COURT DERAILS OBAMA ON IMMIGRATION
Transcription
COURT DERAILS OBAMA ON IMMIGRATION
$2.00 JUNE 24 - 26, 2016 THE NATION’S NEWS E6 Yep, I switched to Sprint. 06.24.16 Paul, former Verizon customer sprint.com/network | 1 (800) SPRINT-1 COURT DERAILS OBAMA ON IMMIGRATION 4-4 vote means more than 4 million parents could face threat of deportation Richard Wolf @richardjwolf USA TODAY WASHINGTON The Supreme Court dealt a likely fatal blow Thursday to President Obama’s effort to protect millions of undocumented immigrants from deportation and allow them to seek work permits, deadlocking 4-4 over a plan that had divided the nation as well as the justices. The tie vote leaves intact a preliminary injunction that stopped the program in its tracks more than a year ago after Texas and 25 other states claimed Obama lacked the authority to circumvent Congress. Though the case will return to Texas for further review, it’s unlikely the lower federal courts that blocked the program will reverse themselves. In practical terms, the 4-4 vote dooms for the remainder of Obama’s presidency his goal of providing help to more than 4 million undocumented parents whose children already have such protection. The justices probably It was a sudden, crushing defeat for millions of parents who came to the country illegally and have lived in the shadows, often for decades. split along ideological lines, though the vote was not revealed; the ruling carries no national precedent. It was a sudden, crushing defeat for millions of parents who came to the country illegally and have lived in the shadows, often for decades. The administration had hoped that at least one of the more conservative justices — possibly Chief Justice John Roberts — would rule that the plan posed no financial threat to the states, therefore could not be challenged in court. “Today’s decision is frustrating to those who seek to grow our economy and bring a rationality to our immigration system and to allow people to come out of the shadows and lift this perpetual cloud on them,” Obama said. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said the ruling shows that “even a president cannot unilaterally change the law.” v STORY CONTINUES ON 5A GETTY IMAGES Use of race OK’d at schools Justice Anthony Kennedy votes with liberal justices to uphold affirmative action at University of Texas. IN NEWS NEWSLINE IN NEWS JOE ROSENTHAL, AP The Feb 23, 1945, photo of flag raising atop Mount Suribachi. Marine identified wrong in iconic Iwo Jima photo IN SPORTS NBA No. 1 pick Ben Simmons says he is feeling relieved Check out our draft tracker with analysis, grades for young talented players. IN LIFE COURTESY OF COLUMBIA PICTURES Blake Lively in The Shallows. Lively up against sharks, angry seagulls in thriller HOME DELIVERY 1-800-872-0001 USATODAYSERVICE.COM QIJFAF-05005v(c)k ©COPYRIGHT 2016 USA TODAY, A division of Gannett Co., Inc. USA SNAPSHOTS© A very wet T-shirt It takes over 700 gallons of water to make one cotton T-shirt SOURCE The Global Leadership Award in Sustainable Apparel and The Sustainable Fashion Academy MICHAEL B. SMITH AND PAUL TRAP, USA TODAY STATE-BY-STATE 8A CHELSEA PENSIONERS LEAVE A POLLING STATION THURSDAY. BY HANNAH MCKAY, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY UK POISED TO LEAVE THE EU BALLOT QUESTION: The United Kingdom has voted to leave the European Union, according to a BBC forecast late Thursday. The Electoral Commission said a record 46.5 million people had registered to vote. Sealed ballot boxes, and ballots sent by mail, were collected and transported to the 382 counting locations. The British exit — or “Brexit” — could rattle global financial markets. IN NEWS “Should the United Kingdom remain a member of the European Union or leave the European Union?” The side that gets more than 50% of the votes will win. Cop who drove Freddie Gray acquitted Verdict a big setback in prosecution’s case John Bacon USA TODAY A Baltimore judge found a city police officer not guilty of all charges Thursday in the death of Freddie Gray, a verdict that dealt a severe blow to prosecution efforts to hold police accountable for the young black man’s death while in custody last year. Officer Caesar Goodson Jr. had faced the most serious count, second-degree depraved-heart murder, leveled against any of the six officers charged in the controversial case. Goodson, 46, was also acquitted of manslaughter, two counts of vehicular manslaughter, assault, reckless endangerment and official misconduct. Gray, 25, was arrested by bicycle officers April 12, 2015, after he caught their eye and ran. He was shackled and loaded into a van AMERICA’S MARKETS 6B BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES Baltimore officer Caesar Goodson Jr. at the courthouse Thursday. He faced the most serious charges in the case. driven by Goodson but was not in a seat belt. Gray suffered a spinal injury en route to the police station and died a week later. Gray’s death set off Black Lives Matter demonstrations across the nation and sometimes violent protests in Baltimore. Goodson, who is black, had MARKETPLACE TODAY 9C PUZZLES 5D waived his right to a jury, instead casting his lot with Judge Barry Williams in a bench trial. The local Fraternal Order of Police called on State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby to drop her “malicious prosecution” of the officers. Some experts expect Mosby to continue pursuing convictions. TONIGHT ON TV 7D “I think Marilyn Mosby is very concerned ... about her political career,” Wayne Cohen, a law professor at George Washington University, told USA TODAY. “She has to make some decisions on whether to fish or cut bait on this. I thing she will continue to fish.” Legal expert and defense lawyer Barry Slotnick agreed. “I think they are stuck with going forward. And I don’t think anybody is going to be convicted.” Prosecutors claimed Goodson, 46, intentionally gave Gray a rough ride. They said he also was responsible for buckling Gray’s seat belt and failed to get Gray medical attention. Goodson’s lawyers said Gray was too volatile to buckle in and that there was no evidence of a rough ride. The trial of officer William Porter, who is black, ended with a hung jury and will be retried. Officer Edward Nero, who is white, was acquitted by Williams, who is black, last month. Three other officers still face trials. WEATHER 10A YOUR SAY 10A 2A NEWS E4 USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 VOICES Venezuela’s food shortage is daunting Shopping is a daily nightmare, requiring hours, patience, luck and a good sense of logistics. Peter Wilson Special for USA TODAY LA VICTORIA , VENEZUELA I am surrounded by a sea of salt, and I’m not even at the beach. The supermarket in this city of 150,000 souls where I do most of my shopping has filled up nearly an entire aisle of shelves with salt to disguise the fact that it has little else to sell. The supermarket usually has a long line of desperate shoppers outside, waiting hours to enter to buy whatever is available. This morning, there is no one waiting, and I know why. “They have nothing,” a middle-age woman says to no one in particular as I enter. Oh, there are some things to buy. Besides salt, there are fresh vegetables and fruits, dairy products but no milk, some cereal, lots of snacks and a few canned goods. The only meat is sausages; there are three kinds of cheese. The only problem: A kilogram of each costs more than a fourth of our monthly minimum wage of 15,050 bolivars. Basic foodstuffs — the things most Venezuelans want to eat such as cornmeal, wheat flour, pasta, rice, milk, eggs, sugar, coffee, chicken, mayonnaise, margarine, cooking oil and beef — are conspicuous by their absence. And there is no toilet paper, no sanitary napkins, no disposable JUAN BARRETO, AFP/GETTY IMAGES baby diapers, no shampoo, no toothpaste, no hand soap and no deodorant. Shopping in Venezuela is a daily nightmare, requiring hours, patience, luck and a good sense of logistics. Many days, impromptu protests over the lack of food and cooking gas, or growing lawlessness close main thoroughfares as residents barricade streets and block access to stores. Lines often start at 3 a.m., making it difficult for me and my immediate neighbors, who live in a mountain village 40 minutes outside La Victoria, to arrive in time to have a chance to acquire hard-to-find items. Sometimes, a few intrepid neighbors spend the night sleeping on the sidewalks in front of the supermarkets, braving rain, thugs and rats to have a chance at gaining a favorable position in line. Venezuela’s economic collapse is due to many factors: falling oil prices that have reduced the country’s revenue but also a socialist revolution that has resulted in the expropriation of more than 1,200 companies and the imposition of stifling price and foreign exchange controls that crushed businesses and slashed national production. My neighbors and I find ways to cope. Given the absence of wheat flour and cornmeal, many are experimenting. The ubiquitous arepa, or cornmeal patty that is the national dish, is being re- The shelves of a supermarket are mostly empty in Caracas, Venezuela, on May 28. placed by less tasty substitutes made of yucca or green bananas. Many of my urban friends plant vegetables in their outdoor spaces — if they have any — or in pots. Another friend, who is a hairdresser, charges clients food to do their hair. For a shampoo and dry, she charges a kilo of cornmeal, saying she doesn’t have time to stand in line like some of her clients. Venezuelans are resourceful. Many have posted entries on Facebook and other social media venues, giving hints as to how to make deodorant from foot talc or toothpaste from blue laundry soap bars. But in the face of such shortages, the only option for many is to eat less. Making matters worse is the fact that all of the country, save the capital of Caracas, has daily three-hour power cuts to prevent a nationwide blackout. Government offices are open only four mornings a week, again to save power. There are those who continue to believe the government’s claims that the economy, which is likely to contract 8% for a second consecutive year, is improving. President Nicolás Maduro knows what he is doing, and things are getting better, says one elderly man who is standing in a line with me and 10 others to buy bread. The others ignore him, collectively rolling their eyes as he continues talking to himself. Datanalysis, the best-known Venezuelan polling agency, estimates that more than 80% of basic foodstuffs are unavailable in the country. That has forced many to look for essentials from bachaqueros, Venezuelan slang for food speculators who are often in league with corrupt government officials seeking to cash in on the crisis. That means paying a premium for anything they sell. Although the official price for one kilogram of cornmeal is 190 bolivars, bachaqueros — whose name derives from the Spanish word for ant — sell the same item for up to 1,500 bolivars. At least there is plenty of salt to rub in our wounds. Wilson is a journalist who has lived in Venezuela since 1992. Sanders says fight to ‘transform nation’ continues He moves to changing economic system, defeating Trump Nicole Gaudiano USA TODAY WASHINGTON Sen. Bernie Sanders vowed Thursday to continue his fight to transform the Democratic Party and the nation, saying political campaigns come and go, but “political and social revolutions continue.” “Our goal from day one has been transform this nation,” the Vermont senator said in a speech at The Town Hall performance venue in New York City. “And that is the fight we are going to continue.” Sanders praised the union movement, railed against poverty around the county, and warned his followers of the dangers of complacency. "We cannot allow ourselves to become used to the fact that we have hundreds of thousands of children in this country who are homeless," he said to cheers of "Bernie! Bernie!" and "Run Bernie, run!" "Never lose your sense of outrage," Sanders implored the approximately 1,250 supporters who attended the speech. Hillary Clinton has won enough delegates to clinch the nomination, but Sanders apparently doesn’t seem to need the prospect of winning to keep his campaign alive. Earlier Thursday, he taped a segment of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, telling the audience, "All of you and everybody else who’s watching have got to be involved in the political process, have got to stand up and fight for the kind of America that we know that we can become, and I’m never going to give up on that fight. Audience members clapped and chanted "Bernie" when he walked on stage. About half gave Sanders a standing ovation. "You’ve gotten used to that," Colbert said. "Sounds awfully good," Sanders replied. Thursday's speech was part of a two-day swing through New ALEX BRANDON, AP “We’re going to go all over this country because that is what the political revolution is about,” Sen. Bernie Sanders said. York that will include a rally Friday in Syracuse, where Sanders will campaign for Eric Kingson, a progressive congressional candidate who co-founded Social Security Works. Sanders said during Thursday's speech he also plans to travel to California to campaign for a woman running for the state Senate. "We're going to go all over this country because that is what the political revolution is about," he told the packed performance hall. "It is millions of people getting involved in the political process in a way that has never been seen in the modern history of this country." Sanders said he wants to ensure the Democratic Party platform is the most progressive ever. Among other things, he wants the party agenda to make it clear the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal is "dead." And he said he may come to the floor of the Democratic convention with a proposal to establish "modern-day" GlassSteagall legislation, which separated commercial and investment banking activities before it was repealed. Sanders also vowed to abolish closed primaries and complained that superdelegates -- the Democratic Party leaders and officials who may vote for the candidate of their choice at the party's national convention -- aren't respecting the will of Democratic primary voters. "We're going to change that," he said. "And while we're at it, we may as well transform the entire Democratic Party. What that means is forcing open the door for ordinary people, for working people and young people, rather than allowing wealthy campaign contributors to be running that party." Earlier Thursday, Sanders spoke at the annual convention of the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials, where he denounced Trump’s “bigotry.” Corrections & Clarifications Senate gun compromise alive — for now USA TODAY is committed to accuracy. To reach us, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail [email protected]. Please indicate whether you’re responding to content online or in the newspaper. Bill that would ban sales to people on no-fly list passes first test, but it faces uphill battle Donovan Slack and Deborah Barfield Berry USA TODAY WASHINGTON Although the Senate voted Thursday to allow further consideration of bipartisan legislation banning gun sales to people on the no-fly list, it is not clear it has enough support to pass. Earlier in the day, House Democrats ended their sit-in on the floor of the House of Representatives after more than 24 hours of chants and speeches advocating for stricter gun control measures. Senate Republicans could have killed the legislation, but several sided with Democrats in allowing it to go forward. Fifty-two senators voted to keep considering the bill, but it will ultimately need 60 votes to be adopted. To reach the threshold, supporters could set their sights on picking up the backing of Sens. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif, outspoken advocates for a no-fly-no-buy ban who didn’t vote Thursday. But they would then have to flip six Republicans who voted to kill the legislation, a daunting task. Still, Democrats declared victory in simply keeping the compromise — crafted by Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and a handful of colleagues from both parties — alive for another chance. “We won the vote, Collins won that vote,” Democratic leader Harry Reid of Nevada said, adding that the National Rifle Association “lost this one.” He called on Republican leaders to allow another vote to actually try and pass the proposal. “It’s the right thing for the country,” Reid said. The measure would ban sales to roughly 109,000 people, including 2,700 Americans, who are on two lists: The no-fly list, which prevents them from boarding commercial planes flying to, from or over the United States; and a “selectee list,” which mandates they receive extra scrutiny at airports before flying. The measure, proposed as an MARK WILSON, GETTY IMAGES Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, crafted the compromise gun bill with colleagues from both parties. “It’s the right thing for the country.” Sen. Harry Reid amendment to a spending bill funding the Justice Department, would allow individuals denied firearms to appeal in court. It would also mandate notification of law enforcement if someone who was on broader terrorism watch lists within the past five years tries to buy a gun. In the House, Democrats vowed to continue their efforts when the House reconvenes after its July Fourth break. Democratic leaders, meanwhile, said lawmakers will return to their congressional districts and drum up more support. “We’re going to engage our constituents on this subject and we will not allow this body to ever feel as comfortable as they have felt in the past to silence our voices,” said South Carolina Rep. James Clyburn, the assistant Democratic leader. Speaker Paul Ryan excoriated Democrats on Thursday morning for disrupting the business of the House as the sit-in moved into its second day. Ryan told reporters Democrats “are descending (the House) into chaos — I don’t think this should be a very proud moment for democracy.” Ryan forced several quick votes in the pre-dawn hours Thursday over loud Democratic objections. He said he would prefer to have allowed debate on those measures, but Democrats were not interested in real debate. SUBSCRIPTIONS 1-800-USA-0001 Monday – Friday 8 a.m. – 7 p.m. ET 7950 Jones Branch Dr., McLean, Va. 22108, 703-854-3400 Published by Gannett, Volume 34, No. 201 (ISSN0734-7456) Regular U.S. subscription rates: $25 per month; $300 per year. For customer service-related inquiries, please contact Barb Smith, VP/Customer Service, PO BOX 650301, DALLAS TX 75265-0301, or fax 1-800-732-3631. Advertising: All advertising published in USA TODAY is subject to the current rate card; copies available from the advertising department. USA TODAY may in its sole discretion edit, classify, reject or cancel at any time any advertising submitted. Classified: 1-800-397-0070 National, Regional: 703-854-3400 Reprint permission, copies of articles, glossy reprints: www.GannettReprints.com or call 212-221-9595 USA TODAY is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to other news services. Published daily except Saturdays, Sundays and widely observed holidays. Periodicals postage paid at McLean, Va., and at additional mailing offices. USA TODAY, its logo and associated graphics are registered trademarks. All rights reserved. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to USA TODAY,PO BOX 650301, DALLAS TX 75265-0301. USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 NEWS 3A E6 ‘BREXIT’ VOTE UK MAKES HISTORIC BREAK WITH EU British pound falls against dollar as new day dawns in Europe Jane Onyanga-Omara and Kim Hjelmgaard USA TODAY LONDON The British pound fell to a 31-year low as the “leave” camp appeared on course to win a dramatic and historic referendum on the United Kingdom’s membership of the European Union. With more 70% of votes counted, the “leave” side was ahead by about half a million votes. The BBC and Sky News forecast a victory for the “leave” advocates. Results from the British referendum — also known as “Brexit” — were incomplete with 101 districts still to declare with “leave” holding 51.4% of the votes counted and “remain” at 48.6%. The British currency initially soared to a 2016 peak of $1.50 amid signs that “remain” was winning the day, but then moved lower with losses accelerating. It fell from $1.50 to below $1.35 as results suggested a strong possibility the U.K. would vote to quit the bloc. Asian stock markets proved volatile as well, with Tokyo stocks and U.S. futures plunging as early vote results showed a tight race. Nigel Farage, leader of the U.K. Independence Party said that “dawn was breaking on an independent U.K.” He is not an official member of the “leave” campaign, but supports an exit from the EU. Kim Hjelmgaard and Jane Onyanga-Omara USA TODAY LONDON Dan Costello voted for the United Kingdom to stay in the European Union; his wife voted for it to leave — but all’s fair in love and war and the “Brexit.” “We don’t talk about it. And there’s no hard feelings,” Costello, 64, said Thursday, standing outside the hardware store where he works just around the corner from the Palace of Westminster and houses of Parliament. “Tomorrow when we wake up and know the result, I’ll still do most of the cooking. It’ll be fine.” The results of the referendum vote are due Friday morning — more than enough time to drive a wedge between families who voted The British currency soared amid signs “remain” was winning the day but fell after some returns were closer than expected. Earlier he said he thought the “remain” side would “edge it.” The final poll from online research firm YouGov had “remain” on 52% and “leave” on 48%. While not an exit poll, the survey was conducted on election day. The four-month campaign has been acrimonious. Backers argued that severing ties with the EU is the only way to reduce a flood of migrants and protect the U.K.’s independence from burdensome EU regulation. Supporters of remaining in the EU, led by Prime Minister David Cameron, said jobs, the economy, national security and the U.K.’s standing on the world stage would be compromised outside the alliance. Although there are no public exit polls and the final official results might not be known until Friday morning, financial markets, which have commissioned their own private exit polls, had appeared to feel that the “remain” forces may have squeaked through, until the Newcastle votes poured in. Boris Johnson, who favors a “Brexit,” and his wife, Marina Wheeler, arrive at the polling station Thursday in London. JANE ONYANGA-OMARA/USA TODAY Kevin Campbell, 36, left, and his father Mick Campbell, 63, said they would vote to leave the EU. IAN FORSYTH, GETTY IMAGES CARL COURT, GETTY IMAGES IN BRIEF IT’S NOT ALL FUN AND GAMES Referendum ballots are counted in the United Kingdom’s North East region Thursday in Sunderland, England. A final tally is not expected until sometime Friday. Marine misidentified in iconic Iwo Jima flag-raising photo Jim Michaels @jimmichaels USA TODAY The Marine Corps acknowledged Thursday it had misidentified one of the six men in the iconic 1945 World War II photo of the flag-raising on Iwo Jima. The investigation solved one mystery but raised another. The Marine Corps investigation identified a man who has never been officially linked to the famous photo: Pfc. Harold Schultz, who died in 1995 and went through life without publicly talking about his role. “Why doesn’t he say anything to anyone,” asked Charles Neimeyer, a Marine Corps historian who was on the panel that investigated the identities of the flag raisers. “That’s the mystery.” “I think he took his secret to the grave,” Neimeyer said. The Marine Corps investigation concluded with near certainty that Schultz was one of the Marines raising the flag in the photo. The investigation also deterWASHINGTON JEAN-PHILIPPE KSIAZEK, AFP/GETTY IMAGES A demonstrator plays with a ball Thursday near French police holding shields during a protest in Lyon against proposed labor law reforms aimed at liberalizing France’s job market. GUNMAN WHO OPENED FIRE IN GERMAN CINEMA KILLED BLUEGRASS LEGEND RALPH STANLEY DIES AT 89 Police shot and killed a masked gunman Thursday who had opened fire in a cinema and taken hostages in a small town in western Germany, according to German authorities. At least 25 people were hurt in the melee. However, the mass circulation newspaper Bild said they were injured by tear gas used by police. The Darmstadt Echo put the number of injured from 20 to 50 people. The incident erupted in the Kinopolis movie theater in the town of Viernheim, about 45 miles south of Frankfurt, according to the Associated Press. — Doug Stanglin Bluegrass legend Ralph Stanleydied Thursday night after a battle with skin cancer, according to a Facebook post by his grandson. Stanley was 89 years old and a member of the Grand Ole Opry and Bluegrass Hall of Fame. His publicist, Kirt Webster, confirmed Stanley’s death but did not have details. Stanley’s career was rejuvenated in 2000 when his music was featured on the soundtrack of the film O Brother, Where Art Thou? His recording of “O Death” won a Best Male Country Vocal Performance. — Juli Thanki, The Tennessean IRAQI SECURITY FORCES CLEAR 70% OF FALLUJAH Iraqi security forces have cleared about 70% of Fallujah from control of Islamic State militants, after breaking through defenses last week and fighting their way to the city center, a top coalition officer said Thursday. British Army Maj. Gen. Douglas Chalmers said the progress reflects an increase in confidence and experience among Iraqi security forces. That is changing as coalitionbacked Iraqi forces make headway against militants across the coun— Jim Michaels try. Thursday. “The reason I’m voting ‘leave’ today is because we don’t govern our own courts. They’re governed by the EU,” said Mick Campbell, 63, sitting outside a coffee shop with his son, Kevin. Kevin Campbell, 36, also wants out. “We recently lost a contract to a Romanian company because those lads were willing to work for 50 pounds (about $75) less a day,” the younger Campbell said. Father and son work for a firm that installs anti-fire sprinkler systems. Campbell’s wife — Kevin’s mother — was not toeing the family line. She voted “remain.” “We disagree about it but don’t argue about it,” Mick Campbell said. that mined John Bradley, a Navy corpsman, was not in the photograph taken on JaMount pan’s Suribachi by Joe Rosenthal, SMITHSONIAN a photographer CHANNEL for the AssociU.S. Marine ated Press. The Corps Pfc. Feb. 23, 1945, Harold photo that has Schultz been reproduced over seven decades in fact depicts the second flag-raising of the day. The three surviving men identified in the photo, John Bradley, Ira Hayes and Rene Gagnon, went on a tour selling war bonds back in the United States and were hailed as heroes. Bradley’s son James Bradley and co-author Ron Powers, wrote a best seller about the flag raisers, Flags of Our Fathers, which was made into a movie directed by Clint Eastwood. John Bradley had been in the first flag-raising photo on Iwo Jima and may have confused the two, Neimeyer said. Schultz, who enlisted in the Marine Corps at age 17, was seriously injured in fighting on the Japanese island and went on to a 30-year career with the U.S. Postal Service in Los Angeles after recovering from his wounds. He was engaged to a woman after the war, but she died of a brain tumor before they could wed, said his stepdaughter, Dezreen MacDowell. Schultz married MacDowell’s mother at age 63. Analysts believe Schultz, who received a Purple Heart, knew he was in the iconic image, but chose not to talk about it. “I have a really hard time believing how it wouldn’t have been known to him,” said Matthew Morgan, a retired Marine officer who worked on a Smithsonian Channel documentary on the investigation. The filmmakers turned over their evidence to the Marine Corps to examine. Schultz may have mentioned his role at least once. MacDowell now she recalls he said he was one of the flag raisers in the early 1990s when they were discussing the war in the Pacific. “Harold, you are a hero,” she said she told him. “Not really. I was a Marine,” he said. POWERFUL TORNADO STRIKES CHINA, 78 REPORTEDLY DEAD A tornado and hailstorm struck the outskirts of an eastern Chinese city on Thursday, killing at least 78 people and destroying buildings, smashing trees and flipping vehicles on their roofs. The tornado hit a densely populated area of farms and factories near the city of Yancheng in Jiangsu province, about 500 miles south of Beijing. Nearly 500 people were injured, 200 of them critically, the official Xinhua News Agency reported. Roads were blocked by trees, downed power lines and other debris, state broadcaster CCTV re— Melanie Eversley ported. JOE ROSENTHAL, AP This Feb 23, 1945, photo, showing U.S. Marines of the 28th Regiment, 5th Division raising the American flag atop Mount Suribachi, had been the subject of some controversy. 4A NEWS USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 1 2 NEWS 5A USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 Court affirms college racial policies Ruling doesn’t cover all such practices, but Texas gets go-ahead Richard Wolf @richardjwolf USA TODAY WASHINGTON A deeply divided Supreme Court upheld the use of racial preferences in admissions at the University of Texas on Thursday, giving a surprising vote of confidence to the type of affirmative action policies it had seemed prepared to strike down. The 4-3 ruling did not endorse all programs designed to attract a diverse student body at colleges and universities. But Justice Anthony Kennedy and the court’s more liberal justices said Texas’ unique method of singling out some minority students for admission to its flagship campus in Austin was constitutional. The court had upheld the use of race in college admissions in 1978, then again in 2003. But Kennedy, clearly destined to be the deciding vote in the case, had been a consistent opponent of affirmative action. “Considerable deference is owed to a university in defining those intangible characteristics, like student body diversity, that are central to its identity and educational mission,” Kennedy wrote. “But still, it remains an enduring challenge to our nation’s education system to reconcile the pursuit of diversity with the constitutional promise of equal treatment and dignity.” His ruling won the votes of liberal Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor. Justice Elena Kagan recused herself, presumably because she was involved in the case as U.S. solicitor general before joining the court in 2010. Justice Samuel Alito slammed the decision as “affirmative action gone wild” in a 51-page dissent that dwarfed the court’s 20-page opinion. He said the ruling allows the university to seek out African-American students with privileged backgrounds over low-income white and Asian students. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Clarence Thomas joined his dissent. “When affirmative action programs were first adopted, it was for the purpose of helping the dis- MARK GREENBERG FOR USA TODAY Students fill the sidewalks between classes in November at the University of Texas-Austin. “Deference is owed to a university in defining those intangible characteristics ... that are central to its identity.” Justice Anthony Kennedy advantaged,” he said in the dissent. “Now we are told that a program that tends to admit poor and disadvantaged minority students is inadequate because it does not work to the advantage of those who are more fortunate.” The decision — more than six months in the making — was made without Justice Antonin Scalia, who died Feb. 13. It was the second time the justices considered the case; in 2013, they sent it back to a federal appeals court with instructions to more closely scrutinize the university’s program. Even so, that court again sided with the school. This time, it appeared during oral argument that a majority of justices were prepared to rule that the school’s use of race violated the Constitution’s equal protection clause by giving minority students a leg up. The university uses a system in which the top-ranked students from all high schools that use such rankings are admitted, including those in heavily minority neighborhoods. That system, which brings in many African Americans and other minorities, was not challenged. The case had threatened the use of racial preferences not only at the University of Texas-Austin but across the nation, since the court’s ruling could have cast doubt on most affirmative action policies. In ruling for the school, the court’s majority did not absolve all universities of the need to meet a high standard when granting preferences. Immigration decision could spur state action v CONTINUED FROM 1A ALLISON SHELLEY, GETTY IMAGES Rosario Reyes, an undocumented mother from El Salvador, reacts to news of a Supreme Court decision blocking President Obama’s immigration plan Thursday in front of the court. After judicial defeat, immigrant groups focus on their next moves They will push for another hearing after new justice confirmed Alan Gomez @alangomez USA TODAY Immigrants and the groups that support them struggled Thursday to explain how damaging the Supreme Court’s decision on President Obama’s immigration plan truly was. From disappointment to confusion to anger, they expressed a wide variety of emotions after the justices’ tie vote upheld a lower court’s decision to block Obama’s plan to protect up to 4 million undocumented immigrants from deportation. One of those is Nelly Curiel, 35, who arrived in Texas 18 years ago from her native Mexico and has since had three children — all U.S. citizens. Curiel said she remembers the day in November 2014 when Obama announced his plan to protect people such as her. “My dreams were finally going to come true,” Curiel said Thursday. “Everything was going to change. I was going to be able to work without fear. I was going to be able to travel with my children. That’s why I’m so sad. Now those hopes are gone.” Despite the disappointment, supporters of Obama’s plan, called Deferred Action for Parents of Americans, or DAPA, quickly turned their focus to ways they could fight back against the Supreme Court’s ruling. Karen Tumlin, legal director for the National Immigration Center, said lawyers will push the Justice Department to request that the Supreme Court rehear the case after a ninth justice is confirmed to the high court. Thursday’s ruling affects only a preliminary injunction issued by Texas District Judge Andrew Hanen, so Tumlin said they would fight to ensure Hanen doesn’t issue a permanent injunction. Hillary Clinton, the presumptive Democratic presidential candidate, said that if elected, she would push an immigration bill in her first 100 days in office to allow undocumented immigrants hurt by Thursday’s ruling to receive a pathway to citizenship. The lawsuit that stopped Obama’s immigration program was filed by Texas and 25 other states. Rep. Jared Polis, D-Colo., suggested the Obama administration should try to implement the program in the states that were not part of the lawsuit. “My dreams were finally going to come true. ... Now those hopes are gone.” Nelly Curiel, 35 “The governor of Texas should not have the power to dictate immigration policy in Colorado,” he said. Greg Abbott, Texas’ Republican governor, hailed the court’s decision, calling the ruling “a victory for all law-abiding Americans — including the millions of immigrants who came to America following the rule of law.” Marisa Franco, director of Mijente, a group that organizes Hispanic activists, said it will start putting pressure on Obama to enact a moratorium on deportations as the DAPA case winds its way through the courts. “With the courts also taken over by the party politics that have ruled the immigration issue for more than a decade, President Obama has a responsibility to pursue alternatives to make his policies more humane,” Franco said. Perhaps the biggest response from immigration groups could be seen in November. Rocio Saenz, executive vice president of the Service Employees International Union, said the Supreme Court decision will be used to mobilize Hispanic voters. “We will vote, we will march, and we’ll hold those accountable at the ballot box who have stood in the way of families with their anti-immigrant policies and rhetoric,” he said. The Latino Victory Fund, a group co-founded by actress Eva Longoria and businessman Henry Muñoz III, and Priorities USA, a Democratic PAC supporting Clinton’s presidential campaign, announced a “five-figure” digital advertising buy in response to the ruling. The ads will target Republicans in Colorado, Nevada and Florida who have opposed efforts to protect undocumented immigrants from deportation and encourage people to mobilize for Clinton in November. Until then, people such as Zaire Garcia will wait for a resolution to the seemingly neverending legal battles over DAPA. Garcia’s parents are undocumented, and Thursday, the 23year-old from Austin wept as she explained how she and her three sisters — all U.S. citizens — will panic that every phone call from their father could be the one saying he’s been caught by immigration agents. “This is about moms and dads who have been humiliated and exploited and continue to keep their heads down out of love for their U.S. citizen children,” she said. “What the court does not understand is that I will continue to fight for my mom and my dad because they deserve better. This is not the end.” Like three other tie rulings since Justice Antonin Scalia’s death in February left the court with only eight justices, the onesentence opinion simply announced that the court was “equally divided” and unable to muster a majority for either side. That’s all opponents needed to block the program, which would have offered qualifying parents of children who were born in the USA or are legal residents the right to remain in the country for three years and apply for work authorization. The president, who had two lower-court strikes against him, needed an elusive fifth vote. “Justice has been delayed, and justice delayed is justice denied,” said Marielena Hincapié, executive director of the National Immigration Law Center. SAUL LOEB, AFP/GETTY IMAGES “Today’s decision is frustrating to those who seek to grow our economy and bring a rationality to our immigration system.” President Obama The Obama administration could ask the high court to rehear the case when it gets back to full strength — a long shot at best. It could request that the injunction blocking the program be limited to the three states overseen by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit: Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi. On the other hand, the decision could embolden conservative governors and legislatures to mount more court challenges to federal immigration actions. The ruling will have political repercussions this fall. Cristina Jimenez, director of the immigrant rights group United We Dream, called for political action “because a new president could either protect and build on these programs or take them away.” Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton said the tie vote does not prove the plan is outside the president’s legal authority. She lamented that it throws millions of families “into a state of uncertainty.” Her Republican opponent, Donald Trump, said the decision “blocked one of the most unconstitutional actions ever undertaken by a president ... giving work permits and entitlement benefits to people illegally in the country.” The immigration battle was waged on two fronts before the court: The administration fought with the states as well as with the House of Representatives, which blocked the president’s effort to confer legal status to some of the nation’s more than 11 million illegal immigrants. Obama announced the “Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents,” or DAPA, program in November 2014. It would extend protections to more than 4 million parents who meet the criteria, just as a 2012 program did for immigrants brought to the USA as children. More than 700,000 have qualified for that earlier program, which would be extended. Once qualified, parents could apply for work authorization, pay taxes and receive some government benefits, such as Social Security. Those with criminal backgrounds or who have arrived since 2010 would not qualify. Texas challenged Obama’s authority to implement the policy by executive action, rather than going through Congress. Federal district court Judge Andrew Hanen upheld the challenge in February 2015 and blocked the program from being implemented nationwide. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit upheld that ruling last November in a 2-1 decision. SUSAN WALSH, AP President Obama’s immigration plan divided the nation as well as the justices. 