EXPRESS_05132019

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TRUMP TAKES OVER THE FOURTH OF JULY 4 today’s pape r in side

MAY 13, 2019 | A PUBLICATION OF

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W2 | EXPRESS | 05.13.2019 | MONDAY


A PUBLICATION OF

Monday 05.13.19

| READEXPRESS.COM | @WAPOEXPRESS

No rush Gruden plans to take it slow with rookie QB Dwayne Haskins 14

Pro-life push

THE WASHINGTON POST

Anti-abortion victories in several states put Roe in the crosshairs 13

Metro food fight Firestorm erupts over a tweet outing a worker who ate on a train 6

Better with age GETTY IMAGES/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION

President Trump is taking over Washington’s Fourth of July festivities, and some worry that his starring role could turn what has long been a nonpartisan celebration into another one of his campaign rallies 4

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Party of one

The stars of Netflix’s ‘Wine Country’ reflect on adult friendship 24 am

63 | 51

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2 | EXPRESS | 05.13.2019 | MONDAY

VINCENT YU (AP)

eyeopeners

UP IN THE AIR: A child supported by a rig of hidden metal rods floats in the air Sunday during a parade to celebrate the Bun Festival on Cheung Chau island in Hong Kong.

‘YOU’RE NOT MY REAL MOM!’

ENOUGH SAID

BLACK (MARKET) BEANS

Ungrateful, rebellious canine would rather chill with his bros

A man named Fuchs apparently stole a whole bunch of sex toys

FYI if you were contemplating buying canned goods on Craigslist

Sometimes, you just want to hang out with your buddies. That was true for Hugo, a dog who ran away from home last week in St. Ann, Mo., and went straight to his doggy day care. KTVI-TV reports Hugo often boards at Happy Tails Pet Hotel and Playland. Security video shows Hugo sprinting through the front door and nosing up to another dog after making the trek from home, which is over a mile and involves crossing a busy road. (AP)

A Tyndall, S.D., man is accused of stealing $500 worth of sex toys from a couple’s home over two years. The Argus Leader reports Brody Fuchs, 25, is charged with burglary. Bon Homme County Sheriff’s Deputy Brian McGuire says Fuchs took “a bunch” of the items. An affidavit says the couple installed a camera system, which caught Fuchs entering briefly, then leaving. A deputy recovered a number of sex toys in a search of Fuchs’ home. (AP)

A businesswoman attempting to make a delivery outside Albuquerque, N.M., says thieves rolled off in her U-Haul packed with $7,000 worth of refried beans. KOB-TV reports no arrests have been made in last week’s legume larceny outside the Isleta Resort & Casino. Mary Jane Brown, president of Mexicali Rose Instant Refried Beans, says she stayed at the Isleta Pueblo hotel because she was concerned about crime in Albuquerque. (AP)

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A party, and a call to action THE DISTRICT For a moment, things weren’t exactly going to plan at the main stage of the Funk Parade music festival. Rain was in the forecast. And because of glitches with some speakers, the live musical performances were delayed. But on Saturday afternoon, none of that stopped the crowd from dancing. The granite-paved plaza by the U Street Metro station became the center of attention, and a dance circle formed as “Give Up the Funk” blasted from a speaker on the ground. “That’s funk,” said Jennifer Queen, one of the event’s hosts. “It’s about going with the flow of things.” This year, the spirit of the Funk Parade — an annual festival meant to celebrate the rich history of live music and arts in Washington’s U Street neighborhood — felt more urgent than ever. The sixth annual parade came after an electronics store in Shaw, known and beloved for blasting go-go beats from its

J. LAWLER DUGGAN (FOR THE WASHINGTON POST)

After #DontMuteDC, this year’s Funk Parade took on a new urgency

A dance circle broke out during the sixth annual Funk Parade on Saturday.

storefront, was forced to briefly silence its music after a resident of a nearby luxury apartment complex complained. The tunes returned after days of protests. But the controversy prompted a much larger movement — to preserve not only go-go music, but the broader culture of the city in the face of gentrification. For many of the people who showed up to dance and sing and march Saturday, the day was not only a party but a call to action.

“It’s about taking a stand in the musical tradition of the city. It’s about saying we’re here, and we’re not going to go anywhere.” JENNIFER QUEEN, a host of the Funk Parade, which celebrates the musical history of U Street

For the first time, this year’s Funk Parade festivities included a conference propelling forward the movement dubbed #DontMuteDC. In the morning, local activists and musicians gathered at the U Street Music Hall to talk about next steps. “We’d be naive to think that music is the only thing that matters,” said Jeffery Tribble Jr., executive director of The MusicianShip, a D.C. nonprofit that took charge of Funk Parade this year. “It’s also about gentrification, it’s housing, it’s culture.” Later in the afternoon, the focus was less on the recent controversies and more on celebration. James Sutton Jr. watched the dancing alongside his wife and four children, reminiscing on the neighborhood he grew up in. Before Sutton, 69, moved out to Frederick, Md., he lived in the U Street area for about four decades, he said. He came out with his family to show his children the culture of his childhood, the funk and go-go music that was in his blood. “The core culture is still here. Go-go is still here. The dancing is still here,” he said. “People still make noise.” SAMANTHA SCHMIDT (THE WASHINGTON POST)

‘This Shirt’ gets people talking “It’s officially This Shirt season for the straight men of D.C.,” a local tweeter, @NRMorrow, wrote last week, setting off a robust discussion about the gingham shirt’s seemingly evergreen popularity among bros in D.C. (EXPRESS) “This shirt just started a podcast with the exact same shirt but in red.” - @DavidWright_CNN “I’m literally wearing this shirt.” - @CapsRegalBeagle “This shirt just asked me ‘so, what do you do?’” - @beckawall “The ... tweet is devastating not just because we all wear the same shirt, but through the revelation that we all react the same way to the observation that we all wear the same shirt.” - @keir_lamont

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local

Trump hijacks July 4

expressline

President Trump has renamed the Fourth of July celebrations “A Salute to America,” and has plans to address the nation from the Lincoln Memorial.

MLADEN ANTONOV (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

WASHINGTON President Trump has effectively taken charge of the nation’s premier Fourth of July celebration in Washington, moving the gargantuan fireworks display from its usual spot on the Mall to be closer to the Potomac River and making tentative plans to address the nation from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, according to top administration officials. The president’s starring role has the potential to turn what has long been a nonpartisan celebration of the nation’s founding into another version of a Trump campaign rally. Officials said it is unclear how much the changes may cost, but the plans have already raised alarms among city officials and some lawmakers about the potential impact of such major alterations to a time-honored and well-organized summer tradition. The annual event on the Mall, which the National Park Service has orchestrated for more than half a century, draws hundreds of thousands of Americans and marks one of the highlights of the city’s tourist season. The fireworks have been broadcast live on television since 1947 and since 1981 have been accompanied by a free concert on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol featuring high-profile musicians and a performance by the National Symphony Orchestra. The new event, to be called “A Salute to America,” will shift the fireworks launch to West Potomac Park, less than a mile southwest of its usual location near the Washington Monument. In addition to a possible address by Trump, the location may feature a second stage of entertainment apart from the performers at the Capitol, officials said. The revised Independence Day celebration is the culmination of

JABIN BOTSFORD (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Potential changes to longtime Mall event include a speech, new fireworks location

Fireworks on the Mall have been organized by the National Park Service for decades. Trump will move the fireworks to West Potomac Park this year.

two years of attempts by Trump to create a major patriotic event centered on him and his supporters, including failed efforts to mount a military parade modeled on Bastille Day in France. The new event has become a top priority for Interior Secretary David Bernhardt, whom Trump tasked with the job three months ago, officials said. Trump has shown greater interest in the event than in some other administration priorities,

Who’ll pay for changes? It is unclear whether the changes to the Fourth of July celebration on the Mall will increase costs for taxpayers. Launching the fireworks last year cost roughly $250,000, a figure that does not include the cost of security, portable toilets and fencing. One D.C. official said the city would expect the federal government to pay for any new costs incurred by changes to the celebration. (TWP)

Arrests follows mini crime wave in Northwest D.C. involving 2 armed robberies, 2 car thefts

administration aides said. “I think the president is excited about the idea, and we’re working hard on it, and I think it could be very, very meaningful,” Bernhardt said. In justifying Trump’s changes, Interior officials argued that moving the fireworks launch site from the north and south sides of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool — where it has been located for at least 18 years — to West Potomac Park will allow for more visitors. But Rep. Betty McCollum, D-Minn., who chairs the House Subcommittee on Interior, Environment and Related Agencies, said she is concerned that Trump could polarize what is typically a unifying event for Americans. “It’s not about any one person, it’s about ‘We, the people,’ ” she said. “And if the president moves to make this about him, I think he will find the American public disappointed and angered by it.” No president has participated in a Fourth of July celebration on the Mall in recent memory, usually celebrating instead at the White House. An official in the administration of D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, D, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to candidly discuss preparations for the event, said the city was worried about moving the fireworks and the logistics of the president traveling to the Mall to address the crowds, which could cut off the flow of visitors to and from nearby Metro stations. “We have a lot of people come to the Fourth of July. Logistically, over the years, the kinks have been worked out,” the official said. “We don’t want to throw off what already works.” JOSH DAWSEY, JULIET EILPERIN AND PETER JAMISON (THE WASHINGTON POST)

WYTHE COUNTY, VA.

Man arrested in deadly Appalachian Trail attack A Massachusetts man named James L. Jordan, 30, is facing federal charges in a brutal attack on two Appalachian Trail hikers early Saturday that left a man dead and a woman hospitalized with severe stab wounds, authorities said Sunday. The Wythe County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement that two hikers reported a man with a machete was attacking people. (TWP/AP) LOUDOUN COUNTY, VA.

