MeN9S CoLLeGe baSketbaLL georgetown ends its skid by beating mount st. mary9s, but new coach ed cooley is seeking much more. D9 oN the NfL if the sputtering Bills can9t turn things around, more change could be coming, Jason La canfora writes. D5 CoLLeGe footbaLL James madison9s hopes for an undefeated season end, and Florida state loses star QB Jordan travis. D3 KLMNO SP su OR nday, november 19, 2023 TS m2 D 1 georgia 38 minnesota 3 n. alabama 13 5 washington 22 6 oregon 49 7 texas 26 chattanooga 10 Florida 31 10 Louisville 38 n.c. state 35 duke 27 east carolina 0 18 tennessee 10 2 ohio state 37 4 Florida st. 58 11 oregon st. 20 arizona state 13 iowa state 16 8 alabama 66 9 missouri 33 miami 31 Virginia tech 28 Virginia 30 navy 10 BY BAILEY JOHNSON The Washington Capitals had won three straight games heading into saturday night9s matchup with the Columbus Blue Jackets, and each followed a similar pattern. In all three, the Capitals scored first, carried the lead into the third period and then spent long stretches defending frantically, leaning on their goaltender to secure the victory. After each game, Coach spencer Carbery and his players emphasized that surviving lategame chaos wasn9tasustainable long-term plan. But whenasimilar pattern played out against Columbus at Capital one Arena, the Capitals again did enough to eke out a 4-3 win. Washington goaltender Charlie Lindgren made 33 saves for his fourth win of the season. <Generally you can feel when your group is locked in. . . . I still felt like that game was hanging in the balance [withatwo-goal lead]. ... Credit to our guys,= Carbery said. <Again, third period, [we] buckle down, five-onsix, penalty kill does a good job. Chuckie was solid again, and we find a way to win it.= neither team found the score sheet in the first period. Johnny Gaudreau put Columbus ahead at 3:27 of the second, firing a slap shot through a screen and past Lindgren on a delayed penalty. But it took less than two minutes for Washington to strike back with a goal by former Blue Jacket sonny Milano. He received a pass from Aliaksei Protas along the bottom of the left circle, and he didn9t hesitate to shoot from the tight angle. Milano spotted some space inside the far post, and that was all he needed to tie the score. Milano9s goal seemed to spark Washington offensively. Protas scored off the rush, a wrister that went off the inside of the crossbar and flew out of the net as the sEE capiTalS on d8 Caps beat Columbus in another squeaker Capitals 4, Blue jaCkets 3 Washington holds on for fourth straight victory Sabres at Capitals wednesday, 7 p.m., monumental BY NICKI JHABVALA sam Howell had two seconds to field the snap, drop back three steps and turn to his first read before seattle seahawks safety Jamal Adams barreled toward him at full speed. Howell9s eyes scanned the right side of the field, where he found wide receiver Terry McLaurin surrounded by three defenders, and the middle, where tight end John Bates had nestled in for a possible throw. But by then, Adams had closed in on Howell and grabbed his right arm. Had Howell hung in the pocket a fraction of a second longer, he would9ve been sacked. Instead, he improvised, turning 180 degrees to scramble left and see whether another target would open up. His move lured seattle linebacker Boye Mafe down toward the line just enough that running back Brian Robinson Jr. could slip behind him and takeashort pass 51 yards for a touchdown. <We9re always telling sam to keep his eyes downfield, and then there9s hot spots that we9re trying to hit when those scramble drills are taking place,= Commanders offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy said. <. . . Those are the things that you love, because there9s growth.= Bieniemy and Coach Ron Rivera have often used the words <growth= and <development= to describe their team 4 especially their second-year quarterback. In only 11 career starts, Howell has become the focal point of a franchise that for years has toiled in quarterback purgatory. since the turn of the century, Washington has started 27 quarterbacks. Howell is its eighth starter since Rivera took over in 2020, and so far he has inspired more optimism than any quarterback in years. He leads all quarterbacks with sEE coMManderS on d8 Howell9s steady improvement providescause for optimism Quarterback has shown arm strength and smarts for the Commanders BY ADAM KILGORE The MinnesotaVikings9 offense includes plays coaches refer to as <deep cuts.= They can be deployed in any game and are so ingrained that they need not be installed and practiced each week 4 <always alive,= in coaches9 parlance. Minnesota relies on deep cuts when it operates its two-minute offense. Every Vikings offensive player should know them, unless he is a quarterback who arrived four days before kickoff and was given a backup9s preparation. Two sundays ago, the singular life of Joshua Dobbs funneled to that singular moment. He had learned some of his teammates9 names and parts of the Vikings9 offense as he quarterbacked an nFL team to a four-point deficit with 2:08 remaining. Quarterbacks coach Chris o9Hara grabbed a whiteboard he hadn9t previously known was kept on the sideline. He drew one deep cut using circles for wideouts, then erased it and drew another. Circles, erase. Circles, erase. Amid the bedlam of an nFL sideline, Dobbs downloaded chunks of sEE doBBS on d7 After a winding journey, Dobbs9scareer ûnally lifts ob In his seventh season, the former NASA intern has his moment arrive with the Vikings adam Bettcher/getty images Quarterback Joshua dobbs led the Vikings to a win in his first start for Minnesota last Sunday. Giants at Commanders 1 p.m., Fox Jonathan newton/the washington Post Tailback Blake corum ran for 94 yards and two touchdowns to lead Michigan, which limited Maryland to 15 yards on 33 carries on senior day. Maryland at Rutgers saturday, 3:30 p.m., Btn BY GENE WANG With 96 yards to go and Maryland seeking an improbable comeback to secure what would have been a program-defining win against no. 3 Michigan,Terrapins quarterback Taulia Tagovailoa found himself under duress in his team9s end zone late in the fourth quarter saturday afternoon. The record-setting redshirt senior tossed the ball into the flat to avoid a sack, but because there was not an eligible receiver in the area, the officials assessed an intentional grounding penalty that resulted in a safety. Most importantly, the call returned possession of the ball to the Wolverines, who ran out the clock to deal Maryland a 31-24 loss at sECU sEE Maryland on d5 Terps hang tough but can9t pull off upset of third-ranked Wolverines hearts and minds of Americans, spent the past month as the victims of the season9s wildest scandal. They saved their fight not for a courtroom but for the gridiron, where they showed Maryland the gritty might of ... sigh, I9m sorry.Ijust can9t anymore. The chuckling can probably be heard throughout College Park because there is no way anyone should write about this team and this moment without breaking into fits of hysterical laughter. sEE Buckner on d5 With their undefeated record on the line, their integrity called into question and their leader banished to a hotel room, the Michigan Wolverines turned back a storm of adversity saturday afternoon to post the 1,000th win in program history. These embattled Wolverines, third in the College Football Playoff ranking but first in the In Michigan sign-stealing dramedy, laughter is truly the best medicine Candace Buckner Falling short, again MiChigan 31, Maryland 24
D2 eZ M2 the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 gOLF Woods says he9ll play in his Bahamas event Tiger Woods showed he could walk four days while caddying for his son. Now he has decided he is fit enough to try to play. Woods announced on social media Saturday that he will be playing in the Hero World Challenge, which starts Nov. 30 at Albany Golf Club in the Bahamas. It will be his first time competing since he withdrew before the third round at the Masters after battling the wind and cold while playing on his injured right leg. His TGR company announced his decision to take a sponsor exemption. The 20-man field is for the top 50 in the world ranking, though the tournament host 4 Woods 4 is exempt. The Hero World Challenge is 72 holes with no cut. Woods, 47, said in an interview last week that his right ankle is pain-free after being fused in a surgery in April following the Masters. Woods recently caddied for his son, Charlie, at the Notah Begay III Junior Golf Championship, sparking speculation that he was close to playing again. . . . In Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Matt Wallace of England made a 30-foot birdie putt on the 10th hole and did not stop until he birdied the rest of them, tying a DP World Tour best with nine birdies in a row for a 12- under-par 60 that shot him into the lead at the season-ending DP World Tour Championship. <That was fun,= Wallace said as he walked off the 18th green on the Earth course at Jumeirah Golf Estates. Even better was the 54-hole lead when Tommy Fleetwood, Viktor Hovland and 36-hole leader Nicolai Hojgaard could not catch him. Wallace finished at 16-under 200 and led by one shot over Fleetwood and Hovland, who each had a 66. Hojgaard had a 70. The European tour records are nine consecutive birdies by James Nitties of Australia in the 2019 Vic Open and 12 birdies for a round by Raphaël Jacquelin in the 2013 Turkish Open. Wallace matched both those marks, but they will not be listed as official records because of preferred lies due to the turf softened by overnight rain. . . . In St. Simons Island, Ga., Ludvig Aberg ran off four birdies and an eagle over a five-hole stretch on the back nine, not so much to pull away but just to keep pace. He had a 9-under 61 for a one-shot lead on an extraordinary day of low scoring at the RSM Classic. Mackenzie Hughes narrowly missed a putt for 59. Eric Cole flirted briefly with a sub-60 round as a half-dozen players had at least a share of the lead at some point. Asberg was at 20-under 192, one shot ahead of Cole (61) and two clear of Hughes (60). . . . In Naples, Fla., Nasa Hataoka had a strong start and Amy Yang had a hot finish, ending up with a share of the lead at the LPGA Tour Championship with 18 holes remaining. Yang had four birdies on her final six holes for an 8-under 64. Hataoka set the pace early with five birdies in her first 11 holes and finished with a 65. They were at 21-under 195, three shots better than Alison Lee, who shot a 68. teNNis Top-ranked Novak Djokovic will be bidding for a recordbreaking seventh ATP Finals title when he takes on home favorite Jannik Sinner in Sunday9s final after both won their semifinal matches in Turin, Italy. Djokovic took less than 90 minutes to defeat Carlos Alcaraz, 6-3, 6-2, in a match between the two top-ranked players after Sinner had dispatched Daniil Medvedev, 6-3, 6-7 (7-4), 6-1. WiNteR sPORts Manuel Feller led an Austrian sweep of the podium at a men9s World Cup slalom in Gurgl, Austria. Feller held on to his first-run lead to beat teammate Marco Schwarz by 0.23 seconds, while Michael Matt was 1.05 behind in third place. . . . Strong winds forced the cancellation of a women9s World Cup downhill in Laghi Cime Bianche, Italy, a week after two men9s races on the same course were wiped out because of snowfalls and gusts. COLLeges Harvard9s Graham Blanks won the men9s race and Florida9s Parker Valby won the women9s at the NCAA cross-country championships in Charlottesville, while the Oklahoma State men and North Carolina State women captured team titles. Blanks is the first Ivy League man to win the NCAA title. 4 From news services Digest teLeVisiON aND RaDiO NFL 1 p.m. New York giants at Washington » WTTG (ch. 5), WBFF (ch. 45), WBiG (100.3 FM) 1 p.m. Pittsburgh at Cleveland » WUSA (ch. 9), WJZ (ch. 13) 4:25 p.m. New York Jets at Buffalo » WUSA (ch. 9), WJZ (ch. 13) 8:20 p.m. Minnesota at Denver » Wrc (ch. 4), WBAL (ch. 11), WJFK (106.7 FM) NBa 8 p.m. Phoenix at utah » nBA TV NHL 8 a.m. toronto vs. Minnesota » nHL network 6 p.m. Vegas at Pittsburgh » nHL network MeN9s COLLege BasKetBaLL 10:30 a.m. Myrtle Beach invitational, fifth place: Wyoming vs. Furman » eSPnU noon Baha Mar, third place: Providence vs. georgia » cBS Sports network 1 p.m. 2K sports Classic, semifinal: Connecticut vs. indiana » eSPn 1 p.m. Hall of Fame tip-Off, final: Mississippi state vs. Northwestern » eSPn2 2:30 p.m. Baha Mar, final: Kansas state vs. Miami » cBS Sports network 3 p.m. Charleston Classic, fifth place: Lsu vs. Wake Forest » eSPn2 3:30 p.m. 2K sports Classic, semifinal: texas vs. Louisville » eSPn 3:30 p.m. Hall of Fame tip-Off, third place: Washington state vs. Rhode island » eSPnU 4 p.m. Western Michigan at Ohio state » Big Ten network 4:30 p.m. arizona tip-Off, third place: DePaul vs. san Francisco » cBS Sports network 4:30 p.m. american at georgetown » Fox Sports 2, WTeM (980 AM) 5 p.m. Wofford at Virginia tech » WJFK (106.7 FM) 5:30 p.m. Charleston Classic, third place: st. John9s vs. utah » eSPn 5:30 p.m. Myrtle Beach invitational, final: Vermont vs. Liberty » eSPn2 6 p.m. alcorn state at Michigan state » Big Ten network 6 p.m. HBCu tip-Off, final: Virginia union vs. Winston-salem state » eSPnU 7 p.m. arizona tip-Off, final: south Carolina vs. grand Canyon » cBS Sports network 8 p.m. Myrtle Beach invitational, third place: saint Louis vs. Wichita state » eSPn2 8 p.m. southern at illinois » Big Ten network 8:30 p.m. Charleston Classic, final: Dayton vs. Houston » eSPn 10 p.m. Main event, final: Washington vs. san Diego state » eSPn2 WOMeN9s COLLege BasKetBaLL noon syracuse at Maryland » Big Ten network 2 p.m. Creighton at Nebraska » Big Ten network 2 p.m. Oklahoma at Virginia » Acc network 3 p.m. Duke at stanford » WJLA (ch. 7), WMAr (ch. 2) 4 p.m. Bucknell at Louisville » Acc network 5 p.m. Connecticut at Minnesota » Fox Sports 1 7 p.m. Drake at iowa » Fox Sports 1 gOLF 1 p.m. Pga tour: RsM Classic, final round » Golf channel 1 p.m. LPga tour: tour Championship, final round » Wrc (ch. 4), WBAL (ch. 11) sOCCeR 9 a.m. ueFa euro qualifying, group g: Montenegro at Hungary » Fox Sports 1 noon ueFa euro qualifying, group F: azerbaijan at Belgium » Fox Sports 1 2:45 p.m. ueFa euro qualifying, group F: Norway at scotland » Fox Sports 1 3:30 a.m. (Monday) FiFa under-17 World Cup, round of 16: ecuador vs. Brazil » Fox Sports 1 teNNis 9 a.m. atP Finals, doubles final » Tennis channel 12:30 p.m. atP Finals, singles final » Tennis channel NBa g League 5 p.m. santa Cruz at g League ignite » nBA TV COLLege FieLD HOCKeY 1:30 p.m. NCaa tournament, final: Northwestern at North Carolina » eSPnU WOMeN9s COLLege VOLLeYBaLL noon syracuse at georgia tech » Acc network 2 p.m. tennessee at texas a&M » Sec network 4 p.m. Florida at arkansas » Sec network 8:30 p.m. MeaC, final: Howard at Delaware state » eSPnU BY CHUCK CULPEPPER KnOXVILLe, Tenn. 4 Grab the shovel and dig out that clunky word <three-peat,= which apparently does have recognition from the Oxford English Dictionary. Start throwing it around on radio shows and podcasts and chatrooms and in the presence of beer 4 especially in the presence of beer. The way Georgia looked in its display of the football arts here Saturday 4 methodical, lovely and brutish all at once 4 justifies giving the word a new go. What a go it should be. Nobody in college football has <three-peated= since 1936, when Coach Bernie Bierman9s Minnesota did it, and the difficulty of the task has blared ever since, such as when Earl Blaik9s Army held down No. 1 to the last Associated Press poll in 1946 but Notre Dame pipped it or when Pete Carroll9s Southern California got one play away at a kaleidoscopic Vince Young Rose Bowl in January 2006. Well, here9s No. 1 Georgia, 11-0 after its 38-10 mastery of No. 18 Tennessee, and here9s twice-defending national champion Georgia, improving by the game, and here9s dynastic Georgia, its winning streak luxuriating at 28 even if its players don9t luxuriate in it. Here9s first-year starting quarterback Carson Beck looking like the maestro Coach Kirby Smart long has seen in him, and here9s that defense with its people who look like a realm above even the top of college football, and now here9s Dillon Bell, too. <I9m a hard worker,= Bell, a sophomore wide receiver, said late Saturday, <and when the team needs me to step up, I won9t hesitate to do that.= The country might not see Bell a whole heap of a lot from here, once first-team Ladd McConkey returns from injury to his rightful leading role, but Bell managed to epitomize the Bulldogs at Neyland Stadium. He gave another hint at the frightfulness of their depth chart. He arrived off the bus as the team9s eighth-leading receiver at 14 catches for 127 yards and a touchdown, after becoming the ninth-leading receiver last year at 20 catches for 180 yards and three touchdowns. He finished looking pretty much like Jerry Freaking Rice. He finished with five catches for 90 yards and a nine-yard touchdown reception, a brilliant 21-yard catch up the right sideline on a third-and-12 play, and even one completion in one pass attempt for an 18-yard touchdown pass that put Georgia ahead for good at 10-7 in the first quarter. His successful pass took him back to high school in Houston, where he threw three touchdown passes as a senior 4 on plays similar, he said, to the one where Beck whipped him a pitch on an apparent end around and Bell headed right and the entire defense of Tennessee plus the 101,915 fans plus the city government of Knoxville seemed to get fooled and bunch around the line while wide receiver Marcus Rosemy-Jacksaint ran alone into the end zone. The floating ball landed to Rosemy-Jacksaint, and Georgia can do this stuff, too? Georgia can do most anything, it seems, as it takes its mission seriously toward a bout with Georgia Tech, an SEC championship scrap with Alabama in Atlanta and maybe a College Football Playoff berth. As it smiled for a while before foraging into that, next to Smart for a CBS interview stood Beck but also Bell, whom Smart gripped around the shoulder in a wildly approving halfhug. Into the tunnel just about last among players exiting went Bell, perhaps unknown to casual Georgia fans before Saturday but now fist-bumping those along the front rows even if he looked a tad bashful doing so. <Great competitor,= the eighth-year Georgia head coach said. <When his name9s called, he9s ready.= And so: <He stepped up big today. We continue to have guys do that when other guys go down.= <That was a big confidence [boost],= Bell said of his throw. <That was a whole game changer right there. You know, our confidence 4 wow, he caught it, and it just shut the crowd [up].= <We9ve been working on it for a while,= Beck said. <We just haven9t called it.= And so: <I was like, 8Please, don9t overthrow it.9 = And so: <I kind of looked at it out of the corner of my eye, 8That9s a touchdown.9 = <I feel like I got a pretty decent arm, you know?= Bell said with a nice grin. <I feel like I can throw the ball a little bit.= With Brock Bowers back from injury and mighty at tight end (seven catches for 60 yards and a touchdown), and Georgia already No. 1 nationally in thirddown conversion rate (and 9 for 13 Saturday), and the Georgia defense a Georgia defense, people do strain to worry. There9s the quirk that the Bulldogs have allowed their past five opponents an opening touchdown: Vanderbilt at the 12:07 mark of the first quarter, Florida at 11:19, Missouri at 5:45, Mississippi at 10:30 and Tennessee at 14:49, which enabled Smart to wisecrack afterward about having instructed, <Let9s get it over with.= Tennessee started with the ball, quarterback Joe Milton handed to his left to running back Jaylen Wright, Wright burst into a gap left unattended, and Wright finished his run in the famed checkerboard end zone 11 seconds into the game. <Good call,= senior defensive back Tykee Smith said. <Good play-call formation. . . . You live and you learn. You9re going to make mistakes.= It does not and cannot dent their confidence. <I really believe our culture9s our difference,= Smart said. <Everybody will say it9s players. I really don9t think it9s just players.= It9s the players, and, as Beck said it, <We9re very bought into the mission.= A standard lives and breathes, and it9s a towering construction. <Obviously,= Beck said, <we9ve been executing at a high level for three years now.= <All we9re trying to do,= Smart said, <is find the best version of ourselves.= Observers can note Beck <evolving= into looking like a champ like his predecessor Stetson Bennett 4 Beck9s a big, impressive dude in person 4 but Smart has seen that a long while, and said, <His evolution was two years ago [in practice] when he was out there getting blitzed by eight first-rounders [on Georgia9s defense].= They move on toward victory No. 29 and maybe even title No. 3 if they can get it in Atlanta, and they move on while <levelheaded,= Smart said, without worrying or yammering about the streak. As for the head coach, he said, <It9s fun tonight,= but not so much during the weeks when, he said: <You get tighter and tighter and tighter as the week goes. I9m not comfortable. I don9t go into games comfortable.= Smart has noted more than once of late, <It9s hard to win.= He said early Saturday night, <I don9t appreciate it sometimes,= but he added that other coaches tell him, <It9s hard to do what y9all have done.= He said: <People have letdowns. They have bad games.= This past Tuesday, Georgia had a <not-so-great practice,= because, <Tuesday, I felt like our team was tired.= Thank goodness for sustenance, of which Smart said, <That9s one thing I can control as a coach is how we sustain, how we retain.= He loves his team9s capacity at <taking a punch,= which he finds <way, way, way more indicative of who you are, taking a punch, than giving a punch.= All the taking and all the giving has led him and his bunch and his standard and his culture way, way, way down the road toward that word this competitive playoff era seemed to make implausible. You know, that word. Bulldogs win, talk of three-peat grows gEoRgIA 38, tENNEssEE 10 WAde PAyne/ASSociATed PreSS <When his name9s called, he9s ready,= Coach Kirby Smart said of wideout Dillon Bell, who had a touchdown catch and threw for a score. BY JIMMY ROBERTSON BLaCKSBURG, Va. 4 Brennan Armstrong threw two touchdown passes and rushed for two scores to lead North Carolina State to a 35-28 victory over Virginia Tech on Saturday. Armstrong accounted for 292 yards for the Wolfpack (8-3, 5-2 ACC), which scored touchdowns on five consecutive possessions spanning both halves and never trailed in winning its fourth consecutive game. The Wolfpack now has won at least eight games in four straight seasons for the first time in program history and is 4-0 since its bye week. <We just had to pick this program basically out of the trash,= said Wolfpack linebacker Payton Thomas, who finished with 11 tackles and a sack. <We all weren9t doing our part. We all weren9t bought in. And that bye week hit, and the coaches got on us and showed us what we could do. You kind of see the result of it.= Kyron Drones led Virginia Tech (5-6, 4-3) with 225 yards passing and three touchdowns. The Hokies had won three of four coming into the game. <We didn9t play well enough in the first half, particularly on defense,= Virginia Tech Coach Brent Pry said. <We got behind far too much. I9m proud of the way the guys continued to fight and battle. . . . Resilient effort. We9ve got to do some things better as coaches and players. The first part of the game, they were able to control the ball and kept us off balance defensively.= Armstrong threw touchdown passes of three and 28 yards to KC Concepcion and added two one-yard scoring runs against the Hokies. He completed 18 of 26 passes for 203 yards and rushed for 89 yards. Behind Armstrong, the Wolfpack finished with 408 total yards, its second-best output this season. <He9s just having fun,= N.C. State Coach Dave Doeren said. <He had such a tough year last year. I think he had such a desire to fix that, and sometimes you press. It9s, 8I9ve got to be better. I9ve got to be better,9 but that9s not how you get better. You play better by doing what the offense needs for you to do and letting your skill set be your skill set. . . . Just play the game. Play with your teammates and enjoy it, and that9s what he9s doing now.= Armstrong lost his starting job after subpar play in the first five games this season, but MJ Morris decided to take a redshirt season after leading North Carlina State to a win over Miami on Nov. 4, giving Armstrong a second chance. Armstrong won both starts since returning to the starting role, completing 30 of 43 passes in that span for 316 yards and three touchdowns and rushing for 185 yards and three scores. He did not turn the ball over in either game. Partly because of a soft nonconference schedule and partly because the bottom half of the ACC is awful this season, the Hokies have played three good teams (Florida State, Louisville and North Carolina State) and lost all three games. They will need a victory over rival Virginia in the regular season finale to become bowl eligible. <We can9t hang our heads and feel sorry for ourselves,= Pry said. <It hurts. We didn9t play our best. We9ve got to watch the film and correct the things that need correcting. We9ve got to be better at winning our one-on-one battles. We have to be an improved team when we go over there Saturday.= 4 Associated Press Hokies miss opportunity to clinch bowl eligibility N.C. stAtE 35, VIRgINIA tECH 28 Virginia tech at Virginia Saturday, time and TV TBA
sunday, november 19, 2023 . the washington post eZ m2 d3 college football l IOWA 15, ILLINOIS 13: Kaleb Johnson9s 30-yard touchdown run with 4:43 to play gave the No. 16 Hawkeyes (9-2, 6-2 Big Ten) a victory over the Fighting Illini (5-6, 3-5) in Iowa City, clinching the conference9s West Division. l ARIZONA 42, UTAH 18: Noah Fifita threw for two touchdowns and the No. 17 Wildcats (8-3, 6-2 Pac-12) used a fast start to rout the No. 22 Utes (7-4, 4-4) in Tucson for their first five-game winning streak since 2014. l NOTRE DAME 45, WAKE FOREST 7: Sam Hartman tormented his former team, passing for 277 yards and four touchdowns to lead the No. 19 Fighting Irish (8-3) to a rout of the Demon Deacons (4-7) in South Bend, Ind. l CLEMSON 31, NORTH CAROLINA 20: Cade Klubnik threw for 219 yards and a touchdown as the Tigers (7-4, 4-4 ACC) held the high-scoring No. 20 Tar Heels (8-3, 4-3) to their fewest points this season in a home win. l KANSAS STATE 31, KANSAS 27: Will Howard threw two touchdown passes and ran for the go-ahead score, and the No. 21 Wildcats took advantage of two special teams blunders to rally past the No. 25 Jayhawks in Lawrence for their 15th straight win in the Sunflower Showdown. l OKLAHOMA STATE 43, HOUSTON 30: Alan Bowman threw for 348 yards and two touchdowns, Ollie Gordon II rushed for 164 yards and three second-half scores, and the No. 23 Cowboys (8-3, 6-2 Big 12) kept their conference title hopes alive with a win at the Cougars (4-7, 2-6). l TULANE 24, FLORIDA ATLANTIC 8: Michael Pratt became the career passing leader for the No. 24 Green Wave (10-1, 7-0 American Athletic Conference), throwing for three touchdowns to key a victory over the Owls (4-7, 3-4) in Boca Raton, Fla. ASSOCIATED PRESS Michael Penix Jr. threw for two touchdowns and ran for another, and Washington, No. 5 in the College Football Playoff rankings, remained undefeated and clinched a spot in the Pac-12 championship game with a 22-20 victory over No. 11 Oregon State on Saturday in Corvallis, Ore. Rome Odunze had seven catches for 106 yards and two touchdowns for the Huskies (11-0, 8-0 Pac-12), who have won 18 straight games. Penix completed 13 of 28 passes for 162 yards. He has thrown for 30 touchdowns this season. Damien Martinez rushed for 123 yards and two touchdowns for the Beavers (8-3, 5-3), who were effectively eliminated from a shot at the conference title. The loss snapped a nine-game home winning streak. Oregon State pulled within two points on Atticus Sappington9s 35-yard field goal with 10:40 left. Washington was forced to punt on the next series, but the Beavers fell short when DJ Uiagalelei9s fourthand-five pass to Jack Velling at midfield was incomplete. The win kept the Huskies alone atop the Pac-12 in front of No. 6 Oregon, which also has national championship aspirations. The Ducks have just one loss 4 to Washington in October in Seattle. l OHIO STATE 37, MINNESOTA 3: TreVeyon Henderson ran for 146 yards and two touchdowns and Kyle McCord passed for 212 yards and two scores, leading the No. 2 Buckeyes (11-0, 8-0 Big Ten) over the Golden Gophers (5-6, 3-5) in Columbus, Ohio. Next up for Ohio State is a trip to Ann Arbor to face third-ranked Michigan. The Wolverines beat the Buckeyes the past two seasons. l OREGON 49, ARIZONA STATE 13: Bo Nix threw for 404 yards and a career-high six touchdowns, Patrick Herbert and Troy Franklin each caught two touchdown passes, and the No. 6 Ducks (10-1, 7-1 Pac-12) crushed the Sun Devils (3-8, 2-6) in Tempe, Ariz. Oregon buried Arizona State with an avalanche of offense on the way to a 42-0 lead, scoring touchdowns on its first six drives and gaining 444 total yards. l TEXAS 26, IOWA STATE 16: Quinn Ewers passed for 281 yards and two touchdowns, and the No. 7 Longhorns (10-1, 7-1 Big 12) pulled away from the Cyclones (6-5, 5-3) to win in Ames, Iowa. CJ Baxter rushed for 117 yards in the fifth straight victory for Texas, which is alone atop the Big 12 and one step closer to the conference title game. l ALABAMA 66, CHATTANOOGA 10: Jalen Milroe launched a 56-yard bomb to Jermaine Burton on the first play and finished with 197 yards and three touchdowns before sitting out the second half for the No. 8 Crimson Tide (10-1) in a rout of the Mocs (7-4) in Tuscaloosa, Ala. national roundup Unbeaten Huskies clinch spot in Pac-12 title game wAShingTOn 22, OregOn STATe 20 Milroe completed his first 10 passes, with throws of 56 and 44 yards to Burton, and he finished his outing 13 for 16. Burton caught three passes for 105 yards, all by halftime. l MISSOURI 33, FLORIDA 31: Brady Cook threw for 326 yards and a touchdown, and Harrison Mevis kicked a 30-yard field goal with five seconds remaining to lift the No. 9 Tigers (9-2, 5-2 SEC) past the Gators (5-6, 3-5) in Columbia, Mo. Cody Schrader carried the ball 23 times for 148 yards and a touchdown, Luther Burden III caught nine passes for 158 yards, and Mevis converted all four of his field goal attempts as Missouri narrowly avoided its first loss to an unranked opponent. l LOUISVILLE 38, MIAMI 31: Jack Plummer threw three scoring passes, the last of them a 58-yarder to Kevin Coleman with 4:17 remaining, as the No. 10 Cardinals (10-1, 7-1 ACC) clinched a spot in the conference title game by beating the Hurricanes (6-5, 2-5) in Miami Gardens, Fla. It9s the first ACC title game berth for the Cardinals, who will play No. 4 Florida State in Charlotte on Dec. 2. l PENN STATE 27, RUTGERS 6: Kaytron Allen ran for two touchdowns, Alex Felkins kicked a pair of field goals, and the No. 12 Nittany Lions (9-2, 6-2 Big Ten) pulled away from the Scarlet Knights (6-5, 3-5) in State College, Pa., after quarterback Drew Allar left with an apparent injury. l MISSISSIPPI 35, LOUISIANA MONROE 3: Jaxson Dart threw for touchdowns on three straight third-quarter series as the No. 13 Rebels (9-2) used a strong second half to defeat the Warhawks (2-9) in Oxford, Miss. l OKLAHOMA 31, BYU 24: The No. 14 Sooners (9-2, 6-2 Big 12) scored 21 points off three turnovers to edge the Cougars (5-6, 2-6) in Provo, Utah, despite playing the second half without quarterback Dillon Gabriel. l LSU 56, GEORGIA STATE 14: Senior quarterback Jayden Daniels added to his Heisman Trophy credentials by piling up 509 yards, throwing for six touchdowns and rushing for two scores as the No. 15 Tigers (8-3) blew out the Panthers (6-5) in Baton Rouge. tom HAuck/getty imAges Michael Penix Jr., left, threw a pair of touchdown passes to Rome Odunze in Washington9s 11th win. BY BOB FERRANTE TaLLaHaSSEE 4 Florida State, No. 4 in the College Football Playoff ranking, lost star quarterback Jordan Travis to a leg injury in the first quarter, yet rallied behind backup Tate Rodemaker and beat North Alabama, 58-13, on Saturday night. Travis suffered what appeared to be a major injury to his left knee/leg on a run up the middle late in the first quarter in what would a devastating blow for the Seminoles (11-0). After an air cast was placed on the leg, Travis was carted off. There was no official update from Coach Mike Norvell on Travis9s injury at halftime, although he told the CW Network at the intermission that <obviously it didn9t look good.= Rodemaker completed 13 of 23 passes for 217 yards with touchdown throws to Keon Coleman and Caziah Holmes as the Seminoles won their 17th straight game. CJ Campbell had a 70-yard touchdown run, and Lawrance Toafili, Trey Benson and Holmes also had rushing scores. Travis, a Heisman Trophy contender, was tackled after a scramble to about midfield, and his leg was caught underneath a defender. Travis immediately pointed to his left leg, and medical staff rushed onto the field. Teammates and coaches looked distraught on the field. <Obviously, our thoughts are with Jordan right now, but I was proud with how our guys fought back,= Norvell told the CW at halftime. Travis, a fifth-year senior, is Florida State9s career leader in offensive yards (10,553). Senior defensive back Jarrian Jones forced a fumble to set up a first-half touchdown, and his second-half interception set up another score. Noah Walters completed 13 of 26 passes with touchdown throws to Takairee Kennebrew and J.J. Evans. But North Alabama (3-8) punted nine times. The Lions had 172 offensive yards on their first three drives, including a pair of touchdowns. They finished with 226 offensive yards. The Seminoles racked up 521 offensive yards, their fifth game surpassing the 500-yard mark. 4 Associated Press Seminoles cruise, but star Travis injures leg FlOridA STATe 58, nOrTh AlAbAMA 13 BY SHANE METTLEN HaRRISONBURG, Va. 4 Kaedin Robinson barely broke the goal line with the football before it squirted out of his hands, scoring the winning touchdown in overtime as Appalachian State beat previously undefeated James Madison, 26-23, on Saturday. James Madison (10-1, 6-1 Sun Belt) jumped ahead in overtime when Camden Wise booted a 25-yard field goal, giving the Dukes a 23-20 lead. But on third down from the 8-yard line, Appalachian State9s Joey Aguilar tossed a strike to Robinson, who made the catch at the 5 and broke two tackles before stepping on the goal line for the winning touchdown and then losing control of the ball. A video review held up the call, and James Madison9s 13-game winning streak ended, a disappointing finish to a big day in Harrisonburg. JMU hosted ESPN9s <College GameDay,= and it became a commercial for the Dukes9 odd postseason predicament. JMU9s appeal for a postseason waiver was denied by the NCAA last week. The Virginia attorney general hired a law firm that is arguing for JMU9s inclusion in bowl consideration based on the Dukes9 record, national ranking and success in its two-year process reclassifying from the Football Championship Subdivision to the Football Bowl Subdivision, the game9s top tier. Teams in transition are not permitted to play for their conference championship or appear in a bowl, but JMU could reach the postseason if there are not enough bowl-eligible teams. Without a loss, the Dukes were hoping to be considered for a New Year9s Six bowl and to play for a Sun Belt title. Robinson finished with four catches for 68 yards and two touchdowns. Aguilar was 28 for 46 passing for 318 yards and three touchdowns with an interception for Appalachian State (7-4, 5-2), which kept its Sun Belt East hopes alive. <It9s a big win for our program against a ranked football team in James Madison,= Appalachian State Coach Shawn Clark said. <I was very proud of everyone involved. This was not an upset.= Jordan McCloud was 27 of 46 passing for 276 yards with a touchdown and interception for JMU. Elijah Sarratt had eight catches 4 including two that helped force overtime 4 for 128 yards and a touchdown for James Madison. <Give our guys a lot of credit, coming back the way they did and forcing overtime, they made some sensational plays on that last drive,= JMU Coach Curt Cignetti said. <But they played better in overtime than we did.= The Mountaineers built a 20-5 second-half lead when Aguilar found Eli Wilson for a 16-yard touchdown on the first play of the fourth quarter. James Madison9s offense finally came alive. McCloud capped a 16-play, 75-yard drive with a sixyard touchdown run as the Dukes closed within 17-12 with 8:20 left. Aguilar was clutch on the ensuing drive, moving the chains each time it appeared JMU was poised to get the ball back. The Mountaineers added another field goal with 3:55 remaining. McCloud completed a pass to Sarratt on fourth and 18 to keep JMU9s hopes alive, and then the pair hooked up for a touchdown on the next play as JMU moved within two points with 0:57 left in the fourth. McCloud hit Sarratt, who made a great catch in the back of the end zone, on a two-point conversion that tied the score at 20. The Mountaineers remained in the hunt for the division title if the Dukes can beat Coastal Carolina next week in their regular season finale. Appalachian State hosts Georgia Southern. 4 Associated Press Mountaineers put end to Dukes9 perfect season AppAlAchiAn ST. 26, JMU 23 (OT) dAnieL Lin/AssociAted press James Madison running back Ty Son Lawton fumbled after getting hit by Appalachian State cornerback Tyrek Funderburk during the first half Saturday in Harrisonburg, Va.
d4 eZ m2 the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 college football SCOReBOARd BY KAREEM COPELAND Twenty-five Midshipmen lined up in the middle of the field at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium on Saturday afternoon, holding American flags as the group was acknowledged on senior day. This was not a typical senior class. Its members were freshmen at the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, which kept them from practicing before a 2020 season that ended with a 3-7 record. These Mids went on to endure three straight losing seasons, a first for the program since 2000-02. They watched the winningest coach in program history, Ken Niumatalolo, get replaced after last season. A class that began with 51 players dwindled to the 25 who were recognized Saturday. That group persevered, and it was rewarded with a 10-0 victory over East Carolina in its last home game Saturday. Navy recorded its third shutout of the season, the most for a Football Bowl Subdivision team and the most for a Navy team since the Midshipmen had four in 1978. <It9s a small class, but it9s just some tough dudes, some resilient guys with a ton of character [that] continued to fight through the years,= said Navy Coach Brian Newberry, who previously served as the team9s defensive coordinator under Niumatalolo. <We always talk about deserving success. You don9t always get it on the scoreboard, but you put in the work and you play the game the right way, you know in your mind that you9ve put your best foot forward and that you deserve something whether you get it or not. And that9s peace of mind that I think our seniors can certainly have.= The team had an emotional meeting Friday during which each senior spoke about his journey and passed along advice and thoughts about the future. Earlier this week the seniors received their upcoming service assignments, with titles such as <surface warfare,= <Marine Corps ground= and <Navy pilot,= and now they have played their final game at home. Navy improved to 5-5 overall and 4-3 in American Athletic Conference games and needs one victory in its final two games to become bowl eligible for the first time since 2019. <Our senior class came in here with covid, couldn9t leave for a whole year,= said senior quarterback Xavier Arline, who has been in and out of the lineup, including a position switch, all four of his years. <Just couldn9t live our lives the way we wanted to. Honestly, it made things a lot tougher, waking up three times a week to get covid tested on top of our already hard schedule that we have. <I9m super blessed to have these guys by my side. These are some of the best men I9ve ever met in my life. . . . It means a lot.= Arline completed 10 of 11 passes (90.9 percent, a school singlegame record) for 102 yards while rushing for 68 more on 18 carries. Alex Tecza ran for 94 yards and the game9s only touchdown 4 a 19-yard score with 2:47 left in the first quarter 4 and Colin Ramos helped lead an oppressive defensive performance with 10 tackles. <Ever since you9re a little kid, you play to win and you play to go out there and whip someone9s butt, whip the person9s butt across from you,= said senior linebacker Will Harbour, who finished with six tackles. <Going out there and doing that is fun. The past two games, we9ve really emphasized the fixation to detail and how we play.= Navy led 7-0 at halftime after a dominant opening 30 minutes everywhere but on the scoreboard. The defense held the Pirates (2-9, 1-6) to just 65 total yards, allowed just one thirddown conversion and forced three turnovers. ECU moved into Navy territory just once, punted three times and missed a 49-yard field goal. Navy couldn9t capitalize on those mistakes because of blown opportunities of its own. A 39-yard run by Arline set up Tecza9s touchdown on the next play. But the Mids9 final four possessions of the half featured two Arline lost fumbles, an illegal forward pass by Arline that killed a drive at midfield and a missed 42-yard field goal as time expired in the second quarter. <It9s tough, but that9s life,= Arline said. <I said a speech to the seniors last night and the whole team: Football9s the ultimate game of life. You9re going to have setbacks like that 4 in this case, it was a fumble 4 but there9s so much game left to play. <If I put my head down and quit, everyone else around me is going to do the same. So I understand the power that I have being a leader, a senior, the quarterback of this offense. And I moved on to the next play. Was it pretty? No. But I was able to shake that stuff off.= After halftime, the teams combined for six consecutive punts before ECU9s Shavon Revel blocked Navy kicker Nathan Kirkwood9s 42-yard field goal attempt with 12:08 left in the fourth quarter. But the Pirates went three-and-out on their next possession before attempting a fake punt. Punter Luke Larsen fumbled just as he began to run, and Navy safety Adam Walker recovered at the ECU 18-yard line. Kirkwood knocked through a 27-yard field goal four plays later to give Navy a 10-0 lead with 8:49 left that felt much bigger considering the lack of success the Pirates9 offense had all day. That offense turned the ball over on downs on its next two possessions, and it got just past midfield when the game ended during a third. <Frustrating loss,= ECU Coach Mike Houston said. <Knew it was going to be a low-scoring game. Knew it was going to be a very hard-fought game. Knew we would have to maximize our possessions. <Did not sustain drives and do what we needed to do to put points on the board and win the game.= Mids pitch shutout on their senior day navy at SMu saturday, noon, esPn2 navy 10, east Carolina 0 no. 10 Louisville 38, Miami 31 lOUISVIllE ........................... 1463 15 4 38 mIAmI .................................... 14773 4 31 FIRST QUARTER lOU: Kurisky 2 pass from Plummer (B.Travelstead kick), 8:02. mIA: Fletcher 21 run (Borregales kick), 6:07. mIA: Restrepo 15 pass from Van Dyke (Borregales kick), 3:17. lOU: Guerendo 12 run (B.Travelstead kick), :18. SECOND QUARTER mIA: B.Smith 34 run (Borregales kick), 7:42. lOU: Sylvester 1 pass from Plummer (kick failed), :08. THIRD QUARTER lOU: FG Lopez 40, 11:28. mIA: Fletcher 1 run (Borregales kick), 5:48. FOURTH QUARTER lOU: Conley 5 run (Thrash pass from Plummer), 11:02. mIA: FG Borregales 51, 5:34. lOU: Coleman 58 pass from Plummer (Lopez kick), 4:17. louisville miami First Downs ..................................... 26 21 Total Net Yards ............................. 470 486 Rushes-Yards ........................... 34-162 26-159 Passing .......................................... 308 327 Punt Returns .................................. 2-6 1-5 Kickoff Returns ............................ 2-70 3-57 Interceptions Ret. ........................... 0-0 1-0 Comp-Att-Int .......................... 24-37-1 24-39-0 Sacked-Yards Lost .......................... 0-0 1-10 Punts ........................................ 4-44.25 5-44.0 Penalties-Yards ............................ 4-50 5-50 Time Of Possession .................... 30:21 29:39 PASSINg louisville: Plummer 24-37-1-308. miami: Van Dyke 24-39-0-327. RUSHINg louisville: Guerendo 15-93, Jordan 9-33, Turner 3-14, Plummer 5-11, Calloway 1-6, Conley 1-5. miami: Fletcher 17-126, B.Smith 2-34, Chaney 4-3, Parrish 1-(minus 1), Van Dyke 2-(minus 3). RECEIVINg louisville: Kurisky 5-50, C.Bell 4-58, Gatewood 3-51, Coleman 2-58, Huggins-Bruce 2-22, Calloway 2-19, Turner 1-13, Guerendo 1-11, Lifson 1-11, Jordan 1-7, Thrash 1-7, Sylvester 1-1. miami: Restrepo 8-193, Young 6-30, Jac.George 3-55, B.Smith 3-17, Parrish 2-4, Fletcher 1-25, Chaney 1-3. no. 3 Michigan 31, Maryland 24 mICHIgAN .............................. 16 7 6 2 4 31 mARYlAND ............................. 3 7 14 0 4 24 FIRST QUARTER mD: FG J.Howes 35, 6:29. mICH: Corum 1 run (Turner kick), 2:19. mICH: D.Moore 4 fumble return (Turner kick), 2:00. mICH: safety, :32. SECOND QUARTER mICH: Corum 1 run (Turner kick), 7:59. mD: B.Edwards 1 run (J.Howes kick), 1:59. THIRD QUARTER mD: B.Edwards 1 run (J.Howes kick), 10:23. mICH: S.Morgan 13 run (pass failed), 4:04. mD: B.Edwards 1 run (J.Howes kick), :16. FOURTH QUARTER mICH: safety, 3:38. Attendance: 49,546. michigan maryland First Downs ..................................... 20 17 Total Net Yards ............................. 291 262 Rushes-Yards ........................... 45-150 33-15 Passing .......................................... 141 247 Punt Returns ................................ 1-14 1-10 Kickoff Returns ............................ 3-13 2-35 Interceptions Ret. ........................... 2-1 1-11 Comp-Att-Int .......................... 12-23-1 21-31-2 Sacked-Yards Lost .......................... 1-7 5-53 Punts .......................................... 5-47.2 2-16.0 Fumbles-Lost .................................. 1-0 1-1 Penalties-Yards ............................ 2-25 5-35 Time Of Possession .................... 30:56 29:04 PASSINg michigan: McCarthy 12-23-1-141. maryland: Tagovailoa 21-31-2-247. RUSHINg michigan: Corum 28-94, Edwards 11-39, S.Morgan 1-13, Mullings 2-13, (Team) 1-(minus 2), McCarthy 2-(minus 7). maryland: Hemby 11-35, McDonald 5-12, Littleton 4-9, Edwards 4-3, (Team) 1-(minus 1), Tagovailoa 8-(minus 43). RECEIVINg michigan: Loveland 3-36, C.Johnson 3-24, S.Morgan 2-16, Morris 1-26, Wilson 1-23, Corum 1-9, Barner 1-7. maryland: Felton 5-41, Dyches 5-26, J.Jones 4-70, Prather 3-81, Hemby 3-28, McDonald 1-1. FROM NEWS SERVICES AND STAFF REPORTS Jarett Hunter ran for 108 yards and a touchdown and Quinton Williams scored on a 34-yard keeper as Howard beat rival Morgan State, 14-7, on Saturday at Greene Stadium to claim the outright Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference championship and its first bid to the Celebration Bowl in Atlanta. The Bison (6-5, 4-1) won four of their final five games to close the regular season. <Last year we got a share of it [MEAC title] but missed out on the Celebration Bowl because of the head-to-head record,= Howard Coach Larry Scott said. <Right after that last game, we decided as a group that we were going to leave no doubt. We heard the chatter that it wasn9t a real championship, so we said that we were going to take that power away from them. There wasn9t going to be any ties or asterisks this year. As you can see, we are men of our word.= Howard rolled up 239 yards on the ground against the Bears. Hunter carried 20 times, and Eden James added 16 carries for 90 yards. Williams threw for 143 yards on 12-for-22 passing and added 36 yards on 10 carries. Tahj Smith was 9-for-22 passing for 144 yards, connecting with Treveyon Pratt on a 28-yard score with under two minutes left for the lone touchdown for the Bears (4-6, 3-2). The Celebration Bowl annually pits the MEAC champion against the Southwestern Athletic Conference champion. l VIRGINIA 30, DUKE 27: Anthony Colandrea threw three touchdown passes, and the Cavaliers burned more than five minutes off the clock on a deliberate drive late in the fourth quarter to turn back the Blue Devils in Charlottesville. Colandrea connected with Malik Washington from 34 and seven yards out and Malachi Fields from 29 yards for the Cavaliers (3-8, 2-5 ACC), who won their sixth straight against the Blue Devils at Scott Stadium. Grayson Loftis, starting again in place of the injured Riley Leonard, threw a seven-yard touchdown pass to Jalon Calhoun and Jaquez Moore scored on a 58-yard run to pull the Blue Devils (6-5, 3-4) within 27-20 with 9:03 to play. l LIBERTY 49, MASSACHUSETTS 25: Kaidon Salter threw for 225 yards, rushed for 118 and accounted for four touchdowns to power the Flames to a blowout in Lynchburg, Va. The Flames (11-0) struck early, scoring on four straight first-half drives to take a 28-0 lead. Taisun Phommachanh threw for 239 yards for U-Mass. (3-8), but Liberty intercepted him twice. l OLD DOMINION 20, GEORGIA SOUTHERN 17: Grant Wilson passed for a touchdown and added a 30-yard touchdown reception and Ethan Sanchez kicked a 22-yard field as time expired to vault the Monarchs past the Eagles in Statesboro, Ga. Old Dominion (5-6, 4-3 Sun Belt) took a 17-10 lead on a trick play at the end of the third quarter. Wilson handed the ball to Ahmarian Granger on a jet sweep, and he threw it back to Wilson, who ran toward the left sideline, juked a defender at the 5-yard line and then dragged another into the end zone. Davis Brin was 20-for-35 passing for 235 yards for Georgia Southern (6-6, 3-4). l HOLY CROSS 31, GEORGETOWN 10: Matthew Sluka threw for one touchdown and rushed for two more to propel the Crusaders past the Hoyas in Worcester, Mass., to clinch at least a share of the Patriot League title. Holy Cross (7-4, 5-1) won its eighth straight in the series with Georgetown (5-6, 3-3). The Crusaders are the first team in conference history to win five league championships in a row. Tyler Knoop threw for 184 yards and a touchdown for Georgetown. l RICHMOND 27, WILLIAM & MARY 26: Quarterback Kyle Wickersham ran for a touchdown, a running back and a wide receiver each threw a touchdown pass, and the Spiders survived a wild finish to edge the Tribe in Williamsburg, Va., to earn a share of the Coastal Athletic Association title. Richmond (8-3, 7-1) tied with Albany and Villanova but didn9t play either one in the 14-team conference. Imoh rushed for 91 yards and a touchdown in addition to the touchdown pass and Darius Wilson threw for 247 yards and a touchdown for the Tribe. l ELON 51, HAMPTON 14: Matthew Downing threw four touchdown passes to vault the Phoenix to a rout in Elon, N.C. Elon (6-5, 6-2) finished a game back of CAA co-champions Albany, Villanova and Richmond. Christopher Zellous threw for a touchdown and ran for another for the Pirates (5-6, 3-5). l LENOIR-RHYNE 63, SHEPHERD 17: Sean White completed 25 of 31 passes for 398 yards and five touchdowns to power the Bears (11-1) to a blowout of the Rams (9-3) in the opening round of the Division II playoffs in Hickory, N.C. AReA ROunduP Bison claim MEAC title, berth in bowl Howard 14, Morgan state 7 tRamel Raggs foR the Washington Post Howard (6-5, 4-1) held off the Bears at Greene Stadium by rushing for 239 yards to clinch a Celebration Bowl berth for the first time. no. 17 Arizona 42, no. 22 utah 18 UTAH ........................................ 0 738 4 18 ARIZONA ............................... 21 7 0 14 4 42 FIRST QUARTER ARIZ: Wiley 21 pass from McMillan (Loop kick), 10:33. ARIZ: A.Ward 25 punt return (Loop kick), 8:32. ARIZ: Lemonious-Craig 32 pass from Fifita (Loop kick), 4:06. SECOND QUARTER ARIZ: Wiley 31 pass from Fifita (Loop kick), 14:53. UTAH: Vele 20 pass from Barnes (Becker kick), :52. THIRD QUARTER UTAH: FG Becker 36, 10:00. FOURTH QUARTER ARIZ: Coleman 1 run (Loop kick), 7:57. UTAH: McClain 2 pass from Barnes (Barnes run), :43. ARIZ: McMillan 51 pass from de Laura (Loop kick), :31. Attendance: 50,800. Utah Arizona First Downs ..................................... 26 21 Total Net Yards ............................. 438 443 Rushes-Yards ........................... 37-118 24-118 Passing .......................................... 320 325 Punt Returns .................................. 0-0 2-27 Kickoff Returns .............................. 0-0 0-0 Interceptions Ret. ........................... 0-0 2-36 Comp-Att-Int .......................... 31-53-2 25-33-0 Sacked-Yards Lost ........................ 3-28 1-10 Punts ...................................... 3-35.333 3-43.667 Fumbles-Lost .................................. 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards ............................ 7-55 5-22 Time Of Possession .................... 35:34 24:26 PASSINg Utah: Barnes 31-53-2-320. Arizona: Fifita 22-30-0-253, de Laura 2-2-0-51, McMillan 1-1-0-21. RUSHINg Utah: Jackson 10-47, Barnes 19-44, Glover 2-10, Vaki 4-10, King 1-4, N.Johnson 1-3. Arizona: Coleman 14-90, Wiley 5-24, Cowing 1-9, Luke 2-7, Williams 1-(minus 2), de Laura 1-(minus 10). RECEIVINg Utah: Vele 9-111, McClain 6-70, King 4-63, Parks 4-30, Jackson 3-24, Matthews 2-13, Stanley 1-11, Glover 1-6, Vaki 1-(minus 8). Arizona: McMillan 8-116, Wiley 5-68, McLachlan 4-51, Cowing 2-5, Riley 1-36, LemoniousCraig 1-32, Burnett 1-11, Green 1-9, Miranda 1-0, Luke 1-(minus 3). no. 12 Penn St. 27, Rutgers 6 RUTgERS ................................. 3 300 4 6 PENN ST. .................................. 0 10 3 14 4 27 FIRST QUARTER RUTg: FG Patel 35, 4:43. SECOND QUARTER PSU: K.Allen 2 run (Felkins kick), 11:36. PSU: FG Felkins 21, 8:44. RUTg: FG Patel 28, :00. THIRD QUARTER PSU: FG Felkins 48, 5:32. FOURTH QUARTER PSU: K.Allen 3 run (Felkins kick), 14:14. PSU: Pribula 1 run (Felkins kick), 3:36. Attendance: 105,114. Rutgers Penn St. First Downs ..................................... 13 16 Total Net Yards ............................. 229 322 Rushes-Yards ............................. 42-99 39-234 Passing .......................................... 130 88 Punt Returns .................................. 0-0 0-0 Kickoff Returns ............................ 1-29 1-24 Interceptions Ret. ........................... 0-0 1-0 Comp-Att-Int .......................... 10-16-1 7-14-0 Sacked-Yards Lost ........................ 3-24 0-0 Punts .......................................... 4-43.0 2-52.0 Fumbles-Lost .................................. 3-2 2-1 Penalties-Yards ............................ 6-48 1-2 Time Of Possession .................... 32:00 28:00 PASSINg Rutgers: Wimsatt 10-16-1-130. Penn St.: Allar 6-13-0- 79, Pribula 1-1-0-9. RUSHINg Rutgers: Monangai 16-39, Wimsatt 17-31, S.Brown 6-24, Young 1-7, Benjamin 2-(minus 2). Penn St.: Pribula 8-71, Allen 16-69, Singleton 11-61, Allar 3-28, Potts 1-5. RECEIVINg Rutgers: Washington 5-55, Strong 2-34, Dremel 2-25, Jackson 1-16. Penn St.: Warren 2-32, Th.Johnson 2-10, Evans 1-25, Clifford 1-15, Allen 1-6. no. 14 Oklahoma 31, BYu 24 OKlAHOmA ............................. 7 10 7 7 4 31 BYU .......................................... 7 10 7 0 4 24 FIRST QUARTER OKlA: Ni.Anderson 3 pass from Gabriel (Schmit kick), 8:04. BYU: Roberts 23 pass from Retzlaff (Ferrin kick), 3:05. SECOND QUARTER OKlA: Gibson 27 pass from Gabriel (Schmit kick), 13:06. BYU: I.Rex 1 pass from Retzlaff (Ferrin kick), 7:49. OKlA: FG Schmit 23, 2:43. BYU: FG Ferrin 49, :00. THIRD QUARTER OKlA: Bowman 100 interception return (Schmit kick), 5:55. BYU: Retzlaff 10 run (Ferrin kick), 1:19. FOURTH QUARTER OKlA: Sawchuk 16 run (Schmit kick), 7:57. Oklahoma BYU First Downs ..................................... 20 18 Total Net Yards ............................. 368 390 Rushes-Yards ........................... 34-144 38-217 Passing .......................................... 224 173 Punt Returns .................................. 2-1 4-39 Kickoff Returns ............................ 1-32 0-0 Interceptions Ret. ....................... 1-100 0-0 Comp-Att-Int .......................... 18-30-0 15-26-1 Sacked-Yards Lost .......................... 1-9 1-12 Punts .......................................... 4-46.0 4-47.0 Fumbles-Lost .................................. 1-0 4-2 Penalties-Yards ............................ 6-45 7-55 Time Of Possession .................... 28:50 31:10 PASSINg Oklahoma: Gabriel 13-21-0-191, Arnold 5-9-0-33. BYU: Retzlaff 15-26-1-173. RUSHINg Oklahoma: Sawchuk 14-107, T.Walker 5-25, Arnold 8-24, Gabriel 4-0, Stoops 1-(minus 2), (Team) 2-(minus 10). BYU: Robbins 22-182, Retzlaff 13-29, Martin 1-3, Smith 2-3. RECEIVINg Oklahoma: Farooq 5-53, Stoops 4-63, Ni.Anderson 3-12, Gibson 2-82, Sawchuk 2-1, Stogner 1-10, T.Walker 1-3. BYU: Epps 6-90, Roberts 2-45, I.Rex 2-14, Smith 2-10, Lassiter 1-18, Marion 1-0, Kingston 1-(minus 4). no. 2 Ohio St. 37, Minnesota 3 mINNESOTA ............................ 0 003 4 3 OHIO ST. .................................. 7 6 17 7 4 37 FIRST QUARTER OSU: T.Henderson 9 run (Fielding kick), 9:22. SECOND QUARTER OSU: FG Fielding 47, 13:05. OSU: FG Fielding 26, 4:51. THIRD QUARTER OSU: T.Henderson 75 run (Fielding kick), 14:48. OSU: Harrison 4 pass from McCord (Fielding kick), 13:53. OSU: FG Fielding 32, 10:17. FOURTH QUARTER OSU: Stover 1 pass from McCord (Fielding kick), 13:43. mIN: FG Kesich 54, 6:43. minnesota Ohio St. First Downs ..................................... 10 23 Total Net Yards ............................. 159 434 Rushes-Yards ............................. 29-70 35-215 Passing ............................................ 89 219 Punt Returns .................................. 0-0 0-0 Kickoff Returns .............................. 0-0 0-0 Interceptions Ret. ........................... 0-0 1-40 Comp-Att-Int .......................... 11-19-1 22-32-0 Sacked-Yards Lost .......................... 2-6 1-7 Punts ...................................... 7-40.571 2-48.5 Penalties-Yards ............................ 1-15 5-43 Time Of Possession .................... 28:38 31:22 PASSINg minnesota: A.Kaliakmanis 11-19-1-89. Ohio St.: McCord 20-30-0-212, Kienholz 2-2-0-7. RUSHINg minnesota: J.Nubin 19-49, Evans 2-17, A.Kaliakmanis 7-3, Tyler 1-1. Ohio St.: Henderson 15-146, Hayden 8-34, Trayanum 4-25, Pryor 6-15, McCord 2-(minus 5). RECEIVINg minnesota: Jackson 3-29, Crooms 2-42, Spencer 2-14, J.Nubin 2-1, Kallerup 1-3, Tyler 1-0. Ohio St.: Egbuka 5-83, Stover 4-26, Harrison 3-30, Henderson 2-26, X.Johnson 2-22, Fleming 2-10, Gurd 1-9, Tate 1-6, Royer 1-5, Pryor 1-2. no. 6 Oregon 49, Arizona St. 13 OREgON ................................. 21 2107 4 49 ARIZONA ST. ........................... 0 0 3 10 4 13 FIRST QUARTER ORE: Herbert 23 pass from Nix (Lewis kick), 11:34. ORE: Herbert 49 pass from Nix (Lewis kick), 6:53. ORE: Franklin 16 pass from Nix (Lewis kick), :27. SECOND QUARTER ORE: Franklin 45 pass from Nix (Lewis kick), 9:40. ORE: Bryant 71 pass from Nix (Lewis kick), 7:22. ORE: Te.Johnson 16 pass from Nix (Lewis kick), :10. THIRD QUARTER ASU: FG Longhetto 38, 5:33. FOURTH QUARTER ORE: Kelly 19 pass from Thompson (Lewis kick), 14:20. ASU: Stovall 15 run (Longhetto kick), 8:39. ASU: FG Longhetto 34, 5:09. Oregon Arizona St. First Downs ..................................... 31 20 Total Net Yards ............................. 603 316 Rushes-Yards ........................... 33-140 18-111 Passing .......................................... 463 205 Punt Returns .................................. 0-0 0-0 Kickoff Returns .............................. 0-0 3-44 Interceptions Ret. ........................... 1-0 2-5 Comp-Att-Int .......................... 28-36-2 25-47-1 Sacked-Yards Lost .......................... 1-8 0-0 Punts ............................................ 0-0.0 3-39.667 Fumbles-Lost .................................. 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards ............................ 5-45 4-37 Time Of Possession .................... 32:58 27:02 PASSINg Oregon: Nix 24-29-0-404, Thompson 4-6-1-59, R.James 0-1-1-0. Arizona St.: T.Bourguet 20-37-0-142, Skattebo 2-6-1-45, Conyers 3-4-0-18. RUSHINg Oregon: Irving 11-63, J.James 9-48, Dowdell 3-16, Limar 2-13, Nix 3-7, Thompson 2-(minus 1), (Team) 3-(minus 6). Arizona St.: Skattebo 8-49, Conyers 6-34, Stovall 1-15, K.Brown 1-8, Badger 2-5. RECEIVINg Oregon: Franklin 8-128, Johnson 6-80, Bryant 3-82, Herbert 3-78, Irving 3-33, Holden 2-22, Kelly 1-19, Anderson 1-16, Kasper 1-5. Arizona St.: Badger 7-64, Omeire 5-57, Pierre 3-19, Conyers 2-38, Stovall 2-1, Skattebo 1-6, Hart 1-5, K.Brown 1-4, Sanders 1-4, Swinson 1-4, Morgan 1-3. no. 1 Georgia 38, no. 18 Tennessee 10 gEORgIA ................................ 10 14 14 0 4 38 TENNESSEE ............................. 7 300 4 10 FIRST QUARTER TENN: J.Wright 75 run (C.Campbell kick), 14:49. UgA: FG Woodring 42, 10:01. UgA: Rosemy-Jacksaint 18 pass from Bell (Woodring kick), 3:17. SECOND QUARTER UgA: Bell 9 pass from Beck (Woodring kick), 8:04. UgA: Bowers 3 pass from Beck (Woodring kick), 1:31. TENN: FG C.Campbell 37, :00. THIRD QUARTER UgA: Rosemy-Jacksaint 8 pass from Beck (Woodring kick), 9:24. UgA: K.Milton 15 run (Woodring kick), 1:03. georgia Tennessee First Downs ..................................... 25 13 Total Net Yards ............................. 472 277 Rushes-Yards ........................... 40-156 25-130 Passing .......................................... 316 147 Punt Returns .................................. 2-8 0-0 Kickoff Returns ............................ 1-25 0-0 Interceptions Ret. ........................... 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int .......................... 25-31-0 17-30-0 Sacked-Yards Lost .......................... 1-7 1-10 Punts .......................................... 2-44.0 6-40.0 Fumbles-Lost .................................. 2-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards ............................ 2-15 3-20 Time Of Possession .................... 40:58 19:02 PASSINg georgia: Beck 24-30-0-298, Bell 1-1-0-18. Tennessee: Milton 17-30-0-147. RUSHINg georgia: Milton 14-66, Edwards 11-34, A.Smith 1-33, Paul 6-16, C.Jones 1-8, Beck 4-5, Bell 1-4, (Team) 1-(minus 3), Vandagriff 1-(minus 7). Tennessee: J.Wright 9-90, Small 6-25, Seldon 3-11, Sampson 2-9, White 1-8, Milton 4-(minus 13). RECEIVINg georgia: Rosemy-Jacksaint 7-91, Bowers 7-60, Bell 5-90, Edwards 2-15, Meeks 1-23, R.Thomas 1-18, Mews 1-10, Lovett 1-9. Tennessee: White 5-45, Nimrod 5-44, Castles 2-21, Webb 1-17, Warren 1-8, Milton 1-6, Small 1-4, Sampson 1-2. nCAA SATURDAY9S RESUlTS EAST Army 28, Coastal Carolina 21 Bryant 45, SE Missouri 21 Bucknell 38, Marist 21 Colgate 21, Fordham 14 Columbia 29, Cornell 14 Dartmouth 38, Brown 13 Duquesne 26, Merrimack 14 E. Illinois 28, Robert Morris 14 Holy Cross 31, Georgetown 10 Howard 14, Morgan St. 7 Michigan 31, Maryland 24 Navy 10, East Carolina 0 New Hampshire 44, Maine 25 Penn St. 27, Rutgers 6 Princeton 31, Penn 24 St. Francis (Pa.) 49, CCSU 14 Stonehill 40, LIU Brooklyn 23 Towson 31, Rhode Island 30 Connecticut 31, Sacred Heart 3 Villanova 35, Delaware 7 Wagner 48, Post 21 West Virginia 42, Cincinnati 21 Yale 23, Harvard 18 SOUTH Alabama 66, Chattanooga 10 Alcorn St. 28, Jackson St. 24 Appalachian St. 26, James Madison 23 (OT) Austin Peay 14, Cent. Arkansas 12 Campbell 28, N.C. A&T 14 Clemson 31, North Carolina 20 Dayton 45, Davidson 14 Elon 51, Hampton 14 Florida A&M 24, Bethune-Cookman 7 Florida St. 58, North Alabama 13 Gardner-Webb 34, Charleston Southern 10 Georgia 38, Tennessee 10 Jacksonville St. 56, Louisiana Tech 17 Liberty 49, Massachusetts 25 Louisville 38, Miami 31 Middle Tennessee 34, UTEP 30 Mississippi 35, Louisiana Monroe 3 Mississippi St. 41, Southern Mississippi 20 N.C. Central 55, Delaware St. 14 N.C. State 35, Virginia Tech 28 New Mexico St. 31, Auburn 10 Old Dominion 20, Georgia Southern 17 Presbyterian 31, Morehead St. 27 Rice 28, Charlotte 7 Richmond 27, William & Mary 26 SC State 44, Norfolk St. 17 SMU 38, Memphis 34 Samford 27, Tennessee Martin 17 San Diego 47, Stetson 20 South Alabama 28, Marshall 0 South Carolina 17, Kentucky 14 Tennessee Tech 35, Tennessee St. 0 Troy 31, Louisiana Lafayette 24 Tulane 24, FAU 8 UAB 34, Temple 24 VMI 27, W. Carolina 24 Virginia 30, Duke 27 W. Kentucky 28, Sam Houston St. 23 Wofford 19, Furman 13 Youngstown St. 34, Murray St. 17 mIDWEST Ball St. 34, Kent St. 3 Drake 13, Butler 9 Iowa 15, Illinois 13 Kansas St. 31, Kansas 27 Michigan St. 24, Indiana 21 N. Dakota St. 48, N. Iowa 27 North Dakota 22, Illinois St. 21 Northwestern 23, Purdue 15 Notre Dame 45, Wake Forest 7 Ohio St. 37, Minnesota 3 S. Dakota St. 35, Missouri St. 17 S. Illinois 38, Indiana St. 9 South Dakota 48, W. Illinois 6 St. Thomas (Minn.) 16, Valparaiso 10 Wisconsin 24, Nebraska 17 (OT) SOUTHWEST Arkansas 44, FIU 20 North Texas 35, Tulsa 28 Oklahoma St. 43, Houston 30 TCU 42, Baylor 17 Texas Tech 24, UCF 23 WEST Arizona 42, Utah 18 Boise St. 45, Utah St. 10 California 27, Stanford 15 Colorado St. 30, Nevada 20 Idaho 63, Idaho St. 21 Oklahoma 31, BYU 24 Oregon 49, Arizona St. 13 Portland St. 27, N. Colorado 23 S. Utah 24, Utah Tech 16 UC Davis 31, Sacramento St. 21 UCLA 38, Southern Cal 20 UNLV 31, Air Force 27 Wyoming 42, Hawaii 9 no. 5 Washington 22, no. 11 Oregon St. 20 WASHINgTON ......................... 9 13 0 0 4 22 OREgON ST. ............................. 7 373 4 20 FIRST QUARTER WASH: Odunze 12 pass from Penix (Gross kick), 9:55. ORST: Martinez 3 run (Sappington kick), 5:09. WASH: safety, 1:17. SECOND QUARTER WASH: Penix 5 run (Gross kick), 9:33. ORST: FG Sappington 38, 4:57. WASH: Odunze 32 pass from Penix (pass failed), :54. THIRD QUARTER ORST: Martinez 5 run (Sappington kick), 1:29. FOURTH QUARTER ORST: FG Sappington 35, 10:10. Washington Oregon St. First Downs ..................................... 15 22 Total Net Yards ............................. 272 319 Rushes-Yards ........................... 25-110 40-148 Passing .......................................... 162 171 Punt Returns ................................ 1-11 1-11 Kickoff Returns ............................ 4-88 3-56 Interceptions Ret. ......................... 2-11 0-0 Comp-Att-Int .......................... 13-28-0 16-33-2 Sacked-Yards Lost .......................... 0-0 1-9 Punts .......................................... 4-44.0 1-47.0 Fumbles-Lost .................................. 1-1 1-1 Penalties-Yards .......................... 10-64 7-65 Time Of Possession .................... 22:03 37:33 PASSINg Washington: Penix 13-28-0-162. Oregon St.: Uiagalelei 15-31-2-166, Chiles 1-2-0-5. RUSHINg Washington: D.Johnson 16-89, Penix 3-22, Nixon 1-3, Rogers 1-1, (Team) 4-(minus 5). Oregon St.: Martinez 26-123, Uiagalelei 6-53, Gould 2-17, Newell 1-4, Fenwick 3-0, Chiles 1-(minus 9), (Team) 1-(minus 40). RECEIVINg Washington: Odunze 7-106, Westover 4-43, G.Jackson 1-10, Rogers 1-3. Oregon St.: Bolden 5-64, Gould 5-36, Martinez 2-44, Irish 1-13, Munyagi 1-7, T.Walker 1-6, Velling 1-1. no. 9 Missouri 33, Florida 31 FlORIDA .................................. 7 0 14 10 4 31 mISSOURI ................................ 3 10 10 10 4 33 FIRST QUARTER mIZZ: FG Mevis 22, 10:33. FlA: Eu.Wilson 8 pass from Mertz (Smack kick), 7:49. SECOND QUARTER mIZZ: Schrader 42 run (Mevis kick), 14:29. mIZZ: FG Mevis 38, 1:21. THIRD QUARTER FlA: Etienne 37 pass from Mertz (Smack kick), 11:54. mIZZ: Cook 1 run (Mevis kick), 8:53. FlA: Pearsall 39 run (Smack kick), 7:16. mIZZ: FG Mevis 24, 3:53. FOURTH QUARTER mIZZ: Wease 77 pass from Cook (Mevis kick), 13:14. FlA: Etienne 9 run (Smack kick), 7:49. FlA: FG Smack 35, 1:36. mIZZ: FG Mevis 30, :05. Florida missouri First Downs ..................................... 23 20 Total Net Yards ............................. 500 508 Rushes-Yards ........................... 41-265 32-177 Passing .......................................... 235 331 Punt Returns .................................. 0-0 0-0 Kickoff Returns ............................ 2-30 1-30 Interceptions Ret. ........................... 0-0 1-0 Comp-Att-Int .......................... 18-27-1 20-36-0 Sacked-Yards Lost .......................... 1-7 1-3 Punts ...................................... 3-44.667 4-41.25 Fumbles-Lost .................................. 1-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards ............................ 8-54 7-59 Time Of Possession .................... 33:08 26:52 PASSINg Florida: Mertz 14-22-1-183, Brown 4-5-0-52. missouri: Cook 20-35-0-331, (Team) 0-1-0-0. RUSHINg Florida: M.Johnson 12-85, Etienne 15-82, Pearsall 2-43, Brown 7-42, Mertz 5-13. missouri: Schrader 23-148, Peat 2-18, Cook 7-11. RECEIVINg Florida: Eu.Wilson 7-23, K.Jackson 4-52, Pearsall 2-68, Hansen 2-43, Etienne 2-37, M.Johnson 1-12. missouri: Burden 9-158, Norfleet 3-43, Cooper 3-29, M.Miller 2-24, Schrader 2-0, Wease 1-77.
