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  • 8/15/2019 06-04-16 Edition

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  • 8/15/2019 06-04-16 Edition

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    FOR THE RECORD2 Weekend • June 4-5, 2016 THE DAILY JOURNAL

    The San Mateo Daily Journal1900 Alameda de las Pulgas, Suite 112, San Mateo, CA 94403

    Publisher: Jerry Lee Editor in Chief: Jon Mays [email protected] [email protected]

    smdailyjournal.com scribd.com/smdailyjournaltwitter.com/smdailyjournal facebook.com/smdailyjournal

    Phone:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (650) 344-5200 Fax: (650) 344-5290To Advertise: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected]: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected]:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected]: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected]: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected]

    As a public service, the Daily Journal prints obituaries of approximately 200 words or less with a photo one time on the date of the family’s choosing.To submit obituaries,emailinformation along with a jpeg photo to [email protected] obituaries are edited for style, clarity,length and grammar.If you would like to have an obituary printedmore than once,longer than 200 words or without editing,please submit an inquiry to our advertising department at [email protected].

    Comedian HoratioSanz is 47.

    This Day in History

    Thought for the Day

    1986Jonathan Jay Pollard, a former U.S.Navy intelligence analyst, pleadedguilty in Washington to conspiring todeliver information related to thenational defense to Israel.

    “If America forgets where she came from,if the people lose sight of what brought them

    along, if she listens to the deniers and mockers,then will begin the rot and dissolution.”

    — Carl Sandburg, American writer

    Sex therapist Dr.Ruth Westheimeris 88.

    Actress AngelinaJolie is 41.

    Birthdays

    REUTERS

    A Palestinian boy from Bar Palestine team demonstrates his workout skills during a training session on a beach in Gaza City.

    Saturday : Mostly cloudy. Patchy fog inthe morning. Highs in the mid 60s. Westwinds around 5 mph .Saturday night : Mostly cloudy. Patchyfog after midnigh t. Lows in th e lower 50s.South winds 5 to 15 mph.Sunday : Mostly cloudy. Patchy fog in th emorning. Highs in the mid 60s. Southwinds 5 to 10 mph... Becoming west in the afternoon.Sunday night: Mostly cloudy. Patchy fog. Lows in thelower 50s.Monday : Cloudy in the morning then becoming sunny.Patchy fog. Highs in th e mid 60s.Monday night through Thursday: Mostly cloudy.Lows in the lower 50s. Highs in the mid 60s.Thursday ni gh tr: Mostly cloudy.

    Local Weather Forecast

    In 1783 , the Montgoler brothers rst publicly demon-strated their hot -air balloon, which did not carry any passen-gers, o ver Annon ay, France.In 1784 , opera singer Elisabeth Thible became the rstwoman to make a non-tethered ight aboard a Montgolerhot-air balloon, over Lyon, France.In 189 2 , the Sierra Club was incorpo rated in San Francisco.In 1919 , Congress approved the 19th Amendment to theU.S. Constitution, guaranteeing citizens the right to voteregardless of their gender, and sent i t to the states for rati-cation.In 1939 , the German ocean liner MS St. Louis, carryingmore than 900 Jewish refugees from Germany, was turnedaway from the Florida coast by U.S. ofcials.In 194 0 , during World War II, th e Alli ed military evacuationof some 338,000 troops from Dunkirk, France, ended.British Prime Minister Winston Churchill declared: “Weshall ght on the beaches, we shall ght on the landinggrounds, we shall ght in the elds and in the streets, weshall ght in th e hills; we shall never surrender.”In 1942 , the World War II Battle of Midway began, result-ing in a decisive American vi ctory against Japan and mark-ing t he turning poin t of the war in the Pacic.

    “Hawaii Five-0” was the firsttelevision series shotentirely on location inHawaii. The series began in 1968 andaired for 12 seasons.

    ***Before Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)establis hed a career in pol itics, he helda liquor license and op erated a tavern.

    ***The idea for the Hula-Hoop came afterthe inventors, Richard Knerr andArthur Melin, heard about an exercisethat Austrian ch ildren did in g ym class;they twirled bamboo hoops aroundtheir waists.

    ***There are around 500,000 detectableseismic tremors in California everyyear.

    ***South Africa held its first interracial

    election in 1994. Do you know whowas elected president that year? Seeanswer at end.

    ***In the early days of radio, announcerswere not allowed to say their name on

    air. Managers of radio stations wereafraid that if radio announcers were toidentify themselves over the radiothey would become too popular, andthen too demanding.

    ***The Mississippi River is the longestriver in North America. The river is awater source for more than 4 millionpeople.

    ***Every year, Parker Brothers prints $50billion worth of Monopoly money.

    ***A tablesp oon o f peanut butter containsmore fat than two slices of bacon.

    ***The best-selling Barbie ever manufac-tured was Totally Hair Barbie in 1992 .Her hair went all the way down to herfeet.

    ***In 1984, William Schroeder (1932-1986) of Indiana was among the firstrecipients of a permanent artificialheart, the Jarvik-7. He was the firstheart-implant patient to live outside ahospital. Schroeder lived for 620 daysafter receiving the heart. Artificialhearts are usually used to keep p atientsalive until a human heart is availablefor transplant.

    ***The presidential vow that begins with

    “I do solemnly swear” is found inArticle II, Section 1 of the U.S.Constitution. George Washingtonadded “so help me God” to the end.

