Open as PDF - Stars and Stripes
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Open as PDF - Stars and Stripes
NFL DRAFT NATION GAMING Goff to Rams at No. 1; Tunsil falls to 13th after pot video hits Twitter Protesters jam streets after Trump speech; 20 arrests made Women often find hostility, threats online Back page Page 6 Page 16 Military: Green Beret who hit child rapist can keep his job » Page 2 Volume 75, No. 10A ©SS 2016 MIDEAST EDITION SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 2016 stripes.com Free to Deployed Areas AFGHANISTAN 16 punished over hospital bombing BY TARA COPP AND CHAD GARLAND Stars and Stripes WASHINGTON — The Pentagon has punished 16 military personnel for an airstrike last year on a Doctors Without Borders medical facility in Afghanistan that killed 42 civilians, including doctors and patients. The results of the investigation into the Oct. 3, 2015, airstrike in Kunduz were Families, rights groups decry Pentagon’s nonjudicial actions after deadly airstrike Page 3 announced Friday by Gen. Joseph Votel, commander of U.S. Central Command. SEE HOSPITAL ON PAGE 3 An employee of Doctors Without Borders stands inside the charred remains of the organization’s hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, on Oct. 16. N AJIM R AHIM /AP SIGAR: US drawdown will leave Afghan forces with ‘capability gaps’ BY PHILLIP WALTER WELLMAN Stars and Stripes KABUL, Afghanistan — Current plans to reduce the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan will leave Afghan forces with “capability gaps” in a number of areas, which could threaten the success of reconstruction efforts in the country, a government watchdog said Friday. Since 2001, the United States and its allies The U.S. is currently scheduled to draw down its 9,800 troops in Afghanistan to about 5,500 by the start of next year. This reduction, SIGAR said, could result in “gaps in air support, signals, intelligence and other areas.” have worked to strengthen Afghanistan’s army and police forces to be able to singlehandedly defend the country, but major challenges continue to hinder those efforts, and further troop withdrawals likely would exacerbate the situation, according to the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction’s quarterly report to Congress. “The U.S. ability to influence operational outcomes on the ground is constricting, while (that of the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces) has not correspondingly risen,” the report said. One major challenge is that the U.S. has lost much of its ability to directly observe the capabilities and effectiveness of Afghan forces since troop reductions last year. Uncertainty over Afghan troop numbers is also a concern, as is the Afghans’ ability to properly manage U.S. financial aid to support the military and police, SIGAR said. SEE SIGAR ON PAGE 5 PAGE 2 •STA QUOTE OF THE DAY “We work with a lot of other developers. They always ask ‘How are the garbage can homes going?’ ” —Brian Stark, an architect with StarkJames, which is transforming shipping containers into apartments in Phoenix See story on Page 8 TOP CLICKS ON STRIPES.COM The most popular stories on our website: 1. House panel votes to end military pay-benefit slide, tweak ex-spouse law 2. Investigation of AF officer who asked teens to ‘model’ suggests more sex charges possible 3. Green Beret who hit admitted Afghan child rapist will stay in the Army 4. Judge sentences veteran to 24 hours in jail, then joins him behind bars 5. Highest military court hears Marine’s religious freedom case COMING SOON Music Remembering Prince TODAY IN STRIPES American Roundup ............ 14 Business, Weather ............ 20 Comics, Crossword ........... 22 Entertainment................... 19 Gaming ........................ 16-17 Health & Fitness ............... 18 Lifestyle ........................... 15 Opinion ....................... 12-13 Sports ......................... 24-32 R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 MILITARY Soldier who hit rapist to stay in Army In 2011, Martland hit an Afghan man who admitted he raped a child ‘ (The Army) modified a portion of one of BY COREY DICKSTEIN Stars and Stripes WASHINGTON — Army Sgt. 1st Class Charles Martland, a Green Beret once selected for involuntary separation from the service after he struck an Afghan police commander who had admitted to raping a child, will remain in uniform. An Army board on Wednesday determined that Martland’s military personnel file contained an “error or injustice,” an Army spokesman said Friday morning. Removing that error from his record means Martland, 33, will continue to serve at least through the end of his enlistment. The Army initially selected Martland, a recipient of the Bronze Star with a “V” device for valor, to leave the service by November 2015 through the Qualitative Management Program, a method used to determine which noncommissioned officers would be part of the Army’s force reduction. In October, the Army decided to allow him to remain in service to appeal his case at the request of several lawmakers. The service again delayed its decision on Martland in March. “The Army Board for Correction of Military Records considers each case on its own merit when determining to grant or deny an applicant’s request,” said Army Lt. Col. Jerry Pionk, a spokesman for the service. “… In Sgt. 1st Class Martland’s case, (Martland’s) evaluation reports ... which will allow him to remain in the Army. ’ Lt. Col. Jerry Pionk Army spokesman Sgt. 1st Class Charles Martland the Army Board for Correction of Military Records determination modified a portion of one of [his] evaluation reports and removed him from the (Qualitative Management Program) list, which will allow him to remain in the Army.” Martland, whose cause has been championed by former Marine Corps officer Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., and other lawmakers, has maintained that the only blemish on his personnel record is an October 2011 “memorandum of reprimand” issued by Brig. Gen. Christopher K. Haas, then commander of the Combined Forces Special Operations Component Command in Afghanistan. That reprimand was issued after Martland and his detachment commander hit an Afghan local police commander in September 2011 while deployed to a remote combat outpost in Kunduz province. The Green Berets shoved and slammed Abdul Rahman into the ground after he’d ad- mitted to chaining a 12-year-old boy and sexually assaulting him repeatedly for several days. Martland and his commander, former Army Capt. Daniel Quinn, were relieved of duty and sent back to the United States for their actions, which Hass wrote were “the intentional assault” of Rahman. Quinn left the Army the following year, while Martland eventually re-enlisted and has continued serving in special forces. A spokesman for Hunter said Friday morning that the congressman was “elated” to receive a call from acting Army Secretary Patrick Murphy on Thursday night confirming Martland would be allowed to continue his service. Hunter “thanked [Murphy] for doing the right thing and for putting Charles back in the fight, which is what Charles always wanted,” said Joe Kasper, Hunter’s chief of staff. “We’ve worked a lot of these types of cases as an office, and this is perhaps the most gratifying outcome of them all.” Martland’s case thrust into the spotlight the long-standing open secret in Afghanistan of the sexual abuse of children, especially young boys, commonly called “bacha bazi” or “boy play.” Accusations surfaced that American servicemembers were instructed to turn a blind eye to the practice. Pentagon officials have denied that was the case, but representatives for the U.S. mission in Afghanistan have said American troops are not required to report allegations of child sexual abuse. The Pentagon inspector general is conducting a comprehensive assessment of the issue. Last month, Hunter introduced legislation dubbed the “Martland Act” that, if made law, would require American servicemembers to intervene if a child is sexually assaulted on American-controlled bases throughout the world. “The Pentagon finally took action and did the right thing,” Rep. Vern Buchanan, R-Fla., said Friday morning. “Going forward, I hope the Department of Defense will learn from Martland’s case and avoid punishing those who stand up for American values at home and abroad.” dickstein.corey@stripes.com Twitter: @CDicksteinDC Marine general nominated to lead AFRICOM BY JOHN VANDIVER Stars and Stripes STUTTGART, Germany — A Marine threestar general was nominated Thursday to serve as the next leader of U.S. Africa Command, the mission of which has taken on greater urgency in recent months as Islamic State fighters spread their reach into northern Africa. Lt. Gen. Thomas D. Waldhauser, currently serving as director of joint force development at the Pentagon, would replace Gen. David Rodriguez at the Stuttgart, Germany-based command. AFRICOM, the military’s youngest geographic command, became fully operational in 2008. Initially conceived as a command focused on training missions, the focus over the years has steadily shifted toward more lethal operations. Now, drone strikes against Islamic militants are periodically carried out in places such as Somalia and, more recently, Libya, where Islamic State fighters have gained a foothold. For Waldhauser, countering terrorist groups in those countries as well as Boko Haram in Nigeria will be the top areas of concern. AFRICOM is expected to continue training indigenous forces in the region to carry out the day-to-day fighting against such groups. Waldhauser, a native of Minnesota who began his military career in 1976, has served in various infantry commands over the years. In 2001, as a colonel, he led some of the first forces into Afghanistan as well as Iraq. Rodriguez, a veteran of multiple tours in Afghanistan, where he held key command posts, is slated to retire. vandiver.john@stripes.com •STA Saturday, April 30, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 3 MILITARY Punishments for Kunduz strike decried BY CHAD GARLAND Stars and Stripes KABUL, Afghanistan — Victims’ family members and human rights groups on Friday expressed disappointment with the Pentagon’s decision to hand down nonjudicial punishments, rather than court-martial, 16 personnel held accountable for an airstrike on a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, last year. Abdul Samad, 41, a resident of Kunduz city whose nephew was killed in the strike, said the attack was an “inhumane act” that violated national and international laws. “I wish they were in our country. Then we could get them convicted according to our own laws,” Samad said in a telephone interview. “Right now, they are 100 percent murders and they should be treated as murders in their own country … and we want the United States to implement the law over them as murders.” The punishments will have “severe repercussions” for those involved, Gen. Joseph L. Votel, commander of U.S. Central Command, said during a briefing Friday. The servicemembers at fault may face blocked promotions and separation from the military, he said. No criminal charges have been filed, and no one will face court-martial. Doctors Without Borders, which goes by its French initials, MSF, has been vocal in its criticism, calling the attack on the hospital “relentless and brutal,” characterizing it as a war crime and repeatedly demanding an independent inquiry by an international body. The briefing amounted to “an admission of an uncontrolled military operation … during which U.S. forces failed to follow the basic laws of war,” MSF President Meinie Nicolai said Friday in a statement. “It is incomprehensible that, under the circumstances described by the U.S., the attack was not called off.” ‘Razed to the ground’ The hospital airstrike in the early morning hours of Oct. 3 killed 14 staff members, 24 patients and four caretakers. The medical center was “razed to the ground,” MSF General Director Christopher Stokes said in a speech in Kabul in November. Votel said the hospital was a protected site and had been on a “no strike” list, but in the rush to get the U.S. gunship in the air, “the crew did not get all the preparatory information they would normally have received.” He said the strike should not be considered a war crime because it was “unintentional,” which he said “takes it out of the realm of being a deliberate war crime.” ‘ Nicolai, however, said the “threshold that must be crossed” is not whether it was intentional or not, and that combatants “cannot escape their responsibilities on the battlefield simply by ruling out the intent to attack a protected structure.” The organization’s statement called the administrative punishments “out of proportion to the destruction,” and said they are unlikely to deter future war crimes. U.N. investigators said in a report last December that even if U.S. troops did not knowingly target the hospital, they still could have committed war crimes if they had not taken precautions to protect civilians. More than a half-million people have signed a petition asking the Obama administration to authorize an independent review of the incident. Other humanitarian organizations have joined the call for an independent inquiry. In a statement Thursday, Naureen Shah, director of Amnesty International USA’s Security With Human Rights program, echoed the call for a criminal inquiry. “To prevent the principles of international humanitarian law from being further eroded, the U.S. government must respect its obligation to independently investigate serious violations of international humanitarian law and ensure those responsible are prosecuted,” Shah said. Apologies, condolences Last month, shortly after taking charge of the forces in Afghanistan, Gen. John W. Nicholson traveled to Kunduz, where he offered his condolences and “humbly and respectfully” asked forgiveness. Votel on Friday noted that many U.S. officials had apologized and expressed condolences to the victims. He also cited “modest payments” meant to express sympathy that had been paid out to more than 170 victims of the attacks. The families of those killed were offered $6,000; the wounded were offered $3,000, he said. But the payments are not meant to be compensation, and earlier this month a New York Times editorial criticized the Pentagon, calling the sums “wholly inadequate.” For Samad, the man whose nephew was killed, those responsible for the strike should get prison time, but he said no matter the punishment, it won’t restore what the victims have lost. “It will not give us anything,” he said. “But at least it should be a strong lesson to those in the future that they should not bomb hospitals.” Zubair Babakarkhail contributed to this report garland.chad@stripes.com I wish they were in our country. Then we could get them convicted according to our own laws. ’ Abdul Samad Kunduz resident whose nephew was killed PHOTO COURTESY OF DOCTORS WITHOUT BORDERS The Pentagon announced Friday that 16 servicemembers will be disciplined for an U.S. airstrike that hit a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan. Hospital: Incident was the result of a series of communication and operational breakdowns FROM FRONT PAGE For 12 of the 16 personnel — who included members of the AC130U gunship air crew that fired on the hospital, a general officer and a U.S. special forces unit that was on the ground and identified the target — the punishments included suspension and removal from command, letters of reprimand, formal counseling and extensive retraining, according to a letter released Friday by the Pentagon that outlined the results of the investigation. Three air crew members still face recertification boards that will determine whether they are eligible to be returned to flight status. Votel said those crewmembers have not flown since the incident and their recertification is still in progress. Five of the 16 personnel, including the general officer, were ordered out of Afghanistan. The general officer was also removed from command. The hospital airstrike occurred in the early morning hours of Oct. 3 as Afghan forces battled Taliban insurgents, who had overrun Kunduz on Sept. 28 and briefly held the city of 300,000. Fourteen staff members, 24 patients and four caretakers were killed, according to Doctors Without Borders, which goes by its French initials, MSF. In the days after the attack, President Barack Obama apologized, and Defense Secretary Ash Carter said he would hold personnel accountable if an investigation showed U.S. culpability in the airstrike. The Pentagon has concluded that the personnel did not know they were striking a medical facility; therefore, the charges against them fell short of a war crime. Instead, Votel said Friday that the incident was the result of a string of communication and operational breakdowns that occurred as U.S. and Afghan forces were on their fourth day of firefights against the Taliban in the area. The area was unusually hostile, he said. “This was an extraordinarily intense situation,” Votel said, noting that the air crew had to evade a surface-to-air missile that was shot at them shortly after they reached the target. “That’s a very significant thing. That does not happen very often in Afghanistan.” The hospital was marked on a “no strike list” database, though the crew flying the mission did not have access to that database during the attack. The flight crew was launched in response to an emergency call, which resulted in it taking off 69 minutes earlier than planned and kept it from receiving all of the information that they would normally process before takeoff, Votel said. Afghan forces provided the correct grid coordinates for the Taliban building that the gunship intended to strike, but the onboard system on the This was an AC-130 extraordinarily malfuncintense tioned, and the situation. system Gen. Joseph Votel directUS Central Command ed the crew to an open airfield instead. The investigation found one crewmember did identify the correct Taliban target, but the aircraft was redirected to the hospital. The Pentagon said it would not release names of the personnel to protect their privacy and because some of them are still serving overseas. The Defense Department has provided $5.7 million in funds to rebuild the hospital. It also has paid between $3,000 and $6,000 to an estimated 170 people who were killed, injured or otherwise affected by the airstrike. A letter of reprimand is an administrative punishment that indicates misbehavior and can block promotions or have career-ending consequences. It does not involve criminal charges. MSF has called the attack on the hospital a war crime and has repeatedly called for an independent inquiry. “We still think that it would obviously be best to have an independent investigation,” said Kate Stegeman, a spokeswoman for the group in Kabul. She said MSF had not gotten any feedback from the United States. ‘ ’ In March, shortly after taking charge of the forces in Afghanistan, Gen. John W. Nicholson apologized for the destruction of the hospital and the many deaths caused by the airstrike. “I grieve with you for your loss and suffering, and humbly and respectfully ask for your forgiveness,” he told the people of Kunduz during a visit there with his wife last month. A Pentagon investigation in November, one of at least three performed in the wake of the attack, stated the incident was the result of “avoidable human error, compounded by process and equipment failures.” Investigators found that a series of errors led the American forces to confuse the hospital with an Afghan intelligence headquarters building reportedly occupied by Taliban fighters. MSF officials called that report’s findings “shocking” and said it left many unanswered questions. The organization conducted its own investigation, which concluded there were no armed combatants in the hospital at the time of the airstrike and no fighting “from or in the direct vicinity” of the facility. MSF also has said it had informed all armed groups involved in the conflict of its GPS coordinates and its neutrality under international humanitarian law. The group has repeatedly called for an independent inquiry by the International Humanitarian Fact-Finding Commission, a permanent body set up under the Geneva Conventions to investigate apparent violations of international humanitarian law. More than 550,000 people have signed an online petition calling on the Obama administration to consent to the commission’s investigation. In a separate report last December, United Nations investigators found nothing to indicate the hospital had done anything to lose its protected status under international law. Even if U.S. troops did not knowingly target the hospital, they still could have committed war crimes if they did not take precautions to protect civilians, the report stated. copp.tara@stripes.com garland.chad@stripes.com PAGE 4 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 MILITARY New charges in Naval Academy sex misconduct case BY JOHN WOODROW COX The Washington Post The military has filed new criminal charges against Marine Maj. Mark Thompson, a former U.S. Naval Academy instructor who insisted he had been unfairly convicted of sexual misconduct with two female midshipmen. After revelations about his case, the military has charged Thompson with making a false official statement and conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman. If convicted of lying under oath, Thompson could face up to five years in prison, dismissal from the service and a total loss of his retirement benefits. Retired U.S. Air Force judge advocate Rachel VanLandingham said the potential penalty for the conduct-unbecoming accusation depends on the underlying offense. The Marine Corps will hold an Article 32 preliminary hearing in May at Quantico, Va. Thompson, who served in Afghanistan, has long fought to show he was falsely accused of having sex with two students in 2011, but a Post investigation revealed he’d been dishonest when he testified under oath in 2014 to an administrative board deciding if he should be expelled from the Corps. Asked in January why he had lied to authorities, Thompson described the immense pressure he faced after one of the women asserted that he had raped her. Thompson was acquitted of the rape charge but found guilty of five lesser offenses. He served two months in a military brig and was fined $60,000. After the Post story was published last month, the Marine Corps launched a new investigation. A prosecutor met this month with one of the accusers, Sarah Stadler, to review the contents of her long-missing cellphone. A number of the messages she and Thompson exchanged appear to contradict several assertions he made at the administrative hearing. Then, this week, Marine Maj. Michael Pretus — a key witness for Thompson’s defense at his 2013 court-martial — told The Post he would now serve as a witness for the prosecution. “I feel vindicated,” Stadler said of the new charges. “I feel relieved that this might now finally be coming to an end and that the end might actually be justice.” Thompson has maintained that he did nothing wrong. On the night of April 30, 2011, Stadler and a female friend — both of whom knew Thompson through the school’s rifle team — attended the boozy annual croquet match between the academy and St. John’s College. Afterward, they stopped by Thompson’s house, just two blocks off campus. He claimed they asked to use the bathroom, did so and left. The women claimed he served them shots of tequila before they played strip poker and staggered to his bedroom, where he had sex with both of them. Stadler, who later was dismissed from the Navy for lying about her relationship with an enlisted sailor, Maj. Mark said the sex was consenThompson sual. But her could face friend told authat up to five thorities she was too drunk to give years in Thompson prison, consent. dismissal In 2014, Thompson’s from the case was reMarine viewed again Corps and at a board of inquiry heara loss of ing. There, retirement three Marine officers were benefits. assigned to decide if Thompson should be discharged. The combat veteran insisted his interactions with Stadler were appropriate, professional and within academy guidelines. He told the board that she had created “a complete fiction about a relationship that never existed.” The board members allowing him to remain a Marine and decried his convictions as unjust. Soon after, Thompson asked The Post to examine his case. But many text messages on Stadler’s old phone, which she discovered after being contacted by The Post, strongly imply that the two were involved in an inappropriate relationship. VanLandingham, who teaches at Southwestern Law School, said he put himself in jeopardy. “A military officer who, as an instructor at a premiere military academy, sleeps with his students commits a serious fraternization crime,” she said. “However, a military officer who lies under oath about it, plus arrogantly engages others to help spin his web of lies on the front page of the nation’s leading newspaper, is deserving of years in jail and our collective condemnation.” L ARRY E. REID JR./Courtesy of the U.S. Air Force Honoring the fallen Coalition forces participate in an annual remembrance ruck, run and walk Wednesday in Kabul, Afghanistan. It honors airmen who died fighting during the war in Afghanistan. GOP senator blocks vote on Army secretary over Guantanamo Bay Associated Press WASHINGTON — The nomination of President Barack Obama’s choice to serve as Army secretary remains blocked by a Kansas senator over administration efforts to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and transfer detainees to the U.S. Eric Fanning, who has held several jobs in the Pentagon, would be the first openly gay leader of a U.S. military service if confirmed. But Republican Sen. Pat Roberts placed a hold on the nomination last year and refused to relent Thursday despite pleas from Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the chairman of the Armed Ser- vices Committee. “My hold on the nominee is to protect the security of the United States and more especially the people of Kansas,” Roberts said on the Senate floor. Closing the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay was a theme of Obama’s 2008 campaign, and he has pushed to shutter the facility, which he argues is costly and gives extremists a recruiting tool. Congress repeatedly has prohibited the transfer of any detainees to U.S. soil, and the possibility of Kansas’ Fort Leavenworth as an alternative prompted Roberts’ actions. Roberts said his hold has nothing to do with Fanning’s qualifi- cations or character. “I would be more than happy to vote on Fanning’s nomination” once there are assurances from the White House, he said. The senator said he had a conversation Thursday morning with the White House in hopes the issue could be worked out, but the administration would not rule out Leavenworth as a potential location for detainees. McCain argued it was unfair to block Fanning’s nomination over an unrelated issue. He said Roberts “is shooting a hostage” and abusing his power. “That’s not the role of advise and consent,” McCain said. “That is a distortion of advise and consent.” Senators unveil legislation to reform VA BY BRIDGET BOWMAN CQ-Roll Call WASHINGTON — Senators took fresh steps this week in the effort to reform the beleaguered Veterans Affairs Department just as news broke of a new scandal — cockroaches in food at a VA hospital in Chicago. “Almost every morning there’s a story on the news about some other failure at a VA hospital,” said Sen. Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., chairman of the Veterans’ Affairs Committee. He said the Chicago story was “just another failure of care for our veterans that we need to see stopped.” Nearly every committee member joined Isakson on Thursday to unveil the Veterans First Act, the product of nearly a year of negotiations. The bipartisan bill combines other legislation aimed at increasing accountability, including lowering barriers to hire and fire senior executives, expanding health care programs, protecting whistleblowers, reviewing prescription drug use, increasing access to disability compensation and expanding education access. Isakson said leaders from both parties were aware of the bill but declined to say when it might be considered, especially in light of the constrained congressional calendar in an election year. The committee’s announcement came a day after a group of Republican senators announced plans to introduce legislation — the Care Veterans Deserve Act, which would seek to address the persistent problem of lengthy wait times for health care. Two years ago, alarming shortcomings centered around delayed care and administrative oversight at some VA hospitals were uncovered. The scandal led to the resignation of VA Secretary Eric Shinseki and prompted hearings and congressional action. But a 2014 reform law has not been effectively implemented, prompting the new legislation. •STA Saturday, April 30, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 5 WAR ON TERRORISM Residents of Iraqi city held by group suffer in siege BY SINAN SALAHEDDIN Associated Press Q ASION NEWS AGENCY/AP People scramble through rubble Friday following airstrikes in Aleppo, Syria. Insurgents shelled a mosque in a government-held neighborhood of Aleppo, while government airstrikes hit rebel-held areas. Violence in Syria’s Aleppo kills many, including worshippers BY A LBERT A JI BASSEM MROUE AND Associated Press DAMASCUS, Syria — Insurgents shelled a mosque in a government-held neighborhood of Aleppo, killing at least 15 people as they left Friday prayers, while government airstrikes struck rebel-held parts of Syria’s largest city — even as the army unilaterally declared a brief truce in other parts of the country. The violence in Aleppo has killed more than 200 civilians during the past week and is likely to continue unchecked, as the government’s cease-fire does not include the city. At least 15 people were killed and 30 were injured when rockets struck Malla Khan mosque in the government-held Bab al-Faraj district shortly after Friday prayers, Syrian state TV reported. “We want the army to finish them,” an Aleppo resident told state TV outside a hospital where some of the dead and wounded were taken. The attack followed an earlymorning lull in government airstrikes on rebel-held parts of Aleppo, following days of deadly violence that killed scores. Yet by late morning, air raids resumed on the city, according to activists from the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and the Local Coordination Committees. The resumption of air raids prompted religious leaders to suspend Friday prayers in rebelheld areas. The Religious Council of Aleppo, a body that runs religious affairs in opposition-held parts of the province, said in a statement online that it was calling on mosque leaders to call off Friday prayers for the first time. “The heart of the believers is aching … but preserving lives is an important religious duty,” it said. The Observatory reported that six people were killed in the strikes on opposition areas, while the LCC said at least 10 people died and dozens were wounded. The LCC and the Observatory also reported shelling near a clinic in the rebel-held neighborhood of Marjeh. There was no word on casualties. The humanitarian situation has deteriorated further in opposition-held neighborhoods, which are almost encircled. The sole road leading into and out of rebel-held areas from northwest Aleppo is regularly targeted by sniper fire and shelling. The carnage in Aleppo — a city contested since the summer of 2012, when opposition fighters took over several districts — was particularly bad on Wednesday and Thursday, when airstrikes and artillery killed more than 60 people, including dozens at a hospital in a rebel-held neighborhood. Also on Friday, the Syrian army has declared a temporary truce for the capital, Damascus, its suburbs and the coastal province of Latakia — but not Aleppo. It was not immediately clear what impact this unilateral declaration would have. The opposition seemed unlikely to abide by the truce after dozens were killed in government airstrikes in Aleppo. The cease-fire is due to come into effect at 1 a.m. Saturday, according to announcement read on Syrian state TV. The military statement said it will last 24 hours in Damascus and its suburbs and three days in Latakia. SIGAR: Report says security ‘essential’ for rebuilding FROM FRONT PAGE The U.S. is currently scheduled to draw down its 9,800 troops in Afghanistan to about 5,500 by the start of next year. This reduction, SIGAR said, could result in “gaps in air support, signals, intelligence and other areas.” In light of the challenges, it said the long-term stability of Afghan forces remains uncertain. “Without the ability to call on U.S. and coalition military components for help … without the strong monitoring and mentoring arm of U.S. and coalition troops, it is increasingly questionable whether the ANDSF will develop into a robust and sustainable force,” the report said. The new head of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, Gen. John Nicholson, is conducting a review of the security situation in Afghanistan, which could affect Washington’s troop-withdrawal plans. His assessment is expected to be ready at the end of May. In addition to international troop numbers, funding is also a concern. According to SIGAR, maintaining Afghanistan’s security forces costs about $5 billion per year, with roughly 80 percent of the amount coming from the United States. SIGAR’s analysis shows that even with this level of funding, Afghan forces are unable to sustain themselves in many areas. Nicholson’s predecessor, Gen. John Campbell, recommended continuing that funding until at least 2020. “With the Afghan economy under great stress facing years of low growth Afghanistan’s difficulty in contributing significantly to its security costs will persist,” the watchdog said. The United States and its allies will meet in Warsaw this summer to discuss how to share the burden of financing the costs of Afghan forces. SIGAR said providing effective security is “essential for the survival of the Afghan state — and for the success of the reconstruction effort. Neither can deliver lasting gains without the other.” wellman.phillip@stripes.com Twitter: @PhillipWellman BAGHDAD — Abu Jassim can only afford to provide one meal per day for his seven-member family — usually a stew made of locally grown leafy green vegetables or rice with a small portion of flat bread. “We are experiencing the agony of starvation for the first time in our life,” said Abu Jassim, 52 a grocer and resident of the besieged, Islamic State-held city of Fallujah. In reality, nobody seems to be starving in Fallujah just yet. But medical officials say malnutrition is on the rise and vital medical supplies are running out. Since August, Iraqi government troops have tightened their grip around Fallujah — under Islamic State control since the early days of 2014 — and have prevented the entry of food and medicine into the city. Those seeking to flee the city have sometimes found themselves trapped by the militants, who seek to retain Fallujah’s civilian population as human shields against a full-scale government assault. Several Fallujah residents spoke to The Associated Press over the telephone — all on condition of anonymity for fear of Islamic State reprisal. Abu Jassim would only be identified by his Iraqi societal nickname, which translates as “Jassim’s father.” These residents depicted a bleak picture of conditions inside the city, with prices soaring for some basic staples while other items have completely run out. A 220-pound bag of flour now costs nearly 2 million Iraqi dinars ($1,550), compared with about 51,600 dinars ($40) in the past. Vegetable prices have risen by 500 percent and a 16-ounce can of powdered baby formula has jumped from 3,870 dinars ($3) to 144,000 dinars ($112). Items like sugar and tea are simply not available at any price. Some residents, however, pointed out that families connected to Islamic State members appear to suffer the least and receive extra provisions. There is also a severe shortage in medicine mainly for chronic diseases such as high blood pressure and diabetes, according to a doctor at the city’s hospital. He added the majority of those seeking treatment these days are children and the elderly suffering from malnutrition. Alarmed by the deteriorating conditions inside Fallujah, the New York-based Human Rights Watch called on warring parties to make sure that aid reaches the civilian population. “The humanitarian picture in Fallujah is bleak and getting bleaker,” Joe Stork, HRW’s deputy Middle East director, said in a statement issued early this month. “Greater international attention to the besieged towns and cities of the region is needed or the results for civilians could be calamitous.” The Islamic State militants who control the city have taken steps to mitigate the shortages in the face of rising public frustration. In August, they opened a bakery to sell subsidized bread, but eventually had to close it due to a shortage of flour. Then they confiscated wheat stockpiled by farmers and started distributing five kilograms of flour to each family for free. But the residents complained that the quality of the flour was substandard because the wheat had been in storage for a long time and was meant to be used as animal fodder. Shortly after Fallujah fell into Islamic State hands in 2014, Abu Jassim and his family joined thousands of residents fleeing the city. They settled in the northern city of Kirkuk, but returned home months later due to the high cost of living. In 2015, the militants began preventing civilians from leaving Fallujah. Anbar councilman Falih al-Issawi estimated that about 90,000 individuals are now living in the city — down from approximately 300,000. Now Abu Jassim sets traps on his roof to capture pigeons to boil them down to make porridge, a dish his children do not like much. He also smashes date seeds and mixes them with flour. “We are waiting for salvation to see Fallujah liberated,” he said. PAGE 6 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 NATION Clashes result in 20 arrests after Trump speech BY GILLIAN FLACCUS AND A MY TAXIN Associated Press COSTA MESA, Calif. — Raucous protesters and supporters of Donald Trump took to the streets in California leading to some 20 arrests as the Republican presidential contender brought his campaign to conservative Orange County after sweeping the Northeast GOP primaries. Dozens of protesters were mostly peaceful Thursday as Trump gave his speech inside the Pacific Amphitheatre. After the event, however, the demonstration grew rowdy late in the evening and spilled into the streets. Approximately 20 people were arrested by Costa Mesa police, according to a tweet from the Orange County Sheriff’s Department. One Trump supporter had his face bloodied in a scuffle as he tried to drive out of the arena. One man jumped on a police car, leaving its front and rear windows smashed and the top dented in and other protesters sprayed graffiti on a police car and the venue’s marquee. Dozens of cars — including those of Trump supporters trying to leave — were stuck in the street as several hundred demonstrators blocked the road, waved Mexican flags and posed for selfies. Police in riot gear and on horseback pushed the crowd back and away from the venue. There were no major injuries and police did not use any force. The crowd began dispersing about three hours after the speech ended. Earlier in the evening, a halfdozen anti-Trump protesters taunted those waiting to get into the venue. Trump supporters surrounded one man who waved a Mexican flag and shouted “Build that wall! Build that wall!” — a reference to Trump’s call to create a barrier between the United States and Mexico to stop illegal border crossings. At one point, seven women wearing no shirts and Bernie Sanders stickers over their breasts entered the square outside the amphitheater. They said they were protesting Trump’s lack of engagement on issues of gender MICHAEL G OULDING, THE O RANGE C OUNTY REGISTER /AP Police clear anti-Donald Trump demonstrators Thursday at the Pacific Amphitheatre in Costa Mesa, Calif. Hundreds of people, most of them apparently Trump protesters, blocked an intersection and some jumped on cars outside the Orange County Fairgrounds, where Trump gave a speech Thursday night. equality and women’s rights. “I feel like he wants to make America great again, but certainly not for women, for the LBGTQ community or for the lower class,” said one of the women, Tiernan Hebron. “He has, like, done nothing to help with gender equality or women’s rights or reproductive rights or anything.” Trump has drawn large crowds across the country as he has cam- paigned for the White House and some of his events have been marred by incidents both inside and outside these venues. Trump addressed a crowd of about 18,000 at the Pacific Amphitheatre and hundreds more were turned away. Earlier this week, a Trump rally in nearby Anaheim, Calif., turned contentious when his supporters and protesters clashed, leaving several people struck by pepper spray. Trump was not present. Ly Kou, 47, of Ontario, said she likes Trump because he has vowed to put the country first. “It’s obvious that America loves Trump,” said Kou, who is from Laos, as she pointed at the waiting throng. “This thing about him being racist? Look around the crowd.” Sanders backers dump on superdelegates GOP finds Trump is Associated Press WASHINGTON — Nancy Schumacher says she just wanted to do her civic duty, and so she heeded the call to become a superdelegate for Hillary Clinton. But in the year of the angry voter, not even an administrative assistant from Elk River, Minn., can escape the outrage. “Some of the (phone and email) messages called me names. Some of them called Hillary names. And others said I was a stupid bitch and something bad will happen to me,” said Schumacher, a Democratic committee member. “It’s kind of hard to take sometimes.” Bernie Sanders defied expectations to turn his long-shot presidential bid into a real threat for the Democratic nomination. Now, as his path to the White House becomes all-but-impossible, some of his supporters are lashing out at a system they believe was engineered against them from the start. While Sanders decries a “rigged” economy, some of his backers see signs of corruption everywhere — even in the party their candidate hopes to lead. Some have turned their frustration on superdelegates, the party insiders whose ability to back either candidate give them an outsized role in picking the nominee. The superdelegates include public officials: governors, former presidents and even Sanders himself. But they also include people like Schumacher, volunteers who’ve generally stayed behind the scenes. The Sanders campaign assures everyone that it doesn’t condone harassment. Yet Schumacher says she’s received vitriolic phone and email messages from self-identified Sanders backers and doesn’t quite understand how things got quite so nasty. Eight years ago, she backed Clinton but said she “cheerfully” switched to Illinois Sen. Barack Obama. She’d do the same, she said, if Sanders won the popular vote or pledged delegates from state primary elections. Gus Bickford, the former executive director of the Massachusetts Democratic Party, was taken aback by the threats that flowed into his inbox and onto his Facebook page. “Someone put up a list of the superdelegates and a person from Rhode Island posted a response that basically said, ‘They should all be assassinated’ and then said ‘I’m only joking,’ ” recalled Bickford. “With the way people are talking, you never know who’s going to take something like that seriously.” Bickford said many of the callers were Sanders supporters who asked him to side with the will of the people, even though Clinton narrowly won Massachusetts in March. Democrats aren’t the only ones facing this kind of barrage: Some Republican delegates say they have also found themselves at the receiving end of death threats and other personal attacks from supporters of GOP front-runner Donald Trump. But Clinton won the support of many superdelegates even before votes were cast in the primaries, and that has drawn the wrath of many Sanders partisans. Clinton is 91 percent of the way to capturing the nomination, meaning that she can lose every remaining primary by a wide margin and still become the party’s standard-bearer, according to an Associated Press analysis. It also means Sanders would need to flip hundreds of superdelegates to his side to have a shot at the nomination — including many from states that Clinton won. Though they’ve been part of Democratic presidential elections since 1984, the superdelegates have never been a determining factor. ‘looking more inevitable’ Associated Press WASHINGTON — Congressional Republicans are beginning to accept, and even embrace, an outcome that was once unthinkable: Donald Trump as the GOP presidential nominee. In the wake of the businessman’s commanding wins in five Eastern states this week, a growing number of lawmakers say that Trump is taking on an air of inevitability. Some argue they should get behind him now instead of trying to stand in his way, as some establishment Republicans are still attempting to do by backing various “Never Trump” efforts. For some lawmakers, supporting Trump is seen as their only hope of stopping the Democrats’ likely candidate, Hillary Clinton, in November and ensuring a Democratic president doesn’t fill Supreme Court vacancies. “I don’t understand. I mean, it’s not ‘Never Trump.’ It’s ‘Never Hillary.’ Never, never, never, Hillary. Come on. Wake up and smell the coffee,” said Rep. Mike Kelly of Pennsylvania, who this week cast his ballot for Trump, along with all members of his large family and 57 percent of Republican primary voters in his state. Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, a re- spected senior member of the Senate, previously endorsed Jeb Bush and then Sen. Marco Rubio and said he doesn’t intend to endorse Trump. But Hatch said Thursday of Trump: “It looks to me like he’s going to win and if he does I’m going to do everything in my power to help him.” Some leading Republicans have forecast that a Trump candidacy could spell electoral disaster, help Democrats win back control of the Senate and even cost Republicans seats in the House. They point to Trump’s disparaging comments about women and minorities that have contributed to high unfavorability ratings. To be sure, not all are on board, and some lawmakers cringe at the thought of vulnerable Senate Republicans and candidates getting linked to Trump’s stances or attempting to distance themselves. “He’s looking more inevitable, yeah. I’ve been wrong all along,” said GOP Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona, an outspoken Trump critic. “My feeling about Donald Trump is, I don’t think that that’s our best foot forward at all. And I can’t imagine being forced to take some of those positions that he’s taken. A ban on Muslims, build a wall and make the Mexicans pay for it, you name it.” •STA Saturday, April 30, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 7 NATION US fears rise of jihadis in moderate Bangladesh BY M ATTHEW PENNINGTON Associated Press STEVE RINGMAN, THE SEATTLE TIMES/AP Firefighting foam is used in an attempt to extinguish a burning fuel tanker truck in Issaquah, Wash., in 2002. The accident took place near one of several wells that supply drinking water to the city. That well is now contaminated and not in use, but the city says it has not confirmed the source of the contamination. Most states doing bare minimum on contamination from firefighting foam BY JENNIFER MCDERMOTT Associated Press The military is checking U.S. bases for potential groundwater contamination from a toxic firefighting foam, but most states so far show little inclination to examine civilian sites for the same threat. The foam likely was used around the country at certain airports, refineries and other sites where catastrophic petroleum fires were a risk, but an Associated Press survey of emergency management, environmental and health agencies in all 50 states showed most haven’t tracked its use and don’t even know whether it was used, where or when. Only five states — Alaska, Minnesota, New Jersey, Vermont and Wisconsin — are tracking the chemicals used in the foam and spilled from other sources through ongoing water monitoring or by looking for potentially contaminated sites. A dozen states are beginning or planning to investigate the chemicals — known as perfluorinated compounds, or PFCs — which have been linked to prostate, kidney and testicular cancer, along with other illnesses. The rest of the states, about two thirds, are waiting for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to make a move. In addition to the Aqueous Film Forming Foam used in disasterpreparedness training and in actual fires, PFCs are in many household products and are used to manufacture Teflon. Knowledge about the chemicals’ effects has been evolving, and the EPA does not regulate them. The agency in 2009 issued guidance on the level at which they are considered harmful to health, but it was only an advisory — not a legally enforceable limit. The EPA said then that it was assessing the potential risk from short-term exposure through drinking water. It later began studying the health effects from a lifetime of exposure. Those studies remain in progress, and the agency is also considering whether to establish a firm limit on PFCs in water. The EPA required large public drinking-water systems and some smaller ones to check for PFCs between 2013 and 2015. But beyond public drinking water, there may be contamination elsewhere that could affect private or other water supplies, including from any use of the firefighting foam. The five states forging ahead with wider tracking for PFCs are going well beyond the EPA’s minimum requirement. States that are not acting point to the cost of the testing and say nothing in federal law gives them the authority to require water utilities and cities to do it routinely. “We don’t have the resources to go out beyond what’s required by the EPA at this point,” said Mark Mayer, administrator of the drinking water program for the environmental department in South Dakota. “But we have been paying attention to it because there have been issues in other states.” WASHINGTON — The slaying in Bangladesh of a U.S. Agency for International Development employee has intensified U.S. concern that the strategically located South Asian country with traditions of religious tolerance is under threat from Islamic extremists. Bangladesh’s government denies that transnational jihadi groups have been behind a spate of bloody attacks on secular writers, bloggers, foreigners and religious minorities. But the Bangladeshi branch of al-Qaida on the Indian Subcontinent claimed Monday’s killing of USAID employee and gay-rights activist Xulhaz Mannan. That claim has not been verified, but it adds to fears that local extremists with international aspirations could enable groups like al-Qaida and the Islamic State group to gain a foothold in a country wracked by prolonged political turmoil because of a bitter divide between the ruling party and the opposition. The No. 2 U.S. diplomat said Thursday that despite the govern- ment blaming the political opposition for the attacks, evidence to date suggests extremist groups, either local or affiliated with Islamic State or al-Qaida, are responsible for the killings. “This gives us concern about the potential for ISIL or Daesh to take root in Bangladesh,” Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken told the House Foreign Affairs Committee, using alternative acronyms for Islamic State. “That is the last thing we want.” The assaults on minorities and moderates, typically by young men wielding knives or machetes and spewing hateful language, began in 2013 and have increased in frequency in the past year. Among the fatalities was Bangladeshi-American writer Avijit Roy, who was attacked on a street in the capital, Dhaka, in February 2015. Human rights groups fear for others facing militant death threats as the Bangladeshi government has appeared unsympathetic to their plight — perhaps because it does not want to alienate Muslims offended by the atheistic writings of some bloggers. While authorities have arrested suspects in some of those cases, none has been prosecuted, and authorities have yet to identify the masterminds. The State Department says the U.S. is considering providing sanctuary to some individuals at risk, although it remains unclear whether that will happen. Human-rights groups have been calling for that since December. A broader concern for Washington as it struggles to counter Islamic State worldwide is that Bangladesh could become a hotbed for religious extremists, despite its traditions of secularism, free speech and respect for its Christian and Hindu minorities, and successes in reducing poverty and raising life expectancy among its 160 million people. In February, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper gave an unusual mention to Bangladesh in his congressional testimony on worldwide threats. He said that Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s efforts to undermine the political opposition “will probably provide openings for transnational terrorist groups to expand their presence in the country.” Proposed rule would delay questions about criminal history for federal jobs BY K EVIN FREKING Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is proposing a rule that would prohibit federal agencies from asking certain job applicants questions about criminal and credit history until conditional offers of employment have been made. The administration said that early inquiries about criminal history can unnecessarily narrow the pool of qualified candidates and make it that much harder for those with criminal histories to support themselves and their families. Beth Cobert, the acting director of the Office of Personnel Management, told reporters in a conference call that the rule being proposed Friday would give applicants from all segments of society a “fair chance” to compete for federal jobs. She said that early screening for criminal history can prematurely disqualify applicants from consideration without agencies checking whether an arrest actually led to a conviction. The proposed rule would cover jobs in which applicants must compete with others in an open competition, but it won’t apply to many of the positions dealing with national security, intelligence and law enforcement, Cobert said. President Barack Obama already had directed the government’s personnel office to wait until later in the hiring process to ask about criminal histories. The proposed rule would formalize that process. Obama has intensified efforts during the final months of his presidency to help the previously incarcerated. Each year, more than 600,000 people are released from federal and state prisons, and millions more are released each year from local jails. He has said that helping those who have paid their debt to society can reduce recidivism and save taxpayer dollars. The White House also noted that more companies are committing to undertaking similar efforts to remove barriers in the hiring of those with criminal records. In all, the White House said, 112 companies and organizations employing more than 1.5 million people have committed to ensuring that information about criminal history is considered in the proper context. Microsoft, Best Buy, Kellogg Co. and Catholic Charities were among those who committed to the effort. PAGE 8 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 NATION Officials ask if Prince overdosed BY BEN GUARINO The Washington Post An official in Minneapolis said there are still many open questions about Prince’s death: Specifically, did Prince die from a painkiller overdose? A law enforcement official said Thursday that an investigation was exploring Prince’s history of prescription drug use. Strong pain relievers like Percocet, the investigator told the Associated Press on the condition of anonymity, are possibly involved. The official also reportedly confirmed an incident TMZ reported in the wake of Prince’s death: Prince collapsed on a plane six days before the he died. When medical help arrived, they gave the unconscious musician a Narcan shot — a drug administered when opioid overdoses are suspected. Should the investigation ultimately show that Prince overdosed, it will be another link in the grim chain connecting fame and fatal drug use — though risk of death is, historically, higher than average for younger artists. A retrospective report of 1,000 music stars, published in the British Medical Journal in 2011, concluded that “risk of death for famous musicians throughout their 20s and 30s was two to three times higher than the general UK population.” Prince was 57. When the rock-n-roll lifestyle crystallized in the latter half of the 20th century so did its lethal side effects: At 39 years old, jazz singer Dinah Washington became one of the first pop artists to die from drug use in 1963. Between 1970 and 1971, barbiturates claimed Jimi Hendrix and Canned Heat guitarist Alan Wilson while heroin did the same to Janis Joplin and, possibly, Jim Morrison — all at the age of 27 — planting the seeds of the socalled 27 Club. At the end of 1980, this timeline of drug and alcohol overdoses ran from Joplin to punk rocker Sid Vicious to Led Zeppelin’s John Bonham. After Michael Jackson died in 2009, a toxicologist reported high levels of a drug in the singer’s body. The intoxicant was different: Not alcohol or the usual recreational drugs, but propofol. Propofol is an anesthetic administered through IV, infrequently seen outside of the surgery room — Jackson acquired it from his physician, Conrad Murray, who said in an investigation that the pop star referred to the drug as “milk.” During Murray’s trial, in which a jury found the doctor guilty of involuntary manslaughter, testimony revealed the “insomniac singer” implored Murray “to give him drugs powerful enough to put him to sleep,” according to The New York Times. According to Prince’s brotherin-law, the “Purple Rain” singer also suffered from insomnia. Given the early nature of the investigation, however, any speculation between Prince’s possible Percocet use and alleged lack of sleep would be premature; what’s more, Percocet is not prescribed as a sleeping pill. Instead, as manufacturer Endo Pharmaceuticals notes on its website, it is “indicated for the relief of moderate to moderately severe pain.” Opioids are a great leveler, however, felling ordinary people, not just stars. Percocet and other opioids have come under heavy scrutiny in recent years. In 2014, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 6 out of 10 fatal overdoses involved opioids, which include heroin and synthetic painkillers like oxycodone. Those close to Prince say he had a history of chronic pain. “He was in pain all the time, but he was a performer,” singer Sheila E. told Entertainment Tonight the day after the singer’s death. “You think about all the years he was jumping off those risers. ... We did a year of touring [and] for him to jump off of that — just an entire year would have messed up his knees.” ROSS D. FRANKLIN /AP Patrick Tupas, right, and his wife, Maria Real-Tupas, sit on the roof of their shipping container apartment in Phoenix, as their dog Moon Moon Fitzgerald stands at the front door. Home sweet shipping container? BY TERRY TANG Associated Press PHOENIX — A stack of shipping containers sitting in a lot in an industrial section of Phoenix has some developers thinking inside the box. The structures usually used to transport cargo have been transformed into eight apartments. Scuff marks, old serial numbers and shipping company logos remain, but a look inside each unit reveals a 740-square-foot modern home. “It doesn’t even feel like a shipping container. It’s also insulated really well,” said Patrick Tupas, who is in the Air Force and, along with his wife, signed a one-year lease for $1,000 a month. “It just feels like a regular apartment.” There was a downside, he said — passers-by asking questions and sometimes pressing to see inside. Housing and retail projects using the containers have popped up in recent years in Las Vegas, Detroit and Washington, D.C., as developers and cities try to cater to millennials and baby boomers who want to live closer to the cultural offerings in urban hubs. To meet those needs, “cargotecture” has become a quick way to fill urban housing gaps. “They are faster, cheaper and now potentially have much more of an aesthetic range,” said Dana Cuff, director of cityLAB, a think tank at UCLA that looks at architecture and urban growth. Some mask their origins, but the ones in Phoenix don’t, she said. “They’re celebrating them,” Cuff said. In the Containers on Grand project in Phoenix, the architecture firm StarkJames designed the apartments in a way that retained the corrugated metal exteriors. Each unit is made of two containers, but inside there are no signs of the cargo hauling days. The walls are painted white. The original wood flooring is encased in epoxy. There is enough space for a bedroom and living area. The two rooms are connected by two separate hallways. One hallway has the kitchen, oven and some counter space. The other one has closet space and a nook. There is also a washer and dryer unit. Monthly rent averages about $1,000. All but two of the eight units are occupied. One is being marketed as a vacation rental. In Washington’s Brookland neighborhood, university students and young professionals have been living in a four-story housing cluster since September 2014. In Las Vegas, containers make up the building blocks of a downtown retail complex. In Detroit, Three Squared Construction is working on $14 million in new projects involving shipping containers because they save time. The company erected the city’s first residential shipping-container development in April 2015. The three-story building is used as a showcase with the top floor periodically rented out. CEO Leslie Horn said there’s been a high demand among millennials and “empty-nesters.” With containers, they only save about 5 percent in lumber costs but even more in terms of time spent. StarkJames, of Scottsdale, is on track to build 12 more container homes in downtown Phoenix. They still get ribbing from others in the industry. “We work with a lot of other developers,” architect Brian Stark said. “They always ask ‘How are the garbage can homes going?’ ” Racist statements lead California lawmakers to reject John Wayne Day BY DON THOMPSON Associated Press SACRAMENTO, Calif. — What a California lawmaker intended as a benign resolution honoring a late, world-renowned movie icon exploded into an emotional debate over decades-old racist comments Thursday. The state Assembly defeated the official ode to John Wayne after several legislators described statements he made about racial minorities and his support for the anticommunist House Un-American Activities Committee and John Birch Society. Known as “Duke,” a nickname he picked up as a boy in Glendale, Calif., Wayne was the star of movies including “The Alamo,” “The Green Beret,” and “True Grit,” for which he won an Academy Award, while portraying the gruff, rugged cowboys and brave soldiers who were his stock in trade. Republican state Assemblyman Matthew Harper, of Huntington Beach, sought to declare May 26, 2016, as John Wayne Day to mark the day the actor was born. “He had disturbing views towards race,” objected Assemblyman Luis Alejo, D-Watsonville, leading off a 20-minute debate. Alejo cited a 1971 interview with Playboy in which Wayne talked disparagingly about blacks. “I believe in white supremacy until the blacks are educated to a point of responsibility. I don’t believe in giving authority and positions of leadership and judgment to irresponsible people,” he told the magazine. Assemblyman Mike Gipson, D-Carson, who is black, said he found Wayne’s comments personally offensive. Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez, D- San Diego, cited his comments defending white Europeans’ encroachment on American Indians who Wayne once said “were selfishly trying to keep it for themselves.” Wayne is the latest deceased white icon to recently come under attack. Former President Andrew Jackson, a slave owner and Indian fighter, is being removed from the face of the $20 bill. Princeton University recently announced that former U.S. President Woodrow Wilson’s name will remain on its public policy school despite calls to remove it because he was a segregationist. The bill fell on a 35-20 vote; Harper blamed “the orthodoxy of political correctness.” “Opposing the John Wayne Day resolution is like opposing apple pie, fireworks, baseball, the Free Enterprise system and the Fourth of July!” he said in a statement. Harper represents the legislative dis- trict that includes John Wayne Airport in Orange County. The airport was renamed after Wayne’s death in 1979 and hosts a 9foot-tall statue of the actor. Several lawmakers supported the resolution, recalling Wayne as an American hero whose family created a namesake cancer foundation after his death. “He stood for those big American values that we know and we love,” said Assemblyman Travis Allen, R-Huntington Beach. Lawmakers have honored others despite controversies that eventually clouded their legacies, said Assemblyman Donald Wagner, R-Irvine. Wagner cited President Franklin Roosevelt, who has been honored despite his internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. “Every one of us is imperfect,” Wagner said. •STA Saturday, April 30, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 9 NATION 3 with family ties to shooters in Calif. attack held Chinese zodiac sculptures turn heads in Boston BY M ARK PRATT Associated Press BOSTON — A dozen giant bronze animal heads representing the signs of the Chinese zodiac are stopping people in their tracks in downtown Boston and sparking conversations. “Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads,” by contemporary Chinese artist and human rights activist Ai Weiwei, is the latest in a series of outdoor public art projects on the Rose Kennedy Greenway intended to delight, awe, and educate the thousands of tourists and workers who walk through the park daily. “The goal of all public art is to engage people,” said Lucas Cowan, the public art curator of the Greenway Conservancy, which oversees the 1.5mile-long ribbon of open space that was once a dim, grimy place in the shadow of an overhead highway. “To be able to bring people here where they see them up close and not in a museum is very important,” he said. “If people just walk past this, then we’ve failed.” The 10-foot-tall cast bronze sculptures, which weigh 1,600 to 2,100 pounds apiece when the stem and base are included, are arranged in an outwardfacing circle surrounding a popular children’s splash area called the Rings Fountain. They are positioned in order — rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, goat, monkey, rooster, dog and pig. They are based on similar but smaller zodiac sculptures that once adorned the fountain clock in the European-style garden at the Yuanming Yuan, an imperial summer palace outside Beijing. The palace was ransacked by British and French troops in 1860, and the heads were stolen. Most have been recovered and returned to China, but two remain missing, Cowan said. “By enlarging them like this, the artist is saying, ‘They belong to us; give them back,’” he said. Cowan also hopes people who see the sculptures educate themselves about the social justice and political issues the artist is involved in. Ai this year has been drawing attention to the European refugee crisis. The Boston installation, which will be in place until October, is part of a world tour of the animal heads owned by a private collector that started in 2010. Even as workers put the finishing touches on the exhibit earlier this week, dozens of people stopped to take pictures or just to gaze up at the detailed sculptures. “We live just down the street, and we knew they were putting them in, but when we saw them, we just said, ‘Wow,’” said Davida Carvin, who was BY A MANDA LEE MYERS AND JOHN ROGERS Associated Press BILL SIKES/AP A man photographs one of 12 gigantic bronze animal heads — representing the signs of the Chinese zodiac — by Chinese artist Ai Weiwei on the Rose Kennedy Greenway in Boston. checking out the sculptures with her friend, neighbor and walking partner, Andrea Mattisen-Haskins. “I’ve seen a lot of art along the Greenway, and this is right up there with the best.” “The quality is spectacular and the detail and texture is amazing,” said Mattisen-Haskins, as the pair snapped pictures. Howard Wu, a Bishop, Calif., resident visiting Boston for the first time, stumbled upon the animal heads on his way to the nearby New England Aquarium and was astonished. Wu, who is half-Chinese, immediately recognized them as the Chinese zodiac and understood their cultural significance. “They are just exceptional,” he said as he snapped dozens of pictures. “They will bring Boston good luck.” RIVERSIDE, Calif. — The brother of the man behind the San Bernardino terror attack and two Russian sisters have been charged with marriage fraud in a case that was unrelated to the December shootings but came to light in the investigation that followed it. The accused include Syed Raheel Farook. His brother and sister-in-law, Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik, died in a shootout with police after killing 14 people and wounding 22 others on Dec. 2. Also arrested Thursday were Syed Raheel Farook’s wife, Tatiana, and her sister, Mariya Chernykh. Prosecutors say Chernykh’s marriage to Enrique Marquez Jr., the only person charged in the shootings, was a sham designed to enable her to obtain legal status in the U.S. after overstaying a visitor visa in 2009. Marquez confessed to the scheme when authorities questioned him about the shootings, and he acknowledged getting $200 per month to marry Chernykh, according to his criminal complaint. The three each entered notguilty pleas at an arraignment late Thursday afternoon in federal court in Riverside. They were ordered to stand trial June 21 in federal court in Los Angeles. Federal Judge David Bristow also scheduled a pretrial conference for June 6 in Los Angeles. Bristow ordered that Chernykh, who prosecutors allege was most culpable for the sham marriage, be subject to electronic monitoring. Her boyfriend, who is the father of her child, arrived in court late Thursday afternoon to tell the judge he would post her $50,000 bond. The mother of the Farook brothers posted bonds of $25,000 each for her oldest son and his wife. Her son left court shortly thereafter, declining to speak to reporters. His wife was expected to be released later in the evening. Farook, who like the others appeared in court with shackles on his hands and feet, wept at times during his arraignment and bail hearing, including when his mother came forward to tell the judge she was posting bail. “This is about a misrepresentation of an act of marriage. This is not about terrorism,” his attorney, Ronald Cordova, told Bristow as he argued for a reasonable bail, maintaining that Farook is not a flight risk or a danger to society. Outside court, he said Farook has cooperated with federal authorities throughout the terrorist investigation. “I think his thorough cooperation may have led to some of the trouble he’s going through now,” Cordova said. If convicted of conspiracy to make false statements on federal immigration documents, the Farooks and Chernykh face up to five years in prison. Chernykh also is charged with fraud, misuse of visas and other documents, perjury and two counts of making false statements, which could mean up to 25 years in prison. Nigerian princess seeks funds to help Boko Haram survivors BY JONATHAN L ANDRUM JR. Associated Press ATLANTA — It pains Nigerian princess Modupe Ozolua every time she hears about the suicide bombings, killings and kidnappings by the Boko Haram militant group in her ancestral homeland. But Ozolua feels just as troubled when the plight of survivors dealing with the aftermath of the attacks goes unheard. The princess, a member of Benin Empire in southern Nigeria, doesn’t want those victims to be forgotten. Ozolua is taking a step toward raising awareness and money to assist displaced victims at her inaugural “Rise Above Terror” African Art Gala at the Besharat Gallery on Saturday in Atlanta. She hopes the money can help rebuild schools and homes and provide medical relief and food to help some of the millions who have been unable to leave an area with destroyed schools and burnt villages. “When people hear about Boko Haram, you think about ‘Bring Back Our Girls’ only, but it’s much bigger than that,” Ozolua said. “Figures are being thrown around about how many people are being killed. It’s bigger than that. Ozolua There are millions of people who have survived these attacks, seeing their families killed in front of them. Their lives are completely traumatized. Nobody is giving much attention to them. Our focus is on them. They should be assisted.” “Vampire Diaries” actress Kat Graham will co-host the gala. The event will auction off African artwork including 29 paintings and 11 handmade wood and brass carvings. Ozolua, a cosmetic surgery philanthro- pist, has brought aid to victims in Africa since she started her nonprofit foundation, Empower 54, in 2003. But this is first time she is holding the fundraiser in the United States, calling it a “coming-out party.” “It’s my privilege to join Empower 54 and help internally displaced persons in northeast Nigeria,” said Graham, who is of Liberian descent. “The horrors of IDPs losing their loved ones, possessions and rendered helpless does not make them hopeless.” The Boko Haram militant group has killed and kidnapped thousands in a campaign of violence in recent years as it seeks to establish an Islamic caliphate in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country with 170 million people, which is divided almost equally between mostly Christians in the south and Muslims in the north. The Nigeria-based Islamic extremist group has forced young men to be its fighters and girls to be sex slaves or even suicide bombers. The nearly seven-year insurgency, which has launched attacks beyond Nigeria’s bor- ders into Cameroon, Chad and Niger, has killed at least 20,000 people, according to Amnesty International. The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs says the violence also has displaced 2.8 million people in the region, mostly those from Nigeria. Millions more face dire food shortages. Boko Haram, which means “Western education is sinful,” in the local Hausa language, in 2015 swore allegiance to the Islamic State group. While Boko Haram is thought to have abducted thousands of people over the years, the mass kidnapping of more than 200 girls from a school in the town of Chibok in 2014 brought the extremist group to the world’s attention. Ozolua said she wants to give underprivileged children in Nigeria a better option. Last year, the princess said her event in Nigeria raised $100,000. She hopes the gala on Saturday can produce more than $400,000. PAGE 10 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 WORLD NK says US soldiers provoking its troops BY HYUNG -JIN K IM Associated Press K IM KWANG H YON /AP Kim Dong Chul, center, a U.S. citizen detained in North Korea, was sentenced Friday by a North Korean court to 10 years in prison for what it called acts of espionage. North Korea sends 2nd US citizen to prison this year Associated Press PYONGYANG, North Korea — North Korea on Friday sentenced a U.S. citizen of Korean heritage to 10 years in prison after convicting him of espionage and subversion, the second American it has put behind bars this year. Kim Dong Chul had been detained in the North on suspicion of engaging in spying and stealing state secrets. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison with hard labor after a brief trial in Pyongyang. North Korea’s Supreme Court found Kim guilty of espionage and subversion under Articles 60 and 64 of the North’s criminal code. Further details were not immediately available. When he was paraded before the media in Pyongyang last month, Kim said he had collaborated with and spied for South Korean intelligence authorities in a plot to bring down the North’s leadership and had tried to spread religion among North Koreans before his arrest in the city of Rason in October. South Korea’s National Intelligence Service, the country’s main spy agency, has said Kim’s case wasn’t related to the organization in any way. Kim’s sentencing comes on the heels of a 15-year sentence handed down on Otto Warmbier, an American university student who the North says was engaged in anti-state activities while visiting the country as a tourist earlier this year. North Korea regularly accuses Washington and Seoul of sending spies to overthrow its government to enable the U.S.-backed South Korean government to control the entire Korean Peninsula. Some foreigners previously arrested have read statements of guilt they later said were coerced. Most of those who are sentenced to long prison terms are released before serving their full time. In the past, North Korea has held out until senior U.S. officials or statesmen came to personally bail out detainees, all the way up to former President Bill Clinton, whose visit in 2009 secured the freedom of American journalists Euna Lee and Laura Ling. Both had crossed North Korea’s border from China illegally. It took a visit in November 2014 by U.S. spy chief James Clapper to bring home Mathew Miller, also arrested after entering the country as a tourist, and KoreanAmerican missionary Kenneth Bae, who had been incarcerated since November 2012. Jeffrey Fowle, a U.S. tourist detained for six months at about the same time as Miller, was released just before that and sent home on a U.S. government plane. Fowle left a Bible in a local club hoping a North Korean would find it, which is considered a criminal offense in North Korea. 11 dead in Norway helicopter crash Associated Press COPENHAGEN, Denmark — An oil-rig helicopter crashed Friday on an island off the coast of western Norway, killing 11 people and leaving two others missing, a rescue official said. Jon Sjursoe, a spokesman for Norway’s Joint Rescue Coordination Center, said the Eurocopter EC-225 helicopter was carrying 11 Norwegians, one Briton and one Italian from the Gullfaks B oil field in the North Sea to Bergen, 74 miles away on the Norwegian mainland. He did not know who was among the confirmed victims. Norwegian broadcaster NRK said 11 on board were employed by the Norwegian oil and gas company Statoil ASA. The company didn’t immediately return calls seeking comment. Police spokesman Morten Kronen said the heli- copter “totally smashed” as it hit the island of Turoey, near Bergen, and the 11 victims were found on land. The helicopter’s fuselage was found in the water off the island while its rotor system was on land, Sjursoe told The Associated Press. “It is a very small island and (helicopter) parts are spread partly on land, partly in the sea,” Sjursoe said. Norwegian media posted photos of huge billows of smoke. Witness Rebecca Andersen told the Norwegian newspaper Verdens Gang that the helicopter’s “rotor blades came rushing toward us.” “Then we heard a violent explosion,” Andersen was quoted as saying. Statoil said it had mobilized its emergency response team and had “temporarily grounded all equivalent traffic helicopters.” SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea on Friday accused U.S. soldiers of trying to provoke its frontline troops with “disgusting” acts and encouraging South Korean soldiers to aim their guns at the North. A North Korean military statement warned U.S. soldiers to stop “hooliganism” at the inter-Korean border village of Panmunjom, or they’ll meet a “dog’s death any time and any place.” “GIs hurled fully armed MPs of the South Korean puppet army into perpetrating such dangerous provocations as aiming at” the North Korean military side last week, said the statement. It said U.S. troops pointed their fingers at North Korean soldiers and made strange noises and “disgusting” facial expressions. North Korea occasionally accuses South Korean and U.S. troops of trying to provoke its border troops and vice versa. After North Korea’s first nuclear bomb test in 2006, the U.S. accused North Korean troops of spitting across the demarcation line, making throatslashing hand gestures and flashing their middle fingers. The latest North Korean accusation came a day after South Korean and U.S. officials said two suspected medium-range missile launches by North Korea ended in failure. North Korea has fired a barrage of missiles and artillery shells into the sea in an apparent response to South Korea-U.S. military drills that end Saturday. The U.S. and South Korean militaries had no immediate official responses. About 28,000 American troops are deployed in South Korea to deter potential aggression from North Korea, a legacy of the Korean War, which ended in an armistice and not a peace treaty. Panmunjom, located inside the 2.5-mile-wide Demilitarized Zone that bisects the Korean Peninsula, is where the 1953 armistice was signed. It remains one of the world’s most dangerous flashpoints, but Panmunjom — jointly overseen by North Korea and the American-led U.N. Command — is also a popular tourist spot drawing visitors on both sides. Visitors from the southern side are often told by tour guides to be extremely careful about what gestures they make so as not to antagonize the nearby North Korean soldiers. UN: More than 9K killed since Ukraine conflict began BY M ICHAEL A STOR Associated Press UNITED NATIONS — Nearly 10,000 people have been killed and more than 20,000 injured since the Ukraine conflict began in April 2014, a top U.N. official said Thursday. Assistant Secretary General for Political Affairs Taye-Brook Zerihoun told the Security Council that the total number of casualties now stands at 30,729 including 9,333 people killed and 21,396 injured. He said the latest incident occurred Wednesday when shelling killed at least four civilians and injured at least eight people in Olenivka near the city of Donetsk. Zerihoun said fighting has escalated in recent weeks to levels not seen since August 2014, when it was at its most intense. He criticized both sides for hindering access to an international monitoring mission put in place under the Minsk cease-fire agreement ironed out by the Ukraine, Russia, France and Germany on Feb. 14, 2015, but said that, according to statistics provided by the monitors, restrictions were more common in rebel-held areas. During the meeting representatives from Russia and Ukraine traded bitter accusations over who was to blame for the flare-up. “Russia has organized and deployed in Donbas a 34,000-strong hybrid military force consisting of the regular Russian troops as well as of foreign and local militants. Russian generals and military officers provide direct command-and-control of this illegal military entity impressively heavily armed,” Vadym Prystaiko, Ukraine’s deputy minister of foreign affairs, told the council. He claimed this force is better armed than most NATO members despite the Russians’ claims that the weapons were acquired in local hardware stores. Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin denounced the U.N. session as a play for time while Ukraine’s army occupies towns “in the neutral strip” stipulated by the Minsk agreement. “Over the entire crisis the U.N. has been used as a propaganda platform,” Churkin said. Russia tried to circulate a press statement reaffirming the U.N.’s commitment to the Minsk agreement, but failed to gain consensus approval because it also called for an investigation into the killing of Russian protesters in Odessa, without mentioning violations of the cease-fire by rebel forces. The U.S., France and Britain all denounced Russian aggression for igniting the conflict. “What is happening today is the result of Russia’s violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity which began with its occupation of Crimea more than two years ago and expanded with substantial military on the ground and weapons support for armed separatists in Eastern Ukraine,” U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power told the council. •STA Saturday, April 30, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 11 WORLD Parts of India ban daytime cooking amid deadly heat BY NIRMALA GEORGE AND I NDRAJIT SINGH Associated Press MOISES CASTILLO/AP Rescue workers search the city dump for survivors Thursday, one day after trash collapsed on workers in Guatemala City, Guatemala. Rescuers search for missing in fatal Guatemala trash slide Associated Press GUATEMALA CITY — Hundreds of rescuers picked through a Guatemalan garbage dump Thursday looking for bodies or possible survivors a day after a massive slope of trash collapsed, killing at least four people. The National Civil Police reported that 18 people still could be missing, while Guatemala’s national disaster response agency put the figure at five. Dozens of people seeking loved ones who were unaccounted for also were at the scene. Marta Julia Davila, 21, said her grandfather, Hugo Leonel Perez Alonzo, 60, works as a “guajero,” or garbage picker, who looks for recyclable materials. Perez’s family had not seen him since before the slide, and workers reported that he was last spotted sitting down in the area where the collapse happened, she added. “We are sure he is there because yesterday he left for work and last night he did not return to his home,” Davila said. “There are a lot of people buried.” Recent rains may have contributed to the slope’s collapse. Authorities said about 1,000 people worked in that area of the dump and had been asked to evacuate after an earlier slide, but some resisted. About 3,000 tons of garbage from the capital and surrounding areas is handled daily at the dump. Eurozone economy rises to size of 2008 Revered Chinese monk mummified, covered in gold leaf BY PAN P YLAS Associated Press BY DIDI TANG Associated Press BEIJING — A revered Buddhist monk in China has been mummified and covered in gold leaf, a practice reserved for holy men in some areas with strong Buddhist traditions. The monk, Fu Hou, died in 2012 at age 94 after spending most of his life at the Chongfu Temple on a hill in the city of Quanzhou, in southeastern China, according to the temple’s abbot, Li Ren. The temple decided to mummify Fu Hou to commemorate his devotion to Buddhism — he started practicing at age 17 — and to serve as an inspiration for followers of the religion that was brought from the Indian subcontinent roughly 2,000 years ago. Immediately following his death, the monk’s body was washed, treated by two mummification experts, and sealed inside a large pottery jar in a sitting position, the abbot said. When the jar was opened three years later, the monk’s body was found intact and sitting upright with little sign of deterioration apart from the skin having dried out, Li Ren said. The body then was washed with alcohol and covered with layers of gauze, lacquer and finally gold leaf. It also was robed, and a local media report said PATNA, India — With sizzling temperatures claiming more than 300 lives this month in India, officials said Friday they were banning daytime cooking in some parts of the drought-stricken country in a bid to prevent accidental fires that have killed nearly 80 more people. The eastern state of Bihar this week took the unprecedented step of forbidding any cooking between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. after accidental fires exacerbated by dry, hot, windy weather swept through shantytowns and thatched-roof houses in villages and killed 79 people. They included 10 children and five adults killed in a fire sparked during a Hindu prayer ceremony in Bihar’s Aurangabad district last week. People were told to cook at night, instead. Hoping to prevent more fires, officials also have barred burning spent crops or holding religious fire rituals. Anyone defying the ban risks up to a year in jail. “We call this the fire season in Bihar,” said Vyas, a state disaster management official who goes by one name. “Strong, westerly winds stoke fires which spread easily and cause great damage.” Much of India is reeling under a weekslong heat wave and severe drought conditions that have decimated crops, killed livestock and left at least 330 million Indians without enough water for their daily needs. Rivers, lakes and dams have dried up in parts of the western states of Maharashtra and Gujarat, and overall officials say that groundwater reservoirs are at just 22 percent capacity. In some areas, the situation is so bad the government has sent tankers of water for emergency relief. Monsoon rains are still weeks away, expected to start only in June. At least 300 people have died of heat-related illness this month, including 110 in the state of Orissa, 137 in Telangana and another 45 in Andhra Pradesh where temperatures since the start of April have been hovering about 111 degrees Fahrenheit. That’s about 8 to 10 degrees hotter than normal for April, according to state meteorological official Y.K. Reddy. He predicted the situation would only get worse in May, traditionally the hottest month in India. C HINATOPIX /AP A man takes a photo of revered Buddhist monk Fu Hou, whose body was mummified and covered in gold leaf. The monk died in 2012 at 94 in China. a glass case had been ordered for the statue, which will be protected with an anti-theft device. The local Buddhist belief is that only a truly virtuous monk’s body would remain intact after being mummified, local media reports said. “Monk Fu Hou is now being placed on the mountain for people to worship,” Li Ren said. LONDON — It’s been a long and tortuous journey, but the eurozone economy is finally back to the size it was before the global financial