Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
POOR RECEPTION
Wilder disappointed
about UAs lack of
interest in hosting his
first title defense | 1C
Dinosaurs in film
once lived here | 1B
THE MOM STOP | 1D
IN TODAYS PAPER
COUPONS
Neighborhood
WORTH
more than
proximity
T U S C A L O O S A , N O R T H P O R T, W E S T A L A B A M A
171
In most areas
S U N DA Y , J U N E 7 , 2015 $1. 50
WWW.TUSCALOOSANEWS.COM
AMERICAN HISTORY
American Pharoah rst horse to win Triple Crown in 37 years
Special
session
to be held
for budget
Victor Espinoza, above and below, reacts after crossing the finish line with American Pharoah to win the 147th running of the
Belmont Stakes horse race at Belmont Park on Saturday in Elmont, N.Y. American Pharoah is the first horse to win the Triple
Crown since Affirmed won it in 1978. For more about the race, see Page 1C.
By Beth Harris
The Associated Press
Bill to split
county jobs dies
in Legislature
By Ed Enoch
90994 32007
Bridge 5F
Business 6B
Classifieds 1F
Crossword 3D
Dear Abby 2D
Horoscopes 2D
Ideas & Issues 10A
Lend A Hand 7B
Real Estate 1E
Sports 1C
Television 1G
Today 1D
BEAU BIDEN
Obama recalls son of vice
presidents life of meaning
as more than 1,000 gather in
Delaware to mourn his loss | 3A
High 92
Low 70
Staff Writer
CMYK
INSIDE
BARD OF DENALI
HILL CLIMB
$2.00
www.adn.com
FAIRBANKS
Restrain
public spending. Enact individual taxes. Look again at oil
and gas taxes. And make wise
use of the states existing -
Developers
reluctant
amid heavy
demand in
Anchorage
budget details for the next scal year, the spending plans
under review in Anchorage
would cut about $800 million
from the budget.
The actions by Gov. Bill
Walker and the Legislature
over the past six months to
study state spending have advanced to the point where its
time to talk about revenue, he
said.
But we do have to act. And
if we fail to act, we take the
challenge and we turn it into
commitment.
Hoffbeck said one of his favorite quotes is from a 1910
speech by Teddy Roosevelt in
which Roosevelt talked about
the man in the arena whose
place shall never be with
those cold and timid souls who
neither know victory nor defeat.
He said those words are a
mantra for this time in Alaska and that it is no time to be
timid: The discussions are
going to be incredibly difcult
Elodea grows
on DeLong
Lakes north
end on Friday.
The state
plans to apply
an herbicide
to Sand Lake,
Little Campbell Lake and
DeLong to kill
the invasive
weed.
Herbicide plan
hailed, hated
by lakesiders
NATION
& WORLD NEWS
Ancient shing method is waning
In Spain, the 3,000-year-old tradition of trapshing has started to disappear in favor of
farming for tuna as consumer demands continue to trump sustainability. Page A-5
INDEX
Classieds.................................. D1
Crossword .................................. C5
Obituaries................................ B4,5
Opinion ................................... D8,9
Sports........................................ C1
Weather.................................... B10
aQstPVMPWMRPQU@@@Q
Learn To Row Day on Saturday gave people a close-up view of the elodea infestation on Sand Lake. Alaska Rowing Association founder Marietta
Hall said the common aquarium plant constantly gets tangled in equipment. For more rowing photos, visit adn.com/multimedia.
Jockey Victor
Espinoza
celebrates
after guiding American
Pharoah to
win the 147th
running of
the Belmont
Stakes at
Belmont Park
on Saturday.
American
Pharoah became the rst
horse since
Afrmed in
1978 to win
the Triple
Crown.
ELMONT, N.Y.
As American
Pharoah came out of the far turn and
squared his shoulders to let his rider,
Victor Espinoza, stare down the long
withering stretch of Belmont Park, a
sense of inevitably surged through
this mammoth old grandstand as a
capacity crowd strained on tiptoe
VOVORPQUL@QPZUUZSU@pm
JTEDS CHEAP
CAR REPAIRS
ROUGHING IT
NOT SO TOUGH
Lawmaker saved
on auto work while
slashing program,
columnist says
Familiesgethands-oncampinghelp HOME+LIFE
PAGE C1
Final
Four opinions
on the future of
Davis-Monthan
American Pharoah enjoys the attention of a throng of people in the winners circle after Saturdays win in the Belmont
Stakes made him just the 12th horse in history to win the Triple Crown. The bay colt, with Victor Espinoza aboard,
galloped to a 5-length victory in the 1-mile race to go along with wins in the Kentucky Derby and Preakness last
month. The win also made Nogales, Ariz., native and UA grad Bob Baffert, in suit with red tie, the 11th man to win the
Triple Crown. American Pharoah is the rst horse to accomplish the feat since Affirmed won it in 1978. Sports, B1.
The day after their sons funeral, Martha and William Wills
stepped into his shoes to put on
the 27th conference by the Racial
Reconciliation Community Outreach Network.
He would have wanted it that
way.
Their son, the Rev. William O.
Wills Jr., started the conference
in 1987 out of a desire to see racial
and cultural unity among Tuc-
Wills Sr.
liam O. Wills Jr.
William participated in a church
Although Martha Wills, 86, between Christian communities outreach program that brought
together children from New
grew up in church, she never gave and race.
She attended a segregated York and Vermont to interact in
much thought to the interplay
sons churches.
The Willses, now in their 80s,
expect hundreds of people to attend the 29th conference, which
kicks off on Thursday. For two
years they have continued without their son to carry on his legacy.
And Tucson is better for it.
E2, CL2
B9
C6-7
Sports
TV
Weather
B1-9
CL5
B10
interracial settings.
For a lot of people, it was the
rst time they had any type of relationship with black youth, William, 83, says of some of the white
children. I dont think we had
any preconceived notions, basically because our schools were integrated.
Williams career in the Air Force
took the family around the country and to England. Wherever they
JOB
MARKET
For many in US, more jobs dont mean more financial security
G-7
SUMMIT
Behind tough talk on Russia, G-7 leaders face tough reality
WORLD
PAGE 6A
NATION
PAGE 5A
Four sections,
38 pages
Number 158, Volume 138
$1.25
SUNDAY
June 7, 2015
www.hotspringssr.com
TITANIC
TEETH
DON THOMASON
The Sentinel-Record
Visitors take an up-close look at the Tyrannosaurus Rex replica on Friday at the Discover the Dinosaurs exhibit at the
Hot Springs Convention Center. The event continues from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. today. Admission is charged, except for
children 2 years old and younger.
Help
coming
soon
for jails
LETTER, PAGE 3A
Triple
triumph
Multiple Oaklawn
winner captures
historic crown
DAVID SHOWERS
The Sentinel-Record
JAILS, PAGE 3A
BOB WISENER
Sports editor
CROWN FOR A PHAROAH: Victor Espinoza reacts after crossing the finish line with American Pharoah (5) to win the
147th running of the Belmont Stakes Saturday at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y. American Pharoah is the first horse to win the
Triple Crown since Affirmed won it in 1978.
for Tuesday at 5 p.m. in the district administration building, 4207 Park Ave. Candidates for the vacancy will be interviewed
by current members.
Positions 1 and 2 on the Jessieville
School Board will be up for vote. The term
for Position 1 will have four years remaining
after September. The candidate voted into
Position 2 will serve the full five-year term.
Position 2 was among the seats announced for the 2014 election, along with
Positions 3 and 5, which were vacated
during the 2013-14 school year. Board member Sonya Eisenhauer, Position 2, and Jack
Wells both filed last summer to run for
the seat.
It was later discovered the term for
Position 1 expired in 2014 and the Position
2 term expires this September. Wells candidacy for the school board election was
disqualified.
Former board member Mike Semmler
could have remained in Position 1 after the
election because no candidates filed for the
seat. He announced last August he would
resign after the election.
Six candidates were publicly interviewed in October and David Morrow
was appointed to the board. Morrow was
elected president of the board at the next
regular meeting.
METERED
SUNRISE: 6 A.M.
SUNSET: 8:22 P.M.
MORE ON PAGE 2A
91 LOW 73
TUESDAY:
HIGH
PRACTICE
MONDAY:
HIGH
PHAROAH, PAGE 5A
Musician Bradley Loudis, of Birdsboro, Pa., rehearses on timpani for the percussion piece Toccata, composed
by Carlos Chavez, on Friday at Oaklawn Visual and Performing Arts Magnet School. Loudis is a student apprentice in this years Hot Springs Music Festival, celebrating its 20th anniversary in 2015. The Festival Chamber
Players concert to include Chavezs work will be at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Oaklawn School. Rehearsals and
performances continue through June 13. See Page 2C for todays schedule and information on purchasing tickets.
We a t h e r
MOSTLY SUNNY.
HIGHS IN THE
LOW 90S. LOWS
IN THE LOW 70S.
87 LOW 70
Arts, etc.
Classified
Sports
FYI
Lifestyles
Ind
2C
1-8D
1-5B
2A
5-8C
ex
Obituaries
Viewpoints
School News
Politics
Statistics
Recognizing
Margaret Phillips,
a reader of The Sentinel-Record
for 20-plus years
300 Spring St. Hot Springs, AR 71901 To subscribe or place an advertisement, call 501-623-7711 or 922-0979 in Hot Springs Village
2015 WST
latimes.com
Auto title
loans snag
the unwary
High-cost firms are
pushing consumers to
borrow against their
cars as rules on other
lending are tightened.
By Jim Puzzanghera
Cash-strapped consumers are being shown a new
place to find money: their
driveways.
Short-term
lenders,
seeking a detour around
newly toughened restrictions on payday and other
small loans, often are pushing Americans to borrow
more money than they need
by using their debt-free
autos as collateral.
So-called auto title loans
the motor vehicle version
of a home equity loan are
growing rapidly in California
and 24 other states where
lax regulations have allowed
them to flourish in recent
years.
Their hefty principal and
high interest rates are creating another avenue that
traps unwary consumers in
a cycle of debt. For about 1
out of 9 borrowers, the loan
ends with their vehicles being repossessed.
I look at title lending as
AMERICAN PHAROAH , with jockey Victor Espinoza, crosses the finish line in the Belmont Stakes to
become the 12th horse to win the Triple Crown and the first since Affirmed in 1978.
HORSE RACINGS
CROWN PRINCE
Modern-day Secretariat
American Pharoah took the
country on a joy ride, writes columnist Bill Dwyre. SPORTS
when he goes that fast.
Pure speed translated into one of
those moments that seemed to transcend sport, captivating a nation that
had been closely following the quest.
Only a dozen horses have won all
three of racings biggest events the
Kentucky Derby, the Preakness
Stakes and the Belmont over the
last 96 years. The last was Affirmed in
1978.
American Pharoah emerged from
the Southern California stables of
trainer Bob Baffert to join that list in
convincing fashion.
