• Pain Index: Where do Arkansas, Purdue, other second-weekend losses rank?
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    Some losses are understandable; others will haunt us forever. Let's rank the 2025 men's NCAA tournament defeats, from least to most devastating.
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  • Amorim: I won't get much time to fix Utd woes
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    Ruben Amorim insisted he will not be given much time to turn things around as Manchester United manager, as his team slumped to another defeat at Nottingham Forest on Tuesday.
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  • St. Pauli fans pay $29M for majority of club stadium
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    St. Pauli supporters have raised over 27 million euros (29.1 million) for a majority stake in the club's stadium after taking part in German soccer's first fan cooperative.
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  • Budenholzer back in Milwaukee, calls run 'great'
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    In his return there Tuesday night, Mike Budenholzer reflected on his time in Milwaukee as a "great five years," even though it ended with his firing following an upset playoff loss to the Heat in 2023.
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  • Bucks catch fire, shoot highest FG% this century
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    The Bucks snapped a four-game skid by shooting 68.9% from the field Tuesday night against the Suns, the highest single-game percentage by any team this century.
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  • Angels' Neto doubles in first rehab appearance
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    Angels shortstop Zach Neto went 1-for-6 with a double in his first rehabilitation game with Triple-A Salt Lake City as he moves closer to a return from offseason shoulder surgery.
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  • Roy: Duclair 'god-awful' during Isles' 4-1 loss
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    In the heat of the Eastern Conference playoff race, and with his team struggling, New York Islanders coach Patrick Roy said Anthony Duclair was "god-awful" in a loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning, and that the veteran is failing to meet expectations.
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  • Amorim: I won't get much time to fix Utd woes
    www.espn.com
    Ruben Amorim insisted he will not be given much time to turn things around as Manchester United manager, as his team slumped to another defeat at Nottingham Forest on Tuesday.
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  • St. Pauli fans pay $29M for majority of club stadium
    www.espn.com
    St. Pauli supporters have raised over 27 million euros (29.1 million) for a majority stake in the club's stadium after taking part in German soccer's first fan cooperative.
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  • US judge orders Trump administration to restore legal aid to unaccompanied migrant children
    apnews.com
    Immigrants line up in the dining hall at a U.S. government holding center for migrant children, July 9, 2019, in Carrizo Springs, Texas. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)2025-04-02T04:02:29Z SAN FRANCISCO (AP) A federal judge in California on Tuesday ordered the Trump administration to temporarily restore legal aid to tens of thousands of migrant children who are in the United States without a parent or guardian. The Republican administration on March 21 terminated a contract with the Acacia Center for Justice, which provides legal services for unaccompanied migrant children under 18 through a network of legal aid groups that subcontract with the center. Eleven subcontractor groups sued, saying that 26,000 children were at risk of losing their attorneys; Acacia is not a plaintiff. Those groups argued that the government has an obligation under a 2008 anti-trafficking law to provide vulnerable children with legal counsel.U.S. District Judge Araceli Martnez-Olgun of San Francisco granted a temporary restraining order late Tuesday. She wrote that advocates raised legitimate questions about whether the administration violated the 2008 law, warranting a return to the status quo while the case continues. The order will take effect Wednesday and runs through April 16. The Court additionally finds that the continued funding of legal representation for unaccompanied children promotes efficiency and fairness within the immigration system, she wrote. It is the third legal setback in less than a week for the Trump administrations immigration crackdown, though all may prove temporary as the lawsuits advance. On Friday, a federal judge in Boston said people with final deportation orders must have a meaningful opportunity to argue against being sent to a country other than their own. On Monday, another federal judge in San Francisco put on hold plans to end protections for hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans, including 350,000 whose legal status was scheduled to expire April 7. The Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008, which created special protections for migrant children who cannot navigate a complex immigration system on their own. Plaintiffs said some of their clients are too young to speak and others are too traumatized and do not know English. The law requires the government to ensure to the greatest extent practicable that all children entering the country alone have legal counsel to represent them in proceedings and to protect them from mistreatment, exploitation, and trafficking.Defendants, which include the Department of Health and Human Services and its Office of Refugee Resettlement, said that taxpayers have no obligation to pay the cost of direct legal aid to migrant children at a time when the government is trying to save money. They also said district courts have no jurisdiction over a contract termination that would have expired at the end of March.Acacia is under a new contract with the government to provide legal orientations, including know your rights clinics.But plaintiffs said they are not asking for the contract to be restored; rather, they want a return to the status quo, which is spending $5 billion that Congress appropriated so children have representation, said Karen Tumlin with the Justice Action Center at a court hearing Tuesday. She said the administration cannot simply zero out funding without providing direction on who will help these children.They need to make sure to the greatest extent practicable that there is a plan, she said.Jonathan Ross with the U.S. Department of Justice said the government is still funding legally required activities, such as the know your rights clinics, and that legal clinics can offer their services without charge.Theyre still free to provide those services on a pro bono basis, he said.Judge Martnez-Olgun is a Biden appointee.
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  • Democrats win in Wisconsin court race also is a big loss for Elon Musk
    apnews.com
    Elon Musk speaks at a town hall Sunday, March 30, 2025, in Green Bay, Wis. (AP Photo/Jeffrey Phelps)2025-04-02T03:39:21Z MADISON, Wis. (AP) Judge Susan Crawford preserved liberals narrow majority on the Wisconsin Supreme Court Tuesday by defeating conservative Brad Schimel, but in a way the real loser of the election was billionaire Elon Musk.Musk and his affiliated groups sunk at least $21 million into the normally low-profile race and paid three individual voters $1 million each for signing a petition in an effort to goose turnout in the pivotal battleground state contest. That made the race the first major test of the political impact of Musk, whose prominence in President Donald Trumps administration has skyrocketed with his chaotic cost-cutting initiative that has slashed federal agencies.Crawford and the Democrats who backed her made Musk the focus of their arguments for holding the seat, contending he was buying the election, which set records for the costliest judicial race in history. Today Wisconsinites fended off an unprecedented attack on our democracy, our fair elections and our Supreme Court, Crawford said in her victory speech. And Wisconsin stood up and said loudly that justice does not have a price, our courts are not for sale. Trump endorsed Schimel as the race turned into a proxy fight over national political issues. The states high court can rule on cases involving voting rights and redistricting in a state likely to be at the center of both next years midterm elections and the 2028 presidential contest. But Musks involvement dialed those dynamics up to 11: A seemingly small election could determine the fate of Western civilization, the billionaire said Tuesday in a last-ditch call to voters on his social media site X. I think it matters for the future of the world.Notably, America PAC, the super PAC backed by Musk, spent at least $6 million on vendors who sent door-to-door canvassers across the state, according to the non-partisan Wisconsin Democracy Campaign. It was a reprise of what the group did across the seven most competitive presidential battleground states, including Wisconsin, which were carried by Trump in November. But the end results this time were not good for Musk. Despite the millions he spent on Schimel, as of