sunday, november 19, 2023 . the washington post eZ sU d5 marched to the maryland 7 in the final minute, linebacker Jaishawn Barham stepped in front of quarterback J.J. mcCarthy9s underthrown pass for the sophomore9s first career interception. A turnover and a maryland gaffe on special teams late in the first quarter allowed the Wolverines to score nine points in less than 90 seconds and claim a 16-3 lead without their offense stepping on the field. The first of those foibles unfolded when Tagovailoa attempted to elude pressure in the backfield before linebacker michael Barrett swooped in for a sack that jarred the ball loose. Edge rusher Derrick moore gathered the ball at the 4-yard line and ran untouched into the end zone with two minutes to play. on maryland9s ensuing possession, punter Brenden Segovia received the snap inside the 5-yard line on fourth and 17, but michigan9s Christian Boivin blocked the kick. Segovia booted the ball out of the back of the end zone, resulting in a safety that expanded michigan9s advantage to 16-3 with 32 seconds to go. maryland faced its largest deficit of the game, 23-3, after Corum9s one-yard touchdown run with 7:59 to play in the second quarter. <It shows that we can play with the big guys,= said Terps safety Beau Brade, one of 24 seniors honored before kickoff. <Everybody talks about the big three [of michigan, ohio State and Penn State], but we9re right there with them. I know that this season hasn9t been what we wished it to be, but that was a pretty good game, and [we] almost came through with it.= designed on a blue hoodie. The message gets straight to the point: <I9m Just Here To Steal Your Signs.= Like so many of the fans around him, Lang was leaning into the scandal. or maybe he was reclining into the scandal, or stretching his legs out and propping them right on top of the scandal, waiting for the next drop in the NCAA9s investigation for more comedic material. <I think it9s kind of like an eh,= said Lang, shrugging his shoulders while describing how he thinks fellow michigan fans feel about everything. With a college football scandal as ridiculous as this one 4 based on an antiquated rule, masterminded by an overzealous staffer in a dollarstore spy disguise and moralized by conference leadership that has done more damage to the purity of the game than any stolen signs ever will 4 the only appropriate reaction is to sit back and shrug. And then laugh. If the Wolverines can do that, they9ll see that they9re not persecuted nor wrongfully targeted. They9re just caught up in the absurdity of their sport while romping through what could become a perfect season that no one will be able to take away. Because of that, they should be laughing all the way to the College football Playoff. would suspect needed parental assistance: <ryan Day Can9t Steal my Sign.= The inside joke was that, according to michigan, ohio State and rutgers sent the Wolverines9 offensive and defensive signals to Purdue ahead of its meeting with michigan in the 2022 Big Ten championship game. Then there was Carlos mora, a 40-year-old who already had a few adult beverages by the time I spotted him. mora and some buddies went with a more sarcastic approach, wearing maize-colored shirts with a pair of binoculars beneath the words <Vast Network.= That9s a clever way of embracing an infamous quote from an unidentified source about michigan9s signstealing methods. <They9re trying to blow this out of proportion,= a goodnatured mora said. While maybe or maybe not joking, he added, <They9re going for the best team in the world.= Dustin Lang, another member of the Ann Arbor crowd that invaded College Park, got his funny shirt in the mail just in time for the trip to maryland. At a recent home game, Lang noticed opposing fans wearing shirts that suggested <Sign Stealers= should be michigan9s new team name. So over the weekend he Googled until he found a witty comeback most passionate fans should keep for the rest of the season: Just laugh it off. But I suspect the way michigan sees things, through Harbaugh9s rectangular-framed lenses, Saturday9s nail-biter against a maryland team that just recently freed itself from a midseason tailspin wasn9t just a win under duress. rather, it was the finest act of resilience shown under winged helmets. An all-time top-10 4 no, topfive! 4 win for America9s team, which shall forever be the iron wall that middling Big Ten teams bash against and shatter. Yet another triumph over adversity, over the naysayers, over the so-called critics. By the way, these are Harbaugh9s sentiments, not mine. But I could add: This win was a conquest of the entire globe because it9s <michigan vs. Everybody.= I saw that phrase plenty around SECU Stadium on Saturday. It was on blue hoodies and T-shirts, within cliques of loyal fans who flooded the concourse by airing, and wearing, their grievances. But thank goodness for the fans with a sense of humor. There was a boy holding an elaborate homemade poster, with the kind of coloringwithin-the-lines precision and mature wisecracking that you had to start their last drive while staring down danger. Two plays in, senior quarterback Taulia Tagovailoa dropped back into the end zone; when the pocket collapsed, he tossed a pass in the general direction of wideout Tai felton. The ball fell way short of making felton an eligible receiver, so Tagovailoa was flagged for intentional grounding, resulting in a safety. <It was good. It was good. maybe we needed this test a little bit,= michigan running back Blake Corum said, crediting maryland for preparing his Wolverines for their biggest game of the season. <maybe we needed a close game like this. . . . [maryland] gave us a run for our money out there.= The safety ended any hopes of an upset by maryland (6-5) as michigan9s offense returned to the field and ate up the rest of the clock. The Wolverines would remain on maryland9s turf after the game, too, as players and staffers posed for a team photo around <1000= signs. And showing he has a wry sense of humor, moore said of the photo: <first, we need to edit Coach in there. With technology in the world today, we can get that done.= That remark drew snickers from reporters, and that9s the kind of response the university9s almost certainly be enough to earn him a third year at the helm, there are mounting rumblings about the possibility New York9s awkward roster construction and money misspent on Jones and Saquon Barkley could lead to a frontoffice shake-up. . . . Whatever happens in Washington next season, quarterback Sam Howell is making more converts among rival executives each week. <marty [Hurney, Washington9s executive vice president of football/player personnel] found another quarterback,= the first Gm said. <That kid can play. They stole him in the fifth round. No way he should have been there that long. That was a hell of a pick. Look how many teams are running guys out there who can9t play, and they got him [with the 144th pick].= . . . Anyone out there still thinking Aaron rodgers will throw a football in another game this season? Please. The Jets sticking with Zach Wilson continues to befuddle other teams. . . . The Browns not going to PJ Walker at quarterback with starter Deshaun Watson out for the season was pretty confounding. There is ample time to look at rookie Dorian Thompson-robinson down the road, but with that defense, they were still in games with Walker. And with the AfC North still undecided, the choice struck some rivals as waving the white flag. Cleveland9s decision to trade Joshua Dobbs before the season looks even more damning now. Bills-like shake-up, with coordinators being shown the door and palace intrigue? Um, yeah, not happening. Bill Belichick isn9t going anywhere yet, as I told you last week. more to the point, look for former backup Bailey Zappe to be given a wide berth at the quarterback spot 4 mac Jones will be elsewhere in 2024 4 and don9t expect owner robert Kraft to shake anything up or in any way try to spark this team. They9re awful, and Kraft knows it, so it9s time to see just how high of a draft pick they can get as Belichick9s final days in New England wind down. The more losses, the better. <Kraft9s not going to do a thing,= said another general manager, under similar restrictions. <They might end up with the first pick. Worst-case scenario, he9s picking second, and he9s going to get [USC9s] Caleb Williams or [quarterback Drake maye] from North Carolina.= notes from around the league Belichick is going to have some competition from his old franchise, the Giants, in the race to the bottom. As ridiculously limited as rookie quarterback Tommy DeVito has been while filling in for the injured Daniel Jones and Tyrod Taylor, the Giants seem resigned to their fate. <They are definitely in the market for a quarterback at the top of the draft,= the first Gm said. <They want one of them.= While Daboll9s work last year as the NfL coach of the year will teardowns and firings 4 are getting a strong sense that Coach frank reich could be one-anddone in Carolina. A few weeks back, I would have cast such suggestions aside, but too many people are whispering too many things, and the more I probed around, the more I got the impression reich is very much coaching for his job. That was before he snatched back play-calling duties from offensive coordinator Thomas Brown mere weeks after ceding them. Yikes. Within that building, there is every sense that jobs are on the line, because, well, with Tepper, of course they are. Some believed Carolina could compete this season in the awful NfC South, with No. 1 pick Bryce Young taking over at quarterback 4 present company included. It also sounds as if Tepper was among them. And with this division being every bit as bad as some predicted, it appears it9s going to take some significant progress from Young and the Panthers9 offense to prevent the impetuous owner from at least mulling starting all over again, including with his football operations department. <He9s [upset] about the quarterback,= one NfL personnel executive said of Tepper, <but nobody there wanted Bryce Young more than him. He led that charge. That was his guy.= Status quo in new england So what happens in New England, with the failed Patriots on their bye week? Where9s their with Carolina. The higher he rose, the more holes were poked in his offense, and it9s doubtful he can be the kind of bad cop that Daboll was to nip Allen9s poor decision-making and turnover jags in the bud. <He kind of got exposed in Carolina,= the general manager said of Brady. <I don9t think he9s going to get that turned around.= Allen leads the NfL in turnovers since he entered the league in 2018, and those mistakes seem to have become a force of their own, with a gravitational pull too strong for a coach such as Brady to fix. Allen tops the league with 14 giveaways this season and has committed at least one turnover in six straight games, with nine total in that span. It9s the kind of thing that could get a coach 4 or at least a couple of coordinators 4 fired. The 5-5 Bills9 remaining schedule is among the most daunting in the NfL, and mcDermott9s defense, pummeled by injuries and ranked 24th in yards allowed per play, will have difficulty holding up over the challenging road ahead. He will have his hands full dealing with inevitable departures and with the future of wide receiver Stefon Diggs. And someone else will probably be installing the defense. More unrest in carolina Speaking of cranky owners, many of the same people who in the past told of Panthers owner David Tepper9s fits and plots 4 and correctly predicted roster body of work is of a quality that one down season wouldn9t lead to his demise. However, to some, the sudden departure of longtime defensive coordinator Leslie frazier in february felt like a throwback to Pegula9s more chaotic past. It reeked of panic, and a bit of scapegoating, as did Dorsey9s dismissal. (The head coach, after all, got burned on an all-out blitz late to set up Denver9s game-winning field goal attempt monday night, and the Bills had 12 men on the field to give the Broncos a second shot at the kick, which was hardly Dorsey9s fault.) The team could have let Brady call plays while revising Dorsey9s duties; instead, he was marched out of the building, leaving an emotional Allen blaming himself for the firing. In any case, the odds of mcDermott serving as both defensive coordinator and head coach in 2024 are small and fading. <He won9t be wearing both hats next year= is how one general manager, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he is not permitted to discuss the inner workings of other clubs, put it. <Pegula is going to want someone else in there.= There is also skepticism in the industry that Brady9s ascension will stoke an offensive revival. Brady was an expert at playing the media 4 he was once a hotshot head coaching candidate, or so some reporters would have you think 4 whose star fizzled on matt rhule9s staff The Buffalo Bills made a change at offensive coordinator in the past week that, frankly, didn9t seem to shock other teams. In fact, it was seen as a potential precursor to more upheaval this offseason, after a season that seems likely to end much sooner than folks have become accustomed to in western New York. The departed Ken Dorsey always had a huge shadow cast over him by former Bills offensive coordinator Brian Daboll, who was most often credited with furthering the development of quarterback Josh Allen, and the striking regression of Allen and Buffalo9s offense portends significant change. more importantly, perhaps, the promotion of Joe Brady to the offensive coordinator role is being read around the league as a window into the growing unrest of Bills ownership. And, lest you forget the days of rex ryan9s undoing, Doug marrone taking a buyout to leave Buffalo without having another head coaching gig lined up and constant infighting within the front office, owner Terry Pegula9s franchise was once mired in dysfunction and turmoil before Coach Sean mcDermott and General manager Brandon Beane settled in. more staff changes would appear imminent without a course reversal. rival general managers and executives believe mcDermott9s More change may be coming if the underachieving Bills can9t turn things around On the NFL Jason la Canfora Saturday, wears a straight face when painting his Wolverines as the injured party in this mess 4 a mess of their creation because former staffer Connor Stalions was so bad at cheating that he got caught. If that doesn9t make you bend over in giggles, then you must be Sherrone moore. Earnest and loyal, moore, the offensive coordinator who is filling in for Harbaugh, again showed his boss some love during his on-field interview after the game. This time, moore didn9t shed tears and drop f-bombs while professing his love. In leading michigan to a second straight close win, moore called the plays, and though his offense scored just one touchdown in the second half, he dialed up a fourth-andshort running play with under two minutes to go that sealed the win. michigan remained undefeated thanks in large part to its special teams and defense. In the fourth quarter, maryland trailed by only five, but after a 47-yard punt pinned it at the 1-yard line, the Terps All this fuss about stealing signs 4 it9s just college football9s latest dramedy. And for the past month, there has been no dearth of unintentional humor, especially because michigan can9t read the room. During Saturday9s 31-24 victory over maryland, the Wolverines (11-0) made young staffers hold up flags to block fox cameras from peeking into the team huddle 4 because you can never be too careful these days with all the rogue signstealers out there. When the university accepted the Big Ten Conference9s three-game suspension of Coach Jim Harbaugh, the authors of Thursday9s statement couldn9t help but squeeze in words such as <high standards= and <values.= And hopefully they typed those words through a haze of tears after laughing so hard. And Harbaugh, who also must sit out the big matchup with rival ohio State next Buckner from d1 candace Buckner Sign-stealing scandal rife with unintended comedy top defense. But the Terps stalled on their next two series, with sacks of Tagovailoa putting them well behind the line to gain. Next came the final opportunity; michigan downed a punt inside the 1-yard line with 4:10 to go, and the Terps gained three yards on a run before the safety. Tagovailoa finished 21 for 31 for 247 yards with two interceptions. He also lost a first-half fumble that was returned for a Wolverines touchdown. michigan got 94 yards and two touchdowns from tailback Blake Corum and limited the Terps to 15 yards on 33 carries. <The football gods laughed at us and dropped the ball there at the one-inch line to go and win the game,= Coach michael Locksley said. <That9s where we have to learn to be able to execute in critical situations with our backs to it, things we practice, and we end up giving up a safety. I9m not going to get into that part of the call there, but wherever the ball ends up to start a drive on offense, we9ve got to figure out how to execute.= A touchdown on the first possession of the second half had pulled maryland within 23-17, courtesy of a one-yard sneak on fourth and goal by Edwards. maryland held the Wolverines to a three and out on its next series, but with the Terps on the move, Tagovailoa misfired on a throw intended for wide receiver Kaden Stadium. The Terps 4 who also committed three turnovers, all charged to Tagovailoa 4 again failed to earn their first victory over a ranked Big Ten opponent since joining the conference in 2014, dropping to 0-34 in those games. maryland (6-5, 3-5) also fell to 2-22 at home in November and December since 2011. michigan (11-0, 8-0), again playing without suspended coach Jim Harbaugh, yielded its most points of the season and nearly saw a 23-3 lead evaporate but survived to remain squarely in the hunt for a berth in the College football Playoff. It also claimed the 1,000th win in program history. <I don9t know if the ball was too short or, you know, what happened,= Tagovailoa said of the safety, which put michigan ahead 31-24 with 3:38 left. <I feel like there was a receiver in the vicinity, but, I mean, playing at maryland, they don9t give us those calls like that, so we . . . just can9t make mistakes like that.= Tagovailoa had directed the Terps to the michigan 1-yard line late in the third quarter before yielding to backup Billy Edwards Jr. for the third of three sneaks for touchdowns, with this one trimming their deficit to 29-24 and capping a nine-play drive covering 84 yards against the nation9s Maryland from d1 Terps blow another shot at program-deûning win yard sneak by Edwards, a transfer from Wake forest who attended Lake Braddock High, with 1:59 to go and a defensive uprising that kept the deficit manageable, at 23-10, heading into the locker room. With the Wolverines having lead to 29-17 with 4:04 to play in the third quarter. Terps cornerback Ja9Quan Sheppard leaped to break up a two-point conversion pass attempt. The Terps closed the first half with a touchdown on another onePrather. Cornerback mike Sainristil secured the ball for a michigan interception. The Wolverines converted the turnover into a touchdown on wide receiver Semaj morgan9s 13-yard jet sweep to grow their JoNaThaN NeWToN/The WashiNgToN PosT With Maryland down by six in the second half, Michigan9s Mike Sainristil picked off Taulia Tagovailoa.
d6 eZ sU the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 raiders (5-5) at dolphins (6-3), 1 p.m. » There are two bright spots for the raiders: interim coach antonio Pierce may have given the team an identity, and the raiders aren9t that far behind the Chiefs in the aFC West. buccaneers (4-5) at 49ers (6-3), 4:05 p.m. » The return of Deebo samuel and Trent Williams helped san Francisco end a three-game losing streak, but so did the arrival of Chase young after a halloween trade. in his 49ers debut, young pressured Trevor Lawrence four times and collaborated with nick Bosa on a strip sack. Jets (4-5) at bills (5-5), 4:25 p.m. (cbs) » The Jets, who beat Buffalo in Week 1, face a reeling Bills team whose quarterback, Josh allen, is the only one in the league to have thrown 10 or more interceptions in each of the past four seasons. he leads the nFL in interceptions (11) and turnovers (13), a decline that hastened the firing of offensive coordinator Ken Dorsey. seahawks (5-3) at rams (3-6), 4:25 p.m. » if seattle 4 5-1 in conference games 4 can survive a tough stretch that features games against the 49ers (twice), Cowboys and eagles, a postseason spot could beckon. Vikings (6-4) at broncos (4-5), 8:20 p.m. (nbc) » Josh Dobbs is the first player in nFL history to pass for 400 yards, rush for 100 and have zero interceptions in his first two games with a team. Minnesota has won five games without wide receiver Justin Jefferson and two without Jefferson and Kirk Cousins. eagles (8-1) at chiefs (7-2), 8:15 p.m., monday (abc, espn) » andy reid is 4-0 4 including the super Bowl LVii win 4 against his former team, but Jalen hurts has 12 straight wins against an opponent with a winning record, tied with Vinny Testaverde and Peyton Manning for the longest streak for a starter since 1950. 4 Cindy Boren cowboys (6-3) at panthers (1-8), 1 p.m. » CeeDee Lamb9s streak of consecutive games of 150 or more yards and at least 10 catches stands at three 4 a record in the super Bowl era. in his past three games, he has caught 12 passes for 158 yards, 11 for 191 and 11 for 151. steelers (6-3) at browns (6-3), 1 p.m. (cbs) » Deshaun Watson led a Cleveland comeback against Baltimore, but shoulder surgery ended his season. Pittsburgh9s relatively meaningless stat streak marches on 4 it is the first team since 1933 to be outgained in each of its first nine games and still have a winning record. bears (3-7) at lions (7-2), 1 p.m. » in Detroit9s victory over the Chargers, the Lions went for it on fourth down five times, converting four of them and showing they can do pretty much as they please on offense by gaining 8.3 yards per play. Jared Goff passed for 333 yards, 156 of which went to amon-ra st. Brown, and Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery each rushed for more than 100 yards. chargers (4-5) at packers (3-6) » For the fourth time in his first season since succeeding aaron rodgers as Green Bay9s quarterback, Jordan Love had the chance to lead his team to a road win and fell short with two fourth-quarter interceptions last week against Pittsburgh. cardinals (2-8) at texans (5-4), 1 p.m. » and now a few words about C.J. stroud (who might be the MVP, offensive rookie of the year, offensive player of the year or possibly all three). he has passed for 1,513 yards on throws over 10 air yards 4 nearly 100 more than any other quarterback, according to next Gen stats. and a few more: he passed for 826 yards against Tampa Bay and Cincinnati in the past two weeks. titans (3-6) at Jaguars (6-3), 1 p.m. » Jacksonville looked horrible in its annihilation at the hands of the 49ers. Trevor Lawrence was sacked five times, was intercepted twice and lost a fumble for the 18th time in his career (seven more than any other player since 2021). souTh W L T PcT. PF Pa New Orleans 5 5 0 .500 214 198 Tampa Bay 4 5 0 .444 178 173 Atlanta 4 6 0 .400 189 217 Carolina 1 8 0 .111 153 242 NorTh W L T PcT. PF Pa Detroit 7 2 0 .778 241 203 Minnesota 6 4 0 .600 233 209 Green Bay 3 6 0 .333 179 182 Chicago 3 7 0 .300 204 255 WEsT W L T PcT. PF Pa San Francisco 6 3 0 .667 252 143 Seattle 6 3 0 .667 200 201 L.A. Rams 3 6 0 .333 178 204 Arizona 2 8 0 .200 176 263 EasT W L T PcT. PF Pa Miami 6 3 0 .667 285 225 Buffalo 5 5 0 .500 262 184 N.Y. Jets 4 5 0 .444 144 172 New England 2 8 0 .200 141 238 souTh W L T PcT. PF Pa Jacksonville 6 3 0 .667 196 190 Houston 5 4 0 .556 217 192 Indianapolis 5 5 0 .500 242 248 Tennessee 3 6 0 .333 154 180 NorTh W L T PcT. PF Pa Baltimore 8 3 0 .727 304 177 Cleveland 6 3 0 .667 214 170 Pittsburgh 6 3 0 .667 156 182 Cincinnati 5 5 0 .500 202 226 WEsT W L T PcT. PF Pa Kansas City 7 2 0 .778 208 143 Las Vegas 5 5 0 .500 172 205 Denver 4 5 0 .444 196 248 L.A. Chargers 4 5 0 .444 239 215 EasT W L T PcT. PF Pa Philadelphia 8 1 0 .889 252 195 Dallas 6 3 0 .667 269 165 Washington 4 6 0 .400 217 274 N.Y. Giants 2 8 0 .200 118 266 other Games 59.2 percent blItz rate everyone knows new york Giants defensive coordinator Don <Wink= Martindale likes to blitz. in Week 7, Martindale blitzed Commanders quarterback sam howell on 29 of his 49 dropbacks (59.2 percent) 4 the highest rate any Washington quarterback had been blitzed in the past decade 4 and the offense looked unprepared. The Commanders9 inability to handle the blitz was the main reason they lost. Two weeks later, in a win over new england, howell and the reshuffled offensive line showed great progress against pressure. howell9s presnap recognition and audibles were critical to the offense9s success, especially against cover-zero blitzes, one of which howell beat for a 33-yard touchdown to wide receiver Jahan Dotson. The question now is whether Martindale will keep blitzing despite howell9s progress. if he does, can howell keep beating it consistently? Who blinks first? 468 yards Last week, Dallas destroyed new york, 49-17, in the first start for undrafted rookie free agent quarterback Tommy DeVito, a new Jersey native who9s arguably most famous for living at home with his parents. Dallas gained 640 yards to new york9s 172, the largest difference in total yardage between teams in a game in 44 years, according to the nFL. Commanders Coach ron rivera was asked what he thought of the Giants9 offense with DeVito. <They9re all professionals,= he said. <They9re going to play as hard as they can and do everything they can to win. We9re going to try and counter all that by coming out and playing the best we can and try to win.= .357 WInnInG percentaGe rivera has struggled against the Giants as Washington9s coach. his record against them, 2-4-1, is good for a .357 winning percentage, the second lowest of any team he has faced at least three times (behind seattle, .333). The most recent loss still stings, several players said. <a lot of guys are motivated by that loss because we feel like we should9ve won that game,= running back Brian robinson Jr. said. <i think a lot of guys are really upset about it, and so am i. i haven9t won a game against new york yet. i9m eager to beat them. it9s a critical game for us and what we9re trying to accomplish for our season. so i think guys are fired up about that.= 4 Sam Fortier seTh WeniG/assOCiaTeD Press The Commanders shuffled their offensive line after losing to the Giants in Week 7, when New York repeatedly blitzed Sam Howell. New York Giants (2-8) at Washington Commanders (4-6) Time: 1 p.m. TV: Fox. Radio: WBIG (100.3 FM). Line: Commanders by 81/2. For in-game analysis, live stats and discussion, read our live updates at postsports.com. by the numbers NFL week 11 aFc nFc commanders GIants 1 Jahan Dotson WR 5-11 182 2 Dyami Brown WR 6-0 195 3 Byron Pringle WR 6-1 203 4 Curtis Samuel WR 5-11 195 5 Tress Way P 6-1 220 6 Joey Slye K 5-11 213 8 Brian Robinson Jr. RB 6-1 228 12 Jacoby Brissett QB 6-4 235 13 Emmanuel Forbes Jr. CB 6-0 180 14 Sam Howell QB 6-1 220 17 Terry McLaurin WR 6-0 210 20 Jartavius Martin DB 6-0 195 23 Chris Rodriguez Jr. RB 5-11 224 24 Antonio Gibson RB 6-2 220 25 Benjamin St-Juste CB 6-3 200 26 Tariq Castro-Fields CB 6-1 197 29 Kendall Fuller CB 5-11 198 31 Kamren Curl S 6-2 198 32 Terrell Burgess S 5-11 202 34 Christian Holmes CB 6-1 205 35 Percy Butler S 6-0 191 36 Danny Johnson CB 5-9 190 38 Derrick Gore RB 5-10 212 40 Alex Armah RB 6-1 255 41 Jabril Cox LB 6-3 235 45 De'Jon Harris LB 6-0 245 47 Khaleke Hudson LB 6-0 220 50 Andre Jones Jr. DE 6-5 258 51 David Mayo LB 6-2 240 52 Jamin Davis LB 6-3 234 54 Camaron Cheeseman LS 6-4 237 55 KJ Henry DE 6-4 255 59 Joshua Pryor DE 6-4 280 61 Julian Good-Jones OT 6-5 313 63 Nick Gates C 6-5 312 69 Tyler Larsen C 6-4 335 71 Andrew Wylie G/T 6-6 309 72 Charles Leno Jr. T 6-3 302 73 Trent Scott T 6-5 320 75 Chris Paul G 6-4 324 76 Sam Cosmi T 6-6 309 78 Cornelius Lucas T 6-8 327 80 Curtis Hodges TE 6-8 240 82 Logan Thomas TE 6-6 250 83 Jamison Crowder WR 5-9 177 85 Cole Turner TE 6-6 240 86 Mitchell Tinsley WR 6-1 205 87 John Bates TE 6-6 259 91 John Ridgeway III DT 6-5 321 93 Jonathan Allen DT 6-3 300 94 Daron Payne DT 6-3 320 95 Casey Toohill DE 6-5 254 96 James Smith-Williams DE 6-4 265 97 Efe Obada DE 6-6 265 98 Phidarian Mathis DT 6-4 312 roster oFFense QB Tommy DeVito Matt Barkley RB Saquon Barkley Matt Breida WR Darius Slayton Sterling Shepard WR Jalin Hyatt Isaiah Hodgins WR Wan'Dale Robinson Paris Campbell TE Daniel Bellinger Lawrence Cager LT Andrew Thomas Joshua Miles LG Justin Pugh Mark Glowinski C John Michael Schmitz Ben Bredeson RG Ben Bredeson Mark Glowinski RT Tyre Phillips Marcus McKethan deFense and specIal teams DE A'Shawn Robinson D.J. Davidson NT Dexter Lawrence II Rakeem Nuñez-Roches DE Azeez Ojulari Jihad Ward OLB Micah McFadden Isaiah Simmons ILB Bobby Okereke Carter Coughlin OLB Kayvon Thibodeaux Boogie Basham CB Nick McCloud Tre Hawkins III CB Deonte Banks Cor'Dale Flott CB Cor9Dale Flott Darnay Holmes SS Jason Pinnock Dane Belton FS Xavier McKinney Gervarrius Owens K Randy Bullock Cade York P Jamie Gillan H Jamie Gillan PR Gunner Olszewski Sterling Shepard KR Paris Campbell Gunner Olszewski LS Casey Kreiter depth chart oFFense QB Sam Howell Jacoby Brissett RB Brian Robinson Jr. Antonio Gibson WR Terry McLaurin Jamison Crowder WR Jahan Dotson Byron Pringle WR Curtis Samuel Dyami Brown TE Logan Thomas John Bates LT Charles Leno Jr. Cornelius Lucas LG Chris Paul Julian Good-Jones C Tyler Larsen Nick Gates RG Sam Cosmi Nick Gates RT Andrew Wylie Cornelius Lucas deFense and specIal teams DE Efe Obada KJ Henry DT Daron Payne John Ridgeway DT Jonathan Allen Phidarian Mathis DE Casey Toohill Andre Jones Jr. MLB Jamin Davis David Mayo OLB Khaleke Hudson De'Jon Harris CB Kendall Fuller Danny Johnson CB Emmanuel Forbes Jr. CB Benjamin St-Juste Christian Holmes SS Kam Curl Terrell Burgess FS Percy Butler Quan Martin K Joey Slye P Tress Way H Tress Way PR Jamison Crowder Jahan Dotson KR Antonio Gibson Byron Pringle LS Camaron Cheeseman depth chart 0 Parris Campbell WR 6-1 205 3 Sterling Shepard WR 5-10 198 5 Kayvon Thibodeaux OLB 6-5 258 6 Jamie Gillan P 6-1 207 9 Matt Barkley QB 6-2 227 13 Jalin Hyatt WR 6-0 185 15 Tommy DeVito QB 6-2 210 17 Wan'Dale Robinson WR 5-8 185 18 Isaiah Hodgins WR 6-3 200 19 Isaiah Simmons S/ILB 6-4 238 21 Bobby McCain S 5-9 196 22 Adoree' Jackson CB 5-11 185 24 Dane Belton S 6-1 190 25 Deonte Banks CB 6-2 200 26 Saquon Barkley RB 6-0 232 27 Jason Pinnock S 6-0 200 28 Cor'Dale Flott CB 6-2 175 29 Xavier McKinney S 6-0 201 30 Darnay Holmes CB 5-10 195 31 Matt Breida RB 5-10 195 34 Deon Jackson RB 6-0 218 35 Jashaun Corbin RB 6-0 221 37 Tre Hawkins III CB 6-3 195 39 Gervarrius Owens S 6-0 200 41 Micah McFadden ILB 6-2 232 44 Nick McCloud CB 6-1 193 45 Boogie Basham OLB 6-3 274 46 Randy Bullock K 5-9 208 47 Cam Brown ILB 6-5 235 51 Azeez Ojulari OLB 6-3 240 52 Carter Coughlin ILB 6-3 240 55 Jihad Ward OLB 6-5 285 58 Bobby Okereke ILB 6-2 235 59 Casey Kreiter LS 6-1 250 60 Marcus McKethan OL 6-7 335 61 John Michael Schmitz Jr. C 6-4 320 64 Mark Glowinski G 6-4 310 65 Sean Harlow OL 6-4 284 67 Justin Pugh OL 6-5 311 68 Ben Bredeson G 6-5 310 73 Evan Neal T 6-7 340 77 Joshua Miles T 6-5 325 78 Andrew Thomas T 6-5 315 79 Tyre Phillips T 6-5 330 80 Gunner Olszewski WR 6-0 190 82 Daniel Bellinger TE 6-6 255 83 Lawrence Cager TE 6-5 220 84 Tyree Jackson TE 6-7 249 86 Darius Slayton WR 6-1 198 91 A'Shawn Robinson DL 6-4 330 93 Rakeem Nuñez-Roches DL 6-2 305 95 Jordon Riley DL 6-5 315 97 Dexter Lawrence II DL 6-4 340 98 D.J. Davidson DL 6-5 320 99 Cade York K 6-1 206 roster Week 1 at Commanders 20, Cardinals 16 Week 2 Commanders 35, at Broncos 33 Week 3 Bills 37, at Commanders 3 Week 4 at eagles 34, Commanders 31 (OT) Week 5 Bears 40, at Commanders 20 Week 6 Commanders 24, at Falcons 16 Week 7 at Giants 14, Commanders 7 Week 8 eagles 38, at Commanders 31 Week 9 Commanders 20, at Patriots 17 Week 10 at seahawks 29, Commanders 26 Week 11 vs. Giants sunday, 1 p.m. (Fox) Week 12 at cowboys Thursday, 4:30 p.m. (CBs) Week 13 vs. dolphins Dec. 3, 1 p.m. (Fox) Week 14 Bye Week 15 at rams Dec. 17, 4:05 p.m. (CBs) Week 16 at Jets Dec. 24, 1 p.m. (CBs) Week 17 vs. 49ers Dec. 31, 1 p.m. (Fox) Week 18 vs. cowboys Jan. 6/7; date, time and TV TBD schedule eriC Gay/assOCiaTeD Press Rookie quarterback C.J. Stroud is a contender for the MVP award and has pushed the surprising Texans into the AFC playoff race.
sunday, november 19, 2023 . the washington post eZ SU D7 he was still on Arizona time, so he tossed and turned when he tried going to bed early. <He goes to work the next day like a zombie,= mcCartney said. <I9m sure he was overwhelmed.= Dobbs missed the first offensive meeting because he needed to take a physical. The Vikings9 palatial facility includes an offensive meeting room, a quarterback room and another room where quarterbacks convene without coaches. He at least knew o9Hara, who had coached him as a lowlevel assistant during Dobbs9s 2019 stint with the Jaguars. Dobbs texted o9Hara all week, <What room are we in?= At practice, Vikings coaches prepared Hall for his first NfL start, against the Atlanta falcons. Dobbs took only mental reps. He didn9t throw a pass to any of minnesota9s starting wide receivers. By friday, he had memorized the game plan cold. on the second series, Hall suffered a possible concussion. In an instant, Dobbs went from emergency option to carrying minnesota9s playoff hopes. His offensive linemen encircled him on the sideline so he could recite his cadence. He took snaps from center Garrett Bradbury for the first time. on his third snap, Dobbs was tackled in the end zone for a safety. His next series ended when falcons defensive end Arnold Ebiketie sacked him from behind and knocked away the ball, which the falcons recovered and returned to the 1-yard line. When Dobbs began his third series, he trailed 11-3, staring at a huddle of teammates he had barely met. He never flinched. Dobbs relied on his athleticism and avoided mistakes. He rushed for 77 yards, didn9t throw an interception and kept the Vikings in it until the final drive, when Atlanta led 28-24. relying on the <deep cuts,= Dobbs marched 75 yards and finished with his second touchdown pass of the day. After seeking an opportunity for so long, his moment had come. <He9s a good football player, and you9re seeing it,= roethlisberger said. <I felt bad because he kept going to bad football teams and never getting a chance. It9s fun that people are getting to see what we always saw.= <I hope with his success,= roethlisberger added, chuckling, <he still returns my text messages.= So many people Dobbs has met over the years are reveling in his success. In 2016, at the end of Dobbs9s junior season, wildfires ravaged Gatlinburg, Tenn. one coach turned on the local news that night and saw a report about the star quarterback who had driven an hour to visit a shelter for victims. NfL locker rooms are filled with former teammates who adore Dobbs. Two NASA centers are packed with brilliant people who marvel at him. <I can9t imagine there9s anybody that has a bad word to say about Josh,= roethlisberger said. <Everyone always talks about the NASA, the smart guy, and obviously he was that. But more important, he was a great guy. He seemed to always care about everybody. He genuinely wanted to know how your day was. It9s like he never had a bad day.= <We9re all big fans of Josh9s,= said Parker, the Glenn communications director. <our center director would like to hire him tomorrow if he could.= <He was humble. He was downto-earth,= Colloredo said. <He had every reason in the world to have a big ego, but he couldn9t have been nicer. There9s a lot of Josh Dobbs fans here, for a lot of reasons. . . . It is a big deal to us to see him doing what he9s doing and making nerds cool. We9re loving this.= Last Sunday afternoon, before he played the best game of his life, Dobbs stood on the sideline as the minnesota crowd performed its ritual. He looked around and saw a stadium of purple-clad fans clapping hands over their heads and screaming <Skol!= in unison. <Take this all in,= o9Hara told him. <You got all these people behind you today. Don9t do anything but just be yourself.= minnesota9s two-minute offense. <I9ve never done that before,= o9Hara said. In the moments that followed, minnesota discovered a new folk hero. He was a quarterback who bounced between benches and practice squads for the first six seasons of his career. He was an aerospace engineering major who graduated from Tennessee with a 4.0 GPA and interned for NASA. He was a beloved teammate with the interpersonal skills to explain rockets to football players and football to rocket scientists. Dobbs made his first career start in December at 27, nine days after the Tennessee Titans signed him off the Detroit Lions9 practice squad. A two-game cameo with the Titans earned him a chance to begin this season as the starter in Arizona. The Vikings traded for him oct. 31, two days after they lost franchise pillar Kirk Cousins to a season-ending Achilles9 tendon tear. five days later, after Dobbs entered in the first quarter for injured rookie Jaren Hall and received a crunchtime sideline tutorial, he led an 11-play touchdown drive that delivered a victory his coaches and teammates would remember always. Dobbs owns a distinction that required his blend of intellect, buoyancy and diligence: He is the second quarterback in NfL history to start for three different franchises in a calendar year and the first to do so with three weeks or less of preparation with each team. <This has never happened in the history of the league,= Dobbs9s agent, mike mcCartney, said. <It9s not like you go to the library and say, 8How do I handle this?9 He9s the one who9s writing the book.= In Dobbs9s first start for the Vikings, a stunning notion emerged: The NfL9s brainiest and most itinerant quarterback might also be a burgeoning star. Dobbs shredded the New orleans Saints9 formidable defense in a 27-19 victory with athletic scrambles and pinpoint passes. He completed 23 of 34 attempts for 268 yards and a touchdown and ran eight times for 44 yards and another touchdown, a spinning, juking, leaping display that left Coach Kevin o9Connell slackjawed on the sideline. on Sunday night against the Denver Broncos, Dobbs will lead the seventh franchise he has played for as the unquestioned starter of a playoff contender. <I understood my journey might be a little unique,= Dobbs told reporters this week in minnesota. <Each stop, each opportunity, my role has grown. I recognized that about a year ago around this time. I kind of accepted that was going to be my journey. Whatever opportunity was thrown my way, no matter how big or small, I was going to make the most of it.= Learning an NfL game plan on the fly is an incomprehensible task, and Dobbs may be the one person on Earth perfectly suited for it. In Dobbs9s view, it requires problem-solving in real time, repeating processes and applying multiple principles across different situations. He is an expert at that kind of thinking in two fields. <There9s definitely some synergy,= Dobbs said. <Engineering and quarterback have a lot of crossover in the mental aspect.= 8The Passtronaut9 one thing Scott Colloredo does when he is not sending rockets into space is root for Tennessee football. Colloredo is the director of Kennedy Space Center engineering and a Tennessee graduate. In the mid-2010s, Dobbs astonished him from afar: The Volunteers quarterback who won SEC player of the year in 2017 also crushed one of the school9s most difficult majors. <Anytime somebody has a 4.0 in aerospace engineering, it9s a big deal,= Colloredo said. <When they9re playing major college football, it9s even more of an amazing deal.= In 2019, Colloredo contacted Dobbs on LinkedIn. Dobbs responded immediately, and their DobbS from D1 NFL week 11 several weeks. <The good thing is he had some clothes in his car,= mcCartney said. <Because he had just gotten to Detroit.= Nine days after he arrived in Nashville, Dobbs started an NfL game for the first time. The Titans lost both of Dobbs9s starts, including a heartbreaker against Jacksonville that would have sent them to the playoffs. His steady performance under unusual circumstances, though, gave the league a new perspective. Dobbs signed again with Cleveland. Two weeks before the season opener, the Browns traded him to the Cardinals. With Kyler murray out and unproven choices behind him, the Cardinals made Dobbs their Week 1 starter. Though the Cardinals began the season 1-7, Dobbs established himself as a viable NfL starter. He kept the Cardinals in games despite a porous defense. only Lamar Jackson totaled more rushing yards than he did among quarterbacks. After the Cardinals lost to the ravens two days before the trade deadline, Coach Jonathan Gannon announced Dobbs would remain their starter. Earlier that day, Cousins tore his Achilles9. on monday, Gannon called Dobbs into his office and informed him he had changed his mind: rookie Clayton Tune would replace him. Dobbs called mcCartney and told him, <Hey, I just got benched.= <Well, then you9re getting traded,= mcCartney said. <No, he told me I9m not,= Dobbs replied. <You9re getting traded,= mcCartney said. <Pack two weeks9 worth. Who knows? You could be going to minnesota.= Dobbs was stunned. He loved the organization, his place in Scottsdale and the chance to play. His furniture had just arrived. <I could tell he was stung,= mcCartney said. <It gets old after a while.= mcCartney9s hunch proved prophetic. The Cardinals traded Dobbs to minnesota for a fifthround pick. Dobbs headed for the airport, two weeks of clothes in tow. 8Take this all in9 Dobbs arrived at the hotel where the Vikings house new players, a short walk from the team9s practice facility. <That part was good,= mcCartney said. <Because he didn9t have a car.= He didn9t know what time he needed to be at work, so he played it safe: 5 a.m. alarm, arrive around 6. But believed he could be a starter. He focused on improving his accuracy and refining footwork in the pocket. He received few practice reps during the season, but he took mental reps as though he was a starter. After the 2021 season, Dobbs recognized he needed to leave Pittsburgh, to play under a new staff that might view him as a starter. He chose to sign with Cleveland, with Deshaun Watson9s looming suspension a possible pathway to the field. Dobbs became Jacoby Brissett9s backup, though, and when Watson9s 11-game suspension ended, the Browns waived Dobbs. He worked out for the Denver Broncos. The Detroit Lions showed interest. He chose Detroit for two reasons: he wanted to play for up-and-coming coordinator Ben Johnson, and the Lions didn9t have a backup quarterback signed for 2023. He joined the Lions9 practice squad Dec. 5. Thirteen days later, Tennessee Titans quarterback ryan Tannehill suffered an injury that knocked him out for the season. mcCartney, Dobbs9s agent, called Titans interim general manager ryan Cowden, hopeful Tennessee wanted another quarterback option. While they spoke, Cowden pulled up Dobbs9s preseason film. By the end of the conversation, Cowden told mcCartney, <I9m liking Dobbs.= mcCartney texted the quarterback. When Dobbs told him he was in a meeting, mcCartney told him he needed to leave 4 he was heading to Tennessee. Dobbs drove to the Detroit airport and left his car in long-term parking, where it remained for why he9s become so good at both areas. Now he9s showing the world what he9s good at.= NASA officials have encouraged Dobbs to attempt astronaut training once his football career ends, Colloredo said, which could make Dobbs an overly imaginative first-grader9s worksheet sprung to life: When I grow up, I want to be an astronaut and a quarterback. A traveling quarterback Dobbs is an overnight sensation years in the making. He entered the league in 2017, picked by the Steelers in the fourth round. He found himself buried on the depth chart with no chance of usurping superstar Ben roethlisberger. Dobbs quickly became one of roethlisberger9s confidants, sitting next to him at every meeting. When the Steelers switched from paper playbooks to tablets, roethlisberger asked Dobbs to show him how they worked. When roethlisberger came off the field between drives on gamedays, the first person he talked to 4 before any coach 4 was Dobbs. <Did you see anything on this?= roethlisberger would ask. <I trusted he wasn9t going to just say what I wanted to hear,= roethlisberger said this past week in a phone conversation. <He was going to tell me what he saw. It9s invaluable to have a guy like that in your corner and behind you. He wanted to play, but he wasn9t trying to take my job.= Dobbs appeared in six games in his first five seasons, missing the 2021 season after he suffered turf toe in the preseason. Still, Dobbs conversation led to an internship, supported by the NfL Players Association, in 2020. Dobbs worked in what NASA labels the <instrumentation group= focused on <expiration ground systems= for the Artemis I mission, an uncrewed test flight that launched in November 2022. Dobbs9s group, Colloredo said, monitored launchpads by studying hazardous gases, flow rates, temperatures and structural defections. In simple terms: Dobbs helped make sure nothing went haywire on the launchpad. <We threw him right into the fire,= Colloredo said. When Dobbs signed with the Cleveland Browns in 2022, NASA9s Glenn research Center contacted him. Dobbs volunteered in engagement and outreach, helping NASA reach a young, sports-obsessed audience. He also toured the center and <definitely geeked out on our testing facility,= Glenn communications director Kristen Parker said. After Dobbs9s first Vikings start, Glenn research Center made a social media post nicknaming Dobbs <The Passtronaut= that included a picture of Dobbs in full spacesuit. By the center9s accounting, the post reached 6.8 million people. <He can bridge the gap between sports and aerospace engineering,= Parker said. <I have not met too many people who are good at explaining on a basic level the type of work we do here at NASA. But then to also be in the sports world, it9s a one-of-a-kind type of skill set. He could easily do either, and that9s crazy.= The vernacular used at NASA often overwhelms newcomers. NASA9s engineers use distinct acronyms and lingo, <almost like a different language,= Colloredo said. When Dobbs9s bosses at Kennedy Space Center quizzed him after a few weeks, Dobbs nailed it. It struck Colloredo that learning the language of NASA might not be unlike absorbing multiple NfL playbooks. <A major event in his world today is a football game, a major event with a lot of preparation, a lot of technical jargon, a lot of rehearsal,= Colloredo said. <When you9re eventually going to launch a rocket, you9re going through all these preparations to make sure your launch team is ready. That9s what we do: We practice, and then we get it right for the actual big test day or launch day. There9s a lot of similarities. It9s probably With Vikings, Dobbs is making the most of latest landing site abbie parr/aSSociated preSS Vikings quarterback Joshua Dobbs threw for 268 yards and a touchdown and ran for 44 yards and a score against the Saints. NaSa Dobbs, an aerospace engineering major, interned at NASA in 2020 under Scott Colloredo, a fellow University of Tennessee graduate. S0129-6x3 Retropolis Stories of the past, rediscovered. washingtonpost.com/retropolis