    ***By 1929, two years after the introduc-

    tion of the “talkies,” motion picturesin the United States were attracting100 million patrons every week.

    ***In the United States, tornadoes occurin April more than any other month

    ***The most p opular name for a pet in t heUnited States is Max. Next are Sam,Lady, Bear and Smokey.

    ***Ford Motor Company introduced theFord Taurus in 1986. The midsize carwas available in a four-door sedan orstation wagon body style.

    ***“Kukla, Fran and Ollie” (1949-1957)was a children’s puppet show on tele-visi on t hat starred Kukla; a puppet thatwas a bald boy, Ollie; a one-tootheddragon puppet and Fran, a human thatconversed with the puppets. The showwas entirely ad-libbed. The showquickly became more popular amongadults than children.

    *** A ns we r : Nelson Mandela (1918-2013) became South Africa’s first black, post-apartheid president in1994. Mandela gained the admirationof his co untry and won the 19 93 NobelPeace Prize for his fight against racialoppression.

    Know It All is by Kerry McArdle. It runs inthe weekend edition of the Daily Journal.Questions? Comments? Emailknowitall(at)smdailyjournal.com or call 344-5200 ext. 128.

    (Answers Monday)DIRTY HONEY PAYDAY DILUTEYesterday’s Jumbles:

    Answer: Tom Cruise played a pilot in “Top Gun” afterhe — LANDED THE PART

    Now arrange the circled lettersto form the surprise answer, assuggested by the above cartoon.

    THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAMEby David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

    Unscramble these four Jumbles,one letter to each square,to form four ordinary words.

    YILVN

    TABYT

    SEODUX

    TUCLAA

    ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLCAll Rights Reserved.

    C h e c

    k o u

    t t h e n e w ,

    f r e e

    J U S T J U M B L E a p p

    ”“ - -

    Lotto

    The Daily Derby race winners are Lucky Star, No.2, in rst place; Money Bags, No. 11, in secondplace; and Gorgeous George, No.8, in third place. The race time was clocked at 1:45.07.

    4 2 8

    32 54 65 66 71 10

    Meganumber

    June 3 Mega Millions

    23 30 33 40 69 12

    Powerball

    June 1 Powerball17 24 25 29 32

    Fantasy Five

    Daily three midday

    84 8 0

    Daily Four

    0 3 7Daily three evening

    2 22 25 34 36 12

    Meganumber

    June 1 Super Lotto Plus

    Actor Bruce Dern is 80 . Musician Roger Ball is 72. Actress-singer Michelle Phillips is 72. Jazz musician AnthonyBraxton is 71. Rock musician Danny Brown (The Fixx) is 65.Actor Parker Stevenson is 64. Actor Keith David is 60. Bluessinger-musician Tinsley Ellis is 59. Actress Julie Gholson is58. Actor Eddie Velez is 58. Singer-musician El DeBarge is 5 5.Actress Julie White is 55. Actress Lindsay Frost is 54. ActorSean Pertwee is 52. Tennis player Andrea Jaeger is 51. Operasinger Cecilia Bartoli is 50. Rhythm-and-blues singer Al B.Sure! is 48. Actor Scott Wolf is 48.

  • 8/15/2019 06-04-16 Edition

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    3Weekend • June 4-5, 2016 THE DAILY JOURNAL LOCAL

    MILLBRAEBurglary . A car’s window was smashed andsomeone stole approximately $2,400 worthof items on the 100 block of Rollins Roadbefore 9:45 p.m. Thursday, June 2.Burglary . Someone broke into a home andstole tools on the 800 block of CleareldDrive before 8:15 p. m. Thursday, June 2.Identity theft. Someone stole anotherperson’s identity and opened several creditcards, reported on the 400 block of LincolnCircle before 9:01 a.m. Thursday, J une 2.Burglary . A vehicle’s window was brokenand property valued at $4,450 was stolen onthe 200 block of El Camino Real before7:10 p.m. Tuesday, May 31.Burglary . A phone, watch, GPS device andtwo hookahs were stolen from a vehicle onthe 400 block of Richmond Drive before9:36 a.m. Tuesday, May 3 1

    BURLINGAME

    Drugs . Juveniles were seen trying to climbon a roof and smoki ng n arcotics on QuesadaWay before 9:3 0 p. m. Thursday, June 2.Petty theft . A trumpet was stolen from aschool on Vancouver Avenue before 4:26p.m. Thursday, June 2.Reckless driver . The driver of a grayLexus was seen driving erratically near ElCamino Real and Floribunda Avenue before7:59 a.m. Thursday, June 2.Accident . An intoxicated driver crashedinto another vehicle near Rivera Drivebefore 12:2 6 a.m. Thursday, June 2.

    Police reports

    That’s not coolA refrigerator was left on a curb of Sterling View Avenue in Belmont before10:29 a.m. Thursday, June 2.By Austin Walsh

    DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

    Youngsters perhaps inspired by theinnovation and design displayed during

    the recent Mak er Faire may return for a sec-ond helping of fun at a similar event host-ed this weekend by t he San Mateo CountyOffice of Education.

    The education-infused Make/LearnCelebration at the office’s headquarters onRedwood Shores will grant students,teachers and parents a chance to check outthe latest and greatest lessons availableon t he maker’s market.

    Local educators are seeking to harnessthe po wer of the makers’ movement, as t hedesign methods focused on creation andinnovation often resonate deeply withyoung students, said Rebecca Vyduna, whois coordinating t he event Saturday.

