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Friday, April 30, 2021

Jayson Tatum rallies Celtics from 32-point deficit, ties Larry Bird's record with 60 points - ESPN

BOSTON -- The first half of Friday night's game between the Boston Celtics and San Antonio Spurs at TD Garden was bad enough that Brad Stevens' daughter didn't even stay to see how the rest of the game would play out.

"I would have left at halftime," Stevens said afterward. "I know my daughter left at halftime. She's got stuff to do tomorrow. There was no reason to stay."

It turned out that, for those who did choose to stick around Friday night, there was plenty to see, after all.

After trailing by as many as 32 points in the first half, the Celtics made a truly improbable comeback, eventually emerging with a thrilling 143-140 overtime victory over the Spurs. Boston's victory was the biggest comeback by a team in more than a decade, since the Sacramento Kings came back from 35 down to beat the Chicago Bulls in 2009, and the third-biggest in the past 25 years.

Adding to the drama of it all was Jayson Tatum having a truly spectacular performance, tying Larry Bird's franchise record with 60 points, including 31 in the fourth quarter and overtime alone. His son, Deuce, got to walk off with the well-earned game ball while Tatum got showered by his teammates after returning to the locker room.

"It was a special night," Tatum said. "Just being around guys, playing with guys you enjoy being around, and are happy for your success ... we all see the hard work each and every one of us put in every day, so that when someone, myself or whoever it is, has a night like that, just to share that moment with them is special. Just to have your teammates be happy for you means everything."

While Tatum was certainly on his way to a brilliant individual performance in the first half, scoring 24 points, no one could've imagined when both teams went to the locker room that there was going to be a dramatic Boston comeback. Tatum was the only Celtic to score until Tristan Thompson put back an offensive rebound with 44.2 seconds to go in the first quarter -- the only points anyone besides Tatum scored in the opening period, which saw San Antonio race out to a 39-16 lead.

Things didn't get any better from there, either, as the Spurs -- who shot over 70% in the first half -- continued to pour it on, eventually taking a 77-48 lead into the halftime break.

"It's a matter of experience, mental toughness, understanding that there are a lot of plays and that's what the 48-minute game is all about," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said, in explaining what happened to the Spurs in the second half. "People are going to make runs. You can't let yourself get down, because if you let it affect you, then all of a sudden transition defense isn't as good. You are not as physical with the half-court defense, you get a little bit sloppy and try to do maybe things too quickly on offense, where the ball was moving before and all of a sudden it stops because their defensive pressure is up.

"So it's a lot of things, we did that. It's a tough, tough lesson, but that's the way it is."

Things began to change in the third quarter, when a 42-point explosion from Boston got the deficit down to a manageable 13 points heading into the fourth. From there, Tatum took over, scoring 20 points in the fourth quarter and another 11 in overtime to help drag the Celtics over the finish line and complete a truly remarkable comeback.

"That boy is destined for greatness," said fellow All-Star Jaylen Brown, who was 5-for-24 on the night but hit the game's biggest shot -- a 3-pointer in the corner with 16.7 seconds to go in overtime that gave Boston the lead for good.

"I couldn't throw a rock into the ocean tonight, and JT carried us to a win, man. He played hard. He led us tonight."

While Tatum certainly led the way, it helped that his teammates finally started seeing the shots that wouldn't go down in the first half begin falling for them in the second. Boston shot 13-for-20 from 3-point range in the second half and overtime, allowing the Celtics to power their way back into things and win the game.

Boston also got big minutes from rookie Aaron Nesmith, who had the best game of his career by far, playing down the stretch and in overtime and finishing with 16 points and six rebounds, including a couple of critical offensive rebounds and putback buckets to help tip the scales in Boston's favor late in the game.

"I think just the best part was obviously coming back and winning and just seeing everyone contribute," Tatum said. "Obviously myself and JB, the big shot he hit at the end. [Marcus] Smart all night. Tristan [Thompson] on the glass, and Rob [Williams]. And Aaron came in and played unbelievable tonight.

"I think that just kind of shows the growth of our team, just everybody contributing, obviously down 30 points and just figuring out a way to win the game."

The Celtics had a chance to end the game in regulation after Tatum buried a 3-pointer with 38 seconds to go in the fourth to put Boston ahead for the first time since the game's opening moments. But after Tatum was fouled and made one of two free throws with 18.8 seconds to go, DeMar DeRozan -- who had his own terrific performance, finishing with 30 points and 14 assists in 42 minutes -- drove to the hoop and drew a foul on Marcus Smart, and tied the game at 128 with both free throws with 10.8 seconds to go.

Tatum then had a shot at a buzzer-beater, but his clean look at a turnaround jumper hit the front of the rim and bounced away, sending the game to an extra session.

"If he would have made the shot at the end of regulation, he wouldn't have tied Bird's record," Stevens said with a smile. "So, maybe that was all a big part of his plan."

The two teams went back and forth in overtime, as well, with baskets on four straight possessions -- a Tatum layup, a DeRozan and-1, another Tatum jumper and a Lonnie Walker IV jumper -- in the final 90 seconds changing the lead each time.

