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Monday, April 30, 2018

Red Flag Warning Issued For Illinois, Dangerous Conditions For Wildfires

CHICAGO (CBS) – A raging fire in north central Illinois has destroyed a number of buildings. The “tinder fire” started on Friday between Phoenix and Flagstaff. Flames now stretching over 8,000 acres.

Illinois is under a red flag warning, meaning conditions are very dangerous for wildfires.

Chopper 2 flew over a brush fire early Monday evening, where flames were burning in a field in Pembroke Township, just outside of Kankakee.

CBS 2’s Ed Curran says there are several cautions for red flag warnings. He says today, it is dry, windy, and warm with low relative humidity, meaning that all of the elements needed for dangerous fire conditions are present. Any fire that begins can quickly spread.

Fire enjoys having a lot of dry air, with relative humidities less than 25%, meaning that it is the perfect environment for fire conditions.

He says that fire needs fuel and with spring beginning late this year, there’s no shortage of exceptionally dry tinder.

Fire can be fueled and driven by the wind. Strong gusts can help fuel and spread a fire. Embers in the wind can also create new fires.

Any outdoor burning is discouraged today. CBS 2’s Ed Curran says to expect another red flag warning tomorrow.



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Convictions Overturned For 2 Men Who Spent Half A Century Behind Bars

CHICAGO (CBS) – The convictions for two men, who spent nearly half a century behind bars, have been overturned.

One of the men was beaten into a false confession and taken by detectives working under the notorious Police Commander John Burge. The other man was falsely arrested.

Anthony Jakes was 15 years old when he says he was beaten into signing a murder confession by Chicago detectives. He spent 22 years behind bars.

“I wish my grandmother and my mother was here to celebrate this with me because they were my biggest, biggest supporters,” said Jakes. “All my growing up came being in the penitentiary.”

Jakes is the nephew of Alderman Emma Mitts, who says she kept her nephew in her thoughts and prayers. “A lot of prayers went up and they went up for good reasons. Many people have been praying all along the way because it’s been a long journey,” said Mitts.

“It’s just a great day right now. I’m so happy. It’s a big burden off my shoulders, like it is off mine,” said Robert Bouto, who’s conviction was also overturned.

Attorneys from The Exoneration Project have one more legal hurdle for Bouto. While the State’s Attorney’s office overturned his conviction, the charges in Bouto’s case were reinstated. A spokesperson from the office says they are reviewing the case and looking at evidence to see if a new trial will take place.

“Really, there’s no evidence against Mr. Bouto and he’s got plenty of evidence of his innocence,” said Russell Ainsworth from The Exoneration Project. “This is not a case that anybody wants to take to trial.”

The attorney for the two men say that he plans on talking with his clients and their families about whether they plan to file suit against the city and against the Chicago Police Department.



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Superheroes’ Superpowers: Spreading Smiles At Local Hospital

CHICAGO (CBS) — A suburban hospital took on the aura of the Hall Of Justice, where everyone there on Monday possessed the same super power–the ability to create smiles.

Batman, Captain America and Wonder Woman were there bringing 14-year-old Jahrel Banks gifts and helping him beat his pain from sickle-cell.

“He was kinda down and didn’t want to have visitors,” said Jahrel’s dad, Veldee Banks. “He heard about superheroes and he brightened up.”

A similar scene played out in Tegan Kunkel’s room. Asthma brought the 8-year-old to Northwestern Medicine Central Dupage Hospital.

“We came in yesterday,” said Tegan’s dad. “Then Batman delivers with gifts.”

There was action outside, too, when a trio of window washers turned super heroes scaled the building.

“Spiderman!” yelled one excited child in the crowd.

Kids, and adults alike, inside and outside, stopped to take pictures and smile. The goal– to make everyone forget about reality, even if it’s just for a few minutes.

Batman in real life is actually in the mortgage business. He got the idea to brighten the day for kids in the hospital when he spent time there with one of his own children.



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Aidan Quinn Talks The Sixth Season Premiere Of ‘Elementary’

Tonight “Elementary” is back with its sixth season premiere on CBS. Aidan Quinn spoke to CBS Local about what to expect from the new season, his role as Captain Gregson and what it was like directing the show.

 

Tonight is the sixth season premiere of “Elementary.” What can we expect from the new season?

A lot of twists and turns. We’re dealing with brain injuries, sex tapes, politics, oh my gosh. We got a little bit of everything.

 

Tell us about your character Captain Gregson. What’s his relationship with Holmes and Watson? What can we expect from him?

It’s probably in line with other seasons. Towards the end of the season, some very dramatic things happen. I can’t reveal the exact nature of it. But I come to loggerheads. There’s some dramatic competition, let’s say. [laughs]

 

Desmond Harrington joins the cast as Michael. What was it like having him on the show?

For the most part, I didn’t work with him. His scenes are with John Michael [Hill], Sherlock and Lucy. But he’s a wonderful actor and I know they had a great time working with him.

 

Were there any standouts from production this season? What was different this time around?

We all had the great good fortune of having the opportunity to direct. We had Johnny and John Michael directing, and Lucy. It was great for all of us that we’ve gotten to direct. It’s a whole new way of approaching the show. I think we all thoroughly enjoyed our stints as directors.

 

Your directorial debut was in season 5. Can you talk about the differences between being on the acting side and the directing side?

It’s complicated having to do both at once. I was very lucky that the writers gave me a complete pass on the one I was directing. They took Gregson out of that episode, which was so considerate. All of the others have had to direct themselves. Obviously, you need to be incredibly prepared, and never have any hesitations with your lines when you’re doing that. And you know, you’re looking at how the other actors are acting while you’re acting. But everyone has done it really well.

 

Season 6 of ‘Elementary’ airs tonight at 10/9c on CBS. Check your local listings for more information.



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Kevin James Tells Us What To Expect On “Kevin Can Wait” Season Finale

The season 2 finale of “Kevin Can Wait” is just two episodes away. Kevin James spoke to CBS Local about what lies in store for the season finale, what special guests we can expect along the way, and his new Netflix stand-up special.

 

Season 2 of “Kevin Can Wait” is winding down with an episode tonight and the finale next Monday. What can we expect from the final two episodes this season?

We got some power-punching in these last two episodes. Tonight’s episode deals with the sale of Enzo’s, the restaurant that we all hang out at, and my daughter and son-in-law. It’s a big moving episode there. The final episode we have the great Adam Sandler and the great Chris Rock come on and put the band back together. We have a band that we played with in the 80s, and we get that going again and relive that dream. Those guys actually have a movie now on Netflix, and I have a comedy special on Netflix now, so it was nice to be hanging out with them.

 

That sounds awesome. Can you tell us about the special? Have you been itching to do stand-up again?

I was! It’s been 17 years since my last special, so I was like, “Man, I gotta start putting something out and doing it again.” I missed it so much. It was nice to be able to dedicate time to do that, tour the country, put this set together and to get it out to the people. We were so thankful that Netflix wanted to do it. We did it at the Beacon Theatre in New York. It was a blast.

 

You’ve had a lot of guest stars on “Kevin Can Wait” over the past two seasons. Any favorite moments?

A ton of them. They’re all different. We shot at the Billy Joel concert with Billy Joel, it was so much fun. Working with Sandler was fantastic as always, and Ray Romano. It’s great to be able to do shows when you have very talented friends.

 

Speaking of very talented friends, Leah Remini joined the cast this season as Vanessa. What’s it been like working with her?

It’s the greatest, she’s family. It really takes the edge off. You can try different things and when you fail, you laugh more at the failures. You can just have fun with it and enjoy it. It’s a comfort, it really is. It’s great to have her and it’s a lot of fun.

 

Watch “Kevin Can Wait” tonight at 8/7c on CBS. Check your local listings for more information.