3 educators arrested during a 2-week period Three Loudoun County Public Schools teachers have been arrested in the past two weeks. Alison Briel, 25, faced charges related to sending inappropriate messages and photos to students. Two others, Brian K. Chamer and Gary K. Goodwin, were arrested and accused of drinking or possessing alcohol on public school grounds. (TWP) TRANSPORTATION

Sinkhole closes section of G.W. Parkway for days A northern section of the George Washington Memorial Parkway near Dead Run, Va., will remain closed for several days as crews repair a 10-foot-deep sinkhole. The National Park Service said it had been working to stabilize a section and that it may reopen one lane in time for today’s afternoon rush hour. (TWP) FAIRFAX COUNTY

Judge rules 19-year-old can stand trial in killings A Fairfax County juvenile court judge ruled on Friday that a 19-year-old from Lorton, Va., is competent to stand trial in the 2017 double killing of his girlfriend’s parents. The case generated national attention because the unnamed suspect allegedly espoused neo-Nazi views on Twitter. The young man was restored to competency after spending months at a Virginia mental hospital. (TWP)

Death toll in gas station explosion near Buena Vista, Va., rises to 3


MONDAY | 05.13.2019 | EXPRESS | 5

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Metro call-out tweet sparks controversy

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THE DISTRICT Author Natasha Tynes has ignited a firestorm on social media, where she criticized a black Metro employee for eating on the train and reported the woman to transit officials. Tynes, a Jordanian American writer and World Bank employee in Washington, tweeted a photo Friday, showing the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority employee in uniform, eating on the Red Line. Tynes tagged the WMATA account, reporting that when she confronted the woman for breaking Metro rules, the woman replied, “Worry about yourself.” “When you’re on your morning commute & see @wmata employee in UNIFORM eating on the train,” Tynes tweeted. “I thought we were not allowed to eat on the train. This is unacceptable. Hope @wmata responds.” Metro rules ban eating, drinking, smoking and littering on buses or trains and in stations. But it’s common to see riders violating the drinking rule. In response to Tynes’ tweet, transit officials asked her for more information and thanked her “for catching this and helping us make sure all Metro employees are held accountable.” Tynes

61%

RICKY CARIOTI (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Author loses book deal after Twitter-shaming black WMATA worker

An employee of the World Bank tweeted a photo on Friday of a black female WMATA employee eating on a train in violation of Metro’s rules.

then provided further details, including the time, the train the employee was traveling on and the direction that it was headed. The backlash was swift on Twitter, where people have been calling out the self-described “minority writer” for publicly shaming a black woman and trying to get her into trouble. Tynes apologized, saying she was “truly sorry” for the tweet, and later deleted her Twitter. But in response, Rare Birds Books, a publishing house that was set to distribute Tynes’ forthcoming novel, “They Called Me Wyatt,” said it has decided not to do so. Barry Hobson, the chief of staff for the Metro workers union, said in a statement that the Metro employee was taking her meal break while in transit from one

assignment to another. The statement notes operators have about 20 minutes to consume a meal and get to their next assignment. Though the union acknowledged it is against Metro rules to eat on a train or in a station, Hobson’s statement also referenced an email from Metro Transit Police Chief Ron Pavlik sent May 8, ordering officers to cease and desist from issuing criminal citations for fare evasion and eating and drinking, among other actions. “Understanding this email, our operator clearly was doing no wrong,” the union statement said. Hobson said Sunday that the case is still under investigation and the union “will not support any discipline.” LINDSEY BEVER (THE WASHINGTON POST)

REGION FAVORS I-270 TOLL LANES

The proportion of Washington-area residents who favor adding express toll lanes to Interstate 270 and Maryland’s part of the Capital Beltway, according to a recent Washington Post-Schar School poll. At the same time, 80% of respondents from the Maryland suburbs are “very” or “somewhat” concerned that adding express toll lanes would require destroying homes. (TWP) Man charged with murder in fatal baseball bat attack on Columbia, Md., woman during home invasion


MONDAY | 05.13.2019 | EXPRESS | 7

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8 | EXPRESS | 05.13.2019 | MONDAY

nation+world

Overseas crises adding up

weekendd re win

Clashes with Venezuela, N. Korea, Iran and China testing Trump’s resolve

Government rations food amid economic crisis

Chinese President Xi Jinping

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani

official defended the efficacy and rationale of the administration’s approach. “The United States is responding to legitimate threats against America and our allies and partners with highly effective maximum pressure campaigns,” the official said. The possibility that Trump’s resolve could be tested has increased in recent days. In Asia, progress in talks with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un showed signs of backsliding, as the U.S. seized a North Korean vessel allegedly used for evading sanctions and suspended efforts to recover remains of U.S. military personnel killed during the Korean War. Pyongyang, for its part, carried out new short-range

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro

Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó

missile tests. In South America, top administration officials suggested the possibility of military action against Venezuela after a failed insurrection by the U.S.-backed opposition caught officials in Washington off guard. The U.S. military sent a hospital ship to the nation’s coast in between preparing for contingencies should Nicolás Maduro’s government fall. A year after Trump pulled out of the Iranian nuclear accord, Tehran announced that it would stop complying with some elements of the agreement, promising to enrich uranium to a higher level than allowed under the treaty. The decision once again raises the threat of

IN MEMORIAM

Grad’s cap honors student victims

An Ohio high school senior wanted to use her graduation cap to send a message. So she decorated it with a large QR code that links to a website she created. “I graduated,” a banner reads. “These high school students couldn’t.” Below it, Gina Warren lists the victims of deadly school shootings over the past 20 years. “That list was so long, and it really did break my heart,” she said. The list covered 10 schools and 49 students. (TWP) Results of Lithuania’s presidential election were not available at Express’ deadline

nuclear proliferation in one of the most unstable parts of the world. Against the backdrop of confrontations with North Korea, Venezuela and Iran, Trump has also been applying economic pressure to China, most recently hiking U.S. tariffs on $200 billion in Chinese goods. “The one source of some comfort is that Trump does seem to be risk-averse when it comes to military action, and I’m sure the U.S. military are reinforcing him in that regard,” Dobbins said. “The more dangerous of these situations in the short to medium term is probably the Chinese one, since that’s an area where he has been less risk-averse.” PAUL SONNE AND JOHN HUDSON (THE WASHINGTON POST)

GETTY IMAGES/EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION

POLITICS President Trump ran for office vowing to extricate the United States from entanglements abroad. But his administration now finds itself juggling three national security crises overseas — with Iran, Venezuela and North Korea — while confronting China over a possible trade war. The situation is partly a function of uncontrollable events but also the result of Trump’s “go big or go home” approach to foreign affairs, which has led his administration to apply “maximum pressure” to multiple nations simultaneously, rather than prioritize one over the other or take incremental steps. “The president’s apparent tendency to brinkmanship brings with it a degree of danger — and it’s even more dangerous when it’s combined with a pattern of bluffing,” said James Dobbins, a former top diplomat. Strategy experts cite the risk of overextending U.S. rhetoric in conflicts with possible military outcomes if the president isn’t willing to back words with actions. “It’s kind of like the not terribly capable bully, who likes pushing people around and teasing them, but when push comes to shove, is nervous to actually get into a bar fight,” said Mara Karlin, a former Pentagon strategist during the Obama administration. But a senior administration

CUBA

Cuba said Friday that it will ration chicken, eggs, rice, beans and other staples because of an economic crisis. Commerce Minister Betsy Díaz Velázquez blamed the crisis on the hardening of the U.S. trade embargo by the White House. Economists give equal or greater blame to a drop in aid from Venezuela, where the collapse of the state-run oil company has led to a sharp cut in shipments of subsidized fuel that Cuba used for power and to earn currency. (AP) POLITICS

Dems try to kick-start $19B plan for disaster aid The House on Friday passed a $19 billion disaster aid bill that would give long-sought relief to farmers and victims of hurricanes and floods, and rebuild military bases, as Democrats try to dislodge the legislation from a Senate logjam over aid to Puerto Rico. The bill passed 257-150 over the opposition of most Republicans, who said it should also include the administration’s $4.5 billion request for more humanitarian aid and law enforcement along the U.S.-Mexico border. (AP) VENEZUELA

Guaidó aims for channel to get U.S. military’s help Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó said Saturday that he’s instructed his political envoy in Washington to immediately open relations with the U.S. military in a bid to bring more pressure on President Nicolás Maduro to resign. Guaidó said he is seeking “direct communications” toward possible military “coordination.” The comment marks one of his strongest public pleas yet for greater U.S. involvement in the escalating crisis. (AP)

Brazil’s Bolsonaro vows to appoint anti-corruption crusader Moro to Supreme Court


MONDAY | 05.13.2019 | EXPRESS | 9

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10 | EXPRESS | 05.13.2019 | MONDAY

nation+world

AUNG THURA VIA AP

Myanmar jet skids to safe stop

TADA-U, MYANMAR | Firefighters hose down a Myanmar National Airlines jet at Mandalay International Airport on Sunday. The plane made an emergency landing on only its rear wheels after the front landing gear failed to deploy. No one was injured in the incident.

MIDDLE EAST

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UAE says 4 ships off coast ‘subjected to sabotage’

Attack on Catholic church kills 6, including priest

Cops raid journalist’s home in probe of leaked report

The United Arab Emirates said Sunday that four commercial ships off its eastern coast “were subjected to sabotage operations,” just hours after Iranian and Lebanese media outlets aired false reports of explosions at a nearby Emirati port. Emirati officials declined to elaborate on the nature of the sabotage or say who might have been responsible. The statement from the UAE’s Foreign Ministry put the ships near the country’s territorial waters in the Gulf of Oman, east of the port of Fujairah. It said it was investigating the incident and there were “no injuries or fatalities on board the vessels.” (AP)

Authorities say gunmen attacked a Catholic church in Burkina Faso, killing a priest and five worshippers. The attack Sunday took place in Dablo, about 124 miles from the capital, Ouagadougou. Urbain Kabore, a government spokesman for the West African country’s Sahel region, said the gunmen also set fire to a health center and destroyed all places serving alcohol. There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but the attacks bore the hallmarks of Islamic extremists who are known to be active in the area. An attack on a Protestant church about two weeks ago left six people dead. (AP)

A freelance journalist is vowing to protect his source after San Francisco police raided his home and office while keeping him handcuffed for several hours as part of a criminal investigation, according to a newspaper report. Bryan Carmody told the Los Angeles Times that officers banged on his door Friday and confiscated dozens of personal items including notebooks, his cellphone, computer, hard drives and cameras. Officials said the raid came during an ongoing probe into who leaked a confidential police report about the Feb. 22 death of San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi. (AP)

Indians cast votes in next-to-last round of the nation’s marathon six-week-long election

Islamic leader and 2 others arrested in murder-for-hire plot in Lexington, Ky.

