11 Old Manor Court, Reisterstown, MD
21136.
www.sollevinson.com
Lemons, Reba L.
Reba L. Lemons, 91, of New Freedom, formerly of
Parkton, died Saturday, June 11, 2016, at ManorCare
Health Services, Dallastown. She was the wife of the
late Charles A. “Al” Lemons. Viewing will be held from
10 to 11 am, on Friday, June 17, at Pine Grove United
Methodist Church, 19401 Middletown Rd, Parkton,
MD. The funeral service will begin at 11 am, with burial
in the church cemetery. Full military rites will be offered by Parkton American Legion, Post #256.
J.J. Hartenstein Mortuary Inc., New Freedom, PA, is in
charge of arrangements.
Lewis, Vanessa
Vanessa Lewis, retired Social
Security employee, mother
and grandmother, passed away
June 6, 2016 from a devastating
illness at Johns Hopkins
Hospital. She was 65 years
old. Vanessa worked at Social
Security Administration for over
30+ years before retiring. She
later worked as Office Manager
at Compassionate Healthcare
Nursing Services.
Home going services will be
held Wednesday on June 15,2016 at Vaughn Green
Funeral Home 8728 Liberty Road in Randallstown Md
@ 10:30am.
Meeks, Jr., Capt. ret. roger r.
Unexpectantly on, Saturday,
June 11, 2016 Capt. Ret. MSP
Roger R. Meeks, Jr.
Beloved husband of 33 years to
Carolyn McCowan Meeks
Dearest son of the late Roger
R. Meeks, Sr and late Audrey B.
(Murray) Meeks.
Devoted father of Melissa M.
and husband Michael Hartzell of
Finksburg and Justin W. Meeks
of Sykesville. Dear brother of Michele and husband Dennis Leppert of Westminster. Devoted Pops to his little buddy
Logan Michael Hartzell.
Loving uncle of Todd and wife Jen Leppert, and Jeff
Leppert. Loving great-uncle of Tyler, Makenzie, Danielle and Brooke.
Also survived by numerous members of the McCowan
family.
The family will receive friends on Wednesday, June 15,
2016 3 to 5 and 6 to 9 PM at BURRIER-QUEEN FUNERAL HOME AND CREMATORY, P.A., 1212 W. Old Liberty
Rd. Winfield, MD. Funeral Services will take place on
Thursday, June 16, 2016 10 AM at St. Joseph’s Catholic Community, 915 Liberty Rd. Sykesville, MD 21784
with MD State Police Chaplain Jeff Paulson officiating. Interment Lake View Memorial Park, Sykesville,
MD. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the
American Heart Assoc. PO Box, Glen Allen, VA 230585216 or The Nathan Chris Baker Foundation, PO Box
994 Sykesville, MD 21784. Online condolences www.
burrier-queen.com
Mefford, Mary Stella
On June 11, 2016, Mary Stella “Ty” Mefford, nee Rubino of Parkville; beloved mother of Michael Rubino,
Gina Cellinese, Steven Everett and Linda Schaefer;
cherished grandmother of Nicholas Cellinese, Toni
Hausmann, Jennifer Whitley, Tyler Schaefer, Miya and
Gaetano Rubino; great grandmother of Stella, Lucas
and Perry; dear sister of the late Leonard and Joseph;
sister in law of Philomena.
A chapel service will be held 10 AM Thursday, June 16
at Dulaney Valley Memorial Gardens. Memorial contributions in Stella’s name may be made to the American Heart Association.
Save 10%
Promo Code: BALTSUN
R
RAIMONDIS FLORIST
Raimondisfuneralflowers.com
410-655-7700
Share your Memories or Express
Condolences For a Loved One
By using the“Guest Book”on-line at:
baltimoresun.com/obituaries
Sympathy Flowers & Gifts
Available on-line at:
baltimoresun.com/obituaries
FROM PAGE ONE
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 | THE BALTIMORE SUN
11
Work starts to clear Howard Tunnel derailment
TUNNEL, From page 1
the tunnel’s north entrance at the Mount
Royal Station in Bolton Hill about 5:45 a.m.
Monday, authorities said. But they waited
until after the evening rush hour to begin
clearing the tracks.
Twelve of the derailed train cars were
empty “but possibly contained a residual
substance in them,” authorities said. The
13th carried acetone, a substance used in
paint thinner and nail-polish remover.
Other cars in the train were carrying
phenol, butane, liquefied petroleum gas,
scrap iron and acid, authorities said.
In the event of a chemical spill during the
clearing of the derailed cars, authorities
said, the Fire Department would use a
reverse 911 system to tell residents who live
within a quarter-mile radius of the incident
to shelter in place, officials said.
“Our meters show there’s no immediate
danger,” Assistant Fire Chief Mark Wagner
said.
Authorites are investigating the cause of
the derailment. It started about one-third of
the way through the train at car 47, one of
the 18 that were carrying loads, authorities
said.
The front of the train had entered the
tunnel when the cars derailed just north of
the tunnel, Maloney said. The derailed cars
continued into the tunnel, where they
stopped, he said.
The Philadelphia-to-Cumberland run “is
a regular, routine route for this train,” said
Brian Hammock, resident vice president of
CSX.
Hammock said he did not know when
the tunnel was last inspected. He said CSX
has full confidence in all of its tracks
AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN
One of trhe 13 derailed cars can be seen Monday In this view of the north end of the Howard Street Tunnel at Mount Royal Station.
throughout the city.
A day after the deadliest mass shooting in
U.S. history Sunday at a gay nightclub in
Orlando, Fla., Wagner called the FBI to help
investigate the derailment. “With everything going on, especially in Orlando, I
asked the FBI to be here because we want to
rule out foul play,” Wagner said.
Investigators determined it was not
caused intentionally.
Baltimore Police Commissioner Kevin
Davis said his department, too, was assisting. “We want to be on the ground at the
very, very beginning in case a twist or turn
DEATH / LODGE NOTICES
MILLER, S.J., Rev. William T.
On June 13, 2016 at Stella Maris
Hospice, Reverend William
Thomas Miller, S.J.; beloved son
of the late William E. and Mary
A. Miller (nee Jaggerd); devoted
brother of Ms. Ethel “Bernie”
Miller of Riverdale, NY; dear
uncle of Christopher Kyriakakos, M.D. and beloved brother
in faith of the Maryland Province
Jesuits.
Friends may call at the Colombiere Jesuit Community Chapel,
5704 Roland Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21210 on Thursday, June 16 from 10:00 am to 11:00 am; at which
time a Funeral Mass will be concelebrated. A Luncheon will be held at Ignatius House, 4603 Millbrook
Road, Baltimore, MD 21212 at 12:30 PM. Interment on
Friday, June 17 in the Jesuit Community Cemetery, 501
N. Church Road, Wernersville, PA 19565 at 11:00 AM.
Memorial gifts may be made in Father Miller’s name
to the Maryland Province Jesuits Fund, 8600 LaSalle
Road, Suite 620, Baltimore, MD 21286. Arrangements
by the family-owned Mitchell-Wiedefeld Funeral
Home, Inc. www.mwfuneralhome.com
myers, Jr., Irvin a.
Irvin A. Myers, Jr., On June 12, 2016 beloved husband
of Bessie G. Myers. Devoted father of Irvin G. Myers,
Virginia Gross, Terri Davis, Barbara Myers, and Kathleen Carey. Brother of the late Paul Myers and one
sister. Grandfather of Carmen Gregg, Nicole Carey,
Petey Carey, Katrina Strumski, Jamie Diamond, and
Ashley Myers. Also survived by 3 great grandchildren.
Mr. Myers was born on September 1, 1929 in Baltimore, MD.
Friends may call on Tuesday from 7:00 to 9:00 PM at
the Stallings Funeral Home, P.A. where funeral services will be held on Wednesday at 10:00 AM. Interment
Meadowridge Memorial Park. For online condolences
please visit www.stallingsfh.com
Nicolette Jr., John Anthony
On June 12, 2016, John Anthony “Nick” Nicolette Jr.,
beloved husband to June Nicolette (nee Gaw); devoted father to Carol Antill and her husband Kelvin, Sharon Fisher and her husband Jack, and Wayne Nicolette
and his wife Debbie; loving grandfather of Jordon,
Braxton, Leeza, and Amelia; caring brother to Sara. He
is also survived by many loving nieces and nephews.
The family will receive friends at the family owned and
operated CONNELLY FUNERAL HOME OF DUNDALK,
7110 Sollers Point Rd. on Wednesday from 2-4 & 6-8
PM. A mass of Christian burial will be held Thursday at
10 AM at St. Rita’s Catholic Church. In lieu of flowers,
donations may be made in honor of Ashraf S. Mostafa
M.D. to the Good Samaritan Hospital Foundation (Russell Morgan Building, Suite 200, 5601 Loch Raven Blvd,
Baltimore, MD 21239).
Novak, Marcia E.
On Thursday, June 9, 2016, Marcia E. Novak, age 70
of Fallston. Beloved wife for nearly 50 years of Bill
Novak; devoted mother of Charles Novak and his
fiancé Donna Burchette; caring sister of Malcolm
Canedy and wife Kathy, and the late Day Wishart
and her surviving husband Martin; and loving aunt of
John Wishart and Sonja Marwick. Also survived by her
mother-in-law Margaret Novak.
Family and friends will honor Marcia’s life at the family
owned Evans Funeral Chapel & Cremation Services –
Bel Air, 3 Newport Dr. (Rts. 23 & 24 – Forest Hill) on
Thursday, June 16, from 6:00 – 8:00 with a service
beginning at that time. Cremation to follow. In lieu of
flowers, donations may be made in Marcia’s name
to: American Breast Cancer Foundation, 10400 Little
Patuxent Parkway, Suite 480, Columbia, MD 21044.
Memory tributes may be sent to the family at:
www.evansfuneralchapel.com
Sambrook, Donald
On June 9, 2016, DONALD SAMBROOK of Catonsville,
MD formerly of Harding Township and Millburn, NJ,
loving husband of the late Myrna Sambrook, beloved
father of Donald Jr., Michael and Jill Sambrook, died
after a long illness.
Mr. Sambrook was born in Detroit MI, served in the
Army during WWII and was part of the occupation
Army in Japan. He completed his education under the
GI Bill, taught mathematics for several years and then
worked for New Jersey Bell Systems, retiring after 32
years as Assistant Vice President.
Mr Sambrook was a member of the Wyoming Presbyterian Church in Millburn, NJ, President of the Wyoming Civic Association and a member of The Millburn
Township Committee. He was active in the Boy Scouts
of America, United Way and a number of community
service clubs. He was an honorary member of the
Mendham Golf & Tennis Club, NJ.
Graveside services will be held on Saturday, June 18,
2016 at 11:00 AM in Restland Memorial Park Association, East Honover, N.J. In lieu of flowers, please make
a donation to the charity of your choice.
schwartzman, Florence
On June 11, 2016, Florence Schwartzman (nee
Kipness); cherished wife of the late Stanley
Schwartzman; devoted mother of Barbara (Benjamin)
Green and Robert (Debbie) Schwartzman; adored
grandmother of Adam Green, Susan Green (Greg
Skipper), Andrew (Jessica) Schwartzman, and Jesse
Schwartzman.
Services at SOL LEVINSON & BROS., INC., 8900
Reisterstown Road, at Mount Wilson Lane on Tuesday,
June 14, at 11 am. Interment Baltimore Hebrew
Cemetery - Berrymans Lane. Please omit flowers.
Contributions in her memory may be sent to the Green
Family Religious Services Fund, Beth El Congregation,
8101 Park Heights Ave., Baltimore, MD 21208 or
Foundation For Women’s Cancer, 230 W. Monroe St.,
Suite 710, Chicago, IL 60606-4902. In mourning at
3514 Anton Farms Road, Pikesville, MD 21208.
www.sollevinson.com
Smith, Sister Georgine marie
Sister Georgine Marie Smith, OSF, 88, died in Assisi
House on June 9. Cause of death was cardiopulmonary
collapse. She had been a professed member of the
Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia for 68 years. She
was born in Baltimore, Maryland, where she was
a member of St. Elizabeth Parish and a graduate of
the Catholic High School of Baltimore. She earned
both a B.S. and an M.S. in Education and ministered
in elementary schools in Baltimore and Silver Spring,
Maryland, and in Wilmington, Delaware. Her 41 years
of ministry in the Archdiocese of Baltimore included
teaching at Immaculate Conception School, Towson;
Our Lady of Mt. Carmel School, Middle River; and
Shrine of the Little Flower School. She served as
principal of St. Joseph School in Fullerton. After her
retirement, she volunteered at Little Flower School
and St. Anthony School. All services will be held in
Assisi House, 600 Red Hill Road, Aston, Pennsylvania,
19014 on Wednesday, June 15. A Christian Wake
Service will be held at 9:30 A.M. followed by viewing.
Mass of Christian Burial at will be at 11 A.M. Burial
will be in Our Lady of Angels Cemetery in Aston.
Sister Georgine is survived by her sisters, Nancy
(Edward) Dentz, Mary Ellen Sologuren, her brother
Paul (Anne) Smith, by her nieces and nephews, and by
her Franciscan family Donations in her name can be
made to the Sisters of St. Francis Foundation, 609 S.
Convent Road, Aston, PA 19014.
www.lyonsfs.com
tacchettI, Florence J.
On June 13, 2016, Florence J. Tacchetti of Abingdon,
MD died at the age of 93 at her home. Beloved wife
of the late Dominic Tacchetti. Devoted mother of
Dominic “Mick” Tacchetti, Victor “Rick” Tacchetti and
Timothy Mark Tacchetti. Loving sister of Mary, Lillian A.
and Loretta M. Juras. Also survived by grandchildren,
Jordan and wife Desiree, Anthony, Jessica and Scott
Tacchetti and 3 great granddaughters. Visitation will
be held at St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church Stone
Chapel in Abingdon, MD on Wednesday, June 15, 2016
from 8-9 am, with a Memorial Mass at 9 am. Those
who desire can make contribution to St. Francis
de Sales Catholic Church, 1450 Abingdon Road,
Abingdon, MD 21009. Condolences may be left on the
guestbook at mccomasfuneralhome.com.
Tegler, Bunny
Bunny
(Hortense)
Bunting
Tegler passed away suddenly
on Friday, June 10, 2016 at the
age of 90. Born on April 17, 1926
in Pocomoke City, Maryland
to the late George Sydney and
Madelyn East Bunting, Bunny
attended the University of
Maryland College Park where
she was a member of the Alpha
Delta Pi Sorority and received
the Abe Gattwals Award. She
completed Nursing School at
University Hospital in 1948, received her Bachelor
of Science and later that year married the late Paul
Alexander Tegler.
Bunny was very active in nursing for 46 years and
held many offices in the Nursing Association. Giving
back to her community was extremely important
and she was actively involved in the Baltimore Arts
Council, Women’s Auxiliary of Baltimore Symphony,
University of Maryland Alumni Association, Baltimore
Club-University of Maryland, Baltimore Group of the
Terrapin Club, American Legion Auxiliary #183, and
Can Too.
Hortense stands for “Lady Gardener”. Like her late
brother, George S. Bunting, she enjoyed her award
winning garden immensely and was active in the
Greenbrier Garden Club.
Additionally, Bunny loved traveling, reading, knitting,
crocheting, cooking and socializing with her friends,
family and neighbors. No one she met remained a
stranger for long. Her passion for life was palpable and
she will be missed by everyone.
She leaves her daughters Lynn T. Eskow and Tracy
T. Highlander and sons Paul Alexander Tegler Jr.
and wife Gail and the late Terry Wayne Tegler, three
grandchildren - Michael William Turner Jr. and wife
Alexandra, Erin German and husband Tom, and
Ashley Laughter and fiancé Brian Giuffre, and 2
greatgrandchildren Sammy and Alice German. She
was preceded in death by her long term partner,
Carson Wiley.
Relatives and friends are invited to gather at the
family owned Ruck Funeral Home, Inc. 1050 York
Rd (Beltway exit 26), Saturday, June 18, 2016 from
9-10am. A celebration of Bunny’s life will follow at
10am. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may
be made to Central Maryland Can Too (Clothing Area
Needy Thinking Of Others) PO Box 66262 Baltimore,
MD 21239.
www.ruckfuneralhomes.com
“Free Obituary Alerts”
For specific names,
towns & more
Sign up at:
baltimoresun.com/obituaries
occurs,” Davis said. “Twists and turns have
not occurred, but we’re nonetheless involved right now in this critical incident.”
Several roads were closed near the
tunnel Monday. They included a stretch of
Howard Street between North Avenue and
John Street.
The Maryland Transit Administration
announced it was suspending light rail
service between the Camden Yards and
North Avenue stations after10 p.m. Monday,
and would use buses to ferry passengers
between the two stops until midnight.
Freight rail traffic was stopped in the
area Monday. The line running through the
tunnel is used only by CSX freight trains;
Amtrak and MARC service was not affected.
The Howard Street Tunnel is considered
to be the most troublesome bottleneck for
north-south freight train traffic on the East
Coast.
For many years, transportation planners
have discussed replacing the tunnel, but the
estimated cost — $1 billion to $3 billion —
has stymied progress.
In April, the Hogan administration and
CSX announced a stripped-down, $425
million plan to expand the tunnel so that
double-stacked trains could pass through.
The state and the railroad pledged to kick in
$270 million for the project and applied for
a $155 million federal grant through the U.S.
Department of Transportation’s FASTLANE program.
Matthew A. Clark, a spokesman for Gov.
Larry Hogan, said the state is waiting for a
decision on its application. Federal officials
are expected to announce awards this
summer.
Since the spectacular tunnel derailment
and fire of 2001 halted freight traffic in the
corridor for almost a week, there have been
a series of smaller-scale incidents along the
approaches to the tunnels.
In 2005, a three-car derailment near the
site of the 2001 incident prompted thenMayor Martin O’Malley to call for a federal
inspection.
Environmental advocates and city residents have long voiced concern about
freight trains carrying hazardous chemicals
through and underneath Baltimore’s neighborhoods. The City Council held a twohour public hearing last summer on the
safety of shipping crude oil through Baltimore.
Keisha Allen, president of the Westport
Neighborhood Association, said her home
is within a block of freight tracks — well
within the “blast zone,” should a derailment
cause an explosion.
“That’s the issue, the fact that it’s highly
flammable,” she said.
Allen said she and her neighbors want
the city to require CSX and Norfolk
Southern to disclose what’s being shipped
on the freight trains and when.
Lawrence Mann, a Washington attorney
who specializes in railroad liability cases,
said the industry has generally been lax
about track inspections.
“The railroads have either fired or
furloughed thousands of track inspectors
around the country,” he said. “They just
don’t have the manpower to do the job
that’s required.”
The country’s major railroads spent $28
billion on capital expenditures and maintenance in 2014, the Association of American
Railroads reported Monday.
That investment increased to $30 billion
last year and is expected to hover around
$26 billion this year, said Edward Hamberger, president and CEO of the trade industry
group.
That has increased from the roughly $20
billion in annual infrastructure investment
between 1983 and 2011, as carriers work to
keep up with customer demands for
reliability and service, including new double-stack containers, he said.
The investments have also improved
safety, Hamberger said. The association
recently reported a 79 percent decline in
train accidents since 1980.
Baltimore Sun reporter Natalie Sherman
contributed to this article.
cmcampbell@baltsun.com
twitter.com/cmcampbell6
Youth funds restored; other cuts loom
BUDGET, From page 1
tions to the City.
“The City needs a balanced budget. Not
grandstanding. That is what we are elected
to do.”
By law, the City Council must approve a
balanced budget by June 26.
Rawlings-Blake’s action drew mixed
reactions.
City Council President Bernard C. “Jack”
Young said he was pleased to see the money
for the youth programs — which serve
thousands of children and teens — but
frustrated by Rawlings-Blake’s approach.
She announced her decision publicly before
speaking to Young and other council
members, he said.
“I’m dissatisfied with some of the cuts,”
Young said. “They should’ve included us
and not blindsided us.”
Other services that would be affected
include graffiti removal and tree maintenance. Art museums, management of grants
and merit pay for employees also would be
affected. If approved by the council, the
new budget will take effect July 1.
Carol Ott, a leading city housing advocate, said she couldn’t argue against
funding programs for young people but is
concerned about cuts to code enforcement.
Inspectors protect children by helping to
ensure they live in safe housing, she said.
“Cutting code enforcement is shortchanging the kids who are impacted by
blight and substandard housing,” Ott said.
“It’s a wonderful thing to put more money
toward youth programming, but these kids
have to go home at the end of the day. If they
are going home to substandard housing,
how is that a win for anybody?”
Ott said city leaders should have worked
more closely together to find cuts that did
not affect services. A closer analysis of
spending could have found areas where
money is wasted, she said.
The community group Baltimoreans
United in Leadership Development, or
BUILD, considered the mayor’s action a
victory after it rallied hundreds to push for
more funding for after-school programs
and community schools.
The Rev. Andrew Foster Connors,
BUILD’s co-chair, said the city “couldn’t go
back to business as usual” after the riots
spurred by the death of Freddie Gray from
injuries suffered in police custody.
“This will mean we can sustain programs
and keep promises to children,” he said.
The mayor said she originally cut $4.2
million in funding for youth programs to
help close a $60 million budget deficit. Her
budget proposal recommended allocating
$265 million for public school students
from kindergarten through high school.
City schools are largely funded by the state
of Maryland, which has dedicated $932
million to Baltimore’s schools next year.
Young and the council’s budget chairwoman, Councilwoman Helen Holton, said
this month that they would refuse to
approve the mayor’s spending plan without
the extra money for after-school programs.
That would leave the city without author-
ized funding for the fiscal year that starts
next month.
Rawlings-Blake has said she tried to
compromise with Young, and pointed to her
suggestion to sell some of the city’s parking
garages to raise money. Young has rejected
that plan.
Councilman Brandon Scott said the cuts
Rawlings-Blake proposed Monday could
have been avoided if the council had gone
along with her proposal to sell the garages.
“I am happy the money is being restored”
for youth programs, Scott said. “At the same
time, it is still unfortunate there has to be
cuts to make it happen. The city doesn’t
have a money tree.”
Young said he will continue to push to
save more youth programs. He wants the
city to pay $167,000 to keep day care open at
Waverly and Northwood schools.
Holton said she was “dissatisfied” with a
breakdown in communication between the
council and the administration.
“The thing about resolving differences is
staying engaged in the conversation,” Holton said.
“Honest minds can agree to differ, that is
the road to compromise. We were on a path
of compromise. … Once again, this is an
executive decision being made. This is not
the makings of a compromise.”
Rawlings-Blake said she has welcomed
“constructive dialogue.”
She said one of her major responsibilities
as Baltimore’s chief executive is to ensure
the city keeps a strong bond rating and
remains on sound financial footing. During
her tenure, the mayor said, she has
introduced a beverage tax to provide money
for new schools and increased funding for
summer jobs programs.
In her proposed budget, Rawlings-Blake
said she increased spending on the school
system by $10 million compared to the
current fiscal year. The increase came while
closing the budget gap, paying for police
body cameras and cutting $20 million from
the police budget.
“Let me be clear: I care deeply and am
passionate about the city’s children and to
imply otherwise is not based on the facts,”
she said.
In a related issue, a City Council
committee adjourned Monday without
approving the school system’s budget for
next year because the system said it
received $2.8 million less than it expected
from the city.
The state Department of Education is
evaluating whether the city owes the
schools the money. State officials are
expected to make a ruling in the coming
days.
The discrepancy stems from a 15-year
agreement under which the city agreed to
pay the schools $2.8 million annually
toward benefits. School officials told the
council committee that the money is
budgeted next year for per-pupil expenditures, charter school funding and other
general fund expenses.
ywenger@baltsun.com
twitter.com/yvonnewenger
12
THE BALTIMORE SUN |
NEWS
| TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
READERS
RESPOND
Protect the public,
not the gun makers
Why was it so easy for the radical
domestic terrorist to obtain an AR-15-style
rifle, a weapon designed for military use
(“FBI: Orlando nightclub gunman had
‘strong indications of radicalization,” June
13)? The AR-15 is known as a semiautomatic assault rifle which accepts
large- capacity magazines that allow potential terrorists to quickly fire 60 or 100
bullets without reloading.
Assault weapons should never be allowed for sale to the general public. A
Federal Assault Weapons Ban, a subsection
of the Violent Crime Control and Law
Enforcement Act of 1994, was allowed by
Congress to expire more than a decade ago.
Congress needs to act now to keep
assault weapons out of the hands of
potential mass killers like the one who
killed nearly 50 people in Orlando or the
killer of 20 young elementary school kids
in Connecticut in 2012 or last year’s San
Bernardino killers.
U.S. Sen. Ben Cardin was quoted as
saying that Congress needs to be “working
to ensure guns made solely for the
battlefield stay out of the hands of
individuals within our borders.” Congress
needs to protect the people of the United
States, not the firearms industry.
Matt Fenton, Baltimore
Aftermath of a disaster
Imagine the horror as investigators
searched the Pulse nightclub after the
mass shooting there Sunday amid all the
bodies and debris, and the cellphones that
continued to ring as partners, friends and
families tried in vain to reach their loved
ones (“Across the world, shock and condemnation at Orlando massacre,” June 13).
Those calls will go unanswered forever.
For those in this country who continue to
advocate for access to military-style weapons like the one used in the Orlando
massacre, may you continue to hear the
endless cacophony of those ringing
phones.
Linda Schulte, Westminster
Szeliga’s half-hearted stand
One of the first lessons I learned as a
child was based on Maya Angelou’s quote:
“When people show you who they are,
believe them the first time.” I am preparing
to vote in my first federal election this year,
candidates are showing us exactly who
they are, and I do not need to be shown
more than once.
Del. Kathy Szeliga is trying to tiptoe
around her party’s presidential nominee,
and it’s not working. Maryland voters
understand when a candidate is playing
both sides of an issue instead of standing
for what he or she believes (“Kathy Szeliga
says Trump statements on Judge Gonazlo
Curiel are ‘insulting,’ ” June 6).
Delegate Szeliga simply cannot disavow
Donald Trump one day and still support
his candidacy the next. Mr. Trump regularly makes inflammatory and bigoted
remarks, yet she still believes he is fit to be
our commander-in-chief. He proposes one
destructive and draconian policy after
another, yet she still believes he should be
leader of the free world.
Ms. Szeliga’s response to Mr. Trump’s
comments on Judge Curiel’s race was
nothing more than an attempt to sound
principled while failing to take a real stand.
She shouldn’t need more time to mull over
the presumptive Republican presidential
nominee’s comments and tone. If there is
one person who has shown us his true
colors already, it is Donald Trump,
whether he tries to change or not.
Like so many Republican candidates,
Ms. Szeliga is doing what Americans hate
about politicians — trying to have it both
ways and putting politics before principles.
If she truly believed that Mr. Trump’s
comments are as racist and insulting as she
asserts, then she wouldn’t support his
candidacy.
Cody Dorsey, St. Mary’s City
Don’t forget your
Retriever dad
I read the clever photo gallery of
Father’s Day gifts displaying school colors
composed by John-John Williams IV
(“What Dad holds dear,” June 6) with
interest but was disappointed when I
realized my alma mater — University of
Maryland Baltimore County — was not
included.
Our mascot is True Grit, a Chesapeake
Bay retriever. I have many fond memories
from my days at UMBC in the early 2000s,
and I proudly wear our black and gold
socially and in my workplace. There are
now 70,000 proud Retrievers living and
leading in Maryland, and the campus will
celebrate its 50th anniversary in September.
May I suggest a pair of black and gold
climbing shoes to celebrate the impressive
ascent of UMBC and its alumni in these
first five decades?
John Becker, Severna Park
The writer is president of the UMBC Alumni
Board of Directors.
,')!-'+$
%*"&#(
EDITORIALS
Horror in Orlando
Our view: The script for our reaction to mass shootings is now as tragically familiar
as the events themselves
A
re we so inured to mass shootings that when the worst
one in American history occurs on an early Sunday
morning in Orlando, Fla., we don’t bother to pause for
even a moment to consider the enormity of the tragedy and
horror? It’s not just Donald Trump’s self-congratulatory tweets
about his supposed wisdom when it comes to stopping terrorism
or his bizarre obsession with goading President Barack Obama
into referring to “radical Islam.” He is far from alone in reducing
the slaughter of more than four dozen innocent people to a
talking point in any number of overworn debates that won’t be
resolved by this event any more than they were by the dozens of
senseless mass shootings that came before.
We doubt the first thought of the mothers, fathers, friends and
others who endured the sickening wait in an Orlando hotel lobby
to hear whether their loved ones had lived or died was about the
efficacy of Mr. Obama’s policies to combat ISIS. We suspect they
were much more likely focused on whether the murderer was
motivated by homophobia — for all the advances gays have made
in public acceptance in recent years, the long legacy of bigotry and
hate has hardly been erased. Acquaintances and the father of the
killer reported that he was prone to anti-gay invective, and this
shooting occurred at the same time that authorities in California
reported the arrest of an Indiana man headed to the Los Angeles
gay pride festival with a car full of weapons and explosives,
though his motives were not immediately clear.
What could have been done to protect the young people who
were gunned down? Some of their loved ones said they had
moved in search of a more accepting community and had found it
in Orlando. But all it takes to shatter the peace is one deranged
man — or, rather, one deranged man and a cache of weapons with
no purpose other than killing.
Would better gun control laws have prevented the Pulse
nightclub killings? A familiar debate is already playing out about
the precise details of Omar Mateen’s purchase of the guns — both
bought legally within the last two weeks — and about his previous
encounters with the FBI and apparent history of domestic
violence. But all that is really beside the point. There is no earthly
reason not to adopt measures like universal background checks
and bans on assault weapons — checks and bans that the vast
majority of Americans want — whether they would have stopped
Mateen or not. We don’t need a tragedy like this one to remind us
of it, nor, unfortunately, does history suggest that such an event
will help the cause of sanity. If the Sandy Hook massacre of 20
children by an AR-15-wielding gunman didn’t prompt Congress to
act, it’s quite possible that nothing will. State assault weapons
bans like Maryland’s are important, to be sure, but of limited
effectiveness without federal action. And even if Congress came
to its senses, it would likely do nothing about the millions of guns
SANDY HUFFAKER/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
A pride flag stands at half-staff during a memorial service in
San Diego for the victims of the Orlando nightclub shooting.
like the one Mateen used that are already in circulation.
If there is anything that is certain at this point, it is that no
amount of supposedly tough tactics against the so-called Islamic
State would have stopped this attack. No matter how many ISIS
commanders we captured and tortured, we never would have
learned about Mr. Mateen’s plans. We face an enemy that does not
need to provide targets, training or weapons in order to claim
credit for acts of terror around the world, nor does it need to pose
its agents as refugees to infiltrate this or any other country. A ban
on Muslims entering the United States not only would have made
no difference in this case — Mateen was born in New York state —
but would reinforce the notion of a religious war that ISIS is
trying to perpetuate.
What can we do in a terrible moment like this? Donald Trump
can call Mr. Obama’s response soft — or in some tinfoil-hatinspired lunacy hint that he is somehow complicit in this tragedy
— but the president’s words are the only ones that make sense. We
can stand together as Americans, as a people who reject hate and
bigotry of all kinds, who believe in freedom and the opportunity
to fully express ourselves. We can affirm, as President Obama did,
that an attack on one of us, “regardless of race, ethnicity, religion
or sexual orientation, is an attack on all of us and on the
fundamental values of equality and dignity that define us as a
country. And no act of hate or terror will ever change who we are
or the values that make us Americans.” We cannot always stop
those determined to lash out in hatred, but we can ourselves
reject hatred and the culture of violence that undergirds horrific
attacks like this one. We can honor the victims, support their
families and stay true to who we are as a nation.
Bernie’s exit strategy
Our view: Sanders needs a graceful way to bow out of the Democratic primaries
T
oday’s election in Washington, D.C., marks the official end
of the Democratic presidential primary season, though
Hillary Clinton already sewed up the nomination with big
wins in California, New Jersey and other states earlier this month.
Nonetheless, her only remaining rival, Vermont Sen. Bernie
Sanders, still hasn’t exited the field. Now is the time for him to find a
graceful way to bow out.
Mr. Sanders’ reluctance to get off the stage may well be due to
more than mere stubbornness. He’s in the position of a man who’s
got a tiger by the tail. He needs to let go of the idea he will be the next
president, but he also needs to hang onto his millions of supporters
so they stay engaged on the Democrats’ side in November’s general
election. And he’s got to persuade them to do so despite the fact that
he’s spent the last six months lambasting Ms. Clinton as antithetical
to everything the progressive insurgency he leads stands for.
Still, over the weekend Mr. Sanders seemed to be coming to
terms with the inevitable. After meeting with President Barack
Obama at the White House on Thursday, he has dropped talk of a
contested convention in Philadelphia this summer, saying merely
that he wants to make sure his supporters’ concerns are addressed.
He’s no longer suggesting there’s a path for him to win the
nomination by “flipping” superdelegates who have signed on for
Ms. Clinton. But he still wants to have an impact on the party’s
platform on the issues important to his supporters. Ms. Clinton
should make every effort to oblige him on that score when the two
meet tonight to hash out a common agenda.
Granted, no one generally pays much attention to party
platforms. But this year could be an exception, because Mr. Sanders
could use any concessions from the Clinton campaign on
substantive matters to show his supporters that their movement has
been heard and that their efforts made a difference. Income
inequality? Ms. Clinton could easily afford a more robust stand on
things like Medicaid expansion and the Earned Income Tax Credit
for low-income workers. Free college tuition? Well, maybe not free,
but perhaps better repayment terms for college debt, or even debt
forgiveness for students who go into careers like teaching or who
participate in some type of national service program.
Ms. Clinton and Mr. Sanders already are in agreement on at least
Talk to us
The Baltimore Sun welcomes comments from
readers on subjects of local and national relevance by
email, by Twitter or on our Web site, baltimoresun.com.
The Sun reserves the right to edit and publish them in
the newspaper or on the Web site.
Online
E-mail us
Twitter
Our address
baltimoresun.com/talk
talkback@baltimoresun.com
twitter.com/baltimoresun
The Baltimore Sun, P.O. Box 1377
Baltimore 21278-0001
80 percent of the issues Democratic voters support. They both want
to raise the minimum wage, protect Social Security, fight climate
change by restricting greenhouse gas emissions and create more
jobs. Most of their differences aren’t about whether the party
should support those goals but about how quickly it can achieve
them. The only real sticking point could be Mr. Sanders’ insistence
on changing the party’s delegate-selection process in ways that give
less weight to party insiders and that open up primaries and
caucuses to more of the independent voters who support
progressive candidates.
Mr. Sanders pledged last week to do everything he can to help
Democrats defeat Donald Trump. But he needs space to do that on
his own terms, so long as it doesn’t threaten to create even more of a
rift between the Democratic Party’s establishment and progressive
wings. Mr. Sanders surely knows the Democrats can’t win if the
party is divided and all the enthusiasm is on the GOP side. It needs
the 10 million young, independent and disaffected Democratic
voters Mr. Sanders mobilized who think the system is rigged against
them. It’s his job to persuade them to stick in the Dems’ camp in the
coming fight against Mr. Trump.
Many in the “Bernie or bust” faction in his own movement have
threatened to stay home on Election Day or even to vote for Mr.
Trump, saying they’re so sick of politics as usual that they would
vote for anyone who promised to shake up the system. Mr. Sanders
has got to show those supporters that despite their misgivings,
there’s a big difference between the Democratic and Republican
nominees. In 2000, Ralph Nader’s insurgent movement convinced
just enough progressive voters that there was no real difference
between Al Gore and George W. Bush, which helped Mr. Bush
squeak out a razor-thin margin of victory in Florida that won him
the presidency.
Mr. Sanders needs to remind his supporters that that can happen
again if progressives aren’t strategic in their thinking. And he can
rightfully claim that while the primaries are over, the “political
revolution” that he championed is alive and well and that the
country can look forward to the dawn of a new era in American
politics if he and his supporters will only keep faith in the larger
goals that have fueled his remarkable campaign.
THE BALTIMORE SUN
A Tribune Publishing Company
T R IF F ON G. A L ATZA S
Publisher & Editor-in-Chief
N EWS PAG E S
Samuel C. Davis
Managing Editor
Laura Smitherman
Assistant Managing Editor /
Enterprise and Investigations
Peter N. Sweigard
Online exclusive
David Horsey: Will helping someone
else make history be enough for
revolution-seeking Bernie Sanders?
baltimoresun.com/opinion
BALT I MO R E SUN
M ED IA GR O UP
Trish McCarthy Carroll
Senior Vice President / Targeted Media
Christopher J. Manis
Vice President / Finance
Amy Powers
Assistant Managing Editor / Digital
Vice President / Advertising
M ARYL A N D VO I CE S
Andrew A. Green
Senior Vice President / Operations
Stephen G. Seidl
Editorial Page Editor
Tim Thomas
Senior Vice President /
Business Development
COMMENTARY
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 |
We need to talk — about depression
By W. Daniel Hale
T
hree years ago, I stood in the pulpit
of the church where my family had
worshipped for more than three
decades to give the most difficult talk I
have ever had to give — offering reflections
on the life and death of my 36-year-old
daughter, Libby, who had passed away just
a few days before. As I prepared my
remarks, Libby’s sister and brother encouraged me to speak openly about the illness
responsible for her death. If she had died of
cancer, they noted, we would not be
reluctant at all to talk about her battles with
and eventual death from it. But it was not
cancer that took Libby from us. It was
another terrible disease — depression.