late Tuesday night the Supreme Court candidate was losing by four percentage points more than the other Republican-backed statewide candidate, Brittany Kinser, who also fell short in her bid for superintendent of public instruction. Musks court race defeat wasnt only because of crushing Democratic margins in deep blue cities like Madison and Milwaukee. Crawfords margins were higher in places where the Musk-backed group America PAC had been active, including Sauk County, just north of Madison, which Crawford was carrying by 10 points after Trump won it by less than 2 points in November.In Brown County, the home of Green Bay where Musk headlined a campaign rally with 2,000 people on Sunday, Crawford beat Schimel. Trump won the county by 7 percentage points last year.Musk was silent on his X platform in the wake of Crawfords victory, reposting a message about Vietnam and tariffs but nothing on the Supreme Court contest. The platform was rife with criticism from Trump opponents for his involvement in the race. Please send @elonmusk to all the close races! Jon Favreau, former speechwriter for President Barack Obama, wrote.Elon Musk is not good at this, J.B. Pritzker, Illinois Democratic governor and a billionaire himself who donated to support Crawford, posted on X.Voters definitely had Musk on their minds.Theres an insane situation going on with the Trump administration, and it feels like Elon Musk is trying to buy votes, said Kenneth Gifford, a 22-year-old Milwaukee college student, as he cast his ballot on Tuesday. I want an actual, respectable democracy. Others may not have had their vote decided by the billionaire but were all-too aware of the money pouring into their state.Jim Seeger, a 68-year-old retiree who previously worked in communications and marketing, said he voted for Schimel because he wants Republicans to maintain their outsized majority in Wisconsins congressional delegation, which could be at risk if Crawford wins and the court orders the maps redrawn. But, he added, he was disappointed the election had become a financial race. I think its a shame that we have to spend this much money, especially on a judicial race, Seeger said as he voted in Eau Claire.Wisconsins Democratic Attorney General, Josh Kaul, sued to bar Musk from making his payments to voters if they signed a petition against activist judges. The state Supreme Court unanimously declined to rule on the case over a technicality.Musk swooped into the race shortly after Trumps inauguration. Republicans were pessimistic about being able to win the seat. They lost a longtime conservative majority on the state high court in 2023, and Democrats have excelled in turning out their educated, politically tuned-in coalition during obscure elections such as the one in Wisconsin. Musk duplicated and expanded on some of the methods he used in the final weeks of last years presidential race, when he spent more than $200 million on Trumps behalf in the seven swing states, including Wisconsin.This time, in addition to the $1 million checks, Musk offered to pay $20 to anyone who signed up on his groups site to knock on doors for Schimel and posted a photo of themselves as proof. His organization promised $100 to every voter who signed the petition against liberal judges and another $100 for every signer they referred.Democrats were happy to make Musk a lightning rod in the race.People do not want to see Elon Musk buying election after election after election, Wisconsin Democratic Party Chair Ben Wikler said Monday. If it works here, hes going to do it all over the country.___Riccardi reported from Denver. Associated Press writer Meg Kinnard in Washington contributed to this report. THOMAS BEAUMONT Beaumont covers national politics for The Associated Press. He is based in Des Moines, Iowa. twitter mailto
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  • Wolves spoil Jokic's 61-point triple-double in 2OT
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    The Timberwolves overcame a career- and NBA-best 61-point triple-double performance from Nikola Jokic to outlast the Nuggets 140-139 in double overtime on Tuesday night.
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  • Curry drops 52 in wild win vs. Grizz: 'Tank is full'
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    Stephen Curry had 52 points and 12 3-pointers as the Warriors held on for a wild 134-125 win over the Grizzlies on Tuesday night.
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  • Wolves spoil Jokic's 61-point triple-double in 2OT
    www.espn.com
    The Timberwolves overcame a career- and NBA-best 61-point triple-double performance from Nikola Jokic to outlast the Nuggets 140-139 in double overtime on Tuesday night.
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  • Wolves spoil Jokic's 61-point triple-double in 2OT
    www.espn.com
    The Timberwolves overcame a career- and NBA-best 61-point triple-double performance from Nikola Jokic to outlast the Nuggets 140-139 in double overtime on Tuesday night.
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  • Curry drops 52 in wild win vs. Grizz: 'Tank is full'
    www.espn.com
    Stephen Curry had 52 points and 12 3-pointers as the Warriors held on for a wild 134-125 win over the Grizzlies on Tuesday night.
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  • As Israel advances in Gaza, many exhausted families flee again. Some cant bear it
    apnews.com
    Displaced Palestinians arrive in Khan Younis, Gaza, on Sunday, March 23, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana, File)2025-04-02T05:02:48Z KHAN YOUNIS, Gaza Strip (AP) As Israel orders wide new evacuations across the Gaza Strip, Palestinians say they are crushed by exhaustion and hopelessness at the prospect of fleeing once again. Many are packing a few belongings and trudging off in search of new shelters. Some say they just cant bear to move.When ordered out of Jabaliya in northern Gaza, Ihab Suliman and his family could only grab some food and blankets before making their way south March 19. It was their eighth time fleeing over the past 18 months of war.There is no longer any taste to life, said Suliman, a former university professor. Life and death have become one and the same for us. Suliman is among the tens of thousands of Palestinians who have fled temporary shelters since Israel shattered a 2-month-old ceasefire on March 18 with renewed bombardment and ground assaults. Daunted by the notion of starting over, some Palestinians are ignoring the latest evacuation orders even if it means risking their lives.After one year and a half of war that has exhausted everyone, children and their parents, too, are just worn out physically and mentally, said Rosalia Bollen, UNICEFs communication specialist. For the past month, Israel has blocked all food, fuel and supplies from entering Gaza, and aid groups say there are no more tents or other shelter supplies to help the newly displaced. On Tuesday, the World Food Program shut down all its bakeries in Gaza, on which hundreds of thousands rely for bread, because it had run out of flour. Many are fleeing with almost no belongingsIsraels evacuation orders now cover large swaths of the Gaza Strip, including many areas of Gaza City and towns in the north, parts of the southern city of Khan Younis, and almost the entire southern city of Rafah and its surroundings.As of March 23, more than 140,000 people had been displaced again since the end of the ceasefire, according to the latest U.N. estimate and tens of thousands more are estimated to have fled under evacuation orders over the past week.Every time families have moved during the war, they have had to leave behind belongings and start nearly from scratch, finding food, water and shelter. Now, with no fuel entering, transportation is even more difficult, so many are fleeing with almost nothing.With each displacement, were tortured a thousand times, Suliman said. He and his family found an apartment to rent in the central town of Deir al-Balah. He said theyre struggling, with no electricity and little aid. They must walk long distances to find water.Fleeing from Rafah on Monday, Hanadi Dahoud said she is struggling to find essentials.Where do we go? she said. We just want to live. We are tired. There are long queues waiting for bread and charity kitchens.During the two-month ceasefire that began in mid-January, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians flowed back to their neighborhoods. Even if their homes were destroyed, they wanted to be near them sometimes setting up tents on or next to the rubble.They had hoped it would be the end of their displacement in a war that has driven nearly the entire population of some 2.3 million from their homes.The war in Gaza began with Hamas Oct. 7, 2023, attack on southern Israel. Since then, Israels retaliatory offensive has left hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in squalid, crowded tent camps or schools-turned-shelters. Most have had to move multiple times to escape fighting and bombardment. Shelter is limitedSome shelters are so crowded they have had to turn families away, said Shaina Low, communications adviser at the Norwegian Refugee Council.Many families are streaming back to Muwasi, a barren coastal stretch of southern Gaza where, before the ceasefire, hundreds of thousands had been packed into tent cities. During the ceasefire, the camps thinned out as people returned to their