d8 eZ M2 the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 Dotson said. <He9s leading us to put us in positions to win football games, and that9s really all you want in your quarterback.= Howell has earned the praise of not just his coaches and teammates but also opponents. Patriots Coach Bill Belichick lauded his toughness. falcons Coach Arthur Smith raved about his resilience and his deep throws. Eagles center Jason Kelce extolled Howell on his podcast. Although the Eagles swept the Commanders this year, the close losses were two of Howell9s finest showings. His play 4 73.1 completion percentage, 687 total passing yards, five touchdowns, one interception and a 107.2 passer rating 4 seemed to validate Washington9s optimism and put a division rival on alert. <Typically, like when you9re playing quarterbacks that aren9t, like, well-known, if you make them drive the field and do short, dink-dunk passes, that9s hard to continually do,= Kelce said. <Not for Sam Howell. He was very on point. He was executing it. He was taking some shots occasionally, but a lot of it, it felt like death by a thousand slants.= While commending Howell9s improvement, rivera and Bieniemy have stressed that the young quarterback still has a ways to go. He still makes the mistakes fitting of a rookie, such as the interception he threw in the end zone against the Patriots when he should9ve thrown the ball out of bounds. or the myriad sacks he took early on that could9ve been prevented. There are still times when he misreads a play and Bieniemy has to remind himself that Howell is probably seeing it for the first time in his career. But Howell9s progress has spurred hope, and for a franchise that has been stuck in mediocrity, that hope can go a long way. But it9s still unknown whether Howell will become the franchise player Washington has been desperately seeking. <It looks like they got one,= Schlereth said. <They got a guy that has the ability to be really good.= PaTrIck sMITh/geTTy IMages sonny milano (15) received a pass along the bottom of the left circle and scored inside the far post to tie the game at 1 in the second period. victory. With wins in eight of their past 10 games, the Capitals have moved into second place in the metropolitan Division at 9- 4-2. <I think we find a way to play our game,= ovechkin said. <obviously, Chuckie played unbelievable, keeps us in the game. Penalty kill did a great job. I don9t think we look at standings right now. We just play the game as hard as we can, try to collect the points and go game by game.= with Lindgren, but it was confirmed upon review by the NHL9s situation room in Toronto. <To me and our video department, olivier goes in there and he moves Lindgren,= Carbery said. <. . . You can argue, 8Well, Chuckie wouldn9t be able to make that save,9 but you don9t know that because he9s spun and now he9s a little bit out of position. That9s just the way we felt about it, and Toronto disagreed.= As Washington defended its late lead, Lapierre9s breakaway tally at 13:34 provided a bit of breathing room that the Capitals dearly needed when the Blue Jackets pulled back within one just over two minutes later on Justin Danforth9s tally. Defenseman Trevor van riemsdyk was sent off for holding with 2:34 left, and the Capitals were again faced with a tenuous defensive situation late in a game. But Washington killed the penalty, its 23rd straight, and held on for its fourth straight minutes later. Dylan Strome, who leads the Capitals with seven goals, had yet to record an assist despite considering himself more of a playmaker than a shooter. That changed on ovechkin9s goal: Strome pulled the puck off the end boards and flipped a backhand pass to ovechkin, who had entered the offensive zone unnoticed, in the low slot. When Strome9s pass landed on ovechkin9s stick, he was all alone in front of Blue Jackets goalie Elvis merzlikins (22 saves), and he sent a wrist shot into the net for the 827th goal of his career. <I don9t know,= ovechkin quipped when asked how he was so open on the play. <Ask them.= As has been the pattern for Washington recently, the game wasn9t over. Defenseman Ivan Provorov brought Columbus within a goal at 7:01 of the third period after a scramble in front of Lindgren. The Capitals challenged the goal, believing that mathieu olivier had interfered red light went on, at 13:16. Though the trio of milano, Protas and Hendrix Lapierre played roughly 10 minutes apiece, they combined for three goals 4 Lapierre scored on a breakaway in the third period 4 and Protas and Lapierre had three-point games. <We did some good things, but we still weren9t breaking through, weren9t generating, and then that line takes over and scores,= Carbery said. <Sort of gets some life in the building, life to our group, and then backs it up again and again.= Added Lapierre: <I thought our line had a good game, especially in that second period when we were kind of looking for a spark. Pretty happy. I thought we made plays, and the team just finds ways to win again. We just gut it out.= After Protas put the Capitals ahead, captain Alex ovechkin extended the lead just over two CAPITALs from d1 Caps grind out fourth consecutive win CapitaLS9 NExt tHREE vs. Buffalo Sabres Wednesday 7 Monumental vs. Edmonton oilers Friday 3 Monumental at San Jose Sharks nov. 27 10:30 Monumental Radio: WJFK (106.7 FM), WFED (1500 AM) ASSOCIATED PRESS Sean Couturier scored the game-winner a minute into overtime, and the host Philadelphia flyers relied on a pair of power play goals to defeat the defending Stanley Cup champion Vegas Golden Knights, 4-3, on Saturday for their fourth straight victory. Couturier took advantage of a turnover by Jack Eichel and slid a shot through the pads of goalie Logan Thompson. The goal stood up to video review for a potential missed stoppage. The flyers9 power play, ranked at or near the bottom of the NHL all season, was able to score on its first two opportunities. owen Tippett scored for the fourth consecutive game, banging in a rebound to give the flyers a 1-0 lead in the first period, and Tyson foerster scored his first goal of the season 59 seconds into the second period to make it 2-0. Sean Walker also scored for Philadelphia, and Carter Hart made 28 saves to earn the win. reigning playoff mVP Jonathan marchessault score twice in the second period for Vegas. l rAnGers 5, deVILs 3: Jimmy Vesey and Artemi Panarin scored two goals apiece as New York stretched its point streak to 11 games by beating New Jersey in Newark. Panarin set a rangers record by running his season-opening point streak to 15 games. His first-period power-play goal broke the mark he shared with rod Gilbert, and his second goal midway through the third tied the score at 3. Vesey broke the tie with 2:49 to play when he backhanded the rebound of Tyler Pitlick9s shot into an open net. New York (12-2-1) is 10-0-1 in its past 11 games. l LIGHTnInG 6, oILers 4: Steven Stamkos and Luke Glendening scored 39 seconds apart midway through the third period, and Tampa Bay rallied to beat Edmonton in Tampa. Stamkos tied it on his 197th career power-play goal, which tied him with Jarome Iginla for 21st place all-time, before Glendening put Tampa Bay up 5-4. Nikita Kucherov had two goals and an assist for the Lightning. Derek ryan scored twice for the oilers. l BrUIns 5, CAnAdIens 2: In Boston, Trent frederic scored two goals, Brad marchand collected his 500th career assist, and the Bruins cruised past montreal. Pavel Zacha, Charlie mcAvoy and James van riemsdyk also scored for Boston (13-1-2). Juraj Slafkovsky and Johnathan Kovacevic scored for the Canadiens, who have lost four in a row and fell to 0-11-1 in their past 12 games against Boston. Earlier, the Bruins said milan Lucic, 35, is taking an indefinite leave of absence from the team after he was involved in an undisclosed incident friday night. Boston Police said they could neither confirm nor deny arresting Lucic early Saturday morning. l HUrrICAnes 4, PenGUIns 2: In raleigh, N.C., Seth Jarvis broke a tie with 8:08 remaining with his first goal in six games, then added an empty-net tally as Carolina got past Pittsburgh. Sebastian Aho and Brent Burns also scored for the Hurricanes. Sidney Crosby scored twice for the Penguins. l AVALAnCHe 6, sTArs 3: mikko rantanen scored the tiebreaking goal in the third period, and Colorado erased a three-goal deficit to win in Dallas. The Avalanche9s Cale makar became the fastest defenseman in NHL history to reach 200 career assists with three in his 254th game. His first two helpers came on second-period goals by miles Wood and ryan Johansen after Dallas had taken a 3-0 lead. former Stars player Valeri Nichushkin tied it on an unassisted goal early in the third before assisting along with Devon Toews when rantanen put the Avalanche up 4-3. l senATors 2, WILd 1 (so): In Stockholm, Josh Norris scored the only goal in a shootout to lift ottawa past minnesota as the NHL9s Global Series continued in the Swedish capital. Norris wristed the puck past goaltender filip Gustavsson to win the second game in Stockholm and extend ottawa9s winning streak to three. l IsLAnders 5, FLAmes 4 (so): oliver Wahlstrom scored the shootout winner in visiting New York9s win over Calgary that snapped a seven-game losing streak. l JeTs 5, CoYoTes 2: mark Scheifele had a goal and two assists to lead Winnipeg over visiting Arizona. l PredATors 4, BLACKHAWKs 2: Cole Smith scored two goals, Gustav Nyquist scored just hours after welcoming his third child into the world, and Nashville beat visiting Chicago to halt a fourgame losing streak. NHL RouNdup Couturier scores in OT, keeps Philadelphia hot FLYERS 4, G. KNIGHTS 3 (OT) in him,= Bieniemy said. <In fact, he9d be a great poker player.= more importantly, Howell is able to quickly correct himself after errors. During the offseason, he spent much of his time improving his footwork. To ensure a play gets off properly, Howell needs his feet to be in sync with those of his pass-catchers. And by fixing his feet, Howell has been able to get the ball out quicker. In the first three games of the season, Howell took an average of 2.81 seconds to either throw the ball or take a sack. In his past three games, he took an average of 2.65 seconds. <He9s improved in just being able to physically go from point of decision to ball out of his hands,= quarterbacks coach Tavita Pritchard said. <He9s done a tremendous job.= Lessons learned in practice often show up quickly in games. <[Bieniemy] was really working with him . . . to keep his eyes down the field and extend those plays and give us chances down the field,= mcLaurin said. <It was like that next week he was doing it right off the bat.= In Washington9s Week 7 loss to the Giants, New York blitzed heavily, which left Washington9s receivers in one-on-one matchups. Taking more deep shots, mcLaurin explained, could have helped to open up the offense. But the pressure up front left Howell almost no time to throw. In the next game, against the Eagles, Washington replaced center Nick Gates with Tyler Larsen and left guard Saahdiq Charles with Chris Paul. The changes, combined with Howell9s lessons from the previous week and Bieniemy9s changes to the game plan, rebooted the offense. Howell found mcLaurin and Jahan Dotson for deep touchdowns on two of the team9s first three drives. The changes have also made a 2,783 passing yards this season 4 in part because he also leads the league with 397 pass attempts and the Commanders average the fewest rushing attempts, 20.2 per game. But Howell is only the eighth player in NfL history to have four games of 300-plus passing yards in his first 11 career outings, and he9s the only one to top 2,900 passing yards and 200 rushing yards (he has 209) and complete at least 66.0 percent of his passes (66.1 percent) in that span. more significant: Howell has improved all season, and for a franchise that has watched quarterbacks peter out or fail to fully launch, that may be the most encouraging sign. <He9s our future,= defensive tackle Jonathan Allen said of Howell following the Commanders9 Week 9 win in New England. <I think we found our quarterback for the next five to 10 years.= Immediate improvements The team9s optimism about Howell centers on three primary factors: his physical traits, mental acuity and willingness to be coached. on the field, Howell has the mobility to escape the pocket and extend plays and the arm strength to sling the ball down the field. <His ability to throw the ball, I mean, he can flat spin it,= former Washington guard and current fox Sports analyst mark Schlereth said. <There9s not a throw that dude can9t make. He9s got touch; he9s got velocity.= mentally, Howell has been able to bounce back from bad plays and maintain a steady demeanor under pressure. <He hates to lose, he hates to be wrong, but he's never going to let you see that frustration come out CommAnders from d1 Howell9s steady growth gives Commanders hope <. . . It9s more than just throwing to open spots. It9s really knowing where you9re supposed to be. It9s a play within itself when you go into scramble drill.= 8He9s not shaken or anything9 Ask around the Commanders9 headquarters about Howell, and most people point to the traits you can9t teach. <Unflappable,= defensive coordinator Jack Del rio said. <His confidence in taking over the offense,= Larsen added. <. . . He comes in the huddle, and it9s like, man, even if he gets hit, he9s not shaken or anything.= Though soft-spoken and seemingly reserved, Howell plays with a grit and toughness that have earned him his teammates9 respect. Such as when he ran for 24 yards on third and 23 against the Patriots or when he took hit after hit in games earlier in the year. or the times he bounced back from throwing a pick to throw a touchdown on the subsequent drive. <He9s trusting in us, trusting in the process, trusting the offense,= ton has tailored his reads so he can get the ball out quicker and play faster, according to rivera. It was noticeable last weekend against Seattle. <Sam got a little bit more involved in the protections as well, in changing some of the calls,= rivera said. much of Howell9s growth 4 knowing when to move up in the pocket, when to scramble, when he9ll need to make the off-schedule plays, when to take the safe bet instead of the big play 4 has come from experience. <I just think my overall understanding of defensive football has gotten better throughout the year,= Howell said. <And obviously [it comes from] just having those in-game experiences and just learning more about what defenses are trying to do to stop us.= Howell9s understanding of defenses 4 and the players around him 4 shows up even more when plays break down. <I think one thing that E.B. brought here is the importance of scramble drill,= mcLaurin said. drastic difference in the number of hits Howell has taken. Through the first seven games, he took a total of 40 sacks, averaging 5.7 a game. over the past four weeks, he has averaged only 2.3. situational awareness In the offseason, when Bieniemy was still in the midst of installing his West Coast scheme, Pritchard noted that Howell had a tendency to hang on the first reads of his passing progressions a little too long. The problem persisted into the season. <We knew that he liked to get to his targets early in his progression, so that was something that we thought we could go in and steal some stuff, and it played out in the game,= Bills linebacker Terrel Bernard said after Buffalo9s Week 3 win over Washington. <When you9re getting pressure from the D-line and guys are in his face, he doesn9t have time to look you off and go through a full progression.= Since then, Howell has improved, in part because WashingJohn McDonnell/The WashIngTon PosT Center Tyler Larsen raved about quarterback sam Howell9s <confidence in taking over the offense.=
sunday, november 19, 2023 . the washington post eZ m2 d9 FROM NEWS SERVICES AND STAFF REPORTS Consider the past week in the life of Bryant Coach Phil Martelli Jr. His team lost to Rutgers on Sunday, his former boss resigned Monday, he got promoted to head coach Wednesday, his team lost to a previously winless Boston University team Thursday and he boarded a flight to Boca Raton, Fla., on Friday wondering whether he was the problem. Saturday was better. Much better 4 after he and the Bulldogs pulled off a stunner. Sherif Gross-Bullock scored 19 points, Earl Timberlake added 13, and the Bryant men9s basketball team stunned No. 10 Florida Atlantic, 61-52, to end the Owls9 19-game home winning streak. <This is a great moment, and certainly it ranks up there,= Martelli Jr. said. <But we9re building towards highlights in February, March and hopefully beyond.= Daniel Rivera scored 12 and Rafael Pinzon added 10 for the Bulldogs (2-3), who were 0-10 against ranked opponents since becoming full members of Division I 4 losing those games by an average of 28.8 points, the most recent by 67 points against Houston in 2021. Didn9t matter. They held the Owls to 26 percent shooting. Johnell Davis scored 17 and Giancarlo Rosado finished with 11 for the Owls (2-1). l CREIGHTON 82, TEXAS SOUTHERN 50: Baylor Scheierman scored 23 points, Trey Alexander had 15 of his 20 points in the first half, and the eighth-ranked Bluejays blew out the Tigers in Omaha. It took a while for Creighton to warm up against its opponent from the Southwestern Athletic Conference. When it did, it was game over. Creighton (4-0) had runs of 11-0, 14-5 and 11-2 while building a 47-27 halftime lead. The bulge grew to 39 points in the second half. Texas Southern (0-4), playing the fourth of nine straight road or neutral-site games to open the season, got 14 points from Zytarious Mortle. l GEORGE WASHINGTON 79, NEW HAMPSHIRE 67: Garrett Johnson scored a team-high 18 points and James Bishop IV added 14 points as the Revolutionaries knocked off the Wildcats at Smith Center for their fourth consecutive win. George Washington (4-0) shot 39.1 percent from beyond the arc (9 for 23) and overcame 16 turnovers by shooting 80 percent (20 for 25) from the free throw line. Ahmad Robinson scored 18 points to pace New Hampshire (2-2), which hit just 4 of 31 (12.9 percent) from three-point range. l RUTGERS 85, HOWARD 63: Derek Simpson scored 23 points, Clifford Omoruyi added 15 points and 14 rebounds, and the Scarlet Knights handled the Bison in Piscataway, N.J. Simpson was 7 for 10 from the field and added a pair of threepointers and four assists for Rutgers (4-1), which shot 54 percent (32 for 59) overall. Marcus Dockery made four field goals from long range and finished with 16 points on 6-for-10 shooting for Howard (2-3). l SAN DIEGO 73, NAVY 55: Bryce Pope scored 20 points to lead the Tritons past the Midshipmen in San Diego. Pope shot 7 for 14 (3 for 7 from three-point range) for the Tritons (4-0). Aniwaniwa Tait-Jones added 19 points, and Francis Nwaokorie finished with 15 points and seven rebounds. Mitch Fischer finished with 13 points for Navy (0-3). Austin Benigni added 11 points. Bison tumble against Rebels Madison Scott had a seasonhigh 21 points and 14 rebounds for her 23rd career double-double as the No. 23 Mississippi women9s basketball team turned back Howard, 67-54, on Saturday in the Battle 4 Atlantis in Nassau, Bahamas. The Rebels (3-1) will play Arizona, a 90-67 winner over Memphis, on Sunday in the semifinals. Howard will face the Tigers in the consolation bracket. Howard tied it at 54 with 5:24 left after Iyanna Warren scored five straight points. But the Bison would not score again. Mississippi scored the game9s final 13 points. Warren scored 12 points of her 18 points in the first half for Howard (1-4). l NOTRE DAME 79, ILLINOIS 68: Hannah Hidalgo and Maddy Westbeld scored 24 points apiece as the 16th-ranked Fighting Irish downed the Illini to win the Shamrock Classic at Entertainment and Sports Arena. Hidalgo had eight assists, and the nation9s leader in steals had six to bring her total in the first four games of her career to 27. Westbeld had three three-pointers and eight rebounds. KK Bransford added 11 points and six offensive rebounds off the bench for Notre Dame (3-1). Genesis Bryant had 31 points for the Illini (2-2). l NORTH CAROLINA 68, ELON 39: Alyssa Ustby scored 16 points and grabbed 11 rebounds to lead the 17th-ranked Tar Heels to a rout of the Phoenix in Chapel Hill, N.C. Maria Gakdeng and Deja Kelly added 13 points apiece for North Carolina (4-0). In addition to her second double-double of the season and 24th of her career, Ustby had three blocks and three steals. Jessica Booth and Maraja Pass had eight points apiece for Elon (1-3), which had seven field goals in the first quarter and 14 in the game. l GEORGE MASON 83, ROBERT MORRIS 63: Kennedy Harris finished with 13 points and 13 Patriots scored as GMU (5-0) matched the best start in school history with a blowout of the Colonials at EagleBank Arena. The Patriots won the rebounding battle 40-30 and committed just 11 turnovers to 17 for Robert Morris (1-3). Sonia Smith added 12 points for the Patriots, who embark on a six-game road trip Wednesday at American to close out their nonconference slate. l MARYLAND EASTERN SHORE 62, GEORGE WASHINGTON 59: The Revolutionaries let a 12-point lead after the first quarter go to waste as the Hawks rallied to send GW to its first loss of the season in Princess Anne, Md. Nya Robertson scored 10 points in the first period as George Washington (3-1) opened up a 17-5 advantage. Robertson finished with a game-high 21 points. Zamara Haynes scored 17 points in 24 minutes off the bench for Maryland Eastern Shore (2-3). ColleGe BAsketBAll rouNdup Bulldogs pull a stunner to end No. 10 Owls9 home winning streak mARTA LAvAndieR/ASSociATed PReSS Sherif Gross-Bullock, right, scored 19 points to help Bryant halt the Owls9 home winning streak at 19. BryAnt 61, floridA AtlAntic 52 BY SAPNA BANSIL Perhaps it9s not worth drawing many meaningful conclusions from either of the Georgetown men9s basketball team9s wins this season, both of which have come against inferior nonconference competition. The latest victory came Saturday afternoon at Capital One Arena, where the Hoyas held off Mount St. Mary9s, 83-72, behind a career-high 26 points from junior guard Dontrez Styles to improve to 2-2 under first-year coach Ed Cooley. Georgetown9s victories have come against Le Moyne, which was playing in its first game as a Division I program, and the Mountaineers, who are now 0-24 all-time against Big East teams. But regardless of the caliber of the Hoyas9 opponents, Cooley9s objective after he took over a floundering program that went 13-50 over its past two seasons has been to build a new culture and establish good habits. Throughout Saturday afternoon, Cooley made clear 4 through each expletive-laden scream after a defensive mistake, poor box-out or careless turnover, even when the game was in hand 4 what he expects from his reconstructed roster of nine transfers, two freshmen and four returners. <A lot of people look at, I would say, my sideline demeanor, as far as [being] demonstrative,= Cooley said. <And that9s just trying to set the tone for what our players are going to [expect]. That9s the way we come at you. But behind that, what appears to be anger is more love and understanding. So that9s why we9re able to pull them aside and have open, honest conversations 4 to give them the confidence.= A major source of Cooley9s ire, particularly over the first 20 minutes, was the Hoyas9 point guard play. Georgetown led 13-2 just over four minutes into the game and by 17 points in the first half. But Mount St. Mary9s (1-2), picked in a preseason coaches9 poll to finish seventh in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference, hung around by turning 11 Georgetown turnovers into 14 points before halftime (and finished with 22 points off 20 turnovers overall). Freshman Rowan Brumbaugh and sophomore Jayden Epps, who shared point guard duties, were responsible for eight of those first-half giveaways and nine turnovers overall. Several led to fast-break layups and dunks for Mount St. Mary9s, which trailed 43-31 at halftime. The Hoyas have managed 59 assists compared with 62 turnovers this season. Brumbaugh, a starter in each of Georgetown9s first four games, began the second half on the bench. But the D.C. native, who transferred from Texas after redshirting last season, checked in with 15:59 remaining and stayed on the floor for the rest of the game. Mount St. Mary9s cut the lead to seven with 2:58 left, but Georgetown scored on consecutive possessions 4 including an alley-oop toss from Brumbaugh to senior forward Supreme Cook 4 to put the game out of reach. <This is his fourth college game,= Cooley said of Brumbaugh, who finished with seven points, one assist and three turnovers in 24 minutes. <So I have to have some understanding of where he9s at with his development. It9s a matter of feel from the bench what we see, but overall, I was happy with what he did, with the understanding that he has so much more growth and development and for us to be the program we want to be. <Overall, all of our guards have to do a better job if we9re going to be really competitive in the Big East,= Cooley added. <We9re not going to be able to give the ball away the way we did.= After being held under 70 points in losses to Holy Cross on Nov. 11 and Rutgers on Wednesday, Georgetown put forth its best offensive showing since the season opener Saturday. Styles led the way, finishing with those 26 points after matching his previous career high of 15 by halftime. The junior guard, who added eight rebounds and four assists, is receiving consistent minutes for the first time in his career after transferring from North Carolina. <You get an opportunity to come here and play a lot of minutes. I feel like I9m getting more comfortable and gaining more confidence by the day,= Styles said. Senior guard Jay Heath, the Hoyas9 best returning player from last season, and Cook, a transfer from Fairfield, each finished with 17 points and eight rebounds. Cook is shooting 78 percent from the field this season after he went 7 for 9 on Saturday, including multiple thunderous dunks. Styles, Heath and Cook helped lead the Hoyas on the glass, where they held a decisive 45-29 edge over the Mountaineers. <It pretty much, I guess, trickles down to me wanting to do it, actually going there to rebound,= Cook said. <Not a lot of people want to go do it. But I see it as an opportunity to help my team win.= Georgetown returns to Capital One Arena on Sunday afternoon, when it will host American as it continues its nonconference schedule. <This is all a teaching, development, growing, building stage that the staff and I are in to give our men confidence to continue to grow and get better,= Cooley said. <That9s what this back-toback is all about.= Cooley9s 8growing9 Hoyas fend ob Mountaineers AmAndA AndRAde-RhoAdeS FoR The WAShingTon PoST <All of our guards have to do a better job if we9re going to be really competitive,= Ed Cooley said after his Hoyas committed 20 turnovers. georgetown 83, Mount st. MAry9s 72 American at Georgetown 4:30 p.m., Fox Sports 2 ASSOCIATED PRESS Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had 40 points, six rebounds and six assists, and the Oklahoma City Thunder sent the host Golden State Warriors to their sixth straight loss with a 130-123 overtime victory in San Francisco on Saturday night. Golden State9s Andrew Wiggins hit a go-ahead three-pointer with 1.6 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter, then Oklahoma City rookie Chet Holmgren responded with a game-tying shot from deep to beat the buzzer and send the game to overtime. The Thunder outscored the Warriors 13-6 in the extra period to seal back-to-back wins at Chase Center and secure the season series, 2-1. Holmgren scored a season-high 36 points and added 10 rebounds and five assists, and Jaylin Williams had 22 points and six rebounds Wiggins scored a season-high 31 points and was 12 for 19 with five threes, and Stephen Curry had 25 points in his return from a right knee strain as the Warriors fell to 1-6 on their home floor. Even with Curry9s return, the Warriors were again shorthanded, missing Draymond Green (five-game suspension) and Gary Payton II (left foot strain). l TIMBERWOLVES 121, PELICANS 120: Karl-Anthony Towns capped a 29-point performance with a running floater off the glass with five seconds left, and Minnesota overcame a 14-point deficit in the final 7:32 to beat host New Orleans. Rudy Gobert had 17 points and 11 rebounds for the Timberwolves. Jonas Valanciunas had 26 points and 11 rebounds for the Pelicans. New Orleans was playing without power forward Zion Williamson, who was being rested on what was the second of three games in four nights. The Pelicans also were without CJ McCollum for a seventh straight game as the highscoring veteran guard continued his recovery from a partially collapsed lung. l BULLS 102, HEAT 97: DeMar DeRozan scored 23 points and host Chicago rallied to beat Miami, halting the Heat9s winning streak at seven games. Despite trailing 22-1 midway through the first quarter, with boos reigning down from the home fans, the Bulls managed to snap their three-game losing streak with a furious fourth-quarter rally. Jimmy Butler scored 25 for the Heat, which didn9t trail until the final minute. But Butler missed a pair of three-point attempts in the final seconds. l BUCKS 132, MAVERICKS 125: Giannis Antetokounmpo scored 40 points and Damian Lillard added 27 for Milwaukee, which extended its winning streak to four games with a victory over Dallas. Kyrie Irving scored 39 while Luka Doncic added 35 for Dallas. l GRIZZLIES 120, SPURS 108: Jaren Jackson Jr. scored 27 points as shorthanded Memphis overcame a 19-point deficit and sent San Antonio to its eighth straight loss. Memphis outscored San Antonio 33-14 in the final quarter. San Antonio rookie Victor Wembanyama finished with 19 points and 13 rebounds. l KNICKS 122, HORNETS 108: Jalen Brunson scored 32 points as New York extended its winning streak to three games with a victory over host Charlotte. Brunson scored 26 points in the opening half for the Knicks, who never trailed and built a 15-point lead by intermission on the way to their sixth win in seven games. LaMelo Ball led all scorers with 34 points for Charlotte, which lost its fourth straight game. Rookie Brandon Miller had 29 points and Miles Bridges 19. NBA rouNdup Even with Curry back, Warriors9 skid grows thunder 130, wArriors 123 (ot) WizArds9 Next tHree vs. Milwaukee Bucks monday 7 monumental at Charlotte Hornets Wednesday 7 monumental 2 at Milwaukee Bucks Friday 8 monumental Radio: WTEM (980 AM) or WJFK (106.7 FM)
D10 EZ M2 the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 Scoreboard Pro FooTBALL nFL WEEK 11 tHURSDAY9S RESULtS Baltimore 34, Cincinnati 20 SUNDAY9S gAMES Arizona at Houston, 1 Chicago at Detroit, 1 Dallas at Carolina, 1 L.A. Chargers at Green Bay, 1 Las Vegas at Miami, 1 N.Y. Giants at Washington, 1 Pittsburgh at Cleveland, 1 Tennessee at Jacksonville, 1 Tampa Bay at San Francisco, 4:05 N.Y. Jets at Buffalo, 4:25 Seattle at L.A. Rams, 4:25 Minnesota at Denver, 8:20 bYE: Indianapolis, New England, Atlanta, New Orleans MONDAY9S gAMES Philadelphia at Kansas City, 8:15 WEEK 12 tHURSDAY9S gAMES Green Bay at Detroit, 12:30 Washington at Dallas, 4:30 San Francisco at Seattle, 8:20 fRIDAY9S gAMES Miami at N.Y. Jets, 3 SUNDAY9S gAMES Carolina at Tennessee, 1 Jacksonville at Houston, 1 New England at N.Y. Giants, 1 New Orleans at Atlanta, 1 Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 1 Tampa Bay at Indianapolis, 1 Cleveland at Denver, 4:05 L.A. Rams at Arizona, 4:05 Buffalo at Philadelphia, 4:25 Kansas City at Las Vegas, 4:25 Baltimore at L.A. Chargers, 8:20 MONDAY9S gAMES Chicago at Minnesota, 8:15 WTA Lp OpEN At Hacienda Chicureo Club in Colina, Chile purse: $115,000 Surface: Red clay WOMEN9S SINgLES 4 SEMIfINALS Diane Parry (5), France, def. Elizabeth Mandlik (7), United States, 7-6 (7-3), 6-2. WOMEN9S DOUbLES 4 cHAMpIONSHIp Conny Perrin, Switzerland, and Julia Lohoff (3), Germany, def. Daniela Seguel, Chile, and Lucciana Perez Alarcon, Peru, 7-6 (7-4), 6-2. TenniS ATP Atp fINALS At Pala Alpitour in Turin, Italy Surface: Hardcourt indoor MEN9S SINgLES 4 SEMIfINALS Jannik Sinner (4), Italy, def. Daniil Medvedev (3), Russia, 6-3, 6-7 (7-4), 6-1; Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Carlos Alcaraz (2), Spain, 6-3, 6-2. MEN9S DOUbLES 4 SEMIfINALS Marcel Granollers, Spain, and Horacio Zeballos (5), Argentina, def. Rohan Bopanna, India, and Matthew Ebden (3), Australia, 7-5, 6-4; Rajeev Ram, United States, and Joe Salisbury (6), Britain, def. Edouard Roger-Vasselin, France, and Santiago Gonzalez (4), Mexico, 7-6 (7-5), 3-6, 10-7. SoCCer MLS Cup playoffs fIRSt ROUND WEDNESDAY, Oct. 25 EAStERN cONfERENcE at New York 5, Charlotte 2 WEStERN cONfERENcE at Sporting KC 0, San Jose 0 (Sporting KC wins, 4-2 PKs) QUARtERfINALS Best of three EAStERN cONfERENcE fc cINcINNAtI ELIMINAtED RED bULLS, 2-0 Game 1: at Cincinnati 3, New York 0 Game 2: Cincinnati 1, at New York 1 (Cincinnati wins, 8-7 PKs) ORLANDO cItY Sc ELIMINAtED NASHVILLE Sc, 2-0 Game 1: at Orlando City 1, Nasvhille 0 Game 2: Orlando City 1, at Nashville 0 cREW ELIMINAtED AtLANtA UNItED, 2-1 Game 1: at Columbus 2, Atlanta United 0 Game 2: at Atlanta United 4, Columbus 2 Game 3: at Columbus 4, Atlanta United 2 UNION ELIMINAtED REVOLUtION, 2-0 Game 1: at Philadelphia 3, New England 1 Game 2: Philadelphia 1, at New England 0 WEStERN cONfERENcE SpORtINg Kc ELIMINAtED St. LOUIS cItY Sc, 2-0 Game 1: Sporting KC 4, at St. Louis City SC 1 Game 2: at Sporting KC 2, St. Louis City SC 1 SOUNDERS ELIMINAtED fc DALLAS, 2-1 Game 1: at Seattle 2, FC Dallas 0 Game 2: at FC Dallas 3, Seattle 1 Game 3: at Seattle 1, FC Dallas 0 LOS ANgELES fc ELIMINAtED WHItEcApS, 2-0 Game 1: at Los Angeles FC 5, Vancouver 2 Game 2: Los Angeles FC 1, at Vancouver 0 DYNAMO ELIMINAtED REAL SALt LAKE, 2-1 Game 1: at Houston 2, Real Salt Lake 1 Game 2: at Real Salt Lake 1, Houston 1 (Real Salt Lake wins, 5-4 PKs) Game 3: at Houston 1, Real Salt Lake 1 (Houston wins, 4-3 PKs) SEMIfINALS EAStERN cONfERENcE SAtURDAY, NOV. 25 Columbus at Orlando City, 5:30 Philadelphia at Cincinnati, 8 WEStERN cONfERENcE SUNDAY, NOV. 26 Sporting KC at Houston , 7 Los Angeles FC at Seattle, 9:30 cONfERENcE fINALS EAStERN cONfERENcE SAtURDAY, DEc. 2 Semifinal winners, TBD WEStERN cONfERENcE SUNDAY, DEc. 3 Semifinal winners, TBD MLS cUp SAtURDAY, DEc. 9 Teams TBD goLF PgA Tour RSM cLASSIc Sea Island, Ga. a-Seaside Course at Sea Island Golf Club (Host Course) 7,005 yards b-Plantation Course at Sea Island Golf Club 7,060 yards purse: $8.4 million tHIRD ROUND Ludvig Aberg ........................... 67b 64a 61a 4 192 -20 Eric Cole .................................. 66b 66a 61a 4 193 -19 Mackenzie Hughes ................. 68b 66a 60a 4 194 -18 Tyler Duncan ........................... 68a 65b 62a 4 195 -17 Sam Ryder .............................. 67a 65b 65a 4 197 -15 Denny McCarthy ..................... 65b 67a 66a 4 198 -14 Greyson Sigg ........................... 66a 68b 64a 4 198 -14 Austin Eckroat ........................ 65b 68a 66a 4 199 -13 Peter Kuest ............................. 67b 66a 66a 4 199 -13 Ryan Moore ............................. 70b 67a 62a 4 199 -13 Matthew NeSmith .................. 71b 63a 65a 4 199 -13 Alex Noren .............................. 67b 68a 64a 4 199 -13 Robert Streb ........................... 66a 68b 65a 4 199 -13 Kevin Tway ............................. 69a 67b 63a 4 199 -13 Vince Whaley .......................... 66a 69b 64a 4 199 -13 Will Gordon ............................. 71b 66a 63a 4 200 -12 Charley Hoffman .................... 68a 70b 62a 4 200 -12 Ben Kohles .............................. 66a 67b 67a 4 200 -12 Nicholas Lindheim .................. 68b 66a 66a 4 200 -12 Fred Biondi .............................. 70b 67a 64a 4 201 -11 Thomas Detry ......................... 70b 66a 65a 4 201 -11 Harris English ......................... 67a 71b 63a 4 201 -11 Nick Hardy .............................. 70a 67b 64a 4 201 -11 Kelly Kraft ............................... 69b 65a 67a 4 201 -11 Luke List ................................. 67a 68b 66a 4 201 -11 Taylor Montgomery ................ 69b 65a 67a 4 201 -11 Adam Schenk .......................... 68a 66b 67a 4 201 -11 Adam Svensson ...................... 68a 66b 67a 4 201 -11 Davis Thompson ..................... 66b 69a 66a 4 201 -11 Matt Atkins ............................ 71b 66a 65a 4 202 -10 Akshay Bhatia ........................ 69b 66a 67a 4 202 -10 Nicolas Echavarria .................. 69b 67a 66a 4 202 -10 Tano Goya ............................... 68a 68b 66a 4 202 -10 Chris Kirk ................................ 69b 67a 66a 4 202 -10 Patton Kizzire ......................... 68a 69b 65a 4 202 -10 Matt Kuchar ............................ 65a 68b 69a 4 202 -10 William McGirt ....................... 67a 68b 67a 4 202 -10 Jacob Solomon ........................ 70b 68a 64a 4 202 -10 J.J. Spaun ................................ 68a 70b 64a 4 202 -10 Brendon Todd .......................... 68b 66a 68a 4 202 -10 Cameron Young ...................... 66b 68a 68a 4 202 -10 Wesley Bryan ......................... 68a 67b 68a 4 203 -9 Corey Conners ......................... 72b 65a 66a 4 203 -9 Cody Gribble ............................ 70b 67a 66a 4 203 -9 Ben Griffin .............................. 67a 67b 69a 4 203 -9 Russell Henley ........................ 72a 66b 65a 4 203 -9 Harry Higgs ............................. 68b 70a 65a 4 203 -9 Stephan Jaeger ....................... 69b 66a 68a 4 203 -9 Alex Smalley ........................... 71a 67b 65a 4 203 -9 Tommy Gainey ........................ 66a 71b 67a 4 204 -8 Kramer Hickok ........................ 71b 66a 67a 4 204 -8 Scott Piercy ............................ 70a 68b 66a 4 204 -8 Austin Smotherman ............... 71b 65a 68a 4 204 -8 Brandon Wu ............................ 67a 70b 67a 4 204 -8 Aaron Baddeley ...................... 70b 68a 67a 4 205 -7 Ricky Barnes ........................... 67b 68a 70a 4 205 -7 Stewart Cink ........................... 69a 67b 69a 4 205 -7 Ben Crane ................................ 70a 68b 67a 4 205 -7 Brian Gay ................................ 72b 65a 68a 4 205 -7 Brian Harman ......................... 71b 66a 68a 4 205 -7 Russell Knox ........................... 66a 70b 69a 4 205 -7 J.T. Poston .............................. 66a 72b 67a 4 205 -7 Camilo Villegas ....................... 67a 70b 68a 4 205 -7 Carl Yuan ................................. 66a 70b 69a 4 205 -7 Brent Grant ............................. 71b 66a 69a 4 206 -6 Chesson Hadley ...................... 71a 67b 68a 4 206 -6 Maverick McNealy .................. 68a 67b 71a 4 206 -6 Ben Carr .................................. 68b 68a 71a 4 207 -5 Cameron Champ ...................... 70a 68b 69a 4 207 -5 Kevin Kisner ............................ 70b 67a 70a 4 207 -5 Kyoung-Hoon Lee ................... 70a 67b 70a 4 207 -5 Andrew Novak ........................ 69a 69b 69a 4 207 -5 Curtis Thompson .................... 68b 70a 69a 4 207 -5 Si Woo Kim ............................. 70b 66a 72a 4 208 -4 Satoshi Kodaira ...................... 69a 69b 70a 4 208 -4 Justin Suh ............................... 71b 65a 72a 4 208 -4 Carson Young .......................... 68a 70b 70a 4 208 -4 Cameron Percy ........................ 70a 68b 73a 4 211 -1 LPgA Tour tOUR cHAMpIONSHIp At Gold Course; in Naples, Fla. Purse: $7 million Yardage: 6,556; Par: 72 tHIRD ROUND Nasa Hataoka ............................... 63 67 65 4 195 -21 Amy Yang ..................................... 68 63 64 4 195 -21 Alison Lee ..................................... 66 64 68 4 198 -18 Xiyu Lin ......................................... 67 66 66 4 199 -17 Minjee Lee .................................... 64 67 69 4 200 -16 Ruoning Yin .................................. 63 68 69 4 200 -16 Brooke Henderson ........................ 69 67 66 4 202 -14 Nelly Korda ................................... 68 68 66 4 202 -14 Atthaya Thitikul ........................... 67 66 69 4 202 -14 Lilia Vu .......................................... 70 66 66 4 202 -14 Carlota Ciganda ............................ 71 70 63 4 204 -12 Gemma Dryburgh ......................... 75 65 64 4 204 -12 Ayaka Furue .................................. 69 65 70 4 204 -12 Yu Liu ............................................ 66 71 68 4 205 -11 Anna Nordqvist ............................ 65 71 69 4 205 -11 Patty Tavatanakit ........................ 66 69 70 4 205 -11 Hannah Green ............................... 70 69 67 4 206 -10 Georgia Hall .................................. 66 71 69 4 206 -10 A Lim Kim ..................................... 69 70 67 4 206 -10 Hyo Joo Kim .................................. 69 67 70 4 206 -10 Yuka Saso ..................................... 68 69 69 4 206 -10 Hye Jin Choi .................................. 66 71 70 4 207 -9 Charley Hull .................................. 68 69 70 4 207 -9 Grace Kim ..................................... 69 68 70 4 207 -9 Cheyenne Knight .......................... 69 69 69 4 207 -9 Yuna Nishimura ............................ 70 67 70 4 207 -9 Jasmine Suwannapura ................. 70 67 70 4 207 -9 Rose Zhang ................................... 71 66 70 4 207 -9 Ally Ewing ..................................... 71 68 69 4 208 -8 Ariya Jutanugarn .......................... 70 70 68 4 208 -8 Jennifer Kupcho ............................ 67 70 71 4 208 -8 Gaby Lopez ................................... 71 65 72 4 208 -8 Madelene Sagstrom ..................... 68 69 71 4 208 -8 Linnea Strom ................................ 68 70 70 4 208 -8 Celine Boutier ............................... 69 70 70 4 209 -7 Sei Young Kim .............................. 71 70 68 4 209 -7 Bianca Pagdanganan .................... 73 66 70 4 209 -7 Angel Yin ...................................... 71 70 68 4 209 -7 Leona Maguire .............................. 68 71 71 4 210 -6 Alexa Pano .................................... 70 71 69 4 210 -6 Pajaree Anannarukarn .................. 70 68 73 4 211 -5 Ashleigh Buhai ............................. 68 70 73 4 211 -5 Peiyun Chien ................................. 72 71 68 4 211 -5 Esther Henseleit ........................... 68 73 70 4 211 -5 Danielle Kang ................................ 75 69 67 4 211 -5 Hae-Ran Ryu ................................. 69 71 71 4 211 -5 Jenny Shin .................................... 72 68 71 4 211 -5 Allisen Corpuz ............................... 69 69 74 4 212 -4 Linn Grant ..................................... 69 71 72 4 212 -4 Sarah Kemp .................................. 71 71 70 4 212 -4 Aditi Ashok ................................... 70 71 72 4 213 -3 Megan Khang ................................ 71 70 72 4 213 -3 Chanettee Wannasaen ................. 72 72 69 4 213 -3 Stephanie Kyriacou ...................... 73 71 70 4 214 -2 Maja Stark .................................... 73 68 73 4 214 -2 Perrine Delacour ........................... 72 72 72 4 216 E Predators 4, Blackhawks 2 cHIcAgO .................................. 0 1 1 4 2 NASHVILLE .............................. 2 1 1 4 4 fIRSt pERIOD Scoring: 1, Nashville, Trenin 1 (Sissons), 12:07. 2, Nashville, Nyquist 2 (Forsberg, O9Reilly), 18:32 (pp). SEcOND pERIOD Scoring: 3, Chicago, Kurashev 3 (Bedard, Jones), 13:05. 4, Nashville, Smith 3 (McCarron, Tomasino), 16:20. tHIRD pERIOD Scoring: 5, Chicago, T.Johnson 5 (Dickinson), 12:15. 6, Nashville, Smith 4 (Fabbro, Trenin), 19:48 (en). SHOtS ON gOAL cHIcAgO .................................. 9 9 13 4 31 NASHVILLE ............................ 13 11 8 4 32 power-play opportunities: Chicago 0 of 2; Nashville 1 of 3. goalies: Chicago, Soderblom 1-6-0 (31 shots-28 saves). Nashville, Lankinen 2-1-0 (31-29). A: 17,397 (17,113). t: 2:27. Senators 2, Wild 1 (So) MINNESOtA ...................... 0 1 0 041 OttAWA ............................ 0 0 1 1 4 2 OttAWA WON SHOOtOUt 1-0 SEcOND pERIOD Scoring: 1, Minnesota, Rossi 6 (Faber, Zuccarello), 6:22. tHIRD pERIOD Scoring: 2, Ottawa, Brannstrom 1 (Hamonic, Forsberg), 3:22. SHOOtOUt Ottawa 1 (Stutzle NG, Batherson NG, Norris G), Minnesota 0 (Zuccarello NG, Kaprizov NG, Eriksson Ek NG). SHOtS ON gOAL MINNESOtA .................... 10771 4 25 OttAWA ............................ 9 9 11 1 4 30 power-play opportunities: Minnesota 0 of 4; Ottawa 0 of 4. goalies: Minnesota, Gustavsson 2-4-2 (31 shots-30 saves). Ottawa, Forsberg 3-3-0 (25-24). A: 13,213 (13,850). t: 2:38. Flyers 4, golden knights 3 (oT) VEgAS ............................... 0 3 0 043 pHILADELpHIA .................. 1 2 0 1 4 4 fIRSt pERIOD Scoring: 1, Philadelphia, Tippett 7 (Atkinson, Sanheim), 15:29 (pp). SEcOND pERIOD Scoring: 2, Philadelphia, Foerster 1 (Tippett, Sanheim), 0:59 (pp). 3, Vegas, Karlsson 9 (Marchessault), 4:01. 4, Vegas, Marchessault 8 (Theodore, Eichel), 15:00. 5, Philadelphia, Walker 3 (Couturier, Seeler), 15:25. 6, Vegas, Marchessault 9 (Stone, Theodore), 19:05 (pp). OVERtIME Scoring: 7, Philadelphia, Couturier 4, 1:00. SHOtS ON gOAL VEgAS ............................... 8 13 10 0 4 31 pHILADELpHIA ................ 16 16 5 1 4 38 power-play opportunities: Vegas 1 of 4; Philadelphia 2 of 4. goalies: Vegas, Thompson 5-2-1 (38 shots-34 saves). Philadelphia, Hart 6-3-0 (31-28). A: 18,113 (19,543). t: 2:38. no. 23 Mississippi 67, Howard 54 HOWARD ............................ 13 17 13 11 4 54 MISSISSIppI ....................... 17 13 18 19 4 67 Howard (1-4) Blake 2-2 1-2 5, Miller 2-6 2-2 6, Harris 1-5 1-2 3, Walker 4-18 0-0 10, Warren 5-12 7-9 18, Creek 2-3 0-0 5, Hemingway 0-1 0-0 0, Steel 1-1 0-0 2, Bohanon 1-4 0-0 2, Cooper 1-2 0-0 3, totals 19-54 11-15 54 Mississippi (3-1) Davis 4-9 4-4 12, Richardson 1-4 4-5 6, Scott 9-10 3-5 21, Deans 1-8 4-5 7, Todd-Williams 4-15 0-0 8, Collins 2-9 0-0 5, Singleton 0-2 0-0 0, Igbokwe 1-3 2-2 4, Avlijas 0-0 0-2 0, Eaton 1-4 2-2 4, Stephenson 0-0 0-0 0, Thompson 0-0 0-0 0, totals 23-64 19-25 67 three-point goals: Howard 5-17 (Miller 0-1, Harris 0-2, Walker 2-9, Warren 1-2, Creek 1-1, Hemingway 0-1, Cooper 1-1), Mississippi 2-22 (Davis 0-1, Scott 0-1, Deans 1-7, Todd-Williams 0-5, Collins 1-5, Eaton 0-3). Assists: Howard 7 (Bohanon 2, Harris 2, Warren 2), Mississippi 12 (Davis 2, Deans 2, Richardson 2, Scott 2, Todd-Williams 2). fouled out: None. Rebounds: Howard 36 (Steel 8), Mississippi 46 (Scott 14). total fouls: Howard 22, Mississippi 19. Technical Fouls_None. A: 284. george Washington 79, new Hampshire 67 New Hampshire (2-2) Baker 4-14 5-8 13, Daniels 5-17 3-4 14, Woodyard 4-7 1-1 9, Robinson 8-18 2-4 18, Sunderland 2-5 0-0 6, Moore 2-6 0-0 5, Gakmar 0-0 0-0 0, Poser 0-3 0-0 0, Davis 1-2 0-0 2. totals 26-72 11-17 67. george Washington (4-0) Akingbola 3-3 1-2 7, Autry 3-8 2-2 9, Bishop 3-10 7-8 14, Edwards 5-12 0-0 12, Johnson 6-10 2-3 18, Buchanan 2-5 6-8 10, Hutchinson 3-6 2-2 9, Schröder 0-2 0-0 0. totals 25-56 20-25 79. Halftime: George Washington 35-30. three-point goals: New Hampshire 4-31 (Sunderland 2-5, Moore 1-3, Daniels 1-9, Woodyard 0-1, Poser 0-3, Robinson 0-4, Baker 0-6), George Washington 9-23 (Johnson 4-7, Edwards 2-4, Hutchinson 1-2, Autry 1-5, Bishop 1-5). Rebounds: New Hampshire 33 (Baker 10), George Washington 42 (Johnson 10). Assists: New Hampshire 8 (Robinson 3), George Washington 15 (Bishop 8). total fouls: New Hampshire 15, George Washington 15. georgetown 83, Mount St. Mary9s 72 Mount St. Mary's (1-2) Cordilia 1-3 0-0 2, Tinsley 1-2 0-0 2, Hobbs 4-13 1-2 10, Leffew 6-17 2-5 14, Reaves 2-8 0-0 5, D.Montgomery 7-13 2-2 17, Adebayo 5-7 4-7 14, Jessamy 2-3 0-0 4, Barton 2-3 0-0 4. totals 30-69 9-16 72. georgetown (2-2) Cook 7-9 3-5 17, Brumbaugh 2-6 3-4 7, Epps 4-8 0-0 10, Heath 6-13 2-4 17, Styles 8-15 7-9 26, Bacote 0-0 0-0 0, Fielder 1-3 0-0 2, Bristol 2-5 0-0 4, Mutombo 0-0 0-0 0. totals 30-59 15-22 83. Halftime: Georgetown 43-31. three-point goals: Mount St. Mary9s 3-15 (Hobbs 1-1, D.Montgomery 1-2, Reaves 1-4, Adebayo 0-1, Tinsley 0-1, Leffew 0-6), Georgetown 8-22 (Heath 3-5, Styles 3-6, Epps 2-5, Fielder 0-1, Bristol 0-2, Brumbaugh 0-3). Rebounds: Mount St. Mary9s 24 (Hobbs 10), Georgetown 39 (Cook, Heath, Styles 8). Assists: Mount St. Mary9s 14 (Hobbs 5), Georgetown 17 (Epps 6). total fouls: Mount St. Mary9s 16, Georgetown 12. A: 4,648 (20,356). AUTo rACing Formula one LAS VEgAS gRAND pRIx LINEUp After Saturday qualifying; race Sunday At Las Vegas Street Circuit Las Vegas, United States. Lap length: 6.12 kilometers tHIRD SESSION 1. Charles Leclerc, Monaco, Ferrari, 1 minute, 32.726 seconds. 2. Carlos Sainz Jr, Spain, Ferrari, 1:32.770. 3. Max Verstappen, Netherlands, Red Bull Racing, 1:33.104. 4. George Russell, Great Britain, Mercedes, 1:33.112. 5. Pierre Gasly, France, Alpine, 1:33.239. 6. Alexander Albon, Thailand, Williams, 1:33.323. 7. Logan Sargeant, USA, Williams, 1:33.513. 8. Valtteri Bottas, Finland, Alfa Romeo Racing, 1:33.525. 9. Kevin Magnussen, Denmark, Haas, 1:33.537. 10. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Aston Martin, 1:33.555. ELIMINAtED AftER SEcOND SESSION 11. Lewis Hamilton, Great Britain, Mercedes, 1:33.837. 12. Sergio Perez, Mexico, Red Bull Racing, 1:33.855. 13. Nico Hulkenberg, Germany, Haas, 1:33.979. 14. Lance Stroll, Canada, Aston Martin, 1:34.199. 15. Daniel Ricciardo, Australia, Alphatauri, 1:34.308. ELIMINAtED AftER fIRSt SESSION 16. Lando Norris, Great Britain, McLaren, 1:34.703. 17. Esteban Ocon, France, Alpine, 1:34.834. 18. Guanyu Zhou, China, Alfa Romeo Racing, 1:34.849. 19. Oscar Piastri, Australia, McLaren, 1:34.850. 20. Yuki Tsunoda, Japan, Alphatauri, 1:36.447. Lightning 6, oilers 4 EDMONtON ............................. 2 1 1 4 4 tAMpA bAY ............................ 1 1 4 4 6 fIRSt pERIOD Scoring: 1, Edmonton, Ryan 1 (Nugent-Hopkins, Ceci), 3:39 (sh). 2, Edmonton, Hamblin 1, 8:31. 3, Tampa Bay, Kucherov 12 (Stamkos, Point), 19:09 (pp). SEcOND pERIOD Scoring: 4, Tampa Bay, Kucherov 13 (Raddysh, Sergachev), 12:56. 5, Edmonton, Ryan 2 (Ekholm, Foegele), 15:55. tHIRD pERIOD Scoring: 6, Tampa Bay, Jeannot 3 (Sergachev, Eyssimont), 3:54. 7, Edmonton, Bouchard 4 (Nugent-Hopkins), 8:04. 8, Tampa Bay, Stamkos 6 (Kucherov, Point), 9:28 (pp). 9, Tampa Bay, Glendening 2 (Koepke, Raddysh), 10:07. 10, Tampa Bay, Sergachev 2 (Paul), 19:05 (en). SHOtS ON gOAL EDMONtON ........................... 20 8 15 4 43 tAMpA bAY .......................... 10 3 11 4 24 power-play opportunities: Edmonton 0 of 5; Tampa Bay 2 of 4. goalies: Edmonton, Skinner 4-6-1 (23 shots-18 saves). Tampa Bay, Johansson 7-4-4 (43-39). A: 19,092 (19,092). t: 2:33. no. 19 notre Dame 45, Wake Forest 7 WAKE fORESt ........................ 0 700 4 7 NOtRE DAME .......................... 7 10 14 14 4 45 fIRSt QUARtER ND: D.Ford 12 pass from Hartman (Shrader kick), :54. SEcOND QUARtER WAKE: Carney 9 run (Dennis kick), 11:41. ND: Merriweather 35 pass from Hartman (Shrader kick), 7:06. ND: FG Shrader 37, :05. tHIRD QUARtER ND: Raridon 19 pass from Hartman (Shrader kick), 14:09. ND: Estime 2 run (Shrader kick), 5:22. fOURtH QUARtER ND: Greathouse 48 pass from Hartman (Shrader kick), 13:24. ND: Faison 17 pass from Angeli (Diomede kick), 3:56. Wake forest Notre Dame First Downs ..................................... 14 25 Total Net Yards ............................. 232 450 Rushes-Yards ........................... 36-134 30-137 Passing ............................................ 98 313 Punt Returns .................................. 0-0 2-13 Kickoff Returns ............................ 3-54 1-26 Interceptions Ret. ........................... 0-0 0-0 Comp-Att-Int .......................... 12-21-0 24-34-0 Sacked-Yards Lost ........................ 3-18 0-0 Punts ........................................ 4-45.75 2-32.0 Fumbles-Lost .................................. 1-1 1-1 Penalties-Yards ............................ 4-50 3-35 Time Of Possession .................... 28:09 36:52 pASSINg Wake forest: Kern 11-20-0-81, Banks 1-1-0-17. Notre Dame: Hartman 21-29-0-277, Angeli 3-3-0-36, (Team) 0-2-0-0. RUSHINg Wake forest: Ellison 15-63, Carney 6-22, K.Williams 1-20, Egbe 6-18, Kern 8-11. Notre Dame: Estime 22-115, Love 4-15, Price 2-9, Payne 2-(minus 2). REcEIVINg Wake forest: Banks 5-35, Fields 2-23, K.Williams 2-22, Alexander 1-11, Morin 1-5, Carney 1-2. Notre Dame: Flores 8-102, Faison 4-39, Greathouse 3-71, Raridon 3-39, Merriweather 2-44, Staes 2-6, D.Ford 1-12, Tyree 1-0. CoLLege FooTBALL Appalachian State 26, James Madison 23 (oT) AppALAcHIAN St. ............. 3 7 0 10 6 4 26 JAMES MADISON ............... 0 5 0 15 3 4 23 fIRSt QUARtER App: FG Hughes 22, 2:55. SEcOND QUARtER JMU: FG Wise 35, 13:02. JMU: safety, 6:56. App: Robinson 8 pass from Aguilar (Hughes kick), 5:16. fOURtH QUARtER App: Wilson 16 pass from Aguilar (Hughes kick), 14:56. JMU: McCloud 6 run (Wise kick), 8:20. App: FG Hughes 30, 3:55. JMU: E.Sarratt 11 pass from McCloud (E.Sarratt pass from McCloud), :57. fIRSt OVERtIME JMU: FG Wise 25, :00. App: Robinson 8 pass from Aguilar, :00. Attendance: 25,838. Appalachian St. James Madison First Downs ..................................... 24 25 Total Net Yards ............................. 387 350 Rushes-Yards ............................. 27-69 33-61 Passing .......................................... 318 289 Punt Returns .................................. 0-0 0-0 Kickoff Returns ............................ 3-34 3-37 Interceptions Ret. ........................... 1-0 1-0 Comp-Att-Int .......................... 28-46-1 27-46-1 Sacked-Yards Lost .......................... 1-4 5-29 Punts .......................................... 5-38.4 5-43.8 Fumbles-Lost .................................. 1-1 3-1 Penalties-Yards ............................ 5-50 8-65 Time Of Possession .................... 27:23 32:37 pASSINg Appalachian St.: Aguilar 28-46-1-318. James Madison: McCloud 27-46-1-289. RUSHINg Appalachian St.: Castle 10-42, Noel 10-21, Stroman 1-6, Roberts 2-2, Aguilar 3-0, Haywood 1-(minus 2). James Madison: Lawton 13-37, Black 6-28, Palmer 2-2, (Team) 1-(minus 2), McCloud 11-(minus 4). REcEIVINg Appalachian St.: M.Jackson 5-49, Robinson 4-68, Wilson 4-61, Das.Davis 3-24, Castle 3-20, Stroman 2-36, Roberts 2-19, Gibbs 2-13, M.Tucker 1-20, Larkins 1-4, Noel 1-4. James Madison: E.Sarratt 8-128, Lawton 5-50, Horton 5-24, R.Brown 3-49, Sproles 3-18, Ayamel 2-16, Y.Knight 1-4. no. 24 Tulane 24, FAU 8 tULANE .................................... 7 7 10 0 4 24 fAU .......................................... 0 008 4 8 fIRSt QUARtER tULN: Carter 9 pass from Pratt (Ambrosio kick), 5:10. SEcOND QUARtER tULN: Brazzell 9 pass from Pratt (Ambrosio kick), 14:14. tHIRD QUARtER tULN: Carter 8 pass from Pratt (Ambrosio kick), 7:39. tULN: FG Ambrosio 20, :12. fOURtH QUARtER fAU: Brantley 4 pass from D.Richardson (Price pass from D.Richardson), 8:58. Attendance: 15,871. tulane fAU First Downs ..................................... 18 14 Total Net Yards ............................. 336 234 Rushes-Yards ............................. 32-84 30-32 Passing .......................................... 252 202 Punt Returns ................................ 1-18 1-10 Kickoff Returns .............................. 0-0 2-35 Interceptions Ret. ........................... 1-8 0-0 Comp-Att-Int .......................... 21-29-0 24-31-1 Sacked-Yards Lost .......................... 2-7 5-32 Punts .......................................... 2-41.0 4-36.75 Fumbles-Lost .................................. 1-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards ............................ 2-10 2-10 Time Of Possession .................... 32:05 27:55 pASSINg tulane: Pratt 21-28-0-252, Mmahat 0-1-0-0. fAU: D.Richardson 24-31-1-202. RUSHINg tulane: Hughes 21-72, Louis 4-17, Pratt 4-(minus 2), (Team) 3-(minus 3). fAU: McCammon 10-32, Lewis 8-14, Terrell 1-9, M.Johnson 3-5, L.Wester 1-0, D.Richardson 7-(minus 28). REcEIVINg tulane: Brazzell 7-103, Bauman 3-26, Carter 3-26, Y.Brown 2-37, Bohanon 2-27, Louis 2-24, Hughes 2-9. fAU: L.Wester 11-86, T.Johnson 4-56, Lewis 4-34, Terrell 2-10, Burton 1-8, Brantley 1-4, McCammon 1-4. Clemson 31, no. 20 north Carolina 20 NORtH cAROLINA .................. 7 076 4 20 cLEMSON ................................. 0 14 14 3 4 31 fIRSt QUARtER UNc: J.Jones 33 pass from Maye (Burnette kick), 4:31. SEcOND QUARtER cLEM: Briningstool 3 pass from Klubnik (Weitz kick), 10:10. cLEM: Klubnik 3 run (Weitz kick), :03. tHIRD QUARtER cLEM: Mafah 3 run (Weitz kick), 7:15. UNc: Hampton 55 run (Burnette kick), 6:20. cLEM: Shipley 33 run (Weitz kick), 3:19. fOURtH QUARtER cLEM: FG Weitz 21, 10:33. UNc: Hampton 3 run (pass failed), 7:03. North carolina clemson First Downs ..................................... 19 26 Total Net Yards ............................. 457 466 Rushes-Yards ........................... 32-248 55-247 Passing .......................................... 209 219 Punt Returns .................................. 2-7 1-2 Kickoff Returns .............................. 0-0 0-0 Interceptions Ret. ........................... 0-0 1-6 Comp-Att-Int .......................... 16-37-1 21-34-0 Sacked-Yards Lost ........................ 4-20 0-0 Punts .......................................... 5-42.0 6-47.5 Fumbles-Lost .................................. 2-2 2-2 Penalties-Yards .......................... 10-75 7-58 Time Of Possession .................... 21:49 38:11 pASSINg North carolina: Maye 16-36-1-209, C.Hood 0-1-0-0. clemson: Klubnik 21-32-0-219, (Team) 0-2-0-0. RUSHINg North carolina: Hampton 19-178, Maye 10-67, B.Brooks 2-4, (Team) 1-(minus 1). clemson: Shipley 18-126, Mafah 23-84, Klubnik 12-44, (Team) 1-(minus 1), Davis 1-(minus 6). REcEIVINg North carolina: J.Jones 5-60, Walker 4-70, McCollum 3-32, Nesbit 2-29, Copenhaver 2-18. clemson: Stellato 6-50, Brown 6-32, Briningstool 3-20, Ad.Randall 2-57, Shipley 2-53, Mafah 2-7. rutgers 85, Howard 63 Howard (2-3) Campbell 0-1 0-0 0, Odom 0-5 4-4 4, Dockery 6-10 0-0 16, Harris 5-11 1-2 12, Strong 2-4 0-0 5, Towns 3-12 1-2 10, Jel.Williams 3-6 0-0 7, Magbegor 2-3 2-4 6, Hairston 0-1 0-0 0, Lewis 1-1 0-0 2, Stewart 0-0 0-0 0, Weaver 0-1 0-0 0, E.Williams 0-0 1-2 1, Atkins 0-0 0-0 0. totals 22-55 9-14 63. Rutgers (4-1) Hyatt 5-11 1-1 12, Woolfolk 2-3 0-0 4, Omoruyi 6-10 3-4 15, Fernandes 4-8 2-4 12, Simpson 7-10 7-9 23, Griffiths 3-8 1-2 7, Davis 1-2 1-3 3, Palmquist 3-4 1-3 7, Chol 1-3 0-0 2, Terry 0-0 0-0 0. totals 32-59 16-26 85. Halftime: Rutgers 39-31. three-point goals: Howard 10-21 (Dockery 4-7, Towns 3-6, Strong 1-2, Jel.Williams 1-2, Harris 1-3, Hairston 0-1), Rutgers 5-17 (Simpson 2-2, Fernandes 2-5, Hyatt 1-4, Palmquist 0-1, Woolfolk 0-1, Chol 0-2, Griffiths 0-2). Rebounds: Howard 28 (Harris 8), Rutgers 35 (Omoruyi 14). Assists: Howard 13 (Dockery, Jel.Williams 3), Rutgers 19 (Simpson, Davis 4). total fouls: Howard 22, Rutgers 14. A: 8,000 (8,000). Timberwolves 121, Pelicans 120 MINNESOtA ...................... 