crisis. Official figures released Friday show that the eurozone, which as a bloc is the world’s secondlargest economy, accelerated unexpectedly at the start of the year to bring it back to the level it was before the recessions of the past eight years. Eurostat, the European Union’s statistics agency, said the 19country currency bloc expanded by a quarterly rate of 0.6 percent in the first three months of the year. The increase was double the previous quarter’s rate and ahead of market expectations for a more modest 0.4 percent. The increase means that the eurozone economy is now 0.4 percent bigger than it was in the first quarter of 2008, before the deep recession stoked by the global financial crisis. Since then, the eurozone has had a torrid time, falling into and out of recession as the global financial crisis morphed into a regional debt crisis that at various times threatened the future of the euro currency, itself. Though the size of the eurozone economy is back to where it was in 2008, the region still has a way to go to heal fully. That’s most evident in the unemployment rate, which at 10.2 percent is still 3 percentage points higher than it was in 2008. It is far higher in the countries that have suffered most financially, such as Greece and Spain. While the eurozone was dealing with the debt problems of a number of its member states, other economies, such as the U.S. and Britain, were recouping the ground lost in the wake of the global financial crisis, which triggered the deepest global recession since World War II. The U.S., for example, regained its pre-recession size back in 2011 and has since managed to eke out consistent growth and has seen unemployment fall sharply. PAGE 12 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 OPINION Max D. Lederer Jr., Publisher Lt. Col. Michael C. Bailey, Europe commander Lt. Col. Brian Choate, Pacific commander Harry Eley, Europe Business Operations Terry M. Wegner, Pacific Business Operations EDITORIAL Terry Leonard, Editor leonard.terry@stripes.com Robert H. Reid, Senior Managing Editor reid.robert@stripes.com Sam Amrhein, Managing Editor International amrhein.sam@stripes.com Tina Croley, Managing Editor for Content croley.tina@stripes.com Sean Moores, Managing Editor for Presentation moores.sean@stripes.com Joe Gromelski, Managing Editor for Digital gromelski.joe@stripes.com BUREAU STAFF Europe/Mideast Teddie Weyr, Europe & Mideast Bureau Chief weyr.teddie@stripes.com +49(0)631.3615.9310; cell +49(0)173.315.1881; DSN (314)583.9310 Pacific Paul Alexander, Pacific Bureau Chief alexander.paul@stripes.com +81-3 6385.5377; cell (080)5883.1673 DSN (315)225.5377 Washington Joseph Cacchioli, Washington Bureau Chief cacchioli.joseph@stripes.com (+1)(202)761.0908; DSN (312)763.0908 Brian Bowers, Assistant Managing Editor, News bowers.brian@stripes.com Amanda Trypanis, Design Desk Supervisor trypanis.amanda@stripes.com CIRCULATION Mideast Robert Reismann, reismann.robert@stripes.com +49(0)631.3615.9150; DSN (314)583.9150 Europe Van Rowell, rowell.van@stripes.com +49(0)631.3615.9111; DSN (314)583.9111 Government eavesdropping run amok BY NOAH FELDMAN Bloomberg View T he U.S. government claims the right to eavesdrop at will on your email when you’re writing to someone who lives abroad. Now it wants to be able to use those emails to convict you of a crime. That’s what’s happening to Aws Mohammed Younis al-Jayab — and he’s not the only one. The legal basis is the 2008 Amendment Act to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which says the government may monitor communications from within the U.S. to foreigners abroad, or vice versa, without first obtaining a warrant to authorize the surveillance. No court has yet reviewed the law’s constitutionality because until 2013 the government didn’t tell anyone that it had been doing this. The Supreme Court ruled in 2013 that no one had legal standing to challenge the law based merely on the speculation that it might be applied to them. Al-Jayab is different. The government can charge him with a crime only by using evidence gathered from his intercepted emails. So it’s put him on notice that it intends to rely on material collected without a warrant per the FISA. That gives alJayab standing to challenge the law. Rightfully, al-Jayab should win — and the details of his case show why. It’s one thing for the government to intercept communications with foreigners for intelligencegathering purposes. I would consider that a close debate. But it’s quite another to use those intercepts as evidence at trial. Such use badly erodes our Fourth Amendment protections, especially in an era when so much electronic communication spans the globe and where we move across borders frequently. The alleged facts of al-Jayab’s case are telling. The Sacramento, Calif., resident came to the U.S. as a refugee from Iraq in 2012. According to the government, while living in Arizona and Wisconsin, he emailed with jihadis in Syria about going there to fight. The emails indicated he had been there before. And sure enough, in 2014, al-Jayab traveled to Turkey and from there crossed into Syria to fight alongside several groups, allegedly including Ansar al-Islam, a Kurdish jihadi group that has since merged with the Islamic State group. In theory, al-Jayab could be charged with material support for terror if it could be proven that he really fought with Ansar al-Islam, a designated terrorist group for purposes of that law. But either the government doesn’t want to charge him with that crime for tactical reasons, or it’s afraid it doesn’t have enough direct evidence to prove it. Instead, the government called al-Jayab in for an interview with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services after his return to the U.S. in 2014. They asked him whether he’d been a member of a rebel group or supported terror. He said no, and claimed to have done nothing more than visit his grandmother in Turkey on the trip. The government then charged al-Jayab with the crime of lying to government officials. Its evidence comes from his emails to Syria when he was in the U.S. and responses he received. Obtained under the FISA without a warrant, they are the heart of the government’s case. To be sure, in the light of the Paris and Brussels attacks, the U.S. needs some way to lock up potential jihadi terrorists who may have been trained abroad to commit attacks here. But relying on warrantless wiretapping isn’t it. There is a reason that warrantless wiretaps usually are inadmissible in court. They count as searches for purposes of the Fourth Amendment. Requiring a warrant before law enforcement is allowed to listen in is a basic element of our modern right to privacy. Once we relax that right by allowing evidence obtained in a warrantless search, there’s no easy stopping point. It would seem arbitrary if we could convict one criminal who called an associate outside the U.S., but not another whose associate was inside our borders. Once the former is permitted, we’ll start thinking about how to allow the latter. What’s more, the Constitution doesn’t say that my privacy stops when I am speaking to someone who happens to be outside the U.S. The Framers surely wouldn’t have exempted letters sent from abroad if they were read within the U.S. The Fourth Amendment provides for the right of “the people” to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures. That need not apply to people outside the U.S. But it should apply to everyone who is here, and we shouldn’t lose our privacy rights just because we’re talking across borders. It’s harder to say with certainty that the government should always be barred from such intercepts when they’re made purely for intelligence purposes. Say the government is listening to the phone of someone in Syria and that person gets a call from the U.S. — the government shouldn’t have to stop listening. But charging a U.S. resident in U.S. court on the basis of warrantless searches of communications while the resident was in the U.S. goes too far. The government should find another way to hold al-Jayab if he is dangerous, such as charging him with a crime that can be proved without violating his rights — and ours. Noah Feldman, a Bloomberg View columnist, is a professor of constitutional and international law at Harvard. Pacific Mari Matsumoto, customerhelp@stripes.com +81-3 6385.3171; DSN (315)229.3171 CONTACT US Washington tel: (+1)202.761.0900; DSN (312)763.0900; 529 14th Street NW, Suite 350, Washington, DC 20045-1301 Reader letters letters@stripes.com Additional contacts stripes.com/contactus OMBUDSMAN Tobias Naegele The Stars and Stripes ombudsman protects the free flow of news and information, reporting any attempts by the military or other authorities to undermine the newspaper’s independence. The ombudsman also responds to concerns and questions from readers, and monitors coverage for fairness, accuracy, timeliness and balance. The ombudsman welcomes comments from readers, and can be contacted by email at naegele.tobias@stripes.com, or by phone at 202.761.0900. Stars and Stripes (USPS 0417900) is published weekdays (except Dec. 25 and Jan. 1) for 50 cents Monday through Thursday and for $1 on Friday by Pacific Stars and Stripes, Unit 45002, APO AP 96338-5002. Periodicals postage paid at San Francisco, CA, Postmaster: Send address changes to Pacific Stars and Stripes, Unit 45002, APO AP 96338-5002. This newspaper is authorized by the Department of Defense for members of the military services overseas. However, the contents of Stars and Stripes are unofficial, and are not to be considered as the official views of, or endorsed by, the U.S. government. As a DOD newspaper, Stars and Stripes may be distributed through official channels and use appropriated funds for distribution to remote locations where overseas DOD personnel are located. The appearance of advertising in this publication does not constitute endorsement by the Department of Defense or Stars and Stripes of the products or services advertised. Products or services advertised shall be made available for purchase, use or patronage without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, marital status, physical handicap, political affiliation or any other nonmerit factor of the purchaser, user or patron. © Stars and Stripes 2016 stripes.com Some crimes can be – and should be – forgotten BY PETER ORSZAG AND CASS SUNSTEIN Bloomberg View T he U.S. is supposed to be a nation of second chances, but for the 70 million Americans with a criminal record, we’re not doing such a great job. Even among those whose crimes were nonviolent and committed long ago, too many still bear a scarlet letter. So it’s encouraging to see many states now moving to expunge or seal the records of nonviolent crimes that aren’t repeated. The stigma from a drug or other offense, even one committed in young adulthood, can linger for decades. In one recent experiment, job applicants randomly assigned a criminal record were half as likely as other applicants to get an offer of employment or even an interview request. People with actual records who are able to get jobs are paid 10 percent to 40 percent less than otherwise similar people, and those with records are less likely to move up the pay scale, research shows. That remains true no matter how many years former criminals stay on the straight and narrow — even though the longer it’s been since their offense, the less likely they are to commit another one. And the former offenders themselves aren’t the only ones who pay: More than 5 million American children have parents who have been incarcerated. The family effect, furthermore, has a substantial racial aspect: Parental incarceration rates are two to seven times as high among black and Hispanic children as they are among white children. To limit these costs, many states are expanding former criminals’ ability to seal or expunge their records. In February, Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat, signed legislation that will seal the records of most second- and third-degree misdemeanors if the offender has not broken the law for a decade. To put this in perspective, third-degree misdemeanors in Pennsylvania include offenses such as disorderly conduct and loitering. Do we really want someone who loitered in his early 20s to continue to bear the costs of that bad decision in his 40s and even 50s? The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press apparently believes so, citing its “strong interest in preserving the presumptive right of access to criminal court proceedings and documents afforded by the First Amendment.” (The committee makes the same argument in many settings, including, in the interest of full disclosure, a family law case involving columnist Peter Orszag.) But when it comes to criminal records, permanent full transparency has costs as well as benefits. Yes, the First Amendment is understood to create a presumptive right of access to certain judicial proceedings, and criminal court records should not be sealed without good reason. But in the U.S., both sealing and expungement have a long history — expungement reaches back at least 50 years. Given the states’ strong interest in preventing severe damage to people’s lives, the constitutional objection to expunging long-ago nonviolent transgressions is weak. More and more states are coming to recognize the value of a second chance. From 2009 to 2014, more than 30 states expanded programs to seal or expunge former criminal records, according to the Vera Institute of Justice — by allowing the process to apply to nonviolent felonies in addition to misdemeanors (Wyoming), by reducing the waiting time before the option is available (Colorado), by making it illegal to deny employment or an occupational license on the basis of an expunged record (Indiana), and by expunging juvenile records (North Carolina). We strongly support these efforts, though we would stop short of allowing sealing or expunging for serious violent crimes (e.g., murder or rape) or for professionals who should know better (e.g., people in the financial services industry who commit fraud or related transgressions). Some employers — including Facebook, Starbucks and Wal-Mart — have taken the complementary step of removing the box on application forms that asks about former criminal activity. The federal government should do the same, except in the case of law enforcement jobs, as the Brennan Center for Justice has recommended. As Arthur Brooks of the American Enterprise Institute said earlier this week at a White House conference on the economics of the criminal justice system, America cannot afford to waste so many lives. One good way to save them is to allow nonviolent criminals to seal or expunge their records after a period of good behavior. Peter Orszag, a Bloomberg View columnist, was formerly President Barack Obama’s director of the Office of Management and Budget. Cass Sunstein, a Bloomberg View columnist, is director of the Harvard Law School’s program on behavioral economics and public policy. Saturday, April 30, 2016 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 13 OPINION Policy specifics still seem foreign to Trump BY M ARTIN SCHRAM Tribune News Service W hile covering a news event Wednesday afternoon, a most unsettling realization came over me. It was based not on personal views — just an instinct that comes with decades of covering things as a journalist and then seeing how they turn out. I realized that the speaker who was delivering a major international policy address had a keen talent for telling ordinary people what they want to hear, making complex crises sound simple and solvable. And a supremely confident way of capturing the hopes and hearts of people who are fearful and fed-up. I realized I was quite possibly — and maybe even probably — covering America’s next president: Donald Trump. Democrats are now salivating at the prospect of being gifted with Trump as their Republican presidential opponent. But in November, those Democrats may be as shocked as today’s Republican elites who last summer were laughing at Trump’s chances. Trump has a way of winning over people who may not have a lot of knowledge about issues — but know enough to know their lives and livelihood are not as prosperous as they should be and their government seems to be making things worse, not better. What made that realization so unsettling was that Trump clearly seems unknowledgeable about the national security topics he was reading from a teleprompter (something he’s rarely done as a neophyte politician). Even worse, I believe he doesn’t know his major in-depth foreign policy speech was riddled with inconsistencies and contradictions. (A point cited by many post-speech TV analysts, including former House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers, R-Mich.) Trump, who only in recent weeks formed a team of international affairs consultants, laid out a world vision in which, in a sin- Trump made no mention of trying to undo any of Russia’s military adventurism in Ukraine, an omission he might not have charitably forgiven if it had been made by Obama. gle sentence, he declared two seemingly contradictory concepts: “We’re getting out of the nation-building business and instead focusing on creating stability in the world.” But America got into nation-building in Afghanistan and Iraq only because the demise of the dictatorial regimes of the Taliban and Saddam Hussein had left unstable lands that militants sought to capture to create safe havens for terrorism. While never specifically mentioning President George W. Bush’s rush to invade Iraq and topple Saddam’s regime, Trump said of the present problems in the Middle East: “It all began with a dangerous idea that we could make Western democracies out of countries that had no experience or interests in becoming a Western democracy.” Yet, in his list of steps he will take to make things better, Trump said (without further explanation): “Finally, I will work with our allies to reinvigorate Western values and institutions. Instead of trying to spread universal values that not everybody shares.” But Trump also was able to capitalize on a number of the calamitous outcomes of President Barack Obama’s declarations and actions, such as the time Obama pointedly warned that if Syria used or even moved its chemical weapons, he would consider that crossing a red line. Trump quite properly said: “Our friends and enemies must know that if I draw a line in the sand, I will enforce that line in the sand.” Trump spoke of the importance of U.S. allies being able to trust his commitments and adversaries respecting his word. Yet when talking about combating Islamic State terrorists, Trump declared, “We must as, a nation, be more unpredictable.” And, after listing what he called reductions in U.S. military strength under Obama, Trump concluded, rather incongruously, by tossing in his only mention of climate change: “Our military is depleted and we’re asking our generals and military leaders to worry about global warming.” He spoke hopefully of a new comity with old adversaries: “We desire to live peacefully and in friendship with Russia and China. … Some say the Russians won’t be reasonable. I intend to find out. If we can’t make a deal under my administration, a deal that’s great — not good, great — for America, but also good for Russia, then we will quickly walk from the table.” Trump made no mention of trying to undo any of Russia’s military adventurism in Ukraine, an omission he might not have charitably forgiven if it had been made by Obama. Still, Trump’s speech was loaded with the sort of jingo-demagoguery that has worked so well for him among fed-up voters so far. And it may indeed surprise the pols and pundits come November. But Trump’s biggest fans may not have forgiven him one omission. Trump never mentioned what every Trump rally-goer can name is his foreign policy centerpiece: Trump never mentioned Mexico or forcing Mexico to pay for building a huge wall along the U.S. border. Alas, unlike his rally-enthusiasts, Trump’s polite foreign policy audience didn’t prompt him by chanting, “Build the wall!” Martin Schram, an op-ed columnist for Tribune News Service, is a veteran Washington journalist, author and TV documentary executive. Celebs, stop threatening to leave the US over elections BY A LYSSA ROSENBERG The Washington Post T here have been many startling things about the 2016 race for the presidency. But we’ve reached a predictable part of the election cycle, one that I particularly dislike: the part where various celebrities, with varying degrees of flippancy, start suggesting that they’ll move out of the country if a candidate they find horrifying gets elected. We’re at least three presidents into this sort of posturing: Robert Altman said he’d move to France if George W. Bush was elected in 2000, and Alec Baldwin suggested he’d pull up stakes before reversing himself. In 2008, Akon said he would renounce his U.S. citizenship if John McCain triumphed over Barack Obama. And now “Girls” creator Lena Dunham has remarked that she’d relocate to Vancouver in the event of a Donald Trump presidency. Beyond the fact that no one ever actually follows through on these pledges (an exception, kind of, is James Cameron, who withdrew his application for U.S. citizenship after George W. Bush was elected), they constitute one of my least favorite forms of interaction between the political and entertainment industries. Threatening to leave the United States behind for good may be a way to communicate just how high celebrities believe the stakes are in a given election. But it immediately undercuts artists’ credibility to speak on political issues in two important and specific ways. And that’s a shame for anyone who believes that artists actually have real things to offer the Dunham political process. First, upping the ante like this immediately highlights the difference between celebrities and their fans, who presumably are the people they’re trying to influence. Moving can cost thousands of dollars, and given the oft-cited statistic that 47 percent of Americans couldn’t come up with $400 on short notice, plenty of ordinary citizens probably don’t have the cash on hand to switch countries at a moment’s notice (though I guess we could all start Fleeing to Canada funds). Whether stars intend it or not, talking cavalierly about leaving the country because of the result of a presidential election is a good advertisement for just how much cash they have on hand and just how much flexibility their jobs allow them. Because beyond the question of the immediate costs of the move, lots of people have jobs that they can’t just take with them. If you’re Miley Cyrus and your job consists of flying to different locations to record and tour, it doesn’t really matter where you make your primary residence. And people at the top of the creative ladder in the entertainment industry and the people who work steady, or even irregular, jobs in it have very different levels of financial security and job flexibility. I don’t know whether everyone in the “Girls” writers room would be completely sanguine about relocating to Vancouver for work, especially with the show coming to a close, if that’s where Dunham wants to live. But especially in the world outside the entertainment industry, if you work at a store, or in a factory, or in a specific school district, there’s no guarantee that an equivalent job awaits you over the border, or that you’d be able to get a Canadian work permit. Yes, I know, to a certain extent it’s silly to blame rich, highly in-demand people for being wealthy and valuable commodities. But flaunting their wealth and privilege in an unseemly way isn’t the only reason it’s extremely dumb for celebrities to threaten to move to Canada based on the outcome of an election. The most idiotic thing about this particular bit of political posturing? It suggests that the people who engage in it are fundamentally unserious about U.S. politics. It’s a grand gesture that’s actually the equiva- lent of giving up and running away. If you move to Canada, or France, or any place other than here and leave everyone else to live through the actual consequences of an election result you didn’t like, you’re not proving that you’re committed to change. Instead, you’re showing that your primary concern is for yourself, even though if you’re already a significantly wealthy person, you’re probably fairly buffeted from any actual policy changes that a new administration might institute. You’re signaling that you find being associated with a given president, and the Americans who voted for him or her, distasteful. And that’s an awfully flimsy reason to flounce out of the country. I will make one exemption. If you declare that you’re moving out of the country but will dedicate, say, 90 percent of your money to funding down-ballot candidates and building durable political institutions that could change the electoral tide, I will give you a pass and agree to regard you as a moderately serious person. But if you’re going to do that, why not stay in the United States and enjoy the results of your investment? And unless you’re willing to make that kind of commitment, your threats to deprive us of your shining presence don’t count for much. Alyssa Rosenberg blogs about pop culture for The Washington Post’s Opinions section. PAGE 14 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 AMERICAN ROUNDUP THE CENSUS 12K The amount of money authorities say a New Jersey man owes in unpaid tolls. Oscar Sanchez, of Jersey City, was pulled over for not having a front license plate on his car. The officer then discovered Sanchez was driving with an expired license and had more than 200 counts of missed EZ Pass toll payments. Sanchez faces charges including theft of service and driving on a suspended license. Zoo introduces new African lion cub BUFFALO — A New NY York zoo has welcomed a new African lion cub, its first cub to be born there in 25 years. The Buffalo Zoo introduced the nearly 8-week-old male to the media Wednesday. Zoo President Donna Fernandes said it was one of four cubs born to Lelie and Tiberius. The new unnamed cub won’t be seen in the lion exhibit for some time, but the zoo plans to post pictures and video to social media. The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service classifies African lions as endangered because of loss of habitat and poaching. Labrador helps man stranded in snowstorm FLAGSTAFF — Flagstaff police said a dog helped lead them to a hiker who was stranded at the base of Mount Elden during a snowstorm. The Arizona Daily Sun reported Officer Melissa Seay said the hiker would have died in the freezing temperatures on April 16 if it hadn’t been for Marley, 2, a black Labrador mix, that heard the man’s cries for help. The dog’s owner, John Paul Roccaforte, said he let Marley outside around 1 a.m. when she started barking and wouldn’t stop. Roccaforte said he went outside and eventually heard someone moaning and calling for help. Seay said the hiker, who had fallen and been unable to walk, was found in a rocky area covered by trees. AZ School project’s sparks fears of Zodiac Killer TALLAHASSEE — A FL Florida State University class project about drug cartels and serial killers took a turn when students scrawled a message associated with the infamous Zodiac Killer on a sidewalk. The Tallahassee Democrat reported Wednesday that police started investigating after finding the message that included the cipher associated with the serial killer responsible for several murders in Northern California in the late ‘60s and early ‘70s. The message near a student apartment complex stated, “I’m alive and well and I’m going to start killing again.” Police stepped up patrols and eventually discovered it was done for an English class project. Students were told to write a message in a public forum and take a picture of it. Tallahassee police spokesman David Northway called it a class project gone wrong. MITCH SNEED, A LEXANDER CITY (A LA .) O UTLOOK /AP That’s one way to settle a debate Alexander City, Ala., Mayor Charles Shaw, left, is restrained by an officer Monday after a fight broke out between him and Councilman Tony Goss, far right, during a meeting of the City Council . The meeting was intended to discuss city audits and other municipal financial issues but spiraled into a shouting match before it ended and the brawl ensued. Duck race winner can dine anywhere in world HARVARD — A rotary club in a MassaMA chusetts town is gearing up for its annual rubber ducky race in which the winner’s prize is a free dinner for two anywhere in the world. The Boston Globe reported that the winner of Harvard’s Ducky Wucky River Race will receive free airfare, a two-night stay at a hotel and the fancy dinner. The Ayer Rotary Club will kick off the festivities on May 7, when a construction vehicle will dump thousands of numbered ducks into the Nashua River to float downstream. Last year’s champion dined in Venice, Italy. Rotary member Jason Kauppi said past winners have traveled as far as Paris, Tokyo and Australia. The event finishes off the Apple Blossom Festival in Harvard, a town of 6,000 residents. Man jumps in river, runs naked from hospital PITTSBURGH — Police said a Pittsburgh PA man driving a stolen car ditched the vehicle and jumped into a river to escape from authorities. Police said he later fled naked from a hospital and hid inside a dumpster. Police first chased James Edward Williams, 30, when a detec- tive saw him driving a stolen car Wednesday morning. Police said Williams abandoned the car and ran through a recycling yard, where he pushed a steel shelving unit onto an officer. He later tried to swim away in the Ohio River. His foot got tangled in a barge’s rope, and he was taken to Allegheny General Hospital. Later Wednesday, he ran naked from the hospital and was found hiding in a garbage container. 