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MONDAY | 05.13.2019 | EXPRESS | 11

A Message from Community Members throughout Washington, D.C. We have signed a petition urging Mayor Muriel Bowser and the D.C. Council to fully fund D.C. Public Schools, not cut budgets and shortchange our children’s futures. If the mayor’s proposed budget is approved by the council, schools that serve some of the district’s poorest children will experience deep cuts, including staff reductions. The council meets on Tuesday morning, May 14. Councilmembers need to hear your voices! Visit www.dccouncil.us/councilmembers to contact your councilmember. Abbondanza, G. Abdul-Ali, A. Abdussalaam, A. Ackerman, C. Adam, L. Adams, A. Adams, K. Adams, T. Akunwafor, M. Alessi, S. Allen, D. Allen, J. Allen, M. Allen, N. Allinson, N. Allison, A. Amaya, E. Amaya, V. Anderson, G. Anderson, S. Anderson, W. Andrews, A. Angala, M. Angell, J. Aponte-Prats, G. Arbiter, B. Armoo, J. Armstrong, P. Ash, C. Baker, C. Ball, C. Ballou, J Banta, E. Baris, M. Barriteau, D. Bass, J. Bass, M. Battle, B. Baum, M. Bayoomi, M. Beard, A. Becky, R. Bedney, K. Beebe, B. Begazo, R. Belguda, A. Bell, T. Bellard, M. Beltran, F. Benach, M. Benjamin, A. Benjamin, R. Benson, C. Bentick, C. Bentley, R. Berg, J. Bergin, K. Bergsieker, R. Bernardo, T. Bernier-Chen, K. Berry, K. Besser, A. Besser, A. Bethea, M. Bethel, V. Beverly-Gomillion, S. Bey, D. Bigelow, K. Birks, M. Bissell, R. Blackledge, M. Blado, K. Blake, M.

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Dean, N. Declue, R. Deely, M. Deering, J. Defelice, S. Demilio, B. Dent, M. Derricotte, D. Dewhurst, E. DeWyngaent, B. Diamont, C. Diaz, M. Dickens, V. Dickerson, K. Dickinson, S. Dieterle, J. DiGenno, R. Dillard, J. Dobbs, M. Dockett, J. Dodson, M. Dodsworth, E. Donaldson, M. Donkin, S. Donovick, R. Dorsey, J. Dosunmu, K. Douglass, P. Dowe, S. Driver, J. Drummond, D. Drummond, P. Dsouza, L. Duane, T. Dubin, J. Ducote, S. Dunmore, J. Durkins, L. Dutoi, B. Duvall, D. Dyson, T. Eastlack, L. Eccles, A. Edmonds, R. Ejechi, N. Elbert, C. Elbert, M. Elie, T. Ellingsen, K. Ellingston, J. Elliott, D. Ellis, C. Elwell, S. Engman, J. Entenberg, A. Epperson, L. Ermis, S. Esad, N. Esposito, D. Etxezarreta, A. Falcon, E. Farenthold, G. Feldman, D. Ferguson, A. Ferguson, M. Ferguson, R. Fi, S. Fife, L. Fifield, C. Figures, D. Fischer, A. Fish, H. Fisher, A.

Fisher, E. Fitterer, J. Fitzgerald, K. Fitzmaurice, J. Flannery, J. Flashman, S. Fleming, D. Fletcher, G. Fletcher, O. Fonville, D. Forrest, T. Forston, M. Foty, N. Fowlkes, K. Fox, K. Fraser, A. Fraser, E. Frazier, G. Frazier, P. Frison, T. Frizzell, T. Frost, D. Frownfelter, B. Fuchs, L. Fuldawn, S. Fuller, C. Fuller, M. Galdamez, G. Galvin, M. Gamougoun, N. Garcia, I. Gardner, B. Garitty, M. Garner, T. Garnett, C. Garnett, Z. Gartin, C. Gasaway, T. Gasoi, E. Generette, C. Gerena, J. Gereon, P. Gerken, A. German, H. Gibson, G. Gibson, K. Gibson, L. Gill-Cunningham, J. Girdish, J. Glassberg, M. Glassman, E. Glubiak, S. Goetz, K. Goldfarb, D. Golland, R. Gonzales, K. Gore-Curry, A. Gottlieb, S. Grabowski, Z. Granados, L. Grant, M. Graves, K. Graves, M. Gray, A. Green, A. Green, C. Gregal, D. Griffin, L. Grimm, C. Grindrod, M. Grivnow, S. Gross, C. Guaraldo, L.

Guerrero, E. Guglielmo, T. Gumbs, L. Gundling, R. Gutierrez, C. Haddox-Rossiter, A. Hagans, J. Haith, S. Hall, A. Hall, B. Hall, D. Hall, M. Hamilton, J. Hamilton, R. Hankerson, G. Hankins, A. Hanlon, C. Hanna, R. Hannah, A. Hanrahan, D. Hanrahan, S. Hansel, A. Hantman, J. Hare, A. Harling, K. Harn, C. Harnik, R. Harris, J. Harris, K. Harris, R. Harriston, A. Harvey, A. Harvey, Y. Hasty, P. Hatcher, J. Hauenstein, W. Hawkins, C. Hawkins, R. Hawkins, T. Hawkins, V. Hayes, K. Haynes, L. Haynes, S. Hazeltine, M. Heale, R. Heholt, D. Hemphill, A. Henderson, D. Henighan, R. Hensley, S. Hernandez, D. Hernandez, N. Hetu, K. Hill, J. Hillenbrand, T. Hines, K. Hines, M. Hochsprung, N. Hoffman, A. Hoffman, B. Holcomb, T. Holland, N. Hollimon-Curley, J. Hollis, M. Holloway, K. Hollowell-Makle, K. Holman, C. Holmes, D. Holmes, P. Hopkins, A. Horge, S. Housey III, J. Houston, S.

Howard, N. Howell, V. Hoyson, E. Hu, G. Hugee, M. Huget, H. Hughes-Cotton, V. Humbles, P. Hunt, A. Hunt, E. Hunt, S. Hurley-Bruno, J. Hussaini, S. Iapalucci, A. Idemudia, O. Inchausti, K. Intagliata, C. Irvin, J. Isom, A. Isreal, J. Jablow, V. Jackson, A. Jackson, B. Jackson, R. Jackson-Baker, H. Jackson Machmer, B. Jacob, S. Jacobs, B. Jacobs, J. Jain, L. James, M. James, N. James, R. Jamison, R. Jamison, S. Jaundoo, M. Jefferson, W. Jenkins, N. Jennings, D. Jimroglou, K. Johns-Gibson, J. Johnson, A. Johnson, C. Johnson, D. Johnson, J. Johnson, T. Johnson, Y. Jones, A. Jones, C. Jones, J. Jones, S. Jones, T. Jones-Renaud, L. Joseph, B. Joseph, D. Joseph, L. Kaijage, T. Kammerer, D. Kang, G. Karaffa, S. Katt, A. Kearney, A. Keeling, E. Kelley, A. Kelly, J. Kelly, T. Kemp, K. Kennedy, E Kennedy, L. Kent, A. King, D. King, K. Kirby, A.

Kirby, J. Kitchen, T. Kleinmann, L. Knudsen, A. Koenig, L. Kohanek, J. Kolhoff, L. Koo, I. Kopsidas, A. Kozel, J. Koziol, M. Kral, B. Kratochvil, A. Kreisman, J. Krongos, S. Kronstadt, A. Krummert, M. Kulas, E. Lai, L. Lambert, F. Lansworth, T. Larry, M. Larson, P. Lashunda, R. Lee, T. Leese, R. Leff, P. Lehman, M. Lehmann, M. Leonard, D. Lesley, K. Levy, M. Lewis, B. Lewis, K. Lewis, O. Ligon, C. Lilyquist, C. Linares, P. Lincoln, C. Linden, J. Little-Smalls, L. Livingson, S. Livingston, S. Lobban, A. Locher, B. Locke, C. Locussol, Y. Loewe, B. Logan, E. Long, C. Lor, M. Loveland, J. Lovell, J. Lowery, J. Luecking, N. Lujan, J. Lunde, J. Lute, N. Luttmer, A. Lytle, D. Maclean, H. Magee, C. Magnuson, S. Mahn, D. Mallory-Powell, M. Manigault, J. Maniscalco, T. Manzano, M. Marbury, C. Marchese, T. Marchi, E. Marcotte, M. Mardirosian, S.

Markle-Elder, S. Marquez, C. Martin, J. Martin, T. Martinez, S. Mason, M. Massey, R. Massie, S. Mathias, J. Mayo-King, J. Mayolo, A. Mbinack, M. McCarthy, C. Mcclamy, A. McClary, K. McClary, S. McClinton, G. Mcconnell, R. McDade, D. Mckelvey, D. Mckinney, D. Mckissick, P. Mclaughlin, L. Mcmillan, A. Mcpherson, T. Mcrae, S. Medley, F. Medley, G. Mekra, M. Mendoza, R. Menecio, J. Menkart, D. Meredith, J. Meyers, L. Middlebrooks, C. Middleton, A. Mihalek, K. Mijangos, J. Miller, C. Miller, E. Miller, J. Miller, L. Miller, O. Miller, T. Miller, V. Minor, M. Miranda, G. Miranda, L. Miras, A. Mitchell, A. Mitchell, C. Mitchell, E. Mitchell, M. Mitchell, S. Mohammed, F. Mohler, J. Moise, V. Montes, R. Montgomery, A. Montiel, J. Moore, G. Moore, H. Moore, L. Moore, R. Moran, P. Moreno, D. Morris, D. Morrow, K. Moscoso, S. Moulden, D. Muhammad, S. Muhammad, T. Mukendi, A.