neighborhoods. Those returning are finding that tents are scarce; aid groups say they have none to give out because of Israels blockade.More than a million people urgently need tents, while thousands of others require plastic sheets and ropes to strengthen fragile makeshift shelters, Gavin Kelleher, NRCs humanitarian access manager in Gaza, said at a recent media briefing. For now, people are cramming into tents or moving into destroyed buildings that are in danger of collapse trying to put absolutely anything between themselves and the sky at night, Kelleher said.Relocating and reinstalling health and nutrition facilities amid declining aid supplies has been absolutely draining for families and humanitarian workers, UNICEFs Bollen said.Our job would be much easier if we had access to our supplies and if we didnt have to fear for our own lives at every moment, she said.Khaled Abu Tair led a donkey cart with some bread and blankets as he and his family fled Khan Younis. He said they were heading God knows where, and would have to set up on the street a makeshift shelter out of sheets.We do not have a place, there are no tents, no places to live or shelter, or anything, he said. Some cant bear to moveWhen orders came to evacuate Gaza Citys Tel Hawa district, Sara Hegy and her mother decided to stay. Their original home in the nearby district of Zaytoun is too destroyed to be livable, and Hegy said she was in despair at the thought of starting over again.I had a breakdown the day the war resumed. I didnt leave the house, said Hegy, who had started an online tutoring job a few days before Israel relaunched its assault.Others dread the evacuation orders that might come.Noor Abu Mariam said she and her brother and parents have already been displaced 11 times over the course of the war, moving through tent camps and houses around the south, each time starting over in the search for shelter, food and supplies.Now back in Gaza City, she cant do it again, she said.I refuse to leave the house no matter the circumstances because I am not psychologically prepared to relive those difficult days I lived in the south, she said.___Khaled reported from Cairo.
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  • Trump is set to announce reciprocal tariffs in a risky move that could reshape the economy
    apnews.com
    President Donald Trump speaks at a reception celebrating Women's History Month in the East Room of the White House, Wednesday, March 26, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)2025-04-02T04:01:52Z WASHINGTON (AP) After weeks of White House hype and public anxiety, President Donald Trump is set Wednesday to announce a barrage of self-described reciprocal tariffs on friend and foe alike.The new tariffs coming on what Trump has called Liberation Day is a bid to boost U.S. manufacturing and punish other countries for what he has said are years of unfair trade practices. But by most economists assessments, the risky move threatens to plunge the economy into a downturn and mangle decades-old alliances.The White House is exuding confidence despite the political and financial gamble being undertaken.April 2, 2025, will go down as one of the most important days in modern American history, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said at Tuesdays briefing while adding that the new tariffs will take effect immediately. The reciprocal tariffs Trump plans to announce follow similar recent announcements of 25% taxes on auto imports; levies against China, Canada and Mexico; and expanded tariffs on steel and aluminum. Trump has also put tariffs against countries that import oil from Venezuela and plans separate import taxes on pharmaceutical drugs, lumber, copper and computer chips. None of the warning signs about a falling stock market or consumer sentiment turning morose have caused the administration to publicly second-guess its strategy. White House trade adviser Peter Navarro has suggested that the new tariffs would raise $600 billion annually, which would be the largest tax increase since World War II. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told lawmakers that the tariffs would be capped and could be negotiated downward by other countries, according to the office of Rep. Kevin Hern, R-Okla. But the White House has yet to confirm policy details, despite Trump saying on Monday that he had made his decision.Importers would likely pass along some of the cost of the taxes on to consumers. The Budget Lab at Yale University estimates that a 20% universal tariff would cost the average household an additional $3,400 to $4,200. The administrations premise is that manufacturers will quickly increase domestic production and create new factory jobs and the White House is expressing confidence that Trumps approach is absolutely correct.Theyre not going to be wrong, Leavitt said. It is going to work. And the president has a brilliant team of advisers who have been studying these issues for decades. And we are focused on restoring the golden age of America and making America a manufacturing superpower.The bold optimism has done little to reassure the public or allies who see the import taxes as a threat.Based on the possibility of broad 20% tariffs that have been floated by some White House aides, most analyses see an economy tarnished by higher prices and stagnation. U.S. economic growth as measured by gross domestic product would be roughly a percentage point lower, and clothing, oil, automobiles, housing, groceries and even insurance would cost more, the Budget Lab analysis found. Trump would single-handedly be applying these tariffs, since he has ways of legally doing so without congressional approval. That makes it easy for Democratic lawmakers and policymakers to criticize the Republican administration, if the uncertainty expressed by businesses and declining consumer sentiment are, in fact, signs of trouble to come. Heather Boushey, who served as a member of the Biden White Houses Council of Economic Advisers, noted that the less aggressive tariffs Trump imposed during his first term failed to stir the manufacturing renaissance he promised voters.We are not seeing indications of the boom that the president promised, Boushey said. Its a failed strategy.Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York said the tariffs were fundamentally a way for Trump to raise revenues in order to pay for his planned extensions of income tax cuts that disproportionately favor millionaires and billionaires.Almost everything they do, including tariffs, it seems to me, is aimed at getting those tax cuts for the wealthy, Schumer said Tuesday on the Senate floor. Even Republicans who trust Trumps instincts have acknowledged that the tariffs could be disruptive to an economy with an otherwise healthy 4.1 % unemployment rate.Well see how it all develops, said House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La. It may be rocky in the beginning. But I think that this will make sense for Americans and help all Americans.Longtime trading partners are preparing their own countermeasures. Canada has already imposed some in response to the 25% tariffs that Trump tied to the trafficking of fentanyl. The European Union, in response to the steel and aluminum tariffs, put taxes on 26 billion euros worth ($28 billion) of U.S. goods, including on bourbon, which prompted Trump to threaten a 200% tariff on European alcohol. Many allies feel they have been reluctantly drawn into a confrontation by Trump, who routinely says that friends and foes have essentially ripped off the United States with a mix of tariffs and other trade barriers.The flip side, of course, is that Americans also have the incomes to choose to buy designer gowns by French fashion houses and autos from German manufacturers, whereas World Bank data show the EU has lower incomes per capita than the United States.Europe has not started this confrontation, said European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. We do not necessarily want to retaliate but, if it is necessary, we have a strong plan to retaliate and we will use it.Because Trump has hyped his tariffs without providing specifics, he has provided a deeper sense of uncertainty for the world, a sign that the economic slowdown could possibly extend beyond U.S. borders to other nations that would see one person to blame.Ray Sparnaay, general manager of JE Fixture & Tool, a Canadian tool and die business that sits across the Detroit River, said the uncertainty has crushed his companys ability to make plans.Theres going to be tariffs implemented. We just dont know at this point, he said Monday. Thats one of the biggest problems weve had probably the last well, since November is the uncertainty. Its basically slowed all of our quoting processes, business that we hope to secure has been stalled.___Associated Press reporters Lisa Mascaro in Washington and Mike Householder in Oldcastle, Ontario, contributed to this report. JOSH BOAK Boak covers the White House and economic policy for The Associated Press. He joined the AP in 2013. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Dodgers' 7-0 start ties 1933 Yanks as May returns
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    With Dustin May on the mound for the first time in more than 22 months, the Dodgers came from behind to beat the Braves 3-1 on Tuesday night and improve to 7-0, tying the 1933 Yankees for the best start to a season by a reigning World Series champion.
