March 5, 2016

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What's Better Than A Buzzer-Beater? How About 3 … In A Single Game?

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On Thursday, an epic high school basketball game — featuring three buzzer-beating buckets — ended with a last-second shot in quadruple overtime, sending one team to the Minnesota state tournament.

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MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

So it is March, the height of basketball season. But college and pro ballers are not the only ones serving up thrills. This past Thursday, there was an epic basketball game in Minnesota. A couple of high school rivals collided in a regional championship game that went to not one, not two overtime periods but four. And you know how exciting a last-second buzzer-beater is – this one had three of them. It was Waseca v. Marshall. Waseca was leading as they neared the end of regulation time. Matt Collins was in the crowd.

MATTHEW COLLINS: They actually missed some free throws that allowed Marshall to crawl back into the game. And Marshall came down and hit the three that rolled around the rim and sat on top of the rim and eventually went in to send it into overtime.

(SOUNDBITE OF BASKETBALL GAME)

MARTIN: So that’s one last-second shot to tie it up. The overtime period that followed ended in yet another tie. The next overtime – same thing, another tie. It came down to a third heart-pounding overtime. Let’s skip to the end. Marshall is up three points with only one second left on the clock. Waseca was all the way at the other end of the court.

COLLINS: The whole place thought the game was over. Some people around us were starting to leave. And Waseca then inbounded it then to Nick Dufault, who is their kind of star player. And from around the opposite free-throw line, he just turned and threw it up.

MARTIN: Now, consider that a regular three-point shot is about 20-feet away. Dufault was almost 80 feet from his own basket when he let it go.

COLLINS: It didn’t even touch the rim. It went straight through the basket. I mean, it was unbelievable.

(SOUNDBITE OF BASKETBALL GAME)

UNIDENTIFIED CROWD: (Cheering).

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #1: Oh, my God.

MARTIN: Needless to say, nobody else was leaving early as the game headed into the fourth overtime. Marshall tied up the game again with time running out. And as if Hollywood were writing the script, enter the unlikely hero – 17-year-old junior Cole Streich, a guy who could have put the game away for Waseca earlier.

COLE STREICH: Yeah, at the end of regulation, I had a free throw where I could have put us up by four. And then I ended up missing that, and I knew I had to make up for it somehow.

MARTIN: And redemption awaits those who seek it. With five seconds on the clock, Streich got the ball near half-court. As he dribbled toward the basket, defenders seemed to be backing away from him. The sea parted. They were focusing on the guy who sank that 80-footer earlier in the game.

STREICH: So they left me wide open. No one came out to guard me.

(SOUNDBITE OF BASKETBALL GAME)

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #2: Go, go, go, go, go…

MARTIN: Three, two, one…

STREICH: So I just shot it.

(SOUNDBITE OF BASKETBALL GAME)

UNIDENTIFIED CROWD: (Cheering).

MARTIN: Swish.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

MARTIN: A third-buzzer beater, this one for the win.

STREICH: It was just chaos. Everyone went wild in the crowd, and we were just all ecstatic that we won.

MARTIN: Final score – Waseca 103, Marshall 100. Amid the frenzy though, Matt Collins noticed the Marshall players on the court trying to process something beyond just the pain of a loss.

COLLINS: They acknowledged and realized how incredible of a game that was. And I think that’s a game that no team should have to lose. But there was definitely a mutual respect that – wow – that we just played a classic game that’s going to go down in history.

MARTIN: Smelling salts not included with the ticket price – should’ve been.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

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Amid Uncertainty, Iranians Hope For Economic Reforms

People ride a horse and carriage at sunset in Isfahan's UNESCO-listed central square on June 2, 2014 in Isfahan, Iran. Isfahan, with its immense mosques, picturesque bridges and ancient bazaar, is a virtual living museum of Iranian traditional culture, and is Iran's top tourist destination.
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People ride a horse and carriage at sunset in Isfahan’s UNESCO-listed central square on June 2, 2014 in Isfahan, Iran. Isfahan, with its immense mosques, picturesque bridges and ancient bazaar, is a virtual living museum of Iranian traditional culture, and is Iran’s top tourist destination. John Moore/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption John Moore/Getty Images

In Iran, voters are still waiting for clarity from the Feb. 26 parliamentary elections, but they’re optimistic that a more cooperative legislature will help the government boost the economy. Hopes for broader social and political reforms, however, remain faint.

On a recent afternoon, a covered bazaar in north Tehran has its share of visitors, but there seems to be a lot more window-shopping than buying going on. Carpet shop owner Ali Mirnezami confirms that impression. He says this shop has been operating for 90 years, but at the moment things aren’t looking good.