Ultimately, though, Brown's corner 3-pointer put Boston ahead for good -- a lead that was kept first by Nesmith stealing San Antonio's ensuing inbounds pass, and then by Tatum knocking down four straight free throws to get to 60 on the night, tying Bird's record and sending the fans who stuck around home happy they stayed to see an unforgettable performance.

"It's definitely something I'll remember forever," Nesmith said. "Jayson's absolute career high, the 30-plus-point deficit we overcame. I've never even seen that in person or watched it, and then to be a part of it was just incredible. So definitely something I'll always remember."

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Florida lawmakers agree to reinstate July as start to college athlete NIL compensation law - ESPN

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Florida lawmakers passed a bill Friday afternoon that reinstates July as the start date for allowing college athletes to make money from endorsements, reversing a brief push to delay the new opportunities by a year.

Politicians hurried to introduce an amended bill Friday on the final day of the state's current legislative session. The new amendment, if signed by the Gov. Ron DeSantis as expected, will make sure that Florida is among the first states that open the door for college athletes to pursue opportunities to profit from their names, images and likenesses (NIL). The Sunshine State was first to push up the timeline for allowing these types of deals when it passed the original law last June.

Florida's push to be at the forefront of NIL changes in colleges sport was in jeopardy earlier this week. The state senate passed an education bill Wednesday that was largely unrelated to athletics but included a last-minute, surprise amendment to delay the implementation of the law until July 2022.

"I was devastated. It was awful. We promised these kids something we could deliver," said Rep. Chip LaMarca, who wrote the original name, image and likeness bill in Florida and pushed for Friday's amendment. "I felt like we were letting these kids down. I was angry and determined to get it out back on."

LaMarca said support from prominent coaches, athletes and athletic directors from the state's biggest college teams who spoke out Thursday in strong and nearly universal opposition to a delay was an important factor in getting the initial date back.

"ThankYou to our state's leadership for their continued support of our student-athletes and promoting necessary change for their name, image and likeness rights," Florida State coach Mike Norvell tweeted Friday. "By listening and deciding to #KeepTheDate the state of Florida remains a leader in student-athlete empowerment."

Sen. Travis Hutson, who wrote the delay amendment, told ESPN earlier this week that he was concerned the NCAA might punish athletes or schools if they take advantage of the new law. Current NCAA rules do not allow athletes to sign endorsement deals while in school. The association says it is working on changing its stance and hopes to have new rules in place by the end of the summer.

Hutson said he wanted a written guarantee from the NCAA that no athletes or schools in Florida would be punished if they took advantage of the state's new law in a way that conflicts with the association's rules. Hutson told ESPN that he spoke with NCAA President Mark Emmert on Friday morning and received enough assurance to get rid of the planned one-year delay.

Florida is one of five states currently on track to allow athletes to start making money this summer. Another half dozen states have laws that will open similar opportunities in the future. The NCAA is hoping that Congress will help them create a uniform nationwide set of standards for college athletes rather than a "patchwork" of state laws going into effect. Several federal bills have been proposed, but it's not clear if Congress or the NCAA will solidify national rules before the state laws start going into effect in two months.

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'Amtrak Joe' Biden to push infrastructure in Philadelphia - Reuters

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President Joe Biden visited an Amtrak train station on Friday to promote his $1.9 trillion infrastructure proposal, saying the United States is “way behind” in improving its transportation grid and needs to do so to keep up with China.

Biden spent time on an Amtrak car at Philadelphia's 30th Street train station before climbing down to give remarks. It was a moment of nostalgia for Biden, who as a U.S. senator commuted by train for years between his home town of Wilmington, Delaware, and Washington.

He was introduced in Philadelphia by Amtrak CEO William J. Flynn as "perhaps one of Amtrak's most loyal customers."

The visit was part of Biden's "Getting America Back on Track Tour," a tour he began in Georgia on Thursday, with more travel expected next week. The stops are intended to build popular momentum for his $1.9 trillion infrastructure proposal and a separate $1.8 trillion "American Families Plan."

Biden said America's transportation system needs a makeover including more high-speed rail lines like China has developed.

"We’re way behind the rest of the world right now. We need to remember we’re in competition with the rest of the world," he said.

U.S. President Joe Biden gestures as he speaks during the Democratic National Committee's "Back on Track" drive-in car rally to celebrate the president's 100th day in office at the Infinite Energy Center in Duluth, Georgia, U.S., April 29, 2021. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo

The Democrat is asking Congress for $80 billion in spending to improve train service, one of a wide set of initiatives included in multitrillion-dollar infrastructure, climate, childcare and other proposals Biden is trying to maneuver through a sharply divided Congress.

The spending would be paid for with higher taxes on the wealthy and corporations.

Republicans and even some Democratic lawmakers have balked at the price tag.

Former President Donald Trump, whom Biden defeated in the November election but who remains influential among Republicans, predicted in a phone interview with Fox Business Network on Thursday that higher taxes would prompt some companies to relocate abroad.

Biden has long been associated with Amtrak because of his decades commuting daily on the 90-minute train ride between Washington and his home in Wilmington, Delaware, when he was a U.S. senator.

