Ashlon Jackson's buzzer-beating trey lifts Duke past LSU

Ashlon Jackson's rim-circling 3-pointer as time expired gave third-seeded Duke an 87-85 win over second-seeded LSU in a roller-coaster Sweet 16 matchup on Friday in the Sacramento Region 2 nightcap.

Field Level Media

The win sends Duke to the regional final on Sunday, when the Blue Devils will face top-seeded UCLA. The Bruins cruised past fourth-seeded Minnesota in the first Sweet 16 contest on Friday, 80-56.

Duke (27-8) led most of the night and by as many as 11 points, including a 78-67 edge in the fourth quarter after an 11-0 run.

LSU (29-6) rallied multiple times in the game. The teams exchanged the lead six times in the third quarter with their big spurt, punctuated with three consecutive converted and-one opportunities.

Facing another double-digit deficit in the final period, the Tigers chipped away again, however, holding Duke without a field goal for more than five minutes. LSU had an opportunity to take the lead with 37 seconds remaining after MiLaysia Fulwiley intercepted a pass near midcourt.

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However, with the Blue Devils' Taina Mair bearing down on her on the fastbreak, Fulwiley attempted a reverse layup going left-to-right that rimmed off. Duke regained possession, and LSU sent Jackson to the foul line -- where she missed both attempts with 19 seconds left.

After a disputed ball knocked out of bounds, LSU pulled ahead on a pair of Mikaylah Williams free throws with nine seconds to go.

Mair had an open look at a corner 3-pointer on the ensuing Duke possession and missed, but in the scrum for the loose ball, it went out off LSU to set up the game-winning inbounds play.

Jackson sank a 3-pointer from the right wing to cap a 19-point night.

Fulwiley led all scorers, finishing with 28 points for LSU. She added four assists and four rebounds. Williams scored 22 points in the loss, and Flau'jae Johnson had 13.

--Field Level Media

Ashlon Jackson's buzzer-beating trey lifts Duke past LSU

Ashlon Jackson's rim-circling 3-pointer as time expired gave third-seeded Duke an 87-85 win over second-seeded LSU...
5 killed after a train and a van collide in a train crossing in rural Mississippi

WIGGINS, Miss. (AP) — Five people were killed when a train and van collided in rural Mississippi, authorities said Friday.

Associated Press

All five killed were in the van, Stone County Coroner Wayne Flurry said. The lone surviving van passenger, a 23-year-old woman, was flown to a hospital, Flurry said. No one aboard the train was reported injured.

The crash occurred when a Canadian Pacific Kansas City freight train collided with a vehicle in a crossing, the railroad said in a statement. The location was near the town of Wiggins about 45 miles (72 kilometers) northwest of Biloxi.

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The Stone County Sheriff's Office was investigating the crash, the company said.

"Our most sincere condolences go out to the families of the victims of this tragedy," the railroad company said.

The driver of the van, Ryan C. Peterson, 26, and the front seat passenger, Kristina Carver, 45, were among those killed, Flurry said. Two of Carver's daughters also died, 22-year-old Emley Chamblee and 20-year-old Sarabeth Chamblee, as did 23-year-old Demarcus Perkins.

5 killed after a train and a van collide in a train crossing in rural Mississippi

WIGGINS, Miss. (AP) — Five people were killed when a train and van collided in rural Mississippi, authorities said Friday...
Bank of America OKs $72.5M settlement in Epstein accusers' lawsuit

NEW YORK - Bank of America agreed to pay $72.5 million to settle acivil lawsuitbrought by women who accused the bank of facilitating their sexual abuse by Jeffrey Epstein, court records showed on March 27.

USA TODAY

Lawyers for the bank and the women had told Manhattan-based U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff this month they had reached a "settlement in principle," but terms of the deal were not disclosed at the time.

"While we stand by our prior statements made in the filings in this case, including that Bank of America did not facilitate sex trafficking crimes, this resolution allows us to put this matter behind us and provides further closure for the plaintiffs," a spokesperson for Bank of America said in a statement.

In a joint court filing, David Boies and Bradley Edwards, attorneys for the plaintiffs, said the settlement represented the best option for their clients "given that many Class Members suffered harm many years ago and are in need of financial relief now."

