at s. carolina capitol, confederate flag flies - Previous Issues
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at s. carolina capitol, confederate flag flies - Previous Issues
VIDEO GAMES NFL NATION Final installment for Batman series proves a letdown Former Raiders quarterback Stabler dies OPM director resigns in wake of data breach Page 17 Back page Page 2 Auditors cite cost overruns, delays at US Embassy in Kabul » Page 5 Volume 74, No. 60A © SS 2015 MIDEAST EDITION SATURDAY, JULY 11, 2015 stripes.com Free to Deployed Areas Army plan to cut troops hits lawmakers where it hurts AT S. CAROLINA CAPITOL, CONFEDERATE FLAG FLIES NO MORE BY TRAVIS J. TRITTEN Stars and Stripes Page 6 WASHINGTON — The Army has warned Congress about budget cuts for months and this week the service brought the pain to lawmakers’ front doors. Its plan to step up troop cuts — 40,000 over the next two years — will hit states and congressional districts across the country and have alANALYSIS ready sparked widespread local outcry. The mayor of Columbus, Ga., said it will be like “losing a large corporation” when the Army trims 3,400 soldiers from Fort Benning due to a tight budget. The Army’s unexpected announcement has forced a gut check among House and Senate lawmakers after the service issued dire warnings about a 2016 defense budget that it says could hurt readiness. The cuts were the latest move in a larger political battle that has pitted the Obama administration and Pentagon against a Congress that has been unable or unPage 4 willing to head off automatic spending cuts slated to kick in this fall. After the Army announcement, Sen. Johnny Isakson, a Georgia Republican, shot back with a statement that he was “demanding answers” on the justification for the reductions in his state. “I have talked in great detail with [Army] Secretary [John] McHugh today and will continue to fight to see to it that we preserve every soldier in Georgia that we can,” he said. Republican Sen. Dan Sullivan said he was “extremely frustrated” that his state of Alaska is set to lose more than 2,700 soldiers by 2017. “Along with thousands of Alaskans, I find this decision devastating far beyond what it means to our state economy, but what it means to America’s defense,” Sullivan said. In all, 17 states will lose soldiers as the Army compresses its three-year plan for post-war downsizing into just two years because of a lack of money. INSIDE Post-by-post numbers for reductions An honor guard of South Carolina troopers removes the Confederate flag from the Capitol grounds in Columbia, S.C., on Friday. JOHN BAZEMORE /AP SEE ARMY ON PAGE 4 PAGE 2 •STA QUOTE OF THE DAY “My kids are more in danger coming here in the car. I’m not someone who lives in fear.” — Kathryn Peperkorn, of Rocklin, Calif., as her family enjoyed a day in the water at Cape Hatteras National Seashore in North Carolina despite a recent surge in shark attacks in the area See story on Page 8 TOP CLICKS ON STRIPES.COM The most popular stories on our website: 1. Army announces details of troop cuts, says they could expand 2. Jade Helm 15 to open without media access 3. USNS Comfort senior NCO relieved after alcohol-related incident 4. Hack of security clearance system affected 21.5M people, feds say 5. Rash illness, commonly affecting children, spreading in Tokyo COMING SOON Music Kacey Musgraves TODAY IN STRIPES American Roundup ............ 14 Business, Weather ............ 21 Comics, Crossword ........... 23 Entertainment................... 19 Health & Fitness ............... 18 Lifestyle ........................... 15 Movies ............................. 16 Opinion ....................... 12-13 Sports ......................... 24-32 Video Games ..................... 17 R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, July 11, 2015 NATION OPM chief resigns over data breach BY JOSH LEDERMAN AND JACKGILLUM The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The head of the U.S. government’s personnel office resigned abruptly on Friday, bowing to bipartisan calls for her to step down following a massive government data breach on her watch. Katherine Archuleta, director of the federal Office of Personnel Management, submitted her resignation to President Barack Obama on Friday morning, the White House said. She’ll be replaced on a temporary basis by the agency’s deputy director, Beth Cobert, who will step into the role on Saturday. Less than 24 hours earlier, Archuleta had rebuffed demands that she resign, telling reporters she had no intention of leaving and that her agency was doing everything it could to address concerns about the safety of data in its hands. The calls for her resignation came soon after it was announced that the scale of the OPM’s date breach was much larger than previously known. Hackers stole Social Security numbers, health histories and other highly sensitive data from more than 21 million people, the Obama administration said Thursday. The scope of the data breach — believed to be the biggest in U.S. history — has grown dramatically since the government first disclosed earlier this year that hackers had gotten into the Office of Personnel Management’s personnel database and stolen records for about 4.2 million people. Since then, the Obama administration has acknowledged a second, related breach of the systems housing private data that individuals submit during background investigations to obtain security clearances. That second attack affected more than 19 million people who applied for clearances, as well as nearly 2 million of their spouses, housemates and others who never applied for security clearances, the administration said. Among the data the hackers stole: criminal, financial, health, employment and residency histories, as SUSAN WALSH /AP Office of Personnel Management director Katherine Archuleta testifies June 25 on Capitol Hill in Washington. well as information about their families and acquaintances. The new revelations drew swift indignation from members of Congress. House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz, a Utah Republican, said Archuleta and her aides had “consciously ignored the warnings and failed to correct these weaknesses.” “Such incompetence is inexcusable,” Chaffetz said in a statement. Earlier, Archuleta had said the hackers also obtained user names and passwords that prospective employees used to fill out their background investigation forms, as well as the contents of interviews conducted as part of those investigations. Yet the government insisted there were no indications that the hackers have used the data they stole. Still, the government declined to say who was behind the attack. Numerous U.S. lawmakers, including Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid, have said China was behind the attack. But Michael Daniel, Obama’s cybersecurity coordinator, said the government wasn’t yet ready to say who was responsible. “Just because we’re not doing public attribution does not mean that we’re not taking steps to deal with the matter,” Daniel told reporters. While officials would not point the finger at China, they acknowledged that the same party was responsible for both of the breaches, which took place in 2014 and early 2015. Investigators previously told The Associated Press that the U.S. government was increasingly confident that China’s government, and not criminal hackers, was responsible for the extraordinary theft of personal information. China has publicly denied involvement in the break-in. The administration said it has stepped up its cybersecurity efforts by proposing new legislation, urging private industry to share more information about attacks and examining how the government conducts sensitive background investigations. “Each and every one of us at OPM is committed to protecting the safety and the security of the info that is placed in our trust,” Archuleta said. In early June, government employees received notice that OPM would offer credit-monitoring services and identity-theft insurance to those affected. Meanwhile, the White House waited about a month before telling the public that hackers had stolen the personal information of millions of people associated with the government, people directly involved with the investigation told the AP last month. FBI Director James Comey, in a briefing with reporters Thursday, described the scope of the OPM breach as “huge” and called it “a very big deal from a national-security perspective and a counterintelligence perspective.” “It’s a treasure trove of information about everybody who has worked for, tried to work for, or works for the United States government,” he said. •STA Saturday, July 11, 2015 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 3 MILITARY Ex-soldier gets year for smuggling immigrants The Associated Press BROWNSVILLE, Texas — A former Fort Hood, Texas, soldier who used his U.S. Army identification to move illegally smuggled immigrants through an immigration checkpoint has been sentenced to a year and a day in federal prison. Christopher David Wix, 21, of Abilene, Texas, could have received up to 10 years in federal prison for his guilty plea to conspiracy to transport and harbor immigrants brought into the United States illegally. In sentencing the defendant Thursday in Brownsville, U.S. District Judge Hilda Tagle said she took his youth into consideration in assessing a shorter prison term. Two other Fort Hood soldiers — Eric Alexander Rodriguez, of Odem, and Brandon Troy Robbins, of San Antonio — along with Arnoldo Gracia, of Harlingen, also have pleaded guilty to charges and are scheduled for sentencing Aug. 4. Iranians point laser at Navy ship 2 times BY CHRIS CHURCH JESSE A. H YATT/Courtesy of the U.S. Navy The Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Comfort arrives pierside at Naval Station Norfolk, Va., in March 2013. Comfort command senior chief sacked Stars and Stripes NORFOLK, Va. — Navy hospital ship Comfort’s senior enlisted leader was relieved of his duties Thursday following an alcohol-related incident in Panama, Military Sealift Command said. Command Senior Chief Aurelio Ayala has been temporarily reassigned to Military Sealift Command in Norfolk, Va., pending an investigation. A statement from the command did not provide specifics on what led to Ayala’s removal. The decision to remove Ayala was made by Capt. Christine Sears, the commanding officer of the Comfort’s Medical Treatment Facility, according to The (Norfolk) Virginian-Pilot. Sears took command of the ship’s hospital two days before the Comfort deployed April 1 on its five-month humanitarian mission to 11 countries in Central America, South America and the Caribbean. Its 700-member crew is conducting medical clinics, performing onboard surgeries and taking part in charity work. Ayala’s removal will not impact the Comfort’s mission, the statement said. It is the third time in two years that a senior person on the Navy ship was relieved of duty, The Virginian-Pilot reported. Sears took over as CO of the treatment facility, replacing Capt. Rachel Haltner, who was relieved after Navy commanders lost con- fidence in her ability to lead. Less than two years earlier, in August 2013, Rear Adm. Thomas Shannon, commander of Military Sealift Command, had lost confidence in Haltner’s predecessor, Capt. Kevin Knoop. He sacked Knoop and appointed Haltner. That decision was later called into question when a board of inquiry unanimously endorsed Knoop’s leadership and his work, according to the Pilot report. news@stripes.com Stars and Stripes MANAMA, Bahrain — An Iranian-flagged merchant vessel on two separate occasions pointed a laser at a U.S. Navy ship and helicopter, Navy officials said. The Iranian ship repeatedly used the laser to target the USS Forrest Sherman and a helicopter belonging to the ship over the course of four days, said Lt. Brett Dawson, the deputy public affairs officer for U.S. Naval Forces Central Command. Dawson said nobody was injured and no equipment was harmed in the incidents, the first of which happened Sunday in the Gulf of Aden, but U.S. Naval Forces Central Command views these activities as “unsafe” and “unprofessional.” The incidents are the latest in a string of issues involving Iran and ships in the Middle East. In April, Iranian forces seized the MV Maersk Tigris — a Marshall Islands-flagged cargo ship — after firing warning shots at it. The Maersk was released about a week later. According to Dawson, there is no rise in tensions, and the U.S. Navy will continue to be “thoughtful, vigilant and responsible mariners and aviators as we work with our partners in the gulf.” church.chris@stripes.com Battalion leader removed at Paris Island BY STEPHEN FASTENAU The (Hilton Head Island, S.C.) Island Packet The leader of the Marine Corps’ only allfemale recruit battalion, which is based on Parris Island, S.C., has been removed from her command following an investigation that found instances of abusive behavior and controversial opinions on sexual assault and gender issues. Lt. Col. Kate Germano, who led the 4th Recruit Training Battalion for one year, was relieved of those duties June 30 for “a poor command climate and the loss of trust and confidence in her ability to serve in command,” Brig. Gen. Terry V. Williams, commanding general of Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island, said in a statement. “The Marine Corps holds all Marines, especially commanders, to a high set of standards,” the statement said. Germano verbally abused fellow officers and subordinates and created an environment of “toxic leadership,” a command investigation found. She also told recruits rape was preventable, that those who drink put themselves in position to be assaulted and made her subordinates fear reporting sexual assault, according to the investigation, a copy of which was obtained by The Beaufort Gazette and The Island Packet after a Freedom of Information Act request. Germano told graduating recruits that men would never take orders from them, and they would always be viewed as “weak and less of a Marine,” the investigating officer found. The investigation contained numerous statements and interviews, including some in support of Germano, a Texas native who was first commissioned as an officer in 1996. The Marine Germano was at Corps holds odds with her superior and filed an all Marines, “equal opportunity” especially complaint, the San commanders, Diego Union-Tribune reported. The to a high set complaint initiates of standards. an investigation Brig. Gen. Terry V. into allegations of or Williams discrimination commanding general of harassment. That investigation, Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island ordered by Marine Corps Training and Command, found no evidence of gender discrimination or a hostile work environment related to equal opportunity, according to a copy obtained by the Gazette and Packet. The 4th Recruit Training Battalion includes 630 women, a Marine Corps Recruit Depot spokesman said. Germano had begun command with a positive attitude and wanted the battalion to be ‘ ’ competitive with others and to raise standards for physical fitness and rifle performance, the investigation documents showed. In a letter to her battalion, Germano said the unit worked through “considerable active and passive resistance” throughout the depot. “Together we redefined the perceived physical and mental limits of female recruits and Marines, which will have a lasting and positive impact on the Institution,” she wrote in the letter. “Regardless of my departure, you must never, ever give up trying to change the status quo. “You are so much better than the Marine Corps knows and it is the right thing to do for not only the Institution, but also our nation. You deserve a seat at the table with your counterparts, but you must continue to earn it every day and never take it for granted.” Germano assumed command June 10, 2014. The battalion’s executive officer will serve as acting commander until a replacement is selected. Germano’s next assignment is unknown, the spokesman said. An anonymous complaint filed in April alleged that Germano abused authority and used abusive language and triggered a command climate survey, which anonymously assesses several factors within a commander’s organization. Germano’s results in organizational effectiveness were below average in nine of 10 categories, the survey found. PAGE 4 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, July 11, 2015 MILITARY Army cuts by bases The list of bases — alphabetical by state — with troop reductions and the percentage of current personnel levels. Alaska Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson: 2,631, (59 percent) Fort Wainwright: 73, (1 percent) FROM FRONT PAGE Arizona Fort Huachuca: 114, (5 percent) Alabama Fort Rucker: 186, (6 percent) California Fort Irwin: 246, (6 percent) Colorado Fort Carson: 365, (2 percent) Georgia Fort Benning: 3,402, (29 percent reduction) Fort Stewart: 947, (5 percent) Hawaii Schofield Barracks: 1,214, (8 percent) Fort Shafter: 229, (10 percent) Kansas Fort Riley: 615, (4 percent) Fort Leavenworth: 60, (2 percent) Kentucky Fort Campbell: 353, (1 percent) Louisanna Fort Polk: 388, (5 percent) Army: Budgeting approach likened to a meat cleaver C OTY KUHN /Courtesy of the U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Joseph T. Trinh, of the 75th Ranger Regiment, conducts stress fire operations for Ranger Rendezvous last month on Fort Benning, Ga. Fort Benning would lose the largest number of troops under a plan to cut Army strength. New York Fort Drum: 28, (0.2 percent) (2 percent) Fort Lee: 127, (4 percent) North Carolina Fort Bragg: 842, (2 percent) Washington Joint Base Lewis-McChord: 1,251, (5 percent) South Carolina Fort Jackson: 180, (6 percent) Maryland Aberdeen Proving Ground: 126, (5 percent) Texas Fort Bliss: 1,219, (5 percent) Fort Hood: 3,350, (9 percent) Joint Base San Antonio: 329, (6 percent) Missouri Fort Leonard Wood: 774, (15 percent) Virginia Fort Belvoir: 250, (6 percent) Joint Base Langley-Eustis: 94, Bases that are adding soldiers: Fort Gordon (Georgia): 41, (1 percent) Fort Knox (Kentucky): 67, (1 percent) Fort Meade (Maryland): 99, (2 percent) Fort Sill (Oklahoma): 219, (3 percent) Source: Department of Defense The Army has said the faster pace is necessary due to a law passed by Congress in 2011 to reduce the federal deficit by imposing a decade of cuts on defense spending. The Budget Control Act has forced the service’s budget down every year since it was enacted, according to the Army. The cuts sent shockwaves through Congress this week after the Army spent months testifying against lawmakers’ current plan. The House and Senate want to keep the caps in place and instead, pump extra money into an emergency overseas war fund. McHugh and Chief of Staff Gen. Ray Odierno put the Army’s budget position in stark terms during joint testimony to the Senate Armed Services Committee in March. “This ongoing budgetary unpredictability is neither militarily nor fiscally responsible. … Even as demand for Army forces is growing, budget cuts are forcing us to reduce end strength to dangerously low levels,” they said in the written testimony. “We face an ‘ends’ and ‘means’ mismatch between requirements and resources available.” President Barack Obama has also said he will veto any budget that keeps the spending caps in place. It remains unclear whether a deeply divided Congress can find a solution to the automatic budget cuts imposed by the 2011 law and ‘Our military budget decisions need to be driven by strategy and the best way to defend American lives and our interests. ’ Rep. Martha McSally provide the Army enough funding to stretch out or halt troop reductions. Fiscal conservatives have been battling with defense hawks over the issue. But the Army’s announcement prompted lawmakers in affected states to renew calls to end the caps. Rep. Martha McSally, R-Ariz., represents Fort Huachuca where the Army has said 114 soldiers — about 5 percent of its personnel — will be cut. “Our military budget decisions need to be driven by strategy and the best way to defend American lives and our interests, not a meat-cleaver approach to budgeting,” said McSally, a retired Air Force colonel and A-10 Thunderbolt pilot. “I’ve repeatedly called for a reversal of the across-theboard cuts established in 2011 and will continue to work with my colleagues on solutions that ensure our national defense and the safety and security of our troops overseas.” Tritten.travis@stripes.com Twitter: @Travis_Tritten Military cuts seen to threaten arms manufacturers BY BENJAMIN K ATZ Bloomberg News Western suppliers of armaments spanning battle tanks to ammunition and soldiers’ ground kits face the risk of collapse if consolidation doesn’t accelerate in the shrinking land-warfare market, military chiefs said. The U.S. is examining how funds can be stretched to sustain manufacturing capabilities, though without mergers to rescue smaller players the supplychain’s ability to ramp up output in response to any new ground threat may be harmed, officials said. General Dynamics Corp. and BAE Systems Plc may be among buyers. Land warfare has become less of a priority for the U.S. and its allies following the withdrawal of forces from wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that were heavily weighted toward armored vehicles and ground troops. That’s led U.S. spending on land capabilities and services to tumble $10 billion since 2010 to $21 billion last year, according to defense analysts IHS Jane’s. “We have some instances where you have very small second- and third-tier vendors who, because they no longer have that work, go out of the business,” Michael Williamson, the U.S. Army’s principal deputy for acquisition, said in an interview at a Royal United Services Institute conference on land warfare. “The challenge for us is understanding the supply chain well enough to know where you have that kind of vulnerability. Cuts are going to happen: understand where you should not cut.” The U.S. and U.K. have asked suppliers and prime manufacturers of land-warfare equipment to trim costs as tensions with Russia and Beijing’s ambitions in the South China Sea make aerial threats a greater concern. Fighter programs such as Boeing Co. F-15, the Lockheed Martin Corp. F-35 and the pan-national Eurofighter venture have become a higher priority. The U.S. plans to cut active troop numbers to just above 450,000 and budget changes mean the tally is likely to drop to 420,000 by 2019, Lieutenant General William Hix, director of strategy at the Army Capabilities Integration Center — which develops and communicates modernization — said at the RUSI event in London. General Dynamics, maker of the Abrams tank, and Europe’s No. 1 defense company BAE, which produces the Bradley Fighting Vehicle, could play a part in consolidation, according to IHS analyst Ben Moores, who cites the ongoing merger of Germany’s Krauss-Maffei Wegmann GmbH, maker of the Leopard 2 battle tank, with Nexter Systems SA of France as an example of a top tier deal prompted by the drop in Western land-systems budgets. GD spokeswoman Lucy Ryan declined to discuss acquisition possibilities or suppliers, and CEO Phebe Novakovic said May 27 at an investor conference that no takeovers are on the Falls Church, Virginia-based company’s “radar screen” right now. London-based BAE declined to comment, citing company policy not to discuss acquisition activity. Small technology specialists could also be bought up by larger suppliers for which they produce key parts, Moores said. The U.K. is spending more cautiously on defense and favoring outsourcing as it awaits a new round of cuts across government departments from the Treasury on July 8, together with a review of security and military needs later in the year. “I’m very hard-nosed now with my teams about getting people to think within fixed-cost envelopes, rather than automatically assume there’s more money,” Nick Pope, director of capability for the British Army, said in an interview. There are “no bounds” to the outsourcing U.K. forces would contemplate, with the emphasis on offering wide-ranging, multiyear deals to a sole partner that would in turn shave costs significantly from current levels, he said at the conference. Still, companies have mostly delivered on any significant savings that are achievable, according to Barbara Doornink, senior vice president at Reston, Virginia-based Leidos Holdings Inc., which helped equip and maintain 26,000 mine-resistant armored vehicles in Iraq and Afghanistan. “There needs to be a recognition that major cost cuts come out just once — the low-hanging fruit,” she said at the RUSI symposium. “After that it’s process improvement.” •STA Saturday, July 11, 2015 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 5 WAR ON TERRORISM GAO: Kabul embassy faces cost overruns BY L AURIE K ELLMAN The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Construction at the U.S. embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, has been plagued by delays and cost overruns that may have affected security, the Government Accountability Office said Thursday. But the Obama administration said the surge in U.S. forces years ago and now the subsequent drawdown of American personnel, among other factors, forced adjustments to the project. “It is unrealistic to expect the development of a static master plan that would have captured all requirements at the beginning of an eight-year project,” Lydia Muniz, director of the State Department’s overseas buildings operations, told the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. Lawmakers countered that war is, by nature, fluid. “The added costs should have been baked in,” said Rep. Stephen Lynch, D-Mass., a committee member. “We shouldn’t be shocked that a war broke out. There’s been a war going on there for 10 or 12 years.” Costs for two construction contracts have increased by about 27 percent to $792.9 million, and completion has been delayed three years, the agency said. Despite the embassy’s expansion, the State Department “has no security standards tailored to those facilities,” the GAO said. The State Department inconsistently applied alternative security measures, the report said. The report recommended that the State Department consider setting up security standards or guidance for temporary buildings in conflict zones. The GAO is the investigative arm of Congress. The auditors reported that all told, the State Department has invested or plans to invest $2.17 billion in its facilities in Kabul, a dangerous city with constantly changing security threats. Since 2002, State has built more than $100 million in temporary buildings to accommodate a dramatic increase in staffing — followed by a gradual drawdown. The temporary buildings are intended for only a few years’ use, but by the time the construction is completed in 2017, GAO reported, the temporary facilities will be as much as a decade old. Iraqi troops, militias repel Islamic State attack in Anbar BY SAMEER N. YACOUB The Associated Press BAGHDAD — Government forces and Shiite militiamen repelled an Islamic State group attack Friday that left 10 soldiers dead in western Iraq’s Anbar province, officials said. The militants attacked the government-held town of Khalidiyah with mortars and five suicide car bombs, Anbar councilman Athal al-Fahdawi said. They retreated after an hours-long battle, leaving behind 12 dead fighters. Some were hiding in houses in nearby Abu Flais village, AlFahdawi said. Police and army officers said at least 10 soldiers were killed. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media. Meanwhile, the Islamic State group’s Radio al-Bayan said Islamic State militants seized positions in the Khalidyah area after attacking Iraqi troops and Shiite militias with car bombs. Iraqi forces, backed by Shiite militias, have been struggling to recapture areas lost to Islamic State in the country’s west and north. In May, the militant group scored a stunning victory when it overran Ramadi in Anbar province, capturing large amounts of ammunition and armored vehicles from fleeing government troops. Also on Friday, a representative for Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Iraq’s top Shiite cleric, urged countries in the region to take “decisive measures” to stop the flow of foreign fighters into Iraq. “The continuation of the policy of carelessness and giving a blind eye on the flow of these fighters to Iraq will increase the danger of these gangs to Iraq and they will represent a threat to their countries,” Abdul-Mahdi al-Karbalei said during a Friday sermon in the city of Karbala. Foreign fighters have been streaming into Syria and Iraq by the thousands to join Islamic State and other extremist groups. M ASSOUD HOSSAINI /AP Ready for takeoff A member of Afghanistan’s air force prepares to fly to the northern city of Kunduz, in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Tuesday. Afghanistan’s Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah visited northern Kunduz and Balkh provinces to meet with local political leaders and to assure residents that security and governance problems will soon be addressed. Water shortages uniting Iraq, Islamic State against Turkey BY Z AID SABAH, SELCAN H ACAOGLU JACK FAIRWEATHER AND Bloomberg News WASHINGTON — There’s one thing Islamic State militants and the Iraqi government they’re besieging agree on: Turkey is using more than its fair share of water. Water levels on the Euphrates River, which flows 1,700 miles from eastern Turkey through Syria and Iraq past ancient Mesopotamian lands, have fallen more than half this year, withering farmers’ crops and raising the risk of a wider regional conflict, Iraqi officials said. Iraq and Islamic State say Turkey needs to release more water from its dams to replenish the river in the former Fertile Crescent area, where drought-like conditions endanger millions. The situation has grown even more acute for Iraq after Islamic State, whose holdings fall within the watershed, used a dam captured in Ramadi in June to cut off water to government areas. Turkey, for its part, says it has to look after its own and is investing $35.5 billion in dam and irrigation works to ensure reliable water supplies. The problem in the region is not “which country to blame,” said Jay Famiglietti, a NASA water scientist. “It is really over the failure to agree on how to manage the waters of the rivers across political boundaries.” Turkey acted unilaterally to build the dams and “has significantly changed the amount of river flow to downstream countries like Syria,” the hydrologist said by email. Construction is underway on the last six dams of a 22-dam project in southeastern Turkey, mostly on the Euphrates and the Tigris, which flows south from Turkey, making part of its border with Syria before crossing the length of Iraq. Dam and irrigation projects on the Tigris — the first to tap the waterway — are due for completion next year despite Iraqi protests. Turkey signed an accord with Syria in 1987 to keep about a third of the Euphrates’ historic average flow, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization. It has no such treaty with Iraq. No international agreement for the Tigris exists at all. A Turkish official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject, said Turkey could be persuaded to regulate the Tigris’ flow at a similar rate as the Euphrates. Still, “Turkey’s desire to withdraw yet more water runs the risk of plunging the region into greater turmoil,” said Adel Darwish, co-author of Water Wars: Coming Conflicts in the Middle East. “Turkey believes it can act with impunity while other countries are busy fighting Islamic State.” Turkey, which uses about 41 percent of its water resources while Middle Eastern countries consume most of theirs, says the falling water levels are the result of others’ poor downstream management, failure to make repairs and conflict. PAGE 6 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, July 11, 2015 NATION Battle over flag erupts in US Capitol BY PAUL K ANE AND A BBY PHILLIP The Washington Post WASHINGTON — Three weeks after a racially motivated massacre in a black church in Charleston, S.C., the Confederate battle flag is no longer flying on the grounds of the South Carolina State House, following a bitter debate over its role as a symbol of racism and hate. The furor over the flag rippled through the halls of Congress on Thursday when House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, called for a review of Confederate symbols and memorabilia, which is likely to include those on display in the Capitol. Boehner was forced to halt consideration of a government funding measure after it became engulfed by the Confederate flag controversy and whether it was appropriate to display the flags at national cemeteries where Confederate soldiers are buried. The dispute pitted Southern conservatives who asserted that the tradition was part of their heritage against members of the Congressional Black Caucus who view the flag as a symbol of slavery and oppression. Congressional Republicans stumbled into the heated flag debate through a series of miscalculations. That began with their decision late Wednesday to allow a House vote on an amendment that would have reaffirmed the ability to place the Confederate flag in national cemeteries as part of a once-per-year tradition in the Deep South. House Democrats accused Republicans of catering to the large and powerful Southern conservative bloc. Republicans accused Democrats of trying to exploit the tragedy of the killings in Charleston and the decision by South Carolina lawmakers to remove the flag from the capitol. Boehner tried to tamp down the dispute by announcing that he would create an informal, bipartisan group to review all matters related to the display of Confederate memorabilia. He pulled the overall legislation, which would provide annual funds for the Interior Department, rather than hold a vote on the Confederate flag amendment. Democrats responded by reintroducing a resolution that would have mandated the removal of Mississippi’s state flag from display on U.S. Capitol grounds because its design incorporates the Confederate battle flag. That resolution, offered by House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., was tabled on a mostly partisan vote that referred it to a committee. Other Democrats have called for the removal of statues of Jefferson Davis and other Confederate leaders that are prominently displayed in the Capitol. In floor speeches throughout the day, Democrats stood in front of an image of the Confederate flag on the House floor. “The red in this flag is a painful reminder of the blood that was shed by AfricanAmerican slaves,” said Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., a member of the Congressional Black Caucus. Southern Republicans said that their Democratic colleagues did not understand that they were trying to pay tribute to fallen Confederate soldiers who were not plantation owners. “The majority of people that actually died in the Civil War on the Confederate side didn’t own slaves. These were people that were fighting for their states, and, you know, I don’t think they even had any thoughts about slavery,” said Rep. Lynn Westmoreland, R-Ga. PHOTOS BY JOHN BAZEMORE /AP People cheer Friday as an honor guard from the South Carolina Highway Patrol removes the Confederate battle flag from the Capitol grounds in Columbia. ‘A sign of good will and healing’ After 54 years, Confederate flag removed from SC State House BY JEFFREY COLLINS AND M EG K INNARD The Associated Press COLUMBIA, S.C. — The Confederate flag was lowered from the grounds of the South Carolina State House to the cheers of thousands on Friday, ending its 54year presence there and marking a stunning political reversal in a state where many thought the rebel banner would fly indefinitely. The turnabout seemed unthinkable before the June 17 massacre of nine black parishioners — including a state senator — at a Charleston church during a Bible study. Dylann Roof, a white man who was photographed with the Confederate flag, is charged in the shooting deaths, and authorities have called the killings a hate crime. The massacre reignited calls to remove Confederate flags and symbols across the South and around the nation. The crowd chanted “USA” and “hey, hey, hey, goodbye” as the flag was swiftly lowered by an honor guard of South Carolina troopers during a 6-minute ceremony. Gov. Nikki Haley stood on the State House steps and while she didn’t speak, she nodded and smiled in the direction of the crowd after someone shouted: “Thank you governor.” Haley supported the flag before the shooting, but the Republican had a change of heart in the days after the killings, urging legislators to pass a bill she could sign bringing the flag down before the end of the summer. As she looked on, two troopers rolled the flag and tied it up with a string. They handed it to a black trooper who brought it to the State House steps. When the trooper An honor guard member from the South Carolina Highway Patrol hands the Confederate battle flag that flew in front of the State House to the curator of the Confederate Relic Room and Military Museum on Friday. handed it to a state archivist, the governor clapped. President Barack Obama tweeted minutes after the flag was down, saying it was “a sign of good will and healing and a meaningful step towards a better future.” Obama delivered a eulogy at the funeral for state Sen. Clementa Pinckney, who also was pastor of the church where the killings took place. A van was to take the flag to the nearby Confederate Relic Room and Military Museum. There, it eventually will be housed in a multimillion-dollar shrine lawmakers promised to build as part of a deal to get a bill passed removing the flag. South Carolina’s leaders first flew the battle flag over the State House dome in 1961 to mark the 100th anniversary of the Civil War. It remained there to represent official opposition to the civil rights movement. Decades later, mass protests against the flag by those who said it was a symbol of racism and white supremacy led to a compromise in 2000 with lawmakers who insisted that it symbolized Southern heritage and states’ rights. The two sides came to an agreement to move the flag from the dome to a 30-foot pole next to a Confederate monument in front of the State House. Many thought it would stay there. Now, even that flagpole will be torn down. No timetable was set on that. People who supported removing the flag chanted “take it down” before the ceremony and vastly outnumbered those who were upset about the move. “It feels so good to be out here and be happy about it,” said Ronald D. Barton, 52, a pastor who also was at the ceremony in 2000. Haley did not answer questions, but earlier Friday on NBC’s “Today” show, she said: “No one should ever drive by the State House and feel pain. No one should ever drive by the State House and feel like they don’t belong.” The flag came down 23 days after the massacre at Charleston’s Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church. Haley signed the bill with 13 pens. Nine of them went to the families of the victims. On Friday, artist Ernest Lee came to the State House with a framed portrait of all nine victims. He said he’s been invited to the Charleston church on Sunday to present his artwork. He said he wished more people would turn to art for inspiration. “If they did, there wouldn’t be so much hate and violence,” he said. •STA Saturday, July 11, 2015 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 7 NATION Latino group: Dump Trump Safety group pans bill on transportation The Associated Press BY LYNN ELBER The Associated Press UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif. — The head of a Latino civil rights group called on more organizations to follow NBC’s example and cut business ties with Donald Trump. Alex Nogales, president of the National Hispanic Media Coalition, said Thursday that the PGA of America’s decision this week to move a golf tournament from a Trump-owned course was a step in the right direction. The PGA and other major golf organizations should agree to keep tournaments off Trump properties in response to his comments about Mexican immigrants, Nogales said. Trump’s representative didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. The PGA said it relocated its Grand Slam of Golf in agreement with Trump. CAROLYN K ASTER /AP Armando Garcia, from Washington state, protests Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump and his portrayal of Mexican immigrants as criminals outside the Trump hotel Thursday in Washington, D.C. Nogales’ comments followed a Q&A with NBC Entertainment Chairman Bob Greenblatt, part of a conference on Latinos in entertainment sponsored by the advocacy group. NBC ended its partnership with Trump on the Miss Universe and Miss USA pageants after the celebrity billionaire, in announcing his presidential campaign, said some Mexican immigrants to the U.S. bring drugs and crime, and some are rapists. Nogales thanked Greenblatt, then moved on to a discussion of Hispanic-oriented shows planned by NBC. Among them: a drama in development about the settlement of California. The Miss USA pageant that was to air on NBC will be carried Sunday instead by the Reelz cable and satellite channel, which has said Trump won’t profit from the telecast. More fallout from the GOP candidate’s June remarks include the Macy’s department store chain decision’s to stop carrying an exclusive line of Trump menswear; Univision dropping its Spanish-language telecasts of the Miss USA and Miss Universe pageants, and the end to a project that OraTV, a company backed by Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim, said it was developing with Trump. Trump has fought back with a $500 million lawsuit against Univision that claims breach of contract and defamation and says Univision turned on him because it supports Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton for president. Regarding Macy’s, Trump said he’d decided to end his relationship with the chain because of pressure put upon them by outside sources. “Both Macy’s and NBC totally caved at the first sight of potential difficulty with special interest groups who are nothing more than professional agitators,” he said. GOP lawmakers again snuff pot proposal BY A ARON C. DAVIS The Washington Post WASHINGTON — Medical marijuana is now sold in nearly half of all states, and even one red state has legalized it for recreational use. Veterans of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are clamoring for access to treat post-traumatic stress disorder. Loosening pot laws polls better in three swing states than any 2016 presidential candidate. But House Republicans have so far declined to keep pace with shifting public opinion. They did so again late Wednesday, when a rare bipartisan pot proposal died a quiet death in the House that would have reclassified marijuana so that national laboratories could conduct “credible research on its safety and efficacy as a medical treatment.” The amendment to a bill scheduled for debate Thursday on the House floor would have encouraged the National Institutes of Health and the Drug Enforcement Administration to work together to allow studies of the benefits and risks of marijuana to treat cancer, epilepsy, glaucoma and posttraumatic stress disorder, among other conditions. The vote is the latest action ‘ We need science to clearly determine whether marijuana has medicinal benefits and, if so, what is the best way to gain those benefits? ’ to reflect national Republicans’ uncertainty on how to address shifting public sentiment about marijuana use. Although the GOP has supported steps to allow state medical-marijuana programs to flourish, Republicans generally have not supported efforts to advance national policy on legalization. When a Senate committee this year passed a measure to let doctors discuss marijuana with patients at Veterans Affairs clinics, House Republicans shot it down. When the District legalized weed for personal use, a powerful House committee chairman threatened the city’s mayor with jail time. House Republicans have defended their opposition to pot. There is no evidence, they have said, that loosening marijuana laws would do anything but destroy the brains Rep. Andy Harris R-Md. of the nation’s adolescents, let alone offer benefits to veterans. The lack of evidence, however, can be traced to congressional Republicans who have made it all but impossible for federal agencies to fund objective testing on the effects of marijuana use. The amendment that died Wednesday was seen by some as a potential game-changer. With 23 states allowing medical marijuana — and a handful plus the District of Columbia having outright legalized it — some House Republicans (and Democrats, too) thought that it was finally time to allow more federal testing of marijuana. For Republican opponents, the research could provide either evidence to continue holding the line or solid ground for the party to begin tiptoeing toward the mainstream. Perhaps surprisingly was the House Republicans’ most outspoken critic of legalization over the past two years who co-sponsored the measure. Maryland Rep. Andy Harris, a doctor and author of a measure in Congress that has left legalization in the District of Columbia in limbo, said more science was the way to go. “We need science to clearly determine whether marijuana has medicinal benefits and, if so, what is the best way to gain those benefits,” he said Wednesday before the House Rules Committee sidelined the amendment in a vote late Wednesday night. Another Republican, Rep. Morgan Griffith of Virginia, pleaded with the committee in person to approve it, but for a different reason. Whereas Harris sponsored the measure confident that the research would prove marijuana is bad, Griffith has become convinced that there are limited circumstances in which marijuana has medical benefits for patients. “We let doctors use heroin derivatives, barbiturates and all kinds of nasty stuff that I wouldn’t want people to use recreationally. Why not study marijuana?” said Griffith, still smarting from the unraveling of the amendment. WASHINGTON — A transportation bill introduced by a Senate committee chairman would allow car rental companies to rent recalled vehicles that haven’t been repaired and eliminate any hard deadline for railroads to start using long-sought technology that automatically stops trains to prevent crashes, safety advocates say. The bill, introduced Thursday by Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., the chairman of the Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, says companies must tell consumers about the recall notices in writing if they don’t intend to fix the cars first. Safety advocates have been urging Congress to prohibit rental car companies, auto dealers and others from renting vehicles that have not been repaired, pointing to several deaths alleged to have been related to unrepaired defects. “Whether you’re visiting Disneyland, New York City or Mount Rushmore, or just need a safer car while your own recalled car is being repaired, you shouldn’t have to worry that it’s perfectly legal, under federal law, for a rental car company to hand you the keys to a ticking time-bomb car,” said Rosemary Shahan, president of Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety. She said she fears the bill will pre-empt stronger state laws that prohibit the rental of unrepaired vehicles. Frederick Hill, a committee spokesman, said the bill wouldn’t pre-empt state laws. Thune wants to ensure that rental agencies and car dealerships in states where there is no prohibition on renting unrepaired vehicles are required to at least inform consumers of the pending recalls, he said. The bill includes provisions that would give freight and commuter railroads and Amtrak more time to install positive train control. The technology relies on GPS, wireless radio and computers to monitor train position and automatically stop trains that are in danger of derailing because they’re traveling too fast, are about to collide with another train or are about to enter an area where crews are working on tracks. The National Transportation Safety Board has been urging railroads to adopt the technology, or its predecessors, for more than 40 years. Railroads say they’ve spent billions of dollars on the technology but have been hampered by difficulties obtaining radio spectrum and the complexities of creating systems that will work for all railroads even though operations and computer systems vary significantly by company. The bill introduced Thursday requires railroads to have the equipment necessary to operate positive train control in place by Dec. 31, 2018, but sets no deadline for when railroads must begin using the technology. PAGE 8 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, July 11, 2015 NATION Not berry good: Adults skimping on fruits, veggies BY M IKE STOBBE PHOTOS BY TAMARA LUSH /AP NEW YORK — Most U.S. adults still aren’t eating nearly enough fruits and vegetables. In a large national survey, only 13 percent said they ate the recommended amount of fruit each day. And only 9 percent ate enough vegetables. California — a big producegrowing state — ranked highest for eating both fruits and vegetables. Tennessee was at the bottom of the fruit list, and Mississippi was last in eating vegetables. The government recommends that adults eat 1½ to two cups of fruit and two to three cups of vegetables each day. Health officials have been trying to promote fruits and vegetables — especially leafy greens People avoid the ocean on a beautiful summer Tuesday in Avon, N.C. Fascinating, scary sharks leave beaches barren in NC BY TAMARA LUSH The Associated Press AVON, N.C. — It’s the golden hour, right before sunset, when the light is soft and pretty. The landscape looks like a postcard. Tourists stroll, kids run. No one is in the water. No one wants to be a feast for a shark. “This is a very sharky place,” mused John Kane, 56, as he stood on the Avon Pier and stared into the crashing surf. They’re out there, somewhere, in the murky, antifreeze-green water. There are sharpnose and black tips, bulls and tigers. Maybe even a great white or two, if Twitter is to be believed. Always lurking, always swimming, always eating. And too often, of late, their prey has been human: In a 28-day span, eight people have been bitten by sharks in North Carolina, a new high for the 80 years in which records have been kept. The attacks have spanned a hundred-mile stretch of coastline, three of them along the barrier islands of the Outer Banks. Most of them occurred in shallow water. Injuries have ranged widely, from an 8-year-old boy who had only minor wounds to his heel and ankle to at least two others who had limbs amputated. Authorities don’t blame the same shark, or even the same type of shark. They struggle to explain the sudden spate of attacks. But there is no need to explain the fascination with this creature, or the fear it inspires. “There could be a 10-footer in there,” Kane said, casually pointing to the dark water under the pier. Kane was hoping to catch a tarpon or mackerel. He’s fished these waters for some 30 years. The only thing he snagged on Tuesday afternoon was a shark. “About this big,” Kane said, holding his hands some 3 feet apart. “I just cut ’em loose. We have an understanding. I don’t eat them and they don’t eat me.” If only people and sharks did have that kind of pact, maybe people would be swimming and bodyboarding and not canceling surf lessons. Everyone is talking about sharks along the Outer Banks. At the sushi bar in Buxton. On the radio. Chuck Bangley, a shark researcher at East Carolina University, said unseasonably warm water brought more turtles and fish closer to shore, which means the sharks that eat those creatures are also drawn to shore. And the hot temperatures drew more people to the beach. Also, the Continental Shelf is narrow in the area near the Outer Banks — like another area popular for shark bites, near New Smyrna Beach, Fla. — which means sharks are “pushed closer to shore” there, said Bangley. “How many car accidents Kathryn Peperkorn, of Rocklin, Calif., looks at the Atlantic Ocean while vacationing with her family on the Outer Banks in Cape Hatteras, N.C. were there in North Carolina this week?” asked Kathryn Peperkorn, 45, of Rocklin, Calif. (Answer: There were 10 car crash deaths over the July 4 weekend.) Peperkorn and her husband and their four children were enjoying a blindingly sunny day at Cape Hatteras National Seashore — and all were going in the water. “My kids are more in danger coming here in the car,” she said, squinting at her four kids, ranging in age from 7 to 14, who waded knee-deep in the surf. “I’m not someone who lives in fear.” She added that they weren’t going to swim far out and were staying in view of the lifeguards. “We’re not going to be stupid.” New national monuments coming to 3 states BY JOSH LEDERMAN The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Mammoth bones, prehistoric rock carvings and more than a million acres of wilderness will be protected as part of three new national monuments that President Barack Obama is creating in California, Nevada and Texas. The presidential move, announced by the White House Friday, brings to 19 the number of monuments that Obama has created or expanded since taking office. In Texas, Obama is creating a monument at Waco Mammoth, a relatively small site in central Texas where archaeologists have discovered remains of 24 Columbian Mammoths — the largest of the mammoth species — from more than 65,000 years ago, the White House said. Like other mammoths, the Columbian Mammoth is now extinct, but roamed freely in North America during the Pleistocene epoch, known colloquially as the ice age. Nevada’s Basin and Range, home to rare rock art from 4,000 years ago, will also become a national monument. The White House said more than 700,000 acres of public land will be protected in an untouched area of the The Associated Press Great Basin region. In addition to petroglyphs, the site also contains “City,” an array of abstract sculptures that artist Michael Heizer has worked on for more than four decades. The project evokes elements of Mesoamerican life, with ceremonial mounds interspersed with more modern architecture. Tourists and nature lovers in California will see more than 330,000 acres in northern California set aside for a new monument at Berryessa Snow Mountain. The White House touted the area’s rich biodiversity and Native American cultural sites, but the area is best known as a destination for hikers, campers, fishermen and hunters. — as healthy alternatives to salty, fatty and sugary foods. The goal is to curb the nation’s obesity problem and reduce diabetes, heart disease and other maladies tied to bad diets. The findings come from a 2013 national telephone survey of hundreds of thousands of Americans. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released the study Thursday. Officials say it’s difficult to compare the latest findings to previous years because of a change in how the survey was done and how it asked about produce consumption. But the amount of fruit- and vegetable-eating appears to be holding steady at a disappointingly low level, said the study’s lead author, Latetia Moore. Gay marriage not a done deal in American Samoa BY FILI SAGAPOLUTELE AND JENNIFER SINCO K ELLEHER The Associated Press PAGO PAGO, American Samoa — American Samoa stands as the only U.S. territory to hold out against the recent Supreme Court ruling that legalized gay marriage. But as the Pacific island’s attorney general reviews the decision, legal observers and gay rights advocates are saying it should go into effect immediately. “It should be unquestioned,” said Rose Cuison Villazor, a professor at University of California, Davis’ law school and an expert on territorial law. “The Supreme Court’s decision was pretty strong.” American Samoa Attorney General Talauega Eleasalo Ale, however, hasn’t been ready to take that step. “We’re still reviewing the decision to determine its applicability to American Samoa, and I have no specific comments at this time,” he said. Asked if same-sex marriage is legal in the territory, Ale said, “I don’t know. We’re reviewing the law.” U.S. territories have some selfgovernance rights. The right to marry, however, isn’t a question of self-governance, said Omar Gonzalez-Pagan, staff attorney for national gay rights group Lambda Legal. “This is a question of individual right, individual liberty.” Other U.S. territories have voluntarily complied with the Su- preme Court decision. In Puerto Rico, Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla signed an executive order soon after the ruling. U.S. Virgin Islands Gov. Kenneth Mapp has said he would issue a similar executive order. In Guam, there is no effort to ignore or challenge the ruling, said territorial legislative Vice Speaker Benjamin F. Cruz, who is gay. The Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands is also supporting the decision. As of Thursday, no one has applied for a same-sex marriage license in American Samoa, according to the island’s Office of Vital Statistics. Christian churches with conservative social views dominate in American Samoa, home to about 50,000, and the government’s motto is “Samoa, Let God Be First.” Yet the territory has a tradition of embracing faafafine — males who are raised as females and take on feminine traits. There are many faafafine who aren’t supportive of gay marriage out of “respect for our Samoan culture and religious beliefs,” said well-known faafafine Princess Auvaa. The lack of marriage-license applications by same-sex couples shouldn’t be taken to mean no one in American Samoa desires gay marriage, Villazor said. The attorney general’s review may have a chilling effect, she said. “I would think there are cultural barriers to begin with. The AG might present some other legal and social barriers, too,” she said. •STA Saturday, July 11, 2015 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 9 NATION Colo. theater shooting defense wrapping up BY DAN ELLIOTT The Associated Press CENTENNIAL, Colo. — Attorneys for Colorado theater shooter James Holmes were expected to wrap up their case Friday, and jurors could start deliberating next week on the central question in the trial: Whether Holmes was legally sane when he unleashed the attack that left 12 dead and 70 injured. Defense lawyers have spent two weeks trying to convince jurors that Holmes was insane and should be sent to the state mental hospital indefinitely. They called two psychiatrists, both hired by the defense, who evaluated Holmes and concluded he was incapable of telling right from wrong and was therefore legally insane. Prosecutors argued he was sane and should be executed. They called two court-appointed psychiatrists who told jurors they evaluated Holmes and concluded that he could distinguish right and wrong, even though he was mentally ill. Jurors will decide whose opinions they trust more when they retreat to a conference room inside the brick-and-glass Arapahoe County Courthouse and begin working their way through 166 counts against Holmes, mostly murder and attempted murder. Deliberations could start Wednesday. On Friday, defense lawyers planned to call one more witness, to show jurors video clips of Holmes from a jail surveillance camera, and then to rest their case. District Attorney George Brauchler then was to make a rebuttal case, taking up to a day. Closing arguments are tentatively set for Tuesday. Holmes slipped into a suburban Denver theater on July 20, 2012, and opened fire with a shotgun, an assault rifle and a semiautomatic handgun as more than 400 people watched a midnight premiere of the Batman movie “The Dark Knight Rises.” The psychiatrists testified that Holmes had schizophrenia and suffered from a delusion that by killing others, he somehow absorbed their value and improved his self-worth. But the court-appointed psychiatrists told jurors that despite his illness and delusions, Holmes still understood that what he was doing was illegal and violated society’s standards of right and wrong — and therefore he doesn’t meet the legal definition of sanity. One of the defense psychiatrists, Dr. Raquel Gur, told jurors Man accused of killing 7 in NJ, Pa. Judge sentences ex-teacher who had sex with 3 students The Associated Press FARMINGTON, Utah — A judge sentenced a former high school English teacher who pleaded guilty to sexually abusing three male students to at least two and up to 30 years in prison Thursday. Prosecutors say one of the boys was 16 and two were 17 when Brianne Altice, 36, had sex with them. Altice was initially free while her case played out, but was sent to jail in January after allegations emerged that she continued a sexual relationship with one of the boys while she was out on bail. Altice cried as she pleaded guilty to three counts of forcible sexual abuse in April. Each count carries a sentence of up to 15 years in prison. Altice sent a handwritten letter to Judge Thomas Kay last month asking him not to send her to prison. She said she’s harmless, and promised she wouldn’t repeat the crime. Prosecutors say she befriended the boys, allowing them to hang out in her classroom, and the relationships later turned sexual. One victim testified the relation- ship began with kissing between class periods and eventually led to intercourse. Another said he considered her to be his girlfriend during their yearlong sexual relationship. She was fired shortly after the allegations came to light, and her husband filed for divorce and custody of their child. Her lawyer, Ed Brass, said she was no longer the boys’ teacher when the sex occurred. Parents of two boys sued the school district, saying that officials knew that Altice was behaving inappropriately but didn’t do enough to stop her. They alleged in court papers that the running joke at the high school was, “Who is Ms. Altice sleeping with now?” One lawsuit was withdrawn after state attorneys said schools aren’t responsible for injuries arising from assaults. The other is still pending. Altice was arrested in October 2013 after a student reported having a relationship with her, and two more victims later came forward with similar allegations. The Associated Press LEAH HOGSTEN, THE SALT L AKE TRIBUNE /AP Brianne Altice appears in court Thursday in Farmington, Utah. Altice had pleaded guilty to sexually abusing three male students. FBI: Arrests stopped plots planned for July 4 The Associated Press WASHINGTON — FBI Director James Comey said Thursday that the agency believes it stopped potential acts of violence in the month before the July 4 holiday. Comey said authorities suspect that some of the more than 10 people arrested during that time were planning to commit violence tied to the holiday. But he declined during a wideranging discussion with reporters to describe any of the potential plots that might have been thwarted or to identify specific individuals the FBI thought might carry out an attack. Federal agents had ramped up efforts in recent months to arrest Islamic State sympathizers across the country, arresting more than 10 in the past four weeks in places including New that Holmes’ schizophrenia and delusions overwhelmed him. “The severe defect in his brain, in his mind, rendered him not capable of distinguishing right from wrong by societal standards,” she said Wednesday. On Thursday, Holmes told Judge Carlos A. Samour Jr. he will not testify in his own defense. After the jury had been sent home for the day, Samour told Holmes the Constitution gives him the right to decide whether or not to take the stand and then asked what he wanted to do. “I choose not to testify,” Holmes said in a clear, firm voice. Jersey, Ohio and North Carolina. “I do believe that our work disrupted efforts to kill people, likely in connection with July 4,” Comey said. The FBI and Department of Homeland Security had warned of a heightened terror threat tied to the July 4 weekend, but had not publicly identified any specific plot they were tracking. A law enforcement bulletin issued ahead of the holiday, Comey said, was motivated by the overall threat. Comey also said the current crop of Westerners attracted by the Islamic State’s messaging is so unpredictable that it can be hard for federal authorities to ever be sure of their plans, or when they might act. Whereas alQaida would train operatives and would carefully scope out targets, the concern among law enforcement officials is that the Islamic State is motivating people to commit violence “on a very short string.” “We face people who are highly unpredictable,” Comey said, noting that the FBI does not discount the possibility that an individual who plans an act of terrorism for a particular day such as July 4 might randomly decide to kill someone earlier. He cited as an example the case of a 26year-old terror suspect who was fatally shot by police in Boston last month after authorities said he lunged at them with a military-style knife. The FBI has said he had been scheming with other men, both now facing charges, on a future plot to kill a blogger known for provoking Muslims, but decided to change plans. A man killed seven people in New Jersey and Pennsylvania in a seven-week period during shooting sprees in which at least some victims may have been targeted at random, authorities said Thursday. The killings began in Elizabeth, N.J., in mid-May and ended 70 miles away in Pennsylvania on Sunday, when three people were shot in the middle of the night, two as they sat in a car. Todd West, 22, of Elizabeth, was arrested Monday by police in Allentown, Pa., who spotted him and an suspected accomplice who matched the description of two men wanted for robberies earlier in the day, prosecuWest tors said. The police work “may have prevented more people from being killed, potentially, because it’s pretty apparent that these guys meant business,” said Terry Houck, first district attorney in Pennsylvania’s Northampton County, where one of the killings occurred. West faces charges including seven counts of homicide and one count of attempted murder. It was not clear if he had hired a lawyer, and a call to an attorney who previously represented him went unanswered Thursday. Prosecutors said his first victim was a cousin, killed in an apartment building in Elizabeth on May 18, but they said they had not found any connections between those shot in the two states. Three other victims were killed June 25 in Elizabeth. Prosecutor Grace Park in Union County, N.J., called the killings a “horrific event.” Her office said a motive was unclear; there was no evidence that drugs, gang activity or robbery played a role. PAGE 10 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, July 11, 2015 WORLD Protection of tourists in Tunisia defended Greece PM hopes to sell austerity deal to his party BY DEREK GATOPOULOS AND ELENA BECATOROS The Associated Press ATHENS, Greece — Left-wing Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras sought his party’s backing for a harsh new austerity package Friday to keep his country in the euro — less than a week after urging Greeks to reject milder cuts in a referendum. Government ministers signed off on the sweeping new measures — likely to extend the recession after six years of painful decline — that include pension cuts and tax hikes. In exchange, Greece wants a three-year financial support program worth nearly $60 billion and some form of debt relief. The measures were sent to rescue creditors who will meet this weekend to decide whether to approve them. The proposed new bailout would be Greece’s third since it lost access to financing from bond markets in 2010. In an unusual procedure, Tsipras is first seeking authorization from parliament to negotiate with the creditors based on the proposal in a vote Friday. He is essentially asking his Syriza party to sign off on the U-turn despite more than 60 percent of voters opposing more austerity in the July 5 referendum. Tsipras was convening his party’s lawmakers for discussions Friday morning before the parliamentary debate. The coalition government has 162 seats in the 300-member parliament and pledged backing on a deal from a large section of opposition lawmakers. But failure to deliver votes from his own government would likely topple his coalition. The proposals are to be discussed by eurozone finance ministers on Saturday ahead of a BY BOUAZZA BEN BOUAZZA The Associated Press EMILIO MORENATTI /AP Pensioners wait outside the main gate of the national bank of Greece to withdraw a maximum of $134 in central Athens on Friday. summit of the European Union’s 28 leaders Sunday. Though German officials would not be drawn on the merits of the Greek proposal, French President Francois Hollande said they are “serious and credible.” France’s Socialist government has been among the Greek government’s few allies in the eurozone during the past months of tough negotiations. Jeroen Dijsselbloem, who chairs eurozone finance ministers’ meetings, said the proposals were “extensive” but would not say whether he thought they were sufficient. Later Friday, Dijsselbloem planned to hold a conference call with the leaders of other key creditors, the EU’s Executive Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund. European Commission spokesman Margaritis Schinas said they would likely send their assessment of the Greek proposal to the eurozone finance ministers later Friday. In Greece, government officials were confident their concessions would be accepted by the creditors. Alternate Finance Minister Dimitris Mardas said he expected parliament to sign off on the proposal. Remarkable airlift rescues 200 rhinos BY M ANUELA HOELTERHOFF Bloomberg News Rhinos are on a path to extinction, possibly within a decade: The estimated 20,000 stand little chance against poachers with AK47s and saws who supply an Asian market that prices the horns, mistakenly believed to have medicinal properties, at $95,000 a kilo. South Africa’s immense Kruger National Park is especially vulnerable, with hired guns entering from neighboring Mozambique. In a remarkable airlift masterminded by conservationists Dereck and Beverly Joubert, 200 rhinos are being flown from South Africa to the safety of Botswana. The complex process involves the Botswana army and a chartered Ilyushin cargo plane capable of lifting off with 10 of these crated, stolid 3,000-pounders. No endangered beast could hope for more articulate advocates than the Jouberts, both National Geographic Explorers-in-Residence. Their documentaries and books on Africa’s big cats and other keystone species have won numerous awards, including seven Emmys and the Presidential Order of Meritorious Service by Botswana President Ian Khama. “Botswana has a ‘shoot to kill’ policy on poachers. It’s not a ‘shoot on sight,’ ” said Dereck Joubert, explaining why rhinos are safe in Botswana. “The military surrounds a camp; you must put down your guns. If anybody lifts a firearm, they don’t try and wound the person; they just shoot everybody.” According to Beverly Joubert, rhino horns grow back, but very slowly. “It depends where it’s cut off,” she said. “Conservationists for The Associated Press Soviet republics in Central Asia. Russia sees the organization as a counterweight to Western alliances. Membership in the group potentially offers India greater access to the energy resources of Central Asia. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has combined ‘ ’ N ADINE HUTTON /Bloomberg News Poachers have put rhinos on a path to extinction, so Dereck Joubert and his wife, Beverly, are organizing a remarkable airlift of 200 rhinos from South Africa to the safety of Botswana. some time cut the rhino horn off about 5 or 6 inches from the base, believing that if you cut off the horn, the animal won’t be poached. But now, at $95,000 a kilo, even a bit of rhino horn is worth killing the entire rhino for.” She added that baby rhinos without horns are being killed for their mucus and their mucus membranes because there is belief that mucus has some sort of potency that grows this magnifi- cent horn later on. “It’s completely ridiculous,” she said. There’s a massive market in Asia for rhino horns, according to the couple, although there’s no medicinal value at all. “It’s like chewing your hair or your fingernail,” said Dereck Joubert. “They’re selling it for everything from a virility booster to a cancer drug or to cure a poisonous bite from a sea snake.” India, Pakistan to join Russia-China alliance UFA, Russia — Russian President Vladimir Putin said India and Pakistan will join the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, a group dominated by Russia and China and also including former TUNIS, Tunisia — Tunisia’s prime minister insisted Friday that his country has done “everything in our power” to protect foreign tourists, as the British government urged travelers to flee because of the threat of more attacks. Britain on Thursday called for all U.K. tourists to leave Tunisia because a terrorist attack is “highly likely,” saying the North African country hasn’t done enough to enhance security. There were 30 British tourists among the 38 victims killed by an Islamic extremist at a Tunisian beach resort last month. The decision is a new wound for Tunisia’s struggling tourism industry and for Tunisia’s We did reputation everything as it tries in our power to solidify its new deto protect mocracy in a volatile (British) region. Ancitizens other atand their tack, on the National interests, Bardo Muas well as seum in Tunis in those of March, left all other 22 dead, mostly countries. foreign Habib Essid tourists. Tunisian prime Tunisian minister Prime Minister Habib Essid said early Friday that his government would help evacuate British citizens and that he would speak to British counterpart David Cameron later in the day about repercussions of the decision. “We did everything in our power to protect (British) citizens and their interests, as well as those of all other countries,” Essid told lawmakers during a debate on security. Hundreds of thousands of Britons visit Tunisia each year. Many left after the Sousse attack, but some 3,000 are still in Tunisia. Travel company Thomas Cook, which has about 2,000 British customers in Tunisia, said it would add an extra flight Friday to bring Britons home, and will be bringing customers back on its 10 scheduled flights this weekend and use other airlines if needed. The head of the Islamist party’s Ennahda Movement in parliament, Noureddine Bhiri, called the British decision “manifestly damaging to Tunisia and its democratic process.” The Tunisian parliament is debating counterterrorism legislation that rights groups say would threaten hard-won freedoms. The government says its compatriots must allow limits on some freedoms to ensure their security amid increasing threats from extremists. his attendance at the summit in Russia with visits to SCO members Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Putin opened the annual summit on Friday by announcing the acceptance of India and Pakistan as members. He said Belarus would obtain observer status, joining Afghanistan, Iran and Mongolia. The Russian president called for greater cooperation in fighting drug trafficking from Afghanistan and the financing of terrorism. •STA Saturday, July 11, 2015 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 11 WORLD Iran: US changing nuclear demands Movie star Sharif dies The Associated Press The Associated Press VIENNA — The Iran nuclear negotiations turned Friday from talk of progress to a blame game, with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif accusing the United States of shifting its demands. He dismissed a warning that the U.S. is ready to quit the negotiations as counterproductive. Hours after his comments, Zarif again met U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry for another try at resolving differences standing in the way of a landmark deal that offers Iran sanctions relief in exchange for long-term and verifiable curbs on nuclear programs which Tehran could turn to making weapons. The tougher rhetoric mirrored the frustrations by the sides as the current round of talks entered its 14th day. After blowing past two extensions, negotiators had hoped to wrap up the talks by Friday, but Zarif’s comments cast doubts that agreement was near. The sides had hoped to seal a deal before the end of Thursday in Washington in attempts to avoid delays in implementing their promises. By missing that target, the U.S. and Iran now have to wait for a 60day congressional review period during which President Barack Obama cannot waive sanctions on Iran. Had they reached a deal by then, the review would have been only 30 days. Iran is unlikely to begin a substantial rollback of its nuclear program until it gets sanctions relief in return. The talks are formally between Iran and six world powers but have devolved into U.S.-Iranian negotiations over recent months, with diplomats saying the other nations were ready to accept terms agreed to by Tehran and Washington. Zarif’s critical comments were thus seen as mostly directed against Washington. Still, disagreements also have surfaced recently between the U.S. and Russia. Moscow supports Iranian demands for at least a partial lifting of the conventional arms embargo as part of any deal. That’s something Washington opposes — and an issue Zarif appeared to touch on in his comments to Iranian state television. Beyond “witnessing a change of stances” from the other side, Zarif noted a “different stand” on some issues among the six nations. “This situation has made the work difficult,” he said. Kerry had warned on Thursday that the Americans were ready to leave, declaring “we can’t wait forever for a decision to be made.” Zarif, in contrast, said his side was ready to stay and work for a “dignified and balanced deal.” L’OSSERVATORE ROMANO/AP Pope Francis and Bolivia’s President Evo Morales, left, smile as they don the traditional Bolivian hats they were given at the second World Meeting of Popular Movements in Santa Cruz, Bolivia, on Thursday. Pope asks pardon for church ‘crimes’ The Associated Press and there was plenty of sin, there was also an abundant grace increased by the men who defended indigSANTA CRUZ, Bolivia — Pope Francis has cast himself as the spiritual and political leader of the enous peoples.” Francis’ apology was met with wild applause from world’s oppressed with his remarkable mea culpa for the sins and crimes of the Catholic Church against the indigenous and other grass-roots groups gathered the indigenous peoples during the colonial conquest for a world summit of popular movements whose fight against injustice and social inequality has been of the Americas. He’ll have a chance to enhance that reputation championed by the pope. “We accept the apologies. What more can we exFriday when he visits Bolivia’s notorious Palmasola pect from a man like Pope Francis?” said Adolfo prison. Francis “humbly” begged forgiveness Thursday Chavez, a leader of a lowlands indigenous group. at a gathering of indigenous leaders in Bolivia in “It’s time to turn the page and pitch in to start anew. We indigenous were never lessthe presence of Bolivia’s firster beings.” ever indigenous president, Evo The apology was significant Morales, the climactic high of I humbly ask forgiveness, given the controversy that has Francis’ weeklong South Amernot only for the offenses erupted in the United States ican tour. over Francis’ planned canIn the speech, Francis noted of the church herself, but of the 18th century that Latin American church also for crimes committed onization Spanish priest Junipero Serra, leaders in the past had acknowlwho set up missions across edged that “grave sins were against the native peoples California. Native Americans committed against the native during the so-called contend Serra brutally convertpeoples of America in the name ed indigenous people to Chrisof God.” St. John Paul II, for his conquest of America. part, apologized to the contiPope Francis tianity, wiping out villages in the process, and have opposed nent’s indigenous for the “pain speaking to indigenous leaders in Bolivia his canonization. The Vatican and suffering” caused during insists Serra defended natives the 500 years of the church’s from colonial abuses. presence in the Americas Francis’ apology was also during a 1992 visit to the Dominican Republic. But Francis went further, and said he was doing so significant given the controversy that blew up the last time a pope visited the continent. Benedict XVI with “regret.” “I would also say, and here I wish to be quite clear, drew heated criticism when, during a 2007 visit to as was St. John Paul II: I humbly ask forgiveness, not Brazil, he defended the church’s campaign to Chrisonly for the offenses of the church herself, but also tianize indigenous peoples. He said the Indians of for crimes committed against the native peoples dur- Latin America had been “silently longing” to being the so-called conquest of America,” he said to ap- come Christians when Spanish and Portuguese conquerors violently took over their lands. plause from the crowd. Amid an outcry from indigenous groups, BeneThen deviating from his prepared script, he added: “I also want for us to remember the thousands and dict subsequently acknowledged that “shadows acthousands of priests who strongly opposed the logic companied the work of evangelizing” the continent of the sword with the power of the cross. There was and said European colonizers inflicted “sufferings sin, and it was plentiful. But we never apologized, so and injustices” on indigenous populations. He didn’t I now ask for forgiveness. But where there was sin, apologize, however. ‘ ’ CAIRO — Omar Sharif, the Egyptian-born actor with the dark, soulful eyes who soared to international stardom in movie epics, “Lawrence of Arabia” and “Doctor Zhivago,” died Friday. He was 83. Sharif died of a heart attack in a Cairo hospital, his longtime agent, London-based Steve Kenis, and the head of Egypt’s Theatrical Arts Guild, Ashraf Zaki, told The Associated Press. The actor had been suffering from Alzheimer’s. Sharif was Egypt’s biggest boxoffice star Sharif when director David Lean cast him in 1962’s “Lawrence of Arabia.” His entrance in the movie was stunning. He was first seen in the distance, a speck in the swirling desert sand. As he drew closer, he emerged first as a black figure on a galloping camel, slowly transforming into a handsome, dark-eyed figure with a gap-tooth smile. The film brought him a supporting-actor Oscar nomination and international stardom. Three years later, Sharif demonstrated his versatility, playing the leading role in “Dr. Zhivago.” 