The government-funded rail service is asking Congress for $31 billion in funding over the next five years to expand it’s Northeast Corridor that runs between Boston to Washington, D.C.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Andrew Vaughn beginning to emerge for White Sox - Chicago Sun-Times

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Andrew Vaughn’s talent is showing through for the White Sox.

The third overall pick in the 2019 draft, Vaughn’s rookie season got off to a slow start. Pressed into service in left field because of the long-term injury to Eloy Jimenez, Vaughn struggled at the plate and didn’t get his batting average back above .200 until April 23.

Over the past week, Vaughn has begun to emerge and show why he was such a highly regarded prospect.

Though his power has been absent - he entered Friday’s game with a .386 slugging percentage - Vaughn has steadily gotten on base (.385 on-base percentage). He lifted his average to .273 with three hits in the second game of Thursday’s doubleheader and has looked more like the hitter the Sox want and perhaps need him to be.

Playing on the “big stage” of the majors was an adjustment for Vaughn, who said he’s tried to take a step back and slow things down.

“I definitely was pressing a little hard,” Vaughn said. “Trying to create a result instead of just going out and having fun and playing the game that I love and have been playing since I was a little kid.”

Hitting has been just part of Vaughn’s acclimation, as Friday was Vaughn’s 15th start in left field.

Last year at Schaumburg, Vaughn took some reps in the outfield and he was able to observe how the ball flies and spins off the bat, and figure out how to get good jumps. He’s carried those lessons over to the majors this year, where he’s played a credible left field despite being a first baseman by trade.

“It’s been a smooth transition for me,” Vaughn said. “The infield part definitely helps with the reaction. You are ready for every single pitch. Bringing that to the outfield is definitely beneficial.”

A turning point?
Dylan Cease had perhaps the best start of his career Thursday, throwing a seven-inning complete-game shutout in the Sox’ 11-0 win over the Tigers. The shutout was the third of the season for Sox starters, and Cease got Detroit to swing and miss 16 times.

On Thursday, Cease threw strikes on 66 of 91 pitches, striking out nine while walking none. The start was a far cry from the beginning of the season for Cease, who had struggled to harness his top-shelf stuff. In his previous start on April 23 against the Rangers, Cease needed 80 pitches to record 10 outs.

“For me personally, the stuff has always been there but it’s about how to utilize it,” Cease said. “I’m not going to get too high or low from this one. There’s a lot more starts to go, but that’s what we are looking for.”

Briefly…
- The Sox, manager Tony La Russa said, are still waiting on the tally from the Schaumburg alternate site before knowing whether they’ve hit the 85% plateau of COVID-19 vaccinations. Once a team reaches that mark, certain safety protocols such as requirements for mask use in bullpens and dugouts will be lifted.

- La Russa confirmed that Lance Lynn (strained right trapezius) will come off the injured list to start Saturday, and will be followed Sunday by Lucas Giolito.

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President Biden Bans Travel from India Due to Covid-19 Surge - The New York Times

As they discussed the decision this week, top health officials warned the White House about uncertainty over how vaccines might respond to a homegrown virus variant in India.

WASHINGTON — The White House, citing guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, announced Friday that it would begin restricting travel from India to the United States next week, a major new test of the Biden administration’s pandemic response.

The decision was one of the most significant steps yet taken by the White House in response to the crush of new infections in India, where over 3,000 people are dying each day as citizens gasp for air on the streets. The country recorded almost 400,000 new coronavirus cases on Thursday alone.

The White House press secretary, Jen Psaki, said the policy would go into effect on Tuesday. The travel restrictions will not apply to citizens or lawful permanent residents of the United States, their spouses or minor children or siblings, or to the parents of citizens or lawful permanent residents who are under 21.

The surge of the virus in India has posed a new challenge for Mr. Biden’s pandemic response. President Donald J. Trump’s decision to issue restrictions on travel from China early in the pandemic followed days of fierce debate among national security and public health officials, and was heavily criticized by Democrats and public health experts, who worried that the decision would hinder the nascent global response to the new threat.

In retrospect, federal health officials say the decision was one of the best that Mr. Trump made in the early weeks of the crisis. But the restrictions proved porous. Tens of thousands of people still arrived in the United States on direct flights from China in the two months after Mr. Trump imposed the limits. Ron Klain, now President Biden’s chief of staff, criticized the move as an ineffectual “Band-Aid.”

And the panicked flight of Americans from Europe ahead of a travel ban that Mr. Trump then imposed on the continent overwhelmed airports in the United States and most likely brought still more infections.

The Biden administration has to avoid a repeat of those problems while it tries to rush humanitarian aid to a country that it counts as an ally.

The India travel restrictions may prove to be as porous as the China order. Beyond Americans and lawful permanent residents, exemptions include students, some academics, journalists, fiancés and immigrants. People may also travel for humanitarian purposes, public health, national security or to support critical infrastructure.

But Mr. Biden has advantages over his predecessor, including widespread testing and vaccines. People who are exempt from the ban must still abide by the guidance the United States has already put in place for international travelers, including a negative test for the virus before traveling and again upon entering the country from India, and they must quarantine if they are not vaccinated.

Other countries, including Britain, Germany and Italy, have instituted similar restrictions on travel from India. Early in his presidency, Mr. Biden barred travel by noncitizens into the United States from South Africa because of concerns about a coronavirus variant spreading in that country, and he extended similar bans imposed by Mr. Trump on travel from Brazil and some European countries.