12-year-old runs half-marathon in error ROCHESTER — A 12year-old western New NY York girl wound up running 10 extra miles after she got into the wrong road race. LeeAdianez Rodriguez had registered for the 5K race that was part of last Sunday’s Rochester Regional Health Flower City Challenge. She thought she was arriving late at the starting line when the race started, so she began running. It turned out she was running with the half-marathoners on the 13.1-mile course and not in the 5K, or 3.1 miles. Rodriguez said she realized about halfway through that she was in the wrong race but decided to finish. Her mother became worried when she wasn’t among the finishers of the 5K, but they were reunited when she finished the half-marathon. Owner reunited with sentimental snow globe ST. PETERSBURG FL — When Michael Moore was forced to throw away a liquid-filled snow globe before going through airport security, he was heartbroken: It had been a gift from his parents to celebrate his and his wife’s adoption of a 5-yearold girl. A couple retrieved the sparkling, silver globe and yelled after him that they would get it back to him somehow. That was in February. On Wednesday, Ivelise Amarri Hernandez personally handed the keepsake over to Moore’s emotional mother, Linda Modry, who had bought the globe in January and decorated it with photos of Moore, his wife, their dog and their new daughter. Modry said it was a good thing it was raining when she picked up the globe, “because we were all crying.” Woman charged with stealing priest’s Bible SUNBURY — Police have charged a woman PA with stealing the personal Bible of a Catholic priest from his central Pennsylvania chapel. The (Sunbury) Daily Item reported Elizabeth Pensyl, 52, was arrested at her home Wednesday. The Rev. Fred Wangwe told Sunbury police he noticed Tuesday that the Bible and two other religious books missing from the chapel at St. Monica Parish. When police reviewed surveillance video, they identified Pensyl and found the stolen materials at her home while arresting her on an unrelated charge. Officer Steve Mazzeo told the newspaper, “It is disgusting to steal, let alone from a church.” University student named Indy 500’s poet INDIANAPOLIS — An Indiana University stuIN dent has been named the Indianapolis 500’s first official poet since the early 20th century. Adam Henze, of Bloomington, beat out more than 200 others who submitted Indy 500-themed poems for the contest. The competition revives an Indy 500 tradition from the 1920s, when an official poem was included in the race day program. Henze is an educator and a doctoral candidate at IU. He received a $1,000 cash prize and two tickets to the race on May 29. His poem is titled “For Those Who Love Fast, Loud Things.” It will appear in the official race program, and he will have a chance to read his winning poem at the Speedway during qualification weekend. From wire reports Saturday, April 30, 2016 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 15 LIFESTYLE Miss. man collects mini liquor bottles BY TAMMY SMITH The Sun Herald A t first glance, Joe Fleming’s neat home in Long Beach, Miss., seems like pretty much any other ranch-style house. But take a look in that cabinet in the dining room. And that one and that one in the living room. And that one in the den. They’re full of miniature liquor bottles, the kind you find in displays at the counter of package stores, on flights or sometimes in hotel mini-bars. Hmm. What’s in this one? Exotica such as Admiral Nelson Spiced Rum, Agwa De Bolivia Coca Herbal Liqueur, Caribbean Rum Runner, 1921 Tequila, Bird Dog Peach Whiskey. It goes on and on, and that’s just one display cabinet. “This is my only dedicated cabinet, and it’s all Scotch whisky,” Fleming said, indicating a nearby china cabinet bereft of china. Instead, scores of true Scotch whisky bottles fill the shelves. Altogether, Fleming now has “in excess of 5,600” little (50-milliliter) liquor bottles in his home. And there’s not a duplicate in the bunch. Well, not anymore. He recently had a potluck party where friends were invited over to polish off some 300 unintentional duplicates. It’s understandable. After all, if you have more than 5,000 bottles at home and a slight obsession with collecting, you’re bound to forget you already have one or two or 300. His guests, many of whom had not seen the collection, were astounded and fascinated — and more than happy to help him pare down the extras. Just how dedicated to his collection is Fleming? “As they fill up, I get another cabinet,” he said. “I’ve been accused not of collecting liquor bottles as much as collecting cabinets.” It’s not just cabinets. “Take a look at this,” Fleming said, leading to the closet in the foyer. He opened the door to reveal row after row of shelves in the closet. Behind the expected coats and other such closet residents, the shelves hold — you guessed it — more bottles. “They [the shelves] go down to the floor.” A bedroom holds more displays as well as his carefully maintained cataloging system. Each bottle has its own printed index card, which bears a color photo of the bottle as well as its price, date of acquisition, manufacturer and, perhaps most important, where it’s located. He has a numeric system that tells him the cabinet the bottle is in, as well as the shelf and location on the shelf. The system also is on his computer, giving faster access. It all began decades ago. “I’ve been collecting since August 1971,” Fleming said. He was on a business-related trip in Europe and at the end of his trip, he was in London. As he was walking down the street, he was wondering what souvenir he wanted to take back. “I had three criteria,” he said. “It had to not cost a lot of money, it could not weigh a lot and it couldn’t take up a lot of space.” Just then, he walked by a store with a display of miniature liquor bottles. It was his “aha” moment. On the next trip, he did the same, then the next and the next. It all started with that one bottle. Fleming consulted his catalog and pulled out the bottle, a PHOTOS BY JOHN FITZHUGH, THE SUN HERALD/TNS miniature of Drioli, a marachino liqueur. Joe Fleming of Long Beach, Miss., has a Vodka, he said, is probcollection of more than 5,000 liquor bottles. ably the most common mini bottle variety. “It’s in vogue right now,” he said. “Seven can Whiskey.” or eight years ago, they began to flavor He first learned of the brew when he vodka. Now, there’s in excess of 200 flavors was traveling through Virginia and saw of vodka. But rum is definitely making a a catalog listing it on a store’s counter. It push now. They’re starting to flavor that, was the right size bottle; the problem was, too.” the store didn’t carry it. Nor did store after Among the more unusual beverages in store he contacted. Finally he was told he his collection, Fleming said, is a bottle of could order it. Well, yes, but it couldn’t be bison grass vodka, which, yes, is flavored shipped to him. He would have to go pick with bison grass. In Poland, it’s known as it up in person from the source, which was Zubrówka. the gift shop at Mt. Vernon, Washington’s Fleming is especially proud of a min- historic home — which he did. iature bottle and shot glass presentation Is there one he’s still trying to find, set that has its roots in the nation’s first that elusive bottle that will complete his president. collection? “This,” he said, opening a small square “I don’t know. I’ll know it when I see it,” box, “is George Washington Vatted Ameri- he said with a smile. PAGE 16 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 GAMING ILLUSTRATION BY ELLEN C HEUNG Stars and Stripes GIRLS KEEP OUT! Female video gamers face vile abuse, threats BY TALI A RBEL Associated Press N ico Deyo, a 33-year-old e-commerce specialist from Milwaukee, used to enjoy mixing it up with players from around the world in the popular online fantasy game “World of Warcraft.” Then a stalker began harassing her on the game’s forums, impersonating her in the game and, later, sending her barrages of Twitter messages, some threatening her with graphic rape and murder. While the stalker didn’t drive her from the game, the experience helped sour her on multiplayer gaming. “There’s a lot of things about the community that are very hostile,” she says of “Warcraft.” Deyo largely gave up the game almost two years ago and now mostly spends her time on playing other games by herself. Deyo is far from alone. In the maledominated world of multiplayer online games like “Grand Theft Auto,” “Halo” and “Call of Duty,” many women say they’ve had to take drastic steps to escape harassment, stalking and violent threats from male players. Some quit particular games. Others change their screen names or make sure they play only with friends. Online harassment of women, often involving threats of horrific violence, has become a big issue — and video games are a frequent flashpoint. Two years ago, the online “Gamergate” movement, ostensibly a protest over the ethics of game journalists, also fueled Twitter attacks on female critics replete with gutter-level abuse and assault threats. Some targets left their homes or canceled speaking engagements, fearing for their safety. Last month, the South by Southwest Interactive festival held a daylong summit on online harassment; one panel addressed problems in “gaming and geek culture.” That summit, however, almost didn’t happen. Last October, the festival canceled two gaming-issue panels after receiving “numerous threats of on-site violence.” Organizers reversed themselves a few days later after BuzzFeed and Vox Media threatened to boycott the festival entirely. Online gaming companies, however, have been slower to act. Major console makers Microsoft and Sony and game developers like Blizzard Entertainment have “terms of service” that explicitly ban stalking and other harassing behavior. The companies have the right to ban reported bad actors from their public forums. Players say that rarely happens — and when it does, as in Deyo’s case, their harassers often follow them onto Twitter and other social channels. Becky Heineman, the 52-year-old founder of the Olde Skuul game studio in Seattle, was an aficionado of shoot-emups like “Halo” and “Call of Duty.” But constant catcalls from other players and questions about her bra size or “whether I do it on top or bottom, or other derogatory things,” she says, wore her down. CONTINUED ON PAGE 17 Saturday, April 30, 2016 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 17 GAMING FROM PAGE 16 Reporting her harassers never seemed to make a difference, she says. She limited her It’s only recently that play to friends for a while, but ‘women players have now mostly been recognized as focuses on simple singlevalid gamers that player games are interesting for like “Cookie Clicker” on her companies.’ phone and coman puter. Eastern Contrary to popular Kentucky stereotypes, women are University profesavid video gamers; one recent sor who wrote a book about survey showed that about half racist and sexist interactions of all women play video games, within Xbox. “They can go to about the same as men. But men the next person and do the same are far more likely to identify thing.” themselves as “gamers,” and exThat’s especially true when perts say that “hard-core” shootharassment shades into the real ing and action games remain world. Mercer Smith-Looper, mostly male. a 27-year-old Boston woman, It’s only recently that “women found it annoying when male players have been recognized as players patronized her and told valid gamers that are interesther how to play. Then she started ing for companies,” said Yasmin receiving unwanted gifts — a Kafai, a University of Pennsylnecklace, a sword — in the mail. vania professor who focuses on One gamer unexpectedly showed gender and gaming. up at her workplace after calling Microsoft says recent changes her repeatedly. to its Xbox Live service make Fed up, she changed her it more likely that players with gamer name and now sticks to bad reputations will end up playing privately with friends playing each other. It adds that or alone. “I’m kind of in hiding,” its enforcement team monitors she says. complaints at all times and that What would effective antiall reports are investigated. harassment measures look like? Sony, Blizzard and the EnterExperts like Edwards and Gray tainment Software Association, point to Riot Games, the maker a trade group, did not respond to of “League of Legends,” for its requests for comment. efforts to change player culture. Those moves don’t impress Riot built a system based on some women in artificial intelligence and player the industry. feedback to determine appropriate behavior during gameplay, and uses it to punish or reward play‘Players basically ers who draw complaints, according have to adopt their to the company’s own strategies online support documents. to deal with it When players (harassment).’ show “signs of toxicity,” Riot can block them from competitive play, limit their chats or ban them entirely. The company shows players what “While they have very good behavior other players didn’t like statements about harassment when it punishes them. Jeffrey and, you know, responsibility to Lin, Riot’s lead game designer the community and all that kind for social systems, has said that of stuff, the enforcement side of because of these efforts, only it is pretty lax,” says Kate Ed2 percent of its global games wards, executive director of the experienced racist, homophobic, International Game Developers sexist language or excessive Association. “Players basically harassment. have to adopt their own strateRiot Games declined to comgies to deal with it.” ment when contacted by The Games and online game Associated Press. networks, for instance, let IGDA’s Edwards acknowledgplayers “mute” messages from es that dealing with harassment opponents and turn off voice is a difficult challenge. “You’re chat, where trash talk can easily dealing with minors versus shade over into harassment. adults,” she says. “You’re dealXbox Live also labels players ing with free speech issues. It’s a who get lots of complaints with a struggle for companies to figure red marker so that other players out exactly how to approach it.” can avoid them. And while Riot-style moderaBut constantly muting or tion might limit harassment, it’s reporting other players interrupts what’s supposed to be a fun unlikely to solve the problem on pastime. And it doesn’t change its own. “This is a social and culharassing behavior. tural problem, not a technologi“If I just block somebody, is cal one,” says Dmitri Williams, that stopping them from doing CEO of game analytics firm the abuse?” says Kishonna Gray, Ninja Metrics. How to stop harassment in video games BY TALI A RBEL Associated Press M any women say popular video games such as “World of Warcraft” and “Halo” are rife with harassment, stalking and sexism that game companies don’t police effectively. But there are some steps the game industry, social media and law enforcement could take to combat harassment. Standard for enforcement Video game companies create their own rules for acceptable behavior, and some players complained that they didn’t know what resulted from their reports of bad behavior. “One of the things that would be really cool to see is if all companies adopted similar standards for what constitutes harassment and behavior so they work more in tandem,” says Kate Edwards, executive director of the International Game Developers Association. Players can mute, block or report users who bother them. But some say that’s not enough: Avoiding a problem doesn’t solve it or change how people act with others. Several experts credit Riot Games, the company behind popular online game “League of Legends,” for building a system that aims to improve the culture of the game and change player behavior. If a player is punished, the company’s system tells them why they were reported and shows them the specific comments that other players didn’t like. Hiring and diversity Video game developers remain overwhelmingly male, and companies could make a conscious effort to diversify their workforces, Edwards says. Doing so might result in games with broader appeal. The industry is paying attention to criticism. At the June 2015 Electronic Entertainment Expo, or E3, video game conference, companies featured more games with prominent women characters. There were also more women attending and representing the industry than there had been in previous years. Social media Harassment isn’t limited to game platforms. It spills out onto Twitter and other social media. After criticism, some sites have taken steps to try to curb abuse. Twitter has tried to make it easier to report threats and abuse, adding staff and trying to streamline reporting and blocking. In February, the company formed a “Trust & Safety Council” with outside groups to help develop tools and policies to fight abuse while still allowing people to speak freely. Last year, the freewheeling online discussion board Reddit adopted new guidelines that prohibit publishing people’s private information (such as stolen pictures or home addresses), harassment, abuse and comments that incite violence. The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group, says that if companies aren’t willing to build in filtering functions for harassing messages, they should let outside developers do so. Prosecution Federal law and many states prohibit stalking and threatening someone online. Law enforcement can pursue people who make threats by collecting user information from Twitter and other services. But such cases can be challenging. It has to be a “true threat,” says Wesley Hsu, an assistant U.S. attorney in Los Angeles. “There is a difference, under the law, between ‘I hope someone comes and kills you’ and ‘I’m coming to kill you.’ ” It can also be difficult to track people who make online threats, Hsu says, given the prevalence of tools for staying anonymous on the Internet. ELAINE THOMPSON /AP Becky Heineman, longtime video game developer and founder of the Olde Skuul game studio in Seattle, used to be an aficionado of action-packed, violent games, but after being constantly harassed while playing highly-competitive games, she now plays simple, single-player games. PAGE 18 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 HEALTH & FITNESS BY M IKE PLUNKETT The Washington Post I n a studio normally used for Bikram yoga classes, Pierre Wright is leading students through a sequence of exercises designed to improve how their bodies move. The class starts with bent-elbow arm circles to release tension in the shoulder blades, then moves to a series of spinal stretches, modified yoga poses and core twists. It ends with the cross touch, a challenging variation of the dead bug posture, engaging the whole body. This isn’t a typical yoga class. In fact, Wright would say it’s not really yoga. The class — FaYoFlex (which stands for Fascia, Yoga and Flexibility) at Wright’s Bikram Yoga Petworth in Washington — is designed to ensure someone can lift weights, fully perform a backward bend or simply stand and walk correctly and without pain. FaYoFlex, as created by Wright, focuses on mobility: the connectivity between muscle groups, joint capsules and the fascial system (the web of soft connective tissue that surrounds the muscles and joints, affecting movement and performance). Wright, who has a psychology Ph.D from Howard University and opened the studio a year ago, told me that FaYoFlex is open to everyone — from children to the elderly — regardless of athletic ability. Betty Weiss, a yoga-practicing Washington resident, is recovering from a back injury, and she said she’s seen her strength and flexibility improve from taking the class. “It’s a good complement for other exercise classes. It keeps things from being too tight,” Weiss said. Although the class might look easy at first glance, FaYoFlex can be deceptively hard for some. “There are athletes who are super-muscular but can barely get through the class because myofascially they are so tight,” Wright said. “Muscles create a tight body, not just physically but internally as well. A tight body is not the most functional body. What we’re trying to accomplish is a functional body.” Mobility is a topic that often gets mislabeled. It’s not the same as flexibility or stretching, although both will give you clues to a body part’s level of mobility. Rather, mobility is how the body moves on a daily basis. Having good mobility means being able to walk, sit, run and move the way your body was intended to. Kate Galliett, a fitness coach who focuses Athough FaYoFlex incorporates modified yoga poses such as pigeon pose, above, the class focuses on one’s sense of body awareness. Courtesy of Elise Perry Getting back to the basics Mobility class teaches the body to move the way it was meant to on mobility issues at fitforreallife.com, said the concept that you can “fix” one part of the body without addressing the larger mobility issues is a misconception people have in dealing with aches and pains. “Everything really is connected. What happens at your foot certainly has influence in what is happening in your hips, but it’s not your job to isolate each muscle and try to make it more mobile on its own, as if it were in a vacuum,” Galliett said. “Nothing works in isolation in your body, so when you look at muscles as ‘tight adductor’ or ‘tight calves,’ you’re missing the point.” Kelly Starrett, a San Francisco-based coach and physical therapist whose new book, “Deskbound: Standing Up to a Sitting World,” focuses on improving mobility for the office worker, said that a good test of mobility is to attempt a full squat, keeping your feet pointed forward and your weight on your heels, with a neu- tral spine and your calves touching your hamstrings. He said a successful squat mobilization requires the ankles, hips and spine to be free of restriction. Starrett says mobility has two components: motor control and biomechanics. Motor control is the technique needed to create stable and powerful body positions. The body is built to move correctly all the time, but Starrett said our society doesn’t teach people the skills to move the way we were meant to move. Instead, we focus on “working out” or “getting some exercise.” The second component, biomechanics, deals with the muscular structure, joints and connective tissues, as well as the nervous system, which sends signals throughout the body to instruct mobile positioning. “Your nervous system is the gatekeeper when it comes to mobility. If your nervous system does not sense that it has control of the joint in the range you’re trying to ex- pand into, it will simply disallow you from going into it,” Galliett said. For example, if you have trouble touching your toes, it’s not just your back and leg muscles stopping you. It’s also your brain telling the rest of your body that it’s not possible. Part of why Wright created the FaYoFlex class was his own inability to complete the Bikram yoga sequences pain-free. “I have been practicing yoga for a long time, and in the yoga experience, I was unhealthy. And, being unhealthy, the mat was far more challenging than it would be for the average person,” Wright said. FaYoFlex strives to integrate body awareness — having a full understanding of how your body is doing and feeling — with the physical. “This class focuses on the innate awareness of the body,” Wright said. “Are you connected? Are you willing to be connected?” Sweat out your hangover with this day-after workout BY SUZEE SKWIOT Rodalewellness.com A fter a particularly wild Saturday night, or a spring break celebration, the morning-after hangover can be no joke. Sure, you can reach for one of those best hangover foods, but the best way to get out of that after-effect might just be to sweat it out. “The only thing I want after a night out is a workout,” says Conor Murphy, a Reebok CrossFit trainer. “As long as you get moving in the morning — before noon, because once you cross that threshold, the hangover is in full effect — you’re going to feel better.” Following the 80/20 rule — sticking to a healthy diet and workout regimen for 80 percent of the time, indulging in Cheat Day and rest days for the remainder of the time — means that your boozy nights and hungover mornings might just be part of the occasional routine. But quicker recovery lies in how you approach the “cocktail flu.” “It’s OK to get hungover and feel like crap in the morning,” Murphy said. “You had too many drinks? All right, here’s a workout.” 20 minutes of ‘Chelsea’ “This is a classic CrossFit benchmark workout that’s been scaled so you don’t visit ‘pukie,’ ” Murphy said. “Each round should take between 35 and 45 seconds. Scale the number of reps from the start if you don’t think you can make that timeframe. If you don’t finish a round in the allotted minute, rest and start back up the following minute.” Every minute on the minute, perform: 5 pullups 10 pushups 15 air squats Interval rowing, running “Grab a friend, partner, perhaps someone you met the night before, and trade off between a 400-meter row and a 400-meter run,” Murphy said. “This is not a sprint pace, but after 8 to 10 rounds, you will be sweating out all of the toxins and cervezas.” If you can’t make it to a rower, or your spring break resort’s gym doesn’t carry a machine? No worries. “Congrats, you now get to do the whole workout running,” Murphy adds. Get in the water “Even if last night’s drinks have your head spinning, you won’t have a problem understanding this workout,” Murphy said. “It’s simple. It doesn’t matter whether you’re near an ocean, a pool, or a pond — just get in the water. Set a distance to swim and do it.” Try Tabata “Any variation of Tabata bodyweight movements will do the trick,” he adds. “Tabata involves 20 seconds of work and 10 seconds of rest for eight rounds.” Here, Murphy suggests, you’ll start with 20 seconds of pullups and follow that with 10 seconds of rest before repeating that cycle for seven more rounds. From there, move on to pushups and move down the list accordingly: Pullups Pushups Situps Air Squats “To make the workout extra salty — yes, we’re talking saltier than the rim of last night’s margarita — rest at the bottom of your squat for all eight rounds of the Tabata air squats,” he continues. “We’ve dubbed this ‘bottom to bottom.’ ” Lunges and burpees “Lunges and burpees are two classic functional training movements, and pairing them together makes for a grueling workout,” Murphy said. “Expert tip: If you mixed and matched liquors the night before, you may want to start with the round of 30.” For this workout, complete the following: 40 lunges (each leg) 40 burpees 30 lunges (each leg) 30 burpees 20 lunges (each leg) 20 burpees 10 lunges (each leg) 10 burpees •STA Saturday, April 30, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 19 ENTERTAINMENT She’s (a) legion Tatiana Maslany likes playing multiple characters RICHARD SHOTWELL , INVISION /AP Carrie Preston says goodbye to ‘Good Wife,’ hello to ‘Crowded’ BY A LICIA R ANCILIO Associated Press C arrie Preston appeared on only 14 episodes of “The Good Wife” during its seven seasons on CBS, but her character, the spacey yet keenly observant lawyer, Elsbeth Tascioni, was always met with excitement from fans. Just this week, a Twitter user wrote, “I will never love another fictional character as much as I love Elsbeth Tascioni.” Another said, “My life goals are to be like Elsbeth Tascioni.” Keep in mind, her last appearance was in February, and fans can’t shake her. In a recent interview with The Associated Press, Preston said co-creator Robert King offered this guidance on the character when she appeared in season one: “He said he thought of it as a female Columbo. But I had never seen ‘Columbo,’ ” she said. “So, instead of getting tripped up with that, I started to focus on what was on the page. ... I just started thinking about what it would be like to be a person who has the ability to focus on 100 things at once and that your brain works that fast, that you can actually be working on a case and complimenting someone on their blouse and thinking about picking up your dry cleaning all at the same time and none of the other things suffer. And so I just kind of took that and ran with it.” After that first appearance in season one, Preston said, “I didn’t hear anything for an entire season. I thought, ‘Oh wow, I really blew that.’ ... Then in season three I got a call.” Preston, who won an Emmy Award for her portrayal of Tascioni, believes her character was brought in “just when things might get a little too serious on the show. I don’t think it would’ve worked to have her there every episode.” She doesn’t appear in the remaining two episodes of “The Good Wife,” but stateside fans can see her on the new NBC sitcom “Crowded.” Preston and Patrick Warburton play a couple whose two grown daughters leave the nest, only to return home. One set of grandparents lives next door, making things very crowded (hence the show’s title). Preston, who has also had supporting roles on shows like “True Blood,” says it’s interesting to be a lead actor. “I’m used to coming in as, like, the pinch hitter. I like it, I feel like I have a little more say on things. I’m pretty deferential to the writers but it’s nice to help build something from the ground up.” BY A LICIA R ANCILIO Associated Press T hink you’re busy? Tatiana Maslany can relate. She’s played 11 characters to date on her BBC America series, “Orphan Black.” The crazy part? She can recall an earlier time when she was juggling just as much. “There was a time in Toronto like 10 years ago where I did three jobs at the same time,” she said in a recent interview. “I was filming this improvised film all day. That night I did a night shoot on a TV series and after an hour’s sleep went straight to the improv film, and I was doing a miniseries at the same time. “I love working. I’ve learned to not do that much. But ‘Orphan Black’ is no different, but for four months.” “Orphan Black,” now in its fourth season on BBC America, is about a dozen or so women, played by Maslany, who are clones. Each multiple has her own personality, physicality and accent. One is a housewife, another is a scientist (and so on). The series follows Sarah, who is trying to get to the bottom of the conspiracy that creates the clones. Jordan Gavaris, who plays Felix, Sarah’s adopted brother, says watching Maslany in between takes is as interesting as when the cameras are rolling. “There’s no drama with her. She takes notes so graciously, just as if like her personal trainer were to say, ‘OK, now give me 25 sets of this. OK, great, OK.’ There’s no part of her that’s defensive. She’s totally artistic all the time,” he said. Maslany, 30, is quick to credit her acting double, Kath- ryn Alexandre, with helping her pull off scenes with multiple clones. Together they block out movements to make it work. “She’s just so incredible. She shows up every day having prepared the scene to such a detailed degree, and she always asks me questions while we’re rehearsing or while we’re shooting about intention or something that I’ve never kind of looked at. ... We’ve got a really good collaborative relationship,” Maslany said. For a show with such technical work, Kristian Bruun, who plays straight-laced husband, Donnie, to his uptight (clone) wife, Alison, says there’s a lot of room for improvisation. “They let us improv quite a bit. Tat and I like to improvise up until we say action. We never quite know what they’re gonna keep or use. It’s always a fun day for us. I always love to see what ends up making it on scene.” “Orphan Black” hasn’t been renewed yet for a fifth season, but Maslany’s full schedule continues. She’s about to begin production on a film opposite Jake Gyllenhaal. Maslany says she’s dedicated to finding a work-life balance. The “first season (of ‘Orphan Black’) was really bad. I lost contact with every person in my life, and that was not good. I’ve sort of learned to not do that and still be a part of the world. You can’t; I need that balance. I need to see people and be social and be not social and not always be going, going, going.” Tatiana Maslany is starring in her fourth season of the BBC America series “Orphan Black.” SCOTT G RIES, INVISION /AP PAGE 20 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 BUSINESS/WEATHER Economy slow at start of election year BY M ARTIN CRUTSINGER Associated Press WASHINGTON — It was not a great start for the U.S. economy. With consumers and businesses turning cautious, the U.S. struggled to grow in the first three months of a presidential election year that is shining the spotlight on the economy’s fitful recovery. Gross domestic product, the broadest measure of economic health, expanded at a paltry annual rate of 0.5 percent in the January-March quarter, the Commerce Department reported Thursday. That is slower than the fourth quarter’s 1.4 percent growth rate and marks the weakest performance in two years. The good news is that American employers are still adding plenty of jobs, which is expected in the months ahead to fuel an economy that’s still outshining much of the world. But if the global slump deepens, or if jobs lose momentum, it could turn Election Day into a pivotal referendum on the economy. The poor start to the year did not escape notice among Republicans hoping capture the White House in November. “Today’s report showing the weakest period of economic growth in two years is the latest sign the Obama economy isn’t working,” said Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus. “Hillary Clinton wants to double down on his failed agenda.” Democrats said GDP is expected to strengthen going forward, with the country continuing to enjoy the longest stretch of private-sector job growth on record. The U.S. has added 14.4 million jobs during the past 73 months. Jason Furman, chairman of Obama’s Council of Economic Advisors, said the GDP report showed “there’s more work to do and the president will continue to call on Congress to support policies that will boost our long-run growth and living standards.” Private economists said that given the severity of the 2007-2009 recession, the debate over the economy is certain to take center stage during campaign season. Democrats will point to a jobless rate at 5 percent — considered close to full employment — and expectations that job growth will continue at a solid monthly pace of at least 200,000 in the months leading up to the election. But Republicans note that annual GDP growth in this recovery has averaged just above 2 percent. That is the slowest pace in the postwar period. Many middle class families are struggling, especially those who lost jobs in the downturn and have had to take on work at lower salaries. The 0.5 percent GDP advance in the first quarter was the weakest showing since GDP contracted by 0.9 percent in the first three months of 2014. It’s a familiar pattern in recent years — a weak first quarter followed by a much stronger second-quarter figure. Many economists are forecasting growth will revive in the cur- rent April-June quarter to about 2 percent, and strengthen further in the second half of the year. Part of the first-quarter weakness stems from the turbulence in the stock market at the beginning of the year, which was triggered by worries that China was slowing more than expected. The market has since recovered all of its early-year losses, China’s slowdown now seems less worrisome and oil prices have stabilized and started to rebound. MARKET WATCH EXCHANGE RATES Military rates Euro costs (May 2) ............................ $1.1737 Dollar buys (May 2) ..........................€0.8520 British pound (May 2) .......................... $1.50 Japanese yen (May 2) ........................105.00 South Korean won (May 2) ............1,110.00 Commercial rates Bahrain (Dinar) ....................................0.3770 British pound .......................$1.4645/0.6828 Canada (Dollar) ...................................1.2539 China (Yuan) ........................................6.4831 Denmark (Krone) ................................6.5041 Egypt (Pound) ......................................8.8796 Euro ........................................ $1.1444/0.8739 Hong Kong (Dollar) ............................. 7.7593 Hungary (Forint) .................................273.30 Israel (Shekel) ..................................... 3.7376 Japan (Yen)........................................... 107.29 Kuwait (Dinar) ..................................... 0.3014 Norway (Krone) ...................................8.0553 Philippines (Peso).................................46.90 Poland (Zloty) .......................................... 3.84 Saudi Arabia (Riyal) ........................... 3.7502 Singapore (Dollar) ..............................1.3432 South Korea (Won) ..........................1,140.08 Switzerland (Franc)............................0.9604 Thailand (Baht) .....................................34.90 Turkey (Lira) ......................................... 2.7979 (Military exchange rates are those available to customers at military banking facilities in the country of issuance for Japan, South Korea, Germany, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. For nonlocal currency exchange rates (i.e., purchasing British pounds in Germany), check with your local military banking facility. Commercial rates are interbank rates provided for reference when buying currency. All figures are foreign currencies to one dollar, except for the British pound, which is represented in dollars-to-pound, and the euro, which is dollars-to-euro.) INTEREST RATES Prime rate ................................................ 3.50 Discount rate .......................................... 1.00 Federal funds market rate ................... 0.36 3-month bill ............................................. 0.25 30-year bond ........................................... 2.68 WEATHER OUTLOOK SATURDAY IN THE MIDDLE EAST SUNDAY IN THE PACIFIC SATURDAY IN EUROPE Misawa 58/40 Kabul 85/54 Seoul 77/54 Baghdad 97/70 Kandahar 99/65 Kuwait City 100/75 Mildenhall/ Lakenheath 55/35 Brussels 53/38 Bahrain 91/80 Riyadh 92/71 Lajes, Azores 66/57 Doha 95/80 Busan 71/56 Tokyo 72/57 Iwakuni 75/58 Guam 90/79 Sasebo 74/61 Ramstein 57/36 Pápa 70/48 Stuttgart 58/39 Aviano/ Vicenza 66/46 Naples 69/56 Morón 79/56 Djibouti 90/81 Osan 78/54 Sigonella 76/53 Rota 70/56 Okinawa 77/69 The weather is provided by the American Forces Network Weather Center, 2nd Weather Squadron at Offutt Air Force Base, Neb. Souda Bay 77/58 Saturday’s US temperatures City Abilene, Tex Akron, Ohio Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Allentown, Pa. Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Baton Rouge Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Bridgeport Brownsville Buffalo Burlington, Vt. Caribou, Maine Casper Charleston, S.C. Charleston, W.Va. Charlotte, N.C. Hi 79 59 63 68 61 65 52 77 83 57 87 60 85 52 83 63 69 56 59 91 59 59 53 42 87 74 80 Lo 53 52 44 44 44 37 40 58 65 49 64 51 70 38 67 33 43 44 44 77 45 38 31 30 69 59 64 Wthr Clr Rain PCldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Clr Clr Snow PCldy Rain Cldy Chattanooga Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Colorado Springs Columbia, S.C. Columbus, Ga. Columbus, Ohio Concord, N.H. Corpus Christi Dallas-Ft Worth Dayton Daytona Beach Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth El Paso Elkins Erie Eugene Evansville Fairbanks Fargo Flagstaff Flint Fort Smith 82 34 53 65 56 43 90 86 62 63 88 80 63 87 39 54 58 49 80 68 53 66 74 63 62 54 59 79 64 31 43 57 48 28 67 66 54 39 75 58 53 69 32 45 44 34 55 53 48 41 60 37 38 30 42 54 Rain Snow Rain Rain Rain Cldy PCldy Cldy Rain PCldy Cldy PCldy Rain PCldy Cldy Rain Cldy Clr Clr Rain Cldy PCldy Rain Clr Clr Cldy Cldy Cldy Fort Wayne Fresno Goodland Grand Junction Grand Rapids Great Falls Green Bay Greensboro, N.C. Harrisburg Hartford Spgfld Helena Honolulu Houston Huntsville Indianapolis Jackson, Miss. Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Key West Knoxville Lake Charles Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles 58 79 43 59 60 55 55 68 59 65 57 86 82 82 61 84 89 49 68 84 81 80 60 69 71 53 79 68 47 56 34 38 43 35 40 61 48 43 36 74 70 64 53 66 69 42 48 77 64 71 43 55 60 45 62 57 Rain Clr Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Rain Cldy Cldy Cldy Clr Rain Cldy Rain Rain PCldy Rain Rain Clr Rain Rain Cldy Rain Rain Rain Rain Cldy Louisville Lubbock Macon Madison Medford Memphis Miami Beach Midland-Odessa Milwaukee Mpls-St Paul Missoula Mobile Montgomery Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark Norfolk, Va. North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Paducah Pendleton Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh 73 74 87 54 71 80 84 84 48 58 62 85 86 81 84 62 61 61 41 73 53 91 77 68 56 62 86 62 60 45 65 41 43 65 74 54 40 40 38 69 68 64 73 47 47 57 35 47 45 69 61 44 47 47 63 53 Rain PCldy PCldy Rain Clr Rain Clr Clr Rain Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Rain Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Snow Clr Rain PCldy Rain PCldy Rain Cldy PCldy Rain Pocatello Portland, Maine Portland, Ore. Providence Pueblo Raleigh-Durham Rapid City Reno Richmond Roanoke Rochester Rockford Sacramento St Louis St Petersburg St Thomas Salem, Ore. Salt Lake City San Angelo San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa Fe St Ste Marie Savannah Seattle Shreveport 62 55 69 60 48 70 47 61 66 66 58 54 83 74 87 83 69 63 86 88 61 74 80 63 55 87 68 82 41 38 47 42 32 62 34 41 54 57 45 43 57 56 74 75 43 46 56 66 57 56 54 38 39 69 48 64 Cldy Clr PCldy PCldy Cldy Rain Snow PCldy Rain Cldy PCldy Rain Clr Rain PCldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Clr PCldy Cldy Clr Clr Cldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Rain Sioux City Sioux Falls South Bend Spokane Springfield, Ill Springfield, Mo Syracuse Tallahassee Tampa Toledo Topeka Tucson Tulsa Tupelo Waco Washington W. Palm Beach Wichita Wichita Falls Wilkes-Barre Wilmington, Del. Yakima Youngstown 51 50 58 67 64 77 63 90 89 56 68 83 74 81 83 62 84 68 76 62 62 74 61 44 39 46 46 52 51 47 67 72 44 47 58 49 64 58 52 74 45 50 45 48 43 50 Rain Rain Rain Cldy Rain Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Rain Cldy Clr Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Clr PCldy Clr Cldy Cldy Clr Rain National temperature extremes Hi: Thu., 96, Laredo, Texas Lo: Thu., 5, Mount Washington, N.H. Saturday, April 30, 2016 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 21 PAGE 22 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 Saturday, April 30, 2016 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 23 PAGE 24 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 SCOREBOARD Sports on AFN Go to the American Forces Network website for the most up-to-date TV schedules. myafn.net College baseball Thursday’s scores EAST Castleton 4-19, New England 1-3 Keystone 11, Susquehanna 9 NJ City 3, Stockton 2 W. New England 4, RPI 1 SOUTH Blue Mountain 11, Martin Methodist 1 Loyola NO vs. William Carey, ppd., weather Middle Georgia St. 17-3, Bethel (Tenn.) 2-9 MIDWEST Grand View 3-6, Missouri Valley 0-8 Midland 8-1, Doane 2-11 SOUTHWEST Oklahoma Christian 6-3, Lubbock Christian 5-13 TOURNAMENTS CIAA First Round St. Augustine’s 10, Chowan 1 Winston-Salem 6, Virginia St. 2 Conference Carolinas First Round Mount Olive 7, Belmont Abbey 2 ODAC First Round Randolph-Macon 11, Virginia Wesleyan 9 Washington & Lee 2, Hampden-Sydney 1 Pro soccer MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Montreal 4 3 1 13 11 9 Philadelphia 4 3 0 12 10 7 Toronto FC 3 2 2 11 8 5 Orlando City 2 2 3 9 13 11 D.C. United 2 3 3 9 10 10 New England 1 2 6 9 9 14 Columbus 2 3 2 8 7 9 New York City FC 1 3 4 7 10 13 New York 2 6 0 6 8 17 Chicago 1 2 3 6 6 7 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA FC Dallas 5 2 2 17 15 13 Colorado 5 2 1 16 10 6 Los Angeles 4 1 2 14 17 7 Real Salt Lake 4 1 2 14 12 11 San Jose 4 2 2 14 11 10 Sporting KC 4 4 1 13 10 9 Vancouver 3 4 2 11 10 12 Portland 2 3 3 9 12 15 Seattle 2 4 1 7 7 10 Houston 1 4 2 5 13 14 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Wednesday’s games New York City FC 1, Montreal 1, tie New England 1, Portland 1, tie Vancouver 1, Sporting Kansas City 1, tie Friday’s games FC Dallas at New York Saturday’s games San Jose at Philadelphia Colorado at Montreal Vancouver at New York City FC Columbus at Seattle D.C. United at Chicago Orlando City at New England Houston at Real Salt Lake Sunday’s games Toronto FC at Portland Los Angeles at Sporting Kansas City Friday, May 6 New York at Orlando City Saturday, May 7 Portland at Vancouver FC Dallas at Toronto FC Montreal at Columbus Sporting Kansas City at Houston Real Salt Lake at Colorado San Jose at Seattle Sunday, May 8 New England at Los Angeles New York City FC at D.C. United NWSL W L T Pts GF GA Washington 2 0 0 6 3 1 Portland 1 0 1 4 3 2 Orlando 1 1 0 3 4 3 Sky Blue FC 1 1 0 3 3 3 Houston 1 1 0 3 4 4 Chicago 1 1 0 3 2 3 Seattle 1 1 0 3 4 2 Western New York 1 1 0 3 1 1 FC Kansas City 0 1 1 1 1 2 Boston 0 2 0 0 0 4 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Saturday, April 23 Chicago 1, Western New York 0 Orlando 3, Houston 1 FC Kansas City 1, Portland 1, tie Sunday, April 24 Washington 2, Sky Blue FC 1 Seattle 3, Boston 0 Friday’s games Washington at Western New York Sky Blue FC at Houston Sunday’s games Portland at Boston Orlando at Chicago FC Kansas City at Seattle Tennis Auto racing Estoril Open Thursday At Clube de Tenis do Estori Cascais, Portugal Purse: $520,000 (WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Second Round Pablo Carreno Busta, Spain, def. Taro Daniel, Japan, 6-4, 7-5. Gilles Simon (1), France, def. PaulHenri Mathieu, France, 3-6, 6-2, 6-1. Leonardo Mayer (7), Argentina, def. Paolo Lorenzi, Italy, 7-6 (5), 6-4. Nicolas Almagro, Spain, def. Joao Sousa (4), Portugal, 4-6, 6-1, 6-2. Doubles Quarterfinals Treat Huey, Philippines, and Max Mirnyi, Belarus, def. Kyle Edmund, Britain, and Frederico Silva, Portugal, 6-4, 6-4. Borna Coric and Franko Skugor, Croatia, def. Jonathan Erlich, Israel, and Colin Fleming, Britain, 6-4, 6-4. Lukasz Kubot and Marcin Matkowski (1), Poland, def. Gastao Elias and Joao Sousa, Portugal, 3-6, 6-3, 10-7. Eric Butorac and Scott Lipsky (4), United States, def. Pablo Carreno Busta and Inigo Cervantes, Spain, 6-3, 6-1. Istanbul Open Thursday At Koza World of Sports Istanbul Purse: $542,250 (WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Second Round Damir Dzumhur, Bosnia-Herzegovina, def. Illya Marchenko, Ukraine, 6-3, 5-7, 6-3. Diego Schwartzman, Argentina, def. Bernard Tomic (1), Australia, 6-2, 6-2. Ivo Karlovic (3), Croatia, def. Dusan Lajovic, Serbia, 7-6 (11), 7-6 (7). Marcel Granollers (5), Spain, def. Chung Hyeon, South Korea, 6-3, 6-4. Doubles Quarterfinals Marcus Daniell and Artem Sitak, Australia, def. Carlos Berlocq, Argentina, and Teymuraz Gabashvili, Russia, 6-4, 6-3. Guillermo Duran and Maximo Gonzalez (3), Argentina, def. Roman Jebavy and Jiri Vesely, Czech Republic, 2-6, 6-2, 10-8. Grand Prix SAR Thursday At Au Club des Cheminots Rabat, Morocco Purse: $250,000 (Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Quarterfinals Kiki Bertens, Netherlands, def. Yulia Putintseva (8), Kazakhstan, 6-3, 6-7 (4), 6-3. Marina Erakovic, New Zealand, def. Aleksandra Krunic, Serbia, 6-4, 6-4. Timea Bacsinszky (1), Switzerland, def. Johanna Larsson, Sweden, 6-4, 6-1. Timea Babos (5), Hungary, def.Pauline Parmentier, France, 6-3, 6-3. Doubles Semifinals Tatjana Maria, Germany, and Raluca Olaru (1), Romania, def. Georgina Garcia Perez, Spain, and Aleksandrina Naydenova, Bulgaria, 6-2, 5-7, 10-7. Xenia Knoll, Switzerland, and Aleksandra Krunic (4), Serbia, def. Laura Pigossi, Brazil, and Sara Sorribes Tormo, Spain, 6-4, 5-7, 10-6. Prague Open Thursday At TK Sparta Praha Prague, Czech Republic Purse: $500,000 (Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Quarterfinals Karolina Pliskova (3), Czech Republic, def. Camila Giorgi, Italy, 6-2, 6-1. Lucie Safarova (2), Czech Republic, def. Su-wei Hsieh, Taiwan, 7-6 (3), 7-5. Sam Stosur (4), Australia, def. Barbora Strycova (5), Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-7 (3), 7-6 (4). Svetlana Kuznetsova (1), Russia, def. Monica Puig, Puerto Rico, 4-6, 7-5, 6-4. Doubles Semifinals Maria Irigoyen, Argentina, and Paula Kania, Poland, def. Raquel Atawo and Abigail Spears (1), United States, 6-4, 6-2. Margarita Gasparyan, Russia, and Andrea Hlavackova (2), Czech Republic, def. Gabriela Dabrowski, Canada, and Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez, Spain, 7-5, 4-6, 10-5. BMW Open Thursday At MTTC Iphitos Munich Purse: $520,000 (WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Second Round Fabio Fognini (5), Italy, def. Mikhail Kukushkin, Kazakhstan, 6-3, 7-5. Jozef Kovalik, Slovakia, def. Igor Sijsling, Netherlands, 6-3, 6-4. Alexander Zverev (8), Germany, def. Lukas Rosol, Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-4. David Goffin (1), Belgium, def. Victor Estrella Burgos, Dominican Republic, 5-7, 6-3, 6-2. Philipp Kohlschreiber (4), Germany, def. Florian Mayer, Germany, 6-3, 6-2. Juan-Martin del Potro, Argentina, def. Jan-Lennard Struff, Germany, 6-3, 3-6, 63. Doubles Quarterfinals Oliver Marach, Austria, and Fabrice Martin, France, def. Ken and Neal Skupski, Britain, 7-6 (6), 6-3. Julian Knowle and Peya Alexander, Australia, def. Mikhail Elgin, Russia, and Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan, 6-3, 6-4. Juan Sebastian Cabal and Robert Farah (2), Colombia, def. Aliaksandr Bury, Belarus, and Igor Zelenay, Slovakia, 7-56 (3), 4-6, 10-6. Henri Kontinen, Finland, and John Peers, Australia, def. Alexander and Mischa Zverev, Germany, 6-4, 7-6 (5). Golf Zurich Classic PGA Tour Thursday At TPC Louisiana Avondale, La. Purse: $7 million Yardage: 7,341; Par: 72 (36-36) Partial First Round Brian Stuard 31-33—64 Retief Goosen 30-35—65 J.J. Henry 34-33—67 Geoff Ogilvy 34-33—67 Derek Ernst 34-33—67 Charles Howell III 32-35—67 Patrick Rodgers 35-32—67 Seung-Yul Noh 32-36—68 Danny Lee 34-34—68 Rickie Fowler 34-34—68 Byeong-Hun An 34-34—68 Steve Wheatcroft 33-36—69 Freddie Jacobson 36-33—69 Angel Cabrera 34-35—69 Stuart Appleby 35-34—69 Jason Day 38-31—69 David Hearn 33-36—69 Andrew Loupe 34-35—69 Andres Gonzales 35-34—69 Hiroshi Iwata 33-36—69 Jonas Blixt 34-36—70 Jeff Overton 37-33—70 Nick Taylor 34-36—70 Ben Martin 35-35—70 John Senden 34-36—70 Steve Stricker 34-36—70 Marc Turnesa 35-35—70 Blayne Barber 38-32—70 Tyler Aldridge 34-36—70 Ryan Ruffels 37-33—70 Rob Oppenheim 35-35—70 Darron Stiles 35-36—71 Daniel Berger 34-37—71 Chesson Hadley 34-37—71 Robert Streb 37-34—71 Marc Leishman 36-35—71 Tom Gillis 36-35—71 Bryce Molder 35-36—71 Sung Kang 35-36—71 Brice Garnett 35-36—71 Dawie van der Walt 35-36—71 Rhein Gibson 36-35—71 Justin Hicks 36-36—72 Tyrone Van Aswegen 35-37—72 Robert Allenby 36-36—72 Gary Woodland 36-36—72 Vijay Singh 36-36—72 Volunteers of America Texas Shootout -8 -7 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -4 -4 -4 -4 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -3 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 E E E E E LPGA Tour Thursday At Las Colinas CC Irving, Texas Purse: $1.3 million Yardage:—6,462; Par:—71 (36-35) First Round Mi Jung Hur 35-31—66 Gerina Piller 33-34—67 Eun-Hee Ji 33-34—67 So Yeon Ryu 34-33—67 Catriona Matthew 33-35—68 Amy Yang 33-35—68 Sei Young Kim 34-34—68 Jenny Shin 33-35—68 Brooke M. Henderson 34-35—69 Jacqui Concolino 33-36—69 Ariya Jutanugarn 36-33—69 Alison Walshe 36-33—69 Casey Grice 35-34—69 Carlota Ciganda 37-32—69 Jodi Ewart Shadoff 36-33—69 In Gee Chun 35-34—69 Danielle Kang 33-36—69 Benyapa Niphatsophon 36-34—70 Belen Mozo 35-35—70 Giulia Molinaro 35-35—70 Ryann O’Toole 35-35—70 Angela Stanford 35-35—70 Megan Khang 37-33—70 Sun Young Yoo 34-36—70 Morgan Pressel 37-33—70 Lindy Duncan 36-34—70 Ayako Uehara 36-34—70 Mirim Lee 35-35—70 Caroline Masson 38-32—70 Min Seo Kwak 35-35—70 Marina Alex 34-36—70 Annie Park 35-35—70 a-Cheyenne Knight 35-35—70 Nannette Hill 35-35—70 Lee Lopez 36-35—71 Haeji Kang 36-35—71 Wei-Ling Hsu 36-35—71 Ilhee Lee 36-35—71 Charley Hull 36-35—71 Candie Kung 37-34—71 Minjee Lee 36-35—71 Ashleigh Simon 37-34—71 Dani Holmqvist 37-34—71 Simin Feng 37-34—71 Alena Sharp 35-36—71 -5 -4 -4 -4 -3 -3 -3 -3 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -2 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 E E E E E E E E E E E NASCAR Sprint Cup Series schedule and winners Through April 24 Feb. 13 — x-Sprint Unlimited (Denny Hamlin) Feb. 18 — x-Can-Am Duel 1 (Dale Earnhardt Jr.) Feb. 18 — x-Can-Am Duel 2 (Kyle Busch) Feb. 21 — Daytona 500 (Denny Hamlin) Feb. 28 — Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 (Jimmie Johnson) March 6 — Kobalt 400 (Brad Keselowski) March 13 — Good Sam 500 (Kevin Harvick) March 20 — Auto Club 400 (Jimmie Johnson) April 3 — STP 500 (Kyle Busch) April 9 — Duck Commander 500 (Kyle Busch) April 17 — Food City 500 (Carl Edwards) April 24 — Toyota Owners 400 (Carl Edwards) May 1 — GEICO 500, Talladega, Ala. May 7 — Go Bowling 400, Kansas City, Kan. May 15 — AAA 400 Drive for Autism, Dover, Del. May 20 — x-Sprint Showdown, Concord, N.C. May 21 — x-NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, Concord, N.C. May 29 — Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C. June 5 — Axalta We Paint Winners 400, Long Pond, Pa. June 12 — FireKeepers Casino 400, Brooklyn, Mich. June 26 — Toyota/Save Mart 350, Sonoma, Calif. July 2 — Coke Zero 400, Daytona Beach, Fla. July 9 — Quaker State 400, Sparta, Ky. July 17 — New Hampshire 301, Loudon, N.H. July 24 — Crown Royal Presents The Your Hero’s Name Here 400 at The Brickyard, Indianapolis July 31 — Pennsylvania 400, Long Pond, Pa. Aug. 7 — Cheez-It 355 at The Glen, Watkins Glen, N.Y. Aug. 20 — Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race, Bristol, Tenn. Aug. 28 — Pure Michigan 400, Brooklyn, Mich. Sept. 4 — Bojangles’ Southern 500, Darlington, S.C. Sept. 10 — Federated Auto Parts 400, Richmond, Va. Sept. 18 — Chicagoland 400, Joliet, Ill. Sept. 25 — New England 300, Loudon, N.H. Oct. 2 — Dover 400, Dover, Del. Oct. 8 — Bank of America 500, Concord, N.C. Oct. 16 — Hollywood Casino 400, Kansas City, Kan. Oct. 23 — Alabama 500, Talladega, Ala. Oct. 30 — Goody’s Fast Relief 500, Ridgeway, Va. Nov. 6 — AAA Texas 500, Fort Worth, Texas Nov. 13 — Can-Am 500, Avondale, Ariz. Nov. 20 — Ford 400, Homestead, Fla. x-non-points race IndyCar schedule and winners Through April 24 March 13 — Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg (Juan Pablo Montoya) April 2 — Desert Diamond West Valley Grand Prix (Scott Dixon) April 17 — Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach (Simon Pagenaud) April 24 — Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama (Simon Pagenaud) May 14 — Angie’s List Grand Prix of Indianapolis, Indianapolis May 29 — Indianapolis 500, Indianapolis June 4 — Chevrolet Dual in Detroit Race 1, Detroit June 5 — Chevrolet Dual in Detroit Race 2, Detroit June 11 — Firestone 600, Fort Worth, Texas June 26 — Road America Grand Prix, Plymouth, Wis. July 10 — Iowa Corn 300, Newton, Iowa July 17 — Honda Indy Toronto, Toronto, Ontario July 31 — Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio, Lexington, Ohio Aug. 21 — ABC Supply 500, Long Pond, Pa. Sep. 4 — Grand Prix of Boston, Boston Sep. 18 — GoPro Grand Prix of Sonoma, Sonoma, Calif. Formula One schedule and winners Through April 24 March 20 — Australian Grand Prix (Nico Rosberg) April 3 — Bahrain Grand Prix (Nico Rosberg) April 17 — Chinese Grand Prix (Nico Rosberg) May 1 — Russian Grand Prix, Sochi May 15 — Spanish Grand Prix, Barcelona May 29 — Monaco Grand Prix June 12 — Canadian Grand Prix, Montreal June 19 — European Grand Prix, Baku, Azerbaijan July 3 — Austrian Grand Prix, Spielberg July 10 — British Grand Prix, Silverstone July 24 — Hungarian Grand Prix, Budapest July 31 — German Grand Prix, Hockenheim Aug. 28 — Belgian Grand Prix, Spa-Francorchamps Sept. 4 — Italian Grand Prix, Monza Sept. 18 — Singapore Grand Prix Oct. 2 — Malaysia Grand Prix, Sepang Oct. 9 — Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka Oct. 23 — United States Grand Prix, Austin, Texas Oct. 30 — Mexican Grand Prix, Mexico City Nov. 13 — Brazilian Grand Prix, Sao Paulo Nov. 27 — Abu Dhabi Grand Prix Deals Thursday’s transactions BASEBALL Major League Baseball OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER OF BASEBALL — Suspended Miami Marlins 2B Dee Gordon 80 games for testing positive for a performance-enhancing drug in violation of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. Suspended Minnesota Twins OF Reynaldo Rodriguez (Rochester-IL) 80 games, without pay, following a positive test for metabolites of Stanozolol, a performance-enhancing substance in violation of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Placed RHP David Robertson on the bereavement list. Recalled INF Carlos Sanchez from Charlotte (IL). DETROIT TIGERS — Placed RHP Shane Greene on the 15-day DL, retroactive to April 25. LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Placed RHP Huston Street on the 15-day DL. National League CHICAGO CUBS — Placed C Miguel Montero on the 15-day DL, retroactive to April 25. Selected the contract of C Tim Federowicz from Iowa (PCL). CINCINNATI REDS — Optioned RHP Layne Somsen to Louisville (IL). Activated RF Jay Bruce from the paternity list. MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Selected the contract of INF Hernan Perez from Colorado Springs (PCL). Transferred RHP Matt Garza from the 15- to the 60-day DL. Placed 2B Scooter Gennett on the 15-day DL, retroactive to April 25. American Association SIOUX CITY EXPLORERS — Signed RHPs Graham Johnson and Jason Townsend. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association SACRAMENTO KINGS — Named Ken Catanella assistant general manager. FOOTBALL National Football League MIAMI DOLPHINS — Waived DB Damarr Aultman, WRs Tyler Davis and Robert Herron and DT Robert Thomas II. Released LB Terrell Manning. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — Signed DE Tavaris Barnes and TE Brandon Williams. HOCKEY National Hockey League TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING — Announced a six-year affiliation extension with Syracuse (AHL). COLLEGE CALIFORNIA — Named Tim O’Toole men’s assistant basketball coach. CHATTANOOGA — Signed women’s basketball coach Jim Foster to a oneyear contract extension and men’s basketball coach Matt McCall to a two-year contract extension. IDAHO — Announced it will drop to the Football Championship Subdivision beginning in 2018 and will join the Big Sky Conference, pending approval from the Idaho State Board of Education. LOYOLA NO — Named Nick Dodson men’s and women’s cross country/track and field coach. TEXAS — Named Jamie Carey women’s assistant basketball coach. TEXAS RIO GRANDE VALLEY — Named Kenya Crandell men’s assistant basketball coach. UTICA — Named Sean Coffey men’s basketball coach. AP sportlight April 30 1922 — Charlie Robertson of the Chicago White Sox pitches a 2-0 perfect game against the Detroit Tigers. 1961 — Willie Mays of the San Francisco Giants hits four home runs in a 14-4 victory over the Braves in Milwaukee. 1971 — The Milwaukee Bucks become the second team to register a four-game sweep in the NBA championship, beating the Baltimore Bullets 118-106. 1975 — Larry O’Brien is named the NBA’s third commissioner, following J. Walter Kennedy (1963-75) and Maurice Podoloff (194663). O’Brien holds the position until 1984. 1976 — Muhammad Ali wins a unanimous 15-round decision over Jimmy Young in Landover, Md., to retain his world heavyweight title. 1992 — The Red Wings and Canucks become the ninth and 10th teams in NHL history to rebound from 3-1 deficits to win playoff series. Detroit beats the Minnesota North Stars 5-2 in the Norris Division, while Vancouver defeats the Winnipeg Jets 5-0 in the Smythe Division. 1993 — Monica Seles, the top-ranked women’s player, is stabbed in the back during a changeover at the Citizen Cup in Hamburg, Germany. Guenter Parche, 38, reaches over a courtside railing and sticks a knife into the back of Seles. She has an inch-deep slit between her shoulder blades and missed the remainder of the 1993 season. 2002 — Texas Rangers shortstop Alex Rodriguez becomes the second-youngest player to reach 250 homers during a 10-3 win over the Toronto Blue Jays. 2005 — James Toney outpoints John Ruiz to win the WBA heavyweight title in New York. Toney, a former champion at three other weights, wins his third heavyweight bout, becoming the third one-time middleweight champion to take boxing’s top crown. 