I really felt I had the horse, Baffert said. I told Victor in the paddock,
Dude, he is ready.
Baffert qualifies as a rock star in
his sport, quick with a quote, instantly recognizable by his white hair
and sunglasses. The son of an Arizona
rancher made a name for himself with
quarter horses at Los Alamitos Race
Course in Orange County before
jumping to the more glamorous world
of
thorough- [See Belmont, A8]
Tony preview
Go behind the curtain
as Broadway celebrates theaters biggest night of the year.
ARTS & BOOKS
California, Business,
Sports, Calendar,
Arts & Books, Travel
Printed with soy inks on
partially recycled paper.
By Thomas Curwen
The Santa Ana River is a robust and
beautiful sight these days. Five miles west
of the Prado Dam in Yorba Linda, the water has cut a narrow channel in a sandy bed
and courses briskly over submerged rocks
and tree limbs.
The water is a complicated cocktail
that comes from many sources. As it flows
96 miles from its headwaters to the ocean,
it provides a glimpse of the future: a picture
of water management set into place nearly
50 years ago that can be seen as a model for
Californias long effort to keep the state
from withering away.
The rushing burble, quickening
through narrow shallows, mingles with
By Noah Bierman
and Evan Halper
85944 10200
Number of loans
91,505
2013
64,585
2012
38,148
2011
Kevin McCarthys
multimillion-dollar
political operation is
key to the Bakersfield
Republicans success.
Funding, not
ideology, fuels
majority leader
Reanimating the
Disney brand
AFTER FLOWING 96 MILES , the Santa Ana River enters the ocean. The
Driven to borrow
WILL YOU?
Rich Pedroncelli AP
AIRPORT
Doss pact
up in air
BY PETER ROPER
THE PUEBLO CHIEFTAIN
About 90 percent
do.
We dont have any
doubt that the Air
Force has been satisfied with the job were
doing for them, said
Randy Davis, chief executive officer at Doss
and a former Air Force
fighter pilot.
But the 10-year
Arturo Rodriguez (right) hugs his friend Bryan Bunch as they watch their horse they bet on, American Pharoah, win
racings Triple Crown. They were watching the action at Southern Colorado Gaming and Events Center on Saturday.
TRIPLE CROWN
SEE DOSS, 2 A
BY RYAN SEVERANCE
THE PUEBLO CHIEFTAIN
CHIEFTAIN PHOTO/FILE
RESCUE OPERATION
A sea of
migrants
Mediterranean coast
in hopes of reaching
Italian shores.
Also aboard the Bulwark, part of a multination patrol and
rescue force, was British Defense Secretary
Michael Fallon. We
could see hundreds of
thousands trying to
cross this summer,
Fallon told reporters
who asked about the
captains half-million
figure.
During Saturday,
a total of 3,480 migrants had been safely
rescued in 15 separate
operations, the Italian coast guard said.
Calls for help went
out via satellite phone
earlier in the day from
the smugglers boats,
SEE MIGRANTS, 2 A
Inside today
Vol. 148
No. 7
264 pages
7 sections
BUSINESS
CLASSIFIED
CROSSWORD
ENTERTAINMENT
FUNERALS
IDEAS
LIFE
LOCAL
SPORTS
1F
1C
4E
6A
4B
1G
1E
3B
1D
AP PHOTO/JULIO CORTEZ
Related story
PAGE 1D
G-7 SUMMIT
Police
walk past
demonstrators
Saturday
during a
protest in
GarmischPartenkirchen,
Germany,
against the G-7
summit.
BY JULIE PACE
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON
Behind the tough talk on
Russia expected from
President Barack Obama
and other leaders gathering in Germany this
weekend is a stark reality.
None of the world powers believes the economic
and diplomatic punishments levied on Russia
for its alleged aggression
AP PHOTO/
MATTHIAS
SCHRADER
Hardly working?
WEATHER
Scattered
storms.
LIFE, 1E
BUSINESS, 1F
82/55
DETAILS, 9C
BOYS LACROSSE
VPs son,
Beau
Biden,
laid to rest
Notre Dame
reaches
Class M
semifinals
News >> A6
YOUR LATEST,
LOCAL
FORECAST
COUPONS
More than
$132
inside today
Sports >> C5
VISIT WWW.NHREGISTER.COM/
WEATHER
Sunny
H: 70 L: 52
$2.00
FACEBOOK.COM/NEWHAVENREGISTER TWITTER.COM/NHREGISTER
PAGE A16
nhregister.com
Gunshot
detecting
tech to
expand
NEW HAVEN
PHAROAHS CROWN
GUNSHOT PAGE 2
Victor Espinoza reacts after crossing the finish line with American Pharoah to win the 147th running of the Belmont
Stakes horse race at Belmont Park on Saturday, in Elmont, N.Y. American Pharoah is the first horse to win the Triple
Crown since Affirmed won it in 1978. See full story in Sports, Page C1.
YALE UNIVERSITY
Alums seek
diversity in new
college names
QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY
NAMING PAGE 15
NEW HAVEN
COLUMN
WASHINGTON
ONLINE
20th International
Festival opens Friday
In search of a young
soldiers painting
Have questions?
Weve got answers!
INDEX
Lottery ............A2
Business .....B2-3
Television ........D6
Advice.............. D7
2-DAY SALE - MON., JULY 8th & TUE., JULY 9th, 2015
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JUNE 7, 2015
delawareonline.com
The Biden family gathers as Beau Bidens casket is brought into St. Anthony of Padua Roman Catholic Church in Wilmington on Saturday morning.
A MIGHTY HEART
President Obama eulogizes Beau Biden as a family man, advocate, patriot
CRIS BARRISH AND JONATHAN STARKEY
THE NEWS JOURNAL
WILMINGTON Three days of public mourning for
Beau Biden ended Saturday with an emotional twohour funeral at St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Church,
where President Barack Obama called his vice presidents son a man of character whose death at age 46
has left a gaping void in the world.
Obama spoke for 25 minutes before about 1,000
mourners, including former President Bill Clinton and
his wife, Hillary, a 2016 presidential candidate, who
said their last goodbyes to Beau before a national television audience.
Beau Biden, Delawares former attorney general
and the son of Vice President Joe Biden, died May 30
after a nearly two-year battle with brain cancer. Rather
than seeking a third term in November, Beau had said
he would instead run for governor in 2016.
Obama echoed other speakers, including Beaus
younger brother and sister, who praised Bidens love of
his family, fellow citizens and his country. The presi-
Find videos of the funeral and memorial services as well as photo galleries, not only of this weeks events,
but also of the life of Beau Biden at
www.delawareonline.com
EULOGIZED
OUTPOURING OF LOVE
FRIENDS REMEMBER
WEATHER
INDEX
Wilmington
Business ................................... 1E
Classifieds ............................... 1D
Crossword ................................5F
Dear Abby ............................... 5F
Education .............................20A
Editorial ................................28A
Homes ..................................... 1G
Horoscope ...............................5F
Letters .................................. 28A
Lotteries ................................. 2A
Obituaries ............................22A
Police & Fire ......................... 18A
Scoreboard ............................ 6C
Sports ....................................... 1C
Details, 4A
Today
Tomorrow
75/59
83/70
Mostly sunny
T-storm
COMING MONDAY
Is Rehoboth Beach, of all places, pricing out the
locals with its amenity-filled mansions?
years. Sports, 1C
$3.00 retail
legislators agree on
hospital funding, 1b
SUNDAY
uf earns trip to
world series, 1C
INSIDE
UP TO
$140
IN COUPON
SAVINGS
www.ocala.com
$2.00
Learn more
inspections on Page 7A
Medicaid
issue not
going away
By Zac Anderson
GateHouse Media Services
Victor Espinoza reacts after crossing the finish line with American Pharoah to win the Belmont Stakes
at Belmont Park on Saturday in Elmont, N.Y. With the win, American Pharoah, broken in Marion County,
becomes the first horse to win the Triple Crown since Affirmed won it in 1978.
By Fred Hiers
Staff writer
TODAY:
A t-storm.
50% chance
of rain.
HIGH
in Elmont, New
York, after the
Affirmed trainer
race. We always
Melvin James
thought he was a
thought American
very, very good
Pharoah would
horse, but the
win. See Page 7A
question was
there whether he was a great horse.
It takes a great horse to win the
Triple Crown. He is a great horse.
Im just so proud of my horse and
the owners of American Pharoah,
he said. He was brilliant. Hes the
best horse Ive ever trained.
This, the 147th running of the
Belmont Stakes, was McKathans
third attempt at a Triple Crownwinning connection after losing
bids in 1997 with Silver Charm and
a year later with Real Quiet.
McKathan had broken and
trained Silver Charm, which in
1997 won the Kentucky Derby and
Preakness only to lose to Touch
Inside
LOW
90 68
TOMORROW:
High: 91, Low: 69
45% chance of rain.
5-day forecast, 8B
Belmont on Page 7A
INDEX
books
6f
Business 14a
classified 1e
crossword 4f
EDITORIAL 10a
LOCAL
1b
lottery
2a
obituaries 6b
PEOPLE
2a
SPORTS
1c
television 4f
travel
3f
RUBIO on Page 6A
541-2171
For more information about when to go to the ER talk with our nurses 24/7
by calling 800-530-1188 or visit us at www.OcalaHealthSystem.com
Check our current average ER Wait Times at Ocala Regional or West Marion by texting ER to 23000.
90994 24007
SUNDAY
IN SPORTS, 1B
AMERICAN PHAROAH
RIDES INTO HISTORY
$2.00
ON THE
WEB: Go
to savannahnow.
com to see video
of a use-of-force
incident earlier
this year at the
Chatham County
SEE TASERS, PAGE 8A jail.
James Hall, right, sits inside the shoe repair business he has operated on Augusta Avenue since 1961. Along Augusta Avenue, the neighborhood includes a mixture of businesses and homes,
as well as a memorial of stuffed animals, top left, for Charles Smith, who was killed by a police officer in September.
ALL-ACCESS: Home
delivery subscribers are
entitled to our digital
products on the Web,
smartphones and iPad at
no extra charge. http://
savannahnow.com/
today
H 87 L 68
Sunshine and rain. 2A
Drawing by Ella Stone, 9
Savannah Country Day
index
Ronald Williams.
Its a fine group of people out here, Williams said. We just have
a few that want to disrupt it.
Bounded by West Bay and Comer streets to the north and south,
and East Lathrop Avenue and Interstate 516 to the east and west, the
West Savannah neighborhood had about 4,500 residents by 2010,
according to U.S. Census numbers cited in the Augusta plan. More
than 70 percent of those residents were African Americans with
more than one in three living below the poverty line.