One senior Biden administration official said Friday that representatives from the National Security Council as well as public health officials in the administration had debated the India move in recent days, though not contentiously. It was recommended by Mr. Biden’s Covid-19 response team, medical experts and national security aides across the federal government.

Another senior official familiar with the decision said that it rested heavily on uncertainty over a homegrown variant spreading in India known as B.1.617. Doctors and news reports have cited anecdotal — but inconclusive — evidence to suggest that it is driving the country’s outbreak.

As federal health officials, including Dr. Rochelle P. Walensky, the C.D.C. director, and Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the government’s top infectious disease expert, discussed the possible move in recent days with White House officials, they emphasized that there was little known about how coronavirus vaccines respond to that variant.

One official said the travel restrictions could be modified once there was more data on vaccine response.

The move comes amid a deceleration in American vaccination rates that has complicated the nation’s quest to protect itself. Even with significant momentum in the government’s vaccination campaign — the White House announced on Friday that 100 million people in the United States had been fully vaccinated — a majority of American adults are still not considered fully protected against the virus.

And in a sign that the government does not want to ease restrictions too quickly, the Transportation Security Administration on Friday extended mandates for mask-wearing on airplanes and public transit through Sept. 13.

Even as cases have ebbed in the United States, the virus has raged through India, leading to mass cremations that run through the night. Under intense pressure to do more to help the ailing nation, the White House announced this week a slate of assistance measures, including sending vaccine-making materials, rapid tests and a tranche of the antiviral drug remdesivir, which received Food and Drug Administration approval last year for treating Covid-19.

In the past 24 hours, military cargo planes from the United States delivered to India small oxygen cylinders, large oxygen cylinders, regulators, pulse oximeters, about 184,000 rapid tests, and about 84,000 N-95 masks, Ms. Psaki said on Friday.

“There is no question that it is a great tragedy, in terms of the loss of life,” Vice President Kamala Harris, who is of Indian descent, told reporters on Friday in Cincinnati. “And as I have said before, and I will say again, we as a country have made a commitment to the people of India to support them.”

On Monday, the Biden administration said that it intended to make available to other countries up to 60 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine — which has not yet been cleared for use in the United States — so long as federal regulators deemed the doses safe. The announcement came after Mr. Biden spoke with Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India and the two pledged to “work closely together in the fight against Covid-19.”

An international terminal in January at Kennedy International Airport.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Several Indian states said this week that they could not fulfill the government’s directive to expand vaccinations to all adults beginning on Saturday because they lacked doses. Only a small fraction of the country has been fully vaccinated.

Dr. Luciana Borio, the former director for medical and biodefense preparedness at the National Security Council, said that if the United States had more effective systems for quarantining travelers and was further into its vaccination campaign, travel restrictions like the ones announced on Friday would not be as necessary.

“You can’t battle a pandemic with travel restrictions, unfortunately, which makes it so important to share vaccines with the world and implement public health measures before the virus gets to our shores,” she said.

Experts have long recommended against restricting travel during outbreaks, arguing that it is often ineffective and can limit the movements of doctors and other health professionals trying to contain the disease.

The decision on Friday comes under drastically different circumstances than those seen in the early weeks of the public health crisis.

Health officials have a much more sophisticated understanding of how the virus spreads. Coronavirus tests, which were in short supply last year when Mr. Trump issued travel restrictions, are widely available, with results often returned quickly. And three highly protective vaccines are in broad circulation. Even as health officials grapple with limited knowledge of the homegrown virus variant in India, those vaccines appear to be effective against other variants.

Months ago, India appeared to be escaping the kind of calamity it is now experiencing. After an initial lockdown, the country did not see an explosion in new cases and deaths comparable to those in other countries. But after the early restrictions were lifted, many Indians adopted a more relaxed approach to virus restrictions. Large gatherings, including political rallies and religious festivals, resumed and drew millions of people.

Hospitals in India are now facing dire shortages of beds, while relatives of the sick have pleaded on social media for access to them, as well as for oxygen and medicine. Many Indians say they do not know if they are infected with the coronavirus because overwhelmed labs have stopped processing tests. One in five tests are coming back positive, but experts fear the true toll is much higher.

There is some debate over how to explain the wave of virus cases, including which variant might be most responsible. Researchers say that data so far points to a variant that has spread widely in Britain and in the United States, B.1.1.7, as a significant factor in the country’s suffering.

Scientists say that different variants seem to dominate specific parts of India. The B.1.617 variant has been detected in a large number of samples from the central state of Maharashtra, while the B.1.1.7 variant is rising quickly in New Delhi.

Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Linda Qiu contributed reporting.

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Top basketball prospect Emoni Bates reopens recruitment after decommitting from Michigan State - ESPN

Top-ranked junior Emoni Bates, widely considered one of the best high school basketball prospects in the past decade, announced Friday that he decommitted from Michigan State and reopened his recruitment.

"I would like to thank Tom Izzo and the coaching staff at Michigan State but I have decided to reopen my recruitment," Bates wrote on Instagram. "I'm not sure what my future holds but I am keeping all of my options open, both college and pro."