27 32 26 36 4 121 NEW ORLEANS .................. 35 29 31 25 4 120 MINNESOtA: McDaniels 5-7 1-1 12, Towns 10-11 7-8 29, Gobert 5-7 7-10 17, Conley 2-8 0-0 5, Edwards 9-19 0-0 23, Anderson 4-7 1-2 9, Reid 2-8 2-2 8, Alexander-Walker 4-7 0-0 10, Milton 2-6 4-4 8. totals 43-80 22-27 121. NEW ORLEANS: Ingram 11-24 7-9 30, Jones 3-7 4-4 13, Valanciunas 10-15 6-6 26, Daniels 6-12 0-0 13, Hawkins 6-12 0-0 15, Marshall 2-4 2-3 7, Robinson-Earl 2-3 0-0 4, Ryan 3-5 1-1 10, Zeller 1-4 0-0 2. totals 44-86 20-23 120. three-point goals: Minnesota 13-31 (Edwards 5-10, Towns 2-2, Alexander-Walker 2-4, Reid 2-6, McDaniels 1-2, Conley 1-5, Milton 0-2), New Orleans 12-29 (Jones 3-4, Ryan 3-4, Hawkins 3-8, Marshall 1-2, Daniels 1-3, Ingram 1-6, Robinson-Earl 0-1, Valanciunas 0-1). fouled Out: Minnesota 1 (Edwards), New Orleans 1 (Jones). Rebounds: Minnesota 33 (Gobert 11), New Orleans 40 (Valanciunas 11). Assists: Minnesota 29 (Towns 9), New Orleans 27 (Jones 8). total fouls: Minnesota 21, New Orleans 26. A: 15,536 (16,867) rangers 5, Devils 3 N.Y. RANgERS ......................... 2 0 3 4 5 NEW JERSEY ........................... 2 0 1 4 3 fIRSt pERIOD Scoring: 1, N.Y. Rangers, Panarin 9 (Trocheck, Gustafsson), 8:37 (pp). 2, New Jersey, J.Hughes 6 (Hamilton, Siegenthaler), 9:25. 3, N.Y. Rangers, Vesey 2 (Jones, Schneider), 14:11. 4, New Jersey, Palat 1 (Bratt, Toffoli), 19:12 (pp). tHIRD pERIOD Scoring: 5, New Jersey, Haula 6 (Hamilton, J.Hughes), 1:17. 6, N.Y. Rangers, Panarin 10 (Trocheck), 11:04. 7, N.Y. Rangers, Vesey 3 (Trocheck, Pitlick), 17:11. 8, N.Y. Rangers, Wheeler 2, 18:27 (en). SHOtS ON gOAL N.Y. RANgERS ....................... 10 11 14 4 35 NEW JERSEY ......................... 10 11 12 4 33 power-play opportunities: N.Y. Rangers 1 of 3; New Jersey 1 of 1. goalies: N.Y. Rangers, Shesterkin 7-2-0 (33 shots-30 saves). New Jersey, Vanecek 7-4-0 (34-30). A: 17,086 (16,514). t: 2:32. Jets 5, Coyotes 2 ARIzONA ................................. 1 1 0 4 2 WINNIpEg ............................... 2 1 2 4 5 fIRSt pERIOD Scoring: 1, Arizona, Maccelli 3 (Kerfoot, Moser), 14:53. 2, Winnipeg, Scheifele 6 (Pionk, Dillon), 17:04. 3, Winnipeg, Namestnikov 2 (Morrissey), 18:02. SEcOND pERIOD Scoring: 4, Arizona, Dumba 2 (Boyd, Schmaltz), 6:08. 5, Winnipeg, Connor 14 (Scheifele, Dillon), 11:26. tHIRD pERIOD Scoring: 6, Winnipeg, Morrissey 2 (Scheifele, Connor), 4:15. 7, Winnipeg, Appleton 6 (Lowry, Niederreiter), 17:30 (en). SHOtS ON gOAL ARIzONA ............................... 11 4 3 4 18 WINNIpEg ............................. 11 8 7 4 26 power-play opportunities: Arizona 0 of 2; Winnipeg 0 of 1. goalies: Arizona, Vejmelka 2-6-2 (25 shots-21 saves). Winnipeg, Brossoit 2-1-1 (18-16). A: 12,103 (15,321). t: 2:29. Bruins 5, Canadiens 2 MONtREAL .............................. 0 1 1 4 2 bOStON ................................... 2 2 1 4 5 fIRSt pERIOD Scoring: 1, Boston, McAvoy 3 (Marchand, Pastrnak), 7:11 (pp). 2, Boston, Frederic 4 (Coyle, Carlo), 19:20. SEcOND pERIOD Scoring: 3, Boston, Zacha 6 (Lindholm, Pastrnak), 5:18. 4, Montreal, Slafkovsky 2 (Suzuki, Newhook), 13:04. 5, Boston, Frederic 5 (DeBrusk, Coyle), 15:30. tHIRD pERIOD Scoring: 6, Boston, van Riemsdyk 5 (Marchand, Pastrnak), 5:39 (pp). 7, Montreal, Kovacevic 2 (Dvorak, Slafkovsky), 15:29. SHOtS ON gOAL MONtREAL .............................. 8 8 6 4 22 bOStON ................................. 18 15 11 4 44 power-play opportunities: Montreal 0 of 2; Boston 2 of 5. goalies: Montreal, Allen 3-4-1 (44 shots-39 saves). Boston, Swayman 7-0-1 (22-20). A: 17,850 (17,565). t: 2:29. grizzlies 120, Spurs 108 MEMpHIS ........................... 26 25 36 33 4 120 SAN ANtONIO ................... 35 33 26 14 4 108 MEMpHIS: Bane 8-15 7-7 26, Jackson Jr. 7-20 11-12 27, Biyombo 7-9 0-1 14, Gilyard 1-2 0-0 3, Konchar 2-5 0-0 5, Aldama 7-15 2-3 17, Roddy 0-5 0-2 0, Lofton Jr. 1-3 0-0 2, Williams 4-8 7-8 17, Rose 3-4 2-3 9. totals 40-86 29-36 120. SAN ANtONIO: Johnson 8-14 2-3 22, Wembanyama 6-17 5-6 19, Collins 4-8 7-8 16, Champagnie 2-6 0-0 6, Sochan 5-8 5-6 16, Barlow 0-0 0-0 0, Mamukelashvili 2-5 0-0 5, McDermott 2-5 0-0 5, Osman 4-10 2-2 13, Bassey 0-0 0-0 0, Branham 2-6 0-0 4, Jones 1-4 0-1 2. totals 36-83 21-26 108. three-point goals: Memphis 11-33 (Bane 3-6, Williams 2-3, Jackson Jr. 2-8, Rose 1-1, Gilyard 1-2, Konchar 1-4, Aldama 1-5, Lofton Jr. 0-1, Roddy 0-3), San Antonio 15-40 (Johnson 4-7, Osman 3-7, Champagnie 2-6, Wembanyama 2-6, Mamukelashvili 1-2, Sochan 1-2, Collins 1-3, McDermott 1-3, Jones 0-1, Branham 0-3). fouled Out: Memphis None, San Antonio 1 (Collins). Rebounds: Memphis 45 (Aldama 10), San Antonio 40 (Wembanyama 13). Assists: Memphis 23 (Williams 5), San Antonio 26 (Collins 6). total fouls: Memphis 25, San Antonio 28. Bucks 132, Mavericks 125 DALLAS .............................. 34 24 40 27 4 125 MILWAUKEE ...................... 33 27 29 43 4 132 DALLAS: Jones Jr. 0-7 0-0 0, Williams 5-11 0-0 14, Lively II 3-4 0-0 6, Doncic 15-26 1-4 35, Irving 16-29 4-4 39, Powell 1-2 1-1 3, Hardaway Jr. 6-14 1-1 17, Curry 1-2 0-0 2, Exum 3-5 0-0 6, J.Green 1-3 0-0 3. totals 51-103 7-10 125. MILWAUKEE: G.Antetokounmpo 18-26 3-5 40, Jackson Jr. 0-1 0-0 0, B.Lopez 3-8 5-5 12, Beasley 3-9 0-0 7, Lillard 7-18 9-10 27, Portis 5-10 0-0 11, A.Green 3-5 0-0 8, Connaughton 6-12 0-0 16, Payne 4-5 0-0 11, Washington Jr. 0-0 0-0 0. totals 49-94 17-20 132. three-point goals: Dallas 16-47 (Doncic 4-9, Hardaway Jr. 4-10, Williams 4-10, Irving 3-10, J.Green 1-3, Curry 0-1, Exum 0-2, Jones Jr. 0-2), Milwaukee 17-45 (Connaughton 4-9, Lillard 4-11, Payne 3-4, A.Green 2-4, Portis 1-2, G.Antetokounmpo 1-3, B.Lopez 1-6, Beasley 1-6). fouled Out: None. Rebounds: Dallas 49 (Lively II 10), Milwaukee 40 (G.Antetokounmpo 14). Assists: Dallas 27 (Doncic 9), Milwaukee 29 (Lillard 12). total fouls: Dallas 15, Milwaukee 16. A: 18,128 (17,500) Bulls 102, Heat 97 MIAMI ................................ 26 24 26 21 4 97 cHIcAgO ............................ 14 26 28 34 4 102 MIAMI: Butler 8-16 7-7 25, Highsmith 0-4 0-0 0, Adebayo 8-12 8-8 24, D.Robinson 5-9 3-4 17, Lowry 3-10 0-0 8, Martin 2-9 0-0 5, Love 2-7 0-2 5, Jaquez Jr. 2-4 1-2 6, Richardson 3-6 0-0 7. totals 33-77 19-23 97. cHIcAgO: Caruso 4-8 1-2 11, DeRozan 6-12 9-13 23, Vucevic 7-14 0-0 15, LaVine 5-10 0-0 13, White 5-13 0-0 14, Craig 3-5 0-0 7, Williams 1-5 0-0 2, Drummond 2-3 2-2 6, Carter 3-9 0-0 9, Dosunmu 0-2 2-2 2. totals 36-81 14-19 102. three-point goals: Miami 12-36 (D.Robinson 4-5, Butler 2-6, Lowry 2-7, Jaquez Jr. 1-1, Martin 1-4, Richardson 1-4, Love 1-6, Highsmith 0-3), Chicago 16-45 (White 4-10, LaVine 3-7, Carter 3-9, Caruso 2-4, DeRozan 2-4, Craig 1-3, Vucevic 1-5, Williams 0-1, Dosunmu 0-2). fouled Out: None. Rebounds: Miami 34 (Adebayo 10), Chicago 44 (Drummond 9). Assists: Miami 23 (D.Robinson 7), Chicago 24 (LaVine 6). total fouls: Miami 18, Chicago 22. A: 18,063 (20,917) knicks 122, Hornets 108 NEW YORK ......................... 30 31 28 33 4 122 cHARLOttE ....................... 19 31 30 28 4 108 NEW YORK: Barrett 5-15 4-5 15, Randle 8-17 3-7 21, Robinson 2-5 0-0 4, Brunson 12-21 4-4 32, DiVincenzo 9-12 0-0 25, Hartenstein 1-2 2-2 4, Hart 3-5 0-0 7, McBride 2-3 0-0 5, Quickley 4-11 1-1 9. totals 46-91 14-19 122. cHARLOttE: Hayward 1-7 2-2 4, Washington 1-10 0-0 3, Williams 3-5 1-2 7, Ball 12-22 2-2 34, Miller 10-15 4-4 29, Bridges 8-12 2-3 19, Thor 2-3 0-0 5, McGowens 0-2 0-0 0, Smith 3-6 0-0 7. totals 40-82 11-13 108. three-point goals: New York 16-37 (DiVincenzo 7-10, Brunson 4-8, Randle 2-5, Hart 1-2, McBride 1-2, Barrett 1-5, Quickley 0-5), Charlotte 17-35 (Ball 8-13, Miller 5-7, Bridges 1-1, Smith 1-2, Thor 1-2, Washington 1-7, McGowens 0-1, Hayward 0-2). fouled Out: None. Rebounds: New York 47 (Robinson 14), Charlotte 36 (Williams 8). Assists: New York 27 (Brunson 8), Charlotte 29 (Ball 9). total fouls: New York 13, Charlotte 22. A: 19,171 (19,077) HoCkey Hurricanes 4, Penguins 2 pIttSbURgH ........................... 1 0 1 4 2 cAROLINA ............................... 0 1 3 4 4 fIRSt pERIOD Scoring: 1, Pittsburgh, Crosby 11 (Karlsson, Guentzel), 10:40. SEcOND pERIOD Scoring: 2, Carolina, Aho 5 (Jarvis, Teravainen), 13:06. tHIRD pERIOD Scoring: 3, Carolina, Burns 4 (Svechnikov, Slavin), 2:46. 4, Pittsburgh, Crosby 12 (Letang, Rust), 9:16. 5, Carolina, Jarvis 6 (Burns, Slavin), 11:52. 6, Carolina, Jarvis 7 (Teravainen, Aho), 19:22 (en). SHOtS ON gOAL pIttSbURgH ......................... 11 5 12 4 28 cAROLINA ............................. 11 11 12 4 34 power-play opportunities: Pittsburgh 0 of 2; Carolina 1 of 3. goalies: Pittsburgh, Jarry 6-7-0 (33 shots-30 saves). Carolina, Raanta 5-2-0 (28-26). A: 18,700 (18,680). t: 2:32. nHL AtLANtIc gp W L Ot pts gf gA Boston ........................ 16 13 1 2 28 56 32 Florida......................... 17 11 5 1 23 52 46 Toronto ....................... 16 9 5 2 20 58 56 Tampa Bay.................. 18 8 6 4 20 63 65 Detroit ........................ 17 8 6 3 19 61 57 Ottawa........................ 15 8 7 0 16 57 49 Montreal..................... 18 7 9 2 16 52 66 Buffalo........................ 17 7 9 1 15 48 55 MEtROpOLItAN gp W L Ot pts gf gA N.Y. Rangers............... 15 12 2 1 25 52 34 Washington................ 15 9 4 2 20 39 40 Carolina....................... 17 10 7 0 20 56 54 Philadelphia................ 17 9 7 1 19 55 50 New Jersey................. 16 8 7 1 17 59 62 N.Y. Islanders ............. 17 6 6 5 17 44 56 Pittsburgh .................. 16 8 8 0 16 55 46 Columbus.................... 18 4 10 4 12 49 65 cENtRAL gp W L Ot pts gf gA Dallas.......................... 16 11 4 1 23 55 45 Colorado...................... 16 11 5 0 22 62 49 Winnipeg .................... 17 10 5 2 22 63 54 Arizona ....................... 17 8 7 2 18 57 53 x-St. Louis .................. 15 8 6 1 17 43 41 Minnesota .................. 16 5 8 3 13 51 66 Nashville..................... 16 6 10 0 12 48 54 Chicago ....................... 15 5 10 0 10 38 53 pAcIfIc gp W L Ot pts gf gA Vegas.......................... 18 13 3 2 28 67 44 x-Vancouver ............... 17 12 4 1 25 73 41 x-Los Angeles............. 15 9 3 3 21 58 43 Anaheim ..................... 17 9 8 0 18 50 53 x-Seattle..................... 18 6 8 4 16 47 66 Calgary........................ 17 6 8 3 15 48 60 Edmonton ................... 16 5 10 1 11 47 61 San Jose ..................... 17 3 13 1 7 26 73 x-Late game fRIDAY9S RESULtS Toronto 3, Detroit 2 Winnipeg 3, Buffalo 2 Florida 2, Anaheim 1 SAtURDAY9S RESULtS Washington 4, Columbus 3 Ottawa 2, Minnesota 1 (SO) Philadelphia 4, Vegas 3 (OT) Nashville 4, Chicago 2 Tampa Bay 6, Edmonton 4 Carolina 4, Pittsburgh 2 N.Y. Rangers 5, New Jersey 3 Winnipeg 5, Arizona 2 Boston 5, Montreal 2 N.Y. Islanders 5, Calgary 4 (SO) Colorado 6, Dallas 3 Seattle at Vancouver, late St. Louis at Los Angeles, late SUNDAY9S gAMES Toronto vs. Minnesota at Avicii Arena, 8 a.m. Columbus at Philadelphia, 5:30 Vegas at Pittsburgh, 6 Buffalo at Chicago, 7 St. Louis at Anaheim, 8 MONDAY9S gAMES Boston at Tampa Bay, 7 Edmonton at Florida, 7 Colorado at Nashville, 8 N.Y. Rangers at Dallas, 8 Los Angeles at Arizona, 9 Calgary at Seattle, 10 San Jose at Vancouver, 10 tUESDAY9S RESULtS No games scheduled CoLLege BASkeTBALL nCAA men SAtURDAY9S RESULtS EASt Binghamton 82, Marist 59 Boston College 73, Harvard 64 Colgate 59, Gardner-Webb 52 Columbia 78, Temple 73 Elon 83, Holy Cross 69 Fairleigh Dickinson 124, Nittany Lions 66 George Washington 79, New Hampshire 67 Georgetown 83, Mount St. Mary9s 72 La Salle 79, S. Indiana 78 Maryland Eastern Shore 83, Penn 80 (OT) Princeton 82, Monmouth (N.J.) 57 Queens (N.C.) 69, Fairfield 63 Rutgers 85, Howard 63 Sacred Heart 66, Loyola (Md.) 51 Seton Hall 72, Wagner 51 SOUtH Bryant 61, FAU 52 Hampton 92, Florida Gulf Coast 85 Lipscomb 106, Alabama A&M 81 Longwood 73, N.C. Central 66 Middle Tennessee 88, Milligan 62 N. Illinois 98, UALR 93 North Alabama 61, Jacksonville St. 59 North Florida 67, Maine 58 Presbyterian 78, Northwestern St. 75 UNC Asheville 114, Virginia Lynchburg 59 VCU 60, Seattle 56 W. Carolina 76, McNeese St. 74 W. Kentucky 95, Kentucky St. 75 Winthrop 74, IUPUI 61 MIDWESt Creighton 82, Texas Southern 50 E. Illinois 48, Coppin St. 46 E. Michigan 69, Cleveland St. 62 Evansville 74, Ball St. 50 Fort Wayne 93, South Dakota 81 Loyola Chicago 73, New Orleans 70 Minnesota 67, S.C. Upstate 53 Northwestern 72, Rhode Island 61 Ohio 71, Detroit 52 Utah Tech 81, Lake Erie 69 SOUtHWESt Incarnate Word 100, Arkansas Pine Bluff 81 WESt BYU 93, Morgan St. 50 Cal Baptist 66, St. Thomas (MN) 62 Mississippi St. 76, Washington St. 64 N. Arizona 78, VMI 69 Nebraska 84, Oregon St. 63 Pacific 77, Lamar 76 Portland St. 73, Cal Poly 57 San Jose St. 77, Norfolk St. 53 Santa Clara 65, SE Louisiana 63 UC San Diego 73, Navy 55 Washington 74, Xavier 71 Weber St. 75, Yale 65 (OT) nCAA women SAtURDAY9S RESULtS EASt Binghamton 73, St. Bonaventure 65 Cornell 52, Mount St. Mary9s 47 Duquesne 56, Pittsburgh 55 Lafayette 54, LIU Brooklyn 51 Le Moyne 63, Massachusetts Lowell 61 (OT) Maryland Eastern Shore 62, George Washington 59 NJIT 80, Wagner 36 Rider 58, Boston U. 55 Rutgers 80, St. Francis (Pa.) 51 SOUtH Arizona 90, Memphis 67 Coppin St. 70, FIU 66 Davidson 62, Morgan St. 48 George Mason 83, Robert Morris 63 Louisiana Lafayette 69, Nicholls 63 (OT) Louisiana Monroe 87, McNeese St. 53 Michigan 63, Middle Tennessee 49 Mississippi 67, Howard 54 Morehead St. 103, Midway 51 N. Kentucky 76, Marshall 66 North Carolina 68, Elon 39 Richmond 76, American 44 S. Dakota St. 55, Tennessee Martin 38 Samford 69, Alabama St. 47 Southern Miss. 91, North Alabama 63 Stetson 71, Iona 62 UNC Greensboro 63, Radford 60 Winthrop 54, SC State 45 MIDWESt Ball St. 75, N. Iowa 64 Bowling Green 73, Xavier 64 Butler 53, Austin Peay 47 Cleveland St. 96, Cent. Michigan 57 Detroit 76, Dayton 60 E. Michigan 68, SIU Edwardsville 65 Kansas 70, UMKC 61 Notre Dame 79, Illinois 68 South Dakota 83, DePaul 71 SOUtHWESt Oral Roberts 93, Tulsa 87 Texas San Antonio 70, Texas Arlington 66 WESt Gonzaga 80, Wyoming 64 New Mexico St. 57, Portland St. 38 Saint Louis 109, Chaminade 63 San Diego St. 68, Sacramento St. 45 Santa Clara 89, Oregon 50 UC Riverside 69, Antelope Valley 47 UNLV 93, New Hampshire 30 Washington 80, Seattle 64 Pro BASkeTBALL nBA EAStERN cONfERENcE AtLANtIc W L pct gb Boston ........................................10 2 .833 4 Philadelphia..................................9 3 .750 1 New York......................................8 5 .615 21/2 Brooklyn .......................................6 6 .500 4 Toronto.........................................5 7 .417 5 SOUtHEASt W L pct gb Miami ...........................................8 5 .615 4 Orlando.........................................7 5 .583 1/2 Atlanta .........................................6 6 .500 11/2 Charlotte ......................................3 9 .250 41/2 Washington..................................2 10 .167 51/2 cENtRAL W L pct gb Milwaukee....................................9 4 .692 4 Indiana..........................................7 4 .636 1 Cleveland......................................6 6 .500 21/2 Chicago .........................................5 9 .357 41/2 Detroit..........................................2 11 .154 7 WEStERN cONfERENcE SOUtHWESt W L pct gb Dallas............................................9 4 .692 4 Houston........................................6 4 .600 11/2 New Orleans.................................6 7 .462 3 Memphis.......................................3 9 .250 51/2 San Antonio..................................3 10 .231 6 NORtHWESt W L pct gb Minnesota ....................................9 3 .750 4 Denver ..........................................9 3 .750 4 Oklahoma City..............................9 4 .692 1/2 Utah..............................................4 8 .333 5 Portland........................................3 9 .250 6 pAcIfIc W L pct gb Sacramento..................................7 4 .636 4 L.A. Lakers....................................7 6 .538 1 Phoenix.........................................6 6 .500 11/2 Golden State ................................6 8 .429 21/2 L.A. Clippers .................................4 7 .364 3 fRIDAY9S RESULtS New York 120, Washington 99 Milwaukee 130, Charlotte 99 Boston 108, Toronto 105 Cleveland 108, Detroit 100 Philadelphia 126, Atlanta 116 Sacramento 129, San Antonio 120 New Orleans 115, Denver 110 Orlando 103, Chicago 97 L.A. Lakers 107, Portland 95 Phoenix 131, Utah 128 L.A. Clippers 106, Houston 100 SAtURDAY9S RESULtS New York 122, Charlotte 108 Minnesota 121, New Orleans 120 Milwaukee 132, Dallas 125 Chicago 102, Miami 97 Memphis 120, San Antonio 108 Oklahoma City 130, Golden State 123 (OT) SUNDAY9S gAMES Philadelphia at Brooklyn, 3 Detroit at Toronto, 4 Orlando at Indiana, 5 Denver at Cleveland, 6 Sacramento at Dallas, 7:30 Boston at Memphis, 8 Phoenix at Utah, 8 Oklahoma City at Portland, 9 Houston at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 MONDAY9S gAMES Milwaukee at Washington, 7 Boston at Charlotte, 7 Denver at Detroit, 7 L.A. Clippers at San Antonio, 8 Miami at Chicago, 8 New York at Minnesota, 8 Sacramento at New Orleans, 8 Houston at Golden State, 10
sunday, november 19, 2023 . the washington post eZ M2 d11 High schools BY SPENCER NUSBAUM BEL AIR, Md. 4 As Arundel9s eight seniors tilted their heads toward the hardwood, the roof at Harford Community College9s APG Federal Credit Union Arena and anywhere other than straight ahead 4 reeling in the moments after Saturday afternoon9s loss to North Hagerstown in the Maryland Class 3A state championship match 4 each felt the arm of a younger teammate. Over the past three full seasons and 64 games before Saturday, the Wildcats had only twice experienced defeat. That9s why, in the moments following this 25-23, 25-21, 25-23 loss, the gratitude seemed to last so long. <Everything we9ve been together for for four years made this group really special,= senior Taylor Johnson said. <We did a really good job picking each other up.= The challenge this season, as with most seasons for the Wildcats (24-1), was for Coach Ashley Yuscavage to prepare a loaded roster for the playoffs. This was the team9s fifth trip to the state final in its past six seasons 4 this year coming in 3A rather than 4A 4 with those trips yielding titles in 2019 and 2021 and this fall9s No. 4 local ranking, the highest of any public school. Still, after last year9s bid for an undefeated season ended with a five-set loss to Urbana in the state championship game yielded by a self-described lack of urgency, the Wildcats had room to self-correct. They swept all but four of their previous matches this fall and addressed the few concerns that arose. Off the court, Yuscavage9s group nurtured younger players without losing its edge. The players also emphasized mental health, donning pregame shirts that read, <You Are Enough.= <That9s one of those things these kids can take with them after they graduate,= Yuscavage said. <That makes me proud.= North Hagerstown (22-1) was seeking to repeat in 3A with a new coach, talented outside hitters in sisters Caydence and Baylee Doolan and an athletic defense. Coupled with Arundel9s self-inflicted errors, those edges handed the Hubs early leads in the first two sets and helped close them out after the Wildcats broke even at 21-21 and 20-20. In depths they hadn9t experienced in 12 months, the Wildcats began their final set with the sort of chest-bumping, head-nodding, hard-hitting moxie that kept the first two close. Their four senior starters 4 Johnson, Deviana Walker, Payton Swinton and Kiara Harmon 4 helped Arundel notch the first four points and nearly let it extend the match after it trailed 24-19. But the Wildcats, as in the previous two sets, couldn9t come all the way back. <This game didn9t define us,= Walker said. <I9m proud of what we accomplished.= MARyLAnd cLASS 3A voLLeybALL FInAL Wildcats keep things close, but stellar season ends just short of perfection n. hAgeRStown 3, ARundeL 0 BY NICKY WOLCOTT BALTIMORE 4 The South River boys9 soccer team found itself in an unusual position just four minutes into Saturday9s Maryland Class 3A championship game 4 leading by two goals. Playing in its first state final in 36 years, South River converted a pair of early strikes off corner kicks for a perfect start. From there, the Seahawks could play freely, and they led by at least two goals for most of their 5-1 victory over Towson at Loyola University to cruise to the second state title in program history. <I love watching this team play. It9s fun. . . . I have fun watching these boys just play their style and win,= Coach Marlyn Argueta said. <They usually like to go to overtime or make it close or lose in a heartbreaking way. . . . They just proved they were the best team in the state.= On Saturday, the Seahawks (14-7) did so quickly. Magnus Schauermann headed in a Cole Mastal corner kick less than two minutes in, then Jeffrey Serrano doubled South River9s lead in the fourth minute when he pounced on a loose ball after another corner. Towson (12-3-5) halved South River9s advantage when Collin Taylor found the back of the net off a corner in the 10th minute, but Hunter Marsden quickly restored the Seahawks9 two-goal advantage by flicking the ball to a defender, cutting back toward the net and finding the bottom corner. Sean Ciminelli, who scored in the Seahawks9 semifinal victory against Howard, missed a chance to extend South River9s lead from the penalty spot in the first minute of the second half, but the Seahawks remained in control. Mastal added South River9s fourth goal on a free kick, and Jack Brusse headed in a Marsden delivery on a set piece for the Seahawks9 final tally. South River fell to Anne Arundel County foe Severna Park twice, first in a 2-0 regular season defeat and then in a 3-2 overtime loss in the county championship game. But the Seahawks took down the Falcons in a region semifinal 4 that victory helped South River realize it could compete for the state title, Argueta said. The Seahawks had to play Severna Park early in the postseason because they retroactively forfeited their first four games, which affected their seeding. South River had fielded an ineligible player, an issue that Argueta attributed to incorrect paperwork. Still, the Seahawks persisted. After Saturday9s final whistle, they lifted South River9s first state championship trophy since 1987. <Without that, we probably wouldn9t be here right now,= Schauermann said. <The adversity made us stronger. . . . Without it, I don9t know 4 we could have lost a while ago.= MARyLAnd cLASS 3A boyS9 SocceR FInAL Seahawks ride fast start to a glorious conclusion South RiveR 5, towSon 1 BY NICKY WOLCOTT BALTIMORE 4 Entering Saturday night9s Maryland Class 3A girls9 soccer championship game, Severna Park and Mount Hebron had combined to record 24 shutouts in 32 matches. In a contest matching two of the state9s best defenses, each team hoped one more clean sheet would be enough to secure a state title. The Falcons got the final shutout. After notching two first-half goals, Severna Park limited Mount Hebron9s dynamic attack for a 2-0 win at Loyola University to complete a perfect season and claim its first state title in 20 years. <From Day One, we always said, 8Just win every game; earn the next day9 4 and we earned them all,= goalkeeper Lily Diedrich said. <I think that9s pretty awesome.= The Falcons (17-0) trailed South River in their postseason opener but never allowed another goal. Severna Park <never wanted to be in a losing situation again,= center back Ryn Feemster said, and its two goals within a minute late in the first half ensured the Falcons wouldn9t be Saturday. Sara Kreis9s shot from outside the penalty box found the net in the 34th minute, and Ava Scott doubled Severna Park9s advantage within 60 seconds after getting behind the Vikings9 defense. Following the second goal, Severna Park9s attackers knew they could rely on the defense. <[It felt] very, very, very comforting,= Scott said. <I know how skilled they are, how aggressive they are. . . . They9re very calm and composed in the back even when it is really stressful.= A back line featuring Feemster, Emerson Scott, Francesca Dunoyer and Caitlyn Boucher, whom Scott called the team9s <core four,= along with Diedrich proceeded to do what Severna Park did all season 4 control possession and keep its opponent, this time Mount Hebron (15-2), far from the net. Severna Park ended up with its 14th shutout and finished its season with just three goals allowed. That let the Falcons celebrate their first state championship since 2003. <I9ve been kind of dreaming of this moment ever since I was little. I always prioritized soccer as my main sport,= said Feemster, a VCU lacrosse commit. <[My] senior year, I was like: 8This is it. This is our last chance, especially for our senior class.9 And I just wanted it.= MARyLAnd cLASS 3A GIRLS9 SocceR FInAL With one last clean sheet, Falcons return to the top SeveRnA PARk 2, mount hebRon 0 BY SPENCER NUSBAUM BEL AIR, Md. 4 The most valuable piece of real estate a volleyball team can own is about two balls wide and sits at the inside edge of the inbounds perimeter at the net. Performing in that spot, coaches attest, is less about the power behind a hit and more about the defense and the passes that set the hit up. In the Maryland Class 2A state championship game Saturday, that space belonged to Centennial. The Eagles9 stoic play on their side of the net, coupled with an incessant thwack on the other half at Harford Community College9s APG Federal Credit Union Arena, delivered a 25-20, 25-21, 25-19 sweep of Calvert and the 15th state title in program history but the first since 2008. <If we9re going to beat them, we9re going to have to be the best us,= Centennial Coach Michael Bossom said. <That9s what we did.= After falling in the state quarterfinals last season, the Eagles felt they were tougher this season, grinding through arguably the state9s stiffest area, Howard County, and coming out the other side better for it. Still, Bossom could sense they had another level to reach. After an in-county loss, every Eagle wrote down a goal on a sticky note. One stood out: Embrace the pressure. <Every game, we have the privilege to play in such a high-speed environment,= senior Kaley MacLellan said. <Even when it9s [close], that is the time we can show all the [work we9ve put in].= For the Eagles (13-4), that meant playing their brand of volleyball, even on their biggest stage. On Saturday, they would have to gut it out against the Cavaliers (15-5), who are well versed in resilience and self-improvement. The teams entered the state tournament as the No. 5 and No. 6 seeds. Still, the Eagles found their rhythm almost immediately, amassing a 16-9 lead in all three sets amid authoritative hits and blocks by seniors MacLellan and Amanda Xu. Limiting mistakes became a significant factor as well, with longer rallies often ending in the Eagles9 favor behind the defensive savvy of Duke commit Mailinh Godschall. Calvert9s duo of Reagan Oursler and Dasani Jones added friction to the Eagles9 pursuit for title No. 15 as the Cavaliers cut their deficit to four in all three sets. Still, in a fitting finale, they closed each set with intuition at the edges: in the first set, with Godschall9s kill landing at the back edge; in the second, letting a Calvert serve land just out; and in the third, with junior Natalie Gomez9s strike toward the same back edge leading to a final errant pass. <We9ve been at this since freshman year,= Godschall said. <It feels amazing.= MARyLAnd cLASS 2A voLLeybALL FInAL Eagles9 best is better than all the rest CentenniAL 3, CALveRt 0 BY SPENCER NUSBAUM BEL AIR, Md. 4 All season, Richard Montgomery volleyball coach Gretchen Barber-Strunk bragged about her team9s intelligence. If the Rockets faltered in one set, she said, they had the requisite experience to recalibrate. And yet, before the title-delivering fourth set in their Maryland Class 4A state championship game win over Leonardtown (25-23, 25-18, 14-25, 25-10) on Saturday night at Harford Community College9s APG Federal Credit Union Arena, the high-IQ Rockets made the most rudimentary adjustment of their season: They took a breath. <It was just a matter of locking back in,= junior Corinne Howard said. More specifically, in its final set, Richard Montgomery always seemed to know where the ball was going and what it wanted to do with it. When it needed a block, Howard appeared; if it needed a pristine pass or a lefthanded kill, it went to junior Ema Djordjevic; if it needed a thrashing shot, it went to sophomore Ellie Mitchell. The Rockets took 15 of the final 20 points to capture the first state title in program history. That success was a byproduct of their veterans, with senior Casey Bradley and Djordjevic leading the way. Setting the example was the only way Djordjevic knew how to lead; she began playing when she was 10 and has idolized and incessantly watched the Serbian national team ever since. <Those two pass that knowledge down to the rest of us,= Howard said. <We all see things a little differently, and we make sure to relay that to each other,= Bradley said. Leonardtown (17-2) arrived in this matchup following many of the same tenets as Richard Montgomery (22-3): It was tenacious on defense, read the floor well and played at a fearless, breakneck pace. But the Rockets began Saturday in control, with a 10-3 lead aiding a 25-20 first-set win. Though they had a more tepid start to the next set, falling behind by six points early, Mitchell and Howard overpowered the Raiders to crawl back from a 9-6 hole and break a 16-16 tie. The Raiders tested the Rockets in the third set, and junior Gracie Zartman came up with a slew of kills with the pressure on. But in the final frame, the Rockets pushed the ball back toward Mitchell and Howard, inducing a cheery and teary dog pile by the net. <This was just the best day ever,= Djordjevic said. <Locking eyes with everyone on the court, that just made the tears start falling. There was so much love all around.= MARyLAnd cLASS 4A voLLeybALL FInAL Rockets make right adjustment at the right time R. montgomeRy 3, LeonARdtown 1 Craig hudson for the Washington Post Richard Montgomery had the talent to win, but Coach Gretchen Barber-Strunk said intelligence is what made the team special. Craig hudson for the Washington Post Centennial raced out to big leads in all three sets Saturday and captured the program9s 15th state championship 4 but its first since 2008. What9s for dinner? S0115-2x1.5 Search our database of tested recipes by ingredient or name. washingtonpost.com/recipes
d12 eZ sU the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 from a few yards out to seal the win. <We got to finish faster sometimes, but we knew we were going to dominate,= said Wheeler, who was named the Gravy Bowl MVP. <. . . It shows that I could get better, that I got a chance to do something in life.= Anacostia found the end zone on a 30-yard pass from Jeremiah Wright to Exavier Odom in the game9s final seconds, but Coolidge already was celebrating by then. The Colts9 promotion to the Stars Division will bring a new level of competition in the form of traditional D.C. powerhouses Dunbar and Ballou, who will meet in the Turkey Bowl on Thanksgiving morning at Eastern. But they say they9re more than ready for that challenge. <We9re going to do the same thing we did in the Stripes,= Coolidge Coach Kevin Nesbitt said. <We don9t worry about our opponents. We just worry about us.= Assistant coach Darnell Dailey put it even more succinctly when he yelled to his team: <We9re done with the gravy! Bring on the turkey, baby!= Before that, the Colts still have work to do this season. With their Gravy Bowl win, they advanced to next Saturday9s D.C. State Athletic Association Class A title game at Georgetown University, where they will face Maret and try to repeat as state champions in a rematch of last year9s rout. BY AARON CREDEUR Even during warmups for Saturday afternoon9s Gravy Bowl, it was clear players on the Coolidge football team had their minds on bigger things. The Colts were chanting and jumping around the field to psych themselves up, brimming with confidence and eager for the opportunity ahead. To achieve its goal, Coolidge had to prove it had outgrown the D.C. Interscholastic Athletic Association9s Stripes Division by repeating as champions 4 and it passed the final test in a 14-6 win over Anacostia at Theodore Roosevelt High. The Colts9 second consecutive Stripes title secured their promotion to the DCIAA9s Stars Division for next season. After several blunders cost Anacostia (6-5) a win in its previous matchup with Coolidge (7-4), Indians Coach Seneca Surles stressed that shutting down the Colts9 running game would be essential to standing a chance. The problem, as it turned out, was that Coolidge9s defense was equally adept at preventing any big plays. And after working out some early jitters, the Colts found their stride with running back Malachi Williams leading the charge. After Williams9s 57-yard run injected energy into the crowd, Ronnell Wheeler9s 31-yard touchdown pass to Allante Stubbs put Coolidge on top. From there, it was all Colts. <It really means the world to me,= Williams, a senior, said of the opportunity to give his younger teammates a chance to compete in the Stars Division. <. . . But I couldn9t really let the excitement go to my head, because it wasn9t the end of the game. Regardless of if it9s the first or fourth quarter, I still have to stay focused.= A third-quarter interception by defensive back Jovan Martin gave Wheeler a chance to run the ball in dciaa stripes division football final With a Gravy Bowl triumph, Colts reach the Stars coolidge 14, anacostia 6 cause for concern. . . . l AFRICA: South Africa started its World Cup qualifying campaign with a 2-1 home win against Benin in Durban to take the early lead in Group C. Percy Tau put the host ahead in the second minute following a swift interchange of passes, and South Africa doubled its lead when Khuliso Mudau finished from close range on the stroke of halftime after Benin failed to clear the ball. The other four teams in Group C all drew their opening games, including Nigeria being held to a surprising 1-1 stalemate at home against Lesotho on Thursday. South Africa hasn9t appeared at a World Cup since it hosted the 2010 edition and last qualified for the tournament in 2002. But with the World Cup expanding to 48 teams in 2026, South Africa has a better chance of qualifying for the tournament in the United States, Mexico and Canada. Nine teams from Africa will qualify directly, and a 10th team could make the field through an intercontinental playoff. . . . Sadio Mané scored twice for host Senegal in a 4-0 rout of South Sudan in Diamniadio. l CONCACAF: Stephen Eustáquio scored in the 85th minute to lift Canada to a 2-1 victory over Jamaica in Kingston in the first leg of a Nations League quarterfinal. Canada had gone ahead in first-half stoppage time on a goal by Jonathan David, but Shamar Nicholson evened things up in the 56th minute for the hosts. ASSOCIATED PRESS Midfielder Weston McKennie will miss the United States9 Copa América qualifier at Trinidad and Tobago on Monday because of a knee injury, another blow to a team already missing Christian Pulisic, Tim Weah and Tyler Adams. McKennie played the entire match in Thursday9s 3-0 win at Austin, the first leg of the totalgoals series. The U.S. Soccer Federation said Saturday the 25-year-old McKennie left the team to recuperate from aggravated left knee tendinopathy, a condition in which tissue connecting muscle to a bone becomes inflamed. l SPAIN: Real Madrid forward Vinícius Júnior tore a leg muscle while playing with Brazil9s national team in South American World Cup qualifying, the Spanish club said. Madrid said medical exams showed Vinícius suffered a muscle tear in his left leg in Brazil9s 2-1 loss at Colombia on Friday. Madrid did not give a timetable for Vinícius9s recovery, but that type of injury can sideline players for about two months. l NORWAY: Manchester City striker Erling Haaland will miss a European Championship qualifying game against Scotland on Sunday with what the national team9s doctor described as a painful foot injury. Haaland was hurt when playing in Norway9s 2-0 win over the Faroe Islands in a friendly on Thursday. France posts record Euro win France racked up the biggest win in European Championship qualifying by beating visiting Gibraltar, 14-0, in Nice, and the Netherlands, Switzerland and Romania all secured places at Euro 2024 next year in Germany. Kylian Mbappe had a hat trick as nine French players scored goals, with one own-goal for Gibraltar in a Group B match. France9s previous biggest win was a 10-0 victory over Azerbaijan in 1995. The previous record in European Championship qualifying was Germany9s 13-0 win over San Marino in 2006. France already had qualified for next year9s tournament. <The team played extraordinarily well today,= said Mbappé, who took his international tally to 46 goals. <This was a victory for teamwork.= Teenage midfielder Warren Zaïre-Emery became France9s youngest goal scorer in his intersoccer roundup U.S. men lose McKennie as knee injury flares up national debut and then went off injured against a Gibraltar side that played most of the match with 10 players following an early send-off. . . . In Amsterdam, the Netherlands needed a win over Ireland to ensure itself of qualifying second out of Group B, and Wout Weghorst gave his team the lead in the 12th minute with the only goal of the game, blasting a shot into the top-right corner. . . . In Group I, first-place Romania won, 2-1, against third-place Israel in Felcsút, Hungary, to qualify for its first major tournament since 2016. Also in Group I, host Switzerland drew, 1-1, with Kosovo in Basel to qualify in second place and continue a run of not missing any major tournament since Euro 2012. . . . In Group D, Croatia is on the verge of qualifying after beating host Latvia, 2-0, in Riga as its closest rival, Wales, dropped points in a 1-1 road draw with Armenia in Yerevan. Croatia can secure a qualifying spot Tuesday with a win over Armenia in its last game or if Wales fails to beat Group D leader Turkey. . . . Turkey shocked Euro 2024 hosts Germany, 3-2, in a friendly in Berlin to spoil Coach Julian Nagelsmann9s home debut after he took the job in September. The Germans, racing to get a strong team together for next year9s tournament on home soil, still have a way to go, and their leaking defense remains a major Darren Carroll/getty Images Weston McKennie took a spill Thursday vs. Trinidad and Tobago and will miss Monday9s second leg. WE BRING THE SHOWROOM TO YOU! 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KLMNO sunday, november 19, 2023 Arts&Style eZ ee e BY PETER MARKS it was the perfect place to sit down with Hana s. sharif: a serene spot at the top of Arena stage, one of the architectural wonders of the American theater, with three playhouses under one majestically soaring roof. Looking down on her new domain from a balcony in the southwest washington complex, Arena9s new artistic director pondered the history beneath her feet. Two of those theaters were built by Arena9s storied founding leader, Zelda Fichandler. The third, and the massive shell encasing all three, were added by Molly smith, who retired in July after running the company for a quarter of a century. <This literally is the place that Molly built,= sharif said between bites of lunch. <And inside the house that Molly built is the house that Zelda built.= The significance was made plain for her before smith left, during an impromptu ceremony in Arena9s kitchen. <she literally hands me the master key to the building,= sharif recalled. <A beautiful glass key chain that says 8Arena stage9 on it.= now that sharif has the key, the intriguing question is which way she will turn it. The artistic leadership post at Arena, a foundational company in the nation9s regional theater movement, is tantamount to a sacred trust. That three of the four people who have held the post over the past 73 years have been women 4 the fourth was Douglas C. wager, who ran Arena in the 1990s 4 burnishes the organization9s trailblazing reputation. And as a younger leader and Arena9s first artistic chief executive of color, the 45-year-old sharif has a golden opportunity to shape Arena9s values and commitments to a diverse capital city. There is also the more pragmatic concern, one that has thrust the American theater into a crisis without parallel. The coronavirus pandemic has left it a wounded industry, with two to three theater companies closing each month, and its leaders pleading for rescue. in september, weeks after assuming her new job, sharif went to Capitol Hill with Lin-Manuel Miranda, Phylicia rashad and theater executives from across the see hana sharif On e4 Arena Stage gets inspiring new chief First leader of color looks to build bridge to future at D.C. theater BY ANN HORNADAY in new YOrK CrItIC9S Notebook No one knows Joan Baez9s story like the friend who put it on film rebeccA MiLLer for THe WASHingTon PoST 8Why did i say yes?= Joan Baez is looking quizzically at her one of her closest friends, Karen O9Connor. The two are telling the story of how they met in 1986, when O9Connor was busy starting her career as a documentary filmmaker and Baez was busy & being Joan Baez. O9Connor, who was living in western Massachusetts, heard that Baez would soon be performing in northampton, so she wrote and asked for an oncamera interview. <why did i say yes?,= therefore, isn9t a rhetorical question. <You didn9t,= O9Connor tells Baez. <Jeannie read the letter and liked the letter.= (<Jeannie= is Jeanne Triolo Murphy, Baez9s longtime business manager.) <i remember nothing, of course,= Baez says with a smile, <except sitting across from Karen.= And here she is again, sitting across from Karen 4 this time in her favorite room of her favorite hotel, which happens to be next door to the Beacon Theatre, where she gave her final new York concert in 2018. That performance is one of the pivotal moments in <Joan Baez i Am a noise,= a documentary O9Connor co-directed with Miri navasky and Maeve O9Boyle that opened in theaters in October and will be available on demand sunday. whereas most journalists and documentarians would shy away from attempting to create a genuinely candid portrait of one of their best friends, O9Connor says <i Am a noise= <wouldn9t be this film if not for the friendship.= For one thing, it wouldn9t have included footage of Baez9s mother, Joan Bridge Baez, and sister Pauline Baez Marden, both of whom O9Connor filmed before they died, in 2013 and 2016, respectively. <Mom loved her,= Baez says of O9Connor, who became close with see baez On e12 INSIDe Exploring a key summer in Picasso9s life e8 MUSIC: High-tech SoundShirts give those with hearing loss a new way to feel the emotion of opera e2 DINING: Padaek brings its inticing blend of Thai and Laotian flavors to a second location in Arlington e18
E2 eZ ee the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 music BY MICHAEL ANDOR BRODEUR O pera is everything all at once: music and drama, poetry and dance, grandeur and intimacy, spectacle and sound. This allencompassing aspect makes it one of the most accessible art forms yet one of the most challenging to make accessible. For audience members who are deaf or hard of hearing, or who are blind or have low vision, attending an opera can be a deeply frustrating experience. A pilot program at the Lyric opera of Chicago is trying on a new approach for deaf and hard-of-hearing people to experience opera: the soundshirt, a jacketlike garment equipped with 16 haptic actuators that transmit sound from the orchestra and stage into pulses, vibrations and other forms of haptic feedback in the shirt itself. Brad Dunn, who spearheaded the soundshirt initiative at the Lyric, is the company9s senior director of digital initiatives and one of its most tireless advocates for expanding accessibility. In addition to accommodations for mobility disabilities such as ramps and wheelchair seating, like many opera houses, the Lyric offers performances with American sign Language interpretation, projected subtitles, and assisted listening devices for deaf and hard-ofhearing patrons. For blind people and those with low vision, the Lyric provides Braille and large-print programs, audiodescribed performances, high-powered glasses and pre-performance <touch tours,= allowing audience members to feel various props, costumes and surfaces before the curtain rises. The soundshirt, though, is cut from a different cloth than most accessibility technology, providing a mediated experience of the music that registers as physical and personal. <It doesn9t re-create the experience of listening to music,= Dunn says. <It9s its own thing. It translates the music into a different sensory experience that can be felt by people. And what I9ve seen through all of the early testing that we did is that audiences who are deaf or hard of hearing have responded very viscerally to it.= <That, to me is what opera is all about,= says Lyric general director Anthony Freud. <It9s the punch to the solar plexus. one can have endless intellectual conversations about the content of operas, about interpreting operas. There9s a huge entertainment value, but ultimately the point to me is the emotional punch. & This was an opportunity to have a physical relationship with the music being performed, and that gets to the very heart of opera.= For attendees at a Lyric production of <West side story= earlier this year, input from the soundshirt didn9t just help provide additional detail to the performance 4 it also illuminated the musical spaces in between, the interludes and interstitial passages of music, the overtures overloaded with crucial cues. Dunn recalls one tester9s eyes welling up with tears after the performance. <It was a confirmation that we were onto something, that it was working,= he says, <that this could actually be meaningful to these folks.= Lyric9s soundshirt project was launched in partnership with the city of Chicago9s Mayor9s office for People With Disabilities (MoPD), but the garment itself was designed by CuteCircuit, a London-based wearable technology design firm that Dunn became aware of in 2020, before he came to the Lyric. Dunn immediately saw potential for the soundshirt to not just enhance the company9s accessibility offerings but also to harness the emotional impact of music minus the music itself. (It9s not for nothing that CuteCircuit9s other primary product is a Hugshirt, which employs sensors and actuators to transmit virtual hugs between distant friends.) on the CuteCircuit website, a soundshirt retails for about $1,900, making the Lyric9s free program accessible in more ways than one. At the Lyric, an array of microphones positioned over various sections of the orchestra feeds audio information to a central computer. Dunn and his crew adapt the software to respond to the specific instrumentation of a given piece. (<West side story= has different rhythmic demands than, say, the Lyric9s current production of Janacek9s <Jenufa.=) Those audio signals are divided across seven channels, each mapped to one of 16 different <zones= on the soundshirt, where motifs and melodies register as patterns and pulses across the garment9s 16 actuators. Thus, for a production of <The Flying Dutchman,= the violins and cellos are assigned to trigger haptic feedback see SOunDShirT on E3 Garment helps people with hearing loss feel emotional pulse of opera lyRiC opeRa of ChiCago RobeRt Kusel ABOVE: Brad Dunn, center, with the SoundShirt and its designers at CuteCircuit in London. The shirt transmits sound from the orchestra and stage into pulses and vibrations felt by the wearer. LEFT: Dunn, the Lyric Opera of Chicago9s senior director of digital initiatives, prepares SoundShirts for a recent performance.
sunday, november 19, 2023 . the washington post eZ ee E3 along the right and left shoulders and upper arms. Timpani and bass, meanwhile, are sent down to the lower torso and hips. Wagner9s mighty horns are split across the upper arms like goose bumps, while vocals register at the wrists like a pulse. The music becomes something you can feel. Through a back-and-forth with testers, Dunn and his team have been experimenting with settings, tweaking parameters and trying to meaningfully map music to the body. The Lyric has 10 SoundShirts, with plans to ramp up to 15. rachel Arfa is a longtime disability advocate and civil rights attorney who serves as commissioner of moPD. As a deaf person who wears bilateral cochlear implants, the issue of accessibility has been close to her heart for a long time. (Her mother tells her the story of how she was the only child not moved to tears by the music in <E.T.= when they saw it in the theater.) But while expanding accessibility is her life9s work, Arfa also knows that good intentions can often pave the road to nowhere. <When Lyric approached me with this shirt, I was highly skeptical,= Arfa said via email. <There are often technical solutions designed by people without disabilities for people with disabilities that do not solve barriers that we have.= Intrigued enough, Arfa agreed to test the SoundShirt at a recent Lyric production of <West Side Story.= Arfa was surprised to find the shirt actually felt like a good fit for the problem it9s trying to solve. SOunDShIRT From E2 <At live theater, it is difficult for me to discriminate between different sounds, so I rely on access provided for equal access,= she says. <I began to understand that the haptics on the SoundShirt vibrated in conjunction with the orchestra sounds. one example is when string instruments were played, the haptics followed the pitch and rhythm. A second example is when a singer was singing a long melody, the haptics picked up on this and I could experience this through the vibration. I am not able to hear this sound, but I could feel it. It was such a surprise and a thrill.= Tina Childress, an audiologist who lives in Champaign, Ill., is a late-deafened adult who wears cochlear implants and works as an advocate for accessibility in the arts. She has taken part in the Kennedy Center9s Leadership Exchange in Arts and Disability conference and served on the steering committee for the Cultural Access Collaborative in Illinois. In 2016, Childress sued the Fabulous Fox Theatre in St. Louis for refusing to provide captions to deaf and hard-ofhearing attendees, claiming that it was in violation of the Americans With Disabilities Act. The court agreed and ordered the theater to offer captioning whenever requested (as opposed to single performances) and to provide notice that captions were available. To Childress, who also tested the SoundShirt at <West Side Story,= what9s most important is offering a variety of options 4 an everything-all-at-once approach to accessibility. <It9s important to remember that you can use two or three of these choices at the same time,= she said via email. <With the SoundShirt, having that tactile feedlyRiC OPeRa OF ChiCagO <When a singer was singing a long melody, the haptics picked up on this and I could experience this through the vibration. . . . It was such a surprise and a thrill.= Rachel Arfa, commissioner of the Chicago Mayor9s Office for People With Disabilities lyRiC OPeRa OF ChiCagO back for what I don9t hear was (pardon the pun) instrumental in me enjoying the performance.= Childress appreciated the haptic feedback at the wrists to indicate dialogue, and the way the shirt clarified the various elements of the score. After intermission, she lent the shirt to another audience member to try out. <I didn9t realize how much I was using it until I didn9t have it.= Both women appreciated the SoundShirt9s athletic-adjacent look and lightweight build. <I have seen images of other haptic vests,= Childress says, <and the first thought that came to mind is it looked like a SWAT vest. The advantage of the zip-up is that you can make the haptic feedback more intense by zipping up, and if it becomes too much, you just unzip to lessen the effects.= But most important to everyone involved, from the developers to the testers to the performers, is the potential for the SoundShirt to connect people more closely with opera, and to open the doors of the opera house to new audiences. <I confess that I might have even fallen asleep because I struggled to connect with the show previously,= Arfa says. <The SoundShirt is a true enhancement to access services, and I am making plans to return for future performances, something I would not have done previously.= the soundshirt will be available at the lyric9s performances of Rossini9s <Cinderella= on Jan. 21 and terence blanchard9s <Champion= on Jan. 31 and Feb. 3. lyricopera.org. RObeRt Kusel CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: Rachel Arfa, commissioner of the Chicago Mayor9s Office for People With Disabilities, wears the SoundShirt. The Lyric Opera of Chicago has 10 of the shirts, with plans to get five more. Operagoers Sally Cooper and Gilberto Gomez and Lyric costume director Kim Buetzow on a touch tour.