The plaintiffs' lawyers may seek up to 30% of the settlement, or about $21.8 million, for legal fees, according to court records.

The settlement requires Rakoff's approval. The judge scheduled a court hearing for April 2 to consider approving the deal.

The proposed class action, filed in October by a woman using the pseudonym Jane Doe, accused the second-largest U.S. bank ofignoringsuspicious financial transactions related to Epstein despite a "plethora" of information about his crimes because it valued profit over protecting victims.

Bank of America has said Doe alleged merely that it provided routine services to people who at the time had no known links to Epstein, and that any suggestion that it was more deeply involved was "threadbare and meritless."

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Rakoff ruled in January that Bank of Americamust faceDoe's claims that it knowingly benefited from Epstein's sex trafficking and obstructed enforcement of the federal Trafficking Victims Protection Act. Among the transactions Doe flagged were payments to Epstein by Apollo Global Management's billionaire co-founder, Leon Black.

Black stepped down as Apollo's chief executive in 2021 after a review by an outside law firm found he had paid Epstein $158 million for tax and estate planning.

Black has denied wrongdoing and said he was unaware of Epstein's criminal conduct.

Doe's lawyers have also sued other alleged enablers of Epstein's sex trafficking, and in 2023 reached settlements of $290 million with JPMorgan Chase and $75 million with Deutsche Bank on behalf of his accusers.

The lawyers are also appealing Rakoff's dismissal in January of a similar lawsuit they brought against Bank of New York Mellon.

Epstein died in a Manhattan jail cell in August 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges. His death was ruled a suicide by New York City's medical examiner.

Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Rod Nickel

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Bank of America to pay $72.5M to Epstein accusers' lawsuit

Bank of America OKs $72.5M settlement in Epstein accusers' lawsuit

NEW YORK - Bank of America agreed to pay $72.5 million to settle acivil lawsuitbrought by women who accused the bank o...
Report card on America at its 250th birthday: How have we changed?

As the nation approaches its250th anniversary, its population is larger and significantly older, more racially and ethnically diverse and likelier to be foreign-born than it was at the time of the nation'sbicentennial, according to a report compiled by the Pew Research Center.

USA TODAY

The U.S. population has grown to 340 million over the past 50 years, an increase of more than 120 million people, the center said. Much of that growth, it said, has been driven by immigrants, longer life spans, and an increase in Asian andHispanic Americans.

As the 1970s got underway, theBaby Boom generationwas still between 6 and 24 years old, noted Ken Johnson, a professor of sociology at the University of New Hampshire not connected to the report.

"It was the first generation where many women went to college," Johnson said. "Older generations were relatively small, having been born during the war and Great Depression. And immigration was picking up, but it had been modest for decades before."

The Baby Boom generation was the first to have many women with higher education, Johnson said. The resulting opportunities led many women to marry later and have fewer children, patterns that would endure in later generations.

That bears out in thePew analysisof U.S. Census data, which shows Americans today less likely to be married and women more likely to have college degrees.

However, economic gaps have widened, the center said, despite many people being better off financially than they were a half-century ago.

With the Baby Boom cohort now ranging from 62 to 80 years old, the share of Americans aged 65 or older has nearly doubled from 10% to 18%, the center said. While the nation's median age has risen across racial and ethnic groups, the increase is sharpest among White Americans (from 30 to 45 years old) and Black Americans (from 21 to 36 years old).

Immigrants carve out a niche

Since 1970, the center said, non-Hispanic White Americans have formed an increasingly smaller share of the U.S. population, falling from 83.5% to 56.3%. Meanwhile, Asian Americans have climbed from less than 1% to 6% today, while Hispanics, just 4.4% of the population in 1970, now comprise 20%.

The share of foreign-born people in the U.S. has more than tripled since 1970, rising from an all-time low of 4.7% to 14.8% in 2024, the center said. The numbers are highest among Asian and Hispanic Americans and most concentrated in the West and Northeast United States.