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  • Roy: Duclair 'god-awful' during Isles' 4-1 loss
    www.espn.com
    In the heat of the Eastern Conference playoff race, and with his team struggling, New York Islanders coach Patrick Roy said Anthony Duclair was "god-awful" in a loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning, and that the veteran is failing to meet expectations.
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  • Dodgers' 7-0 start ties 1933 Yanks as May returns
    www.espn.com
    With Dustin May on the mound for the first time in more than 22 months, the Dodgers came from behind to beat the Braves 3-1 on Tuesday night and improve to 7-0, tying the 1933 Yankees for the best start to a season by a reigning World Series champion.
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  • Dodgers' 7-0 start ties 1933 Yanks as May returns
    www.espn.com
    With Dustin May on the mound for the first time in more than 22 months, the Dodgers came from behind to beat the Braves 3-1 on Tuesday night and improve to 7-0, tying the 1933 Yankees for the best start to a season by a reigning World Series champion.
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  • Roy: Duclair 'god-awful' during Isles' 4-1 loss
    www.espn.com
    In the heat of the Eastern Conference playoff race, and with his team struggling, New York Islanders coach Patrick Roy said Anthony Duclair was "god-awful" in a loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning, and that the veteran is failing to meet expectations.
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  • Man rescued from rubble in Myanmars capital but hope fading of finding more earthquake survivors
    apnews.com
    A rescuer works through rubble of a collapsed building following Friday's earthquake in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, Tuesday, April 1, 2025. (AP Photo)2025-04-02T07:25:39Z BANGKOK (AP) Rescue crews in Myanmar pulled a 26-year-old man out alive from the rubble of the capital city hotel where he worked early Wednesday, but most teams were finding only bodies five days after a massive earthquake hit the country. After using an endiscopic camera to pinpoint Naing Lin Tuns location in the rubble and confirm that he was alive, the man was gingerly pulled through a hole jackhammered through a floor and loaded on to a gurney nearly 108 hours after he was trapped in the hotel where he worked.Shirtless and covered in dust, Naing Lin Tun appeared weak but conscious in a video released by the local fire department, as he was fitted with an IV drip and taken away. State-run MRTV reported that the rescue in the city of Naypyitaw was carried out by a Turkish and local team and took more than nine hours. The 7.7 magnitude earthquake hit midday Friday, toppling thousands of buildings, collapsing bridges and buckling roads. So far, 2,719 people have been reported dead and another 4,521 injured but local reports suggest much higher figures. The earthquake also rocked neighboring Thailand, causing the collapse of a high-rise building under construction in Bangkok. One body was removed from the rubble early Wednesday, raising the death total in Bangkok to 22 with 34 injured, primarily at the construction site. Myanmar has been wracked by civil war and the earthquake is making a dire humanitarian crisis even worse, with more than 3 million people displaced from their homes and nearly 20 million in need even before it hit, according to the United Nations. Countries have pledged millions in assistance to help Myanmar and humanitarian aid organizations with the monumental task ahead.Australia on Wednesday said it was providing another $4.5 million, in addition to $1.25 million it had already committed, and had a rapid response team on the ground. India has flown in aid and sent two Navy ships with supplies as well as providing some 200 rescue workers. Multiple other countries have sent teams, including 270 people from China, 212 from Russia and 122 from the United Arab Emirates. A three-person team from the U.S. Agency for International Development arrived Tuesday to determine how best to respond given limited U.S. resources due to the slashing of the foreign aid budget and dismantling of the agency as an independent operation. Washington said on the weekend it would provide $2 million in emergency assistance.Most of the details so far have come from Mandalay, Myanmars second-largest city, which was near the epicenter of the earthquake, and the capital Naypyitaw, about 270 kilometers (165 miles) north of Mandalay.Many areas are without power, telephone or cell connections, and difficult to reach by road, but more reports are beginning to trickle in.In Singu township, about 65 kilometers (40 miles) north of Mandalay, 27 gold miners were killed were killed in a cave-in, the independent Democratic Voice of Burma reported. In the area of Inle Lake, northeast of the capital, many people died when homes built on wooden stilts in the water collapsed in the earthquake, the governments official Global New Light of Myanmar reported without providing specific figures.___Matthew Lee in Washington and Jintamas Saksornchai in Bangkok contributed to this report. DAVID RISING Rising covers regional Asia-Pacific stories for The Associated Press. He has worked around the world, including covering the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Ukraine, and was based for nearly 20 years in Berlin before moving to Bangkok. twitter mailto
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  • Israels military operation in Gaza Strip expanding to seize large areas, defense minister says
    apnews.com
    Displaced Palestinians carry water in Jabaliya, Gaza Strip on Monday, March 31, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi, File)2025-04-02T06:19:18Z JERUSALEM (AP) Israels military operation in the Gaza Strip is expanding to seize large areas, the defense minister said Wednesday.Israels offensive in the Palestinian territory was expanding to crush and clean the area of terrorists and terrorist infrastructure and seizing large areas that will be added to the security zones of the State of Israel, Defense Minister Israel Katz said in a written statement.Israels security perimeter, which runs along the border with Israel in northern and eastern Gaza, has been a crucial part of the countrys defense for decades, used as a way to protect its citizens living near the territory. Katz didnt specify which areas of Gaza would be seized in the expanded operation, which includes the extensive evacuation of the population from fighting areas.The minister called on Gaza residents to expel Hamas and return all hostages. The militant group still holds 59 captives, of whom 24 are believed to still be alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefire agreements or other deals. This is the only way to end the war, Katz said.The Hostage Families Forum, which represents most captives families, said that it was horrified to wake up this morning to the Defense Ministers announcement about expanding military operations in Gaza. The group said the Israeli government has an obligation to free all 59 hostages from Hamas captivity to pursue every possible channel to advance a deal for their release, and stressed that every passing day puts their loved ones lives at greater risk. Their lives hang in the balance as more and more disturbing details continue to emerge about the horrific conditions theyre being held in chained, abused, and in desperate need of medical attention, said the forum, which called on the Trump administration and other mediators to continue pressuring Hamas to release the hostages. Our highest priority must be an immediate deal to bring ALL hostages back home the living for rehabilitation and those killed for proper burial and end this war, the group said.Israel continued to target the Gaza Strip, with airstrikes overnight killing 17 people in the southern city of Khan Younis, hospital officials said. Officials at the Nasser Hospital said the bodies of 12 people killed in an overnight airstrike that were brought to the hospital included five women, one of them pregnant, and two children. Officials at the Gaza European Hospital said they received five bodies of people killed in two separate airstrikes.The war began when Hamas-led militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking 251 hostages.Israels offensive has killed more than 50,000 Palestinians, including hundreds killed in strikes since a ceasefire ended about two weeks ago, according to Gazas Health Ministry, which doesnt say whether those killed are civilians or combatants. Israel says it has killed around 20,000 militants, without providing evidence.___Follow APs war coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war
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  • Stanton won't blame ailing elbows on torpedo bats
    www.espn.com
    Yankees slugger Giancarlo Stanton declined Tuesday to say whether he believes using the torpedo bats last season caused the elbow ailments that have sidelined him this season.