“The market is down, it’s not bouncing back,” he says. “We’re still waiting for final election results and we hope that will improve things, but so far nothing tangible.”

Mirnezami says Iranian President Hassan Rouhani needs a cooperative parliament to fulfill his promise to use money coming into Iran as part of last year’s nuclear agreement to restore some vitality to the economy.

First, Mirnezami says, the government needs to tackle inflation.

“They also need to create some jobs for our young people,” he says. “Then they need to look to the production sector, rehabilitate our factories. I hope the early signs of a more cooperative parliament are true.”

Broader Reforms Still Elusive

Reform voters stood in long lines on election day in hopes of keeping hardliners out of parliament as much as possible. Younger voters like Mohammad Reza Rezahani made it clear he had more than a better economy on his mind.

“I vote today only for freedom — a little freedom, a little. I’m not having any freedom,” he says. When asked if he’d like to see a parliament that will work with President Rouhani, he eagerly agrees.

Many younger Iranians have been chafing under the country’s conservative religious social restrictions. They would love to be able to speak their mind without fear of arrest. But nearly seven years after authorities crushed massive street protests, reformers are still threatened with arrest and expectations for change are extremely low.

For one thing, there will be large numbers of conservatives in the next parliament who may back Rouhani on economic issues, but will likely vote against changes on sensitive issues such as the mandatory headscarf for women.

Iranians shop in Tehran’s ancient Grand Bazaar on Jan. 16, 2016, the day many sanctions were lifted as part of a nuclear deal. President Rouhani called the deal a “golden page” in Iran’s history. Atta Kenare/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Atta Kenare/AFP/Getty Images

Iranians also see external reasons for caution. Analyst Foad Izadi at Tehran University says Iranians only need look at the chaos plaguing the region to see how easily popular demands for change can get out of hand.

“So if people want to change things — and a lot of people want to change things — they do not want another revolution,” he says. “Because revolutions would be messy and deadly … so they do want to change some things about this government, but they want to do it through polling stations organized by this government.”

In Isfahan, A Plea For The World To Visit

To the south in the culturally rich city of Isfahan, business owners would be perfectly happy with economic improvements. At Imam Square, a UNESCO World Heritage site featuring ornately tiled grand mosques and a palace, locals take a spin in horse-drawn carriages.

But driver Seyed Mehdi says that’s because it’s a weekend — most of the time he’s scrounging for business. “We don’t need the locals, they already know all about this place,” he says. “We need tourists, we need foreigners!”

Ahmed Turkan minds a visitor-free handicrafts store nearby. He says no one he knows is especially interested in whether Iran’s reformers or hardline conservatives will be in charge of the next parliament. What people want, he says, is some action on getting the economy moving. He spreads his hands and asks, is it wrong to be friends with the outside world?

“Some 50 years ago when there were very few tourists, you could still have seen more people here on this square,” he says. “There could be a hell of a lot more people on this square! But as everyone keeps telling us, the signs are promising.”

How Many More Visitors Can Isfahan Handle?

In terms of sheer numbers of visitors, the signs are indeed promising — visits to Isfahan were up 60 percent last year, according to Mohsen Yarmohamadiyan at the provincial culture and tourism department. He says in the wake of last year’s nuclear deal, Iran is starting to overcome the relentless bad press it gets in the West.

“Ever since this new government took over, they’ve been trying to bring the real image of this nation to the world,” he says. “We’re slowly correcting a lot of misinformation.”

But for Isfahan, that good news also comes with a challenge. Yarmohamadiyan says much needs to be done for the province to accommodate more tourists, should the numbers continue to grow.

“As more people come to Isfahan, we’re urging hotels to build more rooms,” he says. “We also have around 1,000 historic houses here, and we’re urging the owners to consider converting them into boutique hotels.”

But development doesn’t always get top priority. After years of debate, Yarmohamadiyan says builders of a new subway line have agreed to reroute it around major cultural sites, including those at Imam Square.

With major social and political reforms still on the back burner, the focus remains on the economy. That’s fine with Tehran cooking and catering businesswoman Sanaz Minaei. She shows a visitor a cooking class at one of her several companies, and says the opportunities for Iran are huge — if only the country can rejoin the global economy as promised.

“Certainly we’d like a parliament that will open up communications with the outside world,” she says. “When the parliament is cooperating with the government there is more peace, and peace is good for business.

