UCLA maulers seem destined for national title after bashing Iowa for Big Ten crown

Above a muddled Southland college basketball landscape, a heartwarming, heartstopping story has arisen.

In a winter filled with the unhappy buzz of screaming coaches and quitting players, a beautiful noise has appeared. It comes from the most dominant college basketball team in Westwood in three decades. It is directed by the coaching curator of the memory of John Wooden. It is led by the most impressive UCLA post player since then-Lew Alcindor.

If they were men, they would have been in the national headlines for the last six months. But from those shadows they have emerged stronger, more connected, and loudly prepared to bring home a long-awaited national championship.

Listen up — that roar at your door is the UCLA women’s basketball team, bursting onto the national headlines Sunday after delivering the kind of Big Ten tournament title beating that sounds, well, fake.

They defeated ninth-ranked Iowa 96-45. They won the title game in arguably the country’s deepest conference by 51 points. Fifty-one points. Fifty-one points! Who wins a game of such import by 51 points? A team that should be the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA tournament, that’s who.

Seriously, when officials reveal the women’s March Madness bracket next weekend, even though one-loss UCLA is ranked second behind defending champion and unbeaten Connecticut, the Bruins should be the top-line No. 1 team.

They have won 25 straight games, all but two by double digits, against a much tougher schedule than the one faced by UConn. Yes, the Bruins’ one loss is to Texas, but the Longhorns just won the SEC and are going to be another No. 1 seed.

And yes, the Bruins lost to UConn by 34 points in last season’s national semifinals, but the Huskies lost Paige Bueckers and the Bruins just got deeper and better and more committed.

By earning the No. 1 overall seed, the Bruins would have a smoother ride to the finals, where a UConn rematch for the national championship seems destined. The Bruins deserve it. The Bruins have earned it.

Were you watching the carnage at Indianapolis’ Gainsbridge Fieldhouse Sunday? If so, you probably turned the channel after 15 minutes. Maybe sooner.

“What they’ve done this year has been extremely impressive,” said Iowa coach Jan Jensen after the throttling. “I think you saw a lot of senior leadership on their end, a team that’s been on a mission since the Final Four last year.”

On Sunday, it was a mission of mauling.

The Hawkeyes took the lead with a quick three-pointer before the Bruins reeled off 13 straight points while holding Iowa to two total baskets in a first quarter that ended with the Bruins holding a 17-point lead.

For the next three quarters, the Bruins made the Hawkeyes look like a grade-school team, not a program that reached the national championship games twice in the last three years.

No, Caitlin Clark isn’t walking through that door. Not that she would have helped much. These Bruins overwhelmed the Hawkeyes by displaying every necessary strength required to take the final step and finish the job next month in Scottsdale.

“I just want to say thank you to the incredible players that really fulfilled their mission and stayed committed to the hard character qualities that we knew we needed to make this kind of run,” said head coach Cori Close.

It helps that they have six veterans who will be taken in the next WNBA draft. It also helps that Close will be steering them into her 10th tournament in 15 coaching seasons — she’s been here enough to know all the madness moves.

In search of the school’s second women’s basketball national title and first in 48 years, they are doing everything right.

They play near-perfect team basketball. On Sunday, they set a Big Ten tournament record with 34 assists on 40 baskets, the highlight being an over-the-head backward pass from Angela Dugalic to Kiki Rice in the fourth quarter.

“This group has the potential to do whatever it wants,” said Rice.

They are deeper than any team in the country. They won by 51 points, and their unquestionably best player, Lauren Betts, took all of nine shots. Lauren was even outscored by her little sister Sienna, whom Lauren wildly cheered for while standing in front of the bench.

The tournament most outstanding player was not Lauren Betts, but Kiki Rice, who wasn’t the leading scorer but had eight assists and three steals—and didn’t crack a smile until she heard her teammates on the trophy stage chanting her name.

“She’s one of the most selfless people I’ve ever played with,” Lauren Betts said of Rice. “She really could not care less about all the attention. She just wants to win.”

In all, nine different players scored for UCLA, and when is the last time you’ve seen a scoresheet so full in a game of such magnitude?

Oh yeah, they can also shoot. All of them can shoot, as they made half of their 26 three-point attempts, led by Gianna Kneepkens’ four treys and team-high 19 points.

The Bruins could have used Kneepkens last season against UConn, but she was playing for Utah. She’s here now, and that could be the difference.

Compared to last spring’s surprise Final Four run, everything feels different. These Bruins know they belong on this big stage, know how to win here, and calmly and precisely play as if they know they can pull this off.

During Sunday’s postgame celebration, the three Bruins who briefly, but famously, joined the UCLA dance team during a recent men’s game repeated the dance on the Indianapolis court. They’re feeling it. Their fans are feeling it. Soon an entire city could be feeling it.