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Neighborhood Fights Over Toxic River Waste Dump Planned For South Side

CHICAGO (CBS) — The Army Corps of Engineers is considering dumping material dredged up from the bottom of the Calumet River and Cal-Sag Channel at five locations on the Southeast Side.

The alderman in the 10th Ward is fighting back, saying that the neighborhood shouldn’t be a toxic dumping ground, CBS 2’s Derrick Blakley reports.

“The people of the 10th Ward have had enough,” said Ald Susan Sadlowski-Garza. ‘We have 8 landfills, toxic landfills, medical landfills. We deserve something better than landfills in our neighborhood.”

One location, known as the KCBX north terminal, near 100th Street and Commercial, is one of five sites where the Army Corps wants to dump the material.

“The river’s indeed cleaner than it used to be,” said Sadlowski-Garza. “But there’s lead, there’s arsenic, there’s chromium–things in that water that have been there a very long time.”

In addition to the KCBX site, the other locations are: Two sites from the former Wisconsin Steel factory, a site at 116th and Burley and the former KCBX south terminal.

This is the same community that won a battle to remove piles of petroleum coke–a byproduct of the oil-refining process–that used to blow into nearby neighborhoods.

Olga Batista of the Southeast Environmental Task Force said: “We’re fighting for it not to get worse but we’re also fighting for it to get better.”

Ald. Sadlowski-Garza says the original site for the dump was in Congressman Dan Lipinski’s district, but Lipinski put a stop to it.

“We don’t want this here,” said Sadlowski-Garza. “I don’t know what part of this they don’t understand.

‘We’re not taking Dan Lipinski’s garbage. They need to take it to the quarry and dump in the quarry, not here.”



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Mom Turns In Son After Seeing His Mugshot On The News

MEMPHIS, TN (CBS Local) – A mother in Tennessee turned her “disobedient, disrespectful” son in to the police after seeing his photo on the news. Adrian Perry also apologized to a couple her son allegedly tried to rob before being shot at by one of the victims.

The Details:

  • Derriontay Perry exchanged gunfire with a woman he attempted to rob on April 22
  • Perry faces assault and robbery charges
  • Adrian Perry turned her son into police on April 25 after seeing his mugshot on TV

According to WREG, Derriontay Perry was charged with two counts of aggravated assault and aggravated robbery after he tried to rob a Memphis homeowner on April 22. The resident’s home security camera captured the 20-year-old approaching the male resident in his attempt to rob him. A female resident is then seen coming out of the home with a gun and firing a warning shot into the air at Perry. He then allegedly pulled out a gun of his own and fired back at the couple.

“I do not even know where he got a gun,” the suspect’s mother said, via The Blaze. The 20-year-old was able to escape the armed couple, but was later identified as the suspect on local television. Perry’s mother says when she saw the report she immediately called 911 and handed her son over to police on April 25.

“I love him. That’s what you call tough love. Something a lot of more parents need to start doing,” the mother told reporters. “I am sorry that your visit to Memphis, Tennessee had to be like that because of MY disobedient, disrespectful child.”

Derriontay Perry is being held in jail on a $100,000 bond. No one was injured during the robbery attempt.



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Community Rallies Behind Woman Told To Take Down Rainbow Flag

ROCKLEDGE, FL (CBS Local) – A Florida community has rallied behind a mother of three who was ordered to remove a rainbow flag from her lawn. According to reports, an email was sent to the woman’s landlord, which compared the symbol of LGBTQ rights to the Confederate flag.

The Details:

  • A member of a community board ordered mother of three, Jennifer Raymond, to take down her rainbow flag
  • The email said the flag could be offensive and compared it to the Confederate flag
  • Florida residents rallied to defend Raymond’s flag on April 29

Jennifer Raymond, a resident in the Ashwood Lakes subdivision of Rockledge, has reportedly flown the rainbow flag outside her family’s home for the last two years. Raymond told local reporters that her landlord recently received an email from a member on the neighborhood’s architectural review committee. The email claimed that Raymond’s flag violated the community’s rules of hanging anything besides the American, state, or military flags.

The problem with the member’s claims was that the neighborhood bylaws don’t mention flags at all. When presented with this information, the unidentified board member wrote, “allowing the flag to be flown is setting a precedence for other homeowners to fly other offensive flags – for example, the Confederate flag,” according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

“The Confederacy supported slavery,” Raymond added. “(The rainbow flag is) a symbol of equality and acceptance of all.”

News of the controversial email quickly spread, culminating in a rally of at least two dozen residents on April 29 in support of the lesbian mother’s right to fly her flag. “I couldn’t keep up with how fast things were happening, really,” Raymond added.

Prior to the rally, the homeowners association in Rockledge had already informed Raymond that she could continue to fly the rainbow flag and the person who sent the erroneous letter acted alone. The HOA added that they would be taking steps to make sure other homeowners are not harassed in the same way moving forward.



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Deborah Norville Talks Flex Glue, Safety For Female Patients, And Tips For Consumers

This week on “Inside Edition,” Flex Glue is put to the test, a woman speaks out after getting assaulted by her dental technician while under anesthesia, and professionals in the travel, food and healthcare industries share secrets consumers don’t (but should!) know. Host Deborah Norville spoke to CBS Local about what to expect on “Inside Edition” this week.

 

A lot is going on on “Inside Edition” this week. Tonight you put Flex Glue to the test. A lot of people have seen the Flex Glue ads on TV — does it hold up like in the commercials?

Well that was what we wanted to find out. We, too, had seen those commercials and they’re kind of amazing, especially when the guy takes the Flex Glue and builds a dune buggy and drives around in it. We thought, that’s crazy. So we literally re-enacted the commercial. We put cement blocks together with the Flex Glue, and, in fact, built a vehicle. We built a dune buggy, we glued it together with the Flex Glue, we got behind the wheel of the thing, we drove into the sunset, and we didn’t die.

 

Tomorrow night you’re investigating a very serious topic. You’re taking a look at sexual assault that occurs within dentists’ offices. Can you tell us about the story of the young woman you speak to on tomorrow night’s episode?

A lot of people are already afraid of going to the dentist, and this story is probably not going to make you feel more at ease about that prospect. What we found was a dentist who thought he was doing all the right things. Concerned because he would have patients under anesthesia and he wanted to make sure that they could feel secure that when they’re out under the effect of anesthesia, everything’s fine, he had cameras installed in the treatment room. But unfortunately, the footage of the cameras wasn’t reviewed on a regular basis. When the footage was looked at, it was discovered that a dental technician had been sexually assaulting female patients when they were under anesthesia. One woman we spoke to had a fuzzy, foggy recollection of the technician’s hand on her breast. She couldn’t really put it together, thinking, was it a dream, what was I thinking? When the footage was reviewed and then shared with the cops, the police ended up going to a number of women and saying, this happened to you. They had no idea because they were completely under. Long story short, the technician plead guilty. He was sentenced to jail time and is behind bars. An important takeaway on this story is that patients, especially female patients, need to request that there be a female companion with them, that there needs to be an individual of their gender in the treatment room with them, just so that they’re never left alone and unsupervised under anesthesia.

 

On the show later this week, you’re taking a look at Secrets From Those Who Know. You get travel secrets from a flight attendant, restaurant tips from a restaurateur and hospital advice from a veteran nurse. What are some surprising things we walk away with?

It’s good advice for all of us in our everyday lives. Ask the people who work in various professions what folks don’t know but they ought to. And that’s kind of what we did. We talked to some flight attendants who said some of the basic stuff like never eat off the tray because lord knows when that was last cleaned. One thing that you might not be aware of: if your flight is delayed more than two hours, you are entitled to a voucher. It’s a small amount of money — 5, 10, 15 bucks — but it’s a voucher that you can spend on a beverage or a snack in the airport terminal. The airlines will never tell you that this is available, but you can go and ask for it. It does exist, and they have to give it to you. So that’s something that they don’t advertise, but we want to make sure that you know. When it comes to restaurants, we all want to make sure that we’re eating at a place that’s clean and sanitary. One good way of finding that out is to first sit at the bar. If the bar is a disgusting mess, you can probably count on the fact that the kitchen isn’t in much better shape. Another tip that we learned from the restaurateurs is that if you want to be sure to get a table, parties of 5 are golden. You can almost always get a group of 5 a table. If you’re a group of 2 or 4, those are the most popular groups, it’s often very hard to get a table reservation for 2 or 4. But 5 is the magic number.