Depression was not unfamiliar to me. I
am a clinical psychologist and have devoted much of my research and clinical
work to mood disorders. And I have had
personal experience with depression as
well, having had two serious episodes that
required medical and psychological treatment.
As I looked out over the more than 300
people attending the memorial service that
evening, I didn’t know what type of
response to expect to my remarks about
Libby’s struggles with depression and how
she had eventually taken her own life. But I
felt strongly that I owed it to Libby and to
all those still suffering from depression. It
was time to use this dark moment in my life
to shed light on this crippling and often
lethal illness.
I must confess that I was surprised by
just how many people spoke to my children
and me after the service to express
appreciation for my remarks — their words
spoken with sincerity and purpose. The
refrain, “We need to talk about depression,”
was repeated over and over again in these
conversations. “We need to talk about
depression in our schools.” “We need to
talk about depression in the workplace.”
“We need to talk about depression in our
houses of worship.” “We need to talk about
depression in our homes.”
I was truly heartened by these comments, and especially moved over the next
few weeks when I learned that many of
these concerned individuals followed up
their words with donations to support the
production of an educational video on
depression that we chose to title, “We Need
to Talk.”
Since Libby’s death, I have had many
occasions to share this video and to speak
about depression in educational institutions, religious congregations and workplaces. I have used these opportunities to
encourage audiences to view depression as
an illness, just as they would diabetes or
hypertension, and to recognize that there
are effective treatments. I have focused
particularly on two of the major obstacles
that often interfere with depressed individuals seeking treatment: the stigma still
too often associated with depression and
the sense of hopelessness that is a central
component of depression.
As I have given these talks, I have
watched closely and listened carefully to
discern the information or examples that
have the greatest impact on my audiences.
There is usually some interest in the
research and clinical reports I provide, but
it is clear that the most impactful part of my
presentations is when I share my own
experience with depression. There is
something very powerful about having a
professional speak openly, without any
sense of shame or embarrassment, about
his own struggles with depression and
how, with treatment, he has been able to
return to a full, active life.
As gratifying as it is when I see that I
have helped people by talking openly about
my depression, I must confess that I know I
have passed up other opportunities where
it would have been entirely appropriate
and potentially quite beneficial for me to
share my own experience. And I have had
no reason not to. I know that I can speak
candidly in these situations without jeopardizing my career or my most important
relationships because my colleagues are
fully aware of my mental health history, as
are my wife, children and closest friends.
While it is true that not everyone who
has had a similar experience with depression can talk about it without concern for
their employment or relationships, undoubtedly there are individuals from
various walks of life — health care,
education, religion, government and the
business community — who, like me, have
been successfully treated for depression
and who could speak openly without fear
of harmful repercussions. Imagine the
impact we could have if more of those
suffering in silence with the pain and
despair of depression could hear our
stories of how we were able to emerge from
the dark, lifeless depths of depression and
discover that our lives could once again
include feelings of love, joy and hope.
What a powerful force we could be.
W. Daniel Hale is special adviser to the
president at Johns Hopkins Bayview
Medical Center and an assistant professor
of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the
Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine; his email is whale5@jhmi.edu.
A healthy, humane future
The National Aquarium in
Baltimore plans to send its
dolphins to a seaside
sanctuary by 2020
By John Racanelli
I
was 17 when I met a dolphin named
Spock, the first of many that I’ve
known in my lifetime. As a scuba diver
at a marine park on San Francisco Bay, I
had the job of scrubbing algae off the
concrete walls of the dolphin tank —
Spock’s home — for hours at a time. I loved
it, of course, but even then, I wondered
what Spock’s previous life in the blue
vastness of the open sea must have been
like.
I left that marine park in the early1980s,
and it wasn’t until I came to the National
Aquarium 30 years later that I found
myself once again responsible for the care
of dolphins. By then, I had a very different
outlook. Times had changed, as had our
understanding of the unique welfare needs
of these intelligent animals.
With that knowledge, we at the National
Aquarium are today announcing our
decision to create the nation’s first seaside
dolphin sanctuary and to move our colony
of dolphins there before the end of 2020.
Our quest to find a new way to care for
the dolphins began five years ago. Working
closely with the aquarium’s board of
directors, an internal team weighed many
options, ranging from rebuilding our
existing pools in a more naturalistic style to
moving the dolphins to other accredited
facilities. In the end, we decided that the
best way forward was to create a protected, year-round, seaside refuge for the
dolphins. We didn’t make this decision
because it was the cheapest or easiest
option — it was neither — and it wasn’t a
decision we could have made quickly or
without thoughtful consideration. For us,
the belief that this is the right decision
came down to three things: the dolphins,
our community and our own mission.
It’s right for the dolphins.
We are committed to creating conditions for all of the animals in our care to
thrive. In the dolphins’ case, we know far
more today than 25 years ago, when the
aquarium’s Marine Mammal Pavilion, the
dolphin’s current home, first opened on
Pier 4. Emerging science and consultation
with experts have convinced us that
dolphins do indeed thrive when they can
form social groups, have opportunities to
express natural behaviors and live in a
habitat as similar as possible to that for
which nature so superbly designed them.
It’s right for the communities we serve.
We owe our very existence to the
broader public, and attitudes have evolved.
While baby boomers grew up watching
NEWS
| THE BALTIMORE SUN
13
A tale of two
political parties
By Jules Witcover
W
ith their presumptive presidential nominees now in place,
the two major political parties
face starkly different, and critical, challenges. The Democrats have already taken
impressive steps toward internal unity
approaching the Hillary Clinton campaign. The Republicans, meanwhile, are
deep in disunity over the fallout of Donald
Trump’s selection and his divisive behavior.
The rapid response in Democratic
ranks to Ms. Clinton’s victories over Sen.
Bernie Sanders in four of last Tuesday’s six
state primaries, including California, was
breath-taking. Mr. Sanders quickly congratulated her, and while he pledged to his
faithful followers that he would remain a
candidate through the primary process
and into Democratic National Convention
late next month, he vowed he would do all
he could to make sure Mr. Trump never
reaches the presidency.
Upon returning from California, Mr.
Sanders paid a courtesy call to President
Barack Obama at the White House, where
Mr. Obama praised his strong campaign
effort that brought millions of new voters
to the party. Then the Obama staff swiftly
aired unequivocal remarks by the president endorsing Ms. Clinton in the most
effusive terms, as Mr. Sanders held a round
of cordial talks with Senate Minority
Leader Harry Reid and Vice President Joe
Biden. It was a political minuet worthy of a
master ballet impresario. And Mr. Sanders
is expected to meet with Ms. Clinton
tonight to see, as he told CBS’ John
Dickerson, “what kind of platform she is
going to support and in fact how aggressive she is going to be in addressing the
major crises that we face.”
All this time, the Republicans continue
to wallow in the mud of Mr. Trump’s
incredible campaign blunder that capped
his own successful nomination run
through the primaries. His pivot to a petty
fight with the federal judge presiding over
a civil suit alleging fraud by the defunct
Trump University immediately threw him
and his campaign onto the defensive.
Mr. Trump’s immense success in capturing the GOP nomination weeks before
Ms. Clinton cemented her own party’s
nomination has now been squandered,
and he is obliged to spend the weeks until
the Cleveland convention trying to recover campaign momentum lost by his
own undisciplined and politically suicidal
remarks.
Jules Witcover is a syndicated columnist
and former longtime writer for The
Baltimore Sun. His latest book is “The
American Vice Presidency: From
Irrelevance to Power” (Smithsonian
Books). His email is
juleswitcover@comcast.net.
ALGERINA PERNA/BALTIMORE SUN
Children watch the dolphins at the National Aquarium in Baltimore in this 2012 photo.
“Flipper,” for millennials it was “Free
Willy.” Through feedback painstakingly
gathered over 10 years, we have learned
that the American public is increasingly
uneasy with the notion of keeping dolphins and whales in captivity. These
beliefs matter to us.
It’s right for the National Aquarium.
We, too, have evolved — from an
entertaining sea life attraction to a nonprofit aquatic conservation organization.
We have built a remarkably talented team
of people who know how to tackle this
complex task, and their dedication to the
dolphins’ welfare is inspiring. We have
already begun imagining ways to repurpose the space the dolphins will vacate in a
few years, many of which will better
achieve our conservation goals. Ultimately,
both those new facilities and the sanctuary
itself can serve to advance our mission to
inspire conservation of the world’s aquatic
treasures.
While we have more work to do, our
research has identified several specific
criteria necessary for the sanctuary to
succeed. It will be an outdoor, seawater
facility in a tropical year-round climate,
ideally located where dolphins already
exist in the wild. The site we choose will be
significantly larger than the dolphins’
current living space, in a setting that
provides more natural stimuli for the
dolphins, such as fish and marine plants.
Humans will care for and interact with the
dolphins for their entire lives, and the
operating principle will be “dolphins first”
with emphasis on the individual needs of
the dolphins. An important function of the
sanctuary will be to allow qualified
scientists to carry out studies not feasible
in either an open-ocean or aquarium
setting, in fields like communication,
behavior, cognition and bioacoustics.
We face unique challenges in this
DOONESBURY BY GARRY TRUDEAU
endeavor, not the least of which is that all
but one of the dolphins in our care have
never lived in the ocean. They have never
before felt the rain on their dorsal fins,
chased a mullet along a mangrove shore or
teased a startled crab. They will need to
learn how to be ocean-dwelling dolphins,
in a place with its own set of risks like
pollution, noise, jellyfish and red tides, and
we will help them build those skills.
The aquarium team, which includes a
staff of 450 and 960 volunteers, is working
to overcome the challenges and advance
our understanding of dolphins, starting
with a set of principles and practices that
will guide the development and operation
of this sanctuary. Concurrently, a site
selection team is evaluating locations in
Florida and the Caribbean. We are studying things like microbiomes, immunology
and habitat enrichment to ensure that the
decisions we make are the right ones.
With today’s announcement, we are
taking the next step, and I am both
honored and humbled that our aquarium,
a Baltimore institution, is leading the way.
Although this decision is about a group of
dolphins, it is every bit as much about our
humanity; for the way a society treats the
animals with whom it shares this planet
speaks volumes about us.
I often think about how much we have
learned since those long-ago swims alongside Spock and his mates. Yet I am struck
by how much we have still to learn if we are
to secure a healthy future for dolphins,
whales and the natural systems that give us
all life. Building this dolphin sanctuary is
the right step to take, and now is the time to
take it.
John Racanelli (JohnRacanelli@aqua.org),
chief executive officer of the National
Aquarium since 2011, is an ocean
conservationist who has led and supported
U.S. aquariums for nearly 40 years.
A modern day ‘My
Country, ’Tis of Thee’
M
y country, ’tis of Thee,
Troubled land of shooting sprees,
Of Thee I sing;
Land where 20 Sandy Hook children died,
Land where they tried to kill gay pride,
From ev’ry mountain side, high-caliber
bullets fly, when will it end?
My native country Thee,
Land of the AR-15;
You love Glocks and (other) semiautomatic
thrills,
Thy Bushmasters and Desert Eagles kill;
Breaking hearts with eternal chill,
When will it end?
Let gun control quell this disease,
And ring from all states please,
Sweet freedom’s song;
Let all voters (still alive) awake;
Let new mental health checks and waiting
periods partake;
Let military-style weapons be banned,
The death they cause is wrong.
Our families’ cry to Thee,
These guns cause misery,
To Thee we sing.
It’s long since our land was bright,
With common-sense laws, things could be
right,
Protect us with Thy electoral might,
Guns are not our King.
Stephen Cooper is a former D.C. and federal
public defender. He has contributed to
numerous magazines and newspapers in the
United States and overseas. His email is
stevecooper7214@gmail.com.
What Maryland thinks
Do you believe Baltimore prosecutors will
be able to prove their court claim that
police van driver Caesar Goodson Jr. gave
Freddie Gray a “rough ride”?
Yes
No
Not sure
4%
93%
3%
(495 votes, results not scientific)
NEXT POLL: Who responded better to the
Orlando deaths: Mr. Trump, who tweeted
about "radical Islamic terrorism," or Ms.
Clinton, who focused on terrorism, gay
rights and gun control?
Vote at baltimoresun.com/vote
14
THE BALTIMORE SUN |
NEWS
| TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
Special Baltimore Sun Offer!
Buy 3 Windows
NAL
RECEIVE 1 ADDITIO
WINDOW FREE
- OR Special Financing Available!
A different kind of window company
Financing through a third party vendor. Financing available with minimum purchase and approved
credit. Ask for details. New orders only. Other restrictions may apply. Not valid with any other offer, or
previous job. Exp. 6/30/16
No high pressure
Season after season, for 70 years, the Beldon
Family has been offering the very best in home
improvements. Our windows are no exception.
Family run for 70 years
Windows for every budget!
NON-Prorated Lifetime Warranty: frame, glass
breakage and seal failure
NAT-32559-2
(410) 346-5364
VA 2705116122A, DCRA 420214000130, MHIC 121787
(410) 504-6151
SINCE 1939
with
PROTECT THE ONES YOU LOVE
SLEEP WITH
A SMILE WITH
A FENCE
FROM PYLE
Complete Cosmetic
& Implant Dentistry
Dr. Lazer, DDS
&
Dr. Rafat,
CALL
PYLE FENCE!
CALL NOW
FOR A FREE
ESTIMATE
DDS, Periodontics/Prosthodontics
A beautiful fence provides
privacy, increases security
and protects children and
pets. It adds to your
property’s value and gives
you peace of mind.
Comprehensive Dental Care Including:
Comfortable Dentures
Dental Implants
Same Day Crowns
All styles of fencing:
• Wood • Aluminum
• PVC • Chain Link
Veneers
Stop hiding your smile . . .
smile with confidence
As Rated
Call today for a
complimentary consultation
410.773.9584
FREE Gate
with any fence
purchase of 200 ft.
or more
• $200 Value
• 1 Coupon per Customer
• Must present at time of estimate
• Coupons cannot be combined
• Not valid on prior sales
Expires 6/30/16
125 OFF
$
“I was so embarrassed of my smile
I never thought I would smile with
confidence. Thanks to Dr. Lazer and
his staff I can’t stop smiling”
with any fence
project of 200 ft.
or more
• 1 Coupon per Customer
• Must present at time of estimate
• Coupons cannot be combined
• Not valid on prior sales
Expires 6/30/16
(410) 504-6151
M.H.I.C. 278
These Are
Actual Patients
Financing available for qualified applicants
ORLANDO SHOOTING
eNEWSPAPER BONUS
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 |
NEWS
| THE BALTIMORE SUN
15
Obama says FBI ‘did a proper job’
Officials scramble
to explain two
previous Mateen
probes
By Del Quentin
Wilber and
Brian Bennett
Tribune Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON
—
Omar Mateen was scaring
his co-workers.
In the spring of 2013, the
security guard at St. Lucie
County Courthouse was
boasting of his family ties
to al-Qaida, the Sunni extremist group, while also
bragging he belonged to
Hezbollah, a rival Shiite
group. He hoped to die as a
martyr when police raided
his apartment, he told
them.
His alarmed co-workers
called the FBI, which
launched a 10-month investigation to determine if
Mateen, a U.S. citizen born
in New York, was a terrorist — or might become one.
Between May 2013 and
March 2014, the FBI sent
an undercover informant President Barack Obama was briefed by FBI Director James Comey on Monday.
who secretly recorded Mateen, conducted surveilSeveral months later, investigations of Mateen briefed on the investigalance of his movements Mateen popped up on FBI failed to prevent him from tion.
and scrutinized his com- radar a second time as the killing 49 people at a gay
Agents believe he visited
munications, FBI officials agency investigated Moner club Sunday in Orlando, those locations in recent
said Monday. The agency Mohammad Abusalha, a Fla., in the worst mass months but cannot say for
interviewed him twice. At Florida man who had shooting in U.S. history.
certain he was evaluating
the end, the agents con- joined the Nusra Front, an
The bureau’s handling them as potential targets,
cluded that Mateen was al-Qaida affiliate in Syria. of Mateen’s case got a the official said.
not a threat and had broken In May 2014, Abusalha strong vote of support from
Former agents said inno laws. He was full of became the first American President Barack Obama vestigators will be digging
bluster, they deto carry out a sui- after he was briefed by through Mateen’s cellcided, and angry
cide bombing in James Comey, the FBI phone and other electronic
about being teased
Syria.
director.
devices to look for GPS
and in his view disAgain, the FBI
“The FBI followed the data and will collect recriminated against
interviewed Ma- procedures that they were cords from businesses and
by his colleagues.
teen. He said he supposed to and did a individuals who may have
His name was rehad met Abusalha proper job,” Obama said.
had contact with him.
moved from the
at a local mosque
As part of its current
Comey, along with Jeh
terrorist watch list Mateen
years earlier. Again, investigation, the FBI is Johnson, secretary of
maintained by the
agents concluded seeking to determine if Homeland Security, and
FBI’s Terrorist
Mateen wasn’t a Mateen scouted other gay Nick Rasmussen, director
Screening Center, a data- threat.
venues or potential targets, of the National Counterbase that serves as a clearThose vivid details and including properties asso- terrorism Center, will give
inghouse for law enforce- others emerged Monday as ciated with Disney World, a classified briefing to
ment agencies to keep FBI officials scrambled to according to a senior U.S. House members Tuesday.
track of potential threats.
explain how two previous law enforcement official
While the FBI reviews
JIM LO SCALZO/EPA
its records to see if agents
missed any clues, senior
officials argued Monday
that they don’t know what
else they could have done.
“We will continue to
look forward in this investigation, and backward,” Comey told reporters at FBI headquarters.
“We will leave no stone
unturned. And we will
work all day and all night to
understand the path to that
terrible night. We are also
going to look hard at our
own work to see if there is
something we could have
done differently,” he added.
“So far, the honest answer is that I don’t think so.
I don’t see anything in
reviewing our work that
our agents could have done
differently,” he said.
Still, officials found one
red flag that may prove
important.
During the 2014 investigation of Abusalha, FBI
agents asked someone else
they interviewed who else
might become radicalized,
a law enforcement official
said Monday.
The person singled out
Mateen because he had
mentioned watching videos featuring Anwar al-Awlaki, the American-born
cleric who joined al-Qaida
and was killed in a 2011
drone strike in Yemen, the
official said.
However, the individual
added that Mateen had
since settled down. He told
agents that he didn’t think
Mateen was still a threat.
dwilber@tribpub.com
Across
world,
shock
and tears
for Fla.
Associated Press
AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/GETTY-AFP
Iraqi government forces prepare mortar launchers on the outskirts of a Fallujah neighborhood Monday during an operation to regain control of the area from Islamic State.
‘Daunting’ U.S. task: Stopping
inspiration for domestic terror
By W.J. Hennigan
and Brian Bennett
Tribune Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — Sunday’s mass shooting in Florida comes as Islamic State
forces are stretched thin,
under financial strain and
losing ground near strongholds in Iraq, Syria and
Libya, U.S. officials say.
A multipronged U.S.
strategy has killed thousands of Islamic State fighters in Syria and Iraq,
trimmed their ability to
smuggle oil and move supplies and steadily chipped
away at the group’s selfdeclared caliphate in both
countries.
“The noose is tightening,” CIA Director John
Brennan said in an interview Sunday with the
Saudi-owned Al-Arabiya
news channel.
“They still maintain
quite a bit of capability to
carry out attacks in (Iraq
and Syria) as well as beyond, so this is going to be a
long, hard fight,” Brennan
said.
As the slaughter of 49
patrons at a gay nightclub
in Orlando early Sunday
made clear, the Obama administration is battling a
multifront war against Islamic State, with more
American casualties on the
home front than overseas.
“Everybody is focused
on the destruction of the
caliphate,” said Christopher Harmer, a former
Pentagon strategist now at
the Institute for the Study
of War, a nonpartisan public policy group in Washington, D.C. “But the more
daunting task will be combating their ideology to
inspire attacks, which is a
virtually impossible problem to solve.”
No evidence indicates
the Orlando gunman, Omar
Mateen, had contact with
or support from Islamic
State or any other terrorist
group, officials said Monday. He had professed allegiance to the leader of
Islamic State in a call to
police Sunday. He died in a
shootout with police.
Mateen’s self-radicalization, apparently from extremist websites and other
online material, is part of a
trend that has confounded
the Obama administration.
“Even as we hit their
leadership, even as we go
after their infrastructure …
one of the biggest challenges we are going to have
is this kind of propaganda
and perversions of Islam
that you see generated on
the internet,” President Barack Obama said Monday at
the White House.
The U.S. military portrays the domestic attacks
in part as a sign of the
growing pressure it is
putting on Islamic State in
Syria and Iraq.
“We know they continue
to look for opportunities to
make spectacular, headline
grabbing attacks, in part to
make up for their losses on
the battlefield in both Iraq
and Syria,” Col. Christopher Garver, spokesman
for the U.S.-led coalition in
Baghdad, wrote in an email.
But the evidence is
scanty.
Islamic State has urged
followers since 2014, when
it was at its peak, to mount
attacks in the U.S., Europe
and other regions.
Nothing suggests that
Mateen, or the couple who
gunned down 14 people in
San Bernardino, Calif., in
December, did so to avenge
Islamic State’s battlefield
setbacks.
While the militants remain entrenched in cities
and towns, by any measure
the group’s losses are substantial and growing.
At the same time, Islamic
State in Iraq has ramped up
a deadly series of suicide
bombings in Baghdad in an
apparent attempt to rekindle sectarian strife between Sunnis and Shiites
and to destabilize the central government.
whennigan@tribpub.com
From across the world,
officials, public figures and
citizens are expressing condemnation and shock over
the Florida massacre.
FRANCE
The Eiffel Tower was
aglow in the colors of the
rainbow Monday night to
honor the victims of the
mass shooting at the Orlando gay nightclub.
French President Francois
Hollande condemned the
slayings as an attack on
freedom. He vowed to
toughen the fight against
terrorism “at the side of the
American people.”
BRITAIN
With tears, song and
defiance, thousands of people gathered in London for
a vigil in honor of the
victims. Mourners packed
narrow Old Compton
Street in Soho, the heart of
London’s gay nightlife district, on Monday evening.
Bearing rainbow flags and
signs reading “stand with
Orlando,” Londoners observed two minutes’ silence
before 49 balloons — one
for each person killed —
were released. J.K. Rowling
said one victim worked on
the Harry Potter ride at the
Universal Studios theme
park in Orlando. The author tweeted a picture of
22-year-old Luis Vielma in
a Hogwarts school tie and
said: “I can’t stop crying.”
ISRAEL
Israeli President Reuven
Rivlin said in a letter to
President Barack Obama
that Israel stands “shoulder
to shoulder with our
American brothers and sisters” after the attack. Rivlin
sent his condolences, say-
EVERT ELZINGA/GETY-AFP
Paris’ Eiffel Tower is illuminated in rainbow colors Monday
to pay homage to victims of the Orlando mass shooting.
ing there is “no comfort for
those who have had their
loved ones torn away from
them.”
PALESTINIAN
TERRITORIES
Palestinian Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah said
that the deadliest mass
shooting in U.S. history is a
“senseless act of terror and
hate” and that “Palestinians
stand with the American
people in this difficult
time.” The statement made
no direct reference to the
LGBT community. Homosexuality is taboo in conservative Palestinian society, a
sentiment
reflected
throughout the Arab and
Muslim world.
IRAN
Iran state TV quoted
Foreign Ministry spokesman Hossein Jaberi Ansari
as saying: “Iran, based on
its main policies of condemning terrorism and its
strong determination to
confront this ominous phenomenon, condemns the
Orlando terrorist attack.”
CHINA
China’s official Xinhua
News Agency issued a
statement saying President
Xi Jinping had telephoned
Obama to express his condolences over the Orlando
shooting. Xi was quoted as
saying that, “on behalf of
the government and people
of China, I convey to President Obama and the
American government and
people my deepest sympathies, sincere condolences
and deep grief for the
victims.”
MALAYSIA
Najib Razak, prime minister of Muslim-majority
Malaysia, said he was “horrified” by the attack. “Islam
abhors killing of innocent
people,” he tweeted.
MEXICO
Mexicans largely reacted
with messages of sympathy
for the victims. Many also
lamented that mass shootings have become too common in the United States.
“My first reaction on hearing the news was horror,
but not disbelief,” columnist Gabriel Guerra wrote
in the newspaper El Universal. “This is another of
the innumerable armed attacks that occur daily in the
United States.”
16
THE BALTIMORE SUN |
NEWS
NATION & WORLD
eNEWSPAPER BONUS
| TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
Site that kept 9/11 alive to close
“The goal all
along has been
to have some of
this steel in as
many places as
it could possibly
be. ... We were
part laboratory,
part historical
archive and part
morgue.”
JFK’s Hangar 17
nearly empty after
giving out artifacts
By Vera Haller
Special to Tribune Newspapers
NEW YORK — A musty
smell hangs in the air as
pigeons swoop from the
rafters and rainwater pools
near a door. In the dim light,
a battered Port Authority
police cruiser sits abandoned — its twisted trunk
popped open, the windshield gone and the front
end bashed in.
Since the terror attacks of
Sept. 11, 2001, the relics of
the World Trade Center —
shafts of broken metal,
warped elevator doors, a
crushed taxi — have been
entombed here in Hangar 17
at John F. Kennedy International Airport. But its somber purpose, as a way station
for remembrances of 9/11, is
ending. The final few pieces
of that September morning
are being carted out of the
cavernous structure.
Soon Hangar 17 will be
empty, its mission complete.
The large, significant
items – such as the huge
steel tridents from the facade of the North Tower and
the damaged firetrucks and
ambulances that roared to
the scene only to be crushed
after they arrived – have
been placed in the National
September 11 Memorial &
Museum in lower Manhattan and in the state museums of New York and New
Jersey, said Steve Coleman, a
spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and
New Jersey, which owns the
World Trade Center site.
The rest has been parceled out to towns across the
country, U.S. military bases
and embassies and foreign
nations where they are required to be publicly displayed as part of smaller 9/11
memorials.
The numbers are staggering. Some 2,500 items have
been distributed to about
1,440
municipalities,
— Amory Houghton, a
former Port Authority
executive
CAROLYN COLE/TRIBUNE NEWSPAPERS
A Port Authority police car is one of the few 9/11 relics left in the soon-to-be-closed Hangar 17 at John F. Kennedy Airport.
schools, fire departments,
nonprofits and other groups
and foundations, said Amy
Passiak, the archivist who
has been supervising the
dissemination project since
2010.
“It’s been a very humbling
experience,” Passiak said as
she walked through the
hangar on a recent morning.
“I have met people from
every aspect and association
of this event — survivors,
family members (of victims),
emergency personnel, recovery personnel from all
over the country, representatives of other countries
whose civilians were killed.”
One of the few relics still
awaiting placement is a jumble of twisted steel, metal
mesh and concrete, a blob of
debris that looks as if it’s part
salvage yard junk and part
modern sculpture. It is, in
fact, material from what
came to be called “the pile,”
the ton upon ton of crushed
remains from the collapsed
towers.
For Passiak and officials of
the Port Authority, the goal
of distributing these relics —
even to places that might not
have a direct connection to
the terrorist attack — has
been to keep alive the memory of 9/11.
“Because it was such a
unifying event, I think that a
lot of smaller towns, emergency services and schools
really want to create a continuing knowledge about
what happened and find a
way of connecting it to U.S.
history,” Passiak said.
On this day, Passiak was
preparing for two rusted
train tracks recovered from
the commuter rail line
underneath the trade center
to be picked up by “the
Iowans,” as she called her
expected guests. Just before
11 a.m.,a white Chevy pickup
truck pulled into a lot next to
the hangar as a jet lifted off
from a nearby runway and
rumbled overhead.
Out of the truck stepped
Elaine and Tom Howard, a
retired couple from Hamburg, Iowa, who had arranged through a community booster organization,
Hometown Pride, to secure
the tracks for a memorial in
their town’s Heroes Park.
They had driven the
nearly 1,300 miles to New
York City to personally deliver the train tracks back to
Hamburg and its 1,187 residents. “What better place to
have a little piece of the
World Trade Center than
Heroes Park,” said Elaine
Howard, 67.
The tracks were not so
little. Each section, about 10
feet long, weighed approximately 600 pounds. The
Howards’ faces fell when a
Port Authority worker who
had transported the tracks to
their vehicle on a forklift
expressed doubt that they
would fit into the truck’s bed.
The tracks did, in the end,
fit, although a slightly longer
one jutted out a bit. They
were secured with heavy
chains for the drive home.
The fact that the hangar is
now nearly empty is gratifying to Amory Houghton, a
former Port Authority executive who first oversaw
Hangar 17, beginning in
2002, when it was filled to
the brim with steel beams,
damaged emergency vehicles and other debris
brought from the World
Trade Center site to save
them for posterity.
“The goal all along has
been to have some of this
steel in as many places as it
could possibly be,” said
Houghton, who left the Port
Authority in 2007.
He recalled bringing in
preservationists and archivists to begin the daunting
process of cataloging and
protecting the relics. “We
were part laboratory, part
historical archive and part
morgue,” he said.
Hearing that most of the
World Trade Center objects
now were placed elsewhere,
Houghton said, “I’m really
happy that this stuff has
been spread out all over the
place. … I think it just keeps it
alive given the inevitability
that the longer time passes
the more memory fades.”
The Howards’ was one of
the final pickups at Hangar
17, which the Port Authority
devices that teams of rangers could use on the ground.
Patrols will be launched
in Queen Elizabeth National Park in western
Uganda in the coming
months. Uganda is home to
some of the world’s most
threatened ecosystems. Andrew Plumptre, director of
the Albertine Rift Program
for the Wildlife Conservation Society in Uganda, said
he was eager to see the app
put to the test.
Plumptre said ranger patrols comprise the greatest
portion of the Uganda Wildlife Authority’s budget for
all of its parks and wildlife
reserves, and recent studies
show an average of 42
percent of households
around two of Uganda’s key
elephant strongholds admitted to hunting in the
parks in the past year.
In Malaysia, where
Tambe and his researchers
teamed with the wild cats
conservation group Panthera to test guided patrols
using the artificial intelligence technology, the program yielded positive outcomes.
A research paper written
by the USC team, Panthera
and other researchers noted
that PAWs was able to guide
rangers toward poaching
hot spots by suggesting feasible and detailed routes.
But they also found limitations.
For example, one of the
routes PAWS suggested for
rangers on foot patrol in
Uganda traversed a body of
water, forcing the wardens
to walk along the water’s
edge and slowing them
down. The technology was
also unable to provide detailed patrol routes in large
conservation areas, and
questions remain about
maintaining and upgrading
the software, Tambe said.
Sean Willmore, president
of the International Ranger
Federation that includes 71
member associations on six
continents, said that while
technology is important in
the fight to protect wildlife,
it is “not the silver bullet.”
“I don’t want to dismiss
the technology, but it is
pointless if we don’t have
rangers who are trained and
rangers who can use that
technology,” Willmore said.
He also stressed rangers’
expects to close later this
summer when the last of the
relics are cleared out. The
structure, dating to the
1960s, probably will be
razed, the space used for
other airport purposes, possibly aircraft parking, Coleman said.
The three biggest pieces
still left inside – concrete
slabs from the parking garage, a mangled elevator motor and a section of the
antenna (each estimated to
weigh about 20 tons) — are
to be picked up in the next
few weeks by representatives of the Stephen Siller
Tunnel to Towers Foundation of Staten Island, named
after a firefighter killed on
Sept. 11.
A set of steel beams was
going to an engineers’ union
in Queens. Still left were
additional train tracks and
the material from the pile,
which Passiak said she
hoped to place with organizations that had expressed
interest in obtaining relics.
Also unclaimed was the
lone Port Authority police
car, dust from the World
Trade Center debris still
coating its blue-and-white
paint.
“I think we’ll find a home
for it, too,” Coleman said.
TARGETING
POACHING
Artificial intelligence-driven app could help
rangers turn tide on animal slaughter
By Ann M. Simmons |
Tribune Newspapers
LOS ANGELES — The newest weapon in the fight against wildlife poaching and illegal
logging doesn’t rely solely on boots or bullets, but on a computer software application
driven by artificial intelligence.
Called Protection Assistant for Wildlife Security, or PAWS, the app uses algorithms –
similar to the mathematical models used to power computer games – to devise strategies
for defeating those who seek to destroy nature.
Thousands of animals are
illegally slaughtered each
year for their ivory, skin and
bones for use in traditional
medicines and feeding
black market demand,
while others meet their
death at the hands of trophy
hunters, in what the World
Wildlife Fund refers to as “a
global poaching crisis.”
Last year, around 30,000
elephants and a record 1,338
rhinos were killed in Africa,
while tens of thousands of
other animals were
poached and trafficked,
“feeding an illegal wildlife
trade that is increasingly
being driven by international organized crime,” the
conservation group said in a
recent statement.
Developed in 2013 and
still in the test phase, the
PAWS software analyzes
data on terrain, topography,
routes most frequently used
by animals and paths traveled by poachers, said Milind Tambe, a computer
scientist and professor of
industrial systems engineering at University of
Southern California who
developed the technology
with his doctoral students.
The Army Research Office and the National Science Foundation funded
the research.
“We can do pattern rec-
ognition, essentially building a model and predicting
poachers’ activity based on
their past actions,” Tambe
said. “We can build up
predictions of where
poachers may strike. Then
that allows us to generate
patrol strategies that would
be effective against those
types of poachers. “
For example, the system
can generate random patrol
routes for rangers in order
to keep potential poachers
guessing about the whereabouts of the wardens.
The technology has been
tested in Malaysia and
Uganda, where it was
loaded onto handheld GPS
A ranger guards illegal
stockpiles of burning
elephant tusks, ivory
figurines and rhino
horns in Nairobi, Kenya,
in April.
CARL DE SOUZA/GETTY-AFP
need for basic field equipment, such as wet weather
gear and mosquito nets.
In addition, technology
can do little to predict how
poachers might react when
discovered by rangers, Willmore said, and encounters
with poachers can prove
lethal. According to ranger
federation statistics, an estimated 100 rangers are killed
on the job each year.
Around 70 percent of them
were murdered by poachers, Willmore said.
PAWS researchers said
the technology was not intended to overshadow the
practical needs of rangers.
“We’re building a decision aid,” Tambe said. “We
are saying to the rangers
here is a tool that may
effectively help you.”
ann.simmons@tribpub.com
Maryland
Business
&COMICS
Microsoft
to buy
LinkedIn
After $26.2 billion purchase of
business-oriented network, it
will be operated as an independent unit PG 2
THE BALTIMORE SUN | TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
Evergreen sues
over ACA rule
Md. health co-op contends risk adjustment
program places it at an unfair disadvantage
By Sarah Gantz
The Baltimore Sun
AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN 2015
Evergreen Health Cooperative staff members are shown at work. The 3-year-old co-op
says the Obamacare rule requiring insurers with healthier members to make payments to
those with sicker, costlier members jeopardizes its future.
Evergreen Health Cooperative sued the
federal government Monday over a program that could force it to make a huge
payment to larger insurance companies and
compromise the 3-year-old company’s future.
The lawsuit marks a critical departure
for Evergreen CEO Peter Beilenson, a
longtime advocate for the Affordable Care
Act, President Barack Obama’s insurance
reform designed to extend health coverage
to more Americans.
The federal law requires insurers with
healthier members to make payments to
those with sicker, costlier members.
In the lawsuit filed Monday in U.S.
District Court, Evergreen says it expects to
owe between $18 million and $22 million
this year, or about a quarter of its $85
million premium revenue in 2015, under the
so-called risk adjustment program.
Evergreen alleges in the suit that the
See EVERGREEN, page 3
A new
Amazon
delivery
system
Lockers in area stores
cut shipping costs,
deter porch thefts
By Jonathan Capriel
The Baltimore Sun
Baltimore-area Amazon customers,
some frustrated by package theft, now have
another option for delivery than their front
steps and porches.
The online retail giant, which opened a
massive distribution center in East Baltimore last year, has brought its Amazon
Locker program to the region, setting up
nine self-service package pickup points.
Most of the nine Baltimore-area Amazon
Lockers are inside Shoppers Food and
Pharmacy stores.
Amazon emails a customer a unique
digital code that they can enter into a touch
screen on the high-tech cabinets, which
opens a compartment in the locker with
their package.
“I first thought, ‘Who is going to use
these?’” said Gino Polsinelli, store director
of the Shoppers on Fort Avenue in Riverside, where Amazon set up the locker two
weeks ago. “But they’ve really taken off. The
first day they were used, there was a line of
people coming to pick up their packages.”