Mulkeen, H. Mulligan, C. Mullins, M. Murchison, K. Murphy, C. Murphy, L. Mus, M. Musgrove, M. Musson, E. Mustafa, A. Myers, A. Myles, J. Myra, H. Nadel, R. Naubean, G. Neidoff, S. Nelson, E. Nelson, P. Nelson, S. Neuhaus, C. Neverson, B. Newberry, J. Newhall, A. Newton, N. Ngono-Binelli, M. Ngwa, T. Nichols, E. Nickens, R. Nishimua, B. Nolan, K. Norton, C. Novikoff, J. Nuber, A. Nunez, D. Nunez, L. Nussbuam, S. Oat, N. Ocean, P. O’Connor, S. O’Donnell, J. Ogunsile, O. O’Hara, M. O’Leary, F. Oliver, D. Oliver, S. Olshefski, P. O’Neal, B. Oneal, J. Orejimi, E. Orourke, T. Orr, R. O’Shea, C. Osman, C. Oster, J. Otero, M. Oudheusden, M. Overby, B. Owens, T. Oyebanjo, M. Pace, M. Padera, A. Padua, A. Palmer Jr., S. Palombo, A. Palomino, R. Pan, M. Papalia, J. Parish, M. Park, G. Parker, L. Parker, S. Parodi, A. Parra, A.

For more information, go to www.wtulocal6.org.

Pascual, M. Patrick, R. Patterson, R. Payne-Tsoupros, A. Payne-Walker, L. Payton, T. Peaks, R. Peckham, V. Pelletier, L. Pendleton, J. Perez, C. Perez, E. Pergerson, L. Perlman, J. Peroli, P. Perrin, T. Perry, J. Perry, R. Person, D. Peterson, C. Peterson, T. Pettit Jr., K. Phillip, E. Phillips, K. Pickens, M. Pickett, M. Pickler, N. Pierce, B. Pierre, F. Pilla, M. Pinks, A. Pitoniak, S. Polk, A. Ponder, C. Popol, L. Porter, W. Potosky, S. Potter, M. Potts-Harris, W. Prater, E. Prato, C. Pratt, A. Price, A. Prince, B. Prince, M. Proctor, A. Provost, A. Puente, O. Punwani, P. Purnell, D. Puryear, C. Putney, M. Putten, R. Quinones, R. Quintanilla, C. Rachel, Z. Radford, E. Rahman, Z. Rain, S. Rainey-Hammett, L. Ramirez, A. Ramirez, K. Ramos, A. Ramos, N. Ramsey, E. Rankin, R. Rankin, T. Ratliff, D. Reavis, S. Reed-Harvey, K. Reeves, W. Reid, K. Reid-Witt, K.

Reilly, C. Remes, S. Resnik, J. Reynolds, T. Rheeling, J. Richards, M. Richardson, A. Richardson, B. Richardson, D. Richardson, K. Riggen, S. Rivera, P. Rizk, N. Robertson, D. Robinson, B. Robinson, C. Robinson, G. Robinson, J. Robinson, K. Robinson, R. Rocket, T. Roderer, E. Rodriguez, LaS. Rodriguez, M. Rogers, T. Rogo, M. Roling, C. Rolle, V. Romeo, M. Rosen, A. Rosier, P. Rosner, R. Ross, L. Ross, P. Roth, T. Rothschild, M. Roy, D. Royster, V. Rubenstein, A. Ruchala, J. Rucker, M. Rucker, N. Rulle, A. Rutter, J. Ryden, L. Sabatini, M. Saccani, S. Saffar, M. Salazar, S. Salisbury, E. Salley-Leroy, T. Salvador, A. Sampleton, H. Samuel, J. Sanchez, F. Sancho, L. Santoro, D. Saraum, M. Sargent, L. Sauls Jr., E. Saunders, C. Saunders, D. Sauter, N. Schaefer, L. Schneider, A. Schneider, J. Schoen, S. Schwabauer, B. Schwadron, S. Schwartzman, D. Scopino, A. Scott, G. Scott, J.

Seals, B. Sebastian, D. Self, M. Severs, A. Seward, K. Sewell, B. Sewell, R. Shabazz, I. Shandell, A. Shaw, M. Shaw, T. Sheard, T. Sheler, D. Shepard, R. Sherr, N. Sherrod, R. Sherry, M. Shields, A. Shipmon, M. Shoenfeld, S. Siegel, H. Simmons, A. Simmons, K. Simpson, A. Sims-Grant, B. Sio, E. Skipper, B. Skrzypczak, L. Slosarski, Y. Slotk, C. Smith, A. Smith, C. Smith, E. Smith, J. Smith, K. Smith, L. Smith, M. Smith, N. Smith, R. Smith, Y. Smith-Butler, L. Smolich, H. Sneiderman, M. Snipes, B. Snodgrass, J. Sonnemann, G. Sontag, C. Soopper, M. Soriano, S. Soter, K. Sowers, T. Spears, T. Stack, R. Stearman, L. Stearman, R. Steele, L. Stephens, G. Stevenson, L. Stewart, E. Stewart, T. Stirling, M. Stokes, J. Stoumbelis, A. Stover, W. Strauss, A. Strickland, J. Strong, V. Stuart, E. Styles, S. Suchenski, M. Summers, C. Sutton, B. Swetzoff, S.

Sykes, A. Tababan-Refuerzo, A. Taliadoros, A. Talley, D. Targoni, C. Tate, L. Taylor, A. Taylor, C. Taylor-Brown, H. Taylor-Harry, S. Tcheffo, J. Teel, P. Teimouri, A. Teutsch, Z. Teverow, R. Thangavelu, S. Thayer, C. Thomas, B. Thomas, C. Thomas, D. Thomas, E. Thomas, J. Thomas, M. Thomas, S. Thomas, T. Thompkins, J. Thompson, E. Thompson, G. Thompson, T. Tierney, B. Timmons, M. Tindal, Y. Tipps, Ms. Tofte, E. Tolbert, S. Toles, J. Toll, C. Tomlinson, J. Tomlinson, S. Trach, D. Treat, A. Troger, A. Trowbridge, L. Tugbeh, B. Tull, N. Turnbull, M. Twarog, L. Twyman, T. Tyrell, A. Tzuanos, J. Ucles, J. Uribe Perez, Y. VanderPloeg, M. Veliz-Gilbert, P. Veronique, M. Vick, M. Victoria, M. Viera, K. Vilmenay, R. Wade, E. Wagner, S. Wakefield, W. Walker, F. Walker, J. Walker, M. Walker, N. Walton, D. Walton, G. Ward, D. Ward, L. Warfield, D. Warkentien, S. ...and many more!


12 | EXPRESS | 05.13.2019 | MONDAY

nation+world

U.S. sits out U.N. waste pact ‘Historic’ agreement aims to track, monitor movements of plastics ENVIRONMENT Nearly every country in the world has agreed upon a legally binding framework to reduce the pollution from plastic waste — except for the United States, U.N. environmental officials say. An agreement on tracking thousands of types of plastic waste emerged Friday at the end of a two-week meeting of U.N.-backed conventions on plastic waste and

toxic, hazardous chemicals. Discarded plastic clutters pristine land, floats in huge masses in oceans and rivers and entangles wildlife, sometimes with deadly results. Rolph Payet of the United Nations Environment Program said the agreement linked to the 186-country, U.N.-supported Basel Convention means that countries will have to monitor and track the movement of plastic waste outside their borders. The framework “is historic in the sense that it is legally binding,” Payet said.

The deal affects products used in a broad array of industries, such as health care, technology, aerospace, fashion, food and beverages. Countries will have to figure out their own ways of adhering to the accord, Payet said. Even the few countries that did not sign it, like the U.S., could be affected by the accord when they ship plastic waste to countries that are on board with the deal. “There is going to be a transparent and traceable system for the export and import of plastic waste,” Payet said. (AP)

Turkish opposition journalist hospitalized after being attacked outside his home in Ankara

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“That sounds more like a Donald Trump thing to say — ‘I’m going to break up you guys.’ ” SEN. CORY BOOKER, D-N.J., who is running for president, striking a more cautious note than one of his rivals Saturday when asked if the government should break up major tech companies. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., has called for the breakup of companies like Facebook, Amazon and Google.