Williams regularly walks the neighborhood to engage with
residents and see what issues need to be addressed when he is not
Lotteries.....................2A
Morning Break ............ 7E
Nation/World....... 3A, 8A
Obituaries .............. 3-5C
Opinion................ 14-15A
Savvy Shopper............6E
Sports.................... 1-10B
Where/Travel...............8E
Vox Populi.................. 4E
CONTACT US
CORRECTIONS:
If you spot an error of
fact, call Susan Catron,
executive editor, at
912-652-0327.
S U N DAY 6/7/15
$2.25 OAH U, $3.25 N E IG H B OR ISLAN DS / STARADVE RTISE R.COM / PARTLY SU N NY. H IG H 86, LOW 72 >> A23
ASSOCIATED PRESS
S P O R TS / C3
Lessons
past
LOCAL
SUSPECTED
COURTHOUSE CANDY
THIEF NABBED
from
the
wcole@staradvertiser.com
NATION
3rd squad
Afghan
soldiers
2nd squad
Jonathan
Brostrom:
The 2006 graduate of
the University of Hawaii
ROTC program was the
platoon leader when
he was killed in
Afghanistan during the
Battle of Wanat in 2008
Command post
1st squad
TOW missile
vehicle
A CLOSER LOOK
A 3-D virtual representation
of the July 13, 2008, Battle
of Wanat in Afghanistan
MARTHA HERNANDEZ /
MHERNANDEZ@STARADVERTISER.COM
local
911 Report B2
Obituaries B4-5
sports
Further Review C3
Scoreboard C12
money
Akamai Money D2
Real estate D6
today
Show Biz F2
Sunday Break F8-9
OAHU HOME
SALES
Median
prices
rise amid
strong
demand
By Rob Shikina
rshikina@staradvertiser.com
538-NEWS
Wilder High
Class of 45
unlike any other
EXPLORE, E1
NEWS, A11
BSU senior
Emma Bates
ready to run
WOMEN, MUSIC
AND COMMUNITY
Mary Jane Oresik creates a camp
EXPLORE, E1
SPORTS, S1
SUNDAY EDITION
Idaho Statesman
JUNE 7, 2015
$2
ADA ASSESSMENTS
SUMMERY
89 / 63 SEE A13
HORSE RACING
AMERICAN ROYALTY
HOME VALUES
UP 6.8 PERCENT
CRUEL SUMMER?
FORENSICS
NURSES BECOME
CRIME FIGHTERS
Agrowing number of ER
nurses are being trained to
collect evidence from rape
victims, which has resulted
in the arrest and conviction
of several attackers. DEPTH, D1
EDITORIAL
Trustees misstep
in West Ada
The action taken by Carol
Sayles emailing from a
school district account an
election choice on the eve of
voting, and exposing secrets
about an employees departure to boot certainly merit punishment. DEPTH, D1
OREGON WILDLIFE
WILDLIFE HABITAT
Noxious weeds
doing damage
Its a story as old as the United States: Weeds run roughshod over land needed to
nourish wildlife, but these
weeds provide no nourishment. Stopping the spread is
nearly impossible. NEWS, A4
An average of 648,000 acres have burned in Idaho annually since1992, and though persistent
rain this spring has pushed back the start of the fire season, experts say we can expect the smoke,
backcountry closures and even evacuations that have become normal as fires burn hotter and
later into the fall. Above, Paul Unser, left, and firefighters Jay Bird and Tyson Vogen watch the
massive Elk Complex Fire in August 2013. Rocky Barker and Audrey Dutton look at the numbers
and talk to the key players to see what Idahoans can expect this wildfire season. DEPTH, D1
IDAHO HISTORY
EARTHQUAKE NECESSITY
A NEWS Catching Up A2-3 | Local news A4-6| Western news A6-7 | Nation/World A10-12 | Idaho History A6 | Weather A13
D DEPTH Editorial D1 |Opinions D4 | Letters to the Editor D5 | Guest opinion D7 | Editorial Cartoon D5 | Dana Milbank D8
E EXPLORE Tim Woodward E1 | TV E2 | Carolyn Hax E3 | Horoscopes E3 | Puzzles E3 | Books E4 | Religion E5 | Obituaries E8-9 | Calendars E5 | Garlic toast E10
S SPORTS NBA Finals S1 | The Bottom Line S2 | SportsTV/Radio S2 | Scoreboard S5 | Horse racing S1, 3 | French Open tennis S4 | Golf S4
INSIDE TODAY
IDAHO STATESMAN: A McClatchy Newspaper, 1200 N. Curtis Road, Boise, ID P.O. Box 40, Boise, ID 83707 (208) 377-6200 2015 Idaho Statesman, Vol. 150, No. 317, 5 sections, 42 pages
sA
Ave biG on All powersports - Accessories - GeAr & clothinG
1764086-01
SUNDAY
CENTER OF
ATTENTION
SPORTS
SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 | $1.75 CITY/BURBS $3 ELSEWHERE
80 63 SPRY
CROWN HIM
American Pharoah is rst to win horse racings ultimate prize in 37 years
JULIO CORTEZ/AP
THE WATCHDOGS
RICKTELANDERANDMORE,PAGES84-85
AMERICAN PHAROAH
RACES INTO HISTORY,
WINS TRIPLE CROWN, 3C
Take grilling to
a new level!
Red, White & Barbecue storewide
event going on now.
$119
SAVINGS
UP TO
INSIDE
TODAY
Charter
schools
$50M
loan pool
6
4
7
MAJOR PLAYERS
1. Mark Leonard: He is the lead suspect in the 2012
fatal explosion in the Richmond Hill subdivision and is
facing trial this month. He is charged with two counts
of felony murder and 46 counts of arson.
2. Monserrate Shirley: She is Mark Leonards exgirlfriend and owner of the house that exploded. In
January, she pleaded guilty to lesser charges in exchange for her cooperation with prosecutors. She is
expected to testify at the trial.
3. Denise Robinson: She is the lead prosecuting
attorney who also is the supervisor of the Marion
County prosecutors offices Special Crimes Unit. She
has handled other high-profile cases, including the trial
of former Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department officer David Bisard.
4. Diane Black: She is the lead public defender for
Mark Leonard and the chief trial deputy for the Marion
County public defenders council. This is the first highprofile case she has handled.
5. Judge John Marnocha: He is the St. Joseph County
Superior Court judge presiding over Mark Leonards
trial. He joined the bench Jan. 1, 1999, and is serving a
term that expires Dec. 31, 2020.
6. Robert Leonard: He is the half-brother of Mark
Leonard and a suspect in the Richmond Hill explosion.
He is scheduled for trial in January in Fort Wayne.
7. Gary Thompson: He is a former employee of Mark
Leonard and the fourth suspect to be arrested in connection with the explosion.
8. Glenn Hults: He is a friend of Mark Leonard and the
fifth and last suspect to be arrested in connection with
the explosion.
TODAYS WEATHER
LOW: 61 HIGH: 87
Business ......1-2D
Classifieds ..3-8D
Deaths ...28-29A
Editorials .....19A
Living ...........1-6E
Lottery ...........2A
NBA................ 7C
Metro... 25-26A
812-378-9906
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maureen.gilmer@indystar.com
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HISTORY
Bullish on
the Mayor
JUNE 7, 2015 | THE NEWS IOWA DEPENDS UPON | DESMOINESREGISTER.COM | METRO EDITION
A GANNETT COMPANY
BURMA TO IOWA
The nerds
won: How
D.M. got
comic con
Mu Mu, a refugee from Burma, plays with her children Ju Aye, 9, left, and Jobmu, 6, in their Des Moines apartment.
A WIDOWS WISH
NO
MORE
SUICIDES
COURTNEY CROWDER
CCROWDER@DMREG.COM
COMING MONDAY: Once a national model, Iowas refugee safety net has grown tattered, leaving newcomers increasingly vulnerable.
High 85 Low 66
Index
Obituaries .. 20-25A
Business............... 1D
Classifieds........... 5D
Iowa Life.............. 1E
Iowa In-Depth.... 1 I
Opinion ........... 1 OP
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STK#F18220
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ZOO-PENDOUS DAY
FOR AREA FAMILIES
Hundreds attend first-ever event, A3
Becker: Pauls
key to stopping
state furloughs
Fifty shades
... of
Hutch?
By Mary Clarkin
The Hutchinson News
mclarkin@hutchnews.com
Sondra Wood, author of The Remainder Man, talks about how she handwrites in a spiral
notebook, then transcribes her writing into a laptop computer at her home.
By Kathy Hanks
The Hutchinson News
khanks@hutchnews.com
Afterward, when
Lewis lay softly snoring, their bodies no
longer slick with sweat,
tears of mixed emotion
coursed silently out of
the corners of Maggies
eyes. Lovemaking was
okay, but far from wonderful, she thought.
The earth hadnt
moved for her, but it
had been interesting to
see it move for Lewis.
The recollection made
her feel somehow
powerful.
***
Did my husband
make love to you?
Maggie watched Mrs.
Albright carefully as
the woman decided
whether to answer the
question.
Yes, she said finally,
unashamed. Lewis
married you on the
rebound. It was unfair
of him to drag you into
this. Enough people
have been hurt already
because of us.
Read another passage
on Page A8
See TALE / A8
Illustration by Lindsey Bauman/The Hutchinson News
Hutchinson Rep.
Jan Pauls deserves
credit for the maneuver in the Kansas
Legislature to prevent
furloughs this week
of thousands of state
employees, according
to Rep. Steven Becker,
R-Buhler.
On Saturday, the
House and the Senate
passed the legislation
to prevent furloughs
by 106-0 and 39-0 votes,
respectively. Gov. Sam
Brownback signed
House Substitute for
SB 11, a bill that designates all state workers
as essential ...
Becker called the
legislative move the
brainchild of Pauls,
a Republican and
longtime legislator.
Near the end
of the late-night
session Friday in the
House, the House
Appropriations
Committee recommended a bill be
amended to insert
language pertaining
to essential state
See PAULS / A9
THE SESSION:
SATURDAY, DAY 107
LEGISLATIVE
WATCH
WHATS HAPPENED
Day 107 passed
Saturday without
final fiscal action. The
Estimated cost of overtime totaled $731,000.
HISTORICAL NOTE
Failure to wrap up
Saturday gave the 2015
Legislature a place in
history. Records going
back to 1969 show no
session lasting longer.
Read more on A10
OO
OO
OO
See VETERANS / A4
95
68
TV Listings
B5
ClassifiedsE1
LotteriesA2
OutdoorsD6
ObituariesA11
CrosswordE4
SportsD1
Weather
C12
INTERCEPTED LETTER
Dear novelist,
That first book, with
Hutch as a backdrop,
pretty salty, yes?
WWW.HUTCHNEWS.COM
CROWN
TRIPLE
PHAROAH
CROWNED
Sale ends
tomorrow
MT SUN
courier-journal.com
Chance of
light snow
Chance
Chanceof
light
snow
of snow
Ice
Chance
Snow
offlurries
snow
Snow
Snow
flurries
facebook.com/courierjournal
WEATHER, 2A
Louisville area 36-hour forecast:
A warm Sunday will give way to a
rainy cold front that night; severe
storms possible on Monday.