    Vyduna, the director of science, technol-ogy, engineering and math at t he Office of Education, said a focus of the event isillustrating how making and design canalign with the more traditional model of classroom learning.

    “We really b elieve chil dren are born withthis incredible, innate human curiosity,but the education process mi ght make th atstagnant,” she said. “Making gives us anopportunity to engage in the incrediblevalue that comes with curiosity. ”

    The event, which is spon sored through agrant from the Oracle Corporation, willfeature a variety of companies and prod-ucts showcasing the groundbreaking ini-tiatives possible through making.

    The TechShop trailer will be present tooffer attendees a chance to check out amobile 3-D creation lab, educators and stu-dents from the Ravenswood City

    Elementary School District will present arobotics lab showcase, students fromDesign Tech High School will engage in achallenge to explore the value of designthinking, the Resource Area for Teachingwill host a creation station, among manyother creative programs.

    The free event, held at 101 Twin DolphinDrive in Redwood City, is open to the pub-lic but nearly 500 people have expressedinterest in att ending, which means capaci-ty has been reached, said Vyduna.

    Beyond the opportunity for the public toenjoy the creative offerings, the eventwill serve as a program kicko ff for a class-room education program available via theOffice of Education as well.

    In an effort to boost accessibility of maker-themed lesson s, t he office will h olda set of kits that teachers can rent andbring to their students remotely. The kits,donated by th e Oracle Corporation, will beavailable for teachers, parents and stu-dents t o view during th e festiv ities.

    Vyduna said officials are hopeful localeducators will learn th rough the event t hatmaking lessons can be an effective meansof conveying standard disciplines in afashion that requires students to thinkingcritically to find a solution.

    Making can also assist s tudents in learn-ing t he importance of trial and error alongwith unconventional problem-solvingmethods, which can prove useful inaddressing complicated and confusingreal-world issues, said Vyduna.

    Teachers who have been trained and areaccustomed to employing traditional edu-cation t echniques could also perhaps use arefresher on the potential value of themaking movement, said Vyduna.

    “We have to dust o ff those sk ills that arethere to feel confident again to lead thiswork,” she said. “We need to be makersourselves.”

    Especially in Silicon Valley, a hub of innovation and creative thinking, arethese types of lessons valued, saidVyduna, and drawing from the wealth of local resources has been invaluable in theoffice’s effort to enhance its cuttin g-edgecurriculum.

    “We have been so encouraged and excit-ed by ho w passionate these partners are in

    jumpi ng in and suppo rti ng us,” sh e sai d.A key compon ent of the maker initiativ e

    is collaboration and teamwork, whichVyduna said is nev er more evident t hanwhen officials sought partnership fromnearby companies for contribution to theevent.

    “Everyone we asked said yes,” saidVyduna. “It’s j ust really refreshing. Peoplewho have that experience of learning andmaking, they know how empowering it isand they want o thers to have that. It’s awe-some to s ee how collaborative the commu-nity can be.”

    The Make/Learn Celebration begins 10a.m., Saturday, June 4, at the San MateoCounty Office of Education, 101 TwinDolphin Drive, Redwood City.

    Making a difference in educationMake/Learn Celebration highlights creative learning techniques

    Comment onor share this story atwww.smdailyjournal.com

  • 8/15/2019 06-04-16 Edition

    4/31

    THE DAILY JOURNALLOCAL4 Weekend • June 4-5, 2016

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    By Austin WalshDAILY JOURNAL STAFF

    Jamie Chen was in her San Bruno homewith her grandmother when a gas pipelinebelow the Crestmoor neighbo rhood explod-ed, annihilating houses, properties and lives

    just hundreds of feet away from the couch

    where she sat.Years removed from the disaster in 2010that claimed the lives of eight p eople, in jured66 and destroyed 38 homes, Chen recalledhow the tragedy transformed her perspective.

    “It really taught me the brevity of life,”said Chen.

    As the 18-year-old senior at St. IgnatiusCollege Preparatory in San Francisco standson th e precipice of enrolling as a freshman inthe University of California at Berkeley,Chen has been granted a chance to turn thedisaster into an opportunity.

    The San Bruno Community Foundation,the organization charged with allocating thenearly $70 million paid in restitution byPacific Gas and Electric in the wake of theblast, named Chen as one of the inauguralwinners of its recently established scholar-

    ship program.Chen was one of the seven students withties to th e San Bruno community awarded theCrestmoor Neighborhood MemorialScholarship paying toward pursuit of a col-lege degree during a ceremony Wednesday,June 1, at the San Bruno Senior Center.

    Leitu Takapu, ErickSullivan, Allie Stines,Giselle Hengst, AnthonyHarvey and AlejandraAndrade joined Chen aswinners of the collective$100,000 granted thisyear by the foundation tohigh schoolers and com-munity college students.

    Chen, who plans topursue a career in medi-

    cine in part because of the care she witnessedprovided to those in need following theexplosion, expressed a deep appreciation forthe scholarship.

    “I’m glad our community was able to turnthis into something positive,” she said.

    Hengst, who will go from Capuchino HighSchool to attend Vanderbil t University i n thefall, shared a similar sense of gratitude.

    “It really means a lot to know the people inSan Bruno are supporting me,” she said.“Paying for college is so difficult and I wantto go to graduate school, s o not havin g a lotof debt would be very help ful.”