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - John Amer (2nd-L), from Pakistan, holds a flag while posing with his son, Uzziah Amer, daughter, Hosanna Amer, and wife, Sajeela Amer, following his naturalization ceremony to become a U.S. citizen at Seattle Center on July 4, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. The annual event drew hundreds of participants from approximately 80 countries.

Johnson noted that White Americans are largely older and no longer having children, while many immigrants are of younger, childbearing age with above-average fertility rates.

"The diversity of the U.S. population is greatest for young children and least for the oldest part of the population," he said.

Census Bureau datareleased this week shows immigration has slowed throughout the country, with nine out of 10 U.S. counties experiencing lower immigration levels between July 2024 and July 2025 compared to the year before.

Meanwhile, the Pew Center analysis found America's population has shifted geographically as well, moving toward Southern and Western states.

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In 1970, it said, less than half of the U.S. population lived in the American South (31%) and West (17%). Today, more than six in ten people live in the Sunbelt, with White Americans comprising about half or less of the population there.

Division over diversity's benefits

The center said Americans largely view the nation's racial and ethnic diversity, and efforts to promote it in the workplace, as positive. However, it found Americans divided along racial, ethnic and party lines about its impact on American culture and about DEI efforts on a fair society.

New members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus pose for a photo at the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) on November 18, 2022 in Washington, DC.

The Pew Center gauged those sentiments late last year and released thesurvey resultsin conjunction with its half-century analysis.

Three-quarters of U.S. adults – including 86% of Democrats and 66% of Republicans – view racial and ethnic diversity as good for the country, the center said.

While 62% of the nearly 14,000 respondents surveyed in late 2025 said diversity positively American culture, they were sharply divided among party lines: Just 45% of Republicans said diversity had a positive impact, compared to 82% of Democrats.

Nearly two-thirds said it was very or somewhat important for U.S. companies and organizations to promote diversity, down from 75% in a Pew survey conducted in 2019. With the share of Democrats edging up a point to 87%, the decline was mostly among Republicans: Just 40% of Republicans said such efforts were important, compared to 61% in 2019.

Likewise, Americans were divided on whether such efforts lead to a fairer society: While 65% of Democrats say diversity efforts have made society fairer, just 18% of Republicans felt the same.

Rev. Al Sharpton speaks during the March on Wall Street on Aug. 28, 2025, in New York City. Rev. Al Sharpton and National Action Network (NAN) lead a protest march on Wall Street, which began at Foley Square, to urge corporate America to resist the Trump administration's campaign to roll back diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives. The march comes on the anniversary of the Civil Rights-era March on Washington in 1963.

Respondents broke along racial and ethnic lines as well. Only 38% of White adults said diversity efforts in workplaces and schools have made society fairer, compared to 53% of Black adults, 48% of Asian adults and 46% of Hispanic adults.

America's altered households

The American family has changed substantially in the last half-century, the center said. Americans now marry and have children later in life than they once did, and while U.S. women averaged about three children in 1970, the number has hovered closer to two over the last several decades.

About half of American adults are married today, down from 69% in 1970, with the decline steeper for adults without a four-year college degree. While the portion of adults aged 50 and older who have never been married has risen from 7% to 10%, the share has tripled for Black adults, from 7% to 21%.

Children in the U.S. are much less likely to live with two married parents than they were a half-century ago, the center said, with the share falling from 82% to 63%. The decline has taken place across racial and ethnic groups – except for households headed by Asian adults, which fell only slightly from 87% to 83%.

Mercedes Lopez speaks with son Rafael, 7, at a recent scholarship award ceremony hosted by the Oklahoma Single Parent Scholarship Program.

Meanwhile, 22% of Americans now live in multigenerational households, the center said, compared to 13% in 1970. The increase has been highest among Black, Hispanic and Asian Americans, climbing to 30% for those groups compared to 16% for White Americans.

"A lot of Asian Americans still live in high-cost housing markets," said Melany de la Cruz-Viesca, deputy director of the Asian American Studies Center at the University of California Los Angeles. "If they live in California or New York, it's more likely they feel comfortable living together. There's a lot of stigma around risky spending, and a belief that it's better to save and not be in debt than to be on your own."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Report card on America at its 250th birthday: How have we changed?