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  • Campbell reunites with Cards for 18th NFL season
    www.espn.com
    Six-time Pro-Bowl defensive lineman Calais Campbell has finalized a one-year deal to return to the Arizona Cardinals for his 18th NFL season, the team announced.
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  • Stanton won't blame ailing elbows on torpedo bats
    www.espn.com
    Yankees slugger Giancarlo Stanton declined Tuesday to say whether he believes using the torpedo bats last season caused the elbow ailments that have sidelined him this season.
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  • Campbell reunites with Cards for 18th NFL season
    www.espn.com
    Six-time Pro-Bowl defensive lineman Calais Campbell has finalized a one-year deal to return to the Arizona Cardinals for his 18th NFL season, the team announced.
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  • Val Kilmer, Top Gun and Batman star with an intense approach, dies at 65
    apnews.com
    Val Kilmer arrives at the 54th annual GRAMMY Awards, Feb. 12, 2012, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello, File)2025-04-02T04:56:01Z LOS ANGELES (AP) Val Kilmer, the brooding, versatile actor who played fan favorite Iceman in Top Gun, donned a voluminous cape as Batman in Batman Forever and portrayed Jim Morrison in The Doors, has died. He was 65. Kilmer died Tuesday night in Los Angeles, surrounded by family and friends, his daughter, Mercedes Kilmer, said in an email to The Associated Press. Val Kilmer died from pneumonia. He had recovered after a 2014 throat cancer diagnosis that required two tracheotomies. I have behaved poorly. I have behaved bravely. I have behaved bizarrely to some. I deny none of this and have no regrets because I have lost and found parts of myself that I never knew existed, he says toward the end of Val, the 2021 documentary on his career. And I am blessed.Kilmer, the youngest actor ever accepted to the prestigious Juilliard School at the time he attended, experienced the ups and downs of fame more dramatically than most. His break came in 1984s spy spoof Top Secret! followed by the comedy Real Genius in 1985. Kilmer would later show his comedy chops again in films including MacGruber and Kiss Kiss Bang Bang. His movie career hit its zenith in the early 1990s as he made a name for himself as a dashing leading man, starring alongside Kurt Russell and Bill Paxton in 1993s Tombstone, as Elvis ghost in True Romance and as a bank-robbing demolition expert in Michael Manns 1995 film Heat with Al Pacino and Robert De Niro. The actor who took part in the Method branch of Suzuki arts training threw himself into parts. When he played Doc Holliday in Tombstone, he filled his bed with ice for the final scene to mimic the feeling of dying from tuberculosis. To play Morrison, he wore leather pants all the time, asked castmates and crew to only refer to him as Jim Morrison and blasted The Doors for a year. That intensity also gave Kilmer a reputation that he was difficult to work with, something he grudgingly agreed with later in life, but always defending himself by emphasizing art over commerce. In an unflinching attempt to empower directors, actors and other collaborators to honor the truth and essence of each project, an attempt to breathe Suzukian life into a myriad of Hollywood moments, I had been deemed difficult and alienated the head of every major studio, he wrote in his memoir, Im Your Huckleberry.One of his more iconic roles hotshot pilot Tom Iceman Kazansky opposite Tom Cruise almost didnt happen. Kilmer was courted by director Tony Scott for Top Gun but initially balked. I didnt want the part. I didnt care about the film. The story didnt interest me, he wrote in his memoir. He agreed after being promised that his role would improve from the initial script. He would reprise the role in the films 2022 sequel, Top Gun: Maverick.One career nadir was playing Batman in Joel Schumachers goofy, garish Batman Forever with Nicole Kidman and opposite Chris ODonnells Robin before George Clooney took up the mantle for 1997s Batman & Robin and after Michael Keaton played the Dark Knight in 1989s Batman and 1992s Batman Returns. Janet Maslin in The New York Times said Kilmer was hamstrung by the straight-man aspects of the role, while Roger Ebert deadpanned that he was a completely acceptable substitute for Keaton. Kilmer, who was one and done as Batman, blamed much of his performance on the suit. The Times was the first to report his death on Tuesday. When youre in it, you can barely move and people have to help you stand up and sit down, Kilmer said in Val. You also cant hear anything and after a while people stop talking to you, its very isolating. It was a struggle for me to get a performance past the suit, and it was frustrating until I realised that my role in the film was just to show up and stand where I was told to.His next projects were the film version of the 1960s TV series The Saint fussily putting on wigs, accents and glasses and The Island of Dr. Moreau with Marlon Brando, which became one of the decades most infamously cursed productions. David Gregorys 2014 documentary Lost Soul: The Doomed Journey of Richard Stanleys Island of Dr. Moreau, described a cursed set that included a hurricane, Kilmer bullying director Richard Stanley, the firing of Stanley via fax (who sneaked back on set as an extra with a mask on) and extensive rewrites by Kilmer and Brando. The older actor told the younger at one point: Its a job now, Val. A lark. Well get through it. I was as sad as Ive ever been on a set, Kilmer wrote in his memoir. In 1996, Entertainment Weekly ran a cover story about Kilmer titled The Man Hollywood Loves to Hate. The directors Schumacher and John Frankenheimer, who finished The Island of Dr. Moreau, said he was difficult. Frankenheimer said there were two things he would never do: Climb Mount Everest and work with Val Kilmer again. Other artists came to his defense, like D. J. Caruso, who directed Kilmer in The Salton Sea and said the actor simply liked to talk out scenes and enjoyed having a directors attention.Val needs to immerse himself in a character. I think what happened with directors like Frankenheimer and Schumacher is that Val would ask a lot of questions, and a guy like Schumacher would say, Youre Batman! Just go do it, Caruso told The New York Times in 2002.After The Island of Dr. Moreau, the movies were smaller, like David Mamet human-trafficking thriller Spartan"; Joe the King in 1999, in which he played a paunchy, abusive alcoholic; and playing the doomed 70s porn star John Holmes in 2003s Wonderland. He also threw himself into his one-man stage show Citizen Twain, in which he played Mark Twain.I enjoy the depth and soul the piece has that Twain had for his fellow man and America, he told Variety in 2018. And the comedy thats always so close to the surface, and how valuable his genius is for us today. Still, we battle racism and greed. The same country, its greatness and its tragedy.Kilmer spent his formative years in the Chatsworth neighborhood of Los Angeles. He attended Chatsworth High School alongside future Oscar winner Kevin Spacey and future Emmy winner Mare Winningham. At 17, he was the youngest drama student ever admitted at the Juilliard School in 1981.Shortly after he left for Juilliard, his younger brother, 15-year-old Wesley, suffered an epileptic seizure in the familys Jacuzzi and died on the way to the hospital. Wesley was an aspiring filmmaker when he died. I miss him and miss his things. I have his art up. I like to think about what he would have created. Im still inspired by him, Kilmer told the Times.While still at Juilliard, Kilmer co-wrote and appeared in the play How It All Began and later turned down a role in Francis Ford Coppolas The Outsiders for the Broadway play, Slab Boys, alongside Kevin Bacon and Sean Penn.Kilmer published two books of poetry (including My Edens After Burns) and was nominated for a Grammy in 2012 for spoken word album for The Mark of Zorro. He was also a visual artist and a lifelong Christian Scientist.He dated Cher, married and divorced actor Joanne Whalley. He is survived by their two children, Mercedes and Jack. ____Kennedy reported from New York. MARK KENNEDY Kennedy is a theater, TV, music, food and obit writer and editor for The Associated Press, as well as a critic for theater, movies and music. He is based in New York City. twitter mailto ANDREW DALTON Dalton covers entertainment for The Associated Press, with an emphasis on crime, courts and obituaries. He has worked for the AP for 20 years and is based in Los Angeles. mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • A wary Europe awaits Rubio with NATOs future on the line
