Marjah: Microcosm of Afghanistan?Six years ago,
Transcription
Marjah: Microcosm of Afghanistan?Six years ago,
Volume 74, No. 193B © SS 2016 Search for 12 missing Marines continues BY WYATT OLSON Stars and Stripes MARINE CORPS BASE HAWAII — The Hawaii Coast Guard established a 7-mile safety zone out into the sea spanning the entire North Shore of Oahu as the search for 12 missing Marines from two helicopters continued Friday afternoon. “That is a huge area,” said Coast Guard spokesman Lt. Scott Carr during a news conference. He said searchers had found debris “consistent with a military aircraft” across that entire area. The Marines were crewmembers and instructor-trainers aboard two CH-53E Super Stallion helicopters on routine nighttime training, said Capt. Timothy Irish, a Marine spokesman at the same news conference. They were assigned to the Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 463, Marine Aircraft Group 24, 1st Marine Airlift Wing, and were permanently assigned to Marine Corps Base Hawaii. They were returning to the base when they were lost, Irish said. “This is still an active searchand-rescue operation,” Irish said. “We’re still looking for survivors.” Irish said it was unknown why the aircraft went down. It isn’t known whether they collided, he said. The Coast Guard is searching the area with two cutters, a helicopter and a C-130 plane. MIDEAST EDITION SUNDAY, JANUARY 17, 2016 stripes.com Free to Deployed Areas Marjah: Microcosm of Afghanistan? Six years ago, US forces swept through Marjah. How did it end up back under Taliban control? Pages 4-5 Staff Sgt. Christopher Whitman points out the location of a Taliban position in Marjah district, Afghanistan, and yells for his men to start firing in March 2010. Stars and Stripes SEE SEARCH ON PAGE 2 Iran releases former US Marine Hekmati, 4 others BY AND BRADLEY K LAPPER A LI A KBAR DAREINI Associated Press VIENNA — Iran released four detained Americans in exchange for seven Iranians held or charged in the United States, U.S. and Iranian officials said Saturday in a major diplomatic breakthrough announced as implementation of a landmark nuclear deal appeared imminent. A fifth American detained in Iran, a student, was released in a move unrelated to the swap, U.S. officials said. Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian, former U.S. Marine Amir Hekmati, pastor Saeed Abedini and Nosratollah Khosravi-Roodsari, whose name had not been previously made public, were to be flown from Iran to Switzerland aboard a Swiss aircraft and then taken to a U.S. military hospital in Landstuhl, Germany, for medical treatment, U.S. officials said. Rezaian’s wife and mother were expected to be on the plane. The student, identified as Matthew Trevithick, was released independently of the exchange on Saturday and already was on his way home, said U.S. officials. They MUSIC MILITARY Bowie transcended definition over course of groundbreaking career A look back at the Gulf War, 25 years later Pages 16-17 Page 3 spoke about the prisoner exchange on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss it publicly. In return, the U.S. will pardon or drop charges against seven Iranians — six of whom are dual U.S.-Iranian citizens — accused or convicted of violating U.S. sanctions. SEE RELEASE ON PAGE 11 Military: Decision on Bergdahl medals to wait for court-martial » Page 2 PAGE 2 •STA QUOTE OF THE DAY “He gave me every confidence that she’d be a great candidate and be a wonderful president. But Bernie (Sanders) is telling the truth about the economy.” — Steve Taylor, a farmer from Plainfield, N.H., on not being sold on Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton despite former President Bill Clinton’s status as a compelling messenger for his wife See story on Page 9 TOP CLICKS ON STRIPES.COM The most popular stories on our website: 1. How US sailors almost started a crisis with Iran 2. US veteran finds lost love in Vietnam — and she has a surprise for him 3. Search expands for 12 Marines missing after Hawaii helicopter crash 4. 92-year-old World War II Navajo code talker dies in Utah 5. Army tables decision on Bergdahl’s POW Medal, Purple Heart until after court-martial COMING SOON Science & Medicine How the Romans may have helped spread parasites TODAY IN STRIPES American Roundup ............ 14 Business, Weather ............ 22 Comics, Crossword ........... 19 Gadgets & Charts.............. 20 Lifestyle ........................... 15 Music ......................... 16, 17 Opinion ....................... 12-13 Sports ......................... 24-32 R S A N D ST R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 MILITARY Army tables Bergdahl medals decision BY DAN L AMOTHE The Washington Post WASHINGTON — The Army will not decide whether suspected deserter Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl will receive two significant medals that could be associated with his five years of captivity until after he is court-martialed for deliberately walking away from his infantry platoon’s base in 2009, an Army official said. The awards are the Prisoner of War Medal and the Purple Heart. The POW Medal goes to servicemembers who are granted “creditable U.S. military service” and who were held captive while involved in a conflict with an opposing force, while the Purple Heart goes to troops who are killed or wounded by an enemy force. Bergdahl, who had been deployed to Afghanistan, was held hostage by the Haqqani network, a group affiliated with the Taliban, and was tortured while held captive, according to Army officials who have testified in the soldier’s criminal case. The Army also will not decide whether Bergdahl is eligible to receive the Afghanistan Campaign Medal and the NATO Medal until after the trial. The campaign medal goes to servicemembers who served in Afghanistan for 30 days consecutively or 60 days non- consecutively, while the NATO Medal goes to servicemembers who serve in a variety of international commands in which NATO is involved. “To ensure compliance with governing statutes and regulations, the Army cannot determine Sgt. Bergdahl’s eligibility for any award until the conclusion of his court-martial,” said Lt. Col. Jerry Pionk, an Army spokesman, in an email to The Washington Post. Bergdahl, 29, faces charges of desertion and misbehavior before the enemy in connection with his disappearance and could be sentenced to up to life in prison. His disappearance spawned a massive manhunt by the U.S. military in Afghanistan that endangered U.S. troops and altered operations across the country for months, U.S. military officials have said. Bergdahl was recovered in May 2014 by a U.S. Special Forces team in Afghanistan following a controversial prisoner swap approved by the White House in which five Taliban officials were released to the Qatari government. The decision to withhold any medals until the end of the court-martial was met on Friday with criticism from Bergdahl’s civilian attorney, Eugene Fidell. The lack of the awards was raised by another attorney for Bergdahl, Army Lt. Col. Franklin Rosenblatt, during a pretrial hearing on Tuesday, but it was not clear when the issue would be resolved. “Sgt. Bergdahl was advised just the other day to initiate the paperwork for the four additional decorations to which he is entitled,” Fidell said in a statement. “If higher-ups in the Army have indeed decided to withhold them without even waiting for his submission, we are both surprised and disappointed. Preventing the accused from wearing his or her decorations is a major issue in a court-martial. A soldier has a right to appear in court wearing all military decorations to which he or she is entitled. Why can’t Sgt. Bergdahl be treated like any other soldier — and afforded the presumption of innocence?” Dwight Mears, a medically retired Army major and former history professor at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., said that it is unlikely that the service will want to award the POW Medal to Bergdahl even if he is acquitted of the charges he faces because he already admitted to walking away from his post deliberately. “Even if he wasn’t playing with a full deck, he’s still admitted some culpability in leaving the base,” said Mears. Search: Wind, heavy surf complicating search, rescue effort FROM FRONT PAGE Joining them are two Navy destroyers, an MH-60 helicopter crew from the 37th Helicopter Squadron out of Marine Corps Base Hawaii and other vessels from the Honolulu Fire Department. “Everyone’s putting every available resource they have to try and find the survivors from this accident,” Carr said. Although the rain and high winds are likely dissuading casual beachgoers from taking a swim from the beaches of the North Shore, those conditions are a magnet for many surfers. Carr said the establishment of the safety zone was intended to encourage everyone to stay out of the water. “There is debris out there that could cause potential harm to you,” he said. “We certainly don’t need more search-and-rescue cases because of that.” The search is severely hampered by the high winds, making it “probably one of the most difficult we’ve had in the year and a half I’ve been here,” Carr said. Searchers are dealing with 25mph winds, swells up to 16 feet and breaking surf up to 30 feet high. Forecasts have been calling for breaking surfs of up to 40 feet. “That is moving that debris all over the place,” he said. “It’s very difficult to find things right now.” The Coast Guard has not yet recovered any of the debris, which Carr described as “from small to good-sized pieces.” Carr said the Coast Guard learned of the missing helicopters when a civilian called in at about 11:39 p.m. Thursday, saying he’d seen aircraft flying that then disappeared, followed by a “fireball.” Within minutes another caller told the Coast Guard of seeing “a flare,” he said. Carr said the decision had not yet been made whether the search would continue through the night. “As we get closer to the evening and through this operational period, operational commanders will look and they’ll make that decision later today,” Carr said. [email protected] W YATT O LSON /Stars and Stripes Marine Corps Capt. Timothy Irish, left, and Hawaii Coast Guard Lt. Scott Carr speak with reporters Friday at Marine Corps Base Hawaii about the search for 12 Marines missing from two helicopters that disappeared late Thursday night off Oahu’s North Shore. •STA Sunday, January 17, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 3 MILITARY Left: A U.S. Marine armored vehicle crewman wears a nuclear-biological-chemical protective mask while taking part in NBC training during Operation Desert Shield. Department of Defense Below: An Abrams tank from the 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment roars through a breached sand berm separating Saudi Arabia from Iraq, paving the way for advancing allied troops. Stars and Stripes Stars and Stripes U.S. servicemembers are silhouetted against the desert sun in Saudi Arabia during Operation Desert Shield, the preface to the Gulf War. THE GULF WAR: 25 YEARS LATER Stars and Stripes “B GOD WE’VE KICKED THE VIETNAM SYNDROME ONCE AND FOR ALL!” When President George H.W. Bush finished a speech with those words on March 1, 1991, the U.S. was flush with the completeness of its victory in Iraq — an overwhelming air campaign, a 100-hour ground war whose speed and domination left even veteran tankers breathless and a Middle Eastern ally grateful for an American rescue. The U.S. had just won the Cold War in Europe. Now it had prevailed in a hot war in the Middle East, while taking few casualties and establishing American dominance among one of the world’s most important regions. Above all, the war was popular at home, its troops welcomed back warmly. American power appeared to be at its zenith. Yet where some saw victory, others saw a job unfinished. And where some in the Middle East thanked the U.S. for its help, others thought it was time for the Americans to go home. Seeds of the next war in Iraq were planted in 1991, and future victories there would prove much more elusive. Y Department of Defense U.S. Army Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, U.S. Central Command commander-in-chief, inspects troops while visiting a base camp in Saudi Arabia during Operation Desert Storm on April 5, 1991. Courtesy of the U.S. Army President George H.W. Bush speaks during a welcoming ceremony for military personnel just returned from deployment in Saudi Arabia during Operation Desert Storm at Sumter, S.C., on March 24, 1991. AN INTERACTIVE LOOK BACK AT stripes.com/gulfwar25 FEATURED CONTENT Timeline looking at key events leading up to and during the war. Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf uses deception to pull off “left hook” Hail Mary. Stars and Stripes Iraqi prisoners of war are checked after their surrender to Americans from Iron Troop, 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment in February 1991. U.S. tanks destroy famed Republican Guard in 40 minutes. Photo galleries Courtesy of the U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. George Wagasky of the 1st Tactical Fighter Wing scans the horizon from his F-15D Eagle aircraft while on a combat patrol near the Iraqi border during Operation Desert Shield. PAGE 4 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 WAR/MILITARY STORMING MARJAH – AGAIN A look at how US-led coalition lost Afghan district to Taliban BY H EATH DRUZIN Stars and Stripes KABUL, Afghanistan ix years before U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Matthew McClintock was killed in a firefight on the outskirts of Marjah, thousands of Marines were poised to strike that same patch of ground in a battle that coalition commanders confidently predicted would mark the beginning of the end of the Taliban insurgency. The plan was for Marines to sweep through Marjah and its opium poppy fields, driving out the insurgents, and then roll out a prepackaged local government to resolve all the complaints of villagers who had rallied to the Taliban cause. Lessons learned in Marjah could then be applied nationwide. “We’ve got a government in a box, ready to roll in,” Gen. Stanley McChrystal, commander of U.S. and international forces, told The New York Times in February 2010. On the eve of battle, the commander of British troops, Brig. James Cowan, told his soldiers the Marjah operation “will mark the start of the end of the insurgency.” Today, Marjah is back under Taliban control. McClintock’s death on Jan. 5 illustrates how badly things have deteriorated since the United States began pulling out its troops and NATO ended its combat mission a year ago. Experts say U.S. officials failed to take into account how much time and resources it would take to cement gains won on the battlefield. U.S. and British troops did take control of the collection of rough farming villages that make up Helmand province’s Marjah district and nearby Nad Ali. But the hope that a “government in a box” would cement those gains proved illusory. Despite years of fighting in Helmand that cost nearly 1,000 foreign troops’ lives, effective local governance never took hold in many rural areas. “In a counterinsurgency, you’re only as good as the government you support, and in Marjah, the government didn’t have the support of the people,” said David Kilcullen, a counterinsurgency expert and author. S Operation Moshtarak In 2010, Operation Moshtarak — Dari for “together” — as the campaign to retake Marjah was known, went well militarily. Marines captured the area, and the Taliban melted away. It was the beginning of the so-called troop surge, an influx of foreign troops sent in to roll back a suddenly resurgent Taliban, and this was its much-publicized showpiece, touted for weeks before the actual operation. Stars and Stripes Kneeling in a poppy field in the Marjah district of Helmand province, in southern Afghanistan, U.S. Marines return fire against a Taliban machine-gun position in March 2010. The 2010 effort was supposed to be a model of counterinsurgency strategy, but six years later, U.S. forces were back in Marjah working with Afghan forces to recapture it yet again. “As we push the Taliban out, there is nothing but a bright future ahead: good schools, good health clinics, a free-flowing market,” Marine Lt. Col. Brian S. Christmas said during a meeting with Marjah elders, according to a 2010 U.S. military news release.” Marjah can do nothing but grow, and what a great place to grow because there is an awful lot here.” Even the choice of the name for the operation carried foreboding for the pending governing and development portion of the counterinsurgency effort, which pinned success on winning over the people. “Moshtarak” is a Dari word, and Dari is largely the language of the country’s north; residents of the southern province of Helmand overwhelmingly speak Pashto and often feel little kinship with Dari speakers. Although guerrilla fighters scattered in the face of U.S. firepower, the Taliban maintained a covert presence, and the governance side went wrong almost immediately after the violence subsided. With no eyes and ears on the ground inside the Taliban-controlled area before their operation, U.S. forces had trouble discerning friend from foe once local fighters put down their weapons, said Dr. Theo Farrell, head of the department of war studies at King’s College London who has conducted assessments for American and British forces in Afghanistan. Many of the Taliban who had controlled Marjah ‘ In a counterinsurgency, you’re only as good as the government you support, and in Marjah, the government didn’t have the support of the people. David Kilcullen counterinsurgency expert melted back into the population, coming out at night to intimidate the population, keeping many from openly supporting the government. Since the command wanted to woo fighters away from the Taliban, troops were told in effect to tolerate their presence as long as the fighters didn’t openly threaten them. “It was impossible for ISAF to get intelligence assets into Marjah ahead of time,” Farrell said of the International Security Assistance Force, as the NATO-led coalition was known then. “No one knew what was happening in Marjah. How can you realistically go in and rapidly establish governance in a place where you don’t know what was happening?” McChrystal’s hand-picked Marjah district governor, Abdul Zahir Aryan, had spent the last 15 years in Germany, four of them in prison for stabbing his stepson, who intervened when Aryan was beating his wife. In Marjah, he lived on a U.S. military base, was out of touch with a country he had left so many years before and was despised by local residents. He lasted six months in the job before being quietly removed. He was later murdered under mysterious circumstances. Dari-speaking Afghan soldiers brought from other parts of the country were nearly as ill-prepared as Americans to keep abreast of what was happening around them. Also, there was no concurrent wave of foreign civilians behind the military to help build up government structures, the local economy and, perhaps most crucially, a local justice system, Kilcullen said. A breakdown in law and order and the terror of rapacious warlords during Afghanistan’s bloody civil war in the early 1990s is exactly what led to the Taliban’s initial popularity — locals saw them and their strict brand of Islamic justice at first as a brutal but welcome alternative to the murder, rape and robbery that had become the norm. SEE MARJAH ON PAGE 5 •STA Sunday, January 17, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 5 WAR/MILITARY Marjah: Misunderstanding Afghan ideology key to coalition’s failure to maintain control FROM PAGE 4 It’s a history of which Kilcullen says many in the international coalition were ignorant, and those who did understand it lacked the resources to address the problem. “We always kind of treated the rule of law as a secondary issue, but it’s fundamental to the life of Afghans,” he said. Despite all of the problems, U.S. and British forces did achieve enough security gains while they were there to allow some infrastructurebuilding and stability in the area. They built schools, dug wells and fixed roads. While experts agree that there were multiple failures in the reconstruction effort in Marjah and across Helmand, the main factor they point to in the near-Taliban takeover last year was simply that international troops left. Former Afghan Defense Minister Rahim Wardak said the coalition was too eager to end its war and that the administration of then-President Hamid Karzai pushed too hard for foreign troops to leave and give Afghans a chance to secure their own country before they were ready to take over the fight. “The whole transition process was premature,” said Wardak, who served during the initial Marjah invasion and left office in 2012. “The international community wanted to relieve itself of the burden, and in the meantime, the Afghan government pushed for national sovereignty.” Successful counterinsurgency operations generally take 10 to 15 years, Kilcullen said. The surge lasted 30 months. “We just didn’t put the time in,” he said. A most dangerous posting What the U.S. and their its allies left behind when they turned over the Helmand military hub Camp Leatherneck to Afghan control at the end of 2014 was a still-shaky Afghan security force and even more lackluster local political leaders who were unprepared for the insurgent onslaught to come. Wardak said there was no mechanism to continue the work of international forces on both a civil and military level. Money for projects dried up, along with military intelligence, surveillance and air power. “The PRTs disappeared with all their resources and backup and professionalism,” he said, using the acronym for Provincial Reconstruction Teams, the military units tasked with civil projects. Afghan troops were poorly supplied, and for the most part, only troops without connections ended up in Helmand, arguably the Afghan security forces’ most dangerous posting. The official troop numbers included many “ghost soldiers” on the rolls, meaning many units were undermanned, as chronicled by a recent Associated Press report. So unresponsive was the central government to Helmand’s woes that Deputy Provincial Governor Mohammad Jan Rasoolyar took to Facebook in December to write an urgent plea to Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, begging for military support as much of the province crumbled to Taliban forces. Ghani subsequently fired him. A year after the NATO-led coalition formally ended its combat mission in Afghanistan, the U.S. sent McClintock, a Green Beret, and other special operations forces out with Afghan counterparts into the dusty farmland of Marjah on Jan. 5 to again try to retake the district. The Taliban were on the doorstep of the provincial capital, Lashkar Gah, threatening to overrun an entire province for the first time since the initial U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 — an even more embarrassing prospect than their brief takeover of the country’s fifth-largest city, Kunduz, in September. It was exactly the scenario the 2010 operation aimed to avoid. The January operation succeeded in driving out insurgents and opening the once-heavily Human shields used in Ramadi, slowing progress BY SUSANNAH GEORGE Associated Press JOSH SMITH /Stars and Stripes An Afghan policeman rides in the back of a truck during a patrol in Helmand province on Sept. 23. mined road between Marjah and Lashkar Gah for the first time in two months. But given the history of the area — even with thousands of U.S. and British troops in the province, Helmand was contested — there is no guarantee the Taliban won’t come back. “They don’t pay attention if there is a threat to a district,” said longtime Helmand resident Sardar Mohammad Hamdard, head of the provincial government watchdog Helmand Civil Society. “When it falls to insurgents and all the equipment and ammunition is taken (and) the disWe always trict governor’s office and the police station kind of are burned, only then treated will they take action. “After the Marjah the rule of offensive (in 2010), law as a there were some fundamental projects secondary implemented, there issue, was money spent; it was completely peacebut it’s ful after; there was atfundamental tention to health and to the life of education,” Hamdard said. “But unfortuAfghans. nately, those achieveDavid Kilcullen ments could not be counterinsurgency maintained by the auexpert thorities because they didn’t pay attention to threats.” Helmand’s troubles have been particularly dramatic, owing in part to it being part of the Taliban’s original heartland, giving them deep roots in the province. But what’s happened there is a microcosm for the situation across the country: Lack of faith in government is keeping Afghans from openly supporting Kabul, undermining security and emboldening insurgents. Also, with the U.S.-led military coalition now slimmed down to about 13,000 troops tasked primarily with training and advising Afghan forces and with an eye on the exit, few see that as a problem that can be fixed quickly. “We in the West expect to see the rapid development of governance so we can get out, but of course, you’re in a part of the world where corruption and incompetence is the norm,” Farrell said. “I’m afraid the history shows consistently that the United States, in particular, is very bad at this, and the reason is very simple: Governments have political and financial interest in not reforming, and those interests will far outweigh any leverage that any foreign power can bring to bear.” ‘ Zubair Babkarkhail contributed to this report. [email protected] Twitter: @Druzin_Stripes RAMADI, Iraq — Six times in the past harrowing month, Um Omar and her family got a knock on the door of whatever home they were occupying in the extremist-held city of Ramadi, Iraq: It was an Islamic State militant, she said, ordering them to pick up and move with them as human shields because the Iraqi army was approaching. “Every time the army would advance, Daesh would knock on our door and say, ‘OK, time to go,’ ” the woman said in an interview with The Associated Press, using an alternate term for the Islamic State group. The knock came again Thursday morning in the Soufiya neighborhood of northeastern Ramadi, Um Omar said, and to her surprise, it was the counterterrorism forces of the Iraqi military. She and about 60 other people had just been rescued. It’s still a little unclear to her what happened to the extremists, said the woman, who spoke on condition she not be identified by her full name to protect relatives who may still be trapped in Ramadi. Either all of the Islamic State fighters were killed during clashes Wednesday night, or they fled further into the neighborhood and didn’t have time to bring their captives along to another part of Ramadi. The capital of sprawling Anbar province fell in May to the Islamic State group. It was the biggest setback for Iraq’s military since the city of Mosul fell to the group in the summer of 2014. Iraqi troops, working with the counterterrorism forces, retook the center of Ramadi last month with heavy air support from the U.S.-led coalition. Ramadi still cannot be considered fully liberated, with pockets of Islamic State fighters still holed up in half to two-thirds of the city’s neighborhoods in the east and north. As Iraqi government forces advanced from west to east from downtown Ramadi and expelled Islamic State militants in Decem- ber, the extremists have pulled back with their civilian captives as shields, leaving behind houses booby-trapped with explosives and roadside bombs. Fighters with the elite counterterrorism forces that are leading operations in the Anbar provincial capital, 70 miles west of Baghdad, say the practice is slowing them down and complicating the already messy challenge of houseto-house urban warfare. Heavy airstrikes and the Islamic State group’s scorchedearth practices have left most of Ramadi in ruins. The devastating combination razed nearly every building along its main thoroughfare. On most city blocks, no house is spared damage; others are reduced to rubble. But as Iraqi forces continue to advance, evacuations like the one that brought Um Omar and her family to safety are draining time and resources from the fight to retake territory, according to troops and commanders. “The main problem now are the civilians. That is what’s slowing our progress,” said Maj. Gen. Fadhil Barwari, the commander of the counterterrorism unit in Ramadi. Working out of a marble-tiled home that his unit has transformed into an operations center, he juggles phone calls and local TV interviews. Off to the side, one of his men unrolls a map and reads out coordinates to someone speaking in Australian-accented English on the other end of the line. “We thought it was going to be easier because we have airstrikes and air support,” Barwari said, referring to the intense waves of coalition bombing that paved the way for his forces’ initial advance in western Ramadi. “But now, when the pilot sees civilians, they don’t strike.” Unlike other Iraqi cities like Tikrit and Beiji, where troops have pushed out the militants, thousands of civilians remained in Ramadi under months of Islamic State rule. While the U.S.