E4 eZ ee the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 theater country to ask Congress for $2.5 billion over five years to support theaters reeling from drops in attendance and donor fatigue. The ask came on top of more than $15 billion in federal aid doled out to live entertainment venues in 2021. no Washington theater has had to shutter, but none has been immune to the new realities either. operating at a loss is now the norm for arts groups in this country, and Arena, too, is engaged in what its executive director, edgar Dobie, calls <deficit planning.= The company was required to scale back a bit, reducing its roster in 2023-2024 4 the last season smith programmed 4 from a onetime high of 10 shows to seven or eight: Among the offerings is a new musical, <swept Away,= that is aiming for Broadway, and two shows by step Afrika!, the D.C.-based dance troupe. on top of that, Arena still has nearly $60 million to repay on the gleaming headquarters it opened in 2010, the $135 million mead Center for American Theater. The exigencies have turned a cool position HAnA SHArif From E1 into a hot seat. <Actually, being the number two is the best job, because you get to do all the fun work, without at the end of the day the success, the failures resting heavy on your shoulders,= sharif said. <so when it9s that much pressure, in this moment when the field is in such evolution, there has to be something greater that draws you to this job.= For sharif, that draw is in making a difference. <I think Hana would be the first to admit she9s really comfortable and thrives in a change environment,= Dobie said, adding that the industry is in the midst of a wholesale reevaluation of <how we unpack and rebuild this business model.= As for sharif9s capacity to handle that much re-engineering, he said: <There9s a fierce intelligence there, I think, beyond her years.= sharif has the leadership gene, a radiant inheritance apparent when she talks one-onone, or to an entire room. she9s a person who speaks with such eloquent conviction that if she asked, you would storm the barricades with her. <The institutions that will survive and thrive in the next 10 to 15 years are the ones that are able to be adaptive, to be nimble, to reimagine, to hold on to the core while building a bridge to the future,= she said. <And I was like, 8so that9s my work, right?9 If you think about me as a transitional leader, in this evolutionary time, it9s not just about the big ideas. I9ve got those in spades. It9s not just about relationships with artists. You know, everyone wants to work in this house. <our survival will depend on our ability to be multifaceted and on the way we think about who and how we serve, and to whom and how we talk about what we do.= sharif has been leading since her childhood in Texas. she was one of five children, with her father working in the corporate world and her mother in education. As a high school senior, she persuaded the principal to let her direct a play about the experiences of teenagers of color, and during college, she formed a theater company. sharif likes to tell people that at age 19, she announced that she wanted to run Arena stage one day. she landed jobs after graduation at highly regarded regional theaters 4 Hartford stage in see HAnA SHArif on E5 Hana Sharif is the new artistic director of Arena Stage in D.C. During the pandemic era, the company has struggled financially, as have many other theaters. Sharif says she looks forward to accommodating the needs of diverse audiences. Marvin JosePh/the Washington Post Sharif steps into challenging role at Arena Stage
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2023 . THE WASHINGTON POST EZ EE E5 Connecticut, Baltimore Center Stage — before being appointed artistic director of the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis in 2019. “The reason I went into regional theater originally was to learn what I could learn, and to get out,” she said. “The reason I stayed is because I understood the scale of the impact I could have, when you have the resources of an institution, when you’re surrounded by talented professionals who can make anything happen when we all put our energy and talents together.” It was in St. Louis that Sharif, who is married to business consultant Marcus Jackson and has two daughters, put her energies and talents into melding change and tradition. Her first season, she staged an adaptation of Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice” that broke the company’s box office records. But her fonder memory is of a play that didn’t sell well. “We did Luis Alfaro’s ‘Mojada: A Medea in HANA SHARIF FROM E4 Los Angeles,’” she said, “and it was the show that had the smallest attendance. Lots of patrons just opted out: ‘We don’t want to see an immigration story. We don’t want to see this. We don’t want to see that. She’s got this agenda,’ or whatever. But I got more positive mail about ‘Mojada’ than any other show in the season. The number of letters I had with people going, ‘I really didn’t want to see the show. I’m so grateful that I did.’ “I love it when the small group gets loud.” Theater has always been a vital outlet for marginalized voices, but theatergoers vote with their feet. The St. Louis Rep has fallen on hard times: In the wake of the pandemic, subscriptions fell from 8,000 to 3,000 per season, according to Danny Williams, the company’s managing director. To pay for the rest of the 2023-2024 season, Williams has created a public campaign, “Rally for the Rep,” hoping to raise $2.5 million by Dec. 31. Dobie says Arena has set aside reserves that leave him “feeling a cautious optimism” about MARVIN JOSEPH/THE WASHINGTON POST Arena Stage opened the $135 million Mead Center for American Theater in Southwest Washington in 2010. Hana Sharif is only the fourth artistic director in the acclaimed theater’s 73 years. the company’s finances. That frees Sharif, to some degree, to dream. She is thinking both in terms of the kind of productions she wants and the ways Arena can serve the greater theater world. One thought is for Arena to host companies from other parts of the country for year-long residences. She’s also developing ideas for the theater’s 75th-anniversary season in 2025- 2026 — a time to reflect on a remarkable legacy. “We can’t wait to see what she picks,” said Catherine Guttman-McCabe, chair of Arena’s 38-member board. “We have opportunities to really sharpen our brand.” Sharif is sifting through the possibilities, talking to Arena’s 130-person staff, getting a feel for D.C. — listening, even, to the chatter in the edifice for which she holds the master key. “I happened to be in the lobby when all three audiences were converging,” she recalled. “And when I tell you that energy was electric, you could feel it. I was like, ‘Oh, this is what this building was meant to be.’” WITH SPECIAL GUEST NOVA Y. PATYON STEVEN REINEKE, CONDUCTOR HERITAGE SIGNATURE CHORALE SPECIAL GUEST DRUMMER RISHAB JAIN Dec. 8 & 9 | Concert Hall Yefim Bronfman plays Brahms Tchaikovsky’s Fourth DIMA SLOBODENIOUK, CONDUCTOR YEFIM BRONFMAN, PIANO Johannes Brahms: Piano Concerto No. 2 Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky: Symphony No. 4 Nov. 30–Dec. 2 | Concert Hall Oded Antman Ballet West THE GEORGE S. AND DOLORES DORÉ ECCLES FOUNDATION’S PRODUCTION OF WILLAM CHRISTENSEN’S The Nutcracker WITH THE KENNEDY CENTER OPERA HOUSE ORCHESTRA CHESTRA Artists of Ballet West in The Nutcracker. Photo by Beau Pearson. Nov. 22 & 24–26 Opera House Nov. 21–26 Eisenhower Theater When Dad feels like a little bit of Sunday afternoon time out, Bluey and Bingo have other plans! This theatrical adaptation of the Emmy Award–winning children’s television series features an original story by Bluey creator Joe Brumm and music by Bluey composer Joff Bush. This is Bluey as you’ve never seen it before—brought to real life! Bluey’s Big Play Ages 7+ Nov. 18–Dec. 17 Family Theater A World Premiere Kennedy Center Commission The Dragon King’s Daughter Chinese dragon mythology, martial arts, and stunning voices combine as an unlikely young duo embarks on a daring adventure in this world premiere musical featuring an original story and inspiring songs by Marcus Yi. All ages Nov. 24 & 25 Concert Hall Celebrate this holiday season with the celestial voices of multi-platinum Irish singing sensation Celtic Woman complete with the majestic sound of the National Symphony Orchestra. Celtic Woman Christmas Symphony Tour 2023 On Stage Thanksgiving Week! Make holiday memories at the Kennedy Center “Orchestral pop so lushly arranged that it all but sweeps you off your feet.” —T H E WA S H I N GT O N P O ST Elman Studio Darren Thomas Kennedy-Center.org The ONLY OFFICIAL WEBSITE of the Kennedy Center (202) 467-4600 Groups 20+ call (202) 416-8400 For all other ticket-related customer service inquiries, call the Advance Sales Box Office at (202) 416-8540 Kennedy-Center.org/health-safety
e6 PG ee the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 in The GALLerieS Sensorial9s Africana Superrealities Texts and symbols characterize much of the work in <Sensorial9s Africana Superrealities: Five Contemporary Diaspora Artists,= a multimedia show at IA&A at Hillyer. All the contributors, three of whom were born in the United States, attended or now work at Howard University. The most prominent artwork is BritishNigerian Raimi Gbadamosi9s set of three hanging flags, striped in the red, green and black established as Pan-African colors by Marcus Garvey in 1920. Just as direct, if more cryptic, is Elka Stevens9s quilt, a traditional African American craft object given a modernist vibe with its array of stark black-and-white icons. Much busier are collage-drawings by Raul Moarquech Ferrera-Balanquet, who9s also the show9s curator. The Cuban-born artist incorporates printed matter in which such words as <Cuba= and <libre= (<free=) are prominent. The phrase Black Lives Matter features in a piece by Reginald Pointer, but he works with ceramics rather than paper. His intriguing creations include two-part blocks in which faces interlock and a smokysurfaced globe whose two round portals offer partial views of the interior. Akili Ron Anderson9s vigorous paintings are nearly abstract, but with shapes and details that evoke the human body. The swirling forms of one picture center on an eye, a universal symbol of awareness and perception that in this arrangement seems to focus on another symbol. The painting is hung so that the orb peers at those redgreen-and-black banners across the room. Sensorial9s Africana Superrealities: Five Contemporary Diaspora Artists through nov. 26 at iA&A at Hillyer, 9 Hillyer Ct. nW. athillyer.org. 202-338-0680. BY MARK JENKINS Among the creatures rendered on huge sheets of paper at Pyramid Atlantic Art Center are a large deer and a nearly life-size bear, but no big tuna. That9s because Big Tuna is not an image but a machine: It9s the nickname for the press on which the massive prints, some eight feet tall, were made. There are also smaller works in the exhibition, as indicated by its name, <Big and Little Inks.= Big Ink is a mobile print workshop that has hauled Big Tuna coast to coast since 2012. The press produced the show9s largest pieces, all of which are vertically oriented black-and-white woodblocks. These include Gretchen Woodman9s exquisite picture of a deer, reaching toward a branch to grab one last apple as a rabbit supervises, and Ralph Robinson9s robust bear, defined by horizontal lines as if it9s a screenshot from a low-definition video. A few of the jumbo prints use their size to conjure an immersive sense of place. Matt DeLeo places the viewer at sea, gazing across choppy waters at the refuge offered by a lighthouse. Even more detailed is Cait Giunta and Ned Roche's immaculate rendering of an old-fashioned office door from the inside, so the word <private= is displayed backward. It's a vivid evocation of interior space, and of a lost era. Supplementing the huge woodblocks are nearly 100 prints that scale from little to tiny. Of the smaller pieces most akin to the large prints, the standouts include Daniella Napolitano9s elegant <Baby Javelina= 4 a piglike wild ungulate 4 and Millie Whipplesmith Plank9s portrayal of three birds nestled in what appears to be barbed wire. Other little prints employ various techniques and often use color. One of the most vibrant is Ryan Kalentkowski9s watercolor-painted woodcut of a bird framed by what the title calls a <strawberry moon.= Such pictures may not require a Big Tuna to make, but their expressiveness is vast. Big and Little inks through nov. 26 at Pyramid Atlantic Art Center, 4318 Gallatin St., Hyattsville. pyramidatlanticartcenter.org. 301-608-9101. A dazzling show of prints, art of the African diaspora and hints of microscopic life PyrAmid AtlAntiC Art Center iA&A At Hillyer TOP: <How Many Times Must I Tell You= is a ceramic work by Reginald Pointer in the show <Sensorial9s Africana Superreaalities.= RIGHT: <Baby Javelina,= by Danielle Napolitano, is on view in the show <Big and Little Inks,= a collection of enormous works alongside prints that scale from little to tiny. NEVER CLEAN YOUR GUTTERS AGAIN!® GUTTERS PROTECTION & GUTTER EXPERTS SINCE1981 CLOGGED OR LEAKING GU OGGED OR LEAKING GUTTERS? GUTTER SOLUTIONS FOR ANY SEASON OR BUDGET BEFORE Gutter Helmet® Scan the QR Code to learn more Family Owned & Operated For 41 Years Cannot be combined with other offers. Subject to credit approval. Interest is billed during the promotional period but all interest iswaived if the purchase amount is paid before the expiration of the promotional period. Financing is provided by federally insured, equalopportunity lender banks. 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sunday, november 19, 2023 . the washington post eZ ee E7 Donna Cameron All the works in Donna Cameron9s show at Washington Printmakers Gallery are prints, but they incorporate vestiges of other art forms. Mostly derived from photographs, the collages in <Confluence of Energies= sometimes feature sprocket holes like those that edge 35, 16 and 8mm film. The artist, who divides her time between Brooklyn and Arlington, Va., holds a patent for cinematic paper emulsion, which recycles fibers into film stock. Some of the artworks, printed on paper, slate or aluminum, echo Cameron9s experimental short films, a selection of which are available on YouTube. <World Trade Alphabet= shares the title, but not the imagery or format, of a nine-minute abstract film. Rather than horizontal, like a typical movie, Cameron9s prints tend to be strongly vertical. The blurred, overlapped details can be architectural, but several predominantly green prints depict ferns that reach toward the sun. The interspersed rows of standing sprocket holes suggest both organic stalks and man-made columns. Unlike in Cameron9s films, the images in these prints don9t move, but their repeated upright lines give them a sense of propulsion. Donna Cameron: Confluence of Energies through nov. 26 at Washington printmakers Gallery, 1675 Wisconsin ave. nW. washingtonprintmakers.com. 202-669-1497. Dan Treado United by technique but distinguished by varied designs, the paintings in Dan Treado9s <Double Platinum= feature such motifs as concentric circles, overlapping dots and abstracted patterns suggestive of microscopic life. All the entries in the Addison/Ripley Fine Art show are painstakingly executed with multiple layers of thinned oil or acrylic paint to fashion surfaces that appear silky and almost machine tooled. Except, that is, two playfully lumpy sculptures made of wads of brightly colored bubble gum. Treado is not a representational painter, yet he9s skilled at illusionistic flourishes. His target-like pictures, made on round birch panels, have a sense of depth and motion that9s nearly hypnotic. (They9re from a series titled <You Are Getting Sleepy.=) Some of the other paintings feature blobby shapes whose graduated colors look to be shifting and reflective and that appear to be floating above the other imagery, even though the pictures are in fact perfectly flat. As the gum sculptures reveal, Treado isn9t solemn about his art. The show9s seven-footwide centerpiece, which contrasts three blackand-white panels with two that pulse with fluorescent forms, is called <Ex-Lion Tamer Moves in With His Mother.= That winking title is akin to Treado9s painting style, which employs meticulous processes to yield playful effects. Dan Treado: Double Platinum through Dec. 2 at addison/ripley Fine art, 1670 Wisconsin ave. nW. addisonripleyfineart.com. 202-338-5180. aDDison/ripley Fine art ABOVE: <On the Fritz= by Dan Treado in the exhibit <Double Platinum,= featuring motifs suggestive of microscopic life. RIGHT: <World Trade Alphabet,= a collage by Donna Cameron in the show <Confluence.of Energies.= Her works feature sprocket holes like those that edge 35, 16 and 8mm film. Donna Cameron Celebrate the vibrant lives of Native peoples today. Native Cinema Showcase 2023 Nov. 17324 | Online The best in Indigenous olm Native American Heritage Day Honoring the Jingle Dress Dance Friday, Nov. 24, 11:30 a.m.35:00 p.m. Native Art Market Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 233 10 a.m.35:30 p.m. AmericanIndian.si.edu Photo by Alan Karchmer for the National Museum of the American Indian TINYJEWELBOX.COM 1155 CONNECTICUT AVE NW, WASHINGTON DC 20036 DISCOVER AWARD WINNING DESIGNER NEW AT TINY JEWEL BOX
e8 Ez EE the washington post . BY PHILIP KENNICOTT in neW York critic9s notebook Over productive summer of 1921, fatherhood was on Picasso9s mind arP icasso studies, and exhibitions, seem increasingly like shale oil extraction: it takes ever-greater investment and resources to extract a diminishing supply of desired product. <Picasso in Fontainebleau,= a midsize show at the Museum of Modern Art, digs deeply into just a few months of production, the summer of 1921, when the artists worked in a rented house in a town some 40 miles outside Paris. Fontainebleau is home to one of the most sumptuous and artistically rich palaces in France, yet Picasso seems to have spent his time there not as a tourist, but holed up in a small garage working on two monumental paintings: the cubist <Three Musicians= and the more classical and traditionally representational <Three Women at the Spring.= The stylistic difference between these two works, which were painted at the same time in a space barely wide enough for one American gas guzzler, is the engine driving the show. <What could Picasso have been thinking of in conceiving, and making, virtually simultaneously and on the same wall, two artworks in such different styles, with such different subjects, on such a grand scale?= asks curator Anne Umland in the introduction to the exhibition catalogue. Contemporary curators, and perhaps audiences, may find this question more provocative than Picasso did. Like composers, authors, poets, architects and choreographers, the great Spanish painter was capable of working in different modes and styles at the same time. He was, as the curators acknowledge, <style agnostic.= And in 1921, Picasso was both teasing out the implications of his earlier forays into a more stringent cubism and evolving new and more conservative representational approaches. The paintings are not so dissimilar as they may at first seem. They both contain three figures, who largely fill the space of the canvas, and while the abstracted musicians face the viewer more directly than the self-engaged women at the spring, there are numerous geometric analogues between the two works: the arm positions of the figures on the right and left, and the columnar leg shapes in both canvases. Thinking only in binary opposites, such as male and female, light and dark, active and passive, is out of fashion. But if you look at these two works as a single project, exploring basic dualities, then the stylistic differences become much less troubling. Picasso had married three years earlier. His first son, Paulo, was born in early 1921. The antinomies of male and female, and the product of their union, seem very much on his mind during this period. Fortunately, the two paintings (including both versions of <Three Musicians= at MoMA and the Philadelphia Museum of Art) are well situated in the exhibition to allow visitors to sort through the cascading dichotomies they represent. Along with male and female, there is the outward and inward focus of the figures, and a sharp distinction between gathering and consuming among the group of women at the spring, and processing and performing among the male musicians. The women, represented with soft lines, are open to the gaze of the viewer, while the men, limned with sharp edges, wear masks and are defended by a table. The women have gravity and weight, while the men are clownish, scattered and disjointed. Gather all these basic oppositions and you might conclude that Picasso is thinking obsessively if not deeply about what men and women respectively contribute to the world. Women (for the artist) are material, and make material things, like children. Men (or some men) are artists, and process that material into new forms, including abstract shapes and novel sounds. one may not like these oppositions, which further deeply entrenched and caricatured ideas about gender. But one cannot spend five minutes with Picasso without realizing how deeply gendered are both his thinking and his art. And if you look closely at works in the exhibition, the birth of Paulo a few months earlier seems to have both rattled and deeply inspired Picasso, unsettling his artistic arrogance as a maker of things, and yet spurring a deep fascination with the material, corporeal fact that he had now produced something potentially more substantial and lasting than art. A series of mother and child figures, made the same summer, is in some ways even more interesting than the contrast between the two seminal works. And one of them, a work called simply <Maternity= from July 10, 1921, is a magnificent, grotesque, disturbing and thrilling showstopper. it depicts Paulo, now preternaturally large, cradled by his mother, with an oversize right
sunday, november 19, 2023 Ez EE e9 hand, and a left hand that has grown so monstrous it looks like something Philip Guston would paint decades later. This is one of a series of paintings he made showing olga and Paulo in which he seems intent on making motherhood both alluring and disgusting at the same time. But <Maternity= goes beyond all the others. if you look closely at the left arm and the left side of olga9s face, both deeply in shadow, you realize it is not olga at all, but Picasso himself. The arm has male musculature, and the left side of Picasso9s face, with his distinctive, sharply parted hair, has now been fused onto that of olga. X-radiograph imaging, reproduced in the catalogue, suggests the artist had returned to this painting after its initial conception and made substantial changes in those areas. in any case, once you see the fused male and female figures in the work as it now exists, it is impossible to unsee them. For visitors who want to get deeper into the weeds of Picasso9s work that summer, this exhibition does not disappoint. it uses photographs, drawings, works made before and after the summer idyll, postcards, maps and other memorabilia to give a sense of his physical and mental workspace. it even includes a gallery with the same dimensions as the garage in which he worked, with reproductions of the two key paintings hanging where they would have in 1921, according to photographic evidence. A floor plan reproduced in the catalogue details where photographs taken that summer were probably madec and which direction the camera was pointed. Despite the admirable effort to gather this level of detail, the summer of 1921 does not seem so complicated to me. or rather, it is complicated in the way that many lives are complicated, by domestic concerns and the clash of professional and family imperatives. Among the most engaging works in the show are a series of drawings Picasso made early in the summer, of the house and gardens he had just rented. They are exquisite, and charming, renderings of a slightly battered old house with shutters askew and a thick tapestry of vines covering the garden walls. in an interior sketch, olga sits at a piano, and you sense Picasso has the desire to freeze her just there, forever, in that moment, with music representing the futility of that desire to arrest time. even that simple drawing seems related to the dichotomies of the two works, with their contrast between women frozen in a timeless moment and men engaged in a slipstream of temporal existence. it is good to see these major works gathered again, no longer in a garage outside Paris, but in a gallery in new York. But it does not strike me as in any way odd that they were made at the same time, born of an obsession about gender, power and productivity that would consume Picasso throughout his life. Picasso in Fontainebleau through Feb. 17 at the museum of modern Art, new york. moma.org. HuGARd & vAnovERScHEldE/FundAción AlminE y bERnARd Ruiz picASSo JonAtHAn doRAdo/muSEum oF modERn ARt GRAnd pAlAiS/muSEum oF modERn ARt/EStAtE oF pAblo picASSo/ARtiStS RiGHtS SociEty pHilAdElpHiA muSEum oF ARt/EStAtE oF pAblo picASSo/ARtiStS RiGHtS SociEty Clockwise from far left: <Maternity=; <Three Musicians=; <Three Women at the Spring=; and a view of <Picasso in Fontainebleau= now on view at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The exhibition dives into just a few months of Picasso9s art in summer 1921, when he worked in a rented house in a town some 40 miles outside Paris. rt
E10 EZ EE the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 now dating a man.) I was <Daniel= in this exact situation a couple of years ago. Our solution? My partner and I sent Christmas cards to family and friends, featuring our smiling faces, holding hands, and: <Make the Yuletide Gay= in big rainbow letters across the front. There was no mistaking what that meant. Everyone invited to our Christmas gathering received one, in advance. 4 Happily Out Out: You9re rainbow-writing your own narrative. Good for you! Amy's column appears seven days a week at washingtonpost.com/advice. Write to [email protected] or Amy Dickinson, P.O. Box 194, Freeville, N.Y. 13068. ù You can also follow her @askingamy. © 2023 by Amy Dickinson. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. know who composed the death notice, and under what circumstances. Ideally, after noticing the slight, you would have held onto your immediate hurt reaction until the dust had settled somewhat, and then talked to your fiancé, who absolutely should have expressed his disappointment over this exclusion. You don9t note why you have remained a fiancé for such a long time. I wonder what role, if any, your partner9s children might have in possibly pressuring your partner not to remarry. If that9s the case, then your status in this family has been revealed in a particularly painful way. Dear Amy: I loved your advice for <Daniel9s Mom= regarding an unexpected game of <guess who9s coming to dinner?= (Her son, who had always dated women, was suddenly, and in the death notice his deceased wife was mentioned (as it should be) and all the aunts9 husbands were also mentioned, but nowhere was I mentioned as a loving partner to my fiancé. This was no oversight, nor have his children supported my concern about it. I have since closed my door to them. I regularly see in death notices that partners are kindly mentioned. Am I wrong to be so hurt? 4 Wounded Wounded: You are not wrong to be hurt by this. I imagine that you feel you have been deleted from the family fold. I urge you, however, to consider your reaction to this slight. You have made your stand during a tragic time in this family9s life. Please keep in mind that one of your fiancé9s children has lost a child. A child. You don9t if the parties don9t communicate effectively or respectfully when they are discussing their differences. I suggest that you work on examining your own perspective. The disagreement is between the two parties. You should feel comfortable speaking to your friend without believing you are being disloyal to your spouse, as long as you basically urge both parties in the same direction: <I hope you two can work things out to the extent that at the very least you agree to disagree so that we can all move forward in our friendship. That9s the most important thing to me.= Dear Amy: I have been with my fiancé for 25 years. We9ve lived together for all of that time. I opened my door to his kids and thought we were all family, but I found out that9s not the case. My fiancé's grandson died and feeling betrayed. That said, as of late, my neutrality has started to feel forced and uncomfortable. Do I say something to my friend to try to assuage the problem, and yet be disloyal to my spouse? Or do I remain neutral and risk losing a good friend? 4 Trying to be the Good Guy Trying: Your spouse claims to want to <move on.= I take this to mean that your spouse would basically like to table this conflict and move forward, awkward as that might be. If that is the case, then I wonder why your friend is left feeling hurt and betrayed. Would the friend like to continue the conversation to try to persuade your spouse to adopt the friend9s point of view? Engaging in a <continued debate= is not everyone9s idea of a useful or productive way to conduct a relationship, especially Dear Amy: My spouse and a close friend of ours recently had a heated and deep argument. This involved philosophic and even theological differences, which had never before been revealed. This unresolved conflict left my spouse unwilling to discuss the subject any further, and our friend hurt and dismayed at the lack of willingness on my spouse9s part for a continued debate on the issue. I am feeling caught in the middle. I am trying hard to stay neutral because both people are important to me. Obviously, I am loyal and supportive to my spouse. However, over the years, I have also become a close confidant to our friend. At this point, my spouse just wants to move on. But our friend, who we see often, is obviously hurting Maintaining neutrality in argument between spouse and friend proves di>cult Ask Amy Amy Dickinson CALL TODAY FOR A FREE QUOTE (240) 335-7017 Thompson Creek is neither a broker nor a lender. Financing is provided by Greensky, LLC under terms and conditions arranged directly between the customer and Greensky, LLC, all subject to credit requirements and satisfactory completion of ûnance documents. Thompson Creek does not assist with, counsel or negotiate ûnancing. *Subject to credit approval. We have several ûnance plans, including no money down and no interest for 18-months. Minimum monthly payments required during the promotional period. Making minimum monthly payments during the promotional period will not pay off the entire principal balance. Interest is billed during the promotional period, but all interest is waived if the purchase amount is paid in full before the expiration of the promotional period. 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sunday, november 19, 2023 . the washington post EZ EE E11 THEATRE Now thru Dec 10 Thur 7:30p, Fri 8p Sat 2:30p & 8p, Sun at 2:30p Shaw shatters romantic illusions about love and war in one of his most sparkling comedies, featuring Lynn Steinmetz. <The playwright9s radical vision still resonates& Shaw9s female roles remain among the most satisfying in the canon= 4 The Guardian The Undercroft Theatre 900 Mass Ave, NW 202-900-8788 stageguild.org No show on Thanksgiving, added 2:30pm matinee Fri, 11/24 $50-$60 Discounts for students, seniors , groups on website. ARMS AND THE MAN by G.B. Shaw Dir. by Michael Rothhaar Now on stage through Dec. 17! Directed by Tamilla Woodard, Folger9s homecoming season opens with a thrilling 05:74+> 22+* </9. +359/54'2 *+69. )53 plex relationships4and a bear in pursuit. A tribute to the magic of storytelling, !.'1+86+'7+8 '8954/8./4- 753'4)+ 67+8 ents a rich tapestry of love, strife, hope, and redemption. Folger Theatre 201 E Capitol St., SE 202-544-7077 folger.edu/winter Register for Shakespeare Everywhere? < 9.+ '9+7 3'1+78 Dec 9 at 6pm. Free! Tickets start at $20 Shakespeare9s The Winter9s Tale Regular Schedule: Tuesday3Friday at 8 Saturday at 6 & 9 Sunday at 3 ,9+7 9.+ 9:71+> '4* 89:#4- +=625*+ </9. 2':-.9+7 '9 9./8 ./2'7/5:8 <.5*:4/9 !.7/+18 5, 2':-.9+7 4/-.9 ',9+7 4/-.9 '9 9.+ fl+44+*> +49+7 &'8./4-954 fi589 The Kennedy Center Theater Lab Student Rush Tickets Available Tickets: 202-467-4600 Groups: 202-416-8400 www.shearmadness.com 7+'9 75:6 '9+8 ,57 57 ffl57+ !6+)/'2 **+* ffl'9/4++ 7/*'> fiffl Tickets Available '9 9.+ 5= ff#)+ Shear Madness The Kennedy Center Theater Lab MUSIC - CHORAL Saturday, December 2, at 8:00 p.m. Cantate Concert Choir is joined by an orchestra for three varied settings of ffl'7>8 '<+ 22+* ffl'-4/ )'9 (> 4954/5 %/;'2*/ fl/3 4*7+ 74+8+4 '4* .7/89/4+ 541/4 285 54 9.+ 675-7'3 /8 !54- 5, 9.+ $4/;+78'2 ff2' 0+/258 8+99/4- 5, &'29 &./93'48 <57*8 5, :4<';+7/4- )54 dence in our shared humanity. Bradley Hills Presbyterian Church 6601 Bradley Blvd, Bethesda, MD 20817 (301) 986-1799 www.cantate.org Featuring so25/898 +44/,+7 Casey Cabot, ffl'-*'2+4' &7 5.4 ffi5-'4 &55* '4* 49.54> 4*+7854 $20-$45 in advance. 17 and under FREE %/;'2*/ 74+8+4 '4* Donkin OPERA Saturday, December 2, 6:00pm Hear this rarely performed Rossini gem in its purest form as a concert opera. Featuring world-renowned tenor Lawrence Brownlee, and soprano Angela Meade, who returns to this title role from critically acclaimed performances in Italy and Spain. Lisner Auditorium 730 21st Street NW (202) 364-5826 www.concertopera.org Season subscriptions still available. Plus, tickets to meet the cast at the Cast Party! $44-$114 Rossini9s ERMIONE Maestro Antony Walker November 18 to December 17, 2023 20189s <#1 Classical Music Event of the Year= returns in a blending of Verdi9s REQUIEM and Shakespeare9s KING LEAR. Source Theatre 1835 14th Street NW www.inseries.org Part of Shakespeare Everywhere Festival $35 - $55 THE PROMISED END VERDI9s Requiem DANCE Today at 2 om Enredo -Flamenco Aparicio Dance Company GALA Theatre 3333 14th Street NW9 202-234-7174 www.galatheatre.org Flamenco Dance & Music $30 - $48 FUEGO FLAMENCO XIX International Festival AUDITIONS Tuesday, December 5th 7- pm Wednesday, December 6th 7-9 pm Thursday, December 7th 7-9 pm (call backs) Cold readings from the script British Accents/RP preferred - 6M, 3F Please contact [email protected] 57 9.+ */"+7+49 752+8 Kensington Town Hall 3710 Mitchell St. Kensington, MD 20895 [email protected] Britishplayers.org $0 British Players Auditions for The Dresser by Ronald Harwood 22-0776 The Guide to the Lively Arts appears: " Sunday in Arts & Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon " Monday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon " Tuesday in Style. deadline: Mon., 12 noon " Wednesday in Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon " Thursday in Style. deadline: Wed., 12 noon " Friday in Weekend. deadline: Tues., 12 noon " Saturday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon For information about advertising, call: Raymond Boyer 202-334-4174 or Robin Wilkerson 202-334-7089 To reach a representative, call: 202-334-7006 | [email protected] M0140 6x10.5 Available at The Washington Post Store Shop and save at washingtonpost.com/store Your purchases help support journalism that matters. washingtonpost.com/store Subscribers save 15% and get free shipping on orders over $29 with promotion code POSTFAN15. GEAR UP
E12 eZ ee the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 former husband] David Harris.= At one point Baez told o9Connor about the storage unit she9d been systematically filling for years, locking up tapes, drawings, answering machine messages, home movies, documents and memories and barely giving them another thought. Baez gave o9Connor and her team the key, and then walked away again. o9Connor, navasky and o9Boyle came to California for a month and <hunkered down,= with navasky doing the heavy lifting of organizing the materials into different timelines. It was Baez9s taped letters home during her first tours 4 often starting with <Hello, mumsy, hello Popsy= 4 that <really cracked the movie open for me,= navasky recalls. <We didn9t want it to be the 82-year-old looking back at her life,= o9Connor explains. <It would be capturing it there so that the past potentially could feel like the present. so that even in the past it would feel immediate and immersive.= for her part, Baez intentionally kept her distance from the research phase, only occasionally leafing through letters that o9Connor would show her. <If I had been part of the process, it would have been impossible,= she says. <I would have wanted to censor everything.= she didn9t know what o9Connor and her team had unearthed <until the very end.= The result is a densely layered, almost dreamlike film, in which the teenage Baez is vaulted to instant stardom, grapples with paralyzing anxiety and panic attacks, embarks on a famous romantic and artistic partnership with Bob Dylan, becomes involved in the civil rights movement, and struggles to find her footing when politics and musical tastes change in the 1980s and 1990s. <I Am a noise= isn9t a comprehensive biopic 4 there9s no mention of Baez9s close relationship with steve Jobs, for example, or her extensive human rights advocacy in Latin America and sarajevo, Bosnia. Instead 4 and here, people who haven9t seen <I Am a noise= might want to stop reading 4 the film focuses on her inner life, including memories of abuse at the hands of her father, Albert, that surfaced when she was 50, and which caused deep conflicts within the Baez family. o9Connor had been aware of those allegations for several years before she began making <I Am a noise= (<It was not public, but it was known within Joan9s world,= she says). Because she knew the family so well, she says, <for me, the real dilemma would have been opening [that] story and not representing them. They had to have their own voices [about] how it was [and] what was going on for them during this.= Baez9s mother and father had died by the time the team did most of their filming, so o9Connor used their taped and written letters to make sure their points of view were included. <I9m happy that it9s even-handed,= Baez says. <one thing I always stress is that my see BAEz on E14 the entire family. <And it9s worth mentioning that Pauline would never get in front of a camera for anybody, not for a still photograph or anything. she just trusted Karen.= Trust informs nearly every aspect of <I Am a noise,= which includes some surprising details of Baez9s life, including audiotapes of her therapy sessions; letters she wrote to her family when she was becoming unexpectedly famous; drawings she made while uncovering past traumas; and disarmingly intimate present-day scenes filmed at home and on tour. <People will say, 8Joan Baez is so courageous,9= Baez says mordantly, recalling her civil rights activism, speaking out against violent dictatorships and enduring a bombing raid while visiting north Vietnam in 1972. <'she had courage when she faced down the Ku Klux Klan, courage in Latin America, where they sprayed tear gas. she had courage in the bomb shelter in Hanoi. But the real courage came when she did this film entirely with natural light.'= Baez needn9t worry. At 82, she is living proof that aging gracefully isn9t just a catch phrase. Her skin is preternaturally supple, her body lithe from dancing every chance she gets. In <I Am a noise,= she also proves that honesty, even at its most uncomfortable, is far more compelling than just another celebrity swan song. O9 Connor and navasky, who have made documentaries for the PBs series <frontline= about mental health, prisons and aging, had discussed the possibility of making a film about Baez9s final concert tour for years, but what they first conceived as a conventional cinema verité chronicle morphed as circumstances changed and material emerged. <At one point, I was a big proponent of doing a film about Karen and Joan and their friendship,= recalls navasky, who adds that since she and o9Connor usually make issue-driven documentaries, they also considered making the Baez material part of a larger series about aging and creativity. o9Connor started gathering material in 2013, catching an interview with Joan and Pauline at their mother9s 100th birthday party and, a few days later, capturing one of the most moving moments in <I Am a noise,= when Joan sr., nearing the end of her life, runs her hand lovingly through her daughter Joan9s silver hair. After that, o9Connor and navasky returned to <frontline,= where they made a film about transgender teenagers. In 2017, when Baez began seriously considering a final tour, the team began production in earnest. That was also the year the filmmakers began to delve into the enormous Baez family archive, which had accumulated over eight decades. <I knew her mom had saved stuff over the years, but I didn9t know the extent of it,= o9Connor recalls. <You9d open a drawer and there was a letter about [hanging out with] the Beatles. And then there9s a letter from [Baez9s BAEz from E1 dreamlike film made by friend focuses on inner life of iconic folk artist rebecca Miller for tHe wasHington Post Matt Heron/Magnolia Pictures TOP: Joan Baez and filmmaker Karen O9Connor in New York City on Nov. 7. ABOVE: From left, James Baldwin, Baez and civil rights leader James Forman at the 1963 March on Washington.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2023 . THE WASHINGTON POST EZ EE E13
E14 ez ee the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 said, 8We need to film this,9= Navasky recalls. Cue the Baez middle finger as she dived into the ocean. <She just refused,= Navasky says. <If Karen was there, I9m sure we would have filmed it.= As annoyed as Baez would occasionally get during the filming process, she has relatively few misgivings about <I Am a Noise.= Certain things in the film, she admits, are always hard to hear: her father leaving a heartfelt voice message; her son Gabe admitting how lonely he was as a child, when she was so often on the road; Pauline sharing how her sister9s growing fame led her to feel invisible. <To hear her say, 8I just couldn9t do it, I just had to leave9 4 oof,= Baez says. <There9s a lot of gut punches.= At the outset, o9Connor insisted on final cut of the film; Baez had no power to make changes, although the filmmakers did agree to take out a scene of her having her makeup done before a CNN interview, because she usually does her own. Baez is more concerned that a sequence filmed in 2018, when she was suffering a mild panic attack, might lead people to think such episodes are still commonplace, when in reality <that doesn9t happen anymore.= <You see that as less-than in your recovery and your health,= o9Connor says, turning toward Baez. <I think of it as life. Like, you can be much better and still have highs and lows. Life is beauty and sorrow.= <Yeah,= Baez responds, <but it doesn9t get that low anymore.= The sun is setting, and Baez and o9Connor are chatting as they9ve been doing for the past 37 years. (In a felicitous full circle, a snippet of that very first interview is included in <I Am a Noise=; look for Baez in a red necktie.) o9Connor is talking about what an enormous trust fall Baez took in giving her and her team the key to her past. <It9s one thing to say you want to do the film but the kind of filmmaking we do is exhausting.= Then there are the emotional stakes. To quote Baez herself, why did o9Connor say yes? And would she do it again? <Under the right circumstances and with the right subject,= she says, glancing over at Baez. <You were really ready. It9s not a tag line. You were ready to leave an honest legacy. And that changes everything.= parents didn9t remember this stuff. It9s hard for people to grasp that, but it makes all the difference. & The way I look at it is, it took me 50 years to get up the nerve to go and look, and that9s the last thing they wanted to do. That9s how I feel [that] it9s represented in the film, that they get their say.= I nevitably, some viewers have quibbled about the recovered memories and other psychological material in <I Am a Noise= (Baez also candidly discusses her experience with multiple personality disorder, a controversial diagnosis). Call it the <Play the hits= syndrome; when you become an icon as venerated as Joan Baez, fans will always recoil when you have the nerve to chip away at the edifice. <There were panicked moments,= recalls Navasky. <Karen is very close to the people who are very close to Joan. [She was asking], 8Is this going to feel bad for her family?9 We were constantly checking in with Joan, [asking her], 8Do you really want to do this?9= o9Connor remembers those conversations vividly. <We9ll do it with as much taste and intelligence as we can,= she recalls telling Baez, <but the fact of the matter is, it will be out there in the world, and it will change your legacy 4 your family9s legacy.= <It will be out there in the world, but first it will be in your bedroom and in your mom9s house and upstairs and in the pool,= Baez says wryly, adding that there were moments during filming when her patience wore thin. (Let9s just say there9s an entire outtake reel9s worth of shots of Joan Baez raising her middle finger to the camera.) Baez balked when the team wanted to film a voice lesson in San francisco, not wanting to be seen sticking out her tongue and <making these horrible noises=; they wound up filming a session at her home, next to a piano under Baez9s portrait of Dylan, her dog Ginger howling in unison with her vocal exercises. <The dog covered for me,= Baez says. Navasky credits o9Connor with being able to push back when Baez said no. After filming an event at the Emanuel AmE Church in Charleston, S.C., the team 4 which didn9t include o9Connor that day 4 went to the beach, where Baez wanted to go for a swim. <I BAEz from E12 stePheN soMersteIN/MAgNolIA PIctures MeAd street FIlMs/MAgNolIA PIctures AlBert BAez/MAgNolIA PIctures < We9ll do it with as much taste and intelligence as we can, but the fact of the matter is, it will be out there in the world, and it will change your legacy.= Karen O9Connor, filmmaker, speaking to Joan Baez about <I Am a Noise= TOP: A photo of Joan Baez in <Joan Baez I Am a Noise.= LEFT: Baez at the Alabama State House in 1965. RIGHT: A view of Baez in the documentary, performing on her final tour. Announce your Engagement, Wedding or Anniversary in The Washington Post9s Sunday Arts & Style Section. (Birthdays, Graduations & other Special Events have moved to Thursdays.) You may provide text and photos.Color is available. Many packages include keepsake plaques of your announcement. To place an order and for more information, including rates: Contact The Weddings DropBox at: [email protected] Or call 202.334.5736, toll free 877.POST.WED, fax 202.334.7188 All materials must be received by Monday at 1 p.m. Declare Your Love! Engagements | Weddings Anniversaries To place an announcement: email: [email protected] phone: 202-334-5736 fax: 202-334-7188
sunday, november 19, 2023 . the washington post Pg ee e15 Mike Du Jour By Mike lester Dear Carolyn: My brother, <Tim,= got married for the third time last month. When he and <Abby= were discussing their wedding, I advised them to do what my husband and I did: Go to the courthouse and then throw a party to celebrate. My husband even joked that he9d already been Tim9s best man twice and that was enough. And even though Abby was a firsttime bride, she9s 45 and past the pretty-pretty-princess stage. Later they announced that Abby9s uncle, who9sajudge, would be marrying them when they visited Abby9s family, and Abby9s sister was throwing a small party for them. Our family could celebrate at Thanksgiving. That sounded likeagreat plan. This week, we saw pictures of the wedding and it was a much bigger deal than Tim had let on. There were at least 30 or 40 guests, all from Abby9s side, I guess; Abby wore a wedding dress; there was a big cake and dozens of roses; yet no one from our side of the family was invited. I9m really hurt we were excluded,Iguess as punishment for speaking our minds. Tim and Abby could have admitted they wanted to do the wedding their way instead of sneaking around behind our backs. CanIask Tim why he hid their wedding from us, or do I just need to let this go? 4 Anonymous Anonymous: You weren9t <speaking our minds.= You were, by your own description, talking more than you listened, ridiculing your brother in front of his fiancée, diminishing her by extension, and making judgy, sexist and ageist assumptions about what constitutes an appropriate amount of wedding fuss for a middle-aged bride 4 and all this when the number and type of weddings either of them has is neither your business nor of significant consequence to you. I9m not sure if the smugness was worse or the buzzkill, but the proportions of both might make the cut for <epic.= So, no, you do not ask Tim to spell out what you already know. Instead, you congratulate Tim and Abby for what looks to have been a beautiful wedding, and apologize for getting so caught up in having opinions at their expense that you forgot your only job was to shut up and be happy for them. And buy them a serious gift. One that9s princess as [all getout]. Dear Carolyn: I started a gift tradition that now causes everyone stress, and I don9t know what to do. When my kids were little and the only grandchildren, I started making a calendar for my mother-in-law. As the extended family grew, I would ask for pics to include all the grandchildren. <C= and her husband would require multiple reminders, and finally submit pictures late or in the wrong format to make more work for me. Finally, I had had enough and asked <E= to take it on. He is only willing to engage so far with what we all see as crazy behavior by C. One year,Iasked her to just send the damn pictures to him. She blew up at me and said just do the calendar without her family. E is now asking for someone else to take a turn with the calendar <because I need a break.= If the calendar doesn9t get done, then my mother-inlaw is sad that we <can9t all get along.= The constant refrain is, <Just don9t makeCmad.= We take a family vacation every summer, and, without fail, someone does something that makes her mad and she has a blowup. Every. Year. Any ideas how to deal with this Christmas present? 4 About to Blow Up About to Blow Up: Either stop making the calendar, or stop asking each parent for photo submissions and just use whatever pics you (and your immediate family) take of all the grandkids during the family summer vacation. Snap-snapsnap, upload, tweak, send. Or pick some other solution that you like better. Because the specifics don9t matter: What does matter is that you stop treating anyone9s difficult personality as a ransom demand you must pay to get your life back. C is who C is. If you behave in ways you believe are thoughtful and fair 4 whatever the behavior, not just calendars 4 then you will have the raw material for enough confidence to ride out any resulting emotional punishment. Whether the backlash is from C or from the mom who appears to have taught her how to use the threat of negative emotions to get her way. Ahem. But I digress 4 once you have the raw material (of behaving with decency), shape it into this: <I know it9s not perfect for everyone, but I did what I thought was best.= No guilt for acts of good faith. Write to carolyn hax at [email protected]. get her column delivered to your inbox each morning at wapo.st/gethax. õ Join the discussion live at noon fridays at washingtonpost.com/live -chats. We scoffed at brother9s third wedding and for some reason didn9t get an invite Carolyn Hax nick galifianakis for the Washington Post Great meals out start here! Get The Washington Post Dining Guide Food critic Tom Sietsema offers 40 suggestions for any occasion in the fall edition of The Washington Post Dining Guide. Plus, his pick for Restaurant of the Year. Get it for yourself or as a perfect gift for the foodies in your life. Just $9.99 shipping included! WAPO.ST/SPECIALS Visit TWP Special Products to discover other unique items N0532 6x10.5
e16 eZ ee the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 liBra (sept. 23-oct. 22) this is a romantic day. reach out to someone you care for, and make plans for a date or a fun diversion. you will also enjoy playful times with children. if you have a chance to express your own creative talents, by all means, do so. scorpio (oct. 23-nov. 21) this is a marvelous day for a hidden, secret love affair. it9saromantic day. reach out to someone and have fun. People are more likely to enjoy the arts because their appreciation of beauty is heightened. saGittarius (nov. 22-dec. 21) you will love learning something new. you9ll also love teaching and explaining something or sharing your ideas with others. you have something to say. short trips will please you. you want to be stimulated by new ideas. capricorn (dec. 22-Jan. 19) business and commerce are favored. you9re full of excellent moneymaking ideas. you also might impress someone in authority with your ideas, especially by making something look nicer. People will listen to you. aQuarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) travel for pleasure. Get out and enjoy the company of others, especially if you can see the arts and crafts that others do. your appreciation of beauty is heightened, which is why you will enjoy parks, beautiful buildings and galleries. pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) you makeagreat impression on people in authority, even though you are being lowkey. someone might be impressed with your research. they might even pay money for what you have done, especially if it9s related to the arts or the entertainment world. b y G e o r G i a n i c ols Happy Birthday|nov. 19: you9re a born crusader who loves a revolutionary cause. you want to makeadifference. you9ll be glad to know that this year is the first year of a new nine-year cycle for you, which means new beginnings, adventures and major changes. Keep your eyes open for new opportunities. moon alert: there are no restrictions to shopping or important decisions. the Moon is in aquarius. aries (March 21-april 19) this is yet another great day to schmooze. you9ll like talking to people from other cultures and different countries. it9s also a great day to explore the arts. taurus (april 20-May 20) you look marvelous, darling. People might approach you to help them at work or invest in their ideas, especially ideas related to the entertainment world, the hospitality industry or the arts. Gemini (May 21-June 20) do something different. if you can9t travel, enjoy museums, galleries or craft fairs. this is a lovely, romantic day. have fun and socialize with someone special. cancer (June 21-July 22) entertain at home. someone might have interesting ideas related to your health or even your pet. be willing to accept help from someone, especially if it9s about making your home more beautiful. leo (July 23-aug. 22) Makeapoint of enjoying the company of partners and close friends. it9s a great day to socialize and talk to people. in particular, fun events and an appreciation of the arts will delight you. Grab a movie. see some sports events. enjoy fun times with kids. VirGo (aug. 23-sept. 22) you might haveafinancial advantage, especially related to real estate or a family business. by the same token, you also might spend money on beautiful things for yourself and loved ones. Horoscope 11/12/23 Answers to last week9s L.A. Times Sunday puzzle. <CHANGE THE SUBJECT=BY SUSAN GELFAND & KATIE HALE ACROSS 1 Word with corn or matzo 5 Fill-in at an office 9 Truly hopeless 15 Org. with badges 18 Director Preminger 19 Thrown in 21 <Clever you= 22 Each and every 23 Tip from a history teacher about how to study WWII? 26 __ card: smartphone need 27 Intimate 28 Went fast 29 Radio City Music Hall style 31 Unreturned tennis serve 32 Grover9s predecessor 35 __ the pot 37 <Ona... = poems 38 Tip from an English teacher about the editing process? 42 <__ there, done that= 44 Rapper Dr. __ 45 Dines 46 3-Down novelist McEwan 47 Desilu co-founder 49 Actress Ward 52 Observed Ramadan, say 55 Question of identity 58 Make a difference 60 Tip from a gym teacher about how to win at tug-of-war? 63 Get more out of 65 Nonprofit URL ender 66 Make money 67 Tiny organism 71 Atlanta pitcher Kirby 74 Sandal feature 76 Botanical balm 77 Hosp. areas 79 Charlie Parker9s instrument 81 Tip from an astronomy teacher about how to set up telescopes? 85 Some flower girl candidates 90 <Stay With Me= singer Smith 91 Invisible 92 Great flood protagonist 94 Baseball deal 95 Western treaty gp. 97 Stuck in __ 99 MMA calls 101 Big-screen format 102 Tip from an accounting teacher about calculating profits and losses? 109 Pie crust ingredient 110 <Anything __?= 111 Prepare for a comeback tour 112 Reproductive cells 115 Google oneself, perhaps 117 Downright nasty 118 Caged copycat 120 Successful show letters 121 Tip from a math teacher about working with squares and cubes? 126 Shorten, as a skirt 127 Venezia9sland 128 Skin soother 129 Sheltered from the wind 130 Thumbs-up 131 Former Seattle team, familiarly 132 Tide type 133 Colorado9s __ Verde National Park DOWN 1 Chocolaty coffee 2 Moral code 3 Booker Prizeshortlisted novel made into a film starring Keira Knightley 4 Booty 5 Grew molars, say 6 Prefix with thermic 7 Any of the Rockies: Abbr. 8 Magic word 9 Little bit 10 Droid 11 Stick (out) 12 Log-shaped pastry 13 Shirley Temple garnish 14 Acid __ 15 Question of evidence 16 Deli device 17 Just about 20 Colorado ski spot 24 Burlap bag 25 Arctic hazards 30 Qatar9s capital 33 Hearing things 34 Struggling to stay awake 35 Apostle of Ireland, forshort 36 Throw at 39 Med school subj. 40 Islamic mystic 41 Fries or slaw 42 <Kapow!= 43 Notable period 48 Zip 50 Girl who cannot be trusted to hold the football for Charlie Brown 51 Pasta __ Norma 53 Pamplona bulls 54 Omelet skillet 56 Supersized sandwich 57 Normandy river 59 Energized anew 61 Unleash upon 62 Number of Grammy Awards won by Dolly Parton 64 Classic mint brand 67 Bleating sounds 68 Pelvic bones 69 Dorm areas for hanging out 70 NBA official 72 Dynamism 73 H-Town pro 75 Parkway sign 78 Wool clippers 80 Resident of Japan9sthird largest city 82 Unseat 83 Spooky 84 Comfy and cozy 86 Prince in <The Little Mermaid= 87 Small part for a big name, often 88 Writer LeShan 89 Census datum 93 Hindu spring festival 96 Goes on to say 98 Number of Powerpuff Girls 100 Course for college-bound HS students 102 Plump 103 <Amen to that!= 104 Contract adverb 105 <The Nightmare Before Christmas= composer Danny 106 Doesn9t use scissors 107 Legendary Paul 108 Close by 113 Casts a ballot 114 On a cruise 116 <Exodus= novelist Leon 117 Many execs 119 Travel without a destination 122 Pharmaceutical giant __ Lilly 123 MC9s need 124 World Cup cheer 125 Cavaliers sch. 11/19/23 ©2023 Tribune Content Agency, LLC. l.a. times sunday puzzle edited by Patti Varol and Joyce nichols lewis crossword the show MUst Go on (noV. 12) 381 $ 0 3(' &&6 8 7 ( 6 ( 6 3 1 ' ( /9( 7 % 21( 6 $ 0 ( 3 ( 5 8 6 7 ((/ $ 5 , (6 7 8 % $ 7 + ( 3 + $ 1 7 2 0 2 ) 7 + ( 2 3(5 7 5 2 8 3 ( 2 5 ( 6 68(' 2 8 7 + 3 $ & , ),& ( & / $ , 5 $'( 6 . $ 7 ( ' 6 3 5 8 1 * +2$ ' , 6 & 9 2: 7 + ( . , 1 * $ 1 ' $06 0$$ '$0 5 , & + & / , 0 $ 7 ( & + $ 1*( 6$9 2 5 ( ' ( $ 5 ( 9 $ 1 + $ 1 6(1 / $ : 6 2 9 ( 5 , 1 ' 8 / * (17 $ 3 & / $66 $6. 2/$ 6/5 ( / / ( % ) ) 6 <$0 0 2 8 / , 1 528* $5 , $ 5 ( 1 $ 6 ( / 1 , 1 2 1*2 %(6 7 0 8 6 , & $ / ' , ( 7 5 & $ 7 7 $ , 1 6 ( , 6 7 2 0 % % 5 ($. 6 7 + ( ) 2 8 5 7 + : $ / / 6 3 8 ' 7 , $5$ 6 8 6+ , $ 5 , $ 2 + 0 < $ / /(< 2 / 6(1 5 , 6 . %23 % / (66 5$< ' 2 6 ( |e letters of the musicals that go beyond the grid spell out aside. $ 6 , ' ( Answers to last week9s puzzle. <taKeahiKe!= by Kate chin ParK across 1 President Barbie portrayer Rae 5 Titleakinto Mlle 9 Actress Ryanof <I.Q.= 12 Villainous 16 Onespulling thestrings 19 Nail salon staple brand 20 Lads, casually 22 Esport, typically 23 Nintendo artproducer? 25 Fictional 36 Across with a sizable ûlmography 26 Abstemious one, maybe 28 Copier9sLGL alternative 29 Höch9s movement 30 *Ekeout anexistence? 34 Litigate 36 OdieorSnoopy 37 Approx. takeofhr. 38 <___ outta here!= 39 Hammerpart 41 Mont. clock setting 43 Apt rhymeof <bit= 45 *Inûuentialstorytellers, collectively 50 Betterequipped 54 Feast with four cups of wine 56 Squad 57 Quaint, quaintly 58 Short-term rental, oven 59 Springlikea frog 61 Bryce Canyon home 63 Housecat9s lookout 65 Sardonic 66 Likeopen countryside 68 Spicieralternatives to bourbon 70 SSgt.,e.g. 71 <Aïrmative= 72 Absurd 73 *<You and me both= 75 Actor Rami 77 Govt.-issued ID 78 Nobody wins inthis situation 80 Sportsbody found to haveviolatedantitrust laws ina unanimous 2021SCOTUSruling 81 SAG-___ (grp. in a 2023 Hollywood strike) 82 Farrow of <Avalanche= 83 Drags 85 Continues no longer 87 Start of something reinvented? 88 <Youkeep using that word.Ido not thinkit means what youthink it means= speaker Montoya 91 Cyanrelative 93 Closes,asa backpack 95 Fan sites,oven 99 Nash who wrote <Parsley / Is gharsley= 100 *<Justdoing my job= 103 Mads Mikkelsen, e.g. 104 Bitofa jerk 106 FinalFour match 107 <Sat= follower inthe U.K.9s GPS equivalent 109 National meritorg.? 110 Flamin9 Hot ___ (Ruöesûavoroption) 113 Bevisually striking 115 Certainstriver ... or something found four times inthis puzzle? 120 <Mediocre=author Ijeoma 122 Specialty for some press conference translators, for short 124 Brand that makes Brunchina JarSippin9 Cream liqueur 125 Oscarof <Dune= 126 Ov-ridiculed Microsov assistant9s greeting 130 Yellow gastropodon UC Santa Cruzgear 133 Public image 134 Beachy state in India 135 Majorprima donnas 136 Venn diagram regions 137 <Moxie= director Poehler 138 God whose name sounds similar tohis missiles 139 <Border Town= author ___ Congwen down 1 Opening act, for short? 2 Basklikealizard 3 Fantastic 4 Doing an imitationof 5 Gloriainstrumental in second-wave feminism 6 Onthe ___ (oven) 7 Afectionate declaración 8 Feature of thediabolical ironclad beetle 9 Teen9s whine, maybe 10 Superfundorg. 11 BernardineEvaristo novel <___, Woman, Other= 12 Littlesqueal 13 <|e Impaler= 14 Epic withPatroclusand Achilles 15 Cloud Cityadministrator Calrissian 17 Savor 18 Ship 20 Roman-sounding home for theShowtime Lakers, with<the= 21 Solo 24 <___ been fun= 27 Retained 30 Downs, ina way 31 Haus wife, maybe 32 Dynamic preûx 33 Pulls (in),asûsh 35 Biblical brotherof Jacob 40 Literature Nobelist Gordimer 42 Texter9s <frankly= 44 Capital southof the CaspianSea 46 Shiba ___ 47 Cold brew option 48 Opt fora quietnight 49 Artista.k.a.SportySpice 51 Representation 52 Jubilant cry 53 <srsly= 55 Likesome splotchy cows 60 Casey whosebook<Little Fish= wonthe Lambda LiteraryAward for transgenderûction 62 Given that 64 Arthur Miller protagonist whose name is aptly foundin<megalomania= 66 Ascendant, like four words inthis puzzle 67 Like words tothe one who got away,perhaps 69 Rhyming quartet,e.g. 71 <Curiously strong= breath mint 73 Brilliantpieces 74 Model Bellaor Gigi 76 Smallamount 79 Very small amount 82 <¡Dios ___!= 84 Retail promotions 86 Spot with wrapson the menu 89 With90 Down, James Brownbiopic whose title couldbea titlefor thispuzzle 90 See 89 Down 92 Long way to go? 94 Align, with <up= 96 Form of Jewish mysticism 97 HBO show featuring the actress at1Across 98 Cookon highheat 101 <___ Neighbors= (ElaineEquipoem whoseentirety reads, <|eydon9tplay loud music. / |eydon9t havea dog. /Ithink they9re both mimes.=) 102 ___ Valley (setting of <East of Eden=) 105 Net gains? 108 Traveler9s collection 110 Hippie-ish, as an aesthetic 111 Radar screen images 112 <I9m not ___ sure= 114 Stat fora bike tire 116 Ethnicity for most Biafrans 117 Open-mouthed 118 Solitary sort 119 Sailplaces? 121 Skip 123 Sportsgrp. whose ûrstpresident was Patty Berg 127 Includesonanemail 128 When doubled, beanie topper 129 Jubilant cry 131 Not thecrushing sort, familiarly? 132 TVchannel that airs <Master Minds= fl ffi fl ffi fl ffi fl ffi fl ffi fl ffi fl ffi fl ffi fl fl fl fl fl fl fl fl flfl flffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffifl ffiffi fl ffi fl ffi fl ffi fl ffi noVemBer 19, 2023 evan birnholz is on paternity leave until January. Please enjoy this crossword fromaspecial guest constructor!
sunday, november 19, 2023 . the washington post EZ EE E17 DISTRICT AMC Georgetown 14 3111 K Street N.W. Next Goal Wins (PG-13) CC: 11:45-2:15-4:45-7:20-9:50 The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 2:45- 5:15-7:45-10:15 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 11:00-11:30-1:20-1:55-3:40- 6:00-9:05 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 12:00-3:30-7:00-10:25 The Holdovers (R) CC: 1:25- 4:25-7:25-10:25 Thanksgiving (R) CC: 2:55-5:35- 8:10-10:45 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) CC: 10:45-5:35-9:05 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) CC: 2:40-7:55-10:30 Priscilla (R) CC: 11:15-1:05-3:45- 6:25-10:45 Dream Scenario CC: 12:30-5:30- 8:00-10:30 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) CC: 4:20-6:45 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) CC: 9:50 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) CC: 2:00 Saving Private Ryan 25th Anniversary (R) 3:00-7:00 The Marvels (PG-13) OC: 12:10 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 11:00-2:25-8:20-9:20 Thanksgiving (R) OC: 12:20 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) OC: 12:05 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) OC: 5:15 Dream Scenario OC: 3:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) OC: 5:50 Alamo Drafthouse Cinema - DC Bryant Street 630 Rhode Island Ave NE The Holdovers (R) 11:15-2:45- 6:45-9:30 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 11:00-3:45-8:30 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 9:45 Priscilla (R) 11:45-3:00-6:15-9:15 Dream Scenario 3:30-7:00-10:00 The Marvels (PG-13) 11:30-2:30- 6:30-10:15 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:15- 11:30-2:15-3:15-6:00-9:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 12:00-4:00-5:45-8:00-9:00 Dream Scenario 12:15 Trolls Band Together (PG) 12:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 5:00 Angelika Pop-Up at Union Market 550 Penn Street NE - Unit E The Marvels (PG-13) 1:30- 4:00-7:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 7:00; 1:00-4:15 Priscilla (R) 1:15-4:20-7:10 Avalon Theatre 5612 Connecticut Avenue Shakespeare in Love (R) 10:30AM The Holdovers (R) 10:45-1:30- 4:30-7:30 Joan Baez I Am A Noise 5:30 Anatomy of a Fall (R) 2:00 Landmark Atlantic Plumbing Cinema 807 V Street Northwest The Marvels (PG-13) 4:05- 5:10-7:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 12:40-1:10-2:00-3:10-3:50- 5:00-6:20-7:00-8:15 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 12:30-4:20-7:10-8:10 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG-13) 12:50 The Marvels (PG-13) 1:00 Landmark E Street Cinema 555 11th Street Northwest Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 12:20- 2:45-5:00-7:25 The Marvels (PG-13) 1:00- 4:00-7:00 The Holdovers (R) 12:15-3:15- 7:15 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 12:00-3:45-7:00 Anatomy of a Fall (R) 12:40-3:30 May December (R) 12:25-6:15 Priscilla (R) 12:10-2:25-4:45-7:30 Dream Scenario 12:30-5:15- 7:35-8:15 May December (R) 3:15 Regal Gallery Place 701 Seventh Street Northwest Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 10:40- 1:20-4:10-6:50-9:30 The Marvels (PG-13) 12:00-2:20- 2:50-5:30-7:40-8:05-10:20 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:10-12:10-1:40-2:40-4:20-5:10- 6:10-8:40-9:10 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 3:30-7:00-10:30 Thanksgiving (R) 11:20-2:00- 4:40-10:00 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 12:20 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 10:50-7:10-9:40 Priscilla (R) 11:50-2:50-5:40- 8:30-10:40 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 10:30-1:00 Saving Private Ryan 25th Anniversary (R) 3:00 The Marvels (PG-13) 5:00 Trolls Band Together (PG) 6:40 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:00-11:30-12:30-2:30-4:00- 6:00-6:30-7:30-9:30-10:00 Thanksgiving (R) 7:20 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 11:40AM The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 3:00 MARYLAND AFI Silver Theatre Cultural Center 8633 Colesville Road New Orleans Music in Exile (NR) 12:30 Double Feature (NR) 6:30 May December (R) OC: 11:30AM The Holdovers (R) 3:15-6:00-8:45 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 11:15AM May December (R) 2:00-7:00- 9:20 AMC Academy 8 6198 Greenbelt Road The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 11:10- 1:50-6:50-9:30 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 11:30-4:30-8:30-10:50 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 10:00-11:00-1:00-2:30- 4:00-5:00-7:15-9:15-10:00 Thanksgiving (R) CC: 10:20- 1:30-4:45-7:30-10:40 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) CC: 11:20-2:15-5:50-8:20-10:50 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) CC: 2:00-7:00 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) CC: 4:20 AMC Annapolis Mall 11 1020 Annapolis Mall Road Next Goal Wins (PG-13) CC: 12:00-2:40-5:20-8:00-10:35 The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 11:15- 1:50-4:25-7:00-9:35-10:45 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 10:05-1:00-1:45-3:30-4:10-6:00- 7:10-8:20 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 10:00-11:30-1:30-3:00- 5:00-6:40-8:30-9:45-10:30 The Holdovers (R) CC: 10:00- 3:50-6:30-10:10 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) CC: 10:50AM Thanksgiving (R) CC: 11:40- 2:20-7:40-10:20 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) CC: 10:30-1:10-3:00-8:10-10:40 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) CC: 3:10-6:50 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) CC: 12:25-5:35 Thanksgiving (R) OC: 5:00 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 11:00-9:30 AMC Center Park 8 4001 Powder Mill Rd. Next Goal Wins (PG-13) CC: 11:15-1:45-4:40-7:30-9:45 The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 10:15- 4:00-9:15 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 11:30-4:30-9:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 10:00-11:45-1:15-3:10- 4:10-5:15-7:15-8:45-10:15 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) CC: 11:00-2:15-4:20-6:50-10:00 Thanksgiving (R) CC: 10:30- 1:30-4:40-7:40-10:40 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) CC: 1:00-6:40 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) CC: 2:00-7:00 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) CC: 1:00-7:20 AMC Columbia 14 10300 Little Patuxent Parkway Next Goal Wins (PG-13) CC: 11:15-1:50-4:30-9:40 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 11:00-12:30-3:00-4:00-9:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 12:30-4:00-7:30 The Holdovers (R) CC: 11:40- 3:00-6:00 Thanksgiving (R) CC: 11:10- 1:50-4:30-7:15-10:00 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) CC: 11:45-4:00-8:30 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) CC: 12:15-5:30 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) CC: 11:00-1:40-4:20-7:00-9:40 Priscilla (R) CC: 12:40-3:30- 6:20-9:10 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) CC: 6:30 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) CC: 12:00-3:50-7:40 Saving Private Ryan 25th Anniversary (R) 3:00-7:00 The Marvels - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC: 3:00-5:45 Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC: 11:30-8:30 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) CC: 7:15-10:00 The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 11:00- 1:45-4:30-8:15 Next Goal Wins (PG-13) OC: 7:05 Trolls Band Together (PG) OC: 1:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 11:00-2:30-6:00-9:30 AMC DINE-IN Rio Cinemas 18 9811 Washingtonian Center Next Goal Wins (PG-13) CC: 10:20-1:00-3:45-6:30-9:10 The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 11:15- 2:00-4:45-5:30-7:30-10:15-11:00 Tiger 3 (Hindi) 10:45-1:45- 4:30-8:00 Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie (PG) CC: 10:00-11:25 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 10:15-1:00-6:00-8:30-9:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 12:30-4:00-7:30-11:00 The Persian Version (R) CC: 10:20AM Radical (PG-13) 10:00-1:00-4:05- 6:00-10:45 The Holdovers (R) CC: 12:00- 3:15-6:30-9:45 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) CC: 10:30-2:00-6:00-9:00 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) CC: 11:30-6:20 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) CC: 11:00-3:00-6:00-8:45 Thanksgiving (R) CC: 11:30- 2:15-5:00-7:45-10:30 The Exorcist: Believer (R) CC: 10:45 Priscilla (R) CC: 10:45-1:30-4:15- 7:15-10:00 The Marvels - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC: 10:15- 1:00-3:45 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) CC: 11:15-2:00-4:30-7:00 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) CC: 2:15-9:15 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) CC: 12:20-2:55 Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC: 6:30-10:00 Billy Idol: State Line Live at the Hoover Dam 8:10 Trolls Band Together (PG) 3:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 10:20-1:15-2:30-5:00- 6:00-7:00-8:30-9:30 AMC Magic Johnson Capital Center 12 800 Shoppers Way Next Goal Wins (PG-13) CC: 1:15-4:00-6:45-9:20 The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 1:00- 3:40-4:10-6:20-9:00 Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie (PG) CC: 12:25-2:45-5:10 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 1:15-3:45-6:15 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 1:15-4:45-7:30-8:15 Thanksgiving (R) CC: 1:15-4:00- 6:40-9:20 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) CC: 1:30-4:00-6:30-9:00 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) CC: 12:15-3:00-5:45-8:30 The Exorcist: Believer (R) CC: 1:00-3:45-6:30-9:15 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) CC: 3:00-8:00 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) CC: 8:45 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) CC: 1:30-6:45-9:30 Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC: 2:00-5:30-9:00 Trolls Band Together (PG) OC: 12:30; 5:30 AMC Montgomery 16 7101 Democracy Boulevard Next Goal Wins (PG-13) CC: 10:30-1:15-4:00-6:45-9:30 The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 10:45-11:45-2:30-4:15-5:15-7:00- 9:45-10:45 Oppenheimer (R) CC: 7:10-9:15 Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie (PG) CC: 2:15-4:45 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 10:15-12:45-4:45-5:45-7:15- 8:15-9:45 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 12:00-2:30-6:00-7:00- 9:30-10:30 The Holdovers (R) CC: 10:00- 1:15-4:30-7:45-10:45 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) CC: 12:15-4:40-6:00-9:15 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) CC: 11:45-2:00 Thanksgiving (R) CC: 11:00- 1:45-4:30-7:15-10:00 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) CC: 10:15-1:00-3:45-6:30-11:00 Priscilla (R) CC: 12:05-2:45-5:30- 8:15-11:00 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) CC: 12:00-3:45-7:30-10:30 The Marvels (PG-13) OC: 1:30 Billy Idol: State Line Live at the Hoover Dam 8:00 Be My Family (Wu jin jia zu) 10:45-10:50 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) OC: 3:30 Trolls Band Together (PG) 3:15 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:00AM Thanksgiving (R) 3:00 AMC St. Charles Town Ctr 9 11115 Mall Circle Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 11:30- 2:15-5:00-7:45-10:30 The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 10:45- 1:30-3:30-4:15-7:00-8:45-10:15 Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie (PG) CC: 10:45-6:15 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 10:30-4:00-6:30-9:00-10:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 11:45-3:15-6:45-9:45 Thanksgiving (R) CC: 11:00- 1:45-4:30-7:15-10:00 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) CC: 10:30-1:10-3:50-6:30-9:15 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) CC: 11:00-1:30-5:30 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) CC: 12:00-2:45-8:00 Trolls Band Together (PG) 1:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 1:00-4:40-8:15 Cinemark Egyptian 24 and XD 7000 Arundel Mills Circle The Marvels (PG-13) XD: 9:10- 4:50-7:35-10:20; 11:00-11:35- 1:50-2:20-4:40-7:30-7:50-9:30- 10:20-10:35; 5:05 Trolls Band Together (PG) XD: 9:20-11:50-2:20; 4:15 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 4:25 Thanksgiving (R) 4:00 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 11:35- 2:15-11:00 Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 9:55- 12:35-7:55-10:40 Tiger 3 (Hindi) 10:55 Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie (PG) 9:15-9:30-12:00 Trolls Band Together (PG) 9:15- 11:45-2:15-4:45 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) XD: 11:50-3:25-7:00-10:35 Radical (PG-13) 10:05-1:15-4:20- 7:25-10:30 The Holdovers (R) 10:10-1:25- 7:45-10:55 Thanksgiving (R) 7:30-10:20 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 9:25- 12:05-2:45-8:10-10:45 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 11:25-4:55-7:40-10:25 Mangalavaaram (Telugu) 5:05- 8:05-10:55 The Exorcist: Believer (R) 10:35- 4:30-10:15 Saw X (R) 1:30-7:20 Priscilla (R) 11:45-5:30-8:20 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 12:15-1:00-6:00-10:15 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) 3:15-7:00 Saving Private Ryan 25th Anniversary (R) 3:00-7:00 Live: Phát Truc Tiep 10:55 Trolls Band Together: The Concert Experience 1:45 Sapta Sagaralu Dhaati - Side B (Telugu) 10:50 Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 5:00 Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie (PG) 2:30 Trolls Band Together (PG) 9:40- 9:45-10:15-10:30-11:15-12:10- 12:45-2:45-3:20-3:30-5:15-5:55- 6:45-7:45-8:25-8:30-9:15 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 9:15-9:45-10:15-10:40-12:50- 1:20-1:50-2:15-5:15-5:25-5:50- 8:00-8:50-9:00 The Holdovers (R) 4:35 Thanksgiving (R) 10:20-1:10- 6:50-9:40 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 5:20 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 2:10 Priscilla (R) 2:35 Cinépolis Gaithersburg 629 Center Point Way Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 12:20- 3:40-7:10-10:10 The Marvels (PG-13) 2:00-4:20- 5:30-7:20-8:35-10:20 Trolls Band Together (PG) 10:30- 11:30-12:30-1:00-2:40-3:15-5:00- 6:00-7:45-8:50 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:00-12:00-3:00-4:00-7:00- 8:00-9:30-10:30 Thanksgiving (R) 11:40-3:15- 6:30-10:45 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 11:15-10:20 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 11:30-2:20 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG-13) 6:15 Landmark Bethesda Row Cinema 7235 Woodmont Avenue Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 1:30- 4:20-7:00 The Marvels (PG-13) 1:20- 4:10-6:45 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 1:00-3:30-4:15-7:30-8:15 The Holdovers (R) 1:15-2:00- 4:00-6:30-7:15 Napoleon (R) 9:30 Anatomy of a Fall (R) 1:00 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 1:05-3:45-7:45 May December (R) 1:05-4:45- 7:10 Saltburn (R) 10:00 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG-13) 5:00 Landmark at Annapolis Harbour Center 2474 Solomons Island Road Unit H-1 Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 12:50- 4:35-7:20 The Marvels (PG-13) 1:30- 4:30-7:15 Trolls Band Together (PG) 1:00- 3:10-5:20-6:30-7:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG-13) 1:15-2:00-3:15-4:00- 6:00-7:00 The Holdovers (R) 1:20-4:15-7:05 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 12:30-3:15-7:00 Priscilla (R) 12:45-4:55-7:25 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG-13) 1:30 Old Greenbelt Theatre 129 Centerway The Holdovers (R) 5:00 Priscilla (R) 2:15-5:15 The Holdovers (R) 2:00 Phoenix Theatres Marlow 6 3899 Branch Avenue The Marvels (PG-13) 12:05-2:35- 5:00-7:35 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:45-12:45-2:00-3:00-4:30-5:20- 6:50-9:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 1:30-5:00-8:30 Thanksgiving (R) 1:00-3:30- 6:00-8:30 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 1:05-3:45-7:00-9:30 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 8:00 Regal Cinemas Majestic Stadium 20 & IMAX 900 Ellsworth Drive Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 11:05- 1:45-4:30-7:05-9:50 The Marvels (PG-13) 11:00- 12:00-1:00-3:35-5:10-7:50-10:30 Trolls Band Together (PG) 10:55- 11:20-11:50-12:20-12:50-1:20- 1:50-2:50-3:20-3:45-4:15-4:40- 5:15-5:45-6:10-6:40-7:10-7:40- 8:10-8:40-9:20-9:40-10:20-10:50 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 10:50-12:10-12:40-1:10-2:20- 2:45-4:15-4:45-6:00-6:30-7:30- 8:00-8:30-9:45-10:15 Radical (PG-13) 2:00-5:00-8:20 The Holdovers (R) 12:05-3:30- 6:45-10:00 Thanksgiving (R) 11:05-1:50- 4:35-7:20-10:00 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 11:25-4:00-8:45 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 11:30AM Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 6:20-9:00 Priscilla (R) 11:45-2:40-5:45-8:50 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 2:15 Saving Private Ryan 25th Anniversary (R) 3:00-7:00 Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 11:40-3:15-7:00-10:45 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 2:35 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 3:45 Regal Germantown 20000 Century Boulevard Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 11:40- 2:20-5:00-7:50 The Marvels (PG-13) 11:45-2:30- 5:10-8:10 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:20- 11:50-1:00-1:50-3:30-4:40-5:30- 6:20-7:00-8:00-8:50 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:25-12:50-3:00-4:30-5:20- 6:40-7:20-8:20-9:05 The Holdovers (R) 11:30-2:40- 5:50-9:00 Thanksgiving (R) 10:55-1:40- 4:40-7:30 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 11:35-2:10-4:50-7:40 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 12:20-3:10-6:10-8:55 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 2:50 Saving Private Ryan 25th Anniversary (R) 3:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 1:30 Regal Hyattsville Royale 6505 America Blvd. Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 12:00- 2:40-5:30-8:20-11:00 The Marvels (PG-13) 12:30-1:30- 3:10-4:00-4:30-5:50-6:50-7:30- 8:50-9:50-10:40 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:40- 12:10-1:10-2:40-4:10-4:40-5:10- 6:40-7:10-7:50-9:10-9:40-10:35 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:40-12:50-3:25-4:20-7:00- 8:10-10:30 The Holdovers (R) 12:30-3:40- 7:10-10:25 Thanksgiving (R) 11:30-2:20- 5:00-7:40-10:50 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 8:30 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 12:10-3:00-5:40 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 12:45-3:40-6:30-9:30 Priscilla (R) 12:15-3:30-6:20-9:00 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 1:00 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 2:10 Regal Laurel Towne Centre 14716 Baltimore Avenue Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 12:30- 3:15-6:00-9:00 The Marvels (PG-13) 11:40-1:45- 2:20-4:20-5:00-7:00-7:45-9:40 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:05- 11:40-1:00-2:10-2:50-3:40-4:40- 5:20-6:15-7:10-8:00 The Creator (PG-13) 9:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG-13) 11:00-12:00-1:10-2:10- 2:40-3:45-4:50-5:50-6:30-7:30- 8:45-9:25 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 8:30 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 11:20-1:20-4:00-6:45-9:35 Thanksgiving (R) 1:30-4:30-7:20 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 12:15 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 11:00AM Regal Rockville Center 199 East Montgomery Avenue Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 11:25- 2:10-5:00-7:40 The Marvels (PG-13) 3:10-5:50- 6:20-8:30 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:40-1:30-2:00-2:50-4:10-4:40- 5:20-7:10-7:50 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:00-11:45-1:00-2:30-3:30- 4:30-6:00-7:00-8:10 The Holdovers (R) 12:00-3:00- 6:10 Thanksgiving (R) 1:40-4:20-7:20 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 11:30-4:00-8:35 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 1:10-3:50-6:30 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 6:40 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 12:20 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 11:35AM Regal Waugh Chapel & IMAX 1419 South Main Chapel Way Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 12:50- 3:50-5:40-8:20 The Marvels (PG-13) 11:40-2:20- 3:20-5:00-6:20-7:40-9:10 Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie (PG) 11:00AM Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:30- 2:00-2:30-4:30-5:20-7:00-9:10 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 12:10-12:20-1:30-3:40-4:00- 6:40-7:10-7:50 Thanksgiving (R) 2:10-4:40-7:20 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 8:00 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 1:00-3:40-6:30 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 11:30-2:10-5:10-8:10 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 12:00 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 12:40 Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 11:10-2:40-6:10 Regal Westview & IMAX 5243 Buckeystown Pike The Marvels (PG-13) 11:20- 12:40-3:50-5:00-6:40-7:50-9:30 Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie (PG) 10:40-11:50-2:20-4:50 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:40-1:10-2:10-3:40-4:40-6:20- 7:10-8:50 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 3:30-7:30 Thanksgiving (R) 2:30-5:20- 8:10-9:40 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 7:40 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 10:20-12:50 The Marvels - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 4:10 Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 11:20-6:50 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 12:20-1:40-4:00-4:30-5:30- 8:00-8:30-9:10 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 2:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 1:00 Xscape Theatres Brandywine 14 7710 Matapeake Business Drive The Polar Express (G) 1:00- 4:00-7:00 Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 10:50- 1:20-4:10-6:50-9:30 The Marvels (PG-13) 11:20-1:50- 4:20-7:10-9:50 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:10- 12:05-1:30-2:20-3:50-4:40-6:20- 7:00-8:40-9:40 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 10:10-11:00-12:30-1:40-2:40- 4:05-5:00-6:00-7:20-8:20-9:20 Thanksgiving (R) 11:40-2:10- 4:50-7:30-10:30 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 10:55-1:25-4:25-6:55-9:25 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 11:15-1:55-4:35-7:15-9:45 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 10:20-12:40-3:00-5:20-7:40- 10:20 The Marvels (PG-13) 10:40-1:10- 3:50-6:30-9:10 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:50-3:20-6:40-10:00 iPic Pike & Rose 11830 Grand Park Avenue The Marvels (PG-13) (!) 11:00- 12:00-3:15-3:45-6:45-7:15- 10:00-10:30 The Equalizer 3 (R) 11:30-2:45- 6:30-10:45 Trolls Band Together (PG) (!) 12:30-3:15-6:00-9:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) (!) 11:15-11:45-2:20-3:00- 6:15-7:00-10:15-11:00 The Holdovers (R) (!) 11:00-4:00- 7:30-11:00 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 11:15-2:00-6:00-9:45 VIRGINIA AMC Courthouse Plaza 8 2150 Clarendon Blvd. Next Goal Wins (PG-13) CC: 1:50-5:20-7:10 The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 12:00- 2:40-8:00 Oppenheimer (R) CC: 11:40-3:40 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 12:20-2:40-7:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 12:05-3:30-7:00 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) CC: 12:05-4:20-7:20 Thanksgiving (R) CC: 11:50- 2:30-5:10-7:50 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) CC: 4:35 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) CC: 5:00 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) CC: 12:15-4:00-7:40 AMC Hoffman Center 22 206 Swamp Fox Rd. The Marvels (PG-13) 5:00 Trolls Band Together (PG) 12:30-8:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 2:30; 12:15 Thanksgiving (R) 12:00 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) CC: 11:00-2:30-7:00-9:15 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) CC: 11:15-2:00-4:45-7:30-10:15 Next Goal Wins (PG-13) CC: 11:10-1:45-4:15-7:00-9:30 Tiger 3 (Hindi) 11:00AM Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 11:00-1:30-4:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 6:30-10:00 A Haunting in Venice (PG-13) CC: 11:00-3:30 Radical (PG-13) 12:00-3:00- 6:00-9:00 The Holdovers (R) CC: 11:30- 6:00-9:15 Thanksgiving (R) CC: 1:15-4:00- 6:45-9:30 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) CC: 11:00-4:30-7:15-10:00 The Exorcist: Believer (R) CC: 6:15 Priscilla (R) CC: 11:00-2:00-4:45- 7:30-10:15 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) CC: 3:00-5:30-10:30 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) CC: 12:00-3:30-7:00-10:30 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) CC: 12:30-3:30-6:15-9:00 Saving Private Ryan 25th Anniversary (R) 3:00-7:00 It's a Wonderful Knife (R) 11:00AM Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC: 12:45-4:30-8:00 Last Suspect (Zheng jiu xian yi ren) 11:30-4:45 The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 11:30-1:30-2:15-4:15-7:00-7:45- 9:45-10:30 Billy Idol: State Line Live at the Hoover Dam 8:00 Be My Family (Wu jin jia zu) 1:15-6:00-10:30 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 1:45-3:45-5:15-7:15- 9:00-9:30 The Holdovers (R) OC: 2:45 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) OC: 1:45 AMC Potomac Mills 18 2700 Potomac Mills Circle Next Goal Wins (PG-13) CC: 11:00-1:40-4:15-6:45-9:30 Tiger 3 (Hindi) 10:45-12:30- 6:50-10:15 Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie (PG) CC: 10:10-2:10-4:30-7:40- 10:10 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 11:00-1:30-3:00-4:00-5:30- 6:30-9:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 12:30-4:00-7:30-11:00 Radical (PG-13) 11:50AM The Holdovers (R) CC: 12:40- 7:10-10:15 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) CC: 4:10 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) CC: 10:30-1:00-3:30-6:00-8:30-11:00 Thanksgiving (R) CC: 11:00- 1:40-4:20-7:00-9:45 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) CC: 11:45-2:30-5:15-8:00-10:45 The Exorcist: Believer (R) CC: 1:30 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) CC: 12:00-12:30-2:30-5:00-7:30- 10:00 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) CC: 12:00-2:45-5:30-8:15-11:00 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) CC: 3:50 Saving Private Ryan 25th Anniversary (R) 3:00-7:00 Billy Idol: State Line Live at the Hoover Dam 8:00 The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 11:00- 1:45-4:30-7:15-10:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 10:00-10:30-11:30-2:15- 3:15-6:00-7:00-8:30-9:45-10:30 The Holdovers (R) OC: 3:45 AMC Shirlington 7 2772 South Randolph St. The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 11:30- 2:10-4:50 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 2:20-4:40-7:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 11:00-12:00-1:40-3:45- 5:05-7:10-8:30 The Holdovers (R) CC: 3:30-7:20 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) CC: 11:20-2:25-6:40 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) CC: 7:00 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) CC: 11:50AM Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) CC: 12:05-3:40-6:30 AMC Tysons Corner 16 7850e Tysons Corner Center Trolls Band Together (PG) OC: 12:25 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) OC: 8:50 Next Goal Wins (PG-13) CC: 10:25-1:05-6:35-9:15 The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 9:55-12:30-3:05-5:45-8:25- 10:15-11:00 Tiger 3 (Hindi) 10:35-4:45-10:25 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 10:55-1:25-4:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 6:25-9:55 The Creator (PG-13) CC: 10:45 Radical (PG-13) 1:50-7:10 The Holdovers (R) CC: 10:10- 1:20-4:25-7:35-10:40 Thanksgiving (R) CC: 11:40- 2:20-5:05-7:55-10:35 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) CC: 10:40-2:25-6:40-9:40 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) CC: 11:00 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) CC: 10:45-1:35-4:20-7:05-9:50 Priscilla (R) CC: 10:15-1:15-4:05- 6:45-10:50 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) CC: 10:00-5:25 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) CC: 12:10-3:45-7:20 Saving Private Ryan 25th Anniversary (R) 3:00-7:00 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) CC: 1:30-4:15-6:55-9:35 Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) CC: 12:05-3:40-7:15-10:55 Trolls Band Together: The Concert Experience CC: 2:00 Billy Idol: State Line Live at the Hoover Dam 8:00 Next Goal Wins (PG-13) OC: 3:50 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 11:30-2:55-4:40-7:50-10:20 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 10:05-1:40-5:15 AMC Worldgate 9 13025 Worldgate Drive Next Goal Wins (PG-13) CC: 11:15-1:45-4:15-6:45-9:15 The Marvels (PG-13) CC: 11:00- 1:45-4:30-7:15-10:00 Tiger 3 (Hindi) 12:00-3:15- 6:30-9:45 Trolls Band Together (PG) CC: 11:00-4:00-6:30-9:05 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) CC: 1:50-6:05-9:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) CC: 11:15-12:45-2:45-4:15- 6:15-7:45-9:45 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) CC: 11:10-1:10-3:45-6:20-10:15 Thanksgiving (R) CC: 10:55- 1:30-4:20-7:00-9:30 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) CC: 1:30 Alamo Drafthouse Cinema - One Loudoun 20575 East Hampton Plaza Trolls Band Together (PG) 10:45- 1:30-4:15 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 7:00 The Holdovers (R) 12:15-3:15- 6:30-10:00 Thanksgiving (R) 11:00-1:40- 4:40-7:40-10:40 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 6:45 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG-13) 6:15 The Marvels (PG-13) 11:10-1:15- 2:00-4:20-5:20-7:20-10:20 Trolls Band Together (PG) 12:30- 3:30-3:45-6:00-8:30-10:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 12:00-2:10-4:00-8:00-9:00; 11:20AM Angelika Film Center Mosaic 2911 District Ave The Marvels (PG-13) 10:40-1:05- 3:25-5:45-8:15 Trolls Band Together (PG) 10:35- 11:15-12:30-1:30-2:45-5:00-7:15 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 1:55 The Holdovers (R) 10:45-1:35- 4:30-8:00 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 3:45-7:30 Dream Scenario 12:45-3:05- 5:25-7:45 Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 12:40- 3:00-5:20-7:50 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG-13) 10:30-12:00-3:30-5:15- 7:00-8:30 CMX Village 14 1600 Village Market Boulevard Planes, Trains and Automobiles (1987) Beer Tasting 3:30 Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 11:15- 1:50-4:50-7:35 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 11:05-6:10 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:00- 11:45-1:00-3:30-4:35-6:00-7:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:30-3:00-6:30 The Holdovers (R) 1:10-4:15-7:20 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 1:20-3:50-6:20 Thanksgiving (R) 11:55-2:30- 5:15-7:50 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 12:15-3:20-8:20 Priscilla (R) 12:45-3:40-7:10 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 2:10 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG-13) 6:40 The Marvels (PG-13) 11:10- 12:05-1:40-2:40-4:10-5:10- 6:45-7:45 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:30-12:30-1:30-3:00-4:00- 5:00-6:30-7:30-8:30 Cinema Arts Theatre 9650 Unit 14 Main St. Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 9:50- 12:15-2:40-7:00 What Happens Later (R) 9:50AM Radical (PG-13) 12:00-5:00-7:30 The Holdovers (R) 10:10-1:15- 7:20 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 11:40-7:15 Anatomy of a Fall (R) 10:00- 1:00-4:00-7:10 May December (R) 9:45-12:05- 2:35-7:40 Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 4:50 The Holdovers (R) 4:15 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 3:30 May December (R) 5:05 Cinemark Centreville 12 6201 Multiplex Drive Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 9:00 Tiger 3 (Hindi) 8:30 Trolls Band Together (PG) 10:30- 11:00-1:00-3:30-4:00-6:00-6:30 Radical (PG-13) 4:55 Thanksgiving (R) 11:20-4:50- 7:40-10:30 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 9:15AM Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 9:35-4:45-7:30-10:15 Saving Private Ryan 25th Anniversary (R) 3:00-7:00 Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 9:30- 12:15-6:40 The Marvels (PG-13) 9:10-10:55- 11:55-2:40-4:25-5:25-7:10- 8:10-9:55 Trolls Band Together (PG) 1:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 9:50-12:10-3:45-5:05-7:20- 8:40-9:20 Thanksgiving (R) 2:05 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 2:00 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 2:50 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) 12:00-8:00 Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 3:55 The Marvels (PG-13) 1:40 Trolls Band Together (PG) 9:00- 9:20-9:40-11:30-11:50-12:20- 2:20-5:20-7:50-10:20 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 1:25 Cinemark Fairfax Corner and XD 11900 Palace Way Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 10:50- 1:30-4:15-6:55-9:35 The Marvels (PG-13) 9:45-10:30- 12:30-1:20-3:15-4:10-7:00-9:50 Tiger 3 (Hindi) 6:30-10:05 Trolls Band Together (PG) 10:00- 3:00-5:30-6:00-8:00-8:30-10:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 1:35-4:40-5:10-8:45 The Holdovers (R) 9:50-1:00- 4:10-7:25-10:35 Thanksgiving (R) 11:05-1:55- 4:45-7:35-10:25 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 10:05AM Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 1:15-3:55 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 10:55-1:40-4:25-7:10-9:55 Mangalavaaram (Telugu) 10:45 Priscilla (R) 10:55-1:45-4:35- 7:25-10:15 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 12:30 Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour (PG13) 12:55-8:15 Saving Private Ryan 25th Anniversary (R) 3:00-7:00 The Marvels (PG-13) XD: 5:15- 8:00-10:45 Trolls Band Together (PG) XD: 9:45-12:15-2:45 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) XD: 11:35-3:10-6:45-10:20 Regal Ballston Quarter 671 North Glebe Road Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 11:20- 2:00-4:50-7:30 The Marvels (PG-13) 12:00-2:20- 5:00-5:20-8:30 Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie (PG) 12:20-3:00 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:30- 2:10-2:50-4:40-5:20-7:10-8:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:00-11:50-2:30-3:30-4:30- 6:00-7:00-8:10 Thanksgiving (R) 11:40-3:10- 5:50-8:40 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 12:40 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 12:30 Priscilla (R) 12:50-3:40-6:40 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 12:10 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 7:40 Regal Dulles Town Center 21100 Dulles Town Circle Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 11:30- 2:00-4:30-7:05 The Marvels (PG-13) 1:30-3:05- 4:15-6:15-7:30-9:15 Tiger 3 (Hindi) 12:15-4:00-7:45 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:40- 12:00-12:45-1:10-2:15-3:15-3:40- 4:40-6:30-7:10-9:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:50-3:30-6:00-7:00-8:30 Thanksgiving (R) 1:45-4:30-7:20 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 5:45-9:30 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 12:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 2:30 Regal Fairfax Towne Center 4110 West Ox Road Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 11:20- 1:00-3:50-6:20-8:50 The Marvels (PG-13) 4:50-6:10- 7:40-9:10 Oppenheimer (R) 2:40 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:30- 12:10-12:50-2:10-3:30-4:40-6:00- 6:30-7:10-8:30 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:50-1:20-3:30-4:20-7:00- 8:00-9:00 Thanksgiving (R) 1:50-4:30-7:20 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 1:40 Priscilla (R) 11:40-3:10-5:50-8:40 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 1:30 Regal Fox & IMAX 22875 Brambleton Plaza Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 10:30- 1:10-3:50-6:40-9:20 The Marvels (PG-13) 11:30-2:10- 5:10-7:50-10:30 Tiger 3 (Hindi) 1:45-5:20-8:55 Trolls Band Together (PG) 10:00- 10:50-11:20-12:40-1:30-3:10- 4:00-5:40-6:30-8:10-9:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 2:30-6:10-9:50 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 9:45AM Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 9:30-12:15-3:00-5:45-8:45 Mangalavaaram (Telugu) 10:55- 2:20-5:50-9:05 Priscilla (R) 10:00-12:45-3:30- 6:15-9:00 The Marvels - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 11:00- 1:40-4:20 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 9:30-12:00 Sapta Sagaradaache Ello - Side B (Kannada) 11:10-6:00 Saving Private Ryan 25th Anniversary (R) 3:00-7:00 Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 7:00-10:40 The Marvels (PG-13) 9:30-2:50 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 12:10 Sapta Sagaralu Dhaati - Side B (Telugu) 2:35-9:25 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 9:40-12:20-1:20-4:00-5:00- 7:30-8:40 Thanksgiving (R) 11:15-1:55- 4:40-7:30-10:10 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:10-5:30-9:15 Regal Kingstowne & RPX 5910 Kingstowne Towne Center Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 11:30- 2:15-5:20-8:15 The Marvels (PG-13) 10:40-1:20- 3:05-4:05-5:50-6:50-8:35-9:35 Tiger 3 (Hindi) 10:30-2:40-6:15- 10:10 Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie (PG) 11:00AM Trolls Band Together (PG) 10:45- 11:40-12:10-1:10-2:20-3:00-5:00- 6:10-6:45-7:30-8:40-9:20-10:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 10:50-12:50-1:50-2:30-4:30- 5:30-6:20-8:10-9:10-9:55 The Holdovers (R) 12:00-3:15- 6:30-9:50 Thanksgiving (R) 11:10-2:00- 4:55-7:40-10:35 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 12:30-3:20-6:00-8:45 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 1:30-4:20-7:10-10:20 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 3:40 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 12:20 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:50-3:30-7:15 The Marvels (PG-13) 11:20- 2:05-4:50-7:50-10:40 Regal Manassas & IMAX 11380 Bulloch Drive Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 11:35- 2:20-5:10-8:00 The Marvels (PG-13) 11:30- 1:40-4:50-6:10-7:40 Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie (PG) 12:00-2:40 Trolls Band Together (PG) 12:00-1:00-2:40-5:20-6:20-8:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 12:00-12:30-2:30-3:45-6:10- 7:30-8:00 The Holdovers (R) 12:10-3:40- 7:00 Thanksgiving (R) 11:40-2:30- 5:20-8:00 Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 1:10-4:00-6:50 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 5:20-8:10 The Marvels - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 12:40 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 11:50-3:40 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 2:30 Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes - The IMAX 2D Experience (PG-13) 3:30-7:10 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 4:15 Regal Springûeld Town Center 6859 Springûeld Mall Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 11:00- 2:30-5:20-8:20 The Marvels (PG-13) 12:00- 1:00-3:10-4:10-6:10-7:10-10:00 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:40- 12:10-2:00-2:10-3:50-4:50-5:00- 6:30-7:30-8:10-9:10-10:10 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 10:50-11:50-12:50-2:20-3:20- 4:20-6:00-7:00-8:00-9:30 The Holdovers (R) 11:20-2:40- 6:20-9:50 Thanksgiving (R) 10:55-1:50- 4:30-7:20 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 11:30AM Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 4:00-6:50-9:40 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 9:20 Regal Virginia Gateway & RPX 8001 Gateway Promenade Place Next Goal Wins (PG-13) 12:50- 3:50-6:40-9:30 The Marvels (PG-13) 10:40- 11:50-1:20-4:30-6:00-7:20-8:50- 10:20 Trolls Band Together (PG) 11:00- 12:00-1:00-1:40-3:40-4:20-5:20- 6:20-7:00-8:00-9:00-9:40 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 12:10-1:10-4:10-5:10-8:10- 9:10-10:00 The Holdovers (R) 11:15-2:30- 5:40-9:20 Thanksgiving (R) 10:50-1:50- 4:40-7:40-10:30 Killers of the Flower Moon (R) 11:30AM Journey to Bethlehem (PG) 11:40-7:15 Five Nights At Freddy's (PG-13) 4:00-6:50-9:50 Trolls Band Together 3D (PG) 2:40 Saving Private Ryan 25th Anniversary (R) 3:00 The Marvels 3D (PG-13) 3:00 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 11:10-3:10-7:10 Smithsonian - Airbus IMAX Theater 14390 Air and Space Museum Parkway Journey to Space (NR) 10:20- 3:00 To Fly! (1976) (NR) 3:40 Aircraft Carrier: Guardian of the Seas 12:40 Deep Sky: The IMAX 2D Experience 10:55-1:20 Blue Planet (Il pianeta azzurro) (NR) 11:45AM The Dream is Alive (NR) 2:10 University Mall Theatres 10659-A Braddock Road The Marvels (PG-13) 5:00 Trolls Band Together (PG) 4:40 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 4:00 The Marvels (PG-13) 12:35- 2:45-7:30 Trolls Band Together (PG) 12:30-2:35-7:15 The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (PG13) 1:00-7:00 MOVIE DIRECTORY (!) No Pass/No Discount Ticket Sunday, November 19, 2023 www.washingtonpost.com/movies S0141 6x4 washingtonpost.com/news/capital-weather-gang " @capitalweather Stay one step ahead of the weather with the Capital Weather Gang snow day or school day?