79
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Sunny
Fair
85 | 68
Business
Comics
Fair
Haze
Deaths
Editorial
14A
1X
Haze
Mostly
21A
sunny
1H
Features
Jobs
Mostly
Metro
sunny
1D
1F
3A
Lottery
Sports
USAToday
2A
1C
1B
Only available at
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each
plus tax and fee
SU N DAY
AMERICAN HERO
LSU WINS
SUPER REGIONAL
OPENER, 4-3
THE NEW
NEW ORLEANS
SPORTS
LIVING
SPORTS
7
Since 183
$2.00
METRO EDITION
S U N D A Y ,
J U N E
7 ,
2 0 1 5
It takes guts.
It really does.
KEEP BOUNCIN
By Alison Fensterstock
Staff writer
OUR
By Jessica Williams
Staff writer
WEATHER,
B-6
HIGH
91
S
KATHLEEN FLYNN / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Metairie teenagers Christian Frost, left, and his twin brother Connor are both headed to college on scholarships in the fall.
LOW
75
BUSINESS
CLASSIFIED
DEATHS
IMES
As children,
local sisters
escaped
the horror
of the Holocaust
A playlist of neighborhood
bounce songs, A-8
Personal BEST
A-10
G-4
B-4
LIVING
LOUISIANA
NATIONAL
D
A-2
A-11
VIDEO AT
NOLA.COM
PUZZLES
REFLECTIONS
SPORTS
JAMES
K ARST
D-9
E
C
TELEVISION
TRAVEL
WASHINGTON
D-11
D-6
A-3
178TH
YEAR
NO. 58
12393 22222
S I N C E 1 8 47
UP TO
$115
IN COUPON SAVINGS
INSIDE
When
strangers
become
family
ROYAL CORONATION
Kiwanis
Pancake
Breakfast
Sunday, June 7
6:30-11:30 am
at
St. Dominic Academy
121 Gracelawn Rd.
in Auburn
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Victor Espinoza crosses the finish line with American Pharoah (5) to win the 147th running of the Belmont Stakes horse race at Belmont
Park on Saturday, in Elmont, N.Y. American Pharoah is the first horse to win the Triple Crown since Affirmed won it in 1978.
G-7 SUMMIT
GARMISCH-PARTENKIRCHEN, Germany (AP) Thousands of demonstrators packed a German Alpine resort town
on Saturday to protest a wide range of
causes, from climate change to free trade,
before the arrival of the leaders of the
Group of Seven industrialized democracies for a two-day summit.
Though the demonstration in Garmisch-Partenkirchen was largely peaceful, a small group of protesters clashed
with police as they marched through the
town, charging at officers who responded
with pepper spray. At least two protest-
Today 72/38
Tomorrow 62/44
INDEX
AdviceB6
ClassifiedE1-E8
CrosswordB6
LotteryA8
MaineC1-C6
NuptialsB7
ObituariesA8
OpinionC9
PerspectiveC10
SportsD1-D8
2015 Lewiston Daily Sun
$2.25
)&'
(*#)%"-,'
!
"
'
&
!
!
!+$
SUNDAY
June 7, 2015
Informing more than 1 million Maryland readers weekly in print and online
baltimoresun.com
Price $2.50 ($3 out of market). Our 178th year, No. 158
BELMONT STAKES
SUN INVESTIGATES
birth
control
debated
Service without
parental consent
triggers objections
By Erica L. Green
and Talia Richman
The Baltimore Sun
A jubilant Victor Espinoza celebrates after riding American Pharoah to victory in the Belmont Stakes and the first Triple Crown since
Affirmed in 1978. Despite concerns about his ability to compete over Belmonts 112 miles, American Pharoah won by 512 lengths.
By Childs Walker
Inside
TODAYS WEATHER
SUNNY
78 61
HIGH
LOW
inside
bridge autos 5
opinion news 24
lottery news 7
obituaries news 22
puzzles comics section classified b&j 9
www.kitchendistributorsofmaryland.com
-AAAAA-
ALL HAIL
PHAROAH!
AP PHOTO
9 823 8
2720 0
2 3
SUNDAY EDITION
A call to service
I N SI D E :
Up to $89
in coupon
values
SPORT S / B1
TOURING
AMERICAN
PHAROAH WINS
TRIPLE CROWN
AS
LOW AS
159/mo
7254080-02
725408
72540
7254
725
7
25408
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254
2
25
5408
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54
5
408
4
08
0
80
0-02
00-0
-02
-0
-0
02
2
Of Classifieds
KALAMAZOO
TODAYS
MUST-READS
Dyrk Hamilton
was born with the
body of a female,
but the mind and
psyche of a male.
He felt like a boy,
thought like a
boy, played like
a boy, dressed
like a boy. He had
crushes on girls
in the way boys
do. Hormone
therapy and
reconstructive
surgery have
changed his
physical appearance. After the
surgery, he was
able to get the
gender changed
on his Kentucky
birth certicate.
KALAMAZOO
Gooness was
on the march
(Mark Bugnaski /
MLive.com)
Its going to be a
multimillion-dollar
INDEX
Advice............ D4
Classied/Jobs. F3
KALAMAZOO
Entertainment D1
Local............... A5
Lottery ............ A2
Obituaries....... C6
Opinion.........G10
Outdoors ........D5
WALLY BAKER
269-426-5055
26
6-5055
Real Estate.....H3
Travel ..............D6
Sports.............B1
Weather.......... C3
A graduation
ceremony is
held inside
Holy Family
Chapel at
what was
then Nazareth College.
(Kalamazoo
Gazette/WMU
archives)
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OPINION
*lease
Adrian
Petersons
return: Forgive
and forget?
SPORTS, 1C
SPORTS, 1C
ST. PAUL
A
JUNE 7, 2015
NEWSPAPER
bshaw@pioneerpress.com
The monthly rent for Lois Bystroms apartment in Arden Hills is rising from
$756 to $1,025, and she says she will be forced to move due to the cost.
Fear, confusion
as Courts call
on health care
subsidies looms
Decision could lead to
millions losing coverage
By Tony Pugh
Linda Penrose, the wife of pastor Joe Penrose of the Open Range Cowboy Church in Ham Lake, worships with other churchgoers last Sunday. For more photos, go to photos.TwinCities.com.
Straight-shootin at
the Cowboy Church
Its worship with a Western theme in Ham Lake, where bootsand-hat-wearing parishioners listen to no-nonsense sermons
By Bob Shaw
bshaw@pioneerpress.com
TwinCities.com
In Texas, the yippee-ki-yay style of worship would be a natural. But pastor Joe
Penrose was asked if there are any real
cowboys in Minnesota.
I think everyone, he said, adjusting
his hat, has a little bit of cowboy in
them.
Adamczak chimed in: You dont have
to be in Texas to be a cowboy.
True to the cowboy spirit, the church
had humble beginnings.
Five years ago, Penrose joined the
American Fellowship of Cowboy Churches, a Texas-based group with more than
200 parishes. After three months training offered through the association, he
was ready to start.
In a dirt-floor horse barn in northern
COWBOY CHURCH, 8A >
SECTION A A&E LIVE SECTION B LOCAL SECTION C SPORTS SECTION D BUSINESS SECTION E SUNDAY LIFE
CALL US Newsroom 651-228-5490
Ads & other info 651-222-1111
Subscriber service 651-717-7377 Reader advocate 651-228-5446
care and
history of
Old Glory
YourLife, 1F
WWW.SUNHERALD.COM
The Biloxi Shuckers take on the Mobile BayBears in the long-awaited home opener at the new MGM Park on Saturday. It was a long night, too, but the Shuckers won in 14 innings.
VICTORIOUS
homecoming
INSIDE
Stadium opener
is extra-special:
Shuckers prevail in
14 innings, 5B
Players take first
swings in practice, 1B
Game Day Experience
has Vieux Marche
hopping, 8A
More photos, 10A
online
@sunherald.com
See more
photos
from the
game-day events
Watch
videos from
pregame
events and the game
By MARY PEREZ
meperez@sunherald.com
hat an opening day for the Biloxi Shuckers, who played late into the night Saturday for a 5-4 victory over the Mobile BayBears in 14 innings.
It was 86 degrees at game time, but even hotter earlier
in the day when fans filled downtown for the organizers
Game Day Experience pregame event.
Warmest of all, though, was the welcome the Shuckers
got from their new hometown fans, whod sold out MGM
Park for the first home game.
After 55 games on the road, the team didnt arrive in
Biloxi until 4 a.m. Saturday from an extra-innings win Fri-
Shuckers TO 8A
Follow us
2015 SUN HERALD
facebook.com/sunherald
@sunherald
At the same time, officials with the state Department of Education are examining ways to collect the
same amount of data with
less test time.
INDEX
Annie, Abby...........5F
Business............10F
Classified.............5C
Crosswords..........4F
Horoscopes..........5F
Obituaries.........12A
Opinion...............2C
Sports.................1B
TV........................5F
Your Life..............1F
Testing TO 9A
WEATHER, 10B
High 90
Low 74
SPORTS C1
CROWNED!
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Real
students
praise
virtual
schools
But online
programs lack
accountability,
could divert
district funds,
detractors say
BY ALEX STUCKEY
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
GEPHARDTS
ABOUT-FACE
GEPHARDT IN
CONGRESS
BY CHUCK RAASCH
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
In 1998 he
called for
Congress
to solemnly
remember
the
genocide
We must
always keep
that fact,
those real
facts, in our
mind.
WASHINGTON As a member
of Congress, Dick Gephardt often spoke passionately about
the need for the United States to
recognize as genocide the mass
deaths of as many as 1.5 million
Armenians under the Turkish
government that began one century ago.
But as a lobbyist for Turkey
since leaving Congress in 2005,
Gephardt, a Democrat, has taken
the opposite side. His behindthe-scenes work has been cited
as a factor in the annual failure of
GEPHARDT AS
LOBBYIST
In 2007 he
told the
Post-Dispatch
he was
working
toward a
reconciliation
that would
avoid a
genocide
declaration.
RAILROAD
RETALIATION?
COLUMN A2
NIXON
AND
THE
NFL
SPORTS C1
EDUCATIONAL EXPERIMENT
ONLINE EDUCATION
IN MISSOURI
A&E D1
NEW
LIFE
AS A
HOUSEWIFE
Fifteen years
ago, a reform
effort at Jefferson
Elementary in
St. Louis offered
promise for fifthgraders such as
Evita Caldwell.
Now shes spent a
year measuring
the results of those
reforms through
the lives of her
former classmates.
STAYING COOL
LIFESTYLE H1
RACE FOR
THE CURE
IN STLSUNDAY B1
SPECIAL SECTION
In the pink
TODAY
BY JACK SUNTRUP
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
93/73
2 M
CHANCE OF STORMS
MONDAY
87/69
STORMS POSSIBLE
WEATHER
A25
POST-DISPATCH WEATHERBIRD
Wicked
Mamma Mia!