    apnews.com
    Secretary of State Marco Rubio, speaks during the International Women of Courage award ceremony, Tuesday April 1, 2025, at the State Department in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)2025-04-02T04:11:13Z WASHINGTON (AP) U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio travels this week to a gathering of top diplomats from NATO countries and is sure to find allies that are alarmed, angered and confused by the Trump administrations desire to reestablish ties with Russia and its escalating rhetorical attacks on longtime transatlantic partners.Allies are deeply concerned by President Donald Trumps readiness to draw closer to Russian leader Vladimir Putin, who sees NATO as a threat, amid a U.S. effort to broker a ceasefire in Ukraine. Recent White House comments and insults directed at NATO allies Canada and Denmark as well as the military alliance itself have only increased the angst, especially as new U.S. tariffs are taking effect against friends and foes alike.Rubio arrives in Brussels on Thursday for two days of meetings with his NATO counterparts and European officials, and he can expect to be confronted with questions about the future U.S. role in the alliance. For 75 years, NATO has been anchored on American leadership, and based on what they have seen and heard since Trump took office in January, European officials have expressed deep concerns that Trump may upend all of that when he and other NATO leaders meet for a June summit in the Netherlands. Can Rubio reassure allies?As Rubio did last month at a meeting of foreign ministers from the Group of 7 industrialized democracies, Americas top diplomat, who is regarded by many overseas as a more pragmatic and less dogmatic member of Trumps administration, may be able to salvage a watered-down group consensus on the war in Ukraine. Thats even as Trump said this week that Ukraine was never going to be a member of NATO despite leaders declaring at last years summit that the country was on an irreversible path to join.But Rubio will be hard-pressed to explain Washingtons unprovoked verbal attacks on NATO allies Canada, which Trump says he wants to claim as a 51st state, and Denmark, whose territory of Greenland he says the U.S. should annex. Both have been accused of being bad allies by Trump and Vice President JD Vance. Its pretty clear neither territory has any interest in joining a Trumpian America, said Ian Kelly, U.S. ambassador to Georgia during the Obama and first Trump administration and now an international studies professor at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.Theres going to be a lot of very anxious Euros about what Trump is going to call for and what announcements hes going to make, he said. If he isnt already, Rubio is going to be in a mode of trying to reassure European allies that we are not, in fact, not dependable.Yet, in just under two months, NATO has been shaken to its core, challenged increasingly by Russia and the biggest land war in Europe since 1945 from the outside, and by the Trump administration from within, breaking with decades of relatively predictable U.S. leadership.Trump has consistently complained about NATO members defense spending and even raised doubts about the U.S. commitment to mutual defense in the alliances founding treaty, which says an attack on one NATO member is considered an attack on all. Europeans taking on more security guaranteesSince Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth warned last month that U.S. security priorities lie elsewhere in Asia and on its own borders the Europeans have waited to learn how big a military drawdown in Europe could be and how fast it may happen.In Europe and Canada, governments are working on burden shifting plans to take over more of the load, while trying to ensure that no security vacuum is created if U.S. troops and equipment are withdrawn from the continent.These allies are keen to hear from Rubio what the Trump administrations intentions are and hope to secure some kind of roadmap that lays out what will happen next and when, so they can synchronize planning and use European forces to plug any gaps.At the same time, NATOs deterrent effect against an adversary like Russia is only credible when backed by U.S. firepower. For the Europeans and Canada, this means that U.S. nuclear weapons and the 6th Fleet must remain stationed in Europe. America is indispensable for credible deterrence, a senior NATO diplomat told reporters on condition of anonymity to speak ahead of the meeting.Around 100,000 U.S. troops are deployed across the continent. European allies believe at least 20,000 personnel sent by the Biden administration after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine three years ago could be withdrawn.Another priority for U.S. allies is to understand whether Trump believes that Russia still poses the greatest security threat. In their summit statement last year, NATO leaders insisted that Russia remains the most significant and direct threat to Allies security.But Trumps receptiveness to Putin and recent favorable remarks by some U.S. officials have raised doubts. The question, diplomats say, is why allies should spend 5% of their gross domestic product on their defense budgets if Russia is no longer a threat. At the same time, the Europeans and Canada know they must spend more not least to protect themselves and keep arming Ukraine. At their next summit in June, NATO leaders are expected to raise the alliances military budget goal from at least 2% to more than 3%.Rubio is in a very difficult position, said Jeff Rathke, president of the American-German Institute at Johns Hopkins University. Trump has tried to convince allies that a U.S. realignment with Russia is in the best interests of the U.S. and presumably Europe, and at the same time tell them that they need to double their defense spending to deal with threats posed by Russia, he said. The logical question they will ask is why?___Cook reported from Brussels.
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  • Bucks catch fire, shoot highest FG% this century
    www.espn.com
    The Bucks snapped a four-game skid by shooting 68.9% from the field Tuesday night against the Suns, the highest single-game percentage by any team this century.
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  • Ovechkin nets No. 891, four shy of NHL history
    www.espn.com
    Washington captain Alex Ovechkin scored his 891st career goal, moving him four away from passing Wayne Gretzky's NHL record, and Dylan Strome broke a third-period tie Tuesday night to lead the first-place Capitals to a 4-3 victory over the Boston Bruins.
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  • Bucks catch fire, shoot highest FG% this century
    www.espn.com
    The Bucks snapped a four-game skid by shooting 68.9% from the field Tuesday night against the Suns, the highest single-game percentage by any team this century.
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  • Ovechkin nets No. 891, four shy of NHL history
    www.espn.com
    Washington captain Alex Ovechkin scored his 891st career goal, moving him four away from passing Wayne Gretzky's NHL record, and Dylan Strome broke a third-period tie Tuesday night to lead the first-place Capitals to a 4-3 victory over the Boston Bruins.