“I’m joyful,” said Close, “and the dance is just beginning.”
https://www.latimes.com/sports/ucla/story/2026-03-08/ucla-mauled-iowa-proved-bruins-can-win-national-title

Obama Presidential Center in Jackson Park to open to public on Juneteenth

CHICAGO (WLS) – The Obama Presidential Center on Chicago’s South Side will officially open on Juneteenth, the former president’s foundation announced on Saturday.

The center, located in Jackson Park, will be dedicated the day before the opening, on June 18, kicking off four days of celebrations.

ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch Obama Foundation CEO Valerie Jarrett discuss the significance of opening to the public on Juneteenth.

Tickets to the center’s museum will be available starting in May.

https://abc7chicago.com/post/obama-center-opening-barack-presidential-jackson-park-chicago-open-public-juneteenth/18690188/

What capabilities does Iran have to hit U.S. soil?

Iran has launched more than 1,600 drone strikes on U.S. allies in the Middle East since the war began last week, according to the Institute for National Security Studies in Israel.

CBS News national security contributor Samantha Vinograd provides further insights on this developing situation.
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/what-capabilities-does-iran-have-hit-us-soil/

WATCH: Daylight saving time: How the time change affects sleep

Daylight Saving Time: How the Time Change Affects Sleep

Sleep expert Rebecca Robbins explains why the clock shift can disrupt routines and shares tips for adjusting to daylight saving time.

https://abcnews.com/Health/video/daylight-saving-time-time-change-affects-sleep-130842002

Savannah Guthrie makes offscreen visit to ‘Today’ show, first since her mother went missing

NEW YORK — Savannah Guthrie made an off-camera appearance Thursday at NBC’s “Today” show studios to thank colleagues for their support since her mother, Nancy, went missing from her Arizona home a month ago.

The “Today” show stated that Guthrie, a longtime co-host of the morning news program, plans to return to the air at some point but “remains focused right now supporting her family and working to help bring Nancy home.”

Nancy Guthrie was last seen at her home outside Tucson on January 31 and was reported missing the following day. Authorities believe the 84-year-old was kidnapped, abducted, or otherwise taken against her will.

The Guthrie family has offered a $1 million reward for information leading to the recovery of their mother, but solid information in the case has been hard to come by.

Savannah Guthrie has been a co-anchor of the venerable NBC morning show since 2012. One of her former colleagues, Hoda Kotb, has returned to “Today” to fill in while Guthrie has concentrated on finding her mother.

https://abc7.com/post/savannah-guthrie-makes-offscreen-visit-today-show-first-mother-went-missing/18681846/

Philip Glass’ ‘Akhnaten’ is back at L.A. Opera, this time with a magnificent John Holiday

By my count, Philip Glass has written 28 operas, the same number as Verdi. The count is iffy because Glass pushes the boundaries between what we tend to call opera and the fuzzier idea of music theater.

His first, *Einstein on the Beach* (1976), a collaboration between the composer and the late, innovative theater maker Robert Wilson, is a non-narrative effusion of imagery, movement, music, and text — each a brilliantly independent entity that somehow excites a hard-to-pin-down purpose. His latest (and probably his last, as Glass turns 90 this year) is *Circus Days and Nights*, a touching and thrilling opera for a circus, staged at a circus in Malmö, Sweden, in 2021. This caps a wondrous 45 years of operatic advancement.

You would have to go back to Handel’s 42 operas, Mozart’s 22, or Verdi’s oeuvre for operatic equivalence. Glass’ subject matter varies widely in epochs and ethoses, from ancient Egypt to Walt Disney’s Hollywood. Taken as a whole, these 28 operas reveal how we got to be who we are historically, artistically, spiritually, politically, and fancifully — often including more than one of those categories. A notable example is his third opera, *Akhnaten*, which Los Angeles Opera has recently remounted at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion.

Glass’ instantly recognizable musical style has remained, over the years, consistently abstract and refreshing. It doesn’t tell you how to think, feel, or even understand. It simply grabs your attention; you do the interpreting.

Still, America knows little of Glass’ operatic enormity. The early “portrait” operas *Einstein on the Beach*, *Satyagraha* (about Gandhi), and *Akhnaten* (about the 14th-century BC Egyptian pharaoh) appear in repertory here and there — mostly in Europe — as do a trio of operas based on Jean Cocteau films. The rest remain little mounted, while several (but not all) have been recorded.

The Metropolitan Opera, for instance, commissioned *The Voyage* in 1992 to celebrate the 500th anniversary of Columbus’ arrival in the Americas, but the epic opera is nowhere to be found in our semisesquicentennial year. It is sadly no longer even thinkable that *Appomattox*, Glass’ revelatory reminder of an America that once honored goodwill negotiation over political self-interest, will return to the Kennedy Center, where its final version premiered 11 years ago.