23 killed in stampede at Bangladesh charity handout The Associated Press DHAKA, Bangladesh — A stampede in central Bangladesh left 22 women and a child dead early Friday when hundreds of people stormed the home of a businessman for a charity handout during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, police said. Another 30 were injured and rushed to a hospital in Mymensingh, a town 70 miles north of the capital, Dhaka, said police officer Kamrul Islam. The crowd gathered outside the tobacco businessman’s home around 4 a.m. and stormed in when the gates were opened to collect free clothing, Islam said. Survivors said there were about 1,000 people, mostly elderly women, in front of the house. Ambia Begum, 45, went with seven female relatives at dawn. One of them died in the stampede. “Oh Allah, why did I come here? Why?” she wailed as the body of her 60-year-old relative was retrieved. The businessman distributes clothes every year ahead of Eid al-Fitr, the festival marking the end of Ramadan. Authorities detained six people, including the businessman, who did not request police presence at his house for the distribution. PAGE 12 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, July 11, 2015 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 Wage hikes haven’t helped Puerto Rico BY CHARLES L ANE The Washington Post 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 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 G reece’s impending bankruptcy is dominating the headlines right now, but between that financial catastrophe and the one facing Puerto Rico, the latter probably deserves more attention in the United States — or at least more attention than it’s getting. After all, whether “contagion” from a default by the Caribbean island’s government is great or small, almost all of those affected by it would be U.S. citizens, from the holders of Puerto Rican bonds to the island’s people themselves. What’s more, the Puerto Rican predicament results in large part from policy mistakes by the federal government — with directly relevant lessons for the economic debate on the U.S. mainland. Take the minimum wage. Right now, progressives around the country are campaigning to raise it to $15 an hour — more than double the current $7.25 minimum and even higher than the $10.10 supported by President Barack Obama. Advocates assert that this huge increase in the price of labor could be imposed with no significant job-killing impact, or at least that any such consequences would be outweighed by reductions in income inequality. Puerto Rico’s economic ruin, however, is partly a story of the damage an ill-considered minimum wage hike can do. Prior to 1974, Congress held Puerto Rico’s minimum wage below that of the mainland, a sensible policy given the commonwealth’s lower level of economic development and labor productivity. Then, with the best of intentions, lawmakers ordered Puerto Rico to equalize its rate with the federal figure; this was phased in by 1983, and the Puerto Rican minimum wage has moved in lock-step with the federal minimum ever since. The results were sharply disruptive, according to a 1992 National Bureau of Economic Research analysis. They included “substantially reduced employment on the island” and mass migration of suddenly unemployable lower-skilled workers to the U.S. mainland. Puerto Rico did post a short-term increase in real earnings, but the causal factor was the out-migration, which shrank the labor supply. Without the exodus, the authors noted, “it would have been virtually impossible to impose the U.S.-level minimum on the island.” Today, a full-time job at the minimum wage of $7.25 pays 77 percent of Puerto Rico’s per capita income, compared with 28 percent in the United States. High prices for low-skilled labor kill employers’ incentive to invest and create jobs, especially in the labor-intensive tourism sector, which faces stiff competition from the hotels and resorts of lower-wage Caribbean islands. A 2012 World Bank study found that the minimum wage, relative to the value added per worker, is nearly twice as high in Puerto Rico as it is in the Bahamas and Jamaica. In short, the minimum wage is a major reason for what a newly published report by two former and one current International Monetary Fund economists calls “the single most telling statistic in Puerto Rico”: Only 40 percent of the adult population on the island is employed or looking for a job — versus a U.S. labor force participation rate of 63 percent. Of course, many Puerto Ricans work for less than the minimum — in the blackmarket economy, which is untaxed. In other words, the minimum wage also helps explain Puerto Rico’s lack of revenue with which to service its debt. Puerto Rico’s dysfunctional labor market is not only due to the relatively high minimum wage. Also killing the demand for, and supply of, labor are the island’s onerous overtime, paid-vacation and jobsecurity regulations. And even at the minimum wage, full-time work in Puerto Rico pays less than the combined package of welfare, Medicaid and food stamp benefits for which a family of three might qualify. Taken together, these factors result in “massive underutilization of labor, foregone output and waning competitiveness,” the IMF economists’ report concludes. If mainland progressives have their way, however, U.S. rules on overtime, sick leave and the rest would become more like Puerto Rico’s. A $15 per hour minimum wage, if adopted nationwide, would mean that fulltime work at the minimum wage would pay roughly $30,000 per year, or 65 percent of 2014 U.S. annual per capita income — that is, more than double the current ratio and only 12 percentage points lower than in Puerto Rico. The point is not that the minimum wage should be abolished or the labor market immune to incremental regulation. Indeed, the U.S. economy is much more productive than Puerto Rico’s, so it could probably absorb modest, gradual minimum wage increases. Still, the island’s experience with the minimum wage and other labormarket regulations is an instructive tale, the clear moral of which is to proceed with caution. Well-intentioned policies can be taken too far — and it is very difficult to know in advance how far that is. Charles Lane is a member of The Washington Post’s editorial board. Van Rowell, rowell.van@stripes.com +49(0)631.3615.9111; DSN (314)583.9111 Pacific Mari Matsumoto, customerhelp@stripes.com +81-3 6385.3171; DSN (315)229.3171 CONTACT US Germany’s debt fixation might do more damage BY H AROLD M EYERSON Special to The Washington Post 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 Ernie Gates 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 ombudsman@stripes.com, or by phone at 202.761.0587. 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 2015 stripes.com A s the minutes tick down before Sunday’s deadline for Greece to reach an agreement with its creditors or else face bankruptcy, the Greeks and their supporters are accusing Germany, their main creditor, of hypocrisy. After all, in 1953, Germany’s creditors forgave half that nation’s debt so that the fledgling republic could recover from the war Germany had inflicted on those creditors, and thrive economically. But Germany, which now adamantly declares that adherence to the rules of debt repayment must trump all other considerations, can rightly claim that in at least one crucial instance, it was anything but a hypocrite. As the Great Depression descended on Germany in 1930, its government — a coalition of centrist parties headed by Chancellor Heinrich Brüning — insisted on balancing its budget in order to convince its creditors (the nations to whom it was paying economically ruinous reparations as compensation for World War I) that it was a responsible debtor. In the hope that the creditor nations would respond by eventually canceling those reparations, Brüning slashed social spending and investment. He trod the path of fiscal rectitude even as unemployment reached record heights — the same policy, under the same depression conditions, to which today’s chancellor, Angela Merkel, has demanded Greece adhere. There was, to be sure, an unfortunate downside to Brüning’s policy. As the Depression deepened and Germany’s centrist and even social democratic parties continued to insist on a policy of balanced budgets uber alles, increasing numbers of voters abandoned the center for extremist parties in the 1932 election. Soon thereafter, one of those extremist leaders — I think his name was Hitler — became chancellor. One of the paradoxes of our time is how Germany has done so exemplary a job in recent decades of understanding and accepting responsibility for the Nazi era while continuing to entertain a willful ignorance of the economic policy errors that paved the Nazis’ path to power. The solution to this riddle is that Germans’ debt obsession (in German, the words for “debt” and “guilt” are the same) has blinded them to the consequences of that obsession. You’d think, for instance, that Germans would have learned from John Maynard Keynes’ 1920 book “The Economic Consequences of the Peace,” which correctly predicted that the onerous reparations inflicted on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles were economically unsustainable and politically perilous to the prospects for German democracy. You’d think they’d have learned from their own descent into Nazism that balancing budgets when unemployment is at record heights can undermine a democracy’s viability. You’d think they’d have learned from the London debt agreement of 1953 that debt forgiveness and reasonable repayment terms can foster prosperity and strengthen democracy in the debtor nation — which, in this case, happened to be Germany. That Germans have learned none of these lessons is now — tragically, for Greece — apparent. Germany’s insistence that Greece continue to slash services and social investment if it is to qualify for debt forgiveness remains unaltered, even though Greek unemployment stands at 25 percent, even though 40 percent of Greek children live in poverty, even though a neo-Nazi party (Golden Dawn) has come out of nowhere to win seats in Greece’s parliament. “Does democracy trump debt? Of course not,” Jochen Bittner, the political editor of the German weekly Die Zeit, wrote in a New York Times op-ed Tuesday, blissfully unconscious, it would seem, that such sentiments helped speed the Weimar Republic to its doom. Yet such sentiments have shaped German policy toward Greece since the beginning of the euro crisis. Worse, they have shaped the policy not only of the governing Christian Democrats but also increasingly of the Social Democrats. Despite a heroic history of advancing democracy and building an uncommonly equitable and vibrant economy, the German Social Democrats also have a history of subordinating their social democratic creed to their German-ness at critical moments. They did this when their parliamentary delegation voted to go to war in 1914, when they acquiesced to Brüning’s fiscal insanity in 1930 and when they joined in the Merkel chorus making impossible demands on Greece. They do this despite the fact that the most scathing critique of Germany’s debt obsession and historic amnesia, and the most plausible outline for a harmonious resolution of the Greek debt, came in a 2013 paper by Jürgen Kaiser published by the party’s own stellar think tank the Frederich Ebert Foundation. To its great credit, Germany has accepted the burdens of its history. To its detriment (and now, to Greece’s), it has not accepted the burden of learning enough of its history to be a responsible economic power. Harold Meyerson is editor-at-large of The American Prospect. Saturday, July 11, 2015 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 13 OPINION Ruling doesn’t mean gerrymanding is dead BY CARL P. LEUBSDORF The Dallas Morning News T he Supreme Court’s decision to allow a redistricting commission set up by Arizona voters holds the potential of reducing the rampant gerrymandering that has virtually guaranteed a Republican-controlled U.S. House until at least 2022. And that would be a good thing, since partisan redistricting in a half-dozen states has skewed the makeup of the House of Representatives, which James Madison said was supposed to display “fidelity and sympathy with the great mass of the people.” But it probably won’t happen. The reason: It’s almost impossible to take politics out of the process by which legislatures redraw legislative and congressional district lines after every census to reflect population changes. Every unequal redistricting has essentially resulted from an election. Most of today’s anomalies stem from Republican 2010 successes in electing the legislators who redrew lines in key states after that year’s census. They produced these GOP House majorities in states that voted Democratic in most recent presidential elections: Florida, 17-10; Michigan, 9-5; North Carolina, 10-3; Ohio, 12-4; Pennsylvania, 13-5; Virginia, 8-3; Wisconsin, 5-3. An even division of seats in those states would have reduced the current GOP margin by two-thirds and given the Democrats the House in 2012, when they received a majority of congressional votes. But Republicans, who spent all but four years in the House minority from 1931 to 1995, are unlikely to cede power without a fight. “For 40 years, the Democratic Party had the pencil in their hands, and for the last 20 years, we had the pencil,” House Speaker John Boehner told The Cincinnati Enquirer last December in opposing any changes in the legislature’s redistricting process in his home state of Ohio. “When you’ve got the pencil in your hand, you’re going to use it to the best of your advantage.” Of course, redistricting isn’t done by pencil anymore, if it ever was, but by sophisticated computers that enable the majority to maximize its advantage. That makes it easier to produce the majority party’s desired result. But gerrymandering itself is hardly new; the term stems from the 1812 handiwork of Gov. Elbridge Gerry in redrawing Massachusetts’ state Senate districts to benefit his Democratic-Republican Party, the forerunner of today’s Democrats. As Boehner correctly notes, Democrats did their best to maintain their House majorities for decades, especially in the South and in California, where the late Rep. Phil Burton crafted a Democratic congressional majority before the state turned reliably Democratic. In Texas, Democrats did an especially masterful job in 1991 by creating three new minority-controlled Democratic districts while temporarily protecting three white Democrats at a time the state was becoming increasingly Republican. In 2011, the GOP-controlled legislature gave Republicans all four new congressional districts. But, unlike the Democrats, they didn’t protect minorities at a time that 65 percent of the state’s increased population was Hispanic, so a federal court threw out the plan as violating the Voting Rights Act. Another federal court produced a revised map, giving each party two of the new districts, and the legislature eventually acquiesced. Some post-2010 cases are still pending, In Virginia, a federal court threw out the legislature’s redistricting plan, throwing the issue back to lawmakers. Democrats might ultimately gain an additional seat or two. But that won’t have much effect, nor will most commissions created at the behest of good-government groups, simply because they are in states with delegations too small to produce major changes. Even in California, a voter-created commission empowered to draw lines failed to dent the top-heavy 39-14 Democratic margin, though it made more districts competitive. In Florida, a voter effort to influence Republican-dominated redistricting had minimal impact. The Arizona ruling will only have a real impact if voters in the largest states act to take redistricting out of the hands of their legislatures. There seems little likelihood of that happening anytime soon. And though some Democrats think they could regain the House with a landslide presidential victory in 2016, few expect that result. Instead, they’ll have to do the nitty-gritty work in the 2018 and 2020 gubernatorial and legislative elections, which will determine who controls redistricting after the 2020 census. But even that will be hard, given the fact that most of those legislatures will be elected in districts determined by those 2010 GOP successes. Carl P. Leubsdorf is the former Washington bureau chief of The Dallas Morning News. Sanders’ primary role is to push Clinton on issues BY DOYLE MCM ANUS Los Angeles Times B ernie Sanders is on a roll. The independent socialist from Vermont, still not a registered Democrat, is drawing big crowds with his gruff populism: 2,500 people in Council Bluffs, Iowa; 7,500 in Portland, Maine; 10,000 in Madison, Wis. He’s raised more than $15 million in mostly small donations — “not from billionaires,” he crows. He’s rising steadily in the polls; one survey shows him only 8 points behind the once untouchable front-runner, Hillary Rodham Clinton, in the early primary state of New Hampshire. And this week, as if to confer a kind of formal recognition, a Clinton aide conceded that her boss considers Sanders a formidable challenger. “We’re worried about him, sure,” Clinton aide Jennifer Palmieri said Monday. “He’s a force. … It’s to be expected that Sanders will do well in a Democratic primary.” The Iowa caucuses are still seven months away, but Palmieri was already working to lower expectations — just in case. So it’s understandable if a touch of giddiness has infected the usually implacable Sanders and his campaign advisers. “I don’t think any of us expected to see thousands of people show up like this,” Sanders’ chief strategist, Tad Devine, told me Tuesday. Devine, a former aide to Democratic presidential candidates including Walter Despite those enthusiastic crowds, Bernie Sanders remains a long shot. Mondale and John Kerry, said there’s no magic in what Sanders has been doing. “The voters are already there. They want this debate. They were looking for someone to talk about the unfairness they see in the economy,” he said. “Bernie has a very powerful message, and he delivers it in a very unvarnished way,” he said. How unvarnished? “The American people understand that establishment politics and establishment economics is not working for the middle class,” Sanders told cheering supporters in Maine on Monday. “Our message to the billionaire class is this: Your greed has got to end, and we are going to end it for you.” Devine has plotted out a straightforward course for Sanders’ march to the Democratic nomination. It begins with raising roughly $50 million by the end of the year, a target that once seemed impractical but now appears conservative. It includes winning endorsements from other progressive Democrats — ideally including Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., who hasn’t declared a preference. Then it hinges on recruiting thousands of volunteers to help win the caucuses in Iowa and the primary in New Hampshire. After which, Devine said, “I think it just builds. It feeds on itself. … If you can win a primary or two, the support will come.” But Devine acknowledges that “the conventional wisdom is still: You’ve got to be kidding.” And the conventional wisdom is probably right. Despite all those enthusiastic crowds, Sanders remains a long shot. Consider recent history: Partisan Democrats, like partisan Republicans, are prone to fall in love with a candidate who expresses their views in their purest, most unvarnished form. The best example is another Vermont progressive, Howard Dean, who looked unstoppable in the early stages of the 2004 campaign. In the weeks before the Iowa caucuses, Dean was well ahead in most polls; he ended up losing to Kerry, the establishment choice. Earlier progressive insurgents included the Rev. Jesse Jackson in 1988 (who won the endorsement of the then-mayor of Burlington, Vt., Bernie Sanders) and Gov. Jerry Brown in 1992 (who finished second in that race to Bill Clinton). The only recent insurgent to win was Barack Obama in 2008, and he did so by building a coalition that included establishment figures such as Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., plus majority support among African-American voters. Sanders has neither of those assets; at this point, Clinton has both. Besides, a more careful look at the polls demonstrates how far Sanders still has to go. The survey that showed him only 8 points behind in New Hampshire was an outlier; most show Clinton ahead by comfortable margins — just a little less cozy than before. Still, Sanders is already winning a different contest: the battle to force Clinton into a debate over what Democrats should stand for, especially in economic policy. Since announcing her candidacy in April, Clinton has campaigned on a platform that could charitably be described as generic: mildly populist rhetoric about the challenges to the middle class, but few specific policies — mostly positions she’s held since 2008, such as a higher minimum wage. Now Sanders will press Clinton on a long list of his proposals: tax hikes on the wealthy, tougher regulations on Wall Street (including a plan to break up the largest banks), turning Medicare into a government-run health system for all Americans (replacing Obama’s health care insurance law), and expanding Social Security benefits (at the price of higher Social Security taxes on the affluent). Clinton would prefer to duck these issues. (She avoided the question of tax hikes again Tuesday in an interview with CNN.) With Sanders as a relatively serious challenger, she won’t have that option. A Sanders presidency? Sorry, liberals. It’s not going to happen. But the Vermont socialist will have accomplished some of what he set out to do — and his speech at the Democratic National Convention will be worth staying up for. Doyle McManus is a Los Angeles Times columnist. PAGE 14 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, July 11, 2015 AMERICAN ROUNDUP Bike-share firm to riders: Please stay clad BOSTON — A Boston MA bike-sharing company is urging riders who may want THE CENSUS 71 The number of foreign objects a Pennsylvania veterinarian retrieved from the stomach of a Labrador retriever. The head technician at Good Shepherd’s Veterinary Hospital said the black Lab named Tiki wasn’t responding to medicine for vomiting, diarrhea and a loss of appetite, and X-rays showed a mass in its stomach. During exploratory surgery, 62 hair bands, eight pairs of underwear and a bandage were retrieved. The dog’s owner, Sara Weiss, said Tiki also once swallowed a plastic foam dart. to participate in a naked bike ride this weekend to keep in mind the next person who will be using that same bike. The Boston Globe said Hubway released a light-hearted statement urging anyone planning to use one of their bikes during World Naked Bike Ride-Boston this weekend to keep something on. The company’s statement read in part: “For the love of all that is decent, please consider the other riders.” Hubway has no affiliation with the event. A company spokesman said while it has no explicit ban on riding naked, clothing is strongly recommended for safety and sanitary reasons. Organizers of the ride said they agreed, noting that many participants do wear some clothing. Funeral set for girl killed by leaping fish LAKE CITY — Funeral FL plans are set for a 5year-old north Florida girl who died after being struck by a sturgeon that leaped into the boat she was riding in with her family. Citing a funeral announcement, The Gainesville Sun reported the funeral for Jaylon Leighann Rippy was planned for Saturday in Chiefland. She died July 3, hours after the sturgeon jumped into the family’s boat. Officials said the girl’s mother, Tanya Rippy, suffered facial injuries and her brother, Trevor Rippy, 9, suffered a broken wrist. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission said it was the first fatality recorded from a sturgeon strike on the Suwannee River. The fish are known for leaping more than 7 feet above the water. They can grow up to 8 feet long and can weigh up to 200 pounds. Bull chases burglary suspect in pasture ARAB — Police say a AL burglary suspect was taken into custody after being chased by a bull through a cow pasture. Sheriff Scott Walls said that Brad Lynn Hemby, 26, was being sought in connection with a burglary Wednesday morning. Walls said Hemby tried fleeing deputies by running through a cow pasture and a bull roaming the land joined the chase. Walls said Hemby eventually fell onto a barbed wire fence and surrendered. Walls said stolen property was recovered from Hemby’s truck and the man is charged with burglary, theft and attempting to elude. Woman competent for trial in corpse slashing TULSA — A woman OK charged with slashing the corpse of her boyfriend’s exgirlfriend has been found compe- TIM BARBER, C HATTANOOGA (TENN.) TIMES FREE PRESS/AP One last sweet treat Greg Deuell gives his dog, Sasha, vanilla and chocolate ice cream in a waffle cone after lunch Tuesday in Cleveland, Tenn. Deuell said it would be her last treat because Sasha suffers from diabetes and blindness. tent to stand trial. Special Judge David Youll ruled Shaynna Sims competent after reviewing her psychiatric evaluation. Sims, who did not appear in court, is jailed without bail and has a preliminary hearing scheduled for Sept. 11. She has pleaded not guilty. Sims was arrested at the dead woman’s apartment after attending a viewing April 30. Police said Sims stole the woman’s shoes and was carrying a knife with the woman’s hair attached to it. Witnesses told officers that they saw Sims reach into the casket during the viewing. The dead woman’s face was slashed, her makeup was smeared and her hair was on the floor. ceived a domestic violence call. Some officers who were headed to the domestic violence call instead were diverted to the reported accident. While officers were en route, the man called 911 again and asked the dispatcher “where the police were.” But when officers arrived, they couldn’t find a crash. They soon found the man and determined he had called 911 because he wanted a ride home. The man was charged with falsely calling 911 and improper behavior. Police: Man reports fake crash to get ride ERIE — A man armed PA with pellet guns when he was wounded by police in north- HACKETTSTOWN — NJ Police in New Jersey say a drunken man twice called 911 to report a fake accident because he wanted officers to give him a ride home. Hackettstown police say the initial call from the 38-year-old man came in Tuesday night about the same time the department re- Man faces trial in pellet-gun incident western Pennsylvania has been ordered to stand trial on charges including aggravated assault and reckless endangerment. The Erie Times-News reported three Erie officers testified Tuesday that they thought Jason Lybrook, 37, was threatening them after they responded to a report of an armed man outside a home May 31. The officers said they fired, wounding Lybrook with two shots, after he aimed one gun in each hand at areas where police were standing. Lybrook remains in the Erie County Jail and his public defender didn’t immediately return a call Wednesday. Police said the officers were justified even though it was later determined both guns Lybrook held — plus one at his feet — were pellet guns. Mother accused of using stun gun on teen COLUMBUS — A CoNE lumbus woman has been accused of using a stun gun to shock her 13-year-old daughter. The Columbus Telegram reported that a hearing is scheduled next week for Ruby Baeta, 42, who is charged with felony child abuse. Online court records don’t list the name of an attorney who could be called to comment on Baeta’s behalf. Columbus police say the girl and her 16-year-old sister reported that their mother shocked the younger girl about 5:30 p.m. July 3. An officer said he saw two bumps on the girl that he said could have been caused by a stun gun. The officer said Baeta denied shocking the girl and denied owning a stun gun. He said he found a stun gun in a suitcase in a closet in the home 2 teens charged with animal abuse WOODBRIDGE — Two New Jersey teens are accused of luring a family of geese into the street so one boy could run them down with his SUV while the other videotaped it. The New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals said Woodbridge police have charged the 17-year-olds with animal abuse charges. The SPCA said it was alerted to the abuse after the tape was posted on social media. The group said at least one goose was found in the road. It said the SUV shown in the video was found in a high school parking lot and had feathers embedded in its grille. NJ From wire reports •STA Saturday, July 11, 2015 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 15 LIFESTYLE Left, George Kindl, 47, of Seattle, is a stay-at-home dad to daughter, Alicja, 4. Below, Kindl and his wife, Ewa Lichnowska, 36, read to Alicja. PHOTOS BY ELLEN M. BANNER THE SEATTLE TIMES/TNS Parenting at midlife a growing trend in Seattle BY GENE BALK The Seattle Times Y ou know the old stereotype about men hitting midlife and rushing out to buy a sports car? These days, in Seattle, it’s more likely to be a car seat. Just ask George Kindl, a stay-at-home dad who lives in Seattle. Even though, at 47, he is the oldest dad at his 4-year-old daughter Alicja’s preschool, he says there are a bunch of guys right behind him in their early 40s and late 30s. “Nobody has kids in their 20s anymore,” Kindl says. An exaggeration, to be sure — but it’s not all that far off from reality, especially in Seattle. Of the city’s roughly 24,000 men who have at least one child under 6, about 43 percent are 40 or older, according to my analysis of census data. That’s the highest percentage of any major U.S. city, slightly edging out San Francisco. And it’s much higher than the national average, which is about 26 percent. So while being an older dad like Kindl might be commonplace now, there was a time — not all that long ago — when it would have seemed quite unconventional, even in Seattle. In 1980, just about 11 percent of Seattle dads with small kids were 40 or older — about on par with the national average. Since then, Seattle’s percentage has nearly quadrupled. Seattle women also matched the national average in 1980 — but since then, the percentage of older moms in the city has increased sixfold; Seattle now ranks Of Seattle’s roughly 24,000 men who have at least one child under 6, about 43 percent are 40 or older, the highest percentage of any major U.S. city. third behind San Francisco and Portland. Why have the numbers skyrocketed in Seattle? One reason, surely, is that the trend of having children later is much more pronounced among the college-educated — folks who are more likely to put marriage and kids on hold while establishing their careers. So it’s not too surprising that Seattle — a magnet for overachievers — would be among the cities with a high concentration of older parents. And beyond career and lifestyle considerations, it goes without saying that Seattle is now a very expensive city — even for people without kids. How many 20-somethings in this city could afford to start a family, even if they wanted to? For George Kindl, who was 43 when his daughter was born, the timing made perfect sense. For one thing, he didn’t get married until he was 40. And even at that point, he still wasn’t sure if he was ready for the responsibility of a child — but his wife, Ewa Lichnowska, 36, convinced him that he was. It turns out she was right, Kindl says. “Being an older father — you have more life experience. You’re not guessing at things as much,” he explains. “You have more confidence in your parenting ability.” Kindl feels that having a child at a mature age has made him a more patient and accepting father. “If I hadn’t waited long enough, I would have been a more reactive dad — more like my dad — than a 21st-century dad.” Kindl does admit he doesn’t always have the energy required to keep up with a preschooler — although it’s been much easier since he stopped working (he had been the assistant manager of the Harvard Exit cinema on Capitol Hill, which closed in January). His wife, a psychotherapist, is the primary breadwinner. He does think about the prospect of being 60 when his daughter graduates from high school. While that doesn’t bother him too much, it is one reason he and his wife won’t be having a second child. “I wouldn’t want to pick her up at school and the other kids being like, ‘Is that your grandpa?’ ” If the trend continues, by then more than half the dads will be Kindl’s age anyway. PAGE 16 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, July 11, 2015 MOVIES “Minions” is an animated spinoff of the “Despicable Me” films. UNIVERSAL PICTURES/TNS MEET THE MINIONS These creatures have a language — and movie — all their own BY JOHN A NDERSON is through facial expressions. You could ideally turn the sound down and still know what they’re going through.” t hasn’t been a good season at the mulCoffin agreed. “It’s very much like a silent tiplex for members of the English-only film,” he said. “It’s common in the animamovement. The oversized stars of “Juras- tion world that the first person you refer to, sic World” get their points across without always, is Chaplin, even in animation school. any intelligible words at all. Likewise, the title He was the best, along with Harold Lloyd and canine of “Max.” Or Arnold Schwarzenegger Buster Keaton, at going beyond story and tellin “Terminator Genisys.” ing a story through a character that conveys But the nearly bald, banana-colored caplets humor, emotion, even plasticity.” in denim who populate “Minions” take verYour characters may be animated, he added, bal miscommunication to a whole other level. but “they still need to translate all that stuff What language do they speak? without words. It’s all physical comedy in ani“It’s basically gibberish,” said director mation, and those guys were able to convey Pierre Coffin, who co-directed the new “De- most emotions you want an audience to feel. spicable Me” spinoff with fellow animator The language is really a cherry on top of it.” Kyle Balda and provides the voices of the In “Despicable Me” and “Despicable Me 2” Minions. He said they tried to use words from (both directed by Coffin and Chris Renaud), every language “so everyone feels the the Minions worked for Gru (voice of Steve Minions are part of their culture.” Carell), the supervillain with the heart It didn’t quite work. of goo, which, as viewers learn in “I had this whole theory “Minions,” was just part of their about using the most spoken eternal mission: serving evil. language in the world, which Minions have always acted as is obviously Chinese,” Coffin servants to whatever malevosaid, “but every time I tried lence they can find, which, as They’re just to say something in Chinese, we learn, has included Dracuit turned out to be the opposite la, Napoleon and the ancient, little balls. of what I was trying to say. In slave-owning, pyramid-buildAnd to give the end, I didn’t want to ofing Egyptians. In each instance, fend anyone, so I dropped it however, they somehow conthem shape in and went directly to Spanish. tribute to the villain’s downfall. a characterWith gibberish. And Italian.” “They kind of fail up, ya driven story, With the occasional lapse know?” Balda said of his Mininto English, or phrases like ions. At the beginning of the you have to “mazel tov.” film, they are in the position have something The Minion-ian language of having to find a new masspoken in “Minions” is cute, ter — which leads them to the happening that’s adorable and occasionally hiruthless Scarlett Overkill (Sanreally, really larious, but it distinguishes dra Bullock), Herb Overkill the film in other ways as well. (Jon Hamm), Queen Elizabeth interesting. “There are a lot of oldII (Jennifer Saunders) and a Pierre Coffin school-animation values in scheme to rip off the crown jew“Minions” director the film,” said Balda, “where els of England. everything you get across Coffin and Balda said they Newsday I ‘ ’ were more than enthused when “Despicable Me” producer Chris Meledandri presented them with screenwriter Brian Lynch’s pitch for “Minions.” “We said, ‘Yes!’ because we love these guys and it felt that we could find hundreds of thousands of ideas with them,” Coffin said. “But we didn’t foresee all the problems making an hour-and-a-half movie with no language and characters that you’re asking the audience to pay quite a bit of attention to.” “We had just loved working with these characters, because there’s so much comedy to work with,” Balda said. “But we learned early on that we needed much more than just gags. You needed to know who the characters are, which is where Kevin, Stuart and Bob’s individual personalities began to emerge.” Kevin became sort of this “big brotherly character,” Balda said; Stuart an “impertinent, lazy teenager,” and Bob is “this innocent kid who helps a lot of the story move because he wanders into situations that are dangerous.” “Kevin was the hardest one,” he added, “because you’re trying to make him a hero, doing something for his tribe, but the qualities of the Minions are not responsibility. They’re idiocy, and messing up all the time.” They still thwart evil, Balda said, but only “through incompetence.” “Minions 2”? Balda didn’t rule it out, but making an animated film like this takes about three years. Both Balda and Coffin are involved in “Despicable Me 3,” coming in 2017. “Everybody has a say that goes beyond their job title,” Coffin said of the “Minions” crew, which included Meledandri, Lynch and editor Claire Dodgson. And while the stars of their new film aren’t exactly divas, they do present difficulties. “They’re just little balls,” Coffin laughed. “And to give them shape in a character-driven story, you have to have something happening that’s really, really interesting.” Cartoon sidekicks who made it big Minions live to serve, so being the stars of their own feature film might seem contrary to their raison d’être. But the little yellow guys are not the first subordinate creatures in cartoon land to be thrust into the spotlight — or given a show of their own. Here are some more sidekicks who made it big: “The Bullwinkle Show” 1961-64 Bullwinkle J. Moose began his career as the learningimpaired sidekick to Rocket J. Squirrel on “Rocky and His Friends.” The show later became “The Bullwinkle Show.” “Josie and the Pussycats” 1970-72 They originally were a sidebar to the “Archie” universe. Following the success of “The Archie Show,” Josie et al. were drafted into their own music-driven animated series. “Postcards from Buster” 2004-08, 2012 This spinoff of PBS’ “Arthur” followed his pal, Buster, across the U.S. to meet other children and learn about their lives. “The Cleveland Show” 2009-13 Peter Griffin’s pal on “Family Guy” got his own program on Fox. Created by Seth MacFarlane, it focuses on Cleveland’s transition from Rhode Island to Stoolbend, Va. “Finding Dory” 2016 This upcoming Disney-Pixar production will center on Dory the blue tang (that’s what she is) who was the daffy sidekick to the offspring-hunting Marlin (Albert Brooks) in “Finding Nemo.” SOURCE: Newsday Saturday, July 11, 2015 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 17 VIDEO GAMES Familiar, broken elements mar final installment of action-adventure series BY M ICHAEL S. DARNELL Stars and Stripes “B atman: Arkham Knight” bookends a series that redefined gaming’s depiction of what a Dark Knight game could be, and also the superhero genre in general. While Batman has fared well in other pop culture adaptations, his video game track record had been less than stellar before the relatively untested studio launched the now-classic “Batman: Arkham Asylum” in 2009. Since then, nearly every game featuring a crime fighter has been compared to the “Arkham” series, and for good reason. Very few developers before or since really understood how to make a great superhero game that didn’t just do the character’s mythos justice, but was also able to add to it in a meaningful way. “Arkham Knight” is (for the moment) Rocksteady Studios’ final punctuation on what has become an acclaimed addition to both video games and a venerated character’s 76-year-old backstory. Sadly, that mark ends up as more of a period and less of the exclamation mark the series truly deserved. The central premise of the latest entry is that the city is under attack by the Scarecrow and a mysterious new villain — Arkham Knight — who seems to know everything about the Batman. He’s brought along a literal army of soldiers and tanks, as well as gathered together Batman’s worst villains, in his quest to finally kill the bat. With the exception of the mystery of who Arkham Knight is, the plot is a rehashing of every other “Arkham” game to date. In the past games, it was a bit more forgivable because it felt fresher. Now in its fourth reheating, the story has lost much of its flavor. It doesn’t help that much of what drives the story is the secret identity of the new villain in town. But even the inevitable reveal falls flat, largely because the twist relies on players having formed an emotional connection to a character they had never met until this game. Comic fans will know who the character is well in advance, so the twist falls doubly flat for anybody familiar with Batman’s backstory. Luckily, the returning characters are engaging. All of the fan favorites, including the Riddler, the Penguin, Harley Quinn and a few surprise guest appearances return. Jim Gordon and Oracle both feature more prominently than they did in the past games. Most of the characters get some sort of defining moment or send-off, helping to salvage the main story somewhat. As for the gameplay, there really is only one new element to talk about — the Batmobile. For the first time in the series, players will jump behind the wheel of the legendary car and cruise along the backstreets of Gotham at 200 miles per hour. When the going gets particularly rough it can transform into a tank, complete with machine guns and a 60mm cannon. On paper, that sounds amazing. What kid hasn’t dreamed of driving the Batmobile? But instead of the Batmobile being the major selling point of the game, its poor handling and dull gameplay mechanics cause it to become the lowest point in perhaps the entire series. And there is no escaping it. Rather than the vehicle being a nice addition to “Arkham Knight,” it takes over as the main focus of the entire game. The problems with that aren’t as apparent when using the Batmobile’s various gadgets to solve puzzles, but it becomes a serious than a dozen towers, each in almost exactly the same way. The final towers won’t appear until an arbitrary point in the storyline. This goes for nearly every side quest, some of which require you to stumble into the trigger that lets you continue onward. It’s almost like they took a normal “Arkham” game and then stapled a free-to-play-style time-waster onto it. The worst part is that while much of the tank combat and side-questing is technically optional, it’s really not. To get any real ending to the game, you will have to complete a certain amount of side quests. Otherwise, the game just stumbles on. Fans will be happy to know the true ending, while weak in places, does bring the se- tent simply isn’t worth the money. As a PC-first gamer, I also have to mention the plethora of bugs in that version of the game. While I was able to play the game to completion on a medium power rig, I had to do so with most of the graphical enhancements turned off. Running anything less than the lowest textures requires an astounding 3GB of VRAM, meaning most PC players will have to play through the game looking at a muddied mess. Despite its flaws, I would still hesitantly recommend “Batman: Arkham Knight.” When compared to the other “Arkham” games, it sits far below those titles. But when compared to every other Batman game ever made, it still comes out near the top. I would Overall grade: C+ TNS “Batman: Arkham Knight,” the final installment in the “Arkham” series, sees a return of iconic characters in the Batman universe. flaw when involved in any of the numerous tank battles. Each of those battles will play out exactly the same, and there are dozens of them in the game. While the core game elements of stealthy takedowns and free-flowing combat never really get old, they haven’t really changed too much, either. Batman now has access to a powerful move that can instantly eliminate five enemies all at once, but if you’ve already grown tired of the same combat and stealth sections, there isn’t much new here to explore. And what little that is new becomes just as overused as the Batmobile. As Batman goes about taking back Gotham from the invading army, he will have to take down enemy towers, roadblocks, clear the roads of mines and finish dealing with each supervillain individually. Each of those elements starts off great, but becomes tiresome because of the amount of repetition built into each segment. For instance, players will take down more ries to a definitive and satisfying conclusion. It’s just too bad that ending is locked behind having to find 243 widgets hidden across an enormous game world. That’s the basic underlying problem with much of “Arkham Knight.” It’s a great game that becomes cluttered with so much repetition that it becomes mediocre. That mediocrity doesn’t end with just the gameplay. There have been, and continue to be, a host of problems revolving around the game. Downloadable content remains locked based on where the game was purchased and when, or hidden behind a “season pass” that so far doesn’t much seem worth its additional $40 cost. The downloadable content that is available now is either of the cosmetic kind, or of the kind that can be completed in less than an hour. The game is packed with enough content that the initial purchase price is reasonable, but as it stands now the downloadable con- Many more staff-written game reviews at stripes.com/military-life recommend picking the game up, playing it until you’re bored with blowing up tanks, then taking a break for a couple of days before returning to it. Perhaps then the repetition wouldn’t be so pronounced. “Arkham Knight” is frustrating in pace, packed with junk missions and (on PC) not especially technically sound. But it does offer up a conclusion to a much-beloved series. Fans of the series will find plenty to love here, even if much of it is buried beneath some not-so-fun elements. Bottom line: C+ While not the best entry in the “Arkham” series, “Batman: Arkham Knight” still has plenty of content to keep fans entertained, if they can overcome the monotony. Rating: M for Mature Platforms: PC (version reviewed), Xbox One, Playstation 4. darnell.michael@stripes.com PAGE 18 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, July 11, 2015 HEALTH & FITNESS BY LESLIE BARKER The Dallas Morning News T here was once a time — really, truly, and not all that long ago — when people merely exercised. They didn’t wear watches. They didn’t wear heart-rate monitors. They didn’t record every move. Phones were for conversations and tended to stay attached to a wall at home. If you exercise these days, though, chances are pretty good you track it in some way. And a main way is through apps: The website digitaltrends.com estimates that 100,000 are dedicated to health and fitness and that globally the market is worth about $4 billion. Lists abound about which apps are most popular, or best for monitoring calorie intake and exercise output; which are easy to understand, and which might take more time to calculate than you spend exercising in a week. But those are just lists. What do real people get from their app-focused health routines? We found some aficionados and asked them to explain how they found an approach that clicked with them. Users weigh in on faves ‘I like having information.’ Name: Stan Eigenbrodt, 49 Number of apps used: At least six Favorites: Lose It! and Runkeeper Primary activity: Weight training and running “I’m sort of a tech person,” says Eigenbrodt. “I like playing around with my iPhone. I like having information. I just got a Polar Beat wireless heart-rate monitor, which has a Polar app and talks to Runkeeper. Now when I’m running, I can do so from a metabolic standpoint.” He continues: “If I run with Runkeeper, it takes the calories it thinks I burned to Lose It! It also tracks my steps in Fitbit. If it thinks the calorie count is more accurate than the algorithm, it takes those. If I have two entries, one from Runkeeper and one from Fitbit, it deletes one, so I don’t end up eating too many calories. “I wear the monitor when I work out. When I work out with my trainer, I don’t use Runkeeper. I use the Polar app for that. Now I use the Polar app with Runkeeper so I can look at the overall report on Polar to see how it changes.” Eigenbrodt, an attorney, started out with Lose It!, an app which, at its most basic, tracks food intake. He liked the app, its information and most especially the discipline it has taught him. “I can outeat any workout,” he says. “In a lot of office environments and certainly this one, almost every day someone is having a birthday and there’s cake or muffins. If I’m not writing down what I eat, it’s easy not to think about it and to just eat.” ‘I wanted to see everything.’ Name: Bree Redwine, 51 Number of apps used: Three Favorite: My Fitness Pal Primary activity: Running and weight training “The reason I chose those I did is that they worked best for me,” says Redwine. “I looked at others. I downloaded them. I got so frustrated.” Redwine has four children. She works full time at a sportswear store. She works out every day. Ease is imperative. “I did start out using more,” she says. “I then just really looked at what I needed for my life and lifestyle and realized I needed something quick and practical and efficient.” My Fitness Pal was her first app. Then she bought a Garmin Vivosmart fitness band and, she says, “my world opened up.” The apps connect; she records everything she eats and drinks as well as her weekly weight. The watch monitors her heart rate, her movement, her sleep patterns. “I’m a weird person,” she says. “I wanted to see everything.” Knowing her stats has improved the way she eats and trains, she says. “It’s almost like Big Brother is watching you. When I see that, I tend to do better.” ‘I don’t want to be fined.’ The Dallas Morning News photos Dan Gray, above, regularly uses nine apps on his smartphone to monitor his health. Stan Eigenbrodt, top right, favors Lose It! and Runkeeper, while Bree Redwine, top left, uses My Fitness Pal to meet her goals. Name: Dan Gray, 45 Number of apps used: At least a dozen Favorite: My Fitness Pal Primary activity: Running While training for a marathon, Gray was surprised to be gaining weight. “That’s when I realized I must be doing something wrong, but couldn’t put my finger on it,” he says. He asked a running friend who had lost a lot of weight how he did it. The answer changed Gray’s life: My Fitness Pal. “Anyone I’m friends with can see what I eat,” he says. “By putting in what I eat as I’m eating it, I found myself making small calibrations in order to get under my calorie limit. Once I started developing good eating habits, I started layering on other things, like tracking the exercise.” He does that with several apps; among them Pact. “I’ve been using it about a year,” says Gray, who works in the health care industry. “They take My Fitness Pal and other apps one step further.” He set up Pact by committing, for example, to how often and how long he’ll exercise, how many times he’ll log his food, how many fruits and vegetables he’ll eat. If My Fitness Pal and his other apps sync up and show he’s not following through, he’ll be fined either $5 or $10. If he does, he receives $1 to $1.50 a week. “What I’ve found, man, is that I will really work a lot to get that dollar or dollar-fifty a week,” he says. “I don’t want to be fined.” •STA Saturday, July 11, 2015 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 19 ENTERTAINMENT Rami Malek, above and below with Christian Slater, stars in “Mr. Robot.” USA NETWORK /TNS Man & machine New television series ‘Mr. Robot’ includes a little bit of human code BY M ARY MCNAMARA Los Angeles Times M an rails against machine in a new and promising techno-paranoia tale. USA’s “Mr. Robot” examines the fear of digital domination: Can evil corporations be broken by the same systems that grant them world domination? Created by Sam Esmail, “Mr. Robot” is shot in muted tones that admirably balance decay, dulled-sense surrender and potential menace. The first hour is overly obsessivecompulsive in plot points — code strings and routers as the new McGuffins — but the adolescent rage of its protagonist gives it emotional life. Nondescript techie for a cyber-security firm by day and vigilante hacker by night, Elliot (Rami Malek) is a blank-faced, socially challenged Millennial. When he’s not bringing down child pornographers and other social scum, Elliot routinely invades the privacy of REVIEW those he loves under the guise of protecting them. “Those he loves” being Angela (Portia Doubleday), friend/coworker/object of devotion, and Krista (Gloria Reuben), Elliot’s therapist who apparently has very bad taste in men. Elliot is seeing a therapist because he has suffered hallucinations in the past. They might still be ongoing. Are the men in suits who appear to be following him the result of his hacking adventures? And who is that homeless guy who looks suspiciously like Christian Slater? Well, it is Christian Slater, playing the title role. Mr. Robot is a fellow computer genius who says he wants to take down the one percent who control the world. Although tricked out with the highfunctioning autism so popular with television writers these days, Elliot is more complex than the typical heroon-the-spectrum. He narrates the series, and clearly we are supposed to sympathize — he is sad, his dad is dead, he cries alone — but his creepiness is also undeniable, played up both by his actions and by Malek’s effectively robotic performance. Discovering Elliot’s true nature and intentions, one hopes, will be as central to the adventure as the quest to take down the Evil Corporation. PAGE 20 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, July 11, 2015 •STA Saturday, July 11, 2015 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 21 BUSINESS/WEATHER Convenience driving delivery mania EXCHANGE RATES Military rates Euro costs (July 13) ..........................$1.1502 Dollar buys (July 13) .........................€0.8694 British pound (July 13)......................... $1.59 Japanese yen (July 13) ......................118.00 South Korean won (July 13) ..........1,100.00 Commercial rates BY ROBERTO A. FERDMAN The Washington Post Delivery is hot right now, with Taco Bell announcing Wednesday it’s bringing tacos, burritos and other Mexican-inspired fare to the doorsteps of customers in some 200 locations around the United States. The fast-food chain, which is extending the delivery option to Los Angeles, San Francisco, Orange County and Dallas, is the latest addition to an already long list of quick-service giants that offer delivery — including Starbucks, Chipotle, McDonald’s and Dunkin’ Donuts. And it underscores an increasingly apparent truth about what Americans want from their food. Yes, people want the food they buy to be cheap, but there’s actually something that matters more to people than price: convenience. The delivery bug, after all, hasn’t been exclusive to the fastfood world. People have become conditioned to expect Amazon to deliver practically anything to them. Third-party companies such as Seamless and Postmates, which partner with food purveyors to deliver meals for a small fee, have come to define the lunch food scene in big cities by making all kinds of food available. And new, delivery-only restaurants, such as Maple and Savory, are taking it a step further, doubling down on the notion that what people want, more than anything else, is convenience. “It’s very widespread,” said Mary Chapman, who is a senior director of product innovation at restaurant market research firm Technomic. “And it touches tons of different price points.” To say that delivery is something entirely new is to forget that pizza shops, such as Domino’s and Pizza Hut, have been ringing doorbells for decades. So, too, have Chinese restaurants, Chapman reminded. But there is something unique about the way in which the most convenient form of restaurant service is spreading. The reason it is becoming more prevalent isn’t merely because people want it — many, it turns out, actually need it. “The reality is that, for many people today, time is more valuable than dollars,” Chapman said. “That’s even true for people who don’t have very many dollars. And, you know, that has a pretty sizable impact.” Families are working more than ever. More than 60 percent of households are now supported by two working parents, according to the latest government data, which is the highest reading on record. The less time people have to sit down at restaurants, leave home to pick up dinner or even cook at home, the more convenience hovers over decisions about food, especially when there is an option that only requires a brief interaction with a screen. What many people might not realize is that the ascent of delivery is something a lot of restaurants actually welcome. At establishments that are normally dependent on dinner, services such as Seamless help boost lunchtime sales. At outlets such as Chipotle, however, where sales drag at dinnertime, the opposite is true: Delivery is something of a savior. “You can only put so many people through your line of drive-through,” Chapman said. “That’s even truer for sit-down restaurants.” MARKET WATCH Bahrain (Dinar) ....................................0.3769 British pound ....................... $1.5517/0.6445 Canada (Dollar) ...................................1.2736 China (Yuan) ........................................6.2090 Denmark (Krone) ................................6.6763 Egypt (Pound) ...................................... 7.8282 Euro ........................................ $1.1178/0.8946 Hong Kong (Dollar) ............................. 7.7509 Hungary (Forint) ................................. 277.99 Israel (Shekel) .....................................3.7682 Japan (Yen)...........................................122.67 Kuwait (Dinar) .....................................0.3020 Norway (Krone) ................................... 7.9955 Philippines (Peso).................................45.08 Poland (Zloty) .......................................... 3.73 Saudi Arabia (Riyal) ........................... 3.7502 Singapore (Dollar) ..............................1.3493 South Korea (Won) .........................1,128.04 Switzerland (Franc)............................0.9382 Thailand (Baht) .....................................33.96 Turkey (New Lira) ...............................2.6651 (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 ................................................ 3.25 Discount rate .......................................... 0.75 Federal funds market rate ................... 0.13 3-month bill ............................................. 0.02 30-year bond ........................................... 3.12 WEATHER OUTLOOK SATURDAY IN THE MIDDLE EAST SUNDAY IN THE PACIFIC SATURDAY IN EUROPE Misawa 80/66 Kabul 92/68 Seoul 81/72 Baghdad 112/84 Kandahar 106/77 Kuwait City 118/91 Mildenhall/ Lakenheath 71/59 Brussels 75/62 Bahrain 102/90 Riyadh 110/83 Lajes, Azores 73/66 Doha 111/90 Busan 78/72 Tokyo 83/74 Iwakuni 82/74 Guam 85/77 Sasebo 82/77 Ramstein 78/59 Pápa 81/56 Stuttgart 82/57 Aviano/ Vicenza 87/62 Naples 92/74 Morón 98/66 Djibouti 105/90 Osan 79/72 Sigonella 91/73 Rota 87/71 Okinawa 87/80 The weather is provided by the American Forces Network Weather Center, 2nd Weather Squadron at Offutt Air Force Base, Neb. Souda Bay 87/70 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 92 82 85 86 87 91 64 85 92 86 91 85 93 90 95 91 84 83 86 92 81 85 80 86 97 84 94 Lo 71 61 63 66 62 68 54 66 75 65 73 70 75 61 75 65 63 68 67 77 63 63 61 55 75 67 72 Wthr Clr Clr Clr Cldy Clr PCldy Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Rain Clr Clr PCldy Clr Clr PCldy Clr PCldy Cldy PCldy 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 93 80 82 82 80 86 99 95 81 87 92 94 81 94 89 85 83 81 94 77 78 76 89 77 83 73 83 95 73 55 69 70 62 57 74 75 67 62 78 76 68 74 61 73 66 62 73 61 61 56 72 56 68 49 64 73 PCldy Clr Cldy PCldy Clr PCldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Clr PCldy Clr PCldy Clr Clr Rain Clr PCldy Cldy Cldy Clr Cldy Cldy Clr Cldy PCldy Clr PCldy 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 81 91 96 86 81 80 82 90 85 87 78 88 93 96 82 95 96 62 90 91 88 92 81 98 84 93 95 76 67 65 65 61 65 61 63 69 64 65 60 77 75 74 71 74 74 53 73 82 70 76 64 78 70 71 75 62 PCldy Clr Clr PCldy Clr Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Clr Cldy Rain Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Rain PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Clr Clr Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Louisville 87 Lubbock 89 Macon 96 Madison 79 Medford 85 Memphis 96 Miami Beach 90 Midland-Odessa 93 Milwaukee 77 Mpls-St Paul 81 Missoula 72 Mobile 93 Montgomery 96 Nashville 92 New Orleans 92 New York City 87 Newark 88 Norfolk,Va. 84 North Platte 94 Oklahoma City 92 Omaha 90 Orlando 96 Paducah 92 Pendleton 83 Peoria 86 Philadelphia 89 Phoenix 104 Pittsburgh 82 73 69 73 67 64 78 79 70 64 69 56 76 76 73 77 69 70 73 62 72 72 74 73 58 69 69 84 63 Cldy Cldy PCldy Rain Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Rain PCldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Clr Clr Rain PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy Rain PCldy PCldy PCldy 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 82 82 75 84 93 92 92 82 85 83 83 81 84 94 92 90 76 89 92 91 73 70 78 84 81 98 74 94 55 64 60 66 60 71 62 59 69 68 63 69 62 76 81 79 58 66 71 74 66 59 61 57 59 75 60 75 Cldy Clr Rain Clr Clr PCldy PCldy PCldy Rain Cldy Clr Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Rain PCldy Clr PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy 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 87 86 81 84 87 90 82 99 93 83 94 99 94 95 94 86 89 94 95 83 86 85 82 70 69 68 62 71 71 62 74 78 63 75 77 74 76 74 72 78 73 73 61 67 57 57 Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Clr Clr PCldy PCldy Clr PCldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Clr Rain PCldy Clr PCldy Clr PCldy Cldy Clr National temperature extremes Hi: Thu., 104, Ellensburg, Wash., Pasco, Wash., and Death Valley, Calif. Lo: Thu., 34, Gothic, Colo. PAGE 22 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, July 11, 2015 Saturday, July 11, 2015 •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, July 11, 2015 SCOREBOARD Sports on AFN Go to the American Forces Network website for the most up-to-date TV schedules. myafn.net Cycling Tour de France Thursday At Le Havre, France Sixth Stage A 118.9-mile hilly ride along the Normandy coast from Abbeville to Le Havre, with three Category 4 climbs 1. Zdenek Stybar, Czech Republic, Etixx-QuickStep, 4 hours, 53 minutes, 46 seconds. 2. Peter Sagan, Slovakia, Tinkoff-Saxo, 2 seconds behind. 3. Bryan Coquard, France, Europcar, same time. 4. John Degenkolb, Germany, GiantAlpecin, same time. 5. Greg Van Avermaet, Belgium, BMC Racing, same time. 6. Tony Gallopin, France, Lotto-Soudal, same time. 7. Edvald Boasson Hagen, Norway, MTN-Qhubeka, same time. 8. Davide Cimolai, Italy, Lampre-Merida, same time. 9. Julien Simon, France, Cofidis, same time. 10. Gorka Izagirre, Spain, Movistar, same time. 11. Alexander Kristoff, Norway, Katusha, same time. 12. Robert Gesink, Netherlands, Lotto NL-Jumbo, same time. 13. Joaquim Rodriguez, Spain, Katusha, same time. 14. Armindo Fonseca, France, Bretange-Seche Environnement, same time. 15. Alejandro Valverde, Spain, Movistar, same time. 16. Alberto Contador, Spain, TinkoffSaxo, same time. 17. Rigoberto Uran, Colombia, EtixxQuickStep, same time. 18. Paul Martens, Germany, Lotto NLJumbo, same time. 19. Mathias Frank, Switzerland, IAM Cycling, same time. 20. Andrew Talansky, United States, Cannondale-Garmin, same time. Also 33. Nairo Quintana, Colombia, Movistar, same time. 38. Thibaut Pinot, France, FDJ, same time. 40. Tejay Van Garderen, United States, BMC Racing, same time. 59. Jean-Christophe Peraud, France, AG2R La Mondiale, same time. 61. Geraint Thomas, Britain, Sky, same time. 91. Romain Bardet, France, AG2R La Mondiale, same time. 92. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy, Astana, same time. 110. Chris Froome, Britain, Sky, same time. 131. Tyler Farrar, United States, MTNQhubeka, 3:06. 174. Tony Martin, Germany, EtixxQuickStep, :02. Overall Standings (After six stages) 1. Tony Martin, Germany, Etixx-QuickStep, 22:13:14. 2. Chris Froome, Britain, Sky, :12. 3. Tejay Van Garderen, United States, BMC Racing, :25. 4. Peter Sagan, Slovakia, Tinkoff-Saxo, :27. 5. Tony Gallopin, France, Lotto-Soudal, :38. 6. Greg Van Avermaet, Belgium, BMC Racing, :40. 7. Rigoberto Uran, Colombia, EtixxQuickStep, :46. 8. Alberto Contador, Spain, TinkoffSaxo, :48. 9. Zdenek Stybar, Czech Republic, Etixx-QuickStep, 1:04. 10. Geraint Thomas, Britain, Sky, 1:15. 11. Warren Barguil, France, GiantAlpecin, 1:19. 12. Bauke Mollema, Netherlands, Trek Factory Racing, 1:44. 13. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy, Astana, 1:50. 14. Robert Gesink, Netherlands, Lotto NL-Jumbo, 1:51. 15. Roman Kreuziger, Czech Republic, Tinkoff-Saxo, 2:03. 16. Alejandro Valverde, Spain, Movistar, same time. 17. Nairo Quintana, Colombia, Movistar, 2:08. 18. Joaquim Rodriguez, Spain, Katusha, 2:12. 19. Jean-Christophe Peraud, France, AG2R La Mondiale, 2:19. 20. Andrew Talansky, United States, Cannondale-Garmin, 2:51. Also 21. Romain Bardet, France, AG2R La Mondiale, 3:06. 30. Thibaut Pinot, France, FDJ, 6:30. 89. Tyler Farrar, United States, MTNQhubeka, 21:08. AP sportlight July 11 1985 — Nolan Ryan of the Houston Astros becomes the first pitcher in major league history to reach 4,000 strikeouts when he fans New York’s Danny Heep in the sixth inning. Auto racing Soccer Deals UNOH 225 CONCACAF Gold Cup Thursday’s transactions NASCAR Camping World Trucks Thursday At Kentucky Speedway Sparta, Ky. Lap length: 1.5 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (1) Matt Crafton, Toyota, 145 laps, 47 points, $59,498. 2. (3) Erik Jones, Toyota, 145, 44, $48,487. 3. (6) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 145, 0, $34,948. 4. (4) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 145, 0, $22,029. 5. (10) Timothy Peters, Toyota, 145, 39, $19,072. 6. (2) Tyler Reddick, Ford, 145, 39, $17,403. 7. (31) David Gilliland, Ford, 145, 0, $14,608. 8. (7) John Wes Townley, Chevrolet, 145, 36, $16,314. 9. (12) Cameron Hayley, Toyota, 145, 35, $16,205. 10. (9) Brandon Jones, Chevrolet, 145, 34, $17,018. 11. (13) John Hunter Nemechek, Chevrolet, 145, 34, $15,959. 12. (5) Johnny Sauter, Toyota, 145, 32, $15,766. 13. (15) Ray Black Jr., Chevrolet, 145, 32, $15,657. 14. (23) Travis Kvapil, Chevrolet, 145, 30, $15,548. 15. (19) Timmy Hill, Chevrolet, 145, 29, $15,811. 16. (14) Ben Kennedy, Toyota, accident, 145, 28, $15,497. 17. (16) Christopher Bell, Toyota, 144, 27, $15,188. 18. (11) Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 143, 26, $15,079. 19. (22) Mason Mingus, Chevrolet, 143, 25, $14,970. 20. (30) Cody Coughlin, Toyota, 143, 24, $12,811. 21. (18) Korbin Forrister, Chevrolet, 141, 23, $15,052. 22. (21) Justin Jennings, Chevrolet, 140, 22, $14,643. 23. (20) Jennifer Jo Cobb, Chevrolet, 140, 21, $13,284. 24. (8) Spencer Gallagher, Chevrolet, accident, 139, 20, $13,175. 25. (29) Brandon Brown, Chevrolet, 132, 19, $12,216. 26. (17) Tyler Young, Chevrolet, 132, 18, $11,957. 27. (28) Caleb Holman, Chevrolet, accident, 124, 17, $11,848. 28. (26) Jordan Anderson, Chevrolet, suspension, 98, 16, $11,508. 29. (27) B.J. McLeod, Chevrolet, electrical, 32, 15, $11,400. 30. (25) Ryan Ellis, Chevrolet, electrical, 16, 14, $10,900. 31. (24) Norm Benning, Chevrolet, engine, 2, 13, $9,400. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 117.268 mph. Time of Race: 1 hour, 51 minutes, 17 seconds. Margin of Victory: Under Caution. Caution Flags: 8 for 30 laps. Lead Changes: 13 among 7 drivers. Lap Leaders: T.Reddick 1-4; D.Suarez 5-22; T.Reddick 23-30; E.Jones 31-45; R.Black Jr. 46; J.Nemechek 47; R.Blaney 48-58; M.Crafton 59-100; E.Jones 101-128; R.Blaney 129-131; T.Reddick 132; E.Jones 133-144; M.Crafton 145. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): E.Jones, 3 times for 55 laps; M.Crafton, 2 times for 43 laps; D.Suarez, 1 time for 18 laps; R.Blaney, 2 times for 14 laps; T.Reddick, 3 times for 13 laps; J.Nemechek, 1 time for 1 lap; R.Black Jr., 1 time for 1 lap. Top 10 in Points: 1. M.Crafton, 417; 2. T.Reddick, 397; 3. E.Jones, 388; 4. J.Sauter, 359; 5. J.Townley, 330; 6. T.Peters, 322; 7. C.Hayley, 315; 8. S.Gallagher, 308; 9. D.Hemric, 308; 10. B.Kennedy, 297. NASCAR Driver Rating Formula A maximum of 150 points can be attained in a race. The formula combines the following categories: Wins, Finishes, Top-15 Finishes, Average Running Position While on Lead Lap, Average Speed Under Green, Fastest Lap, Led Most Laps, LeadLap Finish. FIRST ROUND Top two in each group and two best third-place teams advance to quarterfinals GROUP A GP W D L GF GA Pts United States 1 1 0 0 2 1 3 Haiti 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 Panama 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 Honduras 1 0 0 1 1 2 0 Tuesday, July 7 At Frisco, Texas Panama 1, Haiti 1 United States 2, Honduras 1 Friday, July 10 At Foxborough, Mass. Honduras vs. Panama United States vs. Haiti Monday, July 13 At Kansas City, Kan. Haiti vs. Honduras Panama vs. United States GROUP B GP W D L GF GA Pts Costa Rica 1 0 1 0 2 2 1 Jamaica 1 0 1 0 2 2 1 Canada 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 El Salvador 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 Wednesday, July 8 At Carson, Calif. Costa Rica 2, Jamaica 2 El Salvador 0, Canada 0 Saturday, July 11 At Houston Jamaica vs. Canada Costa Rica vs. El Salvador Tuesday, July 14 At Toronto Jamaica vs. El Salvador Canada vs. Costa Rica GROUP C GP W D L GF GA Pts Mexico 1 1 0 0 6 0 3 Trinidad 1 1 0 0 3 1 3 Guatemala 1 0 0 1 1 3 0 Cuba 1 0 0 1 0 6 0 Thursday, July 9 At Chicago Trinidad and Tobago 3, Guatemala 1 Mexico 6, Cuba 0 Sunday, July 12 At Glendale, Ariz. Trinidad and Tobago vs. Cuba Guatemala vs. Mexico Wednesday, July 15 At Charlotte, N.C. Cuba vs. Guatemala Mexico vs. Trinidad and Tobago BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Reinstated OF Nolan Reimold from the paternity list. Released OF Delmon Young. CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Optioned RHP Scott Carroll to Charlotte (IL). CLEVELAND INDIANS — Agreed to terms with INF Luke Wakamatsu. KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Placed OF Alex Gordon on the 15-day DL. Reinstated RHP Yordano Ventura from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Aaron Brooks to Omaha (PCL). Recalled LHP Brandon Finnegan from Omaha. NEW YORK YANKEES — Selected the contract of INF Cole Figueroa from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Optioned INF Jose Pirela to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Designated OF Taylor Dugas for assignment. SEATTLE MARINERS — Recalled LHP Vidal Nuno and RHP Danny Farquhar from Tacoma (PCL). Placed LHP Charlie Furbush on the 15-day DL, retroactive to July 8. Optioned RHP Mayckol Guaipe to Tacoma. Recalled 1B/DH Jesus Montero from Tacoma. Optioned J.A. Happ to Bakersfield (Calif.). National League PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Agreed to terms with OF Jhailyn Ortiz to a minor league contract. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Reinstated RHP David Carpenter from the paternity list. Optioned RHP Taylor Hill to Syracuse (IL). Eastern League TRENTON THUNDER — Announced RHP Jaron Long was assigned to the team from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Announced INF Dan Fiorito was called up by Scranton Wilkes-Barre. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association ATLANTA HAWKS — Re-signed F Paul Millsap to a three-year contract. Signed C Walter Tavares to a multiyear contract. Acquired F-C Tiago Splitter from San Antonio for the draft rights to F Georgios Printezis and a future second-round draft pick. Waived F Austin Daye. BROOKLYN NETS — Re-signed F Thaddeus Young to a four-year contract and C Brook Lopez. Signed F Thomas Robinson and G Shane Larkin to two-year contracts. Agreed to terms with G Wayne Ellington. Signed F-C Willie Reed. CHARLOTTE HORNETS — Signed G Jeremy Lin. CHICAGO BULLS — Re-signed G Jimmy Butler to a five-year contract. Agreed to terms with F Mike Dunleavy and G Aaron Brooks. CLEVELAND CAVALIERS — Re-signed F Kevin Love to a five-year contract and G Iman Shumpert to a four-year contract. DALLAS MAVERICKS — Signed G Wes Matthews to a four-year contract. Acquired C Zaza Pachulia from Milwaukee for a future second round pick. GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS — Resigned F Draymond Green to a five-year contract. LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS — Re-signed C DeAndre Jordan to a four-year contract. Signed F Wes Johnson. LOS ANGELES LAKERS — Signed G Lou Williams to a multiyear contract and Fs Brandon Bass and Anthony Brown. Acquired C Roy Hibbert from Indiana for a future second-round draft pick. MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES — Signed F Brandan Wright to a multiyear contract. MIAMI HEAT — Signed G Goran Dragic to a five-year contract. MILWAUKEE BUCKS — Re-signed G Khris Middleton to a five-year contract. Signed F Greg Monroe to a three-year contract. NEW ORLEANS PELICANS — Agreed to terms with F-C Anthony Davis on a fiveyear contract extension. Signed C Omer Asik to a five-year contract, F Alexis Ajinca to a four-year contract and F Dante Cunningham to a three-year contract. NEW YORK KNICKS — Signed C Robin Lopez to a four-year contract and G Arron Afflalo and F Derrick Williams to two-year contracts. Acquired F-C Kyle O’Quinn from Orlando for the right to ex- Pro basketball WNBA EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Connecticut 7 3 .700 New York 7 4 .636 Chicago 6 5 .545 Washington 6 5 .545 Indiana 6 6 .500 Atlanta 5 7 .417 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct Minnesota 8 2 .800 Tulsa 9 4 .692 Phoenix 6 5 .545 San Antonio 3 8 .273 Seattle 3 10 .231 Los Angeles 2 9 .182 Wednesday’s games Indiana 88, Seattle 65 San Antonio 70, Los Angeles 63 Thursday’s games New York 79, Washington 76, OT Friday’s games San Antonio at Indiana Minnesota at Chicago Phoenix at Seattle Saturday’s games Los Angeles at Tulsa GB — ½ 1½ 1½ 2 3 GB — ½ 2½ 5½ 6½ 6½ MLS EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA D.C. United 10 6 5 35 23 18 Columbus 6 6 6 24 27 26 Orlando City 6 6 6 24 23 22 New England 6 8 6 24 25 29 Toronto FC 7 7 2 23 22 23 New York 6 6 5 23 23 22 New York City FC 5 8 5 20 20 23 Philadelphia 5 10 4 19 22 32 Montreal 5 7 3 18 20 25 Chicago 4 9 3 15 18 24 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Seattle 10 7 2 32 25 18 Vancouver 10 7 2 32 23 19 Portland 9 6 4 31 22 20 Los Angeles 8 6 7 31 31 23 FC Dallas 8 5 5 29 24 23 Sporting KC 7 3 6 27 25 17 San Jose 7 6 4 25 19 17 Real Salt Lake 5 6 8 23 18 23 Houston 5 7 6 21 22 24 Colorado 3 6 9 18 14 18 Note: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Friday’s game Houston at San Jose Saturday’s games Portland at Philadelphia New England at New York FC Dallas at Orlando City Columbus at Montreal Seattle at Chicago Real Salt Lake at Colorado Sunday’s games Toronto FC at New York City FC Sporting Kansas City at Vancouver Wednesday, July 15 Columbus at Chicago Friday, July 17 San Jose at Los Angeles Saturday, July 18 Philadelphia at Toronto FC New York at Orlando City New York City FC at New England Montreal at Sporting Kansas City D.C. United at FC Dallas Colorado at Seattle Houston at Real Salt Lake Vancouver at Portland NWSL W L T Pts GF Chicago 5 1 3 18 17 Seattle 5 2 3 18 20 FC Kansas City 5 5 2 17 14 Washington 5 4 2 17 16 Western New York 4 4 2 14 13 Houston 3 3 4 13 11 Portland 3 3 4 13 13 Boston 3 6 2 11 13 Sky Blue FC 1 6 4 7 7 Note: Three points for victory, point for tie. Thursday’s game FC Kansas City 3, Boston 2 Saturday’s games Portland at Sky Blue FC Western New York at Seattle Sunday’s games Chicago at Houston Wednesday, July 15 Chicago at Boston Saturday, July 18 Seattle at Washington Boston at Chicago GA 10 11 12 17 14 10 11 22 17 one change 2019 second-round draft selections and cash considerations. OKLAHOMA CITY THUNDER — Resigned F Kyle Singler to a multiyear contract. ORLANDO MAGIC — Signed G C.J. Watson. PHILADELPHIA 76ERS — Named Todd Wright assistant coach, head of strength and conditioning. PHOENIX SUNS — Traded F Marcus Morris, F-G Danny Granger and G Reggie Bullock to Detroit for a 2020 secondround draft pick. Signed C Tyson Chandler to a four-year contract. PORTLAND TRAILBLAZERS — Agreed to terms with G Damian Lillard on a five-year contract extension. Signed F Al-Farouq Aminu to a four-year contract and F Ed Davis to a three-year contract. SACRAMENTO KINGS — Traded G Ray McCallum to San Antonio for a 2016 second-round draft pick. SAN ANTONIO SPURS — Signed F LaMarcus Aldridge to a four-year contract. Re-signed C Tim Duncan. TORONTO RAPTORS — Signed F DeMarre Carroll and G Corey Joseph to four-year contracts. Waived G Luke Ridnour. UTAH JAZZ — Signed G Raul Neto to a multiyear contract. WASHINGTON WIZARDS — Signed G Gary Neal to a one-year contract. Acquired F Jared Dudley from Milwaukee for a protected future second-round draft pick. HOCKEY National Hockey League CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Agreed to terms with F Dennis Rasmussen on a one-year contract. DALLAS STARS — Signed D Jamie Oleksiak to a one-year contract. DETROIT RED WINGS — Agreed to terms with G Jared Coreau on a one-year contract. FLORIDA PANTHERS — Named Scott Luce director of player personnel, Billy Ryan amateur scout, Pierre Groulx goalie development coach and scout, Dakota King equipment assistant and Steve Squier massage therapist. Named Brian Godin equipment manager and Stiles Burr video and travel coordinator for Portland (AHL). Announced the contract of director of player development Brian Skrudland will not be renewed. NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Announced they will not renew the contract of executive vice president, hockey operations/ director of scouting David Conte. TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS — Signed D Martin Marincin to a one-year contract. SOCCER Major League Soccer MLS — Suspended San Jose D Jordan Stewart one game and fined him an undisclosed amount for violent conduct in a July 5 match against Portland. Fined Houston MF Leonel Miranda an undisclosed amount for