 

“Inside Edition” airs tonight at 7 pm. Check your local listings for more information.



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Deborah Norville Talks Flex Glue, Safety For Female Patients, And Tips For Consumers

This week on “Inside Edition,” Flex Glue is put to the test, a woman speaks out after getting assaulted by her dental technician while under anesthesia, and professionals in the travel, food and healthcare industries share secrets consumers don’t (but should!) know. Host Deborah Norville spoke to CBS Local about what to expect on “Inside Edition” this week.

 

A lot is going on on “Inside Edition” this week. Tonight you put Flex Glue to the test. A lot of people have seen the Flex Glue ads on TV — does it hold up like in the commercials?

Well that was what we wanted to find out. We, too, had seen those commercials and they’re kind of amazing, especially when the guy takes the Flex Glue and builds a dune buggy and drives around in it. We thought, that’s crazy. So we literally re-enacted the commercial. We put cement blocks together with the Flex Glue, and, in fact, built a vehicle. We built a dune buggy, we glued it together with the Flex Glue, we got behind the wheel of the thing, we drove into the sunset, and we didn’t die.

 

Tomorrow night you’re investigating a very serious topic. You’re taking a look at sexual assault that occurs within dentists’ offices. Can you tell us about the story of the young woman you speak to on tomorrow night’s episode?

A lot of people are already afraid of going to the dentist, and this story is probably not going to make you feel more at ease about that prospect. What we found was a dentist who thought he was doing all the right things. Concerned because he would have patients under anesthesia and he wanted to make sure that they could feel secure that when they’re out under the effect of anesthesia, everything’s fine, he had cameras installed in the treatment room. But unfortunately, the footage of the cameras wasn’t reviewed on a regular basis. When the footage was looked at, it was discovered that a dental technician had been sexually assaulting female patients when they were under anesthesia. One woman we spoke to had a fuzzy, foggy recollection of the technician’s hand on her breast. She couldn’t really put it together, thinking, was it a dream, what was I thinking? When the footage was reviewed and then shared with the cops, the police ended up going to a number of women and saying, this happened to you. They had no idea because they were completely under. Long story short, the technician plead guilty. He was sentenced to jail time and is behind bars. An important takeaway on this story is that patients, especially female patients, need to request that there be a female companion with them, that there needs to be an individual of their gender in the treatment room with them, just so that they’re never left alone and unsupervised under anesthesia.

 

On the show later this week, you’re taking a look at Secrets From Those Who Know. You get travel secrets from a flight attendant, restaurant tips from a restaurateur and hospital advice from a veteran nurse. What are some surprising things we walk away with?

It’s good advice for all of us in our everyday lives. Ask the people who work in various professions what folks don’t know but they ought to. And that’s kind of what we did. We talked to some flight attendants who said some of the basic stuff like never eat off the tray because lord knows when that was last cleaned. One thing that you might not be aware of: if your flight is delayed more than two hours, you are entitled to a voucher. It’s a small amount of money — 5, 10, 15 bucks — but it’s a voucher that you can spend on a beverage or a snack in the airport terminal. The airlines will never tell you that this is available, but you can go and ask for it. It does exist, and they have to give it to you. So that’s something that they don’t advertise, but we want to make sure that you know. When it comes to restaurants, we all want to make sure that we’re eating at a place that’s clean and sanitary. One good way of finding that out is to first sit at the bar. If the bar is a disgusting mess, you can probably count on the fact that the kitchen isn’t in much better shape. Another tip that we learned from the restaurateurs is that if you want to be sure to get a table, parties of 5 are golden. You can almost always get a group of 5 a table. If you’re a group of 2 or 4, those are the most popular groups, it’s often very hard to get a table reservation for 2 or 4. But 5 is the magic number.

 

“Inside Edition” airs tonight at 7 pm. Check your local listings for more information.



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Paroled Mass Murderer Moves Near School In LaGrange, Prompting Alert

LA GRANGE (CBS) — La Grange School District 105 has issued a community alert after learning that a paroled murderer has taken up residence across the street from Seventh Avenue School.

Carl Reimann, 77, killed five people in 1972 and was released on parole last week.

Reimann now lists his address in the 700 block of South Seventh Street in La Grange, according to the Illinois State Police Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth Registry.

The School District placed a statement on its website:

The Board of Education has been made aware that a convicted murderer has been paroled from prison and has listed his residence at an address across the street from Seventh Avenue School.  The police department is aware of this fact and is working closely  with the schools to plan for increased presence during school arrival and dismissal times.  We have contacted the Illinois Department of Corrections, Chief of Paroles,  to express our concerns about his residence being in such close proximity to our school.

Read more via Patch



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Person Shot And Killed Outside High School In University Village

CHICAGO (CBS) — A person was shot and killed Monday afternoon outside Chicago Technology Academy, a contract school in the University Village neighborhood.

Police at the scene near 14th and Throop said the person was shot inside a vehicle. The school was locked down for a short time after the shooting, according to officers at the scene.

Further details were not immediately available. This is a developing story.



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Keidel: NFL Draft, Good And Not So Good

By Jason Keidel

Impatience is the hallmark of the modern sports fan.

We need to know who will be the top pick months before NFL Draft actually begins. Then, once the draft is over, we need slap grades onto every team five months before their newly minted players play their first NFL game.

It’s almost all conjecture at this point. But based on some evidence, both the players picked and the teams that picked them, we can summon some sense of which teams looked good, bad, or ugly. There’s neither time nor space to assess every team, but we can upack the more notable moves.

Sam Darnold of USC poses with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell after being picked #3 overall by the New York Jets during the first round of the 2018 NFL Draft at AT&T Stadium on April 26, 2018 in Arlington, Texas.

Roger Goodell and Sam Darnold (L-R) (Photo Credit: Tom Pennington/Getty Images)

Looking good…

New York Jets

Sometimes one pick makes it a good draft, and the Jets were lucky enough to grab the highest-rated QB, Sam Darnold, out of USC. Sure, there’s a haunted history of USC QBs bombing in the NFL — including the Jets’ very own Mark Sanchez — but Darnold was the safest pick at No. 3. With the right coaching and tweaking of his mechanics, Darnold could become Gang Green’s first franchise QB since Joe Namath.

The Jets also drafted two defensive linemen — Nathan Shepherd and Folorunso Fatukasi — to fill in for departed Sheldon Richardson and Muhammad Wilkerson, a cornerback (Parry Nickerson) and a much-needed tight end (Christopher Herndon). It’s a rare April moment for a most forlorn franchise still looking for their first Super Bowl since Broadway Joe.

Denver Broncos

Thanks to the ineptitude of the Browns, who could have had the best bookend pass rushers in the sport, that handle now belongs to the Broncos, who will line up Super Bowl MVP Von Miller with Bradley Chubb, who miraculously fell into Denver’s lap. Most great players make lousy coaches and even worse personnel men. But not John Elway, who has kept his Broncos alive and lucid and Super Bowl-ready for years.

Arizona Cardinals

Like the Jets, who elbowed up a few spots to get their man, the Cardinals inched up to the 10th spot to draft the best QB coming out of college this year, Josh Rosen. So much was made about Rosen’s rebellious ways, the loudmouth Millennial who questions play calls and play-callers, who sees the world beyond the gridiron, and doesn’t need to play football to eat.