-trained counterterrorism forces are the most effective unit in the Iraqi military, they still largely depend on air support to retake ground. PAGE 6 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 WAR ON TERRORISM US drone strike kills 3 militants in Yemen BY A HMED A L-HAJ Associated Press SANAA, Yemen — A U.S. drone strike killed three suspected al-Qaida militants in southern Yemen on Saturday, according to local tribesmen. Believed to be the first drone strike this year in Yemen, it targeted the militants’ vehicle while they were traveling in Shabwa province, the tribesmen said. They spoke on condition of anonymity because of security concerns. It was not immediately possible to verify their account. U.S. officials rarely comment on the covert drone program. The latest strike comes amid reports of divisions and defections among al-Qaida’s rival group, the Islamic State group’s affiliate in Yemen, as a defected group leader gave online testimony claiming that the Islamic State group fabricated videos in order to exaggerate their strength and presence. In testimony posted online by al-Qaida supporters, a man calling himself Antar al-Kanadi said he defected from the Islamic State group because its leadership had become too extreme. Al-Kanadi’s allegations seem to match reports elsewhere of dissension within the ranks of the Yemeni Islamic State group affili- ate. According to The Long War Journal, which monitors the activity of militant groups, more than a dozen Islamic State leaders and scores of the group’s fighters have rebelled against the top leader, Abu Bilal al-Harbi, for alleged violations of Islamic Shariah law. “Seventy members of the Islamic State’s Yemeni branch announced their ‘defection’ from the Islamic State’s wali in a letter published online on Dec. 15,” it said. Al-Kanadi also alleged that the Islamic State group in Yemen released two videos of training camps in Hadramawt province and fraudulently claimed they were elsewhere in the country. Yemen has been mired in conflict between Shiite Houthi rebels and an internationally recognized government backed by a Saudi-led military coalition. Both the Islamic State group and al-Qaida in Yemen have exploited Yemen’s chaos and expanded their reach over the past year. Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula has long been described by Washington as the global network’s most active and dangerous branch. The Islamic State affiliate in Yemen has claimed responsibility for a series of bloody attacks including four suicide bomb attacks on mosques in Sanaa in March and the assassination of the governor of Aden province. DOD video shows strike on Islamic State cash stockpile Associated Press Screenshot from video courtesy of the Combined Joint Task Force — Operation Inherent Resolve A coalition airstrike destroys an Islamic State cash and finance distribution center near Mosul, Iraq. WASHINGTON — The Defense Department has released a video showing the U.S. dropping bombs on an Islamic State cash stockpile in Mosul, Iraq, on Monday. The 47-second, black-andwhite video begins with an overhead shot of the targeted building in Mosul, which is the Islamic militant group’s main stronghold in Iraq. The Pentagon’s video then shows the facility being hit with two 2,000-pound bombs. Clouds of paper the Department of Defense says is money can be seen floating above the bombing site after the coalition airstrikes. U.S. officials say that millions of dollars were destroyed, but the exact amount of money is unknown. It’s at least the second time the U.S. has bombed cash stockpiles for the Islamic State group. Combined with attacking the militants’ oil resources, it is part of an effort to sap their financial strength. Russia says the West is ‘politicizing’ the situation in Syria BY A LEXANDRA OLSON Associated Press UNITED NATIONS — Russia dismissed a Security Council meeting Friday on the siege of Syrian towns as “unnecessary noise” that politicizes a humanitarian crisis and risks derailing upcoming peace talks. Russian Deputy Ambassador Vladimir Safronkov questioned the motives of Britain, France and the United States in calling for the Security Council meeting. He accused them of “double standards” by focusing on the suffering in Madaya, a rebelheld town besieged by Syria’s government, while minimizing suffering in other towns under siege by rebels. Safronkov said the insistence on holding the Security Council debate “gives the impression” that “attempts are being made to undermine the launch of the inter-Syrian dialogue scheduled for Jan. 25” in Geneva. “As the date for the launch draws closer, there is all this unnecessary noise,” Safronkov said. The three Western council members called for the debate to intensify the pressure on Syria’s warring parties to lift sieges that have cut off 400,000 people from aid. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said both the Syrian government and the rebels are committing war crimes by deliberately starving civilians. Reports of starvation deaths in Madaya have reinforced the scale of the humani- tarian catastrophe in the town and other besieged areas. Trucks from the United Nations and other humanitarian organizations enAs the tered Madaya this week for the first date for time in months. Two the launch other communities, the villages of Foua (of peace and Kfarya in northtalks in ern Syria, besieged Syria) draws by rebels were also closer, there included in the aid operation. is all this British Deputy unnecessary Ambassador Peter Wilson said the Secunoise. rity Council should Vladimir call on all parties to Safronkov lift the sieges, but he Russian deputy emphasized that the ambassador Syrian government “has the primary responsibility to protect Syrians.” In a reference to Russia, Wilson said “let council members with ties to the regime use their influence, and not their air force, to address this horrific situation.” The Security Council is divided on how to handle the Syrian war, with Russia supporting President Bashar Assad and the Western powers opposing him. Russia is conducting an air campaign in Syria that ‘ ’ PETER SOUSA /The White House President Barack Obama chairs a United Nations Security Council meeting at U.N. Headquarters in New York on Sept. 24, 2009. Moscow says is aimed at the Islamic State group and other extremists, but the U.S. and its allies say is also hitting moderate groups fighting Assad’s army. Safronkov said Russia is engaging with “the relevant Syrian authorities, prompting them toward constructive cooperation with the United Nations.” Addressing the council, Syrian Deputy Ambassador Mounzer Mounzer denied his government was using starvation as a war tactic. He dismissed U.N. accusations that the Syrian government has impeded humanitarian access to civilians, saying any delays are due to the need to safeguard humanitarian workers and prevent aid deliveries from falling into the wrong hands. “The Syrian government had deployed all of its efforts and resources to provide assistance to all those who are suffering without discrimination,” Mounzer said. •STA Sunday, January 17, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 7 WAR/MILITARY Complications dog 4-nation meeting on Afghan peace BY H EATH DRUZIN Stars and Stripes KABUL, Afghanistan — New insurgent attacks and concerns over the lack of female representation could complicate fourcountry talks on Monday aimed at ending Afghanistan’s 14-year war. The meeting of representatives from Afghanistan, the United States, Pakistan and China is aimed at drawing a road map for peace negotiations to end the war, which started in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks. Insurgent groups have not been invited to the preliminary talks. Since the first four-nation meeting in Islamabad last week, insurgents have attacked a Pakistani consulate in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, and the residence of an Afghan diplomat in Pakistan. No diplomats were killed in either incident, although a consular official was slightly injured in Jalalabad. The attacks come as part of a wave of violence, including several car bombings in Kabul, that followed Afghan President Ashraf Ghani’s New Year’s Eve announcement of the talks. The most recent violence appears to be a new tactic by insurgents with two goals: to strain relations between Kabul and Islamabad and to demonstrate that they are not beholden to Pakistan, which has long been considered the Taliban’s most important backer, experts said. “It is kind of putting pressure on Afghanistan and Pakistan by the insurgents to accept their high demands during the peace talks,” said Shahla Farid, a political analyst and professor of law and political science at Kabul University. “This is a new step that the Tal- iban are taking. In the past, they would carry out massive attacks and kill lots of civilians whenever there were starting, but now they target diplomatic facilities to show themselves to be stronger and more independent.” Such attacks on diplomatic compounds could threaten recent improvements in the oftenfraught Women’s relations rights between Afactivists in ghanistan and PakiAfghanistan stan, which have traded have been fighting for accusations for years of years for a supporting place at the insurgents within the table where other’s borders. the future “Since of their Pakistan is a major part country of the peace is being talks, such attacks can decided. make them Heather Barr angry and Human Rights erode their Watch support for peace,” said Mohammad Hassan Hakiyar, a political analyst and former Taliban deputy minister. After the Islamabad meeting, Human Rights Watch voiced concern about the absence of women in the peace negotiations, saying Kabul had failed to fulfill its own national action plan to include them. “Women’s rights activists in Afghanistan have been fighting for years for a place at the table ‘ ’ A SSOCIATED PRESS OF PAKISTAN /AP Delegates from Pakistan, Afghanistan, China and the United States attend a meeting at the foreign ministry in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Monday, hoping to lay the road map for peace talks with the Taliban. where the future of their country is being decided,” Heather Barr, the group’s senior researcher on women’s rights said in the statement. “The Afghan government’s failure to meet the promised deadline for developing this plan suggests a lack of seriousness about giving women the role to which they’re entitled.” In an interview with Afghan news agency Pajhwok published Friday, Zalmay Khalizad, the former U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan, criticized the initial Islamabad meeting for failing to produce a commitment from the capital to bring Pakistan-based militants to the table and conduct military operations against those who refuse. “[The Islamabad] meeting was not encouraging to me,” he was quoted as saying. “What is needed is really to move against the groups that are not reconcilable and are based in Pakistan so that their incentive to engage in the peace process increases or they are no longer able to [conduct] military operations. That is the vital part moving toward the peace process.” Security in the capital will be tight on Monday. Afghan authorities are not disclosing the venue ahead of time because of the threat of attacks, Foreign Minis- try spokesman Shakaib Mustaghni said. He said insurgent groups have not been invited because part of the agenda is to agree on whom to included in formal talks. Only Hezb-i-Islami, an insurgent group unaffiliated with the Taliban or the Islamic State group, has publicly stated support for the process. The United States sent Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Olson to the initial meeting. A senior Obama administration official, speaking on background to reporters in Washington, said he was encouraged by cooperation between Kabul and Islamabad at the initial meeting, but he cautioned that the Taliban would still take convincing to come to the table: “It’s clear that the Taliban have not yet decided to join a process, a reconciliation process, but we are proceeding on the basis that we have to test the proposition,” he said. Ghani’s first stab at peace talks fell apart last summer when it emerged that longtime Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar had been dead for two years. News of Omar’s death sparked a power struggle within the Taliban that continues today. The leader, Mullah Akhtar Mansoor, is opposed by a faction led by Mullah Muhammad Rasool. Experts say Pakistan’s role in any peace agreement will be critical. Islamabad is under pressure from other rebel groups besides the Afghan Taliban. The Pakistani Taliban, known as Tehrik-i-Taliban, carry out regular attacks on Pakistani government and military targets. The Islamic State group has also emerged as a threat. Acknowledging the difficulty in convincing all of the rebel groups to participate, Ghani has said the process can start with the willing factions even as the government continues to fight others. The day before the attack on the Pakistani consulate, The Associated Press quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Hekmat Khalil Karzai as saying that most Taliban want peace, but that “we will use all the means we have against those who do not.” “Because there are different groups fighting in Afghanistan, it makes it hard to reach out to everyone and bring them to peace talks,” said Hakiyar, the former Taliban official. “You can’t end the current war by just talking to the Taliban leadership.” Zubair Babakarkhail contributed to this report. [email protected] Twitter: @Druzin_Stripes PAGE 8 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 NATION Tenn. Powerball winners: No big changes to lives BY ERIK SCHELZIG AND A DRIAN SAINZ Associated Press NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The small-town Tennessee couple who bought one of three magic tickets splitting the world-record $1.6 billion Powerball jackpot says they don’t plan to quit their jobs nor to buy a new house. Their daughter, however, wants a horse. After appearing on national television, John Robinson and wife Lisa went to the Tennessee lottery headquarters in Nashville on Friday to have their winning ticket verified by lottery officials. The couple’s lump sum payout is about $327 million after buying the ticket for Wednesday night’s drawing at a grocery store in their west Tennessee hometown of Munford, population 6,000. Two other winning tickets were bought in California and Florida. At a news conference Friday, the Robinsons said they won’t stop working and won’t make any wild purchases. They’ll pay off their mortgage and their daughter’s student loans, but have no desire to move from their gray, one-story house in a close-knit community into a luxurious compound somewhere. Lisa works at a dermatologist’s office. John is a warehouse supervisor. Both plan to return to work Monday, they said. Friends and neighbors say the Robinsons are a hard-working, responsible family with the ability to deal with their new fortune humbly. “That’s what we’ve done all our lives, is work,” John Robinson said. “You just can’t sit down and lay down and not do nothing anymore. Because how long are you going to last? We do want to enjoy a little bit of our earnings, and maybe invest a little bit of it so our son and daughter will have it and they’ll never need anything again.” M ARK HUMPHREY/AP Rebecca Hargrove, second from right, president and CEO of the Tennessee Lottery, presents a ceremonial check to John Robinson, right, his wife, Lisa, second from left, and their daughter, Tiffany, after the Robinsons’ winning Powerball ticket was authenticated Friday at the Tennessee Lottery headquarters in Nashville, Tenn. No one has produced the other winning tickets, which overcame odds of 1 in 292.2 million to land on all six numbers at a Publix supermarket in Melbourne Beach, Fla., and a 7-Eleven in Chino Hills, Calif. In California, any winnings not claimed within a year automatically go to the state’s schools. Florida gives winners six months to come forward before transferring 80 percent of unclaimed prizes to an educational trust fund, and 20 percent into a pool Coal suspension affects 30-plus mining projects teed tomorrow,” Robinson said. “We just wanted a little piece of the pie. Now we’re real grateful we got the big piece of the pie.” Tennessee Lottery executive Rebecca Hargrove said the couple would get a “small check today for a few million,” and would collect the full lump sum in about 10 business days. Robinson said earlier Friday that they would help certain friends, give to the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, and donate to their church. Police say man in vehicle stolen from Ore. refuge arrested BY M ATTHEW BROWN AND M EAD GRUVER BY K EITH R IDLER Associated Press BILLINGS, Mont. — At least 30 applications from companies seeking to mine hundreds of millions of tons of coal face suspension as the government reviews its sales of the fuel from public lands, U.S. officials disclosed Friday. The coal leasing program is on hold for up to three years while the Interior Department reviews fees paid by mining companies and the environmental effect of burning coal, agency Secretary Sally Jewell said. The Associated Press obtained a Bureau of Land Management list of affected sites ahead of its public release, and it includes mining proposals in nine states. Some of the largest projects are in the Powder River Basin of Wyoming and Montana, the nation’s top coal-producing region. Other projects are in Utah, Kentucky, Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Oklahoma and North Dakota. The announcement marks another major blow to the struggling coal industry, which has been hit with increased competition from cheap natural gas, new anti-pollution regulations and faltering international coal markets that have dimmed hopes to boost exports. The nation’s second-largest coal company, Arch Coal of St. Louis, declared bankruptcy Monday. Even before further leasing was suspended, work at many of the sites was unlikely to begin for years because of the time it takes companies to navigate the government coal program. Mining already underway on public lands will be allowed to continue, as could 17 other lease applica- for future lottery prizes. Robinson said he reached out to his brother for help finding lawyers and financial planners before deciding to take the winnings in a single lump sum of nearly $328 million, rather than let the lottery invest the prize and pay him 30 annual installments totaling an estimated $533 million. Why pass up on a certain income totaling more than $200 million? “We’re going to take the lump sum, because we’re not guaran- Associated Press M ATTHEW BROWN /AP A mining dump truck hauls coal in April 2013 at Cloud Peak Energy’s Spring Creek strip mine near Decker, Mont. The government is reviewing its sales of the fuel from public lands. tions, many of which had been approved or whose environmental studies were completed but still were being processed. Mining representatives and elected officials from coal states decried the suspension. “President [Barack] Obama is wrong, and once again Montana’s working families are bearing the brunt of his unilateral action,” said Montana Gov. Steve Bullock, also a Democrat. But the coal industry effectively has been under its own leasing moratorium in the Powder River Basin for the past few years. Several companies, including Alpha Natural Resources, which filed for bankruptcy protection last year, have asked the government to delay action on coal tracts previously nominated for leasing. No federal coal reserves in Wyoming or Montana have been leased since 2012. “This is just such a great time to take a pause in the federal coal program. There is so much uncertainty about the future of coal,” said Shannon Anderson with Powder River Basin Resource Council, a conservation group made up of landowners. BURNS, Ore. — Authorities arrested a man they said was driving a government vehicle stolen from a wildlife refuge being occupied by an armed group protesting federal land policies as the standoff in Oregon’s high desert hit the two-week mark. Kenneth Medenbach, 62, of Crescent was arrested by Oregon State Police at a grocery store in Burns for investigation of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. It was unclear if he has a lawyer. Medenbach is already facing charges in U.S. District Court in Medford after authorities said he illegally camped on federal land between May and November last year, according to federal court records. Authorities also said they recovered a second stolen vehicle from the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge but provided no other details. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service previously reported the vehicles had been stolen. So far, authorities have not tried to remove the group from the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. As the situation drags on, people in the local area are growing increasingly weary and wary of the group. Concrete barriers have been erected to block streets around the county courthouse in the small eastern Oregon town of Burns, where police from around the state have set up a command center. About 30 miles to the south at the refuge, other protesters carrying what appear to be militarystyle rifles scan the snow-covered rangeland from atop an old fire lookout that gives them a sweeping view of roads leading into the area. “If we all keep a calm about us, everything will be OK,” Brenda Pointere said Thursday as she exited a Burns restaurant. “It started out calm, but the longer it goes on — you start to hear rumors.” The occupation started Jan. 2 as a protest over two local ranchers who had been convicted of arson being returned to prison to serve longer sentences. Afterward, a group led by Ammon Bundy traveled to occupy the refuge to protest the ranchers’ return to prison and to demand that the 300-square-mile refuge be turned over to local control. •STA Sunday, January 17, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 9 NATION Bush sees similarities between his foreign policy and his dad’s BY THOMAS BEAUMONT Associated Press CORALVILLE, Iowa — Jeb Bush believes he’s got the best prescription for American foreign policy, from his strategies for deterring North Korea’s nuclear ambitions, to destroying the Islamic State. However, unlike his rivals in the crowded 2016 Republican race for the White House, Bush’s foreign policy pitch comes with a caveat: He’s as much his own man as he is a member of the Bush family. In an extended interview with The Associated Press, the former Florida governor praised the approach of his father, former President George H.W. Bush, who built a broad coalition to wage the Persian Gulf War, and mobilized U.S. military might to drive Iraq out of Kuwait. Jeb Bush said the aggressive military policy he would pursue as President Barack Obama’s successor would signal to the world “we’re back in the game.” While he said he would seek the advice of his brother, former President George W. Bush, in foreign affairs, especially on the Middle East, a Jeb Bush doctrine would more closely resemble that of Bush the father. “It was a very successful foreign policy and one that I think one could envision a bipartisan consensus emerging around,” Jeb Bush said of his father’s approach, “and one the American people could support.” He speaks of using military intervention “sparingly” but with “awesome force,” taking a page out of the playbook of Colin Powell, who served as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under his father Bush and as his brother’s first secretary of state. Powell laid out a doctrine of “overwhelming force” which he applied in the 1990 Gulf War. But Jeb Bush stresses the need for a military and political strategy to play out hand-in-hand. “The one ingredient that I think is so essential is to not just have a military exit strategy, but have a political strategy not create another void that has to be filled again … where we have to respond again to that void being filled,” he said. “Syria is a good example of that.” Trump strikes back at Cruz as Bush lands key endorsement BY SERGIO BUSTOS AND BILL BARROW Associated Press NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. — With two weeks to go until Iowans head to the polls in the first vote of the 2016 primary season, Republican front-runner Donald Trump ramped up his attacks against rival Ted Cruz on Friday, while Jeb Bush scored a key endorsement for his White House bid. South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham announced he is backing Jeb Bush for the Republican presidential nomination, praising the former Florida governor’s approach to national security. “I have concluded without any hesitation, any doubt, that Jeb Bush is worthy to be commanderin-chief on day one,” Graham said Friday at a joint news conference with Bush. As South Carolina’s senior senator, Graham has been a coveted endorsement for some candidates running for the Republican nomination because he holds clout among establishment Republicans in South Carolina, one of the critical early voting primary states. Bush was initially considered a top contender for the Republican nomination for president, but his campaign eventually lagged behind candidates like Trump and Cruz, who have each positioned themselves as anti-establishment alternatives. Graham launched his own presidential campaign last summer, but dropped out of the race last month having mustered little support in the polls. Graham noted that Bush was the lone candidate in Thursday’s debate to explicitly reject Trump’s continued call to indefinitely ban noncitizen Muslims from entering the United States. “Donald Trump will damage the ability to grow this party. He will get creamed with Hispanics and young women,” Graham said. “Ted Cruz is an ideologue that has no ability, in my view, to bring the country together. So the top two guys, I think, would lose an election we can’t afford to lose.” Meanwhile, Trump kept up his offensive against Cruz on Friday, calling him “strident” and labeling his remarks about “New York values” in the GOP debate “disgraceful.” C HARLIE NEIBERGALL /AP Former President Bill Clinton listens as his wife, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, speaks in Ames, Iowa, in November. Hillary Clinton’s campaign deploys husband carefully BY LISA LERER Associated Press KEENE, N.H. — Bill Clinton promised voters in 1992 that they’d be getting “two for the price of one” if they elected him to the White House — a presidential duo of the young Arkansas governor and his Yale Law-educated wife. Nearly a quarter-century later, the duo are back — but not quite the same. As Hillary Clinton fends off a rising challenge from Bernie Sanders, her campaign aides are grappling with how best to deploy what she has described as her “not-so-secret weapon.” Their answer: very, very carefully. During campaign swings through Iowa and New Hampshire, Bill Clinton treaded fastidiously through tightly controlled campaign events. A natural-born chit-chatter, he was not giving interviews. When he stopped to talk with reporters after one recent event, campaign aides turned up the music, making a conversation all but impossible. His remarks to voters have been relatively subdued: long on history, statistics and nostalgia. He’s dodged questions about Sanders and Republican front-runner Donald Trump, who’s been baiting the Clinton family with comments about the former president’s past sexual improprieties “I’m not going there,” Bill Clinton said on Wednesday, when asked about Sanders at a campaign event in New Hampshire. “I came here to tell people why I thought Hillary should be president and her ideas are better.” While Bill Clinton remains a popular figure among Democrats, some of the key achievements of his administration form the basis of Sanders’ critique against his wife — that she’s too willing to compromise liberal ideals for political gain. The Vermont senator has denounced his