Cirque Dreams Holidaze
Irving Berlins White Christmas
Fox Box Office
Riverdance 20th Anniversary
314-535-1700
Disneys Beauty and the Beast
FabulousFox.com/
Jersey Boys
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YEL
BLAK
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82
55
24-HOUR UPDATES AT
BILLINGSGAZETTE.COM
sunny
AT HOME:Mostly
Tips for
investing in real estate
LOCAL EDITION
6-day forecast / B8
o, youre ready to become the next Donald Trump and embark on your real estate empire. Or maybe youre just looking to diversify
your investment portfolio. Here are nine tips to consider when buying investment property:
RENTAL
RACES
Legion Against
Cancer night
Save and buy
7 emotional for
Scarlets assistant
Kyle McLean C1
Apartment
weather make it
busy for landlords,
tenants
D1 loan
Not your typical
GOOD
DIRT
Know the
neighborhood
How close is it to amenities like parks, shopping areas and grocery stores? And what kind
of parking does it have (for example, a garage)?
Is it located in a quiet area or on a busy street?
All of these factors will determine how easy it
is to rent and what other properties youll be
competing against. You may also check on the
crime rate, which could mean youll have to
discount the rent.
Up to code
2shortage,
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HITTING
HOME
Materials
found around
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make the ideal
compost E1
8
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Managing
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Banks may look more favorably on properties with more than four units because they
carry less vacancy risks. But experts say: With
more units comes more management. Be sure
youre ready to meet the needs of four or more
tenants which may require more maintenance,
regular upkeep and paperwork.
Paperwork
Associated Press
witness again.
I feel like I was honestly a part of history
today, said New York City resident Zach Witkoff,
22, who last year left the Belmont Stakes dejected
after California Chromes failed bid at one of
sports most elusive feats. I think all the fans felt
that way.
Please see Celebration, A7
Prairie professional
Former Billings man helps run Montanas largest private plains reserve
Farm group
breaks silence
on climate
change
Records kept by farmers
show some planting,
harvesting occurring
earlier than ever
By TOM LUTEY
tlutey@billingsgazette.com
During his tenure at the American Prairie Reserve, Damien Austin has become a font of knowledge about the areas wild inhabitants and
flora, easily ticking off the names of different cacti.
bison watched nervously before moving off at a trot. Across the valley to the
southeast, two bachelor bull bison lazed
on a grassy hillside. To the east, the top of
the Larb Hills pushed up to greet the bottom of a bank of dark storm clouds.
Great place, great job, he said.
Bottom floor
Austin, 34, is the operations manager
the top guy on the ground for the
American Prairie Reserve, a sprawling
and ambitious conservation effort begun
in 2004 with a goal of creating the largest wildlife reserve in the lower 48 states
while preserving prairie grasslands,
some of which have never been tilled.
Its so amazing to be a part of this,
getting in at the beginning of something
thats going to last for generations and
help forge what its going to look like in
the future, Austin said.
INDEX
COMING MONDAY: Project searches for photos of soldiers killed in Vietnam. Celebrate Community
CYAN
MAG
YELO
BLAK
SPORTS, C1
Through a
glass darkly
In rhythm
The Huskers success this
season could get a boost if
QB Tommy Armstrong can get
a fast start in games.
WRAPPING UP
THE SESSION
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
JOURNALSTAR.COM
Short staff,
long hours,
high stakes
Finally,
a Triple
Crown
Lincoln fans
cheer American
Pharoah.
By MICHAEL SHORO
Lincoln Journal Star
WEATHER
82 60
Details, B10
82 60
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JUNE 7, 2015
PHAROAH MADE
IT LOOK EASY
REVIEWJOURNAL.COM
FALLEN REMEMBERED
Emotion
lingers
in killing
of three
Anniversary of brazen
attacks to be marked
By COLTON LOCHHEAD
SHANNON STAPLETON/REUTERS
Jockey Victor Espinoza, aboard American Pharoah, celebrates after winning the 147th running of the Belmont Stakes, capping the
first Triple Crown in 37 years, on Saturday at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y.
ELMONT, N.Y.
merican Pharoahs bay coat
turned almost black with
sweat from effort, yet in
full stride he left such an
impression of ease that he appeared
to hover and flutter over the deep
sand of Belmont Park. His jockey,
Victor Espinoza, rode such a perfect
race he seemed almost motionless
until he crossed the finish line, when
he became a flash of turquoise silk,
writhing with joy until he threatened
to come out of the saddle on his victory
lap.
PLUS
CROWD AT BELMONT STAKES DOES SOMETHING FRESH AND UNHEARD OF FOR A GENERATION PAGE 1C
Howard Hancock didnt blame anyone when his husband got cancer.
But he certainly isnt thanking the
Clark County School District or the
Clark County Education Associations
Teachers Health Trust, which is teetering on the verge of financial collapse,
for making the chemotherapy his husband needs affordable.
INSIDE
PAGE 20A
MEMORIAL CEREMONY
Metro plans to honor the lives
of officers Igor Soldo and Alyn
Beck and Joseph Wilcox on the
one-year anniversary of their
deaths. The event is set for 6 p.m.
Monday at the Metropolitan Police
Departments Northeast Area
Command office, 3750 Cecile Ave.
Officers from Soldo and Becks
squad will help dedicate trees for
each of the three slain men.
Books 5F | Business 1D | Classified 1J | Crosswords 3D | Movies 6F | Obituaries 4B | Real Estate Millions 1G | Scoreboard 8C | Television 4D | Travel 7F | Viewpoints 1E | Weather 25A 2015, GateHouse Media LLC | Vol. 111, No. 68, 102 pages
PHARAOH
IS CROWNED
www.nashuatelegraph.com
POWER
WASHING
The Telegraph
SUNDAY
Sunday,
June
7
2015
$2.00
NHs ballot
selfies to get
day in court
Judge decides whether
such photos protected
By DAVID BROOKS
Staff Writer
Naloxone bottles with a syringe. Naloxone reverses the deadly, respiration-stopping effects of heroin overdose.
Adding Up
By KATHRYN MARCHOCKI
Staff Writer
mergency medical
crews used an estimated $2 million
worth of Narcan in
New Hampshire as
they scrambled to
bring heroin and
other opiate overdose victims
back from the brink of death.
EMTs more than doubled use
of the anti-overdose medication
Today74|Tonight57|Monday
INSIDE TODAY
For a complete guide
to todays edition of The
Telegraph, see Page A-2.
CONTACT US
Main number 882-2741
Classifieds 594-6555
Circulation 594-6424
Full Contact info Page A-2
CONCORD The question of whether New Hampshire can keep voters from
sharing a ballot selfie
picture to confirm their
election preference will be
aired Monday in federal
district court.
The hearing before U.S.
District Court Judge Paul
Barbadoro will be the latest
step in the debate between
free speech and the sanctity
of the polling place that has
been going on since 2013,
when The Telegraph bought
up the issue after two Nashua candidates posted photos
of their ballots to Instagram
and Facebook during an
election.
The debate stepped up
a notch in 2014 when New
Hampshire
lawmakers
tightened a long-standing
law about marking ballots.
The law (RSA 659:35-I) now
says that displaying photographs of your own marked
NH schools give
dual admission
Education | Community colleges, 4-year
institutions collaborate to help students.
By TINA FORBES
Staff Writer
70/60|Forecast,
Page D-8
2 Yrs/20K Mi.
Infiniti Basic
Maintenance
Vernon public librarys summer reading program, and the hero for local kids
Saturday was Alex Preston. [Page C-1]
Dog get skunked? Theres
an easy household remedy
It was late and we were miles from
stores that sell dog shampoo or even
tomato juice, which I vaguely recalled
hearing was a remedy. [Page D-1]
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Crowning
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CAMPAIGN 2016
There he goes
again: Why
Christie likens
self to Reagan
NORTH JERSEY
Despite the
political odds,
their moneys
on casino plans
ERIC LeGRAND
By Ted Sherman
By Claude Brodesser-Akner
For The Star-Ledger
Todays
Weather
Occupational therapist Syndi Granger works with Eric LeGrand recently. LeGrand continues to make
progress nearly four years after being paralyzed. (JOHN MUNSON/NJ ADVANCE MEDIA FOR THE STAR-LEDGER)
Index
Eric LeGrand emerges, wearing a Team LeGrand T-shirt and the wide smile that seemingly
never leaves his face. As LeGrand rolls down the
walkway and into the rehab facility, a woman stops
him. She recognizes LeGrand from his many media
appearances and asks if she can take a picture.
SEE LEGRAND, PAGE A10
Classified / G1
County News / B1
New Jersey / A15
Obituaries / A17
Perspective / D1
Puzzles / E2 & E6
Sports / C1
Travel / E8
TV Grid / E7
=2+d+7+1+f
HOME
S a n ta F
e Real
e S tat e
Guide
JUNE 2015
CooliNg
YoUr
HomE
Ceiling Fans
do-it-Yourse
lf
Projects
Inside Adobe
www.santafenewmexican.com
Walls
Northside S
tunner
$1.25
eSY phoTo
CoUrT
S U N D A Y,
2015
J U N e 7,
CoUrTeSY
on
ati
yle
Gen next-st
l to grads,
fond farewel
2
seniors. Page
to send off
unique ways
ion. Page 3
Schools find
a-3
lasting impress
who left a
of ways. Page
in a variety
Three teachers
celebrate
world, grads
Around the
gen
er
InsIde: A
for and
by teens
CoUrTeSY
phoTo
phoTo
f
ss o
Cla 15
20
A keepsake
Fes
for Santa s
graduate
Salute to
local grads
Covert unit
blurs line
between
soldier, spy
erT NoTT
LLer, rob
LYDe MUe
NoTeD
TUrNo, C
NChez SA New MexiCAN UNLeSS
Y LUiS S
phoToS b QUiNTANA of The
AND ChriS
Capital
projects
deal a win
for Smith
Walatowa Charter High School students Tyrell Vigil, left, and Marley Perea make drums under the watchful
eye of science teacher Kristina Kommander. Robert Nott/The New Mexican
By Robert Nott
The New Mexican
JEMEZ PUEBLO
hen Jemez Pueblo student Marley
Perea entered Walatowa Charter High
School in the ninth grade, she was
reading at the seventh-grade level.
Now, she prepares to enter her senior year with her
reading on par with a college student.
School is not my favorite thing to do, Perea
said. Im not a big fan of writing or English. But
the teachers there really pushed me and helped me.
Everyone at Walatowa is really close. I guess you
could say theyre like a second family.
She plans to graduate next year and go to college.
She does not know what she will study but said
she wants to bring whatever she learns back to the
school as a gift for what it has given her confidence in herself.
She is not alone.