So what? Rosen’s IQ is deep into triple-digits, and he is by far the best natural passer in this draft. And for all the murmurs about his attitude, you don’t hear one of his teammates question his devotion or work ethic. Former Cowboys coach Jimmy Johnson — who won titles in college and the pros — says he only requires two things of his players. Are they smart? Do they love football? Check. Check. Cardinals get high grades with Chosen Rosen.

Chicago Bears

Again, one great pick makes the day. The Monsters of the Midway, renowned for a long lineage of linebackers, just got a great one in Georgia’s Roquan Smith. The SEC Defensive Player of the year at just 20 years old, Smith was also the MVP of the SEC title game and was utterly unstoppable against Alabama in the national title game, with 11 tackles, double that of any other Bulldog. His work ethic, instincts, talent, and temerity are unquestioned. He is the perfect progeny for a team with an unprecedented line of lions at LB. Indeed, it feels fitting for Butkus, Singletary, and Urlacher to hand the LB baton to Smith, who should play in the next nine Pro Bowls.

New England Patriots

Shocking. The most competent team, with eight trips to the Super Bowl and five Lombardi Trophies just in this young century, has a keen eye for college talent. It starts with a pair of Georgia Bulldogs — OT Isaiah Wynn and RB Sony Michel — with Michel being exactly the kind of running/receiving threat that melts flawlessly into the Patriots’ mutating offense.

New England is one of only three teams — next to the Titans and Broncos — that NFL.com gave an A Grade for every pick, which now makes them the Vegas favorites to win the most games in 2018. Both are hardly shocking. Once again, the Pats are the talk and chalk of the NFL.

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell announces a pick by the Cleveland Browns during the first round of the 2018 NFL Draft at AT&T Stadium on April 26, 2018 in Arlington, Texas.

Roger Goodell (Photo Credit: Tom Pennington/Getty Images)

Not so good…

Cleveland Browns

The envy of every team, armed with the first and fourth selections in the first round, literally had the pick of the litter. And still messed it up. There’s a reason they’ve gone 1-31 over the last two seasons, including a pristine 0-16 last year. They used the top pick to grab Baker Mayfield, he of the viral arrest video and penchant for plucking his privates on the sideline. There are varying views on the former Oklahoma QB, but almost no pundit had him as the top QB in the draft, yet the Browns think he is.

Then they doubled-down on the head-scratchers by snatching Ohio State CB Denzel Ward. While no one doubts Ward was a first-round talent and arguably the best cornerback on the board, the Browns could have taken NC State defensive end Bradley Chubb. Along with last year’s top pick, Miles Garrett, the Browns could have had the best bookend pass rushers in the NFL, crushing opposing QBs for a decade. If the Browns did one thing right, they got the other Chubb — Nick — in the second round, securing a high-end running back at great draft value.

New York Giants

Big Apple football fans are giddy over G-Men snagging the highest-rated player in the draft — Penn State RB Saquon Barkley. But it says here that Big Blue blew it. Once the Browns took Mayfield the Giants had Darnold or Josh Rosen fall into their laps, with either making a fine successor to the 37-year-old Eli Manning. But rather than look two moves ahead, they looked only at this year, with visions of Barkley rampaging through opposing defenses. Though Barkley has a fine future, there’s endless evidence to suggest you can pick an All-Pro running back — like Le’Veon Bell, Alvin Kamara, and Kareem Hunt — well after the first round.

Oakland Raiders

The media and masses all but booked Super Bowl tickets, laminated in silver and black, the moment we heard Jon Gruden was the head coach of the Oakland Raiders… again.

There’s the narrative, and  then there’s the reality. It takes a lot for NFL.com to give bad grades to any team in the football fraternity, but it’s too obvious that the Raiders got it wrong. With oodles of defensive studs still on the board, Oakland went with the wholly mediocre OT Kolton Miller. They took a player out of Sam Houston State (DT PJ Hall) in the second round, when most had him as a fourth-round talent. Oakland rolled the dice in the third round on LSU DE Arden Key, who is a total variable. On day three they took their best player, Michigan DT Maurice Hurst, who, sadly, has a heart condition.

In typically Raiders fashion, their best move on draft day wasn’t a draft pick. They may have saved face by dealing a third-round pick to Pittsburgh for mercurial WR Martavis Bryant, who comes with more luggage than Kennedy Airport, but is exactly the kind of gifted deep-threat that Oakland has adored for decades. At least they have a QB (Derek Carr) who can get it to Bryant.

Buffalo Bills

Fans are frothing over Buffalo’s aggression in this draft, leapfrogging several clubs on draft day to snare Josh Allen at No. 7. Though we can all applaud the focus and fervor, the natives will soon find more jeers than cheers for the Wyoming QB. First of all, Tyrod Taylor got a bad rap and rep in Buffalo. Taylor is at least a starting NFL quarterback, if not a darn good one. Second, Allen was a bad choice. And not because of those incredibly questionable Tweets he belched in high school, replete with N-Bombs and other dubious remarks. Even if he had a pristine Twitter account, Allen is a project at QB. He’s an unusually large man with unusually small hands for someone his size. He also completed just 56 percent of his passes his last year in college, which obliterates the argument that he’s the perfect cold-weather QB for a cold-weather town.

The worst part is, the Bills took Allen when the other, way more talented Josh — Rosen — was still on the board. Allen wowed the combine gurus in shorts and a t-shirt, throwing the pigskin 80 yards. Won’t mean much if he throws it into that frigid November wind, or to the other team. Maybe they get a bump for grabbing a Clemson WR in the sixth round named Ray-Ray. The world can always use a Ray-Ray.

Jason writes a weekly column for CBS Local Sports. He is a native New Yorker, sans the elitist sensibilities, and believes there’s a world west of the Hudson River. A Yankees devotee and Steelers groupie, he has been scouring the forest of fertile NYC sports sections since the 1970s. He has written over 500 columns for WFAN/CBS NY, and also worked as a freelance writer for Sports Illustrated and Newsday subsidiary amNew York. He made his bones as a boxing writer, occasionally covering fights in Las Vegas, Atlantic City, but mostly inside Madison Square Garden. Follow him on Twitter @JasonKeidel.



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Parts Of Lake Shore Drive To Close Later This Week For Bridge Work

CHICAGO (CBS) — As crews continue building a new pedestrian bridge spanning Lake Shore Drive, parts of the roadway will be closed for several hours overnight on Wednesday, Friday, and Sunday, to install massive structural beams.

Last summer, the city broke ground on a new pedestrian and bicycle bridge over Lake Shore Drive at 41st Street. Several blue support beams have since gone up, and Illinois Department of Transportation crews have been hauling in more bridge parts in from Missouri.

IDOT said oversize trucks hauling the beams will block most of the roadway through Illinois, along parts of Interstate 270, Illinois Highways 255, 111, 140, Intestates 55, 72, and 57, U.S. Route 30, Illinois Route 394, Interstate 94, Stony Island Avenue, Cornell Drive, 57th Street, and Lake Shore Drive on Monday.

The trucks will arrive in Cook County around 9 p.m. Monday on Interstate 57 before heading to the work site on Lake Shore Drive.

The Chicago Department of Transportation said the southbound lanes of Lake Shore Drive will be closed from 9 p.m. Wednesday until 5 a.m. Thursday to install structural beams for the bridge. Northbound lanes will be closed from 9 p.m. Friday until 5 a.m. Saturday. Traffic in both lanes will be blocked from 9 p.m. Sunday to 5 a.m. Monday.

Southbound traffic will be detoured west on Oakwood Boulevard, south on Cottage Grove Avenue, and east on 47th Street back to Lake Shore Drive while the southbound lanes are closed. Northbound traffic will be detoured west on 47th Street, north on Cottage Grove Avenue, and east on Oakwood Boulevard back to Lake Shore Drive.

The $28.7 million bridge will be the second new pedestrian and bicycle bridge spanning the south end of Lake Shore Drive since the 35th Street bridge opened in November 2016.