    Planning to double major in envi ronmentalsociology and women’s studies, Hengst said

    she is uncertain of the career path she willultimately select, but is leaning toward a gov-ernment position in the field of social jus-tice.

    Hengst, 17, said the tragedy did not affecther personally at the time of the blast, butsuggested perhaps subconsciously her inter-

    est in social justice wasdriven by the investiga-tion to the cause of theexplosion.

    In the wake of the blast,Hengst said her primaryrecollection was the wayresidents and neighborsrallied to support eachother.

    “Going to school thenext week was super

    weird,” she said. “It is shocking to thinksomething like that could happen in SanBruno, the place where I grew up my wholelife. To not feel safe was shocking.”

    Hengst and Chen, along with Andrade andHarvey, will receive a $5,00 0 annual scholar-ship from the foundation which is renewablefor four years, pay ing toward a total con tribu-tion of $20,000. Stines and Sullivan, highschoolers enrolling at local community col-leges, will accept $2,500 annually for twoyears. Takapu, transferring from SkylineCollege to San Jose State University, willreceive $5,000 for two years under a scholar-ship worth $10,000.

    Leslie Hatamiya, executive director of the

    foundation, said in a prepared statement shewas proud to help ease the path for local stu-dents toward seeking higher education.

    “We are thrilled to assist the first class of Crestmoor scholars in realizing their dreamof pursuing a college degree,” said Hatamiya.

    The scholarships, along with a community

    grant program, are two of th e first initiativeslaunched by the foundation since the $68.5million in restitution was paid by PG&E in2012.

    The foundation is charged with spendingthe fund toward benefiting the San Brunocommunity, while a separate settlement hasbeen paid to those from the Crestmoor neigh-borhood who suffered the brunt of the blast.

    Chen, whose home and family wereunharmed in the explosio n, said witnessingthe selfless work of first responders to theincident compelled her to enroll in emer-gency medical technician, or EMT, trainingclasses.

    “I thought they were so fearless, they real-ly inspired me,” she said.

    Chen finished the class at Skyline Collegeand took an exam that, if she passes, willallow her to work part time as a first respon-der in Berkeley.

    While planning for her time in college,Hengst said she is also prepared to begin thenext chapter of her life.

    “I’m so excited,” she said. “I’ve been soready to graduate high school and go to col-lege, I wish the s ummer would be shorter.”

    But as she prepares to leave her hometown,Hengst reflected on the opportunity providedby the scholarship.

    “I’m glad the foundation exis ts and is usingmoney to support San Bruno residents,” shesaid. “I think it’s really cool th ey are think-ing about the future.”

    Turning tragedy into an opportunity

    Jamie Chen Giselle Hengst

  • 8/15/2019 06-04-16 Edition

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    5Weekend• June 4-5, 2016 THE DAILY JOURNAL STATE/NATION

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    By Paul WisemanTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    WASHINGTON — An unexpectedlybleak May jobs report has suddenlymuddied the outlo ok for t he U.S. econ -omy.

    Until th is week, t he Federal Reservehad seemed poised to raise interestrates perhaps as soon as June 15 — a

    sign of confidence that the economywas strengt hening after struggling justto grow early this year.

    Any such certainty vanished at 8:30a.m. Eastern time Friday.

    That was when the governmentreported that employers added a scant38,000 jobs in May — the fewestsince 2010 and far less than econo-

    mists had expected. What’s more, thegovernment cut its estimate of hiringfor March and April by a combined59,000.

    “We had been expecting a June ratehike,” said Beth Ann Bovino, U.S.chief economist at Standard & Poor’sRatings Services. “Now it seems likethe Fed can take a breather” and awaitother economic statistics to help clar-ify the economic picture.

    Other recent data are also sendingmixed messages to economic policy-makers, inv estors and corporate execu-tives.

    JOBSFriday’s jobs report was unambigu-

    ously ugly.

    “It’s an across-the-bo ard disappoin t-ment,” said Patrick O’Keefe, directorof economic research at the accountin gfirm CohnReznick.

    The unemployment rate sank to aneight-year low 4.7 percent — but onlybecause 458,000 Americans stoppedlooking for work and were no longercounted among the unemploy ed. Manyof them had likely grown discouragedover failing to find a job.

    And May’s slowdown in hiring was-n’t a one-mont h wonder. The economyhas now added just 347,000 jobs overthe past three months — the weakestthree-month stretch since 20 12.

    The monthly jobs reports have“been flashing a warning signal for

    Portrait of U.S. economy lookscloudier after poor jobs report

    California Assemblymoves to tax marijuana growers

    SACRAMENTO — California lawmakers are moving tolevy t axes on medical marijuana growers after hammering outpot regulations last year.

    The Assembly voted 60-12 to pass AB2243 Thursday.The bill authorizes charges of $9.25 per ounce of marijua-

    na flowers, $2.75 per ounce of pot leaves and $1.25 perounce of immature pot p lants.

    Legislative analysts estimate the taxes would raise $77million annually for lo cal police and environmental cleanup.Some marijuana activists oppose the taxes as unreason-

    ably hig h, s aying th e flower tax alone would be 10 percent of marijuana’s value. Democratic Assemblyman Jim Wood of Healdsburg says his proposal was killed at the last minuteduring negotiati ons to regulate marijuana last year.

    The Senate approved a 15 percent marijuana sales tax earli-er this week. Local go vernments currently tax pot about 7.5percent.