rival’s policies on trade, same-sex marriage, crime and welfare cuts. He’s made reinstating Glass-Stegall, a Depression-era banking law repealed under Bill Clinton’s administration, a central attack line of his campaign. “People don’t have a long memory, but Bernie’s doing his best to remind them,” said Roger Hickey, a co-director of the liberal Campaign for America’s Future. “People don’t want a recycling of Bill Clinton’s presidency. They want somebody who’s willing to stand up to the billionaires and corporate power.” Clinton aides say those critiques miss the larger picture of wage growth, job creation and a balanced budget. In a debate last month, Clinton said she would turn to her husband for economic advice. “He carries a message of peace and prosperity under his presidency and I think a lot of Americans would like to get back to those days,” Clinton said in an interview on NBC’s “Today Show” on Wednesday. At an afternoon event in Keene, voters recalled the Clinton presidency fondly, as a time of prosperity. “The best economic times for my family were when Bill Clinton was president,” said Madeline Smeaton, a graduate student in Keene whose father lost her job in the Great Recession. “We were making a lot of money.” Still, some of those economic achievements face a skeptical reexamination within a party that’s grown more liberal under the Obama administration. Bill Clinton has said that he regrets approving the Defense of Marriage Act and the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy that banned gays and lesbians from military service. He also has looked back with regret on signing the 1994 crime bill, which led to tougher sentencing for drug offenses. “I signed a bill that made the problem worse,” the former president told an audience at the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People’s annual meeting in Philadelphia in July. “And I want to admit it.” The only veiled criticism of Sanders came Friday in Coralville, Iowa, with a reference to Sanders’ support for a singlepayer health care system instead of the 2010 federal health care law, also known as Obamacare. Saying that starting over on health care legislation was not politically viable, Clinton told voters, “We still need to live in the reality-based world.” In New Hampshire, some people said that while Bill Clinton was still a compelling messenger for his wife, they just weren’t sold on her quite yet. “He gave me every confidence that she’d be a great candidate and be a wonderful president,” said Steve Taylor, a farmer from Plainfield, New Hampshire. “But Bernie is telling the truth about the economy.” PAGE 10 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 NATION Answers elusive in Calif. terror attack BY A MANDA LEE MYERS Associated Press NASA-TV/AP U.S. astronaut Timothy Kopra emerges from the International Space Station Friday. Spacewalk aborted due to leak in astronaut’s helmet BY M ARCIA DUNN Associated Press CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Two astronauts aborted their spacewalk Friday and hurried back into the International Space Station after water leaked into one of the men’s helmets in a scary repeat of a near-drowning 2½ years ago. The trouble cropped up after the astronauts — including Britain’s 1st spacewalker — successfully restored full power to the space station. NASA astronaut Timothy Kopra took everyone by surprise when he reported a small water bubble and then a film of water inside his helmet. Mindful of another spacewalker’s close call in 2013, Mission Control terminated the planned six-hour spacewalk at the four-hour mark. It turns out Kopra was wearing the same spacesuit involved in the earlier incident. Kopra said the water bubble was 4 inches long and getting thicker. “I’m doing good,” he said on his way back inside. Lead flight director Royce Renfrew stressed that the situation was not an emergency and insisted neither spacewalker was in danger. An hour later, Kopra was safely inside his orbiting home, along with Timothy Peake, who attracted his own headlines by becoming Britain’s first spacewalker Friday. The astronauts waiting anxiously inside pulled off Kopra’s helmet, then measured the water that had leaked, presumably from the suit’s cooling system. That was the source of the leak last time. Space station commander Scott Kelly reported that he filled a syringe with about 15 cubic centimeters of water. NASA officials pointed out that 1 to 1½ liters of water that escaped into Italian astronaut Luca Parmitano’s helmet and suit in July 2013. Kopra’s suit was the same one Parmitano was wearing when his helmet flooded. The suit was refurbished following the 2013 incident. NASA said Kopra used the same suit for a spacewalk last month without any problem. The cap that Kopra wore on his head under his helmet was moist, as were other parts of his suit. Kopra and Peake completed their No. 1 job early on. The pair quickly removed the voltage regulator that failed two months ago, slashing station power by one-eighth. The breakdown did not disrupt work 250 miles up, but NASA wanted the power grid fixed as soon as possible. Working in darkness to avoid electrical shock from the solar power system, the astronauts quickly removed the bad unit and popped in a spare, both about the size of a 30-gallon aquarium. They had just 31 minutes to complete the job, the amount of nighttime on that particular swing around the world. Following tests, Mission Control said the spare — dubbed Dusty for its 17-year tenure in orbit — appeared to be working properly. Peake, in particular, received a bounty of well wishes — from space as well as Earth. He became the first spacewalker to wear the Union Jack on the shoulder of his suit. Earlier, as Peake floated out, space station commander Scott Kelly called, “Hey Tim, it’s really cool seeing that Union Jack go outside. It’s explored all over the world. Now it’s explored space.” Replied Peake: “It’s great to be wearing it, a huge privilege, a proud moment.” Marathon bomber loses bid for a new trial BY DENISE L AVOIE Associated Press BOSTON — A federal judge on Friday rejected Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s bid for a new trial and ordered him to pay victims of the deadly attack more than $101 million in restitution. The restitution order, issued by Judge George O’Toole Jr., is seen as largely symbolic because Tsarnaev is in federal prison and has no ability to pay. Tsarnaev, 22, was convicted and sentenced to death last year for the 2013 attack. Two pressure cooker bombs placed near the marathon finish line by Tsarnaev and his brother killed three people and injured more than 260 others. Tsarnaev also was convicted of killing a Massachusetts Institute of Technology police officer days later. During the sentencing hearing Tsarnaev admitted that he and his brother committed the bombings and apologized to the victims. His brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, died days after the bombing following a gunbattle with police. The judge, in his order denying Dzhokhar Tsarnaev a new trial, noted that he and a federal appeals court had previously rejected arguments from Tsarnaev’s lawyers that he could not receive a fair trial in Boston. “There is no reason to think — and certainly no specific evidence — that this extensive coverage would have been any different in kind or degree if the trial had been conducted elsewhere,” he wrote in his order. “This was not a crime that was unknown outside of Boston.” The judge also rejected Tsarnaev’s renewed challenge to the constitutionality of the federal death penalty. Tsarnaev’s lawyers cited a dissenting opinion in a U.S. Supreme Court ruling last year by Justices Stephen Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who said they think it’s “highly likely” the death penalty is unconstitutional. But the judge in Tsarnaev’s case said that whatever the merits of the dissent, the majority opinion was the binding precedent. LOS ANGELES — Six weeks after the San Bernardino terror attack, the man leading the investigation said Friday that some of the most basic questions remain the most elusive to answer — was anyone else involved, was more violence planned, and why was the attack site chosen? David Bowdich, chief of the FBI’s Los Angeles field office, told The Associated Press that of all the unanswered questions, the one he most wants answered is whether the husband-and-wife killers had accomplices. “We’re interested in anyone who we find had anything to do with this, anyone who turned their head, anyone who participated in any form or fashion in this,” Bowdich said in an interview in his office near Beverly Hills. “We are not looking past anyone at this point,” he said. “We have a very open mind on this investigation.” Another major question is why the shooters, Syed Farook and his wife, Tashfeen Malik, chose an annual training of his co-workers for their attack, as opposed to a place with more targets, such as a mall or movie theater. Bowdich said, if Farook and Malik truly had another target, why wouldn’t they have acted in the four hours that passed between the attack and their fatal shootout with police? Investigators also are continuing to try to fill an 18-minute gap in the whereabouts of the husband-and-wife killers following the attack. The agency has a number of tips about the gap, though Bowdich declined to elaborate. Federal authorities have said Farook, a restaurant inspector, and his wife, who came to the U.S. from Pakistan in July 2014 so she could marry him, were radicalized Muslims long before the attack. They amassed ammunition and explosives at their home, and on Dec. 2 donned black commando outfits and face masks and launched their attack. Immediately afterward a post on a Facebook page associated with Malik said the couple pledged allegiance to the leader of Islamic State, according to federal authorities. High court will hear appeal from ex-Va. gov. BY M ARK SHERMAN Associated Press WASHINGTON—TheSupreme Court will hear former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell’s appeal of his corruption convictions. The justices said Friday they will review lower court rulings that upheld the convictions based on what McDonnell says is an overly broad definition of bribery. A jury in September 2014 convicted McDonnell and his wife, Maureen, of doing favors for wealthy vitamin executive Jonnie Williams in exchange for more than $165,000 in gifts and loans. Williams was seeking state university research on his company’s anti-inflammatory product. The Obama administration urged the court to reject the appeal. But Republicans and Democrats who once worked in the Justice Department and White House joined McDonnell in contending that the overly broad definition of bribery on which he was convicted would make a crime of routine actions by elected officials on behalf of their constituents. The case probably will be argued in April and decided by the end of June. The justices have taken on several cases in recent years that claimed prosecutors were too aggressive in their pursuit of whitecollar crimes. In 2010, the court narrowed the use of an anti-fraud law that was central in convicting politicians and corporate executives in many of the nation’s most prominent corruption cases. Last year, the justices also declined to hear the government’s appeal of a lower court ruling that threw out insider trading convictions. McDonnell’s was among eight new cases the justices agreed to hear Friday. Others include: A Missouri church’s challenge to its exclusion from a state program that provides money to use ground-up tires to cushion playgrounds. A dispute about whether a board created to review patents by a 2011 law is jeopardizing innovation by using a standard that favors challenges to patents and invalidating too many patents. An appeal from Microsoft Corp. over a class-action lawsuit by disgruntled owners of the Xbox 360 video-game system who claim the console has a design defect that scratches game disks. A bid by service advisers at auto dealerships who say they are entitled to overtime pay under federal labor laws. The action in McDonnell’s case was not a surprise because the justices voted in August to allow McDonnell to postpone the start of his two-year prison term while his appeal was being considered. Such votes typically signal the court will hear the full appeal. The court will not take up a second issue raised by McDonnell: whether the trial judge did enough to ensure that jurors could be impartial in spite of the heavy news coverage of the McDonnells’ cases in Virginia news outlets. The case is McDonnell v. U.S., 15-474. •STA Sunday, January 17, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 11 WORLD 12 arrested in Indonesia after attacks Drug trial in France leaves man brain dead BY NINIEK K ARMINI Associated Press JAKARTA, Indonesia — Indonesian police said Saturday they have arrested 12 people suspected of links to the Jakarta bombings. The audacious attacks by suicide bombers and gunmen on Thursday that targeted a Starbucks and traffic police post in bustling central Jakarta killed seven people, including two civilians. More than 20 people were injured. It was the first major assault by militants in Indonesia since 2009, and police said the attackers were tied to the Islamic State group through Bahrun Naim, an Indonesian fighting with the group in Syria. National police chief Gen. Badrodin Haiti told reporters that arrests were made in west and east Java and in Kalimantan. Elaborating on an earlier claim that the militants received funding from Bahrun, he said police have determined money was transferred to Indonesia via Western Union. “One of those arrested had received money transferred from ISIS,” Badrodin said, using an acronym for the Islamic State group. Separately, authorities say they have blocked more than a dozen websites expressing support for Thursday’s attack as they try to counter radical Islamic ideology online. Communications Ministry spokesman Ismail Cawidu urged Indonesians to report militant websites and social media accounts. In recent years, Indonesian counterterrorism forces successfully stamped out the extremist group Jemaah Islamiyah, which was responsible for several attacks, including the 2002 bombings of bars in Bali that killed 202 people. Terrorism experts say Islamic State supporters in Indonesia are drawn from the remnants of Jemaah Islamiyah and other groups, but are also trying to recruit new members. BY THOMAS A DAMSON Associated Press SUNDAY A LAMBA /AP Rescuers work at the Splendid Hotel in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, on Saturday after an overnight seizure by al-Qaida-linked extremists. Hotel seized in W. Africa 4 jihadi attackers killed in Burkina Faso capital; 23 others also die BY BRAHIMA OUEDRAOGO Associated Press OUAGADOUGOU, Burkina Faso — The overnight seizure of a luxury hotel in Burkina Faso’s capital by al-Qaida-linked extremists ended Saturday when Burkina Faso and French security forces killed four jihadi attackers and freed more than 126 people, the West African nation’s president said. At least 23 other people from up to 18 different countries were killed in the attack at the Splendid Hotel and nearby Cappuccino Cafe, establishments popular with westerners in Ouagadougou, he said. According to CNN, U.S. forces provided logistical support during the rescue. The United States has about 75 military personnel in Burkina Faso, including 15 assigned to the U.S. Embassy, CNN said, citing a U.S. defense official. An additional 60 help train and advise the French military in the nation. Three attackers were killed at the hotel and a fourth was killed when security forces cleared out a second hotel nearby. Two of the three attackers at the Splendid Hotel were identified as female, President Roch Marc Christian Kabore said on national radio. “We appeal to the people to be vigilant and brave because we must fight on,” said the president when praising the security forces and first responders. He also said the country was grateful for the military cooperation from French and Americans. They helped free at least 126 hostages, and the number of those freed may be as high as 153, he said. In a separate development, Burkina Faso’s Minister of Security and Internal Affairs Simon Compaore said a doctor and his wife kidnapped in Burkina Faso’s north are Australian, correcting earlier reports by the ministry’s spokeswoman that they were Austrian. The two were kidnapped from Djibo, the capital of the northern Soum province in the Sahel near the border with Mali, he said. The couple had been doing volunteer work in the area for years, said a local reporter. The Islamic extremists stormed the hotel and cafe Friday night. A young black woman with dreadlocks and young Arabs entered the cafe shouting Allahu akbar (Arabic for “God is great”), said Issouf Ouattara, who was at the cafe where 10 people were killed in the gunfire. “There was general panic. After about 20 minutes, the situation calmed down and then the firing started again, and I think this time it was the police,” said another witness, Inoussa Diarra. Gunfire ramped up early Saturday as gendarme and military forces fought to take back the building, which had been blackened by a fire during the assault. Onlookers were kept far away from the fighting, which continued into daylight. After the morning call to prayer signaled a new day, security forces took control of the Splendid Hotel and searched nearby hotels for other extremists in hiding. The search continued after security forces found and killed a fourth extremist at the Hotel Yibi, the president said. PARIS — One man was brain dead and three others faced possible permanent brain damage after volunteering to take part in a drug trial for a painkiller based on a natural brain compound similar to the active ingredient in marijuana, French authorities said Friday. The Paris prosecutor’s office opened an investigation into what French Health Minister Marisol Touraine called “an accident of exceptional gravity” at a clinical trial lab in the western French city of Rennes. The trial involved 90 healthy volunteers who were given the experimental drug in varying doses at different times, she told reporters at a news conference in Rennes. Six male volunteers between 28 and 49 years old have since been hospitalized, including one man now classified as brain dead, Touraine said, adding that the other 83 volunteers were being contacted. The drug trial for the six hospitalized men began on Jan. 7 and was halted Monday, a day after the first volunteer fell ill. The chief neuroscientist at the hospital in Rennes, Dr. Gilles Edan, said in addition to the brain-dead man, three other men could have “irreversible” brain damage. A fifth man is suffering from neurological problems, and a sixth man is being kept in the hospital but is in less critical condition, he said. Edan said there’s no known way to reverse the effects of the experimental drug, which was given orally to healthy volunteers as part of a Phase 1 trial by Biotrial, a drug evaluation company based in Rennes, on behalf of the Portuguese pharmaceutical company Bial. Release: Michigan’s Hekmati was in Iran to visit his ailing grandmother FROM FRONT PAGE Three were serving prison terms and now have received a commutation or pardon. Three others were awaiting trial; the last one made a plea agreement. The person in Iran said the four were freed Saturday in exchange for the release of seven Iranians held in U.S. prisons. The release of the prisoners, along with the expected implementation of the nuclear deal and sanctions relief, capped a week of intense U.S.-Iran diplomacy that took an unexpected turn on Tuesday with the detention by Iran of 10 U.S. Navy sailors and their two boats in the Persian Gulf. They were released in less than 24 hours after Kerry intervened with Zarif in multiple telephone calls that administration officials hailed as a channel of communication opened because of the nuclear negotiations. Certification by the International Atomic Energy Agency would allow Iran to immediately recoup some $100 billion in assets frozen overseas. The benefits of new oil, trade and financial opportunities from suspended sanctions could prove far more valuable for Tehran in the long run. Kris Coratti, vice president of communications and a spokeswoman for the Post, said that “while we are hopeful, we have not received any official word of Jason’s release.” Hekmati’s lawyer, Mahmoud Alizadeh Hekmati Tabatabaei, said Hekmati called him earlier Saturday from prison. “He told me that judiciary of- ficials have called for a meeting with him. But I’ve not been formally informed if he is free now,” he said, adding that negotiations for the prisoners’ release has been going on for the past two months. A report by the semi-official ISNA news agency quoted a statement from the Tehran prosecutor’s office as saying the inmates were freed “within the framework of exchanging prisoners.” It did not elaborate. Rezaian was born in California and holds both U.S. and Iranian citizenship. He was convicted in closed proceedings last year after being charged with espionage and related allegations. The Post and the U.S. government have denied the accusations, as has Rezaian, who was the Post’s Tehran correspondent. Hekmati, of Flint, Mich., was detained in August 2011 on espionage charges. Hekmati went to Iran to visit family and spend time with his ailing grandmother. Abedini, of Boise, Idaho, was detained for compromising national security in September 2012. He was sentenced in 2013 to eight years in prison. PAGE 12 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 OPINION Max D. Lederer Jr., Publisher Lt. Col. Michael C. Bailey, Europe commander Lt. Col. Brian Choate, Pacific commander Harry Eley, Europe Business Operations Terry M. Wegner, Pacific Business Operations EDITORIAL Terry Leonard, Editor [email protected] Robert H. Reid, Senior Managing Editor [email protected] Sam Amrhein, Managing Editor International [email protected] Tina Croley, Managing Editor for Content [email protected] Sean Moores, Managing Editor for Presentation [email protected] Joe Gromelski, Managing Editor for Digital [email protected] BUREAU STAFF Europe/Mideast Teddie Weyr, Europe & Mideast Bureau Chief [email protected] +49(0)631.3615.9310; cell +49(0)173.315.1881; DSN (314)583.9310 Pacific Paul Alexander, Pacific Bureau Chief [email protected] +81-3 6385.5377; cell (080)5883.1673 DSN (315)225.5377 Washington Joseph Cacchioli, Washington Bureau Chief [email protected] (+1)(202)761.0908; DSN (312)763.0908 Brian Bowers, Assistant Managing Editor, News [email protected] Amanda Trypanis, Design Desk Supervisor [email protected] CIRCULATION Mideast Robert Reismann, [email protected] +49(0)631.3615.9150; DSN (314)583.9150 Europe Van Rowell, [email protected] +49(0)631.3615.9111; DSN (314)583.9111 Pacific Mari Matsumoto, [email protected] +81-3 6385.3171; DSN (315)229.3171 CONTACT US Washington tel: (+1)202.761.0900; DSN (312)763.0900; 529 14th Street NW, Suite 350, Washington, DC 20045-1301 Reader letters [email protected] Additional contacts stripes.com/contactus OMBUDSMAN Ernie Gates The Stars and Stripes ombudsman protects the free flow of news and information, reporting any attempts by the military or other authorities to undermine the newspaper’s independence. The ombudsman also responds to concerns and questions from readers, and monitors coverage for fairness, accuracy, timeliness and balance. The ombudsman welcomes comments from readers, and can be contacted by email at [email protected], or by phone at 202.761.0587. Stars and Stripes (USPS 0417900) is published weekdays (except Dec. 25 and Jan. 1) for 50 cents Monday through Thursday and for $1 on Friday by Pacific Stars and Stripes, Unit 45002, APO AP 96338-5002. Periodicals postage paid at San Francisco, CA, Postmaster: Send address changes to Pacific Stars and Stripes, Unit 45002, APO AP 96338-5002. This newspaper is authorized by the Department of Defense for members of the military services overseas. However, the contents of Stars and Stripes are unofficial, and are not to be considered as the official views of, or endorsed by, the U.S. government. As a DOD newspaper, Stars and Stripes may be distributed through official channels and use appropriated funds for distribution to remote locations where overseas DOD personnel are located. The appearance of advertising in this publication does not constitute endorsement by the Department of Defense or Stars and Stripes of the products or services advertised. Products or services advertised shall be made available for purchase, use or patronage without regard to race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, marital status, physical handicap, political affiliation or any other nonmerit factor of the purchaser, user or patron. © Stars and Stripes 2016 stripes.com Congress should join terrorism debate Akron Beacon Journal editorial P resident Barack Obama often faces the criticism from the Republican presidential campaign trail and elsewhere about failing to see fully the threat posed by the Islamic State group. Those critics argue that the country must go to war. They overlook that the president already has responded with military might. Airstrikes began more than a year ago. Those strikes have been indispensable to slowing and reversing gains made on the ground by the Islamic State group. The president also has deployed special forces. Are those steps aggressive enough? That is the realm for debate, including the question of what should be expected of this country when the fight lacks a sufficient fighting force from the Arab region to counter the Islamic State group. What better place for a discussion than Capitol Hill? Unfortunately, the Republican majorities in Congress have resisted calls for lawmakers to authorize a war. The president has relied on the authority provided by lawmakers after the Sept. 11 attacks. As he put it last month in speaking to the nation in the wake of the Paris and San Bernardino, Calif., attacks and reiterated last week, Congress should act “to demonstrate that the American people are united and committed to this fight.” The Islamic State group has been described as an “existential threat,” although if it were, the likelihood is that Congress — Democrats and Republicans — already would have rallied to declare war. The more illuminating view is that this is part of a different kind of war, the country having learned hard lessons in the form of 6,874 soldiers dead in Iraq and Afghanistan, the cost approaching $2.5 trillion — or as much as $6 trillion when accounting for injured veterans and the need to restore military hardware. The president has examined the aftermath and expressed an understandable reluctance to extend such a sacrifice. For all the criticism hurled his way, fairly and unfairly, he has taken up the task of shaping an alternative, and it is that discussion Congress should join by debating the question of an updated authorization. No doubt, there are sharp partisan divisions, Democrats preferring to see the president with limited authority, Republicans advocating something broader and more muscular. What a debate would encourage are actual choices, moving away from easy talk on the stump to framing the precise mission and commitment. In the end, compromises may be struck. The positive element for the country would be Congress and the White House showing a united front, both taking responsibility for projecting military power abroad and putting men and women at risk. For now, lawmakers have avoided such a duty, one defined in the Constitution, just as they have not revamped their committees to enhance oversight of counterterrorism (as proposed by the 9/11 Commission) or confirmed an able nominee to lead the Treasury effort in tracking the finances of terrorist organizations. The results are lost opportunities to get better in the fight against terrorism. Google to partner ‘more and more’ on cars BY LEONID BERSHIDSKY Bloomberg View T he narrative about Silicon Valley, Calif., disrupting the auto industry has a flaw: The likes of Google probably aren’t going to build their own vehicles, self-driving or otherwise. Traditional car companies will do it for them, just as outside manufacturers make mobile phones for top Silicon Valley brands. Oh, and the cars probably will have steering wheels. At the annual Automotive News conference in Detroit last week, John Krafcik, who runs Google’s self-driving car project, explained that the tech company was going to “need a lot of help in the next stage of our project” and would be “partnering more and more.” That’s because “automakers have a track record of producing cars