The lockers are a smart move that serves
two goals for the retail giant — reducing
ALGERINA PERNA/BALTIMORE SUN
Gino Polsinelli, manager of the Shoppers grocery store on Fort Avenue, stands next to an Amazon self-service package pickup locker
recently installed in the store. Customers are emailed a code to open the compartment holding their package.
shipping expenses and costly package theft,
said Ravi Srinivasan, assistant professor of
operations management at Loyola University Maryland.
Delivering to a single location is cheaper
for Amazon, which manages some of its
own deliveries.
“It’s the logical next step for Amazon,”
Srinivasan said. “Customers are already
used to these type of things. Think about
Nominations sought for the
Baltimore region’s top workplaces
Most Americans spend roughly a third
of their working years on the job, so
shouldn’t we all aim to work somewhere
that challenges and rewards and feels
worthwhile?
At a time when the unemployment rate
in Maryland has fallen to 4.6
percent, below the national average, and competition for qualified
workers is heating up, many
workplaces are looking for an
edge in the hiring market.
For the past five years, The
Baltimore Sun Media Group’s Top
Workplaces has showcased those
companies in the region that
demonstrably can call themselves
the region’s top places to work.
Employees of these companies say they
enjoy going to work and use words like
“team” and even “family” to describe their
sense of belonging.
The Sun is seeking nominations for its
sixth annual list of the region’s top
workplaces.
Last year, 100 companies were recognized as Top Workplaces in the Baltimore
region, encompassing the city and Anne
Arundel, Baltimore, Carroll, Harford and
Howard counties.
Does your company have what it takes
to make the list or even top it in 2016?
Anyone can suggest a company —
employees, customers, executives, even
interns. It doesn’t matter if the workplace
is profit or nonprofit, privately
owned or publicly held. Companies must employ at least 35
people to qualify.
Employees of nominated
firms that choose to participate
will be asked to respond to a
short survey this summer by The
Sun’s partner, WorkplaceDynamics, which has conducted
Top Workplace surveys for more
than 30 news organizations
across the country.
The surveys will be used to rank the top
companies. Winners will be announced at
an event and featured in a special
magazine in early December.
To nominate a company, go to baltimoresun.com/nominate or call 410-779-9337.
Nominations are due July 15. What are
you waiting for?
Christopher Dinsmore, senior editor for
business and health, The Baltimore Sun
Redbox and online grocery stores, retailers
who let you buy online and have products
shipped to a place where you can pick them
up.”
Retailers from Best Buy to Target offer
in-store pickup for items ordered online.
The lockers also could be a response to
package theft, which some in Baltimore say
is a growing problem.
“When a package is stolen, Amazon has
to eat the cost and figure out a way to deliver
the product to the customer,” Srinivasan
said. “The lockers will reduce their overall
costs.”
About 23 million Americans have had
packages stolen from their doorsteps, according to a 2015 report from InsuranceQuotes.com.
Amazon emphasized convenience when
See LOCKERS, page 3
Video gaming retools
as a spectator sport
Broadcasters see the potential for fans — and for profits
By Jeff Barker
The Baltimore Sun
The outside world fades away as Vincent
Alonso dons his headset and hears his
teammates’ urgent voices and the exotic
sounds of a video game land populated by
monsters.
The University of Maryland student
believes the rush he experiences from
“eSports” — shorthand for electronic sports
— is beginning to translate to audience
interest as the gaming industry tries to turn
mythical-world competitions into events
with real-life spectators, sponsors and
profits.
“I have absolutely zero doubt it’s going to
take off,” said Alonso, 22, a computer
science major and a prominent enough
gamer to have been featured on the website
of League of Legends, a popular online
game he competes in with his highly rated
university team.
Countering old stereotypes of solitary
video gamers playing in their bathrobes,
DANIEL SHIREY/GETTY IMAGES
Patrik Lindberg of eSports team Ninjas in
Pyjamas warms up before a match.
eSports tournaments are spreading in
popularity as sponsors buy in, players
become cult celebrities and an increasing
number of games are streamed online and
even televised.
See ESPORTS, page 3
2
THE BALTIMORE SUN |
MARYLAND BUSINESS
BUSINESS
| TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
BUSINESS BRIEFING
Tribune Newspapers and news services
McDonald’s
to move into
ex-Oprah digs
RICHARD DREW/AP
LinkedIn, which lets members network with other professionals, will keep its name.
Microsoft says it will buy
LinkedIn for $26.2 billion
Network will
continue as an
independent unit
By Barbara Ortutay
Associated Press
NEW YORK — In a
surprise move, Microsoft
said Monday that it is
buying LinkedIn for about
$26.2 billion, a deal that
could bring subtle but significant changes for the
professional network’s
more than 430 million
members.
LinkedIn will remain an
independent unit of Microsoft. It will keep its name,
and current CEO Jeff
Weiner will stay on and
report directly to Microsoft
CEO Satya Nadella.
LinkedIn lets members
network with other professionals, upload their resumes, catch up on career
advice and search for jobs.
For Microsoft, the deal
presents an opportunity to
cement itself as the tech
company for the world’s
professionals, helping them
find jobs, learn new skills
and do their work.
Microsoft will also look
for ways to combine Microsoft’s software for workers
with the information
stored in LinkedIn’s online
professional network.
For instance, Nadella
said Microsoft’s digital assistant, Cortana, could
mine LinkedIn for helpful
data. “Cortana can wake up
before you go into a meeting and inform you about
all the people you are meeting for the first time and the
connections you have with
them,” he said.
Similarly, he said,
LinkedIn’s “news feed” —
which provides articles and
updates from your contacts
on the network — could
highlight information
that’s relevant to a project
you might be working on
using Microsoft Office 365
software. LinkedIn users
might see changes in the
first year after the deal is
closed, Nadella said.
Microsoft may also integrate its business software with LinkedIn’s
growing business of providing sales professionals
with contacts and information to help make sales to
large companies.
LinkedIn, based in
Mountain View, Calif. is by
far Microsoft’s largest acquisition. Microsoft Corp.,
which is in Redmond,
Wash., is paying $196 for
each share of LinkedIn
Corp., a 50 percent premium over the stock’s closing price of $131.08 on
Friday. The deal is expected to close this year.
LinkedIn shares soared
47 percent to $192.21 in
trading Monday. Microsoft
shares slipped nearly 3 percent to $50.14.
LinkedIn’s business and
share price have been rocky
recently.
In February, it gave a
surprise forecast for slower
growth that led to a big
sell-off, wiping out nearly
$11 billion in market value.
The company said at the
time that its adjusted earnings would be 55 cents a
share on revenue of roughly $820 million.
Its stock climbed higher
after it reported betterthan-expected results for
the first quarter, though not
enough to recover from the
earlier plunge.
Microsoft has a mixed
track record with acquisitions, having written off
more than $10 billion it
poured into companies
such as cellphone maker
Nokia. Nadella expressed
confidence that this one
will succeed, citing the
company’s more successful
takeovers of Skype and
Minecraft.
MONDAY’S MARKET REPORT
$200
appears likely to remain in wait-and-see mode for
at least another month. The yield on the 10-year
U.S. Treasury note fell to its lowest level this
year. Chemical and tech companies fell, and
investors also sold airline stocks.
SYMC Hanesbrands
HBI
Close: $18.21 0.91 or 5.3%
The security software company said
it will buy privately held Blue Coat
Inc. for $4.65 billion.
$19
28
17
100
M
A
M
52-week range
$98.25
Vol.: 26.2m (9.7x avg.)
Mkt. Cap: $22.68 b
16
J
$258.39
PE: ...
Yield: ...
M
$16.14
A
M
52-week range
26
J
$24.59
PE: ...
Vol.: 34.0m (4.0x avg.)
Mkt. Cap: $11.15 b
Yield: 1.6%
High: 17,893.28
Dow
Close: $26.14 -0.72 or -2.7%
The clothing company said Chairman Richard Noll will give up his
CEO title on Oct. 1.
$30
18
150
Low: 17,731.35
M
$23.25
A
M
52-week range
J
$34.78
PE: 22.8
Vol.: 6.0m (1.9x avg.)
Mkt. Cap: $9.87 b
Yield: 1.7%
Previous: 17,865.34
18,040
Dow Jones industrials
Close: 17,732.48
Change: -132.86 (-0.7%)
17,840
17,640
18,400
10 DAYS
17,600
16,800
16,000
15,200
D
J
F
Nasdaq
d
M
A
S&P 500
d
-46.11 (-.94%)
4,848.44
Close
4,894.85
High
Low
4,844.94
Previous
4,894.55
M
J
Russell 2000
d
-17.01 (-.81%)
2,079.06
Close
High
-13.23 (-1.14%)
1,150.70
Close
2,098.12
High
1,164.90
Low
2,078.46
Low
1,149.48
Previous
2,096.07
Previous
1,163.93
10-yr T-note
Gold futures
Yen
Euro
Crude Oil
d
u
d
d
d
-.03
+11.00
-.58
-.0026
-.19
to 1.61%
to $1,284.40
to 106.21/$1
to .8856/$1
to $48.88
Major market growth and decline
5-day % change
ANDREW BURTON/GETTY
Apple introduces new iOS software Monday at its
annual developer conference in San Francisco.
Apple says it’s making Siri smarter
Apple kicked off its
annual software developer conference with an
artificial intelligence upgrade for Siri.
Apple announced
Monday that the voicecontrolled assistant will
work on Mac desktop and
laptop computers, where
it can locate files and
perform other feats.
Siri will also gain new
capabilities with Apple
TV, where it will let users
launch live TV viewing
with voice command and
search YouTube and the
iTunes store for videos.
Also, Apple is letting Siri
work with applications
made by other companies. The change will
open up new ways for Siri
to help iPhone owners
get things done more
quickly.
Such AI features are
emerging as a major new
tech battleground.
Dish drops Tribune TV stations
Dish Network dropped
Tribune Broadcasting’s
42 television stations
nationwide for 50 million
subscribers in a dispute
over carriage fees.
The blackout, which
began Sunday, pulled the
plug on WPIX in New
York among other stations. It also affected access to WGN America for
7 million subscribers.
“We want to reach an
agreement, just as we
have with every one of
our other cable, satellite
and telco distributors, but
Dish refuses to reach an
agreement based on fairmarket value,” Gary Weitman, spokesman for Chicago-based Tribune Media, said in a news release.
Dish Network provides satellite TV programming to about 14
million subscribers.
THE BOTTOM LINE
is the amount of flights on the largest 12 U.S. airlines that
84.5%
arrived on time in April, better than the previous month
and up from 81.8 percent in April 2015, the Department of Transportation said
Monday. Hawaiian Airlines and Delta Air Lines were the best at staying on schedule, while Spirit Airlines was last, arriving late more than one-fourth of the time.
As airlines do a better job of sticking to schedules, complaints are falling. Consumer complaints about U.S. airlines fell 20 percent to 870 from 1,083 in April 2015.
LOCAL STOCKS
U.S. stocks fell for a third day Monday as
investors wondered what the Federal Reserve
will do with interest rates later this week and
anxiously awaited the fate of Britain’s
membership in the European Union. The Fed
LinkedIn
LNKD Symantec
Close: $192.21 61.13 or 46.6%
Microsoft agreed to buy the professional networking service company
for $196 a share, or $26.2 billion.
McDonald’s is moving
back to Chicago and into
the old home of “The
Oprah Winfrey Show.”
The world’s biggest
hamburger chain said
Monday that it signed a
lease to move its corporate
headquarters in 2018 from
the leafy suburbs of Oak
Brook, Ill., to downtown
Chicago.
McDonald’s was previously based in Chicago,
from 1955 to 1971.
McDonald’s is taking
over the space that once
housed Harpo Studios,
where filming of “The
Oprah Winfrey Show” took
place until 2011. Harpo
Studios sold the site to
developers in 2014 for
more than $30 million.
The fast food company
said the move is a way for it
to attract workers who
want to live in cities. Other
companies have announced moves from the
suburbs to cities, including
Kraft Heinz and General
Electric.
McDonald’s Corp. CEO
Steve Easterbrook said the
new site will encourage
innovation and ensure that
“great talent is excited
about where they work.”
The company said it
plans to turn the space into
a “modern setting that fosters collaboration and connectivity.” Its new headquarters will also house a
Hamburger University, a
learning center for future
executives and other employees.
XCHG. CLOSE
Adams Divers Eqty
Adams Nat Rescs Fd
Aegon NV
BB&T Corp
Bay Bancorp Inc
Becton Dickinsn
Berkshire Hath A
CSX Corp
Ciena Corporation
Cisco Syst
Comcast Corp A
Corp Office Prop
Exelon Corp
FNB Corp FL pfE
FTI Consulting
Fulton Financial
GP Strategies
GSE Systems
Gen Dynamics
Gen Growth Prop
1-year % change
MOST ACTIVE STOCKS
NASD
-2.42
S&P
-1.44
DOW
+.12
NASD
+1.53
S&P
+.60
DOW
-.33
NASD
-3.61
S&P
-.26
d
d
d
u
u
u
d
d
d
STOCK
XCHG. CLOSE
General Motors Co
Glen Burnie Bancorp
Hannon Armstrong
Honeywell Intl
Howard Bancorp Inc
KEYW Holding Corp
Kratos Defense Sec
Legg Mason
Leidos Holdings Inc
Lockheed Martin
M&T Bank
McCormick & Co
Medifast Inc
Northrop Grumman
Old Line Bancshares
Omega Hlthcre
Oracle Corp
Orbital ATK Inc
Osiris Therapeutics
PHH Corp
N
O
N
N
O
O
O
N
N
N
N
N
N
N
O
N
N
N
O
N
29.08
10.99
21.02
115.13
12.87
9.27
3.97
31.59
48.00
237.95
117.69
98.96
32.53
215.05
17.33
33.02
38.62
88.19
4.89
13.63
LARGEST COMPANIES
CHG.
STOCK
+.02
-.01
-.19
-1.55
+.20
+.03
+.01
-.56
-.14
-2.63
+.14
-.85
-.47
-2.31
-.12
+.03
-.12
-1.17
-.04
-.34
PNC Financial
PharmAthene Inc
T. Rowe Price
Procter & Gamble
Sandy Spring Bcp
Severn Bancorp
Sinclair Bdcst
Swst Airlines
Stanley Black & Deck
Suntrust Bks
TESSCO Tech
Tailored Brands
Textron Inc
Tribune Publishing
Under Armour Inc
Univ Secur Inst
Verizon Comm
XCHG. CLOSE
N
N
O
N
O
O
O
N
N
N
O
N
N
N
N
N
N
CHG.
86.34
-.66
2.16 unch.
71.72
-.57
82.57
-.63
28.74
-.34
5.85
-.10
30.45
-.73
42.16 -1.47
112.33
-.61
41.89
-.59
12.63 +.08
11.39
-.21
38.00
-.75
13.04
-.01
37.45
-.93
3.66
-.02
52.57
-.10
LARGEST MUTUAL FUNDS
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
STOCK
CLOSE CHG.
Based on market capitalization
STOCK
CLOSE CHG.
Based on total assets
FUND
Bank of America
13.60
-.23
Twitter Inc
14.55 +.53
Chesapk Engy
4.33
-.09
Gen Electric
29.83
-.21
Pfizer Inc
34.74
-.55
Freeport McMoRan 10.40 +.04
Petrobras
6.20
-.27
Valeant Pharma
23.78
-.36
Barrick Gold
20.22 +.61
Ford Motor
12.98
-.12
Weatherford Intl Ltd 6.57
-.01
Citigroup
43.16
-.74
Vale SA
4.37
-.04
LinkedIn Corp
192.21 +61.13
Regions Fncl
9.36
-.16
Marathon Oil
13.28
-.14
Banco Bradesco ADS 7.03 +.06
AT&T Inc
40.19
-.14
EnCana Corp
8.00
-.03
Wells Fargo & Co
47.97
-.37
Yamana Gold Inc
4.88
-.11
Turquoise Hill Res
3.26 +.38
Whiting Petroleum 11.66
-.25
Kinross Gold
5.16
-.02
AT&T Inc
40.19
Alphabet Inc C
718.36
Alphabet Inc A
731.88
Amazon.com Inc
715.24
Apple Inc
97.34
China Mobile Ltd
55.70
Exxon Mobil Corp
90.59
Facebook Inc
113.95
Gen Electric
29.83
JPMorgan Chase & Co63.27
Johnson & Johnson 116.79
Microsoft Corp
50.14
Pfizer Inc
34.74
Procter & Gamble
82.57
Royal Dutch Shell B 51.60
Royal Dutch Shell A 50.58
Verizon Comm
52.57
WalMart Strs
70.53
Wells Fargo & Co
47.97
DURATION
CLOSE
PREV.
NASDAQ STOCK MARKET
STOCK
CLOSE
3-month disc
6-month disc
2-year
10-year
30-year
0.285
0.40
0.73
1.61
2.43
0.25
0.40
0.74
1.64
2.45
American Funds AMCAPA m
26.59 -.17
-2.6
American Funds AmBalA m
24.67 -.09 +4.3
American Funds CapIncBuA m 57.90 -.44
-.1
American Funds CpWldGrIA m 43.32 -.48
-6.3
American Funds EurPacGrA m 43.81 -.71 -11.6
American Funds FnInvA m
52.11 -.44 +2.1
American Funds GrthAmA m
41.42 -.24
-.6
American Funds IncAmerA m
20.97 -.13 +1.7
American Funds InvCoAmA m 35.07 -.26 +1.3
American Funds NewPerspA m 35.25 -.35
-3.9
American Funds WAMutInvA m 39.81 -.31 +3.0
Dodge & Cox Income
13.74
... +3.9
Dodge & Cox IntlStk
35.46
... -19.5
Dodge & Cox Stock
162.02
...
-5.9
Fidelity Contra
97.10 -.82
-.3
Fidelity ContraK
97.07 -.82
-.2
Fidelity LowPriStk d
47.99 -.49
-5.2
Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg
73.41 -.58 +1.5
Fidelity Spartan 500IdxInstl
73.41 -.58 +1.5
FrankTemp-Frank Income C m
2.18 -.02
-4.5
FrankTemp-Frank IncomeA m
2.16 -.01
-3.6
FrankTemp-Temp GlBondAdv
11.06 -.14
-6.9
Harbor IntlInstl
58.34 -.89 -14.5
Metropolitan West TotRetBdI
10.92
... +4.5
Oakmark Intl I
20.00
... -16.9
PIMCO IncomeInl
11.89
... +3.7
PIMCO TotRetIs
10.26
... +3.9
T Rowe Price BlChpGr
68.89 -.56
-1.6
T Rowe Price CapApprec
26.23 -.16 +5.9
T Rowe Price EqIndex d
56.17 -.44 +1.2
T Rowe Price GrowStk
50.87 -.49
-3.1
T Rowe Price NewIncome
9.67 +.01 +4.8
Vanguard 500Adml
192.65 -1.52 +1.5
Vanguard 500Inv
192.61 -1.52 +1.3
Vanguard BdMktInstPls
11.02 +.01 +5.6
Vanguard DivGr
23.23 -.17 +5.5
Vanguard HltCrAdml
86.41 -.61
-5.3
Vanguard InstIdxI
190.75 -1.51 +1.5
Vanguard InstPlus
190.77 -1.50 +1.5
Vanguard InstTStPl
46.96 -.38
-.2
Vanguard IntlStkIdxAdm x
23.58 -.67 -11.8
Vanguard IntlStkIdxIPls x
94.29 -2.69 -11.8
Vanguard MidCpAdml x
151.78 -1.99
-3.2
Vanguard MuIntAdml
14.51
... +6.4
Vanguard PrmcpAdml
101.24 -1.04
-2.2
Vanguard STGradeAd
10.75 +.01 +3.2
Vanguard SmCpIdAdm x
54.94 -.77
-5.2
Vanguard TgtRe2020
27.90 -.17
-.4
Vanguard TgtRe2025
16.01 -.11
-1.2
Vanguard TgtRe2030
28.33 -.22
-2.0
Vanguard TgtRe2035
17.15 -.15
-2.9
Vanguard TotBdAdml
11.02 +.01 +5.5
Vanguard TotBdInst
11.02 +.01 +5.6
Vanguard TotIntl x
14.10 -.39 -11.9
Vanguard TotStIAdm x
51.67 -.65
-.3
Vanguard TotStIIns x
51.68 -.65
-.3
Vanguard TotStIdx x
51.66 -.64
-.4
Vanguard WellsIAdm
62.69 -.09 +7.3
Vanguard WelltnAdm
65.66 -.31 +2.4
Vanguard WndsIIAdm x
60.23 -1.38
-3.4
d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee.
m - Multiple fees are charged, usually a marketing
fee and either a sales or redemption fee.
Source: Morningstar.
CHG.
Microsoft Corp
50.14 -1.34
Sirius XM Hldgs Inc
3.90
-.02
Apple Inc
97.34 -1.49
Symantec Corp
18.21 +.91
Skyline Medical Inc
.20 +.02
Gevo Inc
.49 +.05
Facebook Inc
113.95 -2.67
Intel Corp
32.17 +.13
Frontier Comm
4.87
-.13
Zynga Inc
2.54
-.11
Cisco Syst
28.84
-.19
Micron Tech
12.05
-.09
Adv Micro Dev
4.40 +.08
Netflix Inc
93.85 +.10
Qualcomm Inc
52.83 -1.00
Applied Matls
23.94
-.13
Eleven Biotherap
2.39 +.52
Nvidia Corporation 46.79 +.59
xG Technology
.14
-.01
JD.com Inc
20.99
-.07
American Airlines Gp 31.80 -1.34
Huntgtn Bancshs
9.86
-.09
eBay Inc
23.89
-.18
Walgreen Boots Alli 84.36 +1.89
INDEX
DOW
-1.05
CHG.
N
12.66
-.11
N
19.59
-.52
N
4.46
-.16
N
35.77
-.15
O
5.25 +.01
N 168.35
-.94
N 211450 -1172
O
26.59
-.19
N
20.86
-.26
O
28.84
-.19
O
62.39
-.41
N
27.60 unch.
N
34.40
-.20
N
30.08
-.13
N
42.49
-.49
O
13.70
-.20
N
23.49
-.65
N
2.17
-.01
N 139.11 -2.42
N
27.61 +.15
FOREIGN MARKETS
30-day % change
Stocks online
Exchange key: N=NYSE, O=NASDAQ
STOCK
CLOSE
CHG./%
Shanghai
2833.07
-94.1/-3.2
Stoxx600
326.80
-6.1/-1.8
Nikkei
16019.18 -582.2/-3.5
MSCI-EAFE 1640.92
-34.4/-2.1
Bovespa
49660.02 +237.9/+.5
FTSE 100
6044.97
-70.8/-1.2
CAC-40
4227.02
-79.7/-1.9
Find comprehensive stock data and the latest news at baltimoresun.com/stocks
-.14
-1.05
-1.31
-2.67
-1.49
-1.17
+.61
-2.67
-.21
-.57
-.22
-1.34
-.55
-.63
-.64
-.73
-.10
-.61
-.37
TREASURY YIELDS
SPOT METALS
CLOSE
Gold
Silver
Platinum
$1284.40
$17.428
$995.30
PREV.
$1273.40
$17.315
$994.20
INTEREST RATES
Prime Rate
3.50
Discount Rate Primary
1.00
Fed Funds Target
.25-.50
Money Mkt Overnight Avg. 0.25
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
A U.S. Dollar buys . . .
Argentina (Peso)
Australia (Dollar)
Brazil (Real)
Britain (Pound)
Canada (Dollar)
China (Yuan)
Euro
India (Rupee)
Israel (Shekel)
Japan (Yen)
Mexico (Peso)
Poland (Zloty)
So. Korea (Won)
Taiwan (Dollar)
Thailand (Baht)
13.8120
1.3533
3.4734
.7029
1.2796
6.5877
.8856
67.190
3.8585
106.21
18.8245
3.91
1172.25
32.37
35.18
NAV
CHG 1-YR
IN $ %RTN
MARYLAND BUSINESS
PEOPLE ON THE MOVE
Paul J. Schwab, a
partner in the Towson
law firm of Azrael,
Franz, Schwab &
Lipowitz LLC, has
been named president
of the board of trustees
for the Baltimore
County Public Library.
Lauren Kronthal
has been named chief
marketing officer for
Baltimore-based Evergreen Health.
Keith O’Hara Hinder Jr. has joined
Niles, Barton & Wilmer LLP as an associate in the firm’s litigation department, focusing on insurance
law and general commercial litigation.
Holly Inglisa has
joined Berkshire
Hathaway HomeServices Homesale
Realty as a realtor
working throughout
Baltimore County.
Candace Osunsade has been promoted to senior vice
president and chief of
staff for the National
Aquarium’s administration department,
and also joined the
aquarium’s leadership
team.
Jenny Morgan has
been appointed to the
boards of directors of
Hamilton Bancorp
and Hamilton Bank.
Rich Bendis, president and CEO of BioHealth Innovation
Inc., was recently appointed to serve on
Gov. Larry Hogan’s
Maryland Life Sciences Advisory Board.
Helene Raynaud
has been chosen as
president and CEO of
the Baltimore-based
nonprofit Guidewell
Financial Solutions.
Guy Garheart has
joined Berkshire
Hathaway HomeServices Homesale
Realty as a realtor specializing in residential
sales throughout central Maryland.
Mary M. Wiethorn has been named
principal in the workers’ compensation and
employers’ liability
practice group for
Semmes, Bowen and
Semmes P.C.
Dale Schmidt has
been promoted to executive vice president
and COO for the National Aquarium in
Baltimore.
Amanda Pizzurro
has been named director of development of
the Howard Hospital
Foundation, which
provides philanthropic support to Howard
County General Hospital.
Nickolas Potts has
been named controller
for Klein Enterprises,
and oversees the company’s accounting
functions and properties.
University System
of Maryland Chancellor Robert L. Caret
has joined the board of
directors of BioHealth
Innovation Inc.
Paul W. Kim has
joined Cole Schotz’s
Baltimore office and is
leading the firm’s new
Healthcare Group.
Online
To see who is being promoted
in the Baltimore area or to submit an
announcement, visit
baltimoresun.com/peopleonthemove
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 |
MARYLAND BUSINESS
3
| THE BALTIMORE SUN
Co-op sues over risk adjustment rule
EVERGREEN, From page 1
method for determining how much companies pay or receive under the program
favors older, more well-established companies and puts small firms, like Evergreen, at
a disadvantage. The suit against the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services
and U.S. Centers of Medicare and Medicaid
Services seeks to phase in payments over
several years or delay them temporarily.
While the charge won’t put Evergreen
out of business, it would be a big setback for
one of the most successful and one of the
few remaining health insurance co-ops
established by the health reform law.
The higher-than-expected fee could
wipe out nearly half of Evergreen’s reserve
cash, the suit said, putting the co-op’s
solvency at risk, and destroy plans to meet a
major milestone in 2016 — profitability.
“We’re quite confident we’ll survive,”
Beilenson said. “But this is an outrageous
sum of money being sent from one insurer
to another that doesn’t need it and doesn’t
deserve it.”
Beilenson said he was told by federal
regulators that CareFirst BlueCross
BlueShield, the largest insurer in the state,
would be the primary recipient of risk
adjustment payments in Maryland.
A spokesperson for the Centers of
Medicare and Medicaid declined to comment because litigation is continuing. CareFirst declined to comment.
The risk adjustment program was put in
place under the federal health reform law to
protect insurance companies that would be
taking on sicker members, as the law
prevented them from denying coverage to
people because of a pre-existing illness.
Regulators give a health plan’s members
a risk rating based on their age, gender,
medical history and other factors. Risk
ratings are compared against the state
average, and plans that have healthier-thanaverage members pay into the program,
while those with sicker-than-average and
riskier members receive money.
Evergreen argues in its lawsuit that, in
practice, the program means small companies must pay out sizable portions of their
revenue to some of the biggest insurers in
the business.
Large insurers who have been in business
for decades are better at estimating their
members’ health, while small companies
lack the technical sophistication and the
years of medical history to provide as
accurate an estimate and, as a result, appear
to have healthier members, the suit contends.
The payments are a significant burden
for small companies with relatively small
operating budgets and reserves, Beilenson
said. The hardship the payments create for
small companies contrast sharply to the
benefit they offer the large recipients,
Beilenson said. While $22 million represents about a quarter of Evergreen’s 2015
revenue, CareFirst has a reserve of about
$1.5 billion.
Co-ops, or consumer-oriented and -operated plans, are insurance companies
governed by a board of their members. The
health reform law offered loans that helped
create 23 co-ops nationwide. Lawmakers
saw the program as a way to inject more
competition into a market dominated by
large corporations.
These newcomers had to build a membership base from scratch, establish a
network of doctors and figure out the right
price for plans, all while competing against
larger insurers with deep-rooted reputations. Co-ops had been counting on new
online insurance marketplaces, also created
by the ACA, to boost early enrollment and
many suffered when these new exchanges
experienced technical problems.
Maryland’s launch problems were
among the nation’s worst, and Evergreen
shifted focus to the small-business market
to survive initially.
Other rules created by the health law to
spread the risk of covering more people,
who previously were denied insurance and
were expected to enroll in droves, also
challenged co-ops. One such program was
supposed to pay back insurance companies
for exorbitant costs. Some co-ops closed
when the federal government said it
wouldn’t deliver on that promise.
Only 11 co-ops remain operating.
“If you’re looking for the fundamental
flaw, it’s not the risk adjustment program,”
said Sabrina Corlette, a senior research
professor at the Center on Health Insurance Reforms at Georgetown University’s
Health Policy Institute. “It’s that they were
given very few resources to enter a market
that has notoriously high barriers to entry
and is expensive to enter.”
The charge will reduce Evergreen’s
reserves from $25.5 million to $13 million,
just above the $11 million required by the
state to cover the claims of its roughly
40,000 members.
The payment will leave Evergreen with a
266 percent risk-based capital ratio, a
complex formula the Maryland Insurance
Administration uses to determine a company’s financial stability. The state is
required to investigate if an insurer’s
risk-based capital ratio falls to 200 percent.
The payment blows the co-op’s chance of
turning a profit for the first time this year.
The company had expected a profit of
between $1 million and $2 million, but
instead would lose $11 million, about the
same as last year.
sarah.gantz@baltsun.com
twitter.com/sarahgantz
Video gaming as spectator sport
ESPORTS, From page 1
“You tend to think young, single, male,”
said Hank Boyd, a clinical professor of
marketing at Maryland’s Robert H. Smith
School of Business. “The group is becoming
more broad, more diverse. It’s become a
cultural phenomenon.”
Americans already spend more on video
games than on going to the movies — nearly
$17 billion last year, compared to a little
more than $11 billion on movies, according
to figures in a new report from PwC, a
global accounting and consulting firm. And
New York-based SuperData Research
projects global revenue for eSports in 2016
to reach $892.8 million.
On May 24, the website Twitch began
streaming live coverage of eLeague, a series
of professional tournaments created by
TimeWarner’s Turner Broadcasting and
talent agency WME | IMG. Games also are
televised Friday nights on TBS.
eLeague players compete in “Counter
Strike: Global Offensive” — a shooting game
that requires teamwork — and are based in
Turner’s 10,000-square-foot arena in Atlanta, which is equipped with 26 cameras
and features live studio audiences.
Teams of five players each, with names
like Ninjas in Pyjamas and Luminosity,
compete for a $1.4 million purse. The
players — sometimes shown in gladiator
poses and wearing eLeague shirts — are
interviewed during the coverage. Fans’
comments about the unfolding games fly up
the right side of the screen.
Turner said the live coverage on Twitch,
its distribution partner, generated 4.3 million video starts during the tournament’s
first four days. The coverage on TBS, a
Turner station, averaged 509,000 viewers
during its initial Friday prime-time broadcast.
“We’ve seen really rich engagement”
DANIEL SHIREY/GETTY IMAGES
Members of the team G2 eSports take a
timeout to discuss strategy during their
competition against Ninjas in Pyjamas at
the eLeague Arena at Turner Studios.
from 18- to 34-year-olds, said Craig Barry,
chief content officer for Turner Sports.
Barry expects the audience to grow as
narratives are developed around popular
players. Ultimately, the network hopes to
develop a soap-opera like roster of heroes
and villains.
The new league may feel marginal to
some, Barry said, but it’s no more obscure
than some Olympic sports.
“You have a two-week period where
everybody tunes in to the Olympics.
They’re watching sports they don’t usually
watch,” he said. “I once found myself
watching curling because I was emotionally
connected to this one curling athlete.”
To make the eLeague more compelling,
the producers allow viewers to see images
hidden from players. For example, only the
audience might see a player hiding behind a
door — a device intended to create tension
for spectators.
A key to eSports’ fan attraction is their
social nature, Boyd said.
“You can have a live chat window and
talk to other folks and say, ‘I’m a gamer,
you’re a gamer,’” he said. “They can share
some of the nuanced points with you.”
The players, too, must interact frequently. It’s a much different experience
than playing games alone.
Andy Zhang, 18, a Maryland student and
former teammate of Alonso’s, likens the
teamwork to basketball.
“Basketball has roles like the point
guard,” he said. “In League of Legends there
are five roles, too, and there’s that feeling
you get when you make a really good play
and your whole team congratulates you.”
Some might wonder whether video
gaming should be considered a sport.
“I would absolutely define it as a sport,”
Alonso said. “It’s a lot like chess but a lot
faster, obviously. You have the mechanical
aspect of pointing the mouse and pressing
the buttons on the keyboard.”
The Big Ten Network is considering
adding coverage of video games involving
the conference’s college teams.
“We want to take the next step and
include all of the schools that are participating,” said Jordan Maleh, director of digital
and consumer marketing for BTN, which
broadcast an exhibition contest in April in
partnership with Riot Games, creator of
League of Legends. Ohio State defeated
Michigan State in the game.
“We’re talking about a whole new fan
base that, to be honest, may not even know
what the three letters [BTN] stand for,”
Maleh said. “It’s a whole new, youngerskewed fan base.”
jebarker@baltsun.com
twitter.com/sunjeffbarker
Deliveries deter ‘porch pirates’
LOCKERS, From page 1
asked about the decision to roll out the new
lockers, which first launched in New York,
Seattle and London in 2011, but now can be
found in a growing number of cities. It
partners with grocery and convenience
stores to host the lockers, paying the
retailers a fee.
Aaron Toso, an Amazon spokesman,
declined to answer questions about package
theft and whether it played a role in the
locker program.
“Customers wanted more options for
delivery. We are adding lockers in cities all
over the country, including Baltimore, and
we’ll be looking for ways to expand the
service,” Toso wrote. “Customers like the
added convenience of a locker option.”
But for online consumers like Ben Foote,
35, the lockers are more of a necessary
inconvenience.
“Some people are happy because they’re
going to start using the lockers,” said Foote,
a father of two. “But that’s just another step
you have to go through to get your package.”
Foote, who lives in Canton, said he’s had
many package stolen from his doorstep.
“I’ve had a cellphone stolen, boxes of
diapers and just random stuff,” Foote said.
“I had a textbook stolen from when I was in
graduate school. I was laughing about that.
What are you going to do with a software
engineering textbook?”
Foote said he isn’t the only victim in his
neighborhood. Thieves often descend on
his part of the city, where rowhouses and
their front steps are close to the street
offering little cover for a delivered package,
Foote said.
Aside from anecdotal evidence and what
people post on Nextdoor and Reddit, it’s
difficult to quantify how big a problem
package theft is in Baltimore.
The city police don’t track package theft
separately from larceny.
An estimated 40 percent of Amazon
items are shipped through the U.S. Postal
Service, almost 150 million packages, according to an analysis done by Bernstein
Research in 2015.
More than 2,300 people were arrested
nationwide for mail theft in 2015, according
to Frank Schissler of the U.S. Postal
Inspection Service, the law enforcement
arm of the USPS. A little more than 2,000 of
those resulted in convictions.
There were 14,000 mail theft cases
initiated by postal inspectors, Schissler said.
Those cases include both parcel and
envelope thefts, and a single case could
encompass several individual claims of mail
theft.
A breakdown of Baltimore-area numbers
was not immediately available, but Schissler
said that the number of mail theft cases in
Baltimore was not higher than in other
major cities.
Some city residents who’ve lost packages
to so-called “porch pirates” hope to deter or
catch thieves with video surveillance.
Aaron Allen, 34, who lives in Waverly,
installed two porch security cameras after
his Amazon package was stolen in March.
“They sent out a replacement box with
all of the items I ordered,” Allen said. “I just
had them send it to a friend’s house who’s
home during the day, but I don’t want to do
that long-term. I hope that by setting up
these cameras, I can dissuade people from
doing it again.”
jcapriel@baltsun.com
ADVERTISEMENT
THE BALTIMORE SUN CD & DEPOSIT GUIDE
Yields Available to Greater Baltimore Area Residents
Institution/Phone
Address/Internet
Int Chking
Acct
Min
Money
Mkt Acct
Min
http://baltimoresun.interest.com
3 mo
CD
Min
6 mo
CD
Min
12 mo
CD
Min
18 mo
CD
Min
24 mo
CD
Min
36 mo
CD
Min
60 mo
CD
Min
RATES & INFORMATION AVAILABLE ONLINE
@ http://baltimoresun.interest.com
LENDERS, MAXIMIZE YOUR VISIBILITY!