Los Angeles Opera has been better than most American companies in its attention to Glass. It has excellently presented the three portrait operas on its main stage, beginning with *Einstein* in the final and most brilliant revival of the original Wilson staging. The *Satyagraha* and *Akhnaten* revivals have been the designed-to-dazzle inventions of quirky director Phelim McDermott, a co-founder of Impossible, an eccentric British theater company.

When new in the last decade, these productions felt like the most arresting presentations of these operas since Achim Freyer’s in Stuttgart, Germany, in the early 1980s. Almost every performance at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion has sold out.

McDermott’s *Akhnaten* received the most attention thanks to breathtaking jugglers and lavish costumes, along with a touch of full-frontal novelty as Akhnaten dons his kitschy, glittery getup for his inauguration. Glass chose the pharaoh because he is thought to have been the first monotheistic ruler.

*Akhnaten* is revealed in episodes of his life, presented not as a fleshed-out narrative but as ritual, including a ravishing love duet with his wife, Nefertiti. The revolutionary pharaoh builds a great city and reduces spiritual chaos by focusing on a single-minded form of worship.

He appears androgynous in portraits, which led Glass to create the role for countertenor. The sung texts are in ancient languages, and there are no projected song titles. Instead, a narrator offers a somewhat loose notion of what’s happening in the audience’s language, notably during Akhnaten’s great aria — a hymn to Aten, god of the sun.

Ultimately, the pharaoh’s prescient spiritual optimism comes into conflict with the all-powerful establishment priests, who kill Akhnaten and Nefertiti. The opera ends with Akhnaten’s son, presumably Tutankhamun, restoring polytheism, and then, after a leap millennia into the future, the site is rediscovered by modern-day tourists.

The opera’s currency could not have been missed on Saturday, with the recent assassination of Shia cleric and Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei and his wife at the start of America’s and Israel’s conflict with Iran.

In the opera, the ghosts of Akhnaten, his wife, and mother have the last word in a glorious trio. When first performed at L.A. Opera a decade ago, the lavish production — co-produced with English National Opera — helped revive a neglected opera. Since then, *Akhnaten* has nearly gone mainstream.

The Metropolitan Opera also staged McDermott’s production, releasing it on CD and DVD, winning a Grammy for Best Opera Recording. Since then, choreographer Lucinda Childs, veteran of *Einstein on the Beach*, staged a stunningly chic *Akhnaten* in Nice, France, available on YouTube.

Last year, director Barrie Kosky caused a sensation with his staging at Komische Oper Berlin, starring American countertenor John Holiday. Holiday happens to be the Akhnaten in the L.A. Opera revival, and he is magnificent.

McDermott originally built his production around the gracefully emotive Anthony Roth Costanzo, slight and luminous in voice and build, and game for nudity. Costanzo’s disarming enthusiasm for the role was significant in mainstreaming *Akhnaten*. Holiday, by contrast, suggests a ruler of profound, unflappable dignity rather than vulnerability.

His hymn to Aten is an exercise in majesty — an ode not just to the sun but to the vast expanses of our solar system. In general, the singers elevate the production. Sun-Ly Pierce as Nefertiti and So Young Park as Queen Tye add allure. The large cast of smaller roles and chorus is excellent.

Zachary James returns as both Amenhotep III, Akhnaten’s father, and the engaging narrator, who occasionally threatens to get carried away. McDermott had perfectly employed James as the droll animatronic Disneyland Lincoln in his animation-friendly, slightly goofy production of *Perfect American* in Madrid, where that opera premiered.

Here, McDermott’s inspired staging demonstrated that Glass’ forgiving personal portrait of Walt Disney makes it the quintessential Hollywood opera — one that no one dares bring to squeamish Hollywood. Hollywood, however, is hardly squeamish when it comes to synchronized jugglers.

For McDermott, jugglers suggest somber ritual and were, in fact, known in Akhnaten’s Egypt. For the audience, they are a thrill a minute. For Glass, they may take on deeper meaning now that the circus is where he landed, 26 operas later.

As for Finnish conductor Dalia Stasevska, making her L.A. Opera debut, she keenly keeps score and bounding balls together with cinematic flair. Glass removed violins from the orchestra to achieve a dark, primordial orchestral sound along with pounding percussion. Stasevska finds light, color, and action.

She conducts for the moment. Picturesque wind instruments suddenly burst forth as if a flock of birds were flying over the pyramids. Solo brass can sound momentous. The percussion pounds like nobody’s business, opening the score up to all the implied emotion and glitter on an over-stuffed stage.