at scale,” and Google doesn’t have experience with mass production. The Silicon Valley giant apparently was overambitious when it decided to build its own self-driving vehicles in 2014. Google’s car initiative probably will resemble its Nexus program for mobile devices: Phones and tablets that are made and branded by established manufacturers. They are only Google devices because they come with an unadulterated version of the company’s Android operating system, free from any manufacturer-introduced flavorings. “The reason we build hardware with our ecosystem partners,” Google Chief Executive Officer Sundar Pichai said last year, is “so we can guide the ecosystem forward.” Google, however, doesn’t really build anything: The latest Nexus devices, the 5X and 6P smartphones, are made by LG and Huawei, respectively. Now, 18 months after Google presented its toasterlike test vehicles to the public, it should be clear that carmakers aren’t going to let Silicon Valley companies monopolize the software that’s becoming increasingly important to their business. Last year, German manufacturers pooled resources to buy the Here navigation map business from Nokia. Ford has developed an open- source alternative to Android Auto and Apple CarPlay — the software products that link mobile devices to cars’ computer systems, and Toyota has signed up to use it. It turned out that automakers can produce or source cutting-edge software. They are working on their own self-driving technology, too. TONY AVELAR /AP Riders enter Google’s self-driving prototype car during a demonstration last May at the Google campus in Mountain View, Calif. With car manufacturers wary of letting Google and Apple take over an important part of their product, the Silicon Valley companies have a choice of two strategies: One is to build their own car-manufacturing operation, which is an enormously expensive and risky proposition. The other approach is to outsource, which can be done two ways: The Apple-Foxconn model, in which the Chinese contractor builds devices to Apple’s specifications and under Apple’s brand, and Google’s Nexus model. I suspect that only the second is feasible, even for Apple, which has its own secretive auto program. No major car manufacturer, and probably no major parts maker, will build white-label cars for the tech companies: They have their own strong brands, and they know Apple suppliers would be forced to take huge risks. One reason Google desperately needs a partner is that it’s finding it hard to reinvent the four-wheeled vehicle. It has just made public a report on the 272 cases in 15 months when its test cars’ software told human drivers to take over, and the 69 when the drivers grabbed the wheel because they sensed danger. Google said the events were increasingly rare, but even if their number is cut down drastically, it’s unlikely that Google would be able to fulfill its ambition of producing cars without a steering wheel, accelerator or brake pedal anytime soon. Other companies testing autonomous vehicles also report numerous cases of driver intervention (Tesla is the one exception), but they never entertained the wheel-less fantasy to start with. The self-driving car will be, well, a car — except that it will be able to drive itself most of the time. Compared with today’s vehicles, it will be enhanced, not reinvented. Therefore, it makes little sense for tech companies to compete with traditional car manufacturers and lots of sense to partner with them. There are weaker competitors to beat — for example, Uber and Lyft, which have been “disrupting” transportation. Bloomberg reported in December that Google was planning to set up a separate unit under its Alphabet holding company that would offer rides in self-driving cars for hire. Google’s resources are vastly superior to Uber’s, and if it finds strong manufacturing partners, it can be as disruptive to the new transportation companies as they themselves have been to the taxi business. If that’s the way things work out, though, the car industry may suffer, too. According to a Barclays report last year, the arrival of self-driving cars could reduce vehicle ownership by 50 percent and annual auto demand by 40 percent in 25 years. Carmakers read these predictions, too. It’s likely that they are working on their own plans for self-driving-car-for-hire businesses. Incumbents don’t have to be passive victims as “software eats the world.” Manufacturing prowess still counts, especially when coupled with open-mindedness and flexibility. Leonid Bershidsky, a Bloomberg View contributor, is a Berlin-based writer. Sunday, January 17, 2016 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 13 OPINION Unleash US air power in Afghanistan BY DAVID PETRAEUS M ICHAEL O’H ANLON AND P resident Barack Obama’s desire to avoid large new ground commitments in the Middle East is, in many respects, understandable, given the experiences of some 15 years of war. At present, however, the modest number of U.S. and coalition troops in Afghanistan operate with one hand tied behind their backs — at a time when Afghan forces, though fighting hard, are struggling. That should be changed. We should unleash our air power in support of our Afghan partners in the same way that we support our Iraqi and Syrian partners against extremists. At present, U.S. and NATO air power in Afghanistan is used only to attack validated al-Qaida targets, to counter specific individuals or groups who have attacked coalition forces previously, and to respond directly to attacks on coalition forces. According to leaders on the ground, U.S. and NATO forces are otherwise not allowed to attack Taliban targets. The situation appears to be in flux in regard to Islamic State elements, but through 2015, they, too, could be targeted only under narrow circumstances. The origins of this contorted policy are, once again, somewhat understandable, even if the policy, itself, should be changed. When he was Afghanistan’s president, Hamid Karzai frequently objected to NATO’s use of firepower, especially when tragic accidents took the lives of Afghan civilians. Though this war has probably involved the most carefully controlled air power in the history of warfare, with NATO troops taking extraordinary measures to protect innocents, mistakes inevitably occurred. Karzai’s accumulated frustration led him to increasingly react to such tragedies not just with private outrage but also public excoriation. At times, the mission’s future hung in the balance. To minimize such friction, while also prodding Afghans to view the fight against the Taliban more as their own and less as ours, Obama decided to end NATO targeting of the Taliban in most situations. Also, some administration lawyers harbor concerns that the authorization for the use of military force approved soon after 9/11 does not extend to justify the continued use of force against the Taliban. That is logic we believe unfounded; after all, it was the Taliban that allowed al-Qaida the sanctuary it used to plan the fateful attacks 15 years ago. In addition, the Taliban, in cahoots with the Haqqani network and other extremist elements, is trying to overthrow the very Afghan government that is now committed to keeping al-Qaida and the Islamic State at bay. We have the tools in place to step up our game considerably. When combined with a motivated and competent ground force, air power can be quite effective. This was witnessed in 2001, when U.S. air power and special operatives worked with the Northern Alliance to oust the Taliban from power. It was seen on a vast scale while supporting coalition and host-nation forces in Iraq and Afghanistan — increasing in effectiveness, in fact, as the fleet of drones and other precision-strike assets expanded dramatically over the course of the “surges” in each war. It has also been seen of late in Iraq and Syria, where U.S. air power collaborated with Kurdish forces and other partners in both countries to prevent further inroads by the Islamic State in 2014 and then to liberate places such as Sinjar and Ramadi in Iraq and a number of villages near Kobani in Syria last year. In Syria and Iraq, U.S. and coalition air power has been used increasingly vigorously. In 2014, coalition aircraft dropped ordnance during about 2,000 aircraft sorties; that number grew above 9,000 last year. But we have moved in the opposite di- ROBERT C LOYS/Courtesy of the U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. Ritchie Videna, in the cockpit, and Staff Sgt. Matthew Crabtree, avionics systems technicians of the 455th Expeditionary Aircraft Maintenance Squadron, perform a chaff-and-flare operations check Jan. 8 on an F-16 Fighting Falcon at Bagram Air Field, Afghanistan. rection in Afghanistan. Even though our military footprint there is more firmly established, with nearly 10,000 U.S. troops and 6,000 other foreign troops, and with several major airfields accessible to NATO forces in country, ordnance was dropped during only about 400 sorties last year. The corresponding tally for 2014 was about 1,100; in 2010, it was about 2,500. The Taliban is not winning decisively in Afghanistan by any means, but it has learned that it can mass for attack in many places without fear of NATO airstrikes. Partly as a result, it temporarily took control of the provincial capital of Kunduz in the fall; more recently it has taken large swaths of Helmand province, as well as a number of places in the country’s mountainous east. We do not need a big U.S. troop buildup in Afghanistan, but we should take the gloves off of those who are there. Afghan forces are doing perhaps 99 percent of the fighting on the ground, and that is as it should be — though as the tragic recent casualties in Helmand and near Bagram Air Field reminded us, Americans are certainly still in the fight. The development of the Afghan air force will take a least a few more years. In the meantime, we can and should do more to ensure that the Taliban does not win the war, which could lead to new sanctuaries for al-Qaida and the Islamic State on the eastern flank of their broader area of operations. Vigorous use of the air power we already have in the region is the most logical and straightforward next step for doing so. David Petraeus, a retired Army general and chairman of the KKR Global Institute, and Michael O’Hanlon, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution , wrote for The Washington Post. Old rules limit US forces in a changed Afghan War BY ELI L AKE Bloomberg View A s the Afghanistan War grinds into its 15th year, many U.S. military officers are telling Congress their hands are tied to go after the enemy, particularly the Islamic State, which is building up its presence in the country despite fierce opposition from the Taliban. Current and former U.S. military officials tell me that the U.S. and NATO mission in Afghanistan is almost entirely focused on the re-emergence of al-Qaida and that strikes against Islamic State leaders are scarce. Afghan news media reported one such strike over the weekend in the province of Nangarhar. In July, U.S. airstrikes reportedly killed Hafez Saeed, an Islamic State leader, in what the group has called its Khorasan province. But U.S. officials tell me the rules of engagement in Afghanistan are highly restrictive. “There are real restrictions about what they can do against the ISIS presence in Afghanistan,” Mac Thornberry, the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, told me about the rules of engagement for U.S. forces in Afghanistan. Thornberry said that the rules of engagement, combined with what he called micromanagement from the White House, have led military officers to tell him they have to go through several unnecessary and burdensome hoops before firing at the enemy. “My understanding is it’s a very confused, elaborate set of requirements,” Thornberry said. “I think the effect of going through all of that makes it harder for our people to conduct their missions.” He would not get into specifics about the rules, saying, “If the public were able to know all the restrictions placed on our troops, they would be unhappy about it, and if the enemy knew this they would have more of a leg up than they do now.” Col. Michael Lawhorn, a spokesman for U.S. Forces-Afghanistan, declined to comment on the rules of engagement. Congress is focusing on the rules in Afghanistan after Green Beret Staff Sgt. Matthew McClintock was killed earlier this month in an operation to assist Afghan national security forces in a battle against the Taliban in Marjah, in Helmand province. A news site run by special operations veterans called Sofrep reported this month that the restrictive rules were one reason it took so long for a Quick Reaction Force to come to the aid of McClintock’s Green Berets when they were pinned down in Marjah. A Pentagon spokesman recently disputed an element of that report, saying that an AC-130 gunship was never waved off in the rescue mission and that it fired at Taliban positions in the fight. Nonetheless, some lawmakers are asking more questions. Rep Ryan Zinke, R-Mont., a retired Navy SEAL and member of the House Armed Services Committee, wrote Defense Secretary Ash Carter to ask whether the current rules “restrict the immediate use of assets on hand” in the Marjah rescue operation. Eight other Republican House members also signed the letter. Thornberry told me Pentagon officials have briefed him about the battle, but he still has questions. “I want to know what happened and why and what the other options were,” he told me. “Whether it was formal rules of engagement or having to call back somewhere and ask, ‘Mother, may I?’ ” President Barack Obama intended for this fighting to be over by now. He signed off on a plan to withdraw all U.S. troops from Afghanistan by the end of 2014. At the end of that year, Obama reluctantly agreed to leave a little less than 10,000 U.S. forces in the country. But those forces were no longer technically engaged in a combat mission. They were there to “advise and assist,” to use the military’s favored phrase. In the last year, however, U.S. forces and the Afghan soldiers they advise and assist have been very much involved in combat as the Taliban increases its territory, alQaida expands and the Islamic State begins to establish its own foothold there. This newly complex war, and the importance of rules of engagement, became obvious in October, after U.S. combat aircraft bombed a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, killing 30 civilians. U.S. military officials have said the special operations forces operating the AC-130 gunship that attacked did not follow rules of engagement; they fired even though there was no video feed of the target on the ground. That failure has placed U.S. forces in Afghanistan under greater scrutiny. David Sedney, who served as deputy assistant secretary of defense for Afghanistan, Pakistan and Central Asia between 2009 and 2013, said the rules in Afghanistan were worrisome because they limited how U.S. forces can support their Afghan allies. “The rules of engagement appear to be confused, contradictory and contrary to our national interest,” he told me. “Our inability to use air power to directly to support Afghan forces is leading to a deterioration of the security situation that is dangerous to the future of Afghanistan and dangerous to our national security.” The Obama administration still hopes there won’t be much more fighting to do. On Monday, Afghanistan, China, Pakistan and the U.S. announced meetings aimed at restarting the stalled peace process with the Taliban to finally end the war in Afghanistan. In the meantime, the rules of engagement are written as though that war had already ended. But U.S. forces in Afghanistan are still fighting it, as best they can. PAGE 14 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 AMERICAN ROUNDUP Man, 101, shovels neighbor’s sidewalk ST. PAUL — A 101MN year-old St. Paul man is receiving praise for shovel- THE CENSUS 154 The number of U.S. stores Wal-Mart will close, starting at the end of the month. It has a total of 11,000 stories worldwide. More than 95 percent of the stores that will close are located within 10 miles of another Wal-Mart. The company will shutter all 102 of its U.S. Wal-Mart Express convenience stores. The retailer said it would work to ensure employees are placed in nearby locations. ing the sidewalk of his next-door neighbor after a light snowfall. Another neighbor started recording when he saw Richard Mann shoveling snow on the walkway leading to his neighbor’s house. The video had nearly 787,000 views as of Friday. The neighbor who recorded the video said he usually tries to shovel Mann’s sidewalk, but this time the 101-year-old beat him to it. Mann said he wanted to help his next-door neighbor because the man was out of town and Mann figured he could use the exercise. He assured the neighbor that he wasn’t going to overexert himself because he knows his limitations. Town has no groundhog after mayor got bit SUN PRAIRIE — Sun WI Prairie is without a groundhog for this year’s Groundhog Day festivities, after the animal used at last year’s event bit the former mayor. Images of Jimmy the Groundhog biting then-Mayor Jon Freund’s ear were widely circulated. Afterward, authorities told Jimmy’s owners they needed a license to own a groundhog. That prompted Ti and Jeff Gauger to release Jimmy into the wild. Ti Gauger told the Wisconsin State Journal that organizers of the town’s Groundhog Day event are scrambling for a replacement. Gauger said the city’s event will begin at sunrise Feb. 2 even if no replacement is found. But if a groundhog is found in time, this year it will be kept in a cage to avoid another nibble. Woman had 50 pounds of pot in foosball table LEWISTON — AuthorNY ities said a Canadian woman has been caught trying to smuggle more than 50 pounds of marijuana into western New York by hiding it in a foosball table. The woman told officers she was heading into New York state to buy tickets for Wednesday night’s $1.6 billion Powerball jackpot, but a search by a K-9 team discovered 50 vacuum-sealed plastic bags with marijuana stuffed into a foosball table in her van. Officials said the pot was worth about $60,000. The woman was turned over the New York State Police. The same day in neighboring Vermont, a Canadian man was arrested while pulling a sled carrying more than 180 pounds of prescription pills across the border. Fake cop gets extra 9 to 18 years for robbery HOLLIDAYSBURG — A western Pennsylvania man already in prison for gun offenses must spend 9 to 18 more years behind bars for robbing a drug dealer while pretending to be a narcotics officer. PA JAMES ROBINSON, PENNLIVE.COM /AP Showing them how it’s done Eva Gates, 12, of State College, Pa., rides a mechanical bull Wednesday at the Farm Show in Harrisburg, Pa. The Altoona Mirror reported a Blair County judge on Thursday imposed the sentence against Stephen Espenlaub Jr., 42. Espenlaub was sentenced to seven to 15 years after his March conviction for possession of illegal firearms. The judge refused to allow Espenlaub to serve the sentences concurrently after detectives testified that Espenlaub made it more dangerous for real officers to do their jobs by robbing someone while pretending to be a cop. Girl stabs boy in neck with pencil on bus BATTLE CREEK MI — Authorities said a 13-year-old girl stabbed a boy in the neck with a pencil while they were on a school bus in southern Michigan. Battle Creek police responded Thursday afternoon to the stabbing, which took place after crude comments were being made toward the girl. Police said the 12-year-old boy was treated for minor injuries. Another boy was struck with the pencil, but police said it didn’t penetrate his clothing. The girl was taken into custody by police. Police said she’ll face a felonious assault charge in juve- nile court. Wrongfully jailed man accused of selling meth SEATTLE — A Seattle man who was wrongfully imprisoned a decade and awarded nearly $500,000 from the state is now back in custody. The Seattle Times reported that Brandon Olebar, 32, was accused of selling methamphetamine, driving a getaway car during a burglary and selling stolen guns. Olebar was released in 2013 after spending 10 years in prison for a 2003 burglary and robbery. His conviction was based solely on witness testimony. He was the first person to receive wrongfulconviction compensation from the state. Now he has three ongoing criminal complaints, two in King County Superior Court and another in U.S. District Court, accusing him of new crimes. WA Agency uses decoy cameras on some trains OAKLAND — Some of CA the security cameras aboard San Francisco Bay Area commuter trains are fake. The Oakland Tribune reported Friday that BART Director Gail Murray said some of the cameras are decoys and some are live. The question arose after police refused to say if a killing on a train car on Saturday was captured by security cameras. BART police have been investigating the shooting since Jan. 9, when a man shot a passenger to death as a San Francisco-bound train rolled into the West Oakland station. The transit agency has many surveillance cameras on the station platforms and at the fare boxes. One of those cameras caught images that police have distributed of the gunman leaving the station. Dispute over stirring chili leads to attack DETROIT — Police MI said a dispute over stirring a pot of chili led to an attack that injured two people. Officer Jennifer Moreno said a 26-year-old is accused of attacking his 35-year-old wife and a 30-year-old man who is a family acquaintance around 5:10 a.m. Friday on the city’s west side. Moreno told The Detroit News the acquaintance stirred the pot, which was on the stove. The acquaintance told police the man bit and stabbed him because he “was unhappy about him stirring the chili.” The 26-year-old was arrested. His name wasn’t immediately released. Police find underground shooting range CALWA — Officers in Central California found an underground shooting range after neighbors reported hearing gunfire. The Fresno Bee reported Friday that the Fresno County Sheriff’s Office gang team found the underground range at a home in Calwa, just south of Fresno. Officers found a hole dug into the backyard of a property that people were using guns for target shooting. Sheriff’s spokesman Tony Botti said the hole was covered by heavy blankets and mattresses to prevent the sounds of gunfire from escaping. Neighbors had reported hearing gunfire in the past but thought it was from airsoft guns. Botti said one person was arrested at the house for drug possession and for being a felon in possession of a gun. CA From wire reports •STA Sunday, January 17, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 15 LIFESTYLE JOHN L OK , THE SEATTLE TIMES/TNS When Jonathan Nichols got a new cellphone in 2012, he didn’t expect to get the number once used by hip-hop legend Sir Mix-ALot. Since then, he’s gotten countless calls and texts. Nichols is at the Dick’s Drive-In mentioned in “Posse on Broadway.” He cannot lie Seattle man at first baffled, then amused after getting rapper Sir Mix-A-Lot’s old phone number BY NICOLE BRODEUR The Seattle Times T he first text came not long after Jonathan Nichols got his new phone. “Check this guy out,” it said, with a link to a YouTube video of a guy making beats out of a synthesizer. It was good, Nichols thought, but couldn’t have been meant for him. He was a law student at Seattle University who had just switched to a local number to prepare for the job search ahead. “That’s pretty cool,” Nichols, 33, texted back. “But you clearly have the wrong number.” Then he started getting phone calls from luxurycar dealerships — Ferrari, Lamborghini, Jaguar — all asking if a Mr. Anthony Ray would like to come out to the dealership and take one or two of their cars for a spin. “I’d love to,” Nichols would tell the very polite salespeople. “But I think you have the wrong guy. I’m a broke law student.” Then he started getting pictures of women in bikinis in various states of raunchy repose. So many that Nichols told the sender, “You need to stop.” Finally came the day in August when Nichols was at a softball tournament and his phone started “blowing up off the hook.” Photos of women with lips pursed. Texts that said “Love you,” and “Happy Birthday.” A photo of a bottle of “Big Bottom” whiskey. More women. More lips and kisses. And one telltale reference to the 1992 rap hit “Baby Got Back.” No way, Nichols thought. After the tournament, he and his friends Googled Seattle hip-hop legend Sir Mix-A-Lot. His real name? Anthony Ray. His birthday? Aug. 12. That very day. “That’s when it all made sense,” Nichols, 33, said one recent afternoon. The phone number he had picked out at the Verizon store just because it was easy to remember had a previous owner no one could forget: Sir Mix-A-Lot, the Sir Mix-A-Lot’s advice for the man who was given the rapper’s old cellphone number: “Don’t check any text messages in front of your wife. That would be the first thing. And don’t answer any texts by saying ‘Yes,’ because people take ‘Yes’ differently with me. And usually you end up opening your wallet.” “Tell him any really sexy pictures — little in the middle, and if she’s got much back — give them the new number.” man behind “Baby Got Back,” “Posse on Broadway” and founder of Rhyme Cartel Records. “Are you serious?” the rapper said when I called him — on his new number — to tell him about Nichols. “That is hilarious. Poor fella.” What would he have told Nichols before the technological torch was passed? “Don’t check any text messages in front of your wife,” the rapper advised. “That would be the first thing. And don’t answer any texts by saying ‘Yes,’ because people take ‘Yes’ differently with me. And usually you end up opening your wallet.” Like with the car dealerships. “That’s why I’m telling him, ‘Don’t say yes.’ ” Nichols, a public-interest attorney with Moriarty and Associates, has been tracking his adventures in Mix-land on his Facebook page. Friends have suggested he start a blog with a sampling of the texts: “Hi Ray (Minista) pls info if u attending freestyle explosion and locale details. Thanks in advance.” Nichols didn’t respond, then got another text: “O.K. silence got it brush.” Another: “What up bro this is SupaSam. I’m having a morning show in-studio Christmas party. I need you to come through!” There have also been offers for free concert tickets and visits backstage, which Nichols has found tempting. Why not just show up at the appointed place at the appointed time and see what happens? “But ‘no false representations’ is one of the rules of the bar,” Nichols says, ruefully. Nichols has saved only one voice message, from a woman with a New Jersey area code. He found it on his phone and handed it to me for a listen. “This used to be Sir Mix-A-Lot,” a woman says with a smile in her voice. “You get someone calling you talking about they be Snoop Dogg, they really are. Lucky you.” Nichols got the new number so he would be local when he started looking for a job. But it turned out to be a secret weapon, a way to stand out and be cool by pure coincidence. “When interviewers have asked me, ‘What’s something interesting that no one else knows?’ or when people I meet working political campaigns tell me about meeting Bill Clinton, I always say, ‘I have Sir Mix-ALot’s old phone number.’ “It’s a total mic drop.” And one that comes with one very specific responsibility, according to the previous owner. “Tell him any really sexy pictures — little in the middle, and if she’s got much back — give them the new number,” the rapper said with a laugh, then paused. “But not the car dealerships.” PAGE 16 •STA R S ST A N D R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 MUSIC DAV I D B O W I E 1947-2016 Icon’s songwriting transcended image BY R ANDALL ROBERTS Los Angeles Times A mong the many appreciations and celebrations likely published about David Bowie in coming days, readers will learn about his standing as a style icon, a groundbreaking avatar of sexual fluidity and a shape-shifting artist who expanded the possibilities in rock ’n’ roll performance. But Bowie the icon is nothing without Bowie the songwriter. Yes, in public, he played with image and identity in ways that will continue to influence generations. Nestled within these visual creations, though, rests the reason for his enduring fame: the music, and his skill as a lyrical storyteller. “The dressing of a show is just a dressing. It’s a sort of perfunctory kind of thing,” Bowie told interviewer Russell Harty in 1975, a few years after Bowie had become a superstar as Ziggy Stardust. “But the content has to stand. I mean, you can dress a show with a trillion dollars — or trillion pounds — worth of goodies, but if the show is not substantial, there will be no impact.” Pressed further, Bowie replied, “I know what songs I’m going to sing, which is the most important thing.” Listen to his breakout hit, “Space Oddity,” and the sensation of travel to the outer limits remains sublimely cosmic. The work’s first lines, a countdown to blast-off, could be the opening lyrics of Bowie’s chapter one, his “Call me Ishmael.” It’s 1969. We’re going on a trip to the moon, and soon Our Hero will be floating in space. David Bowie Blackstar (ISO/Columbia Records) Two days before his death, David Bowie released “Blackstar,” his 26th album, which serves as a fitting musical epitaph. On “Blackstar,” he transforms himself once again, proving that at 69, he still had plenty of surprises up his musical sleeve. Recording primarily with an avant-garde jazz quartet and with a longtime collaborator, coproducer Tony Visconti, Bowie crafted a haunting, seven-song collection that deals thematically with death and despair — and now will be endlessly parsed for clues about his own impending mortality. Far from being depressing, the album The arc of his musical life ascended along with that rocket. Once aloft, Bowie transmitted universal songs about star men who communicated via FM radio waves, about humans longing to explore, and getting lost in the process. He penned works about isolation, self-reflection, the rush of enthusiasm that comes with new life and being “strung out in Heaven’s high, hitting an all time low.” As the years went on and his body gave way, he frequently addressed death and decay. feels uplifting and relentlessly inventive. Credit, of course, goes to Bowie, but his new playmates here keep pace with him note for note, especially drummer Mark Guiliana, whose persistent beats provide an earthly tether to Bowie’s often ethereal vocals, and saxophonist Donny McCaslin, whose bleating playing often gives the project a deliberately off-kilter, discordant feel. Whether on the disturbing title track, which ties together two seemingly disparate tunes and is rumored to be about ISIS, the narrated-from-heaven tale “Lazarus,” or the album closer, “I Can’t Give Everything Away,” Bowie has — for the last time — reinvented not only himself, but popular music in a way that challenges, but never alienates, the listener. It’s an appropriate and satisfying musical goodbye. — Melinda Newman Associated Press That essence, that uniquely Bowie-ian way with lyric and melody, wasn’t something that could be commoditized or compromised. But somehow these oblique songs hit on an international scale. “Ashes to Ashes” is about addiction and existential dread: “The shrieking of nothing is killing me” isn’t a line you’d expect near the top of the charts, yet there it was. Many children of the 1990s first heard Bowie through Nirvana when the band performed “The Man Who Sold the World” on MTV Unplugged. When sung by a gravelly Kurt Cobain, himself struggling with addiction, the version felt like a portent. Conjuring a mysterious interaction in a stairway, Bowie’s words echoed with new meaning: “I thought you died alone, a long long time ago.” Those odd turns of phrases, the way he snatched bits of strange dialogue and turned them into foundations, are what defined Bowie the lyricist. Every line acted as its own portal. Each was its own chapter in an ongoing saga. But they were sturdy enough to withstand reinvention. Consider a scene from Wes Anderson’s “The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou,” where Brazilian musician Seu Jorge serves as Greek chorus while covering Bowie’s songs. Stripped of Bowie’s glamour, his style and everything but a man singing about life on Mars and the importance of turning “to face the strange,” the simply rendered songs remain unsinkable. Throughout his career, Bowie never professed to be an intellectual or begged for a podium. He was reluctant in front of a microphone when he wasn’t performing. But he did have a singular passion. “Do I worship anything? Life. I very much love life,” he said in 1973. Four decades later he suggested another passion during one of his final songs, from “Blackstar.” “I’ve got drama, can’t be stolen,” he sang during “Lazarus.” It’s a song about being untethered, drifting away, of being lost but having nothing left to lose. It’s not hard to hear the voice of Major Tom when Bowie sings, “I’m so high it makes my brain whirl — dropped my cellphone down below.” David Bowie, the infinitely changeable, fiercely forward-looking songwriter, released “Blackstar,” his 26th album, on Jan. 8, his 69th birthday, and two days before his death. M ARTIN RICKETT, PA WIRE-ZUMA PRESS/TNS •STA Sunday, January 17, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 17 MUSIC AP Moments that shaped his varied career BY JILL L AWLESS ‘Hunky Dory’ ‘Space Oddity’ Bowie first displayed his knack for seizing the zeitgeist with this out-of-this-world track released in 1969, the year of the first moon landing. Beautiful and melancholy, it told the story of astronaut Major Tom, adrift in space, lamenting “Planet Earth is blue and there’s nothing I can do.” Real-life astronauts embraced the song, with Cmdr. Chris Hadfield memorably performing it aboard the International Space Station in 2013. Bowie appeared on the cover of this 1971 album as an androgynous figure with long golden locks — one in an ever-changing array of styles and personas he would adopt and abandon. The songs explored sexual ambiguity, fame, new fatherhood and more. “Changes” was almost a career mission statement, while “Life on Mars,” the tale of a misfit girl and her wild imagination, became one of his most enduring hits and gave its name to a 2006 TV show set in the 70s. I Associated Press t took years of hard work for David Jones to become David Bowie. The aspiring artist was a teen popster, a hippy-ish folkie and a purveyor of novelty records (“The Laughing Gnome,” best forgotten), before emerging from his chrysalis to become one of the most unpredictable and influential figures in music. Here are 10 defining moments from the career of rock’s greatest chameleon. ‘Young Americans’ Ziggy Stardust After Bowie killed off Ziggy in 1973, he moved through guises including the edgy Aladdin Sane before going to the United States and immersing himself in the sound of Philadelphia soul. Produced by frequent collaborator Tony Visconti and featuring a roster of funk and soul talent that included guitarist Carlos Alomar and a young Luther Vandross, his 1975 album “Young Americans” was a complete change of pace, and featured the exuberant title track and the acid-tipped dancefloor-filler “Fame,” co-written by John Lennon. ‘The Man Who Fell to Earth’ Bowie was perfectly cast as an alien adrift in the New Mexico desert in Nicholas Roeg’s 1976 film, which opened up a parallel career path as an actor. He went on to play parts including a World War II prisoner of war in “Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence,” a vampire in “The Hunger,” Pontius Pilate in “The Last Temptation of Christ” and Andy Warhol in “Basquiat.” On Broadway, critics praised him as disfigured Victorian John Merrick in “The Elephant Man” in 1980. ‘Heroes’ Exhausted by work and too much cocaine, Bowie holed up in West Berlin in 1976, and — working with synth pioneer Brian Eno — produced three of the most remarkable albums of his career. “Low,” “Heroes” and “Lodger” fused electronic experimentation and Cold War anxiety into a sound that inspired a new crop of musicians. The 1977 single “Heroes,” a defiant shout of love in the face of potential armageddon, became an anthem for a generation. ILLUSTRATION BY BEV SCHILLING Stars and Stripes Bowie adopted the persona of the flamehaired alien rock star for his 1972 album “The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars.” A generation of teenagers stopped and stared when the andro- gynous, seductive character appeared on British TV show “Top of the Pops” performing “Starman.” Ziggy made Bowie a star, but even then he was clear-eyed about the capricious nature of fame and ruthless about moving on: “When the kids had killed the man, we had to break up the band,” he sang on the album’s title track. ‘Ashes to Ashes’ Courtesy of Shore Fire Media “Ashes to ashes, funk to funky, we know Major Tom’s a junkie”: The first single from Bowie’s 1980 album “Scary Monsters (and Super Creeps)” is a bittersweet sequel to “Space Oddity” that Bowie called his epitaph for the 1970s. It also saw him looking to the future and embracing the new art form of music videos, with an eerie clip in which Bowie appeared as a spectral Pierrot alongside figures from London’s emerging New Romantic scene. ‘Let’s Dance’ Bowie embraced the mainstream — or the mainstream finally caught up with him — in 1983 for one of his biggest albums, considered by many to be the last flourish of his golden period. “Put on your red shoes and dance the blues,” Bowie sang, and the fans obeyed, flocking to shows on a monster North American tour. ‘Blackstar’ Another surprise album was released Jan. 8, Bowie’s 69th birthday — a jazz-inflected journey that saw Bowie continuing to explore new sonic worlds. In the video for the title track, a blindfolded Bowie offered enigmatic incantations on life and death. Two days later, Bowie died aged 69, following a battle with cancer. Music writer Graeme Thomson captured the shock felt by many: “We were so thrilled to have him back, we failed to notice he was saying goodbye,” he tweeted. ‘The Next Day’ After a decade of public silence, Bowie took fans and music critics by surprise in 2013 with a new album, “The Next Day.” It saw the musician looking back on songs such as “Where Are We Now,” which referenced his 1970s Berlin days. Fans hoped — in vain — that the new songs meant Bowie might return to live performance. PAGE 18 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 ENTERTAINMENT Big leap into fantasy K IRSTY G RIFFIN, MTV/TNS Poppy Drayton is Amberle on the fantasy TV series “The Shannara Chronicles, ” MTV’s first foray into a magical fantasy-type program. Network pins hopes on ‘The Shannara Chronicles’ BY STEVEN ZEITCHIK Los Angeles Times S ince its Buggles-led inception nearly 35 years ago, MTV has been the arbiter of cool — unearthing bands, genres of reality television and of course the very idea of a music video. But the winds have shifted, and the network is now seeking a different sort of magic: the actual kind. The network has launched a story of elves, trolls, dwarfs and a formidable demonic presence that has nothing to do with Ozzy. The series is “The Shannara Chronicles,” and it turns work from an old novelistic master, Terry Brooks, into a movie-style epic as well as an intimate story of millennials in search of love and identity. (Millennial actors, anyway, because this actually takes place in a future millennium.) Spells are cast, mysterious trees are guarded, and secret powers are tapped into. “The fantasy genre has become much cooler,” said Mina Lefevre, who heads scripted development at MTV. “Even and especially for females, who are a big part of our audience, the nerd factor has dropped from it. Ten years ago, this would have been a very different discussion.” Yes, the network of “Real World” and “Jersey Shore” is now channeling Tolkien. “Shannara” is a counterpart of sorts to HBO’s “Game of Thrones” and seeks both to ride that wave and set itself apart from it, though whether it can do both simultaneously is among the more interesting questions of the winter television window. Nor is it just genre that makes “Shannara” a significant bet for MTV. Self-acknowledged as the most expensive original production in the network’s history, the series’ 10 episodes were shot in New Zealand, “Lord of the Rings” style, and come with a top creative pedigree. It includes the “Smallville” creators Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, who developed, sold and write on the show; “Battle: Los Angeles” director Jonathan Liebesman, who directed the first episode; and “Iron Man” director Jon Favreau, who serves as an executive producer. “We’re going for something big and epic,” Favreau said. “The beauty and the scope is something that I don’t think has quite been done a lot on the small screen before.” “Chronicles” derives from “The Elfstones of Shannara,” the second book in Brooks’ original “Shannara” trilogy. Published in 1982, it was an early entry in the oeuvre of Brooks, a fantasy author who both preceded the heyday of George R.R. Martin and makes him look like a mini- malist. Over dozens of novels and short-story collections, spinoffs and mainline mythologies, Brooks follows the stories of many generations in the Four Lands, a future place where cataclysmic wars among humans have yielded a new order. In this vaguely North American topography, an unnamed holocaust has long wiped out most of the humans, leaving various troll, dwarf, elf and other species to endure. Theirs is a pre-industrial, forest-dwelling, horse-riding existence, and the groups sometimes battle one another, as well as a set of demonic presences tenuously trapped in a place called the Forbidding. By adapting “Elfstones,” MTV has availed itself of the opportunity for two demo-friendly lead protagonists — Wil Ohmsford (Austin ButYes, the network ler), a 20-ish healer who in the opening two-hour of “Real World” special is first beginning and “Jersey Shore” to discover his powers after a tragedy, and Amis now channeling berle Elessedil (Poppy Tolkien. Drayton), an anointed daughter of sorts who lends the proceedings a strong, Hunger Games-style heroine. Starting with a contest Amberle wins to become part of the Chosen (a kind of inner circle guarding a mystical tree), the debut soon sets Amberle on a quest outside her elfin kingdom, where she will meet Wil, on his own journey. The larger political context — it is here where “Shannara” gets most “GOT”-like — has the elves (looking and acting like humans, though with pointy ears that stigmatize them) prepare for war against a longtime enemy. Inevitably, Amberle and Wil’s quest plays into this. Despite the complex back stories and stylized costumes, creators are hoping for a thematic relevance. This is a story of young people finding themselves, and their behaviors and dilemma are not that different from those of a young person today. “These are mutations of humans — not Narnia, not Westeros, not Middle-earth,” said Gough. “It’s our world, thousands of years in the future, and I think that makes it different than a lot of the material that’s come before.” “Shannara” also is in keeping with the modern trend of putting young women on an equal playing field in genre stories, with Amberle as well as Eretria (Ivana Baquero), an outlaw scavenger with a co-lead role. “These are two extraordinary female characters who are very different — they have conversations and a journey that isn’t about romance. Yes, that’s a part of it, but they also have real problems, real dilemmas, real strength that will all be relatable to a contemporary female audience,” Millar said. It would be both correct and overly simple to call “Shannara” a basic-cable answer to “Thrones.” The idea of bringing a cinematic rigor to the fantasy genre and to introduce it to legions of fans who may not dedicate themselves to it on a regular basis certainly runs parallel. But “Shannara” will not go for the big provocations of “GOT,” a factor that may slightly slow its social-media traction but will also avoid that show’s tendency to polarize its viewing base. There’s not likely to be a massacre of main characters. In that vein, “Shannara” will also, despite the occasional arrow battle or amorous exchange, not move in a hard-R direction — Favreau called this show “just a little bit softer” — which, unlike “Thrones,” will make younger teens more likely to watch it (or more accurately, their parents to sanction it). Millennials’ interest in “Shannara” (MTV’s core demographic is 12- to 24-year-olds) could be tempered by the period of the source material. The target audience is certainly unlikely to be familiar with Brooks’ books, and it’s an open question whether the ’80s-era material will speak to 21st-century young people. Series principals who are in that demographic say that it will. “It may look like this classic fantasy world, but there’s a lot of unrequited love, love triangles, slight jealousy and the messiness of love, which always resonates,” said Drayton, the 24-year-old British actress who plays Amberle. “It’s about young people trying to find out who they really are. I think MTV audiences can relate to that. We all can relate to that.” The network, for its part, is hoping that its large-scale production values — not to mention the sheer novelty of the gamble — will help attract viewers. “This is an undertaking that I don’t think MTV has done before and frankly basic cable doesn’t really take on very often,” Lefevre said. “I think the audience is going to be surprised. They would have expected that we’d do another teenager with another superpower. And this is unexpected. That will be good for them, and I think it’s good for us. The MTV brand has always been provocative and pioneering, and this keeps us moving in that direction.” Sunday, January 17, 2016 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 19 CROSSWORD AND COMICS NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD GUNSTON STREET “Gunston Street” is drawn by Basil Zaviski. Email him at [email protected]. Online: gunstonstreet.com. RESULTS FOR ABOVE PUZZLE PAGE 20 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 GADGETS & CHARTS GADGET WATCH Get your groove on with these great goods BY GREGG ELLMAN/Tribune News Service T here are some really cool products here in my office, so here’s a little bit about a bunch of “stuff” I have piling up — some new, some not so new. ILLUSTRATION BY C HRISTOPHER SIX /Stars and Stripes France finds use for ‘Le doggy bag’ BY JENNY STARRS The Washington Post M any highbrow French foodies perceive doggy bags as American and, synonymously, uncouth. But “Un doggy bag, s’il-vous plait,” might become a more common request if environmentalists have their way. A new law in France requires large restaurants to provide takeaway containers, or “les doggy bags,” to any customers who ask for one. Aimed at cutting back on food waste, the initiative launched at the beginning of 2016 and applies to establishments with at least 150 diners a day, reports France24. More than 100 restaurants in Paris are already in compliance with the new regulation, but shifting behaviors is another thing entirely. As one opinionated diner told Reuters, “It’s not in the French culture; it never has been. How come Americans wear a revolver on their belt and French people don’t?” Point taken. But are doggy bags really American? Today’s doggy bags are actually the descendant of a tradition among Roman nobility that was, surprisingly, a sign of courtesy. In the 6th century B.C., banquet guests wrapped their leftovers in napkins and brought them home, etiquette expert Dorothea Johnson wrote in her book “Tea & Etiquette: Taking Tea for Business and Pleasure.” It was considered rude to do otherwise, as if to say the food was not good. The practice stagnated until the scarcity of the WWII years, when the modern doggy bag was born.In the 1940s, food shortages affected Americans of all classes. Economical pet owners were encouraged to minimize waste by feeding their dogs table scraps, says Smithsonian Magazine. Eateries started offering leftover food packets for patrons to bring home to their pets. Eventually, Americans realized that Fido doesn’t need foie gras, and got take-away containers for themselves. By the 1980s, America had firmly latched on to doggy bags. People around the world eventually warmed up to the idea, too. But France has been a holdout, until the government gave them a gentle push earlier this month. GOgroove’s BlueSYNC RST alarm clock is a great nightstand all-in-one with a dual alarm clock, near field communication pairing, charging station, wireless (Bluetooth) speaker, FM radio and even a mic for handsfree calls. For charging, put your device on the built-in holder and plug in your charging cable to the USB port. Online: gogroove.com; $59.99 The Ventev USB Charginghub 400 should be on every kitchen counter for every family. It charges four devices at once with 5.4 amps of power to divide among the four. It runs off of AC itself and works great. Just buy it. Online: mobileaccessories. ventev.com; $34.06 The Plantronics backbeat Fit Bluetooth headphones are obviously wireless, and they’re also comfortable, waterproof sport earbuds that allow you to safely hear your surroundings. The eight-hour battery is nice, too. The earbuds are attached with a flexible headband, which reverses for easy storage. There’s also a built-in mic for calls. Online: plantronics.com; $97 The TaoTronics TT-SK06 Bluetooth Speaker rocks, looks great and doesn’t take up a lot of room. It’s portable, has an internal 4000mAh rechargeable battery, good for six hours and a lifetime guarantee from Tao- Tronics. Just don’t lose it, as I’m sure the guarantee is only for performance issues. Online: taotronics.com; $54.57 The Magellan MiVue 658 HD dash camera MiVue 658 gives you high-quality video in full 1080p HD and is very easy to set up and use from the dash of your car. Obviously it’s not for filming your vacation, but it does a great job filming some fun stuff and recording video in the unfortunate event of an accident. If you have an accident, according to Magellan, “the built-in G-Shock Impact Sensor automatically locks the recorded video footage, location data, and date/time information prior to the incident providing an accurate record of events.” If you need still images of the incident, take the dash cam and switch it to camera mode since it has an internal battery to keep it going outside of the car. You can connect the dash cam to Wi-Fi to watch, save or share your videos. Other features include a wide-angle lens to record in any angle with the rotating mount. The lens is a bright anti-glare F Lens which is described as able to reduce glare and absorbs reflection. Online: magellangps.com; $199.99 BRACKETRON /TNS The Bracketron JamSpot Bluetooth tablet stand does it all for tablet users. It keeps your tablet handsfree in portrait or landscape position in angles from zero to 70 degrees. On the bottom is a pair of built-in speakers to give you much better sound than the tablet itself. There’s also a rechargeable battery to power the speakers. When the stand isn’t in use, fold it up and stick in a drawer. Online: bracketron.com; $49.99 INNOD EVICE /TNS InnoWave wired headphones sound great, but what gets me excited is the styled, branded, wavy and expandable headband that attaches to the soft padded ear cups. Online: innodevice.com/ innowave; $99 (in five colors) M AGELLA N /TN S ITUNES MUSIC SPOTIFY MUSIC ITUNES MOVIES VIDEO GAMES The top 10 songs for the week ending Jan. 1: The most streamed tracks on Spotify from Jan. 1-7: The top 10 movies on iTunes for the week ending Jan. 10: Game Informer ranks the Top 10 Xbox One games for January: The top iPhone apps for the week ending Jan. 10: 1. “Love Yourself,” Justin Bieber 2. “Hello,” Adele 3. “Sorry,” Justin Bieber 4. “Stressed Out,” twenty one pilots 5. “Stand By You,” Rachel Platten 6. “I Know What You Did Last Summer,” Shawn Mendes & Camila Cabello 7. “My House,” Flo Rida 8. “Roses” (feat. ROZES), The Chainsmokers 9. “Ex’s & Oh’s,” Elle King 10. “Confident,” Demi Lovato 1. “Love Yourself,” Justin Bieber 2. “Sorry,” Justin Bieber 3. “What Do You Mean?”, Justin Bieber 4. “Hello,” Adele 5. “Jumpman,” Drake 6. “Me, Myself & I,” G-Eazy, Bebe Rexha 7. “Hotline Bling,” Drake 8. “Roses,” The Chainsmokers 9. “Stressed Out,” Twenty One Pilots 10. “Don’t,” Bryson Tiller 1. “Sicario” 2. “Straight Outta Compton” (Unrated Director’s Cut) 3. “The Martian” 4. “The Visit” 5. “Sleeping with Other People” 6. “The Walk” 7. “Trainwreck” 8. “Cop Car” 9. “A Walk in the Woods” 10. “Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation” 1. “Rise of the Tomb Raider,” Microsoft 2. “Fallout 4,” Bethesda 3. “Call of Duty: Black Ops III,” Activision 4. “Assassin’s Creed Syndicate,” Ubisoft 5. “Halo 5: Guardians,” Microsoft 6. “Divinity: Original Sin Enhanced Edition,” Focus Home Interactive 7. “Life is Strange,” Square Enix 8. “Just Cause 3,” Square Enix 9. “Rainbow Six Siege,” Ubisoft 10. “Star Wars Battlefront,” Electronic Arts 1. Minecraft: Pocket Edition 2. Heads Up! 3. KIMOJI 4. Geometry Dash 5. Akinator the Genie 6. Facetune 7. Minecraft: Story Mode 8. Plague Inc. 9. THE GAME OF LIFE Classic Edition 10. MONOPOLY — Compiled by AP — Compiled by AP — Compiled by AP — Compiled by TNS APPS — Compiled by AP Sunday, January 17, 2016 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 21 PAGE 22 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 BUSINESS/WEATHER 2016 stock slide is markets’ worst ever BY A LEX VEIGA Associated Press Never before has Wall Street gotten off to a worse start to a year. The stock market capped the first two weeks of 2016 with a steep slide Friday that sent the Dow Jones industrial average down nearly 400 points. All three major stock indexes — the Dow, the Nasdaq composite and the Standard & Poor’s 500 — are now in what’s known as a correction, or a drop of 10 percent or more from their recent peaks. The market has been on a stomach-churning ride since the start of the year because of alarm over a slowdown in China and the plunging price of oil to its lowest level in 12 years. Investors are already seeing damage to U.S. corporate profits, particularly at energy companies. The Dow slid 390.97 points, or 2.4 percent, to 15,988.08. The average had been down more than 500 points early in the afternoon. The S&P 500 ended down 41.51 points, or 2.2 percent, at 1,880.33. The Nasdaq dropped 126.59 points, or 2.7 percent, to 4,488.42. The Dow and S&P 500 have now fallen about 8 percent this year, while the Nasdaq is off about 10 percent. “Oil is the root cause of today,” said Dan Farley, regional investment strategist at the Private Client Reserve at U.S. Bank. “People are uncertain, and when they’re uncertain, they’re scared.” Crude oil has dropped below $30 a barrel from a high of over $100 during the summer of 2014. On Friday, Williams Cos. led a slide among oil, gas and mining companies, falling $2.19, or 12 percent, to $16.10. Investors also got some discouraging economic news on Friday: The Federal Reserve said U.S. industrial production, which includes manufacturing, mining and utilities, dropped in December for the third month in a row. And another government report indicated U.S. retail sales dipped. Many investors expected oil prices would stabilize. After a market correction in August, few forecast it would happen again so soon. And the Federal Reserve’s move in December to raise interest rates for the first time in nearly 10 years signaled to many that the U.S. economy was healthy. Despite the rough start, Wall Street watchers are not ready to say the bull market is over. Intel dropped 9.1 percent after the chipmaker posted its fourthquarter results, noting its personal computer business continues to slump. The stock was the biggest decliner in the Dow. It fell $2.98 to $29.76. Benchmark U.S. crude fell $1.78, or 5.7 percent, to $29.42 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils, fell $1.94, or 6.3 percent, to $28.94 a barrel in London. Stocks opened higher in Europe but quickly fell. Germany’s DAX lost 2.5 percent, while France’s CAC 40 dropped 2.4 percent. Britain’s FTSE 100 fell 1.9 percent. In China, the Shanghai Composite Index slid 3.6 percent to its lowest close in 13 months. China’s official Xinhua News Agency reported that new bank loans during the last month fell from a year earlier, another sign that the country’s economic growth is slowing from the torrid pace of the past few years. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng dropped 1.5 percent. Japan’s Nikkei 225 lost 0.5 percent and South Korea’s Kospi 1.1 percent. MARKET WATCH EXCHANGE RATES Military rates Euro costs (Jan. 18) ..........................$1.1244 Dollar buys (Jan. 18) ........................ €0.8894 British pound (Jan. 18) ........................ $1.47 Japanese yen (Jan. 19) ......................115.00 South Korean won (Jan. 19) ..........1,181.00 Commercial rates Bahrain (Dinar) ....................................0.3765 British pound .....................................$1.4263 Canada (Dollar) ...................................1.4540 China (Yuan) ........................................6.5861 Denmark (Krone) ................................6.8419 Egypt (Pound) ...................................... 