6A NEWS USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 NEWS 7A 8A NEWS USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 STATE-BY-STATE News from across the USA ALABAMA Cullman: Spencer Jackson Byrd, 22, a former volunteer coach at Fairview High School pleaded guilty to seconddegree rape and engaging in a sex act with a 15-year-old female student, AL.com reported. ALASKA Juneau: People at risk of overdosing from heroin or other opiates can get lifesaving medicine for free starting Monday, the Juneau Empire reported. ARIZONA Sun Lakes: Jack Holder tried to figure out how to write a thousand thank-you notes. After the 94-year-old World War II veteran publicly admitted losing his life savings in a sweepstakes scam, donations poured in from around the globe to a GoFundMe account set up in his name, The Arizona Republic reported. ARKANSAS Bentonville: Gary HIGHLIGHT: FLORIDA 2nd body found in search for family Michael Braun The (Fort Myers) News-Press CAPE CORAL Rescue workers searching for a Sarasota, Fla., family of four reported missing at sea found a second body Thursday and multiple personal items from the family after covering thousands of nautical miles. Cape Coral Fire and Rescue workers recovered a second body at 11:06 a.m. ET Thursday, 4 miles southeast of the first body discovered Wednesday. A federal Customs and Border Protection pilot also discovered a sailboat mast 101 miles offshore from Fort Myers. The search since the family was reported missing Tuesday has covered 20,000 square miles in an area from Tampa Bay to south of Fort Myers Beach, Capt. Greg Case, commander of Coast Guard Sector St. Petersburg, said in a morning news conference. Coast Guardsmen found a bucket containing the Kimberly family’s birth certificates, a global-positioning navigation system, a wallet, two cellphones, cigarettes, a tool box and a pool noodle about 5 miles from the body. The debris field is about 33 miles off Florida’s west coastline. COURTESY OF FAMILY “We know how devastating this find is to them,” Case said of the remaining family members. No deadline has been set yet for turning the search into a recovery effort. On Tuesday, a relative reported the family — Ace Kimberly, 45; Rebecca Kimberly, 17; Donny Kimberly, 15; and Roger Kimberly, 13 — missing after they had left Sarasota for Fort Myers on Sunday on a 29-foot sailboat. Though two bodies have been recovered, Coast Guard officials have declined to identi- fy whose remains have been recovered. Ace Kimberly contacted his brother Sunday afternoon, saying they were caught up in “6foot waves and thunderstorms,” Case said. The brother reported them missing Tuesday and the Coast Guard immediately launched search crews by air and sea. The father had been living on the sailboat for a year with his children. They were traveling to Fort Myers, about 75 miles to the south, to have the boat repaired. the first quarter this year, the Kennebec Journal reported. It’s the second-highest growth rate in the country. dling almost 750 more jail inmates per day than they have beds to accommodate, the Las Vegas Sun reported. CALIFORNIA Los Angeles: The HAWAII Kauai: Feral cats are MARYLAND Ocean City: A crab NEW HAMPSHIRE Concord: A child welfare organization has ranked New Hampshire at No. 4 in its annual report of kids’ wellbeing nationwide, New Hampshire Public Radio reported. COLORADO Aspen: Thomas Proesel, a man accused of pushing a snowboarder off an Aspen chairlift has been deemed legally insane, the Aspen Daily News reported. The finding by a physician at the Colorado Mental Health Institute was revealed in court Monday. IDAHO Boise: Federal officials have closed the Skinny Dipper Hot Springs, KTVB-TV reported. The Bureau of Land Management officials plan to remove illegal piping and illegal pools during a temporary five-year shutdown. The agency also plans to re-establish vegetation in the area. CONNECTICUT New Fairfield: ILLINOIS Chicago: The Teachers Police have charged Michael Giannone, 44, with firearms trafficking, sale of assault weapons and other offenses after they searched his home and cars and found 59 complete firearms, including 48 legal firearms and nine unregistered assault rifles, The News-Times reported. DELAWARE Wilmington: A grand jury formally charged John Kirsch, 18, with second-degree vehicular homicide for the death of Salesianum School classmate Tyler Brown, 17, The News Journal reported. He’s also charged with second-degree vehicular assault for life-threatening injuries Kelly Muschiatti, 17, suffered months before their graduation. Union and a group calling for an elected police oversight board teamed up to pack City Hall and pressure Mayor Rahm Emanuel and aldermen for their causes, the Chicago Tribune reported. INDIANA Indianapolis: Former Colts backup quarterback Matt Hasselbeck’s 5,385-square-foot Meridian Hills estate is up for grabs for $1.5 million, The Indianapolis Star reported. IOWA Osage: A magistrate has ruled a revised ordinance limiting the use of steel wheels on Mitchell County’s paved roads still violates the religious freedom of Mennonites. The Globe Gazette reported that the county magistrate ruled last week in the case of Derek Zimmerman, 14, who in August 2015 received a citation for violating the steel wheel ordinance. The teen is part of the Groffdale Conference Mennonite Church, whose beliefs ban the use of rubber wheels. KANSAS Topeka: Kansas will DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Storms that continued for more than six hours turned streets into rivers and Metro escalators into rapids. Water poured down flooded streets and into the Metro station at Cleveland Park, The Washington Post reported. have to borrow $900 million to get through the next fiscal year – and probably will have to take money from the highway fund and a Medicaid fee fund to get through the current year, The Wichita Eagle reported. KENTUCKY Lexington: Mayor FLORIDA Naples: Terry Lynn Jim Gray has resigned from the Bluegrass Area Development District executive committee, The Lexington Herald-Leader reported. A spokeswoman for Gray said he chose to resign because he was frequently the only “no” vote on several issues. GEORGIA Cherokee County: A LOUISIANA New Orleans: The Two Gentlemen of Verona, among the first of William Shakespeare’s plays, opens the summer season of the Shakespeare Festival at Tulane University, The TimesPicayune reported. Brady, 47, who is accused of killing a transgender woman and burning her body, was found guilty of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, the Naples Daily News reported. former schools officer accused of leaving his police dog in a patrol car for hours was arrested in connection with the dog’s death. MAINE Augusta: The Bureau of Economic Analysis said Mainers’ personal incomes shot up 1.4% in Donna Patrick, who was suspended from her job at Acme supermarket for a dress-code violation is returning to work, the Bucks County Courier Times reported. She wore a patriotic dress on Memorial Day. A search for members of the Kimberly family of Sarasota has been active since a relative reported them missing at sea Tuesday after strong thunderstorms. Rescue workers have found two bodies about 4 miles apart. Daniel Peabody resigned last week, days after the dog, named Inca, died, The Atlanta JournalConstitution reported. killing the endangered Hawaiian Petrel seabirds, Hawaii News Now reported. Researchers found the bodies of six of the birds which were found dragged from their underground breeding burrows by cats. Some were partially eaten. PENNSYLVANIA Bensalem: RHODE ISLAND Providence: Curtis Maxie, 60, will receive 100 years in prison for raping and sex trafficking a 16-year-old girl, the Providence Journal reported. Wayne Parent was sentenced to three years in prison after pleading guilty to scamming thousands of dollars from people by claiming they had won prizes in a phony Publishers Clearing House giveaway, ArkansasOnline reported. lethal combination of drought, heat and an infestation of ravenous bark beetles has killed 26 million trees in the Sierra Nevada since October, an unprecedented die-off that heightens an already high wildfire risk, the Los Angeles Times reported. coming school year after 10 years of leading Oregon’s largest district, the Oregonian reported. pot found over the weekend contained a grim surprise. The pot contained 20 dead terrapins, the official state reptile, that became trapped in the pot and drowned, The Daily Times reported. MASSACHUSETTS Boston: Mas- sachusetts is the second-best state in the nation for a child’s overall well-being, according to a report by charitable organization Annie E. Casey Foundation, The Boston Globe reported. Massachusetts came in just after Minnesota. MICHIGAN Detroit: More legal troubles appear to be looming for former city councilman Charles Pugh, this time in the form of criminal sexual conduct charges, Detroit Free Press reported. The six recommended charges stem from an alleged incident in 2003, when Pugh was a television anchor at WJBK-TV, Detroit. MINNESOTA Minneapolis: The international activist hacker group Anonymous Legion is claiming responsibility for an attack on the Minnesota Judicial Branch’s website that rendered it unusable for most of Wednesday, the Star Tribune reported. MISSISSIPPI Canton: Anne Dulske pleaded guilty to eight counts of letting underage teens drink at her house, WLBT-TV reported. She was fined $8,000, given a suspended 90-day sentence and ordered to do 80 hours of community service. MISSOURI Jefferson City: Gov. Nixon has signed legislation to require high school students to pass a civics test and learn CPR, The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported. MONTANA Billings: Lindsay April, who says she strangled her boyfriend Robert Glenn Mast, 25, because he told her he wanted to die, has been sentenced to 60 years in prison, The Billings Gazette reported. NEBRASKA Omaha: NEW JERSEY Jersey City: A Jersey City man has been convicted in the murder and decapitation of two men in 2013, the Jersey Journal reported. Jurors rejected 31-year-old Yusuf Ibrahim’s self-defense claim. NEW MEXICO Farmington: Police say a UPS driver was repeatedly stabbed while delivering packages in a mobile home park, The Daily Times reported. The 25-year-old driver’s wounds do not appear to be life-threatening, a police spokeswoman said. burg: Work is set to begin on a $25 million improvement project for the runway at the Spartanburg Downtown Memorial Airport, the Herald-Journal reported. SOUTH DAKOTA Rapid City: Four Pennington County commissioners have publicly reprimanded fellow board member George Ferebee for allegedly bullying and harassing Planning Department staff, the Rapid City Journal reported. TENNESSEE Memphis: In what was described as “the largest earthquake exercise in the history of the state of Tennessee,” tactical vehicles converged at the Shelby County Office of Preparedness to demonstrate how the county would respond in a catastrophic earthquake, The Commercial Appeal reported. TEXAS Melissa: Michael Thedford, who allegedly left his 6month-old daughter in a hot car, causing her death, tried to revive the baby by putting her in the refrigerator before calling 911, WFAA-TV reported. UTAH Salt Lake City: The U.S. Census estimates that 411,143 Hispanics resided in Utah in 2015, about 13.7% of the state’s population of 3 million, The Salt Lake Tribune reported. VERMONT Hinesburg: Lori Ann NEW YORK White Plains: Carron, who says she suffers from mental-health issues and was in crisis when police were called to her home May 6, has filed a lawsuit against police officers she says used “excessive force,” Burlington Free Press reported. NORTH CAROLINA Charlotte: VIRGINIA Richmond: Thirteen years and two months after Harvey Derrick Glanton bludgeoned Daniel Balbaugh 20 times in the head with a cast-iron pot lid was released from supervision, the Richmond Times-Dispatch reported. Glanton was found not guilty of murder by reason of insanity. Glanton said he believed the man he killed was a chicken. Police are investigating a claim that the captain of the tugboat Specialist that sunk and killed three this winter near the Tappan Zee Bridge was helming a different boat while that captain was below deck, possibly with a woman, The Journal News reported. Health officials investigated the death of an Ohio woman who may have contracted an infection from a rare brain-eating amoeba during a visit to the U.S. National Whitewater Center, The Charlotte Observer reported. NORTH DAKOTA Watford City: Sheriff’s Cpl. Travis Bateman, accused of using his vehicle to crash into a fleeing motorcycle, has been acquitted on a felony reckless endangerment charge, the Williston Herald reported. OHIO Cincinnati: In a scathing opinion, the Ohio Supreme Court said Hamilton County Common Pleas Judge Robert Ruehlman had no legal authority to “inject himself” into the collection of a multimillion-dollar settlement in Kentucky that noted attorney Stan Chesley was ordered to pay, The Cincinnati Enquirer reported. OKLAHOMA Pawhus- Nearly $18,000 worth of snakes and feeding rats have been stolen from Bart’s Exotic Pets, the Omaha World-Herald reported. Eight ball pythons, including one valued at $5,000, and $1,500 of frozen rats were taken. ka: Meaghan Blair, 29, who was participating in a pioneer trek re-enactment in northeast Oklahoma with youth of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is believed to have died of a heatstroke, the Northwest Arkansas Democrat Gazette reported. NEVADA Las Vegas: Authorities OREGON Portland: Portland in Las Vegas are again releasing non-violent offenders from jail, after reporting that they’re han- SOUTH CAROLINA Spartan- Public Schools Superintendent Carole Smith announced she plans to retire at the end of the WASHINGTON Seattle: City archivist Scott Cline, who has touched, examined and studied pieces of Seattle’s history dating back to its founding nearly 150 years ago, is retiring after 31 years, KING-TV reported. WEST VIRGINIA Martinsburg: Jefferson County high school teacher Joel Ziler, 29, has been accused of having sexual relations with two female students, The Journal reported. WISCONSIN Green Bay: The only fuel pipeline serving Green Bay and northeastern Wisconsin has been shut down indefinitely as the line’s owner considers rebuilding the aging, repairplagued line north of Milwaukee, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported. WYOMING Cheyenne: Gov. Mead proposed Tuesday cutting $248 million from the state budget beginning July 1, which will result in 677 layoffs of privatesector employees who work for companies that do business with the state, Casper Star-Tribune reported. Compiled by Tim Wendel and Jonathan Briggs, with Carolyn Cerbin, Linda Dono, Mike Gottschamer, Ben Sheffler, Michael B. Smith, Nichelle Smith and Matt Young. Design by Mallory Redinger. Graphics by Alejandro Gonzalez. USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 NEWS 9A 10A NEWS USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 YOUR SAY GUN LAW SIT-IN House Democrats need a time-out LETTERS [email protected] TWITTER @USATOPINION WHO GETS THE GUNS? Do you favor preventing certain people from owning guns? Regarding USA TODAY’s editorial “The Favor Senate’s shame on guns” listing all the Republicans who voted against the Democrat-proposed bills supporting gun control plans, when will there be talk about all those Democrats who — on the same day — voted against the two Republican proposals for gun control? Where is the condemnation of the Democrats’ sit-in that breaks all House rules, or their shamefully disrespectful walkout when House Speaker Paul Ryan called for a moment of silence to honor those killed in the Orlando shooting? Have the Democrats already forgotten all those years when then-Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid blocked votes on GOP proposals? Democrats have become petulant children, trying to take the guns out of law-abiding citizens’ hands instead of fighting lawless, radical Islamists. The polarization spawned by the Obama administration is crippling and endangering this country. Oppose We asked our followers if they agreed with House Democrats’ tactic to get something done about gun control. No opinion Convicted felons or people with mental health problems 1% Absolutely! I’m a gun owner and the ease to buy high-capacity magazines is out of control. We’re arming terrorists. 87% 12% People who are on the U.S. terrorist watchlist or no-fly list 14% 1% @KWClegg67 85% Absolutely not! They are supposed to be “leaders” but instead they are acting like immature children. All Americans 9% 90% 1% @holyangel41 SOURCE CNN/ORC international poll conducted June 16-19 of 1,001 adults. Margin of error is ±3 percentage points. Yes, nothing else is working — not even the deaths of others. That is very sad. GEORGE PETRAS, USA TODAY @lknothr FACEBOOK FACEBOOK.COM/ USATODAYOPINION No. They lost in the votes this week. Not enough support for laws that will do nothing to stop shootings. Reminds me of the time Republicans shut down the entire government to…oh wait, it was so they could get their way. @pstmstr While I agree with their frustration, House Democrats may be setting a bad precedent for future “sit-ins” on many other issues. Kevin Young Larry Guest Cape Canaveral, Fla. Funny, no mention of the Republican bills the Democrats voted down. But as usual, they only want to get their way. If they want to be like that, keep the House in recess. POLICING THE USA POLICING.USATODAY.COM What has your experience with law enforcement been? Share stories of police making a difference. Submit videos or photos at policing.usatoday.com. Send your comments on Twitter using #policingtheusa, call 540-739-2928 or email [email protected]. @JeffOstach Democrats are right to do something in the era of the “do-nothing Congress.” Republicans care about money, not human lives. Steve Long Considering the vote is to prevent terrorists or extremists from getting access to guns, the only cowards here are the Republicans. Obstructionists to the end. @campbellrock For more, follow @USATOpinion or #tellusatoday. Chris Stoltz Nelson Have Your Say at [email protected], facebook.com/usatodayopinion and @USATOpinion on Twitter. All comments are edited for length and clarity. Content submitted to USA TODAY may appear in print, digital or other forms. For letters, include name, address and phone number. Letters may be mailed to 7950 Jones Branch Drive, McLean, VA, 22108. TO COMMENT WEATHER FRONT & CENTER Colorado and Utah are the only two western states that are currently drought-free. 66 62 68 65 Sacramento 93 San Francisco Burns 69 Billings 88 76 88 83 Carson City Salt Lake City 95 86 91 Dodge City Los Angeles Palm Springs 82 Flagstaff 110 92 84 Oklahoma City Albuquerque 109 Fairbanks Anchorage 78 66 101 Hawaii Juneau 93 93 85 94 93 Houston 94 SAT T-storms 96/75 SAT SUN A P.M. t-storm 92/75 SUN FRI SAT SUN Shower, t-storm 90/79 Clouds, sun 91/78 A P.M. t-storm 91/77 FRI SAT SUN Warmer 82/69 Severe t-storm 84/65 Mostly sunny 85/63 AQI Moderate AQI Good c Cloudy T-shower 82/63 Mostly sunny 85/61 Mostly sunny 85/64 BOSTON FRI SAT SUN f Fog i Ice r Rain 20s 30s 40s 95 93 93 60s 50s TODAY SAT Akron, Ohio Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Allentown, Pa. Amarillo, Texas Anaheim, Calif. Anchorage, Alaska Aspen, Colo. Atlantic City, N.J. Augusta, Ga. Austin, Texas Bakersfield, Calif. Baton Rouge, La. Billings, Mont. Birmingham, Ala. Bismarck, N.D. Boise, Idaho Buffalo, N.Y. Burlington, Vt. Cedar Rapids, Iowa Charleston, S.C. Charleston, W.Va. Cheyenne, Wyo. 83/61s 83/56s 95/70t 83/58pc 95/68pc 85/60pc 66/55c 81/45t 76/65s 99/74pc 93/75pc 94/68s 93/74pc 88/51pc 95/76pc 93/63t 74/48pc 83/59s 81/57s 82/67pc 98/79t 84/64pc 85/55t 86/67s 87/60s 94/70t 86/59s 94/67s 88/61pc 69/55r 80/42s 76/62s 98/74t 92/75t 99/71s 93/75pc 80/53w 95/75t 79/59w 82/54s 86/66s 87/63s 90/68pc 96/77t 87/66s 80/49s SAT SUN FRI SAT SUN Partly sunny 93/77 Partly sunny 94/77 Shower, t-storm 95/78 AQI Moderate sn Snow T-storm 95/71 Shower, t-storm 90/69 Partly sunny 88/70 AQI Moderate NEW ORLEANS sf Snowflurries U.S. CITIES FRI SAT SUN Cincinnati Cleveland Colorado Springs Columbia, S.C. Columbus, Ohio Corpus Christi, Texas Dayton, Ohio Daytona Beach, Fla. Des Moines, Iowa Duluth, Minn. Durham, N.C. El Paso, Texas Fairbanks, Alaska Flagstaff, Ariz. Fargo, N.D. Fort Myers, Fla. Fort Smith, Ark. Fort Wayne, Ind. Fresno, Calif. Grand Rapids, Mich. Green Bay, Wis. Greensboro, N.C. Greenville, S.C. Harrisburg, Pa. Partly sunny 82/64 Mostly sunny 84/64 Mostly sunny 84/64 AQI Moderate w Windy dr Drizzle FRI SAT SUN Partly sunny 80/61 Mostly sunny 88/71 70s 80s SATURDAY 100 Charleston 98 Savannah 98 Jacksonville 97 Tampa 91 Miami 90 90 90s 100s 110+ Forecasts and SUNDAY graphics provided by AccuWeather Inc. ©2016 h Haze TODAY SAT 85/62pc 87/66s 81/63s 87/69s 90/61t 84/55t 100/76t 96/75t 84/62pc 86/66s 93/79pc 93/79t 83/59pc 86/67s 93/74pc 94/75pc 86/72pc 92/70pc 79/62s 80/58t 91/69t 83/63pc 101/76pc 99/73t 78/56c 79/58c 84/48pc 85/48pc 86/70s 84/62t 91/75t 91/75t 95/75t 96/76pc 83/58s 87/65s 95/64s 101/69s 87/58s 90/67s 83/57s 84/69pc 92/70t 85/67pc 97/71t 93/71pc 82/64t 87/64s SAT AQI Unhealthy s/g SUN AQI Moderate PHILADELPHIA FRI Partly sunny 96/76 FRI SAT T-storm 95/76 SAT SUN A P.M. t-storm 93/75 AQI Good pc Partly cloudy Hartford, Conn. Indianapolis Islip, N.Y. Jackson, Miss. Jacksonville, Fla. Jefferson City, Mo. Kansas City Key West, Fla. Knoxville, Tenn. Laredo, Texas Lexington, Ky. Lincoln, Neb. Little Rock, Ark. Long Beach, Calif. Louisville, Ky. Lubbock, Texas Madison, Wis. Manchester, N.H. Memphis, Tenn. Milwaukee Mobile, Ala. Modesto, Calif. Montgomery, Ala. Myrtle Beach, S.C. Partly sunny 96/79 Stray t-storm 97/79 Mostly sunny 84/65 Mostly sunny 86/63 Mostly sunny 90/65 SUN AQI Moderate s Sunny sh Showers TODAY 85/56s 83/64pc 80/61pc 96/73pc 97/73pc 91/73t 90/73t 88/81sh 93/70t 100/78pc 87/65pc 92/76t 96/77t 80/63pc 89/70pc 94/69s 82/61pc 82/56s 97/80t 77/62s 94/72pc 94/65s 97/73pc 94/76t SAT 87/57s 87/70s 81/60s 97/75pc 98/74pc 92/74pc 93/72t 89/81t 94/69pc 99/79t 90/68s 89/65c 97/78pc 83/65pc 91/73s 94/69s 85/70t 83/56s 97/78pc 82/69s 95/74s 101/64s 98/75t 91/74t FRI Stray t-storm 90/59 FRI SAT T-storm 82/57 SAT SUN Mostly sunny 88/59 SUN AQI Good PHOENIX FRI SAT SUN HONOLULU DETROIT DENVER Sunny 96/77 FRI T-storms 91/69 ORLANDO NEW YORK FRI DALLAS CHICAGO CHARLOTTE Sunny, nice 75/61 Mostly sunny 74/59 Mostly sunny 79/61 AQI Good MPLS-ST. PAUL MIAMI 92 Columbia San Juan 10s 80 Richmond Air quality index (AQI) AQI Moderate AQI Moderate Tallahassee Puerto Rico Below 10 84 83 94 94 Philadelphia Raleigh Atlanta Mobile New Orleans Brownsville BALTIMORE FRI 84 97 96 83 Charleston 95 96 TODAY Washington Annapolis Charlotte Nashville Jackson Baton Rouge SOURCE U.S. Drought Monitor, AccuWeather, Storm Prediction Center Sun, warm 94/78 93 75 85 82 81 Montgomery Shreveport San Antonio Honolulu 62 Austin 95 Knoxville 95 96 96 85 78 Boston New York 82 Cincinnati Birmingham Little Rock Dallas 94 MidlandOdessa El Paso 89 97 95 Lubbock Louisville Memphis Tulsa 93 95 Phoenix 76 Alaska FRI Ice/mix Hartford 83 Harrisburg 84 83 91 93 76 Pittsburgh Columbus Indianapolis Jefferson City St. Louis Wichita 96 95 Santa Fe 86 90 81 85 Chicago 80 Kansas City Springfield Topeka 90 81 86 Montpelier Albany Cleveland Lansing 82 83 Detroit 87 85 Madison Des Moines Omaha Denver Aspen 105 109 93 81 Buffalo Grand Milwaukee Rapids 77 87 North Platte Cheyenne 82 Sioux Falls 97 85 St. George Las Vegas Fresno Pierre 93 90 85 San Diego ATLANTA Snow Augusta Burlington Mpls-St. Paul 86 Casper 74 Elko Fargo 96 78 79 Rapid City Idaho Falls Jackson Hole Reno 73 DOYLE RICE AND KARL GELLES @USATODAYWEATHER Rain 79 Marquette Duluth 93 91 68 74 Bismarck Miles City Helena Boise Eureka WHAT IS A DERECHO? A widespread, long-lived wind storm, often accompanied by fast-moving thunderstorms. T-storms Bangor Spokane Portland 72 Note: For contiguous 48 states through 4 p.m. ET yesterday Seattle Olympia 66 On this date in 1944, Charleston, S.C., soared to a June record high temperature of 103 degrees. COLDEST: 31° Boca Reservoir, Calif. HOTTEST: 110° Gila Bend, Ariz. Salem PRECIPITATION FORECAST YESTERDAY’S EXTREMES TODAY’S HIGH TEMPERATURES 65 +tax fees Bryce, Zion, Sedona, Monument Valley 2-nts Grand Canyon • 2-nts Zion Park 1-800-CARAVAN WEATHER ONLINE USATODAY.COM Bend TOP TRAVEL CITIES For more of the week’s best, check out our gallery online. CARTOONS OPINION.USATODAY.COM Partly sunny 109/87 Sunny, hot 108/87 Sunny, hot 111/89 AQI Moderate Mostly sunny 85/60 Sunny, warm 87/66 T-storms 90/70 AQI Moderate SALT LAKE CITY FRI SAT SUN Partly sunny 85/74 Showers around 85/73 Shower 84/73 AQI Good SAN DIEGO FRI Sunny, nice 90/57 FRI SAT Sunny 83/57 SAT SUN Sunny, warmer 94/67 SUN P.M. sun 76/65 Fog, then sun 75/67 Mostly sunny 76/68 HOUSTON Stray t-storm 94/76 FRI SAT T-storms 91/75 SAT SUN Stray t-storm 92/74 SUN AQI Good SAN SAN FRANCISCO FRANCISCO FRI SAT SUN Fog, then sun 73/55 Partly cloudy 73/55 Sunny 72/57 LOS ANGELES LAS VEGAS FRI Sunny, hot 109/83 Sunny, hot 108/84 Sunny, hot 111/86 AQI Unhealthy s/g FRI SAT SUN P.M. sun 82/63 Fog, then sun 86/65 Sunny, warm 88/67 AQI Moderate WASHINGTON SEATTLE FRI Spotty showers 66/54 FRI SAT Warmer 72/55 SAT SUN Sunny, nice 76/56 SUN AQI Moderate AQI Moderate AQI Moderate AQI Good TODAY SAT 85/72t 79/70pc 96/71t 96/75pc 82/64pc 86/63s 79/58pc 80/58s 85/71t 78/68s 76/56pc 76/55pc 93/72s 93/74pc 86/75pc 90/66c 110/79s 109/81s 92/75pc 93/76s 97/64t 84/57t 81/64pc 85/67s 75/53s 75/52s 68/53sh 78/58s 81/57s 82/56s 92/70t 85/64pc 96/58pc 84/52s 88/54s 93/59s 83/68t 83/62s 83/56s 86/62s 93/61s 99/59s 93/77pc 90/77t 83/59s 87/58s 92/60t 90/58t Sarasota, Fla. Savannah, Ga. Scottsdale, Ariz. Shreveport, La. Sioux Falls, S.D. South Bend, Ind. Spokane, Wash. Springfield, Mo. Springfield, Ill. St. Louis St. Petersburg, Fla. Syracuse, N.Y. Tallahassee, Fla. Tampa, Fla. Toledo, Ohio Topeka, Kan. Tucson, Ariz. Tupelo, Miss. Tulsa, Okla. Virginia Beach, Va. Wichita, Kan. Wilmington, Del. Winston-Salem, N.C. Worcester, Mass. TODAY 91/78t 98/78pc 107/83s 94/75pc 87/72s 83/56s 62/48c 90/72t 86/69pc 93/76pc 92/77t 82/56s 95/73pc 91/78t 83/56s 91/75t 103/80pc 95/77t 95/77s 84/71t 96/75t 82/64sh 92/69t 79/53s WORLD CITIES T-shower 83/68 Mostly sunny 84/66 Mostly sunny 86/68 AQI Moderate t Thunderstorms Nags Head, N.C. Nashville, Tenn. Newark, N.J. New Haven, Conn. Norfolk, Va. Oakland, Calif. Oklahoma City Omaha, Neb. Palm Springs, Calif. Pensacola, Fla. Pierre, S.D. Pittsburgh Portland, Maine Portland, Ore. Providence, R.I. Raleigh, N.C. Rapid City, S.D. Reno, Nev. Richmond, Va. Rochester, N.Y. Sacramento, Calif. San Antonio San Jose, Calif. Santa Fe, N.M. SAT 92/77t 99/76t 106/84s 95/77pc 84/61t 86/66s 74/52s 92/73pc 92/75pc 94/79pc 92/78t 86/60s 97/74pc 92/78t 87/63s 93/73t 100/78s 97/76t 95/79pc 77/68s 97/75t 85/61s 86/67pc 80/55s Beijing Buenos Aires Cancun, Mexico Dubai, UAE Frankfurt Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg London Mexico City Montreal Moscow Mumbai, India Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Sydney Toronto Tokyo TODAY SAT 91/66s 98/67s 62/44pc 59/46s 89/78pc 89/77pc 108/87s 106/89s 89/66t 76/56t 93/81t 93/84pc 89/75s 87/74s 89/72s 90/71s 63/38s 63/37s 68/54pc 66/54t 75/57t 73/58t 81/60s 87/66s 77/61pc 79/66pc 89/82sh 86/81sh 73/59pc 68/53sh 72/61pc 73/63pc 90/68s 88/66pc 78/64r 78/65s 88/78pc 88/80t 63/45w 60/45s 83/60s 85/62s 77/73r 81/70sh NEWS 11A USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 OPINION TODAY’S DEBATE SUPREME COURT Our view Immigration ruling puts the ball back in Congress’ court Opposing view Decision leaves millions in limbo For those who support humane treatment of undocumented immigrants with deep roots in the USA, Thursday’s Supreme Court decision in United States v. Texas might have seemed like an enormous setback. After all, the 4-4 ruling blocked President Obama’s executive order granting deportation relief to about 4 million undocumented immigrants. But the order had always been problematic, so the court’s action does have its upsides. A ruling affirming Obama’s overreach would have given the president sweeping authority over immigration policy. At the moment, that might seem appealing to Democrats. But the next time a Republican is in the White House, they would welcome limits on presidential power. Democrats would certainly appreciate some limits should the GOP’s presumptive nominee, Donald Trump, win in November. Trump's extreme immigration ideas include building a massive wall along the Mexican border, excluding foreign Muslims from entry into the United States and deporting the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants already in the USA. Trump has indicated he would be aggressive in issuing executive orders. Earlier this year, he even said that Obama had “led the way” in getting things done through executive action. Beth Werlin Stanley Renshon “I ’m not changing,” Donald Trump insists. He should reconsider. Trump’s presidential campaign is at a reckoning point. His struggle for support, from fellow Republicans and from the broader public, has sparked Republican Party anxiety and a desperate search for alternatives. It has also led to ridiculous assertions (for example, that Trump is unconsciously seeking to bail out) and a great deal of advice, some of it (such as urging him to “welcome an open convention”) comically wrong. In response, Trump has advised Republicans to “man up,” as one headline put it, and blamed his woes on political correctness run amok. There is surely some of that, but Trump has compounded his difficulties by being careless in his language, too often assuming that his rhetorical blasts are sufficient explanations of his thinking. The brutal fact-checking of his Wednesday attack on Hillary Clinton’s character should disabuse him of that idea. He has recently taken to saying that it’s not about him, but the movement he is leading. He’s partially right. Trump’s candidacy does reflect a “movement” in the country and in his party. He was the only Republican candidate who really understood the public’s feelings of disappointment, anger and resignation and found a way to give them hope. So it is “about him” in a much more profound way than is reflected in his frequent brandboosting displays of self-regard. ADOLESCENT BOMBAST Trump is poised to become the Republican Party’s nominee and just one election away from being able to attempt all he said he wants to do for the country. Yet a lifetime at the helm of his businesses and his primary victories have left him with the mistaken impression that a presidential candidacy is a legitimate forum for the expression of adolescent traits. Trump’s “say whatever is on his mind” approach may have helped get him where he is, but it will not take him where he says he wants to go. Trump’s responsibilities now go well beyond self-expression. He wants to help rescue the country from its failing domestic and foreign policies by asking that new controversial ideas such as serious immigration enforcement, be considered. He wants to reform public institutions and the lack of competence, honesty BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI AFP/GETTY IMAGES Immigration reform supporters in Washington, DC. So if the court had approved Obama’s sweeping order, it could be hard for it to stand up to an equally sweeping order by a President Trump ratcheting up deportations or limiting immigration from predominately Muslim countries. Another benefit of the ruling is that it keeps the pressure up for a legislative solution on immigration. Indeed, in his remarks after the ruling was handed down, Obama turned up the heat on Republicans, saying that their failure to allow a vote in the House of Representatives on comprehensive reform would be a major campaign issue this fall. Although it might be frustrating that the president can’t simply snap his fingers and save families from deportation, the political tension between the two elected branches of government is evidence of democracy working as envisioned. Obama’s executive order was a pale imitation of a comprehensive law. It would provide relief to less than half of the nation's undocumented immigrants, and it would do nothing to fix a strained system for processing legal immigration. What’s more, it’s not even clear how effective it would be at dealing with the group that would qualify for deportation relief: the undocumented parents of U.S. citizens or permanent legal residents. Because an order could be rescinded by a future president, many of those granted temporary relief would remain reluctant to come out of the shadows, start businesses, return to school or become more active in their communities. Comprehensive immigration reform — combining tough border and visa enforcement with a path to legality for those already here — remains vital, and would be even if the ruling gone the other way. For these reasons, United States v. Texas should not be seen as a loss for reform efforts but a win for presidential restraint and the proper legislative process. Omar Mahmood With the future of his country at stake, he can rise to the challenge and political restraint that has come to define them. He also wants to reverse the widespread and understandable public distrust that permeates civic life. To act, he needs to win the election. Trump has an obligation to the millions of people who have supported him, and millions more who will do so in a general election. He says he is their champion, but he won’t be if he can’t focus. PIVOT TO SPECIFICS That doesn’t mean Trump should abandon the core of his personal appeal. Critics lament his failure to launch a general election “pivot” by steering clear of controversies and moderating policy positions. But that’s wrong. His political brand is made up in equal parts of brash assertions and policy prescriptions, many of which have been too-long kept from polite public discussion. Keeping quiet would betray the rationale for his candidacy and his own integrity. But that doesn’t mean he can’t make another kind Beth Werlin is executive director of the American Immigration Council, a pro-immigration nonprofit group based in Washington. Islam’s struggle with homosexuality TRUMP SHOULD GROW UP Donald Trump in Las Vegas, June 18, 2016. Thursday’s 4-4 Supreme Court decision will have a profound and disappointing impact on the millions of immigrants who would have been eligible for temporary relief from deportation under President Obama’s executive order. Instead of receiving this reprieve and the accompanying work authorization, these immigrants’ lives will remain in limbo. In its nine-word opinion, the Supreme Court refused to resolve any of the questions it had agreed to consider in the case. Because they could not reach a majority, the justices simply let a lower court decision stand. Importantly, they neither rebuked nor affirmed the president’s authority to exercise executive action. The fact remains that every president since Dwight Eisenhower has used his executive authority to protect certain groups of non-citizens. While Supreme Court case law supports this authority, today’s decision provides no further guidance on this issue. While most people agree that there must be a more permanent legislative solution to our outdated immigration sys- tem, Obama’s executive action initiatives are important steps toward meaningful reform and helpful, albeit temporary, measures that protect families, keep our communities safe, and support our economy. Faith-based groups, business owners, law enforcement, educators, former Homeland Security officials, and current and former members of Congress — along with 115 mayors, county executives, and localities and 16 states and the District of Columbia — weighed in at the Supreme Court in support of these measures to show the real-life impact that they can on families and have communities. Despite the disappointing deadlock at the Supreme Court, the immigrant rights community will continue to explore all available legal avenues and will urge the Obama administration to do the same. Ultimately, the nation needs a permanent solution to our outdated immigration system, and that must come from Congress. Until that day comes, the fight will continue. JOHN LOCHER, AP of pivot — from bold assertions that spark debate to real explanations that fully convey his thinking. For example, does he really support strict religious profiling or rather an assessment of some immigrants based on a combination of factors? The pivot is from inspiring a smaller number of primary voters to attracting the general electorate with a more thorough explanation of his plans. Can a 70-year-old man change? Of course. This one just fired his campaign manager. But as new responsibilities assert themselves, Trump can still be himself while reflecting a mature recognition that the ambitions he voiced for the country and his supporters outweigh his need to express his every thought and grievance, real or imagined. That’s the route to a Trump presidency. Stanley Renshon is a political science professor at the City University of New York and a certified psychoanalyst in private practice. Responses on Muslim social media to violence committed in the name of Islam have become infuriatingly predictable, as we saw most recently in Orlando. The knee-jerk reaction is to deny that attacks have anything to do with true Islam and to tar anyone who says otherwise as Islamophobic. But we need an honest conversation about Islam itself. The day after the central Florida massacre, more than 200 Muslim leaders and scholars issued a response titled “A Joint Muslim Statement on the Carnage in Orlando.” It was signed by influential figures such as Yasir Qadhi (the widely followed dean of academic affairs at the Al-Maghrib Institute), Hisham Mahmoud (a lecturer at Harvard’s Islamic Studies Program) and even Yusuf Islam (the singer formerly known as Cat Stevens). Their statement condemns the massacre, distances it from Muslims and stresses that we must live in harmony. That is commendable, but it fails to give American Islam what it needs most: intellectual honesty. The statement reads, “Any such acts of violence violate every one of our Prophet’s teachings.” This overlooks the fact that the prophet Mohammed condemned homosexuality and called for violence against gay people. He is recorded as having said, “Wherever you find people committing the sin of the people of Lot, kill the one doing it and the one to whom it is done.” Beyond that, the Islamic canon contains plentiful condemnation of homosexuality. What the post-Orlando statement proves is that the Muslim- American establishment will not confront literalism — whether the prophet’s teachings must be taken literally or whether they can be adapted to modernity. Such literalism is the issue that the massacre in Orlando lays bare. The “this isn’t real Islam” line ends here. Orlando shooter Omar Mateen, and the violent strain of Islam with which he associated himself, follow the same texts as do mainstream Muslims. The connection is not distant. Sheikh Farrokh Sekaleshfar, who teaches religion in Iran, has openly called for a death sentence for gay people. Just this spring, he spoke at the Husseini Islamic Center near Orlando. The 200 Muslim leaders who issued the statement can wash their hands of Sekaleshfar but not the prophet’s words. Mainstream Muslim-American religious leaders teach that everything the prophet said was true, even as they argue that Islam teaches tolerance for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Americans. Their logic leads to a dangerous cognitive dissonance. I know gay Muslims who live in hiding, who endure a neverending psychological torture. There are many indications that Omar Mateen was conflicted about his own sexuality. And yet the discussion that might have enabled him to deal with his guilt is nowhere to be heard. We can talk all we want about Islamophobia and homophobia. But the issue is Islam itself. Can we still read the prophet’s words literally? Until we answer that question, Islam will have an uneasy relationship with modernity. Omar Mahmood is a USA TODAY Collegiate Network fellow. "USA TODAY hopes to serve as a forum for better understanding and unity to help make the USA truly one nation." Allen H. Neuharth, Founder, Sept. 15, 1982 GANNETT COMPANY PRESIDENT & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Robert Dickey GANNETT CHIEF CONTENT OFFICER USA TODAY PRESIDENT & PUBLISHER EDITOR IN CHIEF GENERAL MANAGER EDITOR, EDITORIAL PAGE CHIEF REVENUE OFFICER EXECUTIVE EDITOR CHIEF PRODUCT OFFICER MANAGING EDITOR PRESIDENT, SPORTS MEDIA GROUP Joanne Lipman David Callaway Bill Sternberg Beryl Love Patty Michalski John Zidich Susan Motiff Kevin Gentzel Daniel Bernard David Morgan 12A NEWS USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 Yep, I switched to Sprint. Hey, I’m Paul, the guy who used to ask if you could hear me now on Verizon... It’s 2016 and every network is great. In fact, Sprint’s reliability is now within 1% of Verizon. And Sprint is saving you 50% on most Verizon, AT&T, or T-Mobile rates. Carrier features differ. Savings until 5/31/18. Discount applies to base monthly service plan only. Up to $30 activation fee/line applies.* Don’t let a 1% difference cost you twice as much. *Discount does not include competitor promotional or sale price. Plans exclude unlimited music and video streaming, data carryover, tethering and cloud options that other carrier plans may offer. Applies to Verizon Plan 1, 3, 6, 12, 18, 20, 25, 30, 40, and 50GBs; AT&T Mobile Share Value 300MB, 2, 5, 15, 20, 25, 30, 40, and 50GBs; and T-Mobile Simple Choice 2, 6 and 10GB rate plans. Available on non-discounted phones. Other monthly charges apply.** “Can you hear that?” Paul, former Verizon customer #TheSwitchIsReal sprint.com/network | 1 (800) SPRINT-1 | Visit a Sprint Store Get your new phone delivered and set up for free with Direct 2 You.SM Visit SprintDirect2You.com to see if you’re in one of our ever-expanding delivery zones. Also available at the Sprint Store at **Monthly charges exclude taxes & Sprint Surcharges [incl. USF charge of up to 17.9% (varies quarterly), up to $2.50 Admin. & 40¢ Reg. /line/mo. & fees by area (approx. 5–20%)]. Surcharges are not taxes. See sprint.com/taxesandfees. Req. credit approval. Plans: Limited time offer. Req valid port from AT&T, Verizon or T-Mobile wireless line to consumer account. Includes unlimited domestic calling, texting and int’l texting. Select int’l svcs. Max of 15 lines. Req. one phone. Includes on-network data allowance per competitor plan and 100MB off-network data usage. Discount does not apply to charges such as taxes, surcharges, add-ons, apps, premium content, int’l svcs, devices, partial charges or add’l lines. Usage Limitations: To improve data experience for the majority of users, throughput may be limited, varied or reduced on the network. Sprint may terminate service if off-network roaming usage in a month exceeds: (1) 800 min. or a majority of min.; or (2) 100MB or a majority of KB. Prohibited network use rules apply—see sprint.com/termsandconditions. Competitor Plans: As of 6/1/16. T-Mobile: tablet and MBB rate plans excluded; data is not shared; after 3G/4G high-speed data allotment, speeds reduced to 2G speeds until the end of your bill cycle.; add’l on-network data at $15/GB. Verizon: after data allotment, pay 1.5 cents/MB overage. AT&T: after data allotment, pay 1.5 cents/MB overage. 1% Claim: based on Sprint’s analysis of Nielsen drive test data (Aug. 2015 to Mar. 2016) for top 106 markets covering more than 200M POPs and 165,000 miles. Other Terms: Offers and coverage not available everywhere or for all phones/networks. See sprint. com/coverage for details. Restrictions apply. © 2016 Sprint. All rights reserved. Other marks are the property of their respective owners. SECTION B FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 AND NOW, LIVE FROM THE U.S. CONGRESS Periscope, Facebook Live bring Democrats’ 25-hour sit-in to millions of viewers, 3B Stylish Fiat 124 Spider has quality to match Two-seat sports car revives nameplate from the ’60s, 7B A.J. MUELLER VW to pay $10B for cheating scandal MONEYLINE MASERATIS RECALLED OVER GEARBOX ISSUE The Maserati division of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles will recall 13,092 luxury vehicles with confusing gearboxes cited as the source of a recall involving 1.1 million Jeep, Dodge and Chrysler SUVs and sedans. The new recall — revealed Thursday — affects certain 2014 Maserati QuatAFP troporte and Yelchin Ghibli vehicles. The problem mirrors a similar issue plaguing Fiat Chrysler vehicles such as the 2015 Jeep Grand Cherokee owned by actor Anton Yelchin, who was killed Saturday after his SUV rolled down his steep driveway and pinned him against a pillar. Yelchin played Chekov in the recent ‘Star Trek’ movie reboot. GE CAPITAL TO SELL FRENCH LENDING UNIT TO CERBERUS Cerberus Capital Management reached a tentative deal to acquire the French consumer finance business of GE Capital as the conglomerate continues to offload many of its assets. Cerberus agreed to buy GE Money Bank in a deal valued at $4.6 billion. GE Capital has been shedding assets since April 2015 and recently asked the U.S. government to remove its too-big-to-fail designation, which brings extra scrutiny. The company has signed deals to sell about $177 billion in assets since then. DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVG. 18,050 230.24 18,000 17,950 17,900 4:00 p.m. 18,011 17,850 17,800 @NathanBomey USA TODAY JEWEL SAMAD, AFP/GETTY IMAGES The SEC claimed Trump Hotels exaggerated earnings results, driving the stock price higher. How Trump’s firm tricked investors THURSDAY MARKETS CLOSE CHG 4,910.04 2,113.32 1.75% $50.11 $1.1351 105.78 x 76.72 x 27.87 x 0.06 x 0.98 x 0.0044 x 1.31 SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM uUSA MARKETS, 6B USA SNAPSHOTS© Most repellent video call behavior Sitting too close to the camera 15% SOURCE Highfive/Zogby survey of 800 workers JAE YANG AND KARL GELLES, USA TODAY German automaker Volkswagen Group is expected to deliver a $10 billion settlement to cover government fines and compensate owners of vehicles fitted with software that cheated emissions standards, according to multiple reports. Volkswagen’s deal, which is due to be filed in a federal court by Tuesday, includes payments of as much as $7,000 to owners of vehicles affected by the scandal, according to Bloomberg and Associated Press reports, citing anonymous sources. The settlement has a provision to remove any VW diesel vehicle with a 2-liter engine that hasn’t been brought into compliance, said Elizabeth Cabraser, the courtappointed lead counsel for the plaintiff’s steering committee. Either they will have to be modified, or VW will buy them back. 2002 case led to changes in ‘pro forma’ accounting @mattkrantz USA TODAY 17,781 Nasdaq composite S&P 500 T-note, 10-year yield Oil, light sweet crude Euro (dollars per euro) Yen per dollar Nathan Bomey Matt Krantz 9:30 a.m. INDEX Car owners could receive up to $7,000 each in settlement Donald Trump’s claim of huge business success is a cornerstone of his presidential campaign. While his companies’ frequent trips to bankruptcy court are well known, there’s another reason people might question his business acumen: One of his most high-profile companies was the first U.S. corporation to be accused of using “pro forma” accounting to exaggerate results and mislead investors. Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts, a once publicly traded company whose shares dropped more than 90% when the firm sought bankruptcy protection, was charged in 2002 by the Securities and Exchange Commission for reporting financial results in a way that made it appear the company was doing better than analysts expected due to “operational improvements,” the complaint said. But that was a “false and misleading impression” that initially fooled investors into driving the stock higher, the SEC said. The case ushered in a series of changes that govern all publicly traded companies over how they must disclose any adjustments to so-called “pro forma” numbers. This is a common practice where companies strip out any unusual non-recurring gains or losses, claiming it’s a way to show how the core business is actually doing. Companies that use such results are required to detail all of the adjustments that are made. investors to believe there were no other adjustments. The company’s reported earnings of 63 cents a share topped expectations by 17%. Had the company excluded the one-time gain, profit would have missed expectations, the SEC said. Investors initially fell for the release. Shares of the stock jumped 8% on “IT WOULD BE HIGHLY SURPRISING IF HE WOULDN’T HAVE KNOWN.” Andrew Stoltmann, securities lawyer, about Donald Trump The SEC’s action against Trump Hotels centered around an Oct. 25, 1999, press release in which the company disclosed its quarterly net income and earnings per share. The release stated that the net income figures left out an $81.4 million one-time charge. However, the SEC said the release made no mention of the fact that the reported numbers included a one-time gain of $17.2 million from the termination of a restaurant lease with the Trump Taj Mahal Casino Resort in Atlantic City. And by revealing the excluded charge, the SEC said the company intentionally misled the day it was issued, Oct. 25. But several days later, on Oct. 28, shares fell 6% after an analyst published a report that brought the misleading issue to light. Trump, who was chairman of the company at the time, was not named in the SEC complaint. ‘”Mr. Trump had nothing to do with this,” spokeswoman Hope Hicks responded in an e-mail. But, says Andrew Stoltmann, a securities lawyer at Stoltmann Law Offices, “It would be highly surprising if he wouldn’t have known what was transpiring. This is the exact issue a chairman would demand to know.” PATRICK PLEUL, EPA A machine tests the emissions coming from a Golf 2.0 TDI. Owners will get “substantial compensation” beyond the buyback and repair program if they are willing to release their legal claims against the automaker. And VW will have to pay a big fine to offset the environmental damage that it has caused, according to Cabraser. Two U.S. senators on the Transportation Committee, reacting to reports of a settlement, said they believe VW owes them a “full vehicle buyback” in addition to compensation. “Any VW owner who wants nothing more to do with the vehicle that they were misled into buying should be entitled to a full vehicle buyback in addition to compensation,” Sens. Ed Markey, D-Mass., and Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said in a joint statement. The company confirmed in April it had reached a sweeping settlement over nearly 500,000 2liter diesel cars that were rigged to dodge emissions tests. Wall Street banks ace Fed’s severe stress test Results are designed to give investors, consumers idea of how financial system would hold up under different levels of economic strain Matt Krantz @mattkrantz USA TODAY The nation’s top banks passed the Federal Reserve’s stringent stress testing Thursday, showing just how much stronger they’ve gotten since the financial crisis. The results showed that even in an economic catastrophe, the banks’ high-quality capital to risk-weighted assets would fall to an acceptable minimum level of 8.4%, the Fed says. That’s down from 12.3% in the fourth quarter but still an indication of how banks have a big cushion against a major economic downturn. All told, the Fed found that the 33 bank holding companies measured would suffer a $385 billion loan loss total even in these extreme situations with unemployment jumping five percentage points to 10% and negative yields on U.S. Treasuries. Banks have been raising capital to make sure they can survive a blow like that, says Ernie Patrikis, partner at law firm White & Case. “Overall banking results were good,” he says. “The banking system is stronger.” The fact all the individual banks passed the test was a welcome surprise, says Erik Oja, ana- SPENCER PLATT, GETTY IMAGES The seven major U.S. banks, including JPMorgan Chase, pay an average dividend yield of 2%. lyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence. It was somewhat unexpected since the Fed added new tests of banks’ risks of contagion as well as the risk of negative interest rates, he says. Thursday’s stress test is one of two annual evaluations by the Fed. This first report is designed to show quantitatively how the banking system as a whole could withstand a serious economic hit. The second, due next Wednesday, is designed to show more qualitatively how the 33 individual institutions required to take the test fared under the different scenariv STORY CONTINUES ON 2B 2B MONEY USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 Bank of America fined $430M for cash misuse But bank says it has fixed ‘the issues related to our procedures and controls’ Kevin McCoy @kmccoynyc USA TODAY The nation’s largest bank has agreed to pay $430 million in settlements for violations of regulatory rules that safeguard customer funds and protect against misleading disclosure statements for securities. The settlements include $415 million North Carolina-based Bank of America will pay in re- 6 sponse to charges that its Merrill Lynch unit misused brokerage customers’ cash from 2009 to 2012 to finance its own trading and generate profits, the Securities and Exchange Commission said Thursday. Although an SEC regulation required the brokerage to keep its trading clients’ funds in a reserve account, Merrill Lynch instead used complex options trades that artificially lowered the amount of money that required safeguarding. The maneuver freed billions of dollars a week that Merrill Lynch used to finance its own trading, the SEC said. Brokerage customers “would have been exposed to a massive shortfall in the reserve account” if Merrill Lynch had failed in the midst of the options trades, the SEC said, adding that Merrill Lynch admitted wrongdoing. The SEC separately announced an administrative proceeding against William Tirrell, who served as Merrill Lynch’s head of regulatory reporting during the episode. The regulator alleged Tirrell ultimately was responsible for determining how much customer money would be reserved and failed to adequately monitor the options trades. He is challenging the allegations. Merrill Lynch also agreed to pay a $10 million SEC settlement for misleading statements it gave retail investors in offering materials for structured notes linked to the brokerage’s proprietary volatility index. The notes were issued by Bank of America, and Merrill Lynch was responsible for drafting and reviewing the disclosure statements, the SEC said. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority also fined Merrill Lynch $5 million over the disclosure violation. “The rules concerning the safe- STANDOUT CAMPAIGNS FROM THE CANNES LIONS FESTIVAL Athena Cao l USA TODAY From a bus ride that shows students in a far-off world to video campaigns that trigger viewer tears, the 63rd Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity this week celebrated some of the world’s most innovative and unusual campaigns from the communications industry. More than 13,500 delegates from 90 countries are gathered in the South of France for the annual awards show and trade event, which is widely considered the Academy Awards of the marketing and advertising world. Here’s a look at six award-winning, buzz-generating campaigns from the festival. MONTY’S CHRISTMAS This touching video stars a little boy who enjoys all things with his pet penguin Monty, such as eating, playing hide-and-seek, going to the park and playing soccer together. One day, Monty begins to longingly gaze at kissing couples, and the boy notices. On Christmas morning, the boy gives Monty a surprise — another penguin, Mabel, who quickly gains Monty’s fondness. The two penguins happily and affectionately extend their beaks to one another. At that point of the ad for British department store John Lewis, the camera shifts back to the boy playing with two stuffed penguin toys. In the background, music plays with the lyrics, “It’s real love, it’s real.” The ad was done by Adam&EveDDB London. JOHN LEWIS/ADAM&EVEDDB LONDON ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO/LEO BURNETT CHICAGO VAN GOGH’S BEDROOM The Art Institute of Chicago invited visitors to stay at Vincent van Gogh’s bedroom — a life-size replica based on one of his 1888 paintings. For $10 per night, guests could rent the room on Airbnb and sleep in the chamber resembling a bedroom from a home known as the “Yellow House,” where he lived in Arles, France. Van Gogh made three almostidentical oil-on-canvas paintings of “The Bedroom.” The Chicago museum has one of them, and the other two traveled from the Musée d’Orsay in Paris and the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam to reunite for the first time in America at an exhibition from February to May in Chicago. Two tickets to the exhibition were included in the nightly rent. The #VanGoghBNB campaign was by ad agency Leo Burnett Chicago and helped to attract 14,608 visitors in the first three days of the exhibition. LOCKHEED MARTIN/MCCANN NEW YORK FIELD TRIP TO MARS In a unique educational campaign from Lockheed Martin, an ordinary bus trip turns into an incredible space journey. Lockheed Martin equipped a bus with virtual reality displays on the windows to showcase 200 square miles of Mars. The vehicle drives 30 mph while its young passengers tour the Martian surface at the same speed. The bus stunt, created with ad firm McCann New York, is part of Lockheed Martin’s Generation Beyond program, which is designed to encourage students to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering and math. PETA/OGILVY & MATHER BANGKOK BEHIND THE LEATHER People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), aided by communications firm Ogilvy & Mather Bangkok, opened an apparel store not to sell the exotic leather purses, wallets or jackets on display, but to remind consumers that leather and other exotic-hide goods come from the skin of animals. The shop, in the heart of Bangkok’s fashion district, shocked unsuspecting shoppers when they took a closer look at the leather products and found startling items inside, such as replicas of an animal’s heart or intestines. CONTOURS/FCB CHICAGO THE BABY STROLLER TEST RIDE How can parents know whether their babies are comfortable in the stroller? Baby-gear brand Contours and marketing agency FCB made adultsize strollers for parents to take a test ride. The giant stroller was able to hold up to 400 pounds, Contours says, and was a replica of one of the brand’s most-popular sellers. A video from the brand shows adults tucked into an oversized seat as the huge stroller is pushed by a test-ride guide who can barely reach the handlebar to keep the trip going. MANBOOBS Argentina’s breast cancer charity MACMA found a novel way to share a breast examination tutorial on social media sites that ban visuals of female nipples. A video, by ad agency DAVID Buenos Aires, shows a woman standing behind a man and demonstrating the examination on a large pair of hairy man breasts. Test results prove a welcome surprise v CONTINUED FROM 1B os. The second is considered the more important of the two because the Fed can exercise more subjective critiques of the banks’ financial standing. The banks are required to calculate if they have enough financial cushion to absorb economic shocks caused by hypothetical events such as soaring unemployment, falling stock prices or severe recession. The stress tests were ushered in by the Dodd-Frank Act following the financial and housing crisis of 2008 and 2009. Since many banks were unprepared for that recession, the federal government ended up having to bail out many institutions. The results have more than a theoretical importance to bank investors. That’s because if banks aren’t able to demonstrate they have adequate capital to withstand recessions, the government can limit how much cash they return to shareholders in the form of dividends or stock buybacks. Banks have been boosting their dividends in recent years as growing profitability improved their financial health. The seven major U.S. banks, the largest by market value being Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, pay an average dividend yield of 2%, roughly in line with the Standard & Poor’s 500. Citigroup, one of the slowest to build a cushion, has the smallest yield of 0.5%. Wells Fargo, the most valuable bank and considered among the strongest, yields the most at 3.3%. The results point to high probability that larger banks might proceed with raising dividend plans or stock buybacks, Oja says. If there is a concern, it’s that the financial strength of regional banks didn’t increase as much as the large money-center banks, a point that might become more of an issue in next week’s test, Oja says. Investors also will look for more details on whether the “exam was difficult enough,” he says. ty of customer cash and securities are fundamental protections for investors and impose lines that simply can never be crossed,” Andrew Ceresney, head of the SEC’s enforcement division, said in a statement. Bank of America said it cooperated with SEC investigators. “While no customers were harmed and no losses were incurred, our responsibility is to protect customer assets and we have dedicated significant resources to reviewing and enhancing our processes. The issues related to our procedures and controls have been corrected,” the bank said in a statement. Gennette to become CEO in Macy’s shake-up Lundgren to step down as struggling retailer looks to reset its business model Hadley Malcolm @hadleypdxdc USA TODAY With Macy’s seeking to reinvent itself for the modern shopper, it’s hoping a change of leadership will help: 13-year CEO Terry Lundgren will step down next year, handing his post to Jeff Gennette, president of Macy’s Inc., in the first quarter of 2017. Lundgren, who has been in the position since 2003, will stay on as executive chairman of the department store company, which also operates Bloomingdale’s. The announcement Thursday comes amid tumultuous times for Macy’s, which has been chasing a leaner business model through store closures and job cuts in recent years. AP Department Terry Lundstores have been hurting at gren will step a time when aside early their vast sales next year. floors and huge selection have come to be seen as overwhelming and unnecessary. In a company statement, Lundgren said that “now is the GETTY IMAGES time to reset our business Jeff Gennette model ... Our has been with company must the company and will change since 1983. in response to the profound secular forces that are driving consumer spending.” The executive shake-up is significant for the country’s largest department store chain, which ended 2015 with $27.1 billion in sales. The company operates about 870 stores in 45 states, between its Macy’s, Bloomingdale’s, Blue Mercury, outlet and offprice stores. But the icon of American shopping has slipped to newer stores such as H&M and an endless array of online shops. Macy’s has experienced five consecutive quarters of same-store sales declines, driven in particular by a drop in tourist spending. Its stock, on a steady rise since the recession and peaking last summer at $70.27 a share, has since fallen by 53%. The company closed 41 underperforming stores last year and has slashed thousands of jobs as it has attempted to pare down operating costs and become more competitive. Part of the changes already underway under Lundgren include opening the off-price Macy’s Backstage stores last year and expanding the availability of services such as same-day delivery and being able to buy online but pick up items in a store. Now, Gennette, 55, will spearhead Macy’s transformation going forward. He has been with the company 33 years, starting as an executive trainee in 1983. He became chief merchandising officer in 2009 and was named president in 2014, sparking speculation he would succeed Lundgren. MONEY 3B USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 TECH House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, center, and other Democrats speak on Capitol Hill on Thursday after ending their 25-hour sit-in protest on the House floor. PERISCOPE, FACEBOOK LIVE BRING HOUSE SIT-IN TO MILLIONS Public, social media are big winners as Democrats protest rejection of guncontrol measures CAROLYN KASTER, AP Allana Akhtar and Paul Singer USA TODAY The time-honored way of watching democracy unfold — with the cable box set to C-SPAN and its wide-angled views of the House and Senate floors — may be headed for the history books after millions tuned into Facebook and Periscope live-video streams to follow an overnight protest by House Democrats. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said Facebook Live broadcasts by 19 members of Congress engaged in the sit-in protest were watched 3 million times. Facebook “Live is unfiltered and real,” Zuckerberg said in a Facebook post Thursday. “It’s bringing us moments we wouldn’t see otherwise — from birthday parties to locker room celebrations to late-night ses- sions in the United States Capitol.” Twitter-owned Periscope, in a fierce rivalry with Facebook over live video views, said more than 1 million people saw the tweets Democratic Reps. Scott Peters and Eric Swalwell, both of California, sent with links to the Periscope broadcasts of the protests. The hashtags used — #NoBillNoBreak and #HoldTheFloor — have been tweeted 1.4 million times since the sit-in. Democrats staged the 25-hour sit-in after the Senate rejected four gun control proposals earlier in the week, in the wake of the massacre in an Orlando nightclub. House Democrats took to social media to live-stream their protest after cameras in the House press gallery that feed C-SPAN’s broadcast were turned off. In keeping with House policy, they went dark after Wednesday’s Facebook “Live is unfiltered and real. It’s bringing us moments we wouldn’t see otherwise.” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg legislative meeting had ended when Speaker Paul Ryan adjourned it. Although House rules prohibit members of Congress from taking videos or pictures on the House floor, Rep. Beto O’Rourke, D-Texas, said his live-stream was an act of civil disobedience, like the sit-in itself. C-SPAN began running O’Rourke’s Facebook Live stream on its own broadcast, and he said he received 10,000 incoming messages an hour at points throughout the night. O’Rourke said the live-stream was “so new to the American public — it was something authentic and raw and honest. And I think that is what helped turn people on.” Facebook has been making a huge push into live video after a limited offering captivated early users, rolling out new features and placing the Live broadcasts at a priority position in the mobile app. The company says users watch live videos three times longer than other videos and comment 10 times more. That has made it a tough competitor to early-mover Periscope, which in turn has been pushing out its own improvements, such as a save feature and a Periscope broadcast from the Twitter app. . The House protest also marks the first significant time Periscope and Facebook Live were used by politicians and in a display of political activism, according Jennifer Stromer-Galley, professor of information studies at Syracuse University and author of Presidential Campaigning in the Internet Age. Stromer-Galley said Periscope and Facebook Live also reached audiences CSPAN could not have, since users were able to share the video with their friends online. In good sign for unicorns, Twilio surges in IPO debut Cloud-computing company puts an end to tech IPO drought Jon Swartz and Eli Blumenthal @jswartz, @eliblumenthal USA TODAY 2014 PHOTO BY MARTIN E. KLIMEK, USA TODAY YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki spoke at VidCon on Thursday. Live mobile streaming now on YouTube app Will have same features regular videos have Jefferson Graham @jeffersongraham USA TODAY ANAHEIM , CALIF. Add online video pioneer YouTube to the list of apps offering live mobile video streaming. Facebook Live and Twitter’s Periscope have emerged as the go-to places for broadcasting live on a mobile phone, leaving Google owned YouTube out of the picture. Not any more. YouTube said Thursday it,too, will begin offering mobile streaming from its app. In an interview with USA TODAY here, YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki said streaming was something the company had been doing since 2011 for desktop and that live video streaming has increased greatly in the last six months. “We’ve seen a tripling of live streaming,” she said. Mobile is “one click away” and a great way for the large group of an estimated 100,000 YouTube video creators to communicate with their audiences, she said. As part of the YouTube app, mobile live streaming will have features regular videos have — users will be able to search for them, find them through recommendations and playlists. A small group of creators has been invited to begin testing the feature, which will roll out to all YouTube app users later this year. The YouTube app is a perennial top 10 download in the Apple and Google App Stores. Wojcicki was the keynote speaker Thursday at the VidCon convention, which is sponsored by YouTube and others, and celebrates the massive growth in online video. The convention floor is teeming with companies such as YouTube, Twitter’s Vine, Facebook’s Instagram and smaller players such as YouNow and Musical.ly. YouTube is the world’s biggest video network, with 1 billion viewers monthly. Twilio, the first unicorn to go public this year, burst out of the IPO gates Thursday, surging 92% to $28.79 a share in its first day of trading. Its emphatic public-market debut on the New York Stock Exchange — it set its IPO price at $15 late Wednesday, above an expected range of $12 to $14 — broke a tech IPO drought and could open the markets to more of its unicorn breed. (Unicorns, privately held start-ups valued at $1 billion or more, include Uber, Airbnb, Snapchat and Dropbox.) Though some investors cautioned against hyping the firstday pop, the debut fanned excitement simply because new issues have become relatively rare. There have been just 40 IPOs priced in the U.S. this year, down 54% from a year ago, according to Renaissance Capital. Twilio’s first-day spike made it the largest of four tech IPOs this year, as measured by market value (nearly $2.4 billion). That initial success could persuade wary Wall Street investors to consider more IPOs after a volatile market, interest-rate uncertainty and steep declines in venture funding all but smothered the notion. The cloud-computing company lets developers incorporate voice and text message services into their applications. Uber, Nordstrom, Box and Coca-Cola are among the 28,000 companies that use Twilio’s software to send notifications and interact with users. TWILIO Twilio set its IPO price at $15 on the New York Stock Exchange. The company used the IPO to advertise its coding chops by tweeting, “Hello NYSE” and installing developers at stations on the NYSE floor for a “Code Jam.” The first-day showing of Twilio was also distinguished because it is the first IPO to price above its proposed range since Atlassian, another tech unicorn, debuted in December 2015, Renaissance Capital said. The impact of Twilio’s IPO extends far beyond the Silicon Valley unicorn: It is likely to be a litmus test for the public market’s appetite for private tech companies. Twilio’s IPO pricing gave it a market value of $1.23 billion, north of the $1.03 billion valuation investors placed on it during its last private round of financing last year. The 9-year-old company, which has yet to turn a profit, said sales surged 88% to $166.9 million in 2015. Unicorns, of which they are an estimated 169, have become a rarer breed following several years of torrid growth — just 20 were created in the first three months of 2016, according to market researcher CB Insights Tepid IPOs from SecureWorks in April and Square last year threw further cold water on Wall Street’s interest in the sector. start-up Mobile-payments Square spooked some investors because it jumped nearly 50% its first day of trading in November 2015, raising the hopes of other tech IPO candidates, before it began an inexorable decline. But that is gradually changing after the stock market’s comeback from a rocky beginning this year, says Neil Dhar, a partner at PwC. “There has been a pick-up in recent months,” he says. Acacia Communications, a maker of high-speed interconnect products, launched a successful offering last month: Its stock is up more than 70% from its initial IPO price. 4B MONEY USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 CUTTING THE CORD SIRI LEADING THE WAY IN ADVANCES FOR APPLE TV She’ll search for shows you like, and there are more channels to watch Mike Snider @mikesnider USA TODAY Apple is buffing up its Apple TV set-top box in hopes of making it a more popular choice for cord cutters. The purveyor of iPhones and iPads is playing catch-up in the Net video streaming device competition. But some Apple TV advances announced recently could give it a boost. One of the latest additions to the 6,000-plus Apple TV apps: Sling TV, the live-streaming service that bundles channels such as AMC, CNN, Disney Channel, ESPN, HGTV, TBS and TNT for $20 monthly. Sling just added Comedy Central to that basic package. (You can add more channels, including new additions such as BET, Cooking Channel and MTV, in $5 programming packages.) Sling TV and several new features are only available on the fourth-generation Apple TV released in October 2015 ($149 for the 32-Gigabyte model, $199 64GB). That hardware refresh helped Apple gain on competitors such as Roku. However, it still lags behind, as Roku was in about 30% of broadband homes with a streaming device in 2015, compared with Apple’s 20%, according to market research firm Parks Associates. Improvements in Apple’s tvOS operating system make artificial intelligent assistant Siri a better content caddy. You can SPENCER PLATT, GETTY IMAGES Time Warner Cable was acquired earlier this year by Charter. Streaming service Sling TV is now available on Apple TV’s fourth-generation set-top box. now universally search a larger collection of apps and channels, including Bravo, CBS, Disney, ESPN, Food Network, PBS and Syfy, and Siri will peruse more than 650,000 movies and TV episodes for you. You can now also search YouTube — it’s not part of universal searching — by simply saying, “Search YouTube for surfing videos” or whatever. And Siri has gotten sharper, so your searches can be less specific and more wide-ranging. On stage at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference on Monday, iOS software guru Eddy Cue used the example “Find high school comedies from the ’80s.” Siri will also take you straight to a channel, if you offer a command such as “Siri, watch ESPN 2,” the AI will boot up WatchESPN. Also coming this summer is an improved iOS app that gives SLING TV/APPLE your iPhone or iPad the same abilities as the Siri Remote that comes with Apple TV, including Siri voice search, keyboard input and controller support for some Apple TV games. Another feature in the works for this fall, Single Sign-On, will make life simpler for pay-TV subscribers who have TV Everywhere apps constantly needing authentication. The idea is that a viewer will log into one pay-TV app, such as Fox Now, and all other TV apps that require authentication would also be approved. Nice touches like that — and an ever-smarter Siri — can help Apple TV connect with more Net TV lovers. “Cutting the Cord” is a regular column covering Net TV and ways to get it. If you have suggestions or questions, contact Mike Snider at msnider@usa today.com. And follow him on Twitter: @MikeSnider. Safety test suggests front passengers at risk in many current car models The Toyota RAV4 performed the worst in the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety test. IIHS This new car crash test may be tough to pass Chris Woodyard @ChrisWoodyard USA TODAY One of the nation’s most closely watched auto safety ratings could soon get even tougher. The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, which conducts rigorous car tests and issues ratings that automakers take seriously, is considering adding yet another front crash test. And early indications are that a lot of current car models will flunk. The issue involves a test that has bedeviled automakers since it was instituted in 2012 — what IIHS calls the “small overlap” crash. Cars are run into a barrier at 40 mph with all of the impact coming on the driver’s side instead of striking it dead on. The basic idea is that many accidents involve hitting a tree or a pole — not just running straight into a wall or head on into another car. After many initially fell Cars are run into a barrier at 40 mph with all of the impact coming on the side instead of dead on. short, automakers are getting “good” ratings on the test in large numbers. But the IIHS decided to see what happened if it performed the same test on the front passenger’s side of the car. Out of seven SUVs with good ratings on the test, only one passed when it came to the crash on the right side — the 2016 Hyundai Tucson. The rest were rated poor or acceptable. IIHS says the issue is important because front passengers are vulnerable in traffic accidents. It says about 1,600 right-front passengers died in 2014 front crashes alone. “It’s not surprising that automakers would focus their initial effort to improve small overlap protection on the side of the vehicle that we conduct tests on,” said David Zuby, IIHS’ executive vice president and chief research officer. The results didn’t differ much between between cars that appeared to have the same construction on both sides when bumpers and covers were pulled off, when compared to those that didn’t. The worst-performing vehicle was the 2015 Toyota RAV4. It had 13 more inches of intrusion on the passenger’s side than on the driver’s side, IIHS says. Plus, a door opened — which could lead to risk of passenger ejection. “Some vehicle structures look the same on both sides, but they don’t perform the same,” says Becky Mueller, an IIHS senior research engineer. Senators: Some cable companies raking in bucks from overbilling Report slams Charter Communications, Time Warner Cable Mike Snider @mikesnider USA TODAY Some pay-TV companies bilk many customers with questionable monthly charges that add up to millions of dollars, charges a Senate report out Thursday. Charter Communications and Time Warner Cable, acquired earlier this year by Charter for $79 billion, were particularly targeted in a Senate hearing held by Sens. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, and Claire McCaskill, D-Mo. Time Warner Cable overbilled customers $640,000, usually in unnecessary charges for equipment or programming, in the first four months of this year, the senators found in their joint report “Some Cable and Satellite Companies Do Not Refund Customer Overcharges,” released at the hearing. Charter overbills customers by about $442,000 monthly, the senfound during the ators investigation. “We found that customers are being charged a host of fees that are not included in advertised pricing, some of which are for programming that used to be included in a customer’s video package,” McCaskill said. “We also found that, just as many customers have long believed, some of these fees, like the HD and DVR service fees, aren’t a true reflection of the cost to the company of the service but rather are based on the revenue goals of the company and the price a customer is willing to stomach.” Their report also looked specifically at those companies’ overbilling in the senators’ own states. In Ohio, where TWC is the largest pay-TV provider, last year the company overbilled 40,000 customers with overages of more than $430,000, an average of about $10.75, the report says. In the first five months of 2016, TWC overbilled up to 11,000 customers in Ohio — and those overcharges totaled $108,000. Charter estimates that it has annually overcharged about 5,900 Missouri customers a total of $494,000 each year. “It doesn’t have to be this way,” Portman said. He noted that Comcast and DirecTV provide automatic refunds and that Dish’s billing system aims to prevent overcharges. Executives from the pay-TV companies answered the senators’ questions at the hearing. Despite the growing trend of cord-cutting — dropping pay TV in favor of streaming TV over the Net —more than 94.2 million U.S. homes subscribe to pay TV, according to Leichtman Research Group. Pay-TV providers have lost about 1 million subscribers over the past four years, the research firm says. Time Warner Cable overbilled customers $640,000 in the first four months of this year, the report said. Still, many cable and satellite customers have been frustrated by the cost and complexity of their pay-TV bills, McCaskill said. “It is amazing to me … the volume and passion of input we got from people about how they feel like they are mistreated by their payTV provider.” During the Senate investigation, Charter and Time Warner Cable agreed to issue credits for overbilling, she said. And Comcast had directed its customer-service agents to make it easier for customers to cancel service. Charter has invested $7 billion in upgrading its networks and adding more than 7,000 jobs to improve customer service, said Kathleen Mayo, the company’s executive vice president for customer operations. Real Estate AUCTION! 41 Deeded Lake Front Homes! Priest Lake, Idaho (Coolin, ID) Incredible Lake Front Properties! Selling on behalf of The Idaho Dept. of Lands Saturday, June 25th, 208.377.5700 See Website For Full Terms/Location www.CorbettBottles.com ABSOLUTE AUCTION MAKE SURE YOUR AUCTION PROFESSIONAL IS AN Thurs., July 14 @ 11:00 A.M. Onsite Former Café-Bar With Attached Residence In the Heart of Saint Augustine, FL Historic District To be Sold Absolute to the Highest Bidder, No Min. or Reserve! Special Note: St. John’s County, Florida Liquor License to be Auctioned Separately! Minimum Bid: $275,000! fisherauction.com | 800.331.6620 3% Broker Cooperation | Subject to All Terms of Sale Lamar Fisher AU93:AB106 Call Us Today! MEMBER Find An Auctioneer at Auctioneers.org Place your ad in USA TODAY to get your phone ringing 800-397-0070 MONEY 5B USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 PERSONAL FINANCE Credit card users still want paper statements 74% of those who get one say it’s a helpful reminder, survey says Charisse Jones @charissejones USA TODAY GETTY IMAGES/ ISTOCKPHOTO PETE THE PLANNER T-Mobile unveils 4G summer deal for European vacations Figuring divorce into your financial plans fatalistic but smart Eli Blumenthal @eliblumenthal USA TODAY T-Mobile users traveling to Europe this summer won’t need to buy a new phone to get highspeed Internet. The company announced Thursday that starting July 1 and running through Aug. 31, travelers who have T-Mobile’s Simple Choice plan while in the U.S. will have access to high-speed 4G LTE networks across the continent. T-Mobile has offered free international data, known as roaming, since October 2013, though with the exception of Canada and Mexico, Internet speeds were slowed to slow, 2G-like connections overseas. DEAR PETE: My wife and I have a question concerning our 401(k)s. Should we contribute to our individual retirement accounts evenly? Her salary is substantially larger than mine. She has 12% going into hers, and I have 10% going into mine. My thoughts were to basically put the same amount into both our accounts each week (adjusting the percentages to make this happen). You never know, she might kick me to the curb (kidding). We plan on being together forever, and all of our finances are shared evenly. Why wouldn’t we want to do the same with the 401(k)s? — JEREMY Peter Dunn Special for USA TODAY DEAR JEREMY: Eleven years ago I met a woman named Gayle. She’d just been through a relationship transition. By relationship transition, I mean divorce. That’s what my divorce attorney friend calls divorces — relationship transitions. Gayle had been a stay-at-home mom for the better part of 30 years, and her marriage was ending. From the outside, her and her future ex-husband’s life appeared to be the epitome of financial success. It wasn’t. Most of their wealth was tied up in very complicated business investments. THE IDEA OF PREPARING TO SEPARATE FROM YOUR SPOUSE PRE-EMPTIVELY, WITHOUT BASIS, IS INHERENTLY UNCOMFORTABLE. Peter Dunn is an author, speaker and radio host. Have a question about money for Pete the Planner? Email him at AskPete @petethe planner .com When the marriage ended, by no fault of her own, Gayle didn’t get nearly as much money as anyone would have thought. Had she had a reasonable accumulation strategy, the likes of what you mention, her life would be much different today. To properly explore this topic is to accept an uncomfortable reality: The idea of preparing to separate from your spouse preemptively, without basis, is inherently uncomfortable. It’s one part fatalist and one part practical. I want to go on and on about how preparing to not be married to the person you’re married to violates the spirit of togetherness and love, but, unfortunately, I’ve seen far too many people — mainly women — left out in the cold when a relationship turns, well, cold. Taking joint responsibility for retirement preparation is a good idea, whether you two make it to your diamond anniversary or your balsam wood anniversary. You both need to develop a healthy view on income independence by systematically breaking your dependency on your work income as you get closer to retirement. It’s not unusual for one spouse to mentally and financially prepare for retirement, while the other one has his or her head in the clouds. You can prevent this by both accepting responsibility, which is obviously what you’re trying to do. When you examine the financial lives of those who divorce, it’s common to see one person more prepared for the future than the other. The lack of preparation is evident in both retirement accounts and daily living. Both people need to know how to budget, pay bills and save for retirement. Those skills are priceless. If both people in a marriage develop them, then the financial risks and impact of a relationship transition are mitigated. Divorce aside, when both individuals possess high-level financial skills, everyone wins. Your marriage will actually benefit from your joint efforts, not suffer. Technically, one of your company-sponsored retirement plans is likely better than the other. One may have lower fees and better-performing funds. If that’s the case, I’d be remiss in not mentioning pumping money into that account would result in higher balances than if you pumped money into the more expensive retirement plan. Therefore, by creating an accumulation strategy to account for your wife making significantly more money, you may end up costing yourself money based on the quality of the two retirement accounts. Be sure to both increase your contributions as your incomes increase. I do think contingency planning for a relationship transition can cross over to sealing your fate. Call it intuition, but constant talk of preparing for “what if we get divorced” seems as though it would actually lead to divorce. Be careful. There’s a fine line between practical preparation and the premonition of a plight. No matter how you cut the cake, preparing together to separate is still preparing to separate. When it comes to credit cards, many Americans are doggedly attached to their paper statements. A new survey from CreditCards .com found 93 million credit card holders are still receiving their statements on paper instead of online, and 43 million of them prefer it that way. “I guess old habits are hard to break,’’ says Matt Schulz, senior industry analyst at CreditCards.com. Nearly 50% of those who are receiving paper financial statements say they would be willing to pay to get those mailings if they had to. For those who are still receiving paper financial statements, 80% said they like having those pieces of paper for their records, and 74% like the tangible reminder that it’s time to make a payment. “As convenient as an electronic statement can be,’’ Schulz says, “they can also be kind of easy to miss in your email.’’ While 67% of those getting mailed statements are just used to finding out what they owe the oldfashioned way, 50% say they pay their bills by checks and the mailed statements supply them with the payment envelopes. More than a quarter of those getting paper statements say they didn’t have consistent access to the Internet. Even if you prefer paper statements, it’s a good idea to also check your accounts online, Schulz says. “That’s the best way to find out as quickly as possible if there’s any sort of fraudulent activity going on,’’ Schulz says. He recommends consumers go online once a week to review not only their credit card accounts but their bank accounts as well. Calls in European countries will be 20 cents per minute, but users can use apps such as Skype, WhatsApp, FaceTime or Snapchat to make calls with friends. You can also use your phone as a wireless hotspot for other devices with unlimited high-speed data for no additional charge. T-Mobile’s Simple Choice plans start at $50 a month (plus taxes and fees) for 2GB of high-speed 4G data, with no fee if you use more. Unlimited texting and calling are also included. T-Mobile users will still be able to get unlimited data when traveling to the other 100-plus countries T-Mobile has arrangements with, but they will remain at 2G speeds. Traditional texting (not services such as iMessage, Whats App or Facebook Messenger) remains unlimited. Advertisement In S tro h du oc cto kin ry g Pr ice ! $2 1 50 ea ch Actual size is 40.6 mm Millions Demand America’s Purest Silver Dollar. Shouldn’t You? Secure Your New 2016 Eagle Silver Dollars Now! M illions of people collect the American Eagle Silver Dollar. In fact it’s been the country’s most popular Silver Dollar for thirty years. Try as they might, that makes it a very hard “secret” to keep quiet. And right now, many of those same people are lining up to secure the brand new 2016 U.S. Eagle Silver Dollars —placing their orders now to ensure that they get America’s newest Silver Dollar, in stunning Brilliant Uncirculated condition, before millions of others beat you to it. 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GovMint.com is not an investment company and does not offer financial advice or sell items as an investment. The collectible coin market is speculative, and coin values may rise or fall over time. All rights reserved. © 2016 GovMint.com. 6B MONEY USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 AMERICA’S MARKETS What to watch David Carrig @david_carrig USA TODAY The single biggest influence for stocks the past few weeks comes down to a single word: “Brexit.” Fears that the United Kingdom would vote to leave the European Union have sent stocks south. Hopes that the U.K. will stay put have triggered rallies. Simply, investors favor the status quo over a change they fear will have global economic repercussions. It was no exception Thursday as millions of Britons cast their vote on whether the U.K. should leave the 28-nation EU. Stocks rallied sharply and sent the Standard & Poor’s 500 index within 1% of a record close as investors bet the historic “Brexit” referendum would end with Britain staying in the EU. Facts about America’s investors who use SigFig tracking services: The S&P rose 1.3% to 2,113, leaving it 0.9% shy of its record high. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 230 points, or 1.3%, to 18,011. And the Nasdaq composite index gained 1.6%. That came on the heels of a rally in European markets that lifted Britain’s FTSE 100 1.2%, France’s CAC-40 2.0% and Germany’s DAX 1.9%. Also, the British pound rose 1.2% and hit its highest level this year. Ahead of the vote, a new Ipsos Mori poll completed Wednesday night showed the “remain” supporters with a narrow lead — 52% to 48%. But the polling firm’s chief executive, Ben Page, said 13% of those polled said they still might change their minds. Another poll, from Populus, gave “remain” 55% and “leave” 45%. The most aggressive SigFig portfolios had the best performance in early June but the worst in the last 6 months. +230.24 +27.87 INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE CHANGE: +1.3% YTD: +586.04 YTD % CHG: +3.4% COMP +76.72 CHANGE: +1.6% YTD: -97.37 YTD % CHG: -1.9% CLOSE: 18,011.07 PREV. CLOSE: 17,780.83 RANGE: 17,844.11-18,011.07 NASDAQ CLOSE: 4,910.04 PREV. CLOSE: 4,833.32 RANGE: 4,859.40-4,910.04 CLOSE: 2,113.32 PREV. CLOSE: 2,085.45 RANGE: 2,092.80-2,113.32 RUSSELL RUT +23.25 COMPOSITE GAINERS Price $ Chg YTD % Chg % Chg 14.05 Micron Technology (MU) Stock rating upgraded at Nomura and Susquehanna. +1.33 +10.5 Company (ticker symbol) +5.5 -2.8 50.81 +2.46 Western Digital (WDC) Expected to benefit from improving NAND demand. +5.1 -15.4 21.78 Williams Companies (WMB) Reverses loss on Energy Transfer deal speculation. +1.02 +4.9 -15.3 Charles Schwab (SCHW) Positive note, makes up some of June’s loss. 29.69 +1.35 +4.8 -9.8 17.98 +.83 +4.8 +3.4 Leucadia National (LUK) Jefferies unit has encouraging second quarter. LOSERS -.8 +.63 Transocean (RIG) Oil rises, nearly makes up 2016 loss. 12.03 +4.7 -.4 Qorvo (QRVO) Consensus buy; improving market. 58.28 +2.64 +4.7 +14.5 28.00 Mosaic (MOS) Rises on potential of two biggest potash producer deals. +1.26 +4.7 +1.5 Akamai Technologies (AKAM) 57.17 Content-delivery network services should push growth. +2.47 +4.5 +8.6 YTD % Chg % Chg Price $ Chg Scripps Networks (SNI) Dips early on unusually high volume. 62.19 -1.23 -1.9 +12.6 Red Hat (RHT) M&A weighs on margins. 78.39 -1.36 -1.7 -5.3 Southwest Airlines (LUV) Falls as CFO cites weak revenue environment. 39.59 -.67 -1.7 -8.1 Viacom (VIAB) CBS deal seen as value destructive and unlikely. 