TO ADVERTISE IN THIS FEATURE, CALL 888-768-4243
Legend: Rates effective as of 6/8/16 and may change without notice. All institutions are FDIC or NCUA insured. Rates may change after the account is opened. N/A means rates are not available or not offered at press time.
Yields represent annual percentage yield (APY) paid by participating institutions. Fees may reduce the earnings on the account. A penalty may be imposed for early withdrawal. Banks, Thrifts and credit unions pay to advertise
in this guide which is compiled by Bankrate.com®, a publication of Bankrate, Inc. © 2016. To appear in this table, call 888-768-4243. To report any inaccuracies, call 888-509-4636. • http://baltimoresun.interest.com
4
THE BALTIMORE SUN |
MARYLAND BUSINESS
| TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE LYNN JOHNSTON
GARFIELD JIM DAVIS
DILBERT SCOTT ADAMS
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE STEPHAN PASTIS
NON SEQUITUR WILEY
GET FUZZY DARBY CONLEY
THE MIDDLETONS RALPH DUNAGIN & DANA SUMMERS
ONE BIG HAPPY RICK DETORIE
CLASSIC PEANUTS CHARLES M. SCHULZ
SALLY FORTH FRANCESCO MARCIULIANO & JIM KEEFE
FAMILY CIRCUS BIL KEANE
SPEED BUMP DAVE COVERLY
MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM MIKE PETERS
B.C. MASTROIANNI & HART
SHOE BROOKINS & MACNELLY
BEETLE BAILEY MORT WALKER
ZITS JERRY SCOTT & JIM BORGMAN
CURTIS RAY BILLINGSLEY
BLONDIE DEAN YOUNG & JOHN MARSHALL
HI & LOIS WALKER BROWNE
F MINUS TONY CARRILLO
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE CHRIS BROWNE
LUANN GREG EVANS
PURSUITS
Tonight’s TV
PM
MOVIES
2
5:30
News (N)
6:00
6:30
7:00
7:30
8:00
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:30
A&E
AMC
ANIM
BBCA
BET
BRAVO
CMT
COM
CSN
DISC
DISN
DIY
E!
ESPN
ESQTV
FOOD
FREE
FS1
FX
GSN
HALL
HGTV
HIST
ION
LIFE
LMN
MASN
METV
MTV
NBCSN
NICK
OXY
OWN
SPIKE
SYFY
TBS
TCM
TLC
TNT
TOON
TRAVEL
TRUTV
TVLAND
TVONE
UNI
USA
VH1
WE
WGN-A
The First 48 Å
The First 48 Å
The First 48 Å
Gladiator (R,’00) ››› Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix. Å ◊
÷ (4:30) Ocean’s Eleven (PG-13,’01) ››› Å
Man on Fire (R,’04) ›› Denzel Washington, Dakota Fanning.
Feed the Beast (N)
Zombie Cats
Super Squid
Super Snake
Weird, True
(9:01) Yeti or Not Å ◊
Man vs. Wild: “Belize.” Man vs. Wild Å
Man vs. Wild Å
Man vs. Wild Å
Man vs. Wild Å
Man vs. Wild Å
÷ Madea’s Big
In House
(6:40) In the House
(7:20) Eve The BET Life of (N)
Inside the Label (N)
Inside the Label
Shahs of Sunset
Below Deck
Below Deck
Below Deck
Below Deck (N)
Below Deck
Reba Å
Reba Å
Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man The Parent Trap (PG,’98) ››› Dennis Quaid ◊
÷ Tosh.0 Å Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama Tosh.0 Å Tosh.0 Å Tosh.0 Å Tosh.0 Å Tosh.0 (N) Not Safe
Fame
Redsk. (N) SportsNet SportsNet Best of Dan Patrick
English Premier League Soccer
Sports
SportsNet
Deadliest Catch Å
Deadliest Catch Å
Deadliest Catch Å
Deadliest Catch (N)
Deadliest Catch (N)
Dark Woods Justice
Austin
Liv-Mad.
Ice Age: The Meltdown (’06) ››
(7:40) Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs ››
Liv-Mad.
K.C.
Girl Meets
Texas Flip and Move
Texas Flip and Move
The Treehouse Guys
The Treehouse Guys
The Treehouse (N)
Luxury
Against (N)
The Kardashians
The Kardashians
E! News (N) Å
Botched: “Super Fupa.” Botched (N) Å
Famously Single (N)
÷ 2016 Euro Pardon (N) SportsCenter (N) Å
O.J.: Made in America: “Part One.”
O.J.: Made in America: “Part Two.” (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles
NCIS: Los Angeles
NCIS: Los Angeles
American Ninja Warrior Å
Boundless (N) Å
Chopped
Chopped
Chopped
Chopped Junior (N)
Chopped
Chopped (N)
÷ (4) The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (PG-13,’13) ›››
Guilt: “Pilot.” Å
Grease (PG,’78) ››› John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John.
NASCAR Hub (N)
Speak for Your (N)
Copa Pregame (N)
2016 Copa America Centenario (N)
Copa America (N) ◊
Mike
Identity Thief (R,’13) › Jason Bateman, Melissa McCarthy.
Ride Along (PG-13,’14) ›› Ice Cube, Kevin Hart. Ride Along (’14) ›› ◊
Deal or No Deal Å
Winsanity Winsanity FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud Idiotest (N) Idiotest (N)
Little House/Prairie
Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man Middle
Middle
Middle
Middle
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Fixer Upper Å
Hunters
Hunt Intl
Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars Cars (N)
Top Gear (N) Å
Cnt. Cars Cnt. Cars
Criminal Minds Å
Criminal Minds Å
Criminal Minds Å
Criminal Minds Å
Criminal Minds Å
Criminal Minds Å
Celebrity Wife Swap
Celebrity Wife Swap
Celebrity Wife Swap
Celebrity Wife Swap
Celebrity Wife Swap
Celeb.-Swap ◊
÷ (4) Taken for Ransom Hush Little Baby (NR,’07) ›› Victoria Pratt. Å Sorority Surrogate (NR,’14) Cassie Steele. Å
Taken: Search ◊
Mid-Atlantic Sports (N)
Nats (N)
MLB Baseball: Cubs at Nationals (N Subject to Blackout)
Nats (N)
Softball
CHiPs: “Rainy Day.”
Mama’s
Mama’s
M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Griffith
Griffith
Hap.Days Gilligan
News (N) Heroes
÷ Ridic.
Ridic.
Ridic.
Ridic.
Are You the One?
How High (R,’01) › Method Man, Redman.
How High (R,’01) › ◊
NASCAR
NASCAR
NASCAR America (N)
World Series of Fighting 30
World Series of Fighting 29
Loud
Harvey (N) Henry
Henry
The Thundermans
Nicky
Kingdom Full House Full House Full House Full House
÷ Virtually Douglas
Douglas
Douglas
The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement
Virtually in Love (N)
Princess Diaries 2 ◊
Police Women
Police Women
The Haves, Nots
The Haves, Nots
The Haves, Nots
The Haves, Nots
Cops Å
Jail Å
Cops Å
Jail Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
Cops Å
÷ Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II
Blade (R,’98) ›› Wesley Snipes, Stephen Dorff. Å
Watchmen (R,’09) ›› Billy Crudup. Å ◊
Friends
Friends
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Wrecked
Wrecked
÷ (4:45) Gandhi (PG,’82) ›››› Ben Kingsley, Candice Bergen. Å
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (’48) ››››
The Graduate ›››› ◊
Dateline: Real Life
My Giant Life Å
Little People, World
Little People (N)
Little People (N)
My Giant Life (N) ◊
÷ (4:15) The Hangover Part III ››
We’re the Millers (R,’13) ›› Jennifer Aniston. Å
Animal Kingdom (N)
Animal Kingdom (N) ◊
Gumball
Gumball
Teen
Teen
We Bare
Gumball
King/Hill
Burgers
Burgers
Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad
Bizarre Foods
Bizarre Foods
Bizarre Foods
Bert-Conqueror (N)
Bizarre Foods (N) Å
Bizarre Foods
Hack
Hack
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Jokers
Hack (N)
Hack ◊
Andy Griffith Show
Griffith
Griffith
Griffith
Griffith
(8:12) George Lopez
George
Raymond Raymond Raymond
Lv Single
Lv Single
Rickey Smiley
Rickey Smiley
Rickey Smiley (N)
Rickey Smiley
Rickey Smiley
Primer Impacto (N) Å Hotel (N) Notic. (N) Rosa de Guadalupe
Un Camino ha (N)
Tres Veces Ana (N)
Copa América (N) ◊
Law & Order: SVU
Law & Order: SVU
Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Chrisley
Impr. (N) ◊
Black Ink Crew
Love, Hip Hop
Love, Hip Hop
Above the Rim (R,’94) ›› Duane Martin, Leon. Gridiron Gang ››› ◊
Law Order: CI
Law & Order: “Flight.” Law & Order: “Agony.” Law & Order Å
Law & Order Å
Law & Order: “Punk.”
Blue Bloods Å
Blue Bloods Å
U.S. Marshals (PG-13,’98) ›› Tommy Lee Jones, Wesley Snipes. Å
How I Met How I Met
FLIX
HBO
MAX
SHOW
STARZ
STZENC
TMC
÷ (4) Quiz Show ›››
(6:15) My 5 Wives (R,’00) › Å
Turner & Hooch (PG,’89) ››
(9:45) King Kong (’05) ››› ◊
Real Time, Bill
VICE Å
(6:45) All the Way (’16) ››› Bryan Cranston. Å
Game of Thrones Å
Silicon
Martian ◊
(5:15) American Sniper (R,’14) ››› Bradley Cooper.
Gone Girl (R,’14) ››› Ben Affleck, Rosamund Pike. Å
Hitman: Agent 47 › ◊
÷ Stanford Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (’01) ››
(7:15) Miami Vice (R,’06) ›› Colin Farrell. Å
Lies
Penny Dreadful Å
(5:10) Pearl Harbor (R,’01) ›› Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett. Å
Girlfriend (8:45) Outlander Å
(9:45) Mad Money (’08) ›› ◊
÷ (3:50) Foxcatcher ››› (6:10) Regarding Henry (PG-13,’91) ››
The Quick and the Dead (R,’95) ›› Å
Far and Away ››› ◊
÷ Good Will Hunting (R) (6:15) Daddy’s Little Girls (PG-13,’07) ›› Å
The Mirror Has Two Faces (PG-13,’96) ››
Royal Tenenbm ◊
ASK AMY
AMY DICKINSON
DEAR AMY: I am the proud
big sister of my 18-year-old
brother “Baxter.”
His last day of high school
was yesterday, and he is set to
graduate in a few weeks. He
earned a 4.0 throughout high
school and has worked really
hard for four years.
He called me yesterday (I
live out of state) and told me
about his last day at school.
Then he dropped a bombshell on me, when he said,
“Don’t tell Mom, but I smoked a
lot of weed today!”
Amy, I was shocked! We grew
up in a no-alcohol, no-smoking
household. Now I don’t know
what to do. Do I keep his secret?
Do I spill to our mom?
I know he’s worked so hard,
so I think he was celebrating
and maybe rebelling a little bit,
since he was the “perfect”
student for so long.
I don’t want this to be a
steppingstone to more bad decisions for him. What should I
do? — Worried in Wisconsin
DEAR WORRIED: This is not
necessarily a binary choice between either telling or not
telling. You can choose to stay
quiet now, but change your
mind later.
It might be best for you to
communicate
your
next
thoughts in text form, rather
than talking to him about this.
You can write: “First, I want
you to know that I appreciate
your honesty. Secondly, please
don’t ever ask me to keep a
secret from our parents. That’s
not fair to me — or them — and I
will make my own choice about
what to do regarding your
decision to get toasted on the
last day of classes. I am naturally very protective of you. I
want you to know that there are
extreme risks to what you are
doing. You risk not graduating
(if you are caught), but you also
risk many other things you
have worked very hard for.
Soon you will be on your own
and I hope you will make
healthier choices. Your high
school record shows how smart
you are. I hope your future
behavior will demonstrate that
you are wise, too.”
After communicating directly with him, leave it alone. If
this is the worst thing this
young man ever does, he’ll be
OK.
— Tribune Media Services
JUMBLE
5
| THE BALTIMORE SUN
Best bets
TUESDAY
TO TELL THE TRUTH One of several
classic game shows being revived by ABC
this summer begins its run, with Anthony
Anderson, above, spending his hiatus from
“blackish” as both the host and an executive
producer here. The format still has several
people claiming to be the individual in question, with a panel having to determine who
indeed is telling the truth. 8 p.m. on 2 ABC 7
ABC 47 ABC
ANIMAL KINGDOM Adapted from a critically acclaimed 2010 Australian feature
film, this edgy new drama revolves around a
spectacularly dysfunctional Southern California crime family headed by tough-asnails grandmother Janine “Smurf ” Cody
(Ellen Barkin). Into this world moves a
teenage grandson, Joshua (Finn Cole), after his mother dies of a heroin overdose.
(TVMA) 9 p.m. on TNT
FEED THE BEAST Using the visionary
designs of Tommy’s (David Schwimmer)
late wife, Rie, he and Dion (Jim Sturgess)
imbue Thirio with a vibrant sense of life in
the new episode “Screw You, Randy.” The
dramatic facelift does not come cheaply,
however, and in order to pay for everything,
the guys have no alternative but to fall back
on Dion’s usual solution: resorting to crime.
(TV14) 10 p.m. on AMC
WRECKED While this new comedy series
isn’t officially a send-up of “Lost,” it could
be, with its central premise of a bunch of
strangers stranded together on a deserted
island after their plane crashes. In the series
premiere, a British ex-special forces agent
leads a rescue mission, while the survivors
make a discovery that could change everything. (TVMA) 10 p.m. on TBS
LATE NIGHT GUESTS
TUESDAY
THE TONIGHT SHOW STARRING JIMMY FALLON: Don Rickles; Lena Dunham;
DJ Shadow and Run the Jewels. (11:34 p.m.
on NBC)
THE LATE SHOW WITH STEPHEN
COLBERT: Actor Daniel Radcliffe; actor
George Lopez; HINDS performs. (11:35 p.m.
on CBS)
THE BALTIMORE SUN CROSSWORD
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square,
to form four ordinary words.
HOVCU
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
All Rights Reserved.
FOREY
TAYNLE
INEFIT
Yesterday’s
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
BROADCAST
CABLE
PREMIUM
5:00
MARYLAND BUSINESS
ABC2: In
World News The List
The Insider To Tell the Truth:
Uncle Buck: “Pilot; Li’l To Tell the Truth: “Iliza
Focus (N) (N)
(N) Å
(N) Å
“Tracee Ellis Ross.” (N) Scarface.” (N) Å
Shlesinger.” (N) Å
11 News at 5 (N) Å
11 News at Nightly
Inside
Ac. Hollywood America’s Got Talent: “Auditions.” (N) Å N
Maya & Marty: “Episode
NBC 11 (SAP)
6 (N) Å
News (N) Edition (N) (N)
3.” (N) Å N
Eyewitness News at 5 Eyewitness News at 6 Evening
Ent. Tonight NCIS: “Double Trouble.” NCIS: New Orleans: “I Person of Interest:
CBS 13 (N) Å
(N) Å
News (N) (N)
Do.” Å N
“.exe.” (N) Å N
Å N
÷ Lark Rise World News PBS NewsHour (N) Å N FarmOutdoors Maryland Vietnam War Escape From Firebase American Experience:
PBS 22/67
(N)
Harvest
Maryland Stories Å
Kate (NR,’15)
“My Lai.” Å
The Wendy Williams
2 Broke
2 Broke
Big Bang Big Bang The Walking Dead:
The Walking Dead: “Self TMZ (N)
Extra (N)
MNT 24 Show (N) Å N
Girls Å
Girls Å
Theory
Theory
“Slabtown.” Å N
Help.” Å N
ÅN
ÅN
÷ This Land Is Your Land World News Business
PBS NewsHour (N) Å The Carpenters: Close to You (My
Burt Bacharach’s Best (My Music
PBS 26 (My Music)
Report (N)
Music Presents) Å
Presents) Å
T. Smiley Old House Masterpiece Mystery! Admission
Democracy Now! Å
PBS 32 Wild Kratt Cyberchas Democracy Now! Å
FOX 45 News at 5:00 Å Family Feud Family Feud Jeopardy! Wheel of Hotel Hell: “Town’s Inn, Coupled: “Love Bites.” FOX 45 News at 10
FOX 45
(N) Å
Fortune
Part 2.” (N) Å
(N) Å N
(N) Å
Å
Å
The People’s Court (N) Mike &
Modern
Mike &
Modern
The Flash: “Family of
Containment (N) Å N Mr. Box
The First
CW
54 Å N
Molly Å
Family Å Molly Å
Family Å Rogues.” Å N
Office Å
Family Å
ABC
News (N)
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 |
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.
(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: ONION KAYAK MEADOW CASHEW
Answer: After going fishing for the first time, he was —
HOOKED
SUDOKU
Degree of difficulty: 1 out of 4
6/14/16
SOLUTION TO MONDAY’S PUZZLE
Yesterday’s answer
Each row must contain the
numbers 1 to 9; each column
must contain the numbers 1 to
9; and each set of 3-by-3 boxes
must contain the numbers 1 to
9. For other puzzles, go to
www.sudoku.org.uk
baltimoresun.com/sudoku
Complete the grid
so each row,
column and
3-by-3 box
(in bold borders)
contains every
digit, 1 to 9.
For strategies on
how to solve
Sudoku, visit
TODAY IN HISTORY
1777: The Continental Congress adopted the Stars
and Stripes as the national flag.
1811: Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of “Uncle Tom’s
Cabin,” was born in Litchfield, Conn.
1922: Warren G. Harding became the first president
to be heard on radio as Baltimore station WEAR
carried his speech dedicating the Francis Scott Key
Memorial at Fort McHenry.
ACROSS
1 Drink-cooling
shapes
6 Family girl
9 Neighborhood
13 Seize
14 So very uncool
15 Mascara target
16 *Where hockey
transgressors
cool their heels
18 Issue a
ticket to
19 Shout of
discovery
20 Draft
classification
21 *Future
attorney’s
hurdle
25 Where sleeping
dogs lie
27 “Give me
a break!”
28 Decide one will
29 Sound
confirming a
locked car door
30 Oil-bearing rocks
33 Jimmy Fallon
asset
36 Go wrong
37 June 14th
observance ...
and a hint to
the first word in
the answers to
starred clues
38 Sudoku section
39 Camping
gear brand
40 Winner’s wreath
41 Voice quality
42 Film snippets
44 TV’s “Kate & __”
45 “The ability to
fully experience
life,” per
Thoreau
47 *Polite applause
on the tee
50 “Money
__ object”
51 Sandy or
Roberto of
baseball
53 Catch sight of
54 *Vessel for
Captain Jack
Sparrow
59 Fired, with “off”
60 Look carefully
61 Gravel unit
62 Colors, as hair
63 NFL gains
64 Cackling
scavenger
DOWN
1 Many a sports
trophy
2 Function
3 Hot dog holder
4 Notable time
5 Organ
associated with
ill temper
6 “Light” sci-fi
weapon
7 “Don’t worry
about me”
8 Physical
attractiveness
9 “Little Women”
novelist
10 *Colorful
sushi creation
11 Perfumer Lauder
12 Down the road
14 Harp
constellation
17 Shower stall
alternative,
if it fits
21 Unloaded?
22 “At last!”
23 *“Drove my
Chevy to the
levee” Don
McLean hit
24 Water source
26 Online crafts
shop
28 Shoppe adjective
30 Silly to the
extreme
31 Fräulein’s abode
32 Farm sci.
34 Ancient
Greek region
35 Follower
on Twitter,
informally
37 Fly like a moth
41 Affectionate
attention, briefly
43 London
insurance giant
44 From scratch
45 Exercise,
as power
46 Thoreau work
47 Second family
of the 1990s
48 “Rubáiyát” poet
49 Zero deg. at the
equator, say
52 Told tall tales
55 Oinker’s pen
56 Clod chopper
57 Ramada __
58 Green soup base
ANSWERS TO YESTERDAY’S PUZZLE
6
THE BALTIMORE SUN |
MARYLAND BUSINESS
| TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
Premium Roof Tune Up
Only $149!
Valued at $800!
Caulking & Sealing of Vents, Flashings & Nail Holes
Tightening of Loose Shingles where needed
Replacement of up to Ten Shingle Tabs
Repair of Exposed Nail Heads (Nail Pops)
Replacement of up to one Pipe Boot Gasket
Full Attic, Roof, Gutter & Exterior Inspection
– with Photos!
$250 Gift Certificate Toward Future Projects
Ask about our Gutter Tune Up!
Book Today at
(410) 988-4075
Offer Expires 6/30/2016
MHIC#
MHIC
MH
IC#
IC
# 31
3133
31337-03
33733
7-03
703
30% OFF
FROM THE TREE TO YOUR HOME
443-302-6377
4 Million Finish Options
Over 100 Different Door Styles
Wellborn Preferred Dealer
Family owned and operated since 1964
We provide special
discounts to contractors!
Discount only available on the Estate Collection.
Appointment must be scheduled to meet with one of our designers in our design center.
Sports
&CLASSIFIEDS
Collins ‘A-OK’
After spending Sunday night in the hospital,
Mets manager expected back today PG 4
‘Fantastic venue’
Caves Valley to host Champions Tour event PG 2
THE BALTIMORE SUN | TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
RAVENS
Minicamp takes on added significance
M
inicamps become
whether the Ravens acquired
more meaningful
playmakers during the offseason.
when a team is comThey needed speedy receivers,
ing off a losing season.
pass rushers and other players
The good teams have few
who could come up with big
holes to fill, so there is less
plays in the last four minutes of a
urgency. Losing teams like the
game.
Ravens are still trying to find
So when the Ravens trot out
answers heading into a threefor practice this afternoon, here
day mandatory minicamp that Mike
are the top five positions to
begins today.
watch:
Preston
The Ravens don’t need to Ravens
make wholesale changes, but Insider
RECEIVER: The Ravens still need
they do have to evaluate players
a deep vertical threat, and the
such as receiver Steve Smith Sr.,
player to watch is Mike Wallace.
tight ends Dennis Pitta and
It appears that second-year playCrockett Gillmore, running back Justin er Breshad Perriman will be out for a while
Forsett, quarterback Joe Flacco and line- with another injury. That’s not really a big
backer Terrell Suggs — all of whom are deal. There have been critics around town
coming back from major injuries.
who want him waived or say he is
There isn’t a lot of concern about those injury-prone, but he is a nice kid who has
players — with the exception of Suggs, just suffered bad luck.
who is 33 and has suffered a torn Achilles
The Ravens won’t miss him because he
tendon in each heel over the past four didn’t contribute anything last year. Nothseasons.
ing from nothing leaves nothing, even
There is more interest in finding out See PRESTON, page 3
Team won’t know more about
Perriman’s status until today
Breshad Perriman was seen by
orthopedist Dr. James Andrews on
Monday, but the visit brought no clarity
as to the severity of the Ravens wide
receiver’s left knee injury.
The Ravens, though, will get a better
idea today about the extent of the injury
as Perriman will have arthroscopic
surgery. That was the plan all along.
The 22-year-old receiver, who missed
his rookie season last year with a
sprained posterior cruciate ligament in
his right knee, was hurt during the
team’s final organized team activity last
Thursday. A magnetic resonance imaging
test taken a day later revealed what the
Ravens believe to be a partially torn
anterior cruciate ligament.
However, the knee scope will
determine how significant the tear is in
the left knee of the 2015 first-round pick.
The Ravens are bracing for the worst,
which would be Perriman needing
reconstructive knee surgery and missing
his second consecutive season. But it’s
possible the damage won’t necessitate a
total knee reconstruction and that
Perriman could return at some point
during the 2016 season.
Last October, Perriman had his right
knee scoped and an injection in the knee
to speed healing. But he never was able
to return to field. Before the latest injury,
Perriman said he was 100 percent
healthy, and he certainly looked the part
during the OTAs.
— Jeff Zrebiec
eNEWSPAPER UPDATE
NBA FINALS
CAVALIERS 112, WARRIORS 97
James
and Irving
help keep
Cavs alive
Their combined 82 points
send the series back to
Cleveland for Game 6
By Janie McCauley
Associated Press
OAKLAND, CALIF. — Booed every
time he touched the ball, LeBron James
cut through Golden State’s defense and
made layups look easy. Dunks and
3-pointers, so smooth, too.
And Kyrie Irving also had his way
with the Warriors.
James and Irving thoroughly overpowered the defending champions from
every spot on the floor, and the Cavaliers
are still alive to chase that elusive
championship.
The unflappable, determined-as-ever
James had 41 points, 16 rebounds and
seven assists,
Irving also
Game 6
scored
41
WARRIORS
points and
@CAVALIERS
Cleveland
Thursday, 9 p.m.
capitalized on
TV: ABC
the absence of
suspended star
Draymond
Green, staving off NBA Finals elimination with a 112-97 victory over the
Warriors in Game 5 on Monday night.
James and Irving became the first
teammates to score 40 points in an NBA
Finals game as the Cavaliers pulled
within 3-2 and sent their best-of-seven
series back to Ohio for Game 6 on
Thursday night.
“We’re just happy we got another day.
That’s all we can ask for,” James said.
“We got another day to survive. We’re
going to start preparing tonight, start
preparing tomorrow and whenever
Game 6 is we’ll be ready.”
James has much more to say about
these playoffs before he’s done — and not
with his mouth, even as the criticism
came from all directions following his
See FINALS, page 5
ORIOLES
Steep
learning
curve
NICK WASS/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Even though his playing time dropped after he cooled off at the plate, Joey Rickard continues to contribute with his defense and base running.
After torrid start, outfielder Rickard accepts
and adjusts to his role as a part-time player
INSIDE: Davis is AL Player of the Week;
Hardy to start rehab assisgnment
today at Double-A Bowie PG 4
By Jake Lourim
ORIOLES@RED SOX
The Baltimore Sun
Even though Orioles outfielder Joey
Rickard is finding his name on the lineup
card less often than he did at the beginning
of the season, the rookie is still finding ways
to contribute.
After Rickard’s coming-out party — when
he was hitting .444 after the first week, .304
after two and leading off every day — he
cooled off and saw much of his playing time
go to Hyun Soo Kim.
Rickard has preached sticking to a routine
and being consistent, which has made him
one of the Orioles’ better defenders and base
runners, even as his batting average has
dropped to .251 through Sunday’s game.
In fact, manager Buck Showalter still calls
his name often.
Though Rickard has only started six of
the past 19 games — after getting the nod in
40 of the first 43 — he has appeared in all but
three games, recently as a defensive substitute, pinch hitter or pinch runner.
When he walks into the clubhouse and
sees his name is not in the lineup, he knows
he can still be valuable that night.
Tonight, 7:10
TV: MASN2 Radio: 105.7 FM
“Extremely — I’ve been in there whether
I’m starting or not, pretty much every single
game,” Rickard said before the Orioles’
current road trip. “It just shows my
versatility a little bit.”
The players who have assumed his role
leading off and playing left field are
excelling.
See RICKARD, page 5
VARSITY SPRING ALL-METRO
Extra spring in their steps
EZRA SHAW/GETTY IMAGES
The Cavaliers’ Kyrie Irving scored 41
points in Game 5 on Monday night,
shooting 17 of 24 from the field.
Beginning today with girls lacrosse,
The Baltimore Sun will honor the
spring sports season’s top local athletes
and coaches, including the first- and
second-team All-Metro selections.
Manchester Valley’s Lizzie Colson,
right, was named Player of the Year
while McDonogh’s Chris Robinson
received Coach of the Year honors.
COVERAGE PG 3
Coming this week
Wednesday: Boys lacrosse
Thursday: Girls track
Friday: Boys track
Saturday: Softball
Sunday: Baseball
■ For a photo gallery of the girls
lacrosse All-Metro first-team, go to
baltimoresun.com/varsity
DAVE MUNCH/BALTIMORE SUN MEDIA GROUP
2
THE BALTIMORE SUN |
SPORTS
| TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
JESSICA HILL/AP
Marissa
Coleman
(Maryland)
and Indiana
face Minnesota
tonight
TELEVISION HIGHLIGHTS
MLB
Cubs@Washington (T)
Philadelphia@Toronto
Cubs@Washington
Orioles@Boston
Pittsburgh@Mets
Orioles@Boston (T)
WNBA
Indiana@Minnesota
PWBA
Sonoma County Open (T)
NHL play. Final: San Jose@Pittsburgh (T)
Final: Pittsburgh@San Jose (T)
Final: San Jose@Pittsburgh (T)
Final: Pittsburgh@San Jose (T)
Horses
Royal Ascot, Day 1 (T)
W. lax
Maryland vs. Northwestern (T)
Tonight @ 6:30pm
VS
Ron Fritz, Senior Editor/Sports, 410-332-6421,
fax: 410-783-2518, e-mail: sports@baltsun.com
eNEWSPAPER UPDATE
MASN
MLB
MASN
MASN2
MLB
MASN
ESPN2
CBSSN
NHL
NHL
NHL
NHL
BEIN
BIGTEN
9 a.m.
12:30
7
7
7
11:30
8
9
1
3
9
10
5
2
M. soccer Euro: Austria vs. Hungary
Euro: Portugal vs. Iceland
Euro: Portugal vs. Iceland (T)
Copa: Chile vs. Panama
Copa: Argentina vs. Bolivia
Copa: Argentina vs. Bolivia
Tennis
Champions Showdown (T)
PowerShares Legends Charleston (T)
Birmingham, Halle or London (T)
WTA
Aegon Open Nottingham, Final (T)
W. track
NCAA outdoor champ. semis (T)
ESPN
ESPN
ESPN2
FS1
FS1
UNIVIS
CSN
MASN2
TENNIS
BEIN
ESPNU
RADIO HIGHLIGHTS
MLB
Orioles@Boston
Cubs@Washington
105.7 FM
1500 AM
11:30 a.m.
2:30
3 a.m.
8
10
10
Noon
Noon
4
Noon
1
7
7
FIND CUSTOMIZABLE TELEVISION LISTINGS AT BALTIMORESUN.COM/TVLISTINGS
GOLF
EDITED FROM TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICES
PRESS BOX
IN BRIEF
■ COLLEGES: A “small minority” of Baylor
PETER SCHMUCK/BALTIMORE SUN
Caves Valley Golf Club will host the Constellation Energy Senior Players Championship
next year. “This is a fantastic venue,” 2016 winner Bernhard Langer said.
Champions Tour stars
play Caves Valley Golf Club
Owings Mills course to
host Senior event next year
By Peter Schmuck
The Baltimore Sun
Bernhard Langer had a busy weekend.
He won the wind-swept Constellation
Energy Senior Players Championship in
Philadelphia on Sunday, then joined 11
other members of the PGA Champions
Tour for an outing Monday at Caves Valley
Golf Club.
Caves Valley in Owings Mills will be the
site of the same event next July, so Langer
and the other senior stars came down to
play the course with potential suite
holders. They could not have picked a
better day to do it.
The morning was cool and breezy,
which was much in contrast to the hot,
windy conditions at Philadelphia’s Cricket Club, where Langer finished one stroke
over par but still won his third consecutive Senior Players title.
“It was totally different,” Langer said.
“This was a gorgeous day today, very little
wind and nice temperatures. Yesterday,
we had 20- to 30-mph gusts, and at times
it was almost unplayable because the
wind was so strong and it was just difficult
to putt or even hit certain shots because
the wind was blowing you off balance.”
Chances are it will be a bit warmer at
Caves Valley when Langer goes for his
fourth straight victory in this event 13
months from now, but he and the other
golfers gave the course high marks
Monday.
“This is a fantastic venue,” he said. “I’m
looking forward to coming here next year
and defending my championship.”
Three-time U.S. Open champion Hale
Irwin did not play in Philadelphia because
of a scheduling glitch, but he still flew into
Baltimore from Arizona just to take part in
Monday’s outing. He was already familiar
with Caves Valley and came away impressed.
“I think we’ve got a beautiful, spectacular place to play,” Irwin said. “The golf
course is a fairly stern test of golf. We had a
beautiful day today and I didn’t think it
was a pushover by any means. We’ve got a
major metropolitan area. We’ve got a
fabulous golf course. We’ve got everything
that is considered important for a major
championship and we’ve got it all right
here at Caves Valley.”
Two-time U.S. Open champion Lee
Janzen has more experience with the
course than any of the golfers he’ll be
competing against next July.
“I’ve been a member of Caves Valley
since 1993. It’s always an enjoyable trip
coming here, so I’m very excited about
playing a Champions Tour event here,”
Janzen said. “I don’t know how much
home-field advantage there will be, because as the tournament gets ready to go,
the course will be prepped in a certain
way — new greens, and I expect them to
be very fast. The greens are going to be
very difficult, I think, once they have
matured, but it’s a great setting and it’s
going to be a great week.”
Sandy Lyle, who won the British Open
in 1985 and The Masters in 1988, was
playing Caves for the first time Monday.
“This is the first time I’ve seen the
course,” Lyle said. “It’s very similar to
Augusta, I would say. You’ve got a lot of
undulations and very tall trees, white
sand, big green fairways in places. Very,
very similar to an Augusta-type golf
course. Enjoyable. Of course, if you play
well, you can get around with a reasonably
low number, but there’s trouble out there
as well.”
The Senior Players Championship will
be played at Caves Valley for the first time,
but it was played in Maryland from
2007-2010 — three times at the Baltimore
Country Club in Timonium and most
recently at TPC Potomac at Avenel Farm.
Caves Valley hosted the LPGA International Crown last summer and hosted the
U.S. Senior Open in 2002. It also was the
site of the 1995 U.S. Mid-Amateur, the
2005 NCAA Division I men’s championship and the 2009 NCAA women’s
championship and several other events.
“It’s one of [golf course architect] Tom
Fazio’s gems,” Champions Tour president
Greg McLaughlin said. “We want to play
great golf courses and we feel like this is
going to be a fabulous test of golf.”
peter.schmuck@baltsun.com
twitter.com/SchmuckStop
More online
Find more photos and
video of Monday’s outing at Caves
Valley at baltimoresun.com/golf
GO TO BALTIMORESUN.COM/SCORES
MINORS
MONDAY
TRIPLE-A INTERNATIONAL
Norfolk 4.......................Charlotte 1
DOUBLE-A EASTERN
Bowie ..........................................idle
HIGH-A CAROLINA
Frederick 7 ...........Myrtle Beach 3
LOW-A SOUTH ATLANTIC
Lakewood 5............Hagerstown 0
Delmarva 3 ...............Kannapolis 1
TODAY
TRIPLE-A INTERNATIONAL
Norfolk at Charlotte ...............7:05
DOUBLE-A EASTERN
Portland at Bowie ...................6:35
HIGH-A CAROLINA
Frederick at Myrtle Beach....7:05
LOW-A SOUTH ATLANTIC
Hagerstown at Lakewood ....7:05
Kannapolis at Delmarva........7:05
Fourth round
At Boyds
Fort Lauderdale
at D.C. United.......................7:30
MLS
NWSL
SATURDAY
Orlando at Spirit ...........................7
MLL
SATURDAY
D.C. United at Houston ...............9
JUNE 23
TODAY
ASL
Bayhawks at Boston ..............7:30
Mystics at Connecticut...............7
SATURDAY
IFK Maryland at AFC Lancaster7
WNBA
SOCCER
PDL
HUNT U.S. OPEN CUP
WEDNESDAY
NEW STAFF
Oriental Massage
Open 7 Days a Week
9am-Midnight
10am-Midnight
SCOREBOARD
SPA
410-633-1880
6218 Eastern Ave.
95 Exit 59 W. 1/4 mile
WEDNESDAY
Bohemians at Lehigh Valley......7
donors is pushing for the school to reinstate
football coach Art Briles in 2017 after he
serves a one-year suspension, USA Today
reported. Briles was suspended “with an intent to terminate” as coach of the Bears on
May 26, in the wake of a report detailing a
pattern of sexual assaults at the school,
some involving football players. School
president Ken Starr lost his title and AD Ian
McCaw resigned several days later as a result of the report. ... Notre Dame CB Devin
Butler will miss the start of the season with
a broken left foot and could be out until October. He will undergo surgery next week. ...
Illinois DL Jarrod Clements pleaded not
guilty in Champaign County (Ill.) court to
misdemeanor battery stemming from a
fight at a party in March and has entered a
program that could see the charge reduced
or dropped. ... Tate Martell of Las Vegas,
ranked by ESPN as the No. 3 dual-threat QB
in the 2017 class, committed to Ohio State. ...
Kentucky men’s basketball player Derek
Willis was released from jail after being arrested Saturday on charges of public alcohol
intoxication. Willis turns 21 next week. ...