7.8320 Euro ........................................ $1.0913/0.9163 Hong Kong (Dollar) ............................. 7.7931 Hungary (Forint) ................................. 289.11 Israel (Shekel) ..................................... 3.9616 Japan (Yen)........................................... 117.00 Kuwait (Dinar) .....................................0.3040 Norway (Krone) ...................................8.8359 Philippines (Peso)................................. 47.86 Poland (Zloty) .......................................... 4.11 Saudi Arabia (Riyal) ........................... 3.7490 Singapore (Dollar) ..............................1.4399 South Korea (Won) ..........................1,216.70 Switzerland (Franc)............................ 1.0019 Thailand (Baht) .....................................36.33 Turkey (Lira) .........................................3.0453 (Military exchange rates are those available to customers at military banking facilities in the country of issuance for Japan, South Korea, Germany, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. For nonlocal currency exchange rates (i.e., purchasing British pounds in Germany), check with your local military banking facility. Commercial rates are interbank rates provided for reference when buying currency. All figures are foreign currencies to one dollar, except for the British pound, which is represented in dollars-to-pound, and the euro, which is dollars-to-euro.) INTEREST RATES Prime rate ................................................ 3.50 Discount rate .......................................... 1.00 Federal funds market rate ................... 0.36 3-month bill ............................................. 0.23 30-year bond ........................................... 2.82 WEATHER OUTLOOK SUNDAY IN THE MIDDLE EAST MONDAY IN THE PACIFIC SUNDAY IN EUROPE Misawa 34/26 Kabul 56/28 Baghdad 65/42 Seoul 45/24 Kandahar 60/31 Kuwait City 71/49 Mildenhall/ Lakenheath 41/33 Bahrain 69/62 Brussels 39/33 Lajes, Azores 60/59 Doha 75/60 Riyadh 76/52 Osan 45/22 Ramstein 35/28 Stuttgart 30/26 Iwakuni 52/42 Sasebo 50/45 Guam 84/77 Pápa 36/25 Aviano/ Vicenza 41/26 Naples 52/39 Morón 57/42 Sigonella 51/48 Rota 63/42 Djibouti 85/75 Tokyo 50/38 Busan 53/33 Okinawa 72/59 The weather is provided by the American Forces Network Weather Center, 2nd Weather Squadron at Offutt Air Force Base, Neb. Souda Bay 65/55 [PUB DAY]’s US temperatures City Abilene, Texas Akron, Ohio Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Allentown, Pa. Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Baton Rouge Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Bridgeport Brownsville Buffalo Burlington, Vt. Caribou, Maine Casper Charleston, S.C. Charleston, W.Va. Charlotte, N.C. Hi 57 25 31 44 36 38 35 42 49 41 57 39 55 20 47 -1 42 36 37 64 28 29 25 32 56 35 48 Lo 32 23 25 25 27 23 21 30 38 31 36 30 39 6 34 -16 30 28 29 45 23 24 17 16 44 28 35 Wthr Cldy Snow Cldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Clr Snow Clr Clr Rain Cldy Cldy Clr Snow Cldy Cldy Cldy Rain Cldy Cldy Chattanooga Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Colorado Springs Columbia, S.C. Columbus, Ga. Columbus, Ohio Concord, N.H. Corpus Christi Dallas-Ft Worth Dayton Daytona Beach Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth El Paso Elkins Erie Eugene Evansville Fairbanks Fargo Flagstaff Flint Fort Smith 46 33 8 27 26 36 55 53 27 31 61 53 24 67 33 1 22 -6 58 31 28 49 29 7 -7 44 19 44 32 18 6 21 23 19 39 40 22 24 40 33 20 60 16 -5 18 -17 35 24 25 42 21 -3 -19 20 15 27 PCldy Cldy Clr Cldy Snow PCldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Clr PCldy Cldy Rain PCldy Clr Snow Clr PCldy Cldy Snow Rain Cldy Clr Clr Clr Snow PCldy Fort Wayne Fresno Goodland Grand Junction Grand Rapids Great Falls Green Bay Greensboro, N.C. Harrisburg Hartford Spgfld Helena Honolulu Houston Huntsville Indianapolis Jackson, Miss. Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Key West Knoxville Lake Charles Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles 18 62 23 33 16 24 4 42 38 35 31 82 55 45 21 51 63 34 13 77 41 55 17 60 33 6 47 67 17 44 12 18 13 7 -5 33 28 25 15 67 41 30 19 34 51 29 10 71 31 41 15 40 24 0 28 49 Cldy Cldy Snow Cldy Snow Cldy Clr Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Clr Cldy PCldy Cldy Clr Cldy Clr Cldy Rain Cldy PCldy Snow PCldy Cldy Clr Clr PCldy Louisville Lubbock Macon Madison Medford Memphis Miami Beach Midland-Odessa Milwaukee Mpls-St Paul Missoula Mobile Montgomery Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark Norfolk, Va. North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Paducah Pendleton Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh 33 51 55 -1 54 44 77 61 3 -4 36 56 53 41 55 38 39 45 17 39 3 70 35 44 10 40 67 29 23 30 40 -5 40 28 69 29 0 -15 25 39 39 27 44 31 31 38 7 27 -3 61 22 33 10 31 45 24 Snow PCldy PCldy Clr Rain Clr Rain PCldy Clr Clr Cldy Clr PCldy PCldy Clr Cldy Cldy Cldy Snow Cldy Clr Rain PCldy Rain Clr Cldy Clr Cldy Pocatello Portland, Maine Portland, Ore. Providence Pueblo Raleigh-Durham Rapid City Reno Richmond Roanoke Rochester Rockford Sacramento St Louis St Petersburg St Thomas Salem, Ore. Salt Lake City San Angelo San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa Fe St Ste Marie Savannah Seattle Shreveport 39 33 47 37 39 43 9 50 42 40 31 4 58 21 67 83 48 38 61 59 65 58 62 39 10 59 49 54 30 24 41 28 17 35 -3 34 34 30 23 1 48 17 63 77 42 29 30 37 51 53 53 19 2 46 43 32 Cldy PCldy Rain Cldy PCldy Cldy Clr Cldy Cldy Cldy Snow Clr Cldy Cldy Rain PCldy Rain Cldy PCldy Clr Cldy Rain Rain PCldy Snow Rain Rain PCldy Sioux City Sioux Falls South Bend Spokane Springfield, Ill. Springfield, Mo. Syracuse Tallahassee Tampa Toledo Topeka Tucson Tulsa Tupelo Waco Washington W. Palm Beach Wichita Wichita Falls Wilkes-Barre Wilmington, Del. Yakima Youngstown 0 -4 13 38 14 30 30 60 69 21 17 67 36 46 54 40 77 25 50 31 41 37 27 -11 -17 13 32 12 19 26 48 64 20 15 39 28 29 32 31 68 21 29 26 31 31 23 Clr Clr Snow Rain Cldy Snow Cldy PCldy Rain Snow Snow Clr Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy Rain Snow Cldy Cldy Cldy Rain Snow National temperature extremes Hi: Fri., 86, Edinburg, Texas Lo: Fri., -17, Fosston, Minn. Sunday, January 17, 2016 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 23 PAGE 24 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 SCOREBOARD Sports on AFN Go to the American Forces Network website for the most up-to-date TV schedules. myafn.net College basketball Friday’s men’s scores EAST Baruch 88, CCNY 79 Canisius 65, Manhattan 62 Elmira 56, Utica 53 Fairfield 73, Niagara 68 Lehman 78, Hunter 61 Maine 81, Albany (NY) 79 Monmouth (NJ) 110, Iona 102 Siena 64, Quinnipiac 52 St. Lawrence 65, William Smith 56 MIDWEST Augustana (SD) 102, St. Cloud St. 63 Bemidji St. 75, Minn. St.-Mankato 74, OT Concordia (St.P.) 76, Minn.-Crookston 69 Crown (Minn.) 117, Martin Luther 113 Dayton 77, George Washington 70 Evansville 66, Illinois St. 55 Minn. St.-Moorhead 78, Sioux Falls 55 Minn.-Morris 85, Bethany Lutheran 64 Minot St. 88, Upper Iowa 83 North Central (Minn.) 84, Wis.-Superior 71 Northern St. (SD) 79, SW Minnesota St. 63 Northland 82, Silver Lake 54 St. Scholastica 81, Northwestern (Wis.) 74 Toledo 78, Akron 64 Wayne (Neb.) 93, Minn. Duluth 85 Winona St. 64, Mary 54 FAR WEST S. Oregon 85, Coll. of Idaho 79 Friday’s women’s scores EAST CCNY 59, Baruch 56 Canisius 54, St. Peter’s 42 Lehman 74, Hunter 64 Marist 62, Iona 61 NYU 48, Emory 45 Northeastern 69, William & Mary 68, OT Quinnipiac 61, Niagara 54 Siena 64, Monmouth (NJ) 54 St. John’s 65, Georgetown 60 Towson 85, Elon 79 Villanova 55, Seton Hall 45 SOUTH Delaware 63, Coll. of Charleston 47 Hofstra 68, UNC Wilmington 64 James Madison 67, Drexel 56 MIDWEST Bethany Lutheran 57, Minn.-Morris 53 Concordia (St.P) 80, Minn.-Crookston 73 DePaul 61, Butler 54 Drake 80, Indiana St. 55 Loyola of Chicago 60, Wichita St. 55 Marantha Baptist 69, Illinois Tech 25 Martin Luther 77, Crown (Minn.) 50 Mary 83, Winona St. 80 Minn. St. (Moorhead) 53, Sioux Falls 52 Minot St. 71, Upper Iowa 69 Missouri St. 55, Bradley 44 N. Iowa 65, Illinois St. 51 Northern St. (SD) 84, SW Minnesota St. 64 Northwestern (Minn.) 74, St. Scholastica 49 St. Cloud St. 81, Augustana (SD) 71 W. Illinois 63, Denver 60 Wayne (Neb.) 68, Minn. Duluth 52 Wis.-Superior 85, North Central (Minn.) 54 Xavier 71, Marquette 66 FAR WEST Arizona St. 64, Colorado 37 Oregon St. 70, California 48 Stanford 64, Oregon 62 Utah 60, Arizona 55 Washington 64, UCLA 56 Washington St. 73, Southern Cal 61 EXHIBITION Minn. St. (Mankato) 82, Bemidji St. 71 College hockey Friday’s scores EAST Boston College 5, Boston U. 3 Penn St. 4, Wisconsin 3, OT UConn 1, Maine 0 Northeastern 4, New Hampshire 2 UMass-Lowell 4, UMass 1 Harvard 3, St. Lawrence 2 Yale 3, Brown 2 RPI 1, Cornell 0 Colgate 4, Union (NY) 2 Providence 3, Vermont 1 Oswego St. 4, Utica 2 Mercyhurst 2, Sacred Heart 1 RIT 3, Bentley 2 Air Force 1, Army 0 Robert Morris 5, Holy Cross 4 Dartmouth 5, Clarkson 2 MIDWEST Michigan 5, Ohio St. 5, OT, OSU wins shootout 3-2 Ala.-Huntsville 3, Ferris St. 3, OT Minn. St. (Mankato) 2, Michigan Tech 2, OT Alaska 3, N. Michigan 2, OT Notre Dame 7, Merrimack 2 St. Cloud St. 3, Minn.-Duluth 1 Bemidji St. 5, Arizona St. 0 Neb.-Omaha 4, North Dakota 3, OT Minnesota 5, Michigan St. 2 FAR WEST Denver 5, W. Michigan 3 Pro football College football Deals NFL playoffs Bowl schedule Friday’s transactions Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 9 Kansas City 30, Houston 0 Pittsburgh 18, Cincinnati 16 Sunday, Jan. 10 Seattle 10, Minnesota 9 Green Bay 35, Washington 18 Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 16 Kansas City at New England Green Bay at Arizona Sunday, Jan. 17 Seattle at Carolina Pittsburgh at Denver Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 24 AFC: Kansas City-New England winner vs. Pittsburgh-Denver winner NFC: Green Bay-Arizona winner vs. Seattle-Carolina winner Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 31 At Honolulu Team Rice vs. Team Irvin Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 7 At Santa Clara, Calif. AFC champion vs. NFC champion Saturday, Dec. 19 Celebration Bowl Atlanta NC A&T 41, Alcorn State 34 New Mexico Bowl Albuquerque Arizona 45, New Mexico 37 Las Vegas Bowl Utah 35, BYU 28 Camellia Bowl Montgomery, Ala. Appalachian State 31, Ohio 29 Cure Bowl Orlando, Fla. San Jose State 27, Georgia State 16 New Orleans Bowl Louisiana Tech 47, Arkansas State 28 Monday, Dec. 21 Miami Beach Bowl Western Kentucky 45, South Florida 35 Tuesday, Dec. 22 Famous Idaho Potato Bowl Boise Akron 23, Utah State 21 Boca Raton (Fla.) Bowl Toledo 32, Temple 17 Wednesday, Dec. 23 Poinsettia Bowl San Diego Boise State 55, Northern Illinois 7 GoDaddy Bowl Mobile, Ala. Georgia Southern 58, Bowling Green 27 Thursday, Dec. 24 Bahamas Bowl Nassau Western Michigan 45, Middle Tennessee 31 Hawaii Bowl Honolulu San Diego State 42, Cincinnati 7 Saturday, Dec. 26 St. Petersburg (Fla.) Bowl Marshall 16, UConn 10 Sun Bowl El Paso, Texas Washington State 20, Miami 14 Heart of Dallas Bowl Washington 44, Southern Mississippi 31 Pinstripe Bowl Bronx, N.Y. Duke 44, Indiana 41, OT Independence Bowl Shreveport, La. Virginia Tech 55, Tulsa 52 Foster Farms Bowl Santa Clara, Calif. Nebraska 37, UCLA 29 Monday, Dec. 28 Military Bowl Annapolis, Md. Navy 44, Pittsburgh 28 Quick Lane Bowl Detroit Minnesota 21, Central Michigan 14 Tuesday, Dec. 29 Armed Forces Bowl Fort Worth, Texas California 55, Air Force 36 Russell Athletic Bowl Orlando, Fla. Baylor 49, North Carolina 38 Arizona Bowl Tucson Nevada 28, Colorado State 23 Texas Bowl Houston LSU 56, Texas Tech 27 Wednesday, Dec. 30 Birmingham (Ala.) Bowl Auburn 31, Memphis 10 Belk Bowl Charlotte, N.C. Mississippi St. 51, NC State 28 Music City Bowl Nashville, Tenn. Louisville 27, Texas A&M 21 Holiday Bowl San Diego Wisconsin 23, Southern Cal 21 Thursday, Dec. 31 Peach Bowl Atlanta Houston 38, Florida State 24 Orange Bowl (Playoff Semifinal) Miami Gardens, Fla. Clemson 37, Oklahoma 17 Cotton Bowl Classic (Playoff Semifinal) Arlington, Texas Alabama 38, Michigan State 0 Friday, Jan. 1 Outback Bowl Tampa, Fla. Tennessee 45, Northwestern 6 Citrus Bowl Orlando, Fla. Michigan 41, Florida 7 Fiesta Bowl Glendale, Ariz. Ohio State 44, Notre Dame 28 Rose Bowl Pasadena, Calif. Stanford 45, Iowa 16 Sugar Bowl New Orleans Mississippi 48, Oklahoma State 20 Saturday, Jan. 2 TaxSlayer Bowl Jacksonville, Fla. Georgia 24, Penn State 17 Liberty Bowl Memphis, Tenn. Arkansas 45, Kansas State 23 Alamo Bowl San Antonio TCU 47, Oregon 41, 3OT Cactus Bowl Phoenix West Virginia 43, Arizona State 42 Monday, Jan. 11 College Football Championship Game Glendale, Ariz. Alabama 45, Clemson 40 Saturday, Jan. 23 East-West Shrine Classic At St. Petersburg, Fla. East vs. West NFLPA Collegiate Bowl At Carson, Calif. National vs. American Saturday, Jan. 30 Senior Bowl At Mobile, Ala. North vs. South BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Agreed to terms with RHP Brad Brach, INF Ryan Flaherty, RHP Miguel Gonzalez, INF Manny Machado, RHP Chris Tillman, and OF/INF Mark Trumbo to one-year contracts. BOSTON RED SOX — Agreed to terms with RHP Joe Kelly on a one-year contract. CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Agreed to terms with OF Avisail Garcia and RHP Zach Putnam on one-year contracts. CLEVELAND INDIANS — Agreed to terms with RHP Cody Allen, OF Lonnie Chisenhall, RHP Josh Tomlin and RHP Jeff Manship to one-year contracts. DETROIT TIGERS — Agreed to terms with INF Jose Iglesias on a one-year contract. HOUSTON ASTROS — Agreed to terms with RHP Josh Fields, INF Marwin Gonzalez, LHP Dallas Keuchel and INF Luis Valbuena on one-year contracts. KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Agreed to terms with LHP Danny Duffy, C Drew Butera, RHP Louis Coleman, C Tony Cruz and OF Jarrod Dyson on one-year contracts. MINNESOTA TWINS — Agreed to terms with INFs Eduardo Escobar and Eduardo Nunez, RHP Casey Fien and LHP Tommy Milone on one-year contracts. NEW YORK YANKEES — Agreed to terms with RHP Michael Pineda and INFOF Dustin Ackley on one-year contracts. Claimed OF Lane Adams off waivers from Kansas City. Designated INF Ronald Torreyes for assignment. OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Agreed to terms with OF Josh Reddick and RHP Fernando Rodriguez on one-year contracts. SEATTLE MARINERS — Agreed to terms with LHP Charlie Furbush and RHP Evan Scribner on one-year contracts. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Agreed to terms with INF Logan Forsythe on a two-year contract and 1B Logan Morrison, RHP Erasmo Ramirez, C Hank Conger and C Rene Rivera on one-year contracts. TEXAS RANGERS — Agreed to terms with C Robinson Chirinos and RHP Tanner Scheppers on one-year contracts. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Agreed to terms with LHP Brett Cecil, RHP Steve Delabar, RHP Drew Hutchison, LHP Aaron Loup, OF Michael Saunders and RHP Drew Storen on a one-year contracts. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Agreed to terms with C Welington Castillo, LHP Patrick Corbin and RHPs Rubby De La Rosa, Randall Delgado, Daniel Hudson and Shelby Miller on one-year contracts. ATLANTA BRAVES — Agreed to terms with RHP Arodys Vizcaino on a one-year contract. CINCINNATI REDS — Agreed to terms with SS Zack Cozart on a one-year contract. COLORADO ROCKIES — Agreed to terms with 3B Nolan Arenado on a oneyear contract. LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Agreed to terms with LHP Luis Avilan, C Yasmani Grandal, RHP Kenley Jansen and INF Justin Turner on one-year contracts. MIAMI MARLINS — Agreed to terms with RHPs Jose Fernandez, Tom Koehler, David Phelps, A.J. Ramos, Carter Capps and Bryan Morris and SS Adeiny Hechavarria on one-year contracts. MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Named Mike Schwartz director of food & beverage hospitality. Agreed to terms with RHP Wily Peralta and LHP Will Smith to oneyear contracts. NEW YORK METS — Agreed to terms with RHP Matt Harvey, SS Ruben Tejada, RHP Carlos Torres, RHP Addison Reed and LHP Josh Edgin on one-year contracts and C Nevin Ashley on a minor league contract. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Agreed to terms with RHP Jeremy Hellickson on a one-year contract. PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Agreed to terms with C Francisco Cervelli, RHP Jared Hughes, RHP Mark Melancon, INF Jordy Mercer and LHP Tony Watson on one-year contracts. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Agreed to terms with RHP Seth Maness, INF-OF Brandon Moss and RHP Trevor Rosenthal on one-year contracts. SAN DIEGO PADRES — Agreed to terms with RHPs Andrew Cashner and Tyson Ross on one-year contracts. NFL injury report NEW YORK — The updated National Football League injury report, as provided by the league: PITTSBURGH STEELERS at DENVER BRONCOS — STEELERS: OUT: WR Antonio Brown (concussion), RB DeAngelo Williams (foot). QUESTIONABLE: RB Will Johnson (hamstring), QB Ben Roethlisberger (right shoulder). PROBABLE: S Will Allen (not injury related), S Robert Golden (shoulder), LB James Harrison (not injury related), DE Cameron Heyward (back), LB Ryan Shazier (knee), TE Matt Spaeth (not injury related), LB Vince Williams (hamstring). BRONCOS: QUESTIONABLE: QB Brock Osweiler (knee). PROBABLE: TE Owen Daniels (knees), LB Todd Davis (shoulder), C Max Garcia (groin), CB Chris Harris Jr. (shoulder), DE Malik Jackson (illness), QB Peyton Manning (foot), LB Brandon Marshall (ankle), LB Von Miller (illness), G Robert Myers Jr. (illness), S Darian Stewart (hamstring), RB Juwan Thompson (illness), S T.J. Ward (ankle), LB DeMarcus Ware (knee). SEATTLE SEAHAWKS at CAROLINA PANTHERS — SEAHAWKS: DOUBTFUL: RB Will Tukuafu (hamstring). PROBABLE: DE Michael Bennett (toe), RB Marshawn Lynch (abdomen), TE Luke Willson (concussion). PANTHERS: OUT: RB Fozzy Whittaker (ankle). QUESTIONABLE: WR Ted Ginn Jr. (knee). PROBABLE: DE Kony Ealy (illness). NFL calendar Jan. 16-17 — AFC and NFC divisional playoffs. Jan. 24 — AFC and NFC championship games. Jan. 31 — Pro Bowl at Honolulu. Feb. 7 — Super Bowl at Santa Clara, Calif. Feb. 23-29 — NFL Combine, Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis. Tennis Hobart International Saturday At The Domain Tennis Centre Hobart, Australia Purse: $226,750 (Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Championship Alize Cornet (7), France, def. Eugenie Bouchard, Canada, 6-1, 6-2. Doubles Championship Han Xinyun, China, and Christina McHale, United States, def. Kimberly Birrell and Jarmila Wolfe, Australia, 6-3, 6-0. Apia International Saturday At Olympic Park Tennis Centre Sydney Purse: Men, $404,780 (WT250); Women, $687,900 (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Championship Viktor Troicki (3), Serbia, def. Grigor Dimitrov (4), Bulgaria, 2-6, 6-1, 7-6 (7). Doubles Men Championship Jamie Murray, Britain, and Bruno Soares, Brazil, def. Rohan Bopanna, India, and Florin Mergea (4), Romania, 6-3, 7-6 (6). ASB Classic Saturday At ASB Bank Tennis Centre Auckland, New Zealand Purse: $463,520 (WT250) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Championship Roberto Bautista Agut (8), Spain, def. Jack Sock, United States, 6-1, 1-0 retired. Doubles Championship Mate Pavic, Croatia, and Michael Venus, New Zealand, def. Eric Butorac and Scott Lipsky (4), United States, 7-5, 6-4. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Agreed to terms with INF Anthony Rendon, RHP Stephen Strasburg, INF Danny Espinosa and OF Ben Revere on one-year contracts. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association CHICAGO BULLS — Assigned F-C Cristiano Felicio to Canton (NBADL). HOUSTON ROCKETS— Recalled G/F K.J. McDaniels fromGrande Valley (NBADL). MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES — Reassigned F James Ennis to Iowa (NBADL). FOOTBALL National Football League NFL — Fined Cincinnati CB Adam Jones $28,940 for contact with an official, Pittsburgh G Ramon Foster $17,363 for unnecessary roughness, Cincinnati DE Wallace Gilberry $8,681 for unsportsmanlike conduct, DT Domata Peko $8,681 for unnecessary roughness, Pittsburgh assistant coaches Mike Munchak and Joey Porter $10,000 each for their actions during a Jan. 9 game. CINCINNATI BENGALS — Named Ken Zampese offensive coordinator and Jim Haslett linebackers coach. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Retained special teams coordinator Chris Tabor. DENVER BRONCOS — Signed DE Derek Wolfe to a four-year contract extension. DETROIT LIONS — Named Kyle O’Brien director of player personnel. GREEN BAY PACKERS — Signed CB Robertson Daniel from the practice squad. Placed TE Andrew Quarless on injured reserve. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Signed Joe Philbin offensive line coach. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Signed CB Melvin White to a reserve/future contract. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS — Named Ken Whisenhunt offensive coordinator, Giff Smith defensive line, Craig Aukerman special teams coordinator, Nick Sirianni wide receivers coach and Shane Steichen quarterbacks coach. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — Named Dirk Koetter coach and Mike Smith defensive coordinator. HOCKEY National Hockey League ARIZONA COYOTES — Traded D Victor Bartley and F John Scott to Montreal for D Jarred Tinordi and F Stefan Fournier. Recalled F John Scott from Springfield (AHL). CAROLINA HURRICANES — Activated F Nathan Gerbe from injured reserve. Reassigned Fs Phil Di Giuseppe and Brock McGinn to Charlotte (AHL). DETROIT RED WINGS — Traded D Richard Nedomlel to St. Louis for future considerations. NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Acquired D Stefan Elliott from Arizona for D Victor Bartley. NEW JERSEY DEVILS — Assigned D Marc-Andre Gragnani and F Jim O’Brien to Albany (AHL). Recalled Fs Reid Boucher and Brian O’Neill from Albany. WASHINGTON CAPITALS — Recalled D Ryan Stanton from Hershey (AHL). USA Hockey USAH — Named Mike Sullivan, John Hynes, Phil Housley, Jack Capuano and Scott Gordon assistant coaches for Team USA for the 2016 World Cup of Hockey. SOCCER National Women’s Soccer League CHICAGO RED STARS — Acquired two 2016 fourth-round draft picks from Boston for a 2016 third-round draft pick. Acquired two 2016 fourth-round draft picks from Sky Blue FC for a 2016 third-round draft pick. PORTLAND THORNS FC — Traded a 2016 first-round draft pick, No. 4 spot in the allocation ranking order and future considerations to Boston for the No. 1 spot in the allocation ranking order. SKY BLUE FC — Acquired a 2016 firstround draft pick and 2017 first- and fourth-round draft picks from Portland for the rights to F Nadia Nadim, a 2016 first-round draft pick and a 2017 secondround draft pick. COLLEGE ALABAMA — Announced RB Derrick Henry and DL A’Shawn Robinson will enter the NFL Draft. FLORIDA — Fired defensive backs coach Kirk Callahan. OHIO STATE — Named Tim Hinton executive director for football relations/ special assistant to the head coach and Greg Studrawa offensive line coach. SMU — Announced men’s junior basketball G Keith Frazier is transferring. Golf Sony Open PGA Tour Friday At Waialae Country Club Honolulu Purse: $5.8 million Yardage: 7,044; Par 70 Second Round Brandt Snedeker 63-65—128 Kevin Kisner 63-66—129 Zach Johnson 64-66—130 Luke Donald 65-65—130 Zac Blair 65-65—130 Chez Reavie 67-63—130 Scott Piercy 65-66—131 Sean O’Hair 65-66—131 Jerry Kelly 65-66—131 Morgan Hoffmann 63-68—131 Si Woo Kim 64-67—131 Daniel Summerhays 67-65—132 James Hahn 67-65—132 Vijay Singh 63-69—132 Danny Lee 66-66—132 Francesco Molinari 68-65—133 Joburg Open -12 -11 -10 -10 -10 -10 -9 -9 -9 -9 -9 -8 -8 -8 -8 -7 PGA European Open Friday At Royal Johannesburg and Kensington Golf Club Johannesburg Purse: $978,310 e-East Course: 7,677 yards, par-72 w-West Course: 7,228 yards, par-71 Second Round Ross McGowan, England 67e-62w—129 -14 J. Hugo, S. Africa 67e-65w—132 -11 H. Porteous, S. Africa 66e-66w—132 -11 Anthony Wall, England 65w-67e—132 -11 Felipe Aguilar, Chile 67e-65w—132 -11 Johan Carlsson, Sweden 66e-67w—133 -10 Stuart Manley, Wales 66w-67e—133 -10 Richard Bland, England 67w-67e—134 -9 Bjorn Akesson, Sweden 70e-64w—134 -9 E. van Rooyen, S. Africa 70e-64w—134 -9 Paul Dunne, Ireland 71e-63w—134 -9 J. Walters, S. Africa 65e-69w—134 -9 J. Scrivener, Australia 69e-66w—135 -8 D. Fichardt, S. Africa 70e-65w—135 -8 •STA Sunday, January 17, 2016 R S ST A N D R I P E S • PAGE 25 MLB/SPORTS BRIEFS MLB briefs O’s reach deal with Davis Associated Press STEVE NESIUS/AP The Baltimore Orioles agreed to a seven-year, $161 million contract with slugging first baseman Chris Davis on Saturday. BALTIMORE — Chris Davis and the Orioles are together again. Multiple people with knowledge of the situation say Davis has agreed to a seven-year, $161 million contract with Baltimore, pending a physical. The people spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity Saturday because the Orioles have not announced the transaction. The 29-year-old Davis has been with Baltimore since 2011. He hit a major league-leading 47 home runs and amassed 117 RBIs last year. The Orioles were his most aggressive suitor, offering a sevenyear deal last month. Since coming to the Orioles in a July 2011 trade with Texas, Davis has been a sensational run producer and a positive force in the clubhouse. “I’ve said all along, Chris is a body-of-work guy,” manager Buck Showalter said. “When you get through and step back, he can do a lot of things that not many people can do.” Royals, Kennedy reach five-year, $70M deal KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A person familiar with the situation says the Kansas City Royals and pitcher Ian Kennedy have agreed to a $70 million, five-year contract that includes an opt-out after the first two years. The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity Saturday because the deal will not be finalized until the 31-year-old Kennedy passes a physical. The right-hander went 9-15 with a 4.28 ERA for the San Diego Padres last season. He has also pitched for the New York Yankees and the Arizona Diamondbacks. The Royals were in search of another starter to replace Johnny Cueto, who became a free agent after helping Kansas City win its first World Series since 1985. Angels sign veteran reliever Alburquerque ANAHEIM, Calif. — The Los Angeles Angels have signed veteran reliever Al Alburquerque to a one-year, $1.1 million contract. The Angels confirmed the signing Friday night. Alburquerque went 4-1 with a 4.21 ERA in a career-high 62 innings of relief for Detroit last season. In other MLB news: AL Cy Young winner Dallas Keuchel and the Houston Astros agreed to a one-year contract for $7.25 million on Friday. Stephen Strasburg and the Washington Nationals agreed Friday to a $10.4 million contract for next season, avoiding arbitration. Red Sox right-hander Joe Kelly reached agreement on a $2.6 million, one-year contract with Boston on Friday to avoid salary arbitration. The Colorado Rockies have avoided salary arbitration with third baseman Nolan Arenado on Friday by agreeing to a $5 million, one-year contract, nearly 10 times the $512,500 he earned last year. Miami Marlins ace Jose Fernandez avoided arbitration by agreeing to a $2.8 million contract for 2016, a big increase over his salary of $651,000 last year. Sports briefs Clash between Steelers, Bengals results in $83,665 in fines Associated Press The NFL fined four players and two coaches a total of $83,665 for their actions in the Pittsburgh-Cincinnati wild-card game. Bengals cornerback Adam “Pacman” Jones was fined $28,940 for contact with an official, a foul that moved the Steelers closer for their game-winning field goal in the final seconds Saturday night. His teammates Wallace Gilberry and Domata Peko were each fined $8,681. Gilberry’s fine was for unsportsmanlike conduct and Peko’s for unnecessary roughness. Steelers guard Ramon Foster was fined $17,363 for unnecessary roughness. Earlier this week, the league suspended Bengals linebacker Vontaze Burfict three games without pay for his conduct in the game, which Pittsburgh won 18-16 to advance to Sunday’s AFC divisional round game in Denver. Burfict was flagged for a hit that knocked out Steelers star receiver Antonio Brown, who was ruled out of Sunday’s game against the Broncos. Although Burfict wasn’t issued any additional fines this week, he’ll miss out on $502,941 of his $2.85 million salary in 2016 if his suspension is upheld. Jones apologized Friday for claiming Brown was faking a concussion at the end of the game, posting a video on Instagram in which he said “I apologize sincerely. Get well.” Jones said in the aftermath of the