    Around the state

    REUTERS FILE PHOTO

    The unemployment rate sank to an eight-year low 4.7 percent — but only because 458,000 Americans stopped looking forwork and were no longer counted among the unemployed.

    See ECONOMY , Page 23

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  • 8/15/2019 06-04-16 Edition

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    LOCAL/NATION 7Weekend• June 4-5, 2016 THE DAILY JOURNAL

    650-583-2273Russo Dental Care

    John J. Russo DDS

    1101 El Camino Real San Bruno

    The old rule “If it's too good to be true, it probably is” applies to dentistry too.When looking for tooth replacement options, do not fall victim to misleadingmarketing tactics. Do your research, ask the right questions, and know whatyou are getting. It’s a lifetime investment and shouldn’t be taken lightly.

    If you are researching dental implants you have seen the ads for $1895 completeor $4000 OFF! Great deal right, NOT SO FAST chances are you are gettingexactly what you paid for, and not what an educated consumer would want!

    Such “special” fees do not correlate with cost of highly trained professionalsand materials for a level of precision and quality that implant supported

    crowns require. Here is the typical range costs to replace a single missing tooth:Implant placement related costs to the dentist:Dental Implant (reputable companies with well researched implants):$400 to $450

    Healing abutment (a temporary extension that sits on the implant): $40 to $50

    Surgical guide (a stent guiding accurate implant placement): $50 to $150

    Drills (series of drills in various diameters necessary to prepare the bone forimplant placement): $50-$100

    Crown related costs to the dentist:Impression post (to take impression of implant): $40 to $50

    Implant analog (An implant duplicate used for models): $25-$35

    Permanent abutment (supports the crown): Customized by lab: $225 to $450;

    Generic : $100 to $150Permanent abutment screw (holds abutment on implant): $50 to $65

    Permanent Crown (made by a high quality lab): $250 to $600

    And for teeth replacement in the upper front area (smile zone) add:Temporary Abutment (Necessary for support of temporary crown): $125-$175

    Temporary Crown (Necessary for implants in the smile zone): $125-$175

    As you can see, these costs to the dentist amount to $1,360 - $1,950 just for thecost of HIGH QUALITY materials. This does not include the impressionmaterials, accessory materials, advertising multiple appointments, personneland administrative costs, and a reasonable return to the dentist.

    So just how does the discount implant center do it? Here is the catch: Theyemploy common "cutting corner" strategies to offer a low fee and still makeprofit on this procedure.

    Bottom line, don't look for the lowest price, but best long-term value!

    Advetisement

    THE TRUTH ABOUT "DISCOUNTED" DENTAL IMPLANTS!

    By Catherine Lucey THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    WESTMINSTER — Hillary Clinton saidFriday that Donald Trump has “lowered thebar” with regard to keeping the peace at hisrallies and creating an environment thatencourages dialogue.

    The likely Democratic nominee for presi-dent said in an interview with CNN that thepresumptive Republican nominee has “set avery bad example” for not condemning theviolence that is increasingly associated withhis rallies, whether by hi s own supporters orhis opponents.

    We must “condemn all violence in thepolit ical arena,” Clinto n said. “I don’t thin kany of this helps anybody.”

    Clinton once again hit Trump for the con-troversy surrounding his now-defunct TrumpUniversity, a real estate education programthat some participants said made fraudulentpromises, saying that the New York realestate mogul “preyed on p eople.”

    He “has taken th em by asking them to maxout their credit cards to a point of financialdespair and walked away. So I will l et th e law-

    suits go on,” Clinton said.Trump University is the target of two law-

    suits in San Diego and one in New York thataccuse the business of fleecing students withunfulfilled promises to teach secrets of suc-cess in real estate. Trump has maintained thatcustomers were overwhelmingly satisfiedwith the offerings. During a rally Friday inWestminster, California, Clinton attackedTrump for saying the federal judge presidingover a case has a conflict of interest becausehe is “of Mexican heritage.”

    “The judge is doing his job. That’s what hegot appointed to do,” Clinton said “AndDonald Trump wants to change the subjectlike he does all th e time. So in stead of facingup to the facts that are coming out ... hewants t o change th e subject and he is attack-ing a distinguished jurist.”

    Clinton also joked that if Trump got intothe White House, “he’s go ing to Trump you!”

    Just 70 delegates shy of clinching theDemocratic nomination, Clinton now leadsrival Bernie Sanders by 268 pledged dele-gates and her advantage grows with thesuperdelegates, party officials who can backany candidate.

    Marina T. MessingerMarina T. Messing er died unexpectedly

    Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2016. She was bornin Guatemala, Central America, on July 3,

    1923.Marina came to San Francisco in 1954.

    She met Max O. Messinger in 1957 whenthey worked together at Wilbur-EllisCompany in San Francisco and they weremarried May 30, 1958.

    Her children Katherina Messinger andAlex Messing er, Alex’s wife Patty and hergrandchildren, Hayley and Chase, surviveher.

    Marina was active in the San Mateocommunity for 58 years. She taughtSpanish at Mercy High School inBurlingame from 1961-1965. She wasinvolved with the Catholic CharitiesAuxili ary (President 196 8-196 9), Medical

    Mission Sisters,Republican Women, the

    San Mateo High SchoolPTA as well as a bandparent. She was activeuntil the end as a mem-ber of the San MateoAthletic Club and St.Bartholomew Women’sGuild.