The 6-foot-8 Bates was the first five-star prospect committed to Michigan State since Jaren Jackson in 2017, and the first No. 1 prospect to commit to the Spartans since the ESPN recruiting database started in 2007.

Bates committed to the Spartans last June. Despite being considered a potentially generational prospect, Michigan State was the only program consistently recruiting him at the time. Izzo attended several games and stayed in contact throughout the first couple of years of Bates' high school career.

College coaches and industry sources have been skeptical that Bates will actually attend college, thinking he would potentially prefer to go to the G League for a year before the NBA. The No. 1 prospect in the 2020 class, Jalen Green, opted to go that route, as did five-star prospects Jonathan Kuminga, Isaiah Todd and Daishen Nix.

When Bates committed to Michigan State, he told ESPN he wasn't planning to go the G League route.

"It's good for certain players. That's a lot of money," he said at the time. "I don't think I'll do it. It's good for some people, but I don't think I'll head that route."

Bates changed high schools last summer, playing for Ypsi Prep (Michigan), a prep school started by his father, Elgin.

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Biden Responds to Sen. Tim Scott: 'I Don't Think The American People Are Racist' - NPR

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President Biden says America has "to deal with" the aftereffects of slavery and Jim Crow laws Evan Vucci/AP

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President Biden says America is not a racist country, but that Black Americans have been left behind and "we have to deal with it."

In an interview on NBC's Today show that aired Friday, Biden was asked about the remarks Wednesday by Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., who delivered the Republican response to the president's address to a joint session of Congress.

Scott, the Senate's only Black Republican, said that "America is not a racist country" and warned that "it's wrong to try to use our painful past to dishonestly shut down debates in the present."

Biden and Scott have divergent views on race in America, but the president agreed with the senator — to a point.

"I don't think the American people are racist," he said, "but I think after 400 years, African Americans have been left in a position where they are so far behind the eight ball in terms of education and health, in terms of opportunity."

Biden continued, "I don't think America is racist, but I think the overhang from all of the Jim Crow and before that, slavery, have had a cost and we have to deal with it."

Biden was also asked in the interview about the situation at the Southern border. He said that the number of children seeking to cross into the country "is way down now, we've now gotten control" and that there's "a significant change in the circumstance for children coming to and at the border."

According to Customs and Border Protection, nearly 19,000 children and teenagers arrived at the Southern border in March — the most ever in a single month. Biden, however, refused to label the situation a crisis.

Biden defended his administration's efforts to reunite children separated from their families by the Trump administration. "One of the things is we don't know yet where those kids are. We're trying like hell to figure out what happened. It's almost like being a sleuth, and we're still continuing to try like hell to find out where they are," he said.

Biden also discussed the state of the pandemic. Asked whether all K-12 schools should be open this fall for in-person instruction five days a week, the president said, "Based on science and the CDC, they should probably all be open."

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Perry Fire Chief Mark Martin ending 50-year safety forces career - Massillon Independent

Sonia Altizer: What Can We Learn From The Migration Of Monarch Butterflies? - NPR

Part 4 of the TED Radio Hour episode Migration

Monarch butterflies fly the longest two-way migration of any insect species. Ecologist Sonia Altizer shares how these intrepid butterflies make the journey — and how it's being threatened.

About The Monarch Migration

Each year, millions of monarch butterflies fly some 3,000 miles, from their summer breeding grounds as far north as Canada to their overwintering sites in the oyamel fir forests of central Mexico. It is one of the Earth's great migrations, and it's also one of the best studied. In recent years, ecologists like Sonia Altizer have been able to better answer how and why these intrepid butterflies make the journey.

The how is owed to a complex suit of navigational and physiological adaptations. Migrating monarchs have internal sun and geomagnetic compasses, and the monarchs that make the longest trek actually grow to be bigger and more powerful fliers, particularly the females. They can even read the skies like a meteorologist, finding and following air currents to quicken their travels. Peering into their genes has also revealed more clues into how they evolved this migratory behavior.

In terms of why they migrate, ecologists think there are three main reasons. The first two have to do with milkweed and temperature. To breed, monarchs need milkweed, and in North America native milkweed dies back with cold winter temperatures. Those same temperatures would kill the monarchs. The fir forests in Mexico offer the ideal shelter and perfect goldilocks temperature while they wait for milkweed to grow back in the spring. The forests in Mexico are warm enough that the butterflies don't freeze but cool enough that their metabolism drops and they can enter a kind of dormant state, called diapause. Altizer has helped establish the third reason why monarchs migrate: to escape a parasite that affects them in their breeding grounds. Infected monarchs are less likely to survive the journey, so the long migration weeds out those who are infected and keeps the population safer. For more on monarchs, check out the Forest Service's monarch FAQs.

How You Can Help Protect Monarchs And Their Migration

First, help protect existing monarch breeding habitat. The Corn Belt produces more than half of the monarchs that migrate to Mexico. As Altizer presents in her TED talk, GMO crops, by design, leave no room in agricultural fields for milkweed and nectar plants to grow. Altizer asks us to see agriculture from an ecosystem perspective and consider using GMOs more judiciously.

