Politics eclipses Benghazi report
Transcription
Politics eclipses Benghazi report
$2.00 WEDNESDAY THE NATION’S NEWS E2 1952-2016 06.29.16 THANK YOU, PAT SUMMITT Female athletes owe 1952-2016 Tennessee coach a lot CHRISTINE BRENNAN IN SPORTS H. DARR BEISER, USA TODAY Politics eclipses Benghazi report Campaigns cloud findings on terrorist attack that killed four Americans in 2012 in Libya Paul Singer @singernews USA TODAY “Fifty-six days,” Rep. Mike Pompeo, R-Kan., intoned at a news conference Tuesday to unveil a House committee report on NEWS Benghazi. There is ANALYSIS no way to understand the government’s immediate response to the attack Sept. 11, 2012, in Libya, Pompeo said, “without understanding this took place 56 days before a NEWSLINE IN NEWS Bernie Sanders ready for fight at Dems’ convention Vermont senator wants party to be “progressive” on trade, minimum wage, climate change. contested political election for president.” Almost the same could be said of the report Pompeo and other Republicans released. It can be understood only in the context of being released 132 days before the 2016 presidential election. Everything about the Select Committee on Benghazi’s twoyear investigation has been political. Then-House speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, resisted creating such a committee until May 2015, when a conservative watchdog group uncovered a White House memo suggesting officials should stick to the story that the Report: Plans for Clinton to visit Libya put lives at risk GOP report says her planned trip pressured diplomats to stay at poorly guarded post. IN NEWS MICHAEL REYNOLDS, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY Chairman of the House Select Committee on Benghazi Trey Gowdy, center, discusses the committee’s report on the attack in Benghazi, Libya, that killed four Americans. attack grew out of a protest, not planned terror activity. Boehner said the fact that the administration had not provided that memo to congressional investigators proved a new committee was needed. Seven Democrats voted in favor of creating the Benghazi committee, perhaps the last shred of bipartisanship the process would see. By the time the Benghazi committee was up and running, there already had been seven congressional investigations, some of which had been both bipartisan and critical of the administration. The Senate Intelligence Committee issued a bipartisan report in January 2014 that concluded v STORY CONTINUES ON 5A DOZENS DIE IN ISTANBUL ATTACK Trio of bombers invade airport in nation’s latest battle with terrorists IN LIFE ‘Tarzan’ tries to answer call to broader audience Gone is the loincloth. Instead, it’s a modern pair of chinos and a strong female character. HOME DELIVERY 1-800-872-0001 USATODAYSERVICE.COM QIJFAF-03005x(M)g ©COPYRIGHT 2016 USA TODAY, A division of Gannett Co., Inc. USA SNAPSHOTS© Child vehicular heatstroke deaths ISMAIL COSKUN, AP Victor Kotsev and Melanie Eversley USA TODAY At least 30 people were killed and 60 injured Tuesday in an attack at Ataturk International Airport by three suicide bombers who blew themselves up, Istanbul Gov. Vasip Sahin said. After the blasts, panicked travelers cowered in stores, and ambulances wheeled the injured away. ISTANBUL 673 children died from heatstroke inside hot vehicles from 1998 to 20161 1 — 12 deaths as of June 16 SOURCE noheatstroke.org Two South African tourists, Paul and Susie Roos, were at the airport to fly home and were shaken by what they saw. “We came up from the arrivals to the departures ... when we heard these shots going off,” Paul Roos told the Associated Press. “There was this guy going roaming around, he was dressed in black, and he had a handgun.” Tuesday’s bombing is the latest in a wave of terror at- tacks in Turkey as the country grapples with a spillover from the civil war raging in neighboring Syria. No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack at Turkey’s largest airport — the third-busiest in Europe. The government in Ankara has blamed Islamic State terrorists or Kurdish separatists for recent attacks. Turkish rescue services gather outside Istanbul’s Ataturk airport Tuesday. Explosions rocked the airport in an attack by suicide bombers. Eversley reported from New York. MICHAEL B. SMITH AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY Swiss reject Muslim girls who wouldn’t swim with boys Helena Bachmann Special for USA TODAY In the latest move to deny citizenship to those who balk at Swiss culture, authorities rejected the naturalization application of two Muslim girls who refused to take school swimming lessons because boys were present. The girls, ages 12 and 14, who live in the northern city of Basel, applied for Swiss citizenship several months ago, but their request was denied, Swiss news media reported Tuesday. The girls, whose names were GENEVA not disclosed, said their religion prevented them from participating in compulsory swimming lessons with males in the pool at the same time. Their naturalization application was rejected because the sisters did not comply with the school curriculum, Basel authorities said. “Whoever doesn’t fulfill these conditions violates the law and therefore cannot be naturalized,” Stefan Wehrle, president of the naturalization committee, told TV station SRF on Tuesday. The case shows how those who don’t follow Swiss rules and customs won’t become citizens, even if they have lived in the STATE-BY-STATE 4A AMERICA’S MARKETS 4B Five ways to be denied citizenship To become a citizen of Switzerland, candidates must prove they are wellassimilated and respect local customs. Here are recent actions that barred applicants from becoming citizens: uRefusing to shake a teacher's hand uRefusing to take compulsory swimming lessons uWearing sweatpants in town uRefusing to greet passersby uFailing to name any Swiss friends or neighboring communities Helena Bachmann MARKETPLACE TODAY 5D PUZZLES 5D ROMAIN LAFABREGUE, AFP/GETTY IMAGES TONIGHT ON TV 6D country for a long time, are fluent in one of the national languages — German, French or Italian — and are gainfully employed. In April, members of an immigrant family in the Basel area were denied citizenship because they wore sweatpants around town and did not greet passersby — a sure sign they were not sufficiently assimilated, the naturalization board claimed. Another recent case sparked widespread outrage in Switzerland when two Muslim brothers refused to shake hands with their female teacher, also citing religious restrictions. WEATHER 6A YOUR SAY 6A NEWS 2A USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 VOICES That day I became a Democratic stooge Paul Singer @singernews USA TODAY The House Democrats’ anti-gun sit-in last week included one of the more embarrassing moments of my journalism career. The Democrats had grabbed the House floor for what amounted to an impromptu 25hour filibuster to protest the unwillingness of Republican leadership to call a vote on gun control legislation. This was a new and unusual tactic, and nobody had any idea how it was going to end. The House doesn’t have a filibuster, so it doesn’t have a way to end one. That makes it newsworthy. As the protest dragged on through the day Wednesday, the rows of stools in the press gallery — up above the House floor — usually nearly empty during House business, had become full. This had become a full-blown Event, and more than two dozen reporters sat in the gallery documenting it. At around 9 p.m., as they girded for House Republicans to return and attempt to re-establish control of the floor, the Democrats pumped up their energy. They congratulated each other and cheered. The partisans who had packed the public visitors’ gallery cheered with them — a no-no when the House is in session. Visitors are supposed to sit quietly, but by this hour, many of the rules of the House floor had long since been thrown out the window. WASHINGTON JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi leads representatives down the steps of the U.S. Capitol after Democrats ended their sit-in on the floor of the House on Thursday. The lawmakers then turned to the galleries and thanked the visitors for their support, and everybody cheered some more. That was another no-no — lawmakers are prohibited from acknowledging the galleries from the floor. Then, my moment of shame: Someone on the floor called out thanks to the press, saying our reporting had spread the word and fueled their protest. The 100-or-so members of Congress on the floor and the several hundred partisans in the gallery cheered for us. My colleagues and I were mortified. We are not in this business to help anybody, only to report the We certainly do not want credit for helping Democrats perpetrate what Republicans correctly labeled a “stunt.” story. We certainly do not want credit for helping Democrats perpetrate what Republicans correctly labeled a “stunt.” Make no mistake: This was a stunt. It was a brazen attempt to make headlines and draw attention to an issue, not an attempt to legislate. Democrats sent fundraising emails, citing the sitin as a reason to donate, which raises some questions about whether they violated House rules against using the chamber for political purposes. To be fair, when Republicans voted more than 50 times to repeal Obamacare, that was a “stunt,” too. And of course, they sent fundraising appeals every time. Congress legislates less and less, and much of what it does nowadays is a stunt. Lawmakers play to the audience, and as reporters, we are the conduit to that audience. We cover these things even when they are theater because it is still news that this is how they use their time. The fact is, though reporters are much prouder of being labeled the enemy, much of the time we have a symbiotic relationship with politicians. They want to get their message out, we want to get the story out. Nearly every week, I get an email from a congressional office offering me an exclusive on (whatever topic), an offer that generally means I will be exclusively writing the version of the story that politician wants to tell. They use us, and we are willingly used, and we know that. But having a hundred Democrats look up to our gallery and cheer, publicly crediting us for promoting their stunt, was embarrassing. I wanted to shout, “I’m not on your side!” Of course, I didn’t. They suspended their rules, but I did not suspend mine. I don’t like being used, manipulated for a stunt, made to be a stage manager for political theater. And I am pretty sure my colleagues felt the same way because I haven’t seen anyone write about the fact that the lawmakers gathered on the House floor thanked the press for making their stunt go viral that day. As much as I hate to help anybody, I have to confess here: I helped the Democrats tell the world they were protesting on the House floor, even though I knew they had no chance of passing legislation or changing government policy. But what was I to do? It was new, it was interesting, and it was news. I did what my job tells me to do. But please — don’t thank me. Singer is USA TODAY’s Washington correspondent. ‘Brexit’ leaders’ promises Obama: No need for reduced to ‘possibilities’ ‘hysteria’ over UK President doubts withdrawal will trigger cataclysm ‘Leave’ faction may not be able to deliver, even in victory Gregory Korte Kim Hjelmgaard @gregorykorte USA TODAY @khjelmgaard USA TODAY Days after the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union, the victorious “leave” campaign is backpedaling on its pledges to reduce immigration and increase public spending with money that goes to the EU. Ian Duncan Smith, a former leader of the ruling Conservative Party and a strong supporter of breaking away from the 28-nation bloc, said many of the promises were “just a series of possibilities.” Thursday’s 52% to 48% vote to depart the EU roiled financial markets, triggered an unprecedented constitutional crisis that may lead to the breakup of the U.K., prompted “remain” backer Prime Minister David Cameron to resign and left the opposition Labour Party in shambles. The national referendum pitted one half of the country against the other in a caustic and emotional debate that shows no sign of abating soon. Here are three key commitments the “leave” camp may not be able to deliver: MILLIONS FOR HEALTH “Leave” leaders Boris Johnson and Michael Gove spent weeks touring the country in a campaign bus with a slogan emblazoned on its side: “We send the EU £350 million a week, let’s fund our NHS instead. Vote Leave.” The NHS, or National Health Service, is publicly funded. Hours after the outcome of the vote became clear Friday morning, U.K. Independence Party chief Nigel Farage, an anti-immigration “leave” backer, said he couldn’t promise the money would be spent on the NHS, “and I never would have made that claim.” Smith said no guarantee had been made that the money would be spent on the NHS. CUT IMMIGRATION The “leave” side said it wanted to stop an influx of EU nationals coming to the U.K. as part of the alliance’s laws that allow free movement of labor within mem- AFP/GETTY IMAGES U.K. Independence Party leader Nigel Farage attends a session at the European Union’s headquarters in Brussels on Tuesday. ber nations. The number of EU immigrants is 10 times what it was 20 years ago. The “leave” camp said reducing immigration would be impossible if the U.K. remained a member of the EU. “Politicians repeatedly (promised) that they could cut immigration to the tens of thousands and then ... throw their hands up in the air and say there’s nothing we can do because Brussels has taken away our control of immigration,” Johnson said in late May when immigration figures showed that 270,000 EU citizens emigrated to the U.K. last year. A day after the vote, Daniel Hannan, a Conservative Party politician and a European Parliament member, told BBC television that the U.K. should remain “If people watching think that they have voted and there is now going to be zero immigration from the EU, they are going to be disappointed.” Daniel Hannan, Conservative Party within the EU’s European Economic Area or single market. The single market allows EU countries (plus non-members Iceland, Switzerland and Norway) to trade with one another without tariffs. The EU said access to the single market can be secured only in return for free movement of labor. So EU nationals would be able to immigrate to the U.K. anyway. “If people watching think that they have voted and there is now going to be zero immigration from the EU, they are going to be disappointed,” Hannan said. THE TURKS ARE COMING Gove said during the referendum campaign that immigration to the U.K. would worsen when Turkey and other countries on Europe’s southeastern perimeter, such as Albania and Macedonia, join the EU. Claims were made that Turkey’s population of 75 million could flood the U.K. with criminals. “Many of these countries have high crime rates, problems with gangs and terror cells, as well as challenging levels of poverty,” Armed Forces Minister Penny Mordaunt, a “leave” supporter, said in May. It’s not clear whether Turkey will ever join the EU. It first applied in 1987 and started accession talks only in 2005. In the 11 years it has been involved in those talks, it has met only one of 35 membership requirements. Prospects that Turkey might be closer to joining the EU emerged this spring under an agreement in which Turkey agreed to take migrants from the Middle East and North Africa trying to enter Europe in exchange for an EU vow to accelerate the process for admitting Turkey. That agreement may have helped the “leave” camp by heightening fears before the vote about a wave of Turks entering the U.K. Any EU member can veto a prospective applicant, so the U.K. could have blocked Turkey’s membership if its citizens voted to stay in the union. WASHINGTON President Obama cautioned against “hysteria” over the United Kingdom’s vote to leave the European Union last week, saying all of Europe needs to take a breath and reassess how to preserve national identity while taking advantage of political and economic integration. “I think that the best way to think about this is, a pause button has been pressed on the project of full European integration,” Obama told National Public Radio in an interview broadcast Tuesday. “I don’t anticipate that there’s going to be major cataclysmic changes as a reAP sult of this.” President Obama’s reObama marks on the Brexit were his most extensive since Britons voted last Thursday to leave the union of 28 countries that it joined in 1973. The resulting financial uncertainty shaved more than $1 trillion out of stock markets and sent the British pound plummeting against the dollar. Obama noted that the U.K. long ago opted out of the euro, the common currency that forms the basis of the monetary union, and will remain a member of NATO. In that way, he said, the U.K. will become more like Norway — very involved in Europe and the world but not through the EU. “I would not overstate it. There’s been a little bit of hysteria, post-Brexit vote, as if somehow NATO’s gone and the trans-Atlantic alliance is dissolving and every country is rushing off to its own corner. And that’s not what’s happening,” Obama said. “What’s happening is you had a European project that was probably moving faster and without as much consensus as it should have.” The White House is not calling for a do-over on the referendum, nor is it encouraging Scotland to leave the United Kingdom in an effort to keep its ties to the EU. “I think that the best way to think about this is, a pause button has been pressed on the project of full European integration.” President Obama “The United States view was then, and continues to be, that a united U.K. is in the best interests of the United States,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Tuesday. “It makes them a better partner, and allows them to make a better contribution to the NATO alliance that is the bedrock of our national security.” Corrections & Clarifications USA TODAY is committed to accuracy. To reach us, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com. Please indicate whether you’re responding to content online or in the newspaper. SUBSCRIPTIONS 1-800-USA-0001 Monday – Friday 8 a.m. – 7 p.m. ET 7950 Jones Branch Dr., McLean, Va. 22108, 703-854-3400 Published by Gannett, Volume 34, No. 204 (ISSN0734-7456) Regular U.S. subscription rates: $25 per month; $300 per year. For customer service-related inquiries, please contact Barb Smith, VP/Customer Service, PO BOX 650301, DALLAS TX 75265-0301, or fax 1-800-732-3631. Advertising: All advertising published in USA TODAY is subject to the current rate card; copies available from the advertising department. USA TODAY may in its sole discretion edit, classify, reject or cancel at any time any advertising submitted. Classified: 1-800-397-0070 National, Regional: 703-854-3400 Reprint permission, copies of articles, glossy reprints: www.GannettReprints.com or call 212-221-9595 USA TODAY is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to other news services. Published daily except Saturdays, Sundays and widely observed holidays. Periodicals postage paid at McLean, Va., and at additional mailing offices. USA TODAY, its logo and associated graphics are registered trademarks. All rights reserved. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to USA TODAY,PO BOX 650301, DALLAS TX 75265-0301. NEWS 3A USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 Trump targets globalization and trade Assails Clinton, China and ‘failed policies’ for job losses num — on U.S. road, bridge, and construction projects, employing only American workers. Trump attacked Clinton and her husband, former president Bill Clinton, for past support of trade deals, including TPP. Hillary Clinton says she now opposes the Pacific Rim trade agreement and other “bad trade deals” that are hurting U.S. workers. Pledging to appoint a “trade prosecutor” during a speech in Ohio this week, Clinton vowed to go after “unfair trade practices like when China dumps cheap steel in our markets.” A prominent Clinton supporter — Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio — called Trump a hypocrite, saying he has benefited from trade deals that have helped him sponsor clothing lines made in other countries. Brown said Trump has “high-priced accountants” who are “cashing checks from products that he’s had manufactured in other countries.” David Jackson @djusatoday USA TODAY MONESSEN, PA . While attacking Hillary Clinton and other career politicians, Donald Trump took aim Tuesday at two other prominent election targets: globalization and free trade. “Globalization has made the financial elite who donate to politicians very, very wealthy ... but it has left millions of our workers with nothing but poverty and heartache,” Trump said during a speech targeting free trade in a nearly shuttered former steel town in Pennsylvania. In a speech devoted to what he called “How to Make America Wealthy Again,” Trump offered a series of familiar plans designed to deal with what he called “failed trade policies” — including rejection of the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) with Pacific Rim nations and renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with Canada and Mexico, withdrawing from it if necessary. The presumptive Republican presidential nominee also said he would pursue bilateral trade agreements rather than multinational deals. Trump’s plans also would target one specific economic competitor: China. He vowed to label China a currency manipulator, bring it before the World Trade Organization and consider slapping tariffs on Chinese imports coming into the U.S. Clinton and other politicians, meanwhile, “watched on the sidelines as our jobs vanished and our communities were plunged into depression-level unemployment,” Trump said in a dusty old aluminum plant in Monessen, part of what was once known as “The Steel Valley” along the Monongahela River. Echoing his mantra of “America First,” Trump vowed to use only American steel — and alumi- JEFF SWENSEN, GETTY IMAGES Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump outlined his trade policy at the Alumisource plant Tuesday in Monessen, Pa. His speech targeted China and Hillary Clinton. SANDERS READY TO TAKE A STAND TO PUSH FOR ‘PROGRESSIVE’ PLATFORM Nicole Gaudiano USA TODAY WASHINGTON Sen. Bernie Sanders says he is prepared for a floor fight at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia if the party doesn’t take more “progressive” stances on trade, the EPA Bernie Sanders minimum wage, climate change and other issues in its platform. The Vermont senator told USA TODAY that there are “a lot of very good and progressive” provisions in the document approved Saturday in St. Louis by the 15-member Platform Drafting Committee, which includes supporters of Sanders and presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton. But Sanders and his supporters will work with labor, environmental and rights human groups to call for amendments when the draft goes to the full 187-member Plat- form Committee for final approval in Orlando July 8 and 9. If he doesn’t succeed there, Sanders said he will have the votes to bring amendments to the convention floor. He acknowledged it would be easier if his changes were adopted in Orlando. A floor fight at the convention could prolong it. “The middle class of this country has been in decline for 40 years and we need to make it clear that we stand with working families in this country and we are prepared to take on powerful special interests,” he said. “That is what the Democratic Party has got to stand for.” Sanders has said he will vote for Clinton, but he hasn’t endorsed her or conceded his bid for the Democratic nomination. Trump vowed to label China a currency manipulator, bring it before the World Trade Organization and slap tariffs on Chinese imports into the U.S. During his speech in a warehouse stacked with aluminum parts, Trump said Clinton came out against the Trans-Pacific Partnership only “when she saw my stance,” and predicted that she would still sign the trade pact if elected to office. “Her whole career, she has betrayed the American worker,” he said. Analysts said that Trump tends to ignore the benefits of a globalized economy, including easier and increased movement of goods and services across borders that leads to greater selection and cheaper prices for consumers. Contributing: Deirdre Shesgreen IN BRIEF LABOR PROTESTS ERUPT IN PARIS THOMAS SAMSON, AFP/GETTY IMAGES French police detain a man Tuesday during a demonstration in Paris. Unions have called for protests in opposition to labor policies that make it easier to hire and fire workers. RECORD TRAVEL PROJECTED FOR JULY FOURTH HOLIDAY The lowest gas prices in a decade will fuel a record number of Independence Day holiday motorists, putting millions more behind the wheel than on Memorial Day, according to AAA. Nearly 43 million Americans will travel from June 30 through July 4, which would set a record for the holiday weekend and amount to 5 million more travelers than the Memorial Day holiday, according to AAA. The average gallon of gas now costs $2.31, down 47 cents from a year ago and the lowest price for the holiday weekend since 2005. The decrease comes as drivers have already saved $20 billion on gasoline this year compared with 2015, according to AAA. More than 36 million people, or 84%, will drive to their destinations this year, an increase of 1.2% over last year, according to AAA. About 3.3 million will fly, up — Bart Jansen 2.2%. SENATE BLOCKS $1.1B BILL TO FIGHT ZIKA VIRUS The Senate on Tuesday blocked a $1.1 billion bill to combat the Zika virus, giving Congress just two weeks to try to reach a new deal before lawmakers leave for a seven-week recess in the midst of mosquito season and a growing public health crisis. Senators voted 52-48 to advance the bill, falling eight votes short of the 60 needed. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., immediately made a motion to reconsider the vote, raising the possibility of another vote on the same bill next week. Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the No. 2 Republican in the Senate, warned before the vote that there would be no negotiations on a new Zika bill if the legislation failed Tuesday. But Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., predicted that Republican leaders would relent and return to the negotiating table at the last minute to seek a compromise rather than go home for the summer with nothing to show their constituents. — Erin Kelly SCOTLAND FARM HOLDS ANCIENT SILVER HOARD A farm field in northeastern Scotland has yielded a dazzling harvest of silver left at a prehistoric stone circle more than a thousand years ago. Scientists were studying the site, called Gaulcross, where 19th-century farm workers dug up a cache that has since been scattered. “We hoped we might find the odd fragment,” said archaeologist Gordon Noble. “I don’t think we really expected in our wildest dreams to find more than 100 pieces of silver.” — Traci Watson U.S. NAVY VIA GETTY IMAGES The USS John C. Stennis, left, with the carrier USS Ronald Reagan, will participate in the Rim of the Pacific war games, after recently completing a three-month patrol of the South China Sea. War games in Pacific bring together U.S., China warships Kirk Spitzer USA TODAY TOKYO Warships from a record 26 nations — including the United States and China — converge near Hawaii this week for a fiveweek series of exercises to promote international security, goodwill and cooperation on the high seas. Well, good luck with that. The Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) war games will take place amid increasing tension and competition in waters of the AsiaPacific region and will include warships from at least seven nations with competing claims or interests in the region. China will take part in the RIMPAC exercise, held every two years, for just the second time. Some lawmakers and the U.S. defense community have called for the invitation to be withdrawn because of China’s island-building in the South China Sea. China has claimed sole ownership over virtually all of that key waterway, through which passes an estimated $5 trillion in annual trade. In just the past two years, China has built at least seven landfill islands in the South China Sea, including some with military-grade runways, deep-water ports and extensive land facilities. The U.S. does not support individual sovereignty claims, yet the Obama administration has expressed concern that China could use the islands to restrict air and sea navigation. China has promised not to do that. The aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis recently completed a three-month patrol through the South China Sea, during which it was tailed by Chinese warships. Although the ships did not interfere with the Stennis’ operations, Chinese authorities refused permission for the Stennis and its escort ships to make a routine port call in Hong Kong. RIMPAC is the largest naval exercise in the world. This year’s event is Thursday through Aug. 4 and will include first-timers Germany, Italy and Denmark. Altogether, 45 ships, five submarines, 200 aircraft and 25,000 personnel will take part in the event, which will include training in surface warfare, air- and missile-defense, amphibious operations and other maritime skills. China’s contingent will be one of the largest with five vessels, including a hospital ship. By law, the U.S. military is not permitted to provide or engage in combat-related training with China’s military. Defense Secretary Ash Carter has defended the decision to invite China to the exercise. Participation in RIMPAC contributes to “relationships that are critical to ensuring the safety and security and peace of the region’s sea lanes,” he said in a speech this year. Several Chinese ships took part in RIMPAC in 2014 without incident. But this year’s event could reflect growing tensions. Malaysia, Brunei and the Philippines also will be at RIMPAC, and each has claims with China in the South China Sea. An international tribunal is expected to rule soon on a legal challenge brought by the Philippines against China’s claims. The ruling could come during RIMPAC and China already has promised to ignore it. 4A NEWS USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 STATE-BY-STATE News from across the USA ALABAMA Birmingham: The Jefferson County Coroner’s Office identified Dexter Leon Armstrong, 54, who had a long history of burglary convictions, as the man found stuck and decaying in the burglar bars of a downtown business, AL.com reported. ALASKA Ninilchik: This year’s Salmonfest, a three-day weekend festival featuring food, crafts, art, brews and a four-stage extravaganza that includes more than 50 acts, will run Aug. 5-7, according to the Juneau Empire. ARIZONA Mesa: Voters will be asked Nov. 8 to approve a 0.4% sales tax hike that could generate more than $38 million a year to meet growing public safety and higher education demands, The Arizona Republic reported. The measure would boost the city sales tax rate from 1.75% to 2.15%. ARKANSAS Hot Springs: The National Park Service turned to goats to help rid Hot Springs National Park of invasive plants growing in areas where herbicides can’t be used. Hot Springs National Park will employ a herd of goats to manage invasive plant services for five weeks. Men help in push for rape kit testing Lauren Pankin A community of men and women has united to help get tested thousands of rape kits left unprocessed in Detroit. The 100 Black Men of Greater Detroit were among those who came together Tuesday in Harmonie Park with the African American 490 Challenge and the Michigan Women’s Foundation to pledge support in a campaign to fund testing of a backlog of rape kits in Wayne County. The men are motivated by the phrase “Enough SAID,” which means Enough Sexual Assault In Detroit. Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy, Michigan Women’s Foundation Chief Community Engagement Officer Peg Tallet and campaign organizer Kim Trent are spearheading the 490 Challenge campaign, which derives its name from the $490 cost to investigate a rape kit. “Anytime a woman faces or goes through anything as horrific as rape they expect the law to be behind them, I am behind those women,” Worthy said. The 490 Challenge campaign runs through December. The goal: raising $657,090. So far, 10,000 rape kits have been tested; 1,341 await attention. 65-year-old hiker missing for more than a week in central Idaho, KTVB-TV reported. will occupy a two-building structure when it moves its $250 million headquarters to the West Side in the spring of 2018, the Chicago Tribune reported. COLORADO Aurora: A federal INDIANA Indianapolis: The CONNECTICUT Hartford: The Department of Consumer Protection said the number of patients in Connecticut receiving medical marijuana treatment has grown from 2,000 a few years ago to 11,000, The New Haven Register reported. DELAWARE Newark: University of Delaware officials are considering moving spring break to coincide with other local schools. A visiting Skidmore College student fell to his death at a St. Patrick’s Day party this spring and students from other colleges on break are known to come to UD for its St. Patrick’s parties. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: AAA Mid-Atlantic predicted a record number of area residents would embark on Independence Day trips this year, benefiting from the long weekend and lower gas prices, The Washington Post reported. FLORIDA Orlan- do: Nine extra days have been added to the 21st annual Epcot International Food & Wine Festival, which runs Sept. 14Nov. 14, Florida Today reported. That means 62 days will be devoted to food and beverages from around the world. ABC’s daytime cooking and variety show “The Chew” will tape before a live audience Oct. 5-7. GEORGIA Atlanta: City Coun- cilman Michael Julian Bond faces 300 civil charges of violating state campaign finance laws — and a $58,000 fine if found guilty, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported. HAWAII Iwilei: The old Malihini Sportswear building is being converted into the state’s first full service hygiene center for the homeless, Hawaii News Now reported. IDAHO Atlanta: Authorities called off the main search for a ILLINOIS Chicago: McDonald’s SOUTH CAROLINA Bluffton: REGINA H. BOONE Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy, left, speaks with Roderick Rickman, campaign chair of the 490 Challenge, at Harmonie Park in Detroit on Tuesday. The 490 Challenge is partnered and supported by churches, sororities, businesses and companies. Donations have contributed to the arrests of 756 rapists, more than 50 of whom raped 10-15 times, Worthy said. “This issue is important to me because 81% of rape victims in Detroit are black women,” Trent said. “We need the support of black men in the community.” Campaign Chair Rod Rickgetting stuck in the mud in a cove. It was taken to a laboratory where biologists will assess its condition and determine if it needs any medical treatment. MICHIGAN Detroit: Authorities say the Detroit fire department responded to a string of 17 suspected arson fires that burned over a roughly 12-hour period, the Detroit Free Press reported. city is home to 2% of the coolest neighborhoods in North America according to a new survey from real estate services firm Cushman & Wakefield, The Indianapolis Star reported. Both Fletcher Place/Virginia Avenue and Massachussetts Avene made the list of 100. Lindholm House, designed by famed architect Frank Lloyd Wright, has been deconstructed and will be reassembled in Acme, Pa., the Pioneer Press reported. A conservancy group will open the home to the public. IOWA Delhi: Officials have MISSISSIPPI Jackson: The city closed the floodgates to start refilling Lake Delhi, following six years and $16 million in work to restore the lake after its destruction in the 2010 floods, the Dubuque Telegraph Herald reported. KANSAS Assaria: Authorities are investigating the death of a 57-year-old as a homicide, KAKETV reported. KENTUCKY Brooksville: A Northern Kentucky teenager is recovering after he was bitten by a rabid fox last week. James Alford told WLEX-TV the animal was hiding under a truck when it latched itself onto his wrist. Alford told the station the worst part of the ordeal was not the bite but the extremely painful shots that followed. MINNESOTA Cloquet: The R.W. has agreed to settle a federal class-action lawsuit by ending the practice of jailing indigent people who can’t pay fines and fees in misdemeanor cases, The ClarionLedger reported. MISSOURI Ballwin: Authorities are urging visitors to Castlewood State Park to avoid swimming after two teenagers drowned there. KTVI-TV reported that signs warn people not to swim in that area of the Meramec River, where the topography under the water is erratic with sudden drop-offs. land: Maine police say a study of fatal motorcycle crashes in the state last year showed that most happened during the day and involved speed or alcohol. Maine State Police put together a study group to review the 32 motorcycle deaths that happened in the state in 2015. MONTANA Drummond: The Montana Department of Transportation is considering a $1.5 million fencing project to funnel roaming elk under Interstate 90 at existing underpasses in the 8-mile stretch between here and Jens, the Missoulian reported. MDT Director Mike Tooley says the fencing project would serve as both a safety measure and interstate maintenance. MARYLAND Salisbury: A 6- NEBRASKA Omaha: The Uni- MASSACHUSETTS Freetown: Officials say a dolphin was rescued from the Assonet River after approved the expense at the recommendation of its Capital Funding Protection Committee. NEW HAMPSHIRE Tilton: Au- thorities say a woman was hospitalized after her kayak tipped over in the Winnipesaukee River, WMUR-TV reported. NEW JERSEY Highlands: The borough clerk and her deputy both fell 20 feet through an attic floor in the old Highlands Municipal Building while retrieving files, Asbury Park Press reported. The building was severely damaged by Superstorm Sandy and officials have been working in temporary trailers. NEW MEXICO Albuquerque: A woman has pleaded not guilty to setting fire to the Desert Sands Motel, which was featured in the 2007 movie No Country for Old Men, KRQE-TV reported. NEW YORK Buffalo: The Buffalo Lighthouse Association helped install a new lens and relight the historic beacon for the first time in more than a century, wgrz.com reported. The lighthouse, built in 1833, is no longer an aid to navigation and was saved from demolition in the 1960s when the Buffalo River was widened. NORTH CAROLINA Vass: The Highway Patrol investigated after a police officer was hurt when his police cruiser rolled over several times while on a call. Adam Hamm, North Dakota’s insurance commissioner, says damage claims from a storm last week in the area total more than $39 million so far. Metropolitan Expressway Commission is preparing to refocus on a toll road loop around the city, The Advocate reported. year-old boy was taken to the hospital after he was found floating in a creek Monday near the Wicomico County Tourist Information Center, The Daily Times reported. Maryland State Police said the boy was part of a group of children from Dove Pointe, a facility that helps people with disabilities. man, who is chairman and CEO of Rickman Enterprise Group, said that with six sisters and three daughters, he is angry that rape persists in Detroit. He said he not only wants to fix the immediate problem of the unprocessed rape kits, but the long-term issue of rape culture. “Women have been taking care of us all our lives,” Rickman said. “It is our social, moral and ethical responsibility to protect them and our children.” NORTH DAKOTA Bismarck: LOUISIANA Lafayette: The MAINE Port- Police say they’ve arrested a man who fatally shot his 42-year-old girlfriend with a crossbow. WCAU-TV reports police say they had been called to the home in the past for domestic incidents. RHODE ISLAND Providence: Police are searching for the suspects who caused more than $1,000 worth of damage to five tulip trees at a high school. WJAR-TV reported that the 12-foot-tall trees were planted at Mount Pleasant High School about three weeks ago by the Rhode Island Tree Council. Detroit Free Press CALIFORNIA Ventura: A pipeline leak dumped more than 29,000 gallons of crude oil into Prince Barranca gorge, but the oil did not reach the beach, the Los Angeles Times reported. judge on Friday dismissed a consolidated group of lawsuits brought against Cinemark, the owner of the Colorado movie theater where a gunman killed 12 people and wounded 70 others in 2012, The Aurora Sentinel reported. PENNSYLVANIA Philadelphia: HIGHLIGHT: MICHIGAN versity of Nebraska has received a $2.2 million grant to establish bachelor’s degree programs at Kabul University and Balkh University in Afghanistan, the Omaha World-Herald reported. NEVADA Reno: The Washoe County School District is spending $700,000 on designs for a 22-classroom addition to Damonte Ranch High School, the Reno Gazette-Journal reported. The school board unanimously OHIO Cleveland: A 9-year-old giraffe at the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo died from an