2009 — Derrick Rose scores 28 points and blocks Rajon Rondo’s potential winner as Chicago held on for a 128-127 triple-overtime victory over Boston to force Game 7. Ray Allen scores a career playoff-high 51 points for the Celtics, while tying the NBA playoff record with nine three-pointers. •STA Saturday, April 30, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 25 SPORTS BRIEFS/COLLEGE FOOTBALL Briefly Ducks fire Boudreau after early playoff exit Associated Press ANAHEIM, Calif. — The Anaheim Ducks have fired coach Bruce Boudreau after their firstround exit from the playoffs. Ducks general manager Bob Murray announced the decision Friday. Boudreau had spectacular regular-season success with the Ducks, leading them to four consecutive Pacific Division titles while going 208-104-40 in nearly five seasons in charge. But the Ducks’ last four seasons have ended with a Game 7 loss on home ice in the playoffs. The Ducks blew a 3-2 series lead in all four years, culminating in Wednesday’s 2-1 loss to Nashville in Game 7 of the first round. Anaheim reached the Western Conference finals last season, losing in seven games to Chicago. That was the second straight year the Ducks were eliminated by the eventual Stanley Cup champions. In other NHL news: Boston’s Patrice Bergeron, Anaheim’s Ryan Kesler and Los Angeles’ Anze Kopitar are the finalists for the Frank J. Selke Trophy as the NHL’s top defensive forward. Members of the Professional Hockey Writers’ Association submitted ballots at the end of the regular season, with the top three designated finalists Thursday. The winner will be announced June 22 during the NHL Awards in Las Vegas. Bergeron won the award in 2012, 2014 and 2015 and was second in 2013. The NHL has fined Washington Capitals forward Tom Wilson $2,404 for his knee-on-knee hit that temporarily knocked Pittsburgh forward Conor Sheary out of Game 1. Will Smith’s shooter indicted for murder NEW ORLEANS — A business owner and semiprofessional football player was indicted Thursday on a second-degree murder charge in the shooting death of retired New Orleans Saints defensive end Will Smith. Cardell Hayes was also indicted on a charge of attempted second-degree murder because police say he wounded Smith’s wife in the shooting. Hayes and Smith got into an argument after Hayes’ Hummer hit Smith’s Mercedes SUV from behind on April 9, police said. Smith’s wife was in the passenger seat at the time. Hayes’ defense lawyer John Fuller has said Hayes was not the aggressor and that a witness saw a gun in Smith’s possession. Police say a loaded gun was found in Smith’s vehicle. A lawyer for Smith’s family, Peter Thomson, insists Smith never brandished or carried a gun. Thomson has described Hayes as “enraged” during the altercation and portrayed his cli- ents as the victims. Smith was shot seven times in the back and once along his side, the coroner said. His wife, Racquel, was shot twice in the legs but survived. Angels put closer Street on 15-day disabled list ANAHEIM, Calif. — Los Angeles Angels closer Huston Street has been placed on the 15-day disabled list due to a strained left oblique muscle. The Angels announced the move Thursday. Street injured himself while warming up Wednesday. The 32year-old veteran has converted all five of his save opportunities this season with a 1.17 ERA, allowing just four hits and one run over nine appearances. The Angels are uncertain how long Street will be out. Their new closer will be eighth-inning specialist Joe Smith, who earned the save Wednesday night when Los Angeles completed a three-game sweep of defending World Series champion Kansas City. Platini arrives at CAS to fight 6-year ban by FIFA LAUSANNE, Switzerland — Michel Platini has begun his appeal at the Court of Arbitration for Sport against a six-year ban by FIFA over a $2 million payment approved by Sepp Blatter. The UEFA president did not speak with reporters Friday after arriving for an 8 a.m. closed-door hearing expected to last at least eight hours. A verdict could come as early as Monday, when UEFA gathers in Budapest, Hungary, ahead of an annual congress of 54 soccer federations who have been without their leader for seven months. “Hopefully it will be early next week, maybe a little later,” CAS secretary general Matthieu Reeb said. “The CAS tribunal will adapt itself to the needs of the parties.” The three-member CAS panel is judging Platini’s case afresh and has the authority to impose a life ban for corruption. Previously, FIFA’s ethics and appeals committees ruled out bribery as a factor and found Platini and Blatter guilty of charges including conflict of interest and disloyalty. Blatter, the former FIFA president, arrived at 10:30 a.m. to serve as a witness. Blatter employed Platini as a presidential adviser from 1999-2002. “I accepted this task. I’m on good form and I’m happy to be a witness in this matter,” Blatter said outside the court. Platini and his former mentor deny wrongdoing, and claim they had a verbal contract for the additional money. FIFA eventually paid Platini three months before Blatter was re-elected as president in 2011. R ALPH RUSSO/AP The University of Michigan equipment truck is parked next to a practice field at IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla., on March 1. The NCAA’s Division I Board of Directors has rescinded the ban on satellite camps almost three weeks after approving a proposal prohibiting Bowl Subdivision coaches from holding or working at camps and clinics away from their schools. NCAA board rescinds ban on satellite camps BY ERIC OLSON Associated Press The NCAA Division I Board of Directors scrapped a proposed ban on satellite camps Thursday, rebuffing a request from powerhouse conferences in the South and clearing the way for coaches to hold and work at clinics far from their campuses this summer. The decision won’t end the debate that centered on whether the camps are just another recruiting tool: The board also asked the Division I Council to conduct a broad assessment of the entire college football recruiting model in coming months, and that could bring modifications to how the camps are run and who can take part. The council approved a ban three weeks ago prohibiting Bowl Subdivision coaches from holding or working at camps and clinics away from their schools. The camps had drawn a high profile after Jim Harbaugh and his Michigan staff held camps in the South last summer and he was among the first to praise the board’s decision. “Good news,” Harbaugh said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. “It’s good for prospective student-athletes, fans, coaches and competition.” The Southeastern Conference and Atlantic Coast Conference sponsored the proposal that created the ban, but there was an outcry from coaches who contend R ALPH RUSSO/AP Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh speaks to reporters during his satellite camp at IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla., on Feb. 29. satellite camps provide opportunities for un-recruited athletes to be noticed by high-profile coaches and possibly receive scholarships. “While we are disappointed with the NCAA governance process result, we respect the Board of Directors’ decision and are confident SEC football programs will continue to be highly effective in their recruiting efforts,” SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey said. The SEC had warned it would lift its ban on satellite camp participation without an NCAA-wide prohibition. The SEC and ACC both said their coaches will now be allowed to participate in the camps. “We continue to believe football recruiting is primarily an ac- tivity best focused in high schools during the established recruiting calendar, which has provided opportunities for football prospective student-athletes from all across the country to obtain broad national access and exposure but with appropriate guidance from high school coaches, teachers and advisers,” Sankey said. The board also directed the council to take a deeper look at FBS recruiting, with initial recommendations due by Sept. 1. Opponents of the camps say they are simply recruiting events held outside the official recruiting calendar and the sight of a Big Ten coach like Harbaugh drawing attention in SEC country with his Florida camps helped put the issue on the front burner for the NCAA. PAGE 26 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 MLB Gordon out 80 games Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Reigning NL batting champion Dee Gordon of the Miami Marlins was suspended 80 games for testing positive for a performance-enhancing drug, Major League Baseball said soon after he got a key hit Thursday night in a win at Dodger Stadium. Gordon was not available for comment after the startling latenight announcement. The 28-year-old Gordon led the majors in hits and stolen bases last year. He batted .333, became an All-Star for the second time and won a Gold Glove at second base. The big season helped him earn a $50 million, five-year contract he signed in January. MLB said he tested positive for exogenous Testosterone and Clostebol. Marlins manager Don Mattingly managed Gordon during his first three big league seasons in Los Angeles before he was traded to Miami in a seven-player deal in December 2014. Mattingly took over as Marlins manager prior to this season. “These guys love Dee, and we’re going to support him,” Mattingly said. “I feel like Dee’s one of my kids, to be honest with you, because I’ve known him so long. So we’re going to love him, and then we’re going to support him. He’s been a big part of the success that we’ve had.” The fleet-footed Gordon is the son of former All-Star pitcher Tom Gordon. Shortly before the penalty was announced, Gordon hit an RBI single in the seventh inning and scored after forcing a balk as the Marlins rallied for a 5-3 win and a four-game sweep of Los Angeles. A LEX G ALLARDO/AP The Marlins’ Dee Gordon was suspended 80 games Thursday after testing positive for a performance-enhancing drug. Scoreboard American League East Division W L 13 8 12 10 10 11 10 13 8 12 Central Division Chicago 16 7 Kansas City 12 9 Cleveland 10 9 Detroit 11 10 Minnesota 7 15 West Division Texas 12 10 Seattle 11 10 Los Angeles 11 11 Oakland 11 12 Houston 7 15 Baltimore Boston Tampa Bay Toronto New York Diamondbacks 3, Cardinals 0 Pct .619 .545 .476 .435 .400 GB — 1A 3 4 4A .696 .571 .526 .524 .318 — 3 4 4 8A .545 .524 .500 .478 .318 — A 1 1A 5 St. Louis Arizona ab r h bi Segura 2b 4 0 1 0 Lamb 3b 3 0 1 0 Gldschmdt 1b 4 0 0 0 Peralta rf 4 0 0 0 Drury lf 4 2 2 1 Herrmann c 3 1 1 2 Owings cf 2 0 1 0 Ahmed ss 2 0 0 0 De La Rosa p 2 0 0 0 Tomas ph 1 0 0 0 Hudson p 0 0 0 0 Ziegler p 0 0 0 0 Totals 30 0 3 0 Totals 29 3 6 3 St. Louis 000 000 000—0 Arizona 020 100 00x—3 E—Ahmed (3). DP—St. Louis 1, Arizona 1. LOB—St. Louis 6, Arizona 5. 2B—Holliday (7), Segura (5), Ja.Lamb (8), Drury (6). HR—Drury (3), Herrmann (2). SB—Segura (4), Owings (5). IP H R ER BB SO St. Louis Wacha L,2-1 7 5 3 3 1 9 Siegrist 1 1 0 0 1 0 Arizona De La Rosa W,3-3 7 2 0 0 2 10 Hudson H,4 1 0 0 0 0 1 Ziegler S,5-5 1 1 0 0 1 0 WP—Wacha. T—2:25. A—18,933 (48,633). Carpenter 3b Piscotty cf Holliday lf Moss rf Molina c Adams 1b Gyorko 2b Diaz ss Wacha p Wong ph Siegrist p National League East Division W L Pct GB Washington 14 7 .667 — New York 13 7 .650 A Philadelphia 12 10 .545 2A Miami 10 11 .476 4 Atlanta 5 17 .227 9A Central Division Chicago 16 5 .762 — Pittsburgh 13 9 .591 3A St. Louis 12 10 .545 4A Cincinnati 9 13 .409 7A Milwaukee 8 13 .381 8 West Division Los Angeles 12 11 .522 — San Francisco 12 11 .522 — Arizona 12 12 .500 A Colorado 9 12 .429 2 San Diego 7 15 .318 4A Wednesday’s games Chicago White Sox 4, Toronto 0 Baltimore 3, Tampa Bay 1 Detroit 9, Oakland 4 Texas 3, N.Y. Yankees 2 Cleveland 6, Minnesota 5 L.A. Angels 4, Kansas City 2 Houston 7, Seattle 4 San Francisco 13, San Diego 9 Philadelphia 3, Washington 0 Boston 9, Atlanta 4 N.Y. Mets 5, Cincinnati 2 Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs Pittsburgh 9, Colorado 8, 12 innings St. Louis 11, Arizona 4 Miami 2, L.A. Dodgers 0 Thursday’s games Detroit 7, Oakland 3 Baltimore 10, Chicago White Sox 2 Chicago Cubs 7, Milwaukee 2 Pittsburgh at Colorado, ppd., rain Philadelphia 3, Washington 0 Atlanta 5, Boston 3 Arizona 3, St. Louis 0 Miami 5, L.A. Dodgers 3 Friday’s games Chicago White Sox at Baltimore N.Y. Yankees at Boston Toronto at Tampa Bay L.A. Angels at Texas Detroit at Minnesota Houston at Oakland Kansas City at Seattle Atlanta at Chicago Cubs Cincinnati at Pittsburgh Cleveland at Philadelphia San Francisco at N.Y. Mets Miami at Milwaukee Washington at St. Louis Colorado at Arizona San Diego at L.A. Dodgers Saturday’s games Detroit (Zimmermann 4-0) at Minnesota (Duffey 0-0) Houston (Devenski 0-0) at Oakland (Graveman 1-2) Toronto (Happ 3-0) at Tampa Bay (Archer 1-4) Chicago White Sox (Latos 4-0) at Baltimore (Gausman 0-1) N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 1-2) at Boston (Porcello 4-0) L.A. Angels (Shoemaker 1-3) at Texas (Holland 2-1) Kansas City (Ventura 2-0) at Seattle (Miley 1-2) Washington (J.Ross 2-0) at St. Louis (J.Garcia 1-1) Atlanta (Teheran 0-3) at Chicago Cubs (Lackey 3-1) San Francisco (M.Cain 0-2) at N.Y. Mets (deGrom 2-0) Cincinnati (Simon 0-2) at Pittsburgh (Liriano 1-1) Cleveland (Bauer 1-0) at Philadelphia (Eickhoff 1-3) Miami (Chen 1-1) at Milwaukee (Ch. Anderson 1-2) Colorado (Rusin 1-0) at Arizona (Greinke 2-2) San Diego (Rea 1-1) at L.A. Dodgers (Stripling 0-1) Sunday’s games Toronto (Stroman 3-0) at Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 0-1) Chicago White Sox (Sale 5-0) at Baltimore (Jimenez 1-2) Detroit (Pelfrey 0-4) at Minnesota (Nolasco 1-0) L.A. Angels (Richards 1-3) at Texas (Hamels 3-0) Houston (Fister 1-3) at Oakland (R.Hill 3-2) Kansas City (Kennedy 2-2) at Seattle (T.Walker 2-0) N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 1-2) at Boston (Price 3-0) San Francisco (Bumgarner 2-2) at N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 2-0) Cincinnati (R.Iglesias 1-1) at Pittsburgh (Locke 1-2) Miami (Koehler 2-2) at Milwaukee (W.Peralta 1-3) Washington (Scherzer 2-1) at St. Louis (C.Martinez 4-0) Atlanta (Wisler 0-2) at Chicago Cubs (Hammel 3-0) Cleveland (Salazar 2-1) at Philadelphia (Velasquez 3-1) Colorado (Bettis 2-1) at Arizona (S.Miller 0-2) San Diego (Pomeranz 2-2) at L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 2-1) ab 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 2 1 0 r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 h 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Cubs 7, Brewers 2 Milwaukee M ARK J. TERRILL /AP The Marlins’ J.T. Realmuto, center, hits a solo home run as Dodgers starting pitcher Kenta Maeda, below, and catcher Yasmani Grandal look on during the second inning of Thursday’s game in Los Angeles. Thursday Tigers 7, Athletics 3 Oakland Detroit ab r h bi ab r h bi Burns cf 4 2 1 0 Kinsler 2b 4 2 2 1 Lowrie 2b 3 0 2 0 J.Martinez rf 3 1 1 0 Reddick rf 4 0 1 1 Mi.Cabrera 1b 5 1 2 1 K.Davis dh 5 0 1 1 V.Martinez dh 4 0 0 0 Vogt c 4 1 1 1 J.Upton lf 4 0 1 1 Canha lf 4 0 0 0 Castellanos 3b 3 0 2 1 Coghlan 3b 2 0 0 0 Saltlmcchia c 4 0 1 0 Alonso 1b 2 0 0 0 J.Iglesias ss 3 1 0 0 B.Butler ph-1b 1 0 0 0 Gose cf 4 2 2 2 Semien ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 32 3 6 3 Totals 34 7 11 6 Oakland 001 100 001—3 Detroit 004 300 00x—7 DP—Oakland 2, Detroit 1. LOB—Oakland 11, Detroit 8. 2B—Burns (3), Lowrie (4), Kinsler (4), Castellanos (5), Gose (1). 3B—Saltalamacchia (1). HR—Vogt (3), Gose (2). SB—Burns (6), Coghlan (1). IP H R ER BB SO Oakland Bassitt L,0-2 3C 10 7 7 3 5 Rodriguez 2B 1 0 0 1 2 Doolittle 1 0 0 0 1 1 Madson 1 0 0 0 0 0 Detroit Sanchez W,3-2 5C 3 2 2 7 9 Ryan 1B 1 0 0 0 0 Hardy 1C 2 1 1 2 2 Rodriguez S,5-6 B 0 0 0 0 0 WP—Rodriguez. PB—Saltalamacchia. T—3:04. A—26,200 (41,681). Marlins 5, Dodgers 3 Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi Gordon 2b 4 1 1 1 Utley 2b 2 1 1 0 Prado 3b 5 0 3 1 Seager ss 4 1 2 0 Yelich lf 4 0 1 0 Gonzalez 1b 4 0 0 0 Stanton rf 4 1 1 1 Grandal c 3 0 1 1 Bour 1b 3 0 0 0 Puig rf 4 0 1 1 Phelps p 0 0 0 0 Crwfrd lf 4 0 0 0 Ramos p 0 0 0 0 Kendrick 3b 3 0 0 0 Suzuki cf 4 0 0 0 Baez p 0 0 0 0 Realmuto c 4 2 2 1 Coleman p 0 0 0 0 Hchvrria ss 4 1 1 0 Thmpsn ph 1 1 1 0 Fernandez p 2 0 0 0 Pederson cf 2 0 0 0 Dietrich ph 1 0 0 0 Turner ph-3b 2 0 2 0 Ege p 0 0 0 0 Maeda p 2 0 0 0 Barraclgh p 0 0 0 0 Hrnndz 3b-cf 2 0 0 0 Rojas 1b 1 0 0 0 Totals 36 5 9 4 Totals 33 3 8 2 Miami 010 000 310—5 Los Angeles 200 000 001—3 E—D.Gordon (2). DP—Miami 2. LOB— Miami 6, Los Angeles 8. 2B—Prado (3), Grandal (5). HR—Stanton (7), Realmuto (2). IP H R ER BB SO Miami Fernandez W,2-2 6 5 2 2 3 8 Ege 0 1 0 0 0 0 Barraclough H,3 1 0 0 0 0 1 Phelps H,4 1 0 0 0 1 1 Ramos S,6-6 1 2 1 1 0 2 Los Angeles Maeda L,3-1 6C 7 4 4 1 5 Baez 1B 2 1 1 0 1 Coleman 1 0 0 0 1 0 Ege pitched to 1 batter in the 7th HBP—by Barraclough (Utley). WP—Ramos. T—2:51. A—44,009 (56,000). Phillies 3, Nationals 0 Philadelphia Washington ab r h bi ab r h bi Herrera cf 3 1 1 0 den Dkkr cf 3 0 1 0 Galvis ss 4 1 1 0 Espinosa ss 3 0 0 0 Franco 3b 2 1 0 0 Rndn ph-3b 0 0 0 0 Howard 1b 3 0 1 0 Harper rf 4 0 1 0 Ruf ph-1b 1 0 0 0 Zmmrmn 1b 4 0 1 0 Rupp c 4 0 1 2 Murphy 2b 4 0 0 0 Hrnandez 2b 4 0 1 0 Werth lf 4 0 1 0 Lough lf 4 0 1 1 Drew 3b-ss 3 0 0 0 Nola p 2 0 0 0 Severino c 2 0 0 0 Burriss ph 1 0 0 0 Roark p 2 0 0 0 Hinojosa p 0 0 0 0 Kelley p 0 0 0 0 Araujo p 0 0 0 0 Heisey ph 1 0 0 0 A.Blanco ph 1 0 0 0 Rivero p 0 0 0 0 Gomez p 0 0 0 0 Papelbon p 0 0 0 0 Bourjos rf 3 0 0 0 Totals 32 3 6 3 Totals 30 0 4 0 Philadelphia 000 000 003—3 Washington 000 000 000—0 DP—Philadelphia 1. LOB—Philadelphia 5, Washington 6. 2B—Galvis (5), Rupp (7). SB—C.Hernandez (2), den Dekker (1), Harper (5). CS—O.Herrera (1). IP H R ER BB SO Philadelphia Nola 7 2 0 0 1 7 Hinojosa C 1 0 0 1 1 Araujo W,1-0 B 0 0 0 1 1 Gomez S,7-7 1 1 0 0 0 0 Washington Roark 7 2 0 0 2 6 Kelley 1 0 0 0 0 1 Rivero L,0-1 0 2 3 3 0 0 Papelbon 1 2 0 0 0 1 Rivero pitched to 3 batters in the 9th T—2:59. A—22,112 (41,418). Braves 5, Red Sox 3 Miami Atlanta Boston ab r h bi ab r h bi Markakis rf 5 0 4 3 Betts rf 4 1 1 0 Castro 3b 5 0 0 0 Pedroia 2b 5 1 2 1 Garcia dh 5 0 1 0 Bogaerts ss 3 1 1 0 Freeman 1b 4 0 3 0 Ortiz dh 4 0 0 0 Pierzynski c 5 0 0 0 Ramirez 1b 4 0 3 2 Stubbs pr 0 0 0 0 Shaw 3b 4 0 0 0 Flowers c 0 0 0 0 Young lf 3 0 1 0 Francoeur lf 4 0 0 0 Holt ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Peterson 2b 1 2 0 0 Bradley cf 4 0 1 0 Aybar ss 4 2 1 0 Vazquez c 3 0 1 0 Smith cf 4 1 3 2 Rutledge ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 37 5 12 5 Totals 36 3 10 3 Atlanta 030 101 000—5 Boston 101 000 001—3 E—F.Freeman (3), Pierzynski (2). DP— Atlanta 1. LOB—Atlanta 10, Boston 9. 2B—Markakis (11), M.Smith 2 (5), Pedroia (7), Bogaerts (9), Han.Ramirez (5), Chris. Young (4). SB—Stubbs (4). CS—M.Smith 2 (4). IP H R ER BB SO Atlanta Chacin W,1-1 5 6 2 2 2 4 O’Flaherty H,2 1 1 0 0 0 1 Ogando H,2 C 1 0 0 1 1 Cervenka H,2 B 0 0 0 0 0 Johnson H,4 1 0 0 0 0 1 Vizcaino S,2-2 1 2 1 1 0 2 Boston Buchholz L,0-3 6B 8 5 5 4 2 Layne 1B 3 0 0 0 1 Hembree 1B 1 0 0 0 0 Chacin pitched to 1 batter in the 6th PB—Pierzynski 2. T—3:22. A—32,232 (37,499). Chicago ab r h bi Fowler cf 5 1 1 1 Heyward rf 4 0 0 0 Bryant lf 1 2 1 0 Baez lf-3b 1 1 1 0 Rizzo 1b 2 1 1 1 Zobrist 2b 5 0 2 2 La Stella 3b 2 1 1 1 Cahill p 0 0 0 0 Strop p 0 0 0 0 Fedrowcz ph-c 1 0 0 0 Russell ss 3 0 0 1 Ross c 3 1 1 1 Hammel ph 1 0 0 0 Ramirez p 0 0 0 0 Arrieta p 2 0 0 0 Soler ph 0 0 0 0 Grimm p 0 0 0 0 Szczur ph-lf 2 0 0 0 Totals 31 2 6 2 Totals 32 7 8 7 Milwaukee 000 010 001—2 Chicago 212 011 00x—7 E—Cahill (1), D.Ross (1), Capuano (1), Y.Rivera (2). DP—Chicago 2. LOB—Milwaukee 10, Chicago 14. 2B—Villar (4), Presley (1), Rizzo (2), La Stella (4). HR—D.Ross (2). SB—Villar (5), Braun (2), H.Perez (1). SF—Presley (1). IP H R ER BB SO Milwaukee Jungmann L,0-4 3C 6 5 5 3 2 Capuano 1B 0 1 1 3 0 Freeman 2 1 1 1 4 2 Torres 1 1 0 0 1 1 Chicago Arrieta W,5-0 5 3 1 1 4 6 Grimm 1 1 0 0 0 3 Cahill 1C 1 0 0 3 2 Strop B 0 0 0 0 1 Ramirez 1 1 1 1 0 1 HBP—by Jungmann (Bryant), by Jungmann (Bryant). WP—Capuano, Freeman, Ramirez. PB—Lucroy. T—3:45. A—32,734 (41,072). ab Villar ss 4 Presley rf 3 Braun lf 4 Lucroy c 1 Carter 1b 4 Nieuwnhs cf 4 Hill 3b 2 Capuano p 0 Flores ph 1 Freeman p 0 Walsh ph 0 Torres p 0 Rivera 2b 4 Jungmann p 1 Perez 3b 3 r 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 h 3 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 bi 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Orioles 10, White Sox 2 Chicago Baltimore ab r h bi ab r h bi Eaton rf 4 0 2 0 Rckard rf-cf 4 2 2 0 Rollins ss 4 0 1 0 Mchdo 3b-ss 4 3 2 5 Saladino ss 1 0 0 0 Davis 1b 4 1 2 2 Abreu 1b 3 1 2 0 Kim ph-lf 1 0 1 0 Sands 1b 1 0 0 0 Trmbo dh-1b 4 1 1 1 Frazier 3b 4 1 1 2 Jones cf 4 0 2 1 Sanchez 3b 1 0 0 0 P.Alvrz ph-3b 1 0 0 0 Cabrera lf 4 0 0 0 Hardy ss 5 1 2 0 Lawrie 2b 4 0 1 0 McFrlnd p 0 0 0 0 Garcia dh 3 0 2 0 Rmold lf-rf 4 1 2 0 Sanchez c 4 0 1 0 Schoop 2b 4 1 1 0 Jackson cf 4 0 0 0 Joseph c 3 0 0 0 Totals 37 2 10 2 Totals 38 10 15 9 Chicago 200 000 000— 2 Baltimore 104 005 00x—10 E—Lawrie (2). DP—Chicago 1. LOB— Chicago 11, Baltimore 8. 2B—Lawrie (7), M.Machado (9), A.Jones (3), J.Hardy (7). HR—Frazier (6), M.Machado (7), C.Davis (7), Trumbo (6). SB—Eaton (3), J.Rollins (2). IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Danks L,0-4 5 9 6 6 2 4 Petricka 1 2 4 3 1 1 Jennings 1 2 0 0 0 0 Webb 1 2 0 0 1 3 Baltimore Wilson 4C 4 2 2 1 3 Givens W,2-0 1B 2 0 0 1 2 Bundy 2 3 0 0 0 1 McFarland 1 1 0 0 0 1 Danks pitched to 1 batter in the 6th HBP—by Wilson (Eaton). WP—Petricka, McFarland. T—3:10. A—14,568 (45,971). Calendar May 18-19 — Owners meetings, New York. June 9-11 — Amateur draft. July 12 — All-Star Game, San Diego. July 15 — Last day to sign for amateur draft picks subject to deadline. July 24 — Hall of Fame inductions, Cooperstown, N.Y. Aug. 1 — Last day to trade a player without securing waivers. •STA Saturday, April 30, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 27 MLB Machado powers Orioles past White Sox Career-high five RBIs for Baltimore SS ‘ It’s good to be back home. ’ Manny Machado Orioles shortstop, on his five-RBI effort at Camden Yards on Thursday BY TODD K ARPOVICH Associated Press BALTIMORE — Manny Machado was ready for this 10-game homestand. Machado had a grand slam and a career-high five RBIs, leading the Orioles over the White Sox 10-2 Thursday night and stopping Chicago’s six-game winning streak. Chris Davis and Mark Trumbo hit consecutive third-inning homers for the Orioles, whose 8-1 record at Camden Yards is the best home mark in the major leagues. “It’s good to be back home,” Machado said. “It was a rough couple of days on the road. We’re excited to be back, we’re excited to be back here in front of the crowd and put that ‘W’ in that win column.” Machado stopped an 0-for-17 slide with an RBI double in a fourrun third inning against John Danks (0-4) and homered in the sixth off Jake Petricka. Machado is batting .333 with a team-high seven homers. PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP The Orioles’ Manny Machado, right, is greeted by teammates Jonathan Schoop (6) and Nolan Reimold after driving them in with a grand slam during the sixth inning of Thursday’s game against the Chicago White Sox in Baltimore. The Orioles won 10-2. Mychal Givens (2-0) pitched 1 1 ⁄3 scoreless innings to win in relief of Tyler Wilson, who allowed two runs and four hits in 4 2 ⁄3 innings. “Obviously, I’d like to stretch it out over a few more frames,” Wil- son said. “The White Sox did a really good job tonight of battling and fighting off good pitches. That’s the nature of the game.” Danks gave up six runs and nine hits in six-plus innings. He has lost seven straight starts dating to Sept. 14. “I certainly need to be better,” Danks said. “I’ll be ready to go. I’ll work hard. “I’m not going to pout or any- thing. I never have and never will. I guess it’s part of it. It’s not easy.” Baltimore had scored just five runs in its previous four games, but the Orioles offense woke up against Chicago, which has the best record in the AL at 16-7. After Todd Frazier’s two-run homer in the first, Adam Jones hit an RBI double in the bottom half. Baltimore burst ahead 5-2 in the third on Machado’s double, Davis’ two-run homer and Trumbo’s solo shot. Before Machado’s slam, which landed in the Orioles’ bullpen, second baseman Brett Lawrie could not handle a sharp grounder by Nolan Reimold, an error that allowed J.J. Hardy to score from second. “They swung the bats. They got some thunder and it showed tonight,” Chicago manager Robin Ventura said. “... If you live in the middle of the plate, they are going to hammer it.” The Orioles hit back-to-back homers for the third time in 2016. Baltimore also improved to 7-0 when scoring five or more runs. Roundup Cubs’ Arrieta wins 16th straight decision Associated Press CHICAGO — Jake Arrieta’s bid for a second straight no-hitter ended after five pitches and the Cubs ace went on to win his 16th straight decision, leading Chicago over the Milwaukee Brewers 7-2 Thursday. Arrieta (5-0) gave up one run, three hits and four walks in five innings — the first run he allowed at Wrigley Field since July 25. Alex Presley’s fifth-inning RBI double ended Arrieta’s home scoreless streak at 52 2 ⁄3 innings, four outs shy of the big league record. At 16-5, Chicago is off to its best 21-game start since 1907. Ben Zobrist hit a two-run single in the first off Taylor Jungmann (0-4), who gave up five runs, six hits and three walks in 3 2 ⁄3 innings. Phillies 3, Nationals 0: Cameron Rupp hit a tiebreaking, tworun double off Jonathan Papelbon in a three-run ninth, and visiting Philadelphia completed a threegame sweep of Washington. Aaron Nola, Dalier Hinojosa, Elvis Araujo (1-0) and Jeanmar Gomez combined on a four-hitter and extended Washington’s scoreless streak to 22 innings. Odubel Herrera singled off Felipe Rivero (0-1) opening the PAUL BEATY/AP Cubs starter Jake Arrieta delivers a pitch during the first inning of Thursday’s game against the Milwaukee Brewers in Chicago. ninth and took third on Freddy Galvis’ double. Maikel Franco was walked intentionally, and Papelbon came in to strike out pinch-hitter Darin Ruf. Rupp hit a drive that landed over a backpedaling Bryce Harper at the warning track in right, and David Lough followed with a run-scoring single. Gomez got a save for the third straight day, his seventh overall. Tigers 7, Athletics 3: At Detroit, Anthony Gose doubled and homered, and Anibal Sanchez (32) allowed two runs and three hits in 5 2 ⁄3 innings. Sanchez struck out nine, but walked seven — one shy of his big league high. Chris Bassitt (0-2) gave up seven runs, 10 hits and three walks in 3 2 ⁄3 innings as Oakland lost for the fifth time in six games. Francisco Rodriguez got one out for his fifth save. Braves 5, Red Sox 3: Nick Markakis had three singles, a double and three RBIs, helping visiting Atlanta end an eightgame losing streak. Mallex Smith doubled twice and had an RBI single for the Braves, a big league-worst 5-17. Jhoulys Chachin (1-1) gave up two runs and six hits in five-plus innings to win for the first time since signing with the Braves as a free agent. Clay Buchholz (0-3) allowed five runs, eight hits and four walks in 6 1 ⁄3 innings. Diamondbacks 3, Cardinals 0: Rubby De La Rosa struck out a career-high 10 and pitched two-hit ball through seven innings and Chris Herrmann and Brandon Drury homered for host Arizona. The Diamondbacks forced a split in the four-game series. De La Rosa (3-3) had been shaky this year and was demoted to the bullpen for a time but turned in his second straight strong start. Herrmann’s two-run home run — after Drury’s blooper dropped in for a double — gave the Diamondbacks a 2-0 lead in the second. Drury lined a 2-1 pitch from Michael Wacha (2-1) into the seats in left for a solo shot in the fourth. It was Drury’s second home run in two days. Wacha (2-1) lasted seven innings. He struck out nine with two walks and allowed three runs and five hits. Marlins 5, Dodgers 3: At Los Angeles, Dee Gordon and Martin Prado drove in the tying and goahead runs with consecutive twoout singles in the seventh inning, and Miami got home runs from Giancarlo Stanton and J.T. Realmuto to complete a four-game sweep. Jose Fernandez (2-2) allowed two runs and five hits in six innings, striking out eight and walking three. Kenta Maeda (3-1) was charged with four runs and seven hits over 6 2 ⁄3 innings in his fifth big league start, after allowing just one run in 25 2 ⁄3 innings. The Dodgers held a 2-1 lead into the seventh before Gordon chased Maeda with his RBI single. Prado then greeted Pedro Baez with a first-pitch single, and the right-hander balked home Gordon with the Marlins’ fourth run. Stanton added his 18th homer in the eighth against Baez, and A.J. Ramos got three outs for his sixth save. PAGE 28 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 OLYMPICS Guessing Games As countdown to Rio moves below 100 days, a look at predictions for how things will unfold FELIPE DANA /AP The Olympic Aquatics Stadium is shown inside Rio 2016 Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro. With less than 100 days until the start, problems still hang over South America’s first Games. Brazil President Dilma Rousseff is being impeached and is likely to be suspended when the Games open Aug. 5, partly fallout from Brazil’s worst recession in decades, 10-percent unemployment and a $3 billion Petrobras corruption scandal. Away from politics, the Zika virus threatens athletes and tourists. BY STEPHEN WADE Associated Press RIO DE JANEIRO wo years ago, the Australian IOC member John Coates called the preparations for the Rio de Janeiro Olympics “the worst” in recent memory. A lot has happened since then as the countdown clock reached 100 days on Wednesday. The venues that Coates worried about are 98 percent ready, and American television network NBC has just passed $1 billion in advertising sales and will set revenue records. The Olympic Park in the upscale suburb of Barra da Tijuca looks spectacular. Television cameras