Magnitude 6.1 earthquake hits Panama area near Costa Rica; no injuries reported

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MONDAY | 05.13.2019 | EXPRESS | 13

nation+world

BOB ANDRES (ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION VIA AP)

‘Huge’ wins for pro-life movement Abortion rights under attack in the South and Midwest as ‘heartbeat’ bans advance POLITICS If a new Mississippi law survives a court challenge, it will be nearly impossible for most pregnant women to get an abortion there. Or, potentially, in neighboring Louisiana. Or Alabama. Or Georgia. The Louisiana legislature is halfway to passing a law — like those enacted in Mississippi and Georgia — that will ban abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected, about six weeks into a pregnancy and before many women know they’re pregnant. Alabama is on the cusp of approving an even more restrictive bill. State governments are on a course to virtually eliminate abortion access in large chunks of the Deep South and Midwest. Ohio and Kentucky also have passed heartbeat laws; Missouri’s Republican-controlled legislature is considering one. Their hope is that a more conservative U.S. Supreme Court will approve, spelling the end of the constitutional right to abortion. “For pro-life folks, these are huge victories,” said Sue Liebel, state director for the Susan B. Anthony List, an anti-abortion advocacy group. “And I think they’re indicative of the momentum and excitement and the hope that’s happening with changes in the Supreme Court and having such a pro-life president.” For abortion rights supporters,

the trend is ominous. “I think it’s certainly more dire than it ever has been. They smell blood and that’s why they’re doing this,” said Diane Derzis, owner of Mississippi’s sole abortion clinic, the Jackson Women’s Health Organization. Already, Mississippi mandates a 24-hour wait between in-person consultations. That means women must make at least two trips to her clinic, often traveling long distances. Other states have passed similar incremental laws restricting abortion in recent years. Besides Mississippi, five other states have just one clinic: Kentucky, Missouri, North and South Dakota, and West Virginia. But the latest efforts to bar the procedure represent the largest assault on abortion rights in decades. Lawmakers sponsoring the bans have made it clear their goal is to spark court challenges in hopes of ultimately overturning the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortion. Those challenges have begun. Derzis’ attorneys are scheduled to go before a judge on May 21, seeking to prevent Mississippi’s heartbeat law from taking effect July 1. A Kentucky judge blocked enforcement of the heartbeat ban after the American Civil Liberties Union filed suit on behalf of the clinic in Louisville. Si m i l a r le g a l ac t io n i s

Georgia’s Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, center, signs legislation last week in Atlanta to ban abortions once a fetal heartbeat can be detected.

Stricter abortion laws in some states Law bans most abortions once a fetal heartbeat is detected

Sweeping abortion bans being considered

Only one clinic for surgical abortions

Data as of May 8 Source: AP reporting, Guttmacher Institute

expected before bans can take effect in Ohio and Georgia, where Republican Gov. Brian Kemp signed the latest heartbeat bill into law Tuesday. Georgia’s ban doesn’t take effect until Jan. 1. But the impact was immediate. An abortion clinic operated by The Women’s Centers in Atlanta began receiving anxious calls from patients soon after Kemp signed the law. Georgia’s heartbeat ban would have a wider impact because the state has 17 abortion clinics — more than the combined total in the other four Southern states that have passed

Gunmen ambush, kill prominent politician-union leader in Salamanca in central Mexico

or are considering bans. “On a typical day, we will see people from North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, South Carolina,” said Dr. Lisa Haddad, the Atlanta clinic’s medical director. “And my thought is we’re not going to see those people coming here because they assume it’s already illegal in Georgia.” If heartbeat bans are upheld, many women who are poor and have limited means to travel would have few options other than to try to terminate their own pregnancies, Haddad said. RUSS BYNUM (AP)

‘Public option’ insurance will debut in Wash. SEATTLE Washington is set to become the first state to enter the private health insurance market with a universally available public option. A set of tiered public plans will cover standard services and are expected to be up to 10% cheaper than comparable private insurance, thanks in part to savings from a cap on rates paid to providers. But unlike existing government-managed plans, Washington’s public plans are set to be available to all residents, regardless of income, by 2021. The Legislature approved the plan last month, and Gov. Jay Inslee is scheduled to sign it into law today. The move thrusts Washington into the national debate over the government’s role in health care, with a hybrid model that puts the state to the left of marketonly approaches but stops short of a completely public system. Instead, the state will dictate the terms of the public option plans but hire private insurance companies to administer them, saving the state from having to create a new bureaucracy — and guaranteeing a role for the insurance industry in managing the new public option. Lawmakers in at least eight other states including Colorado and New Mexico have proposed their own public option measures. But so far none have passed legislation implementing a public option. TOM JAMES (AP)

Insurgent attack at luxury hotel on Pakistan’s southwestern coast kills 5 people


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sports 14 | EXPRESS | 05.13.2019 | MONDAY

MONDAY | 05.13.2019 | EXPRESS | 15

sports

NHL PLAYOFFS

Gruden vows to be patient with Haskins

AP

McCollum scores 37 as Portland advances to face Golden State

Bruins drub Hurricanes for a 2-0 lead

open competition with veterans Case Keenum and Colt McCoy to win the starting job. “The mental part of it is the big thing,”coach Jay Gruden said. “Physically, he has all the tools, without a doubt.” Haskins impressed in the first two days of rookie minicamp. The Buckeyes ran an up-tempo, shotgun scheme, so Haskins must get familiar with taking snaps under center and calling plays from the huddle. The terminology is foreign and more complicated, going from four or five signals in college to 15-word calls in a scheme with West Coast tendencies. He must get the team lined up, organize protections, go through expanded progressions in the passing game and refine footwork. The team has given Haskins only about 20% of the playbook as it looks to take things slow. Gruden is preaching patience, but there’s a lot to master before

JOHN McDONNELL (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Quarterback impresses at rookie minicamp, but Redskins say they’re taking things slow REDSKINS Dwayne Haskins sports the features of a young man just nine days north of his 22nd birthday. The chubby cheeks of the selfproclaimed “mama’s boy” gives way to a shadow of a goatee. His words are soft, yet confident. The feel of revival that comes with a first-round QB has engulfed the Redskins’ organization as excitement swirls around what could be with the budding prospect. The Ohio State product played just 22 collegiate games and only started one season, though it was a phenomenal campaign in which he was named Big Ten offensive player of the year after leading the nation in passing yards and touchdown passes. Of the 16 quarterbacks selected in the first round since 2015, Haskins played the fewest games in college. The Redskins hope their new quarterback is a fast learner because the No. 15 pick will have an

Blazers knock off Nuggets in Game 7

the Redskins open their season Sept. 8 in Philadelphia. And there’s no time for a slow start with the Eagles, Cowboys, Bears, Giants and Patriots in the first five weeks. Even if Haskins picks things up quickly, Gruden could decide that facing four 2018 playoff teams in the first five weeks is too much for the rookie. “When we drafted this kid we didn’t say, ‘Hey, we’re sticking you right in there,’” said Doug Williams, vice president of player personnel. “That’s not something we do. We’re going to have patience with him.” At Redskins Park, the 6-foot-3,

231-pound quarterback has shown off the big arm and the accuracy that led to 4,831 passing yards, 50 touchdowns and a 70.0 completion percentage, although he had the expected inconsistency from a rookie. The work between the ears will likely determine where he lands on the depth chart. Haskins plans to make up ground with a dedication to film study, something he took pride in at Ohio State. “I just don’t like defenses,” Haskins added, “so I want to be able to be the most prepared to rip them apart.” KAREEM COPELAND (THE WASHINGTON POST)

verbatim

“You find good people who are also good leaders, [and] it’s a win-win for everybody.” REDSKINS COACH JAY GRUDEN, whose widely praised rookie class includes a number of proven leaders. Rookies Terry McLaurin, Wes Martin, Bryce Love and Ross Pierschbacher were all team captains at their respective colleges.

Novak Djokovic topples Stefanos Tsitsipas to claim his third Madrid Open title

Matt Grzelcyk scored twice — his first career multigoal game — and Tuukka Rask made 21 saves Sunday to lead the Bruins to a 6-2 win in Boston over the Hurricanes to take a 2-0 lead in the Eastern Conference finals. Connor Clifton, above, had his first career NHL goal, Jake DeBrusk, David Backes and Danton Heinen also scored, and Torey Krug and Charlie Coyle had three assists apiece. The Bruins have won five straight games and need two more wins to reach the Stanley Cup Final for the third time in nine seasons. Petr Mrazek stopped just 19 shots. Justin Williams and Teuvo Teravainen scored after Carolina fell behind 6-0 in the third period. The series moves to Carolina for Games 3 and 4 on Tuesday and Thursday nights. The Bruins won 5-2 in Game 1 on Thursday at home. (AP)

Mystics’ top draft pick, guard Kiara Leslie, expected to miss 3-4 months with a torn meniscus

BLAZERS 100, NUGGETS 96 CJ McCollum scored 37 points and the Trail Blazers overcame a 17-point first-half deficit to beat the Nuggets 100-96 on Sunday in Denver to advance to the Western Conference finals for the first time since 2000. Evan Turner, who scored just

four points in the first six games of the series, added 14 points, including 10 in the fourth quarter. The Trail Blazers advanced to face the two-time defending NBA champion Warriors, beginning Tuesday night in Oakland, Calif. Turner corralled the rebound when Nikola Jokic’s desperation 3-pointer hit the rim and dribbled out the clock, sending the stunned crowd streaming to the exits at the Pepsi Center, where the Nuggets owned the

Sixers- Raptors ended after Express’ deadline

DAVID ZALUBOWSKI (AP)

Rookie QB Dwayne Haskins played just 22 collegiate games before the Redskins drafted him.

CJ McCollum scored 37 points to lead the Blazers to a Game 7 win in Denver.

best home record in the league during the regular season (34-7) but where they lost twice to Portland in the series. McCollum’s big game was necessary because Damian Lillard

made just 3 of 17 shots for 13 points, although two of them were crucial 3-pointers in the fourth quarter. Jokic led Denver with 29 points, but missed 15 shots.

Maryland women top Stony Brook, advance to NCAA lacrosse quarterfinals

Jamal Murray had 14 points, but was 4 of 18 from the floor. Overall, the Nuggets were 2 of 19 from beyond the arc and missed 11 free throws. Portland was 4 of 26 on 3-pointers and 20 of 24 from the stripe. The Nuggets raced to a 17-point lead in the first half and took a 48-39 halftime lead after throttling Lillard, who made just one of nine shots and missed all four of his 3-pointers after going off for 32 points in Portland’s Game 6 victory. Portland’s Rodney Hood, whom Nuggets coach Michael Malone said he was most worried about heading into Game 7, injured his left knee in the third quarter and left the game. (AP)

Md. men beat Towson in NCAA lacrosse opener

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sports SOCCER

Manchester City retains EPL title Manchester City retained the Premier League trophy after coming from behind to beat Brighton 4-1 and hold off Liverpool’s SHAUN BOTTERILL (GETTY IMAGES)

relentless challenge on the final day of the season Sunday. The quality and intensity of the title race was emphasized by City requiring a 14th successive league victory to finish a point above a Liverpool side chasing a first championship crown in 29 years; the top two finished with a record 195 points combined. “Liverpool was exceptional. I don’t mean to rub it in, it is what it is, they didn’t deserve to lose,” City captain Vincent Kompany said. Manchester City coach Pep Guardiola has now won eight league titles in his 10 seasons as a coach. (AP)

Viral Texas track star sets H.S. 100-meter record

Manchester City captain Vincent Kompany lifts the Premier League trophy after Sunday’s victory.