Florida earned the final berth in the College
World Series with a 7-0 home win over rival
Florida State. ... Florida AD Jeremy Foley will
step down on Oct. 1 after 25 years. Under Foley, 63, 27 Gators teams won national titles,
and he is the only NCAA D-I AD in history to
supervise a program that won multiple national titles in football (1996, 2006, ’08) and
men’s basketball (2006, ’07). ... Ron Mason,
who coached Michigan State to a national
title in hockey and won 924 games, died
Sunday. He was 76. Mason was the Spartans
coach from 1979 to 2002, leading them to
the 1986 national title, and was the school’s
AD from 2002 to ’07.
COLLEGES
Terps football home
opener to be televised
on Big Ten Network
Maryland’s home opener against Howard on
Sept. 3 will be televised on the Big Ten Network,
the Big Ten Conference announced Monday. The
game will kick off at noon. This will be the second
time in three years the Terps’ home opener has
been televised on the Big Ten Network. In 2014,
the network aired Maryland’s season-opening
52-7 win over James Madison. The Terps are
scheduled to have two games on the Big Ten Network this fall, including the Oct. 22 night game
against Michigan State. Last season, six Maryland
games were on the Big Ten Network.
— Daniel Gallen, Baltimore Sun Media Group
MEN’S BASKETBALL: Maryland coach Mark
Turgeon will serve on the National Association
of Basketball Coaches ad hoc committee on
NCAA men’s basketball tournament selection,
seeding and bracketing. The committee consists
of head coaches representing all levels of Division
I, former NCAA men’s basketball committee
members, NCAA and NABC staff. NABC executive director Jim Haney and former Southeastern Conference commissioner Mike Slive are cochairs. The ad hoc committee will meet multiple
times in the coming weeks and present feedback
to the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee in advance of its summer meeting. Other
coaches on the committee include Kentucky’s
John Calipari, West Virginia’s Bob Huggins and
Georgetown’s John Thompson III.
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: East Carolina announced the appointment of UMBC assistant
Rich Conover on Friday to the same position. “I
am so happy for Rich as he moves on to his next
position at ECU,” Retrievers coach Phil Stern
said. “He brought so much experience and knowledge to our program over the last three years.” In
2015-16, Conover’s third season with the team,
UMBC won its first postseason tournament game
in program history and reached the quarterfinals
of the Women’s Basketball Invitational. The Pirates finished this past season 13-19 (6-12 American Athletic Conference) with a loss to national
champion Connecticut in the second round of the
AAC tournament.
WOMEN’S LACROSSE: Maryland rising junior
attacker Megan Whittle (McDonogh), graduate
senior Taylor Cummings (McDonogh), rising
senior midfielder Zoe Stukenberg (Marriotts
Ridge), rising senior defender Nadine Hadnagy,
graduate defender Alice Mercer (Century), Penn
State graduate midfielder Madison Cyr (Winters
Mill), Loyola Maryland graduate defender Maddy Lesher and Princeton rising senior Ellie DeGarmo (Bryn Mawr) were named to the All-Inside Lacrosse team. … The NCAA Rules Committee recommended that three-second violations
return to being major fouls for the 2017 season in
an effort to reduce shooting fouls during 8-meter
free-position shots. “It will keep people out of
shooting space and keep people safer,” said Julie
Myers, committee chair and coach at Virginia. “It
was a big sticking point for officials last season
since they couldn’t flag it.”
FIELD HOCKEY: Maryland graduate student
■ NFL: The Eagles and Pro Bowl DE Fletch-
er Cox agreed to terms on a six-year contract extension worth $103 million with $63
million guaranteed, ESPN reported. The new
deal runs through 2022. Cox, 25, will have
the highest guarantee for a non-QB in league
history. ... Former DL Bryan Robinson was
found dead in a Milwaukee motel Saturday.
He was 41. Police said homicide isn’t suspected. Robinson played 14 seasons with
five teams and retired in 2010.
■ SOCCER: Gerard Pique scored in the
87th minute to lift two-time defending
champ Spain to a 1-0 win over the Czech Republic in a Group D opener at the European
Championship in Toulouse, France. In Group
E, Italy downed Belgium 2-0 in Lyons and Ireland and Sweden played to a 1-1 draw in
Saint-Denis. ... Mexico secured first place in
Group C at the Copa America after playing
to a 1-1 draw with Venezuela in Houston. Jesus Manuel “Tecatito” Corona scored the
equalizer for El Tri in the 80th minute. Manuel Velazquez gave Venezuela the lead Monday in the 10th minute. Both teams had already advanced to the quarterfinal round.
■ ALSO: The Blues hired ex-Wild coach
Mike Yeo as associate head coach and will
hand him the head coaching job when Ken
Hitchcock, 64, retires after next season.
Yeo, 42, coached the Wild for five seasons. ...
The defending WNBA champion Lynx broke
their own record for consecutive wins to
start a season, improving to 11-0 with an 8376 victory over the Mystics in Washington.
The Lynx started the 2012 season with 10
wins in a row. ... Austria’s Dominic Thiem
won the rain-delayed ATP Mercedes Cup in
Stuttgart, Germany, while France’s Nicolas
Mahut won the rain-delayed the Ricoh
Open in The Hague, Netherlands.
More online
Go to baltimoresun.com
/lacrosseinsider for:
■ Edward Lee on Maryland men’s
lacrosse coach John Tillman’s rare
display of emotion after the Terps lost
the national championship game
Welma Luus was granted a sixth year of eligibility, making her eligible to play her fourth season
this fall. Luus started at Maryland before the 201112 season. She competed on the women’s tennis
team for her first two seasons, but joined the field
hockey team at the beginning of the 2013-14 season, splitting time between the teams for two seasons. The Pretoria, South Africa, native exhausted
her tennis eligibility at the end of the 2014-15 season and competed for the field hockey team last
fall. She led the Terps with 20 goals, including five
winners. She earned National Field Hockey
Coaches Association third-team All-America
honors, as well as All-Big Ten honors.
BASEBALL: Harford Community College rising
junior pitcher Michael Adams (second team)
and rising junior infielder Dominic DiSabatino
(third team) were named National Junior College
Athletic Association Division I All-Americans.
MEN’S TENNIS: Johns Hopkins had three players on the Intercollegiate Tennis Association AllAmerica teams: juniors Mike Buxbaum, Jeremy
Dubin and Emerson Walsh earned the honor for
doubles, while Buxbaum also did for singles.
ET CETERA
Report: Ex-Ravens guard
Grubbs’ career likely over
Former Ravens Pro Bowl guard and first-round
NFL draft pick Ben Grubbs’ career is likely over
because of a neck injury, the NFL Network reported. Grubbs, 32, started seven games last season for the Kansas City Chiefs before he suffered
the season-ending injury. In March, the Chiefs
cut him with a failed physical designation. Grubbs
was one year into a four-year, $24 million contract. He was named to the Pro Bowl in 2013 with
the New Orleans Saints, who traded him in March
2015 to the Chiefs for a fifth-round draft pick. The
Ravens took Grubbs No. 29 overall in the 2007
draft, two rounds before they selected five-time
All-Pro Marshal Yanda. Grubbs started 65 consecutive games for the team and made the Pro
Bowl in 2011, his final season with the Ravens,
before he agreed to a five-year, $36 million deal
with the Saints.
— Jonas Shaffer
YOUTH GOLF: Coley Hunter of Rockville
claimed first place in the boys age 14-15 division at
the Hurricane Junior Golf Tour College Prep Series tournament in State College, Pa. Coley finished 8-over 152 after shooting 4-over 76 in both
rounds. Gregor Meyer of Pittsburgh was second
with a 13-over 157. Hunter will be awarded an exemption into the Tour Championship on Dec. 3-4.
NATIONAL WOMEN’S SOCCER LEAGUE: The
Washington Spirit’s match against the Houston
Dash that was postponed May 27 has been scheduled for Aug. 18 at 7 p.m. in Houston.
— From Sun staff and news services
VARSITY SPRING ALL-METRO
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 |
SPORTS
| THE BALTIMORE SUN
3
Girls lacrosse
PLAYER OF THE YEAR LIZZIE COLSON, MANCHESTER VALLEY
COACH OF THE YEAR
CHRIS ROBINSON, MCDONOGH
Because of a nagging foot injury, Manchester
Valley senior Lizzie Colson moved from midfield to
attack this spring to cut down on her running. That
made her even more of a scoring threat.
She broke the Carroll County single-season
record with 108 goals and led the No. 2 Mavericks
(19-1) to their third straight Class 2A-1A title.
In the state final, she set a Class 2A-1A championship record with 12 points. She had eight goals and
four assists in the 22-3 victory over Fallston. She
finished her career with 300 goals, second in Carroll
County only to the 307 by former Century star Katie
Schwarzmann, who went on to win the Tewaaraton
Award twice while at Maryland.
“When the score’s close, Lizzie’s the one who
steps up and the team turns the corner because of
what she’s doing,” Century coach Becky Groves said.
In addition to her 108 goals, Colson had 39 assists
and 43 draw controls. A three-time Carroll County
Player of the Year, she finished her career with 396
points and 220 draw controls.
Colson, who will continue her career at Maryland,
is an Under Armour All-American and will play in the
Under Armour All-America Lacrosse Classic July 2 at
Towson University’s Johnny Unitas Stadium.
— Katherine Dunn
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN
Coaching a seemingly unbeatable team posed
several challenges this spring for McDonogh coach
Chris Robinson, who not only had to mold a young
team but had to help the youngsters handle the
pressure when every opponent had its date with the
Eagles circled in red on the calendar.
It all came together in a 22-0 season that
culminated in No. 1 McDonogh’s running its nationalrecord girls lacrosse winning streak to 155 with their
eighth straight Interscholastic Athletic Association of
Maryland A Conference championship.
“I think our kids take pride in the fact that they’re in something special,
something unique that not many other people can ever take part in, and
that’s really brought us a close sense of community and bonding,” said
Robinson, in his 11th season with the Eagles.
While many in the local lacrosse community thought the streak might
end this spring, Robinson may have built his best team ever. The Eagles
won all but one game by at least five goals, won 15 by 10 or more and
cruised through the playoffs by an average margin of 11.3 goals.
Robinson gave a lot of credit to his assistant coaches: his brother Scott
Robinson, Nancy Love and Katie Love.
McDonogh, ranked No. 1 in every national poll, has gone 212-10 since
Robinson took over. Before coaching the Eagles, he coached Mount
Hebron to five state championships between 1997 and 2001. He has a
career record of 319-18-1 in 17 years with nine national No. 1 teams.
— Katherine Dunn
FIRST TEAM
Andie Aldave
McDonogh, junior,
midfielder
■ Two-time first-team
selection affected play all
over the field for the eighttime IAAM A Conference
champion No. 1 Eagles
■ Tied for third on the
team in goals with 43, second in assists with
34; also a force on one of the area’s stingiest
defenses, had six interceptions
■ Had three goals, two assists in the 15-7 title
game win over No. 4 Roland Park
■ Veteran of the U.S. Under-19 national team,
is playing in the Under Armour Underclass
tournament; committed to Notre Dame
Kate Brewster
Manchester Valley,
junior, goalie
■ Carroll County’s top
goalie for three years grew
as a leader, helping the
No. 2 Mavericks run new
switching zone defenses
en route to their third
straight Class 2A-1A state championship
■ Posted a .485 save percentage, 5.95 goalsagainst average, allowed only four opponents
to hit double figures
■ Had 14 saves against 4A-3A state champion
Dulaney in a 16-8 regular-season win; had nine
saves, four on 8-meter shots, in a 13-10 regular-season win over county rival Century
■ Playing in the Under Armour Underclass
tournament, committed to Delaware
Savannah Buchanan
McDonogh, senior,
midfielder
■ The cornerstone of an
exceptional Eagles midfield with her ability to
cause turnovers, win loose
balls, do the little things
that spark transition
■ Ranked in the top four McDonogh scorers
with 43 goals, 24 assists; also had 28 draw
controls, 11 interceptions
■ Had a handful of caused turnovers, ground
balls in the opening minutes of the IAAM A
Conference championship game to set the
tone for a 6-0 start in the win over No. 4 Roland Park
■ The Baltimore Sun’s Female Athlete of the
Year; Under Armour All-American; signed with
Notre Dame
Sami Chenoweth
Manchester Valley,
senior, defender
■ Repeat first-team selection, the area’s top line
defender led a unit that
allowed just 6.4 goals per
game en route to the
Mavericks’ third straight
Class 2A-1A state title
■ Able to shut down opponents one-on-one;
keen off-ball instincts in the No. 2 Mavericks’
zone led to many interceptions, team-high 65
caused turnovers (146 for career)
■ Won 40 ground balls, single-season school
record 104 draw controls
■ Under Armour All-American; will play at
Towson
Sarah Dohler
McDonogh, senior,
defender
■ Enjoyed a breakout
season as the top defender on the nation’s No. 1
team, which ran its winning streak to 155 with its
eighth straight IAAM A
Conference championship
■ Always marked the opposition’s best attacker, led a unit that gave up only 6.01 goals
per game and allowed just two opponents to
hit double figures
■ Also played a key role on clears, using her
speed for uncontested runs into the attack
■ Will play at Bucknell
Brindi Griffin
McDonogh, senior, attacker
■ The top scorer on the
No. 1 team, finished with
100 points; led the Eagles
in goals (62) and assists
(38)
■ Sharp-eyed playmaker
who worked the crease
perfectly, able to hit seemingly no-angle shots
or find teammates with thread-the-needle
passes
■ Scored four goals in the IAAM championship game, including two in the opening 6-0
run; scored seven goals in an early-season
21-4 victory over Ponte Vedra (Fla.)
■ Under Armour All-American; veteran of the
U.S. Under-19 team; headed to Maryland,
where her sister Brooke was an All-America
attacker
Brianna Harris
Broadneck, senior,
midfielder
■ After missing most of
2015 with a foot injury, had
the best season of her
career as a game-changing force all over the field
■ Led the No. 13 Bruins to
the sectional title, 12-11, over two-time defending Class 4A-3A state champion Severna Park
with six goals, two assists; had 11 goals, five
assists in two meetings with the archrival
Falcons
■ Contributed 65 goals, 38 assists, 80 draw
controls, 25 caused turnovers; had six or more
points in 11 games
■ Under Armour All-American, headed to
Florida
Shelby Harrison
St. Mary’s, junior,
midfielder
■ A nonstop presence
from end to end; often
won the draw and went
straight to goal, also
marked the opposition’s
top midfielder
■ Led the No. 10 Saints with 58 goals, 84 draw
controls; also had five assists, 14 caused turnovers
■ Set the tone for a strong season with six
goals, 12 draw controls in early 15-8 win at
Georgetown Visitation; had 13 draw controls in
a 17-9 win over Maryvale
■ Playing in the Under Armour Underclass
tournament; committed to Johns Hopkins
Maddie Jenner
McDonogh, sophomore,
midfielder
■ No one dominated the
draw the way the 6-foot-1
Jenner did; her ability to
win the initial possession
was a vital cog in the
Eagles’ seventh straight
undefeated season
■ Controlled 182 draws — more than four
times the possessions won by any of her
teammates; also contributed 23 goals, 14
assists
■ Won 12 draws in the 15-5 regular-season win
over No. 4 Roland Park; also adept at getting
the ball to her teammates on the circle
■ Playing in the Under Armour Underclass
tournament, undecided about college
SECOND TEAM
Samantha Fiedler, Garrison Forest, junior, midfielder
Charlotte Haggerty, John Carroll, junior, midfielder
Anna Hauser, Roland Park, senior, midfielder
Hannah Ignacio, Mount de Sales, senior, attacker
Hannah Mardiney, Notre Dame Prep, sophomore, attacker
Catie May, McDonogh, junior, attacker
Natalie Miller, St. Mary’s, senior, midfielder-defender
Lila Nazarian, Catonsville, senior, defender
Courtney Renehan, Glenelg, junior, midfielder
Annie Sachs, Dulaney, senior, midfielder
Katie Schluederberg, Howard, senior, midfielder
Jordan Stevens, Mount Hebron, senior, attacker
Taylor Suplee, St. Mary’s, sophomore, goalie
Leah Zadjura, Marriotts Ridge, senior, defender
Teams selected by Katherine Dunn
after consultation with Baltimore
Sun staff and area coaches.
Eva Klaus
Severna Park, senior,
midfielder
■ Two-time first-team
selection led the No. 9
Falcons to the Anne Arundel County championship,
sectional final
■ Led the team with 41
goals, added 19 assists, won 95 draws
■ Had six goals, one assist and won six draws
in the Falcons’ first Arundel-Howard crossover
game, a 15-12 win over No. 6 Mount Hebron;
had eight draw controls, three goals, one
assist in a key 19-10 win over Southern
■ Under Armour All-American, will play for
Johns Hopkins
Maddie McDaniel
Severn, senior,
attacker
■ High-scoring attacker
doubled as one of the
area’s top players on the
draw, led No. 12 Admirals
to IAAM A semifinals
■ Led her team with 60
goals, second in points with 74; controlled 156
draws, second in the A Conference
■ Won eight draws and had five goals, including the one that beat John Carroll, 8-7
■ Headed to James Madison
Lexi Souder
Marriotts Ridge, senior,
midfielder-defender
■ The backbone of the
No. 5 Mustangs’ run to the
Howard County title
■ Quiet playmaker on
attack, relentless defender, often won five to seven
draws in big games
■ Had 21 goals, three assists, 31 draw controls,
21 caused turnovers
■ Under Armour All-American, headed to
Johns Hopkins
Hannah Warther
Century, senior,
midfielder
■ A powerful presence on
attack as one of the area’s
top finishers, also a key to
midfield possession for the
No. 15 Knights
■ Scored 71 goals, had 11
assists; won 56 draws
■ Played a key role on the draw and scored
two goals despite being face-guarded as the
Knights pushed No. 1 McDonogh to overtime
before falling, 12-11 — the closest any team
came to upsetting the Eagles this spring
■ Finished her career with 290 points, 253
goals; Under Armour All-American, signed to
play for Maryland
FROM PAGE ONE
Ravens’ minicamp has new significance this year
PRESTON, From page 1
though Perriman had been starting in
OTAs.
But in those same practices, Wallace has
looked good, and he’ll finally have a
quarterback who can get him the ball
downfield once Flacco returns. If Wallace
plays well and Smith returns to form, the
Ravens should have plenty of weapons
along with a good group of tight ends in Ben
Watson, Gillmore, Pitta and Maxx Williams. Right now, the key is Wallace, who
turns 30 this summer and appears to have
something left.
PASS RUSHER: This group was a major
problem last season, and we’ll see if the
Ravens can solve it. It will be interesting to
see if Suggs is in decent shape. He has been a
regular in rehabilitation sessions at “The
Castle,” but he has had weight problems in
the past. Elvis Dumervil can still provide
pressure, but he is more effective as a
part-time pass-rushing specialist going
against a right tackle than playing full time
like he did on the left side in 2015.
Second-year outside linebacker Za’Darius Smith appears ready for a good season,
especially after a strong offseason in the
weight room, but he has to become smarter
and play with more consistency. Two
rookies to keep an eye on are Kamalei
More online
Go to baltimoresun.com
/blitz for:
■ Jonas Shaffer on the Ravens’ Justin
Forsett saying Joe Flacco probably
wouldn’t make a good contestant on
“The Bachelorette”
Correa, the second-round pick out of Boise
State, and undrafted rookie free agent
Victor Ochi, another physical player from
Stony Brook. The Ravens have three they
will use consistently in Suggs, Dumervil and
Smith, but they’d prefer Correa as the No. 4
in the rotation and Ochi as a fresh pair of
legs they could use late in the season.
INSIDE LINEBACKER: The Ravens have
to find a replacement for former starter
Daryl Smith, now with the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers. This could be difficult because
several of the players competing for the
starting job have had chances to play but
didn’t succeed. Third-year player Zachary
Orr was one of the Ravens’ most physical
performers in training camp last season, but
that didn’t carry over into the regular
season. Fourth-year player Arthur Brown, a
second-round pick out of Kansas State, has
been a disappointment even though he
started to emerge as a strong special teams
performer last season. This season will be a
make-or-break year for him.
The Ravens have moved Correa both
inside and outside during OTAs, but they
might want to use his ability as a pass rusher
during the regular season. Albert McClellan
is strong and versatile enough to play inside
or outside. The Ravens have used him in
previous years on short-yardage situations
because of his physical style and ability to
penetrate.
OFFENSIVE TACKLES: The Ravens used
their first pick in the 2016 draft to select
Ronnie Stanley, a left offensive tackle out of
Notre Dame.
He has the attributes — long body, long
arms and quick feet. But his lack of strength,
especially in the lower half, might hurt him
this season. It will be interesting to see how
Stanley plays this week, because even
though the players won’t be in full pads, the
tempo will be faster with more veterans on
the field.
Right tackle Rick Wagner also needs to
show that he is at full speed after battling an
ankle injury the past two seasons. Two
other tackles who will be observed closely
by the Ravens coaching staff are secondyear player De’Ondre Wesley and rookie
Alex Lewis, a fourth-round pick from
Nebraska. Wesley keeps making progress
and Lewis can play either guard or tackle.
He has a strong physical presence.
SECONDARY: There are always questions about this group. The Ravens improved on the back end by signing former
San Diego Chargers safety Eric Weddle, but
that might not be enough. His experience
will help the Ravens in alignments and
assignments, but not in one-on-one coverage. The Ravens are taking a gamble in
moving veteran Lardarius Webb from
cornerback to safety. It’s apparent Webb has
lost a step and can no longer play
cornerback, but he might be too slow to play
safety as well. Jimmy Smith probably won’t
participate in minicamp because of concerns about his ankle, so that means
Shareece Wright and Jerraud Powers (or
Kyle Arrington) will start at the corners.
Regardless, there are still too many
questions about this group and just as many
about the Ravens in general. But at least
they can start solving some issues on the
field and make the necessary adjustments in
personnel before training camp starts in late
July.
If not, 2016 might be as bad as 2015.
mike.preston@baltsun.com
twitter.com/MikePrestonSun
4
THE BALTIMORE SUN |
SPORTS
| TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
BASEBALL
eNEWSPAPER UPDATE
PROBABLE PITCHING MATCHUP
AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDINGS
AMERICAN
TM PITCHERS
Bal Tillman (R)
Bos Price (L)
Sea Walker (R)
TB
Odorizzi (R)
Det Zimmermann (R)
Chi Gonzalez (R)
Cle Tomlin (R)
KC
Young (R)
Min Santana (R)
LA
Chacin (R)
Tex Perez (L)
Oak Surkamp (L)
EAST
Baltimore
Boston
Toronto
New York
Tampa Bay
W
36
36
35
31
29
L
26
26
31
32
32
PCT.
.581
.581
.530
.492
.475
GB
—
—
3
51⁄2
61⁄2
L10
6-4
4-6
5-5
6-4
7-3
STK
L-3
L-1
L-1
L-2
W-1
HM
24-11
19-12
17-16
18-14
13-16
RD
12-15
17-14
18-15
13-18
16-16
EAST
Washington
New York
Miami*
Philadelphia
Atlanta
W
40
34
32
30
18
L
24
28
31
34
45
PCT.
.625
.548
.508
.469
.286
GB
—
5
71⁄2
10
211⁄2
L10
7-3
5-5
4-6
4-6
2-8
STK
W-4
L-2
L-2
W-1
L-3
HM
19-11
15-12
14-16
16-16
7-26
RD
21-13
19-16
18-15
14-18
11-19
CENTRAL
Cleveland
Kansas City
Detroit
Chicago
Minnesota
W
35
33
32
32
20
L
28
30
31
32
43
PCT.
.556
.524
.508
.500
.317
GB
—
2
3
31⁄2
15
L10
6-4
3-7
7-3
3-7
4-6
STK
L-1
W-3
L-1
W-1
W-2
HM
17-12
20-7
17-13
16-16
12-21
RD
18-16
13-23
15-18
16-16
8-22
CENTRAL
Chicago
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Milwaukee*
Cincinnati
W
43
35
32
30
25
L
19
28
31
33
39
PCT.
.694
.556
.508
.476
.391
GB
—
81⁄2
111⁄2
131⁄2
19
L10
6-4
7-3
3-7
6-4
6-4
STK
L-1
W-5
L-5
W-2
W-1
HM
22-8
15-16
18-15
19-17
17-19
RD
21-11
20-12
14-16
11-16
8-20
WEST
San Francisco*
Los Angeles
Colorado
Arizona
San Diego*
W
38
33
30
29
26
L
26
32
33
37
38
PCT.
.594
.508
.476
.439
.406
GB
—
51⁄2
71⁄2
10
12
L10
5-5
5-5
6-4
5-5
5-5
STK
W-2
L-3
W-2
W-3
L-2
HM
19-13
17-14
13-16
13-23
15-18
RD
19-13
16-18
17-17
16-14
11-20
NATIONAL
TM PITCHERS
Chi Lackey (R)
Was Gonzalez (L)
Cin Finnegan (L)
Atl
Teheran (R)
Pit
Nicasio (R)
NY
deGrom (R)
LA
Maeda (R)
Ari
Bradley (R)
Mia Koehler (R)
SD
Pomeranz (L)
Mil Garza (R)
SF
Bumgarner (L)
INTERLEAGUE
TM PITCHERS
Phi Eflin (R)
Tor Stroman (R)
Hou Fister (R)
StL Garcia (L)
NYY Eovaldi (R)
Col De Rosa (L)
TIME
7:10p
7:10p
8:10p
8:15p
10:05p
10:05p
TIME
7:05p
7:10p
7:10p
9:40p
10:10p
10:15p
TIME
12:37p
8:15p
8:40p
2016
TEAM
W-L ERA REC
8-1 3.01 11-2
7-3 4.63
8-5
3-6 3.48
5-7
3-3 3.47
8-5
8-3 3.30
8-3
1-1 3.57
4-4
8-1 3.48 10-1
2-6 6.37
4-6
1-6 4.77 1-10
1-2 4.42
5-6
5-4 3.22
6-7
0-3 6.41
3-3
2015 VS OPP
W-L
IP ERA
2-0 11.0 4.09
1-1 14.0 1.29
0-0
0.0 0.00
0-1 11.1 0.81
0-0
0.0 0.00
1-1
8.1 7.78
0-1 12.2 5.16
1-1 19.0 3.32
1-0
8.0 0.00
0-0
0.0 0.00
0-0
4.0 9.00
0-0
0.0 0.00
2016
TEAM
W-L ERA REC
7-2 2.63
8-4
3-5 3.93
5-7
2-4 3.77 5-10
2-6 2.85 4-10
5-5 5.34
6-6
3-2 2.80
6-5
5-4 2.70
6-6
2-2 5.22
3-2
4-6 4.36
4-8
5-6 2.44
5-7
0-0 0.00
0-0
7-2 1.88 10-3
2015 VS OPP
W-L
IP ERA
0-0 11.2 4.82
0-1
6.0 3.00
0-0
0.0 0.00
1-0
6.0 0.00
0-1
3.1 11.61
0-0
0.0 0.00
0-0
0.0 0.00
1-0
6.0 0.00
1-0
7.0 0.00
0-0
0.0 0.00
0-1
5.0 9.00
1-0
6.0 4.50
2016
TEAM
W-L ERA REC
0-0 0.00
0-0
5-2 4.94
7-6
6-3 3.34
9-3
4-5 3.89
6-6
6-2 4.42
8-4
2-4 8.81
3-6
2015 VS OPP
W-L
IP ERA
0-0
0.0 0.00
0-0
0.0 0.00
0-0
8.1 4.44
0-0
0.0 0.00
0-0
0.0 0.00
0-0
0.0 0.00
TEAM REC: Team’s W-L in games started by pitcher.
RESULTS, SCHEDULE
Houston at St. Louis, 7:15
Detroit at Chi White Sox, 8:10
Cleveland at Kansas City, 8:15
Minnesota at LA Angels, 10:05
Texas at Oakland, 10:05
SUNDAY’S RESULTS
TORONTO 10, Baltimore 9
Oakland 6, CINCINNATI 1
TAMPA BAY 5, Houston 0
Chi Cubs 13, ATLANTA 2
Kansas City 3, CHI WHITE SOX 1
Detroit 4, NY YANKEES 1
MILWAUKEE 5, NY Mets 3
MINNESOTA 7, Boston 4 (10)
Cleveland 8, LA ANGELS 3
WASHINGTON 5, Philadelphia 4
Texas 6, SEATTLE 4
COLORADO 2, San Diego 1
ARIZONA 6, Miami 0
St. Louis 8, PITTSBURGH 3
SAN FRANCISCO 2, LA Dodgers 1
Home team in CAPS
MONDAY’S RESULTS
WASHINGTON 4, Chi Cubs 1
Philadelphia 7, TORONTO 0
Cincinnati 9, ATLANTA 8
KANSAS CITY 2, Cleveland 1
CHI WHITE SOX 10, Detroit 9 (12)
Minnesota 9, LA ANGELS 4
ARIZONA 3, LA Dodgers 2
Texas at Oakland, late
Miami at San Diego, late
Milwaukee at San Francisco, late
WEDNESDAY’S SCHEDULE
NY Yankees at Colorado, 3:10
Miami at San Diego, 3:40
LA Dodgers at Arizona, 3:40
Milwaukee at San Francisco, 3:45
Chi Cubs at Washington, 4:05
Baltimore at Boston, 7
Toronto at Philadelphia, 7:05
Cincinnati at Atlanta, 7:10
Pittsburgh at NY Mets, 7:10
Seattle at Tampa Bay, 7:10
NL LEADERS
BATTERS
62
59
59
62
58
58
52
60
58
63
HOME RUNS
19: Arenado, Col
18: Duvall, Cin
17: Carter, Mil
16: Cespedes, NY
16: Story, Col
RBI
53: Arenado, Col
47: Rizzo, Chi
46: Bruce, Cin
RUNS
47: Bryant, Chi
45: Arenado, Col
HITS
87: Murphy, Was
78: Marte, Pit
76: Prado, Mia
76: Segura, Ari
76: Ozuna, Mia
DOUBLES
22: Polanco, Pit
20: Carpenter, StL
20: Jay, SD
20: Parra, Col
TRIPLES
6: Bruce, Cin
237
235
235
238
207
205
196
216
210
226
R
H BA
38
33
25
38
44
29
26
44
37
35
87 .367
78 .332
76 .323
76 .319
66 .319
65 .317
62 .316
68 .315
66 .314
71 .314
STOLEN BASES
23: Villar, Mil
19: Marte, Pit
16: Hamilton, Cin
13: Upton Jr., SD
EARNED RUN AVG.
1.52: Kershaw, LA
1.86: Arrieta, Chi
1.88: Bumgarnr, SF
WINS
10-0: Strsbrg, Was
10-1: Arrieta, Chi
9-1: Kershaw, LA
9-1: Cueto, SF
9-3: Fernandz, Mia
STRIKEOUTS
122: Kershaw, LA
118: Fernandz, Mia
118: Scherzer, Was
110: Strasbrg, Was
SAVES
21: Familia, NY
19: Gomez, Phi
19: Melancon, Pit
19: Ramos, Mia
Giants 2, Dodgers 1
BATTERS
G AB
Bogaerts Bos
Altuve Hou
Ortiz Bos
VMartinez Det
Nunez Min
Hosmer KC
Kinsler Det
Mazara Tex
YEscobar LAA
Saunders Tor
61
65
56
60
53
63
59
55
59
57
HOME RUNS
20: Trumbo, Bal
19: Frazier, Chi
18: Cano, Sea
RBI
55: Ortiz, Bos
54: Encarnacn, Tor
51: Cano, Sea
49: Trumbo, Bal
RUNS
58: Betts, Bos
53: Kinsler, Det
51: Bogaerts, Bos
49: Donaldson, Tor
HITS
94: Bogaerts, Bos
88: Altuve, Hou
79: Betts, Bos
DOUBLES
27: Ortiz, Bos
25: Machado, Bal
21: Altuve, Hou
TRIPLES
5: Bradley Jr., Bos
5: Ellsbury, NY
5: Eaton, Chi
262
256
209
216
208
236
247
213
234
212
R
H BA
51
46
29
24
32
32
53
27
28
32
94 .359
88 .344
71 .340
72 .333
68 .327
75 .318
78 .316
67 .315
73 .312
66 .311
STOLEN BASES
18: Altuve, Hou
15: Davis, Cle
14: Nunez, Min
EARNED RUN AVG.
2.09: Wright, Bos
2.19: Salazar, Cle
2.25: Hill, Oak
2.57: Estrada, Tor
2.66: Quintana, Chi
WINS
10-2: Sale, Chi
8-1: Tillman, Bal
8-1: Tomlin, Cle
8-3: Zmrmnn, Det
8-3: Hill, Oak
STRIKEOUTS
96: Archer, TB
91: Price, Bos
90: Verlander, Det
89: Salazar, Cle
SAVES
19: Rodriguez, Det
19: Britton, Bal
18: Colome, TB
18: Davis, KC
WEIGHTED ON-BASE AVERAGE
LATE SATURDAY
LOS ANGELES AB
Utley 2b
4
Seager ss
4
Turner 3b
4
Van Slyke lf
0
Gonzalez 1b
4
Thompson rf
4
Pederson cf
4
Kendrick lf
2
Liberatore p
0
Coleman p
0
Ellis c
3
Urias p
2
Fien p
0
Hernndz lf-3b
1
TOTALS
32
R
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
H
3
1
0
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
6
BI
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
SAN FRAN
Span cf
Panik 2b
Belt 1b
Posey c
Duffy 3b
Crawford ss
Williamson lf
Blanco rf
Peavy p
Strickland p
a-Gillaspie ph
Kontos p
Osich p
Gearrin p
Lopez p
Casilla p
TOTALS
R
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
H
0
1
1
0
1
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
5
BI AVG.
0 .255
0 .251
2 .297
0 .251
0 .238
0 .268
0 .167
0 .231
0 .200
0
—
0 .167
0
—
0
—
0 1.000
0 .000
0
—
2
AB
3
3
4
4
4
3
3
3
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
29
WEST
W
L
PCT.
GB
L10
STK
HM
RD
Texas*
Seattle
Houston
Los Angeles
Oakland*
39
34
30
27
26
24
29
35
37
36
.619
.540
.462
.422
.419
—
5
10
121⁄2
121⁄2
8-2
3-7
5-5
2-8
3-7
W-2
L-2
L-1
L-2
W-1
24-10
15-18
17-14
13-20
13-16
15-14
19-11
13-21
14-17
13-20
*—late game not included
*—late game not included
METS
ON THIS DATE
Collins ‘A-OK’ after tests at hospital
Newsday
NEW YORK — After spending
Sunday night in a Milwaukee
hospital, Mets manager Terry
Collins was released Monday, the
club announced. He’s expected to
be in uniform for the series
opener against the Pirates on
Tuesday at Citi Field.
Collins, 67, left Miller Park
about 30 minutes before the first
pitch Sunday. He had complained of feeling ill, though the
precise nature of his symptoms
were undisclosed.
When asked Monday about his
condition, Collins texted simply:
“A-OK.”
The Mets said Collins was
cleared to return after all tests
came back negative. Collins, the
oldest manager in the big leagues,
had been kept overnight for tests
and further observation.
The Mets had been encouraged, since Collins had not complained of any other symptoms
before falling ill before the game.
Even then, Collins was said to
have been in good spirits. He
walked out of the Mets clubhouse under his own power on
the way to a hospital.
Bench coach Dick Scott took
managerial duties during the
Mets’ 5-3 loss to the Brewers, a
sloppy affair in which the club
may have been distracted by
Collins’ absence.
Most players did not know that
Collins had fallen ill until Scott
abruptly called a brief clubhouse
meeting to make the announcement.
“Without getting into too
many details, he just didn’t feel
good,” Scott said after the game.
“The beauty of what we do is we
have guys like (trainers) Ray
Ramirez and Brian Chicklo right
across the hallway. They came
right in, followed protocol, and
took care of Terry right away. He
actually felt fine right before the
game, so we were all encouraged.
Hopefully that’s the case.”
the team in Oakland, Calif., over
the weekend and will probably
make his debut Saturday against
the A’s. Lincecum has had three
starts for Triple-A Salt Lake City.
... 3B Kyle Kubitza and LHP
David Huff were designated for
assignment. Right-handed relievers Al Alburquerque and A.J.
Achter were added to the roster. .
■ Yankees: 1B Ike Davis agreed to
a one-year contract, giving the
team more options after putting
four 1Bs on the DL. Davis gets
paid at the rate of a $1.5 million
salary while in the majors and at
the rate of a $120,000 salary
while in the minors.
■ Nationals: Max Scherzer retired the first 16 batters he faced
and threw seven innings of two-
hit ball, striking out 11 in a 4-1 win
over the Cubs. Scherzer’s bid for
his third career no-hitter ended
with one out in the sixth when
Addison Russell hit a 3-2 pitch
into the left-field seats.
■ Braves: LHP Eric O’Flaherty
was put on the 15-day DL because of a right knee strain.
O’Flaherty is 1-3 with a 6.52 ERA
in 27 games. He allowed three
runs in two innings against the
Cubs on Saturday. The team
recalled RHP Ryan Weber from
Triple-A Gwinnett before Monday night’s game against the
Reds. Weber is 1-0 with an 8.38
ERA in four games with the
Braves this season. He has a 2.81
ERA in 13 games, including four
starts, with Gwinnett.