As Native American students across the country
continue to lag behind their non-Native peers in
Pasapick
www.pasatiempomagazine.com
Obituaries
Index
Lawrence (Larry)
Apodaca, 91, Santa
Fe, March 29
Rudy Lawrence
Apodaca, 67,
Aurora, Colo.,
March 12
Anthony Joseph
Atkin, 64, Santa Fe,
May 21
Dr. Luciano (Lu)
Francisco Ramon
Baca, June 1
Randy Bonney, 61,
Radium Springs,
May 15
Consuelo
Connie O.
Gonzales, June 4
Mary Ellen
Horton, 79, Santa
Fe, June 1
April M. Hunter,
May 29
Joseph Michael
Mike Martinez,
May 25
Joe G. Medina, 90,
June 1
Merilyn Lloyd
Smith, 78, Denver,
May 31
Page C-2, C-3
Today
Partly cloudy,
thunderstorms
in evening.
High 82, low 55.
Page D-6
(505) 455-5228
CMYK
Nxxx,2015-06-07,A,001,Bs-BK,E3
Late Edition
Today, sunny to partly cloudy,
high 72. Tonight, partly cloudy,
low 58. Tomorrow, clouds and sun,
possible afternoon showers, high
78. Weather map is on Page 22.
$5.00
American Pharoah, under the guidance of the jockey Victor Espinoza, winning the Belmont Stakes in 2 minutes 26.65 seconds.
Winner Since 78
ed five presidents, fought three
wars and lived through at least
three economic downturns since
Affirmed had last completed the
feat in 1978. In the interim, 12 other very good racehorses had
pulled into the starting gate at
this grand old racetrack on Long
Island with a chance to become
the next great horse, only to fall
short at the hands of a great rival,
as Sunday Silence did to Easy
Goer in 1989 or as Real Quiet did
in 1998 in a heartbreaking photo
finish, or to find the mile-and-ahalf distance of the Belmont
Stakes just too much, as California Chrome did last year.
Clinton Traces
Friendly Path,
Troubling Party
By JONATHAN MARTIN
and MAGGIE HABERMAN
WASHINGTON Hillary
Rodham Clinton appears to be
dispensing with the nationwide
electoral strategy that won her
husband two terms in the White
House and brought white working-class voters and great
stretches of what is now red-state
America back to Democrats.
Instead, she is poised to retrace Barack Obamas far narrower path to the presidency: a
campaign focused more on mobilizing supporters in the Great
Lakes states and in parts of the
West and South than on persuading undecided voters.
Mrs. Clintons aides say it is
the only way to win in an era of
heightened polarization, when a
declining pool of voters is truly
up for grabs. Her liberal policy
positions, they say, will fire up
Democrats, a less difficult task
than trying to win over independents in more hostile territory
even though a broader strategy
could help lift the party with her.
This early in the campaign,
however, forgoing a determined
outreach effort to all 50 states, or
even most of them, could mean
missing out on the kind of spirited conversation that can be a
unifying feature of a presidential
election. And it could leave Mrs.
Continued on Page 20
By ERIC LIPTON
By ALEXANDRA ALTER
A memoir by a transgender
teenager from Oklahoma.
NATIONAL
INTERNATIONAL
SPORTSSUNDAY
SUNDAY REVIEW
Mark of a Champion
INTERNATIONAL 4-15
NATIONAL 16-23
SUNDAY BUSINESS
SUNDAY REVIEW
Maureen Dowd
U(D5E71D)x+$!@!/!#!\
PAGE 1
Published for loyal reader Gilbert McGhee and all of Burke County
American
Pharaoh first
Triple Crown
winner in 37 years
SPORTS, C1
$1.25
Save more
than $109 with
coupons in
todays edition
Bench project
offers more
than a place
to rest
INSIDE
FOCUS, B1
WWW.MORGANTON.COM
Fitness Center
Mechantronics
College
awarded
grant for
expansion
going in
Proactive
Approach
Workers dive deep into
sewers for manhole
rehabilitation project
BY SHARON MCBRAYER
Staff Writer
It wasnt the whole shebang, but a community college is getting a huge chunk
of a grant it applied for to expand a program to teach skills manufacturers say are
needed.
Western Piedmont Community College
received word last week that it has been
awarded a $750,000 grant from Golden
LEAF Foundation for expansion of the
colleges engineering building and its mechatronics program. The total grant application was around $1.3 million.
We are deeply grateful for the foundations decision to fund our proposal and
we believe their support is the catalyst that
will make this project successful, said Atticus Simpson, vice president for student
development at WPCC. We are also very
proud of our internal grant development
team for putting such a strong proposal
together. They put a lot of hard work and
thought into this proposal, and their efforts have served us well.
Simpson said the award would not have
been possible without the Burke County
Board of Commissioners, which provided
a financial commitment and encouragement.
Burke Countys proposed budget for
2015-16 includes a $433,000 match for
the Golden LEAF Foundation grant. Even
though the foundation didnt award the
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DEATHS
INSIDE
Classifieds............D2
Focus.................... B1
Opinion................. A7
Puzzles................. C7
THIS IS THE
FUTURE OF
TOUGH
Terry Rhyne
Terrell Kiser
Sandra Miller
Sarah Annis
Johnnie Foster
Ruth Johnson
PAGE A3
WEATHER
Myrna Cuthbertson
Samuel Proctor Jr.
Lydia Tate
STRAY STORMS
IN AFTERNOON
High: 82
Low: 62
www.crossroadsflm.com
American Pharoah
wins Triple Crown
www.thedickinsonpress.com
30 Pages $1.75
Dickinsons
Armstrong
is new chair
of NDGOP
transferor knows, or has reasonable cause to believe, is prohibited from possessing a weapon,
which constitutes a Class A misdemeanor.
However, several law offices
in Dickinson reported that these
types of cases rarely, if ever,
come across their desk.
Wilkie said private sellers could
do a quick background check on
a potential buyer through the
states court system, but added it
is unlikely anyone does so before
selling a weapon.
If you are selling on one of
these sites, like Craigslist, they
will probably give it to the highest bidder, he said.
Despite that, he suspects 99
percent of private transactions
are legal.
Its really that 1 percent, he
GUN/A3
LOOKING
FORWARD
against them.
The gathering that begins at 4 p.m. at the
Elks Lodge is part of the Kwibuka series
of remembrance events held by Rwandans
across the world and will be the first to take
place in North Dakota.
Grace Umuhire, a genocide survivor and an
organizer of the event, said it is important for
Rwandans to teach about their experiences in
that time and the often personal nature of the
killings.
We were neighbors, we were friends, but
RWANDA/A2
ARMSTRONG/A3
Todays Weather
High
80
Low
54
Page Index
Winner of
the 2014
NDNA
General
Excellence
Award.
Accent ..................................C1-C4
Classifieds ............................B3-B8
Comics ................................ D1-D4
Entertainment .......................A7-A8
Local/State ................................ A3
North Dakota ............................. A9
Nation/World............................ A11
Obituaries .................................. A5
Opinion ...................................... A6
Sports ............................ B1-B2, B9
PARKWAY
FORD-LINCOLN
SALES AND LEASING INC.
001267862r1
By Ernest Scheyder
Reuters
OPEC/A4
$15,495
$19,995
$31,995
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SPORTS, E1
$1.50
Pharoah rules
Horse wins first
Triple Crown
in 37 years
Franklin Elementary
Preschool graduate
Braylon Malone, 5,
visits with his aunt,
Celess Santanio, of
Elyria, while making
his way down the
aisle during his
graduation
ceremony
Thursday. Braylon
was named
Leader of the
Pack for his
preschool class.
Church
saves for
pastors
journey
Lisa Roberson
The Chronicle-Telegram
ELYRIA A plaque commemorating years of service or maybe a celebratory dinner church congregations have numerous ways to honor a
pastor for a milestone anniversary.
But in 2014, the membership of
Mount Zion Missionary Baptist
Church decided it wanted to do
something grand for senior pastor the
Rev. Marcettes L.
Cunningham and his
wife, Felicia. The couple came to lead the
church in November
1994.
As a result, the Cunninghams ventured to
Greece for a 10-day Cunningham
land and sea journey
last month that had them following in
the footsteps of Apostle Paul, who visited many European countries to
spread Christianity after the resurrection and ascension of Jesus Christ.
While Paul was not one of Jesus original 12 disciples, he spread the word
of Christianity more than anyone else
and to follow his remarkable journey
set thousands of years ago was an
awe-inspiring experience for Cunningham.
At Mount Zion we believe its Gods
ultimate plan for us to be the best testimony for Jesus Christ we can be for
Elyria and surrounding areas, he
said. In the last two decades, we have
certainly grown numerically and
financially, but I am most thankful for
our spiritual growth.
Mount Zion has about 320 members with about 150 to 175 members
attending services each Sunday.
Last year marked Cunninghams
20th year at the church and it was a
full year of celebration that capped off
with a service where the sabbatical
trip was announced. That also was
done in an elaborate way with three
members of the church coming to the
pulpit with a gift-wrapped box in
hand with instruction for Cunningham to pick one. However, each contained the gift of the trip.
It was a breathtaking moment
when we gave him this gift because he
is a wonderful man of God, said
READ MORE
IN SPORTS,
AP
E1 AND E4
CLASS
OF 2015
The seniors stand for
applause as
Avon Lake High School
Principal Dr. Joanie
Walker introduces the
graduating class
Saturday evening during
commencement
exercises.
SPOTTY
STORMS
7DAYS
INDEX
ADVICE ................D5
BUSINESS ..........E1
CLASSIFIEDS ......F4
MOVIES ................... D5
OBITUARIES ..........B2
OPINION .......... F2-3
See JOURNEY, A2
PERSPECTIVE ........F1
YOURTOWN ..........B3
W W W . C H R O N I C L E T . C O M
AWEEK
HOME DELIVERY
Cyan A1 Magenta A1 Yellow A1 Black A1
A1MAIN/SUN
American
Pharoah races
into history
Is Tiger trying
too hard to
be Tiger?
Sports
Sports
THE SUNDAY
TRANSCRIPT
Visit www.normantranscript.com for breaking news
Dairy Queen
to return
Dairy Queen lovers, your
wait is nearly over.
A company has recently
applied for a building permit
for a new Dairy Queen restaurant at 1835 W. Main Street
in Norman.
DLJ Foods 6, Inc., has
applied for the permit with an
estimated construction value
of $650,000. Earlier this
year it was believed a Dairy
Queen was planned on 12th
Avenue SE.
A Dairy Queen recently
opened in Moore.
Transcript Staff
NORMAN, OKLAHOMA
$1.50
Cretaceous park
Twins
Bridges crash
A car ended up in overflow
water just east of the Twin
Bridges on Alameda Street
near Lake Thunderbird on
Saturday evening, June 6,
2015. There were no injuries
reported.
Joy Hampton
WORD
of the day
Photo Provided
Above inset: Scott Schaefer hold one of three shark fossils found at the Duck Creek Formation site in Texas where the paleontology group planned to
dig for ammonites and discovered ancient remains.