The 41st Street bridge will connect Williams-Davis Park to Oakwood Beach with a curving span that is fully accessible, with ramps for bicycles and wheelchairs.

Emergency vehicles also will be able to use the bridge to get to and from the lakefront.

Construction is expected to be completed by the end of the year.

The city also plans to later replace an existing footbridge over Lake Shore Drive at 43rd Street. The existing bridge there is not wheelchair or bicycle accessible. The city expects to begin construction on that bridge next year.



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Latest MLB Power Rankings

The defending champions retake the top spot in this week's rankings despite the Red Sox being the first team to reach 20 wins.

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Israel’s Netanyahu Claims Iran Lied About Nuclear Weapons Program

JERUSALEM (CBS) — Israel’s prime minister on Monday unveiled what he said was a “half ton” of Iranian nuclear documents collected by Israeli intelligence, claiming the trove of information proved that Iranian leaders covered up a nuclear weapons program before signing a deal with the international community in 2015.

In a speech delivered in English and relying on his trademark use of visual aids, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed that the material showed that Iran cannot be trusted, and encouraged President Trump to withdraw from the deal next month.

“Iran lied big time,” Netanyahu declared.

Netanyahu’s presentation, delivered on live TV from Israeli military headquarters in Tel Aviv, was his latest attempt to sway international opinion on the nuclear deal. The agreement offered Iran relief from crippling sanctions in exchange for curbs on its nuclear program.

Netanyahu furiously fought the deal while President Barack Obama was negotiating it, and he has been a leading critic since it was signed. He says it does not provide sufficient safeguards to prevent Iran from reaching a nuclear weapons capability.

Netanyahu has found a welcome partner in Mr. Trump, who has called the agreement “the worst deal ever.”

Mr. Trump has signaled he will pull out of the agreement by May 12 unless it is revised, but he faces intense pressure from European allies not to do so. Netanyahu said he would share the newly uncovered information with Western allies and the international nuclear agency.

There was no immediate response from Iran, which has adamantly denied ever seeking nuclear weapons. Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency, believed to be close to the hard-line Revolutionary Guard, dismissed Netanyahu’s speech as a “propaganda show.”

Netanyahu said Israel had obtained some 55,000 pages of documents and 183 CDs of secret information from an Iranian nuclear weapons program called “Project Amad.” He said the material was gathered from a vaulted Iranian facility a few weeks ago “in a great intelligence achievement.”

He began his presentation with a series of video clips of Iranian leaders saying their country never pursued nuclear weapons.

Netanyahu provided no direct evidence that Iran has violated the 2015 deal. Also, the deal is not believed to have banned Iran from keeping its old records.

But Netanyahu said the existence of the documents proves that Iran is waiting to resume its race to build a bomb.

“We can now prove that project Amad was a comprehensive program to design, build and test nuclear weapons,” he said. “We can also prove that Iran is secretly storing project Amad material to use at a time of its choice to develop nuclear weapons.”

Mr. Trump has set a May 12 deadline to decide whether to pull out of the Iran deal — something he appears likely to do despite heavy pressure to stay in from European allies and other parties.

Both Mr. Trump and Netanyahu say the deal should address Iranian support for militants across the region and Iran’s development of long-range ballistic missiles, as well as eliminate provisions that expire over the next decade.

Ahead of Netanyahu’s presentation, Iran’s foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, mocked the Israeli leader by tweeting out a photo of Netanyahu’s famous 2012 U.N. speech in which he used a cartoon-like drawing of a bomb to rail against Iran’s nuclear program.

“The boy who can’t stop crying wolf is at it again,” Zarif said. “Undeterred by cartoon fiasco at UNGA. You can only fool some of the people so many times.”

© 2018 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Siblings Hold Hands For First Time Since Crash Killed Parents, Baby Sister

FORT WORTH (CBS LOCAL) – A head-on crash killed their parents, and now a brother and sister have seen each other for the first time since their deaths, according to WBAL TV.

The children’s great aunt posted a moving photo of Zachary Clemens, 5, holding his sister, Angela Clemens’ hand on a hospital bed at Cook Children’s Hospital.

brother sister Siblings Hold Hands For First Time Since Crash Killed Parents, Baby Sister

Zachary Clemens, 5, holding his sister, Angela Clemens’ hand. (photo courtesy: Facebook)

The Facebook post reads: I stand all amazed at the miracles which occur when we align our prayers with our Heavenly Father’s will. Yesterday, we asked for you all to send a special prayer for Zachary. We have seen so many miracles with him. Yesterday, he was able to leave his bed and get into the wheelchair for the first time. He and Angie were able to see each other for the first time. Angie has had a lot of brain injuries, but yesterday she was able to read and sing with us. Our hearts are so full of the miracles we are experiencing. This morning Wyatt was taken out of his wheelchair and was walking towards the physical therapy room and the therapist had to stop him from trying to run. Thank you so much for your support and prayers. We feel them. Miracles are Happening!

According to KTXS, the siblings’ parents, Jim Alan Clemens, 31, and Karisa Brianne Clemens, 29, were driving back from a family outing on April 7 when another driver lost control of a Chevrolet Tahoe and struck the family’s Suburban head-on.

The parents died in the crash, along with their 2-month-old daughter, Julieanna. Zachary, Angela and their two other siblings, Wyatt, 4, and Nicholas, 2, were taken to the hospital.

“It’s really devastating,” Burrell said. “Little Zachary broke his back, but could feel his toes and that’s awesome.”

According to a fundraising page on Facebook, Angela and Wyatt were the most seriously injured.

“The children will need extensive care for many months,” the page reads. “We are seeking funds to help with the funeral arrangements and for medical care of these sweet little children. Thank you for your help and for your faith and prayers as we try to support this special family.”

The San Angelo Standard-Times reported the Texas Department of Public Safety said they are investigating the crash.

H/T: CBS DFW



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Scientists ‘Miserable’ After World’s Oldest Spider Dies At 43

AUSTRALIA (CBS Local) – The world’s oldest known spider has died in Western Australia at the age of 43. The record-breaking arachnid was 15 years older than any other spider scientists have found.


The Details:

  • World’s oldest spider, dubbed “Number 16,” has died at 43
  • Female Giaus Villosus, better known as a trapdoor spider, succumbed to wasp sting
  • Trapdoor spiders commonly seen in Australia, typically live 5-20 years
  • By remaining in same burrow from birth, female trapdoor spiders use little energy
  • Previous record lifespan owned by 28-year-old tarantula in Mexico

According to a report in Pacific Conservation Biology, the ancient trapdoor spider was killed by a wasp sting in the country’s Central Wheatbelt region recently. The female arachnid, known as “Number 16,” was discovered by Barbara York Main in 1974 and eventually outlived a 28-year-old tarantula in Mexico – the former oldest spider.

“To our knowledge this is the oldest spider ever recorded and her significant life has allowed us to further investigate the trapdoor spider’s behavior and popular dynamics,” the spider study’s current lead author Leanda Mason told The Telegraph. “We’re really miserable about it. We were hoping she could have made it to 50 years old.”

The spider likely managed to live for so long by staying in the same burrow its entire life, allowing it to use little energy over the years.

The trapdoor spider is a common sight in Australia and reportedly lives between five and 20 years. Females like Number 16 reportedly live out most of their lives in the same burrow hole. Males are more likely to be seen by humans as they leave their burrow in search of a mate.

The Australian researchers added in their report that the remarkably long life of Number 16 could actually “provide lessons for humanity and sustainable living.”



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Missing Church Deacon Found

CHICAGO (CBS) — An elderly church deacon with dementia, who had been missing for more than a week, has been found.

On Thursday, Chicago police said 83-year-old George Robbins had been reported missing. He had last been seen on the night of April 21 in the South Chicago neighborhood.