AL LEADERS
G AB
Murphy Was
Marte Pit
Prado Mia
Ozuna Mia
Zobrist ChC
Yelich Mia
Braun Mil
ADiaz StL
LeMahieu Col
Herrera Phi
NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDINGS
Los Angeles 000 000 100—1
San Francisco 000 002 00x—2
AVG.
.268
.280
.221
.056
.279
.269
.227
.219
—
—
.195
.000
—
.205
6 1
5 0
a-walked for Strickland in the 7th. E:
Turner (3). LOB: Los Angeles 5, San Francisco 6. 3B: Crawford (3). HR: Pederson
(9), off Strickland; Belt (8), off Urias.
RBIs: Pederson (27), Belt 2 (31). SB: Gillaspie (1). RISP: Los Angeles 0 for 2; San
Francisco 0 for 5.
LOS ANGELES IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Urias L,0-2
51⁄3 4 2 2 1 7 5.82
Fien
11⁄3 1 0 0 0 0 0.00
2
Liberatore
⁄3 0 0 0 1 0 0.92
2
Coleman
⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 2.84
SAN FRAN
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Peavy W,3-6
6 4 0 0 1 3 5.83
Stricklnd H, 8 1 1 1 1 0 0 3.42
1
Kontos H, 2
⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 3.38
1
Osich H, 13
⁄3 1 0 0 0 0 4.05
Gearrin H, 10 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 2.22
1
Lopez H, 6
⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 4.91
2
Casilla S, 13
⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 2.77
Time: 3:01. A: 41,583 (41,915).
ISOLATED POWER
AL BATTERS
TEAM
David Ortiz
Mark Trumbo
Manny Machado
Robinson Cano
Carlos Beltran
Chris Davis
Jackie Bradley Jr.
Todd Frazier
Josh Donaldson
Michael Saunders
Evan Longoria
Mike Napoli
Corey Dickerson
Khris Davis
Jose Bautista
Edwin Encarnacion
Nick Castellanos
Byung-ho Park
Nelson Cruz
Mike Trout
Mookie Betts
J.D. Martinez
Kyle Seager
Miguel Sano
Salvador Perez
Ian Kinsler
Miguel Cabrera
Eric Hosmer
Carlos Santana
Marcus Semien
Red Sox
Orioles
Orioles
Mariners
Yankees
Orioles
Red Sox
White Sox
Blue Jays
Blue Jays
Rays
Indians
Rays
Athletics
Blue Jays
Blue Jays
Tigers
Twins
Mariners
Angels
Red Sox
Tigers
Mariners
Twins
Royals
Tigers
Tigers
Royals
Indians
Athletics
NL BATTERS
TEAM
ISO
.368
.298
.292
.279
.277
.269
.268
.267
.258
.258
.254
.249
.244
.244
.243
.243
.241
.239
.237
.235
.234
.227
.225
.223
.219
.219
.216
.215
.214
.209
ISO
Adam Duvall
Reds
.322
Jay Bruce
Reds
.299
Nolan Arenado
Rockies
.297
Yoenis Cespedes
Mets
.296
Chris Carter
Brewers
.290
Trevor Story
Rockies
.281
Matt Carpenter
Cardinals
.271
Anthony Rizzo
Cubs
.264
Jake Lamb
D’backs
.257
Bryce Harper
Nationals
.253
Kris Bryant
Cubs
.247
Daniel Murphy
Nationals
.240
Carlos Gonzalez
Rockies
.239
Curtis Granderson Mets
.236
Gregory Polanco
Pirates
.235
Marcell Ozuna
Marlins
.231
Corey Seager
Dodgers
.228
Ryan Braun
Brewers
.224
Giancarlo Stanton Marlins
.223
Matt Holliday
Cardinals
.223
Joc Pederson
Dodgers
.222
Michael Conforto Mets
.218
Wil Myers
Padres
.217
Brandon Belt
Giants
.215
Matt Kemp
Padres
.214
Zack Cozart
Reds
.211
Jonathan Lucroy
Brewers
.209
Neil Walker
Mets
.208
Source: Fangraphs.com
AL BATTERS
TEAM
David Ortiz
Jose Altuve
Jackie Bradley Jr.
Manny Machado
Michael Saunders
Mike Trout
Xander Bogaerts
Robinson Cano
Mark Trumbo
Ian Kinsler
Eric Hosmer
Nelson Cruz
Victor Martinez
Josh Donaldson
Miguel Cabrera
Eduardo Nunez
Nick Castellanos
Mookie Betts
Dustin Pedroia
Jose Bautista
Evan Longoria
Carlos Beltran
Kyle Seager
Chris Davis
Nomar Mazara
George Springer
Ian Desmond
J.D. Martinez
Red Sox
Astros
Red Sox
Orioles
Blue Jays
Angels
Red Sox
Mariners
Orioles
Tigers
Royals
Mariners
Tigers
Blue Jays
Tigers
Twins
Tigers
Red Sox
Red Sox
Blue Jays
Rays
Yankees
Mariners
Orioles
Rangers
Astros
Rangers
Tigers
WOBA
NL BATTERS
TEAM
.463
.409
.406
.405
.405
.404
.401
.390
.389
.387
.385
.385
.382
.373
.372
.372
.368
.367
.366
.365
.364
.363
.363
.362
.361
.360
.359
.359
WOBA
Daniel Murphy
Nationals
.429
Matt Carpenter
Cardinals
.401
Nolan Arenado
Rockies
.400
Ben Zobrist
Cubs
.400
Paul Goldschmidt D’backs
.395
Brandon Belt
Giants
.393
Christian Yelich
Marlins
.391
Dexter Fowler
Cubs
.388
Yoenis Cespedes
Mets
.388
Anthony Rizzo
Cubs
.388
Marcell Ozuna
Marlins
.387
Ryan Braun
Brewers
.386
Kris Bryant
Cubs
.381
Gregory Polanco
Pirates
.381
Bryce Harper
Nationals
.379
Stephen Piscotty
Cardinals
.376
Carlos Gonzalez
Rockies
.372
Jay Bruce
Reds
.372
Starling Marte
Pirates
.371
Odubel Herrera
Phillies
.370
DJ LeMahieu
Rockies
.370
Hunter Pence
Giants
.370
Jonathan Lucroy
Brewers
.369
Jake Lamb
D’backs
.367
Charlie Blackmon Rockies
.364
Adam Duvall
Reds
.363
Corey Seager
Dodgers
.360
Aledmys Diaz
Cardinals
.360
Trevor Story
Rockies
.358
David Freese
Pirates
.357
Source: Fangraphs.com
White Sox 10, Tigers 9
DETROIT
AB
Kinsler 2b
5
Maybin cf
6
Mi.Cabrera 1b
5
Castellanos 3b
7
J.Martinez dh
6
Upton lf
4
Sltlmcchia c
5
Aviles rf
5
b-V.Mrtnz ph
0
1-Romine pr-rf
0
Iglesias ss
3
TOTALS
46
CHICAGO
Anderson ss
Eaton cf
Me.Cabrera lf
Abreu 1b
Frazier 3b
Lawrie 2b
Garcia rf
Navarro c
Coats dh
a-Shuck ph-dh
TOTALS
Detroit
Chicago
AB
6
5
6
4
6
6
6
3
2
4
48
■ Rangers: RHP Yu Darvish was
placed on the 15-day DL with
shoulder discomfort after making only three starts in his return
from major elbow surgery. Darvish underwent an MRI in Texas
and the team said it showed no
structural issues but he is still
bothered by discomfort in his
pitching shoulder.
■ Phillies: A man accused of
throwing a beer bottle near Ryan
Howard during a June 4 game
has been cited for disorderly
conduct. Police spokeswoman
Tanya Little said 21-year-old Sidney Smith, from Wilmington,
Del., turned himself in Friday.
■ Angels: Manager Mike Scioscia said two-time NL Cy Young
winner Tim Lincecum will join
STRAND RATE
MLB BEST
TEAM
LOB%
Danny Salazar
Indians
Jon Lester
Cubs
Cole Hamels
Rangers
Jason Hammel
Cubs
Madison BumgarnerGiants
Colby Lewis
Rangers
Chris Tillman
Orioles
Julio Teheran
Braves
Max Scherzer
Nationals
Ian Kennedy
Royals
Jake Arrieta
Cubs
Marco Estrada
Blue Jays
Clayton Kershaw
Dodgers
Noah Syndergaard Mets
Dan Straily
Reds
Jimmy Nelson
Brewers
Chris Sale
White Sox
Doug Fister
Astros
Bartolo Colon
Mets
Jose Fernandez
Marlins
Stephen Strasburg Nationals
J.A. Happ
Blue Jays
Rich Hill
Athletics
Drew Pomeranz
Padres
Kenta Maeda
Dodgers
Jake Odorizzi
Rays
Martin Perez
Rangers
Jose Quintana
White Sox
Johnny Cueto
Giants
MLB WORST
85.9
85.9
85.9
85.0
84.5
84.0
83.3
82.9
82.6
82.2
81.9
81.9
81.7
81.5
81.0
80.7
80.3
80.1
79.8
79.8
79.6
79.6
78.7
78.7
78.6
78.6
78.3
78.2
78.1
TEAM
LOB%
Ricky Nolasco
Twins
59.0
Michael Wacha
Cardinals
60.0
Ubaldo Jimenez
Orioles
62.1
Clay Buchholz
Red Sox
63.9
Dallas Keuchel
Astros
64.0
Adam Wainwright Cardinals
64.1
Marcus Stroman
Blue Jays
64.1
Jake Peavy
Giants
64.2
Corey Kluber
Indians
65.7
Chad Bettis
Rockies
65.8
Matt Harvey
Mets
66.1
David Price
Red Sox
66.7
Hector Santiago
Angels
67.2
Matt Shoemaker
Angels
67.2
Michael Pineda
Yankees
67.6
Patrick Corbin
D’backs
67.6
Jeff Locke
Pirates
67.7
Wily Peralta
Brewers
68.1
Derek Holland
Rangers
68.1
R.A. Dickey
Blue Jays
68.5
Tom Koehler
Marlins
69.1
Collin McHugh
Astros
69.6
Aaron Nola
Phillies
70.0
Wade Miley
Mariners
70.2
Gio Gonzalez
Nationals
70.2
Mike Leake
Cardinals
70.2
Jaime Garcia
Cardinals
70.5
Kyle Hendricks
Cubs
70.5
Chase Anderson
Brewers
70.5
Source: Fangraphs.com
Nationals 4, Cubs 1
R
2
2
2
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
1
9
H
2
2
1
2
3
1
2
0
0
0
1
14
BI
2
2
0
0
2
1
0
0
0
0
1
8
AVG.
.317
.372
.295
.304
.279
.225
.191
.190
.333
.152
.245
R
0
2
2
2
1
0
0
2
0
1
10
H
1
4
3
2
0
3
1
1
0
1
16
BI
0
2
0
3
1
2
1
1
0
0
10
AVG.
.200
.270
.290
.264
.206
.242
.249
.211
.000
.162
331 001 001
002 131 002
AROUND THE HORN
000—9 14 0
001—10 16 3
One out when winning run scored. astruck out for Coats in the 6th. b-pinch
hit for Aviles in the 11th. 1-ran for V.Martinez in the 11th. E: Shields (1), Me.Cabrera (1), Garcia (1). LOB: Detroit 14, Chicago 12. 2B: Mi.Cabrera (14), J.Martinez 2
(16), Me.Cabrera (13), Lawrie (17), Shuck
(1). HR: Kinsler (14), off Shields; Abreu
(9), off Boyd; Navarro (3), off Boyd. RBIs:
Kinsler 2 (44), Maybin 2 (11), J.Martinez 2
(38), Upton (18), Iglesias (11), Eaton 2
(21), Abreu 3 (37), Frazier (43), Lawrie 2
(25), Garcia (23), Navarro (15). SB: Maybin (6), Iglesias (5), Eaton (6). CS: Kinsler
(3). SF: Kinsler, Eaton.
DETROIT
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Boyd
41⁄3 7 6 6 2 3 4.91
Parnell
1 2 1 1 1 1 7.36
Wilson H,6
12⁄3 1 0 0 0 1 4.44
Greene H,3
1 0 0 0 0 1 4.79
Rdrgz BS,2-21 1 3 2 2 2 1 3.80
Sanchez L,3-7 21⁄3 3 1 1 0 3 6.21
CHICAGO
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Shields
5 9 7 6 4 1 16.71
1
Danish
⁄3 2 1 1 1 0 10.80
Jennings
11⁄3 0 0 0 2 1 1.86
Albers
11⁄3 0 0 0 0 2 4.03
Jones
2 2 1 1 0 2 2.89
Robertson
1 0 0 0 3 0 3.86
Duke W,1-0
1 1 0 0 0 1 3.22
Time: 4:34. A: 16,314.
AB
4
4
3
3
3
2
1
2
1
3
2
0
0
1
29
R
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
H
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
2
BI
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
AVG.
.289
.236
.277
.265
.319
.222
.270
.206
.233
.234
.083
—
.000
.273
WASHINGTON
Revere cf
Werth lf
Harper rf
Murphy 2b
Zmmrmn 1b
Ramos c
Rendon 3b
Espinosa ss
Scherzer p
a-Heisey ph
Perez p
Kelley p
TOTALS
AB
5
3
5
4
4
4
4
2
2
1
0
0
34
R
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
4
H
2
1
1
1
0
2
2
1
0
0
0
0
10
BI
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
3
AVG.
.211
.246
.256
.367
.233
.337
.263
.223
.167
.220
.000
—
000 001 000—1
001 003 00x—4
2 2
10 0
a-struck out for Scherzer in the 7th. bstruck out for Coghlan in the 8th. cstruck out for Montero in the 8th. dstruck out for Richard in the 9th. E: Fowler (3), Russell (7). LOB: Chicago 1, Washington 12. 2B: Rizzo (14), Rendon (15). HR:
Russell (5), off Scherzer; Ramos (10), off
Hendricks. RBIs: Russell (33), Revere
(11), Ramos (36), Espinosa (27). SB: Revere 2 (4), Rendon (7). S: Scherzer. Runners left in scoring position: Chicago 1
(Zobrist); Washington 8 (Harper, Murphy, Zimmerman 3, Scherzer, Heisey 2).
CHICAGO
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Hndrcks L,4-6 51⁄3 6 4 3 3 4 3.05
Grimm
12⁄3 3 0 0 0 1 5.16
Richard
1 1 0 0 0 0 6.00
WASHINGTON IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Schrzr W,8-4
7 2 1 1 0 11 3.40
1
Perez H,7
⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 3.31
Kelley S,1-1
12⁄3 0 0 0 0 4 2.70
Inherited runners-scored: Grimm 1-1.
IBB: off Hendricks (Murphy), off Grimm
(Espinosa). Umpires: H, Dan Lassogna;
1B, Dale Scott; 2B, Bob Davidson; 3B,
Lance Barrett. Time: 2:44. A: 37,187.
TEAM
Jose Quintana
White Sox
Rich Hill
Athletics
Corey Kluber
Indians
Danny Salazar
Indians
Steven Wright
Red Sox
Chris Sale
White Sox
Matt Shoemaker
Angels
Justin Verlander
Tigers
Aaron Sanchez
Blue Jays
Masahiro Tanaka
Yankees
David Price
Red Sox
Ricky Nolasco
Twins
Nate Karns
Mariners
Trevor Bauer
Indians
Dallas Keuchel
Astros
Collin McHugh
Astros
Nathan Eovaldi
Yankees
Marcus Stroman
Blue Jays
Chris Tillman
Orioles
Jordan Zimmermann Tigers
Edinson Volquez
Royals
Marco Estrada
Blue Jays
Michael Pineda
Yankees
Jake Odorizzi
Rays
Rick Porcello
Red Sox
Carlos Rodon
White Sox
Drew Smyly
Rays
Taijuan Walker
Mariners
Colby Lewis
Rangers
NL PITCHERS
TEAM
FIP
2.64
2.66
2.89
3.13
3.20
3.38
3.39
3.44
3.44
3.49
3.53
3.57
3.67
3.68
3.81
3.82
3.84
3.86
3.88
3.91
3.95
4.03
4.04
4.06
4.10
4.29
4.35
4.36
4.36
FIP
Clayton Kershaw
Dodgers
1.57
Noah Syndergaard Mets
1.82
Jose Fernandez
Marlins
2.00
Johnny Cueto
Giants
2.55
Jake Arrieta
Cubs
2.56
Steven Matz
Mets
2.58
Aaron Nola
Phillies
2.73
Stephen Strasburg Nationals
2.75
Jon Lester
Cubs
2.82
Madison Bumgarner Giants
2.84
Drew Pomeranz
Padres
2.85
John Lackey
Cubs
2.98
Kyle Hendricks
Cubs
3.04
Gerrit Cole
Pirates
3.04
Kenta Maeda
Dodgers
3.17
Zack Greinke
D’backs
3.33
Tanner Roark
Nationals
3.36
Jaime Garcia
Cardinals
3.46
Gio Gonzalez
Nationals
3.46
Michael Wacha
Cardinals
3.47
Jeff Samardzija
Giants
3.52
Joe Ross
Nationals
3.60
Bartolo Colon
Mets
3.62
Jason Hammel
Cubs
3.68
Carlos Martinez
Cardinals
3.70
Jerad Eickhoff
Phillies
3.71
Matt Harvey
Mets
3.73
Adam Conley
Marlins
3.77
Tyler Chatwood
Rockies
3.83
Adam Wainwright Cardinals
3.92
Source: Fangraphs.com
LEADERS
CHICAGO
Fowler cf
Heyward rf
Bryant 3b-lf
Rizzo 1b
Zobrist 2b
Coghlan lf
b-Baez ph-3b
Montero c
c-Ross ph-c
Russell ss
Hendricks p
Grimm p
Richard p
d-Almora ph
TOTALS
Chicago
Washington
FIELDING INDEPENDENT PITCHING
AL PITCHERS
INTENT. WALKS
13: Harper, Was
8: Mauer, Min
7: Crawford, SF
7: Freeman, Atl
6: Espinosa, Was
6: Machado, Bal
6: Mercer, Pit
6: Ortiz, Bos
6: Votto, Cin
HIT BY PITCH
15: Guyer, TB
9: Dietrich, Mia
9: Fowler, ChC
9: Marte, Pit
9: Rizzo, ChC
8: Eaton, ChW
7: Espinosa, Was
7: Gordon, KC
7: Turner, LAD
SAC BUNTS
6: Davies, Mil
6: Hellickson, Phi
5: Cueto, SF
5: Escobar, KC
5: Garcia, StL
5: Hamilton, Cin
5: Locke, Pit
5: Nelson, Mil
5: Norris, Atl
5: Perez, LAA
HOLDS
17: Herrera, KC
16: Betances, NYY
16: Diekman, Tex
15: Feliz, Pit
15: Harris, Hou
14: Jones, ChW
14: Phelps, Mia
13: Neris, Phi
13: Osich, SF
13: Reed, NYM
13: Thornbrg, Mil
WILD PITCHES
11: Gray, Oak
7: May, Min
7: Ramirez, TB
6: Conley, Mia
6: Keuchel, Hou
6: Martinez, StL
6: Niese, Pit
6: Pomeranz, SD
6: Quintana, ChW
6: Roark, Was
6: Teheran, Atl
6: Tillman, Bal
6: Wright, Bos
COMP. GAMES
3: Cueto, SF
3: Kershaw, LAD
3: Sale, ChW
3: Wright, Bos
■ Extra innings: Tigers DH Victor Martinez was out of the starting lineup against the White
Sox because of irritation in his right knee. Martinez is hitting .333. ... Blue Jays OF Jose
Bautista was DH against the Phillies after missing three games with a sore right thigh.
Reds 9, Braves 8
Royals 2, Indians 1
CLEVELAND
Santana dh
Kipnis 2b
Lindor ss
Napoli 1b
Ramirez 3b
Chisenhall rf
Gomes c
Naquin cf
R.Davis lf
TOTALS
AB
3
3
3
4
3
3
3
4
3
29
R
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
H
0
2
0
0
0
2
0
0
0
4
BI
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
AVG.
.228
.272
.300
.240
.298
.279
.169
.312
.248
KANSAS CITY
Merrifield 2b
Escobar ss
Hosmer 1b
Cain cf
Perez c
Morales dh
Fuentes rf
Cuthbert 3b
Dyson lf
TOTALS
AB
4
4
3
4
4
4
4
3
3
33
R
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
H
2
1
1
0
3
1
2
1
0
11
BI
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
AVG.
.330
.244
.318
.285
.290
.204
.351
.274
.257
Cleveland
Kansas City
000 000 010—1
100 100 00x—2
4 0
11 1
E: Escobar (9). LOB: Cleveland 7, Kansas
City 8. 2B: Kipnis (11). 3B: Merrifield (1).
HR: Kipnis (8), off Herrera; Merrifield (1),
off Carrasco. RBIs: Kipnis (32), Merrifield (6), Escobar (17). CS: Escobar (3).
SO: Lindor (1), Napoli (1), Gomes (1), Naquin (1), Escobar (2), Hosmer (1), Cain
(1), Morales (1), Fuentes (1), Cuthbert
(1), Dyson (2). Runners left in scoring position: Cleveland 4 (Napoli, Chisenhall 2,
R.Davis); Kansas City 3 (Escobar, Morales, Fuentes). RISP: Cleveland 0 for 8;
Kansas City 1 for 6. Runners moved up:
Merrifield. GIDP: Ramirez, Gomes 2,
Cain. DP: Cleveland 1 (Lindor, Kipnis, Napoli); Kansas City 4 (Merrifield, Escobar,
Hosmer), (Escobar, Merrifield, Hosmer),
(Merrifield,
Escobar,
Hosmer),
(Escobar, Merrifield, Hosmer).
CLEVELAND
Crrsco L,2-2
Manship
Chamberlain
KANSAS CITY
Vlqz W,6-6
Herrera H,18
Davis S,18-19
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
6 10 2 2 1 8 3.40
1 0 0 0 0 1 2.79
1 1 0 0 0 0 2.25
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
7 2 0 0 4 3 3.90
1 1 1 1 1 1 1.74
1 1 0 0 0 0 1.11
Pitches-strikes: Carrasco 103-71; Manship 17-10; Chamberlain 19-12; Volquez
95-59; Herrera 19-12; Davis 7-5.
Umpires: H, Eric Cooper; 1B, Jim Wolf;
2B, Ramon De Jesus; 3B, Gary Cederstrom. Time: 2:42. A: 31,269.
AB
4
3
4
3
4
3
4
5
2
1
1
34
R
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
9
H
1
2
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
9
BI
0
0
0
2
3
1
1
0
0
1
0
8
AVG.
.284
.237
.258
.272
.258
.232
.277
.253
.000
.500
.429
ATLANTA
Smith lf-cf
Inciarte cf
Freeman 1b
Markakis rf
Garcia 3b
Pierzynski c
1-d’Arnd pr-ss
Peterson 2b
Aybar ss
Flowers c
Blair p
b-Snyder ph
d-Frncr ph-l
TOTALS
AB
3
5
5
5
5
4
0
3
3
0
2
1
0
36
R
2
1
2
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
8
H
1
1
3
0
2
1
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
10
BI
0
0
3
0
2
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
6
AVG.
.250
.236
.250
.239
.241
.203
.309
.231
.187
.237
.083
.250
.287
303 002 001—9
212 020 010—8
9 1
10 0
a-singled for Ramirez in the 6th. b-struck
out for Weber in the 6th. c-singled for
Wood in the 8th. d-walked for Johnson in
the 8th. 1-ran for Pierzynski in the 8th. E:
Votto (4). LOB: Cincinnati 8, Atlanta 6.
2B: Votto (12), Freeman (11), Garcia (4),
Aybar (6). 3B: Bruce (6). HR: Duvall (18),
off Blair; Freeman (10), off Ramirez; Garcia (3), off Ohlendorf. RBIs: Bruce 2 (46),
Duvall 3 (44), Suarez (34), Holt (7), Waldrop (1), Freeman 3 (21), Garcia 2 (14),
Aybar (7). SB: Smith 2 (11). SF: Duvall,
Suarez.
CINCINNATI
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Wright
3 6 5 3 1 0 7.62
Ramirez
2 2 2 2 0 0 7.20
Wood H,5
2 0 0 0 1 3 3.51
Ohlndrf W,5-5 1 2 1 1 2 0 4.40
Cngrni S,7-12 1 0 0 0 0 0 3.94
ATLANTA
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Blair
5 4 6 6 4 3 7.59
Weber
1 3 2 2 0 0 9.28
Kelly
1 0 0 0 0 1 4.58
Johnson
1 1 0 0 0 1 6.27
Vizcaino L,1-2 1 1 1 1 3 1 2.33
Time: 3:22. A: 13,198.
WINS ABOVE REPLACEMENT
MLB PITCHERS
TEAM
Clayton Kershaw
Noah Syndergaard
Jose Fernandez
Johnny Cueto
Jose Quintana
Jake Arrieta
Jon Lester
Corey Kluber
Stephen Strasburg
Aaron Nola
Madison Bumgarner
Chris Sale
John Lackey
Steven Matz
Rich Hill
Justin Verlander
Drew Pomeranz
Masahiro Tanaka
Zack Greinke
Danny Salazar
Steven Wright
Kyle Hendricks
Aaron Sanchez
Kenta Maeda
Gerrit Cole
Tanner Roark
Dallas Keuchel
Tyler Chatwood
David Price
Marco Estrada
Dodgers
Mets
Marlins
Giants
White Sox
Cubs
Cubs
Indians
Nationals
Phillies
Giants
White Sox
Cubs
Mets
Athletics
Tigers
Padres
Yankees
D’backs
Indians
Red Sox
Cubs
Blue Jays
Dodgers
Pirates
Nationals
Astros
Rockies
Red Sox
Blue Jays
MLB BATTERS
TEAM
Mike Trout
Xander Bogaerts
Manny Machado
Jose Altuve
Kris Bryant
Dexter Fowler
Daniel Murphy
Nolan Arenado
Robinson Cano
Ben Zobrist
David Ortiz
Francisco Lindor
Corey Seager
Mookie Betts
Marcell Ozuna
Brandon Crawford
Starling Marte
Bryce Harper
Matt Carpenter
Ian Kinsler
Ian Desmond
Evan Longoria
Gregory Polanco
Josh Donaldson
Jackie Bradley Jr.
George Springer
Jonathan Lucroy
Paul Goldschmidt
Odubel Herrera
Michael Saunders
Angels
Red Sox
Orioles
Astros
Cubs
Cubs
Nationals
Rockies
Mariners
Cubs
Red Sox
Indians
Dodgers
Red Sox
Marlins
Giants
Pirates
Nationals
Cardinals
Tigers
Rangers
Rays
Pirates
Blue Jays
Red Sox
Astros
Brewers
D’backs
Phillies
Blue Jays
WAR
4.6
3.1
3.0
2.8
2.8
2.6
2.5
2.4
2.4
2.3
2.2
2.2
2.1
2.0
2.0
2.0
1.9
1.9
1.9
1.9
1.8
1.7
1.7
1.7
1.6
1.5
1.5
1.5
1.4
1.4
WAR
3.8
3.7
3.6
3.6
3.1
3.1
2.9
2.9
2.8
2.8
2.8
2.8
2.7
2.6
2.6
2.5
2.5
2.5
2.5
2.5
2.5
2.5
2.4
2.4
2.3
2.2
2.2
2.2
2.2
2.1
Source: Fangraphs.com
Phillies 7, Blue Jays 0
CINCINNATI
Cozart ss
Votto 1b
Phillips 2b
Bruce rf
Duvall lf
Suarez 3b
Holt cf
Barnhart c
Wright p
a-Waldrop ph
c-Selsky ph
TOTALS
Cincinnati
Atlanta
1933: Lou Gehrig’s consecutive game
streak stays intact, even though he and
Yankees manager Joe McCarthy are
thrown out of a game. The streak, now at
1,249, continues.
1969: Reggie Jackson of the Athletics
collects 10 RBI with two home runs, a
double and two singles against the Red
Sox at Fenway Park. Oakland wins, 21-7.
2002: With all 14 interleague games —
and one National League game — taking
place in NL parks, a designated hitter is
not used in a full slate of major league
games for the first time since 1972.
Source: Baseball-reference.com
PHILA.
Herrera cf
Galvis ss
Blanco 3b
Joseph 1b
Howard dh
Ruiz c
Asche lf
Hernandez 2b
Bourjos rf
TOTALS
AB
5
4
5
4
4
3
2
4
4
35
R
1
0
0
0
1
1
2
1
1
7
H
2
0
1
0
1
1
0
2
2
9
BI
3
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
2
7
AVG.
.314
.223
.262
.286
.153
.228
.226
.250
.205
TORONTO
Bautista dh
Donaldson 3b
Saunders lf
Smoak 1b
Pillar cf
Carrera rf
Barney ss
Travis 2b
Thole c
TOTALS
AB
4
3
3
3
4
2
4
4
4
31
R
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
H
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
2
0
6
BI
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
AVG.
.234
.255
.311
.259
.253
.329
.302
.172
.107
Philadelphia
Toronto
001 000 303—7
000 000 000—0
9 0
6 0
LOB: Philadelphia 5, Toronto 9. 2B:
Blanco (9), C.Hernandez (6), Bourjos (9).
HR: Herrera (6), off Dickey; Howard (10),
off Dickey. RBIs: Herrera 3 (22), Howard
(21), C.Hernandez (15), Bourjos 2 (11). SB:
Asche (3). CS: Asche (1). SO: Herrera (2),
Galvis (2), Blanco (1), Joseph (2), Howard (1), C.Hernandez (1), Bautista (1),
Donaldson (1), Saunders (1), Smoak (1),
Pillar (2), Carrera (1), Thole (1). RLISP:
Philadelphia 2 (Galvis, Joseph); Toronto
3 (Saunders, Pillar, Carrera). RISP: Philadelphia 4 for 7; Toronto 0 for 4. Runners
moved up: Pillar. GIDP: Pillar, Thole. DP:
Philadelphia 2 (Blanco, Joseph), (C.Hernandez, Joseph).
PHILA.
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Eickhff W,4-8
6 3 0 0 4 5 3.40
D.Hernandez
1 1 0 0 0 2 2.37
Neris
1 1 0 0 1 1 2.41
Bailey
1 1 0 0 0 0 4.09
TORONTO
IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Dickey L,4-7 61⁄3 5 3 3 2 4 4.16
1
Biagini
⁄3 1 1 1 0 1 2.70
1
Loup
⁄3 1 0 0 0 1 9.00
Storen
1 0 0 0 0 3 6.04
Diamond
1 2 3 3 2 0 27.00
Inherited runners-scored: Biagini 1-1,
Loup 1-1. WP: Loup. Umpires: H, Todd Tichenor; 1B, Bill Miller; 2B, Tony Randazzo; 3B, Tom Woodring. Time: 2:55.
A: 35,678.
ORIOLES NOTES
Davis named AL Player of the Week;
Hardy to begin rehab assignment today
By Eduardo A. Encina
The Baltimore Sun
Orioles first baseman Chris Davis, who
will go into this week’s three-game series in
Boston having homered in five consecutive
games, was named the American League
Player of the Week.
Davis hit .368 (7-for-19) with five home
runs, one double and10 RBIs over six games
to earn the award for the fourth time in his
career. His five homers were the most in the
majors over the course of the week, and he
also led the majors with a 1.211 slugging
percentage and 23 total bases.
He went into Wednesday’s game riding
his worst slump of the season — hitting .137
over his last 21 games, with just two homers
and four RBIs over that span and striking
out more than twice as many times (34) as
he walked (16).
Hardy to start rehab at Bowie: The
Orioles are closer to getting their Gold
Glove starting shortstop back.
J.J. Hardy, who has been out of action
since May1with a fractured bone in his foot,
will begin a minor league rehab assignment
today at Double-A Bowie.
Hardy, who has been on the disabled list
for nearly six weeks after fouling a ball off
his left foot, has been rehabbing the injury
at the team’s spring training complex in
Sarasota, Fla.
He’s been gradually working in all
baseball activities, including some simulated game action.
It’s not clear how many games Hardy
would need before he could be activated
from the DL, but manager Buck Showalter
indicated Sunday that Hardy might not
need much time.
Hardy was hitting .244/.291/.410 in 22
games before going on the DL.
Gallardo strong in rehab start: Right-
hander Yovani Gallardo is on track to
return from the disabled list this weekend
following an impressive minor league rehab
start pitching for Triple-A Norfolk on
Monday night.
Gallardo allowed just one hit over five
innings — a solo homer to Charlotte second
baseman Carlos Sanchez — yielding one
run while striking out five and walking two.
He threw 90 pitches, 52 of them strikes.
He is likely to be activated from the
disabled list to pitch Saturday against the
Toronto Blue Jays at Camden Yards.
Gallardo was 1-1 with a 7.00 ERA in four
starts before going on the DL with shoulder
tendinitis in late April.
eencina@baltsun.com
twitter.com/EddieInTheYard
ORIOLES
eNEWSPAPER UPDATE
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 |
SPORTS
5
| THE BALTIMORE SUN
NEXT FIVE GAMES ON 105.7 FM, 1430 AM, 1450 AM AND 980 AM
TUE
Since April 14,
Tillman is 7-0 in
10 starts with a
2.63 ERA,
including seven
outings allowing
two or fewer
runs.
@Red Sox, 7:10 p.m.,
MASN2
Starters: Chris Tillman (8-1,
3.01) vs. Red Sox’s David
Price (7-3, 4.63)
WED
THU
FRI
SAT
Starters: Tyler Wilson (2-5,
4.73) vs. Red Sox’s Steven
Wright (7-4, 2.09)
Starters: Kevin Gausman
(0-3, 3.45) vs. Red Sox’s
Eduardo Rodriguez (1-1, 6.06)
Starters: Jays’ Aaron
Sanchez (6-1, 3.38) vs.
Mike Wright (3-3, 5.31)
Starters: Jays’ R.A. Dickey
(4-7, 4.16) vs. Yovani Gallardo
(1-1, 7.00) or TBA
@Red Sox, 7:10 p.m.,
MASN2
@Red Sox, 7:10 p.m.,
MASN
Blue Jays, 7:05 p.m.,
MASN
Blue Jays, 4:05 p.m.,
MASN, Ch. 13
Rickard adapts to his
new part-time role
RICKARD, From page 1
Adam Jones is hitting .271in the
leadoff position, and Kim is batting .333 after a torrid start to the
season. But Rickard’s spot on the
active roster is technically safe —
the Orioles can’t demote the Rule
5 pick this season without offering
him back to the Tampa Bay Rays.
Rickard said playing less regularly has required an adjustment.
“Just a little bit,” he said. “Your
mindset changes. You just gotta
continue to go about your same
business and get in that same
routine. Try not to change a lot,
and just go out there when your
name is called.”
Despite their relative scarcity,
Rickard’s plate appearances of late
have been valuable. He worked
just four walks in April before
drawing 11 in May, helping raise
his on-base percentage even as he
appeared to slump at the plate.
That patience can be an asset
on a team with so much power.
On June 5 against the New York
Yankees, even though he went
1-for-3 before Kim pinch-hit for
him in the seventh inning, Rickard
saw 29 pitches in three plate
appearances, helping wear out
starter C.C. Sabathia as the Orioles
chased him after five innings.
On the season, Rickard is seeing
a team-leading 4.44 pitches per
plate appearance.
On Thursday against the Toronto Blue Jays, Rickard came in
as a pinch runner for Kim, who
had doubled to lead off the 10th.
Rickard moved to third on a
groundout and then scored the
winning run on Chris Davis’
sacrifice fly.
“That situation would not have
been present if it wasn’t great base
running by Joey Rickard,” Orioles
pitcher Tyler Wilson said. “Him
reading the ball off the bat and
getting to third with one out is the
difference in winning and losing
that ballgame.”
Those contributions won’t get
the crowd chanting his name like
his performance in the first week
did, but they do make him a good
option off the bench.
In a rare start Saturday against
Toronto, Rickard went 3-for-5
with a home run, raising his
batting average above .250 for the
first time since May 27.