43.47 -.56 -1.3 +5.6 Alaska Air Group (ALK) 59.14 Fund manager cuts; Virgin America deal seen hard. -.54 -.9 -26.5 35.39 Newmont Mining (NEM) Reverses gain on falling spot price ahead of “Brexit” vote. -.33 -.9 +96.7 218.45 -1.77 -.8 -8.8 Nike (NKE) Nears 2016 low ahead of earnings call. 54.12 -.45 -.8 -13.4 Foot Locker (FL) Loses momentum and hits year’s low. 53.14 -.41 -.8 -18.4 157.03 -1.09 -.7 -2.8 SOURCE: BLOOMBERG AND THE ASSOCIATED PRESS YOTUE VO 2016 IN 5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold: -1.34 -0.02 AAPL MSFT AAPL 4-WEEK TREND The computer chip maker got a $15 vote of confidence from two broPrice: $14.05 kerages. Susquehanna Group Chg: $1.33 raised its rating to positive from $9 % chg: 10.5% neutral and Nomura upped its ratMay 26 Day’s high/low: ing to buy from reduce. $14.16/$13.40 4-WEEK TREND $100 Twilio The cloud computing company soared in its first day of trading after pricing its initial public offering above the top end of its $12 to $14 expected range, selling 10 million shares for $15 each. Price: $28.79 Chg: $13.79 % chg: 91.9% Day’s high/low: $29.61/$23.66 Fund, ranked by size Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm Vanguard InstIdxI Vanguard TotStIdx Vanguard InstPlus Vanguard TotIntl Fidelity Contra American Funds GrthAmA m American Funds IncAmerA m American Funds CapIncBuA m NAV 194.93 52.59 193.04 52.57 193.05 14.85 98.13 42.13 21.24 59.19 Chg. +2.57 +0.74 +2.55 +0.74 +2.55 +0.31 +1.24 +0.61 +0.20 +0.71 4wk 1 +3.4% +3.7% +3.4% +3.6% +3.4% +5.2% +1.8% +3.7% +3.5% +4.3% YTD 1 +4.5% +4.5% +4.5% +4.4% +4.5% +4.0% -0.1% +2.0% +6.7% +7.8% 1 – CAPITAL GAINS AND DIVIDENDS REINVESTED ETF, ranked by volume Ticker SPDR S&P500 ETF Tr SPY Barc iPath Vix ST VXX iShs Emerg Mkts EEM CS VS 2x Vix ShTm TVIX iShare Japan EWJ ProShs Ultra VIX ST UVXY SPDR Financial XLF VanE Vect Gld Miners GDX iShares EAFE ETF EFA CS VS InvVix STerm XIV Close 210.81 13.61 34.76 2.35 11.83 10.40 23.33 25.22 58.70 30.05 Chg. +2.71 -1.46 +0.82 -0.53 +0.26 -2.52 +0.48 -0.28 +1.58 +2.71 % Chg %YTD +1.3% +3.4% -9.7% -32.3% +2.4% +8.0% -18.4% -62.5% +2.2% -2.4% -19.5% -63.3% +2.1% -2.1% -1.1% +83.8% +2.8% unch. +9.9% +16.5% INTEREST RATES MORTGAGE RATES Type Prime lending Federal funds 3 mo. T-bill 5 yr. T-note 10 yr. T-note Type 30 yr. fixed 15 yr. fixed 1 yr. ARM 5/1 ARM Close 6 mo ago 3.50% 3.50% 0.38% 0.36% 0.28% 0.18% 1.26% 1.72% 1.75% 2.25% Close 6 mo ago 3.73% 3.91% 2.71% 3.11% 2.82% 2.77% 2.90% 3.21% SOURCE: BANKRATE.COM COMMODITIES Essex Property Trust (ESS) Cap rates in May reached all-time low. RE O F E B 5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold: TOP 10 EXCHANGE TRADED FUNDS 72.23 +3.22 Costco Wholesale (COST) Flooded with complaints on rocky Amex exit. MORE THAN 80% U.S. INVESTMENTS TOP 10 MUTUAL FUNDS United Rentals (URI) Consensus hold; fund manager increases stake. Company (ticker symbol) -1.50 0.56 AAPL MSFT TWTR 51% TO 80% U.S. INVESTMENTS Late Wednesday, the cloud computing and open-source software Price: $78.39 company reported better-than-exChg: -$1.36 pected results for its first quarter $60 % chg: -1.7% May 26 Day’s high/low: but also issued disappointing guidance for the rest of the year. $78.55/$74.76 4-WEEK TREND CLOSE: 1,172.22 PREV. CLOSE: 1,148.97 RANGE: 1,151.51-1,172.22 S&P 500’S BIGGEST GAINERS/LOSERS 5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold: -0.06 0.12 BP BP AAPL Red Hat RUSSELL 2000 INDEX CHANGE: +2.0% YTD: +36.33 YTD % CHG: +3.2% 5-day avg.: 6-month avg.: Largest holding: Most bought: Most sold: STORY STOCKS Micron Technology STANDARD & POOR'S CHANGE: +1.3% YTD: +69.38 YTD % CHG: +3.4% 21% TO 50% U.S. INVESTMENTS -1.23 -0.62 AAPL MSFT LNKD POWERED BY SIGFIG More than half a million investors nationwide with total assets of $200 billion manage their investment portfolios online with SigFig investment tracking service. Data on this page are based on SigFig analysis. S&P 500 SPX LESS THAN 20% U.S. INVESTMENTS NOTE: INFORMATION PROVIDED BY SIGFIG IS STATISTICAL IN NATURE AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE A RECOMMENDATION OF ANY STRATEGY OR SECURITY. VISIT SIGFIG.USATODAY.COM/DISCLOSE FOR ADDITIONAL DISCLOSURES AND INFORMATION. POWERED BY SIGFIG Contributing: Jane Onyanga-Omara and Kim Hjelmgaard DOW JONES USA’s portfolio allocation by foreign investment Here’s how America’s individual investors are performing based on data from SigFig online investment tracking service: MAJOR INDEXES DJIA How we’re performing DID YOU KNOW? Global stocks rally ahead of ‘Brexit’ vote ALL THE MARKET ACTION IN REAL TIME. AMERICASMARKETS.USATODAY.COM Commodities Close Prev. Cattle (lb.) 1.17 1.15 Corn (bushel) 3.87 3.93 Gold (troy oz.) 1,261.20 1,268.00 Hogs, lean (lb.) .84 .84 Natural Gas (Btu.) 2.70 2.68 Oil, heating (gal.) 1.52 1.50 Oil, lt. swt. crude (bar.) 50.11 49.13 Silver (troy oz.) 17.35 17.31 Soybeans (bushel) 11.25 11.38 Wheat (bushel) 4.54 4.59 Chg. +0.02 -0.06 -6.80 unch. +0.02 +0.02 +0.98 +0.04 -0.13 -0.05 % Chg. +1.2% -1.5% -0.5% unch. +0.8% +1.1% +2.0% +0.3% -1.1% -1.0% % YTD -14.0% +7.9% +19.0% +40.9% +15.5% +38.2% +35.3% +25.9% +29.1% -3.4% FOREIGN CURRENCIES Currency per dollar British pound Canadian dollar Chinese yuan Euro Japanese yen Mexican peso Close .6753 1.2797 6.5691 .8810 105.78 18.2968 Prev. .6807 1.2829 6.5870 .8844 104.47 18.4926 6 mo. ago .6723 1.3859 6.4797 .9164 120.88 17.2344 Yr. ago .6363 1.2336 6.2041 .8953 123.96 15.4231 FOREIGN MARKETS Country Frankfurt Hong Kong Japan (Nikkei) London Mexico City Close 10,257.03 20,868.34 16,238.35 6,338.10 46,145.92 Prev. 10,071.06 20,795.12 16,065.72 6,261.19 45,806.16 Change +185.97 +73.22 +172.63 +76.91 +339.76 %Chg. +1.9% +0.4% +1.1% +1.2% +0.7% YTD % -4.5% -4.8% -14.7% +1.5% +7.4% SOURCES: MORNINGSTAR, DOW JONES INDEXES, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS IN-DEPTH MARKETS COVERAGE USATODAY.COM/MONEY $14.05 June 23 $78.39 June 23 $28.79 $30 $0 May 26 June 23 INVESTING ASK MATT Twilio a good start, but caution still prevails Q: Are tech IPOs about to come alive? Matt Krantz [email protected] USA TODAY A: One solid tech deal doesn’t make for a healthy market. Investors are still skeptical despite the solid showing by Twilio, but it certainly doesn’t hurt. Twilio is a cloud-based communications company that allows developers to add voice, recording and transcription features to their applications. Reception for the deal was surprisingly strong given how weak the IPO market has been this year. Shares were sold to initial investors at $15 each, topping the $12 to $14 expected range. It was the first IPO to set its initial price above the expected range all year, Renaissance Capital says. Even with the higher initial price, shares surged about 70% in their first day of trading Thursday to roughly $25 a share. Tech investors see the Twilio deal as a huge vote of confidence. It’s one of the first highly valued new breed of tech companies to successful test the market and find a strong reception. But this deal is unlikely to fix what has been a slow year for deals. So far this year, there have been just 40 IPOs, down 53% from the same point last year, Renaissance says. Tech hasn’t been the driver either, as half the IPOs the past 12 months have been health care stocks and just 15% in tech, Renaissance says. USA TODAY delivers the facts on local and national issues, and where the candidates stand, so you’ll know exactly who you’re voting for. elections2016.usatoday.com MONEY 7B USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 AUTOS WHAT STANDS OUT uFun: You'll love driving again. uPower: That Fiat engine really pops. uSize: Tight squeeze. FIAT 124 SPIDER HAS ITALIAN STYLE, JAPANESE QUALITY Two-seat roadster revival a real blast from the past Chris Woodyard @ChrisWoodyard USA TODAY As a kid, one of the nicest bonding experiences I had with my father was going car shopping. I’ll never forget the time we visited a Fiat dealership and saw a gleaming Fiat 124 Spider in the showroom. Between the British racing green paint job and woodaccented dashboard, it was the most breathtaking car I had ever seen. “My son is silently screaming for me to buy it,” my father told the salesman. He didn’t — and it’s probably for the best, because beyond the car’s flawless appearance, Fiat’s were known for less-than-stellar reliability. Now comes a new Fiat 124 Spider, a two-seat sports car that is not only sexy in appearance and breathtaking when it comes to performance but holds out the REVIEW hope of the kind of reliability that usually comes with Japanesebuilt cars. It is built at Mazda’s Hiroshima plant on the chassis that underpins the highly-regarded Mazda’s MX-5 Miata. The model’s reintroduction comes just ahead of the last Fiat 124’s 50th anniversary. There are still 8,000 of the little buggers registered in the U.S., Fiat says. Some 170,000 were built between 1968 and 1983. The 124 Spider is as appealing as they come, with its long hood and short rear deck that emphasize its zippy performance. The Fiat 1.4-liter MultiAir turbocharged engine puts out a smooth 160 horsepower, teamed with a standard 6-speed manual transmission. Because it’s a sports car with heritage, it basically screams for a manual. Just like the Miata, the shifting is a little stiffer than we’d prefer, both the moving the stick and pressing the clutch. Brushing aside the extra effort, the shifting is just part of the fun. Of course, there’s also the op- tion for an automatic transmission, if you must (and most will even as a $1,350 option). The number of models offering manuals continues to dwindle. Fiat says the brand went to lengths to try to keep touches from the original Fiat 124 Spider in the new one, which comes to showrooms this summer. We noticed the similarities more than differences with the Miata when it came to the dashboard layout. And that’s not a bad thing, given how wonderful the most recent Miata turned out. The Spider’s most appealing feature isn’t inside the car, but outside — that big blue sky that most drivers would never notice. Unlike the complicated electrically operated mechanisms that usually crank tops up and down, the 124 has one of the most simple, easy-opened tops we’ve ever seen. It’s a 5-second operation, and the latching and unlatching is easy. It encourages drivers to open the roof at even a hint of sunshine. A.J. MUELLER 2017 FIAT 124 SPIDER uWhat? A two-seat sports car that revives a nameplate from the 1960s. uWhen? Comes to showrooms this summer. uHow much? Starts at $24,995 plus $995 shipping, for the base version. The fanciest 124 Abarth goes for $28,195. uWhere? Assembled in Hiroshima, Japan. uHow big? 13.3 feet. uWhat makes it go? A Fiat 1.4-liter MultiAir Turbo engine producing 160 horsepower, with a 6-speed manual or automatic transmission. uHow thirsty? 26 miles per gallon in the city, 35 mpg on the highway and 30 mpg combined with the manual. About the same with the automatic. uOverall: Italian flair with Japanese reliability. The biggest drawback to the car is the tight quarters. Though Fiat boasts the car’s trunk is more capacious than other roadsters, we couldn’t fit a lot more in it than a single roller bag. The driver’s seatback seemed unusually narrow. The cupholders are attached next to the passenger’s shoulders, between the seatbacks, requiring a clumsy move to grab that commuter mug that risks a spill. And our 6-2 frame poked up against the canvas roof, which became another reason to find an excuse to drive top-down. Annoyances aside, the Fiat 124 Spider is a blast. And at $25,990, including shipping, it’s coming billed as cheapest new turbocharged-convertible on the market. The bigger decision for many will be whether to buy the roadster as a Mazda or a Fiat. The Mazda version comes with the 2liter SkyActiv engine that has 5 less horsepower and about the same starting price. One thing is clear: Either might be the perfect choice for new car buyers looking to escape their sedan-encased existences. Dodge Viper super car being killed off — again Loved by enthusiasts and collectors, it’s going out in style Brent Snavely @BrentSnavely Detroit Free Press CHRIS WOODYARD, USA TODAY A Tesla mini-store has opened inside a Nordstrom at The Grove mall in Los Angeles. It features a white Model X crossover. You can now buy a Tesla at Nordstrom Chris Woodyard @ChrisWoodyard USA TODAY LOS ANGELES Shoppers browsing through the Nordstrom store in one of this city’s toniest malls may leave with more than a tie or sport coat. They may want something far pricer — a new Tesla. Tesla opened an electric-car boutique in the men’s section of the Nordstrom store Monday that could become the model for others. Tesla has had its own stores in malls, but not one inside of a department store. Not only could it potentially cut the automaker’s real estate costs, but it could also help Tesla attract more customers who discover the car just by walking by. At the store on a hot afternoon, customers could step directly from the men’s suits section into the Tesla display to check out a white Model X crossover with its upward-opening gullwing rear doors or learn more about the cars’ features. Test drives were being held in the parking lot. “We’re getting a lot of people walking by,” said Jonathan Rios, a product specialist. The mini-store is slated to operate inside the Nordstrom store at The Grove through the end of the year. Nordstrom executives “thought it would be interesting,” said Dan Evans, a spokesman for the upscale department store chain. “We like to create experience inside our store to make people want to come there. ... We’ve experimented and tried different things.” He said the two brands were in discussion for months about the idea. Financial terms were not disclosed. Tesla, based in Palo Alto, Calif., is the auto industry upstart that has prided itself in defying industry convention. Rather than dealerships, it has depended on its own company stores to sell cars. Putting Tesla boutiques inside Nordstrom stores is a great idea, said Max Zanan, who has two auto-dealer-related businesses. He’s president of Total Dealer Compliance, a car dealership compliance-auditing firm, and CEO of IDDS Group, a consulting firm for dealerships. The Nordstrom experiment ramps up pressure on traditional dealers to find ways to be more creative, he said. Nordstrom “attracts a very upscale clientele that is a good fit for Tesla,” Zanan said. “Tesla and Nordstrom share a relentless drive to engage and delight customers with new and innovative shopping experiences,” Tesla said in a statement. The Dodge Viper super car, loved by enthusiasts and collectors, will die again next year. But it’s going out in style. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles said this week it is offering five limited-edition models to commemorate the final year of production and celebrate its 25th anniversary. Each model will be inspired by historic Vipers from the past and produced in very small numbers. “The Dodge Viper has had a great run and, 25 years after it was first introduced, it leaves the super car world reaching for the records it continues to set,” Tim Kuniskis, Fiat Chrysler’s head of passenger cars and the Dodge brand, said in a statement. The Viper, with its exaggerated, curvy styling and reputation for being difficult to control on the road, has always been much bigger than its small sales volumes. The car exemplifies the bold spirit of the Auburn Hills automaker and is coveted by street racing enthusiasts and car collectors alike. The car, which debuted in 1992, was discontinued in 2010 in the midst of the Great Recession and the automaker’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy, causing the plant where it is built to be idled. But the Viper rose from its grave just three years later in a project spearheaded by FCA head of design Ralph Gilles. “The history of Viper runs deep. The private equity guys tried to snuff it out, but it’s like the weed that keeps growing back,” Gilles said at the New York International Auto Show in 2012 as he took a swipe at Chrysler’s previous owner, Cerberus Capital Management. “It was done in the darkest hour you could imagine ... I threw this project to the design- SPECIAL EDITION VIPERS IN LIMITED PRODUCTION Starting Friday, customers can begin ordering special edition Vipers. They include: uViper 1:28 Edition ACR. This version pays tribute to the current production car single lap record of 1:28.65 set by champion driver Randy Pobst in a 2016 Dodge Viper ACR at historic Laguna Seca Raceway in Monterey, Calif., in October 2015. Production will be limited to 28 cars. uViper GTS-R Commemorative Edition ACR. This Viper is designed to pay tribute to one of the most distinguishable and iconic Viper paint schemes of all time — the white and blue combination of the 1998 Viper GTS-R GT2 Championship Edition. Production will be limited to 100 cars. uViper VoooDoo II Edition ACR. Modeled after the original 2010 Viper VooDoo, this version (yes, VoooDoo is correct) features a black exterior and a graphite metallic ACR driver’s stripe. Production will be limited to 31 cars. uViper Snakeskin Edition GTC. This Viper features a new Snakeskin Green exterior with a custom snakeskin-patterned SRT stripe. Production will be limited to 25 cars. uDodge Dealer Edition ACR. This version is only available through Dodge’s highest sales volume Viper dealers, Tomball Dodge of Tomball, Texas, and Roanoke Dodge of Roanoke, Ill. LAURENT CIPRIANI, AP A model poses in front of the Dodge Viper GTS at the Geneva International Motor Show in March 2015. ers to keep them motivated.” FCA also overhauled its 400,000-square-foot Conner Avenue Assembly plant just south of 8 Mile Road on Detroit’s northeast side. Workers there custom assemble the car in a plant that is unlike any other operated by the automaker. Unfortunately, sales of the Viper failed to meet even modest expectations of about 1,500 units per year. Fiat Chrysler dropped the price in 2014 by $15,000 and introduced a new custom ordering website in 2015. Customers can use the website to buy a Viper in any color, wheel, interior and aerodynamic kit combination they want. Both moves failed to boost sales. FCA U.S. sold 676 Dodge SRT Vipers in 2015, down 11% from the 760 sold the prior year. The announcement was not a surprise. The UAW’s new fouryear contract with the automaker that was ratified last fall lacked any product plans for the Conner Avenue plant. The company did not say exactly when production will end or say how many Vipers it hopes to produce this year. 8B MONEY USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 FREEDOM TO SAVE FREEDOM FROM INTEREST FREEDOM TO CHOOSE FORD CREDIT ON A HUGE SELECTION OF CARS, TRUCKS AND SUVS PLUS O N S P E C I A L LY TA G G E D V E H I C L E S Not all buyers qualify for Ford Credit limited-term financing. Supply of vehicles with Ford SmartBonus is limited. See dealer or go to ford.com for qualifications and complete details. For all offers, take new retail delivery from dealer stock by 8/1/16. SECTION C FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 INTRODUCING THE ALL-NEW 190 FSH™ SERIES TM YAMAHABOATS.COM The best summer ever begins on a Yamaha. SPORTSLINE FIRST WORD IT WAS REALLY HARD TO LIVE A NORMAL LIFE BUT STAY IN THE CLOSET AT THE SAME TIME. IT WAS A REALLY TOUGH DEAL THAT A LOT OF PEOPLE GO THROUGH. IT WAS PUTTING A LOT OF STRESS AND PRESSURE ON ME.” Shane Wickes, a gay high school football coach in Nevada, to the “Reno Gazette-Journal.” TWEET OF THE DAY @BenAffleck We Boston fans have always been known for our subtlety. One of my favorite interviews; hope you get to see the AFFLECK BY WIREIMAGE entire episode. #GoPats Actor and Boston sports fan Ben Affleck, about his profanity-laced interview with Bill Simmons on HBO’s “Any Given Wednesday.” SECOND TWEET OF THE DAY @RavenNationLIVE ATTENTION: We are confirming that Joe Flacco has not passed away. We were hacked and now have our account back. Thanks for your patience. The Ravens Nation fan site, which said it had been hacked earlier in the day when a bogus report about the Baltimore quarterback being killed was posted. LAST WORD SAVING IS SIMPLE. Get a quote today. “I TOLD THEM, ‘AT ONE POINT I HATED THIS MAN MORE THAN MY RAPISTS.’ ” Brenda Tracy to USA TODAY Sports, on what she said to Nebraska’s football team about coach Mike Riley. She told them the story of the night nearly 18 years ago when she was gangraped by four men, two of whom played for Riley’s Oregon State team in 1998. She was invited by Riley to talk to the team. Edited by Thomas O’Toole and Lila Bromberg See details inside Scars inside, out trace cancer fight Pitt’s Conner tells survivor’s story Nicole Auerbach @NicoleAuerbach USA TODAY Sports PITTSBURGH The artifacts of cancer are different to each patient and to each survivor. To some, they are head scarves and blankets. To others, they are tears and frustration. To Pittsburgh running back James Conner, they are his scars. The visible ones, sure, but the intangible ones, too. The ones only he can feel. Like the early December day he considers his lowest of lows — when he had to stand in front of his teammates and tell them through tears that he had cancer. This week, Conner tugged at the collar of his T-shirt, exposing a thick, horizontal scar on his neck. “I didn’t like this one at first,” he says, “but now I’m proud of it.” Scars and ink cover Conner’s body, telling his story almost better than he can. He starts with this scar — the one on his neck — despite the fact it reminds him of his biopsy last fall and the cancer diagnosis that changed his life. Because of that, he starts there. On Thanksgiving, doctors told the Pitt running back who was the reigning Atlantic Coast Conference player of the year he had cancer. They just didn’t know what type and what stage. Conner’s mother, Kelly Patterson, prayed there would be a clerical error or that someone had misread a scan. But on the first day of December, Conner learned his diagnosis: Hodgkin lymphoma, stage 2, meaning the cancer likely had started in his neck and spread to his chest. “The world was in slow-mo, and my mom started crying,” Conner says. “I tried to be strong.” Patterson made her son promise that he wouldn’t pretend he was fine if he wasn’t, that he’d tell her if he was down, that they’d go through this to- BRAD PENNER, USA TODAY SPORTS Ben Simmons, right, hugs his father after being picked No. 1 overall by the 76ers. Top pick Simmons: Pressure off now At No. 2, Lakers get Duke’s Ingram Mike Coppinger @MikeCoppinger USA TODAY Sports JARRAD HENDERSON, USA TODAY SPORTS James Conner shows the scar from his port, where chemotheraphy treatments entered 12 times over six months. CONNER’S JOURNEY At ncaaf.usatoday.com uVideo of Conner and his supporters uPhoto gallery of Conner’s ordeal and recovery uConner on his new football goals uCoach Pat Narduzzi on their cancer connection gether. And they did — through what Conner called his worst day, Dec. 4, when he cried as he told his teammates the news, through the decision to go public with his battle, through the 12 chemotherapy appointments that spanned six months. “We haven’t had the worst life. We haven’t had the best life,” Patterson says. “My mom calls me ‘The Fixer,’ like Olivia Pope from Scandal, because I’m always like, ‘Everything’s going to be fine. It will be fine. We’ll fix it. It’s going to be OK. What can we do?’ As long as we’re healthy, we’re good. “Then, when he’s not healthy v STORY CONTINUES ON 6C NEW YORK Ben Simmons said his legs were shaking as he shook NBA Commissioner Adam Silver’s hand and realized his dream as the No. 1 overall pick in the 2016 NBA draft Thursday at Barclays Center. The Philadelphia 76ers picked the Australian forward who played one season at LSU and is considered a rare, transcendent talent. He is an excellent passer and a left-hander and stands 6-10. “I’m happy to be part of the family now,” said Simmons, flashing a big smile. “It’s a weight off my chest. I’ve been looking forward to this day for a while, so I’m glad I’ve made history, not only for myself, but my family and Australian basketball. “It honestly feels like all this pressure just has hopped off me. v STORY CONTINUES ON 5C 2C SPORTS E6 USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 LEYVA REBOUNDING Nichols, Kocian battling for Rio IN OLYMPIC TRIALS U.S. gymnast knows how to rise to occasion Gymnasts work to regain form after injuries Nancy Armour ST. LOUIS The Olympic selection process is grueling enough for gymnasts — an exhausting five weeks with three competitions in which they try to prove to national team coordinator Martha Karolyi that they’re at their peak. For Maggie Nichols and Madison Kocian, gymnasts in contention to make the Rio Olympic team, the added challenge comes in a shortened season as they return from injuries. Nichols returns at the U.S. championships here starting Friday after tearing her meniscus in April, while Kocian is competing for the second time after breaking her leg in late February. Both gymnasts helped the U.S. women win the team gold in the world championships last year and brought home individual medals, but those won’t carry as much ROBERT HANASHIRO, USA TODAY SPORTS weight as showing that Madison Kocian won uneven bars gold their form is as good or better than it was before in the 2015 world championships. their injuries. “I just want to show (Karolyi) member is strongest on bars, that I’m strong and that I’ve been where she won gold in a four-way working in the gym super hard tie in last year’s world championand that I’m consistent and can ships, but had to take about three hit my routines,” Nichols said. “I weeks off from the event because want to make her proud and want she couldn’t land on her broken her to know that I can do this.” foot. The U.S. Olympic trials are She competed on beam and next month in San Jose, but bars in the Secret Classic this Nichols and Kocian know Karolyi month, posting the second-highand the selection committee are est score on her favorite event. taking stock at each camp and “I think it’s a huge confidence each competition. A good perfor- boost knowing that I’ve been in mance in the two rounds of com- such a big stage in competition petition here can demonstrate and I handled myself very well how well they have recovered. there,” Kocian said. Nichols had a breakthrough If each can get back to where season in 2015, taking silver in she was last season, Kocian might the all-around in the U.S. champi- have an easier path forward. Bars onships before winning a bronze has been one of the Americans’ on floor exercise at worlds. She weakest events. Nichols, meanstarted the year with a silver in while, shares strengths with Biles, the American Cup in March but defending Olympic all-around hurt her knee on a vault while gold medalist Gabby Douglas and training for Pacific Rim defending Olympic floor gold championships. medalist Aly Raisman. Though she missed a few “I guess I try not to really look weeks of training and one nation- at all the other girls and try to foal team camp, she almost imme- cus on being the best I can be,” diately continued working on Kocian said. “That’s just really uneven bars. what I want to do this summer — Nichols will compete on that just have no regrets at the end of event and balance beam here, the summer.” Rachel Axon @RachelAxon USA TODAY Sports [email protected] USA TODAY Sports ST. LOUIS Other guys want to make the selection committee’s job excruciatingly difficult. Danell Leyva would rather make it as easy as possible. “Like, ‘That guy’s definitely on the team. No question,’ ” Leyva said. Think he did that Thursday? “Yeah. Yeah,” he said. “I hope so.” Needing to make up ground to give himself a shot at the Rio team, the reigning Olympic bronze medalist reminded everyone Thursday that he is, well, the reigning Olympic bronze medalist. Rebounding from his dismal showing in the national championships two weeks ago, Leyva posted the third-highest score of the night to put himself back in the mix for the five-man team. “Ideally, every single time we go out, we’d hit and we’d win,” Leyva said. “But I have that ability to say, ‘OK. That event is over. Literally there is nothing I can do about nationals. But there’s a lot I can do about tonight and Saturday night.’ ” Scores from nationals will be combined with those from trials but, fortunately for Leyva, it’s not a simple matter of sending the top five men to Rio. Because of the unforgiving three-up, three-count format in team finals — the competition that determines which teams leave Rio with medals and which go home empty-handed — the U.S. selection committee is looking for a combination that can ensure the highest scores possible. And the guys who can put them up consistently. It might not have been obvious, given his struggles in nationals, where he was 16th. But time and again when the stakes are highest, Leyva has delivered. He helped the U.S. men win a bronze in the 2011 world championships, then claimed the title on parallel bars. His bronze in allaround in London was the lone bright spot for the U.S. men. Corrections & clarifications USA TODAY is committed to accuracy. To reach us, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones at 800-8727073 or e-mail [email protected]. Please indicate whether you’re responding to content online or in the newspaper. A column about U.S. gymnast Simone Biles in Thursday’s editions incorrectly reported she is sponsored by Coke. She is sponsored by Core Power, which is distributed by Coca-Cola. USA SNAPSHOTS© Professional grooming 110 Players from the Ontario Hockey League selected in the first round of the NHL draft since 2001, most of any amateur league SOURCE NHL ELLEN J. HORROW AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY JASEN VINLOVE, USA TODAY SPORTS Danell Leyva competes on the rings Thursday during the U.S. men’s gymnastics Olympic trials in St. Louis. He was part of the 2014 world team that won bronze and also took silver on parallel bars. Last year, he was the silver medalist on high bar. “That’s a pretty big comfort. People tend to forget about that,” Leyva said at nationals, his eyes hard with determination. He had the second-highest score on parallel bars Thursday and was third on high bar. But his most significant score was on pommel horse. Alex Naddour and Sam Mikulak will help the Americans hold their own in the event, but the selection committee is searching desperately for a third score. With a 14.675, Leyva delivered. Leyva isn’t the only returning Olympian who has ground to make up this weekend. John Orozco was in the top seven on the four events he did, including the top high bar score. But he was below Leyva on pommel horse. Though it doesn’t completely explain his poor performances, Leyva arrived at nationals not fully trained after getting bit by one of his family’s dogs less than a month earlier. Leyva suffered several deep bites on his leg and hand and had to take more than a week off of training. Even after he resumed training, Leyva had to hold back, afraid that if he landed too hard he might tear a muscle. “There was always that, ‘If I would have had that little bit of extra time, it would have been better,’ ” Leyva said. “But, honestly, I was pretty happy with the way I did considering all that happened and the minimal amount of training that I had to get me into the moment.” But he’s had two weeks of solid training since then, and Leyva knew that would make a noticeable difference. “I knew if I was able to do that at nationals with the minimum amount of preparation, if I could give it everything, I could do what I did tonight,” he said. And if it makes the selection committee’s job easier in the process, even better. FOLLOW COLUMNIST NANCY ARMOUR @nrarmour for commentary on the latest in major sports. though she’ll train on all four events. She’s expected to do the all-around at trials. “The No. 1 thing is mentality, but I wouldn’t underestimate her, because I saw her doing floor and vaults, and I’m like, ‘Maggie, if this were anybody else, they wouldn’t be back, but you are,’ ” said Simone Biles, Nichols’ best friend and a three-time defending U.S. and world champ. “So she’s still one of the most powerful gymnasts we have out here, so I would still put her on that team.” For Kocian, the recovery is a little further along. The two-time worlds team Golfer Vegas couldn’t pass up Olympics Callie Caplan USA TODAY Sports BETHESDA , MD. When Venezuelan golfer Jhonattan Vegas thinks about the Olympics, he pictures the opening ceremony, walking with all of the athletes, waving his country’s flag in front of an international audience. He started to imagine the moment a few years ago after the International Olympic Committee voted in 2009 to reinstate golf for the 2016 and 2020 Olympics, ending a 112-year hiatus. Despite public concerns about the Zika virus and security in Rio de Janeiro, Vegas, No. 48 in the International Golf Federation’s Olympic rankings, is excited to achieve his dream. “Being in that big of a stage and wearing your colors and playing for your country, that’s a lot of fun,” said Vegas, who shot 6-under-par 65 in Thursday’s first round of the Quicken Loans National at Congressional Country Club. “It’s probably one of the biggest moments for an athlete, GEOFF BURKE, USA TODAY SPORTS Jhonattan Vegas will represent Venezuela in Rio. so that’s one of the things I’m excited about.” As Vegas, 31, prepares to travel to Rio with his family as Venezuela’s lone golf representative, other players have announced their intentions to skip the Games. Citing Zika concerns, Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy, No. 4 in the Olympic golf rankings, said Monday that he wouldn’t play in Rio. Graeme McDowell, whose wife is due to give birth in early September, declined to replace McIlroy. Australia’s Adam Scott and South Africa’s Charl Schwartzel and Louis Oosthuizen also pulled out of consideration. Vegas accepts the players’ concerns, but he said living in Venezuela until he was 18 made him more aware of the frequency of similar fears. “It’s definitely a big concern, no question about it. It’s a health risk,” Vegas said. “Winning a medal for your country, it’s a big thing, and you just got to take precautions and just be OK with it. I know it’s tough for guys that probably haven’t grown up in that region.” Missing so much talent from the field detracts from golf’s return to the Games, Vegas said. As the first Venezuelan on the PGA Tour and the country’s first golf representative at the Olympics, Vegas feels responsibility to promote the sport internationally. “We definitely need all the support that we can get, because that’s one of the biggest ways we can grow the game, especially in 2 countries that don’t really know about the PGA Tour,” Vegas said. “It definitely hurts, but at the same time, I understand some of the reasons why they’re doing it.” Venezuela’s top golfer grew up admiring Tiger Woods and watching the Olympics on TV. He never dreamed of playing golf at the Games, because it wasn’t an option, but he knows kids at home look up to him. He’s glad to provide a respite from his nation’s social and economic unrest. “It’s going to be a different kind of pressure because you’re playing for you and playing for your country,” Vegas’ caddie, Ruben Yorio, said of Vegas’ Olympic run. “Probably is a little bit more pressure, but he’s happy to handle it.” Vegas views the pressure as excitement. He’ll get to wear his country’s colors with his parents, wife and child in the stands. Aside from the opening ceremony, Vegas is looking forward to watching swimming and track events. “Everyone dreams about the Olympics. We don’t get to play for our country that often, and that’s a great way to do it.” AS LOW AS 99% 190 FSH™ SERIES GO WHERE NO OTHER CENTER CONSOLE BOAT HAS GONE BEFORE. APR FOR FIRST 60 MONTHS* Monthly payments required. 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Jeff Gluck [email protected] USA TODAY Sports SAN FRANCISCO Reporters held cardboard virtual reality goggles to their heads Thursday, twisting in their seats to get a better view — virtually — of the paint scheme on Denny Hamlin’s car for this weekend’s Sprint Cup race at Sonoma Raceway. Reality, as seen through the goggles, was distorted. There was no actual No. 11 car in a Ghirardelli Square restaurant, and Hamlin was seated at a table, not standing in front of a purple FedEx Cares paint scheme. On the track, a similar battle between reality and virtual reality will unfold over the next couple of months. Which drivers are title contenders? Which teams are running well in advance of the Chase for the Sprint Cup? Who needs to do more work to catch up? Be sure to question your eyes as you try to answer, because what you might see on NASCAR tracks in the next 11 races isn’t necessarily the full truth. After all, teams already locked into the Chase — such as Joe Gibbs Racing, which has all four of its drivers in — might not show everything they have until the playoff approaches. “It’s important to make sure you’re competitive at the right MATTHEW O’HAREN, USA TODAY SPORTS “It’s important to make sure you’re competitive at the right time,” says Denny Hamlin, right. time,” Hamlin said Thursday. “If you go out there and you’re dominant and teams have time to look at your car and build whatever is in your car, then you’re hurting yourself. You don’t want to release anything until the last minute, until it’s too late for people to adapt to it.” It’s funny Hamlin mentioned this heading into Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350, because it comes on the heels of two unusual races. In the last calendar year, JGR had counted at least one of its four drivers among the top five finishers of every race. But no JGR driver finished in the top five at Pocono Raceway. Then it happened again the following week at Michigan International Speedway. Suddenly, it’s worth asking: Is this the beginning of a down cycle for Toyota after a dominating start to the season? After all, the manufacturer had won seven of eight races, including Martin Truex Jr.’s Coca-Cola 600 win for JGR alliance member Furniture Row Racing, but now has gone back-to-back races without a top-five. Chevrolets scored a one-two finish at Pocono, with StewartHaas Racing’s Kurt Busch scoring his first win of the season. Then Ford won at Michigan, with Joey Logano driving to victory lane for the first time in 2016. Did the other manufacturers suddenly close the gap? Did aerodynamic rule changes help even the playing field? Those explanations are plausible. But Fox Sports analyst Larry McReynolds says the most likely explanation is JGR is in experimental mode with all four drivers plus Truex locked into the Chase. “You do wonder, ‘Is it because (the circuit is at) some tracks where there’s a good opportunity to try some things?’ ” McReynolds said. Similarly, Hamlin says JGR is putting its focus toward September, when the four-round, 10week playoff begins. A bad run now, he says, can easily be dismissed; it simply doesn’t matter in the long run for teams that already have clinched a spot. “I don’t see anything from my standpoint that’s cause for concern,” Hamlin said. Ten drivers are locked into the Chase with 11 races remaining in the regular season. In addition to the Toyota five (Truex, Hamlin, Kyle Busch, Matt Kenseth and Carl Edwards), Ford has both Team Penske drivers (Brad Keselowski and Logano) and Chevrolet has SHR’s Kevin Harvick and Kurt Busch, along with Hendrick Motorsports’ Jimmie Johnson. None of those drivers is a surprise (all were in last year’s Chase), and Hamlin expects the list of title contenders to look similar to last year’s. But when it comes to finding the cream of the crop, it’s going to be difficult to determine for some time. Whether Toyota remains on top, this much will be true: The other organizations aren’t giving up after JGR’s dominant start to the season. “We knew the gap was going to close,” McReynolds said. “Penske, Stewart-Haas Racing and Hendrick Motorsports weren’t just going to sit there with their arms folded and say, ‘Well, we’re licked. We’re beat.’ ” FOLLOW REPORTER JEFF GLUCK @jeff_gluck for breaking news and insight from the racetrack. Newgarden seeks Road America clearance Curt Cavin @curtcavin USA TODAY Sports Josef Newgarden understands his surgically repaired collarbone and his broken hand are about to be tested at the Road America circuit. Newgarden has been cleared to practice Friday, but he will be evaluated afterward to see if the injuries he suffered June 12 can withstand the rigors of the natural terrain road course in Elkhart Lake, Wis. Newgarden broke his right collarbone and a bone in his right hand in a crash at Texas Motor Speedway. For stability, Newgarden had a plate and two screws inserted in his right shoulder by Indianapolis surgeon Kevin Scheid. Newgarden was injured when his car slid cockpit-first into the oval track’s outside wall. Conor Daly, who caused the crash, was not injured and will race in this weekend’s 50-lap Kohler Grand Prix. Newgarden said the injuries were equally concerning — the pain of having shoulder surgery and the hand and wrist swelling. “They’re both issues, I would say,” he told USA TODAY Sports. “I don’t want to make them sound worse than they are, but they’re equally a concern to me.” If Newgarden is unable to do the job for Ed Carpenter Racing, he will be replaced by JR Hildebrand, who has finished in the top 10 in each of the last three Indianapolis 500s for the Indianapolis-based team. Newgarden, a two-time IndyCar race winner, is motivated to return so quickly by virtue of being fourth in this year’s Verizon IndyCar Series standings, 98 points behind leader Simon Pagenaud. Thus, Newgarden is in contention for the championship as the season moves to its second half with Sunday’s race (1:15 p.m. ET, NBC Sports Network). Newgarden said he passed his first test to returning to the car by meeting with IndyCar consultant Kevin Scheid, who performed the shoulder surgery last week at Indiana Orthopaedic Hospital. “He was happy with how I was feeling and how my (healing) was going,” Newgarden said. Then, Newgarden went to Dallara’s facility on Main Street to experience a race car in a simulator. Road America has 14 turns over 4.048 miles, mostly with left- BRIAN LAWDERMILK, GETTY IMAGES, FOR TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY Josef Newgarden, left, suffered a broken collarbone and hand in a crash with Conor Daly last weekend. hand turns. Newgarden’s next hurdle will come Friday when it’s time to strap into the No. 21 Chevrolet. The pressure applied by the extreme tightening of the seat belts will gauge how much pain his right shoulder can endure. Said Newgarden of his ability to pass that test: “At this point, I don’t know (if I can).” Given the angle and force at which Newgarden hit the outside wall at Texas, it’s almost miraculous he’s in as good condition as he is. The first hit was one thing; the second was with the car on its side and the chassis compromised. Most of the car’s roll hoop was sheered off in the second hit, an indication of how close his head came to hitting the wall. Hildebrand feels ready to step in, if needed. “I’ve tested (the car) last week, and if I drive for them this week — even if Josef goes for two (practice) sessions (Friday) and then decides it’s too much to deal with — at least I’ve been in a current-spec car at that track with this group of (crewmembers),” he said. “Those things all sort of help. “With IndyCar’s competition as tight as it is, a couple of tenths (of a second per lap) really matters.” This weekend marks IndyCar’s return to one of the sport’s most popular venues for the first time in nine years. Sebastien Bourdais won Champ Car’s last race there in 2007. Bourdais is the only driver in this field to have won an Indy car race at Road America. In some ways, owner-driver Ed Carpenter said Newgarden is fortunate IndyCar isn’t racing at Iowa Speedway this weekend. “That’s a more physical track,” Carpenter said. ECR is scheduled to test at the Iowa track next week, but Hildebrand, who does not have a fulltime ride, has been secured for the driving duties. Cavin writes for The Indianapolis Star, part of the USA TODAY NETWORK. KLINSMANN TO PREMIER LEAGUE? NOT SO FAST Martin Rogers [email protected] USA TODAY Sports Jurgen Klinsmann was the subject of a curious flurry of betting activity Thursday in which he was briefly installed as the odds-on favorite to become the head coach of English Premier League team Southampton. London bookmakers were thrown into a panic by a massive flurry of wagers on Klinsmann to replace former boss Ronald Koeman, and this appeared to cast doubt over the German’s future in charge of the U.S. men’s national soccer team. Thursday morning, Klinsmann was generally priced at 1-3, having been available at 40-1 earlier in the week. “There was a massive and sudden move in the betting market odds for Klinsmann,” said Alex Donohue, spokesman for gambling firm Ladbrokes. British betting analysis company Smartbets.com revealed that in the 48 hours up until Thursday morning, 95% of all bets of the new Southampton coach market BILL STREICHER, USA TODAY SPORTS Jurgen Klinsmann guided the Americans to a semifinal spot in the Copa America. had been placed on Klinsmann. But the wave of momentum that seemed to raise the possibility of a dramatic switch quickly dissipated. A source familiar with Southampton’s search for a manager told USA TODAY Sports that Klinsmann was not being considered. The person spoke on condition of anonymity as the person was not authorized to comment publicly on the situation. By Thursday afternoon, Klinsmann’s odds had stretched to 6-1, with French coach Claude Puel the new favorite to take over. US Soccer President Sunil Gulati declined to comment. So what happened to temporarily send the betting markets wild and spark frenzied discussion among Team USA fans? The rapid saga seems to have been one of those occasions in which false information created a betting surge that snowballed quickly. The London betting lines have been correct often enough that they cannot be ignored. When Sven Goran Eriksson was named as England national team coach in 2001, there was a huge surge of betting supporting him in the hours leading up to the announcement. Sometimes, though, such trends are unreliable. After the 2010 World Cup, then-U.S. coach Bob Bradley was installed as the odds-on favorite to take charge at Aston Villa, owned by thenCleveland Browns chief Randy Lerner. However, the position eventually went to Frenchman Gerard Houllier, with Villa sources later saying Bradley had never been in serious contention for the role. It would indeed seem odd for Klinsmann to leave his U.S. position at this juncture — the midway point between the 2014 World Cup and the next one, in Russia in two years. But there were enough factors to have the bookies on edge. First, the vast majority of bets were from the region around the south coast of England, where Southampton is situated. Donohue said that factor, plus the fact that bettors were prepared to gamble even at very short odds, was telling. Alan Alger of betting company Betway said the wave of support for Klinsmann had come as a shock and was drastic compared to similar previous situations. Alger noted that Klinsmann’s reputation in England remains high after his successful playing stint with Tottenham in the mid-1990s, and it can be expected that he will continue to be linked with vacant EPL jobs. Klinsmann has run the U.S. team since 2011 and this week took the team to the semifinals of the Copa America, where it lost 4-0 to Argentina. After the Americans lost their Copa America opener to Colombia on June 3, Gulati declined to guarantee that the coach would remain in charge long term, and it seemed likely Klinsmann would be fired if the team failed to progress from the group stage. Yet a spirited revival followed, with victories against Costa Rica and Paraguay to end on top of Group A, and a quarterfinal win against Ecuador — before world No. 1 and 2014 World Cup finalist Argentina proved far too strong. If Klinsmann did jump to the EPL at any point, he would be likely to greatly increase his salary. He received $3.2 million in the 2014 financial year, according to records disclosed by US Soccer, which likely included bonuses for reaching the last 16 of the World Cup. Former Southampton boss Koeman was reportedly on a $3.72 million salary when he departed for Everton, where he nearly tripled his salary. Given the ever-rising influx of money streaming into the coffers of Premier League teams thanks to the league’s lucrative global television contracts, Southampton might need to pay $5 million or more to get an elite-level coach. FOLLOW REPORTER MARTIN ROGERS @mrogersUSAT for sports commentary, analysis and news. 4C SPORTS USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 NHL MOCK DRAFT GOLF RAHM DIVES RIGHT IN Days after turning pro, 21-year-old leads in Maryland Steve DiMeglio @Steve_DiMeglio USA TODAY Sports FABRICE COFFRINI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES Likely No. 1 pick Auston Matthews dominated the Swiss National League. MATTHEWS COULD LEAD PARADE OF FORWARDS Kevin Allen @ByKevinAllen USA TODAY Sports BUFFALO The NHL draft will be held Friday and Saturday at First Niagara Center. How the first round might play out: 1. Toronto Maple Leafs: Auston Matthews, center, 6-2, 202 pounds, Zurich (Swiss National League). The Arizona native, 18, proved he was NHL-ready with a strong world championships. He’s a franchise player. 2. Winnipeg Jets: Patrik Laine, right wing, 6-4, 210, Tappara (Finland). Led Finland to world junior championships gold, was Finnish Elite League MVP and dominated the world championships. 3. Columbus Blue Jackets: Jesse Puljujärvi, right wing, 6-3, 200, Karpat (Finland). A fabulous skater who could have a Teemu Selanne-like impact. 4. Edmonton Oilers: Matthew Tkachuk, left wing, 6-1, 200, London (Ontario Hockey League). The Oilers might trade the pick to land a defenseman. But Tkachuk, a fiery, biggame power forward, likely will go at No. 4. 