    There will be a Memorial Service forMarina 11 a.m. Wednesday, June 8, at St.Bartholomew Church, 600 ColumbiaDrive, San Mateo.

    Donations can be made to the Sisters of Mercy, sistersofmercymidwest.thanky-ou4caring.org, in memory of MarinaMessinger.

    Clinton: Trump has ‘lowered

    the bar’ regarding protests

    Obituary

    San Jose, California policeunder fire after Trump rally

    SAN JOSE — This Silicon Valley city andits police department are facing mountingcomplaint s o f a tepid and tardy law enforce-ment response to attacks of Donald Trumpsupporters after a political rally.

    Videos circulating online show physicalclashes occurring in fron t of San Jose poli ceofficers dressed in riot gear and standingstoically in a line outside the conventioncenter where Trump spo ke. Critics als o com-plain ed that assaults occurred on si de streetsnear the venue that lacked police presence.

    “Potentiall y more could have been done,”said San Jose Councilman PierluigiOliverio, chairman of the council’s publicsafety committee.

    The questions about the San Jose policeresponse came while Trump launched a rally

    Friday afternoon inRedding, California, apolitically conservativecity 350 miles north of San Jose. Trump calledthose who attacked his

    supporters Thursdaynight a “bunch of thugs.”San Jose police chief

    Eddie Garcia commendedhis officers’ response to

    the violence after the Thursday night rally,saying the 250 officers on hand showed“discipline and restraint.”

    Garcia said uniformed officers refused tobreak from their “skirmish lin e” to break upnearby scuffles because they weren’t deemedlife threatening and that “additional forcecan incite more violence in the crowd.”

    Around the Bay

    REUTERS

    Hillary Clinton talks during a campaign stop at a restaurant and coffee shop in Santa Ana.

    By Steve Peoples and Scott BauerTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    JANESVILLE, Wis. — He’s finally gotPaul Ryan’s endorsement, but many offi-cials in Donald Trump’s new wave of sup-

    porters remain reluctant backers at best.Leaders who have pledged their backingstill aren’t wholly satisfied with his tem-perament, policies or readiness for theWhite House.

    As Trump works to uni fy th e fractured GOPbehind him, these Republicans, Ryanamong them, are struggling to show thesame enthusiasm Trump has generatedamong rank-and-file conservatives acrossthe nation.

    “He’s a work in progress, ” says OklahomaRep. Tom Cole, who promised to supportthe GOP nominee several weeks ago.

    Would Trump be a good president? “Tome this is a question o f alternatives,” Coletold the Associated Press on Friday in aclassic lukewarm embrace. “I’m comfort-able that he will be a better president than

    Hillary Clinton. ”The day before, House

    Speaker Ryan ended anextraordinary public splitby endorsing Trump in acolumn published in hishometown newspaper.Republican officials sug-gested that the endorse-ment marked an impor-tant step toward party

    unification, even while conceding that thespeaker’s endorsement was somewhat under-whelming.

    In a subsequent interview with theAssociated Press, Ryan did not express sup-port for any of Trump’s policies, would notpromise to campaign on his b ehalf this fall,and reminded voters that he doesn’t supportTrump’s confrontation al sty le.

    And, the day after the endorsement, Ryanlashed out at Trump’s suggestio n t hat a fed-eral judge should recuse himself from a caseinvolving one of Trump’s companiesbecause of his Mexican heritage.

    Trump’s reluctant backers:Republicans falling in line

    Donald Trump

    Paul Ryan

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    NATION 9Weekend• June 4-5, 2016 THE DAILY JOURNAL

    A FAMILY SHARING HOPE IN CHRIST

    HOPE EVANGELICALLUTHERAN CHURCH

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    Hope Lutheran Preschooladmits students of any race, color and national or ethnic origin.

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    Church of the Highlands“A community of caring Christians”

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    Baptist

    PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCHDr. Larry Wayne Ellis, Pastor

    (650) 343-5415217 North Grant Street, San Mateo

    Sunday Worship Services 8 & 11 amSunday School 9:30 am

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    Church of Christ

    CHURCH OF CHRIST525 South Bayshore Blvd. SM

    650-343-4997Bible School 9:45amServices 11:00am and

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    By Mike StobbeTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    NEW YORK — Risin g drug and alco-hol overdoses, suicides and disease

    from chronic alcoholism — labeled“deaths of despair” by one expert —are cutting the lives of whiteAmericans short by n early a half a yearon average.

    Increases in these types of deathsamong whites means that lifeexpectancy for whites is not increas-ing as fast as it is for other groups,according to a government report thatoffers an unusual lo ok at ho w differentthreats are affecting U.S. lifespans.

    “Things are moving in the wrongdirection,” said Anne Case, aPrinceton University researcher, of what she calls “deaths o f despair.”

    Drawing from death certificate data,the new report from the Centers forDisease Control and Prevention focus-es on what happened to white lifeexpectancy between 2000 and 2014.

    The work was a reaction to recentresearch that suggested drug overdosesand suicides have caused alarmingincreases in death rates for middle-agedwhite Americans. The new report,which did not perform the same analy-sis for blacks and Hispani cs, was post-ed online Friday.

    Overall, white life expectancy stillgrew because other things wereimproving. Deaths from heart disease— the nation ’s No. 1 kill er — droppedsignificantly, and that alone added ayear to white life expectancy. Nearlyone more year was added because of falling death rates from cancer, s troke,and motor vehicle crashes, theresearchers found.