D.C. United-Sporting KC ended after Express’ deadline

LONDON

DODGERS 6, NATIONALS 0

Mexican wrestler dies in the ring during a match

Parra breaks up no-hit bid with double in 8th off Ryu

A well-known Mexican wrestler who co-starred in the comedy “Nacho Libre” died of a suspected heart attack after collapsing on stage in London. Cesar Cuauhtemoc Gonzalez Barron, the lucha libre star known as Silver King, performed Saturday night at The Roundhouse. The venue said Sunday that he died during the event. The 51-year-old Gonzalez appeared as a champion wrestler and comic villain in the 2006 movie “Nacho Libre,” starring Jack Black. Lucha libre is a popular form of wrestling in Mexico that features colorful masks and acrobatic techniques. (AP)

Dodgers left-hander Hyun-Jin Ryu took a no-hit bid into the eighth inning and the Nationals managed just one hit in a 6-0 loss Sunday as the teams split their four-game series in Los Angeles. Gerardo Parra broke up the no-hitter when he drove Ryu’s 105th pitch to deep left-center and it bounced over the fence for a ground-rule double. Ryu had struck out nine, and Washington’s only previous baserunner came with one out in the fourth when Brian Dozier walked. Washington (16-24) returns home to face the Mets on Tuesday after going 3-7 on its 10-game road trip. (AP/EXPRESS)

Dolphins sign RB Mark Walton, who’s been arrested 3 times this year

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ahead

LIFE AFTER SERVICE

No rest for the weary For graduate students, summer break isn’t a time for slacking off GRADUATE PROGRAMS When you’re an undergraduate, summer break might mean lounging by the pool or working as a camp counselor. But when you’re a full-time graduate student, your summer is probably filled with more research and reaching out than rest and relaxation. Take Najma Mohamud, who’s finishing her first year of a master’s program in public policy at George Mason University. Over the summer, she plans to take two classes while hopefully also working at a full-time job or internship. “You have to think longer term,” says Mohamud, 23. “I’m trying to do the most with the time I’m given.” Mohamud has goals of working in politics after finishing her degree, so she’s ideally looking

for a summer position on Capitol Hill to help boost her résumé. “Especially in an area like D.C. that’s so competitive, it’s not only having your master’s degree,” she says. “Your experience really makes all the difference. You really have to show initiative and that you’re a go-getter.” For graduate students with ambitious career goals, summer isn’t a time for slacking off. A break from classes and teaching obligations provides time for internships, research projects and other résumé builders. Graduate students also can use the opportunity to work on job search strategies they might not have time for during the academic year, like building their network. “No matter what a student’s goals are, my advice is the same — connect, connect, connect,” says Shannon E. Williams, director of Ph.D. student services for the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University. “There’s a pervasive

“No matter what a student’s goals are, my advice is the same — connect, connect, connect.” SHANNON E. WILLIAMS, director of Ph.D. student services at George Mason University’s Schar School of Policy and Government

misconception that education is an individual sport. But the world of work, even research work, has really changed, and it’s increasingly the domain of collaboration. Students can’t just buckle down and study and come out on the other side ready for a career.” For graduate students interested in a professional career, those connections can be made through internships, conferences and networking events, as well as social media. “Go to LinkedIn and find

people from your undergraduate school in the space you want to be in,” says Eric Allen, founder and president of Admit Advantage, which offers application and career consulting for graduate students. “Then get on the phone with them or meet them for coffee. Build a network of people in the industry you want to get into.” For students interested in research or academia, connecting with faculty throughout the year can lead to impactful summer opportunities. “Show up for seminars, brown bag lunches and lectures outside of class,” Williams says. “The more that students show up and support faculty in these small ways, the more that the faculty is going to remember those students when the money comes through [for research projects].” Students also should be forging connections with their university’s career center. “It’s something that’s definitely far CONTINUED ON PAGE 18

DANIEL FISHEL (FOR EXPRESS)

Tips for vets going back to school When it comes to using federal education benefits, veterans need to have a plan. Unfortunately, some schools have been found to lie to vets because they want GI Bill benefits. How can you navigate this? MIKE SAUNDERS (FOR THE WASHINGTON POST)

Be skeptical If a school sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Beware of guarantees and promises about your likely job success and how little it will cost you.

Talk to employers Speak to professionals in the field you want to work in. They can give you insight into whether the school you’re considering will help you to work in the field after graduation. They can also alert you to whether a school recruiter’s job placement claims are realistic or not.

Get promises in writing If a school won’t put their promises in writing, then the promises are worthless. Some school recruiters are under pressure to get you to enroll, so they’re tempted to exaggerate or even lie in person. Make them put it in writing, and get a signed document about the cost.


18 | EXPRESS | 05.13.2019 | MONDAY

ahead Summer plans CONTINUED FROM PAGE 17

underutilized,” Allen says. In addition to getting help with their résumés and interviewing skills, students who develop a relationship with career services staff often get more personalized career advice, because the staff knows their goals and objectives. “Once we understand what students’ individual circumstances and constraints are, we try to work with them to come up with opportunities for summer enrichment experiences,” says Gihan Fernando, executive director of the career center at American University. “If a student’s goal is to gain advancement in their current field of employment, that might be a very different scenario than someone who is

gaining their master’s degree with a goal of joining a professional field but has little experience already in that field.” In addition to providing fieldspecific knowledge, summer internships and work experiences can also help graduate students beef up general skills, like project management, and provide real-world insight on what they want — and don’t want — in their careers. “It’s more broadly an opportunity to understand, say, what working in the nonprofit sector might be like,” says Dana Williams, interim dean of the graduate school at Howard University. “Meeting people who work outside of the space where students are studying and having those people share experiences with them is a helpful thing.”

“Students can go deeper and have that time to reflect on what has happened in that year and about what they’re wanting to do in the future.” KAREN P. DEPAUW, vice president and dean for graduate education at Virginia Tech

Summer is also a good point for students to review the past year and think about their next steps. “I think it’s a great time to find a few extra moments for

Study with Purpose The Johns Hopkins School of Advanced

International Studies (SAIS) develops leaders who seek a deeper understanding of how politics, economics, and international

reflecting,” says Karen P. DePauw, vice president and dean for graduate education at Virginia Tech, which offers graduate programs at two locations in Northern Virginia. “Students can go deeper and have that time to reflect on what has happened in that year and about what they’re wanting to do in the future.” She also recommends that students slow down from the busy pace of the school year. “You should not be surviving graduate school; you should be thriving in graduate school,” DePauw says. “You’ve got to take a break.” But that can be easier said than done. “People make sacrifices in their personal lives in order to pursue this higher level of education,” says Chantal Smith, 45, who’s three years into a Ph.D. in economics at Howard

University. “It’s difficult to take the time, because you want to finish your degree and get back to your regular life. But you do have to take that time to push the reset button, or you will quickly get overwhelmed.” It’s good practice for creating a work-life balance once students begin their careers. And those careers won’t result from just taking classes alone, which is why making the most of the summer is so important. “There’s still this misconception that if I just get this degree I’m going to be ready for a new job when I come out, and I wish it were that easy — but it’s not,” says George Mason’s Williams. “It’s really about the people who get out there and shake the hands and get known by people in the field.” BETH LUBERECKI (FOR EXPRESS)

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MONDAY | 05.13.2019 | EXPRESS | 19

ahead steal this job

LISA BOGGS PHOTOGRAPHY

Lisa Boggs works about 15 weddings a year, taking thousands of photos for each one.

Giving a lens onto that special day Name: Lisa Boggs, 36 Position: Wedding photographer

What she does When a couple vows “in sickness and in health,” wedding photographer Lisa Boggs issues her own promise: in good weather and in bad. Even the extremely bad. When Hurricane Irene hit in 2011, Boggs was adamant that a couple saying “I do” in the downpours and wind gusts would still emerge with the photos they’d been counting on for more than a year. She secured umbrellas, rain boots and rain jackets that matched their wedding colors — white, pink and navy — and captured striking shots against

a stormy sky. “It’s still one of my favorite weddings because we just ran with it,” says Boggs, who’s been in the business for more than a decade. “We went out into the rain and I got soaking wet, but we were still able to get the photos they had envisioned. You have to adapt and make sure you’re still having fun with it, even when challenges come your way.” Couples typically enlist Boggs’ services about a year in advance of their wedding, often booking her for engagement photos, too. That first photo shoot is like a get-to-know-you date, she says: It offers the future spouses a preview of what their wedding

“You have to adapt and make sure you’re still having fun with it, even when challenges come your way.” LISA BOGGS, on her keys to success as a wedding photographer

photos might look like. “I try to keep things natural, but of course you do put couples in poses, and they can see them and say, ‘Oh, this is not my good side,’ or, ‘I love this particular

kind of photo, let’s do that again,’” she says. “It’s like an open conversation — I want them to be comfortable, and I want to be able to show them the photos I’m taking and make sure they feel great.” Boggs photographs about 15 weddings a year, down from 30 in her early years. Now, she says, her goal is to allow ample time to get to know each couple and incorporate their story into their photos. She loves highlighting what makes a couple unique — like the groom who worked for the Washington Nationals, where he met his bride-to-be, who was an intern for the team. They had engagement photos taken at the park. Another couple showcased their love of travel by having their photos taken at Reagan National Airport, grinning at each other in National Hall. Pets are also highly encouraged. Boggs offers a variety of packages based on time spent, and clients can decide how they want to spread out her hours — focusing on getting-ready shots versus a

sparkler send-off, for example, or deciding they can’t miss a thing and booking her for the entire ceremony and reception. About a month before the wedding, she does a walk-through with the couple and other wedding vendors, and everyone involved reviews the timeline. Boggs closely examines the venue, noting places she thinks would be ideal for photographs and gauging whether the couple likes them. Once the big day arrives, she takes thousands of photos; when she gets home, she begins uploading, noting that she’s a “multiple backup person.” She sends a few immediate favorites to the couple and, with their permission, posts a sneak peek on social media — online promotion has become a big part of the job. She then culls down to the number of photos in the coupe’s package, editing with Adobe Lightroom and Photoshop, and ultimately delivers the images eight to 12 weeks post-wedding. CONTINUED ON PAGE 20


20 | EXPRESS | 05.13.2019 | MONDAY

ahead “It’s really hard not to get swept up in the romance and happiness. I feed off the energy of a wedding day, and it inspires me.”