5. Vancouver Canucks: Pierre-Luc Dubois, center-left wing, 6-3, 202, Cape Breton (Quebec Major Junior Hockey League). Has the puck skill and drive to be a top-line forward. High-quality stickhandler. 6. Calgary Flames: Logan Brown, center, 6-6, 225, Windsor (OHL). Brown would give the Flames needed size, strength and skill. 7. Arizona Coyotes: Olli Juolevi, defenseman, 6-2, 185, London (OHL). He has been compared to Oliver Ekman-Larsson, and if he goes to Arizona, he would have the opportunity to learn from him. 8. Buffalo Sabres: Mikhail Sergachyov, defenseman, 6-2, 210, Windsor (OHL). A flashy skater with explosiveness and a booming shot. 9. Montreal Canadiens: Jakob Chychrun, defenseman, 6-2, 205, Sarnia (OHL). It’s not unthinkable that he’d end up as this draft’s best defenseman. 10. Colorado Avalanche: Alexander Nylander, left wing, 6-0, 180, Mississauga (OHL). His dynamic presence emerges with the game on the line. 11. New Jersey Devils: Clayton Keller, center, 5-10, 165, USA Under-18 (USA). Skilled, fast, smart and clever. No one seems concerned about his lack of size. 12. Ottawa Senators: Tyson Jost, center-wing, 5-11, 195, Penticton (British Columbia Hockey League). After a 104-point season, he projects as a scoring winger in the NHL. 13. Carolina Hurri- RONI REKOMAA, AP Patrik Laine’s scoring ability could boost the Jets, who were 22nd in goals in 2015-16 and pick second. canes: Kieffer Bellows, left wing, 6-0, 196, USA Under-18. His father, Brian, scored 485 NHL goals. He has his dad’s scoring ability. 14. Boston Bruins: Charlie McAvoy, defenseman, 6-0, 205, Boston University (Hockey East). He can quarterback a power play and be strong enough defensively to kill penalties. 15. Minnesota Wild: Jake Bean, defenseman, 6-0, 180, Calgary (Western Hockey League). Could end up as this draft’s top offensive-minded defenseman. 16. Detroit Red Wings: Dante Fabbro, defenseman, 6-0, 195, Penticton (BCHL). The Red Wings’ most pressing need is puck-moving defensemen. Fabbro can quarterback a power play. He is as effective defensively as he is offensively. 17. Nashville Predators: Michael McLeod, center, 6-2, 190, Mississauga (OHL). Will be a pro’s pro. Will be an excellent defensive forward, a winner and perfect team player. But he might not be a scorer. 18. Philadelphia Flyers: Julien Gauthier, right wing, 6-4, 225, Vald’Or (QMJHL). Projects as a power forward. Powerful skater with a finishing touch. 19. New York Islanders: German Rubtsov, center, 6-1, 185, Vityaz Podolsk (Kontinental Hockey League). He’s a two-way center who will help his team in many different ways. 20. Coyotes (from New York Rangers): Luke Kunin, center, 6-0, 195, Wisconsin (Big Ten). Has drawn comparisons to Red Wings center Dylan Larkin. Received more and more attention as the season progressed. 21. Carolina Hurricanes (from Los Angeles Kings): Riley Tufte, left wing, 6-5, 210, Blaine (Minn.) High School. He has the potential to be an NHL force. Has the full tool box, including a heavy shot. 22. Winnipeg Jets (from Chicago Blackhawks): Max Jones, left wing, 6-2, 203, London (OHL). Power winger with a mean streak. Has an intimidating presence with offensive ability. 23. Florida Panthers: Alex DeBrincat, right wing, 5-7, 170, Erie (OHL). Scored 102 goals over the last two seasons. He might be the niftiest goal scorer in the draft. 24. Anaheim Ducks: Vitali Abramov, right wing, 5-9, 175, Gatineau (QMJHL). His offensive touch is special. His size is worrisome, but he can be feisty. 25. Dallas Stars: Brett Howden, center, 6-2, 195, Moose Jaw (WHL). Could end up being a big, dependable matchup No. 2 center. Knows how to use his size effectively. 26. Washington Capitals: Tage Thompson, center, 6-5, 190, University of Connecticut (HEast). He’s 6-5, and he’s the son of Brent Thompson, a former NHL player and current coach. He has hockey sense, size and skill. Still needs to grow into his body. 27. Tampa Bay Lightning: Pascal Laberge, center, 6-1, 185, Victoriaville (QMJHL). Has speed and skill. Has drawn comparisons to Derick Brassard. 28. St. Louis Blues: Logan Stanley, defenseman, 6-7, 225, Windsor (OHL). The Blues would hope they were adding another Colton Parayko. 29. Bruins (from San Jose): Dennis Cholowski, defenseman, 6-0, 175, Chilliwack (BCHL). Projects to be a second-pairing defender who plays a dependable two-way game. 30. Anaheim Ducks (from Pittsburgh via Toronto): Rasmus Asplund, center, 5-11, 180, Farjestads (Swedish Elite League). Smart, creative playmaker who knows how to make magic happen on the offensive end. BETHESDA , MD. That didn’t take long. Jon Rahm, a week after he was the low amateur at the U.S. Open, was the low professional in his pro debut Thursday in the Quicken Loans National at softened Congressional Country Club. The big-hitting Arizona State product, 21, who is the only two-time winner of the Ben Hogan Award given to college golf’s top player, fired a bogey-free, 7under 64 to set the pace. “I would say about five months ago my expectations were really high, but coming into this moment, I worked with my mental coach. We basically just narrow it down to enjoying it and learning as much as I could, and I’ve been thinking like that for the last month and trying not to have high expectations,” said Rahm, who had 11 oneputts. “When I compete, especially today, kind of I was anticipating this moment. I kind of blacked out a little bit. I don’t remember a single swing I made all day or a putting stroke or anything. So I kind of got in this motion of just walking, talking with people. “I was not cruising. It was obviously a good day. I was really comfortable off the tee with the driver, hitting it good, hitting it straight, so that allowed me to be a little more aggressive.” Rahm wasn’t the only player going low. The Blue Course at Congressional was pounded by GEOFF BURKE, USA TODAY SPORTS Jon Rahm had a bogey-free 64 Thursday to lead after the first round of the Quicken Loans National. storms that greeted Thursday’s dawn, saturating the layout and delaying the first round. Once the unpleasant front cleared, PGA Tour players battered the Blue and turned it into a sea of red numbers on a course that usually causes players to see red. “Attack, attack, attack, attack,” Jamie Lovemark said about his mind-set once he stepped onto the vulnerable course. Just over 7,000 yards later, Lovemark signed for a 66 to hit the front page of the leaderboard. It is an oversized front page. Jhonattan Vegas shot 65 to stand one in back of Rahm, while Lovemark was in a large group two back at 66 with Kyle Reifers, Bill Haas, Ernie Els, Harold Varner III, Billy Hurley III, Camilo Villegas and Wesley Bryan. Eleven players were at 67. Fifteen of the top 21 played in the morning wave when the course was softer and the winds were their softest. “Just to be able to come out here and shoot 65 on this golf course, which is probably one of the toughest courses we play all year … just amazing,” Vegas said. “(The rain) helps a little bit because fairways get a little softer, the greens get a little softer, and you can be a fraction more aggressive. But even then, it’s an extremely tough golf course.” At 5:15 a.m. ET, rain and lightning arrived and created a delay of 2 hours, 15 minutes and tempered a usually fierce test even more after storms Tuesday. Players were allowed to lift, clean and place their balls, adding to their advantage. And there was little breeze to deal with. “We played a soft golf course, and the course is in great condition, so if you play decent golf, you could score. It was a nice morning,” said Els, who won the 1997 U.S. Open here and is feeling pretty good around this place. “There’s good vibes coming. Every hole is something that you did well.” Players will continue to be in attack mode as more storms are in the forecast for Friday. They might be in attack mode come Saturday, too. “Sunday afternoon?” Lovemark guessed when asked when the entire course could get firm and fast. “The fairways are really soft; the greens aren’t that soft. … It’ll be a few days.” ® Call for your FREE Information Kit 1-888-276-0664 Low profile for easy storage powerplate.com/personal A Complete Full-Body Workout in Just 15 Minutes GET YOUR FREE INFORMATION KIT 1-888-276-0664 USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 SPORTS 5C E6 NBA DRAFT DRAFT TRACKER: ANALYSIS, GRADES Simmons, Ingram give fans of 76ers, Lakers reason to cheer; Dunn fits well with T’Wolves NOAH K. MURRAY, USA TODAY SPORTS AJ Neuharth-Keusch and Michael Singer Brandon Ingram, left, with Jamal Murray, was No. 2. @tweetAJNK, @msinger USA TODAY Sports USA TODAY Sports’ pick-bypick analysis and grades for players selected in the first round: 1. Philadelphia 76ers Pick: Ben Simmons, F, LSU Grade: A Analysis: Simmons has as much upside as anyone in the draft, and he could wind up a perennial All-Star, but there were legitimate questions about his leadership at LSU. The last time the 76ers had the No. 1 pick they took Allen Iverson. That worked out pretty well. Trust the process, as they say. 2. Los Angeles Lakers Pick: Brandon Ingram, F, Duke Grade: A Analysis: At 6-10 with a 7-3 wingspan, the athletically gifted 18-year-old has drawn Kevin Durant comparisons since appearing in the national spotlight during his lone year at Duke. He has the tools to become an All-NBA talent, and if he adds muscle to his sub-200-pound frame, he could be the next franchise player. 3. Boston Celtics Pick: Jaylen Brown, F, California Grade: B+ Analysis: The Celtics owned arguably the most coveted pick in the draft, and they used it on one of the most athletic frontcourt players available. Brown provides elite athleticism on the wing. 4. Phoenix Suns Pick: Dragan Bender, F, Croatia Grade: B+ Analysis: The addition of this year’s top international prospect should be a difference-maker in the Suns’ frontcourt ... eventually. Despite Bender’s 7-1 frame, he’s versatile enough to play either forward position or center. 5. Minnesota Timberwolves Pick: Kris Dunn, G, Providence Grade: A+ Analysis: There might not be a better fit than Dunn in Minnesota under first-year coach Tom Thibodeau. Dunn is a versatile, powerful combo guard who will mesh perfectly with Andrew Wiggins on the wing. 6. New Orleans Pelicans Pick: Buddy Hield, G, Oklahoma Grade: B Analysis: Hield was the one of the best college players last season, a knock-down shooter who can spread the floor for Anthony Davis. 7. Denver Nuggets Pick: Jamal Murray, G, Kentucky Grade: AAnalysis: The Nuggets were one of the worst three-point shooting teams, and Murray’s outside shot immediately improves the perimeter game. 8. Sacramento Kings (traded to Phoenix Suns) Pick: Marquese Chriss, F, Washington Grade: A Analysis: In the first eight picks, the Suns snagged the two best bigs not named Ben Simmons or Brandon Ingram. For a team whose top talent lies in the backcourt, the addition of a 6-10, 230-pound forward with threepoint range and elite athleticism is a home run. JERRY LAI, USA TODAY SPORTS Jaylen Brown, right, hugs supporters after being selected as the No. 3 overall pick by the Celtics. 9. Toronto Raptors Pick: Jakob Poeltl, C, Utah Grade: B+ Analysis: The Raptors needed a player who could contribute immediately. Poeltl is a legitimate back-to-the-basket scorer and excellent rebounder. 10. Milwaukee Bucks Pick: Thon Maker, C, Australia Grade: BAnalysis: The Bucks took the 7-1, 215-pound Sudanese-Australian significantly earlier than expected. What he lacks in experience, he makes up for in size and athleticism. 11. Orlando Magic (traded to Oklahoma City Thunder) Pick: Domantas Sabonis, F, Gonzaga Grade: B Analysis: Serge Ibaka was traded to the Magic for Ersan Ilyasova, Victor Oladipo and the rights to Sabonis. OKC is getting an NBA-ready big man. 12. Utah Jazz (traded to Atlanta Hawks) Pick: Taurean Prince, F, Baylor Grade: B Analysis: If the Hawks planned to replace DeMarre Carroll, Prince is their guy. Prince, 6-8, doesn’t necessarily have the makings of a star but could contribute from the beginning. 13. Phoenix Suns (traded to Sacramento Kings) Pick: Georgios Papagiannis, C, Greece Grade: C Analysis: Papagiannis. 7-2, 240 pounds, likely could’ve been had later. You can’t teach size. He could clog the lane with DeMarcus Cousins’ interior game. 14. Chicago Bulls Pick: Denzel Valentine, G, Michigan State Grade: B+ Analysis: The Associated Press national player of the year is headed to Chicago, which makes all the more sense after the departure of Derrick Rose. With such a high basketball IQ, proven maturity and court vision, the all-around talent is a good fit. But is he athletic enough? 15. Denver Nuggets Pick: Juan Hernangomez, C-F, Spain Grade: AAnalysis: Hernangomez is a draft-and-stash possibility who has good size, excellent strength and a good motor. As a stretch-4, he’s ideal for the current mold of the NBA. 16. Boston Celtics Pick: Guerschon Yabusele, F, France Grade: B+ Analysis: If you hadn’t heard of Yabusele before draft night, it’s time to start listening. He’s a bit undersized at the power forward position at 6-8, but with the small-ball revolution sweeping the league combined with Yabusele’s three-point shooting ability and strength and physicality, he could be a steal. 17. Memphis Grizzlies Pick: Wade Baldwin IV, G, Vanderbilt Grade: A Analysis: Baldwin is a combo guard who could contribute immediately. He’s a good shooter with value on the defensive end, but he isn’t particularly athletic. 18. Detroit Pistons Pick: Henry Ellenson, F, Marquette Grade: A Analysis: Ellenson had lottery potential, so the Pistons nabbing him at 18 could turn out to be a steal. He’s big; he’s skilled; he can shoot. 19. Denver Nuggets Pick: Malik Beasley, G, Florida State Grade: B Analysis: Beasley had an excellent freshman season at FSU with averages of 15.6 points and 5.3 rebounds per game. He has an excellent shooting stroke and is known for his slashing ability. 20. Indiana Pacers (traded to Brooklyn Nets) Pick: Caris LeVert, G, Michigan Grade: B Analysis: LeVert is a highly talented, long, athletic guard with three-point range. The only problem? His health, as he was plagued by injuries at Michigan. He could be a steal for the Nets. 21. Atlanta Hawks Pick: DeAndre’ Bembry, F, Saint Joseph’s Grade: AAnalysis: He is a versatile, underrated athlete who could fit seamlessly into the rotation and pair well with Taurean Prince, whom the Hawks grabbed early in the draft. Bembry’s also an elite passer. 22. Sacramento Kings (from Charlotte) Pick: Malachi Richardson, G, Syracuse Grade: B+ Analysis: With his proven ability to pull up from the perimeter or put the ball on the floor, he has upside. 23. Boston Celtics Pick: Ante Zizic, C, Croatia Grade: BAnalysis: Zizic has good athleticism for his size (6-11, 250 pounds) and couples that with a good motor, but he struggles away from the basket. Could be a draft-and-stash candidate. 24. Philadelphia 76ers Pick: Timothe Luwawu, G, France Grade: B+ Analysis: A long, athletic wing who can jump out of the gym? The Sixers will gladly take that, even if his perimeter shooting isn’t where it needs to be. He might not have an immediate impact for a team that just spent its first overall pick on Ben Simmons at the same position. 25. Los Angeles Clippers Pick: Brice Johnson, F, North Carolina Grade: B Analysis: Johnson has excellent athleticism and significant potential but was rarely featured in the Tar Heels offense. He also needs to to bulk up as Blake Griffin’s backup. 26. Philadelphia 76ers Pick: Furkan Korkmaz, G, Turkey Grade: AAnalysis: Korkmaz is an excellent scorer with outstanding offensive instincts, but his defense is a work in progress. A good ballhandler with slashing ability, the 76ers can afford to be patient with him. 27. Toronto Raptors Pick: Pascal Siakam, F, New Mexico State Grade: B+ Analysis: The 6-10, 230-pounder averaged 20.3 points, 11.6 rebounds and 2.2 blocks with New Mexico State. He wasn’t projected to go in the first round, but he’s an intriguing pick for a team that might lose Bismack Biyombo. 28. Phoenix Suns (traded to Sacramento Kings) Pick: Skal Labissiere, F, Kentucky Grade: BAnalysis: The Kings finally ended Labissiere’s precipitous fall. Some projected the Kentucky forward as a lottery pick, but he underwhelmed last season, averaging 6.6 points and 3.1 rebounds. He’s a long-term project. 29. San Antonio Spurs Pick: DeJounte Murray, G, Washington Grade: A Murray, at 6-5 with a ton of upside, is a great pick at 29 for the Spurs. He needs to improve consistency and take better care of the ball, but the talent is there. 30. Golden State Warriors Pick: Damian Jones, C, Vanderbilt Grade: B+ Analysis: With center Festus Ezeli and Anderson Varejao likely entering free agency, Jones, who some projected to go earlier, provides adequate insurance. He’s also a good athlete for a big man. Simmons: ‘It’s a weight off my chest’ v CONTINUED FROM 1C Now I can relax, but now I know where I’m going to be. More importantly, I know where I’m headed and know I can really start working on what I need to work on for the team.” The 76ers have failed to reach the 20-win mark over the last three seasons. With an elite player to build around in Simmons, the franchise’s fortunes could be turning around. He is the first LSU player to be selected No. 1 since Shaquille O’Neal in 1992 and joins recent top-10 selections Nerlens Noel, Jahlil Okafor and Joel Embiid in Philadelphia. Simmons will play for a familiar face in 76ers coach Brett Brown, who coached Simmons’ father in Australia. Brandon Ingram followed Simmons. The Los Angeles Lakers selected the Duke product No. 2 overall in the team’s first major move in the post-Kobe Bryant era. A dynamic scoring small forward, Ingram is known for his athleticism and shooting ability. “You kind of feel pressure (to fill Bryant’s shoes), but it’s good pressure,” said Ingram, who likely will fill Bryant’s starting role at small forward. “It gives you motivation and the potential to be someone like Kobe Bryant, one of the greats in the game. “I’m going to be myself. Whatever I can do to impact the game, whatever Coach needs me to do, I’m going to do it.” With the No. 3 pick, the Boston Celtics selected Jaylen Brown, a small forward from California. Dragan Bender, a 7footer from Croatia, went fourth to the Phoenix Suns. Providence point guard Kris Dunn was selected No. 5 by the Minnesota Timberwolves, and lights-out shooter Buddy Hield of Oklahoma went No. 6 to the New Orleans Pelicans. Ingram eager to help Lakers recover Scott Gleeson @scottmgleeson USA TODAY Sports As he put on his tinted gray, élevée suit coat hours before the NBA draft, Brandon Ingram nodded his head with satisfaction and said something Los Angeles Lakers fans will surely love to hear: “I’m ready make a statement.” “I wanted to go a little flashy tonight, this is my dream come true — to play in the NBA,” Ingram told USA TODAY Sports. Except flashy is the opposite of Ingram’s fundamentally sound play on the court and his lackadaisical demeanor off it. Yet the former Duke forward will now have the Hollywood spotlight brightly shining as he becomes a key part of a storied franchise’s rebuilding process. “There’s a lot of pressure that comes with playing for a team like the Lakers, being in a big city like Los Angeles. But man, I’m ready for it,” said Ingram, who is 6-9. “What people don’t know about me, that they should, is I’m a fighter. I’m not going there to lose. You might see how I act or my size, but I’ve got that inner strength, that character to help a team.” Ingram’s mother, Joann, says her son’s relaxed demeanor is just what’s on the surface. Beneath it lies a fire that will catapult him into becoming an instant star for a struggling franchise in need of an All-Star. “There have been so many games where he walks out there all lazy looking, and everyone is like, ‘Psshh.’ But then when he plays, everyone shuts up,” Joann Ingram said. “It’s almost like a Clark Kent-Superman transformation. He doesn’t go out there to be good. He goes out there to be great.” Ingram, who focused on improving his body — conditioning, weightlifting and eating six meals a day to bulk up — leading up to draft night, believes he offers a versatile style of play that will translate to the professional level right away, but he also feels he has just tapped into his potential. If his first and only season at Duke is a barometer for his growth rate, ESPN analyst Jay Bilas said the sky is the limit. “(No. 1 pick) Ben Simmons is a full year older than Brandon Ingram,” Bilas says. “You kind of look at that with players, what’s their growth going to be like, what are they going to look like when they’re 23 or 24 years old.” As a freshman, Ingram averaged 17.3 points and 6.8 rebounds a game in leading the Blue Devils to the Sweet 16. Before that, he led Kinston (N.C.) to four consecutive state titles. “Being selected early, he’s going to one of the worst teams in the league. No one man can be a savior for a team, but Brandon doesn’t like to lose. That challenge will make him better,” his father, Donald Ingram said. “For him to make it to Duke and the NBA, it shows how determined he was for the goal he set forth. Where we’re from in Kinston, it’s a small town riddled with crime. A lot of his age group ended up in gangs, locked up or killed. His drive made him mature.” NEW YORK 6C SPORTS USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 MIKE GALLAGHER With teammate Jordan Whitehead, in Pitt T-shirt, lending support, James Conner receives his 12th and final chemotherapy treatment May 9 in Pittsburgh. Conner’s body serves as map of cancer journey v CONTINUED FROM 1C … it does mess you up a little bit, but we knew he was going to be OK. We knew it. He had to be. There wasn’t any other option. Eighty-five percent (chance of survival) — it could have been even less than that, we would have figured something out.” THE KNEE “For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.” — Jeremiah 29:11 These words run across Conner’s right shin, starting just below the scar that marks the inside of his knee. It’s there on purpose, next to the permanent reminder of his torn medial collateral ligament, an injury that devastated Conner almost a year ago but would pale in comparison to what was to follow. He had taken a handoff and spun out of a tackle Sept. 5 in the first half of Pitt’s season opener against Youngstown State. He knew something was wrong, but he got up and jogged off the field. He was held out of the rest of the game as a precaution but figured he’d be back the next week. His thinking changed the next morning after an MRI. “When it came back and you could see it off the bone, I just started crying like a little baby because I had worked so hard,” Conner says. “I wanted to enter the draft that year.” He had never been in better shape, he says, coming off a season in which he rushed for 1,765 yards and 26 touchdowns and was poised for even more success. By late October and early November, Conner’s knee rehab was going quite well. He was running and lifting weights, even entertaining a potential return before season’s end. “But while I’m lifting I can see that I’m getting out of breath really fast,” Conner says. “I’m straining my face. I swell up and get puffy, swollen. I have dizziness a lot.” Pitt coach Pat Narduzzi noticed it, too, wondering what had happened to his star running back. “I just thought he wasn’t taking care of his body because he wasn’t playing,” Narduzzi says. JARRAD HENDERSON, USA TODAY SPORTS Pitt teammate and linebacker Jaymar Parrish encourages Conner during a workout Monday. throat specialist, who ruled out any issues with Conner’s sinuses and ordered an X-ray on his chest, which eventually led to a positron emission tomography (PET) scan — and the discovery of a large tumor. Conner thinks the knee injury saved his life. “You’ve got two veins — one carries blood directly to the body, one carries blood to the heart,” Conner says. “That tumor was growing and was pressing on that vein. That vein was getting skinnier and skinnier. “If I never had this knee injury, I would’ve been on the field, and I probably would’ve been feeling out of shape and that I’ve got to work even harder. I’d be taking shots to the chest. I could’ve died on the field. I’m very thankful for my knee injury — I know He did that to save my life. ... He didn’t want to harm me when He did my knee injury. He did it to save me.” THE CHEST Conner’s scar just below his collarbone matches that of many cancer survivors. It’s the one from his port, the way his body received the chemo cocktails he needed during his treatments. Patterson sat by his side through each treatment. They’d take place every two weeks, and she’d drive two hours each way from Erie, Pa., to hold her son’s hand. “Sometimes, he’d come home from chemo and just be defeated,” roommate and teammate Rachid Ibrahim says. “He’d lay down, we’d watch TV, he’d be asleep until maybe 6, 7 at night. Then he’d wake up and he’d start feeling a lot better. He always made an emphasis the next day to really go break a sweat. He said the doctor said that’d be a good thing.” “Thank God we have a great ending, but it’s hard to think about everybody who doesn’t.” Kelly Patterson, James Conner’s mother “He kept looking the same. One day we’re on the field — probably a week or two before he found there was a tumor in his chest — I went over to the doctor on the sidelines. I said, ‘Doc, something’s wrong. What is going on? We need to investigate this.’ ” Conner visited an ear, nose and COURTESY OF JAMES CONNER These images show a scan from Dec. 3, left, after Conner’s diagnosis and one from May 23 as he was declared cancer-free. Teammates were in awe as they watched Conner sprint on the treadmill, surgical mask on his face to guard against germs. Narduzzi couldn’t believe Conner’s bursts of speed during noncontact parts of spring practice. Even Conner’s doctor, Stanley Marks, called Conner’s physical exertion between chemo treatments “extreme” in a wonderful way. Kansas City Chiefs safety Eric Berry, who beat the same type of cancer, had told Conner “not to be a coach potato.” He took the advice seriously. Anything that could help him attack and defeat cancer, he wanted to try. He wanted to document it, too, to apprise football fans and raise cancer awareness. Marks has treated his fair share of well-known figures, from professional athletes to politicians. He can’t recall a single patient waging such a public war on his own cancer the way Conner did. Conner has plans of continuing his involvement in lymphoma research and awareness, particularly for child patients, after he leaves Pitt. “He clearly made it a mission, if you will,” Marks says. “He was confident he was going to get better, but he really had this urge to help the other patients. I was amazed. He was only 20 years old (for much of the treatment). His level of maturity just truly was remarkable. He was just so caring about the other patients. “When he was in the treatment area, there was like this buzz. Everyone was upbeat. I think it really helped patients get through some of their darkest times.” THE RELIEF On Conner’s worst days, those in the middle of treatment, all he could do was think about how much he didn’t want to be in the hospital and how far he was falling behind everyone else on the football field. Or he would let his mind drift to the 15% chance he wouldn’t beat this cancer. “It crept into my head a little bit,” Conner says. “I know there was a story about the Butler basketball player (Andrew Smith). They said he was on one of his last treatments and he went up for a scan and the cancer had turned into something totally different that spread through his body. He lost his life to it. That scared me.” Those moments of fear — however rare and anxiety however common — disappeared in an instant May 23, the day of his final scan. Conner walked into the Hillman Cancer Center about 10 a.m. for the scan that would tell him if he was officially in remission. While his mother sat and cried and prayed, he waited for the results … rather impatiently. “He literally just stepped out of the scanner and he called me,” Marks says. “I said, ‘Well, give me at least a few minutes because we’ve got to get the films.’ ” Another 15 minutes passed as Marks checked in with a radiologist. As he moved through the hospital, nurses, secretaries and all sorts of hospital employees whom Conner had come to know over the previous six months looked up at the doctor and asked the same question: How was James’ scan? “Everyone was just so excited — the nurses, everyone,” Marks says. “The people in the lab … everyone is just so thrilled.” He made the call he loves to make, catching Conner in the car with his mother and close family friend Mike Gallagher, who captured the moment on film. As Conner smiles and thanks Marks over and over again, his mother is wailing in the back seat. “I’m thinking like, ‘Oh my gosh, they can’t come back and tell me it’s not gone. They can’t. They just can’t,’ ” Patterson says. “That was pretty rough. … It was such a relief, because I’m thinking of all of the moms that didn’t get that call, didn’t get that answer they were hoping for. I couldn’t imagine not getting the answer I got.” Says Conner: “It was just a huge relief off my shoulders. The best day ever. It takes a toll on you. When you first wake up in the morning to you go to bed at night, it’s on your mind. You’re constantly reminded of things you can’t do.” Not anymore. Now, he’s reminded of all he can do and what he has done. Conner will continue to get scans every two or three months. When Conner’s mother thinks of cancer now, she thinks of her son as a strong, brave young man who waged his toughest battle with everyone watching. “It does look like that, but it also looks like the worst of this: heartbreak, angst, sickness, sadness and despair,” Patterson says. “It’s so hard to think about all the people who did have spirit and did have fight but couldn’t beat it, because it was too much. It’s an awful, awful thing. “Thank God we have a great ending, but it’s hard to think about everybody who doesn’t. It’s heartbreaking. I can’t think about other moms who have gone through it and didn’t have this outcome. I don’t know what I would do. “How do you come back from that? You don’t. You really don’t.” USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 SPORTS 7C E6 MLB White Sox’s Shields finally shows signs of life After awful start since being traded, pitcher keeps Red Sox in check “It was good to see what we saw out of (James Shields) today. ... We wish we would have got the win for him, but sometimes that’s baseball.” Maureen Mullen @MaureenaMullen Special for USA TODAY Sports James Shields’ return to the American League has been anything but pretty. He entered Thursday’s matinee against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park 0-2 with a 21.81 ERA in three starts since a June 4 trade brought him from the San Diego Padres to the Chicago White Sox. He became the second pitcher in White Sox history to allow seven or more runs in his debut with the team, joining Fred Lamlein who did so in 1912 — and made just four more big-league appearances. Add in Shields’ final outing with the Padres, and he had a 24.62 ERA in his previous four starts. He is the first major league pitcher to give up 31 earned runs over a four-start span since Jose Contreras did so in 2007 — for the White Sox. Since acquiring Shields, the White Sox had gone 7-10, and his nickname — Big Game James — increasingly had become a term of derision. Yet despite his 5.42 ERA in 13 starts at Fenway and despite facing a club leading the American League in most offensive categories, Shields easily furnished his best outing with the White Sox and put them in position for a four-game sweep. Instead, they lost 8-7 in 10 innings. But their lone loss this week provided some glimmer Shields might regain the form that deserted him the last month. Shields pitched five innings (plus two batters in the sixth), giving up three runs on five hits and four walks — a career high in 27 starts against the Red Sox — with three strikeouts. He whittled his White Sox ERA to 15.80. “He was just getting ahead,” manager Robin Ventura said. “He was just locating. He just looked better as far as rhythm and all that. I think if he gets ahead, then he’s able to use his off-speed stuff. For me, that was the big difference today.” Shields threw 99 pitches, 59 for strikes, with first-pitch strikes to 15 of the 23 batters he faced, despite first-pitch balls to each of the five batters he faced in the second inning. That was an area pitching coach Don Cooper had stressed. White Sox outfielder Adam Eaton BOSTON GREG M. COOPER, USA TODAY SPORTS James Shields has yet to win a game for the White Sox, but he had his best outing for the team Thursday against the Red Sox. “Improvement,” Cooper said. “I think he let go of some of the negative stuff that’s been happening. I saw him competing, throwing more strikes, competing into the game. So it was all good.” While the outing was a big step forward, Cooper would like to see Shields going deeper into games. When Shields departed in the sixth, he left the White Sox with a 3-1 lead, after they got two runs off Red Sox right-hander Rick Porcello in the first and another in the fourth. Taking a no-decision means Shields hasn’t earned a win since May 12, a stretch of seven starts. While Shields had just one clean inning — retiring the top of the lineup in order in the third — he kept Boston’s potent offense in check for most of his outing. But he allowed a run in fifth when he gave up a twoout single to Mookie Betts, who scored on Snitker enjoying run as Braves manager After 40 years with team, interim goes day-by-day Howard Megdal @howardmegdal Special for USA TODAY Sports Brian Snitker, unlikely caretaker manager and perhaps more for the Atlanta Braves, and wife Ronnie took a chartered flight to New York last week — a business trip for Snitker, whose Braves have improved significantly since he took over for good friend Fredi Gonzalez last month. But it represented a vacation of sorts for Ronnie, who’d been in full-time grandmother mode for the twin babies of their daughter, Erin. “A lot of it hit her when we were on the flight,” Snitker said last week, sitting behind the visiting manager’s desk at Citi Field. “She got kind of USA TODAY SPORTS emotional, seeing all the Snitker stewardesses on the plane. My daughter had twins in August, so she’s been busy babysitting them. Her plate’s been pretty full since I got this. And then last night, she finally got a chance to relax, and it really hit her.” It’s an adjustment for them both, one Snitker had given up on ever having to make. He has been a Brave for nearly 40 years, first as a player, then a coach and manager at virtually every level except the major leagues. Every year since 1977 — the season after Hank Aaron retired, a full decade before Tom Glavine made his Braves debut — Snitker has been part of the Braves. And so he believes he has insight into not only the way a team wins, but specifically the way the Braves do it, too. “We talk about a Braves Way,” Snitker said. “And that encompasses doing things the right way. Carrying yourself the right way. Respecting the game. How you wear your uniform. How you’re expected to play on the field. So when guys get here, the coaches are guys who have been here — guys like Terry Pendleton, Eddie Perez — guys who were here when we were putting all those flags up.” No one is pretending the Braves are in anything but a rebuilding phase. And so while it might be counterintuitive to have a 60-year-old in charge of that effort, this is a 60-year-old who has done little over the last 30 years that hasn’t involved working at making young baseball players better. Gonzalez was fired after a 9-28 start. With Thursday’s 4-3 home victory vs. the New York Mets, the Braves are 16-19 under Snitker, including a season-high six-game winning streak that ended Wednesday. “In the case of myself, really, and Brian, we spent so long in the minor leagues, and that was all you did,” Mets manager Terry Collins said. “Your job was to get the guys on that team better. I used to have an old general manager who told me, ‘Don’t worry about wins and losses, worry about making sure three or four of your guys moved to the next level and performed.’ “So it’s easier for us. We’ve managed for a long time. And you see guys put into this position with very little managerial experience. It’s hard; it’s pretty stressful. But when you’ve been through all the tribulations of the minor leagues — you’re short players, you have guys up and down — once you get up here, it just makes it easier, the nature of what you’re dealing with.” It is hard to ignore that the Braves just went into New York and swept the Mets and then split a pair at the Miami Marlins. It wasn’t a total surprise to eternally sunny Snitker, though, who described himself as someone who “comes to the park every day believing today’s the day we’re going to start a 10-game winning streak.” “I talked to Brian today,” Collins said. “He brought up some things that we’ve all gone through. But he’s a little bit calmer about them. Because what are the expectations right now? It’s just about getting better. If that happens, you’ve done your job.” Snitker knows that losing is part of the process the Braves have undertaken and takes great joy when the team succeeds. “I couldn’t have been more proud the other day when we won in, what was it, 12 or 13 innings,” Snitker said of a 13-inning, 9-8 win vs. the similarly rebuilding Cincinnati Reds that lasted 5 hours, 18 minutes. “We loaded the bases twice in that game with nobody out and finally scored. The character that the team showed, how they didn’t get down, stuck with it and won that game. It would’ve been easy to quit. “I always tell the guys, when you fight through the bad, there’s always good on the other end of the bad, if you take ownership of what’s going on and handle it, you’ll be rewarded on the other side of it.” Megdal reported from New York. Dustin Pedroia’s double. He then opened the sixth with back-toback walks to David Ortiz and Ryan LaMarre. Shields was done after the two free passes, with Matt Albers replacing him and guarding a tenuous two-run lead and potential win for Shields. Albers allowed both of the inherited runners to score, as the Red Sox got four in the inning on their way to a walk-off win, thanks to Xander Bogaerts’ 10th-inning, RBI single While it might have been Shields’ best outing in his return to the AL, there is obviously work to do. According to a rival evaluator in attendance, Shields’ fastball command left much to be desired and Shields had to work too hard for outs, indicating an inability to finish off hitters. The evaluator spoke to USA TODAY Sports on condition of anonymity for competitive reasons. “I felt delivery-wise it was pretty good,” Shields said. “I think like the fourth inning, I got a little ahead of myself out of the stretch but got out of it right there. But I got to do a better job in that sixth inning of not walking those guys. But other than that, overall pretty decent, a positive direction.” They will need more from him and the other starters if they are to make up room in the division, where they are six games out. Still, it represented a positive direction for the White Sox, too. They entered the series 2-6 in their last eight games, including a three-game road sweep by the Cleveland Indians. “Well, we won three out of four. You look at it that way,” Ventura said. “You could look at a lot of things negatively, the way it’s been going for us. You win the series and get ready for tomorrow.” They just missed a chance to earn their first four-game sweep at Fenway Park since 1927. “Well, it’s extremely difficult to beat a team four games in a row, especially a team as good as they are,” catcher Alex Avila said. “It was impressive. The quality of baseball we played this series was probably the best baseball we’ve played all year, including the nice start (23-10) that we had. I thought that we made some big pitches when we had to, got some big-time hits when we needed to, which is something that’s been lacking in the past few weeks.” “Winning three out of four is pretty good, so get excited about that,” right fielder Adam Eaton said. “Staff showed some heart, hitting battled back and forth there. “It was good to see what we saw out of (Shields) today, for sure. We wish we would have got the win for him, but sometimes that’s baseball.” Advertisement 8C SPORTS USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 BOXING/MIXED MARTIAL ARTS Thurman keeps late mentor’s memory alive School custodian there from start Bob Velin @BobVelin USA TODAY Sports It was the old black-and-white pictures of boxers taped to the walls of head custodian Ben Getty’s office at Belleair (Fla.) Elementary School that first intrigued 7-year-old Keith Thurman. So when Getty, a short, stocky Italian man the kids called “Ben Spaghetti,” started an after-school YMCA boxing program by putting on a boxing exhibition, young Thurman was all in. “Ben, being an older guy, a Vietnam vet, you could always tell there was a lot of history there,” Thurman told USA TODAY Sports recently. “It was amazing to know he worked side-by-side with Sugar Ray Leonard. He was a strength and conditioning coach. He helped me develop my strength and my power and taught me how to utilize it.” From then on, they were a team — Getty the mentor, Thurman the student, blazing through the amateur program together. Getty and Thurman were together for 117 amateur and nine professional fights before the trainer died unexpectedly in 2009, a devastating blow to 20-year-old Thurman. “It was really emotional,” Thurman said. “Luckily for me, I was heavily into philosophy and world religions, and I was learning a lot about different peoples’ outlooks on life and death during that time. “I came to the conclusion that the only reason Ben Getty was allowed to pass away is because he had already created a world champion. Ben was suffering from Agent Orange. He also was diabetic. So life for Ben was not easy on a day-to-day basis. Ben was prescribed 1,000 milligrams of mor- CLIFF HAWKINS, GETTY IMAGES Keith Thurman, left, says mentor Ben Getty will be on his mind Saturday when he fights Shawn Porter, right. “Every single time I get ready for a fight, I think of him,” Thurman says. phine daily. He would have loved to be here, and I would have loved for him to be here. But it wouldn’t have been easy for him. He was in a lot of pain. “So I understood he had to go, but I truly believe that he taught me everything he needed to teach me to be the champion that I was going to be.” The day after Getty died, Thurman called Dan Birmingham and asked if he would take over. Birmingham, who has known Thurman since childhood, said yes, and they have been together ever since. “I had confidence on Ben’s passing that I’m prepared to make my dreams come true and his dreams come true, which has always been to create a champion from scratch,” Thurman says. “And Ben truly did that with me.” Thurman (26-0, 22 KOs), nicknamed “One Time” for his knockout power, became a world champion March 7, 2015, when he defeated Robert Guerrero in a WBA welterweight title fight in the network debut of Premier Boxing Champions on NBC. He will defend that title for the second time Saturday at Barclays Center in New York against former champ Shawn Porter (26-1-1, 16 KOs) in a PBC fight on CBS (9 p.m. ET). It’s the first fight on CBS in prime time since Leon Spinks upset Muhammad Ali in their first fight in 1978. As always, Getty will be on Thurman’s mind. “Every single time I get ready for a fight, I think of him,” Thurman says. “That’s why I honor him by wearing his name on my trunks. He’s always going to be a part of my boxing style.” Birmingham says what sets his fighter apart, aside from his onepunch power, is that Thurman, 27, is a student of the game. “If you know Keith and have had any conversations with him, he can elaborate on anything from music to philosophy. It just so happens he’s a fighter,” Birming- ham says. “He knows himself, too.” When Birmingham took over Thurman’s career, he felt a need to work on his boxing skills. “I told him we’re going to fight out of a rhythm, we’re going to box more, we’re not just going to come straight ahead,” Birmingham said. “So he’s using his feints, he’s doing all the little things now, stepping to the side, tying up, everything that a good boxer does.” Truth be told, Getty had little use for boxing. He hated when Thurman would move around the ring and try to box more instead of throwing punches. “Ben used to always say, ‘You’re wasting energy, boy. Sit down and throw punches. Stop moving so much. You’re making yourself tired,’ ” Thurman says with a laugh. The long-awaited ThurmanPorter matchup was originally scheduled for March 12, but Thurman was in a car crash on a rainslicked road in his hometown of Clearwater, Fla., on Feb. 22. He hydroplaned, lost control and suffered a neck injury from whiplash. His doctor told him he was not fit to fight, so Thurman postponed the bout. By the time the bell rings Saturday, it will have been almost a year since Thurman last fought, a victory against Luis Collazo last July in Tampa. Porter has not fought since his unanimous-decision victory against Adrien Broner last June. “When you’ve been doing it for 20 years, man, it ain’t nothing,” Thurman said. “It’s not like I picked up the gloves yesterday.” Thurman and Porter have known each other since they were teenagers. Porter once was a sparring partner for Thurman, who expects his opponent to exert pressure and try to fight on the inside to avoid Thurman’s power. “We’ll see how long he’ll be able to try to bully me, possibly, or how many counters he’s going to take before he hears a little voice in the back of his head saying, ‘You shouldn’t have jumped in,’ ” Thurman says. “I know Shawn’s going to do his best to be ferocious, but we’re prepared. It’s going to be a great fight.” And Thurman knows Getty’s voice will be in his head, as always. “Whenever I step in the ring, I look at it like my life’s on the line. This is everything I worked for,” he said. “I can hear Ben Getty saying, ‘The time is now. This is what you’ve worked for your whole career, on this kind of stage on this platform. All you need is a terrific performance and give the people a reason to love you.’ ” Ultimately, it will likely come down to power against power. “We’re going for the knockout,” Thurman says. “We’re going to make this an exciting fight and make a statement at 147 on how devastating Keith Thurman really is. So it’s a great opportunity. It’s been in the works for a long time, and I’m really excited to make this happen.” Legal fights behind him, Mitrione enjoying ‘Rampage’ finally happy greener pastures Steven Marrocco Steven Marrocco Quinton Jackson cast himself as “Guile” and “M. Bison” on Tuesday in a Street Fighter tournament for Bellator’s military outreach program, pitting his gaming skills against veterans’ at a sports bar in St. Louis. A year ago, a PR invitation from the Viacom-owned mixed martial arts promotion might have warranted a letter from his attorney. In February, the former Ultimate Fighting Championship light heavyweight champion and movie actor settled a breach of contract suit with Bellator, the result of the promotion’s attempt to block him from fighting for the UFC, which he did once at UFC 186 in April 2015 before an injunction brought his career to a halt. Understandably, “Rampage” thought things might be weird going back to work for Bellator. But he’s feeling the love. And that, presumably, means terrible things for his opponents. “It’s part of the reason why people go to court,” Jackson, who returns to the cage Friday at Bellator 157 (Spike, 8 p.m. ET), told USA TODAY Sports. “The judge settled things. We both got what we wanted.” Jackson’s mercurial nature with promoters is well established with fans. Before he went to court with Bellator, he blasted the UFC for short-changing him, prompting the industry leader to disclose he had made $15.2 million under its banner. But Jackson (36-11 MMA, 3-0 Bellator), 38, has no complaints these days about money as he heads into a bout with 2008 Olympic gold medal-winning judoka Satoshi Ishii (14-5-1, 0-0). “I’m happy with my pay for the first time in my fight career,” he said. “They’ve started treating me good with hotels and arrangements. They’re doing stuff for me that the UFC has never done for me, or even Pride.” As heavyweight Matt Mitrione heads into his Bellator debut, a lot of questions he gets are not about his present employer but about his past one. Such is life when you’re a “walking soundbite,” Mitrione’s term for his brand of interview. “I understand the repercussions of my personality,” Mitrione (9-5 mixed martial arts, 0-0 Bellator), who meets Carl Seumanutafa (10-6, 1-0) on Friday at Bellator 157, tells USA TODAY Sports. “I could as easily be a quiet and nonsqueaky wheel. I choose not to be that way, because that’s not my personality.” Mitrione, who fights on the Spike-televised main card (8 p.m. ET/PT) at St. Louis’ Scottrade Center, is in the spotlight a little more than usual after turning down a new UFC contract to sign with its most viable competition. Since his defection in March, he’s become an outspoken voice on how the UFC treats its fighters, though he’s shied away from a stewardship role in recent moves toward collective bargaining. This month, the 37-year-old former NFL defensive tackle hit the UFC hard by calling current fighters “foolish” for sticking around. While Mitrione says he ultimately took Bellator’s deal because it was a better financial choice, he also did so because he realized he was looked at as a pure commodity, expendable after one loss, rather than a valued contributor, he says. He doesn’t care to filter that opinion, so these days he winds up giving it a lot. “I feel that we were manipulated and done dirty over another promotion,” he says. “I feel we had an abuse of power that really set the example of, ‘You guys don’t mean a thing to us.’ And that’s something I couldn’t stand for.” Mitrione, No. 15 fighter in the USA TODAY Sports/MMAjunkie @MMAjunkieSteven USA TODAY Sports @MMAjunkieSteven USA TODAY Sports ERIC BOLTE, USA TODAY SPORTS “I’m happy with my pay for the first time in my fight career,” says Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, right. “He’s had his fair share of problems in the past. (But) you surround yourself with good people, and good things happen.” Tiki Ghosn, on Quinton Jackson The star treatment has motivated Jackson to return to a place he’s long dreaded: the gym. Tiki Ghosn, who recently rejoined Jackson’s camp 15 years after they first met in Huntington Beach, Calif., said the ex-champ was actually training. “You ever seen a ‘Rampage’ that’s been excited to go train? Nobody’s heard of that for years,” Ghosn said. “He’s been in a position where he’s been burned a bunch of times. He’s had his fair share of problems in the past. (But) you surround yourself with good people, and good things happen.” Bellator President Scott Coker, once at odds with Jackson over a deal he inherited after joining the company two years ago, sees the difference in a new support system, which he hopes translates into the explosive knockouts the fighter delivered in his prime. “In my opinion, he has much better people around him now that really care about him,” Coker said. “Their goals and our goals are really aligned.” The question now is, how long will the love last? Jackson is non-committal about his future, saying his immediate goal is to “beat the (expletive) out of Ishii and then eat some sushi.” Ghosn, meanwhile, said a deal with the UFC was on hold until this was finished. Coker, though, plans to court Jackson after Friday’s fight for a contract extension. He holds no grudge over the lawsuit and wants to keep the Bellator fighter in the fold. All he has to do is keep “Rampage” happy. “We’ve tried to promote (Jackson) through all our channels for this fight, and I think we did a good job,” Coker said. “And I think they’re starting to see the light.” BOB DECHIARA, USA TODAY SPORTS Matt Mitrione, right, has been a vocal critic of the UFC. MMA heavyweight rankings, correctly predicted he’d be accused of sour grapes, especially with his switch coming after a pair of UFC losses. While it bothers him that some fans might invalidate his opinion based on his recent results, he thinks many of them appreciate his honesty. He’s also fully aware his new home might appear so shiny simply because it’s not the old one. Mitrione knows his relationship with Bellator might only be as good as his performances in the cage. “I understand that I am right now in the honeymoon period, and if I lose on Friday — because Carl’s a tough cat — the honeymoon period is most likely over,” Mitrione says. “I get that. But also, in my opinion, it’s the land of opportunity.” Bellator President Scott Coker, who has aggressively courted MMA free agents over the last year, is happy to provide an alternative. Parent company Viacom advertises Bellator as a fighter-first promotion, a claim strengthened by its lack of restrictions on sponsors. Mitrione was lured away in large part by that carrot. “He’s the first free agent heavyweight who’s come over from the UFC, and I think it shows all the other fighters that, look, you can have a great home here at Bellator and make a good living and advance your career,” Coker said. Coker’s optimism might be based on the very expectations that led fighters such as Mitrione to eventually seek greener pastures. But such is life for a promoter dependent on TV ratings. After his debut, Mitrione will find out where he really stands. SPORTS 9C USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 Kids learning to play golf as team PGA Junior League Golf wants game to be perceived like other youth sports Griffin Adams “It’s fun to see @GriffDoug USA TODAY Sports them learn a sense of — win, BETHESDA , MD. With numbered jerseys on their backs, the kids lose, either way warm up, getting ready for competition. As they converse with — to have a one another, making jokes typical great time.” of elementary-school-aged kids, their coaches struggle to ensure they’re ready for the start of play. While that’s going on, parents set up lawn chairs and talk with one another, ready to watch their kids compete. No, this isn’t a soccer or baseball game but rather a youth recreational golf league match for young boys and girls at Congressional Country Club. This internal league is part of a program called the PGA Junior League Golf (JLG) program, a product of PGA Reach. “The program was created to introduce kids to the sport in a fun, recreational environment, playing on teams that would help us in the PGA’s mission to grow the game of golf and really allow golf to be thought of like every other youth team sport,” PGA Reach senior director Scott Kmiec said. Started in 2011 with 170 kids from 16 teams nationwide, the PGA JLG had grown by 2015 to Neil Borg, father of a PGA Junior League Golf participant about 30,000 participants from 2,500 teams, according to its website. Participants of all skill levels 13 and younger — with some leagues containing 16-under teams, as at Congressional — come from 48 states (in 2015), all competing to play in the PGA JLG Championships on Nov. 19-21 at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Ariz. Youngsters hadn’t really had the opportunity to play golf on a team until this program began. It is supported by some of the world’s best talent, including Rory McIlroy, Rickie Fowler and Michelle Wie. They are all ambassadors of the program and testify to its mission and message: playing as a team. “Playing on a team with friends and a uniform with a number, just like all of the other teams that youth play on, provides a CHELSEA LAND, USA TODAY Youth golfers get ready to play at Congressional Country Club. much more natural pathway for kids to be introduced to the sport,” Kmiec said. Team play is the focus of the program, where they can compete alongside friends and teammates, rather than by themselves. “It’s not really like, ‘We’re (going to) beat you, we’re (going to) win,’ ” said 10-year-old Marty Russo, a participant in the program. “It’s more like, ‘Let’s have fun, and let’s see how it’s (going to) turn out.’ It’s more like just having fun, you can definitely tell.” Teams play four nine-hole matches in which a pair (or trio with an alternate, depending on availability) of golfers from each team go head-to-head. Using a scramble format, where both members of the duo drive from the tee box, they decide which ball to use on the next shot based on positioning and lies. This continues until the ball goes into the cup. In golf, there’s no help with shots or strategy, unless you have your own caddie. This program, though, allows all the kids to not only participate but also strategize and work together in order to get the best result. “It’s a little different than what we’re used to doing around here, where we’re kind of doing a lot of junior clinics, trying to jump in and teach them and instruct them to become better,” PGA JLG team captain and PGA professional Clint Chaffee said. “It’s kind of nice to let them go, take what we taught them previously and see how they do.” Kmiec says he and his staff weren’t sure what to expect at the program’s start but now he sees significant growth potential in the coming years. While everyone who participates in this program won’t become the next Wie or McIlory, that isn’t the point. This is not just for the kids who can afford to play — the PGA JLG provides subsidized costs and financial assistance, according to Kmiec — but for anyone with interest. The allure of the PGA Junior League Golf program is giving young golfers a chance to play the sport they love. According to Neil Borg, a father of a golfer in the program at Congressional, this program is a “must.” “It’s fun to see them compete; it’s fun to see them learn a sense of — win, lose, either way — to have a great time,” Borg said. “It develops a great sense of selfworth, respect for the game, respect for sports, respect for other people. It’s a pretty special program to be involved in.” Tennis innovator could get Hall call Late Buwick has backing of King, others for honor Doug Smith Special for USA TODAY Sports The Wimbledon fortnight begins Monday with Novak Djokovic and Serena Williams continuing to show why they’re shoo-ins for selection to the International Tennis Hall of Fame. Players gain entry into the sport’s hallowed home based on on-court career achievements. The game’s top coaches and executives are enshrined in the contributors wing of the Newport, R.I., facility and honored for exceptional contributions that have furthered the growth, reputation and character of the sport in categories such as administration, media, coaching and officiating. Some contend that the late Gene Buwick, a Wilson Sporting Goods executive who played a key role in the development of the modern game, has been overlooked. While the game’s top pros compete on Wimbledon’s prestigious grass courts outside, the hall’s enshrinee nominating committee will gather in a conference room at the Wimbledon complex to determine if Buwick will be among the chosen few to receive further consideration. The induction process takes up to 10 weeks. Tennis legend Billie Jean King is among his supporters. “I don’t know if I would be where I am today if it weren’t for him,” she says of Buwick, who died in 2004 at 74. Though employed by Wilson for more than 30 years, Buwick worked for the good of the game. In 1973, the U.S. National Lawn Tennis Association named him as executive director of its first professional tennis council. Buwick assembled an eclectic list of accomplishments that enhanced the quality of the professional game. Among other things, he: uPioneered the practice of providing top with players racket endorsement deals. Jack Kramer and Tony Trabert were among the first players to get their names Gene Buwick etched on Wildied in 2004. son rackets. Today, the game’s top players earn millions of dollars by endorsing rackets, shoes, clothes and more. Buwick developed Wilson’s strategy to recruit and market player talent. uSigned King in 1967 to the first racket endorsement for a female player. Years later, Wilson launched the Chris Evert autographed model. uOversaw the U.S. marketing of the first non-wood racket, the Wilson T2000, used by King and Rosie Casals in 1967 at Wimbledon. King won the singles title and teamed with Casals to win the doubles. Jimmy Connors collected many of his record 109 titles playing with the T2000. uFacilitated an agreement between Kramer and PepsiCo, Wilson’s parent company, to develop and finance the first International Grand Prix of Tennis. He also helped arrange television sponsorship for the World Cham- pionship Tennis circuit and for the Satellite Tennis Circuit, which allowed young players to compete against more seasoned pros on a minor league circuit. uHelped develop the first professional umpires association. uOversaw technical research that led to the use of yellow balls for better television visibility. “If you are a teaching professional, a journeyman tour professional or a world-class player, a deep amount of gratitude is owed to (Buwick), who left his indelible fingerprints on the game of tennis,” said Trabert, a 1970 Hall of Fame inductee who signed his racket deal in 1955 after he won the French Open. John Embree, CEO of the U.S. Professional Tennis Association, concurs: “I began working for Gene in 1986. He had an exceptional eye and feel for marketing. Before I worked for him, I knew that when the U.S. Open moved from Forest Hills to Flushing Meadows in 1978, a key element of Wilson’s deal with the USTA was that Wilson’s stadium box seats would be directly in front of the cameras that would show the players as they were serving. From that angle, behind the service line, right behind the server, television viewers worldwide would see the server, the receiver and the Wilson signage in the background.” Buwick learned to love the game as a Chicago teen and later served as captain of the University of Illinois tennis team. He gave lessons to youngsters, including King, when she was 10. “I hit with him every Saturday morning,” King says. “He was a sixth-grade teacher in Long Beach back then. He continued to help me when he took the job with Wilson. He provided me with free rackets and financial assistance and helped other young players whose parents couldn’t always afford to pay tournament entry fees. He helped pay for my first trip to Wimbledon.” Two years ago, Wilson named Buwick’s son, Tim, as U.S. promotions director for racquet sports, the same position his father held for more than 30 years. Though Tim had worked for Wilson as a territorial manager for 25 years, the move was unexpected. “My dad would be shocked, because I was the family rebel,” Tim Buwick says. “I wasn’t at all interested in getting involved in the corporate jungle, but it all fell into place. It’s been somewhat of a surreal experience. You can’t imagine the number of times I’ve heard his voice in my head, and I’d say, ‘Gosh, I wish my dad was alive so I could talk to him.’ He had a great sense of humor and a way of connecting with people. He was the ultimate politician, and I mean that in a positive way.” NOTICES LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE Pursuant to the regulations implementing the National Environmental Policy Act (32 CFR 651.14 [b] 2), the Department of the Army gives notice that a Draft Supplemental Programmatic Environmental Assessment (PEA) has been prepared to evaluate potential changes to the environmental impacts assessed in the prior June 2009 and December 2010 Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicle PEAs. Based on the Draft Supplemental PEA, the Army has concluded that the environmental impacts from recent changes to the MRAP program and variant congurations will not be signicant. As a result, a Draft Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) has been prepared, which concludes that an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) is not required for the continued training, fielding, operation, maintenance, demilitarization and disposal of the Army MRAP family of vehicles. 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W-1 W-5 L-6 L-3 L-1 Last 10 5-5 4-6 6-4 4-6 3-7 Last 10 7-3 7-3 6-4 5-5 4-6 Last 10 8-2 8-2 2-8 4-6 4-6 Home 27-13 23-18 19-17 19-15 15-20 Away 14-17 17-14 21-17 16-21 16-19 Home 23-12 25-8 21-13 17-17 15-25 Away 18-18 13-25 17-22 19-20 8-24 Home 26-11 22-15 15-18 15-20 16-22 Away 21-15 15-21 21-19 16-21 13-20 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Washington New York Miami Philadelphia Atlanta W 43 38 39 31 25 L 30 33 34 43 47 Pct. .589 .535 .534 .419 .347 GB — 4 4 121/2 171/2 Strk. L-5 L-1 W-2 W-1 W-1 Central Chicago St. Louis Pittsburgh Milwaukee Cincinnati W 47 38 34 32 28 L 24 33 39 40 45 Pct. .662 .535 .466 .444 .384 GB — 9 14 151/2 20 Strk. L-4 W-3 L-3 W-1 L-2 West San Francisco Los Angeles Colorado Arizona San Diego W 47 41 34 34 31 L 27 33 37 40 43 Pct. .635 .554 .479 .459 .419 GB — 6 111/2 13 16 Strk. W-3 W-6 L-1 L-1 W-1 Last 10 4-6 4-6 7-3 1-9 7-3 Last 10 4-6 5-5 2-8 3-7 4-6 Last 10 9-1 8-2 6-4 7-3 5-5 Home 20-12 19-16 19-18 16-22 10-27 Away 23-18 19-17 20-16 15-21 15-20 Home 25-11 15-21 19-18 19-17 17-20 Away 22-13 23-12 15-21 13-23 11-25 Home 22-13 23-15 15-16 13-25 18-22 Away 25-14 18-18 19-21 21-15 13-21 THURSDAY’S RESULTS American League Detroit 5, Seattle 4 (10 innings) Boston 8, Chicago White Sox 7 National League San Francisco 5, Pittsburgh 3 Atlanta 4, N.Y. Mets 3 Miami 4, Chicago Cubs 2 Interleague Philadelphia 7, Minnesota 3 Oakland at L.A. Angels San Diego 7, Cincinnati 4 Arizona at Colorado FRIDAY’S GAMES AMERICAN LEAGUE Pitchers GS 2016 Statistics Pct. WHIP ERA W-L IP K 82.2 23.0 78 14 (Line: NYY -225 ) 1.41 5.79 23.1 1.00 2.91 92.2 19 68 Tampa Bay at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m. ET TB: Moore (L) BAL: Gallardo (R) 14 5 (Line: BAL -133 ) .429 1.38 4.90 .667 1.70 6.26 3-4 2-1 Minnesota at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m. ET MIN: Milone (L) NYY: Tanaka (R) 4 14 0-1 4-2 .000 .667 Cleveland at Detroit, 7:10 p.m. ET CLE: Salazar (R) DET: Zimmermann (R) 13 13 Boston at Texas, 8:05 p.m. ET BOS: Price (L) TEX: Martinez (R) (Line: DET -109 ) .727 1.12 .750 1.15 8-3 9-3 15 1 (Line: BOS -160 ) 8-4 .667 1.12 1-1 .500 2.00 Toronto at Chi. White Sox, 8:10 p.m. ET TOR: Sanchez (R) CWS: Rodon (L) 14 13 7-1 2-6 .875 .250 Houston at Kansas City, 8:15 p.m. ET HOU: Keuchel (L) KC: Volquez (R) 15 15 3-9 7-6 0 14 96 54 4.24 5.14 99.2 7.0 109 3 91.1 75.2 89 74 94.2 91.2 87 73 0.0 84.2 47 (Line: HOU -118 ) .250 1.38 5.32 .538 1.35 4.12 (Line: ) .000 .00 .500 1.42 0-0 6-6 80.2 86.0 (Line: TOR -137 ) 1.25 3.35 1.49 4.16 Oakland at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m. ET OAK: () LAA: Weaver (R) 2.23 3.24 .00 5.10 LAD: Tepesch (R) PIT: Taillon (R) 0 3 (Line: PIT -126 ) NA 0.00 0.00 .500 1.11 3.50 0-0 1-1 0 13 CHC: Hendricks (R) MIA: Koehler (R) 2.94 3.92 79.2 78.0 73 65 (Line: CIN -117 ) .500 1.41 5.02 NA 1.29 5.14 71.2 7.0 54 9 (Line: NYM -155 ) .700 1.15 2.99 .000 1.71 7.19 72.1 46.1 73 27 (Line: WSH -160 ) 0.98 3.29 101.1 1.15 3.62 69.2 128 56 (Line: CHC -150 ) 5-6 .455 1.02 6-6 .500 1.49 13 14 San Diego at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m. ET SD: Rea (R) CIN: Reed (L) 13 1 3-3 0-0 N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 7:35 p.m. ET NYM: Matz (L) ATL: Blair (R) 12 10 7-3 0-4 Washington at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m. ET WSH: Scherzer (R) MIL: Davies (R) 15 12 8-4 5-3 .667 .625 Arizona at Colorado, 8:40 p.m. ET ARI: Bradley (R) COL: Anderson (L) 7 2 (Line: COL -130 ) .500 1.32 4.83 .000 0.92 2.25 3-3 0-1 41.0 12.0 44 10 (Line: SF -225 ) 2.04 10.80 8.1 1.44 5.47 72.1 5 59 Philadelphia at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m. ET PHI: Eflin (R) SF: Peavy (R) 2 14 0-2 3-6 .000 .333 INTERLEAGUE St. Louis at Seattle, 10:10 p.m. ET STL: Martinez (R) SEA: LeBlanc (L) 13 0 7-5 0-0 (Line: STL -130 ) .583 1.09 NA 0.00 3.17 0.00 82.1 0.0 66 0 Odds provided by Pregame.com. RESULTS, UPCOMING GAMES Wednesday American League HOU 3, LAA 2 CWS 8, BOS 6 CLE 6, TB 1 DET 5, SEA 1 National League MIA 3, ATL 0 STL 7, CHC 2 SF 7, PIT 6 LAD 4, WAS 3 Interleague NYY 9, COL 8 NYM 4, KC 3 MIL 4, OAK 2 TOR 5, ARI 2 BAL 7, SD 2 TEX 6, CIN 4 MIN 6, PHI 5 Saturday American League MIN at NYY, 1:05 TB at BAL, 1:05 TOR at CWS, 2:10 CLE at DET, 4:10 HOU at KC, 7:15 TB at BAL, 7:05 BOS at TEX, 9:20 OAK at LAA, 10:05 National League ARI at COL, 4:10 CHC at MIA, 4:10 SD at CIN, 4:10 WSH at MIL, 4:10 LAD at PIT, 7:15 NYM at ATL, 7:15 PHI at SF, 10:05 Interleague STL at SEA, 10:10 AL LEADERS BATTING Bogaerts, Boston Altuve, Houston Ortiz, Boston Martinez, Detroit Machado, Baltimore Nunez, Minnesota Desmond, Texas Escobar, Anaheim RBI Encarnacion, Toronto Ortiz, Boston Cano, Seattle Trumbo, Baltimore Beltran, New York Betts, Boston Bogaerts, Boston Napoli, Cleveland HITS Bogaerts, Boston Altuve, Houston Betts, Boston Cano, Seattle Pedroia, Boston .351 .343 .340 .327 .317 .316 .316 .311 62 60 53 52 51 51 50 49 106 97 92 89 89 Sunday American League MIN at NYY, 1:05 CLE at DET, 1:10 TB at BAL, 1:35 TOR at CWS, 2:10 HOU at KC, 2:15 BOS at TEX, 3:05 OAK at LAA, 3:35 National League CHC at MIA, 1:10 SD at CIN, 1:10 NYM at ATL, 1:35 WSH at MIL, 2:10 PHI at SF, 4:05 ARI at COL, 4:10 LAD at PIT, 8:08 Interleague STL at SEA, 4:10 Desmond, Texas Kinsler, Detroit Machado, Baltimore Cabrera, Detroit Escobar, Anaheim HOME RUNS Frazier, Chicago Trumbo, Baltimore Encarnacion, Toronto Beltran, New York Cano, Seattle PITCHING Sale, Chicago Tillman, Baltimore Zimmermann, Detroit Happ, Toronto Hill, Oakland Wright, Boston Price, Boston Fister, Houston Porcello, Boston ERA Wright, Boston Salazar, Cleveland Estrada, Toronto Hamels, Texas TAKING ONE FOR THE TEAM 000 100 010 — 2 000 101 02X — 4 ab r h bi bb so avg Chicago 4 0 0 0 1 1 .302 Zobrist 2b Heyward rf 4 1 1 0 0 0 .236 2 0 1 1 1 1 .269 Bryant lf 4 0 1 0 0 2 .385 Contreras 1b Baez 3b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .263 Russell ss 4 0 1 0 0 1 .239 4 0 1 0 0 0 .282 Almora Jr. cf 3 1 1 1 1 2 .247 Ross c Edwards pr 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Lester p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .063 1 0 0 0 0 1 .308 Szczur ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Strop p Coghlan ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .156 Totals 33 2 7 2 3 11 u Batting — 2B: Baez (9); HR: Ross (6); SF: Bryant (1); RBI: Bryant (49); Ross (23). ab r h bi bb so avg Miami 2 0 0 0 2 0 .243 Hechavarria ss Prado 3b 4 0 0 0 0 3 .315 3 1 1 0 1 1 .311 Yelich lf Ozuna cf 4 1 1 1 0 0 .322 Stanton rf 4 2 2 2 0 2 .216 3 0 2 1 1 0 .308 Realmuto c 4 0 0 0 0 1 .228 C. Johnson 1b Rojas 2b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .231 Chen p 3 0 0 0 0 1 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Barraclough p 30 4 7 4 4 8 Totals u Batting — 2B: Realmuto (17); HR: Stanton (14); Ozuna (16); RBI: Stanton 2 (34); Ozuna (44); Realmuto (23). u Baserunning — SB: Rojas (1); Realmuto (4); CS: Yelich (3). u Fielding — E: Ozuna (5). ip h r er bb so era Pitching Chicago Lester 7 5 2 2 3 7 2.10 1 2 2 2 1 1 3.14 Strop L,1-2 Miami 7 5 2 2 0 7 5.00 Chen Barraclough 1 0 0 0 2 2 3.03 W,4-2 2 Phelps S,3 /3 2 0 0 1 2 2.43 Chen pitched to 1 batters in the 8th. WP: Strop. IBB: Bryant (by Barraclough). Balks: Phelps. Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Lester 28; 100-64; Strop 6; 28-15; Chen 26; 94-67; Barraclough 5; 22-13; Phelps 5; 23-14 uUmpires — HP: Carapazza; 1B: Reyburn; 2B: B. Welke; 3B: Hirschbeck uGame data — T: 2:43. Att: 25,291. Phillies 7, Twins 3 Philadelphia Minnesota 020 101 030 — 7 100 010 001 — 3 ab r h bi bb so avg Philadelphia Herrera cf 5 0 1 1 0 1 .301 4 0 2 0 1 0 .276 Blanco 1b Franco 3b 2 0 0 0 3 0 .235 5 1 2 1 0 1 .150 Howard dh Ruiz c 4 0 1 0 1 0 .216 Asche lf 4 1 2 0 0 0 .277 1 1 0 0 0 0 .239 Goeddel pr Hernandez 2b 4 3 4 0 1 0 .261 Galvis ss 3 1 2 5 0 1 .216 4 0 1 0 0 0 .230 Bourjos rf 36 7 15 7 6 3 Totals u Batting — 2B: Asche (7); Blanco 2 (12); 3B: Galvis (3); Hernandez (5); HR: Galvis (7); Howard (11); S: Galvis 2 (5); RBI: Galvis 5 (28); Herrera (25); Howard (23); GIDP: Bourjos; Howard. u Fielding — E: Eickhoff (1). ab r h bi bb so avg Minnesota 4 0 1 0 0 0 .294 Grossman lf Escobar ss 4 1 1 1 0 0 .281 Mauer dh 4 0 1 0 0 1 .277 4 0 1 1 0 0 .244 Dozier 2b Plouffe 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .250 Nunez 3b 1 1 1 0 0 0 .316 Kepler rf 4 0 2 0 0 1 .259 3 0 0 1 0 2 .200 Park 1b Centeno c 3 1 0 0 1 1 .222 Buxton cf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .195 34 3 8 3 1 6 Totals u Batting — 2B: Dozier (14); Kepler (9); SF: Park (3); RBI: Escobar (19); Dozier (29); Park (24). u Baserunning — SB: Buxton (6). ip h r er bb so era Pitching Philadelphia 6 5 2 1 1 4 3.36 Eickhoff W,5-9 Gonzalez H,1 1 0 0 0 0 2 1.42 Neris 1 1 0 0 0 0 2.75 1 2 1 1 0 0 3.18 Gomez Minnesota 62/3 10 4 4 4 1 4.95 Nolasco L,3-5 2 Jepsen /3 2 3 3 1 0 6.28 2 Rogers /3 2 0 0 1 1 3.98 Tonkin 1 1 0 0 0 1 3.82 IBB: Franco (by Rogers). Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Eickhoff 24; 107-68; Gonzalez 3; 11-7; Neris 4; 13-10; Gomez 5; 2014; Nolasco 30; 106-63; Jepsen 5; 19-9; Rogers 5; 17-10; Tonkin 4; 15-10 uUmpires — HP: Drake; 1B: Holbrook; 2B: Davis; 3B: C. Torres uGame data — T: 3:07. Att: 30,012. San Diego Cincinnati 0.0 18.0 Chi. Cubs at Miami, 7:10 p.m. ET Chicago Miami Padres 7, Reds 4 NATIONAL LEAGUE L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m. ET Marlins 4, Cubs 2 010 104 001 — 7 004 000 000 — 4 ab r h bi bb so avg San Diego 5 0 2 1 0 0 .261 Jankowski cf 2 1 0 0 3 0 .284 Myers 1b Kemp rf 5 1 1 1 0 3 .267 4 1 1 1 0 1 .254 Solarte 3b M. Upton lf 4 2 2 0 0 1 .257 4 1 1 3 0 0 .215 Norris c Ramirez ss 4 0 0 1 0 0 .246 3 1 1 0 1 2 .195 Rosales 2b Friedrich p 0 0 0 0 1 0 .125 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Hand p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .136 Schimpf ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Maurer p Buchter p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 1 0 0 0 0 0 .209 Wallace ph Rodney p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 33 7 8 7 5 7 Totals u Batting — 2B: Rosales (7); HR: Norris (10); Kemp (16); S: Friedrich (1); RBI: Norris 3 (25); Solarte (22); Jankowski (5); Kemp (52); Ramirez (26) LOB: 5. u Baserunning — SB: Jankowski (9); M. Upton (16); CS: Myers (2). u Fielding — E: Solarte (6); Ramirez (8). Cincinnati ab r h bi bb so avg 4 1 1 0 1 1 .282 Cozart ss Hamilton cf 5 1 1 0 0 2 .254 5 1 2 1 0 0 .261 Phillips 2b Bruce rf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .281 4 1 2 2 0 2 .263 Duvall 1b Suarez 3b 1 0 0 0 3 1 .228 Peraza lf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .231 3 0 0 0 1 0 .261 Cabrera c Lamb p 2 0 0 0 0 0 .071 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Ramirez p Holt ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .240 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Smith p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Ohlendorf p Votto ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .246 34 4 7 3 5 9 Totals u Batting — 2B: Cozart (19); Hamilton (13); HR: Duvall (21); RBI: Duvall 2 (51); Phillips (29) LOB: 8. u Baserunning — CS: Holt (3). u Fielding — E: Cabrera (1). Pitching ip h r er bb so era San Diego 5 6 4 4 4 2 3.60 Friedrich W,4-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 3.69 Hand H,4 1 1 0 0 0 3 6.06 Maurer H,13 1 0 0 0 0 1 1.65 Buchter H,12 1 0 0 0 1 2 0.33 Rodney S,16 Cincinnati Lamb 51/3 4 4 3 3 4 4.78 Ramirez L,1-3 BS,3 2/3 2 2 2 0 1 6.61 Smith 2 0 0 0 1 1 2.57 Ohlendorf 1 2 1 1 1 1 4.41 Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Friedrich 25; 101-66; Hand 3; 16-11; Maurer 4; 16-11; Buchter 3; 20-12; Rodney 4; 17-9; Lamb 22; 102-55; Ramirez 4; 18-13; Smith 7; 40-24; Ohlendorf 6; 21-12 uUmpires — HP: Bellino; 1B: Basner; 2B: Hallion; 3B: Cuzzi uGame data — T: 3:26. Att: 20,443. 89 88 86 84 84 21 21 19 19 19 12-2 10-1 9-3 9-3 8-3 8-4 8-4 8-3 8-2 2.01 2.23 2.70 2.79 USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 Sale, Chicago Tanaka, New York Quintana, Chicago Tillman, Baltimore Bauer, Cleveland Fister, Houston Lewis, Texas STRIKEOUTS Price, Boston Archer, Tampa Bay Kluber, Cleveland Sale, Chicago Verlander, Detroit Salazar, Cleveland Hamels, Texas Smyly, Tampa Bay SAVES Britton, Baltimore Rodriguez, Detroit Colome, Tampa Bay Davis, Kansas City Robertson, Chicago Kimbrel, Boston Cishek, Seattle Dyson, Texas 2.83 2.91 3.04 3.11 3.20 3.21 3.21 109 108 103 102 102 96 95 94 21 20 19 18 18 16 16 15 GREG M. COOPER, USA TODAY SPORTS Red Sox shortstop Xander Bogaerts and NESN reporter Guerin Austin get drenched in a victory shower after Bogaerts drove in the winning run in the 10th inning of Thursday’s 8-7 win against the White Sox. Red Sox 8, White Sox 7 Giants 5, Pirates 3 Chicago Boston 200 101 300 0 — 7 000 014 110 1 — 8 San Francisco 004 001 000 — 5 Pittsburgh 102 000 000 — 3 Chicago ab r h bi bb so avg 6 2 2 0 0 2 .271 Anderson ss Eaton rf 4 2 2 0 1 1 .280 Abreu 1b 4 1 2 3 0 0 .270 5 1 1 0 0 0 .289 Cabrera lf 4 0 0 1 0 2 .198 Frazier 3b Lawrie 2b 4 1 2 0 1 0 .230 Avila c 5 0 4 0 0 0 .240 0 0 0 0 0 0 .265 Saladino pr Navarro c 0 0 0 0 0 0 .213 Garcia dh 4 0 1 0 1 1 .246 Shuck cf 5 0 1 1 0 0 .197 41 7 15 5 3 6 Totals u Batting — 3B: Cabrera (3); HR: Abreu (11); SF: Frazier (3); RBI: Shuck (4); Frazier (48); Abreu 3 (47); GIDP: Garcia; Abreu; Cabrera. u Fielding — E: Lawrie (5); Frazier (5). ab r h bi bb so avg Boston 6 2 2 0 0 1 .290 Betts rf Pedroia 2b 4 1 2 2 2 0 .309 6 0 2 1 0 1 .351 Bogaerts ss 2 1 1 0 3 1 .340 Ortiz dh Marrero pr 0 0 0 0 0 0 .143 Young lf 1 0 1 0 0 0 .277 LaMarre pr 1 1 0 0 1 0 .000 Shaw ph 0 0 0 1 1 0 .275 3 1 0 0 1 1 .302 Bradley Jr. cf Ramirez 1b 5 1 2 1 0 1 .266 Vazquez c 2 0 0 0 0 1 .218 Leon ph 3 0 1 1 0 1 .524 4 1 1 1 1 0 .231 Hernandez 3b 37 8 12 7 9 7 Totals u Batting — 2B: Hernandez (1); Ortiz (30); Pedroia (20); SF: Shaw (1); RBI: Leon (3); Hernandez (4); Bogaerts (50); Shaw (38); Ramirez (41); Pedroia 2 (30); GIDP: LaMarre. u Fielding — E: Bogaerts (5). ip h r er bb so era Pitching Chicago 5 5 3 3 4 3 6.22 Shields 2 2 2 0 0 5.34 Albers BS,2 Jennings 1 0 0 0 0 0 1.95 Beck H,1 1 1 1 1 2 1 9.00 Jones BS,3 1 2 1 1 0 1 2.97 1 1 0 0 1 2 3.52 Robertson 1 Purke L,0-1 /3 1 1 1 2 0 5.51 Boston Porcello 51/3 8 4 4 1 2 3.93 Layne 1 3 2 2 0 0 4.26 2 /3 1 1 1 0 0 3.18 Tazawa BS,1 Hembree 1 2 0 0 0 1 2.17 Kimbrel W,1-3 2 1 0 0 2 3 2.70 ab r h bi bb so avg San Francisco 3 1 0 0 1 1 .254 Span cf Panik 2b 4 1 1 3 0 1 .259 4 1 3 2 0 0 .243 Williamson rf Posey 1b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .277 0 0 0 0 0 0 .263 Crawford ss Brown c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .230 Pena ss 4 0 2 0 0 0 .471 3 1 1 0 1 2 .273 Parker lf 4 1 1 0 0 0 .222 Gillaspie 3b Casilla p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Suarez p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .111 Kontos p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 1 0 0 0 0 0 .265 Blanco ph Strickland p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Gearrin p 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.000 Belt ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .302 Totals 33 5 9 5 2 4 u Batting — 3B: Panik (5); HR: Williamson (2); S: Suarez (2); RBI: Panik 3 (36); Williamson 2 (4); GIDP: Posey LOB: 4. u Fielding — E: Suarez (1). ab r h bi bb so avg Pittsburgh 3 1 1 0 0 1 .278 Jaso 1b Harrison 2b 4 2 1 1 0 0 .287 Polanco cf 2 0 0 2 0 1 .298 4 0 0 0 0 1 .267 Kang 3b Joyce rf 2 0 0 0 2 1 .287 Mercer ss 4 0 1 0 0 1 .273 4 0 1 0 0 1 .250 Rodriguez lf Kratz c 3 0 0 0 0 2 .058 Freese ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .292 Niese p 2 0 1 0 0 1 .115 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Schugel p Marte ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .328 Caminero p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Totals 30 3 5 3 2 10 u Batting — 2B: Niese (1); 3B: Harrison (4); SF: Polanco 2 (5); RBI: Harrison (33); Polanco 2 (44) LOB: 5. u Fielding — DP: 1. Pitching ip h r er bb so era San Francisco 5 4 3 2 2 6 3.68 Suarez W,3-1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3.15 Kontos H,3 Strickland H,10 1 0 0 0 0 0 2.96 Gearrin H,12 1 0 0 0 0 1 2.23 1 1 0 0 0 3 2.48 Casilla S,16 Pittsburgh 6 7 5 5 2 4 4.93 Niese L,6-5 Schugel 1 0 0 0 0 0 4.08 Caminero 2 2 0 0 0 0 4.21 Albers pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. WP: Porcello. IBB: Ortiz (by Beck). HBP: Bradley Jr. (by Albers). Batters faced; pitchesstrikes: Shields 23; 99-59; Albers 3; 13-8; Jennings 2; 9-6; Beck 6; 24-9; Jones 5; 14-10; Robertson 5; 22-13; Purke 4; 20-10; Porcello 24; 84-51; Layne 5; 15-8; Tazawa 3; 6-4; Hembree 6; 18-14; Kimbrel 9; 32-21 uUmpires — HP: DeMuth; 1B: Hickox; 2B: Gibson; 3B: Estabrook uGame data — T: 4:25. Att: 37,790. Braves 4, Mets 3 New York Atlanta 011 010 000 — 3 000 101 02X — 4 ab r h bi bb so avg New York 5 1 1 0 0 0 .222 Granderson rf Cabrera ss 5 1 1 0 0 0 .268 3 0 1 0 2 0 .291 Loney 1b 2 0 2 2 1 0 .263 Walker 2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .228 K. Johnson 3b Flores ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .226 3 1 0 0 1 1 .224 Conforto lf d’Arnaud c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .170 4 0 2 1 0 1 .181 De Aza cf Harvey p 3 0 0 0 0 0 .100 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Gilmartin p Blevins p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Reed p Reynolds ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .276 33 3 7 3 5 2 Totals u Batting — 2B: De Aza (4); Cabrera (15); SF: Walker (1); RBI: De Aza (5); Walker 2 (30) LOB: 9. u Fielding — DP: 1. ab r h bi bb so avg Atlanta Peterson 2b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .259 4 0 1 0 0 0 .230 Inciarte cf Freeman 1b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .275 4 2 2 0 0 1 .247 Markakis rf Garcia 3b 4 1 1 2 0 1 .258 4 0 2 2 0 0 .203 Pierzynski c Aybar ss 4 0 2 0 0 1 .215 2 0 1 0 1 0 .333 Bonifacio lf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .037 Wisler p Alvarez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 1 0 1 0 0 0 .268 Francoeur ph J. Johnson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Vizcaino p 32 4 12 4 1 4 Totals u Batting — 2B: Pierzynski (6); Markakis (18); HR: Garcia (4); S: Peterson (1); RBI: Garcia 2 (16); Pierzynski 2 (14) LOB: 6. u Baserunning — CS: Aybar (4). ip h r er bb so era Pitching New York 6 8 2 2 0 3 4.64 Harvey 1 1 0 0 1 0 0.00 Gilmartin H,1 1 Blevins H,7 /3 1 1 1 0 1 1.80 2 Reed L,1-1 BS,1 /3 2 1 1 0 0 2.70 Atlanta 62/3 7 3 3 4 1 4.22 Wisler 1 Alvarez /3 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 J. Johnson W,1-4 1 0 0 0 0 1 4.94 1 0 0 0 1 0 2.01 Vizcaino S,8 Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Harvey 25; 91-63; Gilmartin 4; 15-9; Blevins 2; 8-6; Reed 3; 12-9; Wisler 31; 104-61; Alvarez 1; 4-4; J. Johnson 3; 14-9; Vizcaino 4; 16-7 uUmpires — HP: Baker; 1B: Timmons; 2B: Blakney; 3B: Everitt uGame data — T: 2:54. Att: 22,324. NL LEADERS BATTING Murphy, Washington Ramos, Washington Marte, Pittsburgh Ozuna, Miami Braun, Milwaukee LeMahieu, Colorado Prado, Miami RBI Arenado, Colorado Bruce, Cincinnati Rizzo, Chicago Kemp, San Diego Duvall, Cincinnati Bryant, Chicago Story, Colorado Murphy, Washington Lamb, Arizona Carpenter, St. Louis Goldschmidt, Arizona Myers, San Diego HITS Murphy, Washington Segura, Arizona .347 .330 .328 .322 .320 .318 .315 60 55 54 52 51 49 47 46 45 45 45 45 93 88 HBP: Jaso (by Suarez). Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Suarez 22; 102-59; Kontos 3; 16-9; Strickland 3; 12-9; Gearrin 3; 10-6; Casilla 4; 26-20; Niese 26; 110-74; Schugel 3; 15-12; Caminero 7; 19-11 uUmpires — HP: Gonzalez; 1B: Bucknor; 2B: Culbreth; 3B: Reynolds uGame data — T: 3:04. Att: 29,986. Tigers 5, Mariners 4 Seattle Detroit 000 121 000 0 — 4 020 200 001 1 — 5 Seattle ab r h bi bb so avg 4 0 0 0 1 0 .275 Marte ss 3 0 1 0 0 1 .258 Gutierrez lf S. Smith ph 2 0 0 0 0 0 .264 5 0 1 0 0 2 .296 Cano dh Cruz rf 4 2 2 2 0 1 .285 4 0 0 0 0 1 .282 Lee 1b Seager 3b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .261 3 1 1 1 1 1 .239 Iannetta c 4 1 1 1 0 0 .254 Martin cf O’Malley 2b 4 0 2 0 0 1 .204 37 4 8 4 2 8 Totals u Batting — 2B: O’Malley (3); Cano (18); HR: Martin (11); Cruz 2 (18); Iannetta (7); RBI: Martin (26); Cruz 2 (48); Iannetta (19); GIDP: Martin. Detroit ab r h bi bb so avg 4 0 1 0 1 0 .298 Kinsler 2b Iglesias ss 4 0 1 0 1 0 .258 5 0 0 0 0 2 .301 Cabrera dh Castellanos 3b 4 1 0 0 1 0 .300 3 1 1 1 1 0 .236 J. Upton lf 3 1 1 1 2 2 .321 Moya rf Maybin pr 0 1 0 0 0 0 .339 McCann c 4 1 1 2 0 3 .203 1 0 1 0 0 0 .327 V. Martinez ph Aviles pr 0 0 0 0 0 0 .226 Saltalamacchia 3 0 1 0 2 1 .192 1b Romine cf 5 0 1 0 0 3 .196 36 5 8 4 8 11 Totals u Batting — 2B: Moya (4); J. Upton (15); HR: McCann (5); RBI: Moya (6); McCann 2 (21); J. Upton (32). u Baserunning — SB: Romine (3); J. Upton (5). u Fielding — E: Ryan (1). ip h r er bb so era Pitching Seattle 0 0 0 0 0 7.71 Sampson 31/3 4 4 4 3 2 2.90 Nuno Diaz 12/3 2 0 0 1 4 1.86 1 1 0 0 0 0 10.07 Wilhelmsen Vincent 1 0 0 0 1 1 3.15 1 0 0 0 0 3 3.57 Benoit Cishek L,2-4 12/3 1 0 0 2 1 2.43 Detroit 5 6 3 3 0 5 4.50 Norris Rondon BS,1 12/3 1 1 1 1 1 1.93 11/3 0 0 0 0 1 4.11 Wilson 1 0 0 0 1 0 4.97 Greene 1 1 0 0 0 1 2.84 Ryan W,3-2 WP: Cishek. IBB: Saltalamacchia (by Cishek). HBP: J. Upton (by Diaz). Balks: Nuno. Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Sampson 0; 0-0; Nuno 16; 68-38; Diaz 9; 30-19; Wilhelmsen 4; 12-7; Vincent 4; 21-14; Benoit 3; 18-12; Cishek 10; 39-21; Norris 21; 79-52; Rondon 7; 25-14; Wilson 4; 16-9; Greene 3; 14-4; Ryan 4; 15-11 uUmpires — HP: Fletcher; 1B: West; 2B: Ripperger; 3B: Danley uGame data — T: 3:24. Att: 35,767. Ozuna, Miami Prado, Miami Gonzalez, Colorado Seager, Los Angeles Marte, Pittsburgh HOME RUNS Duvall, Cincinnati Arenado, Colorado Cespedes, New York Carter, Milwaukee Story, Colorado Bryant, Chicago Rizzo, Chicago PITCHING Cueto, San Francisco Arrieta, Chicago Kershaw, Los Angeles Greinke, Arizona Strasburg, Washington Lester, Chicago Fernandez, Miami Bumgarner, San Francisco Scherzer, Washington Samardzija, San Francisco ERA Kershaw, Los Angeles 87 85 85 83 83 21 21 18 18 18 17 17 11-1 11-2 11-1 10-3 10-0 9-3 9-3 8-3 8-4 8-4 1.57 WEDNESDAY’S LATE GAMES Dodgers 4, Nationals 3 Washington Los Angeles 020 000 010 — 3 101 000 002 — 4 ab r h bi bb so avg Washington 5 0 0 0 0 5 .236 Taylor cf 3 0 2 0 2 0 .258 Werth lf Harper rf 5 0 0 0 0 2 .252 Murphy 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .347 4 1 1 1 0 1 .330 Ramos c Zimmerman 1b 4 1 2 0 0 1 .231 Kelley p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Rendon 3b 3 0 1 0 1 0 .251 4 1 2 1 0 0 .225 Espinosa ss Ross p 3 0 2 1 0 0 .258 Perez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Rivero p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 1 0 1 0 0 0 .235 Robinson 1b 36 3 11 3 3 10 Totals u Batting — 2B: Espinosa (6); Ross (2); Werth (13); HR: Ramos (12); RBI: Espinosa (30); Ross (1); Ramos (39) LOB: 9. u Baserunning — CS: Rendon (4); Zimmerman (1). u Fielding — E: Taylor (1). ab r h bi bb so avg Los Angeles Utley 2b 3 1 1 0 0 0 .262 Hernandez ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .195 4 1 3 1 0 0 .289 Seager ss Turner 3b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .244 Gonzalez 1b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .267 4 0 0 0 0 2 .246 Thompson lf Pederson cf 3 0 0 0 1 2 .239 Grandal c 3 0 2 0 0 0 .192 Van Slyke pr 0 0 0 0 0 0 .167 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Liberatore p Baez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Hatcher p 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.000 Kendrick ph 1 1 1 0 0 0 .242 4 1 2 0 0 2 .244 Puig rf Urias p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 1 0 0 0 0 0 .100 Venable ph Fien p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 .191 Ellis ph Totals 33 4 9 1 1 8 u Batting — HR: Seager (16); S: Ellis (3); RBI: Seager (37) LOB: 6. Pitching ip h r er bb so era Washington Ross 61/3 7 2 2 1 5 3.11 2 Perez /3 0 0 0 0 1 4.74 2 /3 0 0 0 0 0 6.47 Rivero H,14 2 Kelley /3 2 2 0 0 2 2.39 Los Angeles Urias 5 6 2 2 1 6 4.33 Fien 2 2 0 0 1 2 5.40 2 /3 0 0 0 0 0 0.75 Liberatore Baez 1 3 1 1 1 2 3.44 1 /3 0 0 0 0 0 4.66 Hatcher W,5-3 WP: Urias. Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Ross 27; 100-63; Perez 2; 6-6; Rivero 2; 7-3; Kelley 4; 18-12; Urias 21; 94-57; Fien 8; 3223; Liberatore 2; 8-4; Baez 7; 36-25; Hatcher 1; 4-3 uUmpires — HP: Nelson; 1B: Lentz; 2B: Blaser; 3B: Eddings uGame data — T: 3:35. Att: 43,776. Twins 6, Phillies 5 Philadelphia Minnesota 011 030 000 — 5 110 030 10X — 6 Philadelphia ab r h bi bb so avg 5 1 1 0 0 0 .303 Herrera cf 4 2 3 2 0 0 .268 Blanco 2b Franco 3b 2 0 0 0 2 0 .237 4 0 1 1 0 1 .143 Howard dh Joseph 1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .229 4 1 1 1 0 1 .262 Rupp c Asche lf 3 0 1 0 0 0 .262 1 0 0 0 0 0 .241 Goeddel ph 4 0 1 0 0 1 .211 Galvis ss Bourjos rf 4 1 1 0 0 0 .230 35 5 9 4 2 5 Totals u Batting — 2B: Asche (6); HR: Rupp (6); Blanco (3); RBI: Rupp (16); Blanco 2 (14); Howard (22); GIDP: Joseph. u Baserunning — SB: Galvis (4). u Fielding — E: Morgan (1). ab r h bi bb so avg Minnesota Nunez 3b 5 0 1 1 0 0 .313 5 1 1 0 0 0 .277 Mauer 1b Grossman lf 5 1 2 0 0 2 .295 4 0 1 0 0 1 .244 Dozier 2b Plouffe dh 4 2 3 1 0 0 .254 4 1 2 2 0 1 .282 Escobar ss Kepler rf 3 0 1 2 0 1 .247 3 0 1 0 1 1 .266 Suzuki c 3 1 1 0 1 1 .193 Buxton cf Totals 36 6 13 6 2 7 u Batting — 2B: Dozier (13); Plouffe (9); 3B: Escobar (2); SF: Kepler (1); RBI: Escobar 2 (18); Nunez (26); Kepler 2 (12); Plouffe (23). u Baserunning — SB: Nunez (17); Kepler (2). u Fielding — E: Kepler (2). ip h r er bb so era Pitching Philadelphia 5 11 5 4 1 3 6.55 Morgan Bailey 1 0 0 0 0 1 4.39 1 2 1 1 1 2 4.41 D. Hernandez L,1-2 Neris 1 0 0 0 0 1 2.82 Minnesota 6 8 5 4 2 5 6.05 Gibson 1 1 0 0 0 0 4.12 Rogers W,3-0 2 Pressly H,4 /3 0 0 0 0 0 3.99 11/3 0 0 0 0 0 2.16 Abad S,1 IBB: Franco (by Gibson). Batters faced; pitches-strikes: Morgan 27; 96-58; Bailey 3; 8-6; D. Hernandez 6; 26-17; Neris 3; 11-8; Gibson 27; 98-64; Rogers 4; 15-11; Pressly 2; 3-2; Abad 4; 13-8 uUmpires — HP: C. Torres; 1B: Drake; 2B: Holbrook; 3B: Davis uGame data — T: 2:48. Att: 25,032. Arrieta, Chicago Bumgarner, San Francisco Cueto, San Francisco Syndergaard, New York Lester, Chicago Fernandez, Miami STRIKEOUTS Kershaw, Los Angeles Scherzer, Washington Fernandez, Miami Strasburg, Washington Bumgarner, San Francisco Syndergaard, New York Arrieta, Chicago Lester, Chicago Lackey, Chicago Cueto, San Francisco Pomeranz, San Diego SAVES Familia, New York Ramos, Miami Jansen, Los Angeles Melancon, Pittsburgh Jeffress, Milwaukee Gomez, Philadelphia 1.74 1.85 2.06 2.08 2.10 2.36 141 128 125 118 115 110 107 99 97 96 96 24 23 21 20 19 19 USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 SPORTS 11C E6 IN BRIEF DERICK E. HINGLE, USA TODAY SPORTS Carmelo Anthony has won two golds and a bronze in the Olympics. REPORT: ANTHONY TO PLAY FOR USA IN RIO OLYMPICS Carmelo Anthony of the New York Knicks has agreed to chase a fourth Olympic men’s basketball medal, while Toronto Raptors teammates Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan also will play for the USA, a person with knowledge of the details said Thursday. The USA was awaiting a decision from the Cleveland Cavaliers’ Kyrie Irving but had solidified 10 of its 12 roster spots, the person told the Associated Press, speaking on the condition of anonymity because the roster discussions were to remain private. The roster is to be finalized Monday. Agent Rich Paul told the AP on Thursday that the Cavs’ LeBron James had informed USA Basketball that he had withdrawn from consideration. The Oklahoma City Thunder’s Kevin Durant, Indiana Pacers’ Paul George, Golden State Warriors’ Draymond Green and Klay Thompson, Sacramento Kings’ DeMarcus Cousins, Chicago Bulls’ Jimmy Butler and Los Angeles Clippers’ DeAndre Jordan also are committed to play for the two-time defending champions in Rio de Janeiro. NCAA CHIEF COMPENSATED WITH NEARLY $1.9 MILLION NCAA President Mark Emmert was credited with nearly $1.9 million in total compensation during the 2014 calendar year, according to the association’s new federal tax return. However, in terms of money actually paid in 2014, the association’s most highly compensated employee — by far — was now-former chief operating officer Jim Isch, who retired from that role late that year. He received more than $2.7 million in 2014, including more than $1.6 million in retirement and other deferred compensation. At the time of his departure, he had worked for the NCAA for 16 years. His base pay for 2014 was just under $800,000, and he had more than $275,000 in other reportable compensation, according to the new return, which the NCAA provided Thursday in response to a request from USA TODAY Sports. PREDATORS OWNER FILES SUIT AGAINST TEAM FOR $250M A longstanding dispute between owners of the Nashville Predators spilled into state court Thursday when co-owner David Freeman filed a $250 million lawsuit against the hockey franchise and chairman Tom Cigarran for not informing him about financial statements and failing to honor loan guaranty fees he says are owed to him. Freeman’s lawsuit takes particular aim at Cigarran, who is accused of dishonest business practices. The lawsuit calls into question the stability of the Predators’ ownership group. On the ice, the team has been a consistent playoff contender. VARDY STAYS WITH LEICESTER Jamie Vardy agreed Thursday to stay with Leicester City and spearhead the team’s English Premier League title defense and first Champions League campaign. The club announced its top scorer agreed to extend his contract by four years, appearing to end Arsenal’s hopes of signing the striker. Vardy had yet to sign the deal, but Leicester’s statement was clear that he was committed to the team. UNITED DEFENDER BOSWELL SUSPENDED FOR GAME, FINED D.C. United defender Bobby Boswell was suspended for one game and fined an undisclosed amount by Major League Soccer on Thursday for a serious foul that endangered the safety of an opponent. Boswell was issued a yellow card in the 28th minute of United’s 0-0 tie at the Houston Dynamo on Saturday. THIEM JOINS TENNIS PLAYERS SITTING OUT RIO GAMES There is a growing group of absentees from Olympic tennis, including Dominic Thiem, a 19-year-old rising star from Aus- SOCCER PGA Tour Quicken Loans National At Congressional Country Club Bethesda, Md. Purse: $6.9 million Yardage: 7,569; Par 71 (36-35) First Round COPA AMERICA All Times ET SEMIFINALS Tuesday Jon Rahm..................................32-32—64 (-7) Jhonattan Vegas ....................34-31—65 (-6) Jamie Lovemark .....................32-34—66 (-5) Kyle Reifers...............................32-34—66 (-5) Camilo Villegas.......................32-34—66 (-5) Bill Haas ...................................32-34—66 (-5) Ernie Els ....................................32-34—66 (-5) Harold Varner III .....................34-32—66 (-5) Billy Hurley III ...........................33-33—66 (-5) Wesley Bryan...........................33-33—66 (-5) Si Woo Kim...............................34-33—67 (-4) Webb Simpson .......................33-34—67 (-4) Charley Hoffman....................34-33—67 (-4) Fabian Gomez ........................32-35—67 (-4) Steve Marino ...........................35-32—67 (-4) Sam Saunders.........................34-33—67 (-4) Marc Leishman........................33-34—67 (-4) Robert Garrigus......................33-34—67 (-4) Mark Hubbard ........................34-33—67 (-4) John Senden............................34-33—67 (-4) Smylie Kaufman......................34-33—67 (-4) Lucas Glover ............................34-34—68 (-3) Will MacKenzie .......................35-33—68 (-3) Michael Kim.............................34-34—68 (-3) Sean O’Hair .............................35-33—68 (-3) Scott Langley ...........................33-35—68 (-3) Chesson Hadley......................36-32—68 (-3) Luke List ....................................36-32—68 (-3) Martin Laird .............................36-32—68 (-3) Patrick Reed.............................33-35—68 (-3) Rickie Fowler............................35-33—68 (-3) Vijay Singh ...............................35-33—68 (-3) Blayne Barber .........................33-35—68 (-3) Erik Compton...........................34-34—68 (-3) Jason Kokrak ...........................34-35—69 (-2) Gary Woodland......................35-34—69 (-2) Chris Stroud .............................36-33—69 (-2) Brian Harman .........................34-35—69 (-2) Tony Finau ................................34-35—69 (-2) Kyle Stanley..............................35-34—69 (-2) Byeong Hun An .......................35-34—69 (-2) Tom Hoge.................................34-35—69 (-2) Francesco Molinari.................34-35—69 (-2) Tyrone Van Aswegen .............35-34—69 (-2) Scott Pinckney..........................35-34—69 (-2) Adam Hadwin.........................35-34—69 (-2) Jon Curran ...............................35-34—69 (-2) Nick Taylor ...............................35-34—69 (-2) Robert Streb.............................37-32—69 (-2) Justin Thomas .........................33-36—69 (-2) Jim Herman .............................36-33—69 (-2) Ryan Palmer ............................35-34—69 (-2) Andres Gonzales ....................37-32—69 (-2) Rob Oppenheim .....................35-34—69 (-2) Patton Kizzire ...........................33-37—70 (-1) David Hearn.............................36-34—70 (-1) Kevin Chappell ........................36-34—70 (-1) Keegan Bradley.......................37-33—70 (-1) Vaughn Taylor .........................35-35—70 (-1) Tim Wilkinson ..........................34-36—70 (-1) Arjun Atwal...............................35-35—70 (-1) Patrick Rodgers .......................36-34—70 (-1) Hudson Swafford....................35-35—70 (-1) Greg Owen ..............................36-34—70 (-1) Rod Pampling ..........................36-34—70 (-1) James Hahn .............................35-35—70 (-1) Daniel Summerhays ...............35-35—70 (-1) Cameron Smith........................33-37—70 (-1) Whee Kim.................................34-36—70 (-1) Dawie van der Walt ...............35-35—70 (-1) Bryson DeChambeau.............36-34—70 (-1) Roberto Castro..........................37-34—71 (E) Michael Thompson ..................36-35—71 (E) Sung Kang..................................37-34—71 (E) Shawn Stefani ...........................37-34—71 (E) Brendon de Jonge ....................37-34—71 (E) Luke Guthrie ..............................35-36—71 (E) Troy Merritt ................................37-34—71 (E) Kevin Streelman........................37-34—71 (E) Zac Blair .....................................35-36—71 (E) Anirban Lahiri ...........................38-33—71 (E) Derek Fathauer.........................36-35—71 (E) Tyler Aldridge .........................36-36—72 (+1) Wes Roach ..............................34-38—72 (+1) Hiroshi Iwata ..........................33-39—72 (+1) Chris Kirk..................................37-35—72 (+1) Matt Jones ..............................36-36—72 (+1) Ben Crane ...............................36-36—72 (+1) Russell Henley.........................37-35—72 (+1) Chez Reavie ............................36-36—72 (+1) Chad Collins............................35-37—72 (+1) Bronson Burgoon...................36-36—72 (+1) Steve Wheatcroft...................37-35—72 (+1) John Huh .................................36-36—72 (+1) Stuart Appleby .......................38-34—72 (+1) Ben Martin...............................37-35—72 (+1) Jeff Overton............................36-36—72 (+1) Morgan Hoffmann................36-36—72 (+1) Brett Stegmaier......................36-36—72 (+1) Jordan Niebrugge.................35-37—72 (+1) Brendan Steele.......................38-35—73 (+2) Brian Stuard ............................37-36—73 (+2) Scott Stallings .........................39-34—73 (+2) Davis Love III ...........................37-36—73 (+2) Jim Furyk..................................36-37—73 (+2) Cameron Tringale .................38-35—73 (+2) Aaron Baddeley .....................37-36—73 (+2) Seung-Yul Noh........................36-37—73 (+2) Rory Sabbatini........................39-35—74 (+3) Andrew Loupe.........................37-37—74 (+3) Spencer Levin ..........................37-37—74 (+3) Charles Howell III ...................38-36—74 (+3) Martin Piller .............................37-37—74 (+3) Carl Pettersson .......................37-38—75 (+4) George McNeill......................36-39—75 (+4) K.J. Choi....................................37-38—75 (+4) Jason Gore..............................38-38—76 (+5) Carlos Ortiz .............................43-33—76 (+5) Peter Malnati ..........................35-41—76 (+5) European Tour BMW International Open At Gut Larchenhof Golf Club Pulheim, Germany Purse: $2.72 million Yardage: 7,228; Par: 72 (3636) First Round Raphael Jacquelin, France ..........33-32—65 Oliver Fisher, England ...................33-33—66 Thorbjoern Olesen, Denmark .....36-31—67 Felipe Aguilar, Chile ......................34-33—67 Zander Lombard, South Africa ...34-33—67 Magnus A Carlsson, Sweden ......36-32—68 Roope Kakko, Finland ...................37-31—68 Pablo Larrazabal, Spain ..............33-35—68 Darren Fichardt, South Africa......34-34—68 Henrik Stenson, Sweden ..............33-35—68 Ross McGowan, England .............36-32—68 Bernd Wiesberger, Austria ..........35-33—68 Jeff Winther, Denmark .................35-33—68 Also Daniel Im, United States ...............34-36—70 David Lipsky, United States ..........36-34—70 Sergio Garcia, Spain .....................37-34—71 Jason Knutzon, United States......36-36—72 a-Lee McCoy, United States ..........37-37—74 NJIT — Named Kevin Driscoll men’s assistant basketball coach. WEST VIRGINIA — Announced sophomore WR David Sills is leaving and plans to transfer to junior college. Wednesday WNBA All Times ET EASTERN CONFERENCE Chile 2, Colombia 0 THIRD PLACE Saturday At Glendale, Ariz. New York Atlanta Washington Chicago Indiana Connecticut W 9 8 7 6 5 3 L 4 5 7 7 9 10 Pct GB .692 — .615 1 .500 21⁄2 .462 3 .357 41⁄2 .231 6 Switzerland vs. Poland, 9 a.m. Minnesota Los Angeles Dallas Phoenix Seattle San Antonio W 13 11 7 4 4 2 L 0 1 7 9 9 11 Pct GB 1.000 — .917 11⁄2 .500 61⁄2 .308 9 9 .308 .154 11 Wales vs. Northern Ireland, Noon Dallas 97, San Antonio 90, OT United States vs. Colombia, 8 p.m. CHAMPIONSHIP Sunday At East Rutherford, N.J. Argentina vs. Chile, 8 p.m. European Championship All Times ET SECOND ROUND Saturday At Saint-Etienne, France At Paris At Lens, France Croatia vs. Portugal, 3 p.m. Sunday At Lyon, France France vs. Ireland, 9 a.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE Thursday’s Game Friday’s Games Phoenix at Washington, 7 p.m. Chicago at New York, 7:30 p.m. Los Angeles at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Connecticut at Seattle, 10 p.m. Saturday’s Games At Lille, France Germany vs. Slovakia, Noon At Toulouse, France Hungary vs. Belgium, 3 p.m. Atlanta at San Antonio, 8 p.m. Indiana at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Monday At Saint-Denis, France COLLEGE BASEBALL At Nice, France NCAA College World Series At TD Ameritrade Park Omaha Omaha, Neb. All Times ET Double Elimination x-if necessary Wednesday Italy vs. Spain, Noon England vs. Iceland, 3 p.m. QUARTERFINALS June 30 At Marseille, France Saint-Etienne winner vs. Lens winner, 3 p.m. July 1 At Lille, France Paris winner vs. Toulouse winner, 3 p.m. Arizona 3, UC Santa Barbara 0, UCSB eliminated Lille winner vs. Saint-Denis winner, 3 p.m. Game 10 — Coastal Carolina 7, Texas Tech 5, Texas Tech eliminated July 2 At Bordeaux, France July 3 AT Saint-Denis, France Lyon winner vs. Nice winner, 3 p.m. SEMIFINALS July 6 At Lyon, France July 7 At Marseille, France Bordeaux winner vs. Paris winner, 3 p.m. FINAL July 10 At Saint-Denis, France Semifinal winners, 3 p.m. Major League Soccer All Times ET EASTERN CONFERENCE L 4 8 5 4 5 4 6 3 5 7 T Pts GF GA 5 26 27 22 1 22 27 22 6 21 25 31 5 20 22 20 4 19 15 15 7 19 21 26 5 17 14 16 8 17 25 23 6 15 18 21 5 11 14 20 WESTERN CONFERENCE Colorado FC Dallas Salt Lake Los Angeles Sporting KC Vancouver San Jose Portland Seattle Houston W 9 8 8 5 6 6 5 5 5 3 L 2 5 4 3 8 7 4 6 8 7 T Pts GF GA 5 32 19 11 4 28 24 24 3 27 27 24 7 22 27 17 3 21 16 18 3 21 24 27 6 21 18 18 5 20 25 27 1 16 13 17 5 14 20 22 Wednesday’s Games Philadelphia 4, Chicago 3 Real Salt Lake 2, New York 1 Colorado 0, Los Angeles 0, tie Saturday’s Games NY City FC at Seattle, 5 p.m. New England at D.C. United, 7 p.m. Vancouver at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. New York at Columbus, 7:30 p.m. Sporting KC at Montreal, 7:30 p.m. Toronto FC at Orlando City, 7:30 p.m. Real Salt Lake at FC Dallas, 8 p.m. Los Angeles at San Jose, 10 p.m. Sunday’s Games Houston at Portland, 6 p.m. DEALS BASEBALL Major League Baseball OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER OF BASEBALL — Suspended Seattle OF Herschel Powell 80 games after testing positive for dehydrochlormethyltestosterone, a performance-enhancing substance, in violation of Major League Baseball’s Joint Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. American League DETROIT TIGERS — Agreed to terms with RHP Matt Manning on a minor league contract. KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Announced INF Omar Infante cleared waivers, making him an unrestricted free agent. MINNESOTA TWINS — Signed OF Alex Kirilloff to a minor league contract and assigned him to Elizabethton (Appalachian). National League CHICAGO CUBS — Extended their player development contract with South Bend (MWL) through the 2020 season. FOOTBALL National Football League SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS — Signed CB Will Redmond to a four-year contract. HOCKEY National Hockey League ANAHEIM DUCKS — Signed F Michael Sgarbossa, F Joseph Cramarossa and D Andrew O’Brien to one-year contract extensions through the 2016-17 season. COLORADO AVALANCHE — Acquired F Rocco Grimaldi from Florida for G Reto Berra. COLLEGE Thursday Friday Game 11 — Oklahoma State (43-20) vs. Arizona (46-22), 3 p.m. Game 12 — TCU (49-16) vs. Coastal Carolina (51-17), 8 p.m. Saturday Marseille winner vs. Lille winner, 3 p.m. Philadelphia New York NY City FC Montreal Toronto FC N. England D.C. United Orlando City Columbus Chicago Two-time Australian Open champion Victoria Azarenka withdrew from Wimbledon because of a right knee injury, the same knee she hurt at the French Open. uMonica Puig became the first qualifier to reach the Eastbourne International semifinals in three years, though it took her nearly three hours to get there Thursday. Puig, from Puerto Rico, needed 2 hours, 43 minutes to overcome Kristina Mladenovic of France 7-6 (8-6), 4-6, 6-3 and become the first qualifier in the semis since American Jamie Hampton in 2013. From staff and wire reports Times Eastern. Programs live unless noted. Check local listings. Argentina 4, United States 0 W 7 7 5 5 5 4 4 3 3 2 INJURY FORCES AZARENKA OUT OF WIMBLEDON SPORTS ON TV FOR THE RECORD GOLF tria who is ranked No. 8, reached his first major semifinal at Roland Garros this month and beat Roger Federer on grass last week. Also staying away: the top American man, John Isner, who is ranked 17th; Australia’s two best players, No. 18 Nick Kyrgios and No. 19 Bernard Tomic; No. 21 Feliciano Lopez of Spain; and No. 24 Kevin Anderson of South Africa. CONFERENCE USA — Named Merton Hanks senior associate commissioner. x-Game 13 — Oklahoma State vs. Arizona, TBA x-Game 14 — TCU vs. Coastal Carolina, TBA If only one game is necessary, it will be played at night TENNIS ATP World Tour Aegon Open Nottingham In Nottingham, England Surface: Grass; Purse: $730,725 Singles — Quarterfinals: Andreas Seppi (7), Italy, def. Dudi Sela, Israel, 5-7, 6-4, 6-4; Pablo Cuevas (2), Uruguay, def. Marcos Baghdatis (9), Cyprus, 6-4, 4-6, 7-6 (8); Gilles Muller (8), Luxembourg, def. Alexandr Dolgopolov (4), Ukraine, 6-3, 6-4; Kevin Anderson (1), South Africa, leads Steve Johnson (6), United States, 6-7 (6), 7-5, 4-3, susp., darkness. WTA Aegon International Eastbourne In Eastbourne, England Surface: Grass; Purse: $711,778 Singles — Third round: Ekaterina Makarova, Russia, def. Andrea Petkovic, Germany, 3-6, 6-4, 6-0; Karolina Pliskova (10), Czech Republic, def. Misaki Doi, Japan, 6-2, 6-4. Singles — Quarterfinals: Monica Puig, Puerto Rico, def. Kristina Mladenovic, France, 7-6 (6), 4-6, 6-3. Wimbledon Seeds At The All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club London Monday-July 10 (Ranking in parentheses) Men 1. Novak Djokovic, Serbia (1) 2. Andy Murray, Britain (2) 3. Roger Federer, Switzerland (3) 4. Stan Wawrinka, Switzerland (5) 5. Kei Nishikori, Japan (6) 6. Milos Raonic, Canada (7) 7. Richard Gasquet, France (10) 8. Dominic Thiem, Austria (8) 9. Marin Cilic, Croatia (13) 10. Tomas Berdych, Czech Republic (9) 11. David Goffin, Belgium (11) 12. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, France (12) 13. David Ferrer, Spain (14) 14. Roberto Bautista Agut, Spain (15) 15. Nick Kyrgios, Australia (18) 16. Gilles Simon, France (20) 17. Gael Monfils, France (16) 18. John Isner, United States (17) 19. Bernard Tomic, Australia (19) 20. Kevin Anderson, South Africa (24) 21. Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany (22) 22. Feliciano Lopez, Spain (21) 23. Ivo Karlovic, Croatia (31) 24. Alexander Zverev, Germany (28) 25. Viktor Troicki, Serbia (27) 26. Benoit Paire, France (23) 27. Jack Sock, United States (26) 28. Sam Querrey, United States (33) 29. Pablo Cuevas, Uruguay (25) 30. Alexandr Dolgopolov, Ukraine (32) 31. Joao Sousa, Portugal (30) 32. Lucas Pouille, France (29) Women 1. Serena Williams, United States (1) 2. Garbine Muguruza, Spain (2) 3. Agnieszka Radwanska, Poland (3) 4. Angelique Kerber, Germany (4) 5. Simona Halep, Romania (5) 6. Victoria Azarenka, Belarus (6) 7. Roberta Vinci, Italy (7) 8. Belinda Bencic, Switzerland (8) 9. Venus Williams, United States (9) 10. Madison Keys, United States (10) 11. Petra Kvitova, Czech Republic (11) 12. Timea Bacsinszky, Switzerland (12) 13. Carla Suarez Navarro, Spain (13) 14. Svetlana Kuznetsova, Russia (14) 15. Sam Stosur, Australia (16) 16. Karolina Pliskova, Czech Republic (17) 17. Johanna Konta, Britain (18) 18. Elina Svitolina, Ukraine (19) 19. Sloane Stephens, United States (20) 20. Dominika Cibulkova, Slovakia (21) 21. Sara Errani, Italy (22) 22. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Russia (23) 23. Jelena Jankovic, Serbia (24) 24. Ana Ivanovic, Serbia (25) 25. Barbora Strycova, Czech Republic (26) 26. Irina-Camelia Begu, Romania (27) 27. Kiki Bertens, Netherlands (28) 28. CoCo Vandeweghe, United States (29) 29. Lucie Safarova, Czech Republic (30) 30. Daria Kasatkina, Russia (31) 31. Caroline Garcia, France (32) 32. Kristina Mladenovic, France (33) NBA Draft Selections SECOND ROUND (partial) 31. Boston, Deyonta Davis, f, Michigan State. 32. LA Lakers, Ivaca Zubac, c, Croatia. 33. LA Clippers, Cheick Diallo, c, Kansas. 34. Phoenix, Tyler Ullis, pg, Kentucky. 35. Boston, Rade Zagorac, sf, Serbia. 36. Milwaukee, Malcom Brogdan, sg, Virginia. 37. Houston, Chinanu Onuaku, c, Louisville. 38. Milwaukee, Patrick McCaw, sg, UNLV. 39. New Orleans, David Michineau, pg, France. 40. New Orleans, Diamond Stone, c, Maryland. 41. Orlando, Stephen Zimmerman, c, UNLV. 42. Utah, Isaiah Whitehead, sg, Seton Hall. 43. Houston, Zhou Qi, c, China. 44. Atlanta, Isaia Cordinier, sg, France. 45. Boston, Demetrius Jackson, pg, Notre Dame. 46. Dallas, A.J. Hammons, c, Purdue. 47. Orlando, Jake Layman, sf, Maryland. 48. Chicago, Paul Zipser, sf, Germany. 49. Detroit, Michael Gbinije, sf, Syracuse. 50 Indiana, Georges Niang, pf, Iowa State . Past No. 1 Selections 2016—Ben Simmons, F, Philadelphia (LSU) 2015—Karl-Anthony Towns, C, Minnesota (Kentucky) 2014—Andrew Wiggins, G, Cleveland (Kansas) 2013—Anthony Bennett, F, Cleveland (UNLV) 2012—Anthony Davis, F, New Orleans (Kentucky) 2011—Kyrie Irving, G, Cleveland (Duke) 2010—John Wall, G, Washington (Kentucky) 2009—Blake Griffin, F, Los Angeles Clippers (Oklahoma) 2008—Derrick Rose, G, Chicago (Memphis) 2007—Greg Oden, C, Portland (Ohio State) 2006—Andrea Bargnani, F, Toronto (Benetton Treviso, Italy) 2005—Andrew Bogut, C, Milwaukee (Utah) 2004—Dwight Howard, F, Orlando (Southwest Atlantic Christian Academy, Atlanta) 2003—LeBron James, G, Cleveland (St. Vincent-St. Mary HS) 2002—Yao Ming, C, Houston (China) 2001—Kwame Brown, F-C, Washington (Glynn Academy HS) 2000—Kenyon Martin, F, New Jersey (Cincinnati) 1999—Elton Brand, F, Chicago (Duke) 1998—Michael Olowokandi, C, Los Angeles Clippers (Pacific) 1997—Tim Duncan, C, San Antonio (Wake Forest) 1996—Allen Iverson, G, Philadelphia (Georgetown) 1995—Joe Smith, C, Golden State (Maryland) 1994—Glenn Robinson, F, Milwaukee (Purdue) 1993—Chris Webber, F, Orlando (Michigan) 1992—Shaquille O’Neal, C, Orlando (Louisiana State) 1991—Larry Johnson, F, Charlotte (UNLV) 1990—Derrick Coleman, F, New Jersey (Syracuse) 1989—Pervis Ellison, C, Sacramento (Louisville) 1988—Danny Manning, F, Los Angeles Clippers (Kansas) 1987—David Robinson, C, San Antonio (Navy) 1986—Brad Daugherty, C, Cleveland (North Carolina) 1985—Patrick Ewing, C, New York (Georgetown) 1984—Akeem Olajuwon, C, Houston (Houston) 1983—Ralph Sampson, C, Houston (Virginia) 1982—James Worthy, F, Los Angeles Lakers (North Carolina) 1981—Mark Aguirre, F, Dallas (DePaul) 1980—Joe Barry Carroll, C, Golden State (Purdue) 1979—Earvin Johnson, G, Los Angeles Lakers (Michigan St.) 1978—Mychal Thompson, C, Portland (Minnesota) 1977—Kent Benson, C, Milwaukee (Indiana) 1976—John Lucas, G, Houston (Maryland) 1975—David Thompson, G, Atlanta (North Carolina St.) 1974—Bill Walton, C, Portland (UCLA) 1973—Doug Collins, G, Philadelphia (Illinois St.) 1972—LaRue Martin, C, Portland (LoyolaChicago) 1971—Austin Carr, G, Cleveland (Notre Dame) 1970—Bob Lanier, C, Detroit (St. Bonaventure) 1969—Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, C, Milwaukee (UCLA) 1968—Elvin Hayes, C, Houston (Houston) 1967—Jimmy Walker, G, Detroit (Providence) 1966—Cazzie Russell, F, New York (Michigan) FOOTBALL Arena Football League All Times ET NATIONAL CONFERENCE Arizona Cleveland Los Angeles Portland W 9 6 5 1 L 3 6 6 10 T 0 0 0 0 Pct .750 .500 .455 .091 Orlando Philadelphia Jacksonville Tampa Bay W 10 9 5 1 L 2 3 6 10 T 0 0 0 0 Pct .833 .750 .455 .091 AMERICAN CONFERENCE Friday’s Game Tampa Bay at Orlando, 7:30 p.m. Saturday’s Game Cleveland at Jacksonville, 7 p.m. Sunday’s Game Arizona at Los Angeles, 6 p.m. Monday’s Game Philadelphia at Portland, 10 p.m. FRIDAY ARENA FOOTBALL LEAGUE: Tampa Bay at Orlando (CBS Sports Network, 7:30 p.m.) AUTO RACING: Verizon IndyCar Series, Kohler Grand Prix, practice, in Elkhart Lake, Wis. (NBC Sports Network, noon); NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Toyota/Save Mart 350, practice, in Sonoma, Calif. (Fox Sports 1, 3 p.m. and 6:30 p.m.) CANADIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE: Montreal at Winnipeg (ESPN2, 8:30 p.m.) COLLEGE BASEBALL: NCAA Division I, College World Series, in Omaha, Game 11, Arizona vs. Oklahoma State (ESPN2, 3 p.m.); Game 12, TCU vs. Coastal Carolina (ESPN, 8 p.m.) DRAG RACING: NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series, Summit Racing Equipment Nationals, qualifying, in Norwalk, Ohio (Fox Sports 1, 8 p.m., same-day tape) GOLF: European PGA Tour, BMW International Open, second round, in Pulheim, Germany (Golf Channel, 9:30 a.m.); PGA Tour Champions, American Family Insurance Championship, first round, in Madison, Wis. (Golf Channel, 12:30 p.m.); PGA Tour, Quicken Loans National, second round, in Bethesda, Md. (Golf Channel, 3:30 p.m.); LPGA, Walmart NW Arkansas Championship, first round, in Rogers, Ark. (Golf Channel, 6:30 p.m.) GYMNASTICS: P&G Championships (NBC, 9 p.m.) MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL: Los Angeles Dodgers at Pittsburgh or Chicago Cubs at Miami (MLB Network, 7 p.m.) MIXED MARTIAL ARTS: Bellator 157, 215-pound catchweight, Quinton “Rampage” Jackson vs. Satoshi Ishii, in St. Louis (Spike, 8 p.m.) NHL: Draft, in Buffalo (NBC Sports Network, 7 p.m.) TENNIS: Aegon International Eastbourne (Tennis Channel, 8 a.m.) SATURDAY ARENA FOOTBALL LEAGUE: Cleveland at Jacksonville (ESPN2, 7 p.m.) AUTO RACING: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Drivin’ for Linemen 200, in Madison, Ill. (practice, Fox Sports 1, 11:30 a.m.; qualifying, Fox Sports 2, 5:30 p.m.; race, Fox Sports 1, 8:30 p.m.); NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Toyota/Save Mart 350, qualifying, in Sonoma, Calif. (Fox Sports 1, 2 p.m.); Verizon IndyCar Series, Kohler Grand Prix, qualifying (NBC Sports Network, 5:30 p.m., sameday tape) BOXING: Premier Champions, Anthony Joshua vs. Dominic Breazeale, for Joshua’s IBF heavyweight title; George Groves vs. Martin Murray, WBA super middleweight eliminator, in London (Showtime, 5:15 p.m.); Premier Champions, Keith Thurman vs. Shawn Porter, for Thurman’s WBA welterweight title; Jesus Cuellar vs. Abner Mares, for Cuellar’s WBA featherweight title, in New York (CBS, 9 p.m.); Premier Champions, Justin DeLoach vs. Junior Castillo, junior middleweights, in San Antonio (NBC Sports Network, 11 p.m.) CANADIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE: Calgary at British Columbia (ESPN2, 10 p.m.) COLLEGE BASEBALL: NCAA Division I, College World Series, Game 13, if necessary (ESPN2, 3 p.m.); Game 14, if necessary (ESPN, 8 p.m.) DIVING: U.S. Olympic trials, in Indianapolis (NBC, men’s springboard final, 4:30 p.m.; women’s platform final, 8 p.m.) DRAG RACING: NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series, Summit Racing Equipment Nationals, qualifying (Fox Sports 2, 11 p.m., same-day tape) GOLF: European PGA Tour, BMW International Open, third round (Golf Channel, 7:30 a.m.); PGA Tour, Quicken Loans National, third round (Golf Channel, 1 p.m.; CBS, 3 p.m.); PGA Tour Champions, American Family Insurance Championship, second round (Golf Channel, 3 p.m.); LPGA, Walmart NW Arkansas Championship, second round (Golf Channel, 5:30 p.m.) GYMNASTICS: U.S. Olympic men’s trials, in St. Louis (NBC, 9 p.m.) HORSE RACING: Breeders’ Cup Challenge Series, The Gold Cup, at Santa Anita, in Arcadia, Calif. (NBC Sports Network, 8 p.m.) MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL: Minnesota at New York Yankees or Tampa Bay at Baltimore (MLB Network, 1 p.m.); San Diego at Cincinnati (Fox Sports 1, 4 p.m.); Houston at Kansas City, New York Mets at Atlanta or Los Angeles Dodgers at Pittsburgh (Fox, 7 p.m.); Philadelphia at San Francisco or St. Louis at Seattle (MLB Network, 10 p.m.) MOTOR SPORTS: AMA Motocross Series, Tennessee National, in Blountville (NBC Sports Network, 4:30 p.m.) SOCCER: UEFA, European Championship, Round of 16, Switzerland vs. Poland, in Saint-Etienne, France (ESPN, 8:30 a.m.); Wales vs. Northern Ireland, in Paris (ESPN, 11:30 a.m.); Croatia vs. Portugal, in Lens, France (ESPN, 2:30 p.m.); MLS, New York City at Seattle (ESPN, 5 p.m.); Copa America Centenario, third-place match, USA vs. Colombia, in Glendale, Ariz. (Fox Sports 1, 8 p.m.) TENNIS: Aegon International Eastbourne (Tennis Channel, 8:30 a.m.) VOLLEYBALL: FIVB World League, men, USA vs. Belgium, in Rome (NBC Sports Network, 9 p.m., tape delay) WNBA: Indiana at Dallas (NBA TV, 8:30 p.m.) SUNDAY AUTO RACING: Verizon IndyCar Series, Kohler Grand Prix (NBC Sports Network, 1 p.m.); NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Toyota/Save Mart 350 (Fox Sports 1, 3 p.m.); Indy Lights Series, Road America, in Elkhart Lake, Wis. (NBC Sports Network, 3:30 p.m., same-day tape) DIVING: U.S. Olympic trials, in Indianapolis (NBC, women’s springboard final, 4:30 p.m.; men’s platform final, 7 p.m.) DRAG RACING: NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series, Summit Racing Equipment Nationals, finals (Fox Sports 1, midnight, sameday tape) GOLF: European PGA Tour, BMW International Open, final round (Golf Channel, 6:30 a.m.); PGA Tour, Quicken Loans National, final round (Golf Channel, 1 p.m.; CBS, 3 p.m.); PGA Tour Champions, American Family Insurance Championship, final round (Golf Channel, 3 p.m.); LPGA, Walmart NW Arkansas Championship, final round (Golf Channel, 5:30 p.m.) GYMNASTICS: P&G Championships (NBC, 9 p.m.) MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL: Chicago Cubs at Miami or Cleveland at Detroit (MLB Network, 1 p.m.); Los Angeles Dodgers at Pittsburgh (ESPN, 8 p.m.) SOCCER: UEFA, European Championship, Round of 16, France vs. Ireland, in Lyon, France (ESPN, 8:30 a.m.); Germany vs. Slovakia, in Lille, France (ESPN, 11:30 a.m.); Hungary vs. Belgium, in Toulouse, France (ESPN, 2:30 p.m.); MLS, Houston at Portland (ESPN2, 6 p.m.); Copa America Centenario, final, Argentina vs. Chile, in East Rutherford, N.J. (Fox Sports 1, 8 p.m.) SWIMMING: U.S. Olympic trials, men’s 400 freestyle and men’s and women’s 400 individual medley, in Omaha (qualifying heats, NBC Sports Network, 6 p.m.; finals, NBC, 8 p.m.) WNBA: Phoenix at New York (NBA TV, 3 p.m.); Connecticut at Los Angeles (NBA TV, 5 p.m.) VOLLEYBALL: Beach, AVP Tour, San Francisco Open (NBC, 3 p.m.) 12C SPORTS USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 SECTION D FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 HOSTELS HAVE COME A LONG WAY, 3D FREEHAND MIAMI BY ADRIAN GAUT LIFELINE MOVIES MAKING WAVES The Kennedy Center has announced its latest batch of annual honorees. Artists include the rock band Eagles, actor Al Pacino, gospel and blues singer PACINO BY DAN Mavis Staples, MACMEDAN, USA TODAY musician James Taylor and Argentine pianist Martha Argerich. The Kennedy Center Honors air on CBS Dec. 27 at 9 p.m. ET/PT. HOW WAS YOUR DAY? GOOD DAY LED ZEPPELIN After less than one day of deliberation, a Los Angeles jury has decided the band Led Zeppelin did not steal the opening riff to its classic anthem ‘Stairway to Heaven.’ Band members John Paul Jones, Robert Plant and Jimmy Page all testified. ANDY RAIN, EPA STYLE STAR Chloë Grace Moretz mixed ethereal with edgy for the Coach And Friends of the High Line Summer Party Wednesday in New York. The actress, showing off a Coach purse, paired a sheer floral top with a high-waisted and chainembellished short leather skirt from Coach’s 1941 Resort 2017 line. NEILSON BARNARD, GETTY IMAGES IT’S YOUR BIRTHDAY WHO’S CELEBRATING TODAY? Blake Lively Just another ‘predator’ in ‘The Shallows’ Patrick Ryan USA TODAY NEW YORK “You have to take a bite of this.” Blake Lively hands over a spoon and nudges her bowl of affogato, a creamy, espresso-topped dessert. “Come on, right?” she grins. “Now you see why I’ll have to take bites between answers, so give me really long questions.” Sitting in the balmy courtyard of the Greenwich Hotel in Tribeca, the star is ravenous yet surprisingly chirpy, considering that not even 48 hours earlier, she was flying back from Bulgaria with husband Ryan Reynolds, who just wrapped shooting the action comedy The Hitman’s Bodyguard. Arriving this afternoon with their curly-haired, 18-monthold daughter, James, in tow, Lively stifles the occasional yawn as she describes her most exhausting role yet in The Shallows (in theaters Friday). Set along a secluded beach semi-ironically called Paradise, Shallows centers on student medical Nancy (Lively), who goes out for a solo surf after her travel companion bails. But disaster strikes when her board flips and she’s attacked by a bloodthirsty great white shark 200 yards from shore. Bleeding out and taking refuge on a jagged rock in the middle of the ocean, Nancy battles nature’s elements as she desperately seeks help. The actress, who last headlined period romance The Age of Adaline in 2015, was drawn to the high-stakes drama facing Shallows’ protagonist. “It’s just two predators trying to survive, and to quote Harry Potter, neither can live while the other survives,” says Lively, 28. She faces down killer sharks — and pecking seagulls — in her survival thriller ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY COURTESY OF COLUMBIA PICTURES Nancy’s (Lively) surf outing turns into a fight for her life in The Shallows, out Friday. Also, isolation stories are often “smaller movies, but (it’s exciting) to be able to do that on a scale that’s a popcorn movie. I got to have a strong acting challenge in a movie that people actually might see, just because they threw a bikini into it.” She likens the shoot to training for a marathon, which required extensive swimming, surfing and gym time just eight months after giving birth. (She’s now pregnant with the couple’s second child.) While parts of Shallows were filmed off Australia’s Lord Howe Island, the majority was shot in giant wave pools, where she would film underwater with divers who were replaced by a colossal CGI shark. “She was really reacting to nothing — what you see in the movie is an environment that doesn’t exist,” says director Jaume Collet-Serra. “It speaks to what a great actress she is and how much she elevated this movie.” The former Gossip Girl walked away with only minor injuries: cuts caused by her pecking seagull co-star, which “loved the taste of my prosthetic wound,” as well as some fake bruising that refused to wash off. “On the weekends, I’d walk around in shorts and my husband is getting dirty looks,” Lively says. “Whether they think he did something to me or allowed something to happen to me,” she wasn’t sure. But “you always get these fears like, ‘Oh, great, people are going to think moviemaking is real life.’ ” She typically didn’t bring her daughter to set. “Hearing me in distress really upset her,” Lively says. But the family still managed to get some R&R Down Under. “We went on a glass boat to see turtles,” she says. James “was hanging out on the beach every day while I was shooting. Now, she would see all my cuts and go ‘Ouchy, Mumma,’ but she was too young then to recognize ‘ouchy.’ ” MOVIES ‘Independence Day’ aims to decimate box office again GETTY IMAGES; FILMMAGIC; WIREIMAGE Solange Knowles is 30. Minka Kelly is 36. Mindy Kaling is 37. Compiled by Mary Cadden USA SNAPSHOTS© ‘Orange’ the new Great White Way? At least 22 “Orange Is the New Black” stars have done Broadway. NOTE Does not include Taylor Schilling, Selenis Leyva or Samira Wiley, who have performed off-Broadway. SOURCE Netflix / Lionsgate TERRY BYRNE AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY With ‘Resurgence,’ a 20-year gap puts brand to the test Brian Truitt @briantruitt USA TODAY Does the 20-year absence of alien attacks make moviegoers’ hearts grow fonder? Independence Day: Resurgence is bound to test that theory. In a summer of sequels that haven’t exactly been tearing up the box office — from the lukewarm reception for X-Men: Apocalypse (which has earned $147.6 million to date) to the tanking of Alice Through the Looking Glass ($71.3 million) — hopes are hanging on the few that have kept their fans waiting. So far, so good: Finding Dory rang up a $135 million debut last weekend, the biggest ever for an animated film, 13 years removed from Finding Nemo’s seas. Next month offers the first Ghostbusters film in 27 years, with a fresh new female cast and social media buzz on its side. This weekend, all eyes are on the return of those pesky space 20TH CENTURY FOX Earth is back under siege in Independence Day: Resurgence. invaders from Independence Day, the top movie of 1996, “because it is such a big brand,” says comScore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabedian. The trend toward long-gestating follow-ups is “all about studios going into their vault and seeing what could be a moneymaker if updated/rebooted/reintroduced to the marketplace,” he says. It certainly worked for last December’s Star Wars: The Force Awakens, the all-time domestic box office champ ($936.7 million), released a decade after the last Star Wars film. Resurgence (in theaters Friday) has a harder row to hoe: While its special-ef- fects destruction was groundbreaking two decades ago, it isn’t as much of a game-changer in 2016, and the movie could have difficulty defeating the second weekend of Dory. “It wrote the script for the next alien invasion movie, what went on to become the ‘disaster porn’ genre,” says Erik Davis, managing editor for Fandango.com and Movies.com. “I definitely think there’s a curiosity out there, and more people than maybe we would think will show up opening weekend to see it.” Davis adds that the sequel’s success depends on whether the franchise takes a next step. Plus, its human personalities need to be as memorable as its effects: “One thing that made the first Independence Day a special movie was, (given) how dorky and goofy as some of the lines were, you were really invested in the characters.” Jeff Goldblum, Bill Pullman and Vivica A. Fox all return to a cast that adds Liam Hemsworth and Maika Monroe to the sci-fi spectacle. But missing is Will Smith, who was one of the most popular actors in the world when Independence Day topped the global box office. “We’re always talking about how star power doesn’t matter anymore and it’s all about the concept,” Dergarabedian says. “This kind of puts that to the test.” The most glaring negative of the Independence Day franchise is that, like other Roland Emmerich big-budget action films such as The Day After Tomorrow and 2012, it hasn’t aged well, says Jeff Bock, senior box office analyst for Exhibitor Relations. “Simply put, they are popcorn fodder,” he says. “Overseas, however, this will be a sure-fire hit — big-budget spectacles with lots of bells and whistles still play well internationally.” 2D LIFE USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 TELEVISION Shark Week stirs up its yearly feeding frenzy Lorena Blas @byLorenaBlas USA TODAY Instead of creating chilling scenes for the big screen, horror filmmaker Eli Roth is trying to get TV viewers to warm up to sharks. Roth returns for his second year hosting Discovery’s late-night talk show Shark After Dark (Sunday through Thursday, 11 ET/PT). Shark Week, which marks its 28th anniversary, is the cable network’s biggest event, and it’s “considered one of the greatest inspirations of cable, and probably television history, because it fits so well with Discovery,” says TV historian Tim Brooks. “It’s just a perfect match. And of course, it’s got violence. It’s got jaws. And it fits the summer, too.” Roth, who’s directing a Death Wish remake and is known for horror flicks such as Hostel and Cabin Fever, has a guest roster filled with researchers, conservationists and celebrities including Chelsea Handler and Kevin Hart. Fans also can expect to see experts such as diver Ashlan Gorse Cousteau and filmmaker Andy Casagrande, who venture with Roth to ice baths, wearing wetsuits, in Thursday’s installment. Don’t feel too sorry for him. In preparation for Shark Week, “Discovery sent me diving with (sharks), and it was truly a lifechanging experience,” Roth says. “I got in the water with about 50 or 75 sharks. They were everywhere. I was so happy, the happiest I’ve been in my life.” Roth can’t contain his excitement. “I saw blacktips, silvertips,” he says, adding there were “lemon sharks, which look like Walkers from The Walking Dead. They have yellow eyes and a big smile like the Finding Nemo version. ... But the most amazing moment was when I saw two different tiger sharks.” He didn’t panic. “I was very DISCOVERY MARK DANIELS, DISCOVERY Filmmaker Joe Romeiro and actor Kevin Hart join Shark After Dark host Eli Roth. Roth’s talk show runs through Shark Week. calm. I was lying flat, but she circled. She just kept checking me out. She was probably down there with us about 15 or 20 minutes. It looked like a submarine circling. She could have bit me in half if she wanted to. It was just this giant eye — this huge plate-sized eye — that just looks right at you.” Highlights of Discovery’s Shark Week (all 9 ET/PT): Sunday: Return of the Monster Mako. A team tries to document a live-predation of a thousandpound mako shark. Monday: Jaws of the Deep. A hunt for Deep Blue, the world’s largest great white shark. Tuesday: Wrath of a Great White Serial Killer. Why are great white sharks traveling as far north as the Pacific Northwest? Wednesday: Deadliest Shark. Researchers look to see if whitetip sharks deserve the reputation as the “world’s deadliest.” Thursday: Nuclear Sharks. Grandson to Jacques Cousteau and his wife travel to the Bikini Atoll to study the reef sharks. July 1: Shark Bait. Great whites hunt seals in Cape Cod. July 2: Sharksanity. The closest calls, biggest bites and greatest gadgets of Shark Week 2016. July 3: The Killing Games. Great whites snatch seals from the shore in South Australia. LIFE 3D USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 TRAVEL DISPATCHES DAVID WALLACE, THE REPUBLIC Passengers to Phoenix Sky Harbor can now choose Uber and Lyft. Phoenix hails Uber, Lyft Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport, the nation’s 10thbusiest airport by passenger boardings, on June 18 became the latest major airport to allow Uber and Lyft to pick up passengers. Service to downtown Phoenix runs as low as $9. Tech-savvy travelers love the ride-hailing services because they can order a ride from an app on their smartphone or tablet after they land, meet the driver outside and bill the fare to their account. The fares are generally are cheaper than taxi or sedan services. Here’s a rundown of airport ride-hailing options at five major airports. LOS ANGELES INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT Airport surcharge: $4 per pickup and drop-off. Estimated fare to downtown Los Angeles: $23-$33. CHICAGO O’HARE INTERNATIONAL/ MIDWAY INTERNATIONAL Freehand has both shared and private rooms. The Miami property also offers complimentary breakfast and has a pool. Hostel grows up: ‘Poshtels’ make their way to the USA Airport surcharge: $5.50 per pickup and drop-off. Estimated fare to Millennium Park: $28-$35 from O’Hare with Uber, $28 with Lyft. $23-$30 from Midway with Uber, $23 with Lyft. Posh hostels offer amenities, are still a cheaper option NEW YORK LAGUARDIA/ JFK INTERNATIONAL Nancy Trejos Fee: None. Unlike at most major airports, New York does not have a separate agreement with the services. They register like cabs and limos. Estimated fare to midtown Manhattan: $30-$39 from LaGuardia with Uber, $27 with Lyft. $49-$64 from JFK with Uber, $48 with Lyft. Dawn Gilbertson LUKAS SCHULZE, EPA The Queen Mary 2 refurbishment includes art, kennels and more. QM2 ready for her close-up HAMBURG The iconic Queen Mary 2 resumed trans-Atlantic service Tuesday after a 23-day makeover at the Blohm + Voss shipyard in Germany. After 12 years of summer crossings and long winter voyages chalking up 1.78 million miles, the Queen Mary 2 was primed for a stem-to-stern tune-up. Billed as a “remastering,” the overhaul was the famed Cunard ocean liner’s most extensive refurbishment to date, with about 6,500 pieces of new furniture, 4,000 new works of art and round-the-clock efforts of more than 5,200 workers. It also included 438,091 square feet of carpeting, some of it sporting patterns replicated from the Queen Mary 2’s 1936-built namesake, now preserved as a hotel and attraction in Long Beach, Calif. As part of the refurbishment, the ship has more solo cabins, offering savings to passengers who have had to pay a supplement to occupy a standard cabin. Even the ship’s four-legged passengers are benefiting from the upgrading, with the addition of 10 kennels for a total of 22. Priced per crossing at $1,000 for a lower and $800 for an upper, pet accommodations often are booked up to a year in advance. Peter Knego ADRIAN GAUT Special for USA TODAY For many people, the word “hostel” evokes images of grungy backpackers, uncomfortable beds, shared bathrooms and snack machines. But that’s a hostel for another era. These days, hostels are more like boutique hotels at a bargain price. The upscale-hostel trend was born in Europe. To attract younger travelers, hoteliers started outfitting hostels with bars, coffee counters, game rooms and fullservice restaurants. This type of accommodation has become so common that it has earned its own name: “poshtel,” short for posh hostel. The idea has made its way across the Atlantic with the introduction of such brands as Freehand and Generator. Rates for shared rooms can be as low as $25 a night. Many offer privateroom alternatives, as well as free Wi-Fi, breakfast and activities to promote interaction among guests. Some even have swimming pools. “Over the past 20 years, we’ve seen a dramatic increase in the variety of the look and feel of hostels,” says Netanya Trimboli, director of communications and public relations for Hostelling International USA, a non-profit member organization. “Just as the hotel market saw the introduction of lifestyle boutique hotels 25 or so years ago, we’re now seeing the same in the hostel sector.” Trimboli says there are more than 360 hostels in the USA. According to the global organization Hostelling International, there are more than 4,000 hostels worldwide. The demographics of a poshtel vary, but for the most part they attract Millennials, those in their 20s and early 30s who are highly coveted by the hotel industry because of their increasing purchasing power and desire to travel. “We find Millennials are especially drawn to our emphasis on social interaction among people of diverse backgrounds,” Trimboli says. Here’s a look at a few poshtels that are upping their game in the USA and abroad: GENERATOR HOSTELS Generator Amsterdam has a restaurant and two bars. Generator Miami opens next year. ities to help them compete with other poshtels. The Boston and San Francisco properties offer each guest a “bed oasis” featuring a private charging station, lamp and shelf. At HI Boston and HI Richmond, guests can charge devices in the protection of a private locker next to the bed. HI Boston has a washer and dryer that will text guests when done. Beds at HI NYC have privacy curtains. HI San Diego plays host to a quarterly art show. And HI San Francisco Downtown has a movie room. Dorm beds range from $20 to 49. FREEHAND MIAMI/CHICAGO The company bills its properties as a “hotel and hostel,” with shared and private rooms available. The Freehand Miami offers a complimentary breakfast that includes Cuban pastries and locally roasted Panther Coffee. It also has a pool and an awardwinning cocktail bar called Broken Shaker. The Freehand Chicago is housed in a classic 1970 building in the River North neighborhood. An event coordinator plans outings and activities for guests. The company teamed with design firm Roman and Williams to give the property an upscale yet comfortable look. Rates for shared rooms start at about $40 a night. “People are looking for good value and the shared alternative is a way for people to travel and spend money on food and experiences,” rather than accommodations, says Andrew Zobler, CEO of the Sydell Group, which developed the Freehand. THE BIVVY, BRECKENRIDGE, COLO. This ski hostel has an outdoor hot tub overlooking the Ten Mile Mountain Range. A hot breakfast is included. All rooms, including shared ones, have private bathrooms. Wi-Fi is free. Draft beers HI USA This non-profit organization has 54 hostels in the USA, in cities such as New York, Boston and San Francisco. Trimboli says many have added amenities such as free breakfast, Wi-Fi and regularly scheduled tours and activ- FREEHAND CHICAGO Unlike most hostels, the Freehand Chicago in the city’s River North neighborhood has an upscale alternative: a penthouse. and wine are served each night. Guests pay as little as $29 a night depending on the season. Hotel manager Balazs Jarai says skiing can be an expensive hobby, and the Bivvy gives travelers, especially younger ones, the opportunity to indulge in it. “There really wasn’t an affordable way to do it,” he says. “You were looking at peak season, a $200 hotel room. Or you’d have to get up at 5 a.m. for one day of skiing. We’re basically aiming to offer a little bit more and still have the hostel atmosphere.” GENERATOR AMSTERDAM This global hostel chain is quickly expanding, with Rome and Stockholm locations opening next month and a Miami property scheduled to open next year. The recently opened Generator Amsterdam offers amenities such as a restaurant and two bars. Private rooms are spacious, with some offering views of a park across the street. Shared rooms have private bathrooms. Each bunk has outlets for charging mobile devices. Starting nightly rates for shared rooms are about $17, for private rooms about $73 and for luxury suites about $113. Fredrik Korallus, chief executive officer of Generator Hostels, says poshtels are increasingly competing with lifestyle and boutique hotels, such as the trendy Ace and Hoxton. The food and beverage experience also has become increasingly important at upscale hostels. The hotel offers a menu with locally sourced ingredients and craft beers. “For the first time in my career, I’m not selling sleep. I’m not selling beds,” Korallus says. “I’m selling experiences. The bed and the sleep become secondary.” 