“You just show up to the park
and do your stuff,” he said,
“whether you’re starting or not.”
jlourim@baltsun.com
twitter.com/jakelourim
More online
Go to
baltimoresun.com
/orioles for:
■ Josh Land’s Orioles on
Deck blog post previewing
tonight’s game
■ An in-game live blog with
tweets from Peter Schmuck,
Eduardo A. Encina and Jon
Meoli
ALL SUBSCRIBERS GET
FREE DIGITAL ACCESS
Activate digital access at
baltimoresun.com/activate
Read the pages at
digitaledition.
baltimoresun.com
STATISTICS
THROUGH SUNDAY’S GAME
BATTERS
AVG. OBA
AB
2B
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
16
20
4
9
6
5
2
11
7
16
1
0
0
BB
4
2
39
49
10
34
27
12
8
35
19
39
8
0
0
11
1
20
17
10
9
12
15
6
17
16
38
12
5
2
SO
.260
W
.326 2105 299
548 115
3 99 286 191 531
L
ERA
IP
H
R
ER HR BB SO
36
6
0
25
11
5
13
7
7
7
9
8
11
3
2
1
HR RBI
TOTALS
PITCHERS
TOTALS
30
5
77
70
26
60
41
48
19
54
31
50
21
12
4
3B
.417
.375
.376
.337
.343
.300
.317
.306
.291
.290
.314
.350
.315
.239
.259
2
5
5
2
8
2
0
2
2
3
1
0
3
1
0
0
11
3
47
38
15
24
14
26
11
33
13
46
11
5
2
H
.333
.333
.308
.286
.277
.268
.266
.251
.244
.238
.231
.228
.223
.182
.167
Britton
Brach
Givens
Worley
Tillman
O’Day
Gausman
Bundy
Wilson
Wright
McFarland
Tolliver
Jimenez
Gallardo
Duensing
Matusz
90
15
250
245
94
224
154
191
78
227
134
219
94
66
24
R
Kim
Pena
Machado
Trumbo
Reimold
Schoop
Wieters
Rickard
Hardy
Jones
Alvarez
Davis
Flaherty
Joseph
Janish
13
4
51
71
30
53
37
44
13
45
39
84
31
14
2
1
1
0
0
1
1
3
1
5
3
2
0
7
1
0
0
1.02
1.04
2.61
2.66
3.01
3.15
3.45
4.50
4.73
5.31
5.68
6.75
6.89
7.00
9.00
12.00
26.1
34.2
31.0
40.2
77.2
20.0
60.0
26.0
59.0
61.0
19.0
4.0
62.2
18.0
4.0
6.0
11
22
28
42
62
18
58
36
60
67
22
4
89
23
8
11
3
4
11
15
26
7
25
14
33
39
12
4
53
14
4
8
3
4
9
12
26
7
23
13
31
36
12
3
48
14
4
8
1
2
3
3
9
5
10
3
7
9
1
1
6
1
2
3
5
10
14
13
29
7
15
7
14
23
5
2
34
7
1
7
28
40
44
33
75
25
54
16
30
43
6
5
53
9
1
1
26
4.14
550.0
561
272
253
66
193
463
FROM PAGE ONE
July 10: Futures Game,
San Diego
July 10: Legends and
Celebrity Softball Game,
San Diego (after Futures
Game)
July 11: Home Run Derby,
San Diego
July 12: 87th All-Star
Game, San Diego
July 15: Deadline for
amateur draft picks to
sign
July 24: Hall of Fame
inductions, Cooperstown, N.Y.
Aug. 1: Last day to trade
a player without
securing waivers, 4 p.m.
Sept. 1: Active rosters
expand to 40 players
Oct. 2: Regular season
ends
Five days after World
Series: Deadline for
teams to make qualifying offers to their
eligible former players
who became free agents
12 days after World
Series: Deadline for free
agents to accept
qualifying offers
Dec. 5-8: Winter
meetings, Washington
MADDIE MEYER/GETTY IMAGES
Rickard was hitting .304 through the first two weeks of the season but
has dropped to .251 through Sunday’s game.
STANLEY CUP FINAL
James, Irving keep Cavs alive
FINALS, From page 1
Game 4 tussle with Green
and reaction to what he
considered the Golden
State forward’s inappropriate words.
Cleveland handed Golden State just its fourth
defeat all season at Oracle
Arena, denying Most Valuable Player Stephen Curry
and the Warriors a chance
to celebrate this title with
their golden-clad supporters. Now, Curry and Co.
must try to win on the road,
just the way the Warriors
did last year and also in their
only other championship
season out West in 1975.
The Warriors will get
Green back Thursday as
they try again for that repeat title.
“I kind of like our position,” coach Steve Kerr said.
“ I like our position a lot
better than theirs.”
Banned from the arena,
Green watched from a baseball suite in the Oakland
Coliseum next door, joined
by Golden State general
manager Bob Myers.
The All-Star forward was
suspended Sunday for his
fourth flagrant point of the
postseason. He was assessed a retroactive flagrant
foul for his swipe at James
in the fourth quarter of
Friday’s Game 4.
“Obviously there’s a void
there with [Green] being
out,” guard Shaun Livingston said. “There’s no excuse. We have to be better.”
Tied at 61 at halftime, the
Warriors missed 14 of their
first 20 shots out of intermission and shot 7 for 24 in
the third as James and the
Cavaliers grabbed command by doing all of the
little things on both ends of
the floor — the very intangibles Golden State desperately missed without
Green’s presence on both
ends. James jumped in the
passing lanes to create defensive havoc, flipped passes around and got open.
Klay Thompson scored
37 points with six 3-pointers and Curry added 25
CALENDAR
PENGUINS
Pens positioned well
Team has players,
staff in place for
legit shot at repeat
By Will Graves
Associated Press
MARIO J. SANCHEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Cavaliers’ LeBron James goes up for a layup in the first
half. James played a game-high 43 minutes.
THE SCHEDULE
June 2: GOLDEN STATE 104-89
June 5: GOLDEN STATE 110-77
June 8: CLEVELAND 120-90
June 10: Golden State 108-97
Monday: Cleveland 112-97
Thursday: at Cleveland, 9
x-Sunday: at Golden State, 8
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
points with five 3s, seven
rebounds, four assists and
two blocked shots. But as
the game wore on, the
Splash Brothers shot airballs and clanked 3-point
tries off the front rim. The
Warriors often failed to get
a hand in the face of Cleveland’s shooters.
“We weren’t very good
defensively. We had to play
better and we didn’t,” Kerr
said.
James and Irving combined to shoot 33 for 54,
while the Warriors finished
36.4 percent from the field.
CAVALIERS 112, WARRIORS 97
CLEV.
MN FG-A
FT-A
REB A PF PTS
James
42:38 16-30
5-8 4-16 7 1 41
Love
32:53
1-5
0-0
0-3 1 4 2
T.Thmpsn 41:32
1-3 4-10 3-15 0 1 6
Irving
39:47 17-24
2-2
0-3 6 4 41
Smith
30:43
3-9
3-3
1-2 1 5 10
0-0
Shumprt 25:41
2-4
0-1 0 0 4
Jefferson 14:18
4-6
0-0
0-1 0 1 8
Dllvdva
3:28
0-2
0-0
0-0 0 3 0
Williams 3:23
0-0
0-0
0-0 0 1 0
Mozgov 1:52
0-0
0-0
0-0 0 1 0
J.Jones
1:52
0-0
0-0
0-0 0 0 0
D.Jones
1:52
0-0
0-0
0-0 0 1 0
TOTALS
44-83 14-23 8-41 15 22 112
Pcts: FG .530, FT .609. 3-ptrs: 10-24, .417 (Irving
5-7, James 4-8, Smith 1-2, Jefferson 0-1, Shumpert 0-1, Dellavedova 0-2, Love 0-3). Blk: 9
(James 3, Shumpert 2, T.Thompson 2, Irving,
Love). TO: 16 (Irving 4, Jefferson 3, Dellavedova
2, James 2, Love 2, Shumpert, Smith, Williams).
Stl: 11 (James 3, Jefferson 3, Irving 2, Shumpert, Smith, T.Thompson).
G.S.
MN FG-A FT-A REB A PF PTS
Barnes 37:54 2-14
0-2
1-5 1 1 5
Iguodala 41:02 6-13
2-2 4-11 6 0 15
Bogut
7:35
0-0
0-0
1-3 0 4 0
Curry
40:07 8-21
4-4
2-7 4 2 25
KThmpsn 40:31 11-20
9-9
0-3 1 2 37
Lvngstn 21:13
3-7
1-1
1-4 3 1 7
Speights 11:20
0-6
0-0
1-3 2 2 0
Barbosa 9:53
1-3
0-0
0-0 0 3 3
Ezeli
9:31
1-3
0-0
2-3 0 2 2
Varejao
8:37
0-0
3-8
1-1 1 0 3
McAdoo 7:37
0-0
0-0
0-2 0 3 0
Rush
4:41
0-1
0-0
0-1 0 1 0
TOTALS
32-88 19-26 13-43 18 21 97
Pcts: FG .364, FT .731. 3-ptrs: 14-42, .333
(K.Thompson 6-11, Curry 5-14, Barbosa 1-2, Iguodala 1-4, Barnes 1-6, Livingston 0-1, Rush 0-1,
Speights 0-3). Blk: 9 (Bogut 3, Curry 3, Barnes,
Ezeli, Rush). TO: 17 (Curry 4, Iguodala 3, Livingston 3, Barbosa 2, Bogut 2, Speights 2,
K.Thompson). Stl: 6 (Iguodala 2, Barnes, Livingston, Rush, Speights).
Cleveland
Golden State
29
32
32
29
32
23
19—112
13— 97
PITTSBURGH — When
the Penguins won the Stanley Cup in 2009, a dynasty
appeared to be in the offing.
It didn’t quite work out that
way. Injuries and inconsistent postseason play sent
the franchise into a fullfledged identity crisis.
The long, seemingly interminable wait for Sidney
Crosby and Evgeni Malkin
to bookend the championship they helped capture
seven years ago came to a
blissful, euphoric end Sunday night in San Jose, Calif.
Their six-game triumph
over the Sharks in the final
capped a meteoric sixmonth sprint under Mike
Sullivan, whose arrival in
mid-December provided
the wake-up call the talented but erratic roster
desperately needed.
“It’s not an easy win in
this league,” Malkin said.
“Every team in the league
deserves to win. We play
against San Jose and they
haven’t won in 25 years. It’s
not easy.”
Maybe, but for the Penguins the path might be
smoother than most. The
group that poured over the
boards and onto the ice
when the horn sounded at
the end of a 100-game-plus
marathon that spanned
from September to June
appears to be well-appointed for the future
thanks to a series of moves
by general manager Jim
Rutherford to build around
his two stars.
Oddsmakers made the
Penguins an early favorite
to win it all again next year,
heady territory considering
there hasn’t been a repeat
champion in nearly two
BRUCE BENNETT/GETTY
Penguins co-owner and chairman Mario Lemieux, right,
embraces star Sidney Crosby after Sunday’s clincher.
decades. Then again,
there’s reason to be optimistic the run at the top
that seemed a near certainty in 2009 could still
come to fruition, if later
than expected.
The core of Crosby, Malkin, forward Phil Kessel
and defensemen Kris Letang and Olli Maatta are all
30 or under and all signed
through at least 2022. Goaltender Matt Murray —
whose 15 wins in the playoffs tied an NHL rookie
record — turned 22 last
month. Young forwards
Bryan Rust, Conor Sheary
and Tom Kuhnhackl are in
their mid-20s. Carl Hagelin, Nick Bonino and Patric
Hornqvist will be back.
So will Sullivan, who
began the season molding
prospects for the Penguins’
American Hockey League
affiliate in Wilkes-Barre/
Scranton.
He ended it posing at
center ice with his sport’s
biggest trophy.
THE SCHEDULE
May 30: PITTSBURGH 3-2
June 1: PITTSBURGH 2-1 (OT)
June 4: SAN JOSE 3-2 (OT)
June 6: Pittsburgh 3-1
June 9: San Jose 4-2
June 12: Pittsburgh 3-1
Home team in CAPS
Penguins in Stanley Cup finals:
4-1 in series (18-11 overall records)
SUNDAY: PENGUINS 3, SHARKS 1
A: 17,562
GOALS
SHOTS
PP
Pittsburgh
1 1 1—3
9 11 7—27 1-2
San Jose
0 1 0—1
4 13 2—19 0-2
FIRST PERIOD:
1, Pit, Dumoulin 2 (Schultz, Kunitz), 8:16 (pp).
Penalty: Zubrus, SJ (tripping), 7:50.
SECOND PERIOD:
2, SJ, Couture 10 (Karlsson, Burns), 6:27.
3, Pit, Letang 3 (Crosby, Sheary), 7:46.
THIRD PERIOD:
4, Pit, Hornqvist 9 (Crosby), 18:58 (en).
Penalties_Sheary, Pit (hooking), 5:26;
Burns, SJ (slashing), 11:02;
Fehr, Pit (high-sticking), 19:50.
GOALIES
REC
SH SV SV%
Pit, Matt Murray
14-6-0
19
18
.947
SJ, Martin Jones 14-9-0 26
24
.923
Referees: Wes McCauley, Kelly Sutherland.
Linesmen: Brian Murphy, Pierre Racicot.
RECENT STANLEY CUP CHAMPIONS
2015: Chicago d. Tampa Bay, 4-2
2014: Los Angeles d. N.Y. Rangers, 4-1
2013: Chicago d. Boston, 4-2
2012: Los Angeles d. New Jersey, 4-2
2011: Boston d. Vancouver, 4-3
2010: Chicago d. Philadelphia, 4-2
2009: Pittsburgh d. Detroit, 4-3
2008: Detroit d. Pittsburgh, 4-2
CONN-SMYTHE TROPHY
MVP in the Stanley Cup playoffs:
2016: Sidney Crosby, Pittsburgh C
2015: Duncan Keith, Chicago D
2014: Justin Williams, Los Angeles RW
2013: Patrick Kane, Chicago RW
6
THE BALTIMORE SUN |
SPORTS
| TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
(#+--&'&)* "+!%),$#+()
%0*(/ +&#0 !/*' ) +.,,.&' #0*10#" * 200-$
3&+(& .,=& 8+ ,-:!-(
8+;(&"!%(058:"!7,&(%=-04,7
9"$% '8%" 8-+ (8%.1
6!%!" 58:"!7,&(%=-04,7/4:8%%!)(+ ',& 7,&( <,5%2 48&%2 #,7(%2 8*8&"7(-"% 8-+ %"='' ● ."-*+ -& -,/ $%()#'0)!!((
LEGAL NOTICES
CARROLL COUNTY FORECLOSURE
NOTICE
The following attorneys are applicants for nomination to Governor
Hogan for appointment to the District Court for Baltimore County:
Sheryl D. H. Atkins
Michael Salvatore Barranco
Susan Anne Bechtel
Andrew Michael Belt
Harold Lee Burgin
Alan Royce Lee Bussard
Robert Alec Cohen
Bruce Edelman Friedman
Garret Peter Glennon
Debra Jill Green
Michael B. Hamburg
Kendra Randall Jolivet
Ari Jason Kodeck
Edwin Stanton MacVaugh
Mala Malhotra-Ortiz
Michael A. Mastracci
Lisa Ann Phelps
Karen Ann Pilarski
Keith Dana Pion
Ernest Michael Reitz
Kirk Seaman
Lisa Yvette Settles
Ephraim R. Siff
Daniel Bernard Trimble
Rodney Clinton Warren
Allan James Webster
Susan Chambers Zellweger
The Trial Courts Judicial Nominating Commission for Commission
District 3 – Baltimore County - will accept signed, written
comments regarding the listed applicants for use in its evaluation
process. Comments must be received by Wednesday, July 20, 2016.
Please address your comments to:
Trial Courts Judicial Nominating Commission for Commission
District 3
c/o Administrative Office of the Courts
Human Resources Department
Maryland Judicial Center
580 Taylor Avenue, Building A, First Floor
Annapolis, MD 21401
Debra L. Kaminski or Connie Winkel
(410) 260-1271 or (410) 260-1275
FAX: (410) 974-2849
debra.kaminski@mdcourts.gov
connie.winkel@mdcourts.gov
Maryland Relay Service: TTY/Voice (800) 735-2258
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR CARROLL COUNTY, MARYLAND
Diane S. RoSenbeRg, MaRk D. MeyeR,
John a. anSell, iii, kenneth Savitz,
JennifeR Rochino
7910 WooDMont avenue, Suite 750
betheSDa, MaRylanD 20814
Substitute trustee(s)
Plaintiff(s)
vs.
JaMeS foRSteR, MeRRyl foRSteR
2113 SykeSville RoaD
WeStMinSteR, MD 21157
Defendant(s)
CASE No. 06C16070442
NOTICE
notice is hereby given this 1st day of June, 2016, by the circuit
court for carroll county, Maryland, that the sale of 2113 Sykesville
Road, Westminster, MD 21157, made and reported, will be ratified
and confirmed, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on
or before the 1st day of July, 2016, provided a copy of this notice be
inserted in a daily newspaper printed in said county, once in each of
three successive weeks before the 22nd day of June, 2016.
the Report of Sale states the amount of the foreclosure sale price
to be $650,000.00.
DonalD b Sealing, ii,
clerk of the circuit court
carroll county, MD
24-Q June 7, 14, 21
4236100
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR CARROLL COUNTY, MARYLAND
Diane S. RoSenbeRg, MaRk D. MeyeR,
John a. anSell, iii, kenneth Savitz,
JennifeR Rochino
7910 WooDMont avenue, Suite 750
betheSDa, MaRylanD 20814
Substitute trustee(s)
Plaintiff(s)
vs.
anDRea M vanieR, StePhanie giggy toM
5472 fReteR RoaD
SykeSville, MD 21784
Defendant(s)
CASE No. 06C15070342
NOTICE
notice is hereby given this 7th day of June, 2016, by the circuit
court for carroll county, Maryland, that the sale of 5272 freter
Road, Sykesville, MD 21784, made and reported, will be ratified and
confirmed, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or
before the 7th day of July, 2016, provided a copy of this notice be
inserted in a daily newspaper printed in said county, once in each of
three successive weeks before the 29th day of June, 2016.
the Report of Sale states the amount of the foreclosure sale price
to be $517,000.00.
DonalD b Sealing, ii,
clerk of the circuit court
carroll county, MD
25-J June 14, 21, 28
4248936
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR CARROLL COUNTY, MARYLAND
Laura H.G. O’SuLLivan, et aL.,
Substitute trustee(s)
Plaintiff(s)
vs.
COnan D. LLOyD anD SaraH a. LLOyD
Defendant(s)
Civil No. 06C15070411
NOTICE
OrDereD, this 26th day of May 2016 by the Circuit Court of
CarrOLL COunty, Maryland, that the sale of the property at 7070
Macbeth Way, Sykesville, Maryland 21784 mentioned in these
proceedings, made and reported by Laura H.G. O’Sullivan, et. al,
Substitute trustees, be ratified and confirmed, unless cause to the
contrary thereof be shown on or before the 26th day of June, 2016,
next, provided a copy of this notice be inserted in some newspaper
published in said County once in each of three successive weeks
before the 15th day of June, 2016, next.
the report states the amount of sale to be $177,000.00.
DOnaLD B SeaLinG, ii,
Clerk of the Circuit Court
Carroll County, Maryland
23-X May 31, June 7, 14
NOTICE OF VESSEL ARREST
United States District Court for
the District of Maryland
M/V JUST HANGIN’ OUT
Civil Action No.: 16-cv-01789-JFM
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the
United States Marshal arrested
the M/V JUST HANGIN’ OUT
on June 3, 2016. Any person
asserting a right of possession
or any ownership interest
in the property pursuant to
Supplemental Rule C(6) must
file a statement of such interest
with the Clerk and serve it on the
attorney for the plaintiff within 14
days after this publication. An
answer to the complaint must be
filed and served within 21 days
after the filing of the statement
of interest or right. Otherwise
default may be entered and
condemnation ordered. Motions
to intervene under FRCP 24 by
persons asserting maritime liens
or other interests shall be filed
within a time fixed by the Court.
4218477
SBE/VOSB/SDVOSB/
HUBZone/SDB/WBE/MBE
Subcontractors and
Suppliers
Ulliman Schutte Construction,
LLC., Miamisburg, OH is interested in receiving quotes from
qualified SBE, VOSB, SDVOSB,
HUBZone, SDB, WBE, and MBE
contractors and suppliers for
the Perry Point Potable Water
System Improvements project
in Perry Point, MD bidding on
June 23. Bid opportunities are
available for Divisions 2 through
41. Subcontractors are encouraged to break down scopes
of work which they can confidently and competitively bid. If
a scope of work is too large, it
is encouraged for DBEs to bid
as a consortium. If you need
assistance with bonding and
insurance, Ulliman Schutte may
be able to help.
Contract Documents are available at: www.ullimanschutte.
com/documents/bids
Username: Vendor
Password: VenDocs13
Please email quotes to Ben
Simcik at:
bsimcik@ullimanschutte.com
United States Marshal: Johnny
L. Hughes, 6115 U.S. Courthouse,
101 W. Lombard Street, Baltimore,
MD 21201, 410-962-2519
Ulliman Schutte Construction
9111 Springboro Pike
Miamisburg, OH 45342
P: 937-910-9900
www.ullimanschutte.com
Equal Opportunity Employer
827063
Notice of Public Sale
For Failure to Pay Rent, the following property will be sold on
StorageBattles.com at 1:30pm
June 16th at Storage King USA
Belcamp 1339 Belcamp Road,
Belcamp, MD 21017 PH: 410272-7272. (CASH ONLY & ITEMS
ARE SOLD AS IS).
Substitute Custodian: Bay Harbor
Boat Yard, 6029 Herring Bay
Road, Deale, Maryland 20751,
410-867-6290.
Unit
2028 Jessica Chewning
G015 Angelina Schulz
3035 Anthony Hrynyshen
Counsel for Denise Klein t/a Bay
Harbor Boat Yard: J. Stephen
Simms (#4269), Simms Showers
LLP, 201 International Circle,
Suite 250, Hunt Valley, MD 21030,
410-783-5795
FRANCHISE AGREEMENT
BY AND AMONG
BALTIMORE COUNTY, MARYLAND and
HARBOR FIBER INSTALLATIONS, LLC trading as
HARBOR FIBER & DATA SOLUTIONS, LLC
Pursuant to the provisions of Section 3-9-201 of the
Baltimore County Code, as amended, notice is hereby given that
Baltimore County, Maryland, is reviewing an application by Harbor
Fiber Installations, LLC trading as Harbor Fiber & Data Solutions,
LLC for a non-exclusive franchise for the property, for property
in rights of way of certain roads in Baltimore County, Maryland
21030, the proposed route starting first at a point located on the
north side of Shawan Road (variable width) approximately 45.5 feet
right of baseline station 7+87.7 as shown on a Plat entitled “Plan to
Accompany Right-of-Way Agreement County Commissioners of
Baltimore County” recorded in Highways Liber No. 15D folio 410;
thence by a straight line to a point located 32 feet right of baseline
station of 5+72.5 as shown on the above mentioned plat; thence and
also by a straight line to a point 29.5 feet right of baseline station
3+50 as shown of the aforementioned plat and to the easternmost
Baltimore County right-of-way limit of Shawan Road and starting
second at a point located on easternmost side of the State Roads
Commission right-of-way (variable width) approximately 25.5 feet
right of the Base Line of Right of Way station 57+42.1 as shown
on a State Roads Commission Plat No. 49500; thence by a straight
line within a Baltimore County right-of-way described in a Deed
and Agreement dated March 6, 1981 conveyed by North Park Associates unto Baltimore County recorded among the Land Records
of Baltimore County in Liber 6288 folio 134 and said right-of-way
being shown and designated as “Future Shawan Road” on a Plat
entitled “Combined Lots No. 1 & 3 North Park” recorded among
the Land Records of Baltimore County in Plat Book 54 folio 97 to
a point 8.6 feet to the south and at a right angle from a point 293.4
feet from the end of the South 87 degrees 05 minutes 00 seconds
West 585.28 foot line also being the southernmost line as shown on
the last mentioned plat; thence by a straight line to a point on and
293.4 feet also from the end of the South 87 degrees 05 minutes 00
seconds West 585.28 foot line.
Franchisee seeks an approximate 797 foot nonexclusive franchise for the purpose of installing fiber optic cable
and thereafter maintaining the improvements.
The initial Term of the Franchise Agreement and
associated franchise shall be thirty-five (35) years. hereafter, the
County shall have the option of extending the Franchise Agreement
and associated franchise for two (2) successive terms of not more
than twenty-five (25) years each.
As Base Compensation for the Initial Term, Franchisee shall pay the County Five Thousand Five Hundred Thirty-Two
Dollars and Zero cents ($5,532.00), which shall be subject to
revaluation no more than once every five (5) years after the date of
execution of the Franchise Agreement, and any renewal thereof, in
accordance with the provisions of the Baltimore County Code, as
amended.
A complete statement of the terms and conditions
of the Franchise Agreement may be obtained from the Baltimore
County Real Estate Compliance, County Office Building, 111 W.
Chesapeake Avenue, Towson, MD 21204.
Any persons having specific objections to the
proposed Franchise Agreement must file said objections, in writing,
with the Director, Department of Permits, Approvals and Inspections, 111 West Chesapeake Avenue, Towson, Maryland 21204.
The Director must receive any written objections no later than July
8, 2016. The County Administrative Officer or his designee shall
schedule a time and place for hearing any valid objections filed.
Name: Albert Schuele
Title: Owner
Company: Harbor Fiber Installation, LLC
Address: 9624 Deereco Road
City, State, Zip Lutherville, MD 21093
Business Phone: (443-799-4334
Email: harborfiberanddata@gmail.com
Fax: 410-252-7450
CARROLL COUNTY FORECLOSURE
BWW Law Group, LLC
6003 Executive Boulevard, Suite 101
Rockville, MD 20852
(301) 961-6555
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES' SALE
Monday-Friday 9:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
Legal notices accepted until 5 P.M.
Saturday 10:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M.
Sunday 10:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M.
Death notices only on weekends
BWW Law Group, LLC
6003 Executive Boulevard, Suite 101
Rockville, MD 20852
(301) 961-6555
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES' SALE
OF REAL PROPERTY AND
ANY IMPROVEMENTS THEREON
321 MONTPELIER CT.
WESTMINSTER, MD 21157
Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust
dated October 28, 2005 and recorded in Liber 4666, Folio
573 among the Land Records of Carroll Co., MD, with an
original principal balance of $308,500.00 and a current
interest rate of 4.71000% default having occurred under the
terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at
the Circuit Court for Carroll Co., at the Old Court House
Door, Court St. Side, Westminster, on
JUNE 24, 2016 AT 10:46 AM
ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND, together with any
buildings or improvements thereon situated in Carroll Co.,
MD and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust.
The property, and any improvements thereon, will be sold
in an "as is" condition and subject to conditions, restrictions
and agreements of record affecting the same, if any, and
with no warranty of any kind.
Terms of Sale: A deposit of $31,000 in the form of certified check, cashier’s check or money order will be required
of the purchaser at time and place of sale. Balance of the
purchase price, together with interest on the unpaid purchase money at the current rate contained in the Deed of
Trust Note from the date of sale to the date funds are
received by the Sub. Trustees, payable in cash within ten
days of final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court.
There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event additional funds are tendered before
settlement. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE FOR THE PURCHASER.
Adjustment of current year’s real property taxes are adjusted as of the date of sale, and thereafter assumed by the
purchaser. Taxes due for prior years including costs of any
tax sale are payable by the purchaser. Purchaser is responsible for any recapture of homestead tax credit. All other
public and/or private charges or assessments, to the extent
such amounts survive foreclosure sale, including water/sewer charges, ground rent, whether incurred prior to or
after the sale to be paid by the purchaser. All costs of deed
recordation including but not limited to all transfer, recordation, agricultural or other taxes or charges assessed by
any governmental entity as a condition to recordation, are
payable by purchaser, whether or not purchaser is a Maryland First Time Home Buyer. Purchaser is responsible for
obtaining physical possession of the property, and assumes
risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale.
The sale is subject to post-sale audit of the status of the
loan with the loan servicer including, but not limited to,
determination of whether the borrower entered into any
repayment agreement, reinstated or paid off the loan prior
to the sale. In any such event, this sale shall be null and
void, and the Purchaser’s sole remedy, in law or equity,
shall be the return of the deposit without interest. If purchaser fails to settle within ten days of ratification, subject
to order of court, purchaser agrees that property will be
resold and entire deposit retained by Sub Trustees as liquidated damages for all losses occasioned by the purchaser’s
default and purchaser shall have no further liability. The
defaulted purchaser shall not be entitled to any surplus
proceeds resulting from said resale even if such surplus
results from improvements to the property by said defaulted
purchaser. If Sub. Trustees are unable to convey either
insurable or marketable title, or if ratification of the sale is
denied by the Circuit Court for any reason, the Purchaser’s
sole remedy, at law or equity, is the return of the deposit
without interest.
PLEASE CONSULT WWW.ALEXCOOPER.COM FOR
STATUS OF UPCOMING SALES
Howard N. Bierman, Carrie M. Ward, et al.,
Substitute Trustees
OF REAL PROPERTY AND
ANY IMPROVEMENTS THEREON
208 OPAL AVE.
WESTMINSTER, MD 21157
Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust
dated May 25, 2012 and recorded in Liber 6943, Folio 185
among the Land Records of Carroll Co., MD, with an original
principal balance of $243,000.00 and a current interest rate
of 3.87500% default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at the Circuit
Court for Carroll Co., at the Old Court House Door, Court St.
Side, Westminster, on
JULY 1, 2016 AT 10:45 AM
ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND, together with any
buildings or improvements thereon situated in Carroll Co.,
MD and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust.
The property, and any improvements thereon, will be sold
in an "as is" condition and subject to conditions, restrictions
and agreements of record affecting the same, if any, and
with no warranty of any kind.
Terms of Sale: A deposit of $23,000 in the form of certified check, cashier’s check or money order will be required
of the purchaser at time and place of sale. Balance of the
purchase price, together with interest on the unpaid purchase money at the current rate contained in the Deed of
Trust Note from the date of sale to the date funds are
received by the Sub. Trustees, payable in cash within ten
days of final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court.
There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event additional funds are tendered before
settlement. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE FOR THE PURCHASER.
Adjustment of current year’s real property taxes are adjusted as of the date of sale, and thereafter assumed by the
purchaser. Taxes due for prior years including costs of any
tax sale are payable by the purchaser. Purchaser is responsible for any recapture of homestead tax credit. All other
public and/or private charges or assessments, to the extent
such amounts survive foreclosure sale, including water/sewer charges, ground rent, whether incurred prior to or
after the sale to be paid by the purchaser. All costs of deed
recordation including but not limited to all transfer, recordation, agricultural or other taxes or charges assessed by
any governmental entity as a condition to recordation, are
payable by purchaser, whether or not purchaser is a Maryland First Time Home Buyer. Purchaser is responsible for
obtaining physical possession of the property, and assumes
risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale.
The sale is subject to post-sale audit of the status of the
loan with the loan servicer including, but not limited to,
determination of whether the borrower entered into any
repayment agreement, reinstated or paid off the loan prior
to the sale. In any such event, this sale shall be null and
void, and the Purchaser’s sole remedy, in law or equity,
shall be the return of the deposit without interest. If purchaser fails to settle within ten days of ratification, subject
to order of court, purchaser agrees that property will be
resold and entire deposit retained by Sub Trustees as liquidated damages for all losses occasioned by the purchaser’s
default and purchaser shall have no further liability. The
defaulted purchaser shall not be entitled to any surplus
proceeds resulting from said resale even if such surplus
results from improvements to the property by said defaulted
purchaser. If Sub. Trustees are unable to convey either
insurable or marketable title, or if ratification of the sale is
denied by the Circuit Court for any reason, the Purchaser’s
sole remedy, at law or equity, is the return of the deposit
without interest.
PLEASE CONSULT WWW.ALEXCOOPER.COM FOR
STATUS OF UPCOMING SALES
Howard N. Bierman, Carrie M. Ward, et al.,
Substitute Trustees
25-G June 14, 21, 28
IF YOU SUSPECT AN ADVERTISER IS FRAUDULENT,
PLEASE CONTACT US AT 410-332-6146
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DPMT.
HOURS OF OPERATION:
BALTIMORE CITY FORECLOSURE
ADVERTISING DISCLAIMER
The Baltimore Sun reserves the right to revise, reject or
edit any advertisement or portion thereof at its sole
discretion. Claims for errors must be made within 14
days of an ad appearing. The maximum liability of The
Baltimore Sun for any error in printing or in the day of
publication shall not exceed the cost of advertisement.
To correct ads appearing more than once, it is the
responsibility of the advertiser to notify The Sun of any
errors to correct subsequent insertions.
4248873
24-B June 7, 14, 21
4234860
BWW Law Group, LLC
6003 Executive Boulevard, Suite 101
Rockville, MD 20852
(301) 961-6555
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES' SALE
OF REAL PROPERTY AND
ANY IMPROVEMENTS THEREON
56 CARROLL VIEW AVE.
WESTMINSTER, MD 21157
Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust
dated July 3, 2007 and recorded in Liber 5293, Folio 114
among the Land Records of Carroll Co., MD, with an original
principal balance of $175,900.00 and a current interest rate
of 6.62500% default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at the Circuit
Court for Carroll Co., at the Old Court House Door, Court St.
Side, Westminster, on
JUNE 24, 2016 AT 10:45 AM
ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND, together with any
buildings or improvements thereon situated in Carroll Co.,
MD and described as Unit 56, Building Group D, The
Condominiums at Carroll View and more fully described in
the aforesaid Deed of Trust.
The property, and any improvements thereon, will be sold
in an "as is" condition and subject to conditions, restrictions
and agreements of record affecting the same, if any, and
with no warranty of any kind.
Terms of Sale: A deposit of $17,000 in the form of certified check, cashier’s check or money order will be required
of the purchaser at time and place of sale. Balance of the
purchase price, together with interest on the unpaid purchase money at the current rate contained in the Deed of
Trust Note from the date of sale to the date funds are
received by the Sub. Trustees, payable in cash within ten
days of final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court.
There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event additional funds are tendered before
settlement. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE FOR THE PURCHASER.
Adjustment of current year’s real property taxes are adjusted as of the date of sale, and thereafter assumed by the
purchaser. Taxes due for prior years including costs of any
tax sale are payable by the purchaser. Purchaser is responsible for any recapture of homestead tax credit. All other
public and/or private charges or assessments, to the extent
such amounts survive foreclosure sale, including water/sewer charges, ground rent, whether incurred prior to or
after the sale to be paid by the purchaser. All costs of deed
recordation including but not limited to all transfer, recordation, agricultural or other taxes or charges assessed by
any governmental entity as a condition to recordation, are
payable by purchaser, whether or not purchaser is a Maryland First Time Home Buyer. Purchaser is responsible for
obtaining physical possession of the property, and assumes
risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale.
The sale is subject to post-sale audit of the status of the
loan with the loan servicer including, but not limited to,
determination of whether the borrower entered into any
repayment agreement, reinstated or paid off the loan prior
to the sale. In any such event, this sale shall be null and
void, and the Purchaser’s sole remedy, in law or equity,
shall be the return of the deposit without interest. If purchaser fails to settle within ten days of ratification, subject
to order of court, purchaser agrees that property will be
resold and entire deposit retained by Sub Trustees as liquidated damages for all losses occasioned by the purchaser’s
default and purchaser shall have no further liability. The
defaulted purchaser shall not be entitled to any surplus
proceeds resulting from said resale even if such surplus
results from improvements to the property by said defaulted
purchaser. If Sub. Trustees are unable to convey either
insurable or marketable title, or if ratification of the sale is
denied by the Circuit Court for any reason, the Purchaser’s
sole remedy, at law or equity, is the return of the deposit
without interest.
PLEASE CONSULT WWW.ALEXCOOPER.COM FOR
STATUS OF UPCOMING SALES
Howard N. Bierman, Carrie M. Ward, et al.,
Substitute Trustees
24-A June 7, 14, 21
4233315
Cars.com
Service & Repair
Know the cost for labor and parts in your area
so you don’t pay more than you should.
Research. Price. Find. Get the right service,
without all the drama.
Rosenberg Martin Greenberg, LLP
25 South Charles Street, 21st Floor
Baltimore, Maryland 21201
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE
OF 1701 N. ELLAMONT
BALTIMORE, MD 21216
F/K/A SANDI’S LEARNING CENTER
Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in that
certain Deed of Trust, Security Agreement, Fixture Filing,
and Assignment of Rents dated March 6, 2008 (the “Deed of
Trust”), to the trustees named therein for the benefit of the
holder of the indebtedness (the “Noteholder”), recorded
among the Land Records of Baltimore City, Maryland, in
Liber 10546, folio 719, and whereas, Bob Van Galoubandi
and Harris W. Eisenstein, Substitute Trustees (the “Trustees”) were substituted and appointed as trustees under
said Deed of Trust pursuant to a Deed of Appointment of
Substitute Trustees, dated September 19, 2014, recorded
among the Land Records of Baltimore City, Maryland, in
Liber 16571, folio 230, and whereas, a default having occurred under the terms of said Deed of Trust, and at the
request of the Noteholder, the Trustees will offer for sale to
the highest qualified bidder at a public auction, at the
Baltimore City Courthouse, located at 100 N. Calvert St.,
Baltimore, MD 21202 (Courthouse West), on:
Wednesday, June 29, 2016
at 10:00 a.m.