embellishment during a July 3 match against Chicago. Fined Columbus MF Federico Higuain an undisclosed amount for violating the League’s policy regarding hands to the face/head/neck of an opponent and fined New York MF Felipe Martins an undisclosed amount for embellishment in the same incident during a July 4 match. Fined New York City MF Mehdi Ballouchy an undisclosed amount for violating the League’s policy regarding hands to the face/head/neck of an opponent during a July 4 match against Montreal. Fined FC Dallas F Fabian Castillo an undisclosed amount for simulation in a July 4 match against New England. Fined Orlando City SC an undisclosed amount for violating the League’s Mass Confrontation Policy during its July 4 match against Real Salt Lake. COLUMBUS CREW SC — Loaned MF Romain Gall to Austin (USL). COLLEGE MEMPHIS — Granted men’s junior basketball F Austin Nichols a conditional release so he can transfer. PEPPERDINE — Named Cooper Fouts assistant baseball coach. ST. JOHN’S — Named Jen Leaverton women’s assistant soccer coach. Golf US Women’s Open U.S. Golf Association Thursday At Lancaster Country Club Lancaster, Pa. Purse: TBA ($4 million in 2014) Yardage: 6,483; Par: 70 (35-35) (a-amateur) Partial First Round Marina Alex 32-34—66 -4 Karrie Webb 31-35—66 -4 Amy Yang 33-34—67 -3 Mi Hyang Lee 33-35—68 -2 Morgan Pressel 36-32—68 -2 In Gee Chun 35-33—68 -2 Austin Ernst 34-34—68 -2 Sydnee Michaels 34-34—68 -2 Elizabeth Nagel 33-35—68 -2 Stacy Lewis 37-32—69 -1 Azahara Munoz 34-35—69 -1 Pernilla Lindberg 36-34—70 E Lydia Ko 33-37—70 E Jung Min Lee 36-34—70 E Brittany Lang 35-35—70 E a-Emma Talley 34-36—70 E Shiho Oyama 38-32—70 E Ai Suzuki 34-36—70 E Laura Davies 36-34—70 E Jaye Marie Green 36-35—71 +1 Ryann O’Toole 35-36—71 +1 Ayako Uehara 37-34—71 +1 Sakura Yokomine 36-35—71 +1 John Deere Classic PGA Tour Thursday At TPC Deere Run Silvis, Ill. Purse: $4.7 million Yardage: 7,268; Par: 71 (35-36) First Round Justin Thomas 31-32—63 Nicholas Thompson 32-31—63 Charles Howell III 31-33—64 Luke Guthrie 32-32—64 Robert Garrigus 31-34—65 Daniel Summerhays 33-32—65 Steve Stricker 31-34—65 Shawn Stefani 31-34—65 Steven Alker 32-33—65 Spencer Levin 33-33—66 Boo Weekley 31-35—66 Michael Thompson 34-32—66 Robert Streb 31-35—66 Tom Gillis 33-33—66 Will Wilcox 33-33—66 Brian Stuard 33-33—66 Scott Pinckney 33-33—66 Carl Pettersson 33-33—66 Zach Johnson 33-33—66 Tyrone Van Aswegen 32-34—66 Jonas Blixt 32-35—67 Scott Piercy 34-33—67 Alex Cejka 32-35—67 Vijay Singh 36-31—67 -8 -8 -7 -7 -6 -6 -6 -6 -6 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -4 -4 -4 -4 Saturday, July 11, 2015 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 25 SPORTS BRIEFS/AUTO RACING Crafton wins 9th Truck Series race The Associated Press A DAM HUNGER /AP A young fan cheers while waiting for the ticker-tape parade to celebrate the U.S. women’s soccer team’s World Cup victory in New York on Friday. Briefly NYC honors US women’s team with flag, ticker-tape parade From Wire Reports NEW YORK — Officials say they’ve unfurled the world’s largest free-flying American flag from the George Washington Bridge as a tribute to the World Cup soccer champions. The 450-pound flag was flown Friday as New York City threw a ticker-tape parade for the players. Its stripes are about 5 feet wide. The stars measure about 4 feet in diameter. It’s hung yearly for Flag Day on the bridge that connects New York City with New Jersey. “Jersey girls” played a big role in the victory over Japan on Sunday. The game featured a hat trick by Delran native Carli Lloyd, a former Rutgers player. Tobin Heath, of Basking Ridge, scored another goal. The team also includes midfielder Heather O’Reilly, from East Brunswick, and defender Christie Rampone, from Point Pleasant. FIFA official will be extradited BERN, Switzerland — One of the seven FIFA officials arrested in Zurich as part of an American corruption probe has agreed to be extradited to the United States, Swiss authorities said Friday. Switzerland’s Federal Office of Justice didn’t identify the official involved, saying in a statement that he “wished not to be named at the moment.” The official, who initially had contested his extradition, agreed to be extradited on Thursday afternoon. The office said it approved his extradition immediately but that, in keeping with its usual practice, it would not give details of when he would be handed over. Under Swiss law, he must be collected by a U.S. police escort and taken to the United States within 10 days. The seven men arrested in raids on a luxury hotel May 27 in Zurich, where FIFA has its headquarters, included current and former members of FIFA’s executive committee. The United States submitted a formal request for their extradition at the beginning of July. The official who has agreed to be extradited is accused of accepting bribes totaling millions of dollars in connection with the sale of marketing rights to various sports marketing firms and keeping the money for himself, the Swiss justice office said. Those rights were related to the broadcast of World Cup qualifiers, regional tournaments and continental championships in North and South America. Goodell: Brady decision ‘soon’ NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said a decision on Tom Brady’s appeal of his four-game suspension “is coming soon” and could happen as soon as next week, according to CNBC. Goodell made his comments to CNBC on Thursday while attending a tech and business conference in Sun Valley, Idaho. Goodell will decide Brady’s fate after declining a request in May by the NFL Players Association to recuse himself and appoint a neutral arbitrator to hear the case. Brady, the four-time Super Bowl-winning quarterback, was suspended for the first four games of the 2015 season after being implicated in the Wells Report that found the Patriots had used underinflated balls in the AFC Championship Game against the Indianapolis Colts in January. Brady is hoping to have his suspension erased or reduced. NCAA drops ban on SC events INDIANAPOLIS — The NCAA will end a nearly 15-year ban on South Carolina hosting sanctioned championship events following the decision to remove the Confederate flag from the state’s capitol grounds. Gov. Nikki Haley signed the legislation Thursday. Within minutes of announcement, NCAA Board of Governors Chairman Kirk Schulz issued a statement commending South Carolina’s lawmakers for taking the action. The ban applied to all championship events with pre-determined host sites, such as the men’s basketball tournament. Events that were assigned to home teams, such as the baseball tournament, were exempt from the ban. SPARTA, Ky. — Matt Crafton earned his ninth career NASCAR Camping World Truck Series victory Thursday at Kentucky Speedway in a race stopped early because of a wreck that damaged the catch fence. NASCAR called the race with five laps to go after Ben Kennedy’s truck clipped and bent portions of the catch fence in Turn 1. Kennedy’s truck lifted off the ground and slid on top of the SAFER barrier after making contact with the trucks of David Gilliland and John Wes Townley. Kennedy is the 23Crafton year-old son of International Speedway Corporation CEO Lesa France Kennedy and great-grandson of NASCAR founder Bill France Sr. He was evaluated and released from the infield care center shortly after the accident. No fans were injured, NASCAR spokesman Kerry Tharp said. “I was coming down the front straightaway and I heard ‘clear’ (on the radio),” Kennedy said. “I guess (Gilliland) had a run on the outside. As soon as I heard clear I wanted to get a good arc into the corner so I started heading up toward the wall, got hit in the right rear and I guess the rest is really history. “I ended up on top of the wall for a while. You don’t really know what to expect being up there. Going down from the wall to the ground was a pretty hard hit as well.” The car damaged two support poles that will need to be replaced, and Tharp said the repairs would take at least 90 minutes. Kentucky Speedway is scheduled to host an XFINITY Series race Friday and the Sprint Cup Series on Saturday. “The fence performed exactly the way it’s designed to perform,” Kentucky Speedway general manager Mark Simendinger said. “We’ve got experts on standby who are over there repairing it as we speak. It should be good as new in a matter of hours.” Thursday’s incident occurred three days after Austin Dillon’s car went airborne and smashed into the catch fence at the end of the Sprint Cup race at Daytona International Speedway. Five fans were injured in that incident. Dillon walked away from the crash. “It’s a perfect storm,” Crafton said. “I have no idea what happened there. I definitely think NASCAR made the right call in calling it. There were two or three poles taken out, and for the safety of the fans and everybody, if something did happen it could be even worse. They made the right call there. We’re going fast. Stuff does happen. It was really good to see that Ben got out and walked away under his own power.” Crafton, the two-time defending series champion, had passed Erik Jones for the lead on a restart with six laps to go. Jones finished second, followed by Ryan Blaney, Daniel Suarez and Timothy Peters. Intermittent rain showers earlier in the day canceled practice and qualifying, and the starting lineup was set according to owner points entering the race. That handed the pole position to Crafton. PAGE 26 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, July 11, 2015 US WOMEN’S OPEN/TOUR DE FRANCE Park joins two others atop field BY BOB LENTZ The Associated Press LANCASTER, Pa. — Jane Park made a birdie and four pars Friday morning, moving into a tie for the lead after the first round of the rain-delayed U.S. Women’s Open. Park is tied with Karrie Webb and Marina Alex at 4-under 66. Na Yeon Choi, the 2012 U.S. Open winner, and Amy Yang are a stroke back. Top-ranked Inbee Park returned to complete her round and pulled within a shot of the leaders before a bogey at No. 17 left her two shots behind and in a pack of eight players at 68. Fifty-five golfers were forced to complete their first rounds starting 6:45 a.m. Friday, hours after play was suspended Thursday evening because of a strong storm that pounded Lancaster Country Club with high winds and heavy rain. Jane Park shrugged off the delay and early start, pleased with her 1-under run through the last five holes. “It’s a good way to start the day,” the 2004 U.S. Amateur champ said. She was at 3 under through 13 holes when play was halted. The 28-year-old American got off to a quick start when play resumed, making a 15-foot downhill putt for birdie at the par-4, 14th to tie for the lead. She saved par at the 17th by hitting to within two feet from a bunker. But she nearly gave a stroke back at the 437-yard, par-4 uphill 18th. She hit driver, 3-wood and still couldn’t get her ball close to the hole. She chipped close with her third shot and drained a testy 2-footer for par. “At 18, I haven’t been able to reach the hole all week,” she said after her approach hit a few paces on the green, only to roll back off the front. She recovered by hitting her chip close and closing out the par. Then, she shifted her focus quickly to the second round, which she started an hour after finishing the first. “It’s the luck of the draw,” she said, “People have to deal with it. And whoever can deal with it best should come out pretty well.” G ENE J. PUSKAR /AP Co-leader Jane Park had to finish her round Friday after storms suspended play Thursday afternoon during the first round of the U.S. Women’s Open. L AURENT CIPRIANI /AP Eritrea’s Daniel Teklehaimanot, wearing the best climber’s dotted jersey, speeds downhill Friday during the seventh stage of the Tour de France covering 118.4 miles from Livarot to Fougeres, France. Cavendish wins 7th stage Froome inherits, retains overall lead BY JEROME PUGMIRE The Associated Press FOUGERES, France — British rider Mark Cavendish won the sun-soaked seventh stage of the Tour de France in a sprint finish on Friday, while countryman Chris Froome retained the overall lead as he bids to win the race for a second time. This time there was no crash near the finish, like the one on Thursday’s sixth stage that cost German rider Tony Martin a broken collarbone, forcing him to withdraw while wearing the race leader’s yellow jersey. Cavendish, seeking his first Tour stage win since 2013 after crashing out of last year’s race, timed his attack to perfection to catch German sprinter Andre Greipel near the line to clinch his 26th career Tour stage win. “I’m super happy,” Cavendish said. “Long time since I’ve won on the Tour de France.” Peter Sagan of Slovakia, who is bidding to win the best sprinter’s green jersey for the fourth straight year, was third. It was a fitting win for Cavendish, who is Martin’s teammate on the Etixx-Quick Step team. Sagan, who is not a main Tour contender, is second overall. American rider Tejay Van Garderen, an outsider for the Tour win who has excellent climbing skills, is third, 13 seconds behind Froome. The stage featured no yellow jersey as Froome, the 2013 Tour champion, elected not to wear it as a mark of respect for Martin, who successfully underwent an operation early Friday. “That’s not the way to get the yellow jer- sey due to someone else’s misfortunes,” Froome said. “I was second on the GC (general classification) so there was no way to wear it.” Cavendish said before the stage that the team’s minds were elsewhere. “It was very emotional this morning,” Cavendish said. “I could feel such devastation; it’s kind of a weird feeling.” The stage started from Livarot — a town in the Normandy region which has a cheese of the same name — and passed through the Calvados region, home to the famed apple brandy drink, and ended 118 miles later in Fougeres, nestled in the Brittany region. Two-time Tour winner Alberto Contador fell off his bike before the start line but got back on to take the start. Within two minutes of the stage start, five riders broke away. Eritrean rider Daniel Teklehaimanot, wearing the best climber’s polka dot jersey, was joined by Frenchmen Anthony Delaplace and Brice Feillu, Croatian Kristjian Durasek and Spaniard Luis Angel Mate. Teklehaimanot took an extra point in his quest to win the King of the Mountains jersey when he was the first to reach the top of the Cote de Canapville — the stage’s only recognized climb. He was the first of the front five to be caught some 20 miles from the line, followed by Durasek and Delaplace. That left just Mate and Feillu in front, who were reeled in with about 6.8 miles to go. Once again, Van Garderen’s BMC team led the main pack as it approached the finish, with three of Froome’s Team Sky teammates parked at the front. PETER D EJONG /AP Britain’s Mark Cavendish celebrates as he wins the seventh stage. Then, the main riders eased up and let the sprinters go. Norwegian sprinter Alexander Kristoff attacked first, with about 300 meters to go, and then Greipel surged past him on the left. But this time Cavendish answered well to deny Greipel a third stage win on this year’s race. •STA Saturday, July 11, 2015 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 27 NBA LeBron agrees to one-year deal with Cavs BY TOM WITHERS The Associated Press CLEVELAND — There was no need for a heartfelt letter this summer. LeBron James isn’t going anywhere. This decision was easy. Just shy of the one-year anniversary of his celebrated homecoming, James agreed to terms on a one-year, $23 million contract, two people familiar with the negotiations told the Associated Press on Thursday. The deal includes a James $24 million player option for 2016-17, said the people who spoke on condition of anonymity because James has not yet signed the contract. That will be done soon enough as the four-time MVP has a busy schedule over the next few weeks to promote a new comedy film in which he portrays himself. James is hosting a VIP screening for family and friends in Akron on Friday, where he’ll walk the red carpet with the other stars of “Trainwreck,” an R-rated movie he filmed last summer shortly after announcing he was returning to the Cavs. TONY D EJAK /AP A fan poses for a photo in front of a billboard featuring Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James before Game 3 of basketball’s NBA Finals in Cleveland. Two people familiar with the negotiations say LeBron James has agreed to a one-year, $23 million contract with the Cavaliers for next season. The deal includes a player option for 2016-17. Unlike last July 11, when his essay in Sports Illustrated touched Cleveland fans and changed the NBA’s landscape, James wasn’t the star attraction during this summer’s free agency period. DeAndre Jordan and others took care of all the drama as James went on vacation in the Bahamas with close friends Dwyane Wade, Chris Paul and Carmelo Anthony. James ended any suspense or speculation about his future with Cleveland by saying several times during the past season that he intends to end his career with the Cavs. This is the first time since 2006 that James will re-sign with a team. On two previous occasions as a free agent he left for another team, signing with Miami in 2010 and Cleveland in 2014. With more experienced players and perhaps a few new ones, there’s no reason why the Cavs won’t be in the title chase again. James’ skills have shown no signs of erosion, and owner Dan Gilbert has shown a willingness to shell out major money to keep his biggest star surrounded with quality players. And while his agreement with the Cavs is not a surprise, it does give him future flexibility and the ability to make more money next summer when the league’s new TV deal kicks in. The $24 billion package is expected to escalate the salary cap by millions. Briefly Lakers officially trade for 2-time All-Star Hibbert The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — After striking out in free agency, the Los Angeles Lakers needed a big man. The Indiana Pacers had one to spare, and he already loves Hollywood. The Lakers acquired Roy Hibbert on Thursday in exchange for a future second-round draft pick, formally ending the two-time AllStar center’s seven-year tenure in Indiana. The Lakers welcomed Hibbert into their ample salary cap space after failing to interest the NBA’s biggest free agents, including LaMarcus Aldridge, DeAndre Jordan and Greg Monroe. Los Angeles is coming off the worst season in the 16-time champion franchise’s history, and Hibbert could be a stopgap in its rebuilding or a piece of a new foundation. “We’re happy to add a veteran big man to the roster,” Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak said. “Roy is a proven All-Star center that will help improve our front line. In addition, he is a consummate professional, and we look forward to having him on the team.” The Pacers dumped their 7foot-2 center and his $15.5 million salary for the upcoming season after Hibbert spent his entire career with Indiana, averaging 11.1 points, 6.8 rebounds and 1.9 blocked shots while reaching two Eastern Conference finals. He was an All-Star in 2012 and 2014. AJ M AST/AP After striking out in free agency, the Los Angeles Lakers needed a big man. They found their man in former two-time All-Star Roy Hibbert, acquiring the defensive stalewart from the Indiana Pacers in exchange for a future second-round draft pick. Hibbert is among the NBA’s top defensive centers, but the Queens native’s offensive game has foundered at times despite numbers that are roughly comparable to his best seasons. He has never averaged more than 12.8 points per game, and he put up 10.6 points and 7.1 rebounds per game last season while making 44.6 percent of his shots. Hibbert likely will get as much playing time as he can handle with the Lakers, who are still assembling a roster around Kobe Bryant. Backup center Robert Sacre is the Lakers’ second longest-tenured player, while big men Jordan Hill and Carlos Boozer are still unsigned. The trade highlighted a busy day for the Lakers, who also formally signed guard Lou Williams to his three-year, $21 million contract and inked deals with veteran forward Brandon Bass and second-round draft pick Anthony Brown. In other NBA news: The Portland Trail Blazers are forcing the Oklahoma City Thunder to make a big decision with center Enes Kanter. The Blazers have signed Kanter to a four-year, $70 million offer sheet, a person with direct knowledge of the situation told The Associated Press. Kanter is a restricted free agent, which leaves the Thunder three days to decide whether they will match the offer and retain their big man or let him go to Portland. The deal puts pressure on the Thunder, who face the prospect of star forward Kevin Durant’s free agency in 2016. There is pressure on Presti to surround Durant with the talent necessary to compete in the powerful Western Conference and convince their centerpiece to remain in Oklahoma City for the long term. But matching the massive offer will push the small-market Thunder well over the luxury tax line and send the total payroll skyrocketing past $120 million. That’s a big number for a franchise that let star guard James Harden leave in part because of the costs it would have incurred to retain him, but Presti told The Oklahoman that they fully intended to match. “Enes expressed his desire to be a part of the Thunder in our meeting with him yesterday and we have planned in advance should he receive an offer such as the one that has been reported,” Presti told the newspaper. The Mavericks have acquired center Zaza Pachulia from Milwaukee in a move for a potential starter after missing out on DeAndre Jordan in free agency. Dallas sent a future secondround pick to the Bucks on Thursday for the 31-year-old veteran from the Republic of Georgia. Pachulia started 45 of his 73 games for Milwaukee last season, averaging 8.3 points and 6.8 rebounds per game. The 12-year veteran has 317 starts in 815 games, with career averages of 7.0 points and 5.6 rebounds. PAGE 28 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, July 11, 2015 SCOREBOARD American League East Division W L 46 39 43 42 44 44 43 45 41 45 Central Division Kansas City 50 33 Minnesota 46 40 Detroit 44 41 Cleveland 41 44 Chicago 39 44 West Division Houston 49 39 Los Angeles 46 39 Texas 41 44 Seattle 40 46 Oakland 39 49 New York Baltimore Toronto Tampa Bay Boston Tigers 4, Twins 2 Detroit Pct GB .541 — .506 3 .500 3½ .489 4½ .477 5½ ab r h bi Dozier 2b 4 1 0 0 Mauer 1b 4 0 1 0 Plouffe 3b 4 1 1 1 Sano dh 4 0 0 0 TrHntr rf 3 0 1 1 Nunez ss 4 0 1 0 Hicks cf 3 0 1 0 KSuzuk c 3 0 1 0 DaSntn pr 0 0 0 0 SRonsn lf 3 0 0 0 ERosar ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 33 4 9 4 Totals 33 2 6 2 Detroit 100 001 020—4 Minnesota 000 020 000—2 E—Castellanos (5). DP—Minnesota 2. LOB—Detroit 2, Minnesota 8. 2B—Kinsler (18), Cespedes (26), Gose (13). HR—Kinsler (3). S—K.Suzuki. IP H R ER BB SO Detroit Price W,9-2 8 5 2 0 3 8 Soria S,20-22 1 1 0 0 0 0 Minnesota 8 4 4 0 4 Pelfrey L,5-6 72⁄3 2 ⁄3 1 0 0 0 0 Boyer 2 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 O’Rourke WP—Price 2. T—3:01. A—29,724 (39,021). .602 — .535 5½ .518 7 .482 10 .470 11 .557 — .541 1½ .482 6½ .465 8 .443 10 National League East Division W L Pct GB Washington 46 38 .548 — New York 44 42 .512 3 Atlanta 42 44 .488 5 Miami 36 50 .419 11 Philadelphia 29 59 .330 19 Central Division St. Louis 56 30 .651 — Pittsburgh 50 35 .588 5½ Chicago 46 38 .548 9 Cincinnati 38 45 .458 16½ Milwaukee 37 50 .425 19½ West Division Los Angeles 49 38 .563 — San Francisco 43 43 .500 5½ Arizona 42 42 .500 5½ San Diego 39 48 .448 10 Colorado 36 49 .424 12 Wednesday’s games Minnesota 5, Baltimore 3 Detroit 5, Seattle 4 N.Y. Yankees 5, Oakland 4 Cleveland 4, Houston 2 Kansas City 9, Tampa Bay 7 Chicago White Sox 7, Toronto 6, 11 innings Milwaukee 6, Atlanta 5 N.Y. Mets 4, San Francisco 1 Pittsburgh 5, San Diego 2 Cincinnati at Washington, ppd., rain Boston 6, Miami 3 Arizona 7, Texas 4 St. Louis 6, Chicago Cubs 5 L.A. Angels 3, Colorado 2 L.A. Dodgers 5, Philadelphia 0 Thursday’s games N.Y. Yankees 6, Oakland 2 Kansas City 8, Tampa Bay 3 Chicago White Sox 2, Toronto 0 Cleveland 3, Houston 1 Detroit 4, Minnesota 2 Seattle 7, L.A. Angels 2 St. Louis 4, Pittsburgh 1 Miami 2, Cincinnati 0 Colorado 5, Atlanta 3 L.A. Dodgers 6, Philadelphia 0 Friday’s games Houston at Tampa Bay N.Y. Yankees at Boston Oakland at Cleveland Detroit at Minnesota Toronto at Kansas City L.A. Angels at Seattle Chicago White Sox at Chicago Cubs St. Louis at Pittsburgh Washington at Baltimore Arizona at N.Y. Mets Cincinnati at Miami San Diego at Texas Atlanta at Colorado Milwaukee at L.A. Dodgers Philadelphia at San Francisco Saturday’s games Toronto (Buehrle 9-5) at Kansas City (C.Young 7-4) Detroit (Simon 8-5) at Minnesota (P.Hughes 7-6) Houston (Keuchel 11-3) at Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 4-5) Oakland (Bassitt 0-2) at Cleveland (Carrasco 10-7) N.Y. Yankees (Nova 1-2) at Boston (E.Rodriguez 4-2) L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 7-6) at Seattle (Iwakuma 0-1) Chicago White Sox (Sale 7-4) at Chicago Cubs (Lester 4-7) Arizona (Corbin 1-0) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 7-6) Atlanta (Wisler 3-1) at Colorado (J.De La Rosa 6-3) Cincinnati (DeSclafani 5-6) at Miami (Latos 3-6) St. Louis (Lackey 7-5) at Pittsburgh (Burnett 7-3) Washington (Zimmermann 7-5) at Baltimore (Mi.Gonzalez 7-5) San Diego (Shields 7-3) at Texas (Lewis 8-4) Philadelphia (D.Buchanan 0-5) at San Francisco (Vogelsong 6-6) Milwaukee (Jungmann 3-1) at L.A. Dodgers (Undecided) Sunday’s games Houston (McCullers 4-2) at Tampa Bay (M.Moore 0-0) Oakland (Gray 9-3) at Cleveland (Kluber 4-9) N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 8-2) at Boston (Miley 8-7) Detroit (Greene 4-6) at Minnesota (Gibson 7-6) Toronto (Doubront 1-0) at Kansas City (Volquez 8-4) L.A. Angels (Heaney 2-0) at Seattle (T.Walker 7-6) Arizona (R.De La Rosa 6-4) at N.Y. Mets (Niese 4-8) Cincinnati (Cueto 6-5) at Miami (Haren 6-5) Washington (Fister 3-4) at Baltimore (W.Chen 4-4) Chicago White Sox (Quintana 4-8) at Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 9-5) San Diego (T.Ross 5-7) at Texas (Gallardo 7-7) Philadelphia (Billingsley 1-2) at San Francisco (Heston 8-5) Atlanta (Banuelos 1-0) at Colorado (Bettis 4-4) Milwaukee (Lohse 5-10) at L.A. Dodgers (B.Anderson 5-5) St. Louis (Cooney 0-0) at Pittsburgh (Liriano 5-6) Minnesota Kinsler 2b Cespds lf VMrtnz dh JMrtnz rf Avila c Cstllns 3b Romine 3b Krauss 1b Gose cf JIglesis ss ab 4 4 4 4 4 3 1 3 3 3 r 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 h 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 1 bi 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Indians 3, Astros 1 Houston JEFF H AYNES/AP White Sox left fielder Melky Cabrera, right, Blue Jays catcher Russell Martin, center, and umpire Chad Fairchild watch Cabrera’s solo home run during the sixth inning of Thursday’s game in Chicago. Thursday Yankees 6, Athletics 2 Oakland New York ab r h bi ab r h bi Burns cf 4 0 0 0 Ellsury cf 4 1 1 2 Vogt c 4 0 0 0 Gardnr lf 5 1 3 1 Zobrist 2b 4 0 0 0 Teixeir dh 4 0 1 1 Reddck rf 3 1 1 0 BMcCn c 3 0 0 0 BButler dh 4 1 1 1 GJones 1b 4 0 0 0 I.Davis 1b 2 0 0 0 Gregrs ss 3 0 0 0 Lawrie 3b 3 0 0 0 CYoung rf 3 1 0 0 Canha lf 3 0 1 1 Drew 2b 3 1 1 0 Semien ss 3 0 0 0 Figuero 3b 4 2 2 0 Totals 30 2 3 2 Totals 33 6 8 4 Oakland 020 000 000—2 New York 101 200 02x—6 E—Semien (28), B.McCann (3). DP— New York 1. LOB—Oakland 3, New York 8. 