Robbins belongs to the Logos Baptist Assembly. He’s had dementia since 2012 and also suffers from kidney disease.

Monday afternoon, police said Robbins had been located, but did not provide details.



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Summer Road Trips To Be Most Expensive In Four Years

CHICAGO (CBS/AP) — Summer road trips will be more expensive than they have been since 2014, according to market analysts.

With crude oil prices already at their highest levels in more than three years, and expected to keep going up, gasoline prices will be going up as well.

The pain at the pump could be especially difficult in Chicago. As of Monday morning, gas prices in Chicago were at an average of $3.20 per gallon, up from $2.57 a year ago, according to the AAA.

Nationally, the average for regular gasoline is now $2.81 per gallon, up from $2.39 per gallon a year ago, according to the AAA. Approximately 13 percent of all U.S. gas stations are charging $3 per gallon or more.

“This will be the most expensive driving season since 2014,” said Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis for Oil Price Information Service.

The price of U.S. crude oil has been on a mostly steady incline since last June and last week hit $68.64, the highest since December 2014. Benchmark U.S. crude closed Friday at $68.10. Oil prices near $70 shouldn’t put the brakes on economic growth, however. While they’re boosting costs for some sectors of the economy, the energy sector and related industries have more money to spend on equipment and workers.

But higher oil prices are certainly an inconvenience for drivers, especially those with lower incomes.

“The good news is, both at the global level and the U.S. level, this is occurring at a time when growth is fairly robust,” said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Markit. “But consumers as whole will be hurt, mostly because gasoline prices are going up.”

Kevin Lanke, a motion picture lighting technician in Redondo Beach, California, says he’s now paying about $3.39 per gallon to fill up the 25-gallon tank in his 2000 Land Cruiser SUV. That’s about 20 cents more per gallon than a couple of months ago.

“I would fill up my car and it would be $52 or $53,” said Lanke, 51. “Now it’s in the mid $60s for the same amount of gas.”

Lanke keeps the recent increase in perspective, noting that three years ago he and his fellow Californians were paying over $4 per gallon. But he’s already weighing his options, saying if gas goes to $4 a gallon he’ll buy a more fuel-efficient car to use as his main ride and drive the Land Cruiser only when he needs it.

Several factors have helped drive oil prices higher. A wave of global economic growth has driven up demand for oil. At the same time, production cutbacks initiated by OPEC last year have helped whittle down oil supplies.

In the U.S., oil supplies were running 1.1 million barrels lower at the start of this summer’s driving season, which runs from April through September, than a year ago, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

That has amplified the typical increase in gas prices seen this time of year. Pump prices normally rise as demand increases from families going on vacation and taking to the highways on road trips. Already, U.S. consumer demand for gasoline hit a record high for the month of April, according to the EIA.

Drivers in Western states such as California, Oregon, Washington, as well as Alaska, Hawaii, Connecticut and Pennsylvania, are paying the most at the pump. The average retail price in those states is running from $2.95 to $3.61 per gallon.

Average retail gasoline prices are lowest in a swath of mostly East Coast states, including Florida, New Hampshire, Delaware and Georgia. They’re ranging from $2.68 to $2.80 per gallon.

Still, prices remain well off from 2008, when crude oil prices jumped above $130 per barrel and average retail gas prices surged to an all-time high of $4.11 per gallon.

“People forget very, very quickly,” Kloza said, noting that the average U.S. gasoline price remains well below where they stood five years ago at $3.60 per gallon.

“We’re seeing a higher price environment… but I don’t think we’re goig to look at really apocalyptic numbers,” he said.

The EIA projects that the U.S. retail price for regular gasoline will average $2.74 per gallon this summer, up from an average of $2.41 per gallon a year earlier. Gas prices to rise each spring through Memorial Day and slowly decline as the summer goes along.

For all of 2018, the agency expects that the national retail price for all grades of gasoline will average $2.76 a gallon. That would translate into an additional $190 spent on fuel by the average U.S. household this year compared to last, the agency said.

“At the higher income levels, this won’t really have much of an effect,” said Behravesh. “But it’s a bigger deal for lower-income families, because a bigger share of their budgets goes to things like gasoline.”

In broader economic terms, the rise in oil and gasoline prices will help crude producers in states like Texas and North Dakota and will likely boost capital spending industrywide. Spending by oil companies fell sharply as oil plunged below $30 a barrel in 2016, dragging on U.S. economic growth.

Industries that rely heavily on fuel, such as shipping companies, airlines, vehicle fleet operators and other transportation companies, are seeing rising costs, which eventually will be passed on to consumers. Diesel fuel hit its highest national average price in more than three years over the weekend at about $3.06 per gallon. American Airlines said it spent $412 million more on fuel in the recent first quarter than in the year-ago period.

At current levels, U.S. crude oil prices won’t noticeably hamper the economy, said Behravesh.

“You would have to get up into the $90-$100 range for it to really have a big impact on growth,” he said. “At these levels, it may shave off a tenth of a percentage point off global growth.”

One reason oil likely won’t get to that level is the emergence of the U.S. as a major global oil producer. Higher prices encourage U.S. oil companies to crank up output.

“That rise in U.S. production and further rises in U.S. production will put a cap or a damper eventually on higher oil prices,” Behravesh said.

(© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)



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Fish Tank Coral Produced Toxin That Nearly Killed Family

CEDAR PARK, TX (CBS Local) – A Texas mother is speaking out after an attempt to clean a fish tank nearly killed her and her entire family.

Chasity Ahman was cleaning the family fish tank when she noticed a strange substance growing on the decorative coral inside the aquarium. “I noticed these little, cute… button polyps that were new to me,” Ahman said, via KHOU.

After scrubbing off the odd algae, Ahman said she immediately started to feel sick. Unknown to her, the algae had released a dangerous neurotoxin into the air. By the next morning the Ahmans were completely incapacitated and their condition stumped local hospitals. “I thought we were coming down with the flu or something. We couldn’t get out of bed. I couldn’t answer the door. I couldn’t force myself out of bed.”

According to local saltwater livestock experts, colorful coral arrangements known as palythoa can be deadly for owners who don’t know how to properly take care of them. “When that stuff becomes airborne, it’s usually caused by somebody scraping,” said Austin Aqua-Dome manager Hunter Leber. “I would suggest, really, to leave them alone for the most part.”

Ahman and her family reportedly spent two days in the hospital. The palythoa toxin also killed five of the family’s fish.

In late March, 10 people in Great Britain were hospitalized after being exposed to “palytoxins” that were released by a man cleaning his fish tank. 27-year-old Chris Matthews reportedly removed his decorative aquarium rocks from the tank and unknowingly exposed his family and firefighters to “incredibly lethal” fumes produced by the coral. Those patients were all treated and released after suffering flu-like symptoms and eye irritation.



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‘Empire’ Actor Acquitted Of Domestic Violence Charge

CHICAGO (AP) — An actor on the television show “Empire” has been acquitted of domestic battery in Chicago.

Morocco Omari took the stand during a two-day trial that ended with his acquittal Friday. Jurors deliberated for less than two hours. He says he “could never beat up a woman” and that his acquittal is like “an albatross lifted from my neck.”

Omari was arrested in April 2017 after a 24-year-old woman who identified herself as Omari’s girlfriend told police officers that he had pushed her to the ground during an argument, causing scratches on her neck and chest.

Omari described the aftermath of the allegations as “like a hurricane wiping out your house.”

Omari played FBI Agent Tariq Cousins on the Fox TV show. The character was killed off last season.

(© Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)



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This Week In Golf: Horschel, Piercy Go Low Sunday, Win Zurich Classic

By Sam McPherson

The Zurich Classic of New Orleans and its unique team format once again provided loads of excitement for golf fans on Sunday. Billy Horschel and Scott Piercy carded a fourth-round best 67 in the alternate-shot format to move up from fifth place and claim the PGA Tour title at the TPC Louisiana course in Avondale. The duo carded five birdies in the first 11 holes and then hung on to post their 22-under winning score by making seven straight pars to close out the final round.