Second, help create new habitat for monarchs. Right now, organizations are creating alternative breeding habitat for monarchs and you can support those wide-scale efforts. You can also make monarch and butterfly-friendly habitats in your neighborhood or backyard. If you do, Altizer stresses the importance of planting native milkweed species. Many plant nurseries carry what's called tropical milkweed, and unlike native species it doesn't die off in winter. While that might sound good, it actually increases the spread of the parasite and it sends signals to the monarchs to stop migrating. If you do choose to create native monarch habitat, it's best to plant more than just milkweed. Variety ensures you'll help all kinds of pollinators and wildlife.

Third, consider joining a community or citizen science project. There are many that help track the migration. Dr. Altizer also founded the citizen science group Monarch Health to track the prevalence of the protozoan parasite Ophryocystis elektroscirrha (OE) in monarch butterflies.

About Sonia Altizer

Sonia Altizer is a Professor and Associate Dean of Academic Affairs in the Odum School of Ecology at the University of Georgia. Her main research focuses on how pathogens affecting wildlife are shifting in response to human environmental change.

At UGA, her students run a citizen science project called Monarch Health. In 2015, Altizer co-edited a book titled Monarchs in a Changing World: Biology and Conservation of an Iconic Insect, and participated in high-level task forces dedicated to monarch butterfly conservation.

Altizer received a B.S. from Duke University and a Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota. She did her postdoctoral work at Princeton University and Cornell University.

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Sonia Altizer: What Can We Learn From The Migration Of Monarch Butterflies? - NPR
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YouTubers to be deported from Bali following prank video - CNN

(CNN) — Two self-described influencers are to be deported from the Indonesian resort island of Bali after being jailed for creating a "prank" video of a painted-on face mask, an official said on Friday.

Josh Paler Lin and Leia "Lisha" Se made the video, in which Lin paints a fake face mask on Se's face before she enters a grocery store where masks are required, in the island's Badung area. It went viral after it was posted to Lin's YouTube channel on April 22.

Indonesia has strict regulations about wearing masks in public. A first offense can result in a fine of 1 million rupiah (about $70) and foreigners can be deported after a second offense.

Though this is a first violation for both Lin and Se, the notoriety from the video reportedly angered Balinese authorities so much that they decided to deport the two influencers.

"We will deport the foreigner in accordance with the Immigration Law Number 6 Year 2011 concerning Immigration," Jamaruli Manihuruk, head of the regional office of the Ministry of Justice and Human Rights Bali, said in a televised press conference.

Coconuts, the local Bali blog that originally picked up on the mask stunt video, quoted Manihuruk saying the exact time of their departure will depend on available flights.

Bali is home to a thriving expat community, and many chose to stay on the island through the pandemic rather than return to their countries of origin. However, the pandemic has reportedly deepened some of the Bali's divisions between foreigners and locals, and Lin's video set that conflict aflame.

By the time he removed it from his YouTube channel, it had already been widely circulated on social media.

On April 24, Lin posted a short video entitled "Clarification Statement" on his Instagram feed. In the clip, he and Se sit on either side of their lawyer and issue apologies in English.

"I make this video to entertain people because I am a content creator and it is my job to entertain people," Lin says -- while wearing a mask. "We would like to invite everyone in Indonesia and Bali to always wear mask for our own safety and health."

However, it appears to have been too little, too late.

Lin, who is Taiwanese, is well known for his stunt videos on YouTube, where has 3.4 million subscribers. He advertises a YouTube Creator Masterclass where he claims he can teach other people how to mimic his success. After his apology video, he returned to form on April 28 by posting a "prank" video where he surprises his assistant with a new iPhone.

Se, a Russian citizen, has 25,000 followers on Instagram, where she posts photos of herself wearing glamorous gowns and partying poolside.

Indonesia has had more than 1.6 million diagnosed cases of the virus and about 45,000 deaths since the beginning of the pandemic.

Masrur Jamaluddin in Jakarta contributed to this story

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Bulldogs report: UMD takes two from Southwest Minnesota State in NSIC baseball - Pine Journal

Mitchell Waletzki and Eric Hinnenkamp earned pitching wins to lead Minnesota Duluth to a 5-1 and 6-5 victory over Southwest Minnesota State in an NSIC doubleheader at Wade Stadium.

Waletzki scattered four hits and didn’t allow a run in five innings in the opener, with four strikeouts and two walks. Trevor Gustafson provided more than enough offensive support with a two-run home run and Tim Pokornowski, Brandt Kolpack and Alex Wattermann added two hits apiece for the Bulldogs.

Pokornowski, a junior outfielder from Cloquet, got things started in the rematch with a two-run homer in the first inning before Southwest Minnesota State came back with four runs in the top of the second. UMD came back with four runs through the third through fifth innings. Wattermann’s sacrifice fly in the fifth proved to be the game winner as Hinnenkamp, Mason Thiel and Liam Blaschko were strong in relief of starter Aaron Wukmir, logging two scoreless innings each.

Wattermann, Henry George, Anders Brown and Mccale Peterson had two hits apiece to lead the Bulldogs (12-20 overall, 9-17 NSIC) while Brodie Smith and Chase McDaniel had two hits apiece to lead the Mustangs (11-20, 9-10).