2B—B.Butler (16), Canha (8), Figueroa 2 (2). HR—Gardner (10). IP H R ER BB SO Oakland Chavez L,4-9 5 7 4 4 3 3 Abad 1 0 0 0 0 1 O’Flaherty 1 0 0 0 1 1 Fe.Rodriguez 1 1 2 0 1 2 New York 2 2 1 1 6 Tanaka W,5-3 72⁄3 Shreve H,6 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 Warren WP—Tanaka. T—2:55. A—40,084 (49,638). Cardinals 4, Pirates 1 St. Louis Pittsburgh ab r h bi ab r h bi Bourjos cf 4 1 0 0 GPolnc rf 3 0 1 0 MCrpnt 2b-3b 4 1 2 2 NWalkr 2b 4 0 1 0 JhPerlt ss 4 0 0 0 Caminr p 0 0 0 0 Heywrd rf 2 0 0 0 McCtch cf 4 1 1 1 Molina c 4 0 2 2 Kang 3b 3 0 0 0 Rynlds 3b-1b 3 0 0 0 Cervelli c 4 0 1 0 Maness p 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz 1b 4 0 0 0 Rosnthl p 0 0 0 0 Mercer ss 3 0 0 0 Grichk lf 4 1 1 0 SRdrgz lf-2b 2 0 0 0 Scrggs 1b 2 1 0 0 Locke p 0 0 0 0 Wong ph-2b 1 0 1 0 Lmrdzz ph 1 0 0 0 CMrtnz p 2 0 0 0 Worley p 0 0 0 0 Choate p 0 0 0 0 Ishikaw ph-lf 1 0 1 0 DJhnsn 1b 1 0 0 0 Totals 31 4 6 4 Totals 29 1 5 1 St. Louis 000 040 000—4 Pittsburgh 000 000 001—1 E—Mercer (5). DP—St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 1. LOB—St. Louis 6, Pittsburgh 5. 2B—G.Polanco (15), Ishikawa (1). HR— McCutchen (11). SB—Molina (1). CS— Grichuk (1). S—C.Martinez, Locke. IP H R ER BB SO St. Louis 4 0 0 2 8 C.Martinez W,10-3 71⁄3 1 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 Choate 1 ⁄3 1 1 1 0 0 Maness Rosenthal S,26-27 1 0 0 0 0 2 Pittsburgh Locke L,5-5 5 5 4 1 3 5 Worley 3 1 0 0 0 2 Caminero 1 0 0 0 0 2 Maness pitched to 1 batter in the 9th. HBP—by C.Martinez (Kang), by Locke (Bourjos), by Caminero (Wong). WP—C.Martinez. T—2:52 (Delay: 0:36). A—35,183 (38,362). Royals 8, Rays 3 Tampa Bay Kansas City ab r h bi ab r h bi Jaso lf 4 0 1 1 AEscor ss 5 1 1 0 Sizemr rf 4 0 0 1 Hosmer 1b 4 2 2 1 Longori 3b 4 0 2 0 L.Cain cf 3 2 1 2 Loney 1b 3 0 0 0 Orland lf 0 0 0 0 Forsyth 2b 4 0 0 0 KMorls dh 3 0 1 1 DeJess dh 2 1 1 0 S.Perez c 4 1 1 2 JButler ph-dh 0 0 0 0 Infante 2b 4 1 1 0 ACarer ss 4 1 1 0 Rios rf 4 1 2 0 Kiermr cf 3 1 1 0 Cuthert 3b 4 0 2 2 Rivera c 3 0 0 1 JDyson lf-cf 4 0 2 0 Totals 31 3 6 3 Totals 35 8 13 8 Tampa Bay 000 030 000—3 Kansas City 310 030 01x—8 E—Cuthbert (1). DP—Kansas City 1. LOB—Tampa Bay 8, Kansas City 5. 2B— A.Cabrera (15), Kiermaier (17), Hosmer (16), K.Morales (23). 3B—Cuthbert (1). HR—L.Cain (8), S.Perez (14). SB—L.Cain (17), J.Dyson (11). SF—Jaso, Sizemore, K.Morales. IP H R ER BB SO Tampa Bay Karns L,4-5 6 9 7 7 0 5 Geltz 1 0 0 0 0 1 Colome 1 4 1 1 0 0 Kansas City Ventura W,4-6 5 4 3 3 3 4 Finnegan 1 1 0 0 1 2 Madson 1 1 0 0 0 0 Hochevar 1 0 0 0 1 0 K.Herrera 1 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Karns (L.Cain). WP—Karns, Ventura. T—2:57. A—32,308 (37,903). Mariners 7, Angels 2 Los Angeles Seattle ab r h bi ab r h bi Giavtll 2b 4 0 0 0 Morrsn 1b 5 2 1 1 Calhon rf 5 1 2 1 Cano 2b 5 1 2 1 Trout cf 4 0 1 0 N.Cruz dh 5 0 3 1 Pujols 1b 4 0 0 0 Seager 3b 4 0 3 0 Aybar ss 4 1 2 0 S.Smith lf 5 1 2 1 Joyce lf 3 0 1 0 Ackley cf 5 2 2 0 Cron dh 3 0 2 0 Trumo rf 2 0 2 0 C.Perez c 3 0 0 0 Gutirrz pr-rf 1 0 1 0 Fthrstn 3b 2 0 0 0 BMiller ss 3 1 1 1 ENavrr ph 1 0 0 0 Zunino c 2 0 2 2 Freese 3b 1 0 0 1 Totals 34 2 8 2 Totals 37 7 19 7 Los Angeles 000 000 011—2 Seattle 110 200 03x—7 E—Freese (5). DP—Los Angeles 1. LOB—Los Angeles 9, Seattle 11. 2B—Calhoun (15), Cano (22), Trumbo (3). HR— Calhoun (10), Morrison (12). S—Zunino. SF—B.Miller, Zunino. IP H R ER BB SO Los Angeles Richards L,9-6 51⁄3 12 4 4 1 3 C.Ramos 12⁄3 2 0 0 0 0 1 ⁄3 2 2 2 0 0 Morin 2 J.Alvarez ⁄3 3 1 1 1 0 Seattle F.Hernandez W,11-5 7 5 0 0 2 6 Rodney 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 ⁄3 1 1 1 0 1 Nuno 1 Farquhar ⁄3 1 0 0 2 0 1 Ca.Smith S,6-7 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 WP—Richards. PB—C.Perez. T—3:14. A—28,131 (47,574). Rockies 5, Braves 3 Atlanta Colorado ab r h bi Blckmn cf 5 0 2 0 Arenad 3b 5 1 3 0 Tlwtzk ss 3 0 1 1 Descals pr-ss 0 0 0 0 WRosr 1b 5 1 1 1 CGnzlz rf 4 1 3 1 LeMahi 2b 4 0 2 0 Hundly c 4 0 2 1 Stubbs lf 3 1 1 1 Kndrck p 0 0 0 0 Hale p 1 1 1 0 Fridrch p 1 0 0 0 Oberg p 0 0 0 0 Paulsn ph 1 0 0 0 Logan p 0 0 0 0 Betncrt p 0 0 0 0 BBarns ph 1 0 0 0 Kahnle p 0 0 0 0 Axford p 0 0 0 0 Totals 34 3 10 3 Totals 37 5 16 5 Atlanta 000 030 000—3 Colorado 220 010 00x—5 E—Axford (1). DP—Atlanta 2, Colorado 2. LOB—Atlanta 7, Colorado 11. 2B—J.Peterson (14), C.Johnson (6), Arenado (20), W.Rosario (10), Ca.Gonzalez 3 (16), Hundley (15). HR—Stubbs (4). S— Brigham. SF—Maybin, Tulowitzki. IP H R ER BB SO Atlanta A.Wood 0 0 0 0 0 0 Brigham L,0-1 4 10 4 4 1 1 Foltynewicz 2 3 1 1 0 4 D.Carpenter 1 2 0 0 0 1 Aardsma 1 1 0 0 1 1 Colorado K.Kendrick 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Hale W,3-4 12⁄3 Friedrich 12⁄3 5 3 3 1 0 2 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 Oberg 2 ⁄3 1 0 0 0 2 Logan H,15 1 Betancourt H,8 1 ⁄3 2 0 0 0 3 Kahnle H,6 1 0 0 0 0 1 Axford S,15-16 1 0 0 0 0 2 T—3:13 (Delay: 2:06). A—30,334 (50,398). JPetrsn 2b Maybin cf Markks rf KJhnsn lf Uribe 3b Przyns c CJhnsn 1b ASmns ss A.Wood p Brighm p JGoms ph Fltynw p EPerez ph DCrpnt p Ardsm p Ciriaco ph ab 5 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 r 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 h 2 1 1 2 0 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 bi 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 White Sox 2, Blue Jays 0 Toronto Chicago ab r h bi ab r h bi Travis 2b 4 0 2 0 Eaton cf 4 1 1 0 Dnldsn 3b 4 0 0 0 Abreu dh 4 0 2 0 Bautist rf 4 0 0 0 MeCarr lf 4 1 1 1 Smoak 1b 3 0 0 0 LaRoch 1b 4 0 0 0 RuMrtn c 3 0 1 0 AvGarc rf 3 0 0 0 DNavrr dh 3 0 0 0 Gillaspi 3b 3 0 0 0 Pillar cf 3 0 0 0 Soto c 1 0 1 0 Carrer lf 3 0 0 0 CSnchz 2b 3 0 0 0 Goins ss 2 0 1 0 GBckh ss 3 0 0 0 Totals 29 0 4 0 Totals 29 2 5 1 Toronto 000 000 000—0 Chicago 000 002 00x—2 E—Smoak (1). DP—Toronto 1, Chicago 2. LOB—Toronto 3, Chicago 5. 3B—Eaton (7). HR—Me.Cabrera (4). IP H R ER BB SO Toronto Dickey L,3-10 7 4 2 2 2 6 Tepera 1 1 0 0 0 1 Chicago Samardzija W,6-4 9 4 0 0 1 5 WP—Tepera. PB—Ru.Martin 2. T—2:15. A—23,298 (40,615). Cleveland ab r h bi ab r h bi Altuve 2b 4 0 1 0 Kipnis 2b 4 0 0 0 Tucker rf 3 0 0 0 Lindor ss 4 1 2 1 Correa ss 4 0 1 0 Brantly cf-lf 4 1 2 0 Valuen 3b 3 0 0 0 Raburn dh 3 1 2 1 Presley pr 0 0 0 0 Moss ph-dh 1 0 0 0 Gattis dh 4 0 0 0 CSantn 1b 3 0 2 1 ClRsms lf 3 0 1 0 YGoms c 4 0 1 0 Conger c 3 1 1 1 DvMrp rf 3 0 0 0 Singltn 1b 1 0 0 0 Urshela 3b 3 0 0 0 MGnzlz ph-1b1 0 0 0 Aviles lf 3 0 0 0 Mrsnck cf 3 0 0 0 Bourn cf 0 0 0 0 Totals 29 1 4 1 Totals 32 3 9 3 Houston 001 000 000—1 Cleveland 000 003 00x—3 DP—Houston 1, Cleveland 1. LOB— Houston 4, Cleveland 7. 2B—Brantley (24), Raburn (13). 3B—C.Santana (1). HR—Conger (5), Lindor (2). CS—Tucker (1). IP H R ER BB SO Houston Oberholtzer L,2-2 5 7 3 3 1 3 J.Fields 1 1 0 0 1 1 Sipp 1 0 0 0 0 0 Gregerson 1 1 0 0 0 0 Cleveland 2 3 1 1 2 1 Co.Anderson W,2-1 6 ⁄3 2 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 Rzepczynski H,12 2 ⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 B.Shaw H,11 Allen S,18-19 1 1 0 0 1 0 Oberholtzer pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. T—2:49. A—11,496 (36,856). Marlins 2, Reds 0 Cincinnati Miami ab r h bi DGordn 2b 3 2 2 0 Yelich cf-lf 3 0 0 0 Hchvrr ss 3 0 1 0 Bour 1b 3 0 1 1 Morse lf 2 0 0 0 Capps p 0 0 0 0 Rojas ph-3b 1 0 0 0 Dietrch 3b 2 0 1 0 ARams p 0 0 0 0 Gillespi rf-cf 3 0 0 0 Mathis c 3 0 0 0 Frnndz p 2 0 0 0 ISuzuki ph-rf 1 0 0 0 Totals 32 0 7 0 Totals 26 2 5 1 Cincinnati 000 000 000—0 Miami 100 010 00x—2 DP—Cincinnati 2, Miami 2. LOB—Cincinnati 5, Miami 6. 2B—Votto (15), Byrd (8), Bour (6), Dietrich (4). SB—D.Gordon 3 (33). CS—D.Gordon (12). IP H R ER BB SO Cincinnati Lorenzen L,3-4 6 5 2 2 4 5 Badenhop 1 0 0 0 0 0 Mattheus 1 0 0 0 1 1 Miami Fernandez W,2-0 7 6 0 0 0 9 Capps H,7 1 0 0 0 0 1 A.Ramos S,14-17 1 1 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Lorenzen (Dietrich). T—2:31. A—25,027 (37,442). Phillips 2b Votto 1b Frazier 3b Bruce rf Byrd lf Suarez ss Brnhrt c Lornzn p Badnhp p Schmkr ph Matths p BHmltn cf ab 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 2 0 1 0 3 r 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 h 1 1 1 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 bi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Dodgers 6, Phillies 0 Philadelphia Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h bi Revere cf 4 0 1 0 Pedrsn cf 3 0 0 0 CHrndz 2b 4 0 0 0 HKndrc 2b 4 1 1 0 Franco 3b 3 0 0 0 AGnzlz 1b 4 1 1 2 Howard 1b 3 0 1 0 Grandl c 3 2 1 0 Asche lf 3 0 0 0 Ethier lf 1 1 1 0 DBrwn rf 3 0 0 0 VnSlyk lf 1 0 0 0 Galvis ss 3 0 0 0 Puig rf 4 1 2 4 Rupp c 3 0 0 0 JRollns ss 3 0 1 0 SGonzlz p 2 0 0 0 Callasp 3b 4 0 0 0 Araujo p 0 0 0 0 Greink p 3 0 0 0 Neris p 0 0 0 0 Guerrr ph 1 0 0 0 OHerrr ph 1 0 0 0 JoPerlt p 0 0 0 0 Totals 29 0 2 0 Totals 31 6 7 6 Philadelphia 000 000 000—0 Los Angeles 000 202 02x—6 LOB—Philadelphia 2, Los Angeles 6. 2B—Puig (11), J.Rollins (12). HR— A.Gonzalez (17), Puig (4). IP H R ER BB SO Philadelphia 5 4 4 2 3 S.Gonzalez L,3-3 52⁄3 1 1 1 1 1 Araujo 11⁄3 Neris 1 1 1 1 1 1 Los Angeles Greinke W,8-2 8 1 0 0 0 8 Jo.Peralta 1 1 0 0 0 1 Araujo pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. HBP—by S.Gonzalez (Ethier). T—2:14. A—41,290 (56,000). •STA Saturday, July 11, 2015 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 29 MLB Cardinals win, extend lead over Pirates St. Louis goes 5 ½ games up in NL Central; Martinez improves to 7-1 with 1.20 ERA in last 10 starts BY JOHN PERROTTO The Associated Press PITTSBURGH — Now, it’s up to the fans. Carlos Martinez made his case for inclusion on the National League All-Star team by pitching 7 1 ⁄3 scoreless innings Thursday night, and the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-1 in a matchup between the teams with the best records in the major leagues. Martinez (10-3) scattered four hits while striking out five and walking three in improving to 71 with a 1.20 ERA in his last 10 starts. The right-hander is one of the five players contending for the NL’s All-Star Final Vote. Fan voting ends Friday afternoon and the game will be played Tuesday at Cincinnati. “It’s off Carlos’ shoulders,” Cardinals manager Mike Mathney said. “Hopefully, he gets in. He’s very deserving, as are the other four guys on the ballot.” St. Louis (56-31) opened a 5 ½game lead on the Pirates in the NL Central. Pittsburgh (50-35) had its five-game winning streak snapped in the opener of a fourgame series. That was Martinez’s main concern. “The All-Star Game would be nice but I just wanted to go out and pitch as long as I could to help the team win the game,” Martinez said. “That’s my job.” Martinez did his job well. “You can see his confidence keep growing and growing because he is getting better every time out,” St. Louis catcher Yadier Molina said. “When he is throwing his fastball at 99 (mph) and his slider for strikes, too, he’s tough for anybody to hit.” The Cardinals did their scoring in the fifth inning on tworun singles by Matt Carpenter — with one out — and Molina an out later. Both hits were off Jeff Locke (5-5). Only one of the runs was earned because shortstop Jordy Mercer booted pinch-hitter Kolten Wong’s grounder for an error with none out. Carpenter and Molina finished with two hits each. Andrew McCutchen kept the Pirates from being shut out as he hit a 443-foot home run, his 11th, to center field off Seth Maness K EITH SRAKOCIC /AP St. Louis Cardinals starting pitcher Carlos Martinez throws against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the first inning of Thursday’s game in Pittsburgh. to lead off the ninth inning. That extended his career-best hitting streak to 16 games. “Martinez was working the zone, was throwing all his pitches for strikes,” McCutchen said. “We didn’t square many balls up against him, that’s for sure.” Trevor Rosenthal retired the next three hitters for his 26th save in 27 opportunities. Locke was pulled for a pinch hitter in the bottom of the fifth. He allowed five hits, struck out five and walked three after giving up two earned runs or fewer in each of his previous five starts. “In that fifth inning, I didn’t execute my pitches,” Locke said. “This is a good team we’re playing. You have to be able to execute if you’re going to beat them.” Roundup Miami’s Fernandez improves mark to 14-0 at Marlins Park The Associated Press DAVID SANTIAGO, EL NUEVO HERALD/AP Miami Marlins pitcher Jose Fernandez pitched seven innings Thursday and tied the modern record for most consecutive home victories by a starter to begin a career, helping Miami beat the Reds 2-0. Fernandez improved to 14-0 in 22 career starts at Marlins Park. MIAMI — Jose Fernandez pitched seven innings and tied the modern record for most consecutive home victories by a starter to begin a career, helping the Miami Marlins beat the Cincinnati Reds 2-0 Thursday. Fernandez won for the second time in two outings since his return from Tommy John surgery. He allowed six hits, struck out nine and improved to 14-0 in 22 career starts at Marlins Park. The only other pitcher since 1914 to win his first 14 home decisions as a starter was Johnny Allen of the Yankees in 1932-33, according to STATS. Fernandez lowered his ERA at home to 1.17. All-Star Dee Gordon stole three bases, scored both runs and broke the Marlins record for hits before the All-Star break with 119. Miami snapped a fourgame losing streak. Dodgers 6, Phillies 0: Zack Greinke allowed one hit in eight innings, extending his career-high scoreless streak to 35 2 ⁄3 innings and lowering his major league-best ERA to 1.39 in the victory over visiting Philadelphia. Adrian Gonzalez hit a two-run homer and Yasiel Puig ended an RBI drought of 51 at-bats with a two-run homer and two-run double for the NL West leaders. Greinke (8-2) struck out eight, walked none and retired his final 21 batters after giving up a leadoff single in the second by Ryan Howard. Greinke hasn’t allowed a run since June 13 at San Diego. Royals 8, Rays 3: Lorenzo Cain and Salvador Perez hit tworun homers, Yordano Ventura went five innings in his return from the disabled list, and Kansas City beat visiting Tampa Bay to finish off a four-game sweep. Ventura (4-6) allowed three runs and four hits and three walks, striking out four. It was his first start since June 12, when an elbow condition began causing numbness in his hand. White Sox 2, Blue Jays 0: Jeff Samardzija had a four-hitter, Melky Cabrera homered and host Chicago shut out Toronto. Samardzija (6-4) took a no-hitter into the sixth inning for a second straight game. It was his first complete game of the season. Yankees 6, Athletics 2: Masahiro Tanaka allowed two hits over 7 2 ⁄3 innings, Brett Gardner hit a first-inning home run and learned midgame he had been picked for his first All-Star team, and New York rallied past visiting Oakland. Tigers 4, Twins 2: Ian Kinsler had a leadoff homer, a double and three RBIs to back David Price’s eight innings as Detroit beat host Minnesota. Indians 3, Astros 1: Rookie right-hander Cody Anderson pitched three-hit ball into the seventh inning against visiting Houston, his latest splendid performance for Cleveland. Mariners 7, Angels 2: Felix Hernandez threw seven shutout innings to become the third pitcher with at least 11 wins before the All-Star break, Logan Morrison hit the first leadoff home run of his career and host Seattle beat Los Angeles. Rockies 5, Braves 3: Carlos Gonzalez hit three doubles, Nolan Arenado had three hits for the second consecutive night and Colorado beat Atlanta at rain-soaked Coors Field. PAGE 30 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Saturday, July 11, 2015 NFL McDonald faces four charges Former San Francisco DT accused of felony false imprisonment BY SUDHIN THANAWALA The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — Former San Francisco 49er defensive tackle Ray McDonald was charged with domestic violence and false imprisonment in connection with allegations he assaulted his ex-fiancée while she held their 2-month-old child, prosecutors said Thursday. McDonald was also charged with child endangerment and violating a court order, the Santa Clara County district attorney’s office said. The false imprisonment charge is a felony while the other counts are misdemeanors. He was arraigned on Thursday but did not enter a plea. He is due back in court in August. Calls to McDonald’s attorney, Steve Defilippis, were not immediately returned. Prosecutors said police responded to a domestic disturbance at a home around 4 a.m. on May 25 and found McDonald had broken into the woman’s bedroom and assaulted her while his driver tried to stop him and she tried to get away. McDonald cornered the woman in a dining room and trapped her there before she told investigators he chased her into a bathroom and repeatedly bumped her while trying to grab her cellphone, according to investigators. It continued in the bedroom, where the woman said McDonald jabbed at her head with a finger and tried to pull her off the bed. Part of the incident was caught on cellphone video the woman took. McDonald eventually left the scene, but then returned as police were interviewing the woman, whom authorities haven’t identified, before his driver sped away, prosecutors said. McDonald’s mom, LaBrina McDonald, told KNTV in San Jose it was a “simple argument that got blown out of proportion,” and the charges were “political.” McDonald was arrested later that morn- ing. He was arrested again two days later when police and the woman arrived at the home to find McDonald there in violation of a restraining order, prosecutors said. Defilippis told the San Jose Mercury News at the time that neither he nor his client had been notified about the restraining order. Citing a pattern of behavior and off-field issues, the 49ers released McDonald on Dec. 17. He was released by the Chicago Bears after his May 25 arrest. The 49ers let McDonald go just a month after Santa Clara County prosecutors declined to file charges against him in a separate domestic violence investigation stemming from an arrest on Aug. 31 while celebrating his 30th birthday at his home. Prosecutors cited conflicting versions of what happened, a lack of verifiable eyewitnesses and a lack of cooperation by the alleged victim, McDonald’s then-fiancée, in explaining their decision. M ARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ /AP Former San Francisco defensive tackle Ray McDonald was charged Thursday with domestic violence and false imprisonment in connection with allegations he assaulted his ex-fiancée while she held their 2-month-old child. QB: Lack of preparation didn’t seem to affect Stabler’s ability FROM BACK PAGE G EORGE BRICH /AP Raiders quarterback Ken Stabler, right, talks with coach John Madden on Jan. 4, 1977 in Oakland, Calif. Stabler remained the starter for the Raiders for more than seven seasons and threw for 27,938 yards over 15 seasons. Stabler first showed his professional chops in the game best known for the Immaculate Reception. Mostly forgotten was his replacing starter Daryle Lamonica and leading the Raiders to what seemed to be the winning touchdown in the fourth quarter — until Franco Harris’ spectacular catch and run won it for Pittsburgh. Oakland lost two of its first three games in the next season, 1973, scoring no touchdowns with Lamonica behind center. After a loss to archrival Kansas City, Madden gave Stabler a chance to show what he could do in practice. Stabler did enough for Madden to start him, and the Raiders beat the Cardinals, and then won four straight games after that. Stabler remained the starter for more than seven seasons, allegedly studying the game plan by the light of a jukebox — if he studied it at all. He prided himself on being able to wing it, and few quarterbacks did it better in the clutch. But for all of his bravado, Stabler was not a wild thrower. He was one of the most accurate passers of his time. Stabler’s favorite songs were playing when he died, from Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Sweet Home Alabama” to Van Morrison’s “Leaves Falling Down,” the family said. His brain and spinal cord were donated to Boston University’s Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy Center to support research into degenerative brain disease among athletes, according to the family. “He was a kind, generous and unselfish man, never turning down an autograph request or an opportunity to help someone in need,” the family said. “A great quarterback, he was an even greater father to his three girls, and grandfather to his two ‘grand snakes.’ ” The Foley, Ala., native threw for 27,938 career yards over 15 seasons, which also included stints with the Houston Oilers and New Orleans Saints. During his college career, Stabler led Alabama to an undefeated 1966 season and was chosen the Sugar Bowl MVP after a 34-7 rout of Nebraska. He also ran for a long touchdown on a rain-soaked field during the 1967 Iron Bowl to lead the Tide to a 7-3 win over Auburn. •STA Saturday, July 11, 2015 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 31 WIMBLEDON Federer returns to final for 10th time Defending champ Djokovic awaits 7-time winner LONDON — Playing the kind of untouchable tennis that has brought him 17 Grand Slam titles, Roger Federer beat Andy Murray in straight sets Friday to reach his 10th Wimbledon final and put him within one victory of a record eighth championship at the All England Club. Riding a dominant serve that produced 20 aces, keeping relentless pressure on Murray with his returns and breaking at the end of each set, Federer put on a supreme grass-court performance to outclass his British rival 7-5, 7-5, 6-4. The win sent Federer into his 26th Grand Slam final, where he will face defending champion Novak Djokovic in Sunday’s championship match. It will be a repeat of last year’s final, which Djokovic won in five sets. If anyone thought the 33-yearold Federer was past his prime, this match dispelled any of those thoughts. The second-seeded Swiss served as well as he ever has, saving one break point in the opening game of the match and never facing another the rest of the way. Federer won 70 of 81 points on K IRSTY WIGGLESWORTH /AP Roger Federer returns a shot to Andy Murray during his 7-5, 7-5, 6-4 men’s singles semifinal win on Friday. Scoreboard Friday PHOTOS BY A DRIAN D ENNIS/AP Novak Djokovic, above, gestures during his men’s singles semifinal victory over Richard Gasquet, below right, on Friday. K IRSTY WIGGLESWORTH /AP Andy Murray wipes his face with a towel during his men’s singles semifinal match against Roger Federer at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships in Wimbledon, London. serve and, after the first game, was taken to deuce only once on serve. He piled up 56 winners and had only 11 unforced errors, compared to 35 and 17 for Murray. Federer, who ran his record in Wimbledon semifinals to 10-0, is the oldest man to reach the final since Ken Rosewall finished runner-up in 1974 at the age of 39. If he can beat Djokovic, Federer will become first man to win eight Wimbledon titles. In 2012, he tied Pete Sampras and 1880s player William Renshaw with seven. Federer extended his career record against Murray to 13-11, including 5-1 in Grand Slams. This was the first time they’ve met here since 2012, when Federer beat Murray in the Wimbledon final and the Briton won in straight sets a few weeks later on Centre Court in the Olympic final. Djokovic advanced to the Wimbledon final for the fourth time. The defending champion beat Richard Gasquet 7-6 (2), 6-4, 6-4 Friday on Centre Court to make his way into the championship match for the third straight year. Djokovic handled Gasquet’s fantastic backhand well enough to keep the 21st-seeded Frenchman from pulling off another upset. Gasquet eliminated fourth-seeded Stan Wawrinka in the previous round. At The All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club London Purse: $42.1 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles Men Semifinals Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Richard Gasquet (21), France, 7-6 (2), 6-4, 6-4. Roger Federer (2), Switzerland, def. Andy Murray (3), Britain, 7-5, 7-5, 6-4. Doubles Women Semifinals Martina Hingis, Switzerland, and Sania Mirza (1), India, def. Raquel KopsJones and Abigail Spears (5), United States, 6-1, 6-2. Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina (2), Russia, def. Timea Babos, Hungary, and Kristina Mladenovic (4), France, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4. Mixed Semifinals Leander Paes, India, and Martina Hingis (7), Switzerland, def. Mike Bryan and Bethanie Mattek-Sands (1), United States, 6-3, 6-4. STA R S A N D ST R I P E S Saturday, July 11, 2015 SPORTS Ready to defend his title Top-seeded Djokovic advances to fourth straight final » Page 31 Ken Stabler BEN M ARGOT/AP Super Bowl-winning QB dead at 69 BY JOHN ZENOR The Associated Press AP A Snake wouldn’t seem to offer much help on a football field. Unless that snake was named Stabler. Ken Stabler, who led the Oakland Raiders to a Super Bowl victory and was the NFL’s Most Valuable Player in 1974, has died as a result of complications from colon cancer. He was 69. His family announced his death on Stabler’s Facebook page Thursday. The statement said Stabler “passed peacefully” on Wednesday while surrounded by family, including his three daughters and longtime partner, who wasn’t named. Raiders owner Mark Davis said the team, which was informed If I had by the family, was one drive to “deeply saddened the passing of the win a game by great Ken Stabler.” to this day, “He was a cherand I had a ished member of the family and quarterback Raider personified what it to pick, I means to be a Raidwould pick er,” Davis said in a statement. “He wore Kenny. the silver and black John Madden with pride and poise Ex-Raiders coach and will continue to live in the hearts of Raider fans everywhere. Our sincerest thoughts and prayers go out to Kenny’s ‘ ’ family.” The family’s statement said he was diagnosed with Stage 4 colon cancer in February. Stabler’s coach with the Raiders, John Madden, said his former quarterback was cool under pressure. “I’ve often said, if I had one drive to win a game to this day, and I had a quarterback to pick, I would pick Kenny,” Madden said. “Snake was a lot cooler than I was. He was a perfect quarterback and a perfect Raider. When you think about the Raiders you think about Ken Stabler.” Stabler was a four-time Pro Bowl selection with the Raiders, leading the franchise to consistent success during the 1970s, including a 32-14 victory over the Minnesota Vikings in the 1977 Super Bowl. SEE QB ON PAGE 30 Marlins’ Fernandez improves to 14-0 at home Crafton earns ninth career Truck Series victory MLB, Page 29 Auto racing, Page 25