Report card on America at its 250th birthday: How have we changed?

As the nation approaches its250th anniversary, its population is larger and significantly older, more racially and ethnic...
NFL owners meeting analysis: 6 things to know, including rule change proposals

NFL owners, executives and coaches will descend upon Phoenix, Arizona from March 29-31 for their annual owners meeting.

USA TODAY Sports

Playing rules, bylaws and resolution proposals will be discussed and some could be implemented ahead of the 2026 NFL season. The owners meetings also features media availability for NFC coaches on Monday and AFC coaches on Tuesday.

The meeting concludes on Tuesday with a scheduled press conference with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell.

USA TODAY Sports will be on the ground for this year's meeting at the Arizona Biltmore. Here are intriguing storylines to watch:

NFL trying to avert replacement ref chaos

Remember the replacement official fiasco that was a blackeye for the NFL in 2012? Brace yourself for the possibility of a repeat episode.

The NFL Referees Association's CBA is set to expire on May 31, and the NFL will hire replacement refs if a work stoppage occurs.Negotiations between the league and the NFLRA broke downon March 25, less than a day into a planned two-day bargaining session.

In preparation for a work stoppage, the NFL's competition committee submitted a proposal to allow the NFL officiating department (the league's command center in New York) to correct clear and obvious misses made by on-field officials that impact the game. The proposal is for one year only in the event there is a work stoppage involving game officials represented by the NFLRA.

"We have many more tools in the toolbox, because replay assist already allows us to do things that we never could do in 2012 and review a ton of plays – scoring plays, turnovers, all those things – and so for us, this was just another bucket we wanted to put in there in case we have to operate under that set of circumstances," Atlanta Falcons CEO and competition committee chairman Rich McKay said.

Good on the NFL's competition committee for trying to protect the league from blatant missed calls by replacement referees. However, the proposal comes up short. Officials represented by the NFL Referees Association miss calls, too. The NFL officiating department should be able to review and correct all calls, regardless if it's a replacement official or an official represented by the NFL Referees Association.

Tush push won't be outlawed this year

We can all look forward to more tush pushes. There is no proposal to ban the tush push this year after the play was nearly outlawed prior to the 2025 season. McKay noted the number of times the tush push is used and its overall success rate are down.

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"I just think there's less talk about it within the football community, and there was no proposal on the table to put anything in this year to deal with that," McKay said.

NFL considering another tweak to onside kick rule

When the NFL implemented the new kickoff rules that required teams to declare whether they would onside kick or not, they could only onside kick in the fourth quarter and when trailing. The league modified the rule last year and allowed teams to onside kick during any quarter when trailing. The competition committee is now proposing a rule to allow the kicking team to declare an onside kick at any time during the game regardless of the score.

If established, the rule could add some more excitement to special teams.

More:NFL rule changes 2026: Competition committees submits five proposals

More discussions regarding disqualifications

The competition committee submitted a proposal that will allow NFL personnel to consult with on-field officials when mulling disqualifications for flagrant football acts and non-football acts without being called on the field.

Calls of that magnitude warrant thorough discussion.

Trade draft picks five years out?

The Cleveland Browns are proposing a rule change that would permit NFL teams to trade draft picks five years into the future instead of three. The proposal was one of two submitted by teams. The other, by the Pittsburgh Steelers, would allow teams to have one video or phone call with no more than five prospective free agents during the annual two-day negotiation period.

Cleveland's rule proposal is interesting. There's already been an uptick in trades. The NFL saw 18 trades just one week into the new league year. Allowing teams to use more assets to complete trades should only increase the number of trades we see.

Roger Goodell press conference

The NFL commissioner will close out the owners meeting with a press conference on Tuesday. Expect Goodell to be asked a wide range of questions about the upcoming season, rules, referees, international games, diversity and more.

Follow USA TODAY Sports' Tyler Dragon on X@TheTylerDragon.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NFL owners meeting preview: Rule changes, replacement refs, tush push

NFL owners meeting analysis: 6 things to know, including rule change proposals

NFL owners, executives and coaches will descend upon Phoenix, Arizona from March 29-31 for their annual owners meeting. ...

 

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