    But t hen drugs and alcohol subtract-ed about 4 months from life expectan-

    cy, according to Kenneth Kochanek, aCDC statistician who was the report’slead author. No oth er cause of death h ada bigger negative impact, he said.

    Increasing suicides had the secondlargest negative impact, subtractingroughly 6 weeks from white lifeexpectancy. The growing impact of Alzheimer’s disease was third, reduc-ing lon gevity by about 3 weeks.

    Falls also whittled down white lifeexpectancy gains, the researchersfound. So did chronic liver disease,often the result of heavy alcohol con-sumption or injection drug use thatspreads the liver-destroying hepatitisC virus.

    Experts cite several possible rea-son s th at drug ov erdose deaths and sui-cides are occurring far more oftenamong middle-aged whites than othergroups. They say whites have had aneasier time getting access to the pow-

    erful painkillers that have been theroot of the current drug overdose epi-

    demic. And whites may more quicklyturn to s uicide because often they don’thave the ki nd of family an d social sup-port often seen in black and Hispaniccommunities, they say.

    Though th e gap is closing, white lifeexpectancy is still significantlygreater than life expectancy forblacks.

    White life expectancy grew to nearly79 in 2014, from about 77 1/2 yearsin 200 0. Black life expectancy rose toa little over 75 from about 71 1/2 . Lifeexpectancy for Hispanics rose to 82years from 79.

    Things may be taking a turn for theworse, however. Earlier this week,CDC issued a report on preliminarydeath data for 2015 that showed theU.S. death rate rose slightly — thefirst i ncrease in a decade. The report didnot b reak down what was happenin g indifferent racial groups, but experts s ay

    whites death trends are likely the pri-mary reason .

    ‘Deaths of despair’ drag lifeexpectancy lower for whites

    Drugs and alcohol subtracted about 4 months from life expectancy of whiteAmericans. No other cause of death had a bigger negative impact.

    Last four soldiers missingfrom Fort Hood accident found dead

    FORT HOOD, Texas — The last four soldiers still missingafter a truck carryin g a dozen troops was washed from a flood-ed low-water cross at Fort Hood were found dead Friday, b ring-ing t he death to ll from the accident to nine.

    The bodies were found downstream from the Owl CreekTactical Crossing where the swift waters of the flooded creekswept the troop carrier from the crossing, said Maj. Gen.Joh n Uberti, Fort Hood deputy commander. Three other occu-pants of the 2 1/2-ton troop carrier were found dead shortlyafter the Thursday morning accident, and two more were founddead Thursday ni ght .

    Three survivo rs were discharged from Fort Hood’s hosp italon Friday, Uberti said at a Friday evening briefing at theCentral Texas Army post. Identities of the dead were beingwithheld pending n otification o f their families, he said.

    The portion of road on the northern fringe of the postwhere the Light Medium Tactical Vehicle overturned Thursdayhadn’t been overrun by water during past floods, Fort Hoodspokesman Chris Haug said earlier Friday.

    Police: Officers shoot, killknife-wielding man who lunged

    NORFOLK, Va. — A city council member is calling for afederal investigation and Norfolk’s police chief is defendinghis officers after this year’s fifth fatal shootin g by p olice inthe city.

    Two officers responding to a disturbance at a home openedfire when Willie D. James, 43, lunged at them with a knifeThursday evening, Police Chief Michael Goldsmith said at anews conference Friday. The pol ice department is conductingan internal investig ation, but Goldsmith said: “I’m going tostand behind my officers on t his. ”

    Around the nation

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    By Nathan MollatDAILY JOURNAL STAFF

    If there is one thing the PeninsulaAthletic League’s softball Players of theYear have in common i s th e fact that allthree can simply rake.

    Lauren Quirke, PAL Bay Division Playerof the Year out of Hillsdale, along withOcean Division Co-Players of the Year —San Mateo’s Taylor Doi and Sequoia’sAllison Amaya — combined for a battingaverage this y ear of .538.

    There is very little artificial padding in

    that number. The three combined for 119hits and just 31 walks on the season, mean-ing that they consistently put the ball inplay and, in the game of softball, that ishalf the battle.

    Quirke just finished up one of the besttwo-year spans in recent Bay Division his-tory, earning Co-Player of the Year honorsfor the second year in a row. She sh ared thehonor with Capuchino’s Allie Stines lastyear as a junior.

    Batting in the middle of the Hillsdale’slineup, Quirke was one of the most fearedpower hitters in the league. She had 14

    extra-base hits among her 41 hits this s ea-son, during which she went wire-to-wire towin the Bay Division batting title with a.4 88 average. She reached base in just morethan half her plate appearances and com-bined with a .750 slugging average had aneye-popping 1.311 on-base plus sluggingpercentage. That is elite level.

    “The funny thing is, she probably couldhave done better,” said Hillsdale assistantcoach Michelle Zalba.

    Big things have been expected fromQuirke, who was called up to the varsityteam midway through her freshman season ,

    and she delivered on that potential the lasttwo years.“We brought her up middle of freshman

    year,” Zalba said. “Being on varsity thatlong, I think she knew there were expecta-tions.”

    And she delivered, helping lead theKnights to the PAL Bay Division title forthe first time since 2011.