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Work from home boosts Taiwan's economic growth to fastest in over a decade - Reuters

Taiwan's economy grew at its fastest pace in more than a decade in the first three months of 2021 as the "work from home" boom sparked strong global demand for the island's hi-tech exports.

Gross domestic product (GDP) grew 8.16% in January-March from a year earlier, preliminary data from the statistics agency showed on Friday, up from the fourth quarter's 5.09% rise.

The reading was well above the 6.1% increase forecast in a Reuters poll and was the fastest pace since growth of 11.54% in the third quarter of 2010.

Compared with the fourth quarter, the seasonally adjusted annual rate of growth was 12.93% in the first quarter.

The government attributed the strong growth to surging demand for electronics, driven by new technologies such as 5G and by people working from home due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Total exports rose 24.58% in the first quarter year-on-year in U.S. dollar terms, while exports of electronics components rose 28.37% and those of communication and audio-visual products leapt 29.67%, the agency said.

"Demand for 5G and high-performance computing continues to increase, and orders for communications and electronic products are booming," it added.

Statistics official Wu Pei-hsuan said exports and investment numbers were far better than expected, saying it wasn't only chip firms expanding their production but sectors like petrochemicals. too.

Domestic consumption also performed well, Wu added.

Revised GDP figures, including growth estimates for the full year, will be released later in May.

Capital Economics increased its growth forecast for this year to 8% from the previous 5% after the data was published.

The tech-powerhouse island, home to the world's largest contract chipmaker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (TSMC) (2330.TW), , has benefited from global demand for smartphones, tablets and computers from people forced to study and work from home in large parts of the world.

A global shortage of chips for everything from cars to consumer electronics has also bolstered demand for made-in-Taiwan semiconductors, where producers are busy expanding capacity. read more

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Bennington agrees to pay $137,000 to Kiah Morris, family | Local News | benningtonbanner.com - Bennington Banner

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BENNINGTON — The Select Board has unanimously approved a settlement agreement concerning a complaint to the Human Rights Commission from former state Rep. Kiah Morris, her husband, James Lawton, and their son.

The settlement, which requires the town to pay the family $137,000 and issue a public apology, was in relation to Morris’ complaints that Bennington Police did not adequately investigate online and other racially motivated harassment prior to her decision to leave the Legislature amid a campaign for re-election in 2018.

The family has since sold their home on Morgan Street and moved to the Burlington area.

The Human Rights Commission has been investigating the family’s complaints against the BPD. No investigative report has been released by the commission, but Select Board Chairwoman Jeannie Jenkins indicated that the parties will be able to comment publicly about the report at some point, once the settlement — reached through mediation — is signed by all the parties involved.

She announced the settlement following a board executive session, prior to the vote to accept it.

A public apology to Morris and her family, another aspect of the agreement, was then read by Jenkins, who said in part:

“No one in Bennington should feel unsafe or unprotected. We have listened to Kiah Morris, James Lawton and their family in mediation. It is clear that Kiah, James and their family felt unsafe and unprotected by the town of Bennington. We have to do better by all persons who live in, work in or travel through the town of Bennington irrespective of color, race, religion and other categories as protected by the law.”

Jenkins added that the town “apologizes to Kiah Morris, James Lawton and their family for the harms and trauma they encountered while residing in Bennington, and we fully acknowledge this reality. We pledge to learn, to do better and to protect all of our citizens.”

‘ALL CLAIMS’

Jenkins said that the parties had agreed in mediation to releasing the town and others from liability for legal action from all claims that have or might arise in the matter.

The agreement becomes official and the town will release the funds after the parties all sign it and the complaint is withdrawn, which is expected by Friday according to the settlement, Jenkins said.

She said the final resolution requires that all claims be dismissed with prejudice, and that no lawsuit shall be filed related to claims.

Each side will pay its own attorney fees, she said, but the parties will retain the right to discuss the HRC investigative report related to the claims when it is released.

The agreement requires a general release from liability/hold harmless provision for the town, its employees and agents, Jenkins said, and the agreement specifies that it “shall not be deemed an admission of liability or the strength or weakness of any claims, and that the claim is being settled to avoid expensive and protracted litigation.”

“The Select Board has voted to accept the settlement,” Town Manager Stuart Hurd said Thursday. “The other party must withdraw the complaint as part of the settlement. The [commission] must agree. The complaint has been investigated so the HRC is no longer looking into the complaint. Beyond that, we await the final withdrawal decision.”

In answer to a question, he said that no disciplinary action has been taken against Police Chief Paul Doucette or others in the police department relative to the complaints or the settlement.

Asked Thursday if the family intends to sign the agreement, Lawton said that at this point, they are issuing a written statement but wouldn’t be commenting further.

He said in a text message, “We feel a statement is premature as it is not a finalized settlement.”

Commenting on the agreement, NAACP official Mia Schultz, of Bennington, said, “It is not enough. The settlement amount is not enough. The apology was weak and insincere at best. Once again there is no accountability for the systemic racism that is overwhelmingly present in the police department, the select board and the town manager.”