Above: The site where three shark fossils dating back to 100 million years ago were discovered in 2010 near Ft. Worth.
telesthesia
(n) telesthesia
[tuh l-uh s-thee-zhuh]
1. sensation or perception
received at a distance without
the normal operation of the
recognized sense organs.
Example: People might think
it was about necromancy or
telesthesia or something.
Dictionary.com
By Megan Sando
History.
As undergraduates at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee,
the couple started a paleontology
club and set out to dig all over
the U.S. They decided to dig at
the Duck Creek Formation near
Fort Worth, Texas for extinct
marine creatures, where Janessa
ended up in the right place at the
right time.
Sponsored by:
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Vol. 125
No. 325
Copyright
2015
All rights
reserved
Four
sections
I N S I DE
Business
Classifieds
Crossword
Deaths
Living
Opinion
Sports
Weather
C1
D5
B7
A5
D1
A4
B1
A8
SMART
PHONE
DIRECT LINK
Sunday Transcript
Patricia Welty,
Cleveland County
Master Gardener
LOCAL FIRST
CAUSES
SPORTS
TODAY'S WEATHER
A PLACE TO PLAY
TRIPLE CROWN
90 HIGH
58 LOW
Full report, 8C
Statesman Journal
Sunday
StatesmanJournal.com
Statesman Journal
Many anglers and hunters who have shouldered the bulk of the financial load for the Oregon Department of Fish Wildlife say proposed
license and tag increases will be the straw that
breaks their backs.
Even the department estimates that the incremental license and fee increases in the 201517 budget proposal working through the Oregon
Legislature would lead to 10,000 dropping out.
If we lost 10,000 customers, the last thing
Bridge.............................................2E
Business ..........................................1F
Causes ............................3D, 4D, 5D
Comics .....................................Insert
Editorials ......................................8D
Horoscope ....................................2E
Lottery ..........................................1D
Mid-Valley.....................................1D
Nation/World ...............................1B
Obituaries .........................10D, 11D
Puzzles ....................................2E, 3E
Sports .............................................1C
Subscriber services:
(800) 452-2511 or
StatesmanJournal.com/subscribe.
Classified ads: (503) 399-6789
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BUSINESS, G-1
SPORTS, C-1
UP TO
$277
WORTH OF
COUPONS INSIDE
IN MOST AREAS
SUNDAY
City homicide
statistics under
U.S. scrutiny
BELMONT STAKES
Justice Department
sends team to city to
study investigations
By Liz Navratil
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Victor Espinoza reacts Saturday after crossing the finish line with American Pharoah to win the 147th running
of the Belmont Stakes at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y. American Pharoah became the first horse to win the
Triple Crown since Affirmed won it in 1978.
American Pharoah
wins Triple Crown
By Eric Crawford
Block News Alliance
At Sweet Briar,
a sour feeling
Obama seeks
to reinforce
isolation
of Russia
By Julie Hirschfeld Davis
The New York Times
By Marylynne Pitz
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
American Pharoahs
Triple Crown!
RHODE ISLANDER, G1
SPORTS, C1
providencejournal.com
$3.50
IN RHODE ISLAND
It is not enough. It is time to
get with the times, said Dr. Pablo
Rodriguez, president of Rhode
SEE DIVERSITY, A8
R.I. ECONOMY
OVERDOSED: RHODE ISLANDS DRUG EPIDEMIC
No clear
verdict on
Raimondos
incentives
More inside
Health Department still has 800 naloxone
doses waiting to be distributed. Also, the
state is changing how it reports month to
month the number of overdose deaths. A10
More jobs
but not
nancial
security
By Josh Boak
and Christopher S. Rugaber
The Associated Press
TODAY
MON
TUE
State Rep. Patricia Morgan says the R.I. Convention Center Authority
has cost taxpayers more than $450 million, even though it wasnt supposed to cost them a dime. We check her claim. A5
71/49
73/48
78/64
Lotteries .......C8
Obituaries .....B8
People...........B4
Rhode Islander G1
Sports ...........C1
Success......... F5
Television......G7
Nation & World B1
9 sections, 74 pages
Home delivery: 401-277-7600
Donate at:
providencejournal.com/giving
or mail your donation to:
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A moveable
feast in
Providence
Guests sample a delectable
array of goodies at the Food
Truck Showdown in Providences India Point Park. A4
SEE ECONOMY, A9
MORE THAN
$172
OF SAVINGS
INSIDE!
Weather
SUNDAY
Afternoon
t-storm
High 83
Low 67
HJ
IN A HURRY
JUNE 7, 2015
SPARTANBURG, S.C.
$1.50
www.GoUpstate.com
Things
to read
today
By BETH HARRIS
The Associated Press
Moving farewell
Politicians, military leaders
and celebrities from across the
country came to bid farewell
on Saturday to former
Delaware Attorney General
Beau Biden, whose death at
age 46 opened yet another
chapter of grief for his father,
Vice President Joe Biden.
PAGE A4
KATHY WILLENS / AP
Victor Espinoza raises an arm in victory after American Pharoah crosses the
finish line Saturday to win the 147th running of the Belmont Stakes horse race at
Belmont Park and the coveted Triple Crown. More coverage in sports, C1.
More to come
Developers and local officials
believe Rite Aid Corp.s new
distribution facility, currently
under construction, will set the
stage for future large-scale
industrial projects. PAGE A11
Putin problem
Behind the tough talk on
Russia expected from
President Barack Obama and
other leaders gathering in
Germany this weekend is a
stark reality. None of the world
powers believes the economic
and diplomatic punishments
levied on Russia for its alleged
aggression in Ukraine are
changing President Vladimir
Putins calculus. PAGE A3
Didnt see it
A New York man who sought
help from a fortuneteller to fix
a romantic relationship says
she scammed him out of more
than $700,000. PAGE A4
On the Web
Visit GoUpstate.com for breaking news and sports stories,
and to see our editors picks for
some of the top
photos from here
in the Upstate
and beyond.
INSIDE
Books
Business
Classified
Crossword
Dear Abby
Horoscope
Obituaries
Sports
Upstate
Mutual funds
TV
Weather
VOLUME 170
NUMBER 158
D2
A11
E1
E3
A2
E4
A6-A7
C1
B1
A15
A10
A10
Bounty
of jobs
produces
few gains
Wage growth weak,
many struggle to
find full-time work
By JOSH BOAK
and CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER
The Associated Press
The Tyron International Equestrian Center celebrated its official opening Saturday. The day featured a grand prix, craft
beer festival, carousel rides and the watching of the Belmont Stakes on a JumboTron. See more photos at GoUpstate.com.
Members of the U.S. Special Forces parachuting team descend into the George
Morris Arena for the opening ceremonies Saturday.
ing a giant American flag, as country music star Lee Greenwood
sang his hit single God Bless the
U.S.A.
The 6,000-seat George Morris
Arena was full, and organizers
estimated at least another 1,000plus people around the venue.
Three permanent restaurants are
on site, along with a number of
other vendors renting space on a
weekly basis.
To have this incredible new
investment, all at one time, it will
help the entire Carolinas region,
McCrory said. Its going to cre-
SpartanburgRegional.com
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We all knew
there would
have to be certain
changes due to the
poor decisions made
by the administration.
But this would be
much more doable.
This wouldnt leave
anybody behind.
See HEALTH, 2A
BELMONT STAKES
TRIPLE CROWN
No Tenn.
hopefuls
for 2016
election
Volunteers
By Michael Collins
michael.collins@jmg.com
202-408-2711
Ridden by jockey Victor Espinoza, American Pharoah (far right), leads Materiality and the rest of the eld down the back stretch Saturday during the 147th running of the Belmont Stakes in Elmont, N.Y., to become the rst Triple Crown winner claiming victories in the Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes and Belmont
in the same year since 1978 when a thoroughbred named Afrmed took the honor. See story, 1D.
By Tom Charlier
charlier@commercialappeal.com
901-529-2572
TODAYS CA
HEALTH CARE COSTS:
Consumers can help
lower insurance premiums by changing
behaviors. BUSINESS, 1C
Copyright 2015
The Commercial
Appeal
91/75
More weather
12D
WASHINGTON U.S.Sen.Bob
Corker could have been a
presidential contender, but
he decided instead to focus
on his new role as the GOPs
top foreign-relations guru.
Gov. Bill Haslam was
occasionally mentioned as
a possible candidate, but he
prefers the statehouse to the
White House.
U.S. Rep. Marsha Blackburn ended speculation
about her political future
when she announced back
in January that, no, she
would not run for president.
Americans on the left and
the right will have plenty of
choices when they decide
next year who will succeed
President Barack Obama.
But one option they wont
have is sending a Tennessean to the White House.
For the second election in
a row, the state that gave the
country three presidents
Andrew Jackson, James K.
Polk and Andrew Johnson
has no one running for
the highest elective office in
the land.
The last time back-toback presidential elections
took place without a Tennessean on the ticket was
four decades ago in the 1972
and 1976 races. Even then,
Tennesseans werent totally
out of the game. President
Gerald Ford seriously considered naming then-Sen.
Howard Baker as his vice
presidential running mate
in 1976 but ended up picking
Bob Dole instead.
So why are no Tennesseans running in a year in
which the GOP eld is the
largest in recent memory
and the contest is packed
with long shots like Republicans Lindsey Graham and
Rick Santorum and Democrats Martin OMalley and
Lincoln Chafee?
The answer is not that
the state is lacking political
talent or suffering a diminished reputation on the national stage. It has more to
do with the ambitions and
goals of the current crop of
state leaders, the state of the
two major political parties
and the changing dynamics
of the presidential contests
themselves, analysts say.
You have to really, really
want to run for president,
said Tom Ingram, a veteran
political consultant who has
been involved in numerous
statewide races in Tennessee. It gets tougher every
cycle, with the process and
See CANDIDATES, 2A
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Picture perfect
Seasons end
building, the time it took to secure funding and to receive approval for its new departments,
faculty job postings went up
later than at a more-established
school, administrators said.
Despite that, UTRGV officials
said they expect to have teachers even if its contingency
faculty for all the classes they
plan to offer.
We missed the major target time for faculty hires, said
Havidn Rodriguez, the University of Pan Americans interim
president and a member of
A student
holds a sign
Dec. 13,
2013, as
the board
of regents
announces
that UT Rio
Grande Valley
is the name
of the new
university in
South Texas.
MY monitornews.com
See positions that
UTRGV is hiring for.
Gabe
Hernandez |
The Monitor
McAllen takes
another look at
civic center site
Officials have been considering proposal
for retail space, according to memo
BY SKY CHADDE
STAFF WRITER
Police presence
A member of the Edinburg Vice Unit stands outside a home May 29 on South 29th Street in Edinburg.
