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In His Beloved Philadelphia, Biden Faces Wariness From Black Voters
Author: Maya King and Katie Glueck
Even in the president’s favorite political stomping ground, his standing has slipped with Democrats who will be vital to a repeat victory, interviews with nearly two dozen Black voters showed.

Washington State News

What Is Your Biggest Takeaway from the 2024 Jets Schedule Unveiling

Green & White Will Play in 6 Primetime Games; Will Open Season at San Francisco 49ers on Monday Night Football NYJ Editorial Staff

Throughout the offseason, NewYorkJets.com reporters Eric Allen, Ethan Greenberg, Randy Lange, Caroline Hendershot and John Pullano will give their responses to a series of questions regarding this year's Jets.

Today's question: What is your biggest takeaway fr

Inbox: It needs to play out

Learn first, then assess Mike Spofford

Mike from Algoma, WI

I've been waiting so long for a legitimate reason to say this - "You guys are a couple of clowns!"

Plenty of others didn't wait so long, trust me.

Carolyn from Minneapolis, MN

I might be an old fogey, but where is the printable Packers 2024 schedule this year? Been looking all over the website.

You

Heretics win twice, stay alive at CDL Major 3
(Photo credit: Kelley L Cox-USA TODAY Sports) The Miami Heretics won twice Friday and advanced to the third round of the elimination bracket at the Call of Duty League's Stage 3 Major in Toronto. The Heretics beat the Vegas Legion 3-2 in the first round and the Los Angeles Thieves 3-1 in Round 2. In a back-and-forth first-round match in the lower bracket, Vegas won 250-223 on Sub Base Hardpoint, but Miami answered with
70 years after landmark court ruling, US schools still segregated

WASHINGTON - Seventy years ago this week, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled separating children in schools by race was unconstitutional. On paper, that decision - the fabled Brown v. Board of Education, taught in most every American classroom - still stands.

But for decades, American schools have been re-segregating. The country is more diverse than it ever has been, with students more exposed to classmates from diffe

Stars eliminate Avs on Matt Duchene's 2OT goal
(Photo credit: Ron Chenoy-USA TODAY Sports) Matt Duchene scored at 11:42 of the second overtime and the Dallas Stars wrapped up their Western Conference semifinal series with a 2-1 win over the Colorado Avalanche in Game 6 on Friday in Denver. Duchene, who played his first nine NHL seasons for the Avalanche, picked up a rebound right of the crease and lifted a wrister over Alexandar Georgiev to send Dallas to the Western

The Chronicle - Centralia

Nelson's late-game heroics lift Bearcats to district title

Aubree Nelson was pinch-hit for in both of W.F. West’s games on Thursday.

She didn’t let that deter her on Friday, when she stepped to the plate in the bottom of the sixth inning of a tied district championship game against Aberdeen.

“I knew what I had to do,” Nelson said. “I saw it coming, and I just swung and hit the crap out of it.”

She did just that, sending a go-ahead solo home run deep over the center field fence to give the Bearcats the lead. That home run went on to stand as the district-title sealing dinger, as W.F. West held on to top Aberdeen 2-1.

“She understood the situation,” W.F. West coach Kevin Zylstra said. “She just wanted her time to shine. She’s worked so hard this year, and she’s done such a good job with our pitchers. To see her get her moment to shine and just jump all over it was so good.”

Zylstra, Nelson, and the rest of the Bearcats exploded with happiness as Nelson’s homer sailed over the fence. Nelson sprinted around the base paths so quickly that her teammates seemed to barely beat her to the plate from the dugout.

“I think she qualified for the Olympics,” Zylstra said with a laugh.

As she made her way back into the dugout, Nelson shared hugs with her teammates and assistant coaches, and she couldn’t hold back tears of joy.

“It was the best moment of my season,” Nelson said.

W.F. West’s best moment came at the end of the top of the seventh, when the Bearcats (19-5) poured onto their home field at Recreation Park to celebrate their 12th district title since 2009.

“We wanted to get back to Field 1,” Zylstra said. “This is where we live and thrive, and we’ve thrived all year long on this field. It’s so special to earn our way back here and then beat a quality team like Aberdeen who we just respect so much.”

As the final score indicates, it was a pitchers duel on Friday. Aberdeen’s Lilly Camp allowed just two runs, Nelson’s home run and an Avalon Myers RBI single in the third.

Taylor Tobin (three innings) and Monroe Dalrymple (four innings) combined to allow just one Aberdeen run, which scored on a wild pitch in the top of the second. 

The Bearcats were solid defensively behind them, committing just one error. Taylor Tobin made a running grab near the fence in foul ground in the top of the seventh, and two innings earlier, Tanner Tobin saved a run with a diving stop at third base.

“Everything we did, people were contributing,” Zylstra said. “As a coach, that’s all you can ask for.”