4D LIFE USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 MOVIES TRAVEL No surprise here: China’s Disneyland is more Study finds most than Main Street, Shanghai film critics are men It matters when reviewers cover only what speaks to them film,” she says. But, she says, “Hollywood’s troubling diversity problem is unquestionably paralleled by a similar lack of diversity on writing and editorial staffs. It takes greatAndrea Mandell er effort to champion smaller @andreamandell films of any kind — and when USA TODAY critics do, they tend to champion the smaller films that speak to A new study finds that most them personally.” film critics are men — mirroring None of this is new news, as the makeup of the industry they Meryl Streep pointed out last fall. critique. “The word isn’t ‘disheartening,’ Women make up just 27% of it’s ‘infuriating,’ ” Streep told rethose listed as top critics on Rot- porters at a media conference for tenTomatoes.com according to a Suffragette in London last year, new study by San Diego State speaking to the gender imbalance University’s Center for the Study found on Rotten Tomatoes and in of Women in Television and Film. groups such as the New York (USA TODAY’s lead film critic, Film Critics Circle, which lists 26 Brian Truitt, took over for long- male critics and six female critics time critic Claudia Puig in 2015.) on its website. “I submit to you The study fothat men and cused on the 247 women are not critics who work the same. They different for the largest U.S. like newspapers, trade things. If the publications, genTomatometer is eral-interest magslided so comazines and webpletely to one set sites. of tastes, that So why does drives box office this matter? in the U.S., “A larger porabsolutely.” tion of the reThe Los Angeviews written by les Film Critics men are about Association shows films with male 10 females to 45 protagonists,” males on its webMICHAEL KAPPELER, EPA Lauzen says. The site. The National study found 34% Meryl Streep says the Society of Film of reviews written small number of female Critics has 43 by women fea- critics is “infuriating.” men and 11 tured female prowomen. tagonists, while only 24% of It’s notable that more women reviews written by men did. are members of the film critics It’s a paramount issue for inde- society today “than ever in our 50 pendent films. While big studio years,” says executive director Liz releases typically are widely re- Weis, but she adds the decline in viewed, modest indies “really rely print journalism is no help. “Film upon the critical chatter to at- criticism is ebbing as a field in tract moviegoers,” Lauzen says. which you can make a living withAnd when those smaller films out doing something else as well.” star women in lead roles, they can But it’s not all bad news. “The get overlooked. good news is that (female critics Jen Yamato, entertainment re- are) up five percentage points porter for The Daily Beast, says from when I conducted the study she has no preference between in 2013,” Lauzen says. “We’re films with male and female leads. moving in the right direction. But “I love experiencing all kinds of that’s still a really low number.” With great fanfare, Robert Iger dedicated Shanghai Disney Resort and presided over its official opening June 16. The sixth theme park resort in the company’s portfolio, Shanghai Disney is the first in mainland China. The nearly 1,000-acre property includes a decidedly unique version of a Disneyland-style park along with two hotels, a nature park, and a shopping and dining district. During his 11-year tenure as CEO of Disney, Iger has engineered the acquisition of content titans Pixar, Marvel and Lucasfilm, the latter of which enabled the Disney empire to strike back with a new round of Star Wars movies. Now 65, he has extended his contract twice and has said the debut of Shanghai Disney is among his proudest accomplishments. Iger sat down with Arthur Levine for USA TODAY just days before the park’s opening. MATT STROSHANE, DISNEY Chinese politburo member Wang Yang joins Robert Iger June 16 for the official opening of Shanghai Disney Resort. Q: Why have you chosen Shanghai as the site for a Disney resort? A: Well, Shanghai is perhaps the most dynamic city in the world, but it’s certainly the most dynamic city in China, which, as we know, is the most populous country in the world. There’s just so much going on here in terms of development, construction, growth in travel and tourism, entertainment. It was a natural fit. Q: How do you anticipate the Chinese people will receive the resort? A: We’ve already had more than 1 million people visit the property and over 600,000 come through the park itself. ... It’s obvious to me that not only are they awestruck but that they’re having a great time. Q: The phrase “authentically Disney, distinctly Chinese” has been attributed to you. Could you share some examples? A: I didn’t want to build Disneyland in China. ... From the very beginning, I wanted to act like we were respectful, invited guests in China. One way to show respect was to infuse this place with elements of the familiar, with elements of Chinese culture. Not only could (Chinese visitors) relate to it, but they could be proud of it and could have a sense MOVIES ‘Wilderpeople’ runs away with the buddy theme Sam Neill is “uncle” Hector to Julian Dennison’s foster kid Ricky in Hunt for the Wilderpeople. Andrea Mandell @andreamandell USA TODAY Feel like veering off the map this summer? Then the adventure film Hunt for the Wilderpeople belongs on your must-see list. Adapted from Barry Crump’s Wild Pork and Watercress and made with a tiny budget in the New Zealand bush by director Taika Waititi, Wilderpeople (in theaters Friday in New York and Los Angeles) stars a chubby, rap-loving foster kid named Ricky (Julian Dennison) stuck living with a family in the backcountry. Though his new foster mom loves him, the troubled child ends up on the lam, running from au- PHOTOS BY THE ORCHARD thorities in the wild with his grizzled foster “uncle” Hector (Sam Neill) — and becoming a national fixture in the process. The Odd Couple-style romp through the bush won raves at Sundance Film Festival earlier this year, and The Hollywood Reporter called it “a deliciously good time at the movies.” “I love classic buddy flicks,” says Waititi, citing comedies such as 48 Hours and Planes, Trains & Automobiles. “Anything with two diametrically opposed character types that get shoved together.” In a summer packed with sequels and superheroes, Waititi says he wanted Ricky’s plight to feel within reach. “I grew up on all those films, which were kind of fantasy films Director Taika Waititi’s next project is Thor: Ragnarok. of ownership. ... The Tarzan show, for example, was developed and directed by a woman named Lee Xining who envisions and tells the Tarzan story with Chinese acrobats. There’s no Main Street, U.S.A. It’s Mickey Avenue ... We wanted (the land) to feel like it could be here in China. Q: Have you experienced many of the attractions and shows? A: I’ve seen every show and been on every ride multiple times. I don’t know that I have a favorite. ... I love how we’ve reinvented (the Pirates of the Caribbean attraction) using far more modern technology. Tron is a kick-and-a-half: the speed, the smoothness, the music, the lighting. In Pirates, Davy Jones is my favorite character in terms of what we were able to accomplish. I just think he’s the most complex in terms of the robotics. Q: How long have you personally been working on Shanghai Disneyland? A: 17 years. I was asked by my former boss, Michael Eisner, in 1999 to start getting discussions going with the Chinese government and to start considering land to build on. We were shown this property then as a potential location. ... There were no adequate roads to get here. It was a wet piece of land. We really had to suspend reality and belief. You’d never be able to look at that and say, “Oh yes. Disneyland, coming soon!” Q: Tell us about instances where you felt strongly about elements or design choices. A: I had a lot to say about the size of the castle (it is the largest and grandest of any of the Disneyland castles) and the fact that I didn’t want it to be just something to look at, I wanted guests to be able to do something in it. ... Nothing else (during my tenure) comes close in terms of my personal involvement. That includes everything from managing the relationship with the (Chinese) government, to the business side and to the creative side. To say that it’s a passion project would be an understatement. You don’t put 17 years of your life into something without believing in it. set in the real world, like Goonies,” says Waititi, who had an outdoorsy upbringing in New Zealand before building his career in the USA with films such as the 2010 coming-of-age drama Boy and his 2014 vampire mockumentary What We Do in the Shadows. “So a kid watching Wilderpeople is like, ‘I could do that, I could run away to the bush and have the whole country looking for me and have an adventure.’ ” What does Dennison, who first worked with Waititi on a drunken-driving commercial several years ago, remember most about shooting for five weeks in New Zealand’s frigid backcountry? “M-U-D,” the 13-year-old spells out over Skype with a grin. “A lot of mud. ... I once got stuck in knee-high mud.” Across the ocean, New Zealanders have turned Wilderpeople into the country’s No. 1 box office hit of all time (the titleholder had been Waititi’s Boy). Neill, who grew up in New Zealand (and memorably starred in the Jurassic Park franchise), calls Waititi “kind of crazily inventive. His imagination is so rich, it probably needs reining in more than anything else.” Now Waititi’s signature blend of wry comedy and action is Marvel-approved: The director is Skyping in from Australia’s Gold Coast, where he’s in heavy preproduction on Thor: Ragnarok (in theaters Nov. 3, 2017). As he talks, Waititi, cloaked in a colorful kimono, is surreptitiously showing off some of the film’s concept art tacked on the walls in his office. In a week, Cate Blanchett will arrive on the set to play a villain. “Chris Hemsworth was here yesterday,” he says. Cameras start rolling July 4. But a few things change with hundreds of millions of Disney dollars at one’s disposal. Typically on set, “I’ll turn up and, like, have completely rewritten (a scene) or added a character and cast someone from the crew,” says Waititi, laughing. “With Thor, for obvious reasons you have to be a little bit more rigid, because there are 200 more people who are affected by any crazy decision you make.” LIFE 5D USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 MOVIES Modeling 101 with ‘Demon’ Fanning Bryan Alexander @BryAlexand USA TODAY Elle Fanning has always admired the fashion universe, from glossy magazines to checking out fashion shows. But the 18-year-old actress stepped fully inside the world of high fashion as aspiring model Jesse in The Neon Demon (in theaters Friday). “Getting to do a movie where I got to play a model was honestly a dream of mine growing up,” Fanning says. While there’s really no formal training for posing with fake blood on your neck (Fanning’s first Neon Demon scene), there’s a lot to learn — from catwalk struts to icy model stares. Fortunately, Abbey Lee, an actual supermodel, played one of the Neon Demon’s supermodels. Fanning relied heavily on Lee to show her the ropes. A few things Fanning learned: Jesse’s star-moment dress was billowing and long. So when Fanning was waiting on the set, she tied the dress around her “like this big giant thing.” Fashion-forward, perhaps not. Yet sensible. “It was like a giant balloon around me, but I could walk. Though holding it all up was a lot.” THE CATWALK STRUT THE BALANCE LOS ANGELES Fanning was pretty sure the runway walk would require a simple stage saunter. Then she looked on the film schedule one morning and saw: “Abbey Lee walking session with Elle Fanning.” “She had to teach me the tricks,” Fanning says. “You don’t swing your arms, because it’s distracting to the clothes. Lean back so your torso makes your legs look longer. And focus on a point.” Everyone has a signature style, she told us, and Fanning gravitated toward rhythmic moves. “Some people really clomp. But I think I’d sway, really move the hips more. So I guess I’m a swayer. I’m making these words up.” make me shorter with flats, because I’m taller than a lot of people in films. It was nice to embrace the tallness.” Elle Fanning learned her fashionmodel moves for The Neon Demon from real-life supermodel Abbey Lee. THE RUNWAY DRESS So how did Fanning navigate a runway scene where the cameras stayed right on her? Director Nicolas Winding Refn shot the walk on a treadmill. She survived in heels and a full gown without a tripping mishap. “Everyone was terrified,” Fanning says. “I’ve never seen anyone so terrified.” GUNTHER CAMPINE FOR AMAZON STUDIOS Fanning perfected her strut, stare and pose — and she gathered up the billowy dress when she wasn’t on set. THE ICE POSE This came naturally for the devotee of fashion magazines. “The Blue Steel (from Zoolander) you just learn as you look more and more at magazines. Jesse’s in particular is very intense. It has a demonic quality.” THE BORED LOOK The recent high school graduate tapped into her classroom experience for this one. “When you’re really tired and you’re looking at the teacher like, ‘Please!’ That’s something all high-schoolers know well. So you go to that place.” THE DEAD STARE During that early scene, a stylized photo shoot in which Jesse poses as if dead, Fanning was ideally suited. “I can go a long time without blinking. With stare-offs, I can pretty much always win.” THE HEELS The 5-foot-9 Fanning loves her heels, especially platforms. “The taller, the better,” she says. “So I had good practice with that.” She was just pleased he could rock the heels. “Normally, they Report puzzle problems to us at [email protected] or 1-800-872-7073 PUZZLES CROSSWORD WORD ROUNDUP BY Frank Longo By David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek FIELD POSITIONS Find and Circle: Five four-letter musical instruments Five words with EE in the middle Four planets Colors of the Russian flag Two four-letter forms of precipitation D X F E E T J L ☑☐☐☐☐ ☐☐☐☐☐ ☐☐☐☐ ☐☐☐ ☐☐ Thursday’s answer: MADRID ATHENS PARIS SOFIA ROME / CHIPMUNK HAMSTER GERBIL GOPHER RAT / DIRECTOR ACTRESS PICTURE ACTOR / TOM HANKS / STOP QUICKCROSS © Universal Uclick 6/24 B R B L U E U S R S U K C T P L E E A T J S MN E O VW I T E E Z U H T R A E V E R H A R P R E R E N X C E J T K O V Z A I WH D E U V Z B N I P B M A R S O T A C H E E S E E UP & DOWN WORDS By John Wilmes 6/24 By David L. Hoyt and Russell L. Hoyt 6/24 1. GO Group of animals 2. Above 3. 4. ____ colada 5. Extremely messy person 6. © Universal Uclick ACROSS 1 City founded by Pizarro 5 Computer students’ workplace 10 Indenting keys 14 Wilson of “Starsky & Hutch” 15 Port in Israel 16 Waikiki wiggle 17 Labor Department concern 19 Caddie’s offering 20 Hemmed in 21 Between-meals bite 22 Source of milk for Roquefort cheese 23 “Oh, were it not so!” 25 Hook, line and sinker? 31 “___ and Maddie” (Disney Channel sitcom) 32 Like clocks with hands 33 Two-syllable poetic foot 35 “Stop, matey!” 37 Emeril’s interjection 38 Gives the brush-off to 39 Sword-wielding TV princess 40 Alaskan grizzly 42 Narc’s org. 43 Walkie-talkie, at times 46 Flip, as a coin 47 Carnival city 48 Want badly, with “for” 51 Argued loudly 56 Org. for free speech 57 Maritime law enforcer 59 Stimulate, as an appetite 60 Antipasto tidbit 61 Watson of “Noah” MARC ROYCE FOR USA TODAY Jumps Wicked Thursday’s Answer © Universal Uclick 62 Between-meals bite 63 Puppies’ cries 64 Fix at the vet’s office DOWN 1 Rob of “Brothers & Sisters” 2 Champion’s cry 3 Former Ford make, for short 4 Spots for spats 5 Introduce gradually 6 Place for java 7 Bore false witness 8 To a boat’s rear 9 Colt coat color 10 Exterior for easily offended types 11 Mystical glow 12 Like-minded group 13 Went under 18 “Like I care!” 21 Pouchlike plant part 23 Like some bombs or clocks 6/24 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 34 36 38 40 41 44 45 48 49 50 51 52 53 Fail to keep pace 54 Witty Bombeck 55 Invasion time Half a sawbuck 57 Playfully shy A Trump ex 58 Bullring cheer Jim who played Gomer Pyle Forest clearing Magna cum ___ Hibachi residue Not at all strict “Be Prepared” org. The way things are, pitifully Thursday’s Answer Super-G sport Fight enders, briefly Makes fizzy Ca++, Na+ or ClLatest styles Nonverbal “Bo-o-o-ring!” Chamber effect Draught drinks Sax sound 6/23 Say you’ll attend, say CROSSWORDS Tiffany treasure ON YOUR PHONE Answers: Call 1-900-988-8300, 99 cents a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-320-4280. mobilegames.usatoday.com D E P P A R I A T I N S Nevada city E C T O Colorless QUICKCROSS ON YOUR PHONE 7. IT Clues: 1. Buy a hybrid, e.g. 2. Certain government document 3. Poker expert 4. Tense “Jaws” scene 5. Offensive military unit 6. It results in an out 7. ____ ____ safe Thursday’s Answer LAST STAND DOWN STAND PAYMENT DOWN HISTORY PAYMENT CLASS HISTORY ACT CLASS UP ACT PLAY ONLINE PUZZLES.USATODAY.COM mobilegames.usatoday.com 6/23 © Universal Uclick SUDOKU Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains the numbers 1 through 9 (no repeats). 1 4 9 8 7 5 Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x2 box contains the numbers 1 through 6 (no repeats). 1 8 6 2 2 4 3 5 5 4 3 6 1 2 6 2 2 3 2 1 9 7 6 3 8 2 9 !!!!! 3 4 6 3 1 7 9 6/24 7 5 3 DIFFICULTY RATING SUDOKU FUSION ON YOUR PHONE mobilegames.usatoday.com DIFFICULTY RATING Thursday’s Answers !!!!! © Universal Uclick 5 9 8 7 1 3 2 4 6 6 7 2 8 4 5 3 9 1 4 1 3 6 2 9 5 8 7 1 2 6 9 3 4 7 5 8 9 3 5 1 7 8 4 6 2 7 8 4 2 5 6 1 3 9 3 6 1 5 9 7 8 2 4 2 5 9 4 8 1 6 7 3 8 4 7 3 6 2 9 1 5 1 2 3 6 5 4 5 3 4 2 6 1 3 5 6 4 1 2 2 1 5 3 4 6 6 4 2 1 3 5 6/23 © WIGGLES 3D GAMES DON’T QUOTE ME® Poet Ralph Waldo Emerson reflects on human nature. 4 6 1 5 2 3 Rearrange the words to complete the quote. CREAM DARE FRIEND MAKING PLEASANT WE ________ NOT ___________ OUR ________ FOR ___________ OUR HOUSE ______________ TO OUR ___________, SO WE BUY ICE ___________. Thursday’s Answer: “Everything in life is somewhere else, and you get there in a car.” - E.B. White 6/24 TRUST WIT 6D LIFE USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 Now in our rd smash year! 3 Stephen Sondheim Theatre 124 West 43rd Street BeautifulOnBroadway.com Photo: Zachary Maxwell Stertz OFFICIAL AIRLINE LIFE 7D USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 ALBUM OF THE WEEK Neil Young’s live ‘Earth’: Organic, indignant Beauty, artistry and anger are the rivers that run through it REVIEW ELYSA GARDNER Neil Young doesn’t want to sing about peace on Earth. He supports the notion, clearly; but on a new collection of imaginatively presented live recordings out Friday — titled, not incidentally, Earth (eeeE out of four) — we’re reminded how furious Young is about attacks on the planet itself, by members of a certain species. “Don’t talk about the corporations/Hijackin’ all your rights,” the rock vet sings on one track, his sarcasm as thick as the ozone layer once was over the North Pole. “Don’t talk about the beautiful fish/ In the deep blue sea dyin’ ” — or the “Chevron millions going to the pipeline politicians,” or pesticides, or global hunger. The song, which fans will recognize as the ironically titled People Want To Hear About Love, was introduced last year on Young’s The Monsanto Years, itself a cri- tique of the agribusiness named in the title. Monsanto is prominently represented — as is 1990’s acclaimed Ragged Glory and the 1970 classic After The Gold Rush — on tracks recorded during Young’s 2015 tour but overdubbed with features ranging from shimmering choir vocals to sounds drawn directly from Earth’s unifying subject. On the opening and title track, we first hear a gentle rain, then the chirping of crickets, plaintive harmonica riffs and spare, stately organ chords. Young’s unmistakable voice, high and thin and quavering, compels us to “feed this world/Ruled by greed.” Swarming bees, braying horses, groaning cows and singing birds and insects pop up elsewhere, embellishing the music and filling moments of silence. (An added STEVE JENNINGS, WIREIMAGE bass part on Mother Nature is one of just a few studio flourishes involving a man-made instrument.) Intruders break into the mix, occasionally, in the form of car horns. Young conveys more angst, predictably, in the live guitar parts. The man whose distinctive, instinctive wailing and thrashing so informed grunge (though that movement’s proponents seldom matched his lyricism) is accompanied on Earth by tour collaborators Promise of the Real, fronted by guitarist/singers Micah and Lukas Nelson (Willie’s sons). Blistering guitars launch the previously unveiled Seed Justice, with ringing, melodic fills following before the crows come back in. On My Country Home, the playing is similarly muscular but has a warmer twang, while Vampire Blues veers dark and bluesy. Not surprisingly, the artful use of feedback enhances the ominous mood here and on other tracks. (So do the crows, who are heard quite frequently.) Though Young wears his righteous anger on his sleeve throughout Earth — anyone who has accused him of being cranky won’t be persuaded otherwise — there are moments of beatific grace and unabashed gratitude, such as Wolf Moon, from Monsanto; its lovely acoustic arrangement is embellished here with glowing harmonies It should be noted, too, that the closing song is Love And Only Love. For the unacquainted, that title is not ironic. Download: Western Hero, After The Gold Rush, Wolf Moon Friday Where space permits, give both city/college and team name on sports listings ABC, CMT & Hallmark--Last Man Standing (scripted); Fox--Last Man (add) on Earth TONIGHT ON TV 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 11:00 11:30 Local Programs Jimmy Kimmel Live Mindy Kaling. CBS NCIS: Los Angeles Kensi’s former fiancé Hawaii Five-0 The brother of a boxer from Blue Bloods Erin takes control of a homicide Local Programs is in danger. O’ahu is murdered. case when it results in a hung jury. Late Show Stephen Colbert (N) Fox Rosewood Villa forced to choose new partner. MasterChef The top 18 cooks make a wedding dinner. NBC The Ranch: Home of an American Sports Dynasty Karolyi Ranch. (N) Wash. Week (N) The Week (N) Gymnastics P&G Championships: Women’s Gymnastics from Chaifetz Arena, St. Louis, Mo. (Live) American Masters Guitarist’s life and music explored. CRITIC’S CORNER ABC Shark Tank Chris Sacca rejoins the Shark What Would You Do? (N) panel; follow-up on Ilumi. Robert Bianco NETWORK @BiancoRobert USA TODAY PBS CW ION Telemundo Univision 10:00 10:30 20/20 (N) Local Programs Local Programs Tonight Show Jimmy Fallon (N) Charlie Rose (N) Masters Illusion (N) Masters of Illusion Penn & Teller: Fool Us Local Programs Criminal Minds Gideon is a suspect. Criminal Minds Campus killings. Criminal Minds Women abducted. Saving Hope The young inmate. Eva, la trailera Lo tenía todo. (N) La esclava blanca Lucha por justicia. El Señor de los Cielos (N) Al rojo vivo (N) Boxeo TLMD Un camino hacia el destino Tr3s veces Ana Tres gemelas. (N) Aquí y ahora (N) Primer (N) Noticiero Univ. (N) Streets of Compton The city recovers. The First 48 Bad tips and lies. CABLE BILLY WILDER MARATHON TCM, FRIDAY TCM celebrates one of our greatest filmmakers with some of his best films. Start with Witness for the Prosecution (8 ET/5 PT) and sail on through Some Like it Hot (10:15 ET/7:15 PT), The Fortune Cookie (12:30 a.m. ET/ 9:30 p.m. PT), The Apartment (2:45 ET/11:45 PT) and Ninotchka (5 ET/2 PT). DISCOVERY CHANNEL You’re gonna need a bigger TV: Discovery’s Shark Week is back. SHARK WEEK DISCOVERY, SUNDAY, 8 ET/PT It’s back: that semi-scientific, sea-based film festival that fans of seal- and penguin-chomping love and sharks despise, assuming sharks have any idea Discovery’s obsessed with them. First up: Tiger Beach (8 ET/PT), Return of Monster Mako (9 ET/PT) and Isle of Jaws (10 ET/PT). If, however, you’re looking for the yin and yang of Shark Week, an event that has mostly succeeded in making people overestimate the risk of shark attacks and underestimate the risk we pose to sharks’ survival, you’ll find it in two upcoming films: Sharks Among Us (Monday, 10 ET/PT), which seeks to calm shark-attack anxiety and convince us man and animal can coexist; and Wrath of a Great White Serial Killer (Tuesday, 9 ET/PT) — the goal of which is pretty self-evident. A&E AMC Animal Planet BBC America BET Bravo Cartoon CMT CNBC CNN Comedy Destination Am Discovery Disney DisXD E! Esquire Food Fox News Freeform FX FXX GSN Hallmark HGTV History HLN ID IFC Lifetime MSNBC MTV NatGeo NatGeo Wild Nick OWN Oxygen Pop Science Spike Sundance Syfy TBS TCM TLC TNT Travel TruTV TV Land USA VH1 Viceland WE Weather WGN America Streets of Compton Slum generates number of idols. Cinemax Man on Fire A former assassin hunts the people who kidnapped a nine-year-old child. Denzel Washington (2004) The Italian Job Mark Wahlberg (2003) Tanked Tanked: Celebrity Scoop (N) Tanked (N) Tanked: Celebrity Scoop Star Trek: The Next Generation Star Trek: The Next Generation Star Trek: The Next Generation Star Trek: The Next Generation Jumping the Broom Two families arrive for a wedding, but realize they come from two backgrounds. Angela Bassett (2011) Real Housewives Housewives (N) Cheaper by the Dozen Balancing careers and 12 kids. Steve Martin (2003) (9:08) King of the Hill King of the Hill Cleveland Show American Dad! My Cousin Vinny A New York lawyer hits the Deep South. Joe Pesci (1992) (7:00) Family Guy Family Guy CMT Crossroads (N) Inside the Label Cheaper by the Dozen (2003) (11:19) Bob’s Burgers Bob’s Burgers Still the King Still the King Undercover Boss Restaurant CEO. Undercover Boss Southern charm. Undercover Boss In line. West Texas Investors Club Anderson Cooper 360° (N) Anderson Cooper 360° (N) Inside Man Forensic unit. (N) Declassified Soviet diplomat. Employee of the Month Slacker strives to be star employee. Dane Cook, Jessica Simpson (2006) (7:50) Walk of Shame Reporter stranded after one night stand. The Haunted A 200-year-old home. The Haunted Supernatural being. The Haunted: Death Rises (N) The Haunted A 200-year-old home. Alaskan Bush People: Off the Grid (N) Alaskan Bush People (N) Homestead Rescue The Zabecs. (N) Alaskan Bush People Adventures in Babysitting Sabrina Carpenter (2016) Bizaardvark (N) Walk the Prank Girl Meets World Backstage Bizaardvark Wander Yonder Lab Rats: Elite Spider-Man Star Wars Rebels Freemaker Star vs. Forces Walk the Prank Gamer’s Guide Guess Who Father upset with future son-in-law. Bernie Mac (2005) EJNYC E! News (N) Parks & Recreation Parks & Recreation Parks & Recreation Parks & Recreation Parks & Recreation Parks & Recreation Car Matchmaker Car Matchmaker Diners, Drive-Ins Diners, Drive-Ins Diners, Drive-Ins The O’Reilly Factor (N) Diners, Drive-Ins Diners, Drive-Ins The Kelly File (N) 17 Again Man gets second chance to be young. Zac Efron (2009) (7:45) Diners, Drive-Ins Diners, Drive-Ins Diners, Drive-Ins Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor Guilt The 700 Club Illegal immigration. Man of Steel A young Clark Kent embarks on a journey to become the legendary Superman. Henry Cavill, Amy Adams (2013) Man of Steel (2013) The Simpsons The Simpsons The Simpsons The Simpsons The Simpsons The Simpsons The Simpsons Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Family Feud Skin Wars The Middle The Middle The Middle The Golden Girls The Golden Girls House Hunters International House Hunters International Forensic Files Forensic Files Home Improvement Home Improvement The Middle Container Homes Container Homes Mighty Tiny Houses Vineyard home. Ancient Aliens Ancient Aliens (N) Ancient Aliens The Hunt with John Walsh The Hunt with John Walsh Forensic Files American Monster A girl at work. American Monster 20 year secret. I (Almost) Got Away with It (N) Tremors (1990) Ancient Aliens Forensic Files American Monster A girl at work. Tremors II: Aftershocks Giant killer worms attack in Mexico. Fred Ward, Chris Gartin (1996) (8:45) Friends with Benefits Physical relationship and complications. Justin Timberlake, Mila Kunis (2011) The Simpsons Comedy Bang! (N) Comedy Bang! (N) The Good Mistress Woman involved with friend’s husband. All in with Chris Hayes (N) The Rachel Maddow Show (N) Hardball with Chris Matthews Ridiculousness Awarded rapper. Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Brothers in War The Vietnam War. Restrepo A reporter spends a year in Afghanistan. Juan ‘Doc' Restrepo (2010) Restrepo Juan ‘Doc' Restrepo (2010) Animals Gone Wild Animals Gone Wild (N) When Sharks Attack (N) Animals Gone Wild All in with Cam (N) The HALO Effect Full House Full House Greenleaf Family in Memphis. Greenleaf Grace at work. Greenleaf Awkward date. Greenleaf Family in Memphis. Snapped Obsessed woman. Snapped Custody battle. Snapped Hit-and-run. Snapped Love triangle. Ridiculousness Full House All in with Chris Hayes Ridiculousness Full House Rush Hour 3 Chris Tucker (2007) Friends Friends Practical Magic Sibling witches deal with family curse. Sandra Bullock (1998) Miss Congeniality An FBI agent poses as a beauty queen. Sandra Bullock (2000) MythBusters: Shark Special MythBusters vs. Jaws Shark Week Sharktacular 2016 MythBusters: Shark Special Law & Order Wily suspect. Law & Order Lawyer dream team. Law & Order McCoy vs. rapist. Wynonna Earp Deadly showdown. (N) Watchmen Malin Akerman (2009) Big Bang Theory ELeague Bellator MMA Live Dynamite 2 Law & Order Headless corpse. Bellator Kickboxing (N) WWE Raw Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Witness for the Prosecution A young man is accused of murder. (1958) Some Like It Hot Fugitive musicians pose as women. Marilyn Monroe (1959) Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the Dress Say Yes to the Dress Randy discovers changes at Kleinfeld. (N) Say Yes to the Dress Twister Storm chasers pursue killer tornadoes. Helen Hunt, Bill Paxton (1996) The Last Ship The Last Ship Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum (N) Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest Top Funniest Comedy Comedy Sister Act A Reno lounge singer who has been targeted by the mob hides out in a convent. (1992) Jim Gaffigan King of Queens King of Queens Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Mr. Robot Recap and look ahead. Speed (1994) Gridiron Gang A probation officer begins a football program for violent youth offenders. Dwayne Johnson, Xzibit (2006) (8:45) Woman Woman Top Funniest Modern Family Woman Top Funniest Modern Family Woman Modern Family World of Sports World of Sports World of Sports World of Sports Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars (N) Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars Weather Caught on Camera Secrets of the Earth Secrets of the Earth Secrets of the Earth Person of Interest Avenging brother. Person of Interest Smuggling ring. Person of Interest Deadly scam. Person of Interest Baby protection. The Last Witch Hunter Cursed warrior becomes humanity’s last hope when the queen witch is resurrected. Vin Diesel, Rose Leslie (2015) (8:10) Outcast Anderson uncovers upsetting information. (N) Outcast Anderson uncovers upsetting information. Encore Legends of the Fall Three brothers battle each other when they all fall in love with the same woman. Anthony Hopkins, Brad Pitt (1995) Me, Myself & Irene The two personalities of a kind state trooper with a dissociative identity disorder compete for the affections of a beautiful suspect. (2000) (10:15) FXM The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo A female computer hacker joins forces with a disgraced journalist who is investigating the 40-year-old murder of a wealthy patriarch’s niece in Sweden. Daniel Craig, Rooney Mara (2011) FXM Presents (N) Hallmark Movies Jesse Stone: Benefit of the Doubt Jesse Stone: Lost in Paradise Stone’s murder investigation in Boston takes an Jesse tries to solve a double homicide. (7:00) unexpected and dangerous turn. Tom Selleck, William Devane (2015) Murder, She Wrote Jessica visits a fishing lodge. HBO Game of Thrones Cersei obeys a request; Game of Thrones Jon and Sansa fight Arya is tested. Ramsay Bolton. VICE Rising costs. (N) Lifetime Movie The Night Stalker An attorney travels to San Quentin to help clear the name of a man. Beyond the Headlines: The Night Stalker Beyond the Headlines: Lou Diamond Phillips, Bellamy Young (2016) (N) Cleveland Abductions Showtime Miles to Go Before I Sleep (N) Starz The Day After Tomorrow Abrupt global warming causes disaster. (2004) (6:55) TMC Death of Superman Lives Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars MOVIE NETWORKS Real Time with Bill Maher Larry Wilmore. (N) Sleeping with Other People Two self-sabotaging people attempt to keep their relationship platonic. Jason Sudeikis, Alison Brie (2015) (8:35) Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story A group of misfits enters a dodgeball tournament in order to save their gym. (2004) La Bare History, lives and culture of one of the world’s most popular male strip clubs. Joe Manganiello (2014) Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2011) Real Time with Bill Maher Miles to Go Before Best in Sex: 2016 AVN Awards I Sleep Show honors excellence in adult film. (N) Outlander Jacobite leaders halt the London march. 28 Days Sandra Bullock (2000) Basic Instinct 2 A young police psychologist finds himself drawn to a seductive novelist. Sharon Stone, David Morrissey (2006) SPORTS NETWORKS KATIE YU, SHOWTIME Bill (Luke Wilson) and Shelli (Carla Gugino) keep the rock rolling. ROADIES SHOWTIME, SUNDAY, 10 ET/PT Oscar-winner Cameron Crowe returns to his rock-music wheelhouse with this series starring Luke Wilson and Carla Gugino centering on the backstage workers tasked with keeping a touring rock band’s show on track. ESPN ESPN2 FS1 Golf MLB NBA NBCSports NFLN 2016 NCAA College World Series Game 12 from TD Ameritrade Park Omaha in Omaha, Neb. (Live) SportsCenter SportsCenter CFL Football Montreal Alouettes at Winnipeg Blue Bombers from Investors Group Field (Live) ESPN FC NHRA Qualifying Norwalk MLB Whip Around LPGA Tour Golf PGA Tour Golf Quicken Loans National: Second Round from Congressional CC (Blue) in Bethesda, Md. Golf Central The Ultimate Fighter MLB Baseball Regional (Live) Eastern Conference Draft Review (N) COMPLETE LISTINGS TVLISTINGS.USATODAY.COM Customized to your location Garbage Time MLB Tonight Western Conference Draft Review (N) The Starters 2016 NHL Draft from First Niagara Center in Buffalo, N.Y. (Live) Top 10 Greatest Hands Fox Sports Live A Football Life A Football Life MOVIES NBAE Presents Eastern Conference Draft Review NHL Top 10 NHL Top 10 NHL Top 10 NFL Total Access Eastern Time may vary in some cities (N) New episode. 8D LIFE USA TODAY FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 LISTEN UP SONG OF THE WEEK THE PLAYLIST Who you gonna call? Fall Out Boy, Missy Elliott remake ‘Ghostbusters’ Ahead of the Avett Brothers’ new album, True Sadness (out Friday), the band’s bassist, Bob Crawford, shares a sentimental playlist of favorite songs from summers past. The Ghostbusters reboot just got a very 2016 soundtrack. Ray Parker Jr. was responsible for the iconic 1984 Ghostbusters theme song, its “Who you gonna call?” refrain becoming almost as iconic as the movie itself. So it’s only fitting that the franchise’s new movie, featuring an all-women paranormal cleanup crew, gets its own remade theme. Instead of letting a female artist take the lead, Fall Out Boy dutifully put a rap-rock spin on the song’s much-beloved lyrics and melody, still keeping it recognizable for TIM MOSENFELDER, FILMMAGIC fans of the original. Halfway through, Missy Elliott makes a welcome appearance, joining for a verse and staking her claim as the movie’s honorary fifth Ghostbuster. ETHAN MILLER, GETTY IMAGES Fall Out Boy was joined by Missy Elliott on the Ghostbusters theme remake. Watch for the updated Ghostbusters theme on the new movie’s soundtrack, which features artists such as Elle King, G-Eazy, Jeremih, 5 Seconds of Summer, Pentatonix and Walk the Moon. Ghostbusters is in theaters July 15. CRACKERFARM Paul Revere Beastie Boys I grew up on the Jersey Shore and went to the beach almost every day the summer this song came out. Born to Run Bruce Springsteen Because I’m from Jersey, this is practically my national anthem. It satisfies two key summer desires: romance and adventure. Sun is Shining Bob Marley What can I say ... who embodies kicking back, relaxing and celebrating life as well as Bob Marley? The Summer Yo La Tengo The first time I saw Yo La Tengo, they performed most of their album Fakebook. I listened to little else for at least six months. Island in the Sun Weezer This song epitomizes the longing to run away from “it all,” particularly when you are cooped up in an office in the summertime. Summertime The Zombies Performed by Ella Fitzgerald and Louie Armstrong with more notable covers than I can list, the band appropriates this classic with their iconic sound. U.S. Blues Grateful Dead Nothing against ‘Yankee Doodle’ or a Sousa March, but for me, this Grateful Dead classic is the ultimate anthem for the 4th of July. I’m Going Fishing Doc Watson Being from New Jersey, discovering Doc Watson felt as if I entered another world. Listening to Doc just makes me want to be outside. Cruel Summer Bananarama At some point, the excitement of summer wanes and we find ourselves yearning for the cool breeze of fall, but that’s for another playlist. Good Vibrations The Beach Boys It’s The Beach Boys! This song reminds us all of summer. It doesn’t matter where you come from, where you’re going, or how old you are. USA TODAY AIRPLAY CHARTS COMPILED BY MEDIABASE Increase in Spins T This week Debut L Last week IN-DEPTH CHARTS LIFE.USATODAY.COM COUNTRY TOP 40 T L ARTIST SONG SPINS T L ARTIST SONG 1 1 JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE Can’t Stop The Feeling 18,069 1 3 LUKE BRYAN Huntin’, Fishin’ And Lovin’ Every Day 27,996 2 2 THECHAINSMOKERS f/DAYA Don’t Let Me Down 17,950 2 6 JASON ALDEAN Lights Come On 24,907 3 4 DRAKE f/WIZKID & KYLA 16,446 3 4 KEITH URBAN Wasted Time 24,375 4 3 FIFTHHARMONY f/TY DOLLA$IGN Work From Home 14,032 4 1 TIM MCGRAW Humble And Kind 22,547 5 5 ARIANA GRANDE 13,985 5 7 CARRIE UNDERWOOD Church Bells 22,494 6 7 CALVIN HARRIS f/RIHANNA This Is What You Came For 12,236 6 2 THOMAS RHETT T-Shirt 22,491 7 6 MIKE POSNER 10,740 7 8 KENNY CHESNEY Noise 18,923 FLORIDA-GEORGIA LINE H.O.L.Y. 18,471 Record Year 18,103 One Dance Dangerous Woman I Took A Pill In Ibiza 8 11 JAMES BAY Let It Go 9,353 8 9 9 13 SIA Cheap Thrills 9,295 9 11 ERIC CHURCH POINTS 10 10 NICK JONAS f/TOVE LO Close 9,153 10 10 JON PARDI Head Over Boots 17,894 11 12 TWENTY ONE PILOTS Ride 8,658 11 13 CHRIS LANE Fix 15,188 12 9 ZAYN Pillowtalk 8,525 12 --- DAN + SHAY From The Ground Up 14,172 13 8 LUKAS GRAHAM 7 Years 7,874 13 15 JAKE OWEN American Country Love Song 13,339 14 15 PINK Just Like Fire 7,856 14 12 DAVID NAIL Night’s On Fire 13,214 15 --- SELENA GOMEZ Kill Em With Kindness 6,456 15 --- FRANKIE BALLARD It All Started With A Beer 12,895 SPINS URBAN RHYTHMIC T L ARTIST SONG T L ARTIST SONG 1 1 DRAKE f/WIZKID & KYLA One Dance 4,495 1 1 DRAKE f/WIZKID & KYLA One Dance SPINS 6,920 2 3 KENT JONES Don’t Mind 4,469 2 2 DESIIGNER Panda 6,212 3 4 RIHANNA Needed Me 4,211 3 4 KENT JONES Don’t Mind 5,511 4 2 DESIIGNER Panda 4,130 4 3 THECHAINSMOKERS f/DAYA Don’t Let Me Down 5,409 5 5 BEYONCE Sorry 4,048 5 5 FAT JOE & REMY MA All The Way Up 4,746 6 6 FAT JOE & REMY MA All The Way Up 3,620 6 6 RIHANNA Needed Me 4,680 7 7 O.T. GENASIS f/YOUNG DOLPH Cut It 3,538 7 7 JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE Can’t Stop The Feeling 3,857 8 8 RIHANNA f/DRAKE Work 2,890 8 8 BEYONCE Sorry Wicked 2,692 9 12 CALVIN HARRIS f/RIHANNA This Is What You Came For Exchange 2,564 10 11 ARIANA GRANDE Uber Everywhere 2,511 11 9 12 13 T.I. f/MARSHA AMBROSIUS Dope 2,389 12 --- DRAKE Controlla 13 15 KEVIN GATES Really Really 2,030 13 10 FUTURE f/THE WEEKND Low Life 2,207 14 --- WALE MY PYT 1,997 14 --- G-EAZY f/CHRIS BROWN Drifting 2,135 15 16 FETTY WAP Wake Up 1,903 15 --- TRINIDAD JAMES Just A Lil’ Thick ($he’s Juicy) 1,986 9 10 FUTURE 10 9 BRYSON TILLER 11 11 MADEINTYO Dangerous Woman FIFTHHARMONY f/TY DOLLA$IGN Work From Home 3,381 2,997 2,911 2,700 2,563 HOT ADULT CONTEMPORARY ADULT CONTEMPORARY T L ARTIST SONG SPINS T L ARTIST SONG SPINS 1 1 JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE Can’t Stop The Feeling 6,731 1 1 JUSTIN BIEBER Love Yourself 2,371 2 2 PINK Just Like Fire 6,463 2 2 LUKAS GRAHAM 7 Years 2,231 3 3 DNCE Cake By The Ocean 5,093 3 5 JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE Can’t Stop The Feeling 2,121 4 4 LUKAS GRAHAM 7 Years 4,719 4 4 CHARLIE PUTH One Call Away 1,972 5 5 JUSTIN BIEBER Love Yourself 4,598 5 3 SHAWN MENDES Stitches 1,960 6 7 ADELE Send My Love (To Your New Lover) 4,584 6 6 ADELE Hello 1,792 7 6 MIKE POSNER I Took A Pill In Ibiza 4,047 7 7 ELLE KING Ex’s And Oh’s 1,789 8 9 RUTH B Lost Boy 3,879 8 8 DNCE Cake By The Ocean 1,358 9 8 TWENTY ONE PILOTS Stressed Out 3,760 9 9 PINK Just Like Fire 1,163 Brand New 3,676 10 --- BEN RECTOR ARTIST SONG SPINS T L ARTIST SONG SPINS 1 1 MAXWELL Lake By The Ocean 2,179 1 1 LAUREN DAIGLE Trust In You 1,873 2 2 GUORDAN BANKS Keep You In Mind 1,924 2 2 DANNY GOKEY Tell Your Heart To Beat Again 1,790 3 3 ANTHONY HAMILTON Amen 1,799 3 3 7EVENTH TIME DOWN God Is On The Move 1,785 4 5 JILL SCOTT Can’t Wait 1,553 4 4 RYAN STEVENSON f/GABEREAL Eye Of The Storm 1,673 5 4 JOHNNY GILL This One’s For Me And You 1,443 5 6 JONNY DIAZ Breathe 1,434 6 6 LALAH HATHAWAY Angel 1,404 6 5 TOBYMAC Move (Keep Walkin’) 1,417 7 8 RO JAMES Permission 1,263 7 8 STARS GO DIM You Are Loved 1,323 8 7 JAHEIM Struggle Love 1,148 8 7 CASTING CROWNS Just Be Held 1,309 I Do 1,008 9 9 FRANCESCA BATTISTELLI If We’re Honest 1,242 Christ In Me 1,177 10 9 YUNA f/USHER Crush ACTIVE ROCK T L ARTIST SONG SPINS T L ARTIST SONG SPINS 1 1 LUMINEERS Ophelia 2,977 1 1 VOLBEAT The Devil’s Bleeding Crown 2,212 2 2 BLINK 182 Bored To Death 2,923 2 2 RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS Dark Necessities 1,979 3 3 RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS Dark Necessities 2,842 3 3 SHINEDOWN Asking For It 1,808 4 4 TWENTY ONE PILOTS Ride 2,461 4 5 CHEVELLE Joyride 1,486 5 7 KALEO Way Down We Go 2,454 5 6 GHOST From The Pinnacle To The Pit 1,318 6 5 THE STRUMBELLAS Spirits 2,366 6 4 SIXX A.M. Rise 1,205 7 6 FITZ & THE TANTRUMS HandClap 2,334 7 --- POP EVIL Take It All 8 8 KONGOS Take It From Me 1,824 8 8 HALESTORM Mayhem Trouble 1,783 9 7 FIVE FINGER DEATH PUNCH My Nemesis First 1,591 SPINS 10 9 COLD WAR KIDS 10 --- A DAY TO REMEMBER Paranoia 994 979 897 877 LATIN ADULT ROCK T L ARTIST SONG T L ARTIST 1 1 RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS Dark Necessities 690 1 1 LAARROLLADORABANDAELLIMON Me Va A Pesar 2,215 2 3 BARNS COURTNEY Fire 610 2 3 BANDAELRECODODECRUZ... Si No Es Contigo 1,972 3 4 AVETT BROTHERS Ain’t No Man 606 3 2 REGULO CARO 1,931 4 2 LUMINEERS Ophelia 580 4 8 BANDA SINALOENSE MS SERGIO... Me Va A Extranar 1,798 5 6 NATHANIELRATELIFF/NIGHTSWEATS I Need Never Get Old 538 5 4 REMMY VALENZUELA 1,787 6 5 THE RECORD COMPANY Off The Ground 508 6 5 ENRIQUE IGLESIAS f/WISIN Duele El Corazon 7 9 ADELE Send My Love (To Your New Lover) 463 7 10 CARLOS VIVES & SHAKIRA La Bicicleta 1,652 8 8 BAND OF HORSES Casual Party 457 8 9 BANDA LOS RECODITOS Me Esta Gustando 1,606 All We Ever Knew 426 9 7 J BALVIN Bobo 1,508 Spirits 385 10 6 CALIBRE 50 Prestamela A Mi 1,405 9 --- HEAD AND THE HEART 10 7 THE STRUMBELLAS 982 T L 9 --- MUSIQ SOULCHILD 9 --- CAGE THE ELEPHANT Send My Love (To Your New Lover) CHRISTIAN URBAN ADULT CONTEMPORARY ALTERNATIVE 10 --- ADELE SONG Cicatrices Espero Con Ansias SPINS 1,702 995 10 --- JEREMY CAMP