For their winning efforts, Horschel and Piercy each earned $1.04 million and 400 FedExCup points, but the win does not count toward golf’s world rankings. Horschel also won the 2013 Zurich Classic when it was a normal Tour stop with traditional single-golfer scoring. This is the second year of the event’s unique team format, where golfers partner up and shoot best ball on Thursday and Saturday, combined with alternate-shot golf on Friday and Sunday.

The winning duo started the fourth round in fifth place, trailing third-round leaders Scott Brown and Kevin Kisner, who shot 77 on Sunday to fall into a tie for 15th place. Michael Kim and Andrew Putnam started Sunday in second place, but they shot a 76 to end up tied with Brown and Kisner. Meanwhile, Horschel and Piercy took advantage, as did second-place finishers Jason Dufner and Pat Perez, who carded a 68 in the fourth round. Louis Oosthuizen and Charles Schwartzel finished third.

The alternate-shot rounds were volatile on both Friday and Sunday, as both teams that led after Thursday’s best-ball round struggled on Friday in the alternate-shot format. After shooting 60 in best ball on Friday, Lucas Glover and Chez Reavie posted a 75 to drop out of contention, while the team of Zecheng Dou and Xinjun Zhang carded an 80 in the second round to miss the cut entirely.

Kim and Putnam held the second-round lead at 13-under after shooting a 69 on Friday, while Brown and Kisner were one shot back. Both those teams had posted 62 on Thursday in the first round, and both teams had solid third rounds as well, with Brown and Kisner carding a 64 on Saturday, and Kim and Putnam managing a 66 score.

>>More: This Week In Golf

Next On The Tee: Wells Fargo Championship

The PGA Tour heads to Charlotte, NC, this week for the Wells Fargo Championship at the Quail Hollow Club. Brian Harman is the defending champion, and the field is loaded with top players, as many golfers want to tune up and get their games right before the Players Championship the following week in Ponte Vedra Beach, FL. Harman will have a tough time winning this event for the second year in a row.

Among the notables playing in the Wells Fargo event are recent major championship winners Jason Day, Jason Dufner, Martin Kaymer, Brooks Kopeka, Rory McIlroy, Phil Mickelson, Patrick Reed, and Adam Scott. If that wasn’t enough to pack the field full of champions, there are 37 Tour winners from the last two seasons playing as well. Also, Tiger Woods is teeing it up at Quail Hollow after a four-week absence from PGA Tour play. Woods won this event in 2007.

The event, played at Eagle Point Golf Club in Wilmington, NC, last year, returns to Quail Hollow, which hosted the PGA Championship in 2017. Four times in the last six Wells Fargo Championship tournaments held at Quail Hollow, a playoff was needed to decide the winner. George Cobb designed the original course, which opened in 1961, but Arnold Palmer modified several of the holes in the mid-1980s, before Tom Fazio executed re-designs in both 1997 and 2003. Quail Hollow is scheduled to host the Presidents Cup in 2021.

The Quail Hollow Club course plays 7,442 yards long and is a par 72.

Favorites: Rickie Fowler, Lucas Glover, Rory McIlroy

Players to Watch: Phil Mickelson, Pat Perez, Andrew Putnam

Sam McPherson is a freelance writer covering baseball, football, basketball, golf and fantasy sports for CBS Local. He also is an Ironman triathlete and certified triathlon coach. Follow him on Twitter @sxmcp, because he’s quite prolific despite also being a college English professor and a certified copy editor.



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What We Learned From The First Round Of The NBA Playoffs

Ryan Mayer

After two weeks and several extended series, the first round of the NBA playoffs is behind us. The field has been whittled down to eight and, in the process, we learned quite a bit about each of the teams left standing. Two games from the second round have already been played, but before we get any further, let’s take a quick look at the biggest lessons we learned from Round 1.

Rockets, Warriors Clash Is Inevitable

We all knew this before the playoffs started, but the Steph Curry injury made some folks waver a bit on the Warriors, understandably. Then Golden State went out in the first round and just blitzed the Spurs, with an average margin of victory of 14 points in the five-game gentleman’s sweep. The Rockets were even more convincing. After a close Game 1 against Minnesota (104-101), the next three wins were by at least 18 points or more with one road loss thrown in.

The advanced stats tell even further just how far above the other teams in their conference both teams are. The teams are 1-2 in Net Rating, with the Warriors first at 12.6 and the Rockets second at 8.8. The order is flipped in offensive rating, with the Rockets posting a 112.8 mark and the Warriors posting a 112.1. Both teams are two points ahead of New Orleans, the next closest team in that metric, and they’re 4-8 points clear in Net Rating, with the Pelicans again being the next closest Western Conference team at 4.0. Since the beginning of the season we knew these teams were likely on a collision course. The first round only confirmed what we’ve suspected.

Sixers Are A Legitimate Threat In The East

Full disclosure: I’m from Philadelphia originally and grew up a Sixers fan. That said, the Sixers’ gentleman’s sweep of the Miami Heat was just a step below the dominance shown by the Rockets and Warriors. We mentioned Net Rating for those two teams, well, the Sixers are third in that category, checking in a 8.0, just 0.8 behind Houston. Their defense ranks second, behind only the Warriors in defensive rating at 101.6, and the offensive numbers aren’t far behind, ranking fifth in the playoffs (109.6) and second to only Toronto (110.2) in the East.

It hasn’t just been the starters either. Philly’s bench has posted the highest Net Rating of the playoffs at 9.7, nearly a full four points ahead of the Warriors group. The Sixers are led by young stars Ben Simmons and Joel Embiid, but J.J. Redick (20 PPG, 35% 3PT), Marco Bellinelli (16.6 PPG, 36.7% 3PT) and Ersan Ilyasova (10.8 PPG) have all been key contributors. Those guys are 33, 31, and 30 respectively with a combined 174 games of playoff experience among them. This isn’t to say the Sixers are the favorite in a conference that still goes through LeBron, but Philly is certainly a threat.

gettyimages 952815696 What We Learned From The First Round Of The NBA Playoffs

Credit: Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

LeBron Needs Help Or Cavs Are In Trouble

In Cleveland’s seven-game war with Indiana, James averaged 41.1 minutes per game, while putting up 34.4 points, 10.7 rebounds and 7.7 assists per outing. The man is 33 years old, in his 15th NBA season, and has been to seven straight NBA Finals. He’s already got a lot of miles on him, and expecting him to continue to produce at that kind of clip is insane.

We knew the Cavaliers would need time to figure things out after trading nearly half the team at the deadline in February. But the supporting cast didn’t give much, well, support in this series. Kevin Love was second in points per game at 11.4. Nobody else averaged double-digit points. Go ahead and read that last sentence again.

An even more alarming picture, the Cavs bench is dead last, 16th, out of 16 playoff teams in Net Rating at minus-13.4. George Hill struggling with back spasms and missing three games didn’t help, but none of the supporting guys shone in this series.

Brad Stevens Continues To Be A Magician

The Celtics could not have been more banged up for their series against the Bucks. Okay, I guess technically that’s not true, they could have had a few more guys get hurt but still. Kyrie and Hayward were already out heading into the series. In addition, Marcus Smart was also out for most of the series, playing in just three of the seven contests.

Then you look at the Net Rating, where the Celtics check in at minus-1.6, while the Bucks, the team Boston just played, was plus-1.6. Yet the Celtics won in seven games. Having home court helped, as the Celtics won every home game, but the fact that Stevens was able to coach the C’s past Giannis and the Bucks with a bunch of (good, not great yet) young guys and Al Horford/Marcus Morris is crazy. The series with the Sixers is fascinating, because of the adjustments and game plans I’m waiting to see Stevens put to work against Ben Simmons and Joel Embiid.