She added, “Since I have moved here, I have witnessed this town pay out thousands of dollars in lawsuits for racism. There is also another pending case as well that is being investigated by the HRC. As the Rutland Area NAACP president that also includes Bennington, I also have complaints against this town and police to address. So the question is, how many times will this town be sued for racism before they actually see that there is a problem in this community and that it starts at the top?”

PD REFORM

The settlement also requires Bennington to continue with an ongoing review and reform of BPD policies and procedures, including consideration of a police advisory or oversight body for the department, and with involvement by the public.

The review of BPD policies was a recommendation of consultants from the International Association of Chiefs of Police, who were hired by the board in 2019 to do a four-month review of the town department.

And the town agreed to provide office space for Vermont Legal Aid or another group providing pro bono legal representation for at least five years, the terms to be negotiated, Jenkins said. No rent would be due but the town could recoup utility and other costs.

In addition to the current settlement agreement, the town in 2020 settled a lawsuit by an African American man who was stopped on Main Street in 2013 and arrested on drug charges, only to have the Vermont Supreme Court overturn his conviction saying the traffic stop was improperly extended.

The town’s insurer paid $30,000 as part of that settlement agreement.

And the American Civil Liberties Union of Vermont has filed a complaint with the HRC on behalf of a biracial couple alleging racially motivated targeting and harassment by Bennington police. The complaint alleged multiple tickets issued to Joel Fowler, who is Black.

Fowler and his girlfriend, Cassandra Keating, have accused the Select Board of retaliating against them for filing complaints against the BPD by publicizing their names and private information about them. The HRC has agreed to investigate their complaint.

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Thousands of Myanmar villagers poised to flee violence to Thailand, group says - Reuters

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Thousands of ethnic Karen villagers in Myanmar are poised to cross into Thailand if, as expected, fighting intensifies between the Myanmar army and Karen insurgents, joining those who have already escaped the turmoil that followed a Feb. 1 coup.

The U.N. humanitarian office said on Friday that in all about 56,000 people have been displaced by conflict in Myanmar this year while another U.N. agency warned that the coronavirus and the political crisis could push nearly half the population into poverty.

Karen rebels and the Myanmar army have clashed near the Thai border in the most intense fighting in the area in 25 years, in the wake of a military coup that ousted an elected government led by Aung San Suu Kyi.

Villagers on both sides of the border have been forced from their homes.

"People say the Burmese will come and shoot us, so we fled here," Chu Wah, a Karen villager who crossed over to Thailand with his family this week from the Ee Thu Hta displacement camp in Myanmar, told Reuters.

"I had to flee across the river," Chu Wah said, referring to the Salween river that forms the border in the area.

The Karen Peace Support Network says thousands of villagers are taking shelter on the Myanmar side of the Salween and they will flee to Thailand if the fighting escalates.

"In coming days, more than 8,000 Karen along the Salween river will have to flee to Thailand. We hope that the Thai army will help them escape the war," the group said in a Facebook post.

Karen fighters on Tuesday overran a Myanmar army unit on the west bank of the Salween in a pre-dawn attack. The Karen said 13 soldiers and three of their fighters were killed. The Myanmar military responded with air strikes in several areas near the Thai border.

Thailand's foreign ministry spokesman said 2,267 civilians had crossed into Thailand as of Friday since the latest conflict began. Many more have taken refuge in forest on the Myanmar side.

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said some 40,000 people had been displaced by the conflict in eastern Myanmar while another 11,000 have been displaced by fighting in the north and 5,800 in the northeast.

Villagers who fled Myanmar's Ee Thu Hta displacement camp rest in Mae Hong Son province, Thailand, near the border while fleeing from gunfire between ethnic minority Karen insurgents and Myanmar military, April 29, 2021. REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha

The inhabitants of two Thai villages close to the border have also fled from their homes, the Thai ministry spokesman, Tanee Sangrat, told a briefing, with 220 people still seeking refuge deeper in Thai territory for safety.

"The situation has escalated so we can't go back," said Warong Tisakul, 33, a Thai villager from Mae Sam Laep, a settlement, now abandoned, opposite the Myanmar army post attacked this week.

NORTHERN CLASHES

Heavy clashes have also been taking place in the north of Myanmar between government forces and ethnic Kachin insurgents.

Media reported heavy casualties among government troops in recent days but a spokesman for the Kachin Independence Army insurgent group said he could not confirm any figures.

"There will be casualties on both sides," the spokesman, Naw Bu, said by telephone.

The Karen, Kachin and several other insurgent groups have come out in support of the pro-democracy protesters who have been taking to the streets in towns and cities across the country to oppose the return of military rule.

The security forces have killed at least 759 protesters since the coup, the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners activist group says. Reuters is unable to confirm the casualty toll.

The military, which ruled for almost 50 years until launching a tentative reform process a decade ago, has acknowledged the death of some protesters, killed after they initiated violence, it says. Several members of the security forces have been killed in the protests, the military says.

The U.N. Development Programme (UNDP) warned that the impact of the pandemic and the political crisis could see as many as 25 million Myanmar people slide into poverty by 2022.

“The development gains made during a decade of democratic transition, however imperfect it may have been, is being erased in a matter of months,” U.N. Assistant Secretary-General and UNDP Regional Director Kanni Wignaraja told Reuters.

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