acute and untreatable urinary condition, Cleveland.com reported. The $45 million Bluffton Parkway flyover is scheduled to open to traffic July 15 after more than a decade of planning, The Island Packet reported. The project is expected to cut the daily traffic of roughly 53,000 vehicles on U.S. 278 near the Hilton Head Island bridges by about 25%. SOUTH DAKOTA Sioux Falls: Egg production is down in the state. The Agriculture Department reported that there were 52 million eggs in May, down from 57 million in 2015. TENNESSEE Newport: Authori- ties say a 36-year-old man died in a motorcycle crash following a police chase in Cocke County, the Knoxville News Sentinel reported. TEXAS Zapata: Search crews recovered the body of a 5-yearold boy who went missing after he fell into Falcon Lake when the inflatable raft he was on flipped over, the Laredo Morning Times reported. UTAH Salt Lake City: Gov. Herbert is calling for harsher penalties for anyone caught flying a drone over a wildfire after one unmanned aircraft forced firefighters to ground their aircraft last week, KUTV reported. VERMONT Jay: Jay Peak’s iconic aerial tram started spinning on Saturday and will run as a scenic attraction through the summer seven days a week, Burlington Free Press reported. VIRGINIA Richmond: Daniel Radcliffe, the actor we know best as Harry Potter, told Thrillist he ate “the perfect meal” at Buckhead’s Chophouse, the Richmond Times-Dispatch reported. WASHINGTON Seattle: Pas- sengers were delayed but no one was injured after the locomotive on an Amtrak train derailed. The Seattle Times reported that the locomotive on train 502 heading from Portland to Seattle with 235 passengers lost contact with the rails at about 12:05 p.m. Sunday. WEST VIRGINIA Huntington: Former Marshall All-American and 2012 Philadelphia Eagles draft pick Vinny Curry is giving $200,000 to the Big Green Scholarship Foundation. WISCONSIN Green Bay: Former DARE volunteer Early R. Fuller, 51, of Howard, pleaded no contest to theft, becoming the second person convicted in the theft from the drug-use prevention program. Authorities said Fuller and Kevin Vanden Heuvel devised multiple ways to skim money from parking fees for a lot they operated on DARE’s behalf during Green Bay Packers games, Green Bay Press-Gazette reported. OKLAHOMA Tulsa: Michael Chase Morris, 54, who was described by a prosecutor as a “white-collar sociopath” was sentenced to a 78-month prison term Monday after pleading guilty earlier to fraud-related charges linked to a check-kiting scheme and a house-flipping business he operated, Tulsa World reported. Friends, family members and former business associates all asked that Morris be given the maximum prison term and then some. OREGON Salem: Gun sales in Oregon increased in the days after the mass shooting in Orlando, the Statesman Journal reported. Police data shows that 573 guns were sold June 12, the day of the shooting but just five days later 1,364 guns were sold in a single day. WYOMING Sundance: Fire- fighters have mostly contained a wildfire east of the Keyhole Reservoir, authorities said. On Monday, all evacuation orders were lifted. Compiled by Tim Wendel, with Jonathan Briggs, Carolyn Cerbin, Linda Dono, Mike Gottschamer, Ben Sheffler, Michael B. Smith, Nichelle Smith, Matt Young and Andria Yu. Design by Mallory Redinger. Graphics by Alejandro Gonzalez. NEWS 5A USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 THE BATTLE OVER BENGHAZI NRA backs Trump in ad campaign $2M will fuel group’s first campaign in 2016 presidential race Donovan Slack @donovanslack USA TODAY The National Rifle Association’s political arm is launching its first ad campaign of the 2016 presidential race, in which a survivor of the terror attack in Ben- ghazi, Libya, urges viewers to vote for Donald Trump. The ad, which the NRA Political Victory Fund backed with more than $2 million, is one of the larger expenditures by an outside group on behalf of the presumptive Republican nominee. The 30-second spot, titled “Stop Clinton, Vote Trump,” features Mark Geist, a Marine Corps veteran and security contractor who fought the assault on the U.S. mission in Benghazi in 2012 that claimed four American lives, in- The NRA Political Victory Fund runs advertising that supports Donald Trump. cluding that of Ambassador Christopher Stevens. “A lot of people say they’re not going to vote this November because their candidate didn’t win. Well, I know some people who won’t be voting this year either,” Geist says as he walks through a military cemetery in the ad. “Hillary as president? No thanks. I served in Benghazi. My friends didn’t make it. They did their part. Do yours.” The ad will air on national cable and on broadcast channels in the battleground states of Colorado, Ohio, Nevada, Florida, Virginia and Pennsylvania. The campaign comes as Clinton has been vastly outspending Trump and pummeling him on air for weeks. The Wesleyan Media Project estimated a few weeks ago that her camp had run 105,000 ads, compared with 33,000 run by Trump. At the same time, his standing in national polls has slipped from a virtual tie with Clinton in late May to trailing her by 7 points, on average, according to RealClearPolitics. Tuesday, House Republicans released the results of their twoyear investigation of the attack in Libya. Clinton said Tuesday, “No one has thought more about or lost more sleep over the lives that we lost, the four Americans, which was devastating.” She noted that she called for an independent investigation and that improvements have been made to ensure a similar attack doesn’t happen. “I think it’s pretty clear it’s time to move on,” she said. In the heat of a presidential election, that seems doubtful. A recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll showed Trump leading Clinton in a few issue areas, including terrorism and homeland security, which respondents said he would handle better by 44%-39%. Geist, who co-authored the book 13 Hours: The Inside Account of What Really Happened In Benghazi, endorsed Trump in February, saying he believes “under President Trump, many conflicts will be avoided because our enemies will fear the United States and our military.” The NRA and its affiliated groups spent $13.6 million in the 2012 presidential race, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. They could spend significantly more this election. GOP blames politics in Benghazi attack Report says bureaucratic delays led to failure to protect Americans Mary Troyan USA TODAY WASHINGTON House Republicans say that despite stonewalling by the Obama administration they were able to conclude a twoyear investigation into the 2012 terror attacks in Benghazi with an 800-page report that blames politically motivated bureaucratic delays for failing to prevent or stop the deadly attacks that claimed four American lives. The highly anticipated report adds new detail to the findings of seven previous congressional inquiries and is expected to be used by Republicans to question Hillary Clinton’s leadership as the fall presidential campaign heats up. Clinton, who was secretary of State when Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three others were killed on Sept. 11, 2012, was planning to visit Libya later that year, which pressured diplomats to stay at the poorly guarded, temporary outpost despite deteriorating security in the region, according to the report. The Republicans said “despite President Obama and Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta’s clear orders to deploy military assets, nothing was sent to Benghazi, and nothing was en route to Libya at the time the last two Americans were killed almost 8 hours after the attacks began.” Republicans highlighted a teleconference meeting a few hours after the attacks began as a turning point in the U.S. response. They say actions taken after that meeting, in which Clinton participated, only delayed the deployof military forces. ment Communications afterward referenced the need to get clearance AFP/GETTY IMAGES An armed man waves his rifle as buildings and cars are engulfed in flames inside the U.S. Consulate compound in Benghazi, Libya, on Sept. 11, 2012. 2 sides, 2 stories, 2 interpretations v CONTINUED FROM 1A the attacks were preventable, security at the facility was insufficient, and intelligence reports gave too much weight to the theory that the attacks were part of an organic protest. The Senate Homeland Security Committee issued a bipartisan report two years earlier concluding the State Department failed to provide adequate security for the facility and intelligence agencies misunderstood threats on the ground. This was not those reports. Democrats and Republicans feuded throughout about who could call witnesses, who would be included in witness interviews and what documents or people should be subpoenaed. Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., famously said By the time the Benghazi committee was up and running, there already had been seven investigations. the Benghazi committee helped drag down Hillary Clinton’s poll numbers. The two sides issued competing reports 24 hours apart, neither having shown their version to the other. The Republican version had a few new details about the events and rafts of blame for why there were not more details. Clinton and the Obama administration stonewalled, the Republicans said, delaying the report by months. Committee members Pompeo and Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, issued a proposed addition to the report accusing the administration of trying to undercut the investigation, because the White House did not want to admit it knew all along the Benghazi attack was planned by radical Islamic extremists. The Democratic report released Monday somehow got in 23 references to Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. This is largely because the Democratic report was not about the events surrounding the Benghazi attack but the events surrounding the committee investigating the Benghazi attack. As a result of all this, there is plenty of material for two political parties to get what they want: talking points they can carry into the election season bashing the opposing party for putting propaganda over truth. from various countries to deploy military resources for a rescue, according to the GOP report. Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., a former prosecutor and chairman of the committee, urged Americans to “read this report for themselves, look at the evidence we have collected, and reach their own conclusions.” “We expect our government to make every effort to save the lives of Americans who serve in harm’s way. That did not happen in Benghazi,” said Rep. Mike Pompeo, RKan., a member of the special committee. “Politics were put ahead of the lives of Americans, and while the administration had made excuses and blamed the challenges posed by time and distance, the truth is that they did not try.” Democrats on the panel, led by Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., have repeatedly accused the Republicans of using the investigation and numerous previous committee probes to try to embarrass Clinton and damage her chances of becoming president. They released their own minority report a day ahead of the Republicans, contending the report absolves Clinton of blame in the terror attacks. In a statement, Clinton’s campaign spokesman Brian Fallon said the House investigation, after spending more than $7 million, did not find anything to contradict the conclusions reached by previous congressional committees. “This report just confirms what Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy and even one of Trey Gowdy’s own former staffers admitted months ago: This committee’s chief goal is to politicize the deaths of four brave Americans in order to try to attack the Obama administration and hurt Hillary Clinton’s campaign,” Fallon said. Contributing: Paul Singer and Gregory Korte, USA TODAY, and Craig Gilbert, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Incarceration capital prepares for more Medicaid Louisiana expansion will allow ex-inmates to continue treatment dents describe prison and re-entry as psychologically crushing for most people. Without access to health care when they leave prison, it’s often a matter of time until many return. The imJayne O’Donnell minent expansion at least gives @jayneodonnell many hope they can get some USA TODAY help for problems that helped send them to prison in the first place. NEW ORLEANS In the state that imprisons more of its citizens per “It’s unconscionable to just capita than any other, the long- drop them off at a Greyhound bus awaited launch of expanded Me- station,” says physician and Louidicaid coverage July 1 will give siana Secretary of Health Rebekthose leaving prison a ah Gee. “They’re just chance to at least congoing to come right back.” tinue what many deWithout Democratic scribe Gov. John Bel Edwards’ as spotty treatment for the condecision to extend Mediditions that plagued caid benefits to everyone them behind bars. below 138% of the federal These include Dolfipoverty limit, only the nette Martin, who has rare person leaving prison been out of prison for in the Deep South had four years with no health care. They had to health coverage or Rebekah Gee either have a job that ofmedications to control fered benefits they could her bipolar disorder, and Maryam afford or earn more than $33,000 Henderson-Uloho, who spent for a family of four and be able to more than 12 years in prison, and afford it with the subsidies availwho says she and other inmates able on the federal insurance seldom sought medical treatment exchange. because prison officials would Those earning less than that write them up for “malingering” relied on emergency rooms or a when they did. network of sliding-scale clinics Both women and other former- that have long waits and few prely incarcerated Louisiana resi- scription options. PHOTOS BY JAYNE O'DONNELL, USA TODAY Maryam Henderson-Uloho, who served more than 12 years in prison, started a thrift store after her release. It employs and benefits people who were incarcerated. Dolfinette Martin was released four years ago from prison where she was treated for her bi-polar disorder, but she hasn’t been able to afford treatment since then. Gee met with Corrections Secretary Jimmy LeBlanc about post-prison health care the day before Edwards held the first meeting of his new prison policy group June 17. Expanding Medicaid was Edwards’ first official action, and he said he’s determined to shed the distinction of being the incarceration capital of the industrialized world while he’s in office. President Obama made access to health care for those leaving prison a priority in April when he clarified that Medicaid coverage was available to those living in halfway houses and encouraged states to help enroll prisoners for Medicaid. As welcome as Louisiana’s expansion is to patients and hospitals, questions remain as to how the cash-starved state will pull this off. The state Legislature wouldn’t approve even a dollar of funding for Medicaid enrollment, so Edwards isn’t sure how he will raise reimbursement for doctors to get them to take new patients. And there will be no shortage of patients as even without funding, state officials signed up about 225,000 people as of Friday. Although Edwards distinguishes himself in the Deep South for expanding Medicaid, his state shares the poverty and poor health of his neighboring states. Along with incarceration, Louisiana has the highest rate of obesity and is among the worst for every other poor-health measure in the USA. The 2016 Global Nutrition Report says it costs a household with one obese person 8% more for health care a year. When families don’t have money to pay for insurance or health care, it’s the hospitals — and ultimately taxpayers — who pick up the tab. Newfound Medicaid coverage is certainly not a panacea for all that ails Louisiana’s poor. Martin, who works as lead organizer for the non-profit Voice of the Ex-offender (VOTE), describes a “deep untouchable hurt” facing women in prison. A former crack addict, Martin says she self-medicated to treat her depression and stole to fund her habit. Health Secretary Gee says Medicaid expansion and the state’s new goal of “treating mental illness and addiction rather than incarcerating” those who suffer from either combine to make it “a new day.” 6A NEWS USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 YOUR SAY Tracking the nation’s conversation REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS Abortions need to be safe for the mother FACEBOOK FACEBOOK.COM/ USATODAYOPINION LETTERS LETTERS@USATODAY.COM PRO-CHOICE Do you think abortion should be legal under any circumstances? The Supreme Court struck down restrictions on Texas clinics and doctors that had created roadblocks for women, giving abortion rights advocates hope of reversing similar laws in other states. have complications that may require hospitalization. In other medical fields when surgery is done on an outpatient, the doctor has hospital-admitance privileges and if a complication arises, he can transport that patient to the hospital. Why do women think that a surgical treatment with no backup is a good idea? I bet that none of the Supreme Court judges would have been supporting this if a loved one bled out while having an abortion because the doctor couldn't get that person to a hospital for advanced support. Tell me again why abortion clinics should be operating below the standard of care of the medical profession? Why standards of infection and sterilization control aren't being followed? And why nobody is concerned about the risks for these women who choose this surgical treatment? I would also wonder if in the signed consent form the women are told of the risks of abortion, that they are in an outpatient facility and that, if a problem should arise, they will have no hospital backup? In my opinion some of the abortion clinics that these women go to are no better than the back-alley abortions that they complain they would be forced to go back to. 53% How sick is our society where we have our high courts siding with butchering babies? Undue burden on women? Those aren’t women, the females who feel fine with killing innocent children. 29% 16% Patricia Murphy I’m thrilled with the ruling. Proudly pro-choice. We live in a secular nation, not one where religious beliefs trump everything else. Abortion is a surgical procedure that can Always illegal Sometimes legal Always legal SOURCE CNN/ORC Poll conducted March 17-20 of 1,001 adults. Margin of error is ± 3 percentage points. FRANK POMPA, USA TODAY Jim Michaud Over 54 million babies murdered in the U.S. since 1973 and counting. By far our biggest national disgrace. When a women is pregnant, it’s not just her body anymore. It’s her body and the baby’s body. The decision is made. Time to move on. If you don’t want to have an abortion, then don’t. But your beliefs have no place in telling others what to do. Bruce Mort Sal Maggiore It seems one group of people just will not stop trying to force their beliefs on another group, usually in the name of religion. How does requiring an outpatient surgical procedure to be held to outpatient surgical procedure standards deny women from getting treatment? The court just proved it will do anything to keep abortion legal, including a blatant disregard for patient safety. Jason Russell POLICING THE USA POLICING.USATODAY.COM Abortion is not murder. Calling it such justifies the nuts with guns who actually do murder living, breathing people. Stop the incendiary language and mind your own — reproductive — business. What has your experience with law enforcement been? Submit videos or photos on Twitter using #policingtheusa, call 540-739-2928 or email letters@usatoday.com. House members can’t agree on Benghazi After conflicting reports from House Democrats and Republicans on Hillary Clinton’s role in Benghazi, our followers shared their thoughts. Big waste of time and money. Blame the perpetrators for the evil done that day and move on. WEATHER The heaviest hailstone ever measured was 2.25 pounds, which fell in Bangladesh in 1986. @yoktomqueegee 79 @pstmstr 91 82 Salem 85 I think it’s unfortunate that politics play a role in this. 87 @johnelsomino88 91 64 Sacramento 98 San Francisco Billings 88 91 Reno 99 97 Carson City 107 North Platte Cheyenne 84 Palm Springs 89 110 San Diego Albuquerque 105 MidlandOdessa El Paso Anchorage 77 69 97 92 Juneau 96 94 87 86 Shreveport 95 78 93 Atlanta Baton Rouge 89 Houston 93 Tallahassee 84 New Orleans 91 87 FRI AQI Unhealthy s/g Partly sunny 84/63 Mostly sunny 86/67 A P.M. t-storm 86/68 AQI Moderate BOSTON Shower, t-storm 90/66 WED THU Sunny 82/67 THU T-storms 87/69 THU FRI Shower, t-storm 84/67 FRI Partly sunny 90/70 FRI AQI Moderate WED THU Shower, t-storm 89/78 THU T-storm 77/57 THU FRI Mostly sunny 76/57 AQI Good f Fog i Ice r Rain FRI T-storms 87/76 Shower, t-storm 92/78 Shower, t-storm 92/79 AQI Moderate sf Snowflurries U.S. CITIES TODAY THU Akron, Ohio Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Allentown, Pa. Amarillo, Texas Anaheim, Calif. Anchorage, Alaska Aspen, Colo. Atlantic City, N.J. Augusta, Ga. Austin, Texas Bakersfield, Calif. Baton Rouge, La. Billings, Mont. Birmingham, Ala. Bismarck, N.D. Boise, Idaho Buffalo, N.Y. Burlington, Vt. Cedar Rapids, Iowa Charleston, S.C. Charleston, W.Va. Cheyenne, Wyo. 76/53s 79/58pc 92/69t 83/58pc 95/67t 94/63pc 69/56c 78/49t 81/67pc 89/69pc 96/71pc 106/76s 89/73t 88/62t 92/67pc 82/56pc 99/67s 76/54pc 77/60pc 78/59pc 89/75t 78/56pc 83/56t 81/58s 84/59s 91/67t 86/63s 93/65t 86/63pc 63/54sh 73/48t 81/69pc 91/71t 96/72s 105/74s 92/74c 87/61pc 91/69pc 76/47s 98/65t 80/59s 84/61s 80/58t 90/76t 82/58s 70/54t AQI Moderate NEW ORLEANS Partly sunny 81/64 c Cloudy 40s 50s 60s sn Snow Warmer 78/59 Partly sunny 82/62 Partly sunny 76/56 WED THU FRI 70s Charleston THURSDAY 89 Savannah 89 Jacksonville 90 90 80s Miami 89 90s 100s 110+ Forecasts and FRIDAY graphics provided by AccuWeather Inc. ©2016 WED THU FRI PHILADELPHIA PHOENIX Clouds, sun 85/69 WED T-storms 92/75 WED Partly sunny 86/67 WED THU Sunny 86/71 THU T-storm 92/75 THU Sunny 87/69 THU FRI Shower, t-storm 85/72 FRI Shower, t-storm 85/72 FRI AQI Moderate dr Drizzle h Haze TODAY THU 79/57s 82/60s 77/56s 83/63s 88/59t 78/55c 91/71pc 91/72t 78/55pc 82/59s 94/75t 94/76t 77/55pc 81/61s 91/73t 90/74t 78/65c 84/62t 78/58t 71/48t 89/66pc 85/69t 92/72t 93/73pc 77/57pc 73/58c 77/51t 75/51t 84/59s 74/47s 90/76t 90/76pc 95/72pc 94/73pc 78/53pc 81/61s 108/72s 104/70s 81/52s 83/61pc 79/58s 78/55t 88/66pc 85/68t 90/67pc 87/68t 83/63pc 86/66s FRI T-storms 93/76 AQI Good pc Partly cloudy Hartford, Conn. Indianapolis Islip, N.Y. Jackson, Miss. Jacksonville, Fla. Jefferson City, Mo. Kansas City Key West, Fla. Knoxville, Tenn. Laredo, Texas Lexington, Ky. Lincoln, Neb. Little Rock, Ark. Long Beach, Calif. Louisville, Ky. Lubbock, Texas Madison, Wis. Manchester, N.H. Memphis, Tenn. Milwaukee Mobile, Ala. Modesto, Calif. Montgomery, Ala. Myrtle Beach, S.C. AQI Moderate s Sunny sh Showers TODAY THU 85/60c 88/61s 78/59pc 81/63s 82/66c 84/67s 93/68pc 94/70pc 90/72t 90/72t 81/64pc 83/66t 79/64t 84/64t 88/80pc 89/81s 86/63s 87/64s 99/77pc 102/78pc 81/58s 84/60s 83/64t 86/62t 92/71s 92/74pc 87/66pc 80/65pc 81/63s 84/66s 93/69t 96/70t 78/58s 79/56t 84/63c 87/62s 90/69s 89/72pc 76/61s 81/60c 84/70t 87/72c 104/66s 103/66s 92/71pc 93/72c 86/75c 87/77t Stray t-storm 87/61 Stray t-storm 76/58 Stray t-storm 75/59 AQI Good WED HONOLULU DETROIT DENVER Partly sunny 97/76 Mostly sunny 97/78 Partly sunny 97/79 AQI Unhealthy s/g AQI Good ORLANDO NEW YORK w Windy Cincinnati Cleveland Colorado Springs Columbia, S.C. Columbus, Ohio Corpus Christi, Texas Dayton, Ohio Daytona Beach, Fla. Des Moines, Iowa Duluth, Minn. Durham, N.C. El Paso, Texas Fairbanks, Alaska Flagstaff, Ariz. Fargo, N.D. Fort Myers, Fla. Fort Smith, Ark. Fort Wayne, Ind. Fresno, Calif. Grand Rapids, Mich. Green Bay, Wis. Greensboro, N.C. Greenville, S.C. Harrisburg, Pa. DALLAS CHICAGO CHARLOTTE WED WED AQI Good 30s Shower, t-storm 80/67 T-storm 89/77 T-storms 90/79 20s WED WED FRI 91 Air quality index (AQI) MPLS-ST. PAUL MIAMI 10s Below 10 BALTIMORE FRI 89 Columbia 88 94 DOYLE RICE AND KARL GELLES @USATODAYWEATHER Mostly sunny 92/73 Richmond San Juan Brownsville 86 83 Tampa Puerto Rico SOURCE World Meteorological Organization, AccuWeather TODAY Philadelphia 86 91 Mobile 85 Raleigh 92 Jackson 85 Charleston 90 86 80 Washington Annapolis Charlotte Nashville 75 Boston 85 76 Montgomery San Antonio Honolulu 66 Austin 93 79 Knoxville 92 92 Ice/mix Bangor New York Pittsburgh 83 Cincinnati Birmingham Little Rock Dallas 93 Hawaii 90 95 Lubbock 81 Memphis Tulsa 92 92 Phoenix 80 Oklahoma City Louisville Snow Hartford 79 Harrisburg 78 78 81 84 88 77 Columbus Indianapolis Jefferson City St. Louis Wichita 92 88 77 79 79 Santa Fe Flagstaff 78 80 74 Albany Cleveland 79 Chicago 76 Detroit Lansing Kansas City Springfield Dodge City Los Angeles 78 78 Rain Augusta Montpelier Buffalo 81 80 Madison Des Moines Topeka 87 78 77 76 81 T-storms Burlington Grand Milwaukee Rapids Sioux Falls 81 Denver Aspen 81 Omaha 83 102 Las Vegas 108 85 86 98 St. George +tax fees 77 74 Mpls-St. Paul 84 Pierre Casper Salt Lake City 94 71 83 85 Elko Fargo Note: For contiguous 48 states through 4 p.m. ET yesterday Marquette 78 Rapid City Idaho Falls Jackson Hole Fairbanks THU Edgar Fuss PRECIPITATION FORECAST COLDEST: 32° Dillon, Colo. Duluth 82 89 88 99 Burns Alaska T-storm 87/71 More lies, deceit, and incompetence from Clinton, as liberals blindly support the most corrupt person to ever run for president just because she’s a woman. For more, follow @USATOpinion or #tellusatoday. Bismarck Miles City Helena Boise Bend HOW OFTEN DOES LIGHTNING STRIKE THE EARTH? 100 times each second. THU Michael Alston YESTERDAY’S EXTREMES Spokane Portland Fresno WED The very fact that there are separate, partisan reports undermines the legitimacy of Congress and its “investigations” into this matter. I think Clinton is guilty of gross negligence and lied about it after the fact. Her lack of leadership was proven. HOTTEST: 113° Needles, Calif. 80 Olympia On this date in 1931, Florida’s all-time record high temperature of 109 degrees was set in Monticello. Partly sunny 91/71 Bill Matthews Bryce, Zion, Sedona, Monument Valley 2-nts Grand Canyon • 2-nts Zion Park 1-800-CARAVAN Seattle Eureka WED A hatchet job intentionally dragged out into the summer of an election year. The GOP never worried about finding the truth or getting justice — it only wanted to have more darts to throw at Clinton. Democrats will say anything to maintain Clinton’s political viability because it means power for them. WEATHER ONLINE USATODAY.COM TODAY’S HIGH TEMPERATURES FRONT & CENTER ATLANTA Al Herriman Have Your Say at letters@usatoday.com, facebook.com/usatodayopinion and @USATOpinion on Twitter. All comments are edited for length and clarity. Content submitted to USA TODAY may appear in print, digital or other forms. For letters, include name, address and phone number. Letters may be mailed to 7950 Jones Branch Drive, McLean, VA, 22108. TO COMMENT TOP TRAVEL CITIES It’s interesting how Democrats were able to completely dismiss all evidence supplied by the military in order to find Hillary Clinton “innocent.” @jinarbry Barry Levy, D.D.S Hawthorne, Calif. Patricia Rudy Hale FACEBOOK FACEBOOK.COM/ USATODAYOPINION TWITTER @USATOPINION Stray t-storm 105/87 Stray t-storm 102/82 T-storms 95/84 AQI Unhealthy s/g WED THU FRI Sunny, nice 80/56 Sunny, nice 83/63 T-storm 80/56 AQI Good SALT LAKE CITY WED THU FRI Partly sunny 98/69 Stray t-storm 91/69 Stray t-storm 92/69 WED THU FRI Partly sunny 87/75 Partly sunny 86/75 Incr. clouds 86/75 AQI Good SAN DIEGO WED THU FRI Fog, then sun 80/67 Clouds to sun 74/66 Turning sunny 72/64 HOUSTON WED THU FRI Shower, t-storm 93/74 Shower, t-storm 94/75 Mostly sunny 91/76 AQI Moderate SAN FRANCISCO WED THU FRI Sunny 71/54 Mostly sunny 73/55 Sunny, nice 73/56 LOS ANGELES LAS VEGAS WED THU FRI A P.M. t-storm 107/86 Mostly sunny 108/85 Partly sunny 103/83 AQI Unhealthy s/g WED THU FRI AQI Moderate WASHINGTON SEATTLE WED THU FRI Fog, then sun 89/63 Fog, then sun 83/63 Turning sunny 80/60 Mostly sunny 80/58 Sunny, nice 76/56 Partly sunny 75/60 WED THU FRI AQI Moderate AQI Good AQI Moderate AQI Good TODAY THU 83/72pc 83/74t 86/62s 87/65s 86/68pc 87/69s 82/63c 84/64s 84/71pc 84/72t 73/55s 76/56s 92/70pc 93/71pc 81/66t 85/62t 110/83pc 109/80s 87/75t 87/75t 85/58c 82/54pc 76/56pc 82/59s 75/60t 80/58s 82/57s 81/56s 82/64c 86/65s 89/67pc 88/69t 83/57t 79/57pc 99/64s 99/64s 86/65pc 85/69t 78/54pc 82/56s 98/59s 100/62s 94/74pc 95/75s 84/57s 85/59s 88/58t 87/58t Sarasota, Fla. Savannah, Ga. Scottsdale, Ariz. Shreveport, La. Sioux Falls, S.D. South Bend, Ind. Spokane, Wash. Springfield, Mo. Springfield, Ill. St. Louis St. Petersburg, Fla. Syracuse, N.Y. Tallahassee, Fla. Tampa, Fla. Toledo, Ohio Topeka, Kan. Tucson, Ariz. Tupelo, Miss. Tulsa, Okla. Virginia Beach, Va. Wichita, Kan. Wilmington, Del. Winston-Salem, N.C. Worcester, Mass. TODAY THU 92/77pc 91/77pc 89/74t 91/75t 103/84t 100/80t 95/72pc 95/74pc 81/60t 79/52t 76/52s 79/59pc 91/64s 88/59s 85/67c 84/69t 80/59pc 84/64pc 84/67pc 87/70pc 90/77t 90/78t 74/54pc 81/57s 91/74t 87/73t 90/78t 90/78t 79/51s 83/59s 79/65c 85/65t 95/74t 93/74t 91/64s 90/68s 95/74t 94/74pc 84/71pc 82/73t 88/68t 87/67t 85/65pc 86/67s 87/65pc 85/67t 79/61c 82/62s WORLD CITIES Partly sunny 85/68 Mostly sunny 87/72 A P.M. t-storm 88/73 AQI Moderate t Thunderstorms Nags Head, N.C. Nashville, Tenn. Newark, N.J. New Haven, Conn. Norfolk, Va. Oakland, Calif. Oklahoma City Omaha, Neb. Palm Springs, Calif. Pensacola, Fla. Pierre, S.D. Pittsburgh Portland, Maine Portland, Ore. Providence, R.I. Raleigh, N.C. Rapid City, S.D. Reno, Nev. Richmond, Va. Rochester, N.Y. Sacramento, Calif. San Antonio San Jose, Calif. Santa Fe, N.M. Beijing Buenos Aires Cancun, Mexico Dubai, UAE Frankfurt Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg London Mexico City Montreal Moscow Mumbai, India Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Sydney Toronto Tokyo TODAY THU 89/70c 93/70pc 62/51pc 62/50r 90/74s 90/77pc 109/91s 106/92pc 74/56sh 72/58pc 91/82t 91/83t 85/71t 83/73t 84/68s 84/67s 66/38s 66/39s 63/56r 68/58pc 74/54t 72/56t 67/62sh 81/59s 76/57pc 79/59c 84/80r 85/81r 72/58pc 70/59pc 78/66pc 77/67pc 85/67pc 84/66s 86/71pc 83/71pc 88/80pc 88/79pc 62/45s 61/48pc 78/55pc 79/62s 76/70r 79/72r NEWS 7A USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 OPINION TODAY’S DEBATE POLITICAL CORRUPTION Our view Justices give sleazy pols a get-out-of-jail free card Opposing view ‘Clear and correct’ on corruption Politicians who lack an ethical compass just got permission from the Supreme Court to push the envelope on sleazy actions a little further. In vacating the conviction of former Virginia governor Bob McDonnell on corruption charges, the court made it more difficult for federal prosecutors to secure bribery convictions. The court’s action underscores the need for criminal statutes to be clear so everybody, including public officials, knows when they cross the line into illegality. And federal prosecutors should not overreach, as the court found they had in the McDonnell case, referring to the government’s “boundless interpretation of the federal bribery statute.” The unanimous ruling leaves more room for public officials to act in ways that ordinary citizens find crooked but which have too often become business as usual from city halls to governors’ mansions to the U.S. Capitol. There was no question that McDonnell, once a rising Republican star, and his wife took $175,000 worth of gifts and loans from a Virginia businessman, including wedding catering, a New York shopping spree and a Rolex. There was no question the episode was, as the court put it, “tawdry.” The question was whether the actions McDonnell took — contacting state officials on the busi- Jay Sekulow Michael Wear H illary Clinton has a choice to make in her campaign against Donald Trump. He is a candidate so profoundly distasteful to such a broad swath of the American electorate that many liberals believe this election offers an opportunity to run to the hard left, and claim the greatest liberal mandate for a Democrat in the White House in almost a century. Their argument is that Hillary can take advantage of the decay and collapse of the Republican Party. For the first time in the modern era, an unabashedly, unreservedly liberal campaign could win a significant majority of the popular vote. That possibility was on display Monday as Clinton campaigned with Massachusetts Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren, viewed by many as a progressive champion and a possible Clinton running mate. However, the power of Senator Warren’s leadership is not in her willingness to fight for an ideology, but in her willingness to fight for her constituents. This is a distinction that should not be missed by the Clinton campaign. JIM LO SCALZO EPA Former Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell. nessman's behalf, arranging meetings, hosting a party at the governor’s mansion — amounted to “official acts.” The court ruled they did not, saying such a broad definition would criminalize routine help officials give constituents and supporters. We’d bet few constituents can lavish such gifts on office-holders or get parties hosted at the governor’s mansion, which is why counting such conduct as “legal” sounds absurd to ordinary citizens. But that is now the law of the land, and it could impact such high-profile cases as last week's conviction on bribery and other charges of Rep. Chaka Fattah, D- Pa., or the upcoming prosecution of Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., accused of using his office to benefit a Florida eye doctor in exchange for more than $1 million in gifts and campaign donations. So what’s to be done? Congress could amend federal corruption laws to more broadly define which acts are “official” and would trigger prosecution. But voters shouldn’t hold their breath waiting for 535 politicians to make it easier to prosecute themselves. A faster and easier way to combat sleaze is to change state ethics laws to ban, or place strict dollar limits on, gifts to elected officials. Virginia had no dollar limit on gifts when McDonnell was governor. Nor did about a dozen other states. As of 2013, Virginia and more than 30 other states failed to require reporting of gifts to spouses or children, a loophole big enough to drive a Lexus through. After the McDonnell scandal erupted, Virginia adopted strict new limits on gifts to government officials. Many public officials, of course, have their own standards of ethical behavior. So the preferred solution is to elect more men and women who don’t need a law to tell them that Rolexes, personal loans and golf outings from businessmen on the make should be shunned, even if they don’t violate a particular federal law. CLINTON’S LIBERAL TEMPTATION Will she use Trump’s unpopularity to bridge our political divides or to advance a polarizing agenda? FAR-LEFT MANDATE Seeking such a far-left mandate is a mistake. The real opportunity for Clinton — what should really tempt her — is the chance to emerge as a unifying political figure after a career as an embattled, divisive player on the national stage. Hillary has the capacity to lead in this way. Her 2000 and 2006 campaigns for U.S. Senate in New York presented her as deeply pragmatic, interested in results and committed to bridging divides. She won these races by large margins, her victory in 2006 even greater than in 2000. In the Senate, she was known for working closely with Republican lawmakers to get things done for her constituents. She reached out to pro-life Americans. She traveled the country with then-Sen. Sam Brownback to raise awareness of the tragedy of human trafficking before it was the popular justice issue it is today. She was a quietly devoted member of a prayer group for members of Congress, where during one meeting Brownback was prompted to apologize to Clinton directly for his unkind comments about her in the 1990s. The real opportunity Trump offers is for Clinton to reach out to discouraged, disempowered members of the conservative establishment and key Republican ANDREW HARNIK AP Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in Denver on June 28, 2016. constituencies — like evangelicals — who have a true crisis of conscience regarding Donald Trump. These voters and opinion-makers are more open to outreach from a Democrat than ever before. Clinton’s speech in San Diego earlier this month showed a willingness to reach toward the center on foreign policy, but she can do this in other areas as well. COSTLY CULTURE WAR As a longtime advocate for families and children, few are better positioned to advance a truly profamily economic agenda than Hillary. She can also reject our corrosive zero-sum politics around social issues — a brand of politics that she was on the losing end of for so much of her career — and embrace LGBT rights and religious freedom, both reproductive choice and abortion reduction. She has worked to bridge political divides before in her career, but that was when it was an electoral necessity. That wouldn’t be the case today. Now, it would be an act of statesmanship. CHOOSING DIVISION When left-leaning special interest groups and liberal ideologues argue that Trump’s candidacy presents an opportunity to ignore those who disagree with them, they are also arguing to further deepen our nation's growing and destructive polarization. Hillary has the opportunity to turn our nation from the politics of division and conflict that has defined so much of her career — for legitimate reasons or not. Whether that is something Hillary wants is another question. But it must be tempting. Michael Wear directed faith outreach for the 2012 Obama campaign and served in the White House office of faith-based initiatives. He is author of the forthcoming Reclaiming Hope: Lessons Learned in the Obama White House About the Future of Faith in America. In a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court vacated the conviction of former Virginia governor Bob McDonnell and slapped down yet another executive power grab — this time checking the power of arbitrary federal prosecution. The issue in the case was whether Gov. McDonnell undertook an “official act” by, for example, “calling an official,” “setting up a meeting,” or “hosting an event” for a donor. As the high court recognized, “conscientious public officials arrange meetings for constituents, contact other officials on their behalf, and include them in events all the time.” This kind of interaction is not corruption but rather a protected feature of a system of elected representative governance. There is no doubt the federal government has an interest in prosecuting officials for actual corruption. But here, just as we argued in our amicus brief, the government’s “unlimited” and “standardless” position transgressed protected political interaction, due process and federalism — and was more than any justice could bear. Properly drawing the line between genuine quid pro quo corruption and things like “setting up meetings” is key. There was no forbidden quid pro quo in this case. And while some contend the jury was able to tell that Gov. McDonnell “crossed the line,” the “line” presented to the jury was wrong: The jury should have been instructed “that merely arranging a meeting or hosting an event to discuss a matter does not count as a decision or action on that matter.” So, an official crosses the line by deciding, agreeing to decide, or pressuring others to decide a question in exchange for a gift. The high court was both clear and correct that hosting events is not enough, and the government’s own witnesses testified that Gov. McDonnell “asked them to attend a meeting, not that he expected them to do anything other than that.” In the end, this case was about a brazen, overreaching Obama Justice Department and whether the government may arbitrarily prosecute an official for granting mere access to financial supporters. According to the Constitution, and a unanimous Supreme Court, the answer is “No.” Jay Sekulow is chief counsel of the Washington-based American Center for Law and Justice. Keep the Ex-Im Bank in a coma, for now Andy Koenig Ronald Reagan once quipped that a government bureau is the “nearest thing to eternal life we’ll ever see.” Congress proved him right in December when it resurrected the Export-Import Bank of the United States, an agency that doles out corporate welfare to exporters. Yet while this New Deal-era federal agency may have cheated death, it now finds itself paralyzed. The question is whether Congress will do the right thing and leave it on life-support. The bank, which has handed out more than $200 billion in taxpayer-backed financing to private companies in the past decade, has lacked a quorum on its five-member board of directors since it was reauthorized late last year. This prevents it from approving transactions larger than $10 million, effectively limiting its activity to small businesses. That shouldn’t be a problem, judging by the rhetoric of Ex-Im Bank officials, allies and beneficiaries. Throughout 2015 — when the bank was under siege by a small group of principled congressional Republicans — its backers routinely claimed that the Ex-Im Bank exists to help small businesses export their products. Its CEO, Fred Hochberg, said “the most important thing we do is … support the small businesses.” Similarly, President Obama declared the bank “helps small businesses go global.” These sentiments were echoed by countless trade associations, lobbyists, politicians and others who wanted to convince Congress that a vote against the ExIm Bank was a vote against the tiny engines of America’s economy. But now big businesses complain that the Ex-Im Bank can’t approve their transactions. That’s because all the talk about small businesses was a ruse. The Ex-Im Bank’s primary beneficiaries are multi-national companies, often with multi-billion dollar revenue streams. Over 75% of its financing in 2015 benefited large firms. Keep in mind that the Ex-Im Bank defines “small businesses” as having up to 1,500 employees or up to $21.5 million in revenue. In 2013, a mere 10 businesses benefited from just under two-thirds of the bank’s financing, including major companies such as General Electric, Bechtel, and Caterpillar. One company — Boeing — accounted for almost one of every three dollars authorized by the bank. The $10 million transaction cap dramatically curtails these businesses’ ability to co-opt the taxpayer into subsidizing their profits. So the big businesses that lobbied so vigorously for the ExIm Bank’s reauthorization have been largely cut off from the taxpayer trough. They’re now trying to convince the Senate to move forward with Obama’s two nominees so the bank can go back to business as usual. Lawmakers should stand strong as the lobbying campaign begins to ramp up. They already gave in once, last year, after the Ex-Im Bank’s supporters successfully convinced Congress that small businesses needed the bank in order to flourish. Now those claims have been unmasked as a cover for the big businesses that want to profit at the public’s expense. Andy Koenig is senior policy advisor at Freedom Partners Chamber of Commerce. "USA TODAY hopes to serve as a forum for better understanding and unity to help make the USA truly one nation." Allen H. Neuharth, Founder, Sept. 15, 1982 GANNETT COMPANY PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Robert Dickey GANNETT CHIEF CONTENT OFFICER USA TODAY PRESIDENT & PUBLISHER EDITOR IN CHIEF GENERAL MANAGER EDITOR, EDITORIAL PAGE CHIEF REVENUE OFFICER EXECUTIVE EDITOR CHIEF PRODUCT OFFICER MANAGING EDITOR PRESIDENT, SPORTS MEDIA GROUP Joanne Lipman David Callaway Bill Sternberg Beryl Love Patty Michalski John Zidich Susan Motiff Kevin Gentzel Daniel Bernard David Morgan 8A NEWS USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 We got stuck in traffic. It was awesome. Make every ride more entertaining with in-car Wi-Fi from AT&T. Add to your Mobile Share Value® plan for $10/mo.