E18 eZ ee the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 BY TOM SIETSEMA DINING PhOTOS by ScOTT SuchMAN FOR The WAShiNGTON POST The menu at Padaek gives diners a chance to discern the difference between Thai and Laotian food. The cuisines share many ingredients, but Laotian relies more on herbs, and Thai is more sweet and sour. nated in ginger, garlic and sesame seeds, the meat is a nice demonstration of heat and spice mirrored by a hot sauce calibrated to just shy of liquid fire. In Laos, the meat would dry in the sun; at Padaek, the beef gets flash-fried just before you get it, and is juicier and less chewy as a result. The pork skewers, a main dish, are so big, the hulks look like they came from Gold9s Gym. In reality, they9re pumped up from a marinade that makes them sweet and sharp and gently crisp from their time on the grill. Laos is landlocked, but rich with rivers from which catfish is caught. Padaek fries catfish from the Chesapeake and all but buries the entree in breezy mint, sharp red onions and crisp bell peppers. Dip a piece of hot fish in the accompanying chile-lime sauce and watch sparks (and forks) fly. While she grew up in a house with almost 20 relatives, Luangrath says her early cooking memories were mostly pounding herbs for basic meals. It wasn9t until after Communists took over that her family fled Laos in the early 1980s and she spent two years in a refugee camp in northeastern Thailand. Luangrath says what she knows about cooking was gleaned from fellow refugees, lessons she put to good use when her family relocated to the United States, first to the San Francisco Bay Area, where, as the eldest daughter of two working parents, the future chef was assigned to prepare meals at home. Luangrath likes to experiment. Her stretches make up the chef9s specials, including the simply billed crab noodles, a combination of a dish she ate in a Vietnamese restaurant in San Francisco and a Thai recipe for mee sua. Thin yellow noodles tossed with Chinese celery and shiitake mushrooms are slicked with garlic butter and finished with nuggets of sweet crab. The invention is a little smoky, a touch slippery, plenty rich 4 a heady distinction between Padaek and the competition. If there9s a disappointment, it9s the pad thai mun goong with jumbo shrimp, which tastes like too much pad thai in this country: sweet. A squeeze of lime and some toasted rice powder, added at the table, improved the eating. So do the cocktails. <Whatever is in the kitchen, I will use,= says Sunny Vanavichai, the restaurant9s bar manager, a role she played before at Thip Khao, her boss9s popular restaurant in the District, and for Daikaya Group. Pandan leaves impart a subtle vanilla-coconut note to an Old-Fashioned made with aged rum and creme de banana, and tamarind is the sweet-sour punch in a smoky-with-mezcal twist on a margarita, its rim red with salted tomato. Most of the balanced drinks cost a neighborly $14, and I applaud the price of the corkage fee, too. Diners can bring their own bottle of wine to Padaek for just $15. Padaek Arlington Ridge is the chef9s fifth dining establishment. Luangrath also brought to life the fast-casual Sen Khao in Tysons, which closed during the pandemic, and the late Laotian watering hole Hanumanh in Shaw. One of my favorite places to open in 2019, the latter space is poised to assume a new identity this winter: Baan Mae or <Mom9s house= in Laotian. Luangrath says the forthcoming restaurant will embrace the flavors of her homeland, as well as Myanmar (also known as Burma), Thailand and Vietnam 4 <anything I feel like.= Something tells me it9s going to take a lot of visits for me to eat my way through the menu before I tell you about it. thin fried garlic on the surface and a dip of black soy sauce, vinegar and Sichuan peppercorns (hence the buzz on the tongue). Maybe you don9t eat meat. Maybe you9ll ease in with cubes of tofu, lightly dusted with potato starch and fried so the outside crackles but the interior is soft as marshmallow. A delicate peanuttamarind dressing adds depth to simplicity. As at the original Padaek, this one weaves Laotian flavors into the script. The equivalent of the larb 4 the dish I could eat every time and never tire of 4 is a salad of fried coconut rice mixed with funky pork sausage (or tofu), chiles, peanuts, sharp onions and a clutch of fresh herbs. <Do you know how to eat it?= a server asks as she places the mound in front of us. We nod. The jam session is spooned into lettuce leaves, a cool counterpoint, and eaten, quickly and greedily, like a wrap. Aom is another distinctly Laotian dish, a stew built from a base of tropical herbs and thickened with sticky rice. Diners choose a featured ingredient (I requested tofu, but chicken, pork and beef are options), which bobs along with fleshy mushrooms and green eggplant in the steaming red bowl. A few dishes into the menu, the difference between Thai and Laotian cooking comes into sharp focus. While the cuisines share many of the same ingredients, Laotian food is neither as sweet nor sour as Thai, more reliant on herbs and not as heavy. Both Thailand and Laos serve papaya salad, for instance, but the Laotian version brings on 9da funk not just with the expected dried fish sauce, but also with pungent crab and shrimp pastes. The kitchen makes terrific beef jerky. Marilittle basket of fragrant sticky rice, from which you form bite-size balls with your fingers and palm and dunk into the sauce on the plate. The process isn9t as messy as you think, since the grains tend to stick to each other rather than your hand. Padaek Arlington Ridge is the chef9s biggest restaurant yet, with 150 seats scattered across an inviting patio and multiple rooms inside, one of which is art-filled and ideal for private functions. Luangrath says she designed her latest restaurant with her Laotian grandmother9s house in mind, so there are homey touches throughout the light-filled interior. Custommade baskets from the mother country line the shelves, and painted flowers and birds draw eyes to the kitchen tiles and tabletops. Rattan lights hang from the ceiling and wood accents warm the setting. Padaek does its best to make you forget you9re eating in a suburban shopping center. There aren9t any live chickens afoot, as there were outside Grandma9s house, but the green of banana and coconut leaves infuses the interior. My eyes keep darting from what9s on my plate to the diminutive chef in the open kitchen. Luangrath, 54, tells me she9s spending seven days a week in her new place, and in my four visits over two months, she has been a constant sight, a hands-on coach to her team. The Thai appetizers are all class acts. The dense but yielding fish cakes underscore her love of lemongrass, which doesn9t hide the presence of fresh dill and lime leaves in the ground catfish. Padaek9s steamed dumplings star chicken and shrimp, lightly bound with egg white to hold the filling together and flattered with a flurry of E ven a cursory reading of my work should tell you I typically eat multiple times in a restaurant before I tell you about it. Several visits not only let me explore the range of a menu, they also place me in different parts of a dining room, put me in the hands of different servers and find me next to a spectrum of fellow customers. Imagine, for instance, if I only went once and the chef were off, the signature dish wasn9t available, the server was working a double or I landed next to an attention-hogging social influencer. Different meals reveal a restaurant9s strengths and weaknesses, its rhythms and priorities. That explanation isn9t entirely complete. I9ll share a little secret. In the case of the new Padaek in Arlington, I couldn9t wait for seconds and thirds of the chopped chicken salad called larb, a staple of Thai and Laotian menus that sometimes stars ground meat or tofu and invariably gets its charge from lime juice, red chiles and lemongrass. The balancing act is a good test of a kitchen, one that this spinoff of the same-named attraction in Falls Church passes with flying Technicolors. The larb is a toss of juicy chicken, toasted rice powder, the fermented fish sauce that gives Padaek its name and chef Seng Luangrath9s favorite herb, lemongrass. Galangal 4 reminiscent of fresh ginger when young and more peppery as it ages 4 lends its spark to the salad as well. This is food that puts your taste buds at full attention. (<Alive!= I texted a note to myself the first time I ate it.) Pretty much anyone can sample the pleasure, since the salad, like a swath of dishes here, is also offered gluten-free and/or vegan. The larb is accompanied by a Padaek dishes up a second helping in Arlington The popular Thai-Laotian restaurant9s new location provides even more chances for savory favorites Chef-owner Seng Luangrath can be found in the kitchen at Padaek in Arlington most days. The original Padaek is in Falls Church, and Luangrath is also behind Thip Khao in the District. She has plans for more ventures, too. Padaek 2931 S. Glebe Road, Arlington. 703-888- 2890. padaekdc.com. Open noon to 3 p.m. and 4 to 8:30 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and noon to 3 p.m. and 4 to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Prices: appetizers $7 to $15, main courses $15 to $23. Sound check: 73 decibels/ Must speak with raised voice. Accessibility: No barriers to entrance; ADA-compliant restrooms.
MAddy AlEWinE for THE WAsHingTon PosT KLMNO S Tr unday, no av vember 19, 2023 . S el ection F EZ EE Flying How to keep from being a red-eye nightmare. F2 CrUising What to know about falling ill on a ship. F5 peTs Tips to ready yourself and your dog for the airport. F5 The Upgrade The best week for cheap flights abroad is here. F6 Dolly Parton9s ballad to childhood The star has opened the HeartSong resort, an ode to her Tennessee past | F3
F2 EZ EE the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 BY CHRIS DONG Hearing someone say they love a red-eye flight is like hearing someone say they love the middle seat: It just doesn9t happen. Sleeping upright, with little legroom, within inches from a stranger9s face is hardly ideal. But while fliers may loathe these overnight sleepovers in the sky, redeyes are an opportunity for travelers to maximize time on the ground. It may come as a surprise then that throughout its 56-year history, Southwest has never operated them. That9s right: The slightly offbeat, all-economy Dallasbased airline doesn9t fly passengers overnight. It9s one of the few major U.S. carriers without a single red-eye option. But a recent comment from Southwest chief executive Bob Jordan on the <evolution= of its business hints that9s set to change. Red-eyes, at least in the United States, constitute west-to-east routes that depart from an origin at night and arrive at a destination in the morning. While Southwest mainly flies domestically, the carrier does offer flights to the Caribbean, Mexico and Central America. Historically, Southwest didn9t offer red-eyes because of technology constraints in its reservation system. In 2017, the airline completed its move to Amadeus, an aviation IT provider behind many of the world9s most popular carriers. The option for red-eyes suddenly opened up. <Before that shift, Sabre [the previous software] didn9t have the capacity to allow Southwest to book red-eye flights,= said Benét J. Wilson, a former aviation journalist and a frequent Southwest Airlines flier. More than six years later, Southwest finally made some moves. In July, Southwest began to sell itineraries that involved an overnight layover 4 connections during the hours of midnight to 5 a.m. local time 4 at six airports nationwide. Those airports included Baltimore, Denver, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Chicago Midway and Oakland, Calif. These weren9t new Southwest flights being added; rather, they were existing flight options that Southwest made available for travelers on its website. For instance, a passenger looking to go from Los Angeles to Baltimore could now be given the option to have an overnight layover in Denver or at Chicago Midway. Before July, this routing wouldn9t even appear in the search results (for better or worse). The next step? Red-eye flights. <It9s a logical evolution for us,= Jordan told the Dallas Morning News in a recent interview. <We have the aircraft; it9s a great way to use an asset that you already have and use it more productively, which means more hours in the day. So, we will be doing red-eyes.= Edward Russell, an aviation analyst and reporter for Skift, believes Hawaii and transcontinental routes should be the first red-eye options from Southwest. <Both markets are long enough to make red-eyes a logical addition to increase aircraft utilization 4 a low-cost way to grow since it uses aircraft an airline already has by flying them more often.= Southwest said in a statement to The Washington Post that redeye flying will be deployed <to offer customers additional service from places they9ve requested,= but a time frame wasn9t given. Contractual agreements with pilots are one logistical hurdle, experts say. Therefore, it could still be years away. <It won9t be an insignificant amount of flights, but against our schedule of more than 4,000 flights a day, we9re talking about a handful of origination points, primarily leisure markets, and with the structure of our network and our size in the western third of the United States, they likely will be in the west, along with some potential international flying,= the company said. Chris Dong is a freelance travel writer and credit card points expert based in Los Angeles. you can follow him on Instagram: @thechrisflyer. Southwest doesn9t do red-eyes 4 but that may be changing WASHINGTON POST ILLUSTRATION; ISTOCK BY ANDREA SACHS On overnight flights, Lee Abbamonte shows up ready for bed. He wears a brimmed hat to shield his eyes from the lights and noisecancellation headphones to drown out snoring adults and crying babies. But on a red-eye from Dubai to New York, he was not prepared for the 10-toed monster that intruded on his sleep. <He was wearing sandals with no socks. He took them off and laid down like he owned the plane,= Abbamonte, a travel expert, said of the ill-mannered passenger in his row. <His feet were like two inches from me. It was absolutely disgusting.= Overnight flights are basically giant sleepover parties with strangers, where intimate and sometimes embarrassing behaviors are on public display. To survive the night, passengers need to mind their P9s and Z9s in the close sleeping quarters. We spoke with travel veterans and etiquette professionals about how to behave like a dream passenger and handle a nightmarish one. Rule 1: Don9t act like this is your living room couch If you are fortunate enough to score an open row, don9t immediately set up camp. For safety reasons, sit upright during takeoff and landing. Once the plane reaches cruising altitude, you can stretch out, assuming you are not encroaching on another passenger9s personal space. <After the plane takes off, give it a second, and if nobody moves over, then do it,= Abbamonte said. <Otherwise, it9s just kind of obnoxious.= Whether you curl up in a ball or lie flat, keep your seat belt buckled and your feet off the furniture. <Do not put your feet up on the seat in front of you. Don9t put it on the armrest in front of you. Don9t prop your feet up on the bulkhead,= said Abbie Unger, a former flight attendant and the founder of the Flight Attendant Career Connection, which advises aspiring crew members. <Don9t put your feet on anything.= Relatedly, if you notice a vacant section during the boarding process, don9t rush over and claim it for yourself. Once everyone is seated, ask the flight attendant whether you can relocate. Brittney, a flight attendant with a major airline who, for professional reasons, spoke on the condition that only her first name be used, reminds passengers to never occupy the empty back rows without permission. She said some carriers block off those seats for flight attendants who can9t reach their jump seats during a patch of turbulence. Crew members may also move an ill passenger to the aft row so they can have a modicum of privacy and space. Rule 2: Dim the lights and lower the volume For most of us, the ideal sleeping environment is dark and quiet. Take your cue from the flight attendants. When they extinguish the cabin lights, lower your light source as well. Close the window shade and, if you9re watching a movie, dim the brightness level on your laptop or seatback entertainment center. The overhead seat light is built like a spotlight, its beam illuminating your tiny stage. If you are surrounded by empty seats, don9t switch on all the lights and turn your row into a floodlit concert arena. If you need additional glow, bring a clip-on reading light. Conversely, if you are sensitive to light, pack an eye mask. Airlines require passengers to wear headphones when listening to audio. However, sometimes sound leaks into the wider world. To avoid irritating your neighbors, keep the volume down or invest in quality gear. If listening to music helps you fall asleep, Unger favors earmuffstyle headphones instead of ear buds, which can pop out while you9re dozing. You don9t want to have to wake your neighbors to ask whether they can check for your wireless earpiece. Rule 3: No pajamas and absolutely no bare feet Pajamas are only appropriate for passengers who still think Ariel is a real mermaid. The rest of us should dress in loose and casual clothing such as leggings, roomy tops, sweatshirts or any attire categorized as loungewear or athleisure. <It should look like you9re wearing outside clothes, not inside clothes,= Unger said. Jamie Gibson, founder of Flightess, an online community for corporate flight attendants, prefers joggers. Because of the elastic ankle cuff, she avoids dragging the pant hem on the lavatory floor and transporting the flotsam back to her seat. For equally pragmatic reasons, Unger recommends a hoodie to block out external stimulus. Abbamonte champions hats as sleepwear. There is no debate on bare feet. It9s a hard no. Diane Gottsman, owner of the Protocol School of Texas, is also against removing your shoes, because of the risk of foot odor seeping through the sock material. Other experts are more tolerant of shoe removal as long as the socks stay on. Compression socks check two boxes: They hide your bunions and reduce leg swelling. (Consult with a physician about maximum wear time.) Gibson pulls from her stockpile of complimentary hotel slippers. <They9re easy to slip on and slip off,= she said, <and I can throw them away at the end of the flight.= Rule 4: No stinky midnight snacks If you bring your own stash of food, the protocols that apply to daytime meals also include afterhours snacks. Don9t nosh on any smelly fare, such as sardines or tuna fish, sandwiches or salads with allium or cruciferous vegetables, fermented products such as sauerkraut, or hard-boiled eggs. <You may really be enjoying your fried pickle sandwich, but that doesn9t mean everyone else is going to enjoy the aroma,= Gibson said. Rule 5: Don9t hog the lavatory for your nightly routine Most travelers don9t want to spend more time than necessary in germy airplane lavatories, but many of us can9t sleep with an unwashed face and unbrushed teeth. Unger performs her bedtime rituals in the airport restroom. Before boarding, she will clean her face with a disposable compressed washcloth (another option: a washcloth and a resealable plastic bag), brush her teeth and moisturize with unscented lotion, out of respect for passengers who may be sensitive to fragrances. Before settling in, make sure your toiletries are within easy reach. You don9t want to disturb your row-mates by opening the overhead compartment and rummaging through your carry-on for your essentials. If you don9t mind using the aircraft9s lavatory, bring a bottle of water for wetting your toothbrush and swishing. Tote your toiletries in a hanging bag or place your dopp kit on paper towels to avoid direct contact with the console. To limit your sink water usage, stock up on makeup wipes and pre-pasted waterless toothbrushes. Once you are finished, clean up any puddles or toothpaste globs. Come morning, you can freshen up before disembarking, but be quick. Bathroom rush hour often falls between breakfast service and landing. <You9re not taking 40 minutes in that restroom. You9re taking a few minutes to wash your hands and splash water on your face,= Gottsman said. <Don9t use this as an opportunity to bathe.= Rule 6: Handle your snoring seatmate tactfully Sleeping in a vertical position, a familiar arrangement for passengers in coach, is often a treatment for snoring, according to Christopher Winter, a sleep specialist and neurologist. Even so, you may still hear a symphony of snorts and nasal whistles. In these instances, tune out the cacophony with noise-cancellation headphones or earplugs. If that does not work, Unger suggests making slight movements, such as unbuckling your seat belt or folding your tray table, in the hope that the snoring passenger will stir awake and switch positions. If this strategy fails, discreetly flag down the flight attendant and ask for assistance or a new seat. If you need to use the bathroom and the person in the aisle seat is deep in dreamland, kindly ask to exit. Do not climb over them or poke them, which is neither polite nor safe. And don9t feel bad for rousing them: As the gatekeeper to the lavatory, it9s their responsibility to let you out. Rule 7: No talking or playing with the window shade If you notice people pacing, be sensitive to their plight: They might suffer from restless leg syndrome. But if you can help it, avoid strolling the aisles while people are trying to sleep. If you need to stretch during a long flight, go in the back galley area and march in place or perform sun salutations. Abstain from talking when the rest of the plane is sleeping, and don9t continually lift your window shade to check the position of the sun in the sky. You can open both your mouth and the shade once the flight attendants emerge from the dark with coffee and breakfast. 7 rules to help you be a dream passenger on your next overnight ûight ILLUSTRATION By ALLISON VU FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ð Get our newsletter every Thursday: washingtonpost.com/ newsletters/by-the-way ý Read us online: washingtonpost.com/travel ð Follow us on Instagram: @bytheway To respond to one of our articles: Email [email protected], call 202-334- 7750 or write: Washington Post Travel section, 1301 K St. NW Washington, D.C. 20071. editor: Amanda Finnegan Deputy editor: Gabe Hiatt art directors: Stephanie Hays, Katty Huertas, Allison Taliaferro Photo editor: Lauren Bulbin Staff writers: Natalie B. Compton, Heidi Pérez-Moreno, Andrea Sachs, Hannah Sampson Copy editors: Rachael Bolek, Jamie Zega editorial aide: Olivia McCormack Travel advertising: Ron Ulrich, 202-334-5289, [email protected] Travel
sunday, november 19, 2023 . the washington post eZ ee F3 <I am proud to be a Tennessee girl, and certainly an East Tennessee girl, and be part of the Smoky Mountains.= Dolly Parton BY ANDREA SACHS IN PIGEON FORGE, TENN. D olly Parton took her rightful place before a giant stone fireplace at the new Heartsong Lodge and Resort. Orange flames flickered inches from her skyscraper heels. An iron screen prevented rogue sparks from alighting on her braided blond locks. After greeting her fans gathered 9round the fire 4 <Oh, look at the two girls in their coat of many colors. I love that. I met you two yesterday, didn9t I?= 4 she ran down her recent projects for those who had lost track. There was her first rock album, a book about her illustrious wardrobe and the new resort that she was christening in true Dolly style: with self-deprecating humor and a heartfelt song. <People are calling me a hotelier now,= she said, laughing at the notion. Drawing a parallel to her <steel Magnolias= character who owned a pair of beauty shops, she added, <Now that I have two hotels, I9m a chain!= On Nov. 3, Parton officially opened her second resort in the Dollywood sphere, the theme park complex co-owned by the star. Her first, DreamMore Resort and spa, is a loud anthem to the queen of Nashville. Heartsong, by comparison, is a tender ballad to her childhood stomping grounds in Tennessee9s smoky Mountains. <I am proud to be a Tennessee girl, and certainly an East Tennessee girl, and be part of the smoky Mountains,= she said. To hammer home this sentiment, she slipped a guitar over her head and sang the resort9s namesake song, slightly altering the nearly 30-year-old lyrics for the occasion. <Heartsong. I just came to sing about my smoky Mountain lodge. Heartsong.= An ode to the Smoky Mountains Upon arrival at Heartsong, guests will typically notice the black bears gamboling behind the check-in counter before they discover the towering photo of Dolly by the fireplace, a testament to the dreamer in chief9s vision for her resort. <I wish our house had looked like this. This was the house I dreamed of,= Parton said during the opening, referring to the simple two-room cabin she grew up in. <I really love the idea of having the lodge here. It does make you feel like you are really in the mountains. I like having something that is a little rustic, but I would say this is high-fashion rustic.= Heartsong is made of heartier stock than the fairytale-like DreamMore. The 302-room property, which was sold out on opening weekend, evokes a mountain lodge. A video of smoky Mountain landscapes and wildlife streams behind the front desk, and nature photos turn the elevators into a scenic ride. In the atrium, monarch butterfly wings rendered in stained glass hover overhead. synchronized fireflies, which visit the national park every summer looking to hook up, appear on the hallway carpeting and the bathroom mirrors in the rooms. For $319 a night and up, guests can fall asleep to a symphony of crickets, rushing water, birdsong, bonfire and pelting rain on their room9s sound machine. Unlike Dolly9s breakneck musical career 4 <Rockstar= is the 77-year-old9s 49th solo album 4 Dollywood and its satellite sites have expanded at a slower pace. The theme park opened in 1986, replacing its predecessor, silver Dollar City, which was owned by Herschend Family Entertainment. The Atlanta-based company, which owns a variety of attractions around the country, stayed on as a partner. True to its name, Dollywood weaves the country singer9s personal journey and affections for her home state into the park9s mainstays: the rides, live performances and food. For instance, visitors can bounce between the Tennessee Tornado, the world9s first spiral-loop coaster; a reproduction of her childhood home, with decor by her mother, Avie Lee; and the Grist Mill, which sells hundreds of loaves of cinnamon bread a day. In July 2015, the company unveiled the 300-room DreamMore, which allowed fans to stretch their Dolly experience beyond the park9s operating hours. similar to Disney9s arrangement, guests receive perks for staying in the family, such as a free Timesaver pass and trolley ride to the park, which is about a mile away. Plans to announce the new Heartsong resort in March 2020 were derailed by the coronavirus. However, construction stayed on schedule after the groundbreaking in fall 2021. Two years later, Dolly was singing her heart out before the roaring fire. Though Heartsong9s overarching theme is the smokies, visitors can still find a few shrines to Dolly. The photo of the singersongwriter strumming her guitar is on giant Buddha scale and commands a similar level of reverence. The Acoustic Lobby, a public hangout spot when it9s not reserved for private dinner parties, contains several of her instruments and handwritten songs as well as the outfit she wore at a Heartsong event in June 2022. At the Honeysuckle & Pine storied Goods Mercantile, her face gazes out from T-shirts, sweatshirts, perfume boxes, mugs and magnets. <This is her down-home place,= said Peggy Montgomery, a retired teacher who drove 10 hours straight from Alabama for the opening. <I am going to add this to my Dolly universe.= On the lookout for Dolly Dolly shows up for milestone moments at Dollywood, a tradition that fans will use for their vacation-planning purposes. she attended the launch of the Big Bear Mountain roller coaster in May and the season opening of Dollywood in March 2022 and 923. Earlier this month, their antennae picked up strong signals that she would be in Pigeon Forge for Heartsong and the kickoff of the smoky Mountain Christmas, one of Dollywood9s most wonderful times of the year. <It9s made us become the best Christmas place in the world:= Parton said 52 days before the holiday. All facets of Dolly 4 her park, her music, her love of Christmas 4 draw people to the state, which set a record last year with 141 million visitors spending $29 billion. Dollywood has a direct economic impact of $1.8 billion each year, according to a 2021 Tennessee Economic Impact study. <We have people coming to Nashville and to East Tennessee to find out more about Dolly,= said Mark Ezell, the commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Tourist Development. <We love the visitor spending, but we also love that those people are being changed by someone of deep character.= A few hours after Dolly9s morning appearance by the roaring fire at Heartsong, a group formed outside the Acoustic Lobby. The fans kept one eye on a roped-off hallway lined with Christmas trees and the other on their intel: updates in Facebook fan clubs and group texts. They remained at their post even when the resort staff wheeled out a cart of free wassail. <We heard that Dolly was going to be here this afternoon. Do you know anything?= Kristi Casey, a diamond season pass holder from Tennessee, asked a bystander. Visitors from Germany and the United Kingdom drew closer for the answer. The barely-in-the-know guest delivered the regrettable news that they had missed Dolly. However, they might glimpse her as she walked to her waiting vehicle, a scooby-Doo-looking van with her signature on the side. <Usually if you find the crowd of security guards, you can find her,= said Casey, a first responder during the 9/11 terrorist attacks in New York City who described Dollywood as her family9s sanctuary. A wave of excitement started to swell when several people spotted a woman in a black grommet jacket and a curtain of blond hair inside the Acoustic Lobby. <It9s Lainey Wilson!= someone exclaimed before a burly man eclipsed their view of the singer who, a few days later, would win big at the Country Music Association Awards. At a long table near songbird Market, Aspen Jones was bent over a <Dolly Parton9s Dixie stampede= coloring book, weighing crayon choices for the horse9s saddle. Earlier in the day, the 5-year-old Knoxville resident had met Dolly when the fashion maven noticed her outerwear 4 a sEE DOLLYWOOD ON F4 Inside Dolly Parton9s new 8high-fashion rustic9 resort PhoTos by MAddy AleWine for The WAshingTon PosT Hotel guests and Dolly Parton fans wait in the lobby of Parton9s newest hotel, HeartSong Lodge and Resort, for a chance to see the star during the Nov. 3 opening ceremony. Various stickers are available at a gift shop in Dollywood, the theme park complex in Tennessee that9s co-owned by Parton. Enjoy the splendor of the holiday season at Gaylord National. Immerse yourself in ICE! featuring Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer#, a winter wonderland of delightful fun the whole family will love. Discover larger-than-life ice sculptures, thrilling frozen slides, and awe-inspiring tunnels to explore. Tickets and packages are on sale now. Book a room night or package and receive exclusive benefits for overnight guests. Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and all related elements © & # under license to Character Arts, LLC. All rights reserved. NOW - DEC. 31 ChristmasAtGaylordNational.com A GAYLORD HOTELS ORIGINAL EXPERIENCE
F4 eZ ee the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 coat of many colors inspired by the 1971 album 4 and mouthed, <I love your coat.= The stylish pair posed for a photo that was captured by a paparazzo who answered to <mommy.= Just after 5 p.m., Aspen9s mom, Hanna, rounded up her daughter and 3-year-old son and led them outside. A crowd was assembling on the sidewalk, a strong indicator that a Dolly sighting could be imminent. Aspen9s view was blocked by a forest of legs, but Casey was front and center when Dolly walked by her, waving and smiling as she gripped the arm of her security guy. Christmas comes early to Dollywood on the first morning of the Smoky mountain Christmas, the line for the trolley stretched from HeartSong9s side door to the elevators. on the short ride to the amusement park, the driver amped up the passengers like a warm-up act for a headlining artist. <Can you see the Wild Eagle?= she asked, pointing at a roller coaster rising in the distance. <I recommend sitting in the front seats. I call them the Jesus seats. There9s nothing between you and the sky.= once inside Dollywood, fans learned that, despite earlier reports, Dolly would not ride through the park in a vintage car. As a consolation prize, they could see a niece and cousin perform in <Heart of the Holidays= at Dreamsong Theater, near the construction site for the Dolly Parton DOLLYWOOD from F3 Experience, an interactive attraction scheduled to debut in may. (A fair assumption that Dolly will attend.) <We always hope to see Dolly,= said Aubrie Holcomb of Asheville, N.C., who was celebrating her recent elopement with a group of girlfriends. <Dolly gives good vibes,= added her wife, maggie Holcomb, who was wearing heart-shaped sunglasses and a <Wife of the Party= sash. The beaming Tennessee sun muted the 6 million lights hung for the holidays, but as evening encroached, the park cranked up its wattage. Trees sparkled as if they had been dusted with a fine coat of sequins. Polar bear sculptures floated on ice floes. Giant snowflakes twinkled like crystallized stars. At the Wonderful Christmas at Wilderness Plaza, an LED light show projected on a 50-foot-tall artificial tree followed the adventures of cousin bears 4 one black, the other polar 4 who must overcome obstacles to spend the holidays together. The spectacle ended with a flurry of fake snow that sent Jordan Smith, a 20-yearold from North Carolina, into the blizzard, spinning under the white flakes. The 10 hours of holiday cheer closed with a drone show. The flying objects took formation as jingle bells, a Christmas tree, a dove and a globe wrapped in a red bow. Dolly9s disembodied voice wished everyone a happy holiday as the drones9 parting message, <merry Christmas, Love, Dolly,= burned bright before vanishing into the Smoky night. HeartSong: A new Dollywood resort that9s imbued with a sense of home PhoTos by MAddy AleWine for The WAshingTon PosT Jordan Smith from North Carolina twirls through the falling fake snow during a show in Dollywood on Nov. 4, the first day of Dollywood9s Smoky Mountain Christmas event. CLOCKWISE FROM MIDDLE: Patrons mill about for the kickoff of Dollywood9s Smoky Mountain Christmas. A 10-year-old displays on-theme earrings. Friends from Alabama don matching sweaters. <I really love the idea of having the lodge here. It does make you feel like you are really in the mountains. I like having something that is a little rustic, but I would say this is high-fashion rustic.= Dolly Parton
sunday, november 19, 2023 . the washington post eZ ee F5 BY HEIDI PÉREZ-MORENO Cruise ships are universes of their own, with restaurants, casinos, waterslides and race tracks. Packing thousands of passengers into confined spaces, sometimes for weeks or even months, can heighten the risk of spreading contagious diseases. Although most major cruise lines have cleaning standards, catching something on a ship isn9t far-fetched, according to Joe Scott, senior director of fleet medical operations for Carnival Corp. A ship is usually most concerned about the diseases that can spread in these close-contact environments, such as gastroenteritis, influenza and the coronavirus. Norovirus outbreaks have risen as people have returned to cruise ships after a pandemic hiatus; the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has reported at least 13 outbreaks on cruise ships this year. <On cruise ships, probably the biggest thing we worry about is communicable disease,= Scott said. <How do we keep our crew members, our guests and the residents of the countries that we visit, how do we keep them all healthy and safe?= Major cruise lines follow health and sanitation standards to keep passengers safe on board, including regular cleaning throughout cabins, restaurants, snack areas, pools and elevators. Ships are also subject to at least two unannounced annual inspections in partnership with the CDC and three or more formal public health reviews, according to the Cruise Lines International Association. Passengers should prepare for the possibility that they may get sick on their voyage, such as by purchasing travel insurance that covers medical costs, visiting a doctor beforehand to assess medical risks or packing extra medication. As major cruise lines prepare for peak booking season, here9s what to expect if you find yourself sick on a ship. What medical services do cruise ships offer? This depends on several factors, including the ship9s size and operating line. But generally, a cruise ship9s capabilities are similar to those of an urgent care center. Passengers can usually walk in or make an appointment for routine reasons, including a fever, sore throat, cold symptoms, abdominal pain, vomiting or diarrhea. These medical centers can also be accessed for emergencies or to stabilize travelers in need of serious treatment, such as those experiencing chest pains, difficulty breathing or uncontrolled blood sugar. <If you feel you9re having an emergency that would prompt you to go to the emergency room or urgent care center if you were home on your daily routine, that would be a reason to visit the ship9s infirmary,= said Jim Evans, senior medical consultant at Allianz Travel Insurance. Cruise medical centers on ships will typically at least have a bed for every 1,000 passengers, and larger ships could have anywhere from five to six beds, Scott said. There is also at least one doctor on board, and some can have three or more. They usually work with two to seven nurses, as well as paramedics and health-care assistants. A ship9s medical center will also determine whether a passenger needs to be quarantined or isolated for highly contagious illnesses. Staff might also want to disembark the patient for serious conditions so they can access additional testing and treatment. Do cruise ships have pharmacies? Many cruise ships carry basic medications. You probably won9t face issues finding Tylenol, aspirins or medications for minor conditions, including sea sickness, fever or even hangovers. If those options are limited, most ports of call should have pharmacies. If the onboard medical professional prescribes you a medication, you9ll be able to obtain that up on the ship. Will health insurance cover care on a cruise? There9s a good chance your average medical insurance policies won9t cover services on cruises or overseas, Evans said. On Carnival, Scott says passengers are responsible for costs of onboard medical services and can submit bills to their insurance company. Because most insurance plans don9t cover services abroad, many travel experts suggest purchasing travel insurance for a trip. Not doing so can put you at risk of paying expensive, out-of-pocket costs for receiving services at a hospital, taking a flight home or using an air ambulance. Traveling back to the United States if you have to depart early could be costly. Evans recalled a case where a passenger paid nearly $20,000 after receiving treatment on a ship, having to be disembarked and eventually flown home because the patient didn9t have proper insurance. What happens if you get sick at a port of call? Evans recommended checking with your travel insurance provider to find out what medical resources can be found at your local port, where they can also help with billing or issuing payments. Remember that it is unlikely that your ship will wait for you while you9re being treated on land. When do you need to be evacuated from the ship? Infirmaries usually don9t have access to medical specialists, invasive testing methods, surgeons and long-term care. So, in some cases, a ship might disembark a passenger if they need treatment from a hospital or medical center at a port. Depending on severity, a ship9s medical staff will determine whether an evacuation should take place from a port of call, which is an easier process than having to be disembarked while at sea, especially in remote areas. There9s a high threshold for disembarking passengers, because it9s expensive and logistically challenging for ships to coordinate. How are cruises handling covid? When cruises returned to sailing in June 2021 after a pandemic hiatus, many lines had testing, vaccine and masking requirements in place, but those have since been dropped. Passengers should notify the ship9s clinic if they have coronavirus symptoms or have tested positive with an at-home test. Medical staff can work to isolate affected passengers and can monitor the extent of the spread. Passengers should call the clinic from their staterooms before walking there to avoid contaminating others. Sick at sea: What to know about falling ill while on a cruise ship WaSHIngTon PoST IlluSTraTIon; ISTocK BY ANDREA SACHS Dog ownership and air passenger numbers are in the megamillions. When the two groups converge, airports can start to resemble dog shows, with canines prancing through the terminals as if they were at Madison Square Garden and not JFK Airport. The airline industry9s rules for traveling with a dog in the cabin are crystal clear: The animal must remain in its zipped carrier at all times or passengers could face the consequences. Last month, Southwest removed a traveler and her puppy for allegedly not complying. The protocols in airports are fuzzier. Each facility sets its own policies, which may not be prominently posted or rigorously upheld. <I would say that you9re supposed to keep the animal in a carrier when you9re inside the airport, but some airports are more lax about it,= said Brandi H. Munden, a spokeswoman for the American Kennel Club. <But then again, you have to keep in mind the rules of the airport. You do run the risk of somebody coming up to you and saying, 8Hey, that9s not okay.9= Travelers with pets have a greater responsibility than passengers who are only tethered to their rolling bags. Owners need to make sure that their animal is safe while being respectful of the people and other animals using the airport. <We know that it9s your best friend and you want them everywhere with you, but be courteous,= Munden said. We spoke with pet travel experts on how to be a good dog owner when transiting through airports with your four-legged companion. Before you go, acclimate your pet To avoid a meltdown at the airport 4 whining, simpering, clawing 4 owners should acclimatize their pet to its carrier weeks before departure day. Stephanie Borns-Weil, an assistant clinical professor at the Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University, said to slowly work up to your total flight time, so your dog knows what, say, three hours in a carrier feels like. For advanced prep, expose your pup to the case in motion. <I gradually increase the challenge and put the carrier in a moving object like a car,= she said. <So by the time they get to the airport, they9re already comfortable in their carrier.= Whether you zip up your pet in the car or upon arrival at the airport depends on your pet9s temperament. Timid or anxious dogs might find the commotion at the departures entrance overwhelming and attempt to flee. If you park in a lot, make sure to enclose your pet for the shuttle ride, for its safety and the comfort of other passengers. Leash or carrier? Know the rules. At the airport, check the website or ask at the information desk about whether your dog needs to be in its carrier at all times, minus bathroom breaks. On its website, Memphis International Airport clearly states that non-service animals must be confined in their carrier inside the facility. At Los Angeles International Airport, pets can stay out of their carriers as long as they are leashed. The three major airports run by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (Newark, LaGuardia and JFK) allow leashed dogs outside, but request travelers enclose them once they step indoors. <It9s okay to have them out of the carrier outside of the building, but once you go inside the building, it9s much better to have them inside of the carrier, mostly because it makes it easier to get through the TSA security screening checkpoint process,= said Sarah McKeon, general manager of New Jersey airports. Munden errs on the side of caution. She keeps her dog, Bruno, a West Highland white terrier, in his enclosure to protect him from the roller derby of luggage wheels, the cacophony of noises, the oblivious walkers who might not notice a tiny dog at their feet and the eager hands that pet without permission. If you plan to visit an airport lounge, keep your dog in its carrier. At Capitol One lounges, for instance, pets must stay with their owners in their sealed totes for the safety and comfort of the staff and guests. The same policy applies at the American Airlines lounge at Reagan National Airport. Unlike their human counterparts, the lounges do not lay out treats or beds for canines. You9ll need to fly private for those perks. Watch out for overstimulation <While your dog may be great with you and your family, the airport might be too much stimulation for them,= Munden said. <They may not be great with random people wanting to walk up and pet them. There may be kids that don9t necessarily know how to pet a dog.= If you keep your dog out, hold them close to your side and keep an eye on body language. BornsWeil said a low tail, retracted ears and a lot of white around the eyes could signify stress. A raised tail, relaxed shoulders and open face and mouth mean your pup is enjoying the airport jaunt. If you need to go up or down a level, use the stairs or elevator but never the escalator, which could endanger your dog. If there are other people in the elevator, consider placing your dog in the carrier and ask the other riders whether they are comfortable sharing space with a pooch. Finally, be careful about your pet interacting with other dogs or travelers. You don9t want to spark a conflict with either species. Don9t send your pet through the X-ray machine In the security line, avoid any lanes with drug- or bomb-sniffing working dogs. After the Transportation Security Administration officer checks your ID, remove your pet from its carrier and send the empty bag through the X-ray machine. Walk, with a leash, or carry your pup through the body scanner, depending on how the officers direct you. They may require an additional patdown because of hardware on the leash or harness. Never send your dog through the dark tunnel of radiation, a message that needs repeating, because TSA officers have seen animal scans on their screens. Also, remember to dump your dog9s water bottle. Dog relief areas should be all business Since 2009, the Transportation Department has required airports to provide pet relief areas for service animals. In 2016, the agency added another provision: Airports that serve 10,000 passengers or more a year must offer these sites after security checkpoints so owners don9t have to dash outside for a potty break before boarding. Because of these laws, most major airports have dog relief areas outside and in several terminals. Seattle-Tacoma International Airport has 10 evenly divided between inside and out. JFK Airport is close behind with nine, in addition to its 4,000- square-foot Wooftop, an outdoor garden patio with views. When Mary-Alice Pomputius traveled with Chloe, her cavalier King Charles spaniel, she would review airport dog relief areas for her blog, Dog Jaunt. She described one spot at Sea-Tac as <a zone of despair= in a phone interview and <seriously grim= online. (The airport has expanded its offerings since her 2009 critique.) At a minimum, relief stations are stocked with poop bags and a waste receptacle. Some airports try to set the mood with a toy red hydrant and wall art that creates the illusion of being outside. <Some of ours are made to look like they9re in an outdoor setting or a park, so the passenger and the animal feel more comfortable,= McKeon said. To avoid interrupting, wait outside until the last user has exited. And don9t encourage play; this is not the time for your pup to roll around in artificial grass. <You want to get your job done and get out, because people are in a hurry,= Pomputius said. Pet relief stations are usually outfitted with a hose and drain, a self-washing mechanism 4 or both. Memphis International Airport has self-washing silver hydrants. A canine restroom at Chicago Midway boasts an automatic flushing system for liquid waste, a mounted shower head with a hose for manual cleaning and a sink. The airport staff will rinse the area as well. McKeon said the outdoor pet relief stations at Newark are washed down on a regular basis, especially when there has been little rain. Airport staff will sanitize the indoor spaces at least once per shift. Even with the frequent cleaning, passengers must be responsible and scoop. <Clean it up and be courteous to the people that will use it after you,= Munden said. Obviously, the same rule applies if your dog has an accident of any kind elsewhere in the airport. <I9ve seen somebody let their dog throw up on the carpet by the gate and not clean it up,= Munden said. In addition, clean your pup with a doggy wipe, so your dog feels better and your seatmate won9t grouse about the stinky puppy smell wafting from the bag by your feet. Who9s a good boy? Hopefully, you and your dog at the airport. IlluSTraTIon by KaTTy HuerTaS/THe WaSHIngTon PoST
F6 eZ ee the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 BY SOFIA ANDRADE You9re sitting on an airplane, and before you pick a movie 4 or maybe despite having done so already 4 you start watching someone else9s screen. Though you can9t explain why you9d rather watch a faraway show on a too-small screen without any audio, you can9t look away. Maybe it9s easier to leech off someone else9s movie selection than to make a choice of your own. Maybe it9s the risk of being caught, the allure of spying on a private moment. In-flight movies are just better on a stranger9s screen. Why we spy The appeal of peeking at another person9s in-flight entertainment is well-documented online. On X, formerly Twitter, a user confesses: <i cannot focus on a movie on an airplane unless it is on someone else9s screen and i am also watching a movie and listening to music and reading a book.= Another writes that <the voyeurism of watching a movie on someone else9s screen just adds to the experience.= These sneaky viewings are more common now than they were a few decades ago, when seat-back, personal screens first started to take hold in the airplane industry. But <shoulder surfing= is nothing new. The term refers to the act of spying on someone else9s phone or laptop screen, ATM or other electronic device behind their back 4 a practice that9s more common than one might think. Mohamed Khamis, an associate professor in computer science at the University of Glasgow, studies the privacy and security implications of technology. He says that shoulder surfing is so popular in part because it doesn9t require any special skills, unlike hacking into accounts or tapping phone calls. The behavior also carries little risk of getting caught. While researching people9s ability to recognize when they are being shoulder-surfed, he found that it often goes unnoticed; people underestimated the amount of times others were spying on their screen. The impulse to shoulder-surf, he added, can be simply explained by boredom and curiosity. It9s why he has looked over at other passengers9 screens while on a flight. <This is something that9s been around for a long time,= he said. <Even when people were reading books and newspapers and stuff, people would also look at each other9s content.= Habiba Farzand, a PhD student on Khamis9s team, said while shoulder surfing can happen anywhere, it9s most common on public transport. This often means trains and buses, but it can apply to airplanes as well. <And sometimes, the device is right in the line of sight,= she said. On an airplane, it can be hard for travelers to avoid looking at the screens in front of them, even if unintentionally. In their research, Khamis and Farzand have found that the risk of shoulder surfing can affect people9s behavior when using screen technology in public. This can mean dimming a screen, tilting devices away from potential prying eyes or turning screens off altogether. On airplanes, where privacy is difficult to come by, these response behaviors can take on different forms. In a popular post last year, one generous Reddit user revealed that they make sure to turn on closed captioning on any inflight movie they watch, <in case someone else is watching my screen.= What are the best movies to watch on a plane? On Reddit, a perennial hotbed of internet discourse, a user who was <currently watching someone four rows up watch Spiderman Far From Home= asked others about the best movies they9ve seen for the first time on someone else9s in-flight entertainment screen. Responses included Hugh Jackman9s <The Greatest Showman,= <Bohemian Rhapsody= and <the entire Harry Potter franchise without trying.= When you9re stuck on a plane, you may adopt different standards for the type of movie you want to watch. <Picking a movie on a plane is hard because you don9t want to watch something very bad (obviously) or very good (too good for a plane!),= declared <Jeopardy!= host Ken Jennings in a tweet this spring. Good genres for plane watching, he continued, included romcoms, <regular athlete,= <Quiet British person & does something eccentric= and <Michael Clayton for the 1,000th time.= Missing from Jennings9s highly specific list: slasher movies and overtly steamy flicks. Both genres are ripe for producing uncomfortable experiences, should the viewer become aware of the many other eyes watching their screen. Considering the possibility of prying eyes is an individual choice, but it9s courteous to steer clear of content you wouldn9t want other passengers 4 especially children 4 to see. But in rare cases, the choice is made for you. For passengers on a recent United flight, a technical mishap forced passengers to watch Will Ferrell9s 2004 comedy <Anchorman,= according to a Reddit post. A picture from the flight shows rows of Ron Burgundy. Why do we love to watch other people9s in-ûight movies? illuSTrATiOn by AMAndA COTAn fOr THe WASHinGTOn POST BY SCOTT KEYES To submit a travel hack to The Upgrade, visit wapo.st/upgrade. If there9s one week you can reliably get cheap flights, it9s Thanksgiving. Surprised? You9re not alone. Few people think of Thanksgiving as a cheap time to travel. For domestic flights, they9re right. With so many people traveling simultaneously to be back with family, it9s one of the most expensive weeks all year for intra-U.S. airfare. But all those people traveling domestically are, by definition, not traveling internationally. And while late November is high season in the United States, overseas it9s very much low season. Thanksgiving is not a holiday in France. Nor is it a holiday in Spain, Italy or other European favorites. I9ve checked. So with airfares inflated domestically and slumped overseas, it9s no overstatement to say that Thanksgiving is the hidden best week of the entire year for international travel. For many routes, transatlantic flights cost the same as or less than domestic flights. Take a recent search of Thanksgivingweek round-trip flights from New York City: Peoria, Ill., for $516 or Paris for $438. Or from Seattle: Raleigh, N.C., for $621 vs. Rome for $536. A similar story out of Miami: Boise, Idaho, for $454 or Barcelona for $473. Nothing against Peoria or Raleigh or Boise, but ask yourself which trip would be more memorable: one more expensive Thanksgiving trip home like all the previous years or a week exploring Europe? If the family will miss you, let them in on the secret and invite them along. After all, cheap international Thanksgiving flights aren9t just abundant in large Northeast cities; they can also be found out of medium and small cities around the country. Another factor that makes Thanksgiving week plum for overseas travel: aligned schedules. Kids are out of school that week (or at most have about two days of class). Same for adults at work: Few, if any, vacation days are needed. Whether you9re traveling with family or vacationing with friends, most people have free time Thanksgiving week. Finally, late November is a fun time to fly abroad. In the Caribbean, hurricane season has largely tailed off. In many parts of Europe, Christmas markets have already started popping up. In South America, summer9s just beginning. And unlike over Christmas or in the summer, in November you9ll have a fraction of the tourist crowds. Spending Thanksgiving in Europe has become something of a new tradition for my friend Andrew and his family. Last year, he scored nonstop flights to Dublin for $374 round-trip apiece. This year, he did even better: Dublin for $360 round-trip. <We had such a great time, we decided to do it again, and it9s now our new family tradition,= he told me. While <last-minute= and <cheap= rarely belong in the same sentence as <flights,= your odds are best on routes where demand is low. Airlines turn a tidy profit off travelers who wait to book their Thanksgiving flights until the final two weeks. But for international Thanksgiving flights, they can9t count on a massive tranche of procrastinators. For those who haven9t yet made plans, you may have better luck finding a last-minute deal flying across an ocean. For many, this year is too late to take advantage, but in 12 months, it9ll be back again. While most U.S. holidays are either a one-off (say, Independence Day) or are celebrated overseas as well (say, Christmas or New Year9s), Thanksgiving is a rare opportunity for traveling abroad that9s been hiding in plain sight for years. Scott Keyes is the founder of Going, a cheap-flight alert service with more than 2 million members. When he9s not on a plane, Keyes lives with his family in Portland, Ore. The Upgrade Something to be thankful for: The best week for cheap international ûights illuSTrATiOn by Min HeO fOr THe WASHinGTOn POST
KLMNO ee aX Fn FS LF PW Dc BD Pg aa FD ho Mn MS SM Busi sunday, nove ne mber 19, 2023 SS g technology hoping to remote-start your new Subaru on a snowy morning? You9re out of luck if you live in Massachusetts. g5 BY NICOLÁS RIVERO M iami-Dade County commissioners rejected a bill earlier this month that would have created the first county-level workplace heat protections in the United states. The defeat for local labor groups signals how difficult it will be to protect workers from increasingly dangerous temperatures in the absence of federal rules. As climate change ratchets up global temperatures, most of the roughly 32 million people who work outdoors in the United states are not protected by any workplace heat safety regulations. The occupational safety and Health Administration (osHA) has published voluntary guidelines on heat safety, but these are not enforceable. only three states 4 California, Washington and oregon 4 require companies to give outdoor workers breaks to cool down on hot days. no states in the south, where workplace heat deaths are most common, have created their own heat safety rules. The Miami-Dade ordinance offered an opportunity to break this impasse and to pave the way for similar rules across the country. This summer smashed heat records in MiamiDade County and for the entire planet. As temperatures rise in summers to come, scientists and healthcare researchers predict that record-breaking heat and workplace deaths will become more common. <The climate crisis will lead to more workers in more industries being exposed to extreme heat,= said David Michaels, an epidemiology professor at George Washington University. <Local ordinances like the one being considered in Miami-Dade are of great importance and are likely to save lives.= The proposed rules in Miami-Dade would have been among the strictest in the country. They would have required construction and agriculture companies to train their workers to recognize and respond to signs of heat illness and, on hot days, to give workers clean water,a10-minute break every two hours andashaded area to cool down. Companies that failed to follow the rules would have faced fines see Heat on g3 house in the family, with no mortgage. In this home, we9ve welcomed relatives who needed a place to recuperate financially. It9s the central location for our extended-family gatherings during the holidays, birthdays and college graduations. We envisioned at least one of our children, all in their 20s, moving into the home once we are gone. selling it was not part of our estate plan. or so we thought. <Mom, I9m selling the house,= olivia pronounced. <Um, our house, our choice,= I shot back. I explained to her again4because we9ve talked about this numerous times 4 that Black folks need to hold on to their homes. We are a people who have suffered greatly from systemic racism that made it extremely difficult to see SingletaRy on g2 will be distributed. Americans 65 or older are the most likely to have a will, with just over threequarters saying they have one, Gallup found. But it9s not enough to have an estate plan. You need to talk to your heirs about your wishes and the reasons behind them. You also may need to reconsider directives based on those conversations. Among the things we discussed with our daughter was our wish to be cremated. We want to set aside funds to help family members who might need financial assistance and contribute to a college fund for a niece and nephew. The conversation then turned to our two-story Colonial home, which we paid off before my husband9s retirement this year. Hallelujah! Getting that debt off our backs fulfilled a longtime desire to keep the My husband and I are updating our estate plan. our eldest daughter, now 28, will manage our affairs in the event we become incapacitated and can9t handle our finances, and after we pass away. our will specifies how our assets will be distributed and stipulates what kind of medical care we want if we cannot speak for ourselves. We also have a living will that addresses whether we want lifeprolonging procedures. our goal is to avoid leaving a hot mess behind when we are gone. Far too many people don9t plan for their death. Just 46 percent of U.s. adults have a will, according toa2021 Gallup poll. The remaining 54 percent are at the mercy of their states to dictate how their assets Our kids don9t want our house 4 or our ashes Michelle Singletary The Color of Money In Miami-Dade, ebort to protect outdoor workers from heat fails The measure would have been the first at the county level to set strict standards eva Marie uzcaTegui For The WaShingTon PoST Farmworkers set up mesh to grow luffa acutangula in Homestead, Fla. Roughly 32 million people work outdoors in the United States; most aren9t protected by workplace heat safety rules. BY JULIAN MARK Florida Realtor Alexandré Worthington is already bracing for a shift that threatens to tear down a compensation system that has ruled his industry for more than a century. <It9s the perfect time to pick up the pieces,= Worthington said. <It9saperfect time to reflect on the changes that could be coming and how to prepare for them.= In a federal civil case, a Kansas City, Mo., jury last month found the national Association of Realtors (nAR) and major brokerages conspired to keep commissions artificially high. The result has left the real estate industry holding its collective breath, as experts say it is on the cusp of a radical reorganization that could affect everything about the business. <There9s a lot of speculation out there around how this will play out,= said Ryan Tomasello, who covers the real estate technology sector for Keefe, Bruyette & Woods. Although much remains uncertain, <we have a high degree of confidence that, at the conclusion of this storyline, significant changes will be made to the commission structure in the U.s.= The most immediate and striking blow could come as a result of the federal case in Kansas City. The judge overseeing the case has the power to issue an injunction that could break up the century-old <bundled= or <cooperative= commissions system, in which sellers9 and buyers9 agents split a commission that typically ranges between 5 and 6 percent of the home sale price. The timing of such an action remains unclear. A settlement in which nAR agrees to change the system is also possible, according to Michael Ketchmark, the lead plaintiff attorney.<We9re in the process of having conversations with the [Justice Department] and nAR, and we remain hopeful that we9re going have a resolution that brings relief to millions across the county,= he told The Washington Post. In 2019, a group of home sellers sued nAR and brokerages Keller Williams and Homeservices of America in the Kansas City federal court, accusing the organizations of conspiring to keep commissions artificially high by requiring sellers to make the cooperative commission offer before listing homes on a widely used property database 4 the Multiple Listing service 4 that allows for-sale properties to receive notice. The plaintiffs alleged that the system stifled competition and inflated commissions for buyers9 agents. nAR, Keller Williams and Homeservices of America have denied those allegations and vowed to appeal the oct. 31 verdict that awarded $1.8 billion to a half-million Missouri home sellers, an amount that could swell to $5 billion. Those organizations say the existing commissions structure is transparent, see RealtoR on g5 Realtors case in Mo.shakes real estate industry Experts expect drastic changes after jurors found a scheme to inflate home sale commissions iSTock
G2 eZ ee the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 If you have a personal finance question for Michelle, please call 1- 855-asK-PosT (1-855-275-7678). her award-winning column <The color of Money= is syndicated by The Washington Post news service and syndicate and carried in dozens of newspapers. [email protected] know your plans can help protect benefits you9re entitled to. When David Jones of Kapolei, Hawaii, learned that his medical insurance employer would be outsourcing his position, he pointed out that the termination would leave him just six months shy of a crucial 15-year milestone for retiree medical coverage. Whether out of generosity, or to avoid looking as though it was illegally trying to prevent Jones from claiming that retirement benefit, the employer extended Jones9s layoff date so he could meet the mark for coverage. So now, having learned from these retirees, here9s what I advise: reader 1: It9s a good sign that you9ve been given more duties. That indicates your employer values your work 4 and it9s good insurance against being nudged out early. You9re probably safe letting at least your boss know of your retirement plans if these new tasks require a long-term commitment. But even if you9re not ready to share the news, make sure you9re documenting your work and communicating project details to colleagues in the meantime. They9ll appreciate it later. reader 2: It9s dicey for your husband to offer less notice than the boss specifically requested. But if he doesn9t trust the employer to let him complete his exit on his schedule, he might give a shorter notice, but soften it by offering to be available post-retirement to consult, recruit and help train his replacement if needed. Paid, of course. Whatever your situation, retiring on your own terms is ideal, as did Kelly m., a legal secretary from Seattle. Even though her employer required three months for retirement notice, she resigned with two weeks9 notice. <I had seen over the years friends of mine following such requests only to be shown the door much earlier by other firms,= she said. <I had my finances in order and was ready to go. No animosity on my part, but no reason to delay my departure.= offers some security. mary ryan of Baltimore gaveayear9s notice to allow time to hire and train someone to take over her exclusive administrative duties. <I am the oNLY person who does contracts, marketing and some other responsibilities= at her 25- person company, she said. Whoneeds to know? You might want to ration your notice on a need-to-know basis. Some readers notified key management or Hr early in the process to allow for planning but waited to make a general announcement to colleagues to avoid an awkward lame duck period. If you have service milestones coming up, letting management rothberg noted on LinkedIn that for C-suite executives, at leastayear9s notice of retirement is a standard successionplanning strategy <so key stakeholders ... don9t panic, thinking the org is adrift, or at risk.= Amanda Cockrell, founding director of a graduate program at Hollins University, gave a full year9s notice to allow time to transfer her institutional knowledge to her colleagues. <After 26 years, most of the program resided inside my personal head,= she said in an email. <If I had given them only a month9s notice or something like that, it would have been an awful mess.= Having unique skills or duties retirement notice period when her boss abruptly left for another job three months out and she was the only viable successor. Chuck Taylor of Atlanta said a hiring freeze at his health-caresystem employer made it difficult to bring in a replacement, even with a year9s notice. <They ended up engaging me on a short-term 1099 contract after my employment ended= to help train his eventual replacement, Taylor said in an email. Who am i to this employer? We all want to think we9re indispensable, but it9s crucial to have a realistic concept of the role you play. Executive coach Emily would offer [before retiring],= said Kevin marek of rhode Island, who spent 30 years in insurance administration before his job was eliminated with two weeks9 notice. Likewise,Iwould be inclined to give the same advice for retirement as for resignations: no more notice than the length of time you can afford to go without that paycheck. But after I put out a call for readers to share their experience, almost all respondents said they gave their employers at least 3 to 6 months9 notice, and sometimes more, with no regrets or concerns. So the traditional guideline for retirement notice hasn9t expired yet. But you first need to ask yourself some questions about your individual situation. Where do i work? most of the retirees advocating more notice were from academia and government, where careers are long, change is slow and hiring qualified replacements is lengthy and complex. Thus the threat of being pushed out early is minimal. Yvonne Stam, a retired judge in Chapel Hill, N.C., noted that legal and medical occupations often schedule work six months to a year in advance. Giving at least six months9 notice is expected <in fairness to your colleagues who have to assume your workload,= she said in an email. Larger private-sector companies with redundant positions generally can more easily absorb departures, so a long heads-up may not be necessary4or advisable. But in bureaucratic or short-staffed environments, even six months to a year of notice may not be long enough. When Karen feldt, a nurse educator in Lancaster, Pa., gave six months9 notice, responses ranged from denial (<You aren9t really ready to retire=) to panic (<You can9t go anywhere until we get through this [project, transition, crisis]=). Her employer had not found a replacement by the time she left. Teresa Adams of madison, Wis., actually received a promotion during her reader 1: I9m 62 and plan to officially retire seven or eight months from now. my plan is to give about three months9 notice to allow for a smooth transition, but my supervisor is giving me new responsibilities and assignments, which are adding some ethical questions of timing. At what point shouldInotify my supervisor about my retirement plans? reader 2: my husband asked his boss how much advance notice of his retirement plans would be needed and was told three months. Now he has decided on a retirement date and needs to inform his boss soon. How should he phrase his announcement? If the boss somehow manages to find a replacement sooner, he may cut my husband loose before he9s ready. We9re planning on using his paychecks during those three months to add to our retirement funds. Karla: Hold up. People still retire? With, like, gold watches and farewell parties? I joke, but only partly. first, it9s commonly acknowledged that longer life expectancy, market-battered savings accounts and the climbing cost of living have moved retirement goal posts well past age 65 for many people. And here9s a darker observation: A large percentage of U.S. workers older than 50 are being pushed prematurely out of longtime jobs 4 too early to segue into retirement but too late to regain their footing at full income. A pre-pandemic study by ProPublica and the Urban Institute put that percentage at 56 percent of workers; more recently, forbes, USA Today and my inbox suggest this trend is continuing, if not accelerating. Giving a lengthy heads-up about retirement plans just seems to be baring your neck for the ax. <How much notice do [employers] give when they9re kicking an employee to the curb? That would be as much as I How much notice should you give before retiring? It depends on a few factors. Work Advice KarLa L. MiLLer IsTocK home, compared with about 3 percent of Whites. But what good does it do to keep a home that isn9t being used or providing positive cash flow just because your mama, daddy or grandparent made you swear never to sell? We are changing the will. They can sell the home. Then I raised the issue of our ashes. <Will you put it on a shelf in your home?= <mom, no, we don9t want your ashes,= olivia said. <What if you put some ashes in a locket or turn them into a diamond?= I offered as a compromise. <Ew, no,= she said. <I9ll just carry your memory in my heart and spread your ashes in the ocean because you like the beach.= That made me laugh. So, our kids don9t want our home or our ashes, and that9s okay. It9s not just about what we want. It9s also what9s best for them. <If you leave the house to just one of us, the ones who don9t get to have a paid-for home might feel some kind of way,= she said. <Plus, this house is too big for us. Wouldn9t it make more sense to take the money and invest in homes we want?= olivia explained, having discussed it with her siblings, that they also want to be mortgage-free before they retire. With no mortgage orasmaller home loan, it would free up money they could then apply toward their retirement accounts or save to send their children to college debt-free, as we had done for them. <Wouldn9t that still contribute to the wealth-building in our family?= olivia asserted. She was right. I9ve counseled families who stubbornly held on to homes that no one wanted, only to let it deteriorate because they lacked the funds to maintain the property. Protracted legal battles can ensue when one heir wants to keep the house but can9t afford to buy the others9 share. of the6percent of Americans who own homes or other property they inherited, about half don9t use them as a primary residence, according to a Washington Post analysis of fed data. About 4 percent of Black Americans live in an inherited become homeowners. In 1940, the Black homeownership rate was 22.8 percent, nearly half of the 45.6 percent for Whites, according to the National Community reinvestment Coalition. Until 1968, homeowners and real estate agents could legally refuse to sell homes to African Americans and other people of color. financial institutions, with the backing of federal policy, carved out sections of cities in a racially motivated system called redlining. It allowed banks to deny mortgage loans based on a home buyer9s race. The fair Housing Act of 1968 made these practices illegal. Two years later, the homeownership rate for Blacks was 41.6 percent. Among White households, it was 68 percent. over five decades later, homeownership rates among Blacks have barely moved the needle. In 2022, about 46 percent of Black families owned their home, according to the federal reserve9s recently released Survey of Consumer finances. That compares with 73 percent for White families. I started to weep as I reminded olivia what I wrote in my <Sincerely, michelle= series about race, which is that the net worth of most Americans comes down to the equity in their homes. It9s this equity that has created generational wealth. my grandmother, the greatgranddaughter of enslaved individuals, scrimped and saved to become mortgage-free before she retired. She drilled into me that, as best you can, you keep the family home. No, ma9am, you will not sell our home, I told my daughter after my history lesson. Then she schooled me. <mom, I hear you, and I understand your passion about keeping the house,= she began. She9s a trained social worker and therapist, so her tone was soothing and respectful. She then made a case for selling our home that I hadn9t considered. sinGletary from G1 MICHELLE SINGLETARY Selling our paid-ob home? No way! But daughter makes persuasive case. IllusTraTIon By KaT BrooKs/The WashIngTon PosT; IsTocK With our CD special, you9re not only getting a great rate, you9re also getting the full experience and commitment of our dedicated bankers. Let9s talk. Call 800.399.5919 or learn more at sandyspringbank.com/cdspecials *Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is accurate as of 11/01/2023. The annual percentage yield assumes interest is credited monthly and remains on deposit until maturity. Deposit must originate from a non-Sandy Spring Bank account. Penalties for early withdrawal may apply. A withdrawal of interest will reduce earnings. For other provisions applicable to your account, please see Personal Deposit Account and Electronic Banking Agreement and if you are opening an account, your Receipt. 1The 14-Month CD Special hasaminimum opening deposit of $2,500. Maximum deposit is $1,000,000. The CD will automatically renew for an 18-month term from the initial and each succeeding maturity date at the interest rate then being offered by us for your type of account. Member FDIC. Sandy Spring Bank and the SSB logo are registered trademarks of Sandy Spring Bank. © 2023 Sandy Spring Bank. All rights reserved.