“We did amazing,” Nelson said. “(Assistant) Coach (Jon) Meyer always says that we haven’t played our best game, but I think this was our best game yet.”

With the district title in hand, the Bearcats will now return to Selah after missing the state tournament last spring. They’ve still had their fair share of success on the east side in recent years, as they took third place two years ago and were the state runner-ups in 2019.

“This was so sweet,” Zylstra said. “Now it’s time to go on and see what lies next for us.”

W.F. West, along with Aberdeen, Rochester, and Tumwater, will find out its seed and first-round matchup at the state tournament on Sunday. The tournament will begin on Friday in Selah.

Rochester upsets Ridgefield to punch unlikely ticket to state

Last Friday, the Rochester Warriors were 9-12, and they were set to play a tiebreaker game against Centralia to determine who would qualify for the 2A District 4 pigtail game.

Seven days later, after Rochester won that game, the pigtail, and defeated both of the top two GSHL teams in the district tournament, the Warriors are heading to the state tournament for the second time in three seasons.

“They don’t care what anyone else thinks,” Rochester coach Joni Lancaster said. “They put everything together, they’ve done everything that we’ve been asking all year, they wanted it more than anything, and it showed.”

The Warriors clinched their state berth in dominant fashion on Friday, defeating Ridgefield, the reigning district champion, 8-0.

Rochester wasted little time taking control of the game. After McKenna Vassar scored the game’s first run on a wild pitch, Leah Hartley gave the Warriors (13-13) a two-run lead with an RBI double, and Arissa LeBaron doubled the advantage with a two-run single two batters later.

Layna Demers kept the momentum in the Rochester dugout by retiring three of the first four batters she faced in the bottom of the first.

“It’s so good when you put up the runs in the first inning,” Demers said. “It’s a huge stress relief for me.”

The Warriors gave her more run support in the second, as Hartley drove in another with an RBI single and Demers scored on a wild pitch to make it 6-0.

From there, Demers did her thing in the circle.

One day after pitching Rochester’s quarterfinal and semifinal, the junior posted zero after zero against a Ridgefield offense that scored 10 or more runs in 17 games this season.

“She’s one of the most amazing players I’ve ever seen,” Lancaster said. “No matter what, she’s gonna give me 100 percent. I don’t have to question her ever.”

Demers didn’t record a strikeout, but she didn’t need to. She allowed just three hits in a complete-game shutout.

“I knew we could do it from the very beginning,” Demers said. “We knew we were gonna struggle this year losing our seniors, but we came through in the end when it mattered.”

Both Lancaster and Demers said that while the wins haven’t started piling up until this point in the season, the girls never lost faith in each other, and that paid off in a big way this week.

“I don’t know how many times I said that every single day to love each other, support each other, and play for one another,” Lancaster said. “When you do that, good things happen.

“Sometimes, the most talented team doesn’t win. But when you believe in each other and you want it more for each other than anyone else, then that’s what happens.”

Demers added that more than anything, she and the six juniors on the team wanted to get the two Rochester seniors, Sara Haury and Macey Fluetsch, back to Selah one final time.

“I’m so happy I get to play at least another tournament with them,” Demers said.

The seniors did their part as well. Haury finished with three hits, including a double and an RBI single in the two-run seventh, and Hartley finished with a double and two RBIs.

“We got a lot of girls that have never been there,” Lancaster said. “They didn’t quite know what we were fighting for here. But the ones that did put the others on their back, and they wanted it.”

The Warriors will find out their seed and first-round matchup at the state tournament on Sunday. The 2A Softball State Tournament is set for May 24 and 25 at Carlon Park in Selah.

Prep girls track and field: T-Birds 800 relay puts together signature moment

TUMWATER – The moment Tumwater’s Ava Jones crossed the finish line, she turned around towards the live results truck and waited for the time to pop up on the screen.

What followed was a screamfest and jubilation on Friday night.

Cassidy Hedin, Annabelle Clapp, Reese Heryford and Jones set a new season-best in the 800 relay and broke a 20-plus year school record with a blitzing time of 1 minute, 42.47 seconds at the Class 2A District 4 meet and their final time running at Tumwater District Stadium.

“We’ve talked about it for three years, obviously a really big goal,” Jones said. “We believe in each other so much. We went into it with the (mentality) like ‘Yeah, we’re going to get it.’

“We didn’t care how we looked. We pushed all the way through the line for that time.”

That win plus two more and 12 events qualified for the 2A state meet in Tacoma allowed the Thunderbirds to capture the team title with 122.5 points.

Now, their true title defense commences. The talk of attempting to three-peat as state champs has been minimal, focusing attention on the meet that’s on the schedule.

All that separates Tumwater from solidifying a dynasty is three days of track and field.

“It is on their minds,” T-Birds head coach Jordan Stray said. “You can’t even talk about fighting for anything at state until you get there.”