will love the aerial shots above Copacabana beach, or views from the famous Christ the Redeemer statue as it peers over Sugar Loaf mountain and Guanabara Bay. But problems still hang over South America’s first Games, the most unsettled in decades. Brazil President Dilma Rousseff is being impeached and is likely to be suspended when the games open Aug. 5, partly as fallout from Brazil’s worst recession in decades, 10 percent unemployment, and a $3 billion bribery scandal involving the staterun oil company Petrobras. Away from politics, the Zika virus threatens athletes and tourists. Ticket sales are lukewarm, and the bacteria and virusfilled venues for sailing, rowing, canoeing and open-water swimming could put 1,600 athletes competing there at risk. The deaths of two people last week when a new Olympic legacy cycling path collapsed into the sea have raised doubts about construction standards in the rush to build. In addition, a labor minister report Mon- T M ARK LENNIHAN /AP Dilma Rousseff, President of Brazil, is being impeached and is expected to be suspended when the Rio Games begin on Aug. 5. day said 11 workers have died on Olympicrelated projects since January 2013. The Associated Press asked a wide range of Brazilians — and non-Brazilians — to predict how the Games will unfold. Here are some of the replies. Briton Michael Payne, former marketing director of the International Olympic Committee: “The Rio Olympics will surprise everyone. No question, the country is facing the ‘perfect storm’ — political and economic meltdown, Zika, construction delays. But in the end, the unique and incredible stage of the city — perhaps one of the most dramatic visual backdrops of any Olympics to date — and the carnival atmosphere of the Brazilians will overcome these problems. There is clear potential to be truly great games. For those working behind the scenes, it will be tough. Very tough.” Brazilian Sergio Praca, political scientist at the Getulio Vargas Foundation: “The Rio de Janeiro Olympics will, at best, be a non-event. Brazilians are too occupied with politics. At worst, we’ll see violence and the collapse of the city’s infrastructure.” Brazilian Juliana Barbassa, author of “Dancing with the Devil in the City of God”: “The Games will be a beautiful, tightly controlled spectacle set against a backdrop that has stunned visitors for nearly 500 years. Those marveling from afar may not even notice the serious budgetary crisis facing the city and the state, and the tremendous cost that this global party has had for locals. But that cost — both in money and in missed opportunities and misplaced priorities — is significant, and Rio will not recover for decades to come.” American Susan Francia, two-time Olympic rowing gold-medalist: “The Olympics in Rio de Janeiro will go off without a hitch. The IOC always pulls it together, even if it’s at the last minute. I think Brazil will put on a fantastic event and the Brazilians will show their incredible hospitality.” American Jules Boykoff, political scientist at Pacific University; author of “Power Games: A Political History of the Olympics”: “I imagine Rio organizers and their allies will perpetually profess that the Olympics will be a high point of the summer. It seems to me that it is just as possible that the Olympics will become a focal point of discontent. Rather than a happy-faced antidote to the political mayhem gripping the country, Rio 2016 could actually stoke dissent as the sharp contradictions of the games — Olympic elites living the high life while hospitals are being shuttered — become more and more obvious.” Brazilian Marina Izidro, reporter for Sportv: “The Rio Olympics will have an amazing atmosphere for spectators and athletes, especially Brazilians who have been waiting for the moment to compete in their country for the last four years. In terms of organization and infrastructure, there will be issues because of bad planning. My fear is how big these problems might be.” Spaniard Edu Sotos, correspondent for the Barcelona daily El Periodico de Catalunya: “I believe Brazilian authorities are crossing their fingers and hoping no misfortune strikes during the Olympics. The pace at which (Olympic) projects were built is a recipe for disaster. I think things will work reasonably well, but I don’t want to think what might happen in case of a terrorist attack — a possibility Brazilian intelligence has brought up. I guess right now everyone is asking: Was it really a good idea to choose Brazil for an event of this size?” American Brant Feldman, sports agent, American Group Management: “Athletes train for their one moment in time every four years to show that they are the best in their particular discipline. You want fair play to be the only thing that matters. It is your best versus the competitor’s best. Things like pollution in the bay and ocean ... is sad to me, to be honest. All I have heard about the Brazilian people is that they love to have a great time, to show the world how to party. Let’s buckle up and enjoy the show.” •STA Saturday, April 30, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 29 NHL PLAYOFFS Scoreboard First round EASTERN CONFERENCE N.Y. Islanders 4, Florida 2 N.Y. Islanders 5, Florida 4 Florida 3, N.Y. Islanders 1 N.Y. Islanders 4, Florida 3, OT Florida 2, N.Y. Islanders 1 N.Y. Islanders 2, Florida 1, 2OT N.Y. Islanders 2, Florida 1, 2OT Tampa Bay 4, Detroit 1 Tampa Bay 3, Detroit 2 Tampa Bay 5, Detroit 2 Detroit 2, Tampa Bay 0 Tampa Bay 3, Detroit 2 Tampa Bay 1, Detroit 0 Washington 4, Philadelphia 2 Washington 2, Philadelphia 0 Washington 4, Philadelphia 1 Washington 6, Philadelphia 1 Philadelphia 2, Washington 1 Philadelphia 2, Washington 0 Washington 1, Philadelphia 0 Pittsburgh 4, N.Y. Rangers 1 Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Rangers 2 N.Y. Rangers 4, Pittsburgh 2 Pittsburgh 3, N.Y. Rangers 1 Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Rangers 0 Pittsburgh 6, N.Y. Rangers 3 WESTERN CONFERENCE Dallas 4, Minnesota 2 Dallas 4, Minnesota 0 Dallas 2, Minnesota 1 Minnesota 5, Dallas 3 Dallas 3, Minnesota 2 Minnesota 5, Dallas 4, OT Dallas 5, Minnesota 4 St. Louis 4, Chicago 3 St. Louis 1, Chicago 0, OT Chicago 3, St. Louis 2 St. Louis 3, Chicago 2 St. Louis 4, Chicago 3 Chicago 4, St. Louis 3, 2OT Chicago 6, St. Louis 3 St. Louis 3, Chicago 2 Nashville 4, Anaheim 3 Nashville 3, Anaheim 2 Nashville 3, Anaheim 2 Anaheim 3, Nashville 0 Anaheim 4, Nashville 1 Anaheim 5, Nashville 2 Nashville 3, Anaheim 1 Nashville 2, Anaheim 1 San Jose 4, Los Angeles 1 San Jose 4, Los Angeles 3 San Jose 2, Los Angeles 1 Los Angeles 2, San Jose 1, OT San Jose 3, Los Angeles 2 San Jose 6, Los Angeles 3 Second round (Best-of-seven; x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE N.Y. Islanders 1, Tampa Bay 0 N.Y. Islanders 5, Tampa Bay 3 Saturday: at Tampa Bay Tuesday: at NY Islanders Friday, May 6: at NY Islanders x-Sunday, May 8: at Tampa Bay x-Tuesday, May 10: at NY Islanders x-Thursday, May 12: at Tampa Bay Washington 1, Pittsburgh 0 Thursday: Washington 4, Pittsburgh 3, OT Saturday: at Washington Monday: at Pittsburgh Wednesday: at Pittsburgh x-Saturday, May 7: at Washington x-Tuesday, May 10: at Pittsburgh x-Thursday, May 12: at Washington WESTERN CONFERENCE Dallas vs. St. Louis Friday: at Dallas Sunday: at Dallas Tuesday: at St. Louis Thursday, May 5: at St. Louis x-Saturday, May 7: at Dallas x-Monday, May 9: at St. Louis x-Wednesday, May 11: at Dallas San Jose vs. Nashville Friday: at San Jose Sunday: at San Jose Tuesday: at Nashville Thursday, May 5: at Nashville x-Saturday, May 7: at San Jose x-Monday, May 9: at Nashville x-Thursday, May 12: at San Jose Thursday Capitals 4, Penguins 3 (OT) Pittsburgh 0 2 1 0—3 Washington 1 1 1 1—4 First Period—1, Washington, Burakovsky 1 (Chimera, J.Carlson), 10:13. Second Period—2, Pittsburgh, Lovejoy 1 (Bonino, Hagelin), 10:40. 3, Pittsburgh, Malkin 3 (Kunitz, Letang), 11:37. 4, Washington, Oshie 2, 12:10. Third Period—5, Washington, Oshie 3 (Ovechkin), 3:23. 6, Pittsburgh, Bonino 1 (Hagelin, Kessel), 8:42. First Overtime—7, Washington, Oshie 4, 9:33. Shots on Goal—Pittsburgh 9-17-136—45. Washington 15-7-5-8—35. Power-play opportunities—Pittsburgh 0 of 2; Washington 0 of 4. Goalies—Pittsburgh, Murray 3-1-0 (35 shots-31 saves). Washington, Holtby 5-20 (45-42). A—18,506 (18,506). T—3:17. Playoff scoring leaders Through April 28 GP G 7 6 6 4 6 6 6 4 6 4 5 3 6 3 5 2 John Tavares, NYI Jamie Benn, Dal Nikita Kucherov, TB Jason Spezza, Dal Reilly Smith, Fla Evgeni Malkin, Pit Sidney Crosby, Pit Brent Burns, SJ 11 tied with 7 pts. A PTS 5 11 6 10 3 9 5 9 4 8 5 8 5 8 6 8 PABLO M ARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/AP Capitals right wing T.J. Oshie, back, scores an overtime goal against Penguins goalie Matt Murray to end Game 1 of their best-of-seven playoff series Thursday in Washington. Also near the net are Penguins defenseman Trevor Daley, left, and Capitals left wing Alex Ovechkin. Oshie’s OT winner lifts Caps BY STEPHEN WHYNO Associated Press WASHINGTON — T.J. Oshie raised his arms in celebration and looked at referee Dan O’Rourke. Oshie was pretty sure he scored in overtime to complete a hat trick and one of the biggest games of his career. Oshie’s third goal of the night stood up after video review and the Washington Capitals beat the Pittsburgh Penguins 4-3 on Thursday night in an overtime thriller that was a classic start to the highly anticipated secondround playoff series between Alex Ovechkin and Sidney Crosby. “That’s kind of the stuff you dream about when you’re a kid playing in the backyard by yourself is scoring the OT winner and getting a hat trick,” Oshie said. “It was awesome. Great way to win.” Oshie’s wraparound just barely crossed the goal line against the right pad of Pittsburgh’s Matt Murray 9:33 into overtime. The call on the ice was a goal, and the NHL’s situation room said video replay confirmed that the puck was completely over the line. Murray, who made 31 saves but was beaten three times by Oshie and once by Andre Burakovsky, wasn’t convinced. Wilson’s hit may get closer look WASHINGTON — Tom Wilson’s knee-on-knee hit on Conor Sheary knocked the diminutive Pittsburgh Penguins forward out of Game 1 temporarily but could cost the Washington Capitals bruiser much more time in the second-round series. Wilson sent Sheary helicoptering to the ice with his left knee 4 minutes into the third period of the Capitals’ 4-3 overtime victory Thursday night. Sheary hobbled to the nearby bench in pain and missed a few shifts, while Wilson was not penalized. The NHL’s department of player safety, which reviews all question- “The ref called it a goal on the ice,” Murray said. “I don’t know how he could have possibly seen it from his angle. But I thought I had it, to be honest. I knew it was close, but I thought it never fully crossed the line. I thought it was close enough that it would be inconclusive.” To the Penguins, it was an inconclusive end to a fast game played at their blistering pace. able plays, could call Wilson for a hearing about the incident. “Those guys, they’re pretty diligent with their job, I’m sure they’ll look at everything,” Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan said. “They’ll do whatever they think is appropriate.” Sullivan said he didn’t get an explanation from referees Dan O’Rourke and Chris Lee about why there wasn’t a kneeing penalty called on Wilson. He also wasn’t concerned about that. “We’re just going to play hockey, and the refs are going to call it the way they see it,” Sullivan said. “Our guys are going to play.” — Associated Press Ben Lovejoy, Evgeni Malkin and Nick Bonino scored for Pittsburgh, which will try to even the best-of-seven series Saturday night in Game 2. Both teams expect much of the same entertainment value that was on display in Game 1. Beyond Murray stoning Ovechkin and Braden Holtby turning aside 42 of 45 shots, there were goals off the rush, a knee-on-knee hit by Washington’s Tom Wilson on Conor Sheary and even Jay Beagle getting a stick stuck between his helmet and visor. “The momentum shifts, the big hits, the goals, overtime, the big saves: This is what the playoffs are all about,” Oshie said. The spotlight was on Ovechkin and Crosby in their first meeting in the Stanley Cup playoffs since 2009. Ovechkin assisted on Oshie’s second goal and was denied by Murray on two breakaways, while Crosby was on the ice for three goals against and won 68 percent of his faceoffs. “I just make stupid plays, stupid moves,” Ovechkin said about his failed breakaways. “Thanks God we won this game.” The Capitals won a playoff game that Holtby allowed more than two goals for the first time since Game 5 against the Boston Bruins in 2012. The Vezina Trophy finalist was tested plenty but made a big stop on Phil Kessel in the final minutes of regulation. Oshie, traded from the St. Louis Blues to the Capitals last offseason, won for the first time in the playoffs when scoring a goal. This was a huge stage for him to step up on, especially because Washington acquired him to win in the playoffs. PAGE 30 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, April 30, 2016 NBA PLAYOFFS Scoreboard First round (Best-of-seven; x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE Cleveland 4, Detroit 0 Cleveland 106, Detroit 101 Cleveland 107, Detroit 90 Cleveland 101, Detroit 91 Cleveland 100, Detroit 98 Toronto 3, Indiana 2 Indiana 100, Toronto 90 Toronto 98, Indiana 87 Toronto 101, Indiana 85 Indiana 100, Toronto 83 Toronto 102, Indiana 99 Friday: Toronto at Indiana x-Sunday: Indiana at Toronto Charlotte 3, Miami 2 Miami 123, Charlotte 91 Miami 115, Charlotte 103 Charlotte 96, Miami 80 Charlotte 89, Miami 85 Charlotte 90, Miami 88 Friday: Miami at Charlotte x-Sunday: Charlotte at Miami Atlanta 4, Boston 2 Atlanta 102, Boston 101 Atlanta 89, Boston 72 Boston 111, Atlanta 103 Boston 104, Atlanta 95, OT Atlanta 110, Boston 83 Thursday: Atlanta 104, Boston 92 WESTERN CONFERENCE Golden State 4, Houston 1 Golden State 104, Houston 78 Golden State 115, Houston 106 Houston 97, Golden State 96 Golden State 121, Houston 94 Golden State 114, Houston 81 San Antonio 4, Memphis 0 San Antonio 106, Memphis 74 San Antonio 94, Memphis 68 San Antonio 96, Memphis 87 San Antonio 116, Memphis 95 Oklahoma City 4, Dallas 1 Oklahoma City 108, Dallas 70 Dallas 85, Oklahoma City 84 Oklahoma City 131, Dallas 102 Oklahoma City 119, Dallas 108 Oklahoma City 118, Dallas 104 Portland 3, L.A. Clippers 2 L.A. Clippers 115, Portland 95 L.A. Clippers 102, Portland 81 Portland 96, L.A. Clippers 88 Portland 98, L.A. Clippers 84 Portland 108, L.A. Clippers 98 Friday: L.A. Clippers at Portland x-Sunday, May 1: Portland at L.A. Clippers PHOTOS BY ELISE A MENDOLA /AP Celtics guard Isaiah Thomas, right, makes a move against Atlanta Hawks forward Paul Millsap, center, and center Al Horford during the first quarter of Game 6 of Thursday’s first-round playoff series in Boston. The Hawks won 104-92 to win the series 4-2. Hawks overwhelm Celtics in Game 6 Atlanta moves on to set up second-round rematch with Cavaliers BY KYLE HIGHTOWER Associated Press BOSTON — The Atlanta Hawks had their best regular season in franchise history spoiled last year by a dismal showing against Cleveland in the Eastern Conference finals. They will get another shot at the Cavaliers in the second round of the NBA playoffs. Paul Millsap had 17 points and eight rebounds, and the Hawks advanced to the second round with a 104-92 Game 6 victory over the Boston Celtics on Thursday night. Al Horford and Kent Bazemore each added 15 points for the Hawks, who earned their first playoff series win over Boston since the St. Louis Hawks beat the Celtics in the 1958 Finals. “Good to finally beat them,” said Hawks point guard Jeff Teague, who was on Atlanta’s 2012 team that lost to Boston in the first round. “It feels good.” The Hawks open the second round on Monday at Cleveland. The Celtics’ last three playoff appearances have ended in first-round exits. Coming off a 27-point win in Game 5, the Hawks took advantage of poor shooting by Boston on Thursday, building as much as a 28-point lead. Atlanta blew the game open with a 39-point third quarter in which it shot 74 percent from the field. “I think we learned from before with this team that no lead is safe,” Horford said. “To start the third it was important for us to get off to a good start and just keep attacking and Atlanta Hawks guard Jeff Teague drives past Celtics forward Jonas Jerebko during the third quarter on Thursday. have that mentality of keep attacking play after play. “I felt we did that consistently in the third and that was the big difference.” The Celtics shot just 36 percent for the game. They made a final charge to get as close as 10 points, but Atlanta was able to close it out. Isaiah Thomas led Boston with 25 points and 10 assists, but most of that came in the second half during the comeback effort after being bottled up early. “We just wore them down,” Teague said. “We tried to make other players beat us. He (Thomas) is a one-man wrecking crew. They have other good players over there, but everybody feeds off him.” Jae Crowder added 15 points for Boston, but it wasn’t enough to turn around the second straight game underlined by their inconsistencies. For most of the game, the Hawks simply benefited from Boston’s struggles. The Celtics played most of the second half with Crowder battling foul trouble. He went to the bench after picking up his fourth foul with 11:21 left in third quarter. Coach Brad Stevens rolled dice and re-inserted him, only for Crowder to be called for his fifth foul with 8:13 to play. Crowder fouled out with 3 minutes to play. But most of the damage was done much earlier. “I think we should give the Hawks credit. They’re better right now,” Stevens said. “It pains me to say that, it’s a sour ending. But they just proved it over six games. That’s just kind of how my world works. There’s a scoreboard and if you’re on the losing end then you’re not as good as the other team.” Conference Semifinals (Best-of-seven; x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE Cleveland vs. Atlanta Monday: at Cleveland Wednesday, May 4: at Cleveland Friday, May 6: at Atlanta Sunday, May 8: at Atlanta x-Tuesday, May 10: at Cleveland x-Thursday, May 12: at Atlanta x-Sunday, May 15: at Cleveland WESTERN CONFERENCE Oklahoma City vs. San Antonio Saturday: at San Antonio Monday, May 2: at San Antonio Friday, May 6: at Oklahoma City Sunday, May 8: at Oklahoma City x-Tuesday, May 10: at San Antonio x-Thursday, May 12: at Oklahoma City x-Sunday, May 15: at San Antonio Thursday Hawks 104, Celtics 92 ATLANTA — Bazemore 6-13 1-4 15, Millsap 4-10 9-11 17, Horford 7-10 0-0 15, Teague 4-11 3-4 11, Korver 4-4 4-4 14, Schroder 5-10 1-2 12, Scott 2-4 2-2 7, Sefolosha 1-4 0-0 2, Hardaway Jr. 3-6 0-0 7, Muscala 2-2 0-0 4, Hinrich 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 38-74 20-27 104. BOSTON — Crowder 5-15 2-2 15, Jerebko 5-9 1-1 13, Johnson 1-1 1-1 3, Thomas 9-24 6-7 25, Turner 4-17 0-0 8, Smart 4-11 5-5 13, Olynyk 0-2 0-0 0, Sullinger 1-5 0-0 2, Hunter 0-2 0-0 0, Rozier 1-2 2-2 5, Zeller 4-6 0-0 8, Young 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 34-94 17-18 92. Atlanta 20 21 39 24—104 Boston 17 16 26 33— 92 Three-Point Goals—Atlanta 8-24 (Korver 2-2, Bazemore 2-6, Horford 1-2, Scott 1-2, Schroder 1-2, Hardaway Jr. 1-3, Teague 0-2, Sefolosha 0-2, Millsap 0-3), Boston 7-32 (Crowder 3-8, Jerebko 2-5, Rozier 1-2, Thomas 1-7, Olynyk 0-1, Sullinger 0-1, Hunter 0-1, Smart 0-3, Turner 0-4). Fouled Out—Crowder. Rebounds— Atlanta 57 (Korver 9), Boston 47 (Smart, Turner 7). Assists—Atlanta 26 (Schroder 8), Boston 16 (Thomas 10). Total Fouls— Atlanta 23, Boston 29. Technicals—Thomas. A—18,624 (18,624). Playoff Leaders Scoring G FG 5 43 4 41 5 41 Assists G Westbrook, OKC 5 Jackson, DET 4 Harden, HOU 5 Rebounds G OFF Jordan, LAC 5 22 Howard, HOU 5 26 Plumlee, POR 5 16 George, IND Irving, CLE Harden, HOU FT PTS AVG 45 144 28.8 12 110 27.5 38 133 26.6 AST 56 37 38 AVG 11.2 9.3 7.6 DEF TOT AVG 56 78 15.6 44 70 14.0 49 65 13.0 Calendar May 17 — Draft lottery. June 2 — NBA Finals begin. June 13 — Early-entry withdrawal deadline for NBA Draft (5 p.m. EDT). •STA Saturday, April 30, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 31 NFL DRAFT Scoreboard 2016 NFL Draft At Chicago Thursday, April 28 FIRST ROUND 1. Los Angeles (from Tennessee), Jared Goff, qb, California. 2. Philadelphia (from Cleveland), Carson Wentz, qb, North Dakota State. 3. San Diego, Joey Bosa, de, Ohio State. 4. Dallas, Ezekiel Elliott, rb, Ohio State. 5. Jacksonville, Jalen Ramsey, cb, Florida State. 6. Baltimore, Ronnie Stanley, ot, Notre Dame. 7. San Francisco, DeForest Buckner, de, Oregon. 8. Tennessee (from Miami through Philadelphia and Cleveland), Jack Conklin, ot, Michigan State. 9. Chicago (from Tampa Bay), Leonard Floyd, lb, Georgia. 10. New York Giants, Eli Apple, cb, Ohio State. 11. Tampa Bay (from Chicago), Vernon Hargreaves III, cb, Florida. 12. New Orleans, Sheldon Rankins, dt, Louisville. 13. Miami (from Philadelphia), Laremy Tunsil, ot, Mississippi. 14. Oakland, Karl Joseph, s, West Virginia. 15. Cleveland (from Los Angeles through Tennessee), Corey Coleman, wr, Baylor. 16. Detroit, Taylor Decker, ot, Ohio State. 17. Atlanta, Keanu Neal, s, Florida. 18. Indianapolis, Ryan Kelly, c, Alabama. 19. Buffalo, Shaq Lawson, de, Clemson. 20. New York Jets, Darron Lee, lb, Ohio State. 21. Houston (from Washington), Will Fuller, wr, Notre Dame. 22. Washington (from Houston), Josh Doctson, wr, TCU. 23. Minnesota, Laquon Treadwell, wr, Mississippi. 24. Cincinnati, William Jackson III, cb, Houston. 25. Pittsburgh, Artie Burns, db, Miami. 26. Denver (from Seattle), Paxton Lynch, qb, Memphis. 27. Green Bay, Kenny Clark, dt, UCLA. 28. San Francisco (from Kansas City), Joshua Garnett, g, Stanford. New England forfeited. 29. Arizona, Robert Nkemdiche, dt, Mississippi. 30. Carolina, Vernon Butler, dt, Louisiana Tech. 31. Seattle (from Denver), Germain Ifedi, ot, Texas A&M. Trades List 1, Cleveland traded its first- (No. 8) and sixth-round (No. 176) picks to Tennessee for the Titans’ first- (No. 15), third-round (No. 76) picks and a 2017 second-round pick. Tennessee Jack Conklin, ot, Michigan State and (No. 176). Cleveland selected Corey Coleman, wr, Baylor and (No. 76). 2, Tampa Bay traded its first-round pick (No. 9) to Chicago for the Bears’ first- (No. 11) and fourth-round (No. 106) picks. Chicago selected Leonard Floyd, lb, Georgia. Tampa Bay selected Vernon Hargreaves III, cb, Florida and (No. 106). 3, Washington traded its first-round pick (No. 21) to Houston for the Texans’ first- (No. 22) and a 2017 sixth-round pick. Houston selected Will Fuller, wr, Notre Dame. Washington selected Josh Doctson, wr, TCU. 4, Seattle traded its first-round pick (No. 26) to Denver for the Broncos’ first(No. 31) and third-round (No. 94) picks. Denver selected Paxton Lynch, qb, Memphis. Seattle selected Germain Ifedi, ol, Texas A&M and (No. 94). 5, Kansas City traded its first-round pick (No. 28) to San Francisco for the 49ers’ second- (No. 37), fourth- (No. 105) and sixth-round (No. 178) picks. San Francisco selected Joshua Garnett, g, Stanford. Kansas City selected (No. 37), (No. 105) and (No. 178). N AM Y. HUH /AP Ohio State running back Ezekiel Elliott was selected fourth overall by the Dallas Cowboys. M ATT M ARTON /AP Buildings are illuminated along the Chicago skyline in anticipation of Thursday’s NFL Draft. Overall: Three quarterbacks taken in first round of Draft FROM BACK PAGE “Somehow, somebody got in my photos and hacked my Twitter account and somebody hacked my Instagram account, so it’s crazy,” Tunsil said. “I can’t control that, man.” Miami wasn’t turned off. “He’s a smart kid,” general manager Chris Grier said. “He’s very football intelligent. This guy is one of those grinders. There’s no doubt this guy loves football, and football is very important to him.” A third quarterback went in the first round when Denver moved up to No. 26 to take Paxton Lynch of Memphis, making him a possible successor for Peyton Manning with the Super Bowl champion Broncos. Three of the top 10 picks were players from Ohio State, and five in all. San Diego took defensive end Joey Bosa at No. 3 with the first real wild card of the night. Dallas followed up by selecting running back Ezekiel Elliott with the fourth pick, and cornerback Eli Apple went to the New York Giants at No. 10. C HARLES REX A RBOGAST/AP Draft prospects wait for the start of the first round of the NFL Draft in Chicago on Thursday night. Tumble: Tunsil slides to Dolphins after video leaked on internet FROM BACK PAGE His troubled past — one chapter at a time — seemed to unfold on social media and national television for the world to see. The excruciating wait for Tunsil finally ended when the Miami Dolphins took him with the 13th overall pick. Dolphins general manager Chris Grier said the team had been aware of the video’s existence well before the draft, and said it was two years old. But Tunsil also had other social media problems. He said his Instagram account was also hacked after a message was posted that showed an alleged text exchange between Tunsil and an Ole Miss football staff member where Tunsil requested money. Tunsil acknowledged taking money from coaches during an interview after he was selected Thursday. When asked if he took money, Tunsil responded, “I’d have to say yeah.” The 6-foot-5, 310-pounder sat out the first seven games of his ju- ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP Mississippi says it will investigate former offensive lineman Laremy Tunsil’s comments that he accepted money from a member of the football staff while playing at the school. The university said in a statement on Friday that it is “aware of the reports from the NFL Draft regarding Laremy Tunsil and potential NCAA violations during his time at Ole Miss” and “will aggressively investigate and fully cooperate with the NCAA and the SEC.” nior season after the NCAA ruled he received improper benefits, including the use of three loaner cars over a six-month period. Tunsil, a three-year starter at Mississippi, was considered a po- tential top overall pick before the Tennessee Titans traded the pick to the Los Angeles Rams. The Titans had a chance to take Tunsil with the eighth overall pick after a trade with the Cleveland Browns, but Tennessee passed on him, selecting Michigan State left tackle Jack Conklin instead. The Baltimore Ravens had the No. 6 pick, but also passed on Tunsil; they went with Notre Dame offensive tackle Ronnie Stanley. But Baltimore general manager Ozzie Newsome said his decision was not influenced by the video, he just had Stanley rated higher on his draft board. Tunsil was one of two Ole Miss players in this year’s draft with off-the-field issues that at least partly overshadowed productive college football careers. Defensive tackle Robert Nkemdiche was charged with possession of marijuana following a 15-foot fall at a hotel in Atlanta in December. He was taken by the Arizona Cardinals with the 29th overall pick late in the first round. STA R S A N D ST R I P E S Saturday, April 30, 2016 SPORTS Oshi Oshi Oshi Caps winger nets hat trick with OT winner » NHL playoffs, Page 29 NFL DRAFT Rams get their man LA takes QB Goff with No. 1 overall selection C HARLES REX A RBOGAST/AP California’s Jared Goff smiles after being selected by the Los Angeles Rams as the first overall pick in the NFL Draft on Thursday night in Chicago. BY JAY COHEN were the first two selections. Wentz led North Dakota State to itsfifth consecutive FCS second-tier college CHICAGO championship in January. He passed for he Los Angeles Rams selected 1,651 yards and 17 touchdowns during quarterback Jared Goff with his senior year that was shortened by a the No. 1 pick in the NFL Draft broken wrist. on Thursday while a former After the top quarterbacks were off candidate for the top sethe board, the focus quickly lection tumbled down the turned to the slide by offenorder after a bizarre video sive tackle Laremy Tunsil, I’m taking it was shared on his Twitter once thought to be a potenfeed showing him smoking tial first overall selection. as an honor marijuana. fell all the way to Miami and something He Goff started every game at 13 after a pair of damagI’m going to during his three college seaing posts to his social media sons at California, setting accounts. have to prove records with 977 compleShortly before the draft them right, tions, 12,220 yards passing began, a video was shared and 96 touchdown passes. on Tunsil’s Twitter account that they The Rams, back in Los Anshowed him smoking made the right which geles for next season after marijuana out of a bong/ decision. relocating from St. Louis, gas mask contraption. His traded with Tennessee to Jared Goff Instagram account reportget the pick. Rams’ No. 1 draft pick edly showed a text-message exchange indicating he “I’m taking it as an honor took money from coaches and something I’m going to have to prove them right, that they made at his college team Mississippi, something he acknowledged during his news the right decision,” Goff said. The No. 2 selection for the Philadelphia conference after he was selected by the Eagles was Carson Wentz, making it the Dolphins. second straight year that quarterbacks SEE OVERALL ON PAGE 31 Tunsil’s tumble Associated Press T ‘ BY DAVID BRANDT Associated Press ’ C HARLES REX A RBOGAST/AP Mississippi’s Laremy Tunsil walks on stage after being selected by the Miami Dolphins as the 13th overall pick of the NFL Draft. Laremy Tunsil, considered a potential No. 1 pick in the NFL Draft, tumbled down the board Thursday night after a bizarre video of him was posted on his Twitter account minutes before the start of the proceedings, potentially costing the offensive lineman millions of dollars. The approximately 30-second video, which showed him smoking from a mask equipped with a bong, was posted to his verified Twitter account before quickly being deleted. The entire account was deactivated about 30 minutes later but the video was another indicator of Tunsil’s off-the-field problems. SEE TUMBLE ON PAGE 31 Hawks overwhelm Celtics, earn rematch with Cavs » NBA Playoffs, Page 30