* att.com/connectedcar *Connect a vehicle to existing AT&T Mobile Share Value® plan for additional $10/month: Eligible vehicles only. Req’s Mobile Share Value plan charge (min. $20/mo. for 300 MB of shareable data) plus $10/mo. access charge per vehicle. Access charges of $10 to $40/mo. apply for add’l devices on your plan. Devices: Limit 10/plan. Overage Charges: If you exceed the amount of data in your plan during your billing period, additional data will automatically be provided in increments of 300 MB at $20/300MB, on 300MB plan, or 1 GB at $15/GB on current available plans. If you are on a grandfathered rate plan, please check your Customer Service Summary for your overage rate. Hotspot: Connects up to 8 Wi-Fi-capable devices. Devices connected to vehicle’s hotspot use data from your plan. Once a device connects, it can automatically reconnect and use data from your plan unless hotspot is removed from returning device settings or hotspot password is changed. Performance varies based on number of devices connected and other factors. International: Wi-Fi hotspot functionality not available outside of U.S. & Canada. Service in Canada subject to unaffiliated carrier coverage. General Wireless Service Terms: Subject to Wireless Customer Agreement (see att.com/wca). Services are not for resale. Activation or upgrade fee (up to $45) per line and deposit may apply. Credit approval may be required. Other Monthly Charges: Apply per line and may include taxes, federal and state universal service charges, Regulatory Cost Recovery Charge (up to $1.25), gross receipts surcharge, Administrative Fee, and other government assessments which are not government-required charges. Pricing, promotions, and terms subject to change and may be modified or terminated at any time without notice. Coverage and service not available everywhere. You get an off-net (roaming) usage allowance for each service. If you exceed the allowance, your service(s) may be restricted or terminated. Other restrictions apply and may result in service termination. See att.com/mobilesharevalue for details. ©2016 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved. AT&T and the Globe logo are registered trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property. All other marks are the property of their respective owners. SECTION B WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 Clinton unveils her technology agenda And the praise is rolling in from Silicon Valley, 6B JULIAN STRATENSCHULTE, EPA How VW’s deal will affect you ANDREW HARNIK, AP We answer your biggest questions, 2B MONEYLINE ECONOMIC GROWTH REVISED UP TO 1.1% IN FIRST QUARTER The economy limped along in the first quarter but at a faster pace than previously estimated, with stronger exports nudging up growth. GDP grew at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.1%, up from the 0.8% estimated, the Commerce Department said Tuesday. Economists expected a revision to 1%. The weak growth is expected to do little to alter the view of Fed officials hesitant to raise interest rates. Impact of ‘Brexit’ on U.S. economy likely modest British decision to exit EU leaves winners, losers AMAZON’S EASY-ORDER DASH PROGRAM GROWS Amazon confirmed Tuesday it is expanding its Dash program to 150 brands overall, including Campbell’s Soup, Pepperidge Farm and Trident. When users run out of an item, they press the button to automatically order more from Amazon. The buttons cost $4.99, which is credited back after your first order. Paul Davidson @Pdavidsonusat USA TODAY DOW TO CUT 2,500 JOBS AFTER CORNING DEAL Dow Chemical plans to shed 2,500 jobs after acquiring full ownership of joint venture Dow Corning. The cuts represent 4% of its global workforce. Midland, Mich.-based Dow said Tuesday it expects to save $400 million in annual costs, up from a previous estimate of $300 million, because of the deal. Dow shares fell 2% on Tuesday to $48.50. “I don’t think it’s a big deal for the U.S. unless the (European Union) splinters.” DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVG. 17,400 17,350 269.48 Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics 17,300 17,250 4:00 p.m. 17,410 17,200 17,150 9:30 a.m. 17,140 TUESDAY MARKETS CLOSE CHG 4,691.87 2,036.09 1.47% $47.85 $1.1049 102.79 x 97.42 x 35.55 x 0.03 x 1.52 x 0.0044 x 0.82 INDEX Nasdaq composite S&P 500 T-note, 10-year yield Oil, light sweet crude Euro (dollars per euro) Yen per dollar SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM uUSA MARKETS, 4B USA SNAPSHOTS © Outliving savings in retirement While two-thirds believe there is some chance they’ll outlive their savings, 14% think the chance is 100%. SOURCE Northwestern Mutual 2016 Planning & Progress Study of 2,646 adults JAE YANG AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY JUSTIN TALLIS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES MARKET SHOCK AFTER U.K. VOTE NOT AS BAD AS YOU MAY THINK Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY Not every market shock spells long-term doom for stocks. When it comes to financial shocks, most trigger swift and violent market reactions but turn out to be short-lived. Then there’s megashocks — like the fall of Wall Street firm Lehman Brothers in 2008 or the techstock wreck in 2000 — which spark market earthquakes that lead to bear markets and long recoveries. So where does the “Brexit” vote shocker rate in the pecking order of past Wall Street implosions? For now, most Wall Street pros say the political and economic fallout spawned by Brexit, or Britain’s vote to exit the European Union, fits into the category of a more typical market shock. While serious and still potentially destabilizing given all the unknowns, markets can bounce back from Brexit. It doesn’t appear to be the type of sinister knock-out punch investors have been fearing. “I don’t think this is the big one,” says Sam Stovall, U.S. equity strategist at S&P Global Market Intelligence. The market’s move Tuesday suggests Stovall might be right. The Dow Jones industrial average rallied nearly 270 points — after a nearly 875-point drop the past two trading sessions. The broad Standard & Poor’s 500 index surged 1.8% after a 5.3% drop Friday and Monday. Stovall doesn’t expect U.S. consumers to cut back on car or home purchases due to what’s going on in Britain and Europe. He also doesn’t see an expected recession in the U.K. throwing the U.S. into recession. And unlike 2008, he says, there is little fear that the financial system will collapse. Still, some say investors should not rule out more pain. “We think this negative market event has legs,” says Phil Orlando, chief equity strategist at Federated Investors. STOCKS AND SHOCKS The “Brexit”-driven stock market slide is in line with recent shock events. S&P 500 performance: Day 1 loss Total loss -3.6% -5.3%1 “Brexit” leave vote June 24, 2016 -2.1% -2.6% “Grexit” referendum June 29, 2015 -2.3% Boston Marathon bombing April 15, 2013 -3.0% -6.7% -6.7% -3.2% -4.7% -4.7% -46.0% USA AAA-rating downgrade Aug. 5, 2011 “Flash Crash” May 6, 2010 Lehman Bros. bankruptcy Sept. 15, 2008 1 – 2-day loss ending 6/27/16 SOURCE S&P Capital IQ FRANK POMPA, USA TODAY The U.S. economy will likely take a modest hit from the United Kingdom’s vote last week to leave the European Union, but the episode is expected to produce some winners as well as losers. The market turbulence set off by the referendum is prompting some businesses to rethink hiring and investment plans. And manufacturers that were starting to stabilize after a prolonged slump face a new potential setback. But homebuyers may be dealt a favorable drop in mortgage rates, while U.S. business and property owners welcome a possible fresh stream of foreign investment diverted from the U.K. Overall, the negatives are expected to outweigh the positives. High Frequency Economics has trimmed its estimate for U.S. economic growth in the second half of 2016 to 2.3% from 2.5%. Goldman Sachs has cut its second-half forecast to 2% from 2.25%. Yet the fallout from the socalled “Brexit” is a moving target. Stocks pared their losses Tuesday, though the Standard & Poor’s 500 remains nearly 4% off its pre-Brexit level and further turmoil may await. “I don’t think it’s a big deal for the U.S. unless the (European Union) splinters,” says Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics. Zandi notes the nearly doubledigit stock sell-off early in the year, triggered by China’s slowdown, was far more significant. Here’s a breakdown of some losers and winners: LOSERS uManufacturers. U.S. factories have been taking it on the chin for nearly two years with weakness abroad and a strong dollar hobbling their exports and low oil prices damping orders for the steel pipes used by drillers. Since January, the dollar has weakened while oil prices have risen, helping the sector regain its footing. Since the vote, however, oil prices have dipped and the dollar has risen as much as 4% against a basket of currencies. “We were starting to see some signs of stability,” says Chad Moutray, chief economist of the National Association of Manufacturers. “This is a fly in the ointment.” The U.K. accounts for only 4% of U.S. exports and 0.5% of U.S. v STORY CONTINUES ON 2B Lending Club names new CEO, cuts 179 jobs Company says improper loans extended to former chief’s family Mike Snider @mikesnider USA TODAY Lending Club named a new CEO in a bid to restore confidence in the troubled peer-topeer banking alternative under investigation for improper loan practices — activities it now says extended to the family of founder and former CEO Renaud Laplanche. The San Francisco-based company also will cut 179 jobs. Shares, trampled in the wake of the company’s disclosure in early May it had sold $22 ing, which had been million in loans to an inpostponed from earlier stitutional investor that in the month. The company took didn’t meet the buyer’s stated criteria, rose 7% that action after the Justice Department to $4.60 Tuesday. began an investigation Scott Sanborn, who has been with Lending into the improper loan Club for six years, had sale. LENDING CLUB Lending Club’s dismost recently been acting CEO. He previously New CEO closure of that loan, was Lending Club’s chief Scott Sanborn which it said was sold operations officer, and to an investor even he helped steer the company to- though staff knew it didn’t meet ward its 2014 IPO. the investor’s request, led to the His naming to the post Tues- resignation of Laplanche. Tuesday comes on the day of Lending day, the company said its interClub’s annual shareholder meet- nal probe also found 32 loans, amounting to about $722,800, made in December 2009, issued to Laplanche and three family members made to help increase reported loan volume. Founded in 2007, Lending Club has handled about $19 billion in loans via its online peerto-peer model, matching borrowers with loans financed by investors. It was the golden standard for a new breed of financial tech disruptors that aimed to overtake traditional financing mechanisms using elements of the sharing economy. The company last month warned the probes might knock investor confidence, curtailing new business. Tuesday, it said lower loan volumes in the Aprilto-June time period led to the staff reductions, which amount to about 12% of its employees, the company says. It forecast second-quarter loan originations to be one-third lower than in the first quarter of the year. Lending Club has made several changes to improve fund governance and is offering incentives to attract investors, it says. BTIG Equity Research analyst Mark Palmer expects the stock, which has lost more than half of its value this year, to rebound. He reiterated a “buy” recommendation and $9 target price. 2B MONEY USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 What Volkswagen’s settlement means to you Chris Woodyard and Nathan Bomey @ChrisWoodyard, @NathanBomey USA TODAY For owners of about 475,000 Volkswagen and Audi vehicles with 2-liter diesel engines, a $14.7 billion settlement announced Tuesday in a case involving VW’s admissions of cheating on emissions tests is going to have huge implications. “We’re getting VW’s polluting vehicles off the road, and we’re reducing harmful pollution in our air,” said Gina McCarthy, administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency. As big as the settlement be- Pfizer plans to expand with biotech plant in China $350M facility to be built in Hangzhou Kevin McCoy @kmccoynyc USA TODAY U.S. drug-making giant Pfizer plans to invest roughly $350 million to develop a biotechnology center in China, increasing the company’s footprint in the world’s second-largest pharmaceutical market, the firm announced Monday. Pfizer shares closed up roughly 2% at $34.44 in Tuesday trading. The new facility, the New Yorkbased company’s first in China and third overall, will be built in Hangzhou and will provide both biologic treatments — medications made in microorganisms, plants or animal cells — for patients in China and worldwide, Pfizer said. The plant will also make biosimilars, treatments akin to medications that already have U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval, the company said. The medications will help cancer patients and those with other ailments, as well as enable China to deal with the emergence of non-communicable diseases and an aging population, Pfizer said. “The local production of highquality, affordable biosimilar medicines will have the potential to significantly improve the lives of patients not only in China but across the world,” Tony Maddaluna, president of Pfizer Global Supply, said in a statement issued with the announcement. China’s pharmaceutical market, second only to the one in the U.S., was worth an estimated $105 billion in 2014 and is forecast to expand to $200 billion by 2020, according to a 2015 report by Kelly Scientific Publications. However, the China market poses challenges for pharmaceutical companies that try to achieve simultaneous global development and registration of new medicines, Wu Xiaobin, president of Pfizer Investment China, said in a September interview with China Daily. “In China, it can take up to eight years on average to register a treatment, compared with four in the U.S.,” Wu said. “As a result, patients are experiencing poor or delayed access to the latest medicines due to regulatory and reimbursement hurdles.” Wu added Chinese authorities in recent years “have issued a series of new policies to address this ‘drug lag.’ ” However, he said Pfizer also faces “inconsistent policies” over prices in China’s provinces, as well as challenges in hospital-level price negotiations. In February, China’s Food and Drug Administration said it would prioritize the approval process for new drugs with clear clinical value, including medications for children and the elderly, rare diseases, AIDS and malignant tumors, Reuters reported. Corrections & Clarifications USA TODAY is committed to accuracy. To reach us, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail accuracy@usatoday.com. Please indicate whether you’re responding to content online or in the newspaper. A travel story Monday about favorite midscale hotels misstated free amenities at Hilton Garden Inn properties. Complimentary cooked-to-order breakfast is offered only for elite loyalty program members. Complimentary wine is only for elite members in certain hotels. tween the company, government agencies and class-action lawyers became, VW still faces myriad other actions arising from its deception, including a Justice Department criminal probe. The case became “one of the most flagrant violations of environmental and consumer laws in our country’s history,” Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates said. Its effects will be far-reaching, including for individual car owners. Here’s what you need to know: even as they spew up to 40 times the allowable amount of nitrogen oxides when they are on the highway. Q A: Its engineers couldn’t meet U.S. Why did Volkswagen do that? regulations for nitrogen oxides. So they installed the “defeat device” software to fool regulators into believing the cars were compliant. VW was hoping to provide a more cost-effective alternative to gaselectric hybrid engines. Q A: Volkswagen admitted that Q it inserted software so that cars A: Volkswagen says about 460,000 What’s this all about? with 4-cylinder 2-liter diesel engines would pass emissions tests How many cars are covered by today’s actions? VW models and 15,000 Audi cars with 2-liter engines were sold or leased in the U.S. and are still in use. Q A: The 2-liter diesel versions of the 2013 to 2015 VW Beetle; Which models? 2010 to 2015 VW Golf; 2009 to 2015 VW Jetta; 2012 to 2015 VW Passat; and 2010 to 2013 and 2015 Audi A3. Q A: Volkswagen will make a payHow will owners compensated? be ment of $5,100 to $10,000 depending on the “diminished value” of their model, according to the Federal Trade Commission. Plus, VW will either repair or buy back the car, depending on what the owner prefers. Q A: They will be based on the How will buyback prices be determined? “Clean Trade-In Value” as published in the September edition of the NADA Used Car Guide. The buyback prices will range from $12,500 to $44,000. Q A: Because the resale values of Volkswagen diesel vehicles Why was that date chosen? have fallen sharply since the start of the emissions scandal, which was exposed by the Environmental Protection Agency on Sept. 18, 2015. Q A: Visit VWCourtSettlement.com. Where can I find out more information? Reaction after ‘Brexit’ shows significance of bank reforms Banks remain the most vulnerable sector in the event of economic shocks and the most sensitive barometer to impending threats. ODD ANDERSEN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES The offices of Barclays, KPMG, HSBC, Citigroup and Bank of America in the Canary Wharf financial district of East London. Darrell Delamaide Special for USA TODAY The surprise vote by Britain to exit the Union European has hammered bank stocks, but the regulations put into place after the financial crisis of 2008 are proving their worth in shielding the banking system from serious disruption, let alone collapse. U.S. banks, including those with extensive international operations, are weathering the crisis relatively well. Even British banks, which have in some cases lost more than a quarter of their value on the stock market, are in a more stable position as a result of reforms introduced in the wake of the financial crisis. Britain’s finance minister, Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne, reassured markets this week with the affirmation that capital requirements for British banks were “10 times what they were,” even though he acknowledged market volatility likely would continue. Bank shares began bouncing back Tuesday as investors realized the sell-off may have been BUSINESS REGULATION WASHINGTON overdone. boost payouts. In the U.S., the Federal Reserve These were precisely the banks last week affirmed the country’s hardest hit by the British referenbiggest banks are in better posi- dum result because of the chaltion than ever to survive market lenges they face with their conditions much more severe London-based European operathan those resulting from the tions. These banks may have to British vote. relocate numerous activities and “The nation’s largest bank thousands of employees if Britain holding companies conno longer keeps its tinue to build their capi“passport” to offer finantal levels and improve cial services throughout their credit quality, the European Union. strengthening their abiliBut their perforty to lend to households mance in the stress and businesses during a tests, analysts argue, acsevere recession,” the Fed tually make these banks said in releasing partial sound investments since results of this year’s the scenarios envisaged GETTY IMAGES stress tests for the 33 bigin the stress tests are so British Figest banks. much more severe than Minis- anything “Brexit” has nance The stress test — which analyzes the im- ter George brought so far. pact of various disaster Osborne Another factor affectscenarios on banks’ baling banks as a result of ance sheets — is one of the mea- Brexit is that it will likely encourintroduced by the age the Fed to keep interest rates sures Dodd-Frank financial reform act. low longer than it might have othThe banks’ ability to pass the erwise. Uncertain economic pertests, in turn, is due in large part formance already had prompted to other Dodd-Frank reforms, in- Fed policymakers to slow their cluding higher capital require- timetable for raising rates after a ments and restrictions on minimal hike in December speculative activities. marked the first time in a decade A second report on the stress it had increased rates. Now, many Fed watchers antictests with a more detailed view of individual banks’ plans for ipate the Fed won’t raise rates dividends and capital is due out again until sometime next year. Wednesday and is expected to Low interest rates, as a rule, regive a green light for megabanks duce bank profits. There are other such as JPMorgan Chase, Bank clouds on the banking horizon. of America and Citigroup to The sharp drop in Italian bank shares following the Brexit vote prompted the Italian government to talk about a $44 billion bailout of the sector. Other European banks remain in far worse shape than their U.S. counterparts, with insufficient capital and massive portfolios of bad loans. Ironically, one of the weakest is Germany’s largest bank, Deutsche Bank, which has dropped more than 50% in value over the past year. Frankfurt, where the bank is headquartered and the largest financial services center on the continent, is set to be the biggest beneficiary if activities are forced out of London. Global banks remain interconnected so that a failure in Italy or Germany would have immediate repercussions on banks elsewhere. But the new restrictions on speculative activities, and especially derivatives, make a chain reaction credit crisis like that which occurred when Lehman Brothers collapsed in 2008 much less likely. Perhaps the main lesson to draw from the market reaction to Brexit is that banks remain the most vulnerable sector in the event of economic shocks and the most sensitive barometer to impending threats. The quick recovery in this case, however, testifies to the effectiveness of new regulations and validates the emphasis on special regulatory treatment for this sector. U.S. homebuyers, shoppers among ‘Brexit’ winners v CONTINUED FROM 1B GDP, according to Capital Economics. But the referendum will require the U.K. to renegotiate trade deals with the eurozone, which represents 15% of U.S. exports, behind only Canada and Mexico. And the vote has fomented fears that other European countries may follow the U.K. out of the EU. “It’s just one more headache,” Moutray says. Jim O’Sullivan of High Frequency Economics has revised down his forecast for U.S. export growth in the second half of 2016 to 1% from 2.5%. uConsumer and business confidence. While stock declines dent consumer confi- dence, consumption has been largely immune to sharp market gyrations, says Tom Porcelli, chief U.S. economist of RBC Capital Markets. Business confidence has been far shakier, with capital spending turning in its worst two-quarter stretch in seven years. “Business investment is probably the most vulnerable sector,” Porcelli says. And while some large banks and technology companies are unfazed by Brexit, others are inclined to put new hiring projects on hold to see where the dust settles while moving ahead with plans to fill existing openings, says Jeanne Branthover, a partner in executive recruiting firm DHR International. That could further constrain job growth that slowed substantially in April and May. uOil producers. Oil companies sharply cut back drilling activity after oil prices tumbled from more than $100 a barrel in 2014 to $26 early this year. Prices had climbed to about $50 a barrel before Brexit sent them down modestly to about $48 by Tuesday. A strong dollar puts downward pressure on oil, which is traded in dollars. WINNERS uHomebuyers. The global turmoil has driven investors to the safety of U.S. Treasury bonds, pushing down the yield on 10-year notes. Thirty-year mortgages, in turn, averaged 3.56% Monday, according to Bankrate, down from 3.66% a week earlier, saving the holder of a new $200,000 mortgage about $144 a year. uShoppers. A strengthening dollar could further cut already low import prices for U.S. shoppers. uU.S. property owners banks, tech firms. Brexit may prompt wealthy foreigners to sell U.K. real estate, spurring demand for U.S. properties, says Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the National Association of Realtors. Branthover says her large banking and technology clients hope for a similar shift in investment assets to U.S. firms. MONEY 3B USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 Former ‘new economy’ stocks have old feel Group of large-cap tech firms lag on revenue growth John Shinal @johnshinal USA TODAY Judging by their financial metrics, a group of large-cap technology companies once thought of as drivers of a new, tech-based economy now look downright stodgy. Microsoft, Intel, Cisco Systems and IBM all pay dividends whose yields are higher than the expected revenue growth rates for their current fiscal years. Healthy dividends combined with weak or negative growth make them look more like plays in utilities or telecoms. While their status as income stocks isn’t new, the figures in the THE NEW TECH ECONOMY chart at right show they don’t belong in growth portfolios. That’s because selling hardware or software to corporations or consumers no longer is a tech growth driver. Sales at Microsoft and IBM are expected to fall in the current year, while Cisco revenue is seen flat and Intel sales are expected to creep up 3%. By contrast, the vast majority of growth in the sector this year will come from Internet companies that provide enabling technologies and platforms for selling something other than tech products. Alphabet and Facebook, for example, sell online advertising while Amazon is a retailer that sells online. The three firms’ annual sales are expected to grow 16%, 44% and 25%, respectively. None of those three companies pays a dividend, choosing instead to re-invest their profits. With sales at Apple seen falling 7.5% in the current year, more than half of the new business in the tech industry will come from the Internet sector. Alphabet, Amazon and Facebook are expected to capture a combined $47 billion in additional revenue this year, with Amazon alone accounting for $27 billion of it. To be sure, some large software companies, including Salesforce and Adobe Systems, sell into enterprise or consumer markets that generate double-digit annual growth. Both are expected to grow 20% or more in their current, respective fiscal years. But the pair between them will add less than $3 billion in new business, according to Wall Street estimates, a tiny fraction of what Amazon, Facebook and Amazon will do. It’s a similar story for certain subsectors in security and stor- REVENUE NON-GROWTH AT&T is growing faster and paying a higher dividend than several former “new economy” names: Company 2016 Divirevenue dend growth yield AT&T +12.5% 4.6% Intel Cisco +3.1% flat 3.3% 3.75% Microsoft -2.2% 2.9% IBM -3% 3.8% Apple -7.5% 2.4% SOURCE USA TODAY RESEARCH age, as well as the market for cloud computing services. While Microsoft and Oracle are posting double-digit cloud growth, they lag behind market leader Amazon in that business and their cloud-related sales are still small relative to overall revenue. Amazon’s making it easier to flip through that book Kindle’s Page Flip feature is aimed at readers who like to bounce around Though Page Flip can be used with any Kindle book, the feature seems most applicable for non-fiction — typically books in which you’d take the time to make notes or highlight passages. Often these are books you don’t have to read in a linear fashion. Ed Baig @edbaig ebaig@usatoday.com USA TODAY One other source of 2016 growth worth mentioning will come from AT&T. Thanks to a series of acquisitions, the wireless giant is seen boosting sales more than 12% this year. AT&T is notable because even though it has a reputation among investors as a staid telecom stock, both its dividend yield and its expected revenue growth are now higher than the former ‘new economy’ giants. Microsoft is expected to post 2.2% lower sales for the year ending this month, for example, while IBM revenue for 2016 is seen dropping 3%. Cisco is expected to post flat sales for its fiscal year ending in July while paying a dividend of 3.75%. Intel sales are expected to rise 3.1% this year, but that’s lower than its dividend yield of 3.3%. The numbers show these names no longer are tech growth stars but rather stocks more at home in the conservative portfolios of income investors. Foreigners’ tweets, posts get closer look Customs, Border Patrol agents might inquire about online activity Not every book read is consumed from start to finish. Amazon is adding a new Kindle feature aimed at readers who find themselves frequently skipping back and forth among pages. The aptly named feature, called Page Flip, is coming (with small variations) to Amazon’s own Kindle e-readers and Fire tablets, as well as the Kindle app on iOS and Android phones and tablets. The new feature starts rolling out Tuesday via a free over-the-air update. Page Flip has a singular purpose: to make it easy to hop, skip and jump around a book while saving your place. You can skim past pixel-accurate thumbnails of every page, tapping to zoom in on any of those pages or zoom out to get a birds-eye view. But there’s also a thumbnail pinned to the screen that represents the last page you read, making it easier to go back to what you were originally reading by choosing that page pin. Though Page Flip can be used with any Kindle book, the feature seems most applicable for non-fiction. These are typically the books in which you’d take the time to make notes or highlight passages. And these are often books that you don’t have to read in a linear fashion. Indeed, if it is a “how-to” book, you may want to consult charts, diagrams or just concentrate on topics drawn in specific chapters. And even if there is more of a linear story arc — perhaps a biography, if not a complex novel — you may want to refer back or skip ahead to photographs or quotes. The notes, highlights, pictures, charts and so on that show up in Page Flip thumbnails all serve as visual landmarks since page layouts are maintained. So as you bounce around, by tapping or swiping, Page Flip gives you a good sense, spatially, for just how long a book is — kind of the rough digital equivalent of flipping through pages of a physical book. When you do want to go back to the last page read, tap the Back to XX thumbnail with XX representing the page in question. Page Flip also works with NEW YORK Allana Akhtar USA TODAY SAN FRANCISCO The government’s next plan to curb terrorism involves snooping around the Facebook profiles of foreign travelers. Non-citizens traveling to the U.S. on a visa waiver could be asked about their online presence and social media profiles — but not their account passwords — by U.S. Customs and Border Patrol. Though CBP already screens foreign travelers with in-person interviews and database checks, collecting social media accounts is specifically meant to track activity that could pose threats to “national security,” according to a proposal submitted by CBP and published in the Federal Register late last week. Collecting social media accounts is meant to track activity that could pose a threat to national security. AMAZON Amazon’s Audible audio edition books that are integrated into Kindle apps. So if you happen to be listening to the Audible version of a book when the narrator references a picture or chart, you can refer to that picture or chart without interrupting the narrator. The page pin will automatically update to follow along with the narrator. If you prefer, you can pause the audio. In an Amazon press release, Laura Hillenbrand, the bestselling author of Unbroken, says, “As an author, I love knowing that my work is presented with fluid clarity, freeing my readers from the page shuffling that can cloud and spoil the narrative.” Page Flip doesn’t alter the other navigational tools that have been in Kindles for some time. You can still move page by page in either direction. You can still bookmark pages, jump to given chapters from a table of contents or menu and, with certain books, exploit an X-ray feature that lets you dig deeper into mentions of a specific character. Last week Amazon unveiled a new updated version of the entry-level $79.99 Kindle reader. Earlier this year it unveiled the far more expensive Oasis model. Mike Torres, Kindle Director of Product Management, maintains that 2015 was a banner year for the Kindle franchise, which he says continues into 2016. The company won’t reveal specifics, but Torres says sales and reading stats continue to rise. Growth has been driven, he says, by the $9.95 Kindle Unlimited subscription service and by the independent publishing business. Amazon has paid out more than $160 million over the last 12 months to authors for Kindle Unlimited alone. Page Flip can give you a bird’s-eye view of a book and allows you to go back and forth between pages. “Collecting social media data will enhance the existing investigative process and provide DHS greater clarity and visibility to possible nefarious activity,” the proposal said. The proposal indicates CBP recognizes the way individual attackers and extremist groups are using social media to spread terror. Two recent mass shootings with connections to established terrorist groups — in San Bernardino, Calif., and in Orlando — were at the hands of killers adept at using social media. The California attackers whose shooting rampage killed 14 posted messages of support to Islamic State on their social media profiles. Omar Mateen, whose massacre at a Orlando night club killed 49, pledged support to ISIS on Facebook. The new CBP proposal, which has a 60-day comment period, may not have flagged the Orlando or San Bernardino shootings because the attackers were either citizens or permanent residents of the United States. Drivers 50-plus want more car-safety tech, survey shows Kimiya Manoochehri USA TODAY In the quest to be able to keep driving in the coming years, more drivers 50 and up are eager to try the latest in car-safety tech that might help them stay behind the wheel, a new study finds. Some 76% of drivers in that age group surveyed say they would look for a car with the latest safety features, finds the online survey by insurer The Hartford. “Our findings indicate that some drivers, age 50-plus, would be more willing to drive in certain situations if they had particular technologies,” said Jodi Olshevski, a gerontologist who is executive director of The Hartford Center for Mature Marketing Excellence. The study suggests “they associate advanced technologies with enhanced safety.” They are looking for advanced safety features like blind-spot warning, crash mitigation, lanedeparture warnings and advanced headlights. Some of the new technologies pave the way toward self-driving cars, which are still a few years away. The study found only about one in four older drivers is opposed to going driverless. Some 35% are willing to give it a try, and 42% don’t know enough yet to say. In order to be willing to back driverless cars, 56% said they need to know they would be as safe as driving themselves. Some 48% would use them if their health prevented them from driving, 27% would use them if they helped them stay connected to friends, 27% if they were cheaper than a regular car, and 17% if they were recommended by someone they trust. The survey was conducted online from 2,015 responses in March with a 2.2% margin of error, The Hartford says. 4B MONEY USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch Adam Shell @adamshell USA TODAY Was that the “Brexit” bottom flashing its green light Tuesday on Wall Street? The stock market’s two-day swoon of more than 5%, due to the shock of Britain’s vote to exit the European Union, was interrupted Tuesday by a slide-ending 1.8% surge — prompting the question: is the Brexit-driven stock market downdraft over already? “Maybe. Too soon to tell,” says David Kotok, chief investment officer at Cumberland Advisors. Kotok, who says he’s not sure if more dominoes will fall in the crisis, says he’s “still sitting on some cash reserves” but also “did some buying in the deep dip.” Quincy Krosby, market strate- Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services: gist at Prudential Financial, wouldn’t rule out a Brexit bottom: “It could certainly be.” While it’s tough to pinpoint a true bottom, especially after a steep market fall, Krosby says she identified some positive signs in Tuesday’s trading session. The British pound, which hit a 31-year low Monday, stabilized Tuesday, rising 1%. A closely watched “fear gauge” also retreated, suggesting investors no longer are in risk-off mode. Gold, a haven in tough times that had been moving higher amid the turbulence, also gave up some gains. The market is calm — “for now,” says Gary Kaltbaum, president of Kaltbaum Capital Management. “Enough damage has been done for now,” he says, adding that “all bets are off if somebody else follows the U.K. (out of the EU),” but doubts that happens anytime soon. DOW JONES Ford (F) was the most-bought stock among smaller SigFig investors (less than $250K in assets) in mid-June. +269.48 +35.55 INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE CHANGE: +1.6% YTD: -15.31 YTD % CHG: -.1% CLOSE: 17,409.72 PREV. CLOSE: 17,140.24 RANGE: 17,190.51-17,409.72 NASDAQ COMP +97.42 +17.65 CHANGE: +2.1% YTD: -315.54 YTD % CHG: -6.3% CLOSE: 4,691.87 PREV. CLOSE: 4,594.45 RANGE: 4,643.93-4,692.98 CLOSE: 2,036.09 PREV. CLOSE: 2,000.54 RANGE: 2,006.67-2,036.09 RUSSELL 2000 INDEX CHANGE: +1.6% YTD: -28.59 YTD % CHG: -2.5% CLOSE: 1,107.30 PREV. CLOSE: 1,089.65 RANGE: 1,092.17-1,110.50 S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS GAINERS LOSERS $ Chg YTD % Chg % Chg Endo International (ENDP) Shares up on issuance of Vasostrict patent. 16.19 +2.50 +18.3 -73.6 Southwestern Energy (SWN) Bought time to avoid breaching covenants. 