loss that Brown winked at him before being helped off the field after taking a shot to the head from Burfict. Also, Pittsburgh assistant coaches Mike Munchak and Joey Porter were each fined $10,000. G ARY L ANDERS/AP Officials step in between players from the Bengals and Pittsburgh Steelers during the second half of last Saturday’s wild-card playoff game in Cincinnati. A total of $83,665 in fines were assessed between the two teams. LeBron hopeful for QB Manziel HOUSTON — LeBron James hopes Johnny Football can get back to the player he was in college. The Cavaliers superstar dropped Browns quarterback Johnny Manziel as a business client earlier this month after his numerous off-the-field issues. But he’s still rooting for the 2012 Heisman Trophy winner to turn things around. James said Friday: “The only concern for everyone is to see him back on the football field, but doing it at a professional level and being able to get back to the caliber of player that he was back when he was an Aggie.” James was asked if he’d consider taking Manziel on as a client in the future. He instead focused on Manziel’s well-being, saying: “What’s most important is him getting things in order for him individually and then the sport side of thing will take care of itself.” Phillips’ death ruled a suicide SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A California coroner says imprisoned former NFL running back Lawrence Phillips committed suicide while he was awaiting a trial that could have brought him the death penalty. The 40-year-old Phillips was found unresponsive alone in his segregation cell at Kern Valley State Prison early Wednesday and died at a hospital. PAGE 26 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 NHL Scoreboard Eastern Conference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts Florida 44 26 13 5 57 Detroit 44 23 14 7 53 Tampa Bay 44 23 17 4 50 Boston 43 22 16 5 49 Montreal 44 23 18 3 49 Ottawa 44 20 18 6 46 Toronto 42 16 19 7 39 Buffalo 44 17 23 4 38 Metropolitan Division Washington 43 33 7 3 69 N.Y. Islanders 44 24 15 5 53 N.Y. Rangers 43 23 15 5 51 Carolina 46 20 18 8 48 Pittsburgh 43 20 16 7 47 New Jersey 45 21 19 5 47 Philadelphia 41 19 15 7 45 Columbus 45 16 25 4 36 Bruins 4, Sabres 1 GF 118 110 116 130 123 120 106 101 GA 98 114 106 114 109 135 119 121 143 122 124 111 103 99 94 114 91 110 113 124 108 110 110 145 Western Conference Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA 47 30 13 4 64 135 108 45 29 12 4 62 151 120 47 25 15 7 57 117 118 44 22 14 8 52 113 103 45 22 20 3 47 128 127 44 19 17 8 46 113 123 45 21 21 3 45 118 129 Pacific Division Los Angeles 42 27 12 3 57 112 92 Arizona 43 22 16 5 49 122 131 San Jose 42 22 18 2 46 120 114 Vancouver 45 18 17 10 46 109 126 Anaheim 43 19 17 7 45 86 102 Calgary 42 20 20 2 42 115 129 Edmonton 45 17 23 5 39 109 133 Note: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Thursday’s games San Jose 2, Edmonton 1, SO N.Y. Islanders 3, N.Y. Rangers 1 Washington 4, Vancouver 1 Chicago 2, Montreal 1 Carolina 4, St. Louis 1 Winnipeg 5, Nashville 4, OT Colorado 3, New Jersey 0 Detroit 3, Arizona 2, OT Friday’s games Boston 4, Buffalo 1 Chicago 4, Toronto 1 Vancouver 3, Carolina 2, OT Tampa Bay 5, Pittsburgh 4, OT Winnipeg 1, Minnesota 0 Anaheim 4, Dallas 2 Saturday’s games N.Y. Rangers at Philadelphia New Jersey at Arizona Ottawa at Los Angeles Toronto at Boston Washington at Buffalo Colorado at Columbus Montreal at St. Louis Minnesota at Nashville Calgary at Edmonton Dallas at San Jose Sunday’s games Carolina at Pittsburgh Vancouver at N.Y. Islanders Florida at Tampa Bay N.Y. Rangers at Washington Montreal at Chicago Philadelphia at Detroit Los Angeles at Anaheim Chicago Dallas St. Louis Minnesota Colorado Nashville Winnipeg N ATHAN D ENETTE, THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP Blackhawks right wing Patrick Kane, center, celebrates his second goal of the game with teammates Duncan Keith, left, and Brent Seabrook while playing against the Maple Leafs Friday in Toronto. Roundup Kane’s hat trick helps Hawks win 10th in row Associated Press TORONTO — Patrick Kane appreciated getting his first career regular-season hat trick, though it paled in importance to his first two — which both came in the playoffs. Kane scored three goals and the Chicago Blackhawks beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 4-1 Friday night for their 10th straight win. “I think I’ve had a few two-goal games but I guess it just never really happened,” Kane said. “I wouldn’t trade the two in the playoffs for anything in the regular season but it’s nice to get the first one.” Kane’s first playoff hat trick came on May 11, 2009, against Vancouver in a 7-5 win in the clinching Game 6 of the Western Conference semifinals. His second was on June 8, 2013, against Los Angeles in Game 5 of the West finals, with his game-winner in the second overtime sending the Blackhawks to the Stanley Cup Final. Artemi Panarin also scored and assisted on two of Kane’s goals for the Blackhawks. Scott Darling made 28 saves to earn the win in net for Chicago while Corey Crawford took the night off after a 2-1 win in Montreal the night before. Kane, who added an assist for a four-point night, now has an NHL-leading 28 goals on the season. The win puts Chicago in first in the Central Division, a point ahead of the Dallas Stars, who lost to Anaheim. “We’re happy with the way we’re trending but we’re not satisfied with where we’re at,” Kane said. “We still feel like we can improve, our coaches feel like we can improve so there’s plenty of things we can do better.” Morgan Rielly scored for Toronto, which has lost four in a row. James Reimer stopped 25 shots. The Maple Leafs were whistled for six penalties — including four in the second period — with Chicago earning two power-play goals. “I think that’s one of their skills — the power play,” Rielly said. “I think they’re really good at it. They use each other well. They really make the ice big and create opportunities. “Their D got pucks to the net and created scoring chances and that’s one of their strengths.” Lightning 5, Penguins 4 (OT): Vladislav Namestnikov completed a hat trick in overtime and host Tampa Bay beat Pittsburgh to extend its season-high fourgame winning streak. Valtteri Filppula and Anton Stralman also scored for Tampa Bay and Steven Stamkos had two assists. Andrei Vasilevskiy made 36 saves. Ducks 4, Stars 2: At Anaheim, Calif., Jakob Silfverberg had a goal and an assist and the NHL’s lowest-scoring team blasted the highest-scoring team for four goals in the first period. After Silfverberg and Sami Vatanen scored 31 seconds apart in the opening minutes, Hampus Lindholm and Corey Perry scored 33 seconds apart later in the first period while the Ducks shredded the Stars’ defense and goalie Kari Lehtonen in a 12:32 stretch. Canucks 3, Hurricanes 2 (OT): Bo Horvat scored his second goal with 1:35 left in overtime and visiting Vancouver beat Carolina. Horvat also had two goals against Carolina in a 3-2 win nine days earlier and has scored four of his eight goals this season against the Eastern Conference foe. Jets 1, Wild 0: Rookie Connor Hellebuyck became the first goalie to shut out Minnesota this season, and visiting Winnipeg used an early goal by Blake Wheeler win the game. Hellebuyck won his NHL debut at Minnesota on Nov. 27 with a 31 decision and made 24 saves in this one. Detroit is now the only remaining NHL team that hasn’t gone scoreless in a game this season. Bruins 4, Sabres 1: Zdeno Chara floated in the go-ahead goal from the left point 29 seconds into the third period and visiting Boston beat Buffalo. Ryan Spooner scored an insurance goal with 9:07 left and added two assists, and Brett Connolly scored into an empty net with 1:09 remaining. Matt Beleskey had a goal and an assist, and Boston snapped a 0-2-1 skid and improved to 2-4-1 in its past seven. Friday Lightning 5, Penguins 4 (OT) Pittsburgh 1 1 2 0—4 Tampa Bay 1 2 1 1—5 First Period—1, Tampa Bay, Namestnikov 7 (Stamkos, Nesterov), 1:51. 2, Pittsburgh, Letang 6 (Crosby, Hornqvist), 10:37. Second Period—3, Tampa Bay, Filppula 6 (Johnson, Stamkos), 8:12 (pp). 4, Tampa Bay, Namestnikov 8 (Hedman, Filppula), 10:47 (pp). 5, Pittsburgh, Hornqvist 10 (Malkin, Letang), 14:23 (pp). Third Period—6, Pittsburgh, Daley 2 (Malkin, Kessel), 10:13. 7, Pittsburgh, Kunitz 7 (Maatta, Hornqvist), 13:48. 8, Tampa Bay, Stralman 5 (Filppula, Paquette), 15:21. Overtime—9, Tampa Bay, Namestnikov 9 (Kucherov), 2:11. Shots on Goal—Pittsburgh 8-11-183—40. Tampa Bay 7-6-10-2—25. Power-play opportunities—Pittsburgh 1 of 4; Tampa Bay 2 of 5. Goalies—Pittsburgh, Fleury 15-11-5 (25 shots-20 saves). Tampa Bay, Vasilevskiy 6-4-0 (40-36). A—19,092 (19,092). T—2:42. Boston 0 1 3—4 Buffalo 1 0 0—1 First Period—1, Buffalo, Legwand 3, 14:37. Second Period—2, Boston, Beleskey 8 (Spooner, Eriksson), 1:01. Third Period—3, Boston, Chara 6 (Spooner, Beleskey), :29. 4, Boston, Spooner 10 (Eriksson, K.Miller), 10:53. 5, Boston, Connolly 6, 18:51 (en). Shots on Goal—Boston 9-9-13—31. Buffalo 10-16-8—34. Power-play opportunities—Boston 0 of 2; Buffalo 0 of 4. Goalies—Boston, Gustavsson 8-3-1 (34 shots-33 saves). Buffalo, Lehner 0-1-0 (30-27). A—18,704 (19,070). T—2:30. Blackhawks 4, Maple Leafs 1 Chicago 0 2 2—4 Toronto 0 0 1—1 Second Period—1, Chicago, Kane 26 (Keith, Panarin), 13:07. 2, Chicago, Kane 27 (Panarin, Seabrook), 17:13 (pp). Third Period—3, Chicago, Panarin 16 (Kane, Seabrook), :21 (pp). 4, Toronto, Rielly 5 (Parenteau, Matthias), 3:47. 5, Chicago, Kane 28 (Teravainen), 17:48 (en). Shots on Goal—Chicago 7-11-11—29. Toronto 10-8-11—29. Power-play opportunities—Chicago 2 of 6; Toronto 0 of 3. Goalies—Chicago, Darling 5-3-2 (29 shots-28 saves). Toronto, Reimer 7-7-4 (28-25). A—20,049 (18,819). T—2:30. Canucks 3, Hurricanes 2 (OT) Vancouver 1 1 0 1—3 Carolina 1 0 1 0—2 First Period—1, Vancouver, Vey 1, 13:14. 2, Carolina, Versteeg 8 (Slavin, J.Staal), 18:27 (pp). Second Period—3, Vancouver, Horvat 7 (Fedun, Bartkowski), 9:32. Third Period—4, Carolina, Liles 4 (Nestrasil, Rask), 17:50. Overtime—5, Vancouver, Horvat 8 (Vrbata, Tanev), 3:25. Shots on Goal—Vancouver 6-5-7-4—22. Carolina 9-19-11-1—40. Power-play opportunities—Vancouver 0 of 0; Carolina 1 of 3. Goalies—Vancouver, Markstrom 7-5-4 (40 shots-38 saves). Carolina, Ward 1411-5 (22-19). A—11,657 (18,680). T—2:30. Jets 1, Wild 0 Winnipeg 1 0 0—1 Minnesota 0 0 0—0 First Period—1, Winnipeg, Wheeler 13 (Little), 3:07. Shots on Goal—Winnipeg 9-12-5—26. Minnesota 13-4-7—24. Power-play opportunities—Winnipeg 0 of 2; Minnesota 0 of 3. Goalies—Winnipeg, Hellebuyck 11-6-1 (24 shots-24 saves). Minnesota, Dubnyk 18-13-4 (26-25). A—19,222 (17,954). T—2:19. Ducks 4, Stars 2 Dallas 0 1 1—2 Anaheim 4 0 0—4 First Period—1, Anaheim, Silfverberg 5 (Manson, Hagelin), 3:05. 2, Anaheim, Vatanen 6 (Cogliano, Thompson), 3:36. 3, Anaheim, Lindholm 3 (Kesler, Silfverberg), 15:04 (pp). 4, Anaheim, Perry 17 (Theodore, Getzlaf), 15:37. Second Period—5, Dallas, Janmark 10 (Moen), 1:15 (sh). Third Period—6, Dallas, Ja.Benn 26 (Spezza, Demers), 11:58 (pp). Shots on Goal—Dallas 7-6-11—24. Anaheim 19-7-9—35. Power-play opportunities—Dallas 1 of 4; Anaheim 1 of 3. Goalies—Dallas, Lehtonen 13-4-0 (35 shots-31 saves). Anaheim, Andersen 78-5 (24-22). A—16,201 (17,174). T—2:36. M ARK J. TERRILL /AP Ducks goalie Frederik Andersen deflects a shot during the third period of Friday’s game against the Stars in Anaheim, Calif. •STA Sunday, January 17, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 27 NBA Scoreboard Eastern Conference Atlantic Division W L 25 15 21 19 20 21 11 29 4 37 Southeast Division Atlanta 23 17 Miami 23 17 Orlando 20 19 Washington 19 19 Charlotte 18 21 Central Division Cleveland 28 10 Chicago 23 16 Indiana 22 18 Detroit 21 18 Milwaukee 17 25 Toronto Boston New York Brooklyn Philadelphia Bucks 108, Hawks 101 (OT) Pct .625 .525 .488 .275 .098 GB — 4 5½ 14 21½ .575 .575 .513 .500 .462 — — 2½ 3 4½ .737 .590 .550 .538 .405 — 5½ 7 7½ 13 Western Conference PAT SULLIVAN /AP The Cavaliers’ Kyrie Irving, left, passes out of a double-team by the Rockets’ Terrence Jones, center, and Patrick Beverley on Friday in Houston. Irving scored 23 points in the Cavaliers’ 91-77 win. Roundup Cavaliers wrap up road trip with win Associated Press HOUSTON — Kyrie Irving scored 23 points, LeBron James added 19 and the Cleveland Cavaliers wrapped up their longest trip of the season with a 91-77 victory over the Houston Rockets on Friday night. The Cavaliers capped six games away from home and were playing for the second straight night, but it was the Rockets who looked tired and listless as Cleveland built a double-digit lead by halftime and pushed it to 20 in the third. Cleveland got back on track after a loss to San Antonio on Thursday night that snapped an eight-game winning streak before the team’s showdown with Golden State on Monday. Dwight Howard had 14 points and 11 rebounds for the Rockets. James Harden had 11 points on 2-for-10 shooting and missed all five of his three-point attempts. Thunder 113, Timberwolves 93: Russell Westbrook had his 23rd career triple-double, leading Oklahoma City to a victory over visiting Minnesota. Westbrook finished with 12 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists for his fourth triple-double of the season. Andrew Wiggins had 25 points for the Timberwolves. They have lost nine straight. Heat 98, Nuggets 95: Hassan Whiteside had a triple-double with 19 points, 17 rebounds and 11 blocks and injury-depleted Miami rallied to beat host Denver. Chris Bosh made the tiebreaking jumper with 55 seconds left and scored 24 points. Mavericks 83, Bulls 77: Dirk Nowitzki scored 21 points to lead visiting Dallas past Chicago. Bucks 108, Hawks 101 (OT): Giannis Antetokounmpo had 28 points and 16 rebounds, Khris Middleton scored 26 points and host Milwaukee beat Atlanta in overtime. Trail Blazers 116, Nets 104: Damian Lillard had 33 points and 10 assists, reserve Allen Crabbe added 19 points and visiting Portland beat Brooklyn for its third straight victory. Pelicans 109, Hornets 107: Ryan Anderson hit six threepointers and had a season-high 32 points, and Anthony Davis dunked Jrue Holiday’s alley-oop lob with 2 seconds left to lift New Orleans past visiting Charlotte. Wizards 118, Pacers 104: John Wall had 28 points, seven rebounds and eight assists to lead Washington past host Indiana for its fourth straight victory. Celtics 117, Suns 103: Isaiah Thomas scored 19 points against his former team, Marcus Smart had his first career triple-double and host Boston beat Phoenix. Southwest Division W L Pct San Antonio 35 6 .854 Dallas 23 18 .561 Memphis 22 19 .537 Houston 21 20 .512 New Orleans 13 26 .333 Northwest Division Oklahoma City 29 12 .707 Utah 17 22 .436 Portland 18 24 .429 Denver 15 25 .375 Minnesota 12 29 .293 Pacific Division Golden State 37 3 .925 L.A. Clippers 26 13 .667 Sacramento 16 23 .410 Phoenix 13 28 .317 L.A. Lakers 9 32 .220 Thursday’s games Toronto 106, Orlando 103, OT Chicago 115, Philadelphia 111, OT San Antonio 99, Cleveland 95 Memphis 103, Detroit 101 Sacramento 103, Utah 101 Golden State 116, L.A. Lakers 98 Friday’s games Oklahoma City 113, Minnesota 93 Washington 118, Indiana 104 Portland 116, Brooklyn 104 Boston 117, Phoenix 103 Dallas 83, Chicago 77 New Orleans 109, Charlotte 107 Milwaukee 108, Atlanta 101, OT Miami 98, Denver 95 Cleveland 91, Houston 77 Saturday’s games Milwaukee at Charlotte Portland at Philadelphia Golden State at Detroit Boston at Washington Brooklyn at Atlanta New York at Memphis L.A. Lakers at Utah Sacramento at L.A. Clippers Sunday’s games Phoenix at Minnesota Dallas at San Antonio Miami at Oklahoma City Indiana at Denver Houston at L.A. Lakers GB — 12 13 14 21 — 11 11½ 13½ 17 — 10½ 20½ 24½ 28½ Friday Cavaliers 91, Rockets 77 CLEVELAND — James 7-14 4-6 19, Love 4-13 0-0 11, Mozgov 1-2 0-0 2, Irving 9-17 4-5 23, Smith 5-15 1-2 13, Dellavedova 1-6 1-2 3, Shumpert 1-7 0-0 2, Thompson 4-4 2-2 10, Varejao 1-5 2-2 4, Jefferson 1-2 1-2 4, Cunningham 0-2 0-0 0, Kaun 0-0 0-2 0. Totals 34-87 15-23 91. HOUSTON — Ariza 3-9 0-0 8, Capela 3-7 1-4 7, Howard 4-9 6-10 14, Beverley 5-8 0-0 13, Harden 2-10 7-7 11, T.Jones 1-6 1-2 3, Lawson 0-0 0-0 0, Thornton 1-10 0-0 2, Brewer 1-4 1-2 3, Terry 2-6 0-0 5, Harrell 2-3 3-4 7, McDaniels 2-2 0-0 4. Totals 26-74 19-29 77. Cleveland 23 23 22 23—91 Houston 21 14 16 26—77 Three-Point Goals—Cleveland 8-35 (Love 3-8, Smith 2-12, James 1-2, Jefferson 1-2, Irving 1-5, Cunningham 0-1, Dellavedova 0-2, Shumpert 0-3), Houston 6-25 (Beverley 3-4, Ariza 2-4, Terry 1-4, Brewer 0-1, T.Jones 0-3, Thornton 0-4, Harden 0-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Cleveland 63 (Love 13), Houston 56 (Howard 11). Assists—Cleveland 19 (James 7), Houston 15 (Harden 5). Total Fouls—Cleveland 24, Houston 20. Technicals—Cleveland defensive three second, Houston defensive three second. A—18,320 (18,023). ATLANTA — Bazemore 3-9 0-0 7, Millsap 10-19 2-2 23, Horford 9-23 0-0 18, Teague 4-13 0-0 9, Korver 7-10 0-0 17, Sefolosha 1-5 2-2 4, Splitter 2-5 0-0 4, Schroder 6-10 2-2 16, Scott 1-5 0-0 3, Hardaway Jr. 0-1 0-0 0, Holiday 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 43100 6-6 101. MILWAUKEE — Antetokounmpo 1018 7-9 28, Parker 5-15 0-0 10, Monroe 416 7-12 15, Carter-Williams 5-15 3-3 15, Middleton 11-23 4-5 26, Henson 3-6 4-8 10, O’Bryant 2-3 0-0 4, Ennis 0-0 0-0 0, Vaughn 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 40-96 25-37 108. Atlanta 28 23 25 19 6—101 Milwaukee 22 24 27 22 13—108 Three-Point Goals—Atlanta 9-30 (Korver 3-5, Schroder 2-3, Millsap 1-4, Scott 1-4, Bazemore 1-4, Teague 1-4, Hardaway Jr. 0-1, Sefolosha 0-2, Horford 0-3), Milwaukee 3-10 (Carter-Williams 2-3, Antetokounmpo 1-2, Parker 0-1, Middleton 0-4). Fouled Out—Bazemore, Millsap. Rebounds—Atlanta 51 (Millsap 10), Milwaukee 74 (Antetokounmpo 16). Assists— Atlanta 29 (Teague 10), Milwaukee 19 (Carter-Williams 7). Total Fouls—Atlanta 25, Milwaukee 14. A—15,144 (18,717). Mavericks 83, Bulls 77 DALLAS — Parsons 4-9 0-0 8, Nowitzki 6-15 7-7 21, Pachulia 4-10 1-2 9, Williams 6-12 2-3 18, Matthews 4-10 0-0 8, Powell 0-2 0-0 0, Harris 1-3 2-2 5, Felton 0-3 0-0 0, Barea 3-7 2-2 9, McGee 2-4 1-1 5, Villanueva 0-2 0-0 0. Totals 30-77 15-17 83. CHICAGO — Snell 1-6 0-0 3, Gibson 4-10 1-2 9, Gasol 7-14 3-4 17, Rose 8-18 2-2 18, Butler 2-11 0-0 4, Hinrich 1-3 5-5 7, Mirotic 0-4 2-2 2, Noah 1-2 0-0 2, McDermott 0-4 0-0 0, Moore 4-6 0-0 8, Brooks 1-4 0-0 2, Portis 2-4 0-0 5. Totals 31-86 13-15 77. Dallas 18 18 23 24—83 Chicago 22 24 15 16—77 Three-Point Goals—Dallas 8-22 (Williams 4-5, Nowitzki 2-5, Harris 1-1, Barea 1-3, Felton 0-1, Parsons 0-2, Matthews 0-5), Chicago 2-19 (Portis 1-1, Snell 1-4, Brooks 0-1, McDermott 0-1, Hinrich 0-2, Moore 0-2, Rose 0-2, Mirotic 0-2, Butler 0-4). Fouled Out—Pachulia. Rebounds— Dallas 50 (Pachulia 10), Chicago 56 (Gibson 11). Assists—Dallas 20 (Williams 6), Chicago 16 (Butler 6). Total Fouls—Dallas 16, Chicago 19. Technicals—Hinrich, Chicago defensive three second. A—22,056 (20,917). Pelicans 109, Hornets 107 CHARLOTTE — Hairston 3-6 0-0 7, Williams 3-6 3-4 10, Zeller 2-7 1-1 5, Walker 9-17 2-2 25, Batum 11-22 1-1 25, Kaminsky 7-9 2-4 18, Lin 3-10 0-0 7, Hawes 2-5 0-0 4, Daniels 2-4 0-0 6. Totals 42-86 9-12 107. NEW ORLEANS — Cunningham 2-6 0-0 5, Davis 8-14 6-7 22, Asik 0-1 1-2 1, Gordon 4-12 0-0 10, Evans 5-10 0-0 12, Holiday 6-14 0-0 13, Anderson 12-19 2-2 32, Ajinca 2-2 0-0 4, Gee 3-5 2-2 8, Cole 1-4 0-0 2. Totals 43-87 11-13 109. Charlotte 34 15 32 26—107 New Orleans 32 25 27 25—109 Three-Point Goals—Charlotte 14-35 (Walker 5-7, Kaminsky 2-2, Daniels 2-4, Batum 2-9, Williams 1-3, Hairston 1-3, Lin 1-5, Hawes 0-2), New Orleans 12-27 (Anderson 6-8, Evans 2-3, Gordon 2-6, Holiday 1-3, Cunningham 1-3, Cole 0-1, Gee 0-1, Davis 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Charlotte 48 (Zeller 8), New Orleans 45 (Gee 9). Assists—Charlotte 21 (Batum 8), New Orleans 29 (Holiday 10). Total Fouls—Charlotte 17, New Orleans 15. Technicals—Hawes, Charlotte defensive three second, Ajinca. A—16,876 (16,867). Trail Blazers 116, Nets 104 PORTLAND — Aminu 3-7 2-2 10, Vonleh 3-8 0-0 6, Plumlee 3-6 1-2 7, Lillard 13-24 2-3 33, McCollum 6-15 0-0 13, Crabbe 7-12 0-0 19, Leonard 3-7 0-0 8, Davis 6-6 2-4 14, Harkless 2-4 0-0 4, Henderson 1-3 0-0 2, Frazier 0-1 0-0 0, Connaughton 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 47-93 7-11 116. BROOKLYN — Johnson 5-13 2-2 15, Young 5-11 1-2 11, Lopez 9-17 7-10 25, Sloan 5-6 3-4 15, Ellington 4-11 0-0 10, Robinson 4-7 3-4 11, Bargnani 4-7 3-4 12, Larkin 1-6 0-0 2, Bogdanovic 1-6 1-2 3, Karasev 0-1 0-0 0, Brown 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 38-85 20-28 104. Portland 22 34 27 33—116 Brooklyn 23 26 30 25—104 Three-Point Goals—Portland 15-35 (Crabbe 5-6, Lillard 5-10, Leonard 2-6, Aminu 2-6, McCollum 1-4, Henderson 01, Harkless 0-1, Vonleh 0-1), Brooklyn 819 (Johnson 3-6, Sloan 2-3, Ellington 2-6, Bargnani 1-1, Karasev 0-1, Bogdanovic 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Portland 50 (Davis 10), Brooklyn 55 (Robinson 10). Assists—Portland 26 (Lillard 10), Brooklyn 22 (Sloan 9). Total Fouls—Portland 18, Brooklyn 10. A—14,749 (17,732). Heat 98, Nuggets 95 MIAMI — Deng 5-13 2-2 12, Bosh 9-13 5-6 24, Whiteside 8-13 3-5 19, Udrih 5-10 0-0 11, Green 1-5 0-1 2, Winslow 3-5 0-0 8, Johnson 6-14 3-4 15, Richardson 1-4 0-0 2, Stoudemire 2-4 1-1 5. Totals 40-81 14-19 98. DENVER — Gallinari 2-10 6-6 11, Arthur 8-12 2-2 18, Faried 4-9 6-7 14, Nelson 3-6 0-0 7, Harris 4-14 2-2 11, Barton 2-8 4-4 9, Mudiay 5-11 4-4 16, Jokic 4-7 1-1 9, Foye 0-1 0-0 0, Kilpatrick 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 32-78 25-26 95. Miami 20 26 30 22—98 Denver 31 31 16 17—95 Three-Point Goals—Miami 4-11 (Winslow 2-2, Bosh 1-2, Udrih 1-2, Deng 0-1, Johnson 0-1, Richardson 0-1, Green 0-2), Denver 6-18 (Mudiay 2-3, Nelson 1-2, Barton 1-3, Harris 1-4, Gallinari 1-5, Foye 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Miami 49 (Whiteside 17), Denver 44 (Barton, Arthur 8). Assists—Miami 26 (Udrih 11), Denver 23 (Jokic 5). Total Fouls—Miami 20, Denver 18. Technicals—Miami Coach Spoelstra, Miami defensive three second, Denver defensive three second. A—15,406 (19,155). Celtics 117, Suns 103 PHOENIX — Tucker 3-8 0-0 7, Morris 210 5-5 9, Chandler 2-4 2-2 6, Knight 7-15 00 16, Booker 2-9 5-6 9, Goodwin 1-8 0-0 2, Brown 1-2 0-0 2, Warren 5-9 2-4 13, Weems 4-6 1-2 10, Leuer 3-5 0-0 7, Teletovic 5-13 8-9 22. Totals 35-89 23-28 103. BOSTON — Crowder 5-13 5-6 17, Johnson 6-9 1-3 13, Sullinger 4-8 2-4 11, Thomas 5-11 6-6 19, Bradley 7-21 2-4 17, Turner 1-1 0-0 2, Smart 4-12 1-2 10, Jerebko 2-5 1-2 7, Olynyk 8-16 1-2 21, Hunter 0-0 0-0 0, Young 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 42-96 19-29 117. Phoenix 29 18 31 25—103 Boston 36 32 28 21—117 Three-Point Goals—Phoenix 10-27 (Teletovic 4-7, Knight 2-7, Weems 1-1, Leuer 1-2, Warren 1-2, Tucker 1-3, Goodwin 0-1, Booker 0-4), Boston 14-30 (Olynyk 4-6, Thomas 3-5, Jerebko 2-3, Crowder 25, Sullinger 1-2, Bradley 1-4, Smart 1-5). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Phoenix 57 (Chandler, Morris 9), Boston 66 (Smart 11). Assists—Phoenix 24 (Weems 5), Boston 30 (Smart 11). Total Fouls—Phoenix 22, Boston 19. Technicals—Boston defensive three second. A—18,624 (18,624). Thunder 113, Timberwolves 93 MINNESOTA — Prince 2-2 0-0 4, Garnett 1-5 0-0 2, Towns 4-13 1-1 9, Rubio 2-6 0-0 6, Wiggins 10-22 5-5 25, Dieng 1-3 0-0 2, Pekovic 2-3 6-6 10, Muhammad 5-12 44 15, LaVine 5-9 2-3 13, Miller 0-1 0-0 0, Bjelica 1-8 2-4 5, Rudez 1-1 0-0 2. Totals 34-85 20-23 93. OKLAHOMA CITY — Durant 7-14 6-7 21, Ibaka 6-13 0-0 13, Adams 4-7 4-6 12, Westbrook 6-10 0-0 12, Roberson 4-4 0-2 8, Kanter 3-8 1-2 7, Waiters 8-14 2-4 20, Collison 1-1 0-0 2, C.Payne 6-11 1-1 14, Morrow 0-3 0-0 0, Singler 2-3 0-0 4, McGary 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 47-89 14-22 113. Minnesota 17 26 22 28— 93 Oklahoma City 31 26 25 31—113 Three-Point Goals—Minnesota 5-12 (Rubio 2-3, Muhammad 1-1, LaVine 1-1, Bjelica 1-4, Wiggins 0-1, Towns 0-2), Oklahoma City 5-23 (Waiters 2-5, C.Payne 12, Durant 1-5, Ibaka 1-5, Westbrook 0-1, Kanter 0-1, McGary 0-1, Singler 0-1, Morrow 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Minnesota 52 (Towns 12), Oklahoma City 52 (Westbrook 11). Assists—Minnesota 15 (Bjelica 4), Oklahoma City 31 (Westbrook 10). Total Fouls—Minnesota 19, Oklahoma City 21. Technicals—Minnesota defensive three second. Flagrant Fouls—Wiggins. A—18,203 (18,203). Wizards 118, Pacers 104 WASHINGTON — Oubre Jr. 2-6 2-4 7, Dudley 1-3 0-0 3, Nene 4-9 0-0 8, Wall 1221 3-5 28, Temple 2-8 0-0 5, Gooden 4-9 0-0 8, Beal 9-15 0-1 22, Neal 5-10 0-0 12, Blair 6-8 0-0 12, Sessions 5-7 0-0 10, Eddie 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 51-98 5-10 118. INDIANA — Miles 1-3 2-2 4, George 6-19 8-8 21, Mahinmi 3-5 1-2 7, G.Hill 8-14 1-2 19, Ellis 7-14 3-5 17, Budinger 1-4 2-3 4, Allen 6-8 3-4 15, Turner 4-8 2-2 10, J.Hill 0-2 1-2 1, Robinson III 0-1 0-0 0, S.Hill 0-0 0-0 0, Young 2-2 2-2 6. Totals 38-80 25-32 104. Washington 24 35 29 30—118 Indiana 27 19 26 32—104 Three-Point Goals—Washington 11-25 (Beal 4-7, Neal 2-3, Dudley 1-2, Oubre Jr. 12, Eddie 1-2, Wall 1-3, Temple 1-4, Gooden 0-2), Indiana 3-17 (G.Hill 2-4, George 1-7, Budinger 0-2, Miles 0-2, Ellis 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Washington 60 (Nene 8), Indiana 41 (G.Hill 8). Assists—Washington 26 (Wall 8), Indiana 19 (George 7). Total Fouls—Washington 29, Indiana 12. A—18,165 (18,165). DARRON CUMMINGS/AP The Indiana Pacers’ Monta Ellis, left, prepares to pass against the Wizards’ Drew Gooden on Friday in Indianapolis. Washington knocked off Indiana 118-104 for its fourth consecutive victory. PAGE 28 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Making it ‘crazy special’ Tournament ban leaves SMU focused on perfect finish BY STEPHEN H AWKINS Associated Press DALLAS — SMU is halfway to potential perfection in Hall of Fame coach Larry Brown’s fourth season and in the top 10 for the first time in 30 years. Yet, the No. 10 Mustangs know there will be no return to the NCAA Tournament, even if they keep it up and do something “crazy special” like win all their games. “This is it. We’ve got [14] games left and our season’s over,” said senior forward Markus Kennedy. “We know there’s nothing else after that, so why not just give it our all. There’s no reason to save anything.” Because of NCAA penalties handed down last fall, SMU (160, 5-0 AAC) is banned from the postseason and will play only its 30 regular-season games a year after its first NCAA Tournament appearance since 1993. The sanctions included Brown missing the first nine games. The Mustangs are also playing with only seven scholarship players with Keith Frazier away from the team for personal reasons. “They’ve overcome all that and they’re doing what we said the first day. The only way we can turn this negative into a positive is to do something crazy special,” associate head coach Tim Jankovich said. “Obviously, they are really trying to do that.” Jankovich, who led the team when Brown was suspended and again when the 75-year-old coach missed the second half of Sunday’s game after feeling dizzy, said the best start in school history has been a bit surreal. But he described the players as very focused and competitive. “We’ve got one goal, and that’s to finish the season undefeated to prove to ourselves and everyone else in the world that we are one of the best teams,” junior guard Sterling Brown said. The Mustangs, who play four of their next six games on the road, moved up five spots to No. 10 in the Top 25 on Monday — their first time in the top 10 since February 1985. They have been ranked that high only two other times, in 1955-56 when they went to their only Final Four and then again the next season. “I’m really proud. We were hopeful we could someday be a Top 25 team,” Larry Brown said. “We’ve got a lot of games to go, and you look at our bench, it’s going to be difficult. With eight (players), I think you can really manage. Seven? You’ve got to be really, really lucky.” Along with Frazier’s absence, a freshman guard decided to transfer, junior guard Ben Emelogu (knee, back injuries) is sitting out the season and Duke transfer Semi Ojeleye opted to redshirt instead of playing only a half this season. SMU added two walk-on practice players last week. With no tourneys, the Mustangs have had to look for their excitement in the regular season. Senior point guard Nic Moore made two three-pointers when the Mustangs overcame a sevenpoint deficit in the final 3:40 to beat Cincinnati last week, three days before a 15-point win over UCF. They routed East Carolina 79-55 on Wednesday night. “Coach Jank, he talked real big about making them remember us now, and talk about us now because come March they aren’t going to be