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 19

How she got the job Boggs studied the fine arts — mostly photography, painting and drawing — at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn. In 2006, a family member happened to be assisting a wedding studio in Leesburg, Va., and approached Boggs with a proposal. “She said, ‘It’s really fun and interesting, and I think it’s something we could do,’ ” Boggs recalls. The two started photographing together, and Boggs was smitten. “It hadn’t even been on my radar at all, but I loved it so much,” she says. So she stuck with it and launched her own company: Lisa Boggs Photography. LISA BOGGS PHOTOGRAPHY

LISA BOGGS, on the appeal of a career in wedding photography

Who would want this job Are you artsy and creative, with a good eye for photographs? If so, it might be a match. Being able to skillfully interact with a lot of (potentially stressed-out) people will also be helpful; the

Photographer Lisa Boggs has captured couples in a slew of settings and poses. “Most of the time I’m smiling behind the camera,” Boggs says.

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same goes for flexibility and attention to detail. Be aware that wedding photography can take a physical toll on your body: Boggs carries two heavy cameras and a slew of gear on her shoulders, so she recommends keeping the upper body in shape. Note, too, that you’ll spend a lot of time alone in an office editing photos and communicating with clients. Boggs balances the lack of a traditional office with

frequent networking, which she makes a priority.

How you can get the job Studying the fine arts (with an emphasis on photography) can be helpful, but it’s not the only path to the alter — er, success. Boggs recommends reaching out to wedding photographers whose work you admire, and offering to buy them lunch or coffee. Pick that person’s brain, and ask if you can assist him or her at an upcoming wedding. That will help you start building a portfolio, which you can use to book your own small gigs. If you enjoy the work, you’re in for a blissful ride. “It’s really hard not to get swept up in the romance and happiness. I feed off the energy of a wedding day, and it inspires me,” Boggs says. “Most of the time I’m smiling behind my camera because it’s so much fun, and I feel really lucky that these people trust me with really special, intimate moments of their life.” ANGELA HAUPT (FOR EXPRESS)

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MONDAY | 05.13.2019 | EXPRESS | 21

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24 | EXPRESS | 05.13.2019 | MONDAY

MUST-SEE THIS WEEK

1 ‘Fleabag’

NETFLIX

Friday on Amazon Prime

Netflix’s “Wine Country” stars real-life friends, from left, Paula Pell, Rachel Dratch, Maya Rudolph, Ana Gasteyer, Emily Spivey and Amy Poehler.

Finely aged friendships The cast of ‘Wine Country’ embraced the film as a celebration of long-lasting bonds Q&A “We’ve had like 20 years of rehearsals,” Amy Poehler explains by phone. She’s surrounded by her longtime friends, including Rachel Dratch, Maya Rudolph, Ana Gasteyer and Paula Pell. The “Saturday Night Live” alumni are comedic powerhouses who form a crew so tight that they can finish each other’s sentences as they chat about starring in “Wine Country,” which was released Friday on Netflix. The film follows a group of middle-aged friends traveling to Napa Valley to celebrate the 50th birthday of Rebecca (Dratch). But it found real-life inspiration in the actual vacations Poehler and her friends take. It’s an easygoing comedy, but Poehler’s directorial debut also taps into the inner lives of grown women

and long-lasting friendships — themes that Hollywood, in its obsession with younger audiences, has given little attention. Amy, what do you wish the world knew about being a woman in her 40s and 50s that you just don’t see represented in pop culture? Amy Poehler: Everybody’s experience is very personal and different. … But one thing that is just unmined territory is long friendships that go deep and the way that women of a certain age interact with each other, because I think sometimes we don’t show enough how we are each other’s kind of chosen family and also how we challenge each other, too. Maya Rudolph: I think about the choice that we’ve made to be a family, in some way. I think about what we’ve learned together as a group. I think about the way

in which everyone has naturally folded into these roles, where this idea that humans are meant to live in villages, and we live in a time and in a world where most of us don’t live in a small village. And yet we can have the choice to create our own, and the choice that we made to create these women and these women in this story who have all of these facets going on in their lives. Everyone’s got their story to tell. Working on this film set, how did it compare to other experiences you’ve all had in your careers? Rachel Dratch: We’ve worked together for so long at “SNL” and we kind of know each other’s comedy language, but then we’re also always surprised and delighted by the stuff that each other does. It’s like a combo of fun and new surprises, but also knowing you can rely on every single person in the cast to play with [you] and have your back. Ana Gasteyer: You never really

know what you’re getting in other projects. You’re being thrown into a room with someone who was cast by somebody else. This is obviously a community that inherently trusts each other, so you’re not working extra hard to manufacture chemistry. How will the experience of making this film shape how you approach future projects? Paula Pell: I think we all said that we would love to always work with friends. There’s something beautiful about that. Dratch: Over the years we’ve gotten to work together, like on “Parks and Rec” or “30 Rock,” so this was another level of that because we’re all together and we were on this beautiful location. But Amy, if I may say, did a great job at directing, so I believe she has more directing ahead. Pell: And if all of us aren’t in it every time, I’m going to break something. EL AHE IZADI

Creator and star Phoebe Waller-Bridge returns for the second season of the fourth wall-breaking series about the exploits of a sexually free woman in London, with a cast that also includes Olivia Colman and Andrew Scott.

2 ‘Game of Thrones’ 9 p.m. Sunday on HBO

Who will sit on the Iron Throne when all is said and done? A question asked by viewers for eight seasons (and readers of George R.R. Martin’s books for longer) will be answered in the fantasy epic’s series finale.

3 ‘Catch-22’ Friday on Hulu

George Clooney, below, directs and appears in this darkly comedic miniseries, based on Joseph Heller’s novel, about a bombardier (Christopher Abbott) in World War II. Kyle Chandler and Hugh Laurie also star. (EXPRESS)

(THE WASHINGTON POST)

1946-2019

‘Mod Squad,’ ‘Twin Peaks’ star Lipton dies at 72

Peggy Lipton, a star of the groundbreaking late 1960s TV show “The Mod Squad,” the 1990s series “Twin Peaks” and that show’s 2017 revival, died of cancer Saturday. She was 72. Lipton died surrounded by her family, including Kidada and Rashida Jones, her daughters from her marriage to music producer Quincy Jones. “Peggy was, and will always be our beacon of light,” her family said in a statement. (AP) ABC renews “Grey’s Anatomy” for two more seasons

NBC orders Kenan Thompson comedy to series

Rashida Jones, Kenya Barris to star in Netflix series “Black Excellence”


MONDAY | 05.13.2019 | EXPRESS | 25

screens

MARC SILVER | BROADCAST MUSE

It sounds like another lame TV idea — a 21st-century version of the 1960s sitcom “Green Acres,” in which a New York couple decamps from Park Avenue to Hooterville. The update is “Bless This Mess” (9:30 p.m. Tuesdays on ABC), starring Dax Shepard and Lake Bell. The first season wraps up May 21, and ABC just

renewed the show for Season 2. The Manhattanites are moderately obnoxious newlyweds — Shepard is Mike, an earnestly hipster music journalist with family roots in Nebraska; Bell is Rio, an overbearingly earnest therapist. (She also is the co-creator of the show, with “New Girl” mastermind Elizabeth Meriwether.) When Mike inherits a farm in his ancestral homeland, the couple heads out to become a favorite sitcom

“Avengers: Endgame” again tops domestic box office with $63 million

ABC

A fresh crop: ‘Mess’ puts its spin on tired terrain

Dax Shepard and Lake Bell play city slickers giving the simple life a try.

stereotype: fish out of water. Despite its cliches about clueless urbanites and wise ruralites, “Bless This Mess” pulls off absurd-yet-warmhearted comedy. Episode 3 is a

prime example. Mike’s fellow farmers think he’s too wussy to slaughter his chickens. Mike tries but can’t decapitate them. Since he doesn’t want to admit his failing when his neighbors

CBS cancels “Murphy Brown,” “Life in Pieces”

come over, he and Rio herd the birds into their home — only the fowl fling themselves at the windows. This is chicken slapstick at its best. There also are plenty of diversions. Ed Begley Jr. is scruffy neighbor Rudy, who expresses his crush on sheriff/ general store owner Constance (Pam Grier) by making a daily trip to her store to buy a single piece of red licorice. And sharp-tongued Susie Essman plays Rio’s mother. When all of these pieces come together, the result is a blessedly funny mess. Read Marc’s previous columns at washingtonpost.com/muse

“Wild Kingdom’s” Jim Fowler died Wednesday at 89

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trending “Please stop feeding the narrative that women are providers and men are consumers of sex.” @EMRAZZ, criticizing actress Alyssa Milano’s call for women to go on

a sex strike to protest states passing strict abortion laws. Last week, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed a bill to ban abortions after a heartbeat is detected, about six weeks into pregnancy. Though Milano’s tweet to refrain from sex “until we get bodily autonomy back” seemed to have good intentions, it was slammed for excluding the LGBT community and perpetuating the idea that women use sex as a favor to men.