Page 12A
ABOUT
Edinburg
Vice unit
Hidalgo County to
pay more to ship
inmates elsewhere
La Villa prison
changes ownership,
raising costs from
overcrowding jail
BY KRISTEN MOSBRUCKER
AND JARED TAYLOR
STAFF WRITERS
EDINBURG A new
owner at the detention center in La Villa prompted Hidalgo County to sign a new
deal to send inmates at its
overcrowded jail elsewhere.
GEO Group in February
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EDINBURG - HARLINGEN
PHAROAH ENDS
CROWN
DROUGHT
BELMONT VICTORY MARKS FIRST
Jockey Victor
Espinoza looks
over his shoulder Saturday
at the trailing
Belmont Stakes
eld as American
Pharoah leads to
the nish.
SPORTS, C1, C9
U T A H S
I N D E P E N D E N T
JUNE 7, 2015
V O I C E
SUNDAY
S I N C E
1 8 7 1
SLTRIB.COM
JULIO CORTEZ | The Associated Press
CAMPAIGN DONATIONS
Political pressures associated with presidential aspirations transformed the relationship
between two prominent Mormon families the HUNTSMANS and the ROMNEYS
from longtime friends to bitter foes.
Has Utahs
A.G. taken
the ethical
high road?
Sean Reyes has raised
nearly $570,000 since
taking ofce on a platform of integrity.
By ROBERT GEHRKE
In the aftermath of a pay-forplay scandal that has his two predecessors facing multiple criminal charges, newly minted Utah
Attorney General Sean Reyes
vowed to take rigorous steps to
guarantee no appearance of impropriety on his watch.
While there may have been a
For Sale sign before on the door
of the attorney generals office
theres a new sign since Ive been
there and its, Beware of the
Dog, Reyes said during a campaign debate last fall, promising
to be a bulldog when it comes to
SEA N R EYES
Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney looks on as Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman joins eventual 2008 Republican presidential nominee John McCain at a GOP fundraiser at the Grand America Hotel in Salt Lake City. To Romneys chagrin, Huntsman endorsed McCain. Romney and Huntsman later squared off as presidential candidates in the run-up to the 2012 election.
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Nation Politicians, military leaders and celebrities came from around the
country to bid farewell Saturday to former Delaware
Attorney General Beau
Biden, whose death at age 46
opened yet another chapter
of grief for his father, Vice
President Joe Biden. > A3
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Obama eulogizes
vice presidents son
Beau Biden
TRACK CHAMPS
SUNDAY 06.07.15
BurlingtonFreePress.com
The Burlington man recently returned to his home village in Sudan after fleeing for his life 25 years ago.
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Repeating last seasons success, the Cavaliers win a trip to the College World Series
Virginia baseball players scale the outeld fences at Davenport Field after defeating Maryland, 5-4. With the win, the Cavaliers punched their ticket to the College World Series.
BY ANDREW RAMSPACHER
aramspacher@dailyprogress.com | 978-7250
INSIDE
Regional.
Wehunginthere,OConnor
said. Our guys didnt quit and
we found a way.
The dramatic ending was
the perfect encore to Fridays
dquizon@dailyprogress.com | 978-7254
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somewhat predictable, it does
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partys candidates are homogenous.
ELECTION
2015
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HISTORY
American Pharoah runs away
60%
Workers
struggle
to make
a living
Employment rate
ignores job quality,
financial security
By Josh Boak
and Christopher Rugaber
Associated Press
WASHINGTON The
U.S. economy is churning
out a lot of jobs these days
but not a lot of financial security for many of the people who hold them.
Pay growth, though improving, remains tepid.
Many workers have few
opportunities to advance.
Others have taken temporary, part-time or freelance
jobs, with little chance of
landing full-time permanent work with benefits.
As a result, many jobs
dont deliver as much economic punch as they used to.
Part of the reason is that
U.S. workers have grown
less efficient in recent
months. When they produce less per hour of work,
their earnings power
shrinks. So the economy
doesnt fully benefit from
the fuel that healthy job
growth normally provides.
The result is a disconnect between the high
number of jobs gained and
a nagging dissatisfaction
among some, both job holders and job seekers.
Lena Allison lost her job
as a private-school kinder-
See WORKERS, A7
Spokane police Officer Michele Kernkamp, left, talks with Jen Wagner in the Spokane Regional
Health District building after a crisis intervention training session at the countys methadone clinic in April.
By Rachel Alexander
rachela@spokesman.com, (509) 459-5406
Without
Putin, G-7
summit
underway
By Julie Pace
Associated Press
hen Jen Wagner told her story, her last encounter with law enforcement
was fresh in her mind.
The 26-year-old college student is a patient at the Spokane Regional
Health District methadone clinic, which helps people with addictions to heroin or
other opioids get their lives back on track.
In early April, she was pulled over by a state
trooper because she swerved while trying to grab a
pacifier for her daughter from the back seat, she
said. The trooper asked if she was on any drugs, and
she explained she was on a prescribed dose of
methadone. He got verbally aggressive and
threatened to call CPS, she said, her voice shaking
as she related the story.
Spokane police Officer Michele Kernkamp, who
works patrol on the North Side, was visiting the
clinic that April morning to hear stories like
Wagners. She listened intently as patients shared
stories about how methadone treatment has
WASHINGTON Behind the tough talk on Russia expected from President Barack Obama and
other leaders gathering in
Germany this weekend is a
stark reality.
None of the world powers believes the economic
and diplomatic punishments levied on Russia for
its alleged aggression in
Ukraine are changing
President Vladimir Putins
calculus; yet there are no
plans to shift strategies.
At most, leaders hope to
emerge from two days of
talks in the Bavarian Alps
with an agreement to keep
U.S. and European Union
sanctions against Russia in
place, and perhaps a pledge
See SUMMIT, A7
>> Business, E1
>> Classifieds, F1
>> Lotteries, A2
>> Movies, D7
>> Obituaries, B4
>> TV, D4
An exceptional
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specialists, unif ied by a mission to put our
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Herd preview
Partly cloudy
9169
Weather / 15A
www.herald-dispatch.com
106
YEARS
SUNDAY
June 7, 2015
District
Music festival promotes reviewing
harmony in Huntington old school
properties
ENTERTAINMENT: JEWEL CITY JAMBOREE
American
Pharoah wins
Triple Crown
American Pharoah
led all the way to
win the Belmont
Stakes by 5
lengths on Saturday, becoming the
first horse since
1978 to sweep the
Kentucky Derby,
Preakness and Belmont Stakes one
of the sporting
worlds rarest feats.
Sports / 1B
lpierson@herald-dispatch.com
Event hosts 11
musical acts on
second full day
ABOVE: Southridge performs during the Jewel City JAMboree on Saturday at Harris Riverfront Park in Huntington. The
three-day festival continues Sunday.
By LACIE PIERSON
The Herald-Dispatch
lpierson@herald-dispatch.com
ON 3A:
By BEN FIELDS
The Herald-Dispatch
befields@herald-dispatch.com
Index
9A
6C
1F
1C
6D
6A
7F
Jumble
2D
Life
1D
Local
3A
Nation 11A
Obituaries 2C
Puzzle
2D
Sports
1B
CHARLESTON Members
of the West Virginia Legislature
will hear more information about
drug testing recipients of public
assistance during the interim
session running Sunday and
Monday, June 7-8, at the Capitol.
The House of Delegates gave
serious consideration to such a
policy, getting House Bill 2021
through committee and onto the
floor during this years session.
The bill, which was overladen
with amendments and objections, was eventually tabled on
second reading in the House on
March 3.
Rochelle Finzel, group director
of the National Conference of
State Legislators, is scheduled
to give a presentation on the
301993
D-Day service
held in France
JSOnline.com
SUNDAY: JUNE 7, 2015
WEATHER
78 / 53
Thunderstorms
Map, details
back of Sports
FINAL
AN AMERICAN WINNER
Wedding
cakes
new spin
advertisement
Are you
living with
joint pain?
Fresh
Sports
Budget
weakens
shoreland
protection
$7.6 million in bad debt removed from jobs agencys balance sheet
By MARY SPICUZZA and JASON STEIN
mspicuzza@journalsentinel.com
$7,607,013
in bad loans written off
$4,682,379
in loans to Flambeau operations
28
NEWSWATCH
Anthony McHenry takes time from his role as executive director to offer some tips and advice to young people at a basketball practice at Silver Spring Neighborhood Center, a nonprofit organization that serves Milwaukees northwest side. See a gallery at jsonline.com/photos.
LOCAL
By GARY DAMATO
gdamato@journalsentinel.com
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WORLD
INDEX
10 SECTIONS
Crossroads ..................1J
Crossword in Comics
Deaths ........................5D
Fresh ...........................1N
Tap ..............................1E
Movies ........................3E
on Carver High Schools powerhouse football team, but Friday night glory left six
other nights to run the streets, to break the
law, to tempt fate.
McHenry doesnt want to go into specifics
about what he did back then, other than to
say he had two or three near-death experiences, had handcuffs slapped on his wrists
several times and did things that should
have landed me in prison. But despite his
reckless lifestyle and his frequent brushes
with the law, he says he was never hurt and
was never charged with a crime.
Years later, he knows why.
I think I had a purpose in life, he says.
Anthony McHenry,
executive director
of Silver Spring Neighborhood Center
Sports on TV .............10B
Travel .........................10E
TV listings ...................5E
Weather ...Back of Sports
honored
at East,
South A3
CHEYENNE, WYOMING
WYOMINGNEWS.COM
$1.75
The shuttered Fast Break gas station and convenience store at the corner of East
Lincolnway and House Avenue could be demolished soon. The Cheyenne City Council
will vote Monday on a zone change that would permit the lot to be redeveloped into a
retail area. Tommy Martino/Wyoming Tribune Eagle
lhigh@wyomingnews.com
Facebook: Facebook.com/WTENews
Twitter: Twitter.com/WTENews
Workers clear
away the
wreckage of a
U.S. 85
overpass that
collapsed onto
the railroad
tracks below
Friday in Lusk.
Parts of Lusk,
Manville and
other areas of
Niobrara
County were
flooded early
Thursday
when intense
rains caused
the Niobrara
River to
overflow its
banks.
Alan Rogers/
Casper
Star-Tribune
Check
out
these
local,
area golf
courses
Page E1
On the Web
Pershing Boulevard.
On the west side of Carey Avenue, parking
will be eliminated between Sixth Avenue and
Eighth Avenue. On the east
side of the street, parking will
be eliminated between First
Avenue and Sixth Avenue.
Weather permitting, the
striping installing will be
done by the end of next
week, Beauheim said.
Records:
94 (2004)
29 (1915)
Avg:
72
46
6647
Index
Crossword . . . . . . E4
Entertainment . . . D3
Local/Wyo . A3-A10
Money . . . . . . .D1-D2
Obituaries . . . A5-A6
Opinion . . . . . C8-C9
Sports . . . . . . . C1-C7
ToDo. . . . . . . . .B1-B4