talking about us,” said Kennedy, who has played despite re-aggravating an ankle injury. BRANDON WADE /AP SMU coach Larry Brown celebrates with guard Nic Moore after the team beat Cincinnati on Jan. 7. The Mustangs (16-0, No. 10) are making the most of their remaining regular-season games because NCAA sanctions left them unable to play in the posteason. SMU hadn’t been ranked in 29 years before breaking into the Top 25 in 2014, a month before hosting a watch party for the NCAA Tournament selection show — and then getting left out of the field. The Mustangs instead were the NIT runner-up after being the No. 1 seed. There was no campus watch party last March, when the Mustangs did get an NCAA berth. But the AAC champions lost their opening game after a goaltending call in the closing seconds against UCLA. Before this season, the NCAA handed down sanctions following an investigation that included a look into online course work for Frazier before his enrollment into SMU. The preseason AAC favorite can’t play in the conference tournament, either. “Ever since we had that celebration when we didn’t get into the tournament, it’s been one thing after the other that you couldn’t predict, and yet they’ve really hung together and it’s great. It’s neat to be part of it,” Brown said. “I’m just worried personally that there’s so many obstacles out there that it’s going to be really, really a challenge to keep this thing going. But we’ll try.” Valentine among season’s best performances BY A ARON BEARD Associated Press RALEIGH, N.C. — Michigan State’s Denzel Valentine started the first week of the season with a triple-double in a marquee matchup, while North Carolina’s Brice Johnson and Oklahoma’s Buddy Hield had their own huge performances once conference play began. And LSU versatile freshman Ben Simmons has been putting up big numbers all along. Hard to believe, but this week marks two months since the season’s tipoff. But now that college football is over and more fans will turn their attention to college hoops, here’s a look at some of the top individual performances this season and a glimpse of some possible highlights lurking around the corner: Denzel Valentine, Michigan State: The 6-foot-5 senior had 29 points, 12 rebounds and 12 assists in a 79-73 win against current No. 1 Kansas in the Spartans’ second game on Nov. 17. That allowed him to join program great Magic Johnson as the only players ever to post a triple-double against the Jayhawks. The performance was a sign that Valentine was a candidate for national player of the year Michigan State for a team that guard Denzel made a quick Valentine climb from No. Reinhol d Matay/AP 13 in The Associated Press preseason Top 25 to No. 1 by early December. A.J. English, Iona: English had a half straight out of a video game against Fairfield on Dec. 1. The 6-4 senior scored 32 of his 46 points after halftime, going 11-for-15 from the field and 9-for-10 from three-point range to help the Gaels turn a fourpoint edge into a 101-77 win. English ended up tying the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference’s single-game scoring record set in 1985 and also set a league record with 13 threes, while the 46 points were tied for the most in Division I this year through Monday’s games, according to STATS. Kay Felder, Oakland: Felder, the Horizon League’s preseason player of the year, put on a two-game show in December. The 5-9 junior had 38 points and nine assists in a 97-83 win at Washington on Dec. 19, the program’s first road win against a power-5 opponent in five years. Three days later, he terrorized then-No. 1 Michigan State with 37 points — including two free throws with 4.9 seconds left to force overtime — and nine assists in a 99-93 loss at the Palace of Auburn Hills, Mich.. Seventy-two hours, 75 points. “He looked like one of the best players I ever saw play here, and I said ever,” Spartans coach Tom Izzo said, “and I’ve watched a lot of pro games here.” Ben Simmons, LSU: The AP preseason all-American wasn’t fazed by his first Southeastern Conference game at Vanderbilt. The 6-10 rookie finished with 36 points and 14 rebounds to go with four assists in the 90-82 win on Jan. 2. He finished an efficient 10 for 15 from the field while getting to the foul line 19 times, a terrific performance in a season filled with them. “I’m not really worried about what everyone says,” Simmons said. “I know what I can be and who I can be as a player. So I’m going to do that.” Brice Johnson, North Carolina: Hall of Fame coach Roy Williams has used tough love to push the lean 6-10 senior for more. Johnson’s showing at Florida State on Jan. 4 illustrated why. Johnson had career highs of 39 points and 23 rebounds in the 106-90 win, with his 23 rebounds tied M ARK WALLHEISER /AP North Carolina’s Brice Johnson had a career high 39 points against Florida State on Jan. 4. for the most in Division I through Monday’s games, according to STATS. Johnson — whose 28 second-half points surpassed his previous game high of 27 — became the first UNC player in 40 years and the fifth ever to have a 30-20 game. “That was a man’s night,” Williams said, calling the performance “about as good as any I’ve ever seen. Particularly on the road.” Buddy Hield, Oklahoma: The preseason AP AllAmerican was unstoppable in a 1-vs-2 triple-overtime classic. The 6-4 senior guard finished with 46 points on 13-for-23 shooting and eight threes for the No. 2 Sooners at Kansas on Jan. 4. He also had eight rebounds and seven assists in a school-record 54 minutes in the 109-106 loss. His 46 points were the most by an Oklahoma player since the 1990-91 season. But he also lamented two late turnovers that tipped the balance in the season’s top game. “I wish I had one more overtime,” he said that night. “I just hate losing.” •STA Sunday, January 17, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 29 AUSTRALIAN OPEN Federer: Djokovic tops among ‘Big Four’ Defending Aussie Open champ is clear favorite BY DENNIS PASSA Associated Press MELBOURNE, Australia — Roger Federer says the so-called Big Four in men’s tennis — he, Novak Djokovic, Andy Murray and Rafael Nadal — still exists, with one possible notation and an addition. “Novak deserves like a little star next to his name right now because he’s been doing extremely well,” Federer said Saturday. The Australian Open begins Monday with Djokovic set to defend his 2015 crown and aim for title No. 6 at Melbourne Park. Last year, Djokovic won 27 of his 28 matches in Grand Slam tournaments, capturing three majors and finishing runner-up to Stan Wawrinka at the French Open. That run left Djokovic unquestionably as No. 1, with Murray second, Federer No. 3, Wawrinka ranked fourth and Nadal, after a series of injuries, back to a spot in the top five. Order restored, says Federer. “Who’s had the most success? The top five guys really, with Stan, you know, Murray, myself, Novak and Rafa,” Federer, who plays his first-round match Monday. “Now the rankings are back to more normal again after Rafa’s worked his way back up.” Djokovic, in the same half of the draw as Federer, will open his defense against Chung Hyeon of South Korea and, if results go with rankings, could meet No. 7 Kei Nishikori in the quarterfinals and Federer in the semis. Federer, who has won four Australian titles among his 17 majors, opens against Nikoloz Basilashvili of Georgia, and possibly Alexandr Dolgopolov in the second and No. 27 Grigor Dimitrov in the third. No 2-ranked Murray will open against Alexander Zverev of Germany and, in the same half of the draw, 2014 champion Wawrinka takes on Dmitry Tursonov. Nadal, who could meet Wawrinka in the quarterfinals, opens with a tough encounter against fellow Spaniard and 2009 Australian Open semifinalist Fernando Verdasco. Nadal beat Verdasco in an epic 17-time major champion Roger Federer, bottom left, said Saturday that Novak Djokovic, left, deserves to be ranked at the top of the players considered part of tennis’ ‘Big Four’ of himself, Djokovic, Rafael Nadal (bottom center) and Andy Murray (bottom right). ‘ Novak deserves like a little star next to his name right now because he’s been doing extremely well. ’ Roger Federer Four-time Australian Open champion AP Photos five-setter that year and went on to win the title. “Not a lucky first round, I think, for me. For him, either,” Nadal said Saturday. “Will be a tough match.” Asked to reflect on the 2009 result, Nadal said: “Obvious that that match gave me the chance to win the only Australian Open that I won. That was an unforgettable memory for me. “ Nadal won three titles last year but it was the first year since 2004 that he didn’t win a major. He was beaten by Djokovic in the Qatar Open final two weeks ago and lavished praise on the Serbian, saying he was virtually unbeatable in that match. He continued the sentiment on Saturday. “Novak is playing at (a) better level than the rest of the players now, that’s obvious,” Nadal said. “The way he’s playing, it’s difficult to see him losing matches. Just can congratulate him for making that happen.” Murray says he knows well and has practiced recently with his Tuesday opponent, the 6-foot-6 Zverev. “It will be a tough match,” Murray said. “He serves well. For a big guy, moves pretty well ... obviously improving all the time.” Murray and his wife, Kim Sears, are expecting their first child in February. On Saturday, he reiterated earlier comments that he would return to London immediately if she went into early labor, even if it was between the semifinal and the Jan. 31 final and it left the tournament without a championship decider. “For me, my child is more important to me, and my wife is more important to me, than a tennis match,” Murray said. Williams dismisses talk of injury, draw BY JOHN P YE Associated Press MELBOURNE, Australia — Injury? What injury? The draw? Don’t mention the draw. Six-time Australian Open champion Serena Williams worked her way through the preGrand Slam rituals on Saturday, practicing on the center court at Melbourne Park, and fielding questions about the inflammation in her left knee that restricted her preparations, and about a tough road to another title. After a tough opener against Camila Giorgi, the highest ranked of the unseeded players in the women’s draw, Williams may have to face former No. 1ranked Caroline Wozniacki in the fourth round and No. 5-ranked Maria Sharapova in a quarterfinal match that would feature last year’s finalists. “I don’t really ever look at the draw, so I would appreciate it if you didn’t mention it. Thank you,” she said, shutting down talk of another showdown with Sharapova. Both players withdrew from tournaments in the first week of the season, with Williams playing just one set in the Hopman Cup — her first competitive outing since her pursuit of the calendar-year Grand Slam ended in a semifinal loss at the U.S. Open — and Sharapova withdrawing before her opening match at the Brisbane International because of a sore left forearm. On Saturday, two days before her opening match, Williams said she felt “a little tired” because she’d been doing so much work, hosing down speculation that she was struggling during her hitting session earlier in the morning. In terms of training, she’s not just working at 100 percent, she said, “I’m at 120, 130 percent right now.” “I’ve had a really good preparation,” she said. “I didn’t have the match play that I’ve wanted to have but after playing for so many years on tour, I should be able to focus on that and the fact that I have played a lot of matches.” She has won 21 major titles, including the Australian and French Opens and Wimbledon in 2015. She doesn’t expect injury to be a problem. “It’s actually really fine. I don’t have any inflammation anymore,” she said. “It’s just that I just needed some time to get over that little hump.” RICK R YCROFT/AP Defending women’s champion Serena Williams said at a press conference on Saturday that she is “130 percent” healthy heading into this year’s Australian Open. PAGE 30 •STA R S A N D ST R I P E S • Sunday, January 17, 2016 NFL PLAYOFFS Panthers’ Harper: ‘We are the better team’ Week 6 victory at Seattle gave Carolina confidence for playoffs BY STEVE R EED Associated Press CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The Carolina Panthers no longer appear apprehensive about playing the two-time defending NFC champion Seattle Seahawks. In fact, they’re pretty confident. “We are the better team,” Panthers safety Roman Harper said matter-of-factly Monday. Now Harper wants his teammates to prove it again Sunday when the two teams meet in Charlotte in the NFC divisional playoffs. The winner advances to play the Green Bay-Arizona winner for the NFC championship. “We have to go out and show confidence in who we are and the things that we have done all year — and don’t shy away from the pressure,” Harper said. The Panthers (15-1) took a big step forward when they went to Seattle and defeated the Seahawks 27-23 in Week 6, a victory that served as a springboard to their 14-0 start. But it was more than just that. That victory was about clearing a major obstacle for the Panthers. Before that they had lost four times in three seasons to the Seahawks, including 31-17 in the divisional playoffs last January in Seattle. “It tells you it can be done,” Panthers coach Ron Rivera said of his team’s confident-building win in October. The Panthers and Seahawks appeared to be on a collision course for the playoffs the final Seattle Seahawks (10-6) at Carolina Panthers (15-1) AFN-Sports 7 p.m. Sunday CET 3 a.m. Monday JKT two months of the season. Several players said after that win they expected to see the Seahawks again in the postseason. Harper even called it “fate.” Many Panthers fans groaned on social media Sunday when Minnesota’s Blair Walsh missed a chip shot field goal that would have eliminated the Seahawks from the playoffs — and possibly given the Panthers a potentially easier road to the NFC title game by playing Green Bay rather than Seattle. But Carolina All-Pro cornerback Josh Norman, who is no stranger to overcoming adversity in his career, said that’s not the approach the Panthers are taking this week. “Why would you want anything in life that is easier?” Norman said. “Shoot man, if you don’t go for it head-on, then how can you say you’re the best at anything? That’s the way we are in our society — we want things the easy way and we want stuff to be given to us. We don’t want to work for it. We want it handed to us. I don’t DAVID T. FOSTER III/AP The Seahawks’ Jimmy Graham, right, makes a catch in front of the Panthers’ Roman Harper during the Panthers’ 27-23 victory on Oct. 18. The teams meet again Sunday with a spot in the NFC championship game at stake. Last year, the Seahawks eliminated Carolina in the divisional round. think that is the way it should be done. ... Challenge yourself to be the best. And if you want to be the best, then go beat the best.” Harper said the Panthers are better prepared for the Seahawks in this year’s playoffs than they were last January when they reached the postseason with a 78-1 record. Carolina finished first in points scored on offense this season and led the league in takeaways. “To be honest with you I don’t think we were ready for it,” Harper said of last year’s playoff defeat. “We were excited to be there and have a ticket to the dance. [This year] we have a better-looking date because we’re 15-1 and at home. This year we are looking forward to them having to come here.” The Panthers have not lost at home since Nov. 16, 2014 — a string of 11 straight games. That’s the longest home winning streak in the NFL. They will have to win two more games to get to where they ultimately want to go — the Super Bowl. “This team is built for this,” Harper said of a Panthers team that has eight All-Pros, including six on the first team. “This team is built for this playoff run and I’m looking forward to seeing who we are going to rise up to be.” Rubin, Mebane keys in Seattle’s top run defense BY TIM BOOTH Associated Press RENTON, Wash. — From afar, Brandon Mebane would look at film of other defensive tackles around the NFL and what Ahtyba Rubin was doing in Cleveland jumped off the screen. What he saw on the screen became He can run even more impressive when Rubin like deer. decided to sign Like a big with Seattle last offseason and play deer. alongside Mebane Brandon Mebane on the Seahawks Seahawks defensive defensive line. tackle on teammate “He runs down Ahtyba Rubin the field like I never seen no big dude run down the field,” Mebane said. “He can run like deer. Like a big deer. He’s a great player.” On a defense with stars like Richard Sherman, Bobby Wagner, Michael Bennett and Earl Thomas — just to name a few — players like Mebane and Rubin can ‘ ’ get easily overlooked. It’s understandable because their positions on the interior of Seattle’s defensive line make it difficult to stand out. But ask around about why the Seahawks had the best run defense in the NFL this season giving up just 81.5 yards per game and were successful twice in shutting down Minnesota’s Adrian Peterson and the reasons point back directly to Mebane and Rubin as the instigators of that success. “They make plays and they make sure that me and K.J. (Wright) never really get touched,” middle linebacker Bobby Wagner said. “They’ve done a great job with that. I don’t know if you guys have noticed it on film, but sometimes [Mebane] calls out the plays before it happens and [Rubin] does a great job of two-gapping and keeping the double teams. They’re very crucial to what we do as a team.” The task before Mebane and Rubin this week is among the most difficult they have faced all season, trying to shut down Carolina in the NFC divisional playoff game on Sunday. There may not be a more challenging or diverse run game in the NFL to try to slow down. Whether it’s Jonathan Stew- art carrying the ball, Mike Tolbert bulling his way through the line or the times quarterback Cam Newton keeps the ball in his own hands, there is not a more unique running attack in the league, according to the Seahawks. “It is a really diverse run game. It is the most that we will see in the NFL,” Seattle coach Pete Carroll said. “There is nobody that does more stuff and it’s basically because the quarterback is such a dynamic part of it. ... This is the most difficult offense that we face and it really is because Cam is such an adept player and they rely on him.” Both Rubin and Mebane entered this season with questions about how they could be effective for Seattle. Mebane was coming back from a serious hamstring injury that cost him the latter half of last season and the playoffs. He was also trying to come back from a significant injury at age 30 and playing a position where strength and explosiveness with his legs is a priority. “Can you imagine how big his hammy is? That’s a major surgery, a major injury to come back from,” Carroll said. “As we watched him in the offseason, through the summer time, he worked so hard to get back. I’ve said that he had one of his best offseasons ever. He had to, to get back. That usually pays you back, and he’s had a really good year for us.” Rubin was a bit of an unknown because of the lack of attention defensive tackles receive, but Seattle was confident in his ability to play the “three-technique” defensive tackle position and be able to cover two gaps of the offensive line. What caught them a bit by surprise was Rubin’s speed chasing the play downfield. He recovered Adrian Peterson’s key fourth-quarter fumble last week 13 yards beyond the line of scrimmage. “It was really clear the first time we’d sat down and really talked about it. I asked him to try to be really stout as a three-technique at the line of scrimmage, and then we’ve seen you running the football, be great at doing that for us and show us that you’re a big guy that can chase,” Carroll said. “I wasn’t asking him something that he wasn’t ready to do, but we just kind of solidified what our expectations were. He’s done that all year long.” •STA Sunday, January 17, 2016 R S A N D ST R I P E S • PAGE 31 NFL PLAYOFFS Trouble: It took a while for duo to adjust to O-line FROM BACK PAGE G ENE J. PUSKAR /AP Steelers receivers, from left, Markus Wheaton, Martavis Bryant and Sammie Coates wait to run a drill during practice Thursday in Pittsburgh. The Steelers face the Broncos without star receiver Antonio Brown, while he recovers from a concussion, in an NFL divisional playoff game in Denver on Sunday. Steelers embrace task of playing without Brown BY WILL GRAVES Associated Press PITTSBURGH — Antonio Brown leaned back in his locker recently and allowed himself a brief moment of introspection. Fresh off the most productive three-season stretch by a wide receiver in NFL history, a run that has garnered the Pittsburgh Steelers star a pair of first-team All-Pro selections while feeding social media a steady stream of GIF-worthy, open-field moves and touchdown celebrations, Brown listened as someone rattled off the list of Hall of Famers whose numbers he has somehow topped. “I am the best though, right?” Brown said in a way best described as a humblebrag. “Guys haven’t done what I’ve done. But we don’t want to talk about that. We always want to grow. Growing is never-ending.” Even when it hurts. Brown will miss the first playoff game of his career on Sunday when the Steelers travel to Denver in the divisional round. The four-time Pro Bowler and one of the league’s most electric players is out with a concussion sustained in the final minute of last week’s wild-card win over Cincinnati. The injury deprives the Steelers of their MVP against the league’s best defense, one he lit up for 189 yards and two touchdowns in a comeback victory a month ago. Yet the Steelers insist they can Pittsburgh Steelers (11-6) at Denver Broncos (12-4) AFN-Sports 10:30 p.m. Sunday CET 6:30 a.m. Monday JKT get by without him. Having an apparently healthy-ish Ben Roethlisberger helps. The quarterback is officially questionable with a sprained right shoulder but threw the ball well in practice on Friday, according to teammates. It also helps to have a group of receivers who have spent their time in Pittsburgh absorbing what they can from one of the most meticulous preparers in the league. “We’ve all leaned on him in the past, but it creates an opportunity for us,” Markus Wheaton said Friday. One Pittsburgh hasn’t had to face since a sprained ankle forced Brown to skip three games in 2012. Back then he was an overachieving sixth-round draft pick. Now he’s arguably one of the NFL’s most unguardable threats, his combination of speed — Brown runs with the intensity of a 6-year-old chasing down an ice-cream truck — hands and body control makes any one-onone matchup with him borderline unfair. Look for no further than 355 receptions since the start of the 2013 season as proof. Heading to Denver without him is less than ideal, yet it’s a challenge Wheaton, Martavis Bryant, Darrius Heyward-Bey and Sammie Coates believe they’re ready to embrace. None of them have played a game in Pittsburgh without Brown. Not having his familiar No. 84 in the huddle will be weird. It won’t be the end of the world. “To not see him be there with us, we’ve got to do some bigger things that we haven’t done before to show him that we’ve got his back,” said Coates, a rookie who caught all of one pass in limited playing time. In that sense, Brown’s own development has hastened the maturity of the rest of the group. Offensive coordinator Todd Haley requires each of Pittsburgh’s receivers to learn every route from every position so they’re prepared when he finds something he wants to exploit. Sometimes that means putting Brown in the slot. Sometimes it means putting him in the backfield or in motion at the snap. The Steelers expect that constant tinkering to help minimize the inevitable drop-off. “Everybody knows where to be and how to do everything,” Heyward-Bey said. “When somebody goes down, it’s not like, ‘Oh no, what do we do?’ ” secure the AFC’s No. 1 seed. They’ll host the Pittsburgh Steelers (11-6) Sunday. “Both of them have played hard all season. Both of them have played through injuries,” Peyton Manning said. “I do think kind of like a quarterback develops timing with receivers, that both of those backs are running behind five new offensive linemen for the most part. That chemistry between those seven, eight guys has taken time. I think that’s certainly a lot better than it was in Week 1 or 2.” Denver’s O-line features three first-time starters in Max Garcia, Matt Paradis and Michael Schofield. “I think that’s been a big difference in those guys seeing the holes based off of how Max is going to block or Matt is going to block, and the linemen feel more comfortable with those guys behind them,” Manning said. The running backs also feel more comfortable with each other. “My first year here, me and Ronnie barely talked,” Anderson said. “Part of it was because he’s from L.A. and I’m from the Bay, we didn’t get along. No, to be honest, that’s real. We just, we didn’t see eye to eye.” Hillman laughed off the geographical differences and said their personalities just clashed. While Anderson loves to talk, Hillman doesn’t. Asked for his thoughts last week on which team he’d like to face in the divisional round of the playoffs, Hillman replied, “No. Who has thoughts?” Anderson, for one, and he loves to share them. “Yeah, he still talks too damn much,” Hillman said. “You’ve just got to get used to him.” What Hillman and Anderson do well is compliment — and complement — each other. Asked what impresses him most about Hillman, Anderson said: “The growth. Since I’ve been here, the football IQ he has now is just tremendous. “And then you know him making those runs between the tackles that people said he can’t do, him breaking tackles that people said he can’t do. I mean, Ronnie’s a dog. Ouch. You play with a dog, it just makes you want to go out there and be that same dog.” Asked what impresses him most about Anderson, Hillman said: “He just bounces off tackles. All of a sudden you Both of just find guys them have bouncing off of him or you played know you see hard all something, there’s nothseason. ing there and Both of all of a sudthem have den somebody falls off played of him and he through runs for 15 or 20.” injuries. Hillman is Peyton the speedster, Manning Anderson the Broncos QB power driver. They both see the game the same thanks to all their sideline conversations they have between series. Anderson has learned to listen; Hillman has learned to speak up. “I just think when it comes to football, me saying some things that he can look at on tape and say, ‘Damn, C.J.’s making sense’ probably built confidence on what I’m saying,” Anderson said. “And vice versa: he said some things and I’m going, ‘Man, Ronnie’s making some sense on that. I have never thought of it that way.’ ” The 24-year-old running backs can still clash at times. Anderson is seven months older than Hillman, but Hillman entered the NFL a year earlier. “I’m Big Bro,” insisted Anderson. “I’m still the Daddy in the room,” retorted Hillman. ‘ ’ DAVID Z ALUBOWSKI /AP Broncos running back Ronnie Hillman celebrates with fans after scoring during against the Chargers on Jan. 3 in Denver. STA R S A N D ST R I P E S Sunday, January 17, 2016 SPORTS Cavalier attitude Cleveland wraps up road trip by beating Rockets » NBA, Page 27 NFL PLAYOFFS DAVID EULITT, K ANSAS CITY STAR, ABOVE , AND STACIE SCOTT, C OLORADO SPRINGS G AZETTE, RIGHT/TNS Broncos running backs Ronnie Hillman, above, and C.J. Anderson, right, combined for 1,583 yards rushing. Double trouble Denver RBs form terrific tandem BY A RNIE STAPLETON Associated Press ENGLEWOOD, Colo. here was a time when Ronnie Hillman and C.J. Anderson didn’t even speak to each other. Now, they’re fast friends who have given the Denver Broncos a terrific tandem in the backfield heading into the playoffs. The Broncos are one of two NFL teams with two 700-yard rushers. The other is Cincinnati. Hillman led the team with a career-high 863 T yards and seven touchdowns. Anderson ran for 720 yards and five TDs. Both maneuvered their way through a spate of injuries this season along with the growing pains that came with a new offensive line and Gary Kubiak’s zone blocking scheme. Doling out tips to each other between series, they hit their stride this month. Denver’s double dose of trouble for defenses combined for 212 yards and two touchdowns against the Chargers in Week 17. That helped the Broncos (12-4) SEE TROUBLE ON PAGE 31 Inside: In matchup with Seahawks, Harper says Panthers are better team, Page 30 Federer: Djokovic should have a star by his name Kane’s hat trick helps Blackhawks win 10th straight Australian Open, Page 29 NHL, Page 26