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  • Worried families and rescue dogs bond during the long days of searching at Bangkok collapse
    apnews.com
    K9 named Lek, center, works as an emotional support with relatives of workers of a high-rise building under construction that collapsed after Friday's earthquake in Bangkok, Thailand, Tuesday, April 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)2025-04-02T04:45:03Z BANGKOK (AP) For most of the day, somberness clouded over a makeshift shelter set up for grief-stricken relatives of dozens of workers who remain missing at the building collapse in Bangkok. They huddled together, a short distance from the rubble, awaiting news for their loved ones to be found.But for a few minutes, their faces broke out in smiles, as a group of fluffy, playful golden retrievers approached the waiting relatives on a break from the dogs rescue mission.Bangkok is more than 800 miles (1,287 kilometers) from the epicenter of the magnitude 7.7 earthquake that struck Myanmar on Friday. Fifteen of the 22 deaths reported in Bangkok were people found at the site of the collapsed high-rise, according to the Bangkok city authorities. Around 70 workers remain missing.Pornchai Chaodongbang has been waiting for her missing brother at the site since Sunday. She said she was crying every day since the news broke, and when she saw the site of the ruins, she collapsed. On Tuesday evening, she and dozens of others were visited by Sahara, Safari and Lek, rescue dogs from K9 USAR Thailand, a non-profit that works closely with the Thai government in disaster and humanitarian relief efforts. Pornchais face lit up as she played with them. She said her spirit was lifted a little. I saw in the news that they were helping the crew up there. I felt a little happier, she said. Its the dogs main job to climb the rubble, sniffing for any sign of humans trapped underneath. But Alongkot Chukaew, deputy director of the group, said they are also offering emotional support on the side, as his experience working with the dogs in many of their missions showed that they can give moments of comfort to disaster victims.He saw that happened with Sahara during the rescue mission after the 2023 earthquake in Turkey.At times when people were feeling down, she walked over to relatives of the victims who were sitting among the rubble. I saw the children come to her, play with her. Amid those great losses, its a small moment of happiness that can lift their spirits. From that day on, its what we have been trying to do during our breaks, he said. They chose the dogs that are gentle to visit the relatives, he said. I believe their gentleness is what gives a spirit to the relatives. Its also like making a promise that they will be here with them until all the victims are found.Samran Khotchomphun said she has been waiting for her missing grandson and granddaughter since the first day of the collapse. She said she cried through the first three days because she couldnt cope with the situation.Samran said the dogs offered her a brief comfort and hope on day five of the search and rescue operations.I told the dogs, please help find them. My hope is hanging on you, she said.
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  • With a nod to Americas civil rights legacy, Sen. Cory Booker makes a mark of his own
    apnews.com
    In this image provided by Senate Television, Sen, Cory Booker, D-N.J. speaks on the Senate floor, Tuesday morning, April 1, 2025. (Senate Television via AP)2025-04-02T03:26:09Z WASHINGTON (AP) Democratic Sen. Cory Booker ended his record-setting speech the same way he began it, more than 25 hours earlier: by invoking the words of his mentor, the late congressman and civil rights icon John Lewis.He endured beatings savagely on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, at lunch counters, on freedom rides. He said he had to do something. He would not normalize a moment like this, Booker said of Lewis work as a young activist during the Civil Rights movement. He would not just go along with business as usual.He said for us to go out and cause some good trouble, necessary trouble, to redeem the soul of our nation, Booker said. A break from business as usual was what Booker had in mind as he performed a feat of political endurance, holding the Senate floor for 25 hours and 5 minutes while delivering a wide-ranging critique of President Donald Trump and his policies. In doing so, Booker of New Jersey broke the record for longest Senate floor speech, a mark that had belonged for decades to Strom Thurmond, the avowed segregationist from South Carolina who filibustered the Civil Rights Act of 1957. Booker said hed been aware of Thurmonds record since first coming to the Senate in 2013 a room near the Senate chamber is still named for him and it bothered him. It seemed wrong to me, Booker said. It always seemed wrong.Booker, a Black progressive, spoke about his roots as a descendant of both slaves and slave-owners as he invoked the Civil Rights movement, implicitly linking Lewis steadfast resistance to Jim Crow to the modern-day opponents of Trumps reshaping of government and society. Throughout his speech he read letters from Americans about the impact that Trumps agenda is having on their lives, drawing historical parallels and warning that the country faces a looming constitutional crisis.This is a moral moment, Booker said. Its not left or right; its right or wrong. As Booker held the floor, dozens of members of the Congressional Black Caucus flanked the back of the Senate chamber in support, including House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Rep. Maxine Waters. Other CBC members kept close to the floor, including Sens. Angela Alsobrooks, Lisa Blunt Rochester and Raphael Warnock. Before Booker surpassed Thurmonds 68-year-old record, Jeffries said Bookers speech was an incredibly powerful moment ... because he is fighting to preserve the American way of life and our democracy. And the record was held by Strom Thurmond who was actually defending Jim Crow segregation.Rep. Hank Johnson, D-Ga., a close friend of Lewis who represented the neighboring district in metropolitan Atlanta, said Bookers speech was an act of resistance.The American people want to see us as their representatives do everything we can to resist the encroachment on our liberties and the taking away of benefits, Johnson said. Bookers speech captured attention at a time when Democrats have grown frustrated and despondent at their inability to stop Trumps plans. Locked out of power in Congress and the executive branch, Democrats have struggled with how to take on Trump and the slashing of government being carried out by Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency. Grassroots liberal organizers have been urging major Democratic figures to take a more combative approach. Some hoped that Bookers speech would offer the party lessons going forward.Booker is reminding all of America and his own party, not simply to stand for what were against, but to stand up for what we believe in, said Brittany Packnett Cunningham, an activist who helped lead the 2014 protests against police brutality in Ferguson, Mo.I think he recognized that people are looking for our leaders to have the moral clarity to declare that whats happening is wrong, and to determine, to do something about it, she said.As Bookers marathon speech drew to a close, he recalled the last conversation he ever had with Lewis, who was known for his acts of civil disobedience in Congress throughout his career until his passing in 2020.Booker recalled telling Lewis, well do everything possible to make you proud. And he said he had no doubt what Lewis message would be if he were alive today.John Lewis would say, do something, Booker said. He wouldnt treat this moral moment like it was normal. MATT BROWN Brown is a reporter covering national politics, race and democracy issues. twitter instagram mailto
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  • Do smartphones and social media really harm teens mental health?
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 02 April 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00933-3Researchers are debating the strength of evidence connecting technology to surging rates of adolescent mental illness. But they have some clear advice for parents.
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  • Are screens harming teens? What scientists can do to find answers
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 02 April 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00991-7The fierce debate about smartphones and adolescent mental health rests on conflicting science. Researchers and technology companies must work to improve it.
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  • Carlo: Madrid made final despite 'a lot of mistakes'
    www.espn.com
    Carlo Ancelotti admitted Real Madrid made "a lot of mistakes" but also did "a lot of good things" in a 4-4 draw with Real Sociedad on Tuesday, which saw them reach the Copa del Rey final 5-4 on aggregate.