sunday, november 19, 2023 . the washington post ez ee G3 lifies a broad swath of local ordinances, including heat laws passed by city governments in Austin and Dallas, which required construction companies to give workers 10-minute breaks every four hours under $500 penalties. A district court judge ruled the state preemption law unconstitutional, but it took effect anyway on Sept. 1 while the state appeals the decision. Thatmonth,florida statelegislators passed a law that allows businesses to sue local governments over any ordinance they deem <arbitrary or unreasonable.= If a business sues, the local government must immediately stop enforcing the ordinance while the case plays out in court. The municipality must pay up to $50,000 in attorneys fees and repeal the law if it loses the lawsuit. The debate in miami-Dade mirrors industry pushback against heat standards across the United States. <It is a microcosm of what we expect nationally,= said martinez.<Industry is always lobbying for less red tape around issues of worker safety.&That9s the reality of why a heat standard has taken so long to move forward.= Before the final vote, Kionne mcGhee, a miami-Dade County commissioner and co-sponsor of the heat ordinance, vowed that the fate of the bill would be decided promptly. <There is no intent to defer this item any longer,= mcGhee said.<If it means we have to sit in that chamber for 10 to 15 hours in a marathon, we9re going to go in there and get this right.= But shortly after mcGhee and Bastien introduced the bill, six commissioners 4 a majority of those present 4 said they planned to vote no. Bastien quickly moved to defer the vote, and mcGhee assented.<I know how to count,= he said. heat standard for indoor workers in factories and warehouses. But most worker heat deaths happen outside those states, according to oSHA data. They9re concentrated in the South, where republican state legislatures have rejected heat regulations. florida lawmakers have killed a bill that would create a state heat standard three years in a row. <Inalot of states across the country, there is no political path to passing a statewide standard, so what we9re doing in miamiDade can be an example for cities across the country to take local action to protect their workers,= said marleine Bastien, a miamiDade County commissioner and co-sponsor of the proposed heat ordinance, before the vote. But state lawmakers can strike down local rules. In may, Texas state legislators passed a preemption law that nulistrations in recent decades have not issued any health standards,= said michaels. <So we can expect that if the next administration is led by a republican president, we willnot see a heat standardfor the entire period of that administration.= <As part of the standards development process, the agency held Small Business Advocacy review Panel meetings in September to gather views on the potential effects of a heat standard on small businesses,= an oSHA spokesperson wrote in an email. <oSHA is currently reviewing comments received during the panel meetings.= In the absence of federal rules, several states have passed their own. California, Washington and oregon have standards that cover all outdoor workers. Colorado has rules that apply only to farmworkers. minnesota created a ple, work outdoors. But heat9s impact isn9t limited to the steamy subtropics of South florida. <The reality is, every county in America needs to worry about it at least part of the year,= said Douglas Casa, head of the University of Connecticut9s Korey Stringer Institute, which publishes research on heat illness among workers and athletes. Local regulations fill the federal void Worker advocates say the best solution would be for oSHA to set one federal standard to create basic heat regulations for all U.S. workplaces. President Biden directed the federal agency to do just that in 2021. But the rulemaking process will drag on for years 4 and may collapse if Biden loses his reelection bid next year. <As apolicy,republican adminfrom 2009 to 2017. Heat also contributes indirectly to heart attacks, kidney failure, falls and machine accidents 4 causes of death and injury that often aren9t officially recorded as heat-related.A 2021 analysis from the German nonprofit IZA Institute of Labor Economics found that higher temperatures are correlated with about 20,000 workplace injuries in California each year. <Workers are not disposable, so they need urgent protections & in particularin areas such asmiamiDade where1in 4 workers work outdoors,= said Jessica martinez, co-executive director of the National Council for occupational Safety and Health, a worker advocacy group affiliated with WeCount. Data from the Union of Concerned Scientists shows that 26 percent of the county9s workforce, or more than 300,000 peoof up to $2,000 per violation. But on Nov. 7, commissioners raised concerns about the cost of enforcing the rules,the likelihood that florida9s state legislature would preempt the measure and the financial impact the proposed fines would have on farms and construction companies. <This ordinance could potentially kill industry,= commissioner Danielle Cohen Higgins said. After six of the 10 present commissioners voiced their objections, the bill9s co-sponsors moved to defer the final vote until march rather than face a flat-out defeat. But there9s no indication that any changes to the bill 4 which had already been watered down by industry lobbyists4can win over skeptical commissioners. <I don9t want to give false expectations to my colleagues that deferring this item and bringing it back & would be any different,= commissioner Juan Carlos Bermudez said. Before the defeat, labor groups said miami-Dade County9s rules could be a model for local governments across the country to follow as they wait for oSHA to create an enforceable federal heat standard. The Labor Department started that rulemaking process in 2021, but the rules could take years to finish 4 if they ever take effect at all. <Counties across the country are looking to miami-Dade as an example of what government can do locally,= said oscar Londoño, co-executive director ofWeCount, a worker advocacy group lobbying for the local heat ordinance. <We can9t wait for the federal government to take action.= But pressure from construction and agriculture industry groups, concerned about the red tape the ordinance would create, sealed the bill9s fate. <Its anti-business sentiment quite frankly sends a message to everyone in the county and the rest of the country that miami does not want businesses to survive,muchless thrive,= said Arianna Cabrera de oña, chief people officer for Costa farms, which cultivates 5,000 acres across florida and the Carolinas. heat9s uncertain toll on workers It9s hard to quantify the toll heat takes on U.S. workers. According to official records from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 815 workers died and 70,000 more were seriously injured by heat stress between 1992 and 2017. But health researchers 4 and the Labor Department4say those numbers are likely an undercount. <There9s no question there are many people who die from heat or are affected by heat where the fatality or the illness case is never reported or recorded as heat-related,= said michaels, who was oSHA administrator hEaT from G1 Federal heat-protection rules could take years to enact, if they happen at all PhoTos by eva Marie uzcaTegui For The WashingTon PosT CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: Workers move plants into pots at a nursery in homestead, Fla. The proposed rules in Miami-Dade County would have, among other things, required construction and agriculture companies to give workers clean water anda10-minute break every two hours on hot days. Farmworker Marta Gaspar covers guava fruits with plastic bags to protect them from pests. Heat kills roughly 30 workers a year, according to oïcial records u.s. worker deaths from environmental heat exposure, 1992-2021 20 deaths 40 deaths 60 deaths 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 source: bureau of Labor statistics The WashingTon PosT OSHA reported heat deaths per 1 million workers, 2017-2022 0 2.26 Heat deaths per 1 million workers TX ca MT az nM nv co Wy or uT Mn iD Ks ne sD aK nD oK Mo Wa ga FL Mi iL ia Wi ar aL nc ny Ms La Pa Tn oh va Ky in Me sc Wv nh nJ hi De ri source: osha, census bureau, bloomberg Law Jacob bogage anD eLi Tan / The WashingTon PosT
G4 eZ ee the washington post . sunday, november 19, 2023 editor: Lori montgomery " Design: Andrew Braford " Photo editor: Haley Hamblin " e-mail: [email protected] " Telephone: 202-334-9800 " Mail: the Washington Post, sunday Business, 1301 K st. nW, Washington, D.c. 20071 " Advertising: noelle Wainwright, 202-334-7610, [email protected] BusiNess BY ANDREW VAN DAM W e hate to be the bearers of bad news, but you9re probably not going to get an inheritance. Hopefully, this information doesn9t surprise you as much as it did our kids 4 and by <kids= we mean the dog. A little over 1 in 5 U.S. households had received an inheritance at some point in their lives as of 2022, according to the Federal Reserve9s remarkable Survey of Consumer Finances. The inheritance rate jumps to 2 out of 5 if you look only at folks in their 70s, who have had more time for their parents and favorite aunts to meet a regrettable but timely demise. But even those folks are in the lucky minority. Every three years the Fed, with the help of NORC at the University of Chicago, asks at least 4,500 Americans an astonishingly exhaustive, almost two-hour battery of questions on income and assets, from savings bonds to gambling winnings to mineral rights. One of our all-time favorite sources, the survey provides our best measure of America9s ghastly wealth disparities. It also includes a deep dive on inheritance, the passing down of the family jewels (or whatnot) from parents (73 percent in 2022), grandparents (14 percent) and aunts and uncles (8 percent). Since 1992, the number of people getting inheritances from parents has nearly doubled even as bequests from grandparents and aunts and uncles have remained flat. Your 50s will be your peak inheriting ages, which makes sense given that an average 65-year-old in the United States can expect to live to around age 83 and your parents are, sadly, mortal. These windfalls include homes and other real estate. They also include related gifts and trusts, but those go to a much smaller share of Americans. They don9t include assets left to you by your spouse, unless you were divorced at the time of the gift. The average American has inherited about $58,000 as of 2022. But that9s if you include the majority of us whose total lifetime inheritance sits at $0. If you look only at the lucky few who inherited anything, their average is $266,000. And if you look only at those in their 70s, it climbs to $344,000. Of course, that9s the value at the time of the gift. Add inflation and market-level returns, and many bequests are worth much more by the time you earn your septuagenarian badge. Most of us probably grew up with a mental model of inheritances as an unexpected, random windfall, not unlike winning the lottery or striking oil. But when we ran the numbers, we found they weren9t random at all. White folks are about three times more likely to inherit than their Black, Hispanic or Asian friends. The gap closes slightly when you account for the fact that the typical White American is older than their peers, but it remains vast enough to help explain why the typical White family has more than six times the net worth of the typical Black American family. Up and down the demographic charts, it appears to be a case of to whom much is given & much more is given. Folks in the bottom 50 percent of earners inherit at half the national rate, while those in the top 1 percent are twice as likely to inherit something. When we called John Ricco, an associate research scholar at Yale Law School who has worked with this data for years, he confirmed that inheritances make the rich richer. But a rich kid9s true inheritance goes far beyond cash value: In a million less-measurable ways, elite parents give you a head start in life. By the time they die and hand you a windfall, you9ve already used all your advantages to accumulate wealth of your own. <It9s not just the dollar amount that you get when your parents die,= Ricco said. <It9s the safety net that you had to start a business when you were younger, or the ability to put down a larger share of your savings into a down payment and a house because you know that you can save less for retirement. <Little things like that are probably the main mechanisms through which intergenerational wealth is transmitted and are not easily captured just by the final value of what you see.= Those myriad advantages defy measurement on their own, but inheritance reliably signals their presence. Just one variable 4 how much you inherit 4 can account for more than 60 percent of U.S. wealth inequality, according to economists Pedro SalasRojo at the International Inequalities Institute at the London School of Economics and Juan Gabriel Rodríguez of the Complutense University of Madrid, who applied machine learning to previous editions of the same Fed data. So, if you had to guess someone9s economic station in life and you could peek at only one data point, inheritance would be a pretty good bet. It9s one of the clearest socioeconomic signals on the planet. <Inheritances are able to capture a lot of information on your background,= Salas-Rojo told us. <They actually reflect many advantages, many inequalities of opportunities that we face.= The U.S. tax system does little to temper our uneven inheritance. Consider the stepped-up basis provision, <one of the most egregious (tax loopholes) that we have,= according to Marc Goldwein, senior policy director at the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, who boasts the tax-loophole knowledge of a man with many times his net worth. When you sell something at a profit, you typically pay capital gains tax. But you can avoid that tax by holding the asset until you expire. At your death, the cost basis of your assets gets stepped up to their current value 4 meaning your heirs avoid getting taxed on what might be a very substantial gain. Say you9re a natural-soda fan who bought $1,000 of Hansen Natural Corp. stock in 2000. You watched your money grow to more than $1.15 million as sleepy Hansen became the world-eating Monster Beverage Corp. Selling the stock would force you to pay capital gains on more than $1 million in earnings, so instead, you took it to the grave. (If you needed cash, you probably borrowed against your stockpiled stock pile, a common strategy among the 1 percent.) Now you9re dead. The taxable basis of your stock immediately steps up from $1,000 to $1.15 million. If your heirs sell it, they9ll pay no taxes. If the value of the stock rises to, say, $1.151 million, they would owe taxes only on that extra $1,000. Now multiply that loophole by the millions of homes, businesses, equities and other assets being handed down each year. Goldwein and his colleagues estimate that closing the loophole could reap as much as $204 billion in revenue over the next decade, depending on how aggressively it was taxed. The loophole9s effect on the economy extends well beyond inheritance and inequality, Goldwein and Ricco told us. It encourages older folks to hoard homes and businesses they can no longer make full use of, assets our housing-starved millennial readers would gladly snap up. The loophole, codified in 1921, appears to date back to British tax systems, according to Calvin Johnson at the University of Texas School of Law. Early on, Goldwein said, it may have been considered necessary because it was difficult to determine the original value of long-held property. Revenue lost to the loophole was partly offset by a simpler-to-administer levy: the estate tax. But the threshold for paying the estate tax was raised substantially by George W. Bush, extended and indexed for inflation under Barack Obama, and raised once more in Donald Trump9s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which expires after 2025. For now, you9ll pay the federal estate tax only on the part of your fortune that exceeds $12.92 million ($25.84 million for couples), and rising to $13.61 million in 2024 4 and that9s only if your tax lawyers aren9t smart enough to dodge it. Total revenue from the estate tax, as a result, has plummeted. Just 2,192 estates were subject to the tax in 2019, down from 51,159 at the turn of the millennium, and it raised just $14.6 billion, down from more than $35 billion in 2000, adjusted for inflation. Even among the elite, most estates today go untaxed. <Between politicians continuing to cut the estate tax and taxpayers becoming increasingly good at avoiding it, very few now pay it,= Goldwein said. <That means we now have a big net tax break for most people inheriting large amounts of money.= It may feel like we9ve whacked pretty deep into the weeds at this point. We have! But minor inheritance rules can shape a society. Consider an analysis by Yuzuru Kumon, now a researcher at the Norwegian School of Economics. Kumon used detailed census records for 586 Japanese villages from 1640 to 1870, originally collected as part of the shogun9s efforts to root out Christians, to show that Tokugawa Japan was much more equal than Western Europe at the time. Furthermore, Japanese equality remained steady while European inequality increased. Kumon presents a convincing explanation: If you didn9t produce a male heir in Japan, it was customary to adopt one. A surplus son from another family would marry into yours. That kept your property in the family. In Europe, if an elite family didn9t produce a male heir, which happened more than a quarter of the time, the default was for a daughter to marry into another well-off family and merge assets. So while Japanese family lines remained intact from generation to generation, European family lines merged, concentrating wealth into fewer and fewer hands. This might sound familiar if you recall the plot of Jane Austen9s critically acclaimed sophomore effort, <Pride and Prejudice.= As other families compete to marry into the Darcys9 colossal estate 4 spoiler for a novel from 1813! 4 inequality increases. Given a few centuries, even subtle variations in inheritance patterns can produce sweeping societal differences. The Department of Data covets queries. What are retail loyalty programs really tracking? Who9s most likely to live beyond their means? Why are women leaving academia? Just ask at wapo.st/data-department. If your question inspires a column, we9ll send an official Department of Data button and ID card. this week, we owe buttons to Lily c. from sacramento and sonya graham in grovetown, ga., who asked about racial gaps in inheritances, and to Richard macheski in silver spring, md., who asked about the age at which we are most likely to inherit. DePARTMeNT OF DATA Who gets inheritances, and how those windfalls contribute to U.S. inequality As politicians raise the threshold at which your estate is exempt, fewer and fewer Americans pay any estate tax taxable estate-tax returns in the U.s., by death year 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 0 20,000 40,000 60,000 80,000 100,000 120,000 140,000 note: |e estate tax was temporarily repealed in 2010, so we lev it of this chart. U.s. estate-tax exemptions, by tax year 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000 2020 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 $14 million inheritances tend to go to those who already earn the most, which helps exacerbate racial wealth gaps share who have ever received an inheritance, 2019-2022 average All TOTAL AGes 70 TO 79 RACe Hispanic Black Asian White eDuCATiON Less than H.s. High school some college Bachelor9s or higher iNCOMe PeRCeNTiLe Bottom half 50-89th percentile 90-99th percentile top 1 percent 10% 20 30 40 50 60 By age 74, almost 2 in 5 Americans will have inherited at least once, with the highest share arriving in your 50s share who have ever received an inheritance, by age, 2019-2022 avg. 18-19 years 25-29 35-39 45-49 55-59 65-69 75-79 0 10 20 30 40% note: Based on age of the head of the household Age at receipt of inheritance, based on who gave it to you, 2019-2022 avg. 0-9 years 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60-69 70-79 80-92 0 3 6 9 12 15 18% Aunt or uncle Grandparent Parent Other note: Based on age of the head of the household median household net worth, adjusted for inûation 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 0 50,000 100,000 150,000 200,000 250,000 $300,000 Other White Hispanic Black sources: Federal Reserve9s survey of consumer Finances, Internal Revenue service DePARtment OF DAtA/tHe WAsHIngtOn POst note: |e estate tax was temporarily repealed in 2010. starting in 2011, the spouse who died ûrst could pass their exemption to their partner and their heirs would beneût from the combined exemptions. We don9t include those larger combined exemptions in this chart. tax cuts and Jobs Act KeystOne FRAnce/gAmmA-RAPHO/getty ImAges Assuming you9re not John D. Rockefeller Jr., left, your chances of an inheritance might not be as good as you want them to be. But they9re much better if you9re White than if you9re Black, Hispanic or Asian.
sunday, november 19, 2023 . the washington post eZ ee G5 The Justice Department has also filed statements of interest in the missouri case and a similar civil case in Illinois that clarify the parameters of a 2008 settlement between NAr and the Justice Department involving online listings. It did not respond to a request for comment on settlement negotiations in the Kansas City case. Echoing the missouri and Illinois cases, a new group of missouri residents filed a proposed lawsuit oct. 31, alleging that real estate agents are conspiring to keep commissions high, restraining price competition and harming consumers in violation of federal antitrust laws. The lawsuit seeks damages for home sellers nationwide. Carole Higgins, a real estate agent in Suttons Bay, mich., said changes are long overdue because agents have largely failed to appropriately explain contracts and commissions to consumers. <We9ve grown so sloppy with the way that we are training our realtors that this was the natural outcome,= Higgins said of the lawsuits. This <is a wake-up call.= Rachel Kurzius contributed to this report. when National Association of real Estate Exchanges, the precursor to NAr, said its member agents should share commissions with agents that produced buyers, according to a 2015 study by economists Panle Jia Barwick and maisy Wong. The commissions rate hit 5 percent in 1940 and has remained virtually unchanged ever since, according to the study. Commissions work differently in countries such as the United Kingdom, where sellers pay typically less than 2 percent, and buyers pay their own agents, according to the study. U.S. regulators have long scrutinized America9s commission system, Tomasello, the analyst, said. In 2020, the Justice Department sued NAr and proposed a settlement in which the association would have to change its rules to bring more transparency to its commission system. The settlement also sought to stop NAr from saying buyers9 agent services are free. But less than a year later, the Justice Department withdrew from the settlement to <permit a broader investigation of NAr9s rules and conduct to proceed without restriction.= might fall because they would have to compete on the price of their services, experts said. Worthington, the florida realtor, said buyers9 agents could shift to an <a la carte= service model, in which potential home buyers choose their level of service and pay accordingly. A 1 percent commission, for example, could buy a customer automated emails with new homes for sale, based on the preferences of a prospective buyer, he said. for a 3 percent commission, <I9m actually going to walk into my office every morning and scrub our system and every resource I have to find the house that you9re looking for,= he said. Sophia Gilbukh, an assistant professor of real estate at Baruch College9s Zicklin School of Business in New York, said breaking up the buyers9 and sellers9 agent commissions could also result in lower listing prices for homes. High fees borne by sellers result in higher listing prices, Gilbukh said, because sellers want to cover their costs. Higher prices increase mortgage payments for buyers, she said. Breaking up the commission system, Gilbukh said, would result in lower prices overall but technology & innovation BY GERRIT DE VYNCK After months of high-level meetings and discussions, government officials and Big Tech leaders have agreed on one thing about artificial intelligence: The potentially world-changing technology needs some ground rules. But many in Silicon Valley are skeptical. A growing group of tech heavyweights 4 including influential venture capitalists, the CEos of midsize software companies and proponents of open-source technology 4 are pushing back, claiming that laws for AI could snuff out competition in a vital new field. To these dissenters, the willingness of the biggest players in AI, such as Google, microsoft and ChatGPT maker openAI, to embrace regulation is simply a cynical ploy by those firms to lock in their advantages as the current leaders, essentially pulling up the ladder behind them. These tech leaders9 concerns ballooned this month, when President Biden signed an executive order laying out a plan to have the government develop testing and approval guidelines for AI models 4 the underlying algorithms that drive <generative= AI tools such as chatbots and image-makers. <We are still in the very early days of generative AI, and it9s imperative that governments don9t preemptively anoint winners and shut down competition through the adoption of onerous regulations only the largest firms can satisfy,= said Garry Tan, the head of Y Combinator, a San francisco-based start-up incubator that helped nurture companies including Airbnb and DoorDash when they were just starting. The current discussion hasn9t incorporated the voices of smaller companies enough, Tan said, which he believes is key to fostering competition and engineering the safest ways to harness AI. Companies like influential AI start-up Anthropic and openAI are closely tied to Big Tech, having taken huge amounts of investment from them. <They do not speak for the vast majority of people who have contributed to this industry,= said martin Casado, a general partner at venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, which made early investments in facebook, Slack and Lyft. most AI engineers and entrepreneurs have been watching the regulatory discussions from afar, focusing on their companies instead of trying to lobby politicians, he said. <many people want to build, they9re innovators, they9re the silent majority,= Casado said. The executive order showed those people that regulation could come sooner than expected, he said. Casado9s venture capital firm sent a letter to Biden laying out its concerns. It was signed by prominent AI start-up leaders including replit CEo Amjad masad and mistral9s Arthur mensch, as well as more established tech leaders such as e-commerce company Shopify9s CEo Tobi Lütke, who had tweeted that <AI regulation is a terrible idea= after the executive order was announced. requiring AI companies to report to the government would probably make it more difficult and expensive to develop new tech, Casado said. The order could also affect the open-source community, said Casado and Andrew Ng, an AI research pioneer who helped found Google9s AI lab and now leads the AI start-up Landing AI. As companies have scrambled to release new AI tools and monetize them since openAI released ChatGPT nearly a year ago, governments have wrestled with how to respond. Numerous congressional hearings have tackled the topic, and bills have been proposed in federal and state legislatures. The European Union is revamping AI regulation that has been in the works for several years, and Britain is trying to style itself as an AI-friendly island of innovation, recently hosting a major gathering of government and business leaders to discuss the tech. Throughout the discussions, representatives from the most powerful AI companies have said openly that the tech presents serious risks, and that they9re eager for regulation. Enacting good regulation could ward off bad outcomes, encourage more investment in AI and make citizens more comfortable with the quickly advancing tech, the companies have said. At the same time, being a part of the regulatory conversation gives the business leaders influence over what kinds of rules are developed. <If this technology goes wrong, it can go quite wrong,= openAI CEo Sam Altman said at a congressional hearing in may. Lawmakers including Senate majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) have said they want to regulate AI early, rather than taking a more laid-back approach like the government did with social media. Days after Biden9s executive order, government representatives attending the U.K.-hosted AI Safety Summit signed a statement supporting the idea of giving governments a role in testing AI models. <Until now the only people testing the safety of new AI models have been the very companies developing it. We shouldn9t rely on them to mark their own homework, as many of them agree,= British Prime minister rishi Sunak said in a statement. Demis Hassabis, CEo of Google9s Deepmind AI division, and Dario Amodei, CEo of Anthropic, both added their support to the statement. Spokespeople for Google and Anthropic did not comment. A spokesperson for microsoft declined to comment but pointed toward congressional testimony from the company9s vice chair and president, Brad Smith, where he supported the idea of AI licensing by an independent government body. A spokesperson for openAI declined to comment but referred to a tweet from Altman where he said that while he supported regulation for more established AI companies working on powerful AI models, governments should be careful not to damage competition. many of the big breakthroughs in tech over the past few decades have happened because developers have made their tech available to others to use free. Now, companies are using open-source AI models to build their own AI tools without having to pay Google, openAI or Anthropic for access to their models. With Big Tech lobbyists working hard in Washington, those companies might be able to influence regulation in their favor 4 to the detriment of smaller companies, Ng said. Andreessen Horowitz has had a presence in Washington for a while, and its co-founder marc Andreessen recently attended an AI meeting of tech leaders hosted by Schumer. Y Combinator recently hired a well-known government relations executive from Yelp to help push its agenda in the capital. Ng said he has begun meeting more with politicians, though he wouldn9t say who. Critics of the emerging regulatory frameworks also say that they are based on exaggerated concerns about the risk of AI. Influential AI leaders, including executives from openAI, microsoft, Google and Anthropic, have warned that AI poses a risk on par with pandemics or nuclear weapons to human societies. many prominent AI researchers and businesspeople say the tech is advancing so quickly that it could soon outstrip human intelligence and begin making its own decisions. Those concerns, which featured prominently at the U.K. AI summit, give governments cover to pass regulations, said Ng, who now regrets not pushing back against <existential risk= fears more strongly. <I just have a hard time seeing how humanity could go extinct,= he said. Big Tech wants ground rules for AI. The rest of Silicon Valley is skeptical. ToBy Melville/Pool/AP World leaders and tech executives gather for a group photo at the aI Safety Summit in Bletchley, england, earlier this month. Government representatives attending the conference signed a statement supporting the idea of giving governments a role in testing aI models. BY SHIRA OVIDE CitySide Subaru, a car dealership in the Boston area, regularly loses potential customers for a surprising reason: Subaru has disabled some of its own software in a stalemate over control of data from your car. That means no automatic emergency calls if the car crashes, no wireless notifications from the dealer about maintenance problems and no option to remotely start the car and fire up the heater. (Don9t judge. It9s cold in massachusetts.) Nathan White, CitySide9s general manager, said his staff warns car shoppers that features like those requiring wireless transmission don9t work on new Subaru models sold in the state. The lack of those features is a <conversation we have to have with the customer,= White said. <To be honest with you, it9s a couple of percent a month= in lost vehicle sales. Subaru crippled its technology over a state law intended to let people share their car9s wireless repair information with any service shop 4 not only the authorized dealer. massachusetts voters overwhelmingly approved the law in 2020 but automakers have fought it in court ever since. Two of the companies, Subaru and Kia, have responded by turning off remote access features in new vehicles in the state. Subaru declined to comment. Kia didn9t respond to questions. The massachusetts law, and a similar one that maine voters approved in a landslide this month, show our desire to influence what happens to the reams of data our cars collect. The tactics of Subaru and Kia also expose that when your phone, car, television, doorbell or sneakers are wirelessly connected, you never fully own them. The manufacturer does. That power can be useful or harmful. Your smartphone gets regular safety updates wirelessly. or the manufacturer of your printer might remotely disable it when you use off-brand ink. And your car that might track how fast you drive, when you slam the brakes and everywhere you go can use the data against you 4 or shut down useful features entirely. the impasse over who controls your car data The massachusetts and maine laws could let a car owner send an in-dash warning about worn brake pads to a service shop of her choice to schedule repairs. right now, a car might transmit that information only to the car manufacturer or dealership. Automakers say they oppose the state laws because sensitive information from your car is at risk if any repair shop has access. The automakers9 lobbying group has also said that the laws aren9t needed because repair shops already have access to necessary maintenance and diagnostic tools and information. Several experts told me that the automakers are mostly wrong. They said there are ways for companies to make secure, remotely transmitted software and diagnostic data in a standard format that could be accessible to service shops. Joshua Siegel, a michigan State University engineering professor, said that this isn9t a simple task and that car manufacturers are doing a reasonable job in trying to comply with the spirit of a first-ofits-kind law in massachusetts. Backers of the massachusetts and maine laws say that while wirelessly transmitted car information may not be essential for many repairs today, it9s becoming more so as cars transform into smartphones on wheels. They say if wireless repair information stays exclusive to the car9s manufacturer and dealers, you may pay more for repairs and other services. regardless of which side you believe, massachusetts hasn9t followed through with a law that 75 percent of voters wanted. Subaru and Kia car buyers in massachusetts are bearing the immediate consequences, including losing out on features available to car owners in every other state. Automakers opposed the new maine law, too, potentially resulting in frustration for more new car buyers. About 84 percent of maine voters said yes to this month9s car data ballot measure. the bigger picture Car companies9 opposition to the vehicle data laws highlights how much information is spewing from our cars and how little we control what happens to it. Data used for maintenance warnings, emergency support and wireless software updates can help us. But does any car need to constantly squeal to the manufacturer about where you drive and how fast, the text messages on your phone and your preference for mcDonald9s? Siegel from michigan State said people benefit from at least some of that data collection, which car companies might use to design better and more reliable cars. At CitySide Subaru, White hopes that automakers find a way to let car owners provide remote vehicle maintenance data to any service shop. He knows the result could be fewer people servicing their Subarus at his dealership. <This all comes down to who owns the information,= White said. <Shouldn9t the customer have some say?= THe TeCH Friend Now that cars are like smartphones, it9s apparent we don9t really own them from advertising for buyers agents, according to analysts. During an earnings call a day after the jury verdict, Zillow chief executive richard N. Barton sought to reassure Wall Street analysts that buyers agents would not go extinct and that the company9s revenue model was safe. He added that possible developments to the commissions system <look like good initial steps at more transparency and education for consumers,= though he said that he believed any change would come slowly. Changes to the commissions structure could eventually result in a 30 percent reduction in the $100 billion total that U.S. consumers pay in real estate commissions, according to a report by Tomasello and his team. Analysts and real estate experts said prices for buyers9 agents would adjust more accurately to the value of their services. If buyers9 agents are no longer guaranteed 3 percent of the commission, their fees and they denied that the payment structure was anticompetitive. NAr said after the verdict that the <matter is not close to being final.= mantill Williams, an NAr spokesman, said the association is open to a resolution that <maintains a way for buyers and sellers to continue to benefit from the cooperation of real estate professionals and eliminates our members9 risk of liability for the claims alleged.= <That being said,= he added, <we remain confident we will prevail on our appeal.= But the verdict has already sent convulsions through financial markets and the real estate industry. Shares of Zillow plunged nearly 7 percent after the jury rendered its verdict, as investors saw potential changes as a threat to the company9s revenue model 4 a large portion of which comes realtor from G1 Realtors brace for major shift in sale commissions also lead to bigger upfront costs for buyers, who indirectly pay the costs of the commissions in the form of higher mortgage payments. Without the structure of the current cooperative system, buyers would need to directly pay their agents immediately after a sale. <That might put a lot of buyers at a disadvantage, especially liquidity-constrained buyers,= she said. <They might not be able to afford a higher-fee agent 4 even if it9s worth it for them 4 because they just don9t have the money to pay for it upfront.= The cooperative compensation structure was established in 1913, <We9ve grown so sloppy with the way that we are training our Realtors that this was the natural outcome.= Carole Higgins, a real estate agent in Suttons Bay, Mich., about the lawsuits
A JOBS ACCOUNTANT Walnut Consulting Group LLC is seeking a full-time Office Accountant. Position requires a Bachelor's degree in Accounting, Finance, Management, or a related field. Requires good communication skills and attention to details. Please mail resume to Walnut Consulting Group LLC, 46090 Lake Center Plaza, Suite 208, Sterling,VA, 20165 Staff Accountant 3 Req9d BS dgr in Acct or Mkt or Advt. Also, req9d 1mn Exp as inhouse Acct or Finc or Audit staff. 40hrs/wk. $62,608/yr. CV to jobsite @ Golfzon America, Attn: Dong Jin Lim, 3863 Centerview Drive #300, Chantilly,VA 20151 Accountant - Req9d BA in Acc't or closly related. Also req'd 3mn exp as acc't or finc staff. 40hr/wk. $62,608/yr. CV to job site @ AN Exterior Inc, Attn: Se AN, 14522-C Lee Rd, Chantilly, VA 20151 Accounting Associate - Compute, classify, & record numerical data to keep financial records complete. Perform calculations & verifications to obtain primary financial data to maintain records. Check accuracy of figures & transactions. Bachelor9s Degree in Accounting/ Finance. One year experience. 40 hrs per week. $54,371.00 per yr. Apply to Parminder Singh Ahuja, CPA, PSA CPA, 7361 Calhoun Pl, Ste 585, Rockville, MD, 20855. Data Analyst I, Database support to project team, create offline data products, test & maintain integrity of DB + rel. duties. BA deg. or for. equiv. in Comp. Sci., IT, or rel. engineer9g field. Send cl/resume Eagleforce Associates Inc., Attn Jash/DAI, 13241 Woodland Park Rd. Ste. 600, Herndon,VA 20171 Quantum Technologies, Inc. has mult. F/T perm. Pos. for Buss/Sys Analysts. Job Loc'ns: Falls Church, VA & various unanticipated loc9ns in US. Reloc'n Poss. Mail Resumes to: HR, 119 Rowell CT, Suite B, Falls Church, VA 22043 or email [email protected] A JOBS Business Operations Analyst: Analyzing, documenting, managing requirements, structure information, preparing reports, & more. Req. MS degree in information systems. Job location: Arlington, Va. Resume: G&I Consulting Group. Fax: 703 997 6029. Appliance Repairer (2 pos.): household appliances. Job Loc: Alexandria, VA. Mail resume or apply in person to: Attn: HR - Ref #17148. Used Appliance, 8730 Richmond Highway, Alexandria, VA 22309 Associate Consultant, Traffic Engineer - (Herndon, VA) WSP USA Inc.: Independently performs engineering analysis, develop traffic studies, operational reports and traffic engineering plans, specifications and estimates. Req's a bac's in Transportation Planning and Engineering, Civil Engineering, or rltd. + 6 mos. exp. as a Traffic Engineer, Civil Engineer, or rltd. Graduate assistantship experience accepted. 25% (domestic) travel required. Email resumes to: Attn: Julia Savaneli - Ref #7295, [email protected]. Associate Director, Rail Infrastructure Planning and Logistics Network Rail Consulting, Inc. (Washington, DC) seeks Associate Director, Rail Infrastructure Planning and Logistics to provide proj mgmt for rail infrastructure work dlvry, planning, & logistics for clients (incl operational & infrastructure improvement initiatives, & outage/ROW access mgmt). Reqs Bachelor9s deg in railway engg, logistics, sply chain mgmt, trans. mgmt or rltd field (will accept combo of edu & exp as equiv to bachelor9s deg) & five (5) yrs of exp in railway logistics mgmt. Telecommuting is permitted. This pos reqs little (<24%) domestic trvl. Mail CV to C. Austin, JobCode RIPL423, 1001 Connecticut Ave NW, Ste 925, Washington, D.C. 20036. The local expert on local jobs A JOBS Associate sought by Moody Graham (Washington, DC). Responsible for sched & budget; Communicate directly w/ clients, contractors, & consultants to refine & implmt the dsgn; Dvlp, review, & refine drawings that clearly define the materials & specs of the project; Accurately present bids & respond to issues during the bid process; Conduct inspections as a Certified Landscape Expert for Green Area Ratio projects completion. Reqmts: Master of Landscape Architecture or closely rltd discipline, or foreign equiv; &3yrs exp as Project Dsgnr, Architect, or closely rltd occupation [or Bach deg in Architecture or Landscape Architecture, closely rltd discipline, or foreign equiv; & 4 yrs exp as Project Dsgnr, Architect, or a closely rltd occupation] Must have prof'l landscape architecture license. Exp w/: Working & managing int'l mixed-use complex large-scale urban park projects from dsgn to construction completion; Fluency in 3D modeling & rendering using Rhino, Grasshopper, & Lumion, Adobe Creative suite & AutoCAD; Independently managing landscape projects from dsgn ideation to dsgn dvlpmt incl coord'n & presentation w/ clients & team consultants; Construction & skills to put together dsgn dvlpmt drawing sheets. Send resumes to jobs@ moodyarchitecture.com. Assurance Manager @ BDO USA, P.C. (FKA BDO USA, LLP) in McLean, VA. F/T. Advise clnt on various econ & regltr rsks by frmltng audit plns & answrng cmplx qstns invng GAAP & GAAS. Travl to vrious unantcpted clnt sites & BDO offce loctns natinlly. Mstr's deg (or frgn eqvlnt) in Accn, Tax, Bus Admin or rltd & 1 yr of exp in job offrd, Sr Audit Assoc or rltd. Altrntvly, ER wll accpt Bchlr's deg (or frgn equvlnt) in Accn, Tax, Bus Admin or rltd + 5 yrs of prgrssvly resp exp. Mst hve exp in ea: Rslvng cmplx accntng issues; GAAS; GAAP; SEC, PCAOB rules & rgltns; Public accuntng; Mcrsft Offce prds, incl Windws, Word, Excl, & PwrPoint; rviewing engmnt prftblt, incl billings & cllctns; usng vrs assrnce appls & rsrch tools. Mst hve CPA OR suffcnt edu/exp rqurmnts (as dtrmnd by state Board of Accntncy) to rcve CPA w/in 24 months of hre or prmtn. ER wll accpt any sutble combo of edu, training or exp. Mail resume: T. Brown, HR, BDO USA, P.C.; 615 South College St, Suite 1200, Charlotte, NC 28202. Job title & code JC - VA in cv ltr. EOE. Multiple pstns avlbl. HKP Auto Care seeks Lead Technician in Ashburn, VAH.S. Dip. or For. Eq. & 24 mnths exp. req. Vehicle diagnosis & repair or replacement of parts. Routine vehicle maintenance. Discuss issues w/ customers. Resumes to: Attn: Arun Pabi, 43185 Broadlands Center Plaza, Ashburn, VA 20148 B JOBS Baristas (Bethesda, MD) Prep or serve specialty coffee or other bevs. Serve food such as baked goods or sandwiches to patrons. Take customer orders & convey them to other employees for prep. 40 hrs/wk. Forward resume to Janice's Espresso & Gift Shop, 11200 Minstrel Tune Dr, Germantown, MD 20876 C JOBS Carpenter Foreman 3 Northern VA Area - F/T, 2yrs exp in job offered or 2yrs exp in a related position. Call Southland Concrete Corp.; 703-471- 4444 or fax res.; 703-661- 8740 C JOBS Carpenter Needed by W&B Brothers Construction LLC in Clinton MD: Construct, erect, install, or repair structures and fixtures made of wood, such as concrete forms; building frameworks, including partitions, joists, studding, and rafters; and wood stairways, window and door frames, and hardwood floors. May also install cabinets, siding, drywall and batt or roll insulation. Includes brattice builders who build doors or brattices (ventilation walls or partitions) in underground passageways. Must have completed trade school in carpentry, construction, or related field Full time/hours - 40 hours required. Mail resume to: 5805 Alan Drive, Clinton, MD 20735 Chinese Specialty Cooks Prepare & cook Szechuan style cuisine including appetizers, seafood, meat and vegetable dishes. Req: 2 years of exp. 40 hrs/wk. Resume to Manager at 6387 Corners Center, Falls Church, VA 22044. Two positions open CNC Operator Assistant 3 Chantilly, VA - F/T, No exp req9d. Call Ms. Kim @ H.Y. Kim Cabinet Co., Inc.; 703- 802-1517 Ion International Training Center, LLC seeks a Communications and Project Coordinator to promote the organization9s services and increase brand awareness. Reqs: Bachelor9s in Advertising, Public Relations, Journalism or related (will accept foreign degree equiv) plus 3 yrs9 exp writing and editing news releases for sports broadcasts. 3 yrs of exp must incl controlling execution of content; interacting w/ the press; managing endto-end internal communication plans, tactics and outcomes; working on large events or projects that require cross-functional collaboration; meeting project deadlines; and planning and coordinating organizational meetings and special events. Mail CV Attn: HR, 19201 Compass Creek Pkwy SE, Leesburg, VA 20175. Reference job code IITC-CPC-5523 Doyle Construction Company seeks VP 3 Construction & Commissioning. Manage projects from inception through construction completion. Lead and direct procurement strategies, oversee budgeting, execution and commission process to meet client requirements for successful delivery. Identify and assess risk in the Pre-construction phase and ensure compliance with safety and commissioning requirements. Work on multiple projects simultaneously while managing internal and external resources to achieve company goals and project deadlines. Proficient in Microsoft Project, AutoCAD. Bachelor9s degree in electrical engineering or related field with two year relevant experience required. Job located in Rockville, MD. Mail resume and cover letter to Alex Silbert, Doyle Construction Company, [email protected]. Find more jobs. The local expert on local jobs Find more jobs. C JOBS Newspapers carriers needed to deliver The Washington Post in the DC, MD and VA area Excellent part-time income opportunity! Transportation required To apply, go to deliverthepost.com C JOBS COOK. Plans menus, prepares & cooks meals for residents & employees of institution, such as, meat fish, soups, rice, vegetables, chicken in variety of styles, desserts. Specialize in preparing fancy dishes for special diets. Creates & explore new cuisines. Bakes breads & pastry. Cooks foodstuffs in quantities, according to menu & number of persons to be served. Manages all foods & domestic appliances & supplies. Keeps records & accounts. H.S. Diploma, 2 yrs. Exp. Req9s. Decena Home Health Care LLC., Job in Herndon, VA. 40 hrs/wk., 9:00 am to 5:00 pm. Please send resume to: [email protected] Cooks Prep ingredients & sauces. Prep & cook Indian & Pakistani dishes. Monitor portion & presentation of dishes. Clean food prep areas & utensils. Req. 6 mths of exp, knowledge of Indian & Pakistani cuisine, able to work evenings & weekends. To apply, email andleebkhan15@ gmail.com. Swab, Inc. dba/ Four Sisters Kabob and Curry 1243 Shopping Ctr Rd, Stevensville, MD. Corporate Devt. Associate Job in Bethesda, MD. Req. 15% domes. travel as needed. Analy. financial & op. performance of portfolios, assess investments & financial/capital impact of transactions. Req. CFA designation & knwl. of / demons. exper. w/: enterprise software, data integration for auto. data flow, financial planning, performing due diligence & financial/risk modeling for new investments & developing board & strategy presentations. Apply: send resume to Capitol Hill Group at 4350 East-West Hwy., Ste. 1050, Bethesda, MD 20814. Get tips and advice for recent grads. The local expert on local jobs Search 20,000 job listings by industry. The local expert on local jobs C JOBS C JOBS Cyberbahn Federal Solutions, LLC (Arlington, VA) needs: Lead Biomedical Engineer: Provide tech. leadership in development of medical device & consumer products esp. focusing on surgical, wound care, personal care, hernia repair or nerve repair/regeneration and other rtld. medical sectors. Execute experiments & prep. and/or review tech. study reports & executive summary. Must have 2 yrs exp in experimental & study design & analysis, technical writing, ISO 13485 (Quality system regulation), ISO 14971 (risk management for medical device), ISO 13485:2016 7.3, FDA 21 CFR 820 (Design Controls). Travel/relocation required as jobs to be performed at various unanticipated locations throughout the United States. Mail resume to Cyberbahn Federal Solutions, LLC, 1100 N. Glebe Road, Suite 1010, Arlington,VA 22201. Domestic Nanny 3 Vienna, VA - F/T, 6mos exp in job offered or 6mos exp in related position, have or be able to obtain driver9s license. Call Trevor Hirst @ 202-489-8685 E JOBS Energy: Fluence Energy, LLC seeks Senior Business Development Associate in Arlington, VA (100% Telework permitted anywhere in the US. 20% travel required) to identify and acquire customers for Fluence Digital9s software product and manage relationships with electricity market operators. Job requires Master9s degree in Environmental Management, Computer Science, Finance, or related field, plus 2 years of experience in any occupation involving Energy and Energy Markets Analysis experience. E-mail resume to Emily Roy, Global Mobility Manager, at Emily.Roy@ fluenceenergy.com. Please reference Job Code SBDA23. ENGINEERING Transportation Engineer Gorove Slade Associates, Inc., a Fairfax, VA company, is looking for a Transportation Engineer with the following: "Bachelor of Technology in Civil Engineering. "Must have completed at least two semesters of Master9s level coursework in roadway capacity analysis, traffic signal systems, modeling, and simulation. Please send your resume to Melinda Eleazer at Gorove Slade Associates, Inc., located at 4114 Legato Rd, Suite 650, Fairfax, VA 22033, or email your resume to [email protected]. Please refer to Job #MP23 in your cover letter. E JOBS Meta Platforms, Inc. (f/k/a Facebook, Inc.) has the following positions in Washington, DC: Data Engineer to manage data warehouse plans for a product or a group of products. (ref. code(s) REQ-2311- 129272: $175,190 - $191,000). Individual pay is determined by skills, qualifications, experience, and location. Compensation details listed in this posting reflect the base salary only, and do not include bonus or equity or sales incentives, if applicable. In addition to base salary, Meta offers benefits. Learn more about benefits at Meta at this link: https://www.metacareers. com/facebook-life/benefits For full information & to apply online, visit us at the following website https://www.metacareers. com/jobs & search using the ref code(s) above. Alternatively, click the Apply Now button above to be routed to our careers site & search using the ref code(s) above. Volkert, Inc has openings for the position Project Engineer with Master9s degree in Civil engineering, Environmental Engineering related and 1 yr of exp to review design and bid documents, evaluate contractor bids, and oversee construction progress and scheduling. Additionally, provide technical support to construction staff under the supervision of the Project Manager. Work under guidelines of OSHA/DDOT and coordinate with major Construction and Utility companies. Experience working in Quality Control, Quantity Assessment, Site visits and Office Engineering. Work location is Springfield,VA with occasional travel to our office /project locations throughout the USA. Please mail resumes to 11 N Water St, Suite #18290, Mobile, AL 36602 (OR) e-mail: [email protected] Engineering: ICF Incorporated, LLC: Managing Consultant, Energy and Sustainability Engineering (multiple positions) 3 Arlington, VA: lead execution of gov research & dvlpmt (R&D) across ENERGY STAR labeled products portfolio + building techs. Req9s Bachelor's or frgn equiv in Electrical or Mech Engg or closely rltd fld +3 yrs relevant tech exp in Electrical or Mech Engg OR Master's or frgn equiv in Electrical or Mech Engg or closely rltd engg fld +1 yr relevant tech exp in Electrical or Mech Engg. Hybrid position; p/t telecommuting authorized. Up to 5% N. American travel req9d. ICF is an equal opportunity employerthat values diversity at all levels. (EEO / AA 3 Minorities / Females / Veterans / Individuals with Disabilities). TO APPLY: Send resume identifying Job Code ICF152 to [email protected]. No calls. Engineering: ICF Resources, LLC: Lead Technical Consultant 3 Distributed Resources (multiple positions) 3 Reston, VA: advise clients in dvlpmt of strategies & plans rltd to electric Transmission & Distribution. Req9s Master9s degree in Electrical Engg, Engg Mngmt, or rltd Energy Engg fld +2 ys exp with Electric Transmission & Distribution Strategy. P/t telecommuting with authorization. Up to 5% North American travel req9d. ICF is an equal opportunity employerthat values diversity at all levels. (EEO / AA 3 Minorities / Females / Veterans / Individuals with Disabilities). TO APPLY: Send resume identifying Job Code ICF144 to [email protected]. No calls. E JOBS JEK Engineering LLC is seeking an Engineering Manager to manage, spprt & grow a diverse team of engrs, Coordinating engg projs & etc. Pos reqs Master's deg in Electrical Engg or rltd; 2 yrs' exp as Engg Mgr or rltd; In-depth understanding of Power Sys Dsgn & etc. Interested applicants can mail resume with code JEK23 to: JEK Engineering LLC., 4460 Brookfield Corporate Drive., Suite J, Chantilly, VA 20151. Engineering: Fluence Energy, LLC seeks Regional Director of Services in Arlington, VA (100% Telework permitted anywhere in the US, 20% of travel required) to drive and manage Fluence Service Business performance across key business metrics (Safety, Finance, Maintenance etc.) for North America and South America Region. Job requires Bachelor9s Degree in Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering or related, plus 5 years of experience in any occupation involving energy efficient product industry. Email resume to Emily Roy, Global Total Rewards & Mobility Manager, at Emily.Roy@ fluenceenergy.com. Please reference Job Code RDS2023. ENGINEERING Civil Engineer II [Engineer 2] needed by AECOM Technical Services, Inc. in Germantown, MD to complete subsurface investigation, geotechnical design, and construction for various infrastructure and civil engineering projects. EIT registration with the ability to obtain PE required. To apply, email resume to AECOM_Resume@ aecom.com. Please refer to Job #5937062. Executive Chef Washington DC Seeking Chef with expertise in Levantine, Eastern Mediterranean, and Turkish cuisine; lead menu development, create signature dishes, and daily specials; collaborate with manager on pricing, inventory, and vendor sourcing; oversee kitchen staff for consistent, high-quality output. High school diploma and 60 months of chef experience required. Send resumes to Ala1320 LLC [email protected]. F JOBS FINANCE Compass Lexecon LLC: Senior Vice President 3 Washington, DC. The Compass Lexecon Sr Vice President (<SVP=) functions in the lead role to run entire large or significant competition or regulatory cases & can serve as testifying expert when appropriate. Job req a PhD in Economics, Finance, or rltd & 2 yrs of economic consulting & analysis exp OR Master's in Economics, Finance, or rltd & 4 yrs of economic consulting & analysis exp. Slry $330/hr. Send cover letter/resume identifying job code RM to [email protected]. No calls. Financial Analyst: Eval capital bgt on investmt & imp. Anlyz cost saving & potential impacts on financl outcomes. MS in Econ/Fin rltd 6 mos exp. Job in Hyattsville, MD. Res: Metropolitan Partitions and Specialties Company, 5018 46th Ave., Hyattsville, MD 20781. Tel: 571-488-9730. For details visit: https:// metropart.com/careers/ Financial Clerk 3 Gaithersburg, MD - F/T, 1yr exp in job offered or 1yr exp in a related position. Call Mr. Herman @ Elite Financial Group: 240-454-7079 or email res.; [email protected] Food Preparation Worker 3 Washington, DC - F/T, No exp req9d. Call 88 Sky Inc.: 703- 795-7526 F JOBS Food Preparation Worker (Multiple openings) (RPM Restaurant LLC) - 40hrs/wk. Var OT. $36,000.00/ year Help cook in preparing food by washing, peeling, cutting & seeding veg. & fruits. Clean, cut & grind meats, poultry & seafood. Clean work area. No experience req9d, Job in Washington DC. Submit resumes to: RMP Restaurant LLC 1331 F Street NW Washington DC 20004. Food Preparation Worker: Perform food preparation duties such as cleaning meat, fish & vegetables, slicing meat, fish & vegetables, cooking rice & preparing sauces. F/T, $26,478/yr. Resume to Miso Cafe, 7410B Little River Tpk., Annandale, VA 22003 H JOBS Heavy Truck Driver, Leesburg, VA 2 yrs exp. req'd incl. 6 mo. w/asphalt, w/Class A endorsement. Apply by mail with cover letter & resume to Edgar Aguilar, Escalante Trucking 603 York Lane SE, Leesburg VA 20175. Dimention X INC. 2 HR Managers. AS deg. & 2 yrs. exp. per. mgt. Job in NO.VA. Fax res (202) 217-4400. Healthcare- General Hospitalist Physician (Winchester, VA). Multiple openings. Hospitalist Medicine Physicians of Virginia, LLC dba Sound Physicians of Virginia II: Diagnose, treat, & provide inpatient care for hospitalized adult patients. To apply, email Maggie McCluney at belong@ soundphysicians.com. MEDICAL MedStar Medical Group II, LLC seeks Endocrinologist provide clin & prof med svcs to pat. Req MD deg or frgn deg equiv + 3-yr ABIM-recog IM residency, 2-yr endo fellows, valid MD med license, ABIM cert in IM, & ABIM cert (or elig) in Endo Diab & Metab. Req travel to work at out-pat clinic setts & in-pat & out-pat hosp setts in Leonardtown, MD. Req day shifts, even, overn, & weekend shifts & on call duties. Apply online at https:// careers.medstarhealth.org/ global/en/job/MMG1750/ Endocrinologist Speech-Language Pathologist -Children9s National Medical Center-Washington, DC: Evaluate patients usng stndrd & spcl prcdres. Use apprprte prtcl for age & dsordr & cmplte prtcl in tmly fash9n. Shw sklls fr a vriety of disrdrs & tst instrmnts. Reqs: Mast. dgree or frgn evlnt in Communicative Sciences and Disorders, Speech-Language Pathology, or clsly rltd fld + 1y pst-clncl fllwshp. DC, MD, & VA licenses + Cert. of Clncl Cmptnce (CCC) from Amrcn Speech-language-Hearing Assoc9n reqrd. Send CV to aphuong@ childrensnational.org & ref code SLP. Search 20,000 job listings by industry. The local expert on local jobs M JOBS Manager, Corporate Tax 3 Financial Services (Mult Pos) PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, Washington, D.C. Hlp clnts meet their tax obligations while managing the impact tax has on their bus. Req Bach9s deg or foreign equiv in Acct, Bus Admin, Tax or rel + 5 yrs of prgrssve, postbach9s rel work exp; OR a Master9s deg or foreign equiv in Acct, Bus Admin, Tax or rel + 3 yr rel work exp. Cert Req: Mst have CPA lic or foreign equiv, EnrolledAgent or Member of the Bar. 80% telecommtng permitted. Mst be able to commute to designated local office. Domestic and/or int travel up to 20% req. Please apply by sending your resume to US_PwC_ Career_Recruitment@ pwc.com, specifying Job Code DC3858 in the subject line. Carver Business Group. Marketing Manager. Directing marketing polices. BA in marketing or rel. fld. & 2 yrs. exp. Job in NO.VA . Fax res (571) 261-8007 Dimention X INC. 2 Marketing Managers. AS deg. & 3 yrs. exp. mktg. mgt. Job in NO.VA. Fax res (202) 217-4400." N JOBS Jadore Beauty Spa is hiring Nail Technicians, six-month experience required. Please send resume to 1020 19th St NW,Washington, DC 20036. Mavana Nails & Waxing is hiring Nail Technicians, sixmonth experience required. Please send resume to 7257 Arlington Blvd, Falls Church, VA 22042. Nanny: Care for child in private household. Resumes to Robert Coffey, 5805 Beech Ave, Bethesda MD, 20817. O JOBS Operations & Business Development Associate Capital Alpha Partners, LLC seeks to hire an Operations & Business Development Associate w/ BA in Business Admin. Candidate will monitor firm9s engagement with clients & prospects; ensure completion of CRM projects using Microsoft Excel; perform ongoing revenue analysis; monitor internal communication/participate in senior staff discussions; shape written materials for external consumption; review exposure and propose improvements for social/traditional media/website interfaces; generate sales leads, produce recommendations based on trend analytics; write summaries of in-house policy research; fact check/proofread weekly client summaries; create charts, tables, and other visual elements; use software to design color selections and publish layouts; streamline/maintain organized cross-team communication systems to execute internal projects/revenue-increasing deliverables; create training manuals and deliver training to employees (individually/group). Salary $73000/year. Mail CV and Cover Letter to Courtney Oldham at 600 Pennsylvania Ave SE, Suite 220, Washington, D.C., DC 20003 Find the right job for you. The local expert on local jobs G6 JOBS H GENERAL JOBS H A H POSITIONS WANTED OPQRS SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2023 For employers and employees, matchmaking seems to have gotten more difûcult. A recent Top Workplaces Research Lab study revealed that employers and job seekers alike are struggling with the recruiting and hiring process. What ticks off job seekers the most? The frustration with the amount of time it takes to ûnd a job, along with the added stress and spotty communication. And there are big gaps in perceptions centered on clear communication of company culture. While 80% of employers believe they effectively convey their company culture to job seekers, only 30% of candidates share the same perception. Furthermore, while 60% of employers said they felt they were regularly communicating, only 28% of job seekers said they felt the communication was sufûcient. Both hiring organizations and job seekers agree that hiring, recruiting and ûnding a job are more difûcult than in past years. The Top Workplaces Research Lab recently conducted a comprehensive survey, gathering insights from both hiring organizations (246 responders) and job seekers (302 responders) to shed light on the hiring process. While there were some commonalities in their views, there were also signiûcant disparities. Here are some other key ûndings. Challenging times: Both employers and job seekers report an increased level of difûculty in the hiring and job-hunting processes compared with the pre-pandemic era. Perception gap: Job seeker responses indicated a more negative interview process than what hiring organizations believed candidates at their own organizations would experience. Culture ût discrepancy: While 95% of hiring organizations considered culture ût highly important when selecting a candidate, only 45% of job seekers shared this perspective. Dissatisfaction with time-to-ûll positions: Nearly half of hiring organizations (47%) expressed dissatisfaction with the time it takes to ûll vacant positions within their organizations. Effective recruitment channels: Hiring organizations reported that they ûnd most candidates through employee referrals and job boards. Effectiveness of hiring efforts: Surprisingly, only 56% of hiring organizations rated their hiring and recruiting efforts as highly effective. Where are employers ûnding workers? Of those employers surveyed, 78% said they ûnd talent through referrals. Some 61% use job boards. Another 38% use word of mouth, and about a third rely on direct advertising. Another third said they used promotions and transfers to ûll positions. When asked what obstacles are hurting the hiring and recruiting process, 62% of employers said there was a limited talent pool. About half said candidate expectations for pay was a barrier. Another third cited candidates unexpectedly dropping out of the process as well as a limited number of applicants. And 29% cited candidate expectations for remote work. Not surprising, employees valued pay, work-life ûexibility and beneûts (in that order) when looking for a job. When asked what would improve the process, job seekers said better communication, transparency about pay, a shorter process and clearer expectations around the job itself. Recommended best practices for employers around hiring: " Communicate more, from start to ûnish, at every phase of the process. " Streamline the hiring process. " Be transparent about pay from the beginning. " Design the process to be more inclusive of diverse candidates. " Collect data on the most important aspects of the hiring process and use it to improve. These ûndings offer valuable insights into the perspectives of both job seekers and organizations, highlighting the areas of needed improvements. Improvements in the hiring process would close some of these gaps and create a more positive experience for everyone. Bob Helbig is media partnerships director at Energage, an employee survey ûrm that is The Washington Post9s survey partner for Top Workplaces. The production of this section did not involve the news or editorial staff of The Washington Post. Study reveals common ûaws in the hiring process Covering career advice, recruitment trends and delivering the area9s newest jobs. We are D.C.9s #1 source for employment news. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2023 " WASHINGTONPOST.COM/JOBS AN ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT TO THE WASHINGTON POST PRINT: Advice, events, and Jobs every Sunday. ONLINE: Visit jobs.washingtonpost.com, a leader in local jobs. Twitter: @washpostjobs Facebook: facebook.com/WashingtonPostJobs/ LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/washington-post-jobs./ Instagram: @WashPostJobs [email protected] By Bob Helbig Career Training and Employment Services The Washington, D.C. Joint Plumbing Apprentice Committee is accepting applications for the 2024/2025 Apprentice Program online at local5training.org. The application process is open year-round. The school calendar year operates from September through August. Requirements: Minimum age 17 at time of application, must be 18 when placed at assigned employment High School Diploma or GED All applicants are REQUIRED to take a computer-based assessment, a proctored math exam, and an in-person interview. You will be sent an email with further instructions following the receipt of the following documentation: " Birth Certificate or Passport " Valid Driver9s License or Valid State Issued Identification Card " High School Diploma or GED Certificate " Transcript of Grades (sealed school envelope or raised school seal) or GED Test Scores " If you have a transcript from another country, you must have your Embassy verify in writing that it is equivalent to U.S. High School standards. *Please send copies of your documents EXCEPT the official sealed High School Transcripts which MUST be the original document. Mail all documentation to the Local 5 Training Facility located at 5000 Forbes Blvd. Lanham, MD 20706. If selected for apprenticeship, final acceptance will be contingent on ability to pass a drug screening. The Committee selects students of any race, color, sex, national or ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. The Apprentice Committee is actively recruiting applicants including minorities and females. FOR QUESTIONS ABOUT APPLICATIONS CALL: (301) 552-3505 OR VISIT OUR WEBSITE: LOCAL5TRAINING.ORG PLUMBER APPRENTICES