Childs’ exalted use of dance and Kosky’s dazzling theatrical imagination may have moved us into a sleeker, more sophisticated, and paradisal Glassian realm, but the sheer passion McDermott and Stasevska bring continues its own attraction.
https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/story/2026-03-05/philip-glass-akhnaten-is-back-at-la-opera-this-time-with-magnificent-john-holiday

1st vertical farm in downtown office building in US now in Chicago’s Loop

Chicago Hosts First Vertical Farm in a Downtown Office Building in the U.S.

CHICAGO (WLS) — The first vertical farm located inside a downtown office building in the United States has opened its doors in Chicago, and it’s just the beginning of a new farming revolution.

At this innovative urban farm, workers cut fresh cilantro with scissors, place it into containers, and prepare it for delivery to local restaurants — where it could be served on the same night. Remarkably, all of this fresh produce is grown right in a Loop office building on La Salle Drive. The space was formerly occupied by a law firm but has now been transformed into a revolutionary indoor farm.

“We don’t have the challenge of pesticides. We don’t have pests and rodents and things like adverse weather conditions knocking out entire crops,” explained Farm Zero CEO Russ Steinberg.

Currently, the farm operates within a 500-square-foot area using trays and a hydroponic drip watering system that recirculates water. Instead of soil, the plants grow in a cotton-like material, and energy-efficient LED lights provide an effective substitute for natural sunlight.

See also: Climate Ready: Midwest ski resorts ‘cheat’ mother nature to survive season

Although the farm’s current scale is somewhat limited, Farm Zero is expanding rapidly. Plans are underway for a massive new facility inside the historic former home of Roosevelt University on South State Street. The 137-year-old building occupies an entire city block and spans approximately half a million square feet — offering ample space to significantly increase food production.

“We’re developing land inside downtown vacant office buildings,” Steinberg added.

One of Farm Zero’s customers is Blue Plate Catering, which highly values the fresh, healthy vegetables supplied by a local urban farm.

“If you go to Whole Foods or Mariano’s, that food is coming from California or Mexico. Eighty percent of our food comes from there. So, to have a local business that can support, I think it’s a huge breakthrough,” said Blue Plate Executive Chef Charles Haracz.

With 45 million square feet of vacant office space in downtown Chicago, there is tremendous potential for growing fresh food close to the city’s population.

“We have designs on creating an entirely new food system, tackling some of the major challenges that exist between commercial real estate vacancy and the public health crisis,” Steinberg said.

In addition to producing fresh food, Farm Zero serves as an eco-tourism spot. They have hosted tours for school groups and international business visitors, many of whom get the chance to sample the farm’s fresh produce.

https://abc7chicago.com/post/1st-vertical-farm-downtown-office-building-us-now-chicagos-loop-la-salle-drive/18677636/

Fall River man sentenced for raping woman when she refused to take naked pictures of young daughter

A Fall River man pleaded guilty to rape and child pornography charges on Monday after sexually assaulting a woman who refused to take nude photos of her young daughter, prosecutors announced Tuesday.

Elias Rodrigues Dos Santos Mendes, 55, was sentenced in Fall River Superior Court to eight to ten years in state prison. Because he is undocumented, Dos Santos Mendes will be deported back to Brazil after serving his sentence, the office of Bristol County District Attorney Thomas Quinn said in a press release.

Dos Santos Mendes faced multiple charges, including two counts of rape, one count of assault to rape, indecent assault and battery on a person over 14, and possession of child pornography, according to the DA.

Prosecutors revealed that in March 2024, Dos Santos Mendes met an adult woman who was acquainted with him prior to their meeting, as well as her four children. The family had recently arrived in the United States with plans to reside in Fall River. Dos Santos Mendes offered to assist the woman and her children in finding housing.

While the victim and Dos Santos Mendes were speaking inside his car, he asked her to take naked photos of her 12-year-old daughter so he could allegedly sell them online. He also showed the victim numerous videos and photos of naked children on his phone.

When the victim refused to comply, Dos Santos Mendes became angry and then sexually assaulted and raped her inside his vehicle, the DA’s office stated.

The victim reported the incident to the police and sought medical treatment, which included collecting a DNA sample. That sample was later matched to Dos Santos Mendes.

During the investigation, police confiscated multiple phones belonging to Dos Santos Mendes, including a brand-new device. He claimed to have broken one of his phones the week prior.

A search of the devices uncovered a video containing child pornography, prosecutors said.

District Attorney Thomas Quinn condemned the actions, stating, “This behavior clearly demonstrates a disturbed and deranged mind.”

The case was prosecuted by Assistant District Attorneys Canan Yesilcimen and Kalene Kobza.
https://www.boston.com/news/local-news/2026/03/04/fall-river-man-sentenced-for-raping-woman-when-she-refused-to-take-naked-pictures-of-young-daughter/

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