Jrue Holiday’s Introduction To The National Consciousness

Holiday is in his 9th year in the league, and he has been a solid-to-above-average point guard for both the Sixers and Pelicans. He was an All-Star in 2013, but most folks outside of his local market wouldn’t necessarily consider him a star. In his previous playoff appearances with Philly (2011-2012), he was solid, but in his only other playoff experience with the Pelicans (2014-15), he played just three games, struggling with injuries.

In the first round series against the Trail Blazers, Holiday lit it up, averaging 24 points, six assists and just under four rebounds per game. He’s played a different role this year in New Orleans, playing more off-ball with Rajon Rondo in the fold, and he’s flourished. The first round was just a continuation of that trend. While he struggled against the Warriors in Game 1 with just 11 points on 4-of-14 shooting, it’s clear that Holiday is ready for the national audience to know his name. The Pelicans tend to just be talked about as Anthony Davis and a bunch of guys, Holiday is changing that.



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Sprint And T-Mobile CEOs Promise Merger Won’t Raise Prices

(CNN Money) — The CEOs of T-Mobile and Sprint are confident that their proposed merger will get approval from US regulators and create jobs — and that it won’t raise prices for wireless subscribers.

T-Mobile’s John Legere and Sprint’s Marcelo Claure told CNN’s Richard Quest on Monday that the merger of the two companies would make it easier for them to build out a national, high-speed 5G network before their rivals Verizon and AT&T do.

“The country needs 5G,” Claure said. He said the United States can’t fall further behind China and South Korea, which are ahead in deploying 5G technology.

Legere stressed that the deal won’t harm consumers because T-Mobile has a reputation for offering low-cost plans. And he said the combined company plans to invest $40 billion to build out its 5G network, which should create thousands of jobs.

“Prices are going down and jobs are going up,” Legere said.

Claure told Quest that he had the “simple realization that both companies needed each other” in order to build a 5G network. And Legere added that Claure called him to jump-start merger talks between the two, which have been on and off for several years.

During that time, the two CEOs have often taken potshots at each other on Twitter, part of the intense competition for wireless subscribers. But Legere and Claure now seem more comfortable jabbing rivals AT&T and Verizon instead.

Related: Sprint’s Claure and T-Mobile’s Legere are CEOs with a history of attacking each other

Legere poked fun at Verizon’s purchases of AOL and Yahoo, which it combined into a subsidiary it calls Oath. Verizon said in its most recent earnings report that revenue for Oath fell in the first quarter from last year’s fourth quarter because of lower ad spending.

“That really worked out, hasn’t it?” Legere cracked, adding that T-Mobile and Sprint “don’t feel the need to own and curate the content of what you watch.”

Legere argued “that regulatory approval prospects have never been better” — which seems like a curious thing to say considering that the Trump administration has sued to block AT&T’s proposed acquisition of Time Warner, the parent company of CNN.

But Legere said the time is right for a deal because there’s much more competition in the wireless world these days. He noted that cable giants Comcast and Charter are now competing for the same customers as Verizon, AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile.

“The industry we work in is changing,” Legere said.

Quest’s full interview with Legere and Claure from the New York Stock Exchange will air on the Quest Express and Quest Means Business shows on CNNi later Monday.

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2 Injured, Including Firefighter, In Hollywood Park Fire

CHICAGO (CBS) — One person was seriously injured, and a firefighter suffered a shoulder injury, in an apartment fire Monday morning in the Hollywood Park neighborhood.

The fire started around 9:15 a.m. on the third floor of a 3-story building near Spaulding and Bryn Mawr.

One person was pulled out of the building, and was taken to the hospital in serious condition.

A firefighter suffered a shoulder injury, and was taken to the hospital for evaluation.

The fire was extinguished by about 10:15 a.m.



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Drama At The Border: ‘Caravan’ Kept From Entering U.S.

TIJUANA, Mexico (CBS) — After traveling through Mexico with great fanfare for a month under the Trump administration’s watchful eye, nearly 200 Central American migrants intending to seek political asylum in the United States were stopped in their tracks when border inspectors said a crossing facility didn’t have enough space to accommodate them.

Mr. Trump vowed last week to “stop” the caravan while Cabinet members said they would deliver a swift response. The asylum seekers held firm, setting up a possible showdown.

In an anticlimactic twist, about 50 asylum seekers were allowed past a gate controlled by Mexican officials to walk across a long bridge but were stopped at the entrance to the U.S. inspection facility at the other end. They were allowed to wait outside the building, technically on Mexican soil, without word of when U.S. officials would let them claim asylum.

Another 50 or so camped on blankets and backpacks in Tijuana, outside the Mexican side of the crossing, prohibited from even getting close to the U.S. inspection building.

The asylum-seekers began the day with anticipation, traveling in red-and-white school buses under police escort to a beachfront rally in Tijuana, where a steel fence juts out into the Pacific Ocean. They sang the Honduran national anthem, and supporters on the San Diego side of the fence waved a Honduran flag.

After a final briefing from lawyers and minutes before they were to begin a short walk to the border crossing, U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Kevin McAleenan announced that the San Ysidro border crossing, the nation’s busiest, had “reached capacity” for people without legal documents and that asylum-seekers may need to wait in Mexico temporarily.

Mr. Trump has commented frequently on the caravan since it started in Mexico on March 25 near the Guatemala border and headed north to Tijuana. His broadsides came as his administration vowed to end what officials call “legal loopholes” and “catch-and-release” policies that allow people requesting asylum to be released from custody into the U.S. while their claims make their way through the courts, which can take years.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions has called the caravan “a deliberate attempt to undermine our laws and overwhelm our system.” Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said asylum claims will be resolved “efficiently and expeditiously” and warned that anyone making false claims could be prosecuted.

The administration’s stern warnings left organizers in disbelief that border inspectors weren’t ready for them.

“They have been well aware that a caravan is going to arrive at the border,” Nicole Ramos, an attorney working on behalf of caravan members, said at a news conference. “The failure to prepare and failure to get sufficient agents and resources is not the fault of the most vulnerable among us. We can build a base in Iraq in under a week. We can’t process 200 refugees. I don’t believe it.”

The San Ysidro border inspection facility can hold about 300 people, according to Pete Flores, Customs and Border Protection’s San Diego field office director, suggesting the bottleneck may be short-lived. The agency processed about 8,000 asylum cases from October through February, or about 50 a day.

Asylum-seekers are typically held for up to three days at the border and then turned over to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. If they pass an asylum officer’s initial screening, they may be detained or released into the U.S. with ankle monitors.

Asylum seekers didn’t appear to be thrown off the by the delay.

Wendi Yaneri Garcia said she was confident she will be released while her asylum case is pending because she is traveling alone with her 2-year-old son, who has been sick. She said that police in her hometown of Atlantida, Honduras, jailed her for protesting construction of a hydroelectric plant and that she received death threats after being released.

“All I want is a place where I can work and raise my son,” the 36-year-old said.

Elin Orrellana, a 23-year-old pregnant woman from El Salvador, said she is fleeing the violent MS-13 street gang, a favorite target of both Sessions and Mr. Trump because of their brutal killings in communities in the United States. She said her older sister had been killed by the gang in El Salvador, so she is attempting to join other family members in the Kansas City area.

“Fighting on is worth it,” she said as she camped out for chilly night outside the border crossing.

Heather Crone, of advocacy group Show Up for Racial Justice, said she’s found 80 people across the U.S. who agreed to sponsor caravan members if they’re released while their petitions are pending.

U.S. immigration lawyers told the asylum-seekers they face possible separation from their children and detention for many months, and said they want to prepare them for the worst possible outcome.

“We are the bearers of horrible news,” Los Angeles lawyer Nora Phillips said during a break from legal workshops for the migrants at three Tijuana locations where about 20 lawyers gave free information and advice. “That’s what good attorneys are for.”



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