Visit washingtonpost.com/jobs to view complete details and to apply to these and thousands of other listings. washingtonpost.com/jobs Washington Post Jobs9 Featured Employer packages offer a valuable and unique way to source qualified candidates. Become an FE today and leverage the power of Washington Post media. Contact your Jobs account rep and call 202-334-4101. Washington Post Featured Employers are D.C.9s largest and most prominent organizations. They include employers across a range of industries, like IT, accounting, healthcare, and government, and are hiring candidates today! To view a complete list of our Featured Employers9 job listings, visit www.washingtonpost.com/jobs. To register online, create a job seeker profile and upload your resume visit washingtonpost. com/resume. Searching for talent? Join some of D.C.9s top companies on the area9s #1 job board. Washington Post Jobs has over 1.5 million registered online jobseekers across a variety of industries, occupations and career levels. This spotlight showcases a small sample of our Featured Employers, allowing you to learn about each company and some of the thousands of jobs they are currently hiring for. Check out the FE Spotlight each Sunday to discover new D.C. area companies. FEATURED EMPLOYERS SPOTLIGHT Adventist HealthCare Healthcare3We are a faith-based healthcare organization, based in Montgomery County, Maryland. We are the largest employer in Montgomery County with over 6,000 employees! Our comprehensive approach to caring for our community includes three acute-care hospitals 3 Shady Grove Medical Center, White Oak Medical Center and Fort Washington Medical Center 3 as well as two Physical Rehabilitation hospitals, Outpatient centers, Imaging Centers, Urgent Cares, Home Care Services, Employer Health Programs and Physician Networks& Digital Marketing Specialist, Day Shift, Marketing3 Gaithersburg Adventist HealthCare seeks to hire a Digital Marketing Specialist who will embrace our mission to extend God's care through the ministry of physical, mental and spiritual healing. As a Digital Marketing Specialist, you will: Manages websites and AHC && Registered Nurse (RN), Night Shift, NICU3Rockville Shady Grove Medical Center seeks to hire an experienced Registered Nurse (RN) for our NICU Unit who will embrace our mission to extend God's care through the ministry of physical, mental and spiritual healing.As an RN, you will: Develop a plan of care according to patient& George Mason University Education3George Mason University is a university with three campuses, each with a distinctive academic focus that plays a critical role in the economy of its region. At each campus, students, faculty, and staff have full access to all the university's resources, while duplication of programs and support services is minimized through the use of technology. In addition to the main campus in Fairfax, the university has campuses in Arlington and Prince William Counties. Associate Director for Family Programs3Fairfax Department: University Life. Job Category: Administrative or Professional Faculty. Job Type: Full-Time. Work Schedule: Full-time (1.0 FTE, 40 hrs/wk). Location: Fairfax Telework. Friendly: Yes. Salary: Starting in the low 70k's; commensurate with education and experience. About& Power Plant Operator3 Fairfax Department: Facilities. Classification: Utility Plant Specialist 2. Job Category: Classified Staff. Job Type: Full-Time. Work Schedule: Full-time (1.0 FTE, 40 hrs/wk). Location: Fairfax Telework. Friendly: No. Pay Band: 03. Salary: Salary commensurate with education and experience& Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority Delivery and Transportation3The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority operates the second largest rail transit system and the fifth largest bus network in the United States. Safe, clean and reliable, "America's Transit System" transports more than a third of the federal government to work and millions of tourists to the landmarks in the Nation's Capital. Metro has earned a worldwide reputation for security and architectural beauty. WMATA is clearly the employer of choice for over 10,000 area residents. The Authority was created in 1967 by& Manager, Digital Video Evidence3Washington D.C. At Metro, we are dramatically expanding our video capabilities to better detect, respond to, and understand incidents that affect our public safety and operations. If you have significant experience managing an enterprise video/ CCTV system, we invite you to apply to become& Senior Capital Program Manager3Washington D.C. Minimum Qualifications: Bachelor's Degree in Business, Public Administration, Construction Management, Construction Technology, Computer Science, Engineering, or a related field In lieu of a Bachelor's Degree, a High School Diploma and four (4) year of project& Dewberry Engineering3Dewberry is a leading, market-facing professional services firm with more than 50 locations and 2,000 professionals nationwide. What sets us apart from our competitors are our people. At Dewberry, we seek out exceptional talent and strive to deliver the highest quality of services to our clients. Whether you9re an experienced professional or a new graduate, you9ll have the chance to collaborate with the best and brightest and work on innovative and complex projects at the forefront of the industry. Our commitment to excellence& Senior Project Accountant3 Fairfax Dewberry is currently seeking a Senior Project Accountant in our Corporate Accounting and Financial Services Team for our growing A&E service company. Position will be located in Fairfax Virginia. Dewberry is a leading, market-facing professional services firm with& Senior Staff Accountant3 Fairfax Dewberry, a growing A&E service company, is looking for a Senior Staff Accountant to join its Corporate Financial Services Group (FSG). The position will be based out of our Fairfax, Virginia office. Dewberry is a leading, market-facing professional services firm with more& Westat Research3Westat, headquartered in Rockville, Maryland, near Washington, D.C., is an employee-owned research corporation serving agencies of the U.S. Government, state and local governments, businesses, and foundations. We conduct surveys and program evaluations, provide statistical research, and offer related services. Our multiproject environment provides career opportunities in health, energy, education, transportation, the environment, human services, and the workforce. We combine the relevant research area expertise& Bilingual Field Room Clerk (Hourly)3Rockville Westat is seeking a Bilingual Field Room Clerks to join its team on a national education study. We are seeking energetic, self-motivated professionals who are dependable, have good attention to detail, and are deadline-driven. Responsibilities: 1. Prepare and mail out over 3,500& Public Health Intern - Community Engaged Research - Remote3Rockville Westat's 11-week summer internship experiences will be hosted virtually, or on-site at our U.S. office-based locations. Our interns can expect to work 40 hours per week, Monday through Friday. The program will begin on Monday, June 3, 2024, and end& The Emmes Company, LLC Science3The Emmes Company, LLC established in 1977, is a privately owned Clinical Research Organization (CRO). We are a public health focused company that is growing and adding staff regularly in many areas including clinical operations, data management, bio statistics, project management, and regulatory as well as corporate positions to support our project needs. We are committed to ensuring that our newly hired staff receive a positive virtual on-boarding experience and the support they need to effectively work remotely. Headquartered in& CIRB Coordinator3Rockville US Remote. The Emmes Company, LLC ("Emmes") is a global, full-service Clinical Research Organization dedicated to excellence in supporting the advancement of public health and biopharmaceutical innovation. We believe in the power of truth, so much so that we named our company Emmes& Sr. Director Global Operations Strategy and Execution in VID3Rockville US Remote. The Emmes Company, LLC ("Emmes") is a global, full-service Clinical Research Organization dedicated to excellence in supporting the advancement of public health and biopharmaceutical innovation. We believe in the power of& American Speech-Language-Hearing Association Associations3The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association was founded in 1925. It is a not-for-profit scientific and professional association for speech-language pathologists, audiologists, and speech and hearing scientists. ASHA is committed to the consumers of our services, the more than 42 million Americans with communication disorders. ASHA's mission is to ensure that all people with speech-language, and hearing disorders receive quality services from well-educated professionals. The American Speech-Language-Hearing& Customer Relations Manager3Rockville As our customer relations manager you will provide assistance to Speech Language Pathologists, Audiologists, and those they serve. You will provide information, resources, and tools to our membership community so they can focus on supporting their workplaces and& Digital Campaign Manager3 Rockville Valued. Be an important part of ASHA's daily email and enewsletter communications using Salesforce Marketing Cloud. Trusted. Work with a supportive and energetic team to produce mission critical email and e-newsletters daily within Salesforce Marketing Cloud using& Fairfax County Government Government and Public Services3Fairfax County, Virginia is a diverse and thriving urban county. As the most populous jurisdiction in both Virginia and the Washington metropolitan area, the County's population exceeds that of seven states. The median household income of Fairfax County is one of the highest in the nation and over half of its adult residents have four-year college degrees or more educational attainment. Fairfax County also is home to an extensive commercial office market and is a major employment center. Fairfax County& Social Services Supervisor3 Alexandria This position includes a signing bonus of $2,500 (fulltime) for new county hires. The Division of Children, Youth and Families (CYF) of the Department of Family Services (DFS) is seeking a Foster Care and Adoption Supervisor to lead a team of Social Services Specialists& Administrative Assistant II3 This recruitment will be used to fill an Administrative Assistant II vacancy in the department's offices located in Alexandria, Annandale, Fairfax, and Reston, Virginia. Will be responsible for anend product demonstrating the knowledge and ability to process and integrate simple data within& Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority Defense / Aerospace3The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority operates a two-airport system that provides domestic and international air service for the mid-Atlantic region. The organization consists of approximately 1,700 employees in a structure that includes central administration, airports management, and police and fire departments. In addition to operating Ronald Reagan Washington National and Washington Dulles International Airports, the Airports Authority is responsible for capital improvements at both airports and& Vice President and Secretary to the Board3 Washington D.C. Compensation Grade: SSBD. Salary Range: $0.00-$0.00. Opening Date: November 13, 2023. Closing Date: December 13, 2023. Please Note: All job announcements close at 11:59 p.m. of the day before the posted closing date. The recruitment for this Vice& Compensation and Benefits Specialist I3 Washington D.C. Compensation Grade: S19. Salary Range: $77,558.00- $112,460.00. Opening Date: November 7, 2023. Closing Date: Please Note: All job announcements close at 11:59 p.m. of the day before the posted closing date. As a Compensation and& Fairfax Water Science3Fairfax County Water Authority (Fairfax Water) is Virginia's largest water utility, serving one out of every five Virginians who obtain their water from public utilities. Nearly 1.5 million people in the Northern Virginia communities of Fairfax, Loudoun, Prince William and Alexandria depend on Fairfax Water for superior drinking water. That's 1.5 million friends, neighbors and family members. We don't need any other reason to demand the highest in water quality standards! Chartered in 1957 by the Virginia State Corporation Commission as a& Laboratory Field Instrument Support Technician3 Herndon Performs support activities associated with the operation and maintenance of various types of online water quality/water security monitoring instruments. Perform routine checks of online chemical and bio-monitoring instruments and associated& Environmental Health and Safety Officer3 Serves as Fairfax Water9s primary point of contact for Environmental Health and Safety (EHS) concerns. Assists in managing compliance with regulatory requirements in a diverse number of environments, to include equipment and facility maintenance shops, administrative offices& Alexandria City Public Schools Education3Alexandria City Public Schools is one of the most diverse school systems in the country and we celebrate that diversity. Our students come from more than 80 different countries, speak more than 60 languages, and represent a rainbow of ethnic and cultural groups. They are economically diverse, but all are rich in that the residents of Alexandria are dedicated to ensuring that each and every one of them achieves success. The children of Alexandria have benefited significantly from the strong support of City Council and the Alexandria& Director II, Capital Programs, Planning and Design3Alexandria The Director of the Office of Capital Programs, Planning and Design Services manages the design and construction of facilities for the division. The Office develops and executes the Capital Improvement Program (CIP) which responds to& Instructional SpecialistSecondary Advanced Academic Services3 Alexandria The Secondary Advanced Academic Services (AAS) Instructional Specialist will be responsible for supporting the implementation of the secondary gifted services and the Young Scholars model. In addition, the specialist& The MIL Corporation (MIL) Government Contractor3Established in 1980, MIL provides innovative cyber, engineering, financial, and information technology services to the federal government. Our subject matter experts help advance customer operations through proven tools and methodologies. Dedicated to excellence, service, and support, MIL recognizes that sustained high-quality service delivery is a critical contributor to our success. We are recognized by our clients and industry professionals alike for our integrity, diligence, and expertise across our core service areas: Cyber& Business Analysis, Senior Associate (CAW Support)3 Washington D.C. Clearance Required: Other. Education Required: BA/BS. US Citizenship: Required. The MIL Corporation seeks a Business Analysis, Senior Associate (CAW Support) to support a Federal Government client on site in Washington, D.C. Responsibilities& Business Analysis, Senior Associate (Installation Support)3Washington D.C. Clearance Required: Other. Education Required: BA/BS. US Citizenship: Required. The MIL Corporation seeks a Business Analysis, Senior Associate (Installation Support) to support a Federal Government client on site in Washington, D.C. Responsibilities& The Foundation Schools Education3The Foundation Schools has provided psychoeducational programs for students since 1975. A variety of talented staff members is needed to ensure the smooth and successful operation of the educational and clinical programs at our three schools located in Largo, Landover Gaithersburg, Maryland. Our Administrative Office is located in Largo, Maryland. We offer a supportive working environment, excellent resources and a competitive salary and benefit package. The mission of The Foundation Schools is to serve the special education needs& Middle School (Language Arts/Social Studies) Teacher - $3,000 Hiring Incentive3Gaithersburg The Foundation Schools is a special education day school which delivers innovative school programs and support services for children and adolescents with emotional disabilities, autism spectrum disorders and other learning& Dedicated Aide - Special Education3Gaithersburg The Foundation Schools is a special education day school which delivers innovative school programs and support services for children and adolescents with emotional disabilities, autism spectrum disorders and other learning challenges. For over 40 years, The Foundation Schools9& AARP Associations3AARP is a nonprofit, nonpartisan, social welfare organization with a membership of nearly 38 million. Our aim is to disrupt preconceived notions about aging, turn goals and dreams into Real Possibilities, strengthen communities and fight for the issues that matter most to people 50-plus and their families; such as health care, employment security and retirement planning. Community Outreach and Employment Assistant Manager3San Antonio AARP Foundation works to end senior poverty by helping vulnerable people over 50 build economic opportunity. Our approach emphasizes equitable outcomes for populations that have faced systemic discrimination. We serve all people 50 plus& Remittance Processing Assistant3Lakewood AARP is the nation's largest nonprofit, nonpartisan organization dedicated to empowering people 50 and older to choose how they live as they age. With a nationwide presence, AARP strengthens communities and advocates for what matters most to the more than 100 million& Capital One Financial Services and Banking3We Don9t Only Think Big Things4At Capital One, We Do Big Things. You9re dedicated to your career. You deserve professional satisfaction and personal fulfillment. You belong at Capital One. Here, every day brings another chance to do impactful work that matters: helping millions of customers confidently manage their money, building stronger communities and delivering truly disruptive tech. You9ll give your all alongside some of the brightest, most resilient people in the industry4and in return, you9ll enjoy the& Senior Data Engineer3 McLean Do you love building and pioneering in the technology space? Do you enjoy solving complex business problems in a fast-paced, collaborative, inclusive, and iterative delivery environment? At Capital One, you'll be part of a& Senior Software Engineer, Android3McLean Do you love building and pioneering in the technology space? Do you enjoy solving complex business problems in a fast-paced, collaborative, inclusive, and iterative delivery environment? At Capital One, you'll be part& O JOBS Operations Improvement Engineer Micron Technology, Inc. has an opening for Operations Improvement Engineer in Manassas,VA. Job duties include: Complete all required safety training and ensures all work is conducted in accordance with safety policies. Improve safety behaviors and processes for work environment through analyzing and sharing safety data. Position requires up to 25% both domestic and international travel. To apply, visit Micron.com/ Careers. Search by requisition no. JR43112 ORIENTAL RUG TECHNICIAN BloomMclean LLC has Oriental Handmade Rugs Repair & Cleaning Technician positions in Sterling, VA. Inspects oriental handmade rugs for stains and other signs of wear for repair or deep cleaning. To apply, please mail resume to 14700 Flint Lee Rd, Unit E, Chantilly VA 20151. P JOBS PAINTERS-Multiple painters wanted by commercial paint co in Lorton, VA. Building Painters (multiple positions available) to paint surfaces according to work orders and requirements. (ref HR/RF) Industrial Painter to paint surfaces according to work orders, requirements, and OSHA rules. (ref HR/HN) All positions require daily travel to various unanticipated jobsites throughout VA, MD and DC. Mail resume: Sparkle Painting Co., Inc., 7962 Conell Court, Lorton VA 22079. Attn: (ref code). Pre-School Teacher - Montessori curriculum. Multiple Openings. Must Have BS Degree (or foreign equiv.) & 2 Yrs. Exp. Minimal Travel Reqd. Montessori Cert. at Employers exp. WFM, LLC, Rockville, MD. Send Resume to admin@ wfchmontessori.com. Find a job. picnic or movie? Stay one step ahead of the weather with the Capital Weather Gang @capitalweather wpost.com/news/capital-weather-gang S0141 2x4 P JOBS Project Coordinator: Ensure data integrity, develop & produce analytical reports utilized in manufacturing products, construction projects & services to prepare cost estimation & aid management in determining price of services. Utilize scheduling software, Smartsheet & Excel VBA, to track project progress, allocate resources & maintain project schedules. Produce 3D rendering of the project using AutoCAD. Coordinate & develop construction related projects by following waterfall frameworks & methodologies. F/T, $70,928/yr, BA in Computer Information Systems, Resume to MLU Corp, 14641 Lee Hwy #206, Centreville, VA 20121 S JOBS Shift Supervisor, Night Shift: Washington, DC; O.T. Req9d; to apply email resume to Harvest Eats DC LLC, c/o Faisel Y. to [email protected] Shift Supervisor, Night Shift: Washington, DC; O.T. Req9d; to apply email resume to Emilie9s LLC, c/o Faisel Y. to [email protected] DERMIK LLC. Station Manager. HS. & 2 yrs. exp. Job in Montgomery Village. Fax res (301) 972-1546. Marketing Administrator Computer Packages Inc., a world leader in intellectual property software, is seeking a Marketing Administrator to work at our headquarters in Rockville, MD. Will train a highly motivated individual, however some marketing admin. experience and strong computer skills are preferred. Excellent salary and benefits including fully paid health insurance, tuition reimbursement, visa sponsorship and strong opportunity for growth. Resume only to cpijobs@ computerpackges.com Find a job. Tech Jobs MPOWER Financing, Public Benefit Corporation in Washington, DC. is seek9g an Associate Director of Analytics to use MPOWER sys9s & query tools to complete work proj9s, dvlp9ng new models & tools to meet objectives. No trvl req9d. WFH benefit avail. Please apply online at: https://www.mpower financing.com/about-us/ careers?gh_jid=5499171 Application Developer Computer Packages, Inc. seeks Application Developers in Rockville, MD to develop and build proprietary digital solutions and applications for patent litigation and intellectual property software. Code, test, debug, document, and implements applications. Analyze technical requirements and implement improvements for client application systems. Convert application systems with different data sources while contemporaneously performing data analysis, data mapping, and conversion testing. Requirements: Bachelor's degree in Computer Science, Computer Engineering, or a related technical field. Coursework must include application development, including back-end application development techniques, multiple web technologies, database conversions, web security, and application conversion. Coursework involving intellectual property management systems and the following: Asp.net, C#, Visual Basic, SQL Server, HTML, CSS, JavaScript, JQuery and API's. To apply, please send resume to cpijobs@ computerpackages.com Business & Integration Architecture Associate Manager (Accenture LLP; Arlington, VA): Define, analyze, solve, and document the business requirements and processes for Accenture or our clients9 program/project specifications and objectives. Must have willingness and ability to travel domestically approximately 80% of the time to meet client needs. Multiple Positions Available. For complete job description, list of requirements, and to apply, go to: www.accenture.com/ us-en/careers (Job# R00180871) Equal Opportunity Employer 3 Minorities/Women/ Vets/Disabled. Business Intelligence Lead CARFAX, Inc. seeks a Business Intelligence Lead for our Centreville, VA office to lead provision of business intelligence to internal & external stakeholders. REQ: Bach in Comp Sci, MIS or rel IT field plus 5 years of business intelligence exp. 3 yrs of exp. must incl. executing BI projects & leading BI development teams. The anticipated base salary range for this position is $152,931.84 to $160,000. Final base salary for this role will be based on the individual9s geographic location, as well as experience level, skill set, training, licenses & certifications. In addition to base compensation, this role is eligible for an annual incentive plan. This role is eligible to receive additional S&P Global benefits. For more information on the benefits we provide to our employees, please see: https:// spgbenefits.com/ ourbenefits/CARFAX. Resume to HR Manager: Attn: NINA, 5860 Trinity Parkway, Suite 600, Centreville, VA 20120, job reference #73140391 (Business Intelligence Lead). Tech Jobs Cloud Integration Developer: Req Mstr or equiv in Data Sci/ Data Anlytis/Info Sys + 1 yr exp or Bach + 5 yrs post-bach prog exp. Job Loc9n: Fairfax, VA & othr unanticipated loc9ns in US. Re-loc9n possible. Resume: HR, Algorithm Inc d/b/a Cloud Integrator, 3949 Pender Drive, Suite 350, Fairfax, VA 22030 or email at [email protected] Computer/IT: Marriott International, Inc: Senior Software Engineer (multiple positions) 3 Bethesda, MD : perform research, analysis, design, creation & implement of apps to meet current & future user reqs. Req9s Bachelor's or equiv in Comp Sci, IT, or closely rltd fld +5 yrs progressively resp exp with custom app dvlpmt on open-source tech. 100% telecommuting with manager approval. Background check, which may include pre-employment drug test, req9d. Apply online at careers.marriott.com (Job Number 23180685). COMPUTER SYSTEMS ENGINEER. Analyzes data processing requirements and confers with data processing system & project managers to obtain information on limitations, capabilities of existing system & capabilities required for data processing projects & projected work load. Analyzes information to determine, recommend, & plan layout for type of computers and peripheral equipment, or modifications to existing equipment & system, that will provide capability for proposed project or work load, efficient operation, & effective use of allotted space. H.S. Diploma, 2 yrs. Exp. Req9s. MKZ Barkat LLC., Job in Woodbridge, VA. 40 hrs./wk., 9:00 am to 5:00 pm. Please send resume to: [email protected]. Database Administrator, Leesburg, VA: Limited domestic travel, telecommute and/or occasional relocation to multiple client locations nationwide to analyze, design, install, tune, administer, monitor databases using Oracle, Oracle based tools; work with SQL queries, testing, schema objects, tables, indexes, views. Reply to: Softrams, LLC, 161 Fort Evans Road NE, #205, Leesburg, VA 20176 Data Integration Specialist CARFAX, Inc. seeks Data Integration Specialist for our Centreville, VA office to design & develop data integration solutions. REQ: Bach in Comp Sci, Comp Engg or rel IT field plus 5 years of business intelligence exp. Incl. building integrations for Data Lakes and Data Warehouses. The anticipated base salary range for this position is $146,744 to $160,000. Final base salary for this role will be based on the individual9s geographic location, as well as experience level, skill set, training, licenses & certifications. In addition to base compensation, this role is eligible for an annual incentive plan. This role is eligible to receive additional S&P Global benefits. For more information on the benefits we provide to our employees, please see: https://spgbenefits.com/ ourbenefits/CARFAX. Resume to HR Manager: Attn: NINA, 5860 Trinity Parkway, Suite 600, Centreville, VA 20120, job reference #51667-0701 (Data Integration Specialist). Dimention X INC. 3 Computer Support Specialists. HS dip. & 2 yrs. exp. Job in NO.VA. Fax res (202) 217-4400. Tech Jobs V.L.S Systems Inc has multiple openings for the following positions to work in Chantilly, VA and/or various client sites throughout U.S. Must be willing to travel and/or relocate to unanticipated client locations throughout U.S. 1) .Net Software Developer to develop apps using ASP.net, C#, SQL Server. Ensure tech feasibility of UX designs. 2) Business Analyst to perform analysis & elicit & document business functional reqs, system & process design & create system design specs for development or enhancement or customization of apps utilizing DevOps & CI/CD to support architecture changes. 3) Software Developers 3 design, develop, implement, enhance and test applications using Java, Full Stack, AWS, Spring MVC, HTML, CSS. Mail resume to V.L.S Systems Inc., 4080 Lafayette Center Drive, Ste 300 Chantilly VA 20151 or Email- [email protected]. IT Microsoft Corporation currently has the following openings in Reston, VA (opportunities available at all levels, e.g., Principal, Senior and Lead levels). To access job posting, visit website address listed. Customer Success Account Manager: Leverage reports, dashboards, tabular models & analytical insights to drive biz success. Telecommuting permitted greater than or equal to 50%, but <100%/wk. https://bit.ly/ MSJobs-Customer_Success_ Acct_Mgr Software Engineer: Responsible for developing or testing comp software apps, systems or services. Telecommuting permitted <50%/wk. http://bit.ly/MSJobs-Soft_Eng Multiple positions available. Some positions req travel and/or permit telecommuting. For details (if applicable), including job descriptions & min reqs, salary range & benefits info, and how to apply, access job posting using website address listed. EOE. IT Microsoft Corporation currently has the following openings in Washington, DC (opportunities available at all levels, e.g., Principal, Senior and Lead levels). To access job posting, visit website address listed. Pro Bono Program Manager: Dvlp a scalable & effective technical strategy to support the rhythm of the biz & organizational goals for the company's pro bono legal program. Req domestic travel up to 25%; Telecommuting permitted <50%/wk. https://jobs-microsoft. icims.com/jobs/37511/go/job Multiple positions available. Some positions req travel and/or permit telecommuting. For details (if applicable), including job descriptions & min reqs, salary range & benefits info, and how to apply, access job posting using website address listed. EOE. IT Professionals: QA Testers, Software Test Analysts, Computer Programmers, Programmer Analysts, Software Developers, Business Systems Analysts, Application Developers, Software Engineers, Business Analysts, QA Engineers. Multiple positions. Various worksites. May travel to unanticipated client sites nationally. Mail resume to Zillion Technologies Inc, Attn: HRGC, 20745 Williamsport Place, Ste 250, Ashburn, VA 20147. Tech Jobs NETWORK ENGINEERS Sterling,VA & various unanticipated locations throughout the U.S: Dsgn, Impl, & Mntn cmplx ntwrks for a wide range of Org. Config Routers (CISCO) w/diff Routng Protocols (RIP V1/V2, EIGRP, & OSPF). Mng tech infrastruc & oprtns of Ntwrk Oprtng Cntr (NOC), incl ntwrk mntrng tools, mgmt sys, & ntwrk devices such as switches, routers, & firewalls. Config & Optimize cloud-bsd ntwrk soltns such as AWS, incl advanced features such as Virtual Ntwrks, Subnets, Routing tbls, & secrty groups. Dply, config, mntn, & fix most ntwrk secrty implmtns. Skills req9d: Wireshark, Solar Wind, Infoblox, Linux, AWS IAM, Palo Alto, LAN/WAN, TCP/IP & Nagios. Bachelor9s in Sci, Tech, or Engg (any) w/5yrs exp in job off9d or rltd occup is req9d. Mail resume: HR, Hyperion Technologies LLC, 21335 Signal Hill Plaza, Ste 250, Sterling,VA 20164. Principal Software Engineer for Vercara, LLC to work on cloud-based Application Security service to ensure customer network connectivity is protected/optimized. Requires Bachelor's deg or foreign education equivalent in CS, Electrical Engg, Network Engg, IS, or related field + 7 years9 experience building & maintaining test network using Linux VMs, switches, routers, load balancers, firewalls & IXIA/Breaking Point. Will also accept Master's + 5 years. Telecommuting position performed anywhere in the U.S. To apply, visit https://app.trinethire.com/ companies/36524- vercara-llc/jobs/84421- principal-software-engineer Ref#0014 Senior Data Analyst Capital One Services, LLC in Northern VA; Mult pos avail: Perform quant & qualt analysis of econ data, relating constants & variables, restrictions, alternatives, conflicting objectives, & their num parameters. To apply, visit https:// capitalone.wd1.myworkday jobs.com/Capital_One and search "Senior Data Analyst" or " R176687". Senior Professional Programmer Analyst Computer Sciences Corporation hiring for Senior Professional Programmer Analyst in Ashburn, VA (Ref. #6907300). Cdes, tsts, debgs, implmnts, & dcumnts mdrtly cmplx prgams. Crts apprprt dcumnatn in wrk assgnmnts sch as prgrm cde, & tchncl dcmnttn. Dsgns systms & prgrms to meet cmplx bsnss needs. Pstn rqrs a Bchlr's dgre, or a foreign eqvlnt, in Cmptr Scnc, Mthmtcs, or rltd fld, & 6 yrs of wrk exprnc in job offrd, or rltd occptn. Will work at unanticipated client sites throughout the U.S. Telecommuting is permissible. Annual Salary Offer: $165,173. Fulltime hires are eligible to participate in the DXC benefit program. DXC offers a comprehensive, flexible, and competitive benefits program which includes, but is not limited to, health, dental, and vision insurance coverage; employee wellness; life and disability insurance; a retirement savings plan, paid holidays, paid time off; and much more. Email resume to [email protected] resume must include Ref. #6907300, full name, email, address & mailing address. No phone calls. Must be legally authorized to work in the U.S without sponsorship. EOE The local expert on local jobs Tech Jobs Sr. Software Developer: Precise Inc., seeks a Sr. Software Developer to re-engineer & modernize legacy apps & migrate to cloud. Duties include: automate sys processes; decode & document legacy reporting processes; document source to target mappings; data mining, data modeling & data profiling; test & implem support & rel duties. Must have Bachelor9s deg or equiv in CS, S/w Engg, IS, or rel & 5 yrs of exp as S/wr Dvlpr or S/w Engg or Progr Anlyst or any job title involving s/w dvlpmnt. Exper must include use of DB2/Oracle/ Hadoop; COBOL/ Java/.Net; Django, Agile frmwrk; UNIX & Win. Job in Chantilly, VA. Travel/reloc to unanticipated client locs throughout US may be req9d. Email resume ref job title to [email protected]. EOE. Junior Software Quality Assurance Engineer (Multi Openings w/National Placement out of Fairfax County, VA). Must have min of Bach9s in any Comp9s, Eng9g or IT (Info Tech) related field. Forgn educ equiv acceptable. The candidate will devlp & execute software tests to identify software problems & there causes. Although no exp req9d, Candidate must have coursework or internship in at least 4) of the following: Data Mining; Design of Algorithms; Database Management Systems; Programming and/or Data Structure; Proj Mangmt and/or Quality Assurance or Design Analysis. Able to travel/relo to unanticipated client sites as needed. 9-5, 40 hrs/wk. $94,058/Yr Ref# JSQA-0423 LP send resume to Logical Paradigm, LLC, an EOE M/F/V/D, to 150 Elden St, Ste 245, Herndon, VA 20170 or [email protected]. Software Developer Ashburn,VA Gather /analyz reqs, design system specs, translt reqs to tech specs. Design code, develop prgrms, implmnt. Dsgn/ analyz data, review dataflow. OO dsgn/ analysis. Dcmnt prgrms. QA test. Deploy, maintain, enhance/ modify, support. Extnsiv invlvmnt in SDLC using at least 7 technlgs from Java, J2EE, EJB, JSP, Sprng, AngularJS, H/brnate, JDBC, PERL, Shell/VB-Scrptng, W/logic, W/sphere, I/matica, TOAD, XML, SQL, ETL, D/w-housing, C#, .Net, S/Point, VB, SSRS, ERP-SAP, BI/OBIEE, BO, Orcle, SQL Srvr, Teradata, Tableau, SoapUI, RESTful, API, AWS, Cloud, Salesforce, CRM, QC, ALM, Jira, Selenium, QTP, TSL, Agile, iOS, Windows, UNIX, Linux, etc. Education reqd; bachelors' degree in Comp Sci / Engineering / CIS / IT/ Science or rlted. 36 months (3 yrs) of progressive work exp reqd as Software Developer 3 Engineer / Programmer / Analyst / IT Consultant or in any related positions. May work in or travel to unanticipated client locations within US. Mltpl f/t opnings. Send resume with ref 8SQAC-SD23/19 to SQAC, Inc, 44335 Premier Plz, Ste 240, Ashburn VA 20147. Software Engineer (Python) Design, develop software apps using Python. Develop software testing strategies. Will work in Sterling, VA and/or various unanticipated client sites throughout U.S. Must be willing to travel and/or relocate. Apply to: Avi Technologies Inc, 21495 Ridgetop Circle, Ste. 308, Sterling, VA 20166 or email to [email protected] Find a job. Tech Jobs Software Engineer 3 McLean, VA. This position requires up to 10% domestic travel. Telecommuting permitted up to 40% of the week. Design, develop and implement software solutions. For reqs & to apply, visit https:// careers. jpmorgan.com & apply to job #: 210465989. EOE, AAE, M/F/D/V. JPMorgan Chase & Co. All rights reserved. www.jpmorganchase.com Software Engineering Architect Xcelerator Group, LLC seeks Software Engineering Architect in Fairfax, VA. Provide innovative and influential engineering leadership. Telecommuting permitted. Apply @ www.jobpostingtoday.com # 68726 Software Engineer(s) Nodal Exchange LLC seeks Software Engineer(s) in Tysons Corner, VA to develop, deploy and continuously integrate scalable and fault tolerant micro services in J2EE and Spring Boot frameworks. Telecommuting permitted. Email resume to blair@ nodalexchange.com; reference job code T3042-00134. E.O.E. SOFTWARE ENGINEERS FrontPoint Security Solutions LLC seeks Software Engineers in Vienna, VA to accomplish development tasks with minimal assistance, across full stack of solutions. Telecommuting is permitted. Apply @ www.jobpostingtoday.com Ref#56996 Data Science: Marriott International, Inc.: Sr. Manager, Card Analytics 3 Bethesda, MD: instrumenting data collection, measurement, analytics & KPI frameworks for Marriott9s Cards business. Req9s 4 yr Bachelor9s degree or frgn equiv from an accredited university in Math, Stats, Data Sci or rltd quant fld +4 yrs prof, f/t exp with data analytics OR Master9s degree or frgn equiv from an accredited university in Math, Stats, Data Sci or rltd quant fld +3 yrs prof, f/t exp with data analytics. Any suitable combo of edu, training &/or exp will be considered. 100% remote; may be performed from anywhere in the US. Up to 5% travel req9d. Background check, which may include pre-employment drug test, req9d. Apply online at careers.marriott.com (Job Number 23188929). Sr. Principal Support Manager Verato, Inc. seeks Sr. Principal Support Manager in McLean, VA to recv, triage, & resp to customer suprt tickets. Monitor & analyze customer traffic patterns. Build customer relationships & manage delivery of customer support. Mentor customer support team to dev, review, propose & test new product functionalities. Reqs Mstr9s in Info Mgmt or rlt9d & 2 yrs exp performing identity resolution on customer data using Alteryx; monitoring and analyzing customer traffic patterns on Kibana, AWS CloudWatch, & EC2 to reduce downtime impact & API error rate. Occas telecommuting permitted. Mail CV to Alison Webber, Verato, Inc., Attn: SPSM, 1751 Pinnacle Drive, Ste. 1700, McLean, VA 22102 The local expert on local jobs Find more jobs. Tech Jobs System Analyst: Evaluate business processes; develop & implement solutions. Test new systems. Perform analysis on data mapping between data models. Develop test scripts & render data thru XML files. Create data mapping from multiple sources including CRM & relational databases. Develop software reqs methodology utilizing the UML. Will work in Fairfax, VA and/or various client sites throughout the U.S. Must be willing to travel and/or relocate. Apply to: Technova Systems Inc, Attn: HR, 3701 Pender Drive, Suite 510, Fairfax, Virginia, 22030 or email to admin@ technovasystemsinc.com TECHNOLOGY Wal-Mart is seeking a Principal Technical Program Manager in Reston, VA. Job duties incl but not limited to ensuring proj mgr & sr proj mgr dvlpmt & continued successful performance by providing mentoring. Bachelor's or the equiv in CS, IT, Eng'g or a rel. fld + 6 yrs of tchncl prog mgmt exp or rel. exp OR Master's or the equiv in CS, IT, Eng'g or a rel. fld + 4 yrs of tchncl prog mgmt exp or rel. exp. Skills req'd incl but not limited to exp w/: tchncl prog mgmt, process improvement, & high-technology security driven decisions; end-to-end Prog Mgmt of Security Elements, incl Risk & Response & Vulnerability Mgmt; Prog Mgmt incl scoping, gathering req'mts, financials, & resource mgmt; Prog Budget Mgmt, incl Budget Planning & Forecasting. Employer will accept any amount of exp w/ the req'd skills. For detailed job req'mts & to apply, visit http://careers.walmart.com, & apply to the following Job ID # R-1717826. EOE,AAE. TECHNOLOGY PROFESSIONALS Two openings available in Reston, VA. Wal-Mart is seeking candidates for the following positions: Senior Software Engineer, Software Engineer III. Job duties incl but not limited to dsgn'g, dvlp'g, implementing, testing & supporting systs & bus. apps. For job req'mts & to apply, visit http://careers.walmart.com, & apply to any of the following Job ID #'s R-1718015, R-1717836. EOE,AAE. Technology Architecture Delivery Associate Manager (Accenture LLP; Arlington, VA): Assess, design, implement and/or support worldclass information technology architectures for Accenture or our clients, spanning simple IT projects to large-scale, enterprise-level change programs. Must have willingness and ability to travel domestically approximately 80% of the time to meet client needs. Multiple Positions Available. For complete job description, list of requirements, and to apply, go to: www.accenture.com/ us-en/careers (Job# R00166846) Equal Opportunity Employer 3 Minorities/Women/ Vets/Disabled. Get tips and advice for recent grads. The local expert on local jobs The local expert on local jobs Tech Jobs VP Professional Services and Enablement sought by CoreMedia Corporation, based out of headquarters in Arlington, VA to manage s/ware consulting services. Manage direct reports. May work from home 5 days/wk. Must report to co. office in Arlington, VA 4 days/month. May travel to various & unanticipated locs. w/in the U.S. Must have Master's Deg. in Comp. Sci or a rltd field + 1 yr of managing s/ware consulting services exp. Must have at least 1 yr of exp in each of the following:Dvlp'g solutions for an enterprise-level cloudbased Content Management Service (CMS) w/ integration into eCommerce platform & Digital Asset Management (DAM) for content sharing & storage; Implmt'g cloudbased SaaS, CMS, & DXP enablement strategies; & Utilizing expertise in Java, the Spring Framework, & Docker to dvlp & improve s/ware consulting services & technologies. Apply by emailing resume to [email protected]. Ref. job # 00011. Seeking --Domestic Positions Kind, loving, honest, compassionate, trustworthy, reliable Caregiver Avail. Hardworking individual is looking for position caring for your loved one. Over 31 years exp. Seeking position in VA/DC/MD. Exc refs. Call Julie 301-221-7695 Search 20,000 job listings by location. The local expert on local jobs Find an entry-level job. The local expert on local jobs Get tips and advice for recent grads. The local expert on local jobs SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2023 OPQRS JOBS H GENERAL JOBS H O H POSITIONS WANTED G7
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All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. the local expert on local jobs homes for sale, commercial real estate rentals merchandise, garage sales, auctions, tickets dogs, cats, birds, û sh Trustee Sales 202-334-5782 washingtonpost.com/ recruit washingtonpost.com/ realestate washingtonpost.com/ rentals washingtonpost.com/ merchandise washingtonpost.com/ pets mypublicnotices.com/ washingtonpost/ PublicNotice.asp For Recruitment advertisements, go to washingtonpost.com/recruit or call 202-334-4100 (toll free 1-800-765-3675) Legal Notices: 202-334-7007 Auctions, Estate Sales, Furniture: 202-334-7029 Biz Ops/Services: 202-334-5787 To place an ad, go to washingtonpostads.com or call 202-334-6200 Non-commercial advertisers can now place ads 24/7 by calling 202-334-6200 1408 Antiques & Classics LOOKING TO BUY AN OLD FOREIGNPROJECT CAR - In any condition, running or not. Porsche, Jaguar, Mercedes, Maserati, Ferrari, and much more! Fast & easy transaction, cash on the spot. If you have any of these or any other old foreign cars sitting around, please call 917-584-4918 WANTED VINTAGE SPORTS CARS & CLASSICS - Especially Mercedes, Porsche, Jaguar. Lexus, Datsun Z, Highest prices paid for the very best examples. Call Bob 703-966-0122 Legal Notices 815 Notice of Dissolution Notice is hereby given that ProSynthesis Laboratories Inc., a Virginia corporation, with prior ofûces at 45975 Nokes Blvd. Sterling, VA 20166 is dissolving pursuant to the provisions of the Article 16 of the Virginia Stock Corporation Act. Claims against this corporation, if any, are to be brought by December 17, 2023 by mailing the detailed claim to ProSynthesis Laboratories Inc. at P.O. Box 3332, Reston, VA 20195. Any claim against the dissolved corporation will be barred unless a proceeding to enforce the claim is commenced prior to the earlier of the expiration of any applicable statute of limitations or three years from the date of publication of this notice. ProSynthesis Laboratories Inc. by Jerome Krachenfels, President Legal Notices 815 THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA HOUSING AUTHORITY INVITATION FOR BID (IFB) SOLICITATION NO.: 0008-2024 MOTOR POOL REPLACEMENT OFFICE TRAILER The District of Columbia Housing Authority (DCHA) requires qualiûed Contractor to remove an existing trailer, complete site preparation, deliver and install a new ofûce trailer at the DCHA Motorpool. SOLICITATION DOCUMENTS will be available beginning Monday, November 20, 2023, on DCHA9s website at www. dchousing.org under <Business= and <Solicitations=. SITE VISITS ARE TO BE SCHEDULED UPON REQUEST by contacting Lolita Washington, Contract Specialist via email at [email protected] with copy to [email protected] SEALED BID RESPONSES ARE DUE ON OR BEFORE Wednesday, January 3, 2024 at 11:00 AM. A BID OPENING IS TO BE CONDUCTED ON Wednesday, January 3, 2024 at 11:30 AM via WebEx. Email Lolita Washington, Contract Specialist lwashing@ dchousing.org with copy to [email protected] for additional information. Official Notices 820 The Department of the Army, in conjunction with Army National Military Cemeteries (ANMC) and Arlington National Cemetery (ANC) has released for public comment the environmental assessment (EA) and Draft Finding of No Signiûcant Impact (FONSI) for the Congressionally-mandated removal of the bronze elements of the Confederate Memorial, located in Section 16 of ANC. The EA was prepared in accordance with National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), Council on Environmental Quality Regulations, and Army-speciûc NEPA requirements. It analyzes the effects of the discretionary elements of the proposed action, including how to disassemble the Confederate Memorial. The complete EA and draft FONSI are available to the public at https:// www.arlingtoncemetery.mil/About/Confederate-Memorial-Removal The public comment period will remain open for 15 days following publication. Comments can be submitted to ANMC through the comment form provided through the project comment website. https:// anmc-confederatememorialpubliccomments.com Special Notices 830 Michael Morris, MD of the Washington ENT Allergy Center closed his practice in August 2022. The practice was located at 14955 Shady Grove Rd., Rockville, MD 20850. I have asked my medical record company, Quest Diagnostics EMR, to format the records for use by Dr. Thomas Troost, ENT doctor with George Washington University Medical Faculty Associates. He has offered to see patients who need to see an ENT doctor. If the medical record company fails to comply with this request, the records will be destroyed on November 20, 2023. Official Notices 820 Give a giv that delivers every day Giv subscriptions washingtonpost.com/my-post S0390-1x2 MD Real Estate Auctions For complete terms and conditions visit www.atlanticauctions.com or contact Bill Hudson at (410) 803-4177 or [email protected] BANK FORECLOSURE AUCTION Substitute Trustees9 Sale Valuable Commercial Ofûce Building in Oxon Hill, MD 5410 Indian Head Hwy Oxon Hill, MD 20745 NEW DATE! Fri. Dec. 1 @ 11:00 AM Sale to be held at the Circuit Courthouse for PG County 14735 Main St. (Duvall Wing entrance) Upper Marlboro, MD 20772 3-story ofûce building containing 22,800 +/- rentable sq. ft. situated on a 1.45 +/- acre corner lot. The property is believed to be zoned CM (Miscellaneous Commercial). Ideally situated less than a mile from the Capital Beltway (I-495). Broker Participation offered! Investors welcome. No Buyer9s Premium. SUMMARY TERMS: A $50,000 deposit in the form of a cashier9s or certiûed check required of all registered bidders at the time of sale. The deposit must be increased to 10% of the purchase price within 3 business days of date of sale. Property sold in <As-Is, Where-Is= condition. MD Real Estate Auctions Seashore Sales Virtual Showings Available! Just Listed, Old Landing - Canal front with direct access to the Rehoboth Bay! 4BR, 3/2BA, & designed to maximize canal & bay views. Rehoboth Beach $1,899,900. Just Listed, Captiva Sands - Bright & Sunny 2BR/2BA End Unit! Offered fully furnished, you can move in & start living your best life at the beach. Rehoboth Beach, $449,000. Key West Style Home - Stunning 4BR/3.5BA coastal home in a pool community. Walnut floors, chef9s kitchen, media/family room, gym/flex room, all just 1 mile to Rehoboth Ave. Rehoboth Beach, $1,199,000. North Shores - This charming Beach House boasts 4BR/3BA, including two primary suites, and is conveniently located just a short stroll from the beach. Rehoboth Beach, $2,999,999. East of Rt 1 - New construction on Savannah Road, within WALKING DISTANCE to the bike trail! 3 miles from Lewes Beach & less than 2 miles to dining & shops on 2nd St. Lewes, $653,990. THE DEBBIE REED TEAM REMAX Realty Group Main: 302-227-4800 Direct: 302-227-3818 www.DebbieReed.com Firewood 237 FIREWOOD - Seasoned oak firewood for sale, $650/per cord. Delivered, dumped, 540-729-1311 Musical Instruments 280 SCHAEFFERSPIANO.COM New, used, tuning, moving. 301-424-1144 Garage Sales, D.C. 345 CHEVY CHASE - Sat 11/18 10-3pm, Hurry to Chevy Chase United Methodist Church, 7001 Connecticut Ave., Holiday Bazar, for your gifts, decorations,, gently used clothing and jewelry, children activities includes face painting and a photo with Santa. Lunch is available. For more info call 301-652-8700 Moving Sale 358 Home Decor Online Store Closing - Everything Must Go Mens hats; eyeglasses/cases; Small Ramen bowls; Water Goblets (Pink/Green/Blue/Grey); Lenticular Posters; Outdoor Camping Chairs (Red/Blue/Green); Slingback Lounge Chairs; Small Wooden Signs and more. Contact Mrs. White 703-819- 7263 for more information Dogs for Sale 610 AKITA FEMALE DOG 11 months old. All shots. $100. Call 301-633-7372 Cliff Bernese Mountindog Puppies, shots, wormed, family raised, M/F, 10 weeks, beautiful, $1000.Willing to meet 540-809-7041 BORDER COLLIE PUPS - 8 weeks old, parents on premises. Call 540-788-4190 for more information leave message. Dogs for Sale 610 BOXER CKC Reg Boxer Puppies, born 9/9/23, ready now, 1 female reverse brindle, 1 male reverse brindle, 1 male fawn color, up to date on shots and worming, asking $1000. Please call or text 540-660-4685 CAVALIER KING CHARLES PUPPIES Males, 1 ruby, 2 black and tan. $2000. Call or text 540-974-5777 COCKAPOO PUPS - 10 weeks old, black, black & tan, black/white spotted. Great temp. Health guarantee. Ground delivery and training available. $1800. Email [email protected] or text 540-808-8042 ENGLISH LAB PUPPIES - AKC reg, vet checked/shots/deworming,raised in home w/lots of socialization. Avail mid December. Call 540-247-1682 FRENCH BULLDOG PUPPIES - ACA & CKC reg. Ready 11/24. 3 males. Vet checked, 1 st shots & wormed. Call James 540-539-0894 French Bulldog Puppies, 15 weeks old 2 boys, reduced price. 571-264-4947 GERMAN SHEPHERD DOGS - 5 mo +, housebroken, crate trained, obedience, protection for family. European world champ lines. AKC. Starting at $2500. call 571-643-2107 Goldendoodle minis 15-20lbs nonshed $1500 Hlth Guar. . Rdy now call/txt 540 729 6365 www.doodledogpups.com LAB Black and chocolate Lab Mixed puppies for sale $400. Ready now. 540-908-5931 LAB PUPPIES - Chocolate, AKC, F, vet checked, 1st shots, wormed, family raised. $1500. Will meet. Call 540-392-9707 LABRADOR RETRIEVER PUPPIES - AKC, black & yellow. Ready 11/20. Call 304-257-3944 Photos can be seen on website www.chasintailkennel.com Dogs for Sale 610 LABRADOR RETRIEVERS - AKC reg, 8 weeks old. Yellow. Male & female. Our program focuses on: family companions, working & service dogs. Parents on premises with health clearances. Shots up to date. $1500. Over 40 yrs exp. 804-795-5933 or 804-514-8838 MINI SCHNAUZER MIXED - Shots and wormed, health guarantee, Delivery avail. $300. Prefer text 301-672-1072 or 434-277-8108 SHELTIE PUPS AKC - "Lassies". Sable & tris with full white collar. Taking deposits. $1500-$1800. Call 757-613-6651 YORKIES, MALTESE, POODLES - Purebred pups, NOT mixed, located in Ruther Glen,VA. For pics and info TEXT Marie at 210-584-8896 YORKSHIRE TERRIER - 2F, 25wks. $1150. Home raised in DC, 2nd shots, ACA reg, 15 year 3rd gen pedigree. 202-288-4470 Cats 620 RAGABOB Kittens, M, F, rag doll/ bob tail mixed, 1st shots, ready to go 450. Will meet. Call 540-392-9707 SIAMESE KITTENS - Pedigree, wedgehead, seal point.Avail Dec 2023. website: davasoirsiamese.com Call 540-433-2537 washingtonpost.com/classifieds CLASSIFIED S0141 10x5.25 Stay one step ahead of the weather with the Capital Weather Gang @capitalweather washingtonpost.com/news/capital-weather-gang picnic or movie? S0114 10X2 A ts & entertai ment? Washington Post newsletters deliver more of what you9re looking for. Discover and subscribe for free at washingtonpost.com/newsletters Did you hear |e Post today? wpost.com/podcasts Washington Post podcasts go with you everywhere Politics " History " Culture " More S0108 4x2 Washington Post newsletters deliver more. washingtonpost.com/newsletters TE H? S0114 2X2 washingtonpost.com/realestate EFGHI REAL ESTATE GUIDE EZ G8 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2023 DC H NORTHEAST Apartments Condos " Co-ops NE DC - 2 BR, w/d hook up, heat, a/c, new renovations, section 8 okay, $1700. Call 202-270-6802 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Roommates DC - Furn room for rent, use of kitch. No smoking, no pets. $800. Avail Now. Call Pearl 718-419-9424 NW PETWORTH - Large furn room in quiet home, close to shopping, on busline. $895. 301-529-5430 MARYLAND Other Maryland Counties ST MICHAELS - Charming turn-key 3BR, 1.5BA, quiet street downtown. $5000/mo. Avail Dec 1. 908-578-3032 MARYLAND Roommates BOWIE - Furn room in house, beautiful environment. $600 /mo. Avail Dec 1st. Call 301-509-3050. COLLEGE PARK/LANHAM - 2BR bsmt $1300. Lg BR $1150. Furn BR $625. In hse to shr. All util inc. No Smkg. Male Pref. 240-423-7923 RENTALS Wanted Senior looking for house to Rent/Buy w/owner financing. Handy w/ tools & you can still live there. 301-873-0663 Give a giv subscription! washingtonpost.com/my-post S0390-1x.25
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