Of the six times that quartet has ran the 800 relay, they have yet to lose. Still, this was the first time since the Shaner Invite two weeks ago the time was close to sub-1:43.

Clapp gave Heryford a multi-second lead in the second exchange and Jones punctuated the dominance on the anchor leg.

“It was our best race,” Jones said. “We ran like it was our last time running it.”

Jones ran the third leg on the winning 1,600 relay and edged out Ridgefield’s McKenna Calkins 12.61-12.63 to triumph in the 100-meter dash.

The junior placed second in the 200 to be in four events next week.

“I definitely think I need to relax into my race,” Jones said. “Everyone is super fast; running with fast people is all I want.”

Tumwater had several PR’s that aided to its stellar day. Clapp was the runner-up in the 400 and 800 while freshman Ashlyn Hufana was second in the long jump, ran on the second place 400 relay and took third in the 100. Abigail Krause was second in the shot put plus McKayla Clary (javelin) and Alexandra Broome (1,600) were third.

“It is a (much) bigger spread this year and that was one of our goals as a coaching staff,” Stray said. “Even if it is one point here or there, all of that will help with the top stuff we have.”

W.F. West’s Amanda Bennett registered a new season-best in the javelin, uncorking a throw of 124-09 to win the event. The reigning state champ threw for over 120 for the first time since the Activators Classic.

Which has caused the junior to get in her head a bit.

“It was so important to me,” Bennett said. “I just decided to clear my head, do a little happy dance and I throw better when I’m having fun.”

While javelin is still her main event, she’ll double up at state next week. Bennett cleared the pole vault bar at nine feet even to finish third.

It is her first year doing pole vault.

“You have to be mentally strong for it because you’re always going to end on a fail,” Bennett said. “I make sure to listen to what my coaches have to say and my teammates. In any event in track, you can never have too much pride with something.”

For as long as Bearcats head coach Katie Jansen Guiliani has been around Bennett, she is far from surprised with how she’s handled two field events to add on to her running events.

“She’s spent most of her time this season at pole vault,” Guiliani said. “She’s focused a lot of her energy there. Who doesn’t love to fly upside down in the air?”

Freshman Ashlen Gruginski set a new lifetime best in the 1,600 to place second and qualify for state. Joy Cushman (800) and Emily Mallonee (110 hurdles) placed fourth to head to state for W.F. West.

Rochester’s Merecedies Dupont broke one minute in the 400 for a new PR and placed in the top-four in the 200 to head to state. Centralia’s Alayna McGregor took fourth in the javelin to claim her spot at state.

Black Hills’ best finish was Lia Crecelius, sixth in the triple jump.

T-Birds mash their way into state tournament

This time last spring, Tumwater was in the same spot it found itself in on Friday — in an elimination game with a state tournament berth on the line.

Last season, the Thunderbirds were shut out in that game, and they missed out on the state tournament. This time around, they made sure to avoid the same fate.

“We knew what defeat tasted like,” Tumwater coach Ashley Lupinski said. “And we didn’t want to taste that again.

Tumwater scored three in the first and never let up against Mark Morris, scoring 14 runs in just five innings to defeat the Monarchs 14-1 and return to the state tournament.

“We talked about being on the offensive,” Lupinski said. “They did that.”

Ella Ferguson helped herself before she even threw a pitch by opening the scoring with an RBI single in the top of the first, and Jamie Haase brought her home by hitting her 11th home run of the season to make it 11-0.

The Thunderbirds added on with six in the second, and all six runs came with two outs.

Haase brought home another with an RBI single, and Sarah Stevens brought her around with a two-run home run of her own. 

Marrisa La Praim followed with her first home run of the season, one day after delivering a game-tying two-run single in Tumwater’s semifinal matchup against Aberdeen.

Avery Sugg capped the rally with another RBI single, but the Thunderbirds (18-5) weren’t done yet.

Two more came across on an error in the third, and Zoe Fields brought home another pair with a double later in the inning.

Just two and a half innings in, Tumwater led 13-1. Another Fields RBI in the fifth made it 14.

“We knew what that pitcher threw,” Lupinski said. “We laid off the high (pitches), hit our strikes, and I thought we did a great job.”

La Praim finished 3 for 4 with her home run and also scored a second run, while Haase finished 3 for 3 with four runs batted in, including her two-run shot.

“She can get behind in a count, and it doesn’t matter,” Lupinski said. “With her up to bat, anything can always happen.”

Ferguson went 2 for 2 with her RBI in the first, and she scored twice.

The Monarchs got one back against Ferguson in the circle in the bottom of the first with a solo home run, but outside of that, she was locked in.

She didn’t allow another hit, struck out 12, and retired the final 11 batters she faced.

After the final out was recorded, she was right in the middle of the Tumwater celebration in the middle of the infield.

The T-Birds will now wait for Sunday, when they’ll find out their seed and first-round matchup at the state tournament, which is set for May 24 and 25 at Carlon Park in Selah.

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