ALL OF THAT property and any improvements thereon being
part of the real property described in the Deed of Trust, and
situate in Baltimore City, Maryland (the “Property”), as
follows:
BEGINNING for the same thereof at the corner formed by
the intersection of the east side of Ellamont Street (formerly
called Tenth Street West) with the north side of Presbury
Street and running northerly bounding on the east side of
Ellamont Street 100 feet, thence easterly parallel with
Presbury Street 128 feet 4 inches to the west of an alley 10
feet wide there situated and running from Presbury Street
to the Westwood Avenue; thence southerly binding on the
west side of said alley with the use thereof in common with
others 100 feet to the north side of Presbury Street and
thence westerly binding of the north side of Presbury Street
128 feet ½ inches to the place of beginning.
The improvements thereof being known as 1701 N. Ellamont Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21216. The tax account
number for the Property is 15-03-2429-013.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit in the amount of Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000.00), payable in cash, cashier’s check,
or other form acceptable to the Trustees, will be required of
the purchaser at the time and place of the sale for the
Property. The balance of the purchase price shall be due in
cash or by certified check with interest on the unpaid
balance of the purchase price at the rate of Six Percent (6%)
per annum from the date of sale to and including the date of
settlement. In the event the Noteholder, its servicer or an
affiliate, or designee, is the purchaser, such party will not be
required to make a deposit or to pay interest on the unpaid
purchase money. All real property taxes, water rent, and all
other municipal charges and liens owed against the Property shall be the responsibility of the purchaser and shall be
paid by the purchaser at settlement. In addition, all other
charges, expenses and liens owed against the Property
including, but not limited to, all condominium fees (if any),
HOA fees (if any), and expenses and public charges and
assessments owed against the Property and payable on a
periodic basis, such as sanitary and/or metropolitan district
charges shall also be the responsibility of the purchaser and
shall be paid by the purchaser at settlement. The cost of all
documentary stamps, recordation taxes, document preparation and transfer taxes is to be paid by the purchaser. The
Trustees reserve the right to reject any and all bids, and to
extend the time for settlement, if applicable.
The Property will be sold in “AS IS” condition and without
any warranties or representations, either express or implied, as to the nature, condition or description of the
improvements. In addition, the Property will also be sold
subject to all existing housing, building and zoning code
violations, subject to all critical area and wetland violations,
subject to all environmental problems and violations which
may exist on or with respect to the Property, and subject to
all matters and restrictions of record affecting the same (if
any). The purchaser at the foreclosure sale shall assume
the risk of loss for the above-referenced Property immediately after the sale takes place. It shall be the purchaser’s
responsibility to obtain possession of the Property following
ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court for Baltimore
City.
The Property will be sold subject to all easements, conditions, senior liens, taxes, restrictions, rights of redemption
(including the 120 day right of redemption of the United
States), covenants, encumbrances, agreements of record,
and such state of facts that an accurate survey or physical
inspection of the Property might disclose (if any) that are
not otherwise extinguished by operation of law.
The purchaser shall pay all state and local transfer taxes,
recordation taxes and fees, title examination costs, attorneys’ fees, conveyance fees and all other incidental settlement costs. The purchaser shall settle and comply with the
sale terms within twenty (20) days following the final ratification of sale by the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, unless
said period is extended by the Trustees for good cause
shown. Time is of the essence. Unless the Trustees otherwise agree, settlement shall be held at the offices of Rosenberg Martin Greenberg, LLP, 25 South Charles Street, Suite
2115, Baltimore, Maryland 21201.
In the event the purchaser fails to go to settlement as
required, in addition to any other legal or equitable remedies available to them, the Trustees may, without further
order of the court, declare the aforementioned deposit
forfeited and resell the Property at the purchaser’s risk and
expense. In such event, the defaulting purchaser shall be
liable for the payment of any deficiency in the purchase
price, all costs and expenses of both sales, reasonable
attorneys’ fees, all other charges due, and incidental damages. In the event a resale of the Property results in a sale
in excess of the amount originally bid by the defaulting
purchaser, the defaulting purchaser waives any and all
claims, rights and interest to any such excess amount and
shall not be entitled to any distribution whatsoever from the
resale proceeds. The parties’ respective rights and obligations regarding the terms of sale and the conduct of the sale
shall be governed by and interpreted according to the laws
of the State of Maryland.
If the Trustees are unable to convey the Property as
described above, the purchaser’s sole remedy at law or in
equity shall be limited to the refund of the aforementioned
deposit, without interest thereon. Upon refund of the
deposit to the purchaser, the sale shall be void and of no
effect, and the purchaser shall have no further claim against
the Trustees or the Noteholder.
The information contained herein was obtained from
sources deemed to be reliable, but is offered for informational purposes only. The Noteholder and the Trustees do
not make any representations or warranties with respect to
the accuracy of this information.
Bob Van Galoubandi, Harris W. Eisenstein
Substitute Trustees
For further information, contact:
Bob Van Galoubandi, Esq.
Rosenberg Martin Greenberg, LLP
25 S. Charles Street, 21st Floor
Baltimore, Maryland 21201
(410) 727-6600
25-I June 14, 21, 28
4248913
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 |
SPORTS
7
| THE BALTIMORE SUN
AUCTIONS
REAL ESTATE AUCTION
!Maryland Eastern Shore!
Just East of Chesapeake Bay Bridge
5.82± ACRE COMMERCIAL
DEVELOPMENT PARCEL
$44,700 Current Annual Income
REAL ESTATE AUCTION
SOUTHEAST BALTIMORE
Highlandtown Area
COMMERCIAL BUILDING
Arranged for Bar, Liquor Store & Apartments
0.20± ACRE PARKING LOT
Separate Tax Bill - Zoned M-3 Industrial
- 2 Operating Billboards -
Substantial Frontage Along
US 50/301, MD-18 & COX CREEK
- 7 DAY BEER, WINE & LIQUOR LICENSE -
Sale On Premises
Sale On Premises
103 SHOPPING CENTER RD.
WED., JUNE 15, 2016
AT 11:00 A.M.
Known as “O’Ryan’s Pub”
High visibility waterfront parcel is zoned TC, Town Center
District, permitting a multitude of commercial and residential
land uses. Currently occupied by a used car lot, Clear Channel
billboard and snow ball stand, the site has tremendous potential.
A $50,000 deposit by cashier’s check is at time of sale. Please
see our web site or call for complete details, photos and terms.
No Buyer’s Premium
A. J. BILLIG & CO. 410-296-8440
AUCTIONEERS
6500 FALLS RD. • BALTO., MD 21209 www.ajbillig.com
Deposits (Cashier’s Check): $10,000 on 53-55 S. Kresson St.,
and furniture, fixtures & equipment; $5,000 on 4400-4410
E. Lombard St.; $5,000 on the liquor license; or $20,000
on the entirety. See our website for property details,
photos, full terms of sale and registration information.
A. J. BILLIG & CO. 410-296-8440
AUCTIONEERS
6500 FALLS RD. • BALTO., MD 21209
On The Respective Premises
At 11:00 A.M. - Semi-Detached Home
3903 WILKE AVENUE
“Waltherson”
Baltimore City 21206
$20,000 suggested opening bid - two story covered porchfront brick townhome contains living room,
dining room, kitchen, 2 bedrooms, bath, basement;
lot size 26’ x 110’ m/l; in fee simple. Deposit $3,000.
At 12:30 P.M. - Cape Cod Home
1019 SUMTER AVENUE
“Rosedale”
Baltimore County, MD 21237
$50,000 suggested opening bid - two story
vinyl sided home with garage and deck, contains
living room, eat-in kitchen, 4 bedrooms, bath; lot
size 50’ x 300’ m/l; in fee simple. Deposit $5,000.
Deposits are payable by cashier’s check at time of sale. Please
see our web site or call for complete details, photos and terms.
A. J. BILLIG & CO. 410-296-8440
AUCTIONEERS
6500 FALLS RD. • BALTO., MD 21209
www.ajbillig.com
3
HIGH VISIBILITY
FELLS POINT BUILDINGS
“ARCOS” RESTAURANT
Huge Patio, Multiple Bars, Full Kitchen
With Two Large Turn-Key Apartments
410.825.2900
★★★ AUTO AUCTION ★★★
SALES EVERY THURSDAY • Next Sale:
Thursday, June 16 • 9:00 am
REGISTRATION & INSPECTION
Featuring repossessed assets
STARTING AT 8:00 a.m.
from area Credit Unions, Banks
and other Financial Institutions. To view autos being offered this week
NOTE: In order to Bid on a car a
$1,000 buyers deposit is required and refunded
day of sale if a
purchase is not
made. If you are
attending the
Public Sale and not
bidding a deposit is
not required.
go to: www.bscamerica.com
& click on Lane 6.
PUBLIC WELCOME!
BelAir Auto Auction
803 Belair Rd.
Bel Air, MD 21014
410-879-7950
JUNE 16th
Session begins at 12 PM
Sat.,
JUNE 18th
Session begins at 10 AM
Decorative Arts; Period and Quality
Reproduction and Modern Furniture;
Chinese Export Porcelain; European
Art Glass; Sculpture; Sports
Memorabilia; Dolls; Books; Clocks;
Paintings & Prints and Oriental Rugs
Auction to be held in our gallery at
908 York Road • Towson, MD
Auction to be held on the premises
2605 Old Court Rd. • Brooklandville, MD 21022
THURS., JUNE 16 @ 11:00AM
Designed by Notable Baltimore Architectual Firm Mottu
& White, the 3 story home includes over 5,500± SF with 6+
bedrooms, 4 full/1 half baths, multiple fireplaces, outdoor
portico and original detail throughout the home.
Call Jared Block at 443-804-1418. $25,000 Deposit.
5% Buyer’s Premium. Terms & conditions available online.
PREVIEW: Tues.-Fri., June 14-17 » 10am – 4pm
410-828-4838 • WWW.ALEXCOOPER.COM
& 2 MIXED USE MULTI-UNIT BUILDINGS
Sale On Premises
129 S. BROADWAY
1706 E. PRATT STREET
& 128 S. BROADWAY
http://antiques.alexcooper.com • MD DLLR #2503
410-828-4838 • Email: antiques@alexcooper.com
Baltimore City, MD 21231
THURS., JUNE 23, 2016 ♦ AT 2:00 P.M.
Separate and entirety offerings. Deposits (cashier’s check) of
$25,000 for 129 S. Broadway, $10,000 for 1706 E. Pratt Street and
$10,000for128S.Broadwayrequiredtobid($35,000forentiretyoffering of 129 S. Broadway and 1706 E. Pratt Street). See our website for
photos,fullpropertydetails,registrationinformationandtermsofsale.
A. J. BILLIG & CO. 410-296-8440
AUCTIONEERS
6500 FALLS RD. • BALTO., MD 21209 www.ajbillig.com
PUBLIC SALE
Special Consignments
to be sold by ALLY
AUTO AUCTION
www.TidewaterAuctions.com
www.ajbillig.com
REAL ESTATE AUCTION
BelAir
CHECK OUR WEBSITE FOR ALL
UPCOMING FORECLOSURE SALES!
Thurs.,
Baltimore City, MD 21224
TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016 ♦ AT 2:00 P.M.
REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2016
Auction
Secluded 1.28± Acre Estate with
a Grand French Manor Home, Built
Circa 1911 in the Brooklandville
Area of Baltimore County
Important Precious Jewelry
& Sterling Silver
53-55 S. KRESSON ST. &
4400-4410 E. LOMBARD ST.
Chester, Queen Anne’s County, MD 21619
GALLERY
ESTATE AUCTION • OPENING BID $250,000
Sale Starts: 9:00am
Featuring:
THURSDAY
JUNE 23rd
2013
CHEVROLET
IMPALA
LTZ 4DSN WHITE EXT.
VIN# 2G1WC5E38D1241020
To view all units being
offered this week, go to:
www.BSCAmerica.com
and click PUBLIC SALE
NOTE: In order to Bid on a car, a $1,000
cash deposit is required and refunded day
of sale if a purchase is not made. If you
are attending the Public Sale and not
bidding, a deposit is not required.
Sale to be held at:
Bel Air Auto Auction • 803 Bel Air Rd, MD • (410) 879-7950
★★★ AUTO AUCTION ★★★
SALES EVERY THURSDAY • Next Sale:
Thursday, June 16 • 8:00 am
Featuring repossessed assets
from area Credit Unions, Banks
and other Financial Institutions.
NOTE: In order to Bid on a car a
$1,000 cash deposit is required and
refunded day of sale if a purchase is not
made. If you are attending the Public Sale
and not bidding a deposit is not required.
REGISTRATION & INSPECTION
STARTING AT 7:00 a.m.
To view autos being offered this week
go to: www.bscamerica.com
& click on Car & Truck Auction.
PUBLIC WELCOME!
ction 1300 BUSINESS CENTER WAY
uckAu
Car&Tr
CLAYTON STATION
EDGEWOOD, MD 21040
410-893-5200
Milton J. Dance Co., Inc. Auctioneers for 100 Years
PUBLIC AUCTION
REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS
TUESDAY, JUNE 14
SalesOnRespectivePremises
BALTIMORE
2 EAST
PROPERTIES
AT 11:00 A.M.
416 S. DUNCAN ST.
“Upper Fells Point” - 21231
Suggested Opening Bid:
$45,000 - Two story townhome
in an ideal location between
Fells Point, Canton, Patterson Park & Johns Hopkins.
Needs renovation. Lot: 11’ x
38’, m/l. $30 ground rent (unregistered). Deposit: $5,000.
AT 12:00 NOON
7959 BANK ST.
“Eastwood Heights” - 21224
BaltimoreCounty-Absolute
Above $25,000 - Two story
townhome with replacement
windowsandforcedairheatand
CAC. Contains 7 rooms (3 BR),
bathandbasement.Lot:16’x100’,
m/l.Infeesimple.Deposit$2,500.
Deposits as stated above,
payable by cashier’s check,
are required to bid. Please see
our web site or call for complete
details, photos and terms.
A. J. BILLIG & CO.
AUCTIONEERS
6500 FALLS RD. • BALTO., MD 21209
410-296-8440
www.ajbillig.com
PUBLIC AUCTION
OPENING BID
$25,000 PER LOT
17 Recorded
Townhouse Lots
in “Washington
Village”
Auction to be held on the premises
1200-1232 Nanticoke St.
Baltimore, MD 21230
QUALITY FURNITURE
JUNE 14 @ 1 PM
WED. JUNE 22nd, 2016 at 11 AM
Scott Frank » 410-977-4712
5% Buyer’s Premium. Manner
of offering, deposits, terms &
conditions online.
POTTHAST, KITTINGER, CHINA, DOLLS, STERLING
110 Bellemore Road, Baltimore, MD 21210
Please see website for full listing and photos.
400 Allegheny Avenue • Towson, MD 21204
410-823-3993 • www.stevedance.com
410-828-4838
www.AlexCooper.com
REAL ESTATE AUCTIONS
TUES., JUNE 21
SalesOnRespectivePremises
CITY
4 BALTIMORE
PROPERTIES
AT 11:00 A.M.
2318 McCULLOH ST.
“Penn North” - 21217
Absolute Above: $5,000 Two story formstone front
brick bow front townhome has
replacement windows, 6 rooms
(3 BR) and bath. Lot size: 14’
x 80’, m/l. $66 ground rent
(unregistered).Deposit:$2,500.
AT 11:50 A.M.
4921
ALHAMBRA AVE.
“Winston-Govans” - 21212
2 DAY
SALE!
BID ONSITE
& ONLINE
JUNE 22 & 23 • 10:00 A.M. EDT
240 Arch Street, York, PA 17405-7043
HEAVY MACHINING & FABRICATING ASSETS
FROM A WORLD RENOWN MANUFACTURER
SHIBAURA (RECENTLY REBUILT) BSF-24/16A, 6.3” CNC
floor type horizontal boring • FARRELL (REBUILT BY MTR
RAVENSBURG) vertical boring mill • OM (REBUILT 4 YEARS
AGO) 4 axis vertical boring mill • TOS SKS20 CNC vertical
boring/live milling center • (2) CINCINNATI HYPRO vertical
boring mills • ALLTRA (2012) CNC bridge type plasma •
BERTSCH 14’ x 1 3/8” heavy plate rolls • HUGH SMITH (2009
REBUILT) 3000 TON X 13’ vertical plate bender • (7) welding
positioners up to 78,500 lbs • Welding manipulators • Power
& idler tank turning rolls • GROVE 35,000LB mobile boom
crane • Tool crib & spare parts department • Woodworking
department • Huge offering of T-slot floor plates • Welding,
Fabricating & Machine Shop departments & MUCH MORE!
Suggested Opening Bid:
$10,000 - Two and onehalf story traditional home
contains enclosed front porch,
6 rooms (3 BR), bath, attic and
basement. Needs renovation.
Lot size: 0.16 acre, m/l. In
fee simple. Deposit: $2,500.
www.corpassets.com • 416.962.9600 • #AH001858
4501 SEIFERT AVE.
Rancher in “Parkville”
AT 12:40 P.M.
“Frankford” - 21206
Suggested Opening Bid:
$35,000 - All brick ranch home
features updated gas boiler and
water heater and contains covered side porch, eat-in kitchen
with pantry, living room, 2 bedrooms,bath,andlowerlevelclub
room. Lot size: 0.20 acre, m/l.
In fee simple. Deposit: $2,500.
AT 1:30 P.M.
246
S. ROBINSON ST.
“Patterson Park Highlandtown” - 21224
Suggested Opening Bid:
$50,000-Twostorytownhome
features vinyl-clad replacement windows, and contains
6 rooms (3 BR), 2 baths and
basement. Needs renovation.
Lot size: 12’6” x 62’6”, m/l. In
fee simple. Deposit: $5,000.
Deposits as stated above,
payable by cashier’s check,
are required to bid. Please see
our web site or call for complete
details, photos and terms.
A. J. BILLIG & CO.
AUCTIONEERS
6500 FALLS RD. • BALTO., MD 21209
410-296-8440
www.ajbillig.com
2 PUBLIC AUCTIONS
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ AUCTION SALE
Auction to be held on the premises
3107 Summit Ave. • Baltimore MD 21234
TUES., JUNE 21 @ 11:00AM
Believed to be improved by a 3 bedroom, 1 bath rancher.
Call Paul Cooper at 443-470-1437. $10,000 Deposit.
Full terms & conditions available on our website.
410-828-4838 • WWW.ALEXCOOPER.COM
AUCTION
BROKERS
TM
A CHARLES PARRISH COMPANY
s at u r d ay, j u n e 18
th
11am 34 Pleasant Hill Rd, Owings Mills, MD 21117, Balt. Co.
4BR/3.5BA Colonial. BP Dep. $4K. Gopal Hariani 410-977-9390
4 1 0 - 4 2 6 - 2 6 2 2
See websitefor terms & conditions. Auctioneer-Charles Parrish L#A-351
w w w. A u c t i o n B r o k e r s . n e t
You can find pre-auction opportunities at our next
real estate network meeting. Call: 410-426-6000.
PUBLIC AUCTION
the new york times
crossword
1
5
10
14
15
16
17
18
20
21
22
23
25
27
28
31
32
33
34
38
41
42
46
49
50
51
52
53
ACROSS
Some rote
learning
Cutup
Not ___ many
words
“You make
me laugh”
Sponsorship
Oracle
Bosnian,
e.g.
Longtime
Orioles
manager
in the Baseball
Hall of Fame
El-overseeing
org.
TV Guide
chart, for
short
“Buenos ___!”
Co-author of
the Federalist
Papers
Fathers,
to tots
More foolish
Big name in
skateboarding
“Dude!”
9-3 automaker
Covert org.
“The Broken
Tower” poet
“Annie”
characters
Alsace assents
Havens
Boy genius of
old teen fiction
Team esteem
Relative
of a blintz
Best Picture
of 2014 … or
what 18-, 23-,
28-, 34-, 46and 56-Across
each is?
Parts of
small
intestines
Famed
synthesizer
No. 0510
55 Genre first
included in the
Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame
in 2007
56 “Network”
Oscar winner
58 ___ Minor
60 Like fine wines
and cheeses
61 Put into office
62 Appearance
63 Mouthfuls of
chewing gum
64 Poking around
in other
people’s
business
65 Lead-in to
masochism
DOWN
1 Sounds of
comprehension
2 One set in
a “Romeo
and Juliet”
production
3 Georgia county
of which
4-Down is
the seat
4 Oldest city
in Georgia
5 “Veni, vidi,
vici” speaker
6 Like a faulty
pipe
7 Shrek, e.g.
8 Word repeated
before “West”
in a film and
1960s TV
series
9 Its capital is
Sydney: Abbr.
10 Book after
Song of
Solomon
11 Many a
resident on
Lake Tahoe
12 Vacillates
13 Boston Bruin
great
SunTrust Bank
Chase, VRS/Credit
Acceptance Corp. and all
other institutions legally
obligated to offer vehicles to
the public
Every Thursday at 9:00 AM
MANHEIM
FREDERICKSBURG
120 Auction Drive
Fredericksburg, VA 22406
For more registration
and information,
please contact
Manheim Fredericksburg
540-368-3400
ON SITE PUBLIC AUCTION
Contemporary Dining Room and Bed
Room Furniture, Riding Mowers,
Lawn Mowers, Machinist Chest, Tools,
Collectibles, Fishing Gear, Household,
and More
Saturday June 18 at 10 am, Preview at 9am.
2718 Bynum Hills Circle, Bel Air, Md. 21015
For details see auction zip or www.bdudleyandson.com
All items must be removed by 6/21.........15% B.P. 410-252-9800
Bridge Play Frank Stewart
By David Kwong
19 Turning point?
23 Brown or Rice
24 Actress
Malone of
“The Hunger
Games”
26 Cousin of
reggae
28 Implied but
not stated
29 Sculls
30 Magic and
Wizards org.
32 Double ___
Oreos
35 Reine’s
husband
36 Former queen
of Jordan
37 Catchers of
some waves
38 And everything
else, for short
39 Former
dictator of
Panama
40 Refined
43 Biblical city
of Palestine
44 Passed, as
time
45 Jack Reed or
Harry Reid:
Abbr.
47 Barrels along
48 Have on
49 Powerful
51 Lawn game
53 Minderbinder
of “Catch-22”
54 Cash register
compartment
56 Manhandle
57 Swamp
59 Enero
begins it
ANSWER TO YESTERDAY’S PuzzLE
Annual subscriptions are available for the best
of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years:
1-888-7-ACROSS.
Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more
than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year).
Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay.
Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/
6/14/16
learning/xwords.
West dealer
In the prestigious VanNeither side vulnerable
derbilt Teams at the
ACBL’s Spring NABC,
NORTH
♠9762
South was Sabine Auken,
♥5
a world-class player who
♦ K 10 6
♣KJ983
has excelled in both
women’s
and
open WEST
EAST
events.
♠QJ8
♠ K 10 5 4 3
♥
Q
3
♥ A K 10 9 8 2
When East opened
♦
♦
Q
J
7
2
985
with a third-seat weak ♣ 7 5
♣4
two-bid, Auken overSOUTH
called three clubs, and
♠A
West competed with
♥ J764
three hearts. Then North,
♦ A43
♣ A Q 10 6 2
Roy Welland, boldly cuebid four hearts, and Au- West
North
East
South
3♣
Pass
2♥
ken leaped to slam. The Pass
3♥
4♥
Pass
6♣
busy East-West bidding All Pass
told her that North had a
heart singleton or void Opening lead — ♥ Q
plus useful values.
West led the queen of hearts, and East overtook to lead the
queen of spades. Auken won and sandwiched three heart
ruffs in dummy around two spade ruffs in her hand (leaving
West with the defenders’ only high spade).
Auken then ran her trumps. When she led her last trump
at Trick 10, West could keep three cards. He had to save his
king of spades -- dummy still had a spade -- so he bared his
Q-J of diamonds. Auken discarded the spade from dummy,
took the A-K of diamonds and won the13th trick with the ten.
Well done!
DAILY QUESTION You hold: ♠ A ♥ J 7 6 4 ♦ A 4 3 ♣ A Q
10 6 2. You are the dealer. What is your opening call?
ANSWER This situation is awkward. If you open one
club, you will lack a good second bid if partner responds one
spade. A rebid of two clubs would suggest a six-card suit, a
"reverse" to two hearts would show more strength, and a bid
of1NT would be an underbid. Many players would open1NT.
I can’t recommend that action, but the problem has no good
answer.
—Tribune Media Services
8
THE BALTIMORE SUN |
SPORTS
WEATHER
| TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 2016
WJZ FIRST WARNING WEATHER
Bob Turk and meteorologists Tim Williams
and Chelsea Ingram
TODAY
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
Sun and some
clouds
A thunderstorm
possible
Showers and a
heavier t-storm
Cooler; periods
of rain
Mostly sunny
High 82
Low 62
High 84
Precipitation: 0%
NNE 6-12 mph
Low 66
High 82
Precipitation: 50%
SE 6-12 mph
Low 62
High 74
Precipitation: 60%
SSW 6-12 mph
Low 57
Precipitation: 70%
NNE 8-16 mph
High 80
Low 56
NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
BALTIMORE ALMANAC
Data for Baltimore through 5 p.m. yesterday
Downtown high/low
80/63
BWI high/low
79/58
BWI normal high/low
83/61
BWI record high
97 in 1956
BWI record low
51 in 1985
One year ago
89/73
Temperature trend and forecast
Average
Actual
Record
UV INDEX TODAY
Shown are noon positions of
weather systems and precipitation.
Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Showers T-Storms
City
The higher the AccuWeather.com UV
Index™ number, the greater the need
for eye and skin protection. Shown are
the day’s highest and lowest value. 0-2 Low,
3-5 Moderate, 6-7 High, 8-10 Very High, 11+ Extreme.
United States
Albany
Albuquerque
Anchorage
!Atlanta
!Birmingham
Boston
Buffalo
Charleston SC
Charleston WV
!Charlotte
!Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Dallas
Denver
!Des Moines
Detroit
El Paso
Fairbanks
!Fargo
Harrisburg
Hartford
!Helena MT
!Honolulu
Houston
!Indianapolis
!Kansas City
!Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Louisville
!Memphis
!Miami
Milwaukee
!Minneapolis
!Nashville
!New Orleans
New York
Oklahoma City
!Omaha
!Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland ME
!Portland OR
Raleigh
Richmond
Salt Lake City
AIR QUALITY INDEX YESTERDAY
9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
PRECIPITATION AT BWI
24 hours ending 5 p.m. yest.
0.00"
Month to date
0.39"
Normal month to date
1.57"
Most in June
9.95" in 1972
Least in June
0.15" in 1954
Year to date
18.24"
Normal year to date
18.70"
Days since last measurable precip.
5
The last week
0-50 Good, 51-100 Moderate, 101-150 Unhealthy for
sensitive groups, 151-200 Unhealthy, 201-300 Very
unhealthy, 301-500 Hazardous
DEGREE DAYS
Yesterday
Month to date
Normal to date
Season to date
Normal to date
Last year to date
Heat
0
4
13
4004
4784
4964
Cool
4
100
77
197
159
287
ASTRONOMICAL DATA
7
8
9
10
11
RELATIVE HUMIDITY
8 a.m. 54
1 p.m. 38
BAROMETER
12
13
(percentages)
5 p.m. 37
(at sea level)
8 a.m. 29.95 1 p.m. 29.91 5 p.m. 29.84
POLLEN INDEX
Source: Drs. Golden
and Matz, LLC
Sun
Moon
Mercury
Venus
Mars
Jupiter
Saturn
Full
Jun 20
Rise
5:40 a.m.
3:14 p.m.
4:31 a.m.
5:49 a.m.
6:13 p.m.
12:13 p.m.
7:28 p.m.
Last
New
Jun 27
baltimoresun.com/marylandweather
Precipitation: 25%
N 6-12 mph
MARYLAND FORECAST FOR JUNE 14
TEMPERATURES
For the latest weather news
throughout your day.
Jul 4
Set
8:34 p.m.
2:21 a.m.
6:42 p.m.
8:44 p.m.
3:53 a.m.
1:05 a.m.
5:13 a.m.
First
Jul 11
MARINE FORECAST
High
AM
PM
TIDES
Low
AM
PM
Patapsco River (Fort McHenry)
3:11 2:57 9:59 9:22
Tolchester
3:29 3:15 10:10 9:33
Annapolis (U.S. Naval Academy)
1:41 1:27 8:15 7:38
Choptank River (Cambridge)
12:29 12:15 7:31 6:54
Patuxent River (Solomons Island)
10:19 11:25 5:13 4:36
Susquehanna River (Havre de Grace) 6:24 6:10 12:11 1:26
Middle River (Bowley Bar)
4:02 3:48 10:42 10:05
Potomac River (Fort Washington)
4:25 4:49 11:21 11:25
Ocean City
3:33 4:12 9:49 10:30
WATERWAYS
WAVE HEIGHTS
Wnd Spd Wav
Upper Chesapeake Bay NW
Susquehanna River
NW
Middle River
NW
Patuxent River
NW
Choptank River
NNW
Potomac River
NNW
Ocean City
NW
4-8
3-6
3-6
3-6
4-8
3-6
6-12
1-2
0-1
0-1
0-1
1-2
0-1
1-3
Ocean City
3 feet, water temp 63
Assateague Island
2 feet, water temp 73
Chesapeake Bay
1 foot, water temp 68
Follow the weather blog online at baltimoresun.com/weather
Prolonged heat to hold off for another week
MARYLAND
WEATHER
BLOG SCOTT
DANCE
By
AccuWeather.com
Senior Meteorologist
Alex Sosnowski
Following
the brief brought
spike in the highest temperatures
will be higher later
heat is not likely to have a direct path
Last weekend
of this
the week,
year when
so far. Baltimore-Washington
temperatures
past weekend,
compared
to thison
past
weekend,
thelast
Northeastern
International this
Thurgood
Marshall Airport
hit 96 degrees
Saturday,
therainfall
hottestinto
since
July 19 states for
highs
for the
balancefrom
of this
weeka are
to be
morehit
widespread
and
the ifsome
yet. There is a chance of
and three
degrees
tying
record is
setlikely
in 1911.
Sunday
93 degrees,
which,
not fortime
Saturday,
likely
tohave
be near
orBaltimore’s
below average.
Theday since
chance
a locally
storm
willthe forecast
some
home-grown
warmth building
would
been
hottest
lastofSept.
9. Noheavy
such heat
is in
through
at
warmest
day
of the
week
is likely
be in
greater.
The
best
chance
of storms
next week for a few days, when
least early
next
week,
with
highstoexpected
the 70s
and
80s
this week.
be on Wednesday, ahead of a system
will be on Thursday. Extreme heat is
temperatures could flirt with 90 F.
that will bring spotty showers and
forecast to build over the Southwest
ONLINE Follow the weather blog online at baltimoresun.com/weather
thunderstorms. Since humidity levels
states this weekend. However, that
BATTER UP!
It's !me for baseball season! Get in the Orioles
spirit with team memorabilia and more.
Flurries
77/53/pc
89/60/s
68/55/s
92/75/t
91/74/t
76/61/s
75/53/s
94/78/s
89/65/pc
91/73/t
85/70/t
86/68/pc
79/65/pc
95/78/pc
81/55/pc
89/70/t
76/62/c
98/70/s
62/44/pc
73/60/t
80/59/pc
80/55/pc
68/46/pc
83/75/pc
91/76/pc
86/72/t
89/69/t
98/74/s
74/59/pc
91/75/pc
89/77/pc
91/77/pc
75/63/c
75/66/t
92/74/pc
90/79/t
81/63/s
96/75/pc
88/67/t
94/75/pc
82/60/pc
100/74/s
80/64/pc
71/55/pc
61/50/t
90/72/s
83/64/pc
84/63/s
82/57/pc
93/61/s
71/55/s
89/74/t
89/75/t
77/60/pc
83/62/pc
92/78/t
88/69/t
92/73/t
88/66/t
88/70/t
86/68/t
96/77/pc
89/58/s
92/68/pc
82/65/t
101/71/s
72/53/pc
77/55/pc
83/66/c
85/56/pc
61/49/sh
83/74/sh
93/75/pc
89/71/t
95/72/s
95/72/s
74/59/pc
90/75/t
96/78/t
89/77/t
84/63/r
78/61/c
92/74/t
92/78/t
86/67/pc
98/75/s
94/68/s
92/74/t
86/64/pc
103/75/s
86/68/t
77/54/pc
66/51/c
90/73/t
84/70/t
89/62/s
105 in Wink, TX
26 in Bridgeport, CA
$59.99
Cold
Warm
Stationary
Today
City
H/Lo/W
San Antonio
94/76/pc
San Diego
69/62/pc
!San Francisco 66/54/pc
!Savannah
95/77/t
!Seattle
59/48/t
!St. Louis
94/78/pc
!Tampa
89/78/pc
Tomorrow
H/Lo/W
96/75/pc
68/61/pc
66/54/s
91/76/t
64/48/c
98/75/t
89/78/t
Canada & Mexico
Cancun
!Mexico City
Montreal
Toronto
!Vancouver
90/78/pc 89/79/pc
73/57/t 72/54/t
78/59/s 81/60/s
74/55/s 72/57/pc
60/51/t 63/48/c
!Amsterdam
Athens
Baghdad
!Berlin
Copenhagen
!Dublin
Jerusalem
Kuwait City
!London
Madrid
Moscow
!Paris
Riyadh
Rome
Tel Aviv
65/53/t
84/70/pc
108/75/s
70/54/t
65/56/r
62/50/t
91/74/s
110/83/s
65/54/t
85/56/s
69/51/c
65/54/t
104/79/s
78/63/pc
93/75/s
Beijing
!Hong Kong
Kabul
!Manila
Mumbai
Seoul
Sydney
Tokyo
72/62/sh 89/65/pc
91/82/t 90/82/t
95/60/s 93/59/s
91/78/t 93/78/t
91/85/pc 90/85/pc
84/69/pc 78/66/t
69/52/s 68/51/s
79/68/pc 75/69/c
Cairo
Cape Town
Nairobi
103/82/s
59/56/sh
77/52/s
Bermuda
Buenos Aires
Nassau
Rio de Janeiro
San Juan PR
79/74/pc 79/73/pc
61/41/pc 61/40/pc
90/79/pc 90/79/pc
73/61/pc 75/61/s
91/78/s 91/78/s
Europe & Middle East
Asia & Australia
Africa
Americas and Islands
65/52/t
87/70/s
111/80/s
68/54/t
68/58/t
62/50/t
92/62/s
114/84/s
65/52/t
73/51/pc
73/64/pc
64/53/t
107/80/s
78/66/s
94/71/s
99/72/s
61/47/r
76/55/c
World Extremes Yesterday
High
Low
119 in In Salah, Algeria
13 in Saddle, Greenland
Forecasts and graphics, except WJZ 5-day forecast, provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
WITH
• LIFETIME GUARANTEE
• FREE GUTTERS WITH PURCHASE
• EASY FINANCING PAYMENTS AS
LOW AS $69/MONTH
MHIC # 89675
50% OFF LABOR UNTIL JUNE 30TH
For installation call 410-656-3098
For service call 410-941-4245
Call today to receive
$150.00 off a New Whole House
Generator and $50.00 off
a New Customer Service Contract!
410-849-6967
"Iron Man: Cal Ripken Jr.'s Historic Career"
Newspaper Book • $50.00
Ice
Legend: W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,
t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, ! travel delays possible.
SCHEDULE YOUR FREE ESTIMATE TODAY
Brooks Robinson Uniframe
Snow
National Extremes Yesterday
High
Low
For more in-depth details, please visit AccuWeather.com
GET YOUR ROOF READY
Rain
Today Tomorrow
H/Lo/W H/Lo/W
*Restrictions apply. Subject to credit approval
Offer expires July 30
Same Day Service
7 Days a Week!
(443) 213-0520
• 24 hr. monitoring and protection
against Power Outages
• Generac Dealer / Installer and
Service Provider
• Install Generator no matter
where you buy it
• Yearly service contracts to all
Generac Generator Owners
Licensed & insured for MD, PA and DE
We have certified techs
on staff at all times.
Serving Harford County and
Baltimore County Only
QUALITY SUNROOMS
for 50 years
$
UP TO
4,000
OFF
SUNROOMS*
PLUS
Baltimore Orioles Team Canvas Print
"Cal Stands Alone" Front Page Print
$89.99
Starting at $48.00
PAYMENTS
AS LOW AS†
199/MO..
$
HURRY! Offer ends July 3
YOUR SUNROOM EXPERTS
SHOP NOW at
Bal!moreSun.com/BaseballShop
or call 866-622-7721
The One and Only
FOR A FREE DESIGN CONSULTATION
CALL 888-399-4997
PROMO CODE: BS *Discount applies to MSRP. Some restrictions apply. See store for details. Offer not valid on prior sales or in conjunction with other offers or discounts.
Franchise & dealer participation may vary. †Payment based on 10x12 sunroom only. Does not include site preparation or electrical. Subject to credit approval. Fixed APR of
7.99% for 144 months. Based on each $1,000 financed, 5 payments of $6.66 followed by 139 amortized payments of $11.05.
©Copyright 2016 Patio Enclosures.
MHIC #132308
SUNROOMS
|
SCREEN ROOMS
|
PORCH ENCLOSURES
|
AWNINGS
|
WINDOWS & DOORS