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“My jaw is on the floor.” @THEANNALYTICAL, tweeting about YouTuber Tati Westbrook, left, on Friday publicly ending her friendship with James Charles, right, in a 43-minute video. Westbrook cited Charles’ rude behavior toward fellow influencers and alleged lies he told about Westbrook, his former mentor, as the reason for the split. The video, testimonials from other YouTubers supporting Westbrook’s claims, and Charles’ own public controversies caused him to lose millions of followers. He posted an apology later that day, though many doubted its sincerity.

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“If you made it a game to drink whenever there was a racist trope, this trailer alone would get you hammered.” @THECASEYGRAM, slamming Jeremy Saville’s upcoming movie in which he plays a white man masquerading as a black woman on the radio. The trailer for “Loqueesha” sparked calls of racism, from its use of a “ghetto” name to Saville’s loud voice for the character.

“She shouldn’t have to protect herself from other people, but she does.” @SELENACASANOVA, supporting singer Billie Eilish after she revealed in her Calvin Klein campaign that she wears baggy clothing because “nobody can have an opinion” on her body if they don’t know what it looks like. The confession earned Eilish praise, while people decried internet culture for scrutinizing young women’s bodies.


MONDAY | 05.13.2019 | EXPRESS | 27

fun+games Horoscopes

Scrabble Grams

PAR SCORE 150-160, BEST SCORE 246

Sudoku

EASY

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You can afford to discuss almost anything, but you will want to consider all possible outcomes before swinging into action. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You may not be able to rely on technology today. An old-fashioned method keeps you moving forward. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Someone else suggests a plan of action that seems very far-fetched. Examination reveals it is possible. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You can expect the day to progress in a manner that pleases you, but profits may be limited by how much you’re willing to break with tradition.

FRIDAY’S SOLUTION

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Someone

you know well is in a position to help, but you’re not likely to get the assistance until you ask for it directly.

FRIDAY’S SOLUTION

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) If it’s the truth you want, it’s the truth you can have, but you’re going to have to ask some tough questions of someone who is not forthcoming. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) An opportunity presents itself today, and you’ll want to be sure you are as ready as you can be to take advantage of it. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

FOUR RACK TOTAL Make a 2-7-letter word from the letters in each row. Add points of each word using scoring directions at right. Seven-letter words get a 50-point bonus. Blank tiles used as any letter have no point value. Scrabble is a trademark of Hasbro in the U.S. and Canada.

Comics

Forecast By Capital Weather Gang

POOCH CAFE | PAUL GILLIGAN

63 | 51

You receive more than a wink and a smile for doing something valuable without being asked. Something big is finally in the making.

TODAY: Scattered showers remain likely as some upper-level energy swings through. Skies may brighten a bit during the afternoon, but we’re still looking at a pretty much overcast day overall. An evening shower is still possible, but we’ll start to dry out overnight as a cold front finally pushes through.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

What you do is sure to raise eyebrows, but before the day is out, you’ll be able to turn critics into supporters. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You may have to drop what you are doing in order to tend to a problem that is not of your making. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You must maintain your flexibility and maneuverability today, or you may find yourself stuck behind someone who isn’t likely to give way.

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE | STEPHAN PASTIS

AVG. HIGH: 74 RECORD HIGH: 95 AVG. LOW: 55 RECORD LOW: 39 SUNRISE: 5:56 a.m. SUNSET: 8:12 p.m.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) You know what you know and that’s it, but that doesn’t mean you can’t convince those around you that you know more than they do.

DAILY CODE

today in histor y

Need more Sudoku? Find another puzzle in the Comics section of The Post every Sunday and in the Style section Monday through Saturday.

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

63 | 50

71 | 49

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

73 | 55

76 | 55

TA

1607: English colonists arrive by ship at the site of what becomes the Jamestown settlement in Virginia (the colonists travel ashore the following day).

1940: In his first speech as British prime minister, Winston Churchill tells Parliament, “I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat.”

1973: In tennis’ first so-called “Battle of the Sexes,” Bobby Riggs defeats Margaret Court 6-2, 6-1 in Ramona, Calif. (Billie Jean King soundly defeats Riggs in September.)

Get more news and forecasts at washingtonpost.com/weather or follow @capitalweather on Twitter.


28 | EXPRESS | 05.13.2019 | MONDAY

fun+games Crossword 1 Shut tightly 5 Idiots 10 Gefilte fish fish, often 14 Rotating car part 15 Luxury Honda line 16 Exam aptly contained in “doctoral” 17 Knockoff square cereal? 19 Tidied, as a bed 20 From ___ Z 21 Airport org. 22 Oslo Accords signer Yitzhak 23 Comes up 25 Dwight’s wife 29 Initials in a poker pot 30 Rapper whose name sounds like a cold drink 31 Go phishing? 33 Oscars slight 35 “My parents are gonna kill me ...” 36 Fruity cereal that fell on the floor?

CEREALIZATION 38 “This doesn’t look familiar” 40 Pen points 43 “Let It Be Forgotten” poet Sara 44 Balkan native 46 ___ and haw 47 Tiger Woods’ clubs 49 Doesn’t leave 50 RSVP request in an inbox 52 Play, as a 12-Down 54 Longtime CBS series 55 “Nick at ___” 56 Why to eat a puffed-grain cereal when you’re full? 60 Colorful “sad” synonym 61 Request from 62 Foreshadow 63 Nile biters 64 Like Seattle weather 65 Wall St. debuts

DOWN 1

Place to watch

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 18 22 24 26 27 28 32 34 35

the big game? Unusual plants and pets The Hebrew Hammer of the Cleveland Indians Part of a relay Barq’s rival ___’s razor “Of course!” Miner concern? Lisa Simpson’s instrument, briefly Unresponsive state Coffee bean variety Pitch that’s heard but not seen Full assembly Klingons, e.g. Enter, as data Piano practice pieces Plastic soldiers “Is it necessary?” “Are you ___ out?” Like male pigs One under par Writer Calvino

37 Tush 38 Destructive beetles 39 Put on a show for the cameras 41 Covert mission 42 Gets hitched 43 League for Bulls and Grizzlies 45 Some muscle car engines 48 Used, as a chair

49 Broadway hit letters 51 Casual shirts 53 Unclear 56 Mason ___ (pantry container) 57 “Born in the ___” 58 Emulate Lindsey Vonn 59 Javier Baez stat

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To advertise: e-mail guidetoarts@washpost.com, or call 202-334-7006.

Every Tuesday in Express

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MONDAY | 05.13.2019 | EXPRESS | 29

people GETTY IMAGES

Constance sad she still has a job

PRIVACY

Next: Parents invest in fake noses, mustaches Prince Harry and Meghan Markle plan to keep their newborn son, Archie, a “private citizen” and are planning on “shielding” him from the public gaze, sources told The Sunday Times. Citing one of Harry’s friends, the newspaper reported that the prince prioritizes privacy more than “almost any other member of the royal family.” (EXPRESS)

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CHILDREN

BLAME GAME

Backstabbing extends beyond ‘Thrones’ set Sophie Turner says “Game of Thrones” co-star Emilia Clarke is to blame for the coffee cup that appeared in a recent episode of the hit HBO show. “Look who it’s placed in front of,” Turner said Friday on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,” pointing to a photo of Clarke sitting by the cup. “Emilia Clarke — she’s the culprit.” (EXPRESS)

Royal baby gets to play second fiddle

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Call 202-334-6800 or fax 202-334-9777

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JESSIE J, in the caption of an Instagram photo, explaining her tattoo that reads, “Don’t loose who you are.”

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verbatim

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FOR CIRCULATION: Call 202-334-6992

Kodak Black was arrested Saturday at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Fla., the U.S. Marshals Service said. The statement said the rapper was charged with a crime in connection with weapons but didn’t elaborate. Black also was arrested last month on drug and weapons charges as he crossed from Canada into the U.S. near Niagara Falls, N.Y. (AP)

WHO WE ARE

CONTACT THE NEWSROOM

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Kodak Black arrested on weapons charge

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CRIME

“Yes I spelt the tattoo wrong. … Yes I still don’t know the difference between lose and loose.”

Kim Kardashian West and Kanye West have welcomed their fourth child, a boy born via surrogate. Kardashian West tweeted Friday: “He’s here and he’s perfect!” A spokeswoman said the baby was born Thursday, weighing in at 6 pounds, 9 ounces. The new baby joins North, Saint and Chicago. Chicago, who is 15 months old, also was born via a gestational carrier. North, the oldest, is 5. The baby is the couple’s second son, after Saint. Kardashian West tweeted that the new arrival is “Chicago’s twin.” “I’m sure he will change a lot but now he looks just like her,” she added. (AP)

Published by Express Publications LLC, 1301 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20071, a subsidiary of WP Company, LLC

Call 202-334-6200.

Constance Wu said she was initially unhappy that “Fresh Off the Boat” was renewed for a sixth season because it meant she had to give up on another project. When ABC announced the renewal Friday, Wu said in a series of tweets that it was not welcome news. The actress clarified Saturday on Twitter that she was “temporarily upset” because the other project “would have challenged me as an artist.” (AP)

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GOOD PROBLEMS

FEATURES EDITOR | Stephanie Williams ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR | Thomas Floyd

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30 | EXPRESS | 05.13.2019 | MONDAY

IT’S KOJO NNAMDI DAY! Join WAMU 88.5 FM and Ice Cream Jubilee in celebration of this special day, named by the D.C. mayor in honor of Kojo’s 20 years on public radio in the region. Be one of the first 600 people to stop by Ice Cream Jubilee’s Navy Yard location today for a FREE “Kojo Scoop.” Learn more about The Kojo Nnamdi Show and Kojo’s 20th Anniversary at kojoshow.org/20.

@kojoshow

kojoshow

#Kojo20


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