13.89 Marathon Petroleum (MPC) Shares follow rising oil. 35.70 +2.77 +8.4 -31.1 Marathon Oil (MRO) Upgraded to peer perform at Wolfe Research. 14.78 +1.12 +8.2 +17.4 Cabot Oil & Gas (COG) Hits year’s high in leading sector. 25.99 +1.93 +8.0 +46.9 Seagate Technology (STX) Seen undervalued, rebounds from June’s low. 22.53 +1.66 +8.0 Murphy Oil (MUR) Climbs along with peers in leading sector. 30.08 Devon Energy (DVN) Evens June in strong sector. 35.99 +2.24 Company (ticker symbol) Price +1.47 +11.8 +95.4 +6.7 +34.0 +6.6 +12.5 +.87 +6.5 +20.6 Micron Technology (MU) Shares up ahead of earnings. 12.99 +.76 +6.2 -8.3 Price $ Chg YTD % Chg % Chg 34.98 -.83 -2.3 unch. 62.75 DuPont (DD) Stock rating downgrades to neutral at JPMorgan. -1.33 -2.1 -5.8 Dow Chemical (DOW) 48.50 Stock rating downgrades; cuts about 2,500 jobs. -1.01 -2.0 -5.8 Tyson Foods (TSN) 64.20 Lower costs to boost earnings, shares dip anyway. -1.04 -1.6 +20.4 36.05 -.57 -1.6 -13.8 37.17 -.52 -1.4 +106.6 132.99 -1.81 -1.3 +7.4 62.75 Campbell Soup (CPB) Retreats from hitting June’s high on positive note. -.82 -1.3 +19.4 Dr Pepper Snapple (DPS) Retreats from gain on “Brexit” fears. 94.73 -1.12 -1.2 +1.6 Hershey (HSY) Takes another step away from year’s high. 96.23 -.98 -1.0 +7.8 Kroger (KR) Reverses gain on “Brexit” fear boost. Newmont Mining (NEM) Reverses some of gain on “Brexit.” Raytheon (RTN) Buy rating, loses momentum. Heather decided to catch a flight. Her seat was on the wing. vrstories.usatoday.com *Headset not required. Actual head required. 5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold: 5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold: 0.91 0.57 HD AAPL AAPL Barnes & Noble Education Price: $10.58 Chg: -$0.20 % chg: -1.9% Day’s high/low: $11.00/$10.46 0.58 -2.45 AAPL AAPL AAPL POWERED BY SIGFIG 4-WEEK TREND Carnival Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstPlus Vanguard TotIntl Fidelity Contra American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds CapIncBuA m NAV 187.85 50.55 186.02 50.53 186.03 13.84 94.52 40.33 20.68 57.11 ETF, ranked by volume Ticker SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr SPY Barc iPath Vix ST VXX SPDR Financial XLF CS VS 2x Vix ShTm TVIX VanE Vect Gld Miners GDX ProShs Ultra VIX ST UVXY iShs Emerg Mkts EEM CS VS InvVix STerm XIV iShares EAFE ETF EFA iShare Japan EWJ Chg. +3.32 +0.91 +3.29 +0.90 +3.29 +0.34 +1.89 +0.82 +0.25 +0.97 4wk 1 -2.8% -2.9% -2.8% -2.9% -2.8% -4.3% -4.2% -3.4% -0.8% -1.3% YTD 1 +0.7% +0.4% +0.7% +0.4% +0.7% -3.0% -3.8% -2.3% +3.9% +4.1% Close 203.20 15.10 22.00 2.56 26.60 11.43 33.18 23.22 54.01 11.45 Chg. +3.60 -1.71 +0.55 -0.68 -0.46 -3.29 +0.95 +1.76 +1.38 +0.17 % Chg %YTD +1.8% -0.3% -10.2% -24.9% +2.6% -7.7% -21.0% -59.1% -1.7% +93.9% -22.4% -59.7% +2.9% +3.1% +8.2% -10.0% +2.6% -8.0% +1.5% -5.5% INTEREST RATES MORTGAGE RATES Type Prime lending Federal funds 3 mo. T-bill 5 yr. T-note 10 yr. T-note Type 30 yr. fixed 15 yr. fixed 1 yr. ARM 5/1 ARM Close 6 mo ago 3.50% 3.50% 0.41% 0.36% 0.23% 0.16% 1.01% 1.72% 1.47% 2.23% Close 6 mo ago 3.60% 3.91% 2.77% 3.13% 2.81% 2.82% 2.80% 3.33% SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.17 1.16 Corn (bushel) 3.85 3.85 Gold (troy oz.) 1,315.30 1,322.50 Hogs, lean (lb.) .83 .83 Natural Gas (Btu.) 2.92 2.72 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.47 1.43 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 47.85 46.33 Silver (troy oz.) 17.84 17.74 Soybeans (bushel) 11.51 11.33 Wheat (bushel) 4.44 4.47 Chg. +0.01 unch. -7.20 unch. +0.20 +0.04 +1.52 +0.10 +0.18 -0.03 % Chg. +1.0% unch. -0.5% unch. +7.4% +2.9% +3.3% +0.6% +1.5% -0.7% % YTD -13.8% +7.4% +24.1% +39.1% +24.8% +33.7% +29.2% +29.5% +32.1% -5.6% FOREIGN CURRENCIES Close .7495 1.3056 6.6481 .9051 102.79 18.8110 Prev. .7590 1.3096 6.6415 .9087 101.97 19.2043 6 mo. ago .6718 1.3896 6.4893 .9112 120.34 17.2505 Yr. ago .6357 1.2323 6.2094 .8960 123.85 15.5590 FOREIGN MARKETS Close 9,447.28 20,172.46 15,323.14 6,140.39 44,714.54 May 31 June 28 4-WEEK TREND $50 1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City June 28 $43.73 The cruise ship operator reported an adjusted quarterly profit of 49 cents a share, which was nearly $40 double year-ago levels and topped May 31 expectations by 26%. Quarterly revenue of $3.7 billion was up 3%. Price: $43.73 Chg: $0.09 % chg: 0.2% Day’s high/low: $46.16/$42.94 Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso $10 $27.79 $10.58 $12 The school material seller reported an adjusted quarterly gain of 7 cents a share, beating expectations calling for a loss. COMMODITIES SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Available on the USA TODAY app AGGRESSIVE 100%-plus turnover TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS +1.89 1.01 1.19 BP AAPL AAPL VERY ACTIVE 51%-100% turnover The computer-networking gear $30 maker’s shares rose after saying it Price: $27.79 plans to buy cloud-security comChg: $0.48 pany CloudLock for $293 million. $25 % chg: 1.8% Cisco is trying to shift more corpoMay 31 Day’s high/low: rate business online. $27.85/$27.50 4-WEEK TREND -38.5 14.19 Hormel Foods (HRL) Margins may expand yet loses momentum. 5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold: 0.53 0.85 MCD LNKD AAPL TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS NRG Energy (NRG) Rebounds from month’s low in winning market. Company (ticker symbol) 5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold: STORY STOCKS Cisco Systems RUSSELL RUT COMPOSITE ACTIVE 11%-50% turnover More than half a million investors nationwide with total assets of $200 billion manage their investment portfolios online with SigFig investment tracking service. Data on this page are based on SigFig analysis. STANDARD & POOR'S CHANGE: +1.8% YTD: -7.85 YTD % CHG: -.4% BUY AND HOLD Less than 10% turnover NOTE: INFORMATION PROVIDED BY SIGFIG IS STATISTICAL IN NATURE AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE A RECOMMENDATION OF ANY STRATEGY OR SECURITY. VISIT SIGFIG.USATODAY.COM/DISCLOSE FOR ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURES AND INFORMATION. POWERED BY SIGFIG S&P 500 SPX USA’s portfolio allocation by trade activity Here’s how America’s individual investors are performing based on data from SigFig online investment tracking service: MAJOR INDEXES DJIA How we’re performing DID YOU KNOW? Did Wall Street witness the ‘Brexit’ bottom? ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. AMERICASMARKETS.USATODAY.COM Prev. 9,268.66 20,227.30 15,309.21 5,982.20 44,282.03 Change +178.62 -54.84 +13.93 +158.19 +432.51 %Chg. +1.9% -0.3% +0.1% +2.6% +1.0% YTD % -12.1% -8.0% -19.5% -1.6% +4.0% SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY June 28 INVESTING ASK MATT Blue skies are likely ahead for cruise line Q: Is it smooth sailing for Carnival? Matt Krantz mkrantz@usatoday.com USA TODAY A: Carnival shows that while cruises are still a relatively small niche in the travel industry, they can be a fairly stable and predictable one. The cruiseline operator behind brands such as Carnival Cruise Line, Princess Cruises and Holland America Line put up another quarter of strong growth in the May quarter, and the company is calling for the growth to continue. The company’s adjusted earnings during the quarter jumped nearly 100% to 49 cents a share. Hopes are riding high for the company’s August quarter, which is the busiest of the year. Analysts think the company will earn $1.87 a share during the quarter, which would be an increase of 7%, S&P Global Market Intelligence says. Going into next fiscal year, ended in November 2017, analysts think the company could earn $3.92 a share, which would be an increase of 18% from fiscal 2016. Meanwhile, the company is trading at roughly the same valuation of the market at 19 times trailing earnings. There are risks, certainly, especially with uncertainty in Europe. But analysts think the stock should be worth $59.25 in 18 months, which would be 37% higher than Tuesday’s price of roughly $43 a share. MONEY 5B USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 Report: Oil industry may come up short to tune of $2 trillion SPECIAL PAID ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE PAID ADVERTISEMENT There’s no escaping the financial hit producers have taken — and no simple solution for their recovery Bill Loveless @bill_loveless Special for USA TODAY It has been two years since oil prices began one of their worst declines ever, and the cost of recovering from the slump is mounting. A new report from the consulting firm Deloitte warns that the oil and gas industry may come up $2 trillion short of the cash it will need to replace proved reserves and meet other obligations over the next five years, following huge cuts that companies are making in capital spending to offset lower prices for their commodities. “It takes significant capital for the industry to just remain flat. Actual and announced capital expenditure cuts suggest that even remaining flat could be a challenge for the industry, let alone meeting any expected growth,” John England, a vice chairman with Deloitte, said in a statement accompanying the release of his firm’s report. On June 20, 2014, the futures price for WTI, the U.S. benchmark for crude oil, hit a high for the year of $107.26 per barrel. Since then, the price has tumbled to below $30 at one point this year, and to $47.85 on Tuesday, 56% off its level two years ago. Deloitte completed its assessment of integrated oil companies, listed national oil companies and independent drillers recently as oil prices rallied to $50 per barrel. Now, with the financial fallout from the United Kingdom’s decision to leave the European Union, the market has been shaken up again. “A low oil-price environment and the resulting stress on the exploration and production industry continues for the third year in a row,” the report says. “Although there is some cause for optimism — oil prices have recovered from the lows of $26 per barrel in February 2016 to $50 per barrel in early June — the final outcome of the degradation of oil and gas companies’ balance sheets and the future direction of oil prices continues to remain uncertain.” Deloitte cites some dire statistics that illustrate the deep slump: 77 exploration and production companies in North America had filed for bankruptcy ENERGY protection as of mid-May; several were on the brink of debt default; and companies throughout the sector are generally finding it difficult to work through the crisis. Moreover, capex spending among companies outside the Middle East and North Africa declined by 25% in 2015 and is expected to fall 27% in 2016. “These cuts have reduced spending to below the minimum required levels to offset resource depletion, let alone meet any expected growth,” said England, who noted that production from existing oil and gas wells declines at an average annual rate of 7% to 9%, including shale wells, which account for the surge in U.S. oil and gas output over the last few years. Public line up to get first ever Gov’t issued Reagan coins Free THINKSTOCK The plunge in oil prices has been a boon to consumers. Deloitte says it will take a minimum investment of $3 trillion over the next five years for companies outside the Middle East and North Africa to offset depletion of proved reserves, let alone meet any expected growth in demand. That said, capex spending isn’t the only challenge for companies, which also need to shore up their balance sheets, service debt and maintain dividend payments. With $590 billion in debt maturing over the next five years, and $600 billion in dividends then, cash-flow obligations for companies will exceed $4 trillion from 2016 to 2020, the report says. Assuming a $55-per-barrel average price for oil, Deloitte calculates that the industry will come up short by as much as $2 trillion over that period. England manged to sound an optimistic note. “This industry’s middle name is ‘resiliency,’ ” he said. “This is not the first, nor will it be the last, downturn.” PAUL J. RICHARDS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES The 20-city index is up 39.2% from its March 2012 low. Home prices show 5% rise for sixth month in a row But growth slows as headwinds persist Athena Cao USA TODAY Single-family home prices notched at least a 5% annual rise tor the sixth consecutive month in April, but growth is slowing. The Standard & Poor’s/CaseShiller U.S. National Home Price Index showed home prices increased 5% in April compared to a year ago, down from a revised 5.1% rise in March. That marks the third consecutive slowdown in annual price appreciation, which topped out at 5.4% in January. Ralph McLaughlin, chief economist of research firm Trulia, says the recent trend likely signifies a moderation in home price inflation. Home prices in S&P Case Shiller’s 20-city index increased 5.4%, down from 5.5% the previous month. Portland, Ore., Seattle and Denver led the price gains among the 20 cities but showed signs of slowing. Portland’s single-family homes are priced 12.3% higher than a year ago, unchanged from March. Home prices in Seattle and Denver rose 10.7% and 9.5%, respectively, a modest easing from their previous pace. Denver, Dallas, Portland, Ore., San Francisco, Seattle, Charlotte and Boston all set single-home price records. The 20-city index is up 39.2% from its March 2012 low. Yet the housing market faces possible headwinds. “Last week’s vote by Great Britain to leave the European Union is the most recent political concern, while the U.S. elections raise uncertainty and will distract home buyers and investors in the coming months,” says David M. Blitzer, Managing Director and Chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices. Washington is bracing for massive line ups with everyone trying to get the first Ronald Reagan Coins ever to be minted by the U.S. Government. That’s why droves of collectors are now clamoring to get as many first issue rolls as they can carry home. To make sure no one gets left out, the general public has until midnight tomorrow to send in just 2 U.S. postage stamps to be the first guaranteed to receive the shimmering new Reagan Dollar Coins in brilliant, never-circulated condition for free. The only catch is that the Official Coupon printed in today’s newspaper must be postmarked by midnight tomorrow. “Get as many as you can now,” said Mary Ellen Withrow. And when Mary Ellen Withrow tells you to do something, it pays to listen. That’s because she knows money like no other. She’s the now retired 40th Treasurer of the United States of America and presided over the longest economic boom in U.S. history. Today, she is the compensated Sr. Executive Advisor to the Lincoln Treasury. And when she says it’s smart to get the only existing, Sealed Vault Tubes of these brand new, nevercirculated U.S. coins, you better do it today. That’s why serious collectors are snapping up these valuable, Sealed Vault Tubes, each loaded with twelve brilliant, nevercirculated Ronald Reagan Dollar Coins to be socked away and cashed in later. Today’s readers can claim only ten of these never before seen, Sealed Vault Tubes loaded with one hundred and twenty brilliant, never-circulated Ronald Reagan Dollar Coins. Just clip the Official Coupon printed in today’s newspaper and be sure it’s postmarked by midnight tomorrow. Any ■ REAGAN GIVEAWAY: Local residents do not need to go to Washington to get in on the free giveaway for the first-ever U.S. Gov’t issued Reagan Coins. That’s because the general public has until midnight tomorrow to send in just 2 U.S. postage stamps to be among the first guaranteed to get the new Reagan Dollar Coins free. ■ VALUABLE: These are the never before seen sealed Vault Tubes loaded with twelve valuable first-ever U.S. Gov’t issued Ronald Reagan Dollar Coins in brilliant, never-circulated condition. coupon for this special preorder deadline postmarked later than midnight tomorrow is not guaranteed delivery within the sixteen week shipping schedule. “It’s smart to stash away as many Sealed Reagan Vault Tubes as you can get. These valuable, never-circulated Vault Tubes of U.S. Gov’t issued coins make highly impressive gifts for anyone you want to be remembered by,” Withrow said. Official cOupOn: Must Be Postmarked By Midnight Tomorrow Print or aFFiX addrEss labEl hErE: EnclosE 2 U.s. PostagE stamPs: Name: Address: Cit": St: ZIP: rEqUirEd For dElivEry conFirmation: Da"time Phone: ©2016 P7039A OF19663R-1 DO NOT AFFIX STAMPS. USE PAPER CLIP OR LEAVE LOOSE INSIDE ENVELOPE. ONE FREE COIN PER HOUSEHOLD. SELLOUTS by THE U.S. MINT DURING THIS PROMOTIONAL GIVEAWAy WILL NOT AFFECT GUARANTEED CONSUMER DELIVERy OF SUbSTITUTED PRIOR ISSUE PRESIDENTIAL DOLLAR COINS OF EqUAL FACE VALUE. Email: chEck all that aPPly: Send m" FREE Reagan Dollar Coin. I am enclosing 2 stamps. Also send me How man" Sealed Reagan Vault Tu!es (Limit 10). mUst bE PostmarkEd by midnight tomorrow, mail to: I am enclosing $35 for each never-circulated Reagan Vault Tu!e. EnclosEd is: Make checks pa"a!le to: “Lincoln Treasury” Personal Check Mone" Order Certified Check Cashiers Check FL & OH RESIDENTS ADD 6% SALES TAX. NO SHIPMENTS TO MN. Compan" Check Lincoln Treasur" Vault: LRG100 Free Reagan Distri!ution 8000 Freedom Ave. NW N. Canton, OH 44720 6B MONEY USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 Clinton’s tech agenda reads like a Silicon Valley wish list Plan proposes cheaper Wi-Fi, expansion of 5G, green cards with STEM degrees Jon Swartz STEPHEN BRASHEAR, AP Chipotle hopes a food giveaway satisfies customers. Chipotle launches ‘Chiptopia’ to woo fans Kimiya Manoochehri USA TODAY Chipotle Mexican Grill is hoping some free food will help it win back some of its most valued customers as it looks to distance itself from a food-borne illness crisis that sickened customers. The chain is launching a “Chiptopia” summer promotion startFriday that rewards ing customers for their number of visits. At its lowest level, diners who buy four burritos or other entrees get a fifth one free. Chipotle has been scrambling to regain loyalty after alienating many fans with several incidences of E. coli and Norovirus at stores last year. Those food-safety scares sent same-store sales tanking nearly 30% in the first quarter. In its attempt to recover, the company gave away more than 6 million burritos or burrito bowls earlier this year and has offered buy-one, get-one deals. Chipotle overhauled its foodsafety standards, appointed an executive director of food safety and brought on several food-safety consultants. And the summer promotion may not be temporary. Discounting is becoming more rampant among fast-food chains and is spreading to fast-casual purveyors such as Chipotle. Contributing: Chris Woodyard, Hadley Malcolm @jswartz USA TODAY If there was any lingering doubt as to tech’s favored presidential candidate, Hillary Clinton put an end to that Tuesday. The presumptive Democratic nominee released a comprehensive tech plan that reads like a Silicon Valley wish list. It calls for connecting every U.S. household to high-speed Internet by 2020, reducing regulatory barriers and supporting Net-neutrality rules, which ban Internet providers from blocking or slowing content. It proposes investments in computer science and engineering education, expansion of 5G mobile data, making inexpensive Wi-Fi available at more airports and train stations and attaching a green card to the diplomas of foreign-born students earning STEM degrees. In short, the plan hits on nearly every big-ticket issue in tech, says Box CEO Aaron Levie, a Clinton supporter. “She did a great job of articulating and underscoring” issues affecting talent, patents, content, encryption and privacy, he says. Campaign advisers have said other Clinton proposals, covering infrastructure and education, would help raise funds that would go toward paying for the technology agenda. “No doubt, lots of good stuff included in Secretary Clinton’s tech agenda,” says Bobby Franklin, CEO of National Venture Capital Association. “If the details are as good as the blueprint, we would be very supportive of this type of agenda in a Hillary Clinton administration.” The 15-page treatise, announced by Clinton in Denver, was released several hours before she was to speak to digital content creators in Los Angeles on Tuesday. The plan comes a day after political commentator and SAN FRANCISCO this if you like to do then you should probably wear this 1 See garmin.com/ataccuracy ©2016 Garmin Ltd. or its subsidiaries ANDREW HARNIK, AP Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton answers questions Tuesday in Denver. Uber board member Arianna Huffington, appearing on MSNBC, mentioned Salesforce .com CEO Marc Benioff and Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz as possible vice presidential running mates for Clinton. (Benioff did not immediately reply to an email message seeking comment.) Her presumed general election foe, Donald Trump, who has spent the past several months engaged in lambasting Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, Apple’s Tim Cook, Airbnb’s Brian Chesky and other tech leaders on Twitter, has not published any tech policy proposals. While Silicon Valley leaders commended the scope and intellect of Clinton’s plan, they said its fate is largely dependent on Congress, post-presidential election. “What she has proposed is ambitious and may not be approved right away, but it sets a good starting point,” says Anis Uzzaman, CEO of Fenox Venture Capital in San Jose. “What she has proposed is ambitious and may not be approved right away, but it sets a good starting point.” Anis Uzzaman, Fenox Venture Capital Support from Congress is by no means assured. The tech industry and U.S. lawmakers have been at odds over some key issues in the past year. Apple rallied most major tech firms to its side as it fought the Justice Department’s order that it hack into the iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino, Calif., terrorists. Google and others unsuccessfully fought a new rule that would allow federal agents armed with a search warrant to hack millions of Americans’ computers. “It would be good for a presidential candidate to advocate a digital ethics and rights bill that would protect citizens and set the rules so that the valley would have clear guidelines on data ownership and usage,” says Ray Wang, CEO of Constellation Research. “All the talk about STEM education is nice, but let’s be realistic,” Wang adds. “We need a system that enables more than just college. There are technical jobs that don’t require a traditional four-year degree, and what we need to do is foster this type of learning. More private-public partnerships in creating these training programs will help in crafting skill sets and jobs as they evolve.” Clinton’s plan, too, could be at the mercy of economic uncertainty. A drop in venture funding and volatile equity markets have yielded a dearth of IPOs and raised concerns the tech boom could quickly turn into a bust. SECTION C WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 Paying the price Stars tee up for Rio Mets pitchers feel the strain from high inning counts in 2015, 3C In spite of the diluted field, Olympic golf is likely to be a competitive, entertaining affair, 4C SYNDERGAARD BY USA TODAY SPORTS PAT SUMMITT LINE FIRST WORD HERE’S HOW I’M GOING TO BEAT YOU. I’M GOING TO OUTWORK YOU. THAT’S IT. THAT’S ALL THERE IS TO IT.” Pat Summitt, in her book “Reach for the Summitt.” The former Tennessee women’s basketball coach died Tuesday at 64 after a five-year battle with Alzheimer’s. THANK YOU, PAT PARKER BY ROBERT HANASHIRO, USA TODAY SPORTS TWEET OF THE DAY @Candace_Parker You held true to your promises…and some. Thank you Coach for always being the perfect role model I love you. #RIP Candace Parker, who played for Summitt from 2005 to 2008, winning national titles in her final two seasons. Parker, who plays for the WNBA’s Sparks, attached to her tweet a photo of a handwritten recruiting note from Summitt. MAGIC NUMBER 1,098 Wins in Summitt’s 38-year Ten- nessee career, an NCAA basketball record, men’s or women’s. She coached the Lady Vols to eight NCAA titles and qualified for the postseason each year. CORKER BY MARK WILSON, GETTY IMAGES LAST WORD “BASKETBALL HAS LOST A LEGEND, AND TENNESSEE HAS LOST ONE OF ITS MOST BELOVED DAUGHTERS.” Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., in a statement. He lauded Summitt’s historic record on the court and her pioneering efforts in the community and for the game. SPORTS WEEKLY Meet Tim Lincecum 2.0, the twotime Cy Young Award winner who is still getting comfortable with his reinvented self while pitching for the Angels. We also look at the top NBA and NHL free agents. Available on newsstands. To subscribe, go to mysportsweekly .com or call 800-872-0001. The digital edition is available in the Apple, Google Play and Amazon Kindle stores. Compiled by Callie Caplan USA SNAPSHOTS© Serving notice 80 Aces by Serena Williams at Wimbledon in 2015, the most by a woman in a single event in tournament history SOURCE Wimbledon.com ELLEN J. HORROW AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY CAITIE MCMEKIN, KNOXVILLE (TENN.) NEWS SENTINEL Teresa Olive of Knoxville, Tenn., pays her respects to the late coach at Pat Summitt Plaza on the Tennessee campus. Female athletes owe famed coach a lot Christine Brennan cbrennan@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports Every girl and every woman who plays sports, and there are millions of them in this country, owes Pat Summitt one thing today: A thank you. Well before Title IX was taken seriously, well before there were record ratings for women’s sports on TV, well before there was the dominance of the U.S. Olympic women’s basketball team or the sold-out crowds at the NCAA women’s Final Four or the glorious rivalry of Tennessee-UConn, there was Pat Summitt. As a young head coach earning $250 a month in the mid-1970s, Summitt loaded her players’ uniforms into a washing machine after each game because she knew if she didn’t do it, no one else would. She also drove the Tennessee team van from game to game. Money was so tight that one night she and her players slept in sleeping bags on the other team’s gym 2008 PHOTO BY H. DARR BEISER, USA TODAY SPORTS v STORY CONTINUES ON 5C Summitt won eight NCAA titles in 38 years at Tennessee. Back in Iceland, hearts melting Martin Rogers mjrogers@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports SANDY HOOPER, USA TODAY SPORTS More than 600 families in Vila Autodromo, a favela in Rio de Janeiro, were displaced to make room for the Olympics. Games squeeze neighborhoods Movement displaces people Martin Rogers @mrogersUSAT USA TODAY Sports RIO DE JANEIRO The video presentations used to pitch for hosting rights to an Olympic Games are glossy and sparkling and bursting at the seams with the same kind of narrative. They focus on what an Olympics — with its seven-ringed slice of international obsession and gleaming parks and multipurpose venues that purport to provide years of benefit — would add. The word “legacy” is used. A lot. There is typically no mention of what the Olympics take away, v STORY CONTINUES ON 8C REYKJAVIK , ICELAND Remarkable stories of underdog achievement rarely have much to do with luck. Typically they are the product of at least one special factor, one powerful enough to offset all the reasons for why the team or individual shouldn’t succeed. In the case of Iceland and its wondrous, extraordinary and thoroughly unexpected surge to the quarterfinals of soccer’s European Championship, the key word is strength. Strength of character, so much that England wilted 2-1 in the Round of 16 on Monday. Strength of belief, enough to crush the soul and psyche of arguably soccer’s most confident man, Cristiano Ronaldo, while tying Portugal 1-1 in group play. And strength in unity. Roughly 10% of this tiny nation’s 330,000 citizens trekked to SIGUROUR OLAFUR SIGUROSSON Magnus Ver Magnusson says Iceland’s soccer players are strong by nature. France to cheer on the team. If you want to talk strength, Iceland is the place to come. Magnus Ver Magnusson, fourtime winner of the world’s strongest man contest, calls Reykjavik home. He has a theory on how Iceland’s soccer sons have upstaged the odds. “If you think about the past and where we come from, life was really hard,” Ver Magnusson told USA TODAY Sports during a conversation at his local gym. “When the Vikings settled here, it was a really tough v STORY CONTINUES ON 8C 2C SPORTS E6 USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 SCORERS WILL BE IN HIGH DEMAND Kevin Allen @ByKevinAllen USA TODAY Sports The NHL free agent signing period begins at noon ET Friday, but teams have been allowed to talk to potential free agents since Saturday. Scorers are in short supply, as are impact defensemen, particularly right-shot defensemen. Here is a ranking of the top 20 potential unrestricted free agents: 1. Steven Stamkos, Tampa Bay Lightning, center: Bidding will be heavy, and Stamkos could end up with an average salary of more than $11 million a season, which would make him the NHL’s highest-paid player. The Lightning have offered Stamkos a contract in the range of $8.5 million a year, but general manager Steve Yzerman said Saturday at the NHL draft that he wasn’t ruling out re-signing the team captain. The Toronto Maple Leafs, Detroit Red Wings, New York Islanders, Buffalo Sabres, Vancouver Canucks and Montreal Canadiens are expected to make offers. 2. Milan Lucic, Los Angeles Kings, left wing: Lucic can score 20 goals and 50 points and be an intimidating presence. Wouldn’t he be perfect playing alongside the Canucks’ Sedin twins or helping protect the Edmonton Oilers’ young stars? Half of the league’s teams will talk to Lucic, including the Boston Bruins, who traded him to the Kings last summer. 3. Loui Eriksson, Bruins, right wing: With many teams looking for additional scoring, Eriksson, 30, will be among the most popular free agents. He can score 20 to 30 goals a season. 4. David Backes, St. Louis Blues, center: He’s the kind of player every coach wants on his bench: a born leader and a prickly competitor who can score. The only drawback is he’s 32. 5. Kyle Okposo, Islanders, right wing: Okposo has totaled 67 goals the last three seasons. He’d be a good fit for the Philadelphia Flyers or New Jersey Devils. BRACE HEMMELGARN, USA TODAY SPORTS Kings forward Milan Lucic is one of the most sought-after players on the market. 6. Andrew Ladd, Chicago Blackhawks, left wing: Ladd is a top-six forward with some bite in his game. It would help the Blackhawks if they can figure out how to keep him. But they couldn’t find a way to keep Andrew Shaw. Ladd possibly could return to the Winnipeg Jets, where he had been captain. 7. Mikkel Boedker, Colorado Avalanche, right wing: He scored 51 points last season, and there aren’t many players available who can play among the top six forwards. 8. Troy Brouwer, Blues, right wing: He helped his cause with a gritty playoff performance. He’s 6-3, 215 pounds, and he scored 18 goals in the regular season. There’s plenty to like about his game. 9. Jason Demers, Dallas Stars, defenseman: He is solid and dependable and shoots righthanded. In some cases, that’s enough to make you a $5 million player. 10. Frans Nielsen, Island- ers, center: He’s highly respected around the league because he contributes as a penalty killer, skilled offensive player and savvy defensive forward. 11. Dan Hamhuis, Canucks, defenseman: Hamhuis is 33 but still is a reliable, consistent two-way defender. The left-handed shot is perfect for a general manager looking to plug a hole on defense. 12. Eric Staal, New York Rangers, center: The interest level in Staal will depend on his asking price. If he wants a longterm contract with a superstar average salary, his list of suitors will be shorter. He isn’t the offensive force he once was, but he is still a smart competitor who can help you win. 13. Thomas Vanek, Minnnesota Wild, right wing: Even though the Wild bought out Vanek, he will draw interest if his asking price is reasonable. Too many teams are looking for scoring. He has scored 20 or more goals in a season 10 times. 14. Jiri Hudler, Florida Panthers, right wing: Teams will have to decide whether Hudler is the 76-point scorer he was in 2014-15 or the 46-point scorer he was last season. 15. Kyle Quincey, Red Wings, defenseman: With 495 NHL games on his résumé, the left-handed shot is more marketable than you think. 16. Lee Stempniak, Devils, right wing: The versatile forward can play on the second or third line and provide secondary scoring. 17. David Perron, Anaheim Ducks, left wing: He played much better for the Ducks than he did for the Pittsburgh Penguins last season. He has offensive sparkle, but he hasn’t been consistent in his production. 18. Brian Campbell, Panthers, defenseman: Campbell, 37, who shoots left, had 31 points last season. He could be a shortterm remedy for a team waiting for its defensemen to mature. 19. Kris Russell, Stars, defenseman: He’s 5-11, but he can have a big impact as a shot blocker. He has played 573 NHL games. He shoots left. 20. Teddy Purcell, Panthers, right wing: He’s a good fit for a team looking for secondary scoring. You can pencil him in for 12 to 14 goals a season. IN BRIEF cident at about 9:30 a.m. at the dealership. Tipton, a Detroit native, signed with the Indianapolis Colts as an undrafted free agent after the 2014 NFL draft. He played in a combined 13 games in the 2014 and 2015 seasons as a backup running back, rushing for 27 yards on 12 attempts. He also had six catches for 68 yards, including a touchdown. The Colts waived Tipton in December. GEOFF BURKE, USA TODAY SPORTS A victory last weekend earned Billy Hurley III a British Open invitation. SISTER’S WEDDING TO KEEP HURLEY FROM BRITISH OPEN Billy Hurley III will not be playing in the British Open. He has a wedding to go to. Hurley’s emotional victory Sunday in the Quicken Loans National came with perks, including playing spots in this week’s World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational, next month’s British Open and next year’s Masters. He said Tuesday that he would not be going to Scotland to play in the game’s oldest championship. Instead, he’ll be going to a house near his childhood home in Leesburg, Va., to attend the wedding of his sister, Megan. “I wouldn’t miss my sister’s wedding for the world, and I think that at this point in time for me and my family and the trajectory of our family, it’s very important for me to be there to support her and her new husband,” Hurley said. — Steve DiMeglio RUNNING BACK TIPTON DIES FROM GUNSHOT WOUND Former Central Michigan and NFL running back Zurlon Tipton died Tuesday after he accidentally shot himself in the stomach at a Roseville, Mich., car dealership, according to the Wayne County Medical Examiner’s Office. Tipton, 26, was reaching into his vehicle to get a bag containing two guns, and one of the guns discharged, hitting him, Roseville police said. Police said they received notification from St. John Hospital and Medical Center in Detroit that Tipton died from his injuries after the in- NHL FINES CANUCKS $50,000 FOR GM’S TAMPERING The NHL fined the Vancouver Canucks $50,000 for tampering after general manager Jim Benning mentioned specific players the team might be interested in. Benning noted the Canucks’ interest in Montreal Canadiens defenseman P.K. Subban and Tampa Bay Lightning captain Steven Stamkos last week during a radio interview before the NHL draft in Buffalo. NHL rules bar teams from discussing their interest in players who are under contract. The one exception is during a window of opportunity that opened Saturday, when all teams are allowed to contact pending free agents but not allowed to sign them until July 1. Benning commented two days before that window. DODGERS’ KERSHAW TO GET AILING BACK EXAMINED Clayton Kershaw, whose dominance has him on track for a potentially historic season, was returning to Los Angeles to have his ailing back examined, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said Wednesday in Milwaukee. Kershaw, 28, is 11-2 with a 1.79 ERA this season for the Dodgers but emerged with back soreness Sunday after his latest start. Kershaw gave up four runs — his most since April 26 — and failed to pitch into the seventh inning for the second time in 16 starts this season as the Dodgers fell to the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-3. PROCEDURE WILL SIDELINE HORNETS’ KAMINSKY The Charlotte Hornets said forward Frank Kaminsky would have a minor procedure Wednes- SERENA WILLIAMS: IT’S SAD PLAYERS SKIPPING OLYMPICS WIMBLEDON, ENGLAND Serena Williams says she thinks it’s sad that athletes are opting out of the Summer Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro because of worries over the Zika virus. “It’s probably one thing I have that I love the most,” Williams said of her Olympic medals. “For me, I look at the Olympics as a bonus opportunity.” Williams was told of world No. 1 golfer Jason Day’s announcement Tuesday that he would not compete in the Games. Golf is set to make its return to the Olympic program for the first time in more than 100 years. Williams is the defending Olympic women’s champion in singles and doubles. She won doubles gold alongside sister Venus in 2000 and 2008, as well. “I think for me, the most important thing is knowledge and day to repair a small pocket of air between his lung and chest wall. He will not participate in the Pro Summer League in Orlando. The recovery time for the procedure is about six weeks, the team said Tuesday. The Hornets said Kaminsky could have played with the issue, adding the procedure would help relieve discomfort. He averaged 7.5 points, 4.1 rebounds and 1.2 assists in 21.1 minutes per game as a rookie last season. protection, to know what I’m going into,” the world’s No. 1 female tennis player said. “It is really one of the best experiences that I’ve ever had. It’s difficult for someone that is in a sport like golf because their main goal, like tennis, is to win Slams.” Asked if she thought Day and others — including Rory McIlroy — are missing out on the Olympics, Williams was unsure. “I don’t know if they’re missing out. … I mean, everyone’s experience is different,” she said. “My experience has been really amazing at the Olympics. I really loved going out there and competing, really just standing out there and being an Olympic athlete.” She continued: “I think it is sad. But at the same time I obviously understand where they’re coming from and how they feel. Part of me feels that way, too, NBCUNIVERSAL TO PROVIDE 6,755 HOURS FROM RIO NBCUniversal’s TV and digital networks will show a record 6,755 hours of action during this summer’s Rio Olympics. The previous high was 5,535 hours from the 2012 London Games. The main NBC network will broadcast more than 260 hours, including the opening and closing ceremonies and extensive coverage of swimming, gymnastics and track and field, the company said Tuesday. Rio is one hour ahead of the USA’s Eastern time zone. The last Summer Olympics held in a time zone close to those of the USA was in Atlanta in 1996, when NBC was the only network airing events and showed 171 hours. JAMES BANNER STAYING PUT BRUCE THORSON, USA TODAY SPORTS Anthony Marks drives in two runs Tuesday as Coastal Carolina defeated Arizona 5-4 to force a deciding Game 3 on Wednesday in the College World Series. LeBron James will continue to soar over downtown Cleveland. announced Sherwin-Williams Tuesday that it had changed plans to remove a 10-story banner of James hanging from the side of its headquarters. The paint company had intended to detach the banner and replace it with one celebrating its 150th an- SUSAN MULLANE, USA TODAY SPORTS Serena Williams calls playing in the Olympics a bonus opportunity. which is why I’m going in with a whole mind-set of how do I protect myself, how do I prevent and also raise awareness for this. That’s kind of how I’m looking at it.” Nick McCarvel niversary. But public outcry caused Sherwin-Williams to alter those plans. Now the banner, which hangs across the street from Quicken Loans Arena, home of the NBA champion Cleveland Cavaliers, will be untouched. “We’re committed to doing the right thing for the people of this great city. ... What better way to celebrate our 150th year than with an NBA championship,” said John Morikis, the company president and CEO. WADA CLOSES ANTI-DOPING LAB IN KAZAKHSTAN Four days after shutting down work at the Olympic drug testing laboratory in Rio de Janeiro, the World Anti-Doping Agency said it had suspended another lab, this one in Kazakhstan. WADA said Tuesday that the Almaty lab’s accreditation was suspended Friday for four months as “a direct result of the more stringent quality assessment procedures enacted by WADA.” WADA did not say how exactly the Almaty lab failed to pass such an assessment. From staff and wire reports SPORTS 3C USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 METS ROTATION PAYING PRICE High-inning count in 2015 catches up to young pitchers Bob Nightengale bnighten@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports Hall of Fame pitcher John Smoltz loved the New York Mets’ vaunted rotation but feared this would happen, watching the Mets’ hopes of a dream season devolve into a nightmare. The Mets, who won the National League pennant last season with one of the youngest and most inexperienced rotations in baseball, are paying a price. “I feel bad for the Mets pitchers; they were not given a fair chance,” Smoltz told USA TODAY Sports. “I remember saying, ‘Careful what you wish for.’ I don’t think there was any way they could envision being in that spot (a pennant race). “Their stuff last year was off the charts. But you cannot do what those young guys did again with no experience and the mindset they were dealing with. The way baseball is played now, there’s no way a young pitching staff can be prepared to do this. “In theory, this would have been the year, not last year, where all of the eggs are pointed the right way and they dominated.” The Mets rotation is not broken, but it is frayed. Noah Syndergaard and Steven Matz are pitching with bone spurs that could, particularly in Matz’s case, require season-ending or afterthe-season surgery. Matt Harvey has been a shadow of himself with a 4-9 record and 4.64 ERA entering Tuesday’s start. Jacob deGrom (3-4, 2.67 ERA) missed time with an injury to a muscle in his back, and only 43-year old Bartolo Colon (5-4, 2.86) has been pain-free and living up to expectations. Mets general manager Sandy Alderson told reporters Tuesday that Syndergaard’s bone spur was insignificant and Matz must decide whether he can tolerate the discomfort. If the pain becomes unbearable, he would have surgery and miss the rest of the season. The Mets were hoping that starter Zack Wheeler would be BRAD PENNER, USA TODAY SPORTS Mets pitcher Steven Matz (bone chips) has an ERA more than a full run higher than last season. ready after having Tommy John elbow surgery in March 2015, but he had a setback expected to delay him at least until August. Simply, the young staff, with no one outside Colon having pitched more than one complete season in the major leagues, wasn’t ready for the grind of last year. The Mets were in a tight division race, won the NL East and beat the Los Angeles Dodgers and Chicago Cubs in the NL playoffs before falling to the Kansas City Royals in a five-game World Series. The season lasted a month longer than anyone had envisioned. Harvey, Syndergaard and deGrom each pitched more innings than in any other season in their professional careers, most of the stressful variety after the All-Star break. And every inning you pitch in the postseason, Smoltz says, is equivalent to 21⁄2 times a regular-season inning. “Imagine surpassing your in- nings in the regular season, with the intensity of those games, and then pitching all of those postseason games, too,” Smoltz said. “I mean, you look at deGrom. He emptied the tank in those postseason games. Going forward, you knew they were going to have issues — ‘How do I rebound? How am I supposed to feel? What’s the difference between pitching with soreness or risking injury?’ “That’s what they’re going through now.” What makes it worse is the scrutiny and swirling talk of health issues surrounding their starts. The focus Monday was about Matz’s bone chips. After Syndergaard gave up a seasonhigh five runs in three innings against the Washington Nationals, the conversation shifted to his bone chip and the health of his arm; he had an MRI after his previous start in New York. “It would be nice just to talk about pitching and not worrying about anything else,” Mets manager Terry Collins told reporters. “But that’s not the case. Now our conversations are always going to be about, ‘Are they hurt?’ “I’m a little tired of that.” The trouble the Mets have is that the talk won’t go away. The players were rushed to the big leagues and never really learned how to pitch without their blazing fastballs. Gone are the days of Hall of Famer Greg Maddux, who threw at least 200 innings for 19 consecutive years, including the playoffs, and pitched with a bone spur. Maddox learned how to pitch by throwing 491 innings in the minors, recording 19 complete games. Syndergaard, 23, is the only Mets starter outside of Colon who has pitched at least 400 minor league innings. The young quartet combined for three com- plete games in the minors. “Those guys never had that natural increase,” Smoltz said. “You need to learn how to pitch in the minors or even on a bigleague developing team. That’s what we did in Atlanta. But in this lack of a patient world, we get them up and get them in. We’re fast-breaking because their stuff is so good. We get success at a lower salary, maximize their effort and turn the page. “As soon as someone’s velocity drops, that’s all that’s talked about instead of learning how to pitch at a lower velocity. The controlled effort to control injuries, it may sound good on paper, but it’s a warped philosophy. We are training guys for sprints, not marathons.” If it were up to Leo Mazzone, the Atlanta Braves’ pitching coach during their 14-year postseason run, radar guns would be outlawed through high school. The Braves actually had pitchers throw two bullpen sessions between starts. “Everybody talks about velocity, but I’m finding out that guys aren’t throwing as much as they used to,” said Mazzone, who spent 28 years in the Braves organization. “It’s less often with more exertion instead of more often with less exertion. “You’re supposed to grow into your velocity and have secondary pitches, but no one learns how to pitch in the minors anymore. “It’s not about, ‘How hard can you throw a baseball?’ How about, ‘Can you pitch?’ ” Smoltz, who stressed these points during his Hall of Fame speech, frets over a future with six-man rotations, the need for 30 pitchers over a season and incessant pitching changes. He says he’s willing to talk about it, but no one seems to be listening. “I may be wrong, but I believe in the next five years this game could be in big trouble if we keep going the way we’re going,” Smoltz said. “If this stays the way it is, you’re going to have the sixth, seventh and eighth innings of games eaten up by six or seven And that’s not relievers. sustainable. “The way we’re going now, guys pitching 200 innings will be a freak of nature. It’s sad.” FOLLOW MLB COLUMNIST BOB NIGHTENGALE @BNightengale for breaking news, commentary and analysis. Patience key in forging Simmons-Nike deal Jeff Zillgitt @jeffzillgitt USA TODAY Sports From the beginning of negotiations with Nike and Adidas for a shoe and apparel deal, Ben Simmons sought a lucrative contract beyond the norm for an NBA rookie, even for the player who was the No. 1 overall pick by the Philadelphia 76ers in last week’s draft. Simmons’ representatives, Rich Paul and Mark Termini of Klutch Sports Group, developed a plan predicated on patience. The first best deal wasn’t the one they were going to take. On May 5, Simmons and his reps met with Adidas in Los Angeles, and four days later they met with Nike in Portland, Ore. For the next month, Paul, CEO of Klutch Sports and Simmons’ agent, and Termini, the attorney and contract negotiator for Klutch, bargained with both companies. On June 6, Simmons signed a five-year, guaranteed $20 million contract with Nike, multiple people with direct knowledge of the DAVID RICHARD, USA TODAY SPORTS Ben Simmons, center, sits courtside next to his agent, Rich Paul, second from left, at a Cavaliers game in March. deal told USA TODAY Sports. They requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the contract. The deal also includes bonuses that could push the value above $20 million. Some bonuses are achievable with solid efforts such as making the all-rookie team or winning the rookie of the year award, and some, such as firstteam all-NBA and MVP, are difficult to attain. But if Simmons turns into a once-in-a-generation player, bonuses could send the deal above $40 million. What makes this deal unique? Nike doesn’t normally do deals at this base salary or include a bonus package at the level contained in Simmons’ contract, according to people with knowledge of the contract. The deal also goes higher than what recent No. 1 picks have received in shoe and apparel contracts. Simmons was the No. 1 target for Nike and Adidas, and the final offers from both companies were higher than the original offers. Adidas made a serious push and appealed to Simmons’ personality with personalized videos featuring DJ Khaled and Pusha T. Even with Klutch’s connection to Nike — Paul represents the Cleveland Cavaliers’ LeBron James, who has a lifetime deal with Nike — Adidas wasn’t ruled out from the start despite perceptions that Simmons-to-Nike was a done deal, multiple people told USA TODAY Sports. Adidas made a competitive offer that has been described as in the ballpark compared to Nike’s offer, but Adidas’ offer also came with restrictions that reduced the deal’s value if he didn’t meet specific statistical benchmarks, according to multiple people. Nike is a behemoth in the basketball sneaker world, claiming more than 90% of that market. It has James, Kevin Durant and Anthony Davis, while Jordan Brand, a subsidiary of Nike, has Chris Paul and Carmelo Anthony. More NBA players wear Nike or Jordan Brand than the other shoe companies combined. Simmons’ potential to turn into a star helped him in the negotiations with Nike. Nike had lost Stephen Curry to Under Armour in 2013, and an ESPN story published in March painted an unflattering picture of Nike’s attempt to keep Curry. The patient approach proved the right way to go. Klutch Sports distanced Simmons from the fallout of his only season at LSU. As the calendar moved toward the draft, companies began to see Simmons’ value as an endorser. He also signed deals with Foot Locker, Beats by Dre and Upper Deck. Ultimately, Nike wasn’t willing to risk losing a potential star to another brand. Defensive wiz Ryan pushed envelope Nate Davis @ByNateDavis USA TODAY Sports Buddy Ryan’s career path wound through some of pro football’s most memorable chapters. He was a defensive assistant for the 1968 New York Jets, who smothered the heavily favored Baltimore Colts in their shocking Super Bowl III upset. Ryan coached the Minnesota Vikings’ famed Purple People Eaters defensive line in the 1970s. But he’d leave an indelible imprint as the cocky mastermind of the 1985 Chicago Bears’ groundbreaking and havoc-generating “46 defense,” regarded as the best ever by some after it allowed 10 points in three playoff games, including two shutouts, in the franchise’s march to its only Super Bowl title. The unit’s success frequently overshadowed the rest of the team, fueling Ryan’s eversimmering feud with head coach Mike Ditka. Ryan’s one-liners and oppressive defenses during his subsequent (and tumultuous) head coaching stints with the Philadelphia Eagles and Arizona Cardinals rarely failed to make headlines. So did his infamous sideline sucker punch of fellow Houston Oilers assistant Kevin Gilbride during the 1993 season. Ryan, who served with the U.S. Army in the Korean War before becoming a coach, died Tuesday at 85. No cause was given, but he had battled cancer in recent years. “His knowledge, passion for football and the love he had for his players and coaches are traits that have shaped and influenced so many careers, including my own,” said Los Angeles Rams coach Jeff Fisher, who played and coached under Ryan. Ryan’s twin sons, Buffalo Bills head coach Rex Ryan and assistant Rob Ryan, have extended their father’s legacy, creating defenses designed to punish quarterbacks on the field while typically earning respect and loyalty from their players off of it — all the while rattling off viral sound bites with reckless abandon. Ryan, who employed his sons on his Cardinals staff, couldn’t have been prouder. “For Rob and me, we’ve had the great fortune of sharing the coaching profession that he was so proud of and cherished so much,” Rex Ryan said. “There is no way we can possibly begin to measure how much football we have learned from him over the years, and we are forever thankful to him for instilling within us his unwavering love for the game of football.” 1995 PHOTO BY USA TODAY SPORTS Buddy Ryan was the architect of the 1985 Bears defense. 4C SPORTS E4 USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 TENNIS GERMAN TEEN ZVEREV MOVES UP IN RANK Youth impressing the tennis elite Nick McCarvel @NickMcCarvel Special for USA TODAY Sports WIMBLEDON, ENGLAND The sitting forehand volley was there — well above the net — for Alexander Zverev, a lanky German teenager with wavy boy band hair and a serve that rivals that of Roger Federer. Then, he missed it. At Indian Wells this year, Zverev, who goes by the nickname “Sascha,” had Rafael Nadal on the ropes in the fourth round. A single string dangling, actually, as Zverev charged in and chased after a volley. But then the ball was in the net, and Nadal won the next three games — and the match. “Being that close to beating someone like that and in the end losing, it was a little difficult for me mentally,” Zverev, 19, said in a phone interview last week. “I didn’t know how to handle the situation better. That match helped me a lot to become a better player to know what to do in the deciding moments. That was for sure the most painful loss I’ve had so far.” “So far” isn’t very far for 6-6 Zverev, who at No. 28 in the world is the fastest-rising tennis star you’ve yet to hear of. Two weeks ago he crossed that precious finish line against Federer, stunning a childhood idol in front of home fans in Halle, Germany. Zverev, who grew up in tennis following his older brother Mischa, is the first teenager to be ranked inside the top 30 in 10 years, since Novak Djokovic in 2006. The expectations are mounting for Zverev, who moves like a swift-footed giraffe on the court, his lion’s mane of hair billowing SHAUN BOTTERILL, GETTY IMAGES Alexander Zverev of Germany is the first teenager to be ranked inside the top 30 since Novak Djokovic in 2006. behind a headband. Like contemporaries Nick Kyrgios, Dominic Thiem and Borna Coric, he wants generation next to be generation now, though his patience is what has so far set him apart. “I’ve been doing this for nearly 30 years, and to have a 19-yearold kid embrace what’s necessary to win in the long term at the tender age of 19, that is just extraordinary,” says his agent, Patricio Apey, who once represented Andy Murray. Zverev hasn’t had to learn the ropes of the pro tour as he’s blossomed, however. Mischa, a journeyman at 28, having been ranked as high as No. 45 in the world, has served as a de facto chaperone and guide on tour to his little bro. The benefit? A hard-charging teenager with unabated hunger in his eyes. “The kid just keeps improving month to month, not year to year,” says commentator Tracy Austin, who knows a thing or two about teen success. “It’s just every single time he plays a tournament, it seems like he’s gaining valuable experience and knowledge and seems to have this very pretty all-court game already.” Germany hasn’t had a bona fide tennis star since Steffi Graf was a dominant force in the early 1990s. Boris Becker is still the country’s most famous male player, though those who came after him, such as Rainer Schuettler, Nicolas Kiefer and Tommy Haas, had their share of top-10 successes. Germany wants a megastar, however. Is Zverev it? “They wait for the next Grand Slam champion in Germany,” Haas says, offering Angelique Kerber’s rise in stature in the country since her Australian Open win in January. “It always seemed like what I was achieving wasn’t enough. I reached No. 2 in the world, but they wanted to see someone win majors. The expectations are really high after Graf and Becker.” For now, however, Zverev doesn’t expect himself to win majors. At least, not immediately. His Wimbledon campaign started Tuesday when he won the first two sets against Frenchman PaulHenri Mathieu in a match that will be resumed Wednesday. Tomas Berdych, the No. 10 seed and a 2010 finalist here, looms in the third round should he win. “Right now it’s a learning procedure,” Zverev says. “You have to become the best player you can for later in your career. There are no goals to win Wimbledon this year. Yes, it would be nice, but it’s more about preparing yourself for later years when you can win it.” But there are always road bumps: injuries, burnout, distractions. Zverev is soft-spoken in person, but on court he can be fiery, quick-lipped with chair umpires and unafraid to complain about the minor things that bother him. In his interview with USA TODAY Sports, Zverev didn’t want to waste a moment, so he took the phone call on the physio’s table, getting his massage during an exhibition event before Wimbledon. It’s a kind of approach that even Federer has taken notice of. “I think every day that goes by he’s going to learn more and only going to become stronger,” Federer said this year. “This is, if you like, the weakest Zverev we’ll ever see. He will only get better from here. … For the next few years now he will get so good that I hope he will compete at the top, top 10 at least, if not then top 5 and No. 1. “No. 1 is always a big ask. A lot of things need to align for that: consistency, fitness, mental. I hope he can do it. I think he’s a great talent.” He used that Nadal loss — the haunting vision of his sitter volley into the net — to fuel him against Federer two weeks ago, but after that semifinal triumph he fell short in the championship match. That loss didn’t sit well with young Sascha. “Beating someone like Roger on one of his favorite courts, where he has won eight titles, that was something special for me,” he says. “It was a positive week for me, even if I wanted to get the title and didn’t. You can’t always get what you want.” Despite opt-outs, don’t dismiss Olympic golf Steve DiMeglio ERICH SCHLEGEL, USA TODAY SPORTS @steve_dimeglio USA TODAY Sports Missy Franklin finished seventh in the 100meter backstroke finals. Franklin misses out in 100 backstroke Nicole Auerbach @NicoleAuerbach USA TODAY Sports OMAHA Missy Franklin’s smile belied her pain. But her voice grew shaky as she spoke the words few who watched her swim four years ago expected to hear three nights into the U.S. Olympic trials. “Right now, I need to make the team in whatever way that looks like,” Franklin said. “I need to make the team.” Franklin was a non-factor in the women’s 100-meter backstroke final Tuesday, finishing seventh in the event she won in the London Olympics. She’d struggled, too, during the preliminary heat, barely sneaking into the final in an outside lane. Olivia Smoliga and Kathleen Baker were the top two finishers in the final, securing spots on the U.S. Olympic roster for Rio. Franklin, 21, has been one of the most prominent names in U.S. swimming since taking home five Olympic medals four years ago. She’s also in significant danger of failing to qualify for any individual events if she swims the rest of the week the way she did Tuesday. Franklin has the 100 freestyle, 200 free and 200 backstroke left, but she’s fallen behind early in most of her races thus far. It’s been tough, too, to be one of the marquee swimmers entering 2016. There were sponsorship obligations, media requests — all sorts of things that took her focus away from training. “I think I’m dealing with a little bit more pressure than I ever have before,” Franklin said. “But that’s all part of the process, learning how to deal with it and learning how to move forward. “All I can do is the best I can do. I had a race strategy; I went out and I did it. It just wasn’t good enough. “You definitely have a bit more on your shoulders than normal (as the defending Olympic gold medalist). It’s going to be really hard not doing that race this summer, but I cannot wait to watch Kathleen and Olivia do it.” Franklin isn’t the only big-name swimmer to stumble early. Ryan Lochte has missed two opportunities to qualify in individual events — the 400 individual medley and the 200 freestyle — and is dealing with a painful groin injury that he suffered during the 400 IM preliminaries. Lochte finished fourth in the 200 free Tuesday, earning a spot on the 4x200 relay team. He breathed a sigh of relief that he’s Rio-bound, but he couldn’t hide his disappointment in his performance so far. “You can never go in knowing that you’re going to make the team,” said Lochte, an 11-time Olympic medalist. “You’re never 100% sure, especially in the U.S. because we’re so strong. You’ve just got to hope and believe that you can. “I’m just happy that I’m going to Rio and that I’m representing my country at the highest stage in sports.” AKRON, OHIO Alarmists are pronouncing golf’s demise in the Olympics as one defection after another weakens ANALYSIS the strength of the field, the latest nail in the coffin being world No. 1 Jason Day’s decision not to play. Hold the hammer. At least for now. While more players likely will opt out of playing in the Rio Games in August, citing various reasons from the Zika virus to security issues, from scheduling to travel to political upheaval in Brazil, the field for the men’s tournament presently would include seven of the top-10 players in the world, as well as No. 11 Sergio Garcia and reigning Masters champion Danny Willett. And not one of the top players in women’s golf has decided to pull out. While the absence of Day, who withdrew Tuesday citing the Zika virus, four-time major winner Rory McIlroy and 2013 Masters champion Adam Scott dilutes the field, it is far from drained. The show will go on after a 112-year absence. And while it might not be Hamilton on Broadway, it’s still going to be a pretty darn good show. Golf will be the better for it no matter the field because, let’s face it, those watching the world over who don’t know Rory McIlroy from Roy McAvoy or Henrik Stenson from Happy Gilmore will be exposed to the game. Yes, the list of withdrawals will be amended, and no one should begrudge any player’s decision not to go to the Marvelous City presently facing dire challenges. Shane Lowry, who finished in a tie for second in the U.S. Open, dropped out Tuesday shortly after Day. Also among those not playing are major champions Charl Schwartzel, Louis Oosthuizen and Vijay Singh. World No. 2 Jordan Spieth is uncertain about his participation, with concerns for his own safety chief among his uneasiness. But he has always said he’d love to be a part of it. World No. 3 and U.S. Open champ Dustin Johnson said he will play, as have No. 5 THOMAS J. RUSSO, USA TODAY SPORTS Rory McIlroy, left, and Jason Day have opted out of the Rio Olympics. Stenson and No. 10 Justin Rose. Garcia is a definite; No. 7 Rickie Fowler is a maybe right now. And No. 6 Bubba Watson is all in. “I can’t wait,” Watson said Tuesday at Firestone Country Club as he prepped for the World Golf ChampionshipsBridgestone Invitational. Watson nonetheless will have to wait, because he’ll be defending his title at The Travelers the week before the Games begin, negating his appearance in the opening ceremony. But that just tempers his enthusiasm a tad. “The positives outweigh the negatives,” said Watson, who did add that if he and his wife, Angie, could have kids, he wouldn’t go. They have adopted two children. “When you’re done with your career, the significance for my own personal satisfaction of being an Olympic athlete is huge. I’m not even talking about winning a medal. I’m talking about competing as an Olympic athlete. “And I’ve got tickets from Monday night through Saturday night of different events. I’m going to be a fan of the Olympics. ... “I have no concerns. The only concern I have, if there is one, is I’m a really picky eater. So I have to make sure I get the right food down there.” Day said it was a very difficult decision to make. Citing the Zika virus, he said he just could not put his family at risk. But he did say golf in the Rio Olympics is not at risk of being a failure. “There’s not going to be an asterisk, I don’t think,” Day said. “The competition is going to be great regardless.” USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 SPORTS 5C E4 PAT SUMMITT Coach set the standard for women’s sports Dan Fleser CAROLYN KASTER, AP Pat Summit receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom in May 2012. @fleserKNS USA TODAY Sports Kara Lawson summed up the end product of Pat Summitt’s career in dramatic fashion Tuesday. The former Tennessee women’s basketball point guard took her turn at the Ray and Lucy Hand Studio expounding on the career of the Lady Vols coaching legend, who died that morning. Lawson described Summitt as “the most important figure in the history of the sport.” Former Tennessee football coach Phillip Fulmer appeared later and essentially covered the foundation of Summitt’s 1,098 career victories and eight national championships by extolling some key virtues. “Pat was way ahead of the game in women’s basketball as to how she coached and recruited,” he said. “She set the entire standard for everybody out there that’s being successful now.” No less important, though, were some key Summitt moments during her early years. They helped shape the stature of the Lady Vols program and changed the game at the high school level in the state of Tennessee. Summitt became Tennessee’s coach in 1974. Her hiring came two years after the passage of Title IX legislation, which federally mandated equal opportunity for women in school. Bob Kesling, the university’s director of broadcasting, once was the radio voice of the Lady Vols. He recalled the game against Texas on Dec. 9, 1987, at Thompson-Boling Arena. A crowd of 24,563 turned out, which was then a world record for single-game attendance at a women’s basketball game. “It just showed you how far she took the program,” he said, PATRICIA SUE HEAD SUMMITT Born: June 14, 1952, in Clarksville, Tenn. Education: University of Tennessee-Martin, where she was an All-America basketball player and earned a bachelor’s in physical education. Earned a master’s in physical education from Tennessee-Knoxville. Family: Summitt is survived by her mother, Hazel Albright Head; son, Ross “Tyler” Summitt; sister, Linda; brothers, Tommy, Charles and Kenneth. Halls of Fame: Inducted in 2000 into Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame; 1999 into Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame; 1996 into National Association for Sport and Physical Education’s Hall of Fame; 1990 into Women’s Sports Foundation Hall of Fame; also in Tennessee Women’s Hall of Fame. Coaching career: 38 seasons, all at Tennessee, 1,098208 (.841), most wins for a basketball coach at any fouryear college or university, ELSA, GETTY IMAGES Kara Lawson praised Summitt’s importance to sports. DALE ERNSBERGER, THE (NASHVILLE) TENNESSEAN Summitt starred internationally as player and coach. H. DARR BEISER, USA TODAY SPORTS AP FILE PHOTO BY PAT SULLIVAN Pat Summitt had 1,098 career wins, the most in men’s or women’s college basketball. Summitt and son Tyler, 5, celebrate a 1996 title. “from a day when she was handing out tickets just to get people to come to the game to selling out Thompson-Boling Arena.” Kesling recounted another poignant moment that characterized Summitt’s passion for advancing the sport. The Lady Vols played a game at LSU in 1979 that was the opener of doubleheader featuring a Tennessee-LSU men’s game. The women’s game went “I think that was a motivating factor for Pat that no more was women’s basketball treated as a stepchild or second-hand citizen. She talked about that game for years after that. It was a milestone fighting for her sport, fighting for her players.” men’s or women’s, with 47% of games against ranked opponents and a 440-168 record (.724); faced 164 different opponents over 35 conferences; 2000 Naismith coach of the century. Seventime NCAA coach of the year, eight NCAA championships (1987, ’89, ’91, ’96, ’97, ’98 with a 39-0 record, 2007, ’08), second to Connecticut’s Geno Auriemma (11) among NCAA Division I women’s coaches. Eighteen Final Four appearances, most among all Division I coaches (men or women). Sixteen Southeastern Conference titles and 16 SEC tournament titles, eight-time SEC coach of the year; played on the USA’s silver medal team in the 1976 Summer Games in Montreal, coached the U.S. team to a gold medal in the 1984 Summer Games in Los Angeles, becoming the first in U.S. Olympic basketball history to play on and coach medal-winning teams. Among players coached: Candace Parker, Kara Lawson, Tamika Catchings, Cha- overtime, and the coaches were given the option of five minutes of running clock or playing overtime after the men’s game. Summitt wanted to play immediately and Tennessee lost 85-80. “Pat was just livid, not just about that they lost, she was upset about that, but she was mad because her team, her players, her sport was disrespected,” Kesling said. mique Holdsclaw, Nikki McCray Honors: Courts at TennesseeMartin (Pat Head Summitt Court) and Tennessee (The Summitt) named in her honor. There also are streets named after her on those campuses; the SummittWooden Room at NCAA headquarters; 2012 Presidential Medal of Freedom; 2012 Billie Jean King Legacy Award from the U.S. Tennis Association; 2011 Mildred “Babe” Didrikson Zaharias Courage Award from the United States Sports Academy; 2011 “Sports Illustrated” Sportswoman of the Year; 2009 WNBA Inspiring Coach Award; one of “America’s Best Leaders for 2007” as released by “U.S. News & World Report”; among the “1998 Women of the Year” by “Glamour”; only woman on “The Sporting News” list of 50 Greatest Coaches of All-Time. Foundation: The Pat Summitt Foundation, begun in 2011 “to help find a cure for Alzheimer’s so that one day no family Fleser writes for the Knoxville News Sentinel, part of the USA TODAY NETWORK. has to hear that a loved one has been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease.” Author: “Sum It Up: A Thousand and Ninety-Eight Victories, a Couple of Irrelevant Losses, and a Life in Perspective” (with Sally Jenkins), 2013; “Raise the Roof: The Inspiring Inside Story of the Tennessee Lady Vols’ Undefeated 199798 Season” (with Jenkins), 1998; “Reach for the Summitt” (with Jenkins), 1998 Trivia: When she arrived in Knoxville she never corrected her mentors when they shortened her name from Patricia to Pat. She had always gone by Tricia or Trish. Quote: “Pat’s gift has always been her ability to push those around her to new heights, and over the last 38 years her unique approach has resulted in both unparalleled success on the court and unrivaled loyalty from those who know her and those whose lives she has touched.” — President Obama, in 2012 Rachel Shuster ‘A role model to millions’ President Obama released a statement Tuesday on the death of legendary Tennessee women’s basketball coach Pat Summitt: Nobody walked off a college basketball court victorious more times than Tennessee’s Pat Summitt. For four decades, she outworked her rivals, made winning an attitude, loved her players like family and became a role model to millions of Americans, including our two daughters. Her unparalleled success includes never recording a losing season in 38 years of coaching, but also, and more importantly, a 100% graduation rate among her players who completed their athletic eligibility. Her legacy, however, is measured much more by the generations of young women and men who admired Pat’s intense competitiveness and character, and as a result found in themselves the confidence to practice hard, play harder, and live with courage on and off the court. As Pat once said in recalling her achievements, “What I see are not the numbers. I see their faces.” Pat learned early on that everyone should be treated the same. When she would play basketball against her older brothers in the family barn, they didn’t treat her any differently and certainly didn’t go easy on her. Later, her Hall of Fame career would tell the story of the historic progress toward equality in American athletics that she helped advance. Pat started playing college hoops before Title IX and started coaching before the NCAA recognized women’s basketball as a sport. When she took the helm at Tennessee as a 22year-old, she had to wash her players’ uniforms; by the time Pat stepped down as the Lady Vols’ head coach, her teams wore eight championship rings and had cut down nets in sold-out stadiums. Pat was a patriot who earned Olympic medals for America as a player and a coach, and I was honored to award her the Presidential Medal of Freedom. She was a proud Tennessean who, when she went into labor while on a recruiting visit, demanded the pilot return to Knoxville so her son could be born in her home state. And she was an inspiring fighter. Even after Alzheimer’s started to soften her memory, and she began a public and brave fight against that terrible disease, Pat had the grace and perspective to remind us that “God doesn’t take things away to be cruel. … He takes things away to lighten us. He takes things away so we can fly.” Michelle and I send our condolences to Pat Summitt’s family — which includes her former players and fans on Rocky Top and across America. Women owe debt of gratitude to pioneer v CONTINUED FROM 1C floor. They did this willingly, even happily. They didn’t know what they didn’t have. “We played because we loved the game,” Summitt said years later. “We didn’t think anything about it.” Everything was new in women’s sports back then — even the game itself. Summitt grew up at a time when girls played six-person basketball, which meant three played offense, three played defense, and no one but a rover was allowed to cross halfcourt. The theory was that girls might not be able to give birth someday, or something or other, if they ran full court as kids. Tell these stories to a 12-yearold girl playing AAU basketball, or the high school girl playing travel soccer, or a college women’s lacrosse star, and we know how they’ll react. They’ll laugh out loud, as well they should. It’s unimaginable to them that that’s how women’s sports in America got their start. But that is exactly how they began, with women like Summitt washing jerseys while drawing up inbounds plays. Title IX, the law that continues to empower millions of U.S. girls and women through sports, was signed by President Nixon in 1972. Summitt started coaching Tennessee women’s hoops two years later. We can’t separate one from the other. Just as crusading tennis star and women’s rights advocate Billie Jean King is forever linked with the early rumblings of Title IX, so, too, is Summitt. But there is a difference. King came from tennis, one of the few sports considered “acceptable” for girls and women as far back as the 1950s and 1960s. 2008 PHOTO BY H. DARR BEISER, USA TODAY SPORTS Pat Summitt’s success at Tennessee was a game changer for women’s team sports. Acceptance for women’s team sports came a generation later, if it has come at all. Many adore the U.S. women’s soccer team and our college women’s basketball programs, but there still are dark corners of American life (sexist sports talk radio, that’s you) where even now, women in basketball uniforms are ridiculed rather than revered. That makes Summitt’s grand cultural success at Tennessee all the more meaningful. She turned a women’s sports team into a national brand in the 1980s and 1990s. And she did it not by playing by the old, demure, ladylike rules of women’s sports, but by crashing the boys’ sports party. She wasn’t subtle. She could be mean. She yelled. A lot. She took over every room she entered. She stared down anyone who crossed her. (If it happened to you, and it happened to me, you never forgot it.) She showed that a woman could be tough and unrelenting and powerful — and be rewarded for it. Mostly, she wanted to win. And win and win and win. And she did, more than anyone else who has ever coached the college game, male or female. She was a women’s basketball coach, yes, but she real- ly was a basketball coach who happened to be a woman. By every measure, Pat Summitt was a success. Check that. Pat Summitt is a success. She sadly is gone, but everything she worked for lives on. Perhaps in her dreams she pictured the year 2016 in women’s sports. Perhaps not. But we’re all here, from the T-ball players and littlest somersaulters to the young travel players and the house-leaguers, from the high school allstars to the college veterans to the weekend hackers to every single woman preparing for Rio. And we have just one thing to say: Thank you. FOLLOW COLUMNIST CHRISTINE BRENNAN @cbrennansports to keep up with all the latest sports issues. 6C SPORTS E6 MLB SCORES AMERICAN LEAGUE East Baltimore Boston Toronto New York Tampa Bay W 45 42 41 37 32 L 30 35 37 39 44 Pct. .600 .545 .526 .487 .421 GB — 4 51/2 81/2 131/2 Strk. W-5 W-1 L-2 L-3 L-1 Central Cleveland Kansas City Detroit Chicago Minnesota W 46 40 39 38 25 L 30 36 38 39 51 Pct. .605 .526 .506 .494 .329 GB — 6 71/2 81/2 21 Strk. W-10 L-1 W-1 L-1 W-2 West Texas Houston Seattle Oakland Los Angeles W 51 40 38 33 32 L 27 37 38 43 45 Pct. .654 .519 .500 .434 .416 GB — 101/2 12 17 181/2 Strk. W-4 W-1 L-1 W-1 L-1 Last 10 7-3 4-6 4-6 5-5 1-9 Last 10 10-0 5-5 5-5 5-5 5-5 Last 10 8-2 8-2 3-7 6-4 3-7 Home 31-13 23-18 19-17 21-18 16-21 Away 14-17 19-17 22-20 16-21 16-23 Home 23-12 27-11 22-16 19-19 15-25 Away 23-18 13-25 17-22 19-20 10-26 Home 28-12 22-15 17-19 16-22 16-24 Away 23-15 18-22 21-19 17-21 16-21 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Washington New York Miami Philadelphia Atlanta W 45 40 41 33 26 L 32 35 36 45 51 Pct. .584 .533 .532 .423 .338 GB — 4 4 121/2 19 Strk. W-2 L-2 L-1 W-1 L-2 Central Chicago St. Louis Pittsburgh Milwaukee Cincinnati W 49 40 37 34 29 L 26 36 40 42 48 Pct. .653 .526 .481 .447 .377 GB — 91/2 13 151/2 21 Strk. W-1 W-1 L-1 L-2 L-1 West San Francisco Los Angeles Colorado Arizona San Diego W 49 43 37 36 33 L 29 36 39 43 44 Pct. .628 .544 .487 .456 .429 GB — 61/2 11 131/2 151/2 Strk. L-1 W-2 W-3 L-3 L-1 Last 10 3-7 4-6 6-4 3-7 5-5 Last 10 4-6 5-5 4-6 4-6 3-7 Last 10 7-3 7-3 5-5 6-4 6-4 Home 21-12 19-16 21-19 16-22 11-31 Away 24-20 21-19 20-17 17-23 15-20 Home 25-11 15-21 22-19 21-19 18-23 Away 24-15 25-15 15-21 13-23 11-25 Home 24-15 23-15 18-18 13-26 18-22 Away 25-14 20-21 19-21 23-17 15-22 TUESDAY’S RESULTS American League Texas 7, N.Y. Yankees 1 Boston 8, Tampa Bay 2 National League N.Y. Mets at Washington Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati Interleague Cleveland 5, Atlanta 3 Detroit 7, Miami 5 St. Louis 8, Kansas City 4 Minnesota 4, Chicago White Sox 0 Houston at L.A. Angels L.A. Dodgers 6, Milwaukee 5 Philadelphia at Arizona Toronto at Colorado Baltimore at San Diego Oakland at San Francisco WEDNESDAY’S GAMES AMERICAN LEAGUE 2016 Statistics Pct. WHIP ERA IP K Boston at Tampa Bay, 12:10 p.m. ET (Line: BOS -165) .667 1.22 4.68 .375 1.37 5.04 102.0 89.1 110 84 Houston at L.A. Angels, 3:35 p.m. ET (Line: HOU -140) .308 1.43 5.35 .500 1.44 5.24 101.0 89.1 89 51 (Line: NYY -195) .500 1.77 5.54 .714 1.03 3.01 13.0 98.2 5 75 (Line: CWS -113) 1.35 4.95 91.0 3.07 15.80 13.2 74 8 Pitchers BOS: Price (L) TB: Moore (L) HOU: Keuchel (L) LAA: Weaver (R) GS W-L 16 15 8-4 3-5 16 15 4-9 6-6 Texas at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m. ET TEX: Martinez (R) NYY: Tanaka (R) 2 15 1-1 5-2 Minnesota at Chi. White Sox, 8:10 p.m. ET MIN: Nolasco (R) CWS: Shields (R) 15 4 3-5 0-2 .375 .000 Chi. Cubs at Cincinnati, 12:35 p.m. ET CHC: Hendricks (R) CIN: Reed (L) 14 2 (Line: CHC -210) .455 1.02 2.76 .000 1.67 6.75 5-6 0-1 PHI: Eflin (R) ARI: Bradley (R) 3 8 78 15 14.1 46.0 6 49 41.1 107.1 31 138 (Line: LAD -115) 0.00 0.00 0.0 1.14 3.67 61.1 0 53 (Line: ARI -150) .000 1.53 6.28 .500 1.37 4.50 0-2 3-3 N.Y. Mets at Washington, 7:05 p.m. ET NYM: Verrett (R) WSH: Scherzer (R) 4 16 (Line: OFF) .429 1.45 4.14 .615 1.00 3.52 3-4 8-5 L.A. Dodgers at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m. ET LAD: Stewart (R) MIL: Guerra (R) 0 10 0-0 4-1 NA .800 INTERLEAGUE Miami at Detroit, 1:10 p.m. ET MIA: Koehler (R) DET: Norris (L) 15 1 (Line: DET -125) 6-6 .500 1.49 0-0 NA 1.17 Toronto at Colorado, 3:10 p.m. ET TOR: Sanchez (R) COL: Anderson (L) 15 3 6 8 2-1 4-2 Cleveland at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m. ET CLE: Salazar (R) ATL: () 14 0 9-3 0-0 16 14 71 5 3.33 2.55 97.1 17.2 93 18 (Line: BAL -140) .667 1.69 6.04 .667 1.56 3.60 28.1 45.0 17 36 (Line: OFF) .750 1.15 .000 .00 Kansas City at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m. ET KC: Volquez (R) STL: Martinez (R) 84.0 6.0 (Line: TOR -140) .875 1.26 .000 1.19 7-1 0-1 Baltimore at San Diego, 3:40 p.m. ET BAL: Gallardo (R) SD: Friedrich (L) 4.07 4.50 7-7 7-5 2.40 .00 86.1 0.0 99 (Line: STL -165) .500 1.46 5.15 .583 1.09 3.02 92.2 89.1 73 70 (Line: SF -113) 1.42 5.22 1.44 6.02 79.1 49.1 63 40 (Line: SEA -127) .500 1.32 4.50 .667 1.38 5.28 22.0 76.2 15 58 San Francisco at Oakland, 10:05 p.m. ET SF: Peavy (R) OAK: Manaea (L) 15 9 4-6 2-4 .400 .333 Pittsburgh at Seattle, 10:10 p.m. ET PIT: Taillon (R) SEA: Miley (L) 4 13 1-1 6-3 Monday American League TEX 9, BYY 6 TB 13, BOS 7 HOU 4, LAA 2 National League LAD 5, PIT 4 WAS 11, NYM 4 CHC 11, CIN 8 PHI 8, ARI 0 Interleague CLE 8, ATL 3 KC 6, STL 2 COL 9, TOR 5 OAK 8, SF 3 Thursday American League TEX at NYY, 1:05 MIN at CWS, 2:10 CLE at TOR, 7:07 DET at TB, 7:10 BAL at SEA, 10:10 National League LAD at MIL, 2:10 CIN at WSH, 7:05 CHC at NYM, 7:10 MIA at ATL, 7:10 Interleague KC at STL, 7:15 SF at OAK, 10:05 PITCHING Sale, Chicago Tillman, Baltimore Salazar, Cleveland Zimmermann, Detroit Happ, Toronto ERA Wright, Boston Salazar, Cleveland Hamels, Texas Sale, Chicago Estrada, Toronto STRIKEOUTS Price, Boston Sale, Chicago Archer, Tampa Bay Verlander, Detroit Kluber, Cleveland SAVES Britton, Baltimore Robertson, Chicago Rodriguez, Detroit Colome, Tampa Bay Davis, Kansas City Friday American League CLE at TOR, 1:07 DET at TB, 7:10 LAA at BOS, 7:10 CWS at HOU, 8:10 TEX at MIN, 8:10 BAL at SEA, 10:10 National League CIN at WSH, 6:05 CHC at NYM, 7:10 MIA at ATL, 7:35 MIL at STL, 8:15 SF at ARI, 9:40 COL at LAD, 10:10 Interleague KC at PHI, 7:05 PIT at OAK, 10:05 NYY at SD, 10:40 13-2 10-1 9-3 9-4 9-3 2.18 2.40 2.60 2.79 2.81 110 109 108 107 103 23 20 20 19 18 PITCHING Arrieta, Chicago Kershaw, Los Angeles Cueto, San Francisco Fernandez, Miami Strasburg, Washington ERA Kershaw, Los Angeles Bumgarner, San Francisco Arrieta, Chicago Lester, Chicago Fernandez, Miami Cueto, San Francisco STRIKEOUTS Kershaw, Los Angeles Fernandez, Miami Scherzer, Washington Bumgarner, San Francisco SAVES Familia, New York Ramos, Miami Melancon, Pittsburgh Jansen, Los Angeles Jeffress, Milwaukee ab r h bi bb so avg Texas 4 1 0 0 0 1 .264 Choo rf Desmond cf 5 2 3 0 0 1 .326 5 2 3 3 0 0 .285 Beltre 3b 4 1 2 1 0 0 .217 Fielder dh Rua lf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .278 Mazara ph 1 1 1 1 0 0 .289 4 0 1 1 0 0 .271 Odor 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .284 Andrus ss Profar 1b 3 0 1 1 1 1 .347 Wilson c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .245 37 7 11 7 1 4 Totals u Batting — 2B: Fielder (14); HR: Beltre (11); RBI: Profar (9); Mazara (32); Odor (38); Beltre 3 (51); Fielder (40); GIDP: Andrus. ab r h bi bb so avg New York Ellsbury cf 4 1 1 0 0 0 .272 1 0 1 0 0 0 .297 Beltran rf Refsnyder pr 2 0 1 0 1 0 .293 3 0 0 1 0 2 .219 Rodriguez dh Teixeira 1b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .192 4 0 1 0 0 1 .253 Castro 2b Gregorius ss 4 0 1 0 0 0 .287 4 0 2 0 0 0 .249 Headley 3b Hicks lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .206 3 0 0 0 0 1 .253 Romine c 33 1 8 1 1 7 Totals u Batting — 2B: Ellsbury (12); SF: Rodriguez (3); RBI: Rodriguez (27). ip h r er bb so era Pitching Texas 7 6 0 0 1 7 2.60 Hamels W,9-1 Diekman 1 1 1 1 0 0 3.03 1 1 0 0 0 0 6.58 Tolleson New York 7 8 6 6 1 2 3.17 Sabathia L,5-5 Swarzak 1 3 1 1 0 0 4.50 1 0 0 0 0 2 4.50 Mullee Sabathia pitched to 4 batters in the 8th. HBP: Choo (by Sabathia). Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Hamels 27; 86-59; Diekman 4; 14-9; Tolleson 4; 17-11; Sabathia 31; 102-68; Swarzak 5; 15-10; Mullee 3; 9-7 uUmpires — HP: Nauert; 1B: Wegner; 2B: Porter; 3B: Tumpane uGame data — T: 2:37. Att: 32,373. Cardinals 8, Royals 4 St. Louis Kansas City 030 023 000 — 8 020 002 000 — 4 ab r h bi bb so avg St. Louis 3 2 2 2 2 1 .300 Carpenter 2b Moss lf 5 1 1 1 0 2 .251 Holliday dh 5 0 1 1 0 0 .257 Piscotty rf 4 1 1 0 0 0 .287 3 0 2 1 0 0 .305 Adams 1b Pham cf 0 0 0 0 1 0 .200 Peralta 3b 4 1 0 0 1 2 .208 Molina c 4 1 0 1 0 0 .262 3 1 1 1 1 0 .232 Wong cf G. Garcia ss 4 1 1 1 0 1 .400 35 8 9 8 5 6 Totals u Batting — 2B: Carpenter (24); Piscotty (21); Moss (11); HR: Carpenter (14); SF: Adams (2); RBI: Adams (34); Carpenter 2 (49); G. Garcia (8); Wong (7); Holliday (47); Molina (26); Moss (38); GIDP: Piscotty. u Baserunning — SB: Piscotty (4). u Fielding — E: Piscotty (3). Kansas City ab r h bi bb so avg 5 0 0 0 0 2 .307 Merrifield lf Escobar ss 5 0 2 0 0 0 .260 Cain cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .290 Dyson cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .252 1 0 0 0 0 0 .212 Gordon ph Hosmer 1b 5 1 2 0 0 2 .311 K. Morales dh 4 2 2 0 0 1 .247 Orlando rf 4 1 1 3 0 0 .348 4 0 1 0 0 0 .273 Cuthbert 3b Colon 2b 3 0 1 1 1 1 .277 Butera c 3 0 1 0 1 0 .308 Totals 38 4 11 4 2 6 u Batting — 2B: Hosmer (17); Cuthbert (6); RBI: Orlando 3 (18); Colon (4). u Fielding — E: Hosmer (5). Pitching ip h r er bb so era St. Louis 6 9 4 3 1 4 4.42 Wacha W,4-7 Broxton 1 0 0 0 0 1 3.52 1 0 0 0 0 1 2.87 Siegrist Oh 1 2 0 0 1 0 1.62 Kansas City Ventura L,6-5 51/3 7 7 7 3 4 5.00 Flynn 22/3 1 1 1 1 1 3.38 1 1 0 0 1 1 3.38 Moylan WP: Wacha. HBP: Piscotty (by Ventura). Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Wacha 28; 99-68; Broxton 3; 9-7; Siegrist 3; 11-8; Oh 6; 25-16; Ventura 27; 98-58; Flynn 11; 38-25; Moylan 4; 14-9 uUmpires — HP: Timmons; 1B: Blakney; 2B: Everitt; 3B: Baker uGame data — T: 2:50. Att: 32,909. 020 011 010 — 5 000 070 00X — 7 ab r h bi bb so avg Miami 4 0 2 0 1 0 .340 Suzuki rf Prado 3b 4 0 0 1 0 0 .308 5 1 2 1 0 0 .313 Yelich lf Ozuna cf 5 1 2 0 0 0 .321 5 1 3 3 0 1 .228 Stanton dh 5 0 1 0 0 1 .268 Bour 1b Dietrich 2b 4 0 2 0 1 1 .305 4 0 1 0 0 0 .301 Realmuto c Hechavarria ss 4 2 3 0 0 0 .243 40 5 16 5 2 3 Totals u Batting — 2B: Yelich (20); HR: Stanton (15); SF: Prado (3); RBI: Stanton 3 (40); Yelich (38); Prado (27); GIDP: Yelich; Hechavarria. ab r h bi bb so avg Detroit 4 1 1 0 0 2 .293 Kinsler 2b 3 1 1 0 1 1 .346 Maybin cf Cabrera 1b 4 1 1 3 0 2 .295 4 1 2 0 0 1 .322 V. Martinez dh Castellanos 3b 4 1 3 2 0 0 .302 4 0 0 0 0 1 .228 J. Upton lf McCann c 4 0 0 0 0 4 .201 3 1 0 0 1 1 .215 Aviles rf Iglesias ss 3 1 1 2 1 0 .256 33 7 9 7 3 12 Totals u Batting — 2B: Kinsler (15); 3B: Castellanos (3); HR: Iglesias (3); Castellanos (14); Cabrera (17); RBI: Iglesias 2 (19); Castellanos 2 (42); Cabrera 3 (48). u Fielding — E: Castellanos (5); Upton (2); Aviles (5). Pitching ip h r er bb so era Miami 41/3 5 5 5 3 9 3.90 Conley L,4-5 2 Wittgren /3 2 2 2 0 1 3.66 2 2 0 0 0 0 0.87 Ellington 1 0 0 0 0 2 2.86 McGowan Detroit 51/3 12 4 4 1 1 5.02 Pelfrey W,2-7 Rondon H,1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1.29 2 Wilson H,13 /3 1 0 0 0 0 3.30 1 2 1 1 0 0 5.27 Greene 2 Rodriguez /3 0 0 0 1 1 3.29 Red Sox 8, Rays 2 Boston Tampa Bay NL LEADERS AL LEADERS 200 000 050 — 7 000 000 010 — 1 Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Conley 21; 92-59; Wittgren 4; 17-11; Ellington 8; 29-19; McGowan 3; 12-8; Pelfrey 28; 100-61; Rondon 4; 10-7; Wilson 3; 14-9; Greene 5; 15-9; Rodriguez 4; 12-7 uUmpires — HP: Wolf; 1B: Johnson; 2B: De Jesus; 3B: Cederstrom uGame data — T: 3:00. Att: 30,808. Odds provided by Pregame.com. RESULTS, UPCOMING GAMES Texas New York Miami Detroit 84.2 12.0 Philadelphia at Arizona, 3:40 p.m. ET Rangers 7, Yankees 1 Tigers 7, Marlins 5 NATIONAL LEAGUE 12-2 11-2 11-1 10-3 10-0 1.79 1.99 2.10 2.10 2.28 2.42 145 138 138 122 26 24 22 22 21 USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 011 010 302 — 8 000 100 100 — 2 ab r h bi bb so avg Boston 5 1 1 0 0 0 .287 Betts rf 3 2 1 0 2 1 .305 Pedroia 2b 4 1 2 1 1 0 .337 Ortiz dh 2 1 2 1 3 0 .276 Ramirez 1b 5 2 2 1 0 1 .298 Bradley Jr. cf 5 1 3 5 0 2 .273 Shaw 3b Brentz lf 5 0 0 0 0 3 .350 Vazquez c 4 0 0 0 0 2 .212 Hernandez ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .257 37 8 11 8 6 11 Totals u Batting — 2B: Bradley Jr. (19); Betts (18); Shaw (22); Ortiz (31); HR: Shaw (8); RBI: Bradley Jr. (50); Shaw 5 (44); Ortiz (63); Ramirez (45); GIDP: Ortiz LOB: 8. u Baserunning — SB: Bradley Jr. (7); Pedroia (5). Tampa Bay ab r h bi bb so avg Forsythe 2b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .296 Miller ss 4 1 1 1 0 2 .248 Longoria 3b 4 0 2 0 0 1 .278 Morrison 1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .237 Jennings cf 3 1 1 0 1 1 .202 Arcia rf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .244 Motter lf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .195 Franklin dh 3 0 0 1 1 1 .231 Conger c 4 0 0 0 0 2 .200 33 2 6 2 3 11 Totals u Batting — 2B: Longoria (20); HR: Miller (10); RBI: Franklin (6); Miller (26) LOB: 7. u Fielding — DP: 1. ip h r er bb so era Pitching Boston Porcello W,9-2 6 5 1 1 3 8 3.78 Tazawa 1 1 1 1 0 1 3.26 Uehara 1 0 0 0 0 1 4.91 1 0 0 0 0 1 3.13 Barnes Tampa Bay 61/3 7 4 4 4 9 4.76 Archer L,4-11 12/3 3 2 2 0 2 4.28 Romero 1 1 2 2 2 0 8.15 Eveland IBB: Ramirez (by Eveland). Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Porcello 26; 109-72; Tazawa 4; 16-9; Uehara 3; 11-8; Barnes 3; 9-6; Archer 29; 109-69; Romero 8; 26-19; Eveland 6; 29-14 uUmpires — HP: Reyburn; 1B: Hirschbeck; 2B: Woodring; 3B: Bucknor uGame data — T: 3:11. Att: 16,996. JENNIFER STEWART, USA TODAY SPORTS Entering Tuesday’s game, Diamondbacks first baseman Paul Goldschmidt had struck out in 78 of his 276 at-bats. D’backs swing and miss Arizona copes with high strikeout rate The Arizona Diamondbacks have struck out way too many times this season. That’s what manager Chip Hale said before Monday’s game against the Philadelphia Phillies, adding that the team recognizes the strikeout problem and is doing what it can to deal with the issue throughout the organization. “It’s important to us, it’s important as an organiza- tion,” he said. Hale’s hitters confirmed exactly what he said in an 8-0 loss to the Phillies in Phoenix. The Diamondbacks struck out 13 times, including back-to-backto-back swinging strikeouts to end the game. That made it 28 games in which the Diamondbacks have struck out at least 10 times. They’ve fanned 701 times, third most in the majors behind the Houston Astros and the Milwaukee Brewers. But Houston and Milwaukee also rank in the top five in walks — Arizona ranks 16th. Monday’s 13 punchouts put Arizona at 270 in June, or 10.8 per game. Phillies pitchers had recorded 14 strikeouts over their previous three games. “Yup, correct. ... Thirteen, that’s a lot of strikeouts,” Hale said after the game. strikeouts Arizona’s have certainly been spread around. First baseman Paul Goldschmidt entered Tuesday’s game tied for eighth in the National League with 78 strikeouts in 276 at-bats. Yet his onbase-plus-slugging percentage of .958 more than justified his high strikeout number and was 60 points higher than anyone else in the top 10 in NL strikeouts. Jake Lamb is tied for 15th with 71 strikeouts in 252 at-bats, but like Goldschmidt, his 15 homers and .924 OPS help justify the high whiff rate. Twins 4, White Sox 0 Indians 5, Braves 3 MONDAY’S LATE GAMES Cleveland Atlanta Athletics 8, Giants 3 Matthew Bain @MatthewBain10 USA TODAY Sports Minnesota Chicago 010 003 000 — 4 000 000 000 — 0 ab r h bi bb so avg Minnesota Nunez ss 4 1 1 0 0 0 .311 Grossman lf 3 0 0 0 1 2 .262 3 1 0 0 1 2 .267 Mauer 1b Dozier 2b 4 2 3 4 0 0 .259 Plouffe 3b 4 0 0 0 0 3 .245 Kepler rf 3 0 1 0 1 0 .247 4 0 0 0 0 2 .191 Park dh Suzuki c 4 0 2 0 0 0 .279 Buxton cf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .188 Totals 33 4 7 4 3 10 u Batting — 2B: Suzuki (10); HR: Dozier 2 (12); RBI: Dozier 4 (36); GIDP: Buxton. u Baserunning — SB: Nunez (18). u Fielding — E: Plouffe (5). ab r h bi bb so avg Chicago 4 0 2 0 0 0 .286 Anderson ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .277 Eaton rf Abreu 1b 3 0 1 0 1 0 .266 3 0 0 0 0 0 .294 Cabrera lf Coats lf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .063 4 0 0 0 0 2 .198 Frazier 3b Lawrie 2b 4 0 2 0 0 1 .245 4 0 0 0 0 3 .237 Avila c Garcia dh 4 0 0 0 0 1 .242 3 0 1 0 0 0 .210 Shuck cf 34 0 6 0 1 10 Totals u Baserunning — SB: Lawrie 2 (6); Anderson (2). u Fielding — PB: Avila (2). ip h r er bb so era Pitching Minnesota 7 5 0 0 1 7 5.12 Gibson W,1-5 1 1 0 0 0 2 3.92 Pressly Kintzler 1 0 0 0 0 1 2.49 Chicago 7 6 4 4 1 8 3.18 Quintana L,5-8 1 1 0 0 1 1 2.45 Beck Purke 1 0 0 0 1 1 5.00 Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Gibson 28; 107-72; Pressly 4; 20-14; Kintzler 3; 10-7; Quintana 27; 100-63; Beck 5; 21-12; Purke 4; 17-8 uUmpires — HP: Barber; 1B: Kulpa; 2B: Conroy; 3B: Meals uGame data — T: 2:51. Att: 22,072. Dodgers 6, Brewers 5 Los Angeles Milwaukee 020 310 000 — 6 002 000 030 — 5 Los Angeles ab r h bi bb so avg 4 0 1 0 1 0 .260 Utley 2b Kendrick lf 5 1 2 0 0 1 .245 4 1 1 0 1 0 .297 Seager ss Gonzalez 1b 3 2 3 1 1 0 .272 4 1 2 0 1 1 .238 Thompson rf Grandal c 5 0 0 2 0 1 .178 3 1 1 1 1 0 .236 Pederson cf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .248 Puig rf 5 0 1 0 0 2 .250 Taylor 3b Urias p 3 0 1 1 0 1 .125 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Liberatore p Van Slyke ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .195 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Baez p Blanton p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Jansen p Totals 38 6 12 5 5 7 u Batting — 2B: Gonzalez (12); Kendrick (7); 3B: Seager (2); RBI: Grandal 2 (28); Pederson (33); Urias (1); Gonzalez (34); GIDP: Grandal LOB: 11. u Baserunning — SB: Thompson (5). u Fielding — E: Seager (10). Milwaukee ab r h bi bb so avg 4 0 0 0 1 4 .293 Villar ss Hill 3b 4 2 1 0 1 0 .276 Braun lf 4 1 1 2 0 1 .322 Lucroy c 4 1 2 2 0 0 .302 Carter 1b 2 0 0 1 1 1 .231 3 0 0 0 1 1 .274 Perez rf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .000 Elmore 2b 1 1 0 0 1 1 .131 Broxton cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 C. Torres p Boyer p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Nieuwenhuis ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .217 Marinez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 1 0 .268 Gennett ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Barnes p Anderson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .091 2 0 0 0 1 1 .233 Flores cf 28 5 4 5 8 10 Totals u Batting — 2B: Lucroy 2 (16); Braun (15); S: Anderson (5); SF: Carter (7); RBI: Lucroy 2 (38); Carter (48); Braun 2 (40) LOB: 6. u Baserunning — SB: Broxton (7); Perez (9). u Fielding — E: Broxton (3); Lucroy (5); DP: 1. ip h r er bb so era Pitching Los Angeles 6 2 2 2 6 6 4.09 Urias W,1-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0.72 Liberatore 2 3 2 0 0 3.79 Baez 1 0 0 0 2 1 2.43 Blanton H,10 1 0 0 0 0 2 1.38 Jansen S,23 Milwaukee 4 8 6 5 2 0 5.45 Anderson L,4-8 C. Torres 2 1 0 0 1 3 3.46 1 2 0 0 0 1 3.47 Boyer Marinez 1 1 0 0 2 1 3.26 Barnes 1 0 0 0 0 2 2.53 Anderson pitched to 2 batters in the 5th. IBB: Gonzalez (by Marinez). HBP: Gonzalez (by C. Torres). Batters faced; pitchesstrikes: Urias 25; 100-63; Liberatore 3; 10-7; Baez 3; 7-6; Blanton 4; 21-9; Jansen 3; 10-7; Anderson 21; 72-47; C. Torres 9; 30-19; Boyer 5; 19-13; Marinez 6; 21-11; Barnes 3; 15-9 uUmpires — HP: Bellino; 1B: Basner; 2B: Hallion; 3B: Cuzzi uGame data — T: 3:25. Att: 33,819. 200 000 003 — 5 000 002 001 — 3 ab r h bi bb so avg Cleveland Santana 1b 4 1 2 1 1 1 .238 Kipnis 2b 5 1 1 0 0 1 .266 5 1 1 0 0 0 .312 Lindor ss Ramirez lf 4 0 2 2 1 0 .292 Chisenhall rf 5 0 2 0 0 2 .298 4 0 0 0 0 2 .183 Gomes c Naquin cf 1 1 0 0 2 1 .325 Uribe 3b 3 0 1 0 1 1 .228 Davis pr 0 1 0 0 0 0 .263 2 0 0 0 0 2 .250 Kluber p Martinez ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .298 Allen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 34 5 9 3 5 11 Totals u Batting — S: Kluber (2); RBI: Ramirez 2 (30); Santana (42); GIDP: Gomes; Lindor. u Baserunning — SB: Chisenhall (4); Ramirez 2 (10); Lindor (13). ab r h bi bb so avg Atlanta 4 1 1 1 0 1 .271 Peterson 2b Inciarte cf 3 0 1 2 1 1 .240 4 0 1 0 0 2 .285 Freeman 1b Markakis rf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .251 3 0 0 0 0 0 .249 Garcia 3b Pierzynski c 3 0 0 0 0 0 .199 3 1 1 0 0 0 .211 Aybar ss Bonifacio lf 3 1 1 0 0 0 .200 1 0 0 0 0 1 .036 Wisler p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Cervenka p J. Johnson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Vizcaino p Alvarez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 1 0 0 0 0 1 .271 d’Arnaud ph Totals 29 3 5 3 1 8 u Batting — 3B: Freeman (3); HR: Peterson (2); S: Wisler (3); RBI: Inciarte 2 (10); Peterson (11); GIDP: Freeman. u Fielding — E: Aybar (6). ip h r er bb so era Pitching Cleveland 8 3 2 2 1 7 3.50 Kluber W,8-7 Allen S,15 1 2 1 1 0 1 3.31 Atlanta Wisler 6 6 2 2 2 9 4.14 1 0 0 0 1 0 2.59 Cervenka J. Johnson 1 1 0 0 0 0 4.39 2 /3 2 3 1 2 1 2.16 Vizcaino L,1-3 1 Alvarez /3 0 0 0 0 1 1.93 WP: Vizcaino. HBP: Naquin (by Wisler). Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Kluber 26; 87-64; Allen 5; 17-10; Wisler 27; 98-67; Cervenka 3; 9-4; J. Johnson 3; 6-4; Vizcaino 7; 30-16; Alvarez 1; 3-3 uUmpires — HP: Gibson III; 1B: Wendelstedt; 2B: Hamari; 3B: B. Welke uGame data — T: 2:40. Att: 19,206. MONDAY’S LATE GAMES Phillies 8, Diamondbacks 0 Philadelphia Arizona 000 002 600 — 8 000 000 000 — 0 ab r h bi bb so avg Philadelphia Herrera cf 5 2 4 1 0 0 .307 5 2 3 0 0 1 .259 Bourjos rf Joseph 1b 5 0 0 0 0 4 .234 5 1 2 3 0 0 .243 Franco 3b Rupp c 4 0 1 1 1 2 .270 Galvis ss 5 1 0 0 0 0 .216 Goeddel lf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .227 Ramos p 0 0 0 0 1 0 .000 Neris p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Paredes ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .233 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Gonzalez p 5 1 3 2 0 1 .260 Hernandez 2b 2 0 1 0 0 1 .286 Velasquez p 3 1 1 1 0 0 .280 Asche lf 43 8 16 8 2 10 Totals u Batting — 2B: Bourjos (11); Herrera (8); Velasquez (1); Asche (9); RBI: Herrera (28); Hernandez 2 (18); Rupp (19); Franco 3 (40); Asche (7) LOB: 10. u Fielding — E: Rupp (4); DP: 2. ab r h bi bb so avg Arizona 4 0 1 0 0 1 .311 Segura 2b Bourn cf 2 0 0 0 2 0 .252 Goldschmidt 1b 4 0 2 0 0 1 .304 O’Brien 1b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .140 Lamb 3b 3 0 0 0 0 2 .282 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Collmenter p 1 0 1 0 0 0 .257 Gosselin ph 4 0 0 0 0 2 .247 Weeks Jr. lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .266 Castillo c Tomas rf 4 0 1 0 0 2 .257 Ahmed ss 3 0 2 0 0 1 .225 Ray p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .259 Barrett p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Drury 3b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .272 32 0 7 0 2 13 Totals u Batting — LOB: 7. u Baserunning — CS: Bourn (3). Pitching ip h r er bb so era Philadelphia Velasquez W,6-2 5 5 0 0 0 7 3.38 Ramos H,2 2 0 0 0 1 3 0.00 Neris 1 1 0 0 1 0 2.61 Gonzalez 1 1 0 0 0 3 3.12 Arizona 6 9 4 4 0 7 4.69 Ray L,4-7 2 Barrett /3 3 4 4 2 1 3.54 Collmenter 21/3 4 0 0 0 2 4.80 Ray pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. WP: Barrett. Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Velasquez 19; 84-55; Ramos 6; 24-17; Neris 5; 18-12; Gonzalez 4; 20-14; Ray 27; 102-73; Barrett 7; 23-14; Collmenter 11; 36-25 uUmpires — HP: Barrett; 1B: Hoberg; 2B: Scott; 3B: Davidson uGame data — T: 3:18. Att: 22,567. Oakland 050 001 200 — 8 San Francisco 000 000 021 — 3 ab r h bi bb so avg Oakland 3 2 1 0 2 0 .237 Crisp cf Lowrie 2b 5 0 2 1 0 1 .295 Vogt c 5 1 1 1 0 0 .266 Valencia 3b 4 1 3 0 1 0 .335 5 1 2 2 0 0 .249 Davis lf Alonso 1b 3 2 1 0 1 0 .251 Semien ss 4 1 2 4 0 0 .248 Burns rf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .235 4 0 0 0 0 2 .000 Mengden p Rodriguez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Neal p Rzepczynski p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 36 8 12 8 5 3 Totals u Batting — 2B: Davis (9); Semien (9); Alonso (13); HR: Semien (15); RBI: Davis 2 (52); Vogt (20); Semien 4 (39); Lowrie (20); GIDP: Davis; Alonso LOB: 6. u Fielding — DP: 2. ab r h bi bb so avg San Francisco Span cf 3 0 1 0 0 1 .251 Stratton p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 3 0 0 0 1 0 .256 Panik 2b Belt 1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .301 3 0 0 0 0 0 .282 Posey c Williamson rf 1 1 1 0 0 0 .263 3 0 1 0 0 2 .298 Pagan lf Brown c 1 0 1 0 0 0 .239 3 0 0 0 1 0 .250 Blanco rf Pena ss 4 1 2 1 0 0 .414 4 1 1 0 0 0 .221 Gillaspie 3b Samardzija p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .147 1 0 0 0 1 0 .260 Parker ph 32 3 7 1 3 6 Totals u Batting — RBI: Pena (5); GIDP: Stratton; Blanco LOB: 5. u Fielding — DP: 2. ip h r er bb so era Pitching Oakland Mengden W,1-3 72/3 4 2 2 3 5 2.81 1 Rodriguez /3 0 0 0 0 1 3.40 2 /3 3 1 1 0 0 8.59 Neal 1 Rzepczynski /3 0 0 0 0 0 2.77 San Francisco Samardzija L,8-5 6 8 6 6 2 2 3.91 3 4 2 2 3 1 4.00 Stratton WP: Rodriguez. IBB: Burns (by Samardzija). Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Mengden 29; 104-66; Rodriguez 1; 7-4; Neal 4; 10-8; Rzepczynski 1; 1-1; Samardzija 27; 89-60; Stratton 14; 57-31 uUmpires — HP: Little; 1B: Iassogna; 2B: Hernandez; 3B: Barksdale uGame data — T: 2:43. Att: 41,422. Rangers 9, Yankees 6 Texas New York 101 200 014 — 9 021 020 100 — 6 Texas ab r h bi bb so avg 5 0 2 2 0 1 .279 Choo rf Desmond cf 4 2 1 2 0 2 .321 4 1 1 0 0 0 .286 Mazara lf Beltre 3b 5 1 1 2 0 1 .279 3 1 1 0 1 1 .213 Fielder dh Odor 2b 5 1 1 1 0 0 .271 4 1 1 2 1 2 .288 Andrus ss 3 0 1 0 0 0 .231 Moreland 1b Rua ph 2 0 0 0 0 2 .284 2 1 0 0 2 1 .178 Chirinos c Profar pr 0 1 0 0 0 0 .348 Wilson c 0 0 0 0 0 0 .255 37 9 9 9 4 10 Totals u Batting — 2B: Mazara (6); Choo (3); HR: Odor (14); Desmond (14); RBI: Odor (37); Beltre 2 (48); Choo 2 (10); Desmond 2 (51); Andrus 2 (33) LOB: 8. u Baserunning — SB: Choo (4); Andrus (11). u Fielding — DP: 1. ab r h bi bb so avg New York 5 0 1 0 1 0 .272 Ellsbury cf 5 1 2 0 0 0 .260 Gardner lf 4 2 3 0 1 0 .294 Beltran dh 4 0 1 1 1 1 .223 McCann c 5 2 3 1 0 1 .191 Teixeira 1b 5 0 2 1 0 1 .253 Castro 2b 5 1 3 1 0 0 .288 Gregorius ss Headley 3b 4 0 1 1 1 2 .244 Hicks rf 5 0 0 1 0 0 .212 42 6 16 6 4 5 Totals u Batting — 2B: Gregorius (12); HR: Teixeira (5); RBI: Hicks (15); Gregorius (33); Teixeira (14); McCann (30); Headley (19); Castro (30); GIDP: Gregorius LOB: 13. u Baserunning — SB: Gregorius (4); Ellsbury (13). u Fielding — E: Teixeira (3). ip h r er bb so era Pitching Texas Gonzalez 5 10 5 5 2 2 9.00 Jackson 11/3 4 1 1 0 0 7.20 Barnette W,5-2 12/3 1 0 0 1 3 2.97 Dyson S,16 1 1 0 0 1 0 1.88 New York Nova 5 6 4 4 3 4 5.32 1 0 0 0 0 0 3.38 Bleier H,1 1 0 0 0 0 1 2.89 Betances H,19 Miller H,12 1 1 1 1 0 3 1.34 0 1 1 1 0 3.15 Chapman 1 2 3 3 0 2 5.72 Yates L,2-1 BS,2 Chapman pitched to 1 batters in the 9th. WP: Barnette. HBP: Desmond (by Yates). Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Gonzalez 26; 87-53; Jackson 8; 35-23; Barnette 7; 3017; Dyson 5; 18-9; Nova 25; 94-54; Bleier 3; 13-7; Betances 3; 11-8; Miller 4; 14-10; Chapman 1; 9-2; Yates 8; 29-19 uUmpires — HP: Tumpane; 1B: Nauert; 2B: Wegner; 3B: Porter uGame data — T: 3:43. Att: 32,914. USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 SPORTS 7C E6 HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS Norman first to repeat track award Sprinter is 11th athlete overall to win Gatorade honor twice Chad Konecky Special for USA TODAY Sports MURIETTA , CALIF. Sprinter Michael Norman showed up at Vista Murrieta High’s scorching outdoor track Tuesday for what he thought was a photo for his local newspaper before leaving town to compete in the U.S. Olympic trials in July. Instead, he was surprised with the news that he’d pulled off another unprecedented feat as Gatorade made him the first high school boy to repeat as its National Track and Field Athlete of the Year. “I was a little suspicious about the photo shoot, but when I showed up at the track, there was just the one reporter there, so I really didn’t expect anything,” said Norman, 18, a Southern California signee. “Then all these family and friends and teammates and cameras came out of nowhere. This leaves me speechless. To double with a prestigious award like this one is something no one ever imagines.” Norman, who is 6-1 and 167 pounds, won the national title in the 200-meter dash in the USATF Junior Outdoor Championships, breaking the tape in 20.15 seconds. The clocking is the third fastest in U.S. prep history and No. 1 in 2016. It is also the sixth-fastest time by an American this year and the world No. 15 among men of all ages. His season-best 45.51 in the 400 meters ranks as the nation’s No. 1 time among prep competitors this year. “His world-class speed is impressive, but what really separates Michael from his peers is his unprecedented ability to carry that higher gear over stunning range,” said Rich Gonzalez of Track & Field News. “From 400 meters down to the 100, no dasher in prep history has recorded a superior set of cumulative sprint times.” Norman’s career-best 45.19 in the 400 is the seventh-best high school time ever. He is the only prep boy in history who ranks in the all-time top 10 of the 200 and the 400. He ran a personal best in the 100 meters this season as well, clocking a 10.27, which is the nation’s No. 2 wind-legal time in 2016. The Gatorade Player of the Year award recognizes outstanding athletic excellence as well as high standards of academic achievement and exemplary character demonstrated on and off the track. The 11th athlete to repeat as Gatorade’s national winner in any sport throughout the award’s 31-year history, Norman is now a finalist for the Gatorade Male High School Athlete of the Year award. USA TODAY High School Sports administrates the nationwide selection process in collaboration with Gatorade. TRENT MUSHO, GATORADE “To double with a prestigious award like this one is something no one ever imagines,” Michael Norman says. FOR THE RECORD AMERICAN FAMILY INSURANCE ALL-USA GIRLS LACROSSE SWIMMING Olympic Swim Trials At At CenturyLink Center Omaha, Neb. (All distances in meters) Men 100 Backstroke Final 1, Ryan Murphy, Jacksonville, Fla., 52.26 seconds. 2, David Plummer, Oklahoma City, Okla., 52.28. 3, Matt Grevers, Lake Forest, Ill., 52.76. 4, Jacob Pebley, Corvallis, Ore., 52.95. 5, Michael Taylor, Alpharetta, Ga., 54.04. 6, John Shebat, Oak Hill, Va., 54.20. (tie)7, Sean LeHane, Naperville, Ill., 54.72. (tie)7, Jake Taylor, Honeyville, Utah, 54.72. 200 Freestyle Final 1, Townley Haas, Richmond, Va., 1 minute 45.66 seconds. 2, Conor Dwyer, Winnetka, Ill., 1:45.67. 3, Jack Conger, Rockville, Md., 1:45.77. 4, Ryan Lochte, Daytona Beach, Fla., 1:46.62. 5, Gunnar Bentz, Atlanta, Ga., 1:47.33. 6, Clark Smith, Denver, Colo., 1:47.53. 7, Tyler Clary, Riverside, Calif., 1:47.78. 8, Jonathan Roberts, Southlake, Texas, 1:49.50. 200 Butterfly (q-Top 8 times advance to final) Semifinal 1 1, q-Pace Clark, Memphis, Tenn., 1 minute 56.27 seconds. 2, q-Tom Shields, Huntington Beach, Calif., 1:56.35. 3, q-Chase Kalisz, Bel Air, Md., 1:56.48. 4, q-Andrew Seliskar, McLean, Va., 1:57.10. 5, Bobby Bollier, Mission Hills, Kan., 1:57.43. 6, Christian McCurdy, Irwin, Pa., 1:57.76. 7, Adam Hinshaw, Saratoga, Calif., 1:58.09. 8, Tyler Clary, Riverside, Calif., 1:59.50. Semifinal 2 1, q-Michael Phelps, Baltimore, Md., 1:55.17. 2, q-Gunnar Bentz, Atlanta, Ga., 1:56.82. 3, q-Zach Harting, Madison, Ala., 1:56.99. 4, q-Jack Conger, Rockville, Md., 1:57.02. 5, Justin Wright, Fresno, Calif., 1:57.23. 6, Michael Klueh, Evansville, Ind., 1:57.77. 7, Kyle Higgins, Pittsburgh, Pa., 1:58.10. 8, Mick Litherland, Alpharetta, Ga., 1:58.28. Women 100 Backstroke Final 1, Olivia Smoliga, Glenview, Ill., 59.02 seconds. 2, Kathleen Baker, Winston Salem, N.C., 59.29. 3, Amy Bilquist, Carmel, Ind., 59.37. 4, Ali DeLoof, Grosse Point, Mich., 59.69. 5, Hannah Stevens, Lexington, Ohio, 59.97. 6, Clara Smiddy, Miami, Fla., 1:00.12. 7, Missy Franklin, Centennial, Colo., 1:00.24. 8, Natalie Coughlin, Vallejo, Calif., 1:00.48 100 Breastroke Final 1, Lilly King, Evansville, Ind., 1 minute 05.20 seconds. 2, Katie Meili, Colleyville, Texas, 1:06.07. 3, Molly Hannis, Santa Rosa, Calif., 1:06.65. 4, Breeja Larson, Mesa, Ariz., 1:07.53. 5, Andee Cottrell, Reynoldsburg, Ohio, 1:07.59. 6, Jessica Hardy, Long Beach, Calif., 1:07.73. 7, Sarah Haase, Rockville, Md., 1:08.01. 8, Miranda Tucker, Plymouth, Mich., 1:08.19. 200 Freestyle (q-Top 8 times advance to final) Semifinal 1 1, q-Leah Smith, Pittsburg, Pa., 1 minute 56.73 seconds. 2, q-Allison Schmitt, Canton, Mich., 1:57.05. 3, q-Missy Franklin, Centennial, Colo., 1:57.33. 4, q-Simone Manuel, Sugar Land, Texas, 1:57.82. 5, q-Katie McLaughlin, Dana Point, Calif., 1:58.43. 6, Sarah Henry, Garner, N.C., 1:58.49. 7, Shannon Vreeland, Overland Park, Kan., 2:00.48. 8, Karlee Bispo, Modesto, Calif., 2:00.59. Semifinal 2 1, q-Katie Ledecky, Bethesda, Md., 1:55.10. 2, q-Melanie Margalis, Clearwater, Fla., 1:57.35. 3, q-Cierra Runge, Cochraneville, Pa., 1:58.10. 4, Chelsea Chenault, 1:58.70. 5, Katie Drabot, Cedarburg, Wis., 1:58.58. 6, Hali Flickinger, Spring Grove, Pa., 1:58.91. 7, Mallory Comerford, Kalamazoo, Mich., 1:59.24. 8, Sarah Gibson, San Antonio, Texas, 1:59.71. 200 Individual Medley (q-Top 8 times advance to final) Semifinal 1 1, q-Caitlin Leverenz, Tucson, Ariz., 2 minutes 11.42 seconds. 2, q-Bethany Galat, Mishawaka, Ind., 2:12.29. 3, q-Ella Eastin, Irvine, Calif., 2:12.68. 4, q-Emily Cameron, Lilitz, Pa., 2:13.36. 5, Meaghan Raab, Hummelstown, Pa., 2:14.34. 6, Brooke Zeiger, Cumberland, R.I., 2:14.41. 7, Kate Mills, Sacramento, Calif., 2:14.94. 8, Karlee Bispo, Modesto, Calif., 2:15.12. Semifinal 2 1, q-Maya DiRado, Santa Rosa, Calif., 2:10.09. 2, q-Melanie Margalis, Clearwater, Fla., 2:10.41. 3, q-Madisyn Cox, Lubbock, Texas, 2:11.39. 4, q-Meghan Small, Lineboro, Md., 2:13.00. 5, Margaret Aroesty, Long Beach, N.Y., 2:14.22. 6, Kaitlyn Jones, Newark, Del., 2:14.34. 7, Celina Li, Pleasanton, Calif., 2:14.66. 8, Kristin Malone, Milwaukee, Wis., 2:16.12. SOCCER European Championship All Times ET QUARTERFINALS Thursday At Marseille, France Poland vs. Portugal, 3 p.m. Friday At Lille, France The 2016 American Family Insurance All-USA Girls Lacrosse Teams were selected by Casey Vock of 3dRising.com based on performance, level of play and strength of schedule. For second and third teams, player capsules, photo galleries and more, visit usatodayhss.com. Player of the Year: Lizzie Colson, Manchester Valley (Manchester, Md.) Hampered by a foot injury, the Maryland recruit moved to attack from midfield to start the season. There, she faced even more defensive pressure as teams focused on stopping her, but they could not. She set the Carroll County single-season scoring record with 108 goals, also adding 39 assists and 43 draw controls. Her 300 career goals are second all time nationally behind Katie Schwarzmann, a two-time Tewaaraton Trophy winner at Maryland. She also set a record in the state final with a 12-point performance in the Mavericks’ convincing 22-3 win against Fallston for Manchester Valley’s third consecutive state title. Coach of the Year: Chris Robinson, McDonogh School (Owings Mills, Md.) The dynasty continues at McDonogh with its eighth consecutive Interscholastic Athletic Association of Maryland “A” Conference championship and seventh consecutive undefeated season, pushing its winning streak to 155. Despite playing one of the nation’s toughest schedules, Robinson’s team — with 20 college-bound players — finished 22-0 with an average margin of victory of 10 goals. McDonogh only faced one true test — a 12-11 overtime battle with Maryland public school power Century on May 2. FIRST TEAM School (location) Year College Position Player A Zoe Belodeau St. Stephen’s & St. Agnes (Alexandria, Va.) Junior Penn Senior Lizzie Colson Manchester Valley (Manchester, Md.) Maryland A Senior A Brindi Griffin McDonogh School (Owings Mills, Md.) Maryland Senior Navy A Kelly Larkin Bishop Ireton (Alexandria, Va.) A Sara Szynal Senior Northwestern Summit (N.J.) Junior Notre Dame M Andie Aldave McDonogh School (Owings Mills, Md.) Notre Dame Academy (Hingham, Mass.) Senior M Charlotte Allard North Carolina M Savannah Buchanan McDonogh School (Owings Mills, Md.) Senior Notre Dame Senior Syracuse M Vanessa Costantino West Islip (N.Y.) M Meghan Duffy Cicero-North Syracuse (Cicero, N.Y.) Senior Northwestern Ridgewood (N.J.) Senior D Katie Bourque Dartmouth D Sami Chenoweth Manchester Valley (Manchester, Md.) Senior Towson Georgetown Visitation Prep (Washington, D.C.) Virginia Senior D Lauren Martin Senior Marriotts Ridge (Marriottsville, Md.) Johns Hopkins D Lexi Souder New Hampton (N.H.) School Senior Syracuse G Asa Goldstock TENNIS FINAL July 10 At Saint-Denis, France Wimbledon Semifinal winners, 3 p.m. Major League Soccer All Times ET EASTERN CONFERENCE Philadelphia NY City FC New York Montreal D.C. United Orlando City Toronto FC N. England Columbus Chicago W 7 6 7 5 5 4 5 4 3 2 L 5 5 8 4 6 3 6 5 5 7 T Pts GF GA 5 26 29 25 6 24 27 31 2 23 28 23 6 21 24 22 5 20 16 16 8 20 28 25 4 19 17 18 7 19 21 28 7 16 19 22 5 11 14 20 WESTERN CONFERENCE Colorado FC Dallas Salt Lake Vancouver Portland Los Angeles Sporting KC San Jose Seattle Houston W 9 9 8 7 6 5 6 5 5 3 L 2 5 5 7 6 3 8 4 9 8 T Pts GF GA 5 32 19 11 4 31 26 24 3 27 27 26 3 24 27 29 5 23 28 29 8 23 28 18 4 22 18 20 7 22 19 19 1 16 13 19 5 14 22 25 Friday’s Games San Jose at Chicago, 8 p.m. D.C. United at Real Salt Lake, 10:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games New England at Montreal, 5:30 p.m. Seattle at Toronto FC, 7:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Houston, 9 p.m. Sunday’s Games New York at NY City FC, noon Columbus at Sporting KC, 7 p.m. WNBA All Times ET EASTERN CONFERENCE New York Atlanta Washington Chicago Indiana Connecticut W 10 8 8 6 6 3 L 5 6 8 8 9 12 Pct .667 .571 .500 .429 .400 .200 GB — 1½ 2½ 3½ 4 7 Los Angeles Minnesota Dallas Phoenix Seattle San Antonio W 13 13 7 6 5 3 L 1 2 8 9 9 11 Pct .929 .867 .467 .400 .357 .214 GB — ½ 6½ 7½ 8 10 WESTERN CONFERENCE Tuesday’s Games Atlanta at Seattle Dallas at Los Angeles Wednesday’s Games San Antonio at Washington, 11:30 a.m. Indiana at Chicago, 12:30 p.m. New York at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Connecticut at Phoenix, 10 p.m. Thursday’s Games Wales vs. Belgium, 3 p.m. Atlanta at Los Angeles, 3:30 p.m. Dallas at Seattle, 10 p.m. Germany vs. Italy, 3 p.m. BOXING Saturday At Bordeaux, France Sunday At Saint-Denis, France France vs. Iceland, 3 p.m. Fight Schedule Wednesday SEMIFINALS July 6 At Lyon, France At Khon Kaen, Thailand, Byron Rojas vs. Knockout CP Freshmart, 12, for Rojas WBA World strawweight title. July 7 At Marseille, France At Belasco Theater, Los Angeles, Oscar Negrete vs. Jose Bustos, 10, bantamweights. At Tepic, Mexico, Jose Argumedo vs. Julio Mendoza, 12, for Argumedo’s IBF strawweight title. Poland or Portugal vs. Wales or Belgium, 3 p.m. Germany or Italy vs. France or Iceland, 3 p.m. Friday In London Surface: Grass; Purse: $38.4 million Men’s Singles — First round: Nick Kyrgios (15), Australia, def. Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic, 6-4, 6-3, 6-7 (9), 6-1; Richard Gasquet (7), France, def. Aljaz Bedene, Britain, 6-3, 6-4, 6-3; Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (12), France, def. Inigo Cervantes, Spain, 6-4, 7-6 (5), 6-4; John Millman, Australia, def. Albert Montanes, Spain, 7-5, 4-6, 5-7, 6-4, 6-3; Albert Ramos-Vinolas, Spain, def. Vasek Pospisil, Canada, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4; Viktor Troicki (25), Serbia, def. Tristan Lamasine, France, 6-4, 6-2, 6-2; Dennis Novikov, United States, def. Luke Saville, Australia, 4-6, 6-4, 7-5, 6-4; Yen-hsun Lu, Taiwan, def. Alexander Kudryavtsev, Russia, 6-4, 6-1, 6-4; Dustin Brown, Germany, def. Dusan Lajovic, Serbia, 4-6, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4; Juan Monaco, Argentina, def. Taro Daniel, Japan, 7-5, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2; Marcel Granollers, Spain, def. Victor Estrella Burgos, Dominican Republic, 6-2, 6-4, 2-6, 6-4; Benjamin Becker, Germany, def. Facundo Bagnis, Argentina, 6-3, 6-3, 6-1; Joao Sousa (31), Portugal, def. Dmitry Tursunov, Russia, 3-6, 7-6 (2), 4-6, 6-3, 7-5; Benoit Paire (26), France, def. Franko Skugor, Croatia, 3-6, 7-6 (2), 2-6, 6-3, 10-8; Stan Wawrinka (4), Switzerland, def. Taylor Fritz, United States, 7-6 (4), 6-1, 6-7 (2), 6-4; Juan Martin del Potro, Argentina, def. Stephane Robert, France, 6-1, 7-5, 6-0; Feliciano Lopez (22), Spain, def. Rajeev Ram, United States, 7-6 (5), 6-4, 6-4; Roberto Bautista Agut (14), Spain, def. Jordan Thompson, Australia, 6-3, 6-3, 6-3; Gilles Muller, Luxembourg, def. Santiago Giraldo, Colombia, 4-6, 6-7 (3), 7-6 (5), 6-3, 15-13; Andy Murray (2), Britain, def. Liam Broady, Britain, 6-2, 6-3, 6-4; Mikhail Kukushkin, Kazakhstan, def. Martin Klizan, Slovakia, 7-6 (7), 7-6 (5), 6-4; Fernando Verdasco, Spain, vs. Bernard Tomic (19), Australia, 6-4, 3-6, 3-6, 6-3, susp., rain; Tomas Berdych (10), Czech Republic, leads Ivan Dodig, Croatia, 7-6 (5), 5-7, 6-1, 4-1 (15-15), susp., rain; Radu Albot, Moldova, leads Gastao Elias, Portugal, 3-6, 6-2, 7-5, 2-1, susp., rain; Florian Mayer, Germany, leads Dominic Thiem (8), Austria, 2-1 (15-15), susp., rain; Donald Young, United States, leads Leonardo Mayer, Argentina, 6-4, 0-2 (15-30), susp., rain; Albano Olivetti, France, leads Matthew Barton, Australia, 7-6 (7), 6-6 (5-5), susp., rain; Jiri Vesely, Czech Republic, leads Igor Sijsling, Netherlands, 6-2, 6-4, 1-1, susp., rain; Alexander Zverev (24), Germany, leads Paul-Henri Mathieu, France, 6-3, 6-4, 3-0, susp., rain. Women’s Singles — First round: Dominika Cibulkova (19), Slovakia, def. Mirjana LucicBaroni, Croatia, 7-5, 6-3; Daria Gavrilova, Australia, def. Wang Qiang, China, 2-6, 6-3, 6-4; Christina McHale, United States, def. Daniela Hantuchova, Slovakia, 7-5, 6-2; Duan Ying-Ying, China, def. Kristyna Pliskova, Czech Republic, 6-3, 3-6, 7-5; Serena Williams (1), United States, def. Amra Sadikovic, Switzerland, 6-2, 6-4; Yulia Putintseva, Kazakhstan, def. Marina Melnikova, Russia, 7-5, 6-2; Roberta Vinci (6), Italy, def. Alison Riske, United States, 6-2, 5-7, 6-3; Caroline Garcia (30), France, def. Cagla Buyukakcay, Turkey, 6-2, 6-3; Elena Vesnina, Russia, def. Tamira Paszek, Austria, 7-5, 6-2; Timea Babos, Hungary, def. Katie Swan, Britain, 6-2, 6-3; Katerina Siniakova, Czech Republic, def. Pauline Parmentier, France, 6-3, 7-5; Tara Moore, Britain, def. Alison Van Uytvanck, Belgium, 6-3, 6-2; Svetlana Kuznetsova (13), Russia, def. Caroline Wozniacki, Denmark, 7-5, 6-4; CoCo Vandeweghe (27), United States, def. Kateryna Bondarenko, Ukraine, 6-2, 7-6 (3); Hsieh Su-wei, Taiwan, vs. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (21), Russia, 5-7, 6-1 (30-30), susp., rain; Andrea Petkovic (32), Germany, leads Nao Hibino, Japan, 3-6, 7-5, 5-1 (1540), susp., rain; Johanna Konta (16), Britain, def. Monica Puig, Puerto Rico, 6-1, 2-1 (1540), susp., rain; Eugenie Bouchard, Canada, leads Magdalena Rybarikova, Slova- kia, 6-3, 2-1 (15-30), susp., rain; Evgeniya Rodina, Russia, leads Lesia Tsurenko, Ukraine, 6-3, 4-3 (40-15), susp., rain; Julia Boserup, United States, leads Tatjana Maria, Germany, 4-3, susp., rain. COLLEGE BASEBALL NCAA College World Series At TD Ameritrade Park Omaha Omaha, Neb. All Times ET Championship Series (Best-of-3) Monday: Arizona 3, Coastal Carolina 0 Tuesday: Coastal Carolina 5, Arizona 4, series tied 1-1 Wednesday: Arizona (49-23) vs. Coastal Carolina (54-18), 8 p.m. DEALS BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Recalled LHP T.J. McFarland from Norfolk (IL). BOSTON RED SOX — Optioned LHP Eduardo Rodriguez to Pawtucket (IL). Recalled RHP Pat Light from Pawtucket. HOUSTON ASTROS — Agreed to terms with RHP Manuel Gonzalez on a minor league contract. LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Optioned RHP A.J. Achter to Salt Lake (PCL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Sent LHP Rich Hill to Stockton (Cal) for a rehab assignment. SEATTLE MARINERS — Sent C Jesus Sucre to Tacoma (PCL) for a rehab assignment. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Designated RHP Ryan Webb for assignment. Assigned RHP Andrew Bellatti outright to Durham (IL). Recalled RHP Danny Farquhar from Durham. TEXAS RANGERS — Optioned LHP Alex Claudio to Round Rock (PCL). Recalled RHP Chi Chi Gonzalez from Round Rock. National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Placed RHP John Gant on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Casey Kelly from Gwinnett (PCL). CHICAGO CUBS — Assigned C Tim Federowicz outright to Iowa (PCL). Sent 3B Tommy La Stella and LHP Clayton Richard to Iowa for rehab assignments. LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Sent RHP Bran- don McCarthy to Rancho Cucamonga (Cal) for a rehab assignment. Claimed INF Cole Figueroa from Pittsburgh and optioned him to Oklahoma City (PCL). MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Selected the contract of INF-OF Jake Elmore from Colorado Springs (PCL). Designated OF Alex Presley for assignment. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Agreed to terms with RHP Andrew Brown on a minor league contract. PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Agreed to terms with RHP Max Kranick on a rehab assignment. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Designated C Eric Fryer for assignment. Reinstated C Brayan Pena from the 15-day DL. SAN DIEGO PADRES — Claimed RHP Paul Clemens off waivers from Miami. Transferred RHP Jon Edwards to the 60-day DL. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Selected the contract of RHP Lucas Giolito from Harrisburg (EL). FOOTBALL National Football League HOUSTON TEXANS — Signed WR Will Fuller. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — Signed LS Nolan Frese. Released LB Khairi Fortt. HOCKEY National Hockey League NHL — Fined the Vancouver Canucks $50,000 for inappropriate public comments regarding potential interest in players under contract to other teams. CAROLINA HURRICANES — Agreed to terms with F Patrick Brown on a one-year, twoway contract. COLLEGE FLORIDA STATE — Announced men’s basketball G Benji Bell will transfer. JOHNSON C. SMITH — Announced the retirement of tennis coach James Cuthbertson, effective July 29. LA SALLE — Announced the retirement of men’s soccer coach Pat Farrell. FOOTBALL Canadian Football League All Times ET EAST DIVISION Hamilton Montreal Ottawa Toronto W 1 1 1 0 L 0 0 0 1 T 0 0 0 0 Pts 2 2 2 0 PF 42 22 45 20 PA 20 14 37 42 B.C. Ssktchwn Calgary Edmonton Winnipeg W 1 0 0 0 0 L 0 0 1 1 1 T 0 0 0 0 0 Pts 2 0 0 0 0 PF 20 0 18 37 14 PA 18 0 20 45 22 WEST DIVISION Thursday’s Games Ottawa at Montreal, 7 p.m. Toronto at Ssktchwn, 10 p.m. Friday’s Games B.C. at Hamilton, 7 p.m. Winnipeg at Calgary, 10 p.m. SPORTS ON TV Times Eastern. Programs live unless noted. Check local listings. COLLEGE BASEBALL: NCAA Division I, College World Series championship, in Omaha, Game 3, Coastal Carolina vs. Arizona (ESPN, 8 p.m.) GOLF: PGA of America, PGA Professional Championship, final round, in Verona, N.Y. (Golf Channel, 3 p.m.) MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL: Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati (MLB Network, 12:30 p.m.) or Miami at Detroit (MLB Network, 1 p.m.); Philadelphia at Arizona (MLB Network, 3:30 p.m.) or Baltimore at San Diego (joined in progress) (MLB Network, 4 p.m.); New York Mets at Washington (ESPN2, 7 p.m.) SWIMMING: U.S. Olympic trials, in Omaha, qualifying heats: men’s 100-meter freestyle and 200 breaststroke, women’s 200 butterfly (NBC Sports Network, 7 p.m., same-day tape); finals: women’s 200 individual medley and 200 freestyle, men’s 200 butterfly (NBC, 8 p.m.) TENNIS: Wimbledon, early rounds, in London (ESPN, 7 a.m.) WNBA: New York at Minnesota (NBA TV, 8 p.m.); Connecticut at Phoenix (NBA TV, 10 p.m.) USA TODAY SPORTS/MMAJUNKIE MMA RANKINGS The rankings are produced by the USA TODAY Sports and MMAJunkie staffs. They take into account a fighter’s record, quality of competition, finishing rate/dominance and frequency of fights. Fighters can be ranked in one weight class and are ineligible after 24 months of inactivity. POUND-FOR-POUND 1. Demetrious Johnson (24-2-1) UFC 2. Jon Jones (22-1-0) UFC 3. Dominick Cruz (22-1-0) UFC 4. Rafael dos Anjos (25-7-0) UFC 5. Conor McGregor (19-3-0) UFC 6. Jose Aldo (25-2-0) UFC 7. Daniel Cormier (17-1-0) UFC 8. Robbie Lawler (27-10-0) UFC 9. Stipe Miocic (15-2-0) UFC 10. Michael Bisping (29-7-0) UFC HEAVYWEIGHT 1. Stipe Miocic (15-2-0) UFC 2. Fabricio Werdum (20-6-1) UFC 3. Cain Velasquez (13-2-0) UFC 4. Junior Dos Santos (18-4-0) UFC 5. Alistair Overeem (41-14-0) UFC 6. Andrei Arlovski (25-12-0) UFC 7. Travis Browne (18-3-1) UFC 8. Ben Rothwell (36-10-0) UFC 9. Vitaly Minakov (17-0-0) Bellator 10. Mark Hunt (12-10-1) UFC LIGHT HEAVYWEIGHT 1. Jon Jones (22-1-0) UFC 2. Daniel Cormier (17-1-0) UFC 3. Anthony Johnson (21-5-0) UFC 4. Phil Davis (16-3-0) Bellator 5. Glover Teixeira (25-4-0) UFC 6. Ryan Bader (20-5-0) UFC 7. Alexander Gustafsson (16-4-0) UFC 8. Ovince Saint Preux (19-8-0) UFC 9. Rashad Evans (19-5-1) UFC 10. Quinton Jackson (37-11-0) Bellator MIDDLEWEIGHT 1. Michael Bisping (29-7-0) UFC 2. Luke Rockhold (15-3-0) UFC 3. Chris Weidman (13-1-0) UFC 4. Yoel Romero (11-1-0) UFC 5. Ronaldo Souza (23-4-0) UFC 6. Vitor Belfort (25-12-0) UFC 7. Lyoto Machida (22-7-0) UFC 8. Tim Kennedy (18-5-0) UFC 9. Gegard Mousasi (38-6-2) UFC 10. Derek Brunson (15-3-0) UFC WELTERWEIGHT 1. Robbie Lawler (27-10-0) UFC 2. Stephen Thompson (13-1-0) UFC 3. Rory MacDonald (18-4-0) UFC 4. Tyron Woodley (15-3-0) UFC 5. Ben Askren (15-0-0) One 6. Johny Hendricks (17-4-0) UFC 7. Demian Maia (23-6-0) UFC 8. Matt Brown (20-14-0) UFC 9. Carlos Condit (30-9-0) UFC 10. Dong Hyun Kim (21-3-1) UFC LIGHTWEIGHT 1. Rafael dos Anjos (25-7-0) UFC 2. Khabib Nurmagomedov (23-0-0) UFC 3. Tony Ferguson (20-3-0) UFC 4. Eddie Alvarez (27-4-0) UFC 5. Nate Diaz (19-10-0) UFC 6. Justin Gaethje (16-0-0) WSOF 7. Edson Barboza (17-4-0) UFC 8. Anthony Pettis (18-5-0) UFC 9. Gilbert Melendez (22-5-0) UFC 10. Michael Chiesa (14-2-0) UFC FEATHERWEIGHT 1. Conor McGregor (19-3-0) UFC 2. Jose Aldo (25-2-0) UFC 3. Frankie Edgar (20-4-1) UFC 4. Max Holloway (16-3-0) UFC 5. Chad Mendes (17-4-0) UFC 6. Ricardo Lamas (16-5-0) UFC 7. Cub Swanson (22-7-0) UFC 8. Charles Oliveira (21-5-0) UFC 9. Daniel Straus (24-6-0) Bellator 10. Patricio Freire (25-3-0) Bellator BANTAMWEIGHT 1. Dominick Cruz (22-1-0) UFC 2. Raphael Assuncao (23-4-0) UFC 3. T.J. Dillashaw (12-3-0) UFC 4. Bibiano Fernandes (19-3-0) One 5. Marlon Moraes (16-4-1) WSOF 6. Eduardo Dantas (18-4-0) Bellator 7. Urijah Faber (33-9-0) UFC 8. Michael McDonald (17-3-0) UFC 9. Cody Garbrandt (9-0-0) UFC 10. Takeya Mizugaki (21-9-2) UFC FLYWEIGHT 1. Demetrious Johnson (24-2-1) UFC 2. Joseph Benavidez (24-4-0) UFC 3. Henry Cejudo (10-1-0) UFC 4. Kyoji Horiguchi (17-2-0) UFC 5. Jussier Formiga (18-4-0) UFC 6. Ali Bagautinov (14-4-0) UFC 7. John Moraga (16-4-0) UFC 8. Ian McCall (13-5-1) UFC 9. Wilson Reis (20-6-0) UFC 10. Dustin Ortiz (15-5-0) UFC WOMEN’S POUND-FOR-POUND 1. Joanna Jedrzejczyk (11-0-0) UFC 2. Cristiane Justino (16-1-0) Invicta 3. Claudia Gadelha (13-1-0) UFC 4. Miesha Tate (18-5-0) UFC 5. Holly Holm (10-1-0) UFC 6. Ronda Rousey (12-1-0) UFC 7. Cat Zingano (9-1-0) UFC 8. Barb Honchak (10-2-0) Invicta 9. Alexis Davis (17-6-0) UFC 10. Jessica Aguilar (19-5-0) UFC WOMEN’S BANTAMWEIGHT 1. Miesha Tate (18-5-0) UFC 2. Holly Holm (10-1-0) UFC 3. Ronda Rousey (12-1-0) UFC 4. Cat Zingano (9-1-0) UFC 5. Alexis Davis (17-6-0) UFC WOMEN’S STRAWWEIGHT 1. Joanna Jedrzejczyk (11-0-0) UFC 2. Claudia Gadelha (13-1-0) UFC 3. Jessica Aguilar (19-5-0) UFC 4. Carla Esparza (11-3-0) UFC 5. Alexa Grasso (7-0-0) Invicta 8C SPORTS USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 OLYMPICS “They leave us with this, something that looks like a war zone,” Vila Autodromo resident Sandra Souza says of the Olympics. Rio residents find resistance futile v CONTINUED FROM 1C and that is what most bothered Sandra Souza, as she gazed earlier this year from her balcony at the Vila Autodromo favela over a cluster of venues for this summer’s Rio Games. “The Olympics should serve like an event to unite the people,” Souza told USA TODAY Sports through an interpreter. “But the reality, my understanding of the Olympic Games, I saw that wherever it goes, it takes it away. “The Olympics does not allow poor people around it. That does not happen. Instead they leave us with this, something that looks like a war zone.” When favela is translated into English it typically becomes “slum” or “shanty town.” It is slightly misleading. The Vila Autodromo was a safe, workingclass settlement originally populated by fishermen and then construction workers in the 1960s and ’70s. When USA TODAY Sports first visited in February, the area had become primarily a building site, slowly being taken over by construction for the Games, including the adjoining Olympic park. Souza, a resident of 20 years, remained in her home, a comfortable two-story dwelling that had a rough and rudimentary exterior but an inside that was well-main- tained and was appointed with decorative care. She fought with many residents to keep away developers, an effort that was ultimately lost and displaced more than 600 families. Rio’s powers that be decreed that despite its citizens holding a 99-year lease, Vila Autodromo had to be razed, making way for a complex filled with luxury apartments. “The older constructions there do have some kind of a title deed,” said Alexandro Rochedo, a Rio architect and businessman. “So the government finds itself in a complicated situation when they need to urbanize the area, because they need to remove (everyone). If it is a small community, they will be removed. But if it is big enough, they will let them stay.” Vila Autodromo might normally have been populated enough to resist the physical and political bulldozers. But its location was simply too lucrative to ignore. Rio city officials did not respond to requests for comment. In February, one property at Vila Autodromo that was originally part of a crude row of terraced homes stood alone, with the adjoining dwellings on either side having been bulldozed and only the walls left in place. Pools of standing water infested with mosquitoes collected, a major concern with the Zika vi- PHOTOS BY SANDY HOOPER, USA TODAY SPORTS Luxury apartments are among the plans to replace homes demolished in Vila Autodromo. rus, primarily carried by mosquitoes, being among the many issues for these Olympics. Police occupied the area with their van parked by a playground. “Protect us from what?” Souza said. “They are trying to intimidate us to leave.” “Over several decades, people had built up their homes,” said Theresa Williamson, executive director of the Catalytic Communities, who has worked to help Vila Autodromo’s residents in the struggle. “Some of them were two or three stories, finished, painted and tiled. There were streetlights, a bakery, a supermarket. Children played soccer; people set up outdoor hair salons. It was a very vibrant community.” Williamson has long fought to protect favela communities from displacement, an uphill battle in this city. “There are laws and regulations in place, but getting them enforced against big-business interests and the local government is very difficult for people with limited means,” Williamson added. Souza and other residents, who asked not to be named for fear of antagonizing city officials, fondly remembered the site’s origins. In recent times, many of the occupants were descendants of those who settled when working at the nearby motor sports track in the late 1970s. Souza stood on the balcony of her property, next to her teenage daughter, who was cradling a tiny dog named Onyx. The puppy was one of many left behind when residents departed and were no longer able to care for their pets. Souza explained how the fight against eviction had long since become a point of principle. It was no longer pleasant to stay at the site, which had become dusty, dirty and filled with the noise of demolition. “It is not nice here anymore, but I want my daughter to understand that money cannot win everything,” she said. “I want her to know that having rights and protecting them is the most important thing.” In February, Souza still dreamed that the battle would be won, that the developers would give up, and other exiles would return. In the end, though, the paperwork counted for little. Most residents felt they had little choice but to accept the offer of alternate accommodation across the city and left. Souza stayed true to her promise of resisting removal. She turned down work as an acupuncturist, fearing that her property, as was the case with others, could have been reduced to rubble unless someone was home at all times. Eventually, in late May, the developers agreed to provide her and the handful of others who had remained new accommodation on the site, hidden from the view of the new apartments but connected by a road. When USA TODAY Sports returned in June, Souza’s original dwelling was the last one standing but was awaiting the bulldozer. Over the fence, the finishing touches were being put to the Riocentro Olympic development that will house boxing, badminton, gymnastics and athletes from several other sports. Souza reflected on a victory that didn’t feel much like one. “What happened here was not right,” she said. “I get to stay, but it is not the same place. It will not feel like home any more.” Soon, tens of thousands of fans from around the world will walk through the Olympic facilities, unaware of what once sat over in the distance. In some ways the saga of Vila Autodromo was not about the Games, but rather about real estate development and corporate greed. But fair play and equality remain tenets of the Olympic ideal — at least we prefer to believe so. At Vila Autodromo, on the doorstep of competition, they appear to have been in short supply. SOCCER Iceland enjoying its moment in sporting sun “Right now is the best time to be in Iceland. Everyone has a smile on their faces. Everyone is loving life.” v CONTINUED FROM 1C life and only the strongest survived. That’s still in the genes. You get used to working and being physical, learning to farm or fish. The footballers have strength in their nature. You can see it.” Iceland is a remote and sparsely populated place, full of raw scenic beauty and friendly locals. It has as many people as Santa Ana, Calif., or around 150 times fewer than England, the opponent it embarrassed Monday. Logic would suggest that Iceland should not have qualified for the tournament for the first time, let alone made it to the last eight, where it meets host France on Sunday. However, another key piece to the conundrum of the triumphant underdog is turning a weakness into a strength. “Our team are like brothers,” said Magnus Magnusson, whose soccer agency Total Football represents 10 Iceland squad members. Magnusson is no relation to the strongman. In a small country, such confusions are common. “One of the disadvantages of being so small is obvious — you have less players,” the agent added. “But the big advantage is these guys have played together since they were young, for club teams and national youth teams.” That unity has been picked up upon by the army of traveling supporters. “If one guy makes a mistake, his best friend is behind him ready to make up for it,” popular Icelandic singer-songwriter Jon Jonsson said by telephone from France. “They have this incredible passion and will. It is inspirational. It is beautiful. It is a kind of mania, and the whole country is gripped by it.” Much of Iceland’s game plan is built upon resolute defensive efforts, with the players ending each game exhausted after long periods chasing down opponents. Johnatan Lama, an American who is playing professional soccer in Iceland HALLDOR KOLBEINS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES Fans in Reykjavik celebrate Monday at a public showing of Iceland’s game vs. England in the European Championship. Iceland won 2-1 in an upset and will face France in the quarterfinals. Yet there is talent, too. Veteran Eidur Gudjohnsen played for Chelsea and FC Barcelona and was not amused when former colleague Frank Lampard, an Englishman playing for New York City FC of Major League Soccer, sent him a text before the Round of 16. Gudjohnsen couldn’t see why Lampard thought it funny that the two teams were playing each other. No one in England is laughing now. Instead, the world of soccer is waking up to the Icelandic story and falling deep for it. How can you not? The now-legendary Viking chant and slow clap might be the coolest fan display of this or any other tournament. Among those performing the awe-inspiring routine after the England game was new President Johannesson, who Gudni shunned the VIP lounge to mix it with the fans, wearing a national team jersey and posing for selfies. Indeed, everywhere the Iceland fans go, they seem to spread good cheer and collect new admirers. Jimmy Carter, 25 and from California, made friends with a group of Iceland supporters when they invited him into their card game. When they departed, he was left with fond memories and a new team scarf. “As soon as you meet them, you realize it is a group of people who are celebrating the best moment of their lives,” Carter said. “But they are happy to let everyone else be part of their party.” Before its Euro 2016 breakthrough, Iceland had failed to qualify for every World Cup and European Championship since 1974. Now it is ranked No. 34 in the world and set to climb higher. “Beating England was bigger for us than beating anyone else,” soccer historian and author Stefan Palsson said. “People in Iceland are crazy for English soccer. Young men have tattoos of Manchester United or Chelsea on their skin, not of their Icelandic club. So in that regard it is monumental.” But perhaps unlike England, Iceland’s soccer chiefs have done so many things that make sense. Kids used to play handball in the winter and saw their soccer progress stymie, before all-weather fields were laid nationwide and indoor soccer schools built. Economic and population factors mean that Iceland’s domestic league is never going to be a world force and all of the current squad plies its trade overseas. Yet for enterprising players seeking to get a foothold in Europe, there are now opportunities here. Johnatan Lama, 22, a midfielder from Naples, Fla., moved to Iceland last summer to play for Huginn Seyoisfjorour, in a town of just 800 on the remote east of the island. “It is tough and physical on the field, but away from it Icelanders are the most honest and welcoming people you could meet,” Lama said. “For the Euro games, it was crazy. Right now is the best time to be in Iceland. Everyone has a smile on their faces. Everyone is loving life.” Suddenly, wonderfully, Iceland is finding its sporting dream falling into place, for the team and its supporters. Like the group of fans who hustled back from Nice to Paris after the England victory but would have missed their flight home Tuesday morning had it not been delayed. Or for Jon Jonsson, whose latest single has long been scheduled to be released Friday and speaks about the human tenet of seizing the moment. Iceland is doing just that, a country whose summer nights never see the sun go down, loving its time in the light. FOLLOW REPORTER MARTIN ROGERS @mrogersUSAT for sports commentary and breaking news. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 SECTION D K1 A twosome on tour For pals Nick Jonas and Demi Lovato, it’s work and play 2D STEVE GRANITZ, WIREIMAGE LIFELINE ROYALS REPORT PRINCE HARRY TAKES UP THE CAUSE Following in his late mother’s footsteps, Prince Harry will begin a new focus on the fight against HIV/AIDS. According to a release from Kensington Palace, the young royal plans to meet with doctors and nurses who are caring for HIV-positive patients in London later this month. He also is set to speak at an international AIDS conference in South Africa in July. Harry’s mother, Princess Diana, is remembered for her work in raising awareness of HIV/AIDS. CHRIS JACKSON, GETTY IMAGES WHERE IN THE WORLD? MARRAKESH, MOROCCO USA TODAY PICKS THE 20 BEST ALBUMS OF 2016 (SO FAR) Marrakesh Meryl Streep and Freida Pinto joined Michelle Obama Tuesday in Marrakesh, where they met with Moroccan young women to promote the Let Girls Learn program. The conversation with the adolescent girls centered on the challenges they face in getting a quality education. FADEL SENNA, AFP/GETTY IMAGES CAUGHT IN THE ACT Harrison Ford played tourist Tuesday as he walked near the Mosque-Cathedral of Córdoba in Spain. The actor and his wife, actress Calista Flockhart, are on vacation before he starts filming his next Indiana Jones adventure. T he first six months of 2016 held more blockbuster releases than a good year sees in twelve. Stars such as Beyoncé, Kanye West, Rihanna and Drake all dropped their long-anticipated new albums, three of which were good enough to make our best-of list. Indie rock fans got surprise releases from both Radiohead and James Blake, rising young artists captured our attention with mission statements mature beyond their years, and David Bowie’s Blackstar — released just days before his death — gave one of pop’s most storied artists an outstanding final chapter. It’s a rare year where critics can pick 20 albums deserving of a best-of list midway through the year, but 2016 holds a certain kind of musical magic. Here are the albums USA TODAY’s Maeve McDermott and Patrick Ryan will still be enjoying come December. year, it’s from Grande, a bona fide star whose Dangerous Woman didn’t need to be particularly good to win over fans and sell singles — lucky for us; it is. ANDERSON PAAK MALIBU One of rap’s fastest-rising stars effortlessly fuses jazz, soul and hip-hop on his sophomore effort. A$AP FERG ALWAYS STRIVE AND PROSPER A modern classic from one of hip-hop’s most underrated MCs, whose boisterous rhymes and elastic flow are elevated by an eclectic group of guest stars. ANOHNI HOPELESSNESS The bewitching vocalist marries social consciousness and cavernous synths on her ambitious electro-pop debut. ARIANA GRANDE DANGEROUS WOMAN Last year, the album listeners weren’t expecting came from Carly Rae Jepsen. This v STORY CONTINUES ON 2D LAMAR BY GUSTAVO CABALLERO, GETTY IMAGES, SANTIGOLD BY DONALD BOWERS, GETTY IMAGES; BEYONCÉ BY LARRY BUSACCA, PW/WIREIMAGE; GRANDE BY FREDERICK M. BROWN, GETTY IMAGES MOVIES ‘Tarzan’ swings on back — with a change of clothes And he’s looking for new audiences, too Andrea Mandell RAFA ALCAIDE, EPA Compiled by Cindy Clark USA SNAPSHOTS © The nation’s best sellers Top five best sellers, shown in proportion of sales. Example: For every 10 copies of Me Before You sold, The Pursuit sold 5.6 copies. Me Before You Jojo Moyes 10 The Pursuit 5.6 Janet Evanovich, Lee Goldberg End of Watch Stephen King 4.9 Bay of Sighs Nora Roberts 4.6 Foreign Agent Brad Thor 4.3 THURSDAY Top 50 books list (top150.usatoday.com) SOURCE USA TODAY Best-Selling Books MARY CADDEN AND VERONICA BRAVO, USA TODAY @andreamandell USA TODAY It’s a jungle out there at the box office. In a summer when many tentpoles have fallen short of expectations, from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows to Independence Day: Resurgence, The Legend of Tarzan has its work cut out this holiday weekend. And part of the studio’s challenge is explaining this isn’t your grandfather’s Tarzan. The Legend of Tarzan (in theaters Friday) is prone to flashbacks but veers from being an origin story. Audiences meet Tarzan (Alexander Skarsgård) as a sophisticated London lord who chooses to go back to the Congo to save a nation enslaved by a Belgian king. His deadly jungle mission includes an empowered Jane (Margot Robbie) and an American envoy (Samuel L. Jackson). Tarzan doesn’t even wear a loincloth — he’s clad in a relatively modern pair of chinos. “What struck me when I read the script was how different it JONATHAN OLLEY, WARNER BROS. An empowered (Margot Robbie) and a worldly Tarzan (Alexander Skarsgård) are a far cry from the characters of old. was from the old iterations of the movie,” Skarsgård says. “The fact that you meet the two characters as British aristocrats, and not the ‘Me Tarzan, you Jane.’ ” Opinion is divided on whether American audiences will welcome back the hero, who last hit cinemas in 1999 in Disney’s animated Tarzan, which grossed $171 million. Jeff Bock, box office analyst for Exhibitor Relations, calls the project outdated. “This has Lone Ranger written all over it,” he says. Or it could be “an unexpected surprise,” says Erik Davis, managing editor of Fandango.com and Movies.com. “The success of something like The Jungle Book may play into teens’ and adults’ desire to see another story told in the jungle. And the trailers are pretty strong.” So to the wild Skarsgård has gone, posing for photo ops with animals in Sydney, joining Robbie in a Stop Ivory PSA and jokingly demonstrating how to nuzzle a computer-generated lion on Late Night With Seth Meyers. Trailers have been heavy on spectacle, in- cluding Tarzan’s madcap swings through the jungle and bombastic fights with chest-beating apes. Tarzan could get an assist from Jane, who holds her own fighting baddie Christoph Waltz. But in a gender flip, it’s Skarsgård’s bod bared on billboards, not Robbie’s. “Hey, it’s Marketing 101,” says Robbie with a bit of a grin. “Tarzan shirtless is going to get us movie tickets.” Who is Tarzan aiming for? The trailers evoke “a Planet of the Apes vibe,” says Davis, and some experts say the gender-balanced marketing approach is a sign that Warner Bros. is trying for a four-quadrant movie, meaning a film that appeals to male and female moviegoers who are over and under 25. “On the surface, it seems easy — it’s Tarzan, it’s an action movie — but it seems like they’re courting the female audience in a big way,” says comScore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabedian, allowing that Tarzan and fellow newcomer The BFG have a “formidable competitor” in Finding Dory, which heads into its third weekend. “If you can get women going to see it because of Skarsgård but also because there’s a strong female character, that’s a smart marketing move.” 2D LIFE K1 USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 MUSIC Nick Jonas and Demi Lovato: Dynamic road duo Patrick Ryan USA TODAY Nick Jonas and Demi Lovato are best friends, business partners and newly minted tourmates. So of course they know exactly how to drive each other up the wall. “I’m a big sports fan and Demi will pretend to know about sports, and then you actually try to start a conversation and she just doesn’t,” says Jonas, 23. “Although, now it’s getting better because she’s really into (UFC) fighting, so we can have deep conversations about that.” “Nick, you can be bad at texting back,” says Lovato, 23. “But you’ve been a lot better about it lately.” Luckily for Lovato, her pal will soon be just a dressing room away as the pop stars embark on the Honda Civic Tour: Future Now in Atlanta Wednesday. The joint trek will stop in 42 cities across North America, including New York, Chicago and Houston, before wrapping in Los Angeles Sept. 17. (The two canceled their two North Carolina shows in protest of the state’s controversial HB2 “bathroom bill.”) The ex-Disney Channel stars last hit the road together in fall 2010, when Jonas was one-third of teen heartthrob band the Jonas Brothers with siblings Joe and Kevin. Lovato, then 18, supported her Camp Rock castmates on tour but left that November for rehab, where she sought treatment for conditions relating to bulimia and addiction. Although they’ve played shows and record- ed together since, the notion of a co-headlining tour didn’t come until last year, shortly after the launch of their label Safehouse Records. The idea, Jonas explains, is that “it’s a continuous night of music: going in and out of the different sets and trying to build a dynamic show that showcases different things for both of us.” Pulling primarily from Lovato’s fifth album, Confident, released in October, and Jonas’ third solo effort, Last Year Was Complicated, the loose set lists will feature both solos and duets. “The great thing about this show is that we can really play around,” Jonas says. “If there’s a song that I love of Demi’s that I might want to jump up and just play on, that’s a possibility.” Traveling from city to city, the two plan to catch up on some of their favorite shows: Jonas, with Game of Thrones and Silicon Valley; Lovato, with Thrones and The Walking Dead. They’ll also have a studio the bus on so they can work on new music. Lovato, particularly, says she has already rehearsed what will likely be the first single off her next album, which she may unveil on tour. The singer, who recently teamed with Brad Paisley on the sultry duet Without a Fight, says, “This new sound is definitely sexier. It’s more adult, and there’s also some songs on my album that have more of a country influence. We’ll see where it goes — you never really know until it’s finished.” STEVE GRANITZ, WIREIMAGE Longtime pals Jonas and Lovato launch their Future Now tour Wednesday in Atlanta. It’s been a very good (half) year MITSKI PUBERTY 2 Mitski Miyawaki is among her generation’s most essential young songwriters, making rock music that’s cinematic in both its soaring melodies and starkly emotional stories. PINEGROVE CARDINAL 1990s alt-rock isn’t the most fashionable starting point for many young bands. Luckily, Pinegrove eschews the irony, making twangy pop punk that traces the emotional lives of its young protagonists in stark detail. v CONTINUED FROM 2D BEYONCÉ LEMONADE Lemonade’s release was a capital-E event. But divorce (get it?) Beyoncé’s sixth album from its high-art short film and controversy, and it’s still possibly her most compelling work to date, dipping into guitar rawk and classic country before closing with a fiery statement of female power that captures Bey atop 2016’s pop throne. CAR SEAT HEADREST TEENS OF DENIAL Singer/songwriter Will Toledo channels ’90s greats such as Yo La Tengo and Pavement with deadpan lyrics and timeless guitar melodies, with a voice that’s a dead ringer for the Strokes’ Julian Casablancas. CHAIRLIFT MOTH A frothy glass of sleekly crafted pop songs, whose whip-smart lyrics and hummable hooks go down easy. CHANCE THE RAPPER COLORING BOOK The Chicago rap protégé gets a proper come-out with Coloring Book, a gospel-rap classic with big-name collaborators (Justin Bieber, Kanye West) who never come close to stealing the spotlight. DAVID BOWIE BLACKSTAR A stirring coda for the late music icon, who continued exploring new sonic terrain as he confronted his own mortality. DVSN SEPT. 5TH Drake and dvsn may share a label, a Toronto hometown, a release month (Drake’s Views came out weeks after) and a penchant for making R&B that alternates between sad and sexy — but the duo’s debut album eclipses that of their more famous benefactor. XAVI TORRENT, WIREIMAGE Thom Yorke and Radiohead surprised us with a new album. DIMITRIOS KAMBOURIS, GETTY IMAGES FOR YEEZY SEASON 3 Kanye West pushes boundaries and buttons with his lyrics (and the video) for The Life of Pablo. KANYE WEST THE LIFE OF PABLO An ever-evolving body of work that’s as messy as it is extravagant, Pablo pushes as many buttons with its lyrics as it does musical boundaries, showing Kanye at the peak of his artistic and cultural powers. KAYTRANADA 99.9% The Haitian-Canadian producer colorfully blends tropical samples with hip-hop beats, creating the funkiest, feel-good dance album of the summer. FERDY DAMMAN AFP/GETTY IMAGES DOMINIK MAGDZIAK, GETTY IMAGES FOR HILTON Tegan and Sara’s eighth album, Love You to Death, showcases the sisters as master craftswomen. JAMES BLAKE THE COLOUR IN ANYTHING Stepping out of his London bedroom and into Rick Rubin’s Malibu studio, the sensitive singer/producer takes a maximalist approach to exploring heartbreak, rife with piercing falsetto and throbbing bass lines. KENDRICK LAMAR UNTITLED UNMASTERED From Kanye tacking songs onto the end of Pablo to Future’s nearconstant mixtape releases, rap’s biggest star’s 2016 has been a prolific year for rap’s biggest stars, but the music’s quality does not always matching quantity. Not so for Kendrick Lamar, whose untitled unmastered is a collection of outtakes that surpasses many of his peers’ fully realized new albums. RADIOHEAD A MOON SHAPED POOL The British quintet’s longawaited return does not disappoint, as they continue to infuse their polarizing brand of stadium-ready art rock with existential dread and gutwrenching melancholy. RIHANNA ANTI On another Rihanna album, her bubbly 2016 single Work would be surrounded by soundalikes. But it’s an outlier on ANTI’s collection of curveballs, one of the most confounding, and interesting, releases of her career. SANTIGOLD 99 CENTS Expertly critiquing commercialism and selfie culture under the guise of shimmering, playful pop, the genre-defying singer’s third album is easily her savviest and most refined. TEGAN AND SARA LOVE YOU TO DEATH The most ambitious statement of their career, this doubles as the Quin sisters’ hitmaking résumé, culminating in their transition from a modest indie-rock duo into master craftswomen of clinically-sharp synth-pop. LIFE 3D USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 TELEVISION ‘GoT’ season finale sets up epic conflicts Character and story threads are starting to come together Bill Keveney @billkev USA TODAY Spoiler alert! This story contains significant details from the Season 6 finale. Sunday’s Game of Thrones finale has its stars asking what’s coming next, too. The action- and story-packed Season 6 closer featured pivotal moments that reshape the Game, including Cersei Lannister blowing up much of Kings Landing and becoming queen; Jon Snow, with Sansa Stark at his side, consolidating power in the north; and Danys Targaryen forming alliances with Dorne, the Tyrells and the Greyjoys as she sails her new armada toward Westeros. “You read the script and then you go, ‘How are they going to pull this off?’ ” says Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, who plays Cersei’s brother and lover, Jaime. “I just thought the direction was so good, the first 10, 15 minutes, watching the members of court getting dressed and ready for trial, the way (director Miguel Sapochnik) built up to the explosion was amazing.” Jaime is “in shock and appalled” when he sees that Cersei has destroyed a major part of Kings Landing using wildfire, a nuclear bomb equivalent that he prevented an earlier king from using, Coster-Waldau says. “I don’t think he ever thought that Cersei would do such a thing,” he says. “I can’t wait to read the scripts for Season 7. I’m very curious to see how that relationship plays out, because he’s the most loyal to his family and has done so many things for her and who knows what she’s become now? She truly is terrifying, I think.” Events of the finale set up what are expected to be the final two seasons of the sprawling, Emmywinning series. PHOTOS BY HELEN SLOAN, HBO The Game of Thrones Season 6 finale is full of answers, and yet more questions, setting up what could be the last two seasons for the Emmy-winning series. Bran Stark’s (Isaac Hempstead Wright) supernatural visions push the story. “You’ve got all the pieces in play and now you’re getting closer to the end of the game. If you’ve told the story well, it will build momentum,” he says. “You can see all these characters on this collision course.” Season 6 went beyond George R.R. Martin’s best-selling book series, but that didn’t hurt the show, Coster-Waldau says. “I thought it freed (writers and producers David Benioff and D.B. Weiss) in a weird way. Obviously, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, who plays Jaime (right, with Jerome Flynn), says, “I can’t wait to read the scripts for Season 7.” they’re still faithful to the story and the characters and George Martin is involved in the show,” he says. One revelation many Martin readers have been wondering about centers on the true parentage of Jon Snow, who has been identified as Ned Stark’s illegitimate son. In one of his supernatural visions, his half-brother, Bran (Isaac Hempstead Wright), learns that Jon is not Ned’s son and that his mother is Ned’s sister, Lyanna Stark, who died after childbirth. It also raises the possibility, suspected by fans, that Daenerys’ brother, Rhaegar, is Jon’s father, which would make him a Targaryen and an heir to the Iron Throne. “The very fact Bran saw it tells us this is a hugely important moment of history. And, all we know so far is that Jon Snow is (Lyanna’s) son with some unknown gentleman,” Hempstead Wright says. “It opens up a lot of questions, as well as answering a few.” The finale marks significant turns for all the Stark children, including the still young Bran, who must now shoulder important responsibilities as the powerful Three-Eyed Raven. “Bran knows he’s going to have to do something in the great war that’s coming up but right now I don’t think he has a clue as to what he’ll be doing,” Hempstead Wright says. His Stark siblings, now growing into their power, likely will play major roles, too. Jon Snow has inspired growing allegiance as the king in the north, while Sansa has used her hard-earned political skills to ensure his battle victory. Arya is back in Westeros, gaining murderous vengeance against Walder Frey, the man behind the murders of her mother and brother at the Red Wedding. Hempstead Wright can see the possibility of a family gathering. “They’re all on the same continent for once. Sansa and Jon are at Winterfell, Arya’s not far from there. Bran is not far in the North,” he says. “It all seems to be coming the way for a Stark reunion. I think they’d make quite the team.” PRIME-TIME NIELSEN RATINGS BEYOND THE NUMBERS THE NEWS BEHIND THE RATINGS THE NETWORK RATINGS RACE, WEEK BY WEEK ENDING JUNE 26 (in millions) SEASON TO DATE 12 CBS NBC ABC FOX UNI CW 8 4.6 4.6 3.0 4 BY GARY LEVIN 5/29 MICHAEL STRAHAN BY ABC ABC’s trio of revived game shows hit the buzzer Sunday, with Celebrity Family Feud (8 MILLION same-day viewers), $100,000 Pyramid (8.1 MILLION) and Match Game (6.6 MILLION) among the week’s top shows. BET Awards (4.5 MILLION on the main network) was down from 6.3 million last year. 6/26 5/29 6/26 5/29 6/26 MORE SUMMER OPENERS OWN’s Greenleaf (3 MILLION Tuesday); CBS’s American Gothic (3.5 MILLION Wednesday); USA’s Queen of the South (1.4 MILLION Thursday). Discovery’s Shark Week opened Sunday with an average 2.1 MILLION in prime time. TOP 10 TWEETED-ABOUT PROGRAMS OF THE WEEK Show 1 BET Awards (BET, Sun.) 2 Game of Thrones (HBO, Sun.) 3 The Bachelorette (ABC, Mon.) 4 WWE Raw (USA, Mon.) 5 Pretty Little Liars (Freeform, Tue.) 6 Big Brother (CBS, Wed.) 7 Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta (VH1, Mon.) 8 Big Brother (CBS, Thur.) 9 The Fosters (Freeform, Mon.) 10 WWE SmackDown (USA, Thur.) Tweets 3,447,000 635,000 157,000 151,000 150,000 137,000 117,000 78,000 49,000 41,000 Data from week ending June 26; number of tweets measured until 5 a.m. local time the day after telecast for new prime-time and late-night programs except sports. Source: Nielsen 6/26 5/29 6/26 5/29 Time Program 8:00 The Big Bang Theory (CBS) MONDAY, June 20 8:00 The Bachelorette (ABC) 8:30 9:00 9:30 9:59 10:00 10:01 10:03 American Ninja Warrior (NBC) Mom (CBS) So You/Can Dance (Fox) Camino Hacia Destino (UNI) Reign (CW) 2 Broke Girls (CBS) Scorpion (CBS) Houdini & Doyle (Fox) Tres Veces Ana (UNI) Whose Line Is It Anyway (CW) Whose Line Is It Anyway (CW) Braindead (CBS) Spartan: Team Challenge (NBC) Mistresses (ABC) Yago (UNI) Rank Season to date 7.0 6.5 4.6 3.2 1.8 0.9 4.0 4.2 1.8 1.7 1.1 1.1 3.5 4.5 2.9 1.1 6 *9 22 *50 *70 *98 *32 29 *70 *73 *88 *88 *43 *23 54 *88 8.5 7.4 8.9 4.7 2.0 1.4 7.7 11.4 3.0 2.2 1.5 1.4 5.3 5.2 4.3 1.5 11.7 6.6 3.0 2.6 1.8 0.8 4.3 2.5 6.1 3.5 1.3 0.9 6.5 4.1 4.1 1 *7 53 *59 *70 *101 *26 *61 13 *43 83 *98 *9 *30 *30 13.8 9.8 3.1 3.1 6.2 3.8 3.8 3.6 0.7 3.3 3.5 2.3 0.9 3.7 3.1 4.3 3.5 2.7 2.2 *11 *36 *36 *41 *103 *48 *43 65 *98 *39 52 *26 *43 58 *66 Viewers NCIS (CBS) The Middle (ABC) Hotel Hell (Fox) Futbol Central (UNI) Flash (CW) 8:30 Copa: U.S./Argentina (UNI) Black-ish (ABC) 9:00 NCIS: New Orleans (CBS) Uncle Buck (ABC) Coupled (Fox) Containment (CW) 10:00 Person of Interest (CBS) Maya & Marty (NBC) To Tell the Truth (ABC) 4.1 2.6 14.0 5.0 1.6 1.8 8.9 5.8 5.1 WEDNESDAY, June 22 8:00 Big Brother (CBS) 8:30 9:00 9:10 9:31 10:00 10:30 Masterchef (Fox) The Middle (ABC) American Ninja Warrior (NBC) Arrow (CW) The Goldbergs (ABC) Modern Family (ABC) Wayward Pines (Fox) Supernatural (CW) Copa America (UNI) Black-ish (ABC) Night Shift (NBC) American Gothic (CBS) Fresh Off the Boat (ABC) The Real O’Neals (ABC) Program Viewers Rank 6/26 Season to date Total viewers 10.3 7.8 6.9 5.5 2.1 1.9 Ages 18-49 2.6 2.4 2.3 1.0 0.9 2.7 NETWORK TOP 20 THURSDAY, June 23 SOURCE: NIELSEN 8:00 America’s Got Talent (NBC) Mavis (Oprah Winfrey) and Lady Mae (Lynn Whitfield) in Greenleaf. 5/29 Time LEGEND: VIEWERS = IN MILLIONS (*) = NIELSEN RATINGS TIE (R) = REPEAT EPISODE (S)=SPECIAL BROADCAST TUESDAY, June 21 GUY D'ALEMA, OWN: OPRAH WINFREY NETWORK 0.9 NIGHT-BY-NIGHT RATINGS ‘THRONES’ SOARS The sixth-season finale of HBO’s Game of Thrones drew a series-high 8.9 MILLION same-day viewers Sunday, up from 8.1 million for last year’s finale. Over at Showtime, Ray Donovan returned with 1.1 MILLION. 2.2 4.5 0 GAME NIGHT (in millions) 7.9 5.3 8.0 2.9 7.5 9.7 4.3 2.2 7.1 6.0 4.5 2.9 2.3 8:31 9:00 9:59 10:00 Bones (Fox) Battlebots (ABC) Spartan: Team Challenge (NBC) Camino Hacia Destino (UNI) Legends of Tomorrow (CW) Life in Pieces (CBS) Big Brother (CBS) Spartan: Team Challenge (NBC) Home Free (Fox) Tres Veces Ana (UNI) Beauty and the Beast (CW) Code Black (CBS) Celebrity Family Feud (ABC) Aquarius (NBC) Yago (UNI) 7.2 4.5 3.9 2.5 1.7 0.7 5.1 5.7 2.8 2.2 1.6 0.8 3.3 4.7 1.7 1.0 5 *23 35 *61 *73 *103 19 15 *55 *66 *76 *101 *48 21 *73 *94 4.3 3.8 2.6 1.6 1.5 1.1 1.1 5.0 3.6 1.6 1.2 3.7 1.1 5.8 5.2 1.2 *26 *36 *59 *76 82 *88 *88 20 *41 *76 *84 *39 *88 14 18 *84 2.1 2.8 2.5 1.6 4.0 3.2 2.4 1.0 68 *55 *61 *76 *32 *50 64 *94 2.5 7.6 4.0 3.5 1.0 6.2 1.0 8.0 4.5 1.6 5.5 1.2 8.1 5.4 2.8 1.6 1.2 6.6 1.9 4 *32 *43 *94 *11 *94 3 *23 *76 16 *84 2 17 *55 *76 *84 *7 69 11.7 5.1 9.0 7.0 4.5 1.9 2.8 9.5 7.5 2.7 1.9 1.0 8.8 2.2 1.4 FRIDAY, June 24 8:00 NCIS: Los Angeles (CBS) 8:30 9:00 9:01 10:00 10:01 Shark Tank (ABC) Home Sports Dynasty (NBC) Camino Hacia Destino (UNI) Rosewood (Fox) Masters of Illusion (CW) Masters of Illusion (CW) Hawaii Five-0 (CBS) Women’s Gymnastics (NBC) Tres Veces Ana (UNI) Penn & Teller: Fool Us (CW) What Would You Do? (ABC) Masterchef (Fox) Blue Bloods (CBS) 20/20 (ABC) Aqui Y Ahora (UNI) 10.4 3.9 1.9 1.5 1.2 1.1 10.2 1.9 1.2 3.2 1.2 12.0 5.9 SATURDAY, June 25 7:12 Fox Saturday Baseball (Fox) 8:00 48 Hours (CBS) Olympic Trials: Diving (NBC) People’s List (ABC) 9:00 20/20: In an Instant (ABC) Olympic Trials: Gym. (NBC) Boxing: Porter/Thurman (CBS) 10:17 MLS: San Jose/LA Galaxy (UNI) 1.9 3.6 SUNDAY, June 26 7:00 60 Minutes (CBS) 7:30 8:00 8:01 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 Funniest Home Videos (ABC) Olympic Trials: Diving (NBC) Cooper Barrett (Fox) Copa: Argentina/Chile (UNI) Bob’s Burgers (Fox) Celebrity Family Feud (ABC) Olympic Trials: Swim (NBC) The Simpsons (Fox) Big Brother (CBS) Brooklyn Nine-Nine (Fox) The $100,000 Pyramid (ABC) Women’s Gymnastics (NBC) Madam Secretary (CBS) Family Guy (Fox) Last Man On Earth (Fox) Match Game (ABC) American Gothic (CBS) BILL INOSHITA CBS Bridgette Dunning, Paulie Calafiore, Michelle Meyer and Frank Eudy compete on the season premiere of Big Brother. Viewers (millions) 1 America’s Got Talent (NBC) 11.7 8.1 2 The $100,000 Pyramid (ABC) 3 Celebrity Family Feud (ABC) 8.0 7.6 4 60 Minutes (CBS) 5 The Big Bang Theory (CBS) 7.2 7.0 6 The Bachelorette (ABC) 7 Match Game (ABC) 6.6 6.6 * NCIS (CBS) 9 American Ninja Warrior (NBC) 6.5 6.5 * Person of Interest (CBS) 11 Big Brother (Wed.) (CBS) 6.2 6.2 * Copa: Argentina/Chile (UNI) 13 NCIS: New Orleans (CBS) 6.1 5.8 14 Blue Bloods (CBS) 5.7 15 Big Brother (Thur.) (CBS) 16 Big Brother (Sun.) (CBS) 5.5 5.4 17 U.S. Women’s Gymnastics (NBC) 5.2 18 20/20 (ABC) 19 Life in Pieces (CBS) 5.1 5.0 20 Hawaii Five-0 (CBS) CABLE TOP 10 Jesse Williams made an impassioned speech at the BET Awards. MATT SAYLES, INVISION/AP 1.3 8.0 2.3 5.5 1.6 8.1 11.0 1.9 1.5 6.6 Show Viewers (millions) 1 Game of Thrones (HBO) Sun. 8.9 4.5 2 BET Awards (BET) Sun. 4.1 3 Rizzoli & Isles (TNT) Mon. 4 Major Crimes (TNT) Mon. 3.7 3.6 5 WWE Raw (9PM) (USA) Mon. 6 Adv. in Babysitting (Disney) Fri. 3.4 3.4 * WWE Raw (8PM) (USA) Mon. * WWE Raw (10PM) (USA) Mon. 3.4 9 O’Reilly Factor (Fox News) Mon. 3.2 3.1 10 O’Reilly Factor (Fox News) Wed. 4D LIFE USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 MOVIES ‘Neon Demon’: It’s weird, right out of the morgue Bryan Alexander @BryAlexand USA TODAY There’s a whole lotta of strange in The Neon Demon (in theaters now). But Elle Fanning isn’t the only one getting her weird on, as aspiring model Jesse. The strangeness is spread all around. Jena Malone, as twisted makeup artist Ruby, along with Bella Heathcote and Abbey Wells as jealous models, have their moments in director Nicolas Winding Refn’s film, which premiered to some controversy last month at Cannes Film Festival. The top weirdest five moments: THE NECROPHILIA SCENE Yes, that happened. During Ruby’s moonlighting gig at the morgue where she primps bodies, she fully interacts with a female corpse. “I think that will go down in history,” Malone says. “That might be the first.” Malone says the encounter explains her character’s “extreme loneliness and this sort of empty feeling inside of her.” The corpse is, of course, played by a living actress in an awardsworthy performance of staying, well, deathly still throughout. “We talked to each other beforehand,” Malone says. “She made me feel very comfortable. I think in any love scene you talk to your fellow actors. It’s like, ‘These are my boundaries.’ ” BROAD GREEN PICTURES Jesse (Elle Fanning) dreams of being a model, but she gets more than she bargained for. Keanu Reeves shows he’s pretty handy with a rubber knife. her. Good thing, because it turns out the intruder is a mountain lion that jumps onto her bed. There’s no real explanation how the beast got into the room. You’d think she’d work it for a room upgrade. Nope. HANK STICKS A KNIFE DOWN JESSE’S THROAT THERE’S A MOUNTAIN LION IN JESSE’S HOTEL ROOM On her way back to her seedy hotel (where aspiring models apparently stay in L.A.), Jesse finds someone has broken into her room. She grabs hotel manager Hank (Keanu Reeves) to protect After Hank saves the day with the mountain lion, he breaks into Jesse’s room and sticks a knife slow- RICHARD SHOTWELL, INVISION/AP ly down her throat. It turns out to be a dream sequence, but it’s still incredibly disturbing and strange. Fanning says a “dulled-down” rubber knife was used. And Reeves was “so polite” about it. Reeves “was like, ‘I just want to make sure you’re OK.’ And I was like, ‘I’m good, it’s OK,’ ” Fanning says. “We didn’t do too many takes. It was like, ‘All right, we got this one.’ ” JESSE KISSES HERSELF IN THE MIRROR As Jesse gets pulled into the modeling world, her narcissism grows. She doesn’t meet her end while gazing at her own reflection like Narcissus did in Greek mythology. But Jesse does make out with her multi-mirror image dur- ing a photo shoot. It was an ad-lib. “We built this incredible set that had these triangles and the mirrors and all of these lights,” Fanning says. “I had this really glossy lip gloss on. I looked up and could see myself in the mirrors. And it just happened.” THE EATING OF AN EYEBALL Lee, the stunning supermodel star of Mad Max: Fury Road, did sign up for the part of a flesheating model in Neon Demon. And she made good on the casting during a scene — we’ll be vague on the details — in which her model Sarah finds an eyeball. Sarah plops it into her mouth like an olive, and Lee nails a selfsatisfied look. MOVIES Director David Yates, wrestling with ‘Tarzan’ and ‘Beasts’ Andrea Mandell @andreamandell USA TODAY David Yates is one heck of a Muggle. The director, who helmed the final four Harry Potter films, releases The Legend of Tarzan on Friday, a $180 million live-action film starring Alexander Skarsgård as the jungle hero. This fall, Yates will follow Tarzan with Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (in theaters Nov. 18), the highly anticipated Potter spinoff starring Eddie Redmayne as magizoologist Newt Scamander. USA TODAY spoke with Yates on how he pulled off two massive films in one year. You’ve dealt with suspension of disbelief with the ‘Harry Potter’ films, but ‘Tarzan’ speaks to animals, fights gorillas and is a lord living in London when we meet him. What attracted you to this take on ‘The Legend of Tarzan’? A: There were so many projects I was reading. I was getting sent all these scripts from here, there and everywhere and they all felt very one-note. ... It had lots of good, fun elements you would enjoy when you went into the theater — there was action, great landscapes, amazing animals. I wasn’t seeing those kinds of things in any of the other scripts. … I just thought this is all great, we haven’t been to Africa, this big, beautiful, amazing (continent), in a movie in a while. And I haven’t seen this sort of action/adventure/romance film for awhile. In a summer tentpole movie so full of CGI, what was the hardest thing to get right? A: The challenge was really creating the world and making it feel romantic and big and heightened — but believable. ... (In one scene), Margot (Robbie) is chained to the rail and the boat’s traveling up the river. That’s a Q Q VALERIE MACON, AFP/GETTY IMAGES pure drama scene, but actually it’s a visual-effects sequence (with a real river shot in Gabon, Africa, added into the background). We can only do that now. We couldn’t do that a few years ago, but we’ve gotten better and better at that kind of technology. How did you manage the overlapping production schedules of ‘Tarzan’ and ‘Fantastic Beasts’? A: I was still shooting Tarzan when I got sent a script for Beasts. So I went straight onto Beasts. ... My editor, bless him, Mark Day, would have one machine that had Tarzan on it and one machine that had Beasts, and I would flip-flop between the two all the time. ... All doable, all perfectly fine, but literally there wasn’t a single day when I was working Beasts that I didn’t at least peek at Tarzan in some shape or form. Did ‘Fantastic Beasts’ feel like a ‘Harry Potter’ homecoming? A: It feels the same but different. In the sense that it’s Jo’s (J.K. Rowling’s) universe extended, but it feels different because it’s not Hogwarts, it’s not about kids. It’s about grown-ups. It’s dealing with very adult themes. Q Q Yates’ The Legend of Tarzan hits theaters Friday, and on its heels comes his Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them. NOTICES LEGAL UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT, SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ) Chapter 11 In re: AOG Entertainment, Inc., et al., ) Case No.16-11090 (SMB) ) (Jointly Administered) Debtors. NOTICE OF (I) DEADLINE REQUIRING FILING OF PROOFS OF CLAIM ON OR BEFORE AUGUST 5, 2016 AND (II) DEADLINE OF ON OR BEFORE OCTOBER 25, 2016 FOR FILING PROOFS OF CLAIM OF GOVERNMENTAL UNITS TO ALL PERSONS AND ENTITIES WITH CLAIMS AGAINST THE DEBTORS LISTED BELOW: The United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York has entered an Order establishing August 5,2016 at 5:00 p.m.(Prevailing Eastern Time) (the“Bar Date”) as the last date for each person or entity (including individuals,partnerships,corporations,joint ventures and trusts) to file a proof of claim against any of the Debtors listed below (the“Debtors”): Debtor, Tax ID, Case No.: 19 Entertainment Limited, 98-0458517, 16-11122; 19 Entertainment Worldwide LLC, 80-0331986, 16-11127; 19 Entertainment, Inc., 03-0470323, 16-11121; 19 Management Limited, 98-0458501, 16-11095; 19 Merchandising Limited, 98-0458512, 16-11097; 19 Productions Limited, 98-0458490, 16-11101; 19 Publishing Inc., 80-0800800, 16-11094; 19 Recording Services, Inc., 20-0600641, 16-11119; 19 Recordings Limited, 98-0458507, 16-11092; 19 Recordings, Inc., 20-0949492, 16-11087; 19 Touring Limited, 98-0458499, 16-11093; 19 Touring LLC, 74-3057157, 16-11089; 19 TV Limited, 98-0458511, 16-11098; 7th Floor Productions, LLC, 35-2479160, 16-11116; All Girl Productions Inc., 55-0805760, 16-11117; Alta Loma Entertainment, LLC, 80-0933015, 16-11111; AOG Entertainment, Inc., 95-2984420, 16-11090; Brilliant 19 Limited, N/A, 16-11091; Clown Car Productions, LLC, 46-4295459, 16-11108; CORE Entertainment Cayman Limited, 98-1014886, 16-11132; CORE Entertainment Offeror, LLC, 98-0702685, 16-11131; CORE Entertainment UK Limited,98-0702685,16-11133;CORE Entertainment Inc.,95-2984420,16-11134; CORE G.O.A.T. Holding Corp., 86-1163459, 16-11128; CORE Group Productions Limited, 98-0458504, 16-11118; CORE Media Group Inc., 27-0118168, 16-11130; CORE Media Group Productions Inc.,46-1688505,16-11125;CORE MG UK Holdings Limited, 98-0458518, 16-11126; CTA Productions, Inc., 64-0955879, 16-11102; Dance Nation Productions Inc.,20-2249622,16-11115;DoubleVision Film Limited, 98-0458492, 16-11088; EPE Holding Corporation, 14-1922295, 16-11129; Focus Enterprises,Inc.,95-4094396,16-11124;Fresh Start Productions,LLC,47-1052204, 16-11110; Gilded Entertainment, LLC, 80-0934153, 16-11114; IICD LLC, N/A, 16-11107; J2K Productions, Inc., 14-1852687, 16-11105; Magma Productions, LLC, 90-0994711, 16-11106; Masters of Dance Productions Inc., 80-0303417, 16-11099; Native Management Limited, 98-1026634, 16-11104; Native Songs Limited, N/A, 16-11103; On the Road Productions, 14-1893468, 16-11109; Pioneer Production Services LLC, 46-1704822, 16-11120; Sonic Transformation, LLC, 36-4767828, 16-11123; Southside Productions Inc., 20-1691908, 16-11112; Sunset View Productions, LLC, 37-1731692, 16-11113; SYTYCD DVD Productions Inc., 80-0331976,16-11096;This Land Productions,Inc.,37-1539523,16-11100 The Bar Date and the procedures set forth below for filing proofs of claim apply to all claims against the Debtors that arose prior to April 28,2016,the date on which the Debtors commenced cases under chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code,exceptforthose holdersoftheclaimslisted inSection4belowthatarespecifically excluded from the Bar Date filing requirement.Governmental units may have until October 25, 2016 at 5:00 p.m. (Prevailing Eastern Time), the date that is one hundred eighty (180) days after the order for relief,to file proofs of claim. 1. WHO MUST FILE A PROOF OF CLAIM. You MUST file a proof of claim to vote on a chapter 11 plan filed by the Debtors or to share in distributions from the Debtors’ bankruptcy estates if you have a claim that arose prior to April 28, 2016 (the“Filing Date”), and it is not one of the types of claims described in Section 4 below. Claims based on acts or omissions of the Debtors that occurred before the Filing Date must be filed on or prior to the Bar Date,even if such claims are not now fixed,liquidated or certain or did not mature or become fixed,liquidated or certain before the Filing Date. Under Section 101(5) of the Bankruptcy Code and as used in this Notice, the word “claim” means: (a) a right to payment, whether or not such right is reduced to judgment, liquidated, unliquidated, fixed, contingent, matured, unmatured, disputed, undisputed, legal, equitable, secured, or unsecured; or (b) a right to an equitable remedy for breach of performance if such breach gives rise to a right to payment,whether or not such rightto an equitable remedy is reduced to judgment, fixed,contingent,matured,unmatured,disputed,undisputed,secured or unsecured. 2. WHAT TO FILE. The Debtors are enclosing a proof of claim form for use in these cases; if your claim is scheduled by the Debtors, the form also sets forth the amount of your claim as scheduled by the Debtors,the specific Debtor against which the claim is scheduled and whether the claim is scheduled as disputed,contingent or unliquidated. You will receive a different proof of claim form for each claim scheduled in your name by the Debtors.You may utilize the proof of claim form(s) provided by the Debtors to file your claim.Additional proof of claim forms may be obtained at http://www.kccllc.net/AOG or at www.uscourts.gov/forms/ bankruptcy-forms. All proof of claim forms must be signed by the claimant or,if the claimant is not an individual,by an authorized agent of the claimant.It must be written in English and bedenominatedin UnitedStatescurrency.Youshould attachtoyour completed proof of claim any documents on which the claim is based (if voluminous,attach a summary) or an explanation as to why the documents are not available. Your proof of claim form must not contain complete social security numbers or taxpayer identification numbers (only the last four digits), a complete birth date (only the year),the name of a minor (only the minor’s initials) or a financial account number (only the last four digits of such financial account). Any holder of a claim against more than one Debtor must file a separate proof of claim with respect to each such Debtor and all holders of claims must identify on their proof of claim the specific Debtor against which their claim is asserted and the case number of that Debtor’s bankruptcy case.A list of the names of the Debtors and their case numbers is set forth above. 3. WHEN AND WHERE TO FILE. Except as provided for herein, all proofs of claim must be filed so as to be received on or before August 5, 2016 at 5:00 p.m. (Prevailing Eastern Time) at the following address: AOG Entertainment, Inc. Claims Processing Center, c/o Kurtzman Carson Consultants LLC, 2335 Alaska Avenue,El Segundo,CA 90245. Alternatively, proofs of claim may be submitted electronically through the electronic filing system available through the claim’s agent website at http:// www.kccllc.net/AOG. Proofs of claim will be deemed filed only when received at the address listed above or filed electronically on or before the Bar Date. Proofs of claim may not be delivered by facsimile,telecopy or electronic mail transmission. 4. WHO NEED NOT FILE A PROOF OF CLAIM.You do not need to file a proof of claim on or prior to the Bar Date if you are: (a) A person or entity that has already filed a proof of claim against the Debtors with the claims agent or the Clerk of the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York in a form substantially similar to Official Bankruptcy Form No. 410; (b) A person or entity whose claim is listed on the Schedules if (i) the claim is not scheduled as“disputed,”“contingent,”or“unliquidated;”(ii) you do not disagree with the amount,nature and priority of the claim as set forth in the Schedules;and (iii) you do not dispute that your claim is an obligation only of the specific Debtor against which the claim is listed in the Schedules; (c) A holder of a claim that has previously been allowed by Order of the Court; (d) A holder of a claim that has been paid in full by any of the Debtors; (e) A holder of a claim for which a specific deadline has previously been fixed by this Court; (f) Any Debtor having a claim against another Debtor or any of the nondebtor subsidiaries of CORE Entertainment, Inc. having a claim against any of the Debtors; (g) A holder of a claim allowable under § 503(b) and § 507(a)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code as an expense of administration of the Debtors’estates; (h) the existing prepetition administrative agent or any of the lenders pursuant to that certain First Lien Term Loan Agreement, dated as of December 9, 2011, but only to the extent of claims that arise under or in connection with such agreement; (i) the existing prepetition administrative agent or any of the lenders pursuant to that certain Second Lien Term Loan Agreement, dated as of December 9, 2011, but only to the extent of claims that arise under or in connection with such agreement;and (j) an employee of the Debtors, but only to the extent that such claim is solely for outstanding wages, base salary, commissions, benefits, bonuses, or other ordinary course compensation;provided,however,that any employee of the Debtors who wishes to assert a claim against the Debtors that is not based solely on outstanding wages, base salary,commissions, benefits,bonuses, or other ordinary course compensation must file a proof of such claim on or prior to the Bar Date. If you are a holder of an equity interest in the Debtors, you need not file a proof of interest with respect to the ownership of such equity interest at this time. However,if you assert a claim against the Debtors,including a claim relating to such equity interest or the purchase or sale of such interest, a proof of such claim must be filed on or prior to the Bar Date pursuant to procedures set forth in this Notice. This Notice is being sent to many persons and entities that have had some relationship with or have done business with the Debtors but may not have an unpaid claim against the Debtors.The fact that you have received this Notice does not mean that you have a claim or that the Debtors or the Court believe that you have a claim against the Debtors. 5. EXECUTORY CONTRACTS AND UNEXPIRED LEASES. If you have a claim arising out of the rejection of an executory contract or unexpired lease as to which the order authorizing such rejection is dated on or before June 23, 2016, the date of entry of the order establishing the Bar Date, you must file a proof of claim by the Bar Date. Any person or entity that has a claim arising from the rejection of an executory contract or unexpired lease, as to which the order is dated after the date of entry of the order establishing the Bar Date, you must file a proof of claim with respect to such claim by the date fixed by the Court in the applicable order authorizing rejection of such contract or lease. 6. CONSEQUENCES OF FAILURE TO FILE A PROOF OF CLAIM BY THE BAR DATE. ANY HOLDER OF A CLAIM THAT IS NOT EXEMPTED FROM THE REQUIREMENTS OF THIS ORDER, AS SET FORTH IN SECTION 4 ABOVE, AND THAT FAILS TO TIMELY FILE A PROOF OF CLAIM IN THE APPROPRIATE FORM SHALL NOT BE TREATED AS A CREDITOR WITH RESPECT TO SUCH CLAIM FOR THE PURPOSES OF VOTING ON ANY PLAN OF REORGANIZATION FILED IN THESE CASES AND PARTICIPATING IN ANY DISTRIBUTION IN THE DEBTORS’ CASES ON ACCOUNT OF SUCH CLAIM. 7. THE DEBTORS’SCHEDULES AND ACCESS THERETO.You may be listed as the holder of a claim against one or more of the Debtors in the Debtors’Schedules of Assets and Liabilities and/or Schedules of Executory Contracts and Unexpired Leases (collectively,the“Schedules”).To determine if and how youare listed on the Schedules,please refer to the descriptions set forth on the enclosed proof of claim forms regarding the nature, amount, and status of your claim(s). If you received postpetition payments from the Debtors (as authorized by the Court) on account of your claim, the enclosed proof of claim form will reflect the net amount of your claims. If the Debtors believe that you hold claims against more than one Debtor, you will receive multiple proof of claim forms,each of which will reflect the nature and amount of your claim against one Debtor, as listed in the Schedules. If you rely on the Debtors’Schedules,it is your responsibility to determine that the claim is accurately listed in the Schedules.As set forth above,if you agree with the nature, amount and status of your claim as listed in the Debtors’ Schedules, and if you do not dispute that your claim is only against the Debtor specified by the Debtors, and if your claim is not described as “disputed,”“contingent,” or “unliquidated,” you need not file a proof of claim. Otherwise, or if you decide to file a proof of claim, you must do so before the Bar Date in accordance with the procedures set forth in this Notice. Copies of the Debtors’ Schedules are available for inspection free of charge at http://www.kccllc.net/AOG. Copies of the Debtors’ Schedules are also available on the Court’s Public Access to Court Electronic Records (“PACER”) at http://ecf. nysb.uscourts.gov; a login and password are required to access this information and can be obtained through the PACER Service Center at http://www.pacer.psc. uscourts.gov.Copies of the Schedules may also be examined between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday at the Office of the Clerk of the Bankruptcy Court,One Bowling Green,Room 534,NewYork,NewYork 10004-1408. Copies of the Debtors’ Schedules may also be obtained by written request to the Debtors’ claims and noticing agent at the following address: AOG Entertainment, Inc. Claims Processing Center, c/o Kurtzman Carson Consultants LLC, 2335 Alaska Avenue, El Segundo, CA 90245. A holder of a possible claim against the Debtors should consult an attorney regarding any matters not covered by this notice, such as whether the holder should file a proof of claim. Dated: June 23, 2016, New York, New York, BY ORDER OF THE COURT, Counsel for the Debtors and Debtors in Possession, WILLKIE FARR & GALLAGHER LLP, 787 Seventh Avenue, New York,New York 10019,Telephone:(212) 728-8000 If you have any questions related to this notice, please call (877) 709-4752, or (424) 236-7232 for international calls LIFE 5D USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 PEOPLE Amanda Seyfried is a ‘stage mother’ – to her dog Carly Mallenbaum @thatgirlcarly USA TODAY Amanda Seyfried didn’t grow up with dogs. With her busy work schedule, she didn’t think she could take care of a canine. In fact, she wasn’t looking for a furry friend at all. But then she met Finn. Today, the 30-year-old actress — who’s known for films Mamma Mia and Ted 2, and stars as Russell Crowe’s daughter in new drama Fathers and Daughters, out July 8 — is a dog owner and an ambassador at the welfare organization Best Friends Animal Society. “I can’t imagine my life without him,” Seyfried says of 61⁄2-year-old Australian shepherd Finn. “He’s in my contract for every (acting) job” to be allowed on U.S. sets. Finn, whom Seyfried met through a production coordinator on HBO’s Big Love, “has always been good on set,” she says. If for some reason he can’t join Seyfried on location — like on a recent trip when she traveled from France to China — the two “I can’t imagine my life without him. He’s in my contract. ... (He) has always been good on set.” Facetime regularly, and Seyfried requests twice-daily videos from her dog sitter. Yep, she’s a helicopter dog mother now. And with a new video for Best Friends Animal Society, she also calls herself Finn’s “stage mother.” Seyfried and Finn shot an ’80sthemed video for the initiative Strut Your Mutt and the #9000StepsChallenge, which asks animal owners to walk 9,000 steps with their pets on the ninth day of the month to raise awareness to the fact that more than 9,000 dogs and cats are euthanized in shelters each day because there’s not enough room. That toll “is an important thing to know when you’re looking for your best friend,” Seyfried says. As for the video shoot, in which Seyfried and Finn wore matching headbands and walked the 9,000 steps — it was more exhausting than a long walk. Seyfried, who was Finn’s trainer on the shoot, “had to make sure he looked a certain way, (fed) him treats.” She believes that instead of being Finn’s co-star, she’ll go back to being BFFs. 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Jim Carrey movie 2. Buck 3. It features George Washington 4. ____ ____ Rights 5. Nick ____ ____ 6. It summarizes hours worked 7. Musician’s aid Tuesday’s Answer THE NATURAL GAS NATURAL GAS PUMP PUMP IRON IRON MAN MAN IN TROUBLE IN PLAY ONLINE PUZZLES.USATODAY.COM © Universal Uclick SUDOKU Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains the numbers 1 through 9 (no repeats). 5 4 1 6 1 3 4 2 6/29 Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x2 box contains the numbers 1 through 6 (no repeats). 8 6 1 3 3 4 9 4 2 1 3 6 3 3 6 2 5 4 3 6 2 4 1 1 6 5 7 6 4 DIFFICULTY RATING SUDOKU FUSION ON YOUR PHONE mobilegames.usatoday.com !!! DIFFICULTY RATING "" Tuesday’s Answers 9 9 4 1 7 6 2 CROSSWORDS ON YOUR PHONE mobilegames.usatoday.com MUSIC mobilegames.usatoday.com 6/28 Tuesday’s Answer 6/28 7. !!!"" © Universal Uclick 7 8 1 3 4 9 2 6 5 2 6 4 7 5 8 9 3 1 3 5 9 6 2 1 8 7 4 8 2 6 5 1 7 3 4 9 9 4 7 2 8 3 5 1 6 1 3 5 9 6 4 7 2 8 6 7 2 4 9 5 1 8 3 5 1 3 8 7 6 4 9 2 4 9 8 1 3 2 6 5 7 4 1 3 6 2 5 6 3 2 5 1 4 2 5 4 1 6 3 3 2 6 4 5 1 5 4 1 2 3 6 6/28 © WIGGLES 3D GAMES DON’T QUOTE ME® English author Samuel Johnson thinks about the writing process. 1 6 5 3 4 2 Rearrange the words to complete the quote. EFFORT GENERAL IS PLEASURE WHAT WITHOUT ________ IS ___________ WITHOUT ___________ ________ IN ___________ READ ___________ ______________. 6/29 Tuesday’s Answer: “Never work before breakfast; if you have to work before breakfast, eat your breakfast first.” - Josh Billings WRITTEN 6D LIFE USA TODAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 2016 ‘Imagine’ a dark descent into mental illness BOOK REVIEW Don Oldenburg Special for USA TODAY Adam Haslett’s second novel, Imagine Me Gone (Little, Brown, 356 pp., eee out of four), is a gut-wrenching immersion into mental illness and its debilitating effect on a family over four decades. Trouble begins early in a flashback to 1960s London when a young, spirited American, Margaret, is blindsided by the discovery that her charming, steadfast, British fiancé, John, has been hospitalized. She learns that his history of incapacitating bouts of depression started in childhood. Margaret marries John anyway. Before their third child is born, John loses his London investment job and moves the family near Boston, where his struggles to fend off “the beast” continue to interfere at home and work. John is a decent husband and a loving father ... until he can’t be anymore. “There is no getting better,” he acknowledges. The kids grow up before you know it. Seems as if in one chapter, Michael, Celia and little Alec are playing hide-and-seek summering on Maine’s rocky shore, and, then, a couple of chapters later, they’re adults trying to survive difficult lives. Michael, the oldest, is intense and creative; he’s overmedicated for depression and anxiety and manically obsessed with “house music,” random troubled women and racial issues. Celia is attrac- tive and strong-willed, a social worker in San Francisco fighting to make her tenuous relationship with her boyfriend work. Alec is gay, a middling journalist who agonizes over his mother and her finances, made fragile by supporting Michael, who can’t hold down a job. Haslett knows personally the toll on families having to endure severe mental illness — suffering overwhelming burdens, psychological upheaval and tormenting guilt while desperately trying to rescue a loved one. Drawing vivid scenes and compelling characters from a tragic realism, he tells the story, chapter by chapter, through the alternating voices and points of view of the five family members. Haslett so intimately connects the reader to his characters’ inner lives, their thoughts and fears, that, at times, reading the novel becomes uncomfortable, too close to emotional voyeurism. Such as when a suicidal John feels he has failed everyone and sadly confides: “It’s impossible, what I’m trying to do. To say Wednesday Where space permits, give both city/college and team name on sports listings ABC, CMT & Hallmark--Last Man Standing (scripted); Fox--Last Man (add) on Earth; Freeform--Change “Hungry” to “Young & Hungry” BEOWULF SHEEHAN good-bye without telling them I’m leaving.” This is not an easy read, despite Haslett’s exceptional storytelling and poignant insights. While there are uplifting moments of humor, kindness and love, this rare, complex story’s emotional trajectory is a dizzying downward spiral that finally, abruptly, stops at no happy ending. Author Adam Haslett TONIGHT ON TV 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 ABC The Middle Brick visits Sue. The Goldbergs Adam does magic. Modern Family Hot pepper heist. Black-ish Guardian search. Fresh Off the Boat Friends quarrel. The Real O’Neals Eileen’s book club. Local Programs Jimmy Kimmel Live Zac Efron. (N) CBS Big Brother Strangers live together without Criminal Minds The BAU hunts down a any contact with the outside world. (N) kidnapper. American Gothic Garrett takes a family secret public. (N) Local Programs Late Show Stephen Colbert (N) Fox MasterChef The remaining 17 cook for two guests. (N) Wayward Pines Teresa is in danger when Abbies attack. (N) Local Programs NBC US Summer Olympic Trials Swimming Trials (Live) SuperNature - Wild Flyers (N) The Night Shift A college student comes to the ER; audience members fight at a wrestling match. (N) NOVA North America formed by forces. 9 Months That Made You (N) Local Programs Tonight Show Jimmy Fallon Arrow Facing consequences. Supernatural Bed and breakfast. Law & Order Cosmetic killer. Law & Order Killer comes clean. Law & Order Author kills cabbie. Law & Order Football killer. Eva, la trailera Lo tenía todo. (N) La esclava blanca Lucha por justicia. El Señor de los Cielos (N) Al rojo vivo (N) Titulares y más Un camino hacia el destino Tr3s veces Ana Tres gemelas. (N) Por siempre Joan Sebastian (N) Primer (N) Noticiero Univ. (N) A&E AMC Animal Planet BBC America BET Bravo Cartoon CMT CNBC CNN Comedy Destination Am Discovery Disney DisXD E! Esquire Food Fox News Freeform FX FXX GSN Hallmark HGTV History HLN ID IFC Lifetime MSNBC MTV NatGeo NatGeo Wild Nick OWN Oxygen Pop Science Spike Sundance Syfy TBS TCM TLC TNT Travel TruTV TV Land USA VH1 Viceland WE Weather WGN America Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Wahlburger (N) Wahlburger (N) Vacation (1997) National Lampoon’s Vacation A family vacation faces many obstacles. (1983) Cinemax Focus An expert con-artist teaches a novice tricks of the trade, and three years later, she finds herself on the opposing side of the same scam. Will Smith (2015) Outcast Anderson uncovers upsetting information. Encore Spartacus: Blood and Sand Gladiator training; reunion possible. Power Ghost rejoins ex who threatens crime. The Glimmer Man Two L.A. policemen must race against the clock to catch a serial killer. Steven Seagal (1996) FXM The Tooth Fairy Tooth Fairy killed and returns for more. Lochlyn Munro (2006) The Tooth Fairy A Tooth Fairy, who killed children for teeth years earlier, returns for more. Lochlyn Munro (2006) (8:53) Hallmark Movies The Lost Valentine (2011) (6:30) HBO Ted 2 After Ted and Tami-Lynn get married, they decide to have a baby. Mark Wahlberg, Tara Strong (2015) Any Given Wednesday Lifetime Movie She Made Them Do It A woman convicted of murder escapes from a maximumsecurity prison. April Telek, Jenna Dewan Tatum (2012) Pretty Little Addict Teen alcoholic is pursued by brother of college-bound track star she injured. Andrea Bowen, Scott Lyster (2015) Showtime Meet the Hitlers (2014) (7:00) Hannah (Carla Gallo) gets a helping hand from Jordan (Jill Flint). Starz Machine Gun Preacher Ex-biker protects Sudanese children. (2011) (6:50) Outlander Jamie tries to save the Jacobite army. TMC Freedom A slave escapes with his family. Cuba Gooding Jr. (2014) (7:25) Daddy’s Little Girls A poor but determined father fights to gain custody of his three girls. Gabrielle Union, Idris Elba (2007) THE NIGHT SHIFT NBC, 9 ET/PT SPORTS NETWORKS CRITIC’S CORNER Robert Bianco NETWORK @BiancoRobert USA TODAY PBS CW ION Telemundo Univision Charlie Rose (N) Local Programs CABLE SHAKESPEARE ON FILM TCM, 8 ET/5 PT It’s a bifurcated day at TCM. The daytime hours are devoted to eight films starring Nelson Eddy, most of them operettas co-starring Jeanette MacDonald. In prime time, that gives way to adaptations of Shakespeare’s work, led by Orson Welles’s Macbeth (8 ET/5 PT) and Laurence Olivier’s Hamlet (10 ET/7 PT). LYDIA BAINES, BBC A Northern flying squirrel is one of the creatures at home in the air. SUPERNATURE PBS, 8 ET/PT (TIMES MAY VARY) This latest PBS nature series opens with an exploration of the science of flight in the animal world. But it’s more than just birds flying and squirrels gliding — the show expands its definition of flight to include animals such as the caracal, a wild cat able to launch itself into the air and land on its feet. In the promo clip, at least, the show’s treatment of the launch is a bit precious (it’s set to a NASA-style countdown), but the slow-motion explanation of how the caracal is able to land on its feet is fascinating. Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty National Lampoon’s European Vacation Chevy Chase (1985) Treehouse Masters Soothing space. Treehouse Masters: Out on a Limb Treehouse Masters: Out on a Limb Top Gear Wild Alaska Spring season. Wild Alaska Season of summer. Wild Alaska Winter in Alaska. Sprite Celebrity Basketball Game Music Moguls F in Fabulous Martin New York City Social (N) Real Housewives of New York City (N) Real Housewives of New York City What Happens (N) Real Housewives American Dad! Family Guy Cleveland Show F in Fabulous American Dad! Insane Pools: Deeper Dive Dish Nation King of the Hill Bob’s Burgers Bob’s Burgers Last Man Standing Last Man Standing My Cousin Vinny An inept New York lawyer defends a cousin charged with murder in the Deep South. Joe Pesci (1992) Family Guy Shark Tank Paintbrush storage. Shark Tank Anti-aging strips. Jay Leno’s Garage Jay’s wild rides. (N) Shark Tank Home security; salsa. Anderson Cooper 360° (N) Anderson Cooper 360° (N) CNN Tonight with Don Lemon (N) Anderson Cooper 360° South Park South Park Another Period (N) South Park Daily Show (N) Smoked Georgia rib experts. South Park Smoked Whole animal cooks compete. South Park Smoked Instructors compete. (N) Smoked Georgia rib experts. Wrath of a Great White (N) Deadliest Sharks Oceanic whitetip. (N) Nightly Show (N) Sharks vs. Dolphins: Face Off (N) Shark Dark (N) Adventures in Babysitting Sabrina Carpenter (2016) Bizaardvark Stuck in the Middle Liv and Maddie Backstage K.C. Undercover Wander Yonder Lab Rats: Elite Spider-Man Star Wars Rebels Freemaker Star vs. Forces Walk the Prank Keeping Up with the Kardashians Gamer’s Guide EJNYC (N) American Ninja Warrior Obstacle race. Matchmaker (N) Keeping Up with the Kardashians Car Matchmaker Car Matchmaker Car Matchmaker E! News (N) This Is Mike Stud Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen (N) Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives Diners, Drive-Ins The O’Reilly Factor (N) The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor Young & Hungry (N) Baby Daddy (N) Zookeeper Animals reveal they can talk. Kevin James, Rosario Dawson (2011) The Purge All crime is legal one night each year. Ethan Hawke (2013) Family Feud Skin Wars (N) Last Man Standing Last Man Standing The Middle The Middle Food Fight (N) The 700 Club The Purge All crime is legal one night each year. Ethan Hawke (2013) Lone Survivor Navy SEAL try to capture Taliban Leader. Mark Wahlberg, Taylor Kitsch (2014) Family Feud Deadliest Sharks The Middle Lone Survivor Navy SEAL try to capture Taliban Leader. The Middle Family Feud Family Feud The Golden Girls The Golden Girls Property Brothers Home in suburbs. Brother vs. Brother (N) House Hunters (N) International (N) American Pickers Eviction near. American Pickers Car delivery. Pawn Stars (N) Pawn Stars (N) Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Nancy Grace (N) Forensic Files Forensic Files Forensic Files Forensic Files Forensic Files The Perfect Murder The Perfect Murder (N) Blow Johnny Depp (2001) (6:00) Maron (N) Forensic Files American Monster (N) Property Brothers Brothers’ new home. The Perfect Murder Crank 2: High Voltage Chelios’ heart has been hijacked. Jason Statham (2009) Maron Ghosts of Girlfriends Past Ghosts visit a womanizer to reveal life. (2009) Fun with Dick and Jane Husband and wife become thieves. Jim Carrey (2005) All in with Chris Hayes (N) Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell (N) All in with Chris Hayes The Rachel Maddow Show (N) Project X Three seniors make name for themselves. Thomas Mann (2012) The Challenge: Rivals III (N) The Challenge (N) Underworld, Inc. Underworld, Inc. Underworld, Inc. Underworld, Inc. (N) Lost Sharks of Easter Island World’s Deadliest Sharks United Sharks of America Nicky, Ricky Full House Full House Game Shakers Full House Ridiculousness Shocking Sharks Odd shark species. Full House Friends Friends Greenleaf Grace at work. Greenleaf Awkward date. Greenleaf Favor repaid. (N) Douglas Family Douglas Family Douglas Family Douglas Family (N) Guess Who Father upset with future son-in-law. (2005) Rock This Boat (N) You’ve Got Mail A woman begins an online romance with a man who hides his true identity. Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan (1998) Douglas Family Greenleaf Grace at work. Outrageous Acts of Science Outrageous Acts of Science (N) X2 A madman plans mutant genocide. Wrath of the Titans Perseus journeys to the underworld in order to rescue his father, Zeus. (2012) The Hurt Locker Army bomb squad stationed in Iraq. Jeremy Renner (2009) (7:00) How to Build (N) How to Build Cleverman (N) Rock This Boat Outrageous Acts of Science Expend. 2 (2012) Breaking Bad Home situations. Faster Dwayne Johnson (2010) (7:00) Friday the 13th Madman terrorizes visitors at a lake. Jared Padalecki (2009) A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984) Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Conan (N) Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Macbeth A nobleman plots the death of his king. Orson Welles (1948) Hamlet Prince wants revenge for king’s murder. Laurence Olivier (1948) My Big Fat Fabulous Life (N) My Big Fat Fabulous Life (N) I Am Jazz Jazz’s surgery. (N) My Big Fat Fabulous Life Castle Magician murdered. Castle Detective gunned down. Major Crimes Major Crimes Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown (N) Expedition Unknown Expedition Unknown Carbonaro Effect Carbonaro Effect Carbonaro Effect Carbonaro Effect Carbonaro Effect (N) Carbonaro Effect Carbonaro Effect Carbonaro Effect George Lopez George Lopez Loves Raymond Loves Raymond Loves Raymond King of Queens King of Queens Loves Raymond Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Royal Pains Hank helps actor. (N) Why Did I Get Married Too? (2010) Dating Naked (N) (Season premiere) Barely Famous (N) Barely Famous (N) Dating Naked Natalie and David. Weediquette Cannabis farming. Weediquette Weed in Africa. Noisey Music culture in Jamaica. Noisey South Beach in Miami, Fla. Law & Order Death of an investigator. Law & Order Trail of drugs. Law & Order Illegal immigrants. Law & Order Prep school student dead. Weather Caught on Camera Highway Thru Hell New competitor. Highway Thru Hell Fleet to oil fields. Highway Thru Hell New driver crashes. Constantine A detective battles with Satan’s son. (2005) Person of Interest Five mob leaders. Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Person of Interest Reese’s memories. Person of Interest MOVIE NETWORKS URSULA COYOTE, NBC It’s unlikely anyone will ever call The Night Shift “fascinating” (“unambitious” is more like it), but for those desperate for original scripted programming, it is offering two new hours. The first finds Jordan bonding with a dying patient; the second finds the team suffering from a record heat wave — and a lack of airconditioning. ESPN ESPN2 FS1 Golf MLB NBA NBCSports NFLN FXM Presents (N) Sinister 2 Young family’s rural home is haunted. James Ransone (2015) Transporter 2 Jason Statham (2005) Walking with Dinosaurs 3D The story of an underdog dinosaur. (2013) Ever After: A Cinderella Story A young woman who is made a servant by her scheming stepmother uses Murder, She Wrote A latin band gets an her wits and the help of a great inventor to overcome the odds and win a handsome prince. (1998) offer. The Gift A widowed psychic stumbles into danger when the police ask her to help solve the disappearance of a socialite in their sleepy town in Georgia. (2001) Inherent Vice A private eye helps his ex-girlfriend solve a possible kidnapping plot. Joaquin Phoenix, Josh Brolin (2014) Roadies A devoted crew of “roadies” on tour. Rocky III A boxer is trained by his former rival to reclaim the boxing championship. Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire (1982) Miles to Go Before I Sleep Rocky IV Sylvester Stallone Underclassman Brash young detective goes undercover to stop a criminal syndicate. Nick Cannon (2005) (10:40) NCAA College World Series CWS Finals, Game 3 (If Necessary) Coastal Carolina Chanticleers vs. Arizona Wildcats (Live) SportsCenter MLB Baseball New York Mets at Washington Nationals (Live) Baseball Tonight City Slam from Los Angeles UFC Tonight The Ultimate Fighter The Ultimate Fighter TUF Talk Chronicles (N) Chronicles PGA of America H/L Chronicles Chronicles Chronicles (N) Chronicles Fox Sports Live MLB Tonight WNBA Basketball New York Liberty at Minnesota Lynx from Target Center (Live) WNBA Basketball Connecticut Sun at Phoenix Mercury (Live) NASCAR Throwback NASCAR Throwback Top 100 Players of 2016 #20-11 COMPLETE LISTINGS TVLISTINGS.USATODAY.COM Customized to your location Top 100 #20-11 NFL 360 MOVIES Top 100 Players of 2016 #20-11 NFL Total Access Eastern Time may vary in some cities (N) New episode.