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  • Messi fit as Miami eyes 'big step' into semifinals
    www.espn.com
    Inter Miami head coach Javier Mascherano recognized the importance of reaching the Concacaf Champions Cup semifinals as a young club, but warned against taking the quarterfinal series against LAFC for granted.
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  • Why Ovechkin is 'nearly impossible' to stop: Opponents, teammates explain his shot
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    Top NHL blueliners, goalies and scorers explain Ovi's unique skill as he closes in on Wayne Gretzky's record.
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  • How long will Banda and Chawinga's NWSL dominance continue?
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    March saw the return of NWSL action after African stars took the league by storm in 2024. This year, Temwa Chawinga and Barbra Banda have wasted no time picking up where they left off.
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  • Carlo Ancelotti to go on trial for tax evasion
    www.espn.com
    Ancelotti is expected to appear in court on Wednesday for the first day of a trial in which he is accused of failing to pay 1m in tax on revenue.
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  • Carlo: Madrid made final despite 'a lot of mistakes'
    www.espn.com
    Carlo Ancelotti admitted Real Madrid made "a lot of mistakes" but also did "a lot of good things" in a 4-4 draw with Real Sociedad on Tuesday, which saw them reach the Copa del Rey final 5-4 on aggregate.
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  • Messi fit as Miami eyes 'big step' into semifinals
    www.espn.com
    Inter Miami head coach Javier Mascherano recognized the importance of reaching the Concacaf Champions Cup semifinals as a young club, but warned against taking the quarterfinal series against LAFC for granted.
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  • Counting the potential toll of Trumps tariffs on major Asian economies
    apnews.com
    Trucks line up to enter a Port of Oakland shipping terminal on Nov. 10, 2021, in Oakland, Calif. (AP Photo/Noah Berger, File)2025-04-02T10:09:53Z BANGKOK (AP) The trade war that U.S. President Donald Trump has escalated in his second term is a challenge for all Asian economies, large and small, in an era when the most populous region of the world is expected to drive global economic growth.Export manufacturing and free trade helped transform China and other Asian countries into economic powerhouses over the past decades. Trumps barrages of tariffs, aimed at compelling companies to keep or set up their factories in the United States, are rupturing trade agreements often made at great political cost to trading partners. The White House says the criteria for raising tariffs will include not just U.S. trade deficits but also various taxes, exchange rates, government subsidies and various non-tariff trade barriers. Apart from the tariffs to be announced on Wednesdays Liberation Day, as Trump calls it, 25% tariffs on imports of autos and auto parts are due to take effect on Thursday. Trump has also ordered levies against China, Canada and Mexico; expanded tariffs on steel and aluminum, and imposed tariffs on countries that import oil from Venezuela. He plans more import taxes on pharmaceutical drugs, lumber, copper and computer chips. Higher costs already have led many manufacturers to shift away from China to other economies in South and Southeast Asia, Africa and Latin America. But for now the prevailing uncertainty over what Trump will do with what he calls reciprocal tariffs may lead most to sit tight and see what comes next. Theres no script for how reciprocal tariffs get priced, and uncertainty is the only constant, Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management said.Heres a look at how higher U.S. tariffs might affect some major Asian economies. China Despite some decrease in trade since Trump launched a trade war with China during his first term in office, the U.S. trade deficit has continued to climb, hitting $295.4 billion last year. China, the worlds No. 2 economy, has leaned heavily on exports to make up for weak demand at home. The ruling Communist Party has made exports of autos, especially electric vehicles, and batteries a priority, but 27.5% tariffs on auto exports and 102.5% duties on EVs have in effect closed the U.S. market for its automakers. China is the second largest supplier of auto parts to the U.S. behind Mexico. During Trumps first term, higher tariffs led leader Xi Jinping to champion a shift to high-tech production. That will likely continue as U.S. pressure intensifies, causing job losses due to changes in manufacturing rather than direct damage from the tariffs themselves, Raymond Yeung of ANZ Research said in a report. As Trump has rolled out rounds of tariff hikes that have piled on an extra 20%, China has raised its own import duties, targeting U.S. farm goods. It also expanded export controls, especially on strategically important minerals used in high-tech electronics. U.S. exports of liquefied natural gas (LNG) to China have fallen since the beginning of the year, and are expected to fall further after Beijing imposed a 15% tariff on U.S. LNG imports. JapanPrime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said Tuesday that his government was making last ditch efforts to get the United States to exclude his country from auto tariffs. The U.S. absorbs about one-fifth of Japans exports, or about 1.5 million passenger cars a year. Even though major Japanese automakers like Toyota Motor Corp., Honda Motor Co. and Nissan Motor Co. have factories in the U.S. and increasingly, in Mexico, its an important industry back home. Nearly 5.6 million people are employed in auto-related jobs, according to the Japan Automobile Manufacturing Association. Japans exports of electronics, machinery, chemicals and steel are also potential targets. A central bank survey released Monday found business sentiment among large manufacturers worsened in the past quarter, for the first time in a year. Tokyos Nikkei 225 share benchmark has fallen more than 10% in the past three months, while shares in Toyota Motor Corp. have tumbled 27%. TaiwanMore than 60% of the self-governed islands economy comes from exports, and it ran a trade surplus with the U.S. of nearly $74 billion last year. Computer chips are one of Taiwans biggest exports to the United States, along with computers and other office machines and consumer products. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp. is expanding its U.S. factories in Arizona, enticed by U.S. incentives and its own strategic needs. In early March, its CEO C.C. Wei pledged $100 billion in new U.S. investments. South KoreaSouth Korea ran a $66 billion trade surplus with the U.S. last year, and autos, electronics and computer chips were a large share. The country could boost investments in making autos, steel, and semiconductors in the U.S. and also consider revising the Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement to promote more balanced trade, Patrick Cronin of the Hudson Institute said in a recent report.South Korea is among several big importers of LNG that may try to buy more of the gas from the US to help balance trade, researchers at RaboBank said in a recent report. Vietnam Like most of its Southeast Asian neighbors, Vietnam has emulated Japan, China and other major exporting nations in relying on trade and foreign investment to develop their economies. It had the third-largest trade surplus with the United States last year, after Mexico and China, at $123.5 billion. Its biggest exports are machinery, textiles and footwear. A 14% increase in exports helped Vietnams economy expand at a sizzling 7.1% annual rate last year. The government recently said it would slash tariffs on LNG, autos, ethanol and some other farm products, moves meant to placate Trump and reduce its trade surplus. Vietnam also has agreed to allow a five-year trial launch of Elon Musks Starlink satellite internet service.IndiaThe worlds most populous country ran a trade surplus of nearly $46 billion with the U.S. in 2024, according to the U.S. Trade Representatives office. The main exports are medicines and chemicals to make them, pearls, diamonds and other gems.Exports account for just under a quarter of Indias GDP, providing millions of jobs, and the U.S. is its largest overseas market. ELAINE KURTENBACH Based in Bangkok, Kurtenbach is the APs business editor for Asia, helping to improve and expand our coverage of regional economies, climate change and the transition toward carbon-free energy. She has been covering economic, social, environmental and political trends in China, Japan and Southeast Asia throughout her career. twitter mailto
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