Minaei’s wish is to see all the sanctions finally lifted so she can expand her business of promoting Iranian cuisine internationally. She includes the U.S. in that wish, but doesn’t expect it to come true overnight. As one of Iran’s most successful businesswomen, she can’t even get a visa to visit her sisters in America, let alone do business there.

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Former Montana Clinic Owner Sues Ministry Group Over Vandalism

Susan Cahill, owner of All Families Healthcare, stands in front of the first building in Kalispell, Mont., where she offered abortion services. After vandalism closed her last clinic down, Missoula became the nearest place for women in the Flathead Valley to find abortion services.

Susan Cahill, owner of All Families Healthcare, stands in front of the first building in Kalispell, Mont., where she offered abortion services. After vandalism closed her last clinic down, Missoula became the nearest place for women in the Flathead Valley to find abortion services. Corin Cates-Carney/MTPR hide caption

toggle caption Corin Cates-Carney/MTPR

All Families Healthcare was vandalized by Zachary Klundt in March 2014. Last spring, he was sentenced in a criminal trial. In an affidavit, police describe destruction to the clinic’s art, iodine all over the floor and severe damage to the building’s heating and plumbing. Klundt later said he broke into the clinic looking for prescription drugs. But Susan Cahill, the physician assistant who owned the clinic, doesn’t believe that story.

Klundt pleaded guilty to three felony charges. He was sentenced to 20 years with 15 years suspended and ordered to pay Cahill and other victims more than $600,000 in restitution. He apologized to Cahill at the end of that trial, though Klundt is appealing his case to the Montana Supreme Court.

Last month, Cahill filed a civil suit alleging that Klundt wasn’t the only person responsible for the destruction of her business. Cahill names Zachary Klundt, his parents, Hope Pregnancy Ministries of Kalispell, Mont., and that organization’s executive director as defendants. She is suing for damages for, among other things, loss of her business, emotional distress and putative damages for “defendants’ malicious actions.”

“If I can do anything to help stop this assault on women’s reproductive health and lives, I’m going to. It’s not just about me, although yes, I would like some compensation,” Cahill says. “I’m not just going to sit down and play dead.”

In the civil case, Cahill alleges that Klundt was an instrument of Hope Pregnancy Ministries to stop her from performing abortions.

Hope Pregnancy Ministries is a non-profit Christian organization that offers free pregnancy diagnosis, alternatives to abortion, parenting education and STI testing in Northwest Montana.

Klundt’s mother, Twyla Klundt, served on its board of directors at the time of the vandalism and resigned from the position immediately after.

“The vandalism of All Families Healthcare was deplorable and regrettable, but it has nothing to do with Hope Pregnancy Ministries,” board chair Joanna Wirth said in a written statement.

The civil suit filed in Montana’s Flathead District Court says that on December 13, 2013, Michelle Reimer, executive director of Hope Pregnancy Ministries, purchased the building in which Cahill had a medical office in Kalispell, and subsequently evicted her.

The suit says Cahill relocated her practice in mid-February 2014, and Klundt vandalized it the following month. It was the only health clinic that provided abortions in Northwest Montana’s Flathead Valley. Cahill has been unsuccessful in finding a new building for her business.

“I can’t open my own place again because no one is going to rent to me. And I don’t know if I had a place if I have the heart to start all over again,” Cahill said.

Cahill now works as a receptionist in her husband’s acupuncture therapy business.

Cahill says she has not seen any of the restitution Klundt was ordered to pay, and has been told by the county attorney’s office that she is unlikely to see much of it, if any, because Klundt won’t be earning much money over his lifetime.

Cahill has demanded a jury trial in her civil suit. The named defendants have until the end of March to respond.

In response to a Montana Public Radio request for comment, a statement released by Hope Pregnancy Ministries said, “Hope Pregnancy Ministries has, for the past 17 years, provided compassionate care to thousands of men and women in this community, and will continue to do so regardless of baseless allegations intended to malign an organization which has always been above reproach.”

The statement also said, “A number of inaccuracies and untruths have been included in recent press releases and media reporting on this matter. Hope Pregnancy Ministries will issue its own press release at a later date to correct the erroneous statements that have been made.”

This story is part of a reporting partnership with NPR, Montana Public Radio and Kaiser Health News.

Evidence Used For The Trial

These photos of a series of text messages between Zachary Klundt and his mother were part of the criminal case against Klundt. The James Armstrong to which they refer was the the first abortion provider in the Flathead after Roe v. Wade and hired Cahill. She opened All Families Healthcare when Armstrong retired in 2006. Photos provided by the attorney representing Susan Cahill in her civil lawsuit against Klundt, his parents and Hope Pregnancy Ministries.

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