    Interestingly enough, Quirke’s mostinteresting stat is t he four triples she hit tolead the team. Quirke is big and powerful,

    Quirke, Doi and Amaya: PAL softball’s best

    By Janie McCauley THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    SANTA CLARA — Cri sti an Zapata s coredhis first international goal, JamesRodriguez added a 42nd-minute penalty kickand Colombia beat the United States 2-0Friday night in the opener of the CopaAmerica.

    U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann spokeabout the importance of a strong showing

    in this special edition 100th anniversaryCopa to create buzz for a potential 2026World Cup bid. Instead, the 31st-rankedAmericans began th e bigges t tournament athome since the 1994 World Cup with a dudas FIFA President Gianni In fantino watchedamong the announced sellout crowd of 67,439.

    Geoff Cameron lost his mark on the firstgoal, and DeAndre Yedlin left a raised armthat led to a hand ball call and Rodriguez’s

    penalty kick. Colombia dominated, withCarlos Bacca putting a shot of the crossbarin the 77th minute.

    The Americans will look to rebound onTuesday against Costa Rica at Chicago,then close their group stage four days lateragainst Paraguay at Philadelphia.

    Clint Dempsey had the three best U.S.chances. Klinsmann started eight playerswho appeared in t he 201 4 World Cup, join edby goalkeeper Brad Guzan and forwards

    Gyasi Zardes and Bobby Wood. Trying tospark the attack, he put in 17-year-oldChristian Pulisic and Darlington Nagbe inthe 66th minute.

    Rodriguez came down hard on his leftshoulder in the second half after trippingover U.S. captain Michael Bradley, andRodriguez exited in the 7 3rd minute.

    No. 3 Colombia, a World Cup quarterfinal-ist two years ago, went ahead in the eighth

    U.S. blanked by third-ranked Colombia

    By Tim DalhbergTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Muhammad Ali remained hospitalizedFriday in the Phoenix area, battl ing respira-tory problems serious enough to draw fami-ly members to hi s bedside.

    The 74-year-old box ing great’s respirato-ry issues have been complicated by theParkinson’s that he was diagnosed with inthe 1980s, two people told the Associated

    Press a day earlier.The two spoke sepa-

    rately in describing Ali’scondition as being veryconcerning to family

    members. They declinedto be identified becausethey were not speakingon behalf of th e family.

    Several of Ali’s daugh-ters reportedly flew toPhoenix late Thursday

    and early Friday to be with th eir father.Laila Ali, herself a former boxin g champi-

    on, posted a picture Friday afternoon onFacebook of her father hol ding her daughterwhen she was an infant.

    “I love this photo of my father and mydaughter Sydney when she was a baby!” shewrote. “Thanks for all the love and wellwishes. I feel your love and appreciate it!!”

    A spokesman for the former heavyweightchampion said in an email Friday that th erewas no update on his condition. Spokesman

    Bob Gunnell s aid a day earlier that Ali was infair condition and that a brief hospital staywas expected.

    Ali’s longtime Parkinson’s doctordeclined comment when reached by the APThursday nigh t.

    “I can’t really say much more than what’sin the papers,” said Dr. Abraham Liebermanof the Barrow Neurological Institute inPhoenix.

    Ali has been hos pitalized several times inrecent years, most recently in early 2015when he was treated for a severe urinary tractinfection initially diagnosed as pneumonia.

    Ali has looked increasingly frail in publicappearances, including April 9 when he

    Muhammad Ali isin grave condition

    See SOFTBALL , Page 14

    See ALI , Page 13

    See SOCCER , Page 13

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    SPORTS12 Weekend• June 4-5, 2016 THE DAILY JOURNAL

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    ST. LOUIS — Johnny Cueto workedaround a season-worst five walks to p ost h isninth win, tying for the major league lead,as the San Francisco Giants beat the St.Louis Cardinals 5-1 on Friday night.

    Cueto (9-1) allowed a run on four hits insix innings with one strikeout. He hadn’twalked more than two in any of his first 11starts for hi s new team.

    Cueto is among four nine-game winners, joi nin g Step hen St rasburg, Jake Arrieta andChris Sale. Six of Cueto’s victories have

    come on th e road.Five Giants relievers combined to gi ve up

    just o ne hi t.Adam Wainwright (5-4) allowed two runs

    in seven innings. The Cardinals were heldto one run for the second straight game.

    The Giants bunched three straight two-strike hits in the fourth to take a 2-1 lead,with RBIs by Brandon Belt and BrandonCrawford.

    Denard Span had a two-run single andMatt Duffy squeezed home a run in a three-run ninth, capitalizing on three straightwalks to open the innin g by Cardinals clos-er Trevor Rosent hal.

    The NL West leaders are a major league-

    best 18-4 s ince May 11.Cueto is 5-0 with a 0.99 ERA his last sixstarts, working at least six innings andallowing two or fewer runs i n each of th em.

    He’d entered 2-4 with a 5 .71 ERA in 1 0 p re-vious starts in St. Louis.

    Wainwright had been 5-0 in his previousseven starts.

    Stephen Piscotty had an RBI single in th ethird but the Cardinals left the bases loadedwhen Randal Grichuk tapped out, with Cuetomaking a nice play and throw just in time.

    Up nextGiants : Jeff Samardzija (7-3, 2.84) lost

    his l ast outing, allowing four earned runs infive innings against Atlanta.

    Cardinals : Michael Wacha (2-6, 4.99)is 1-0 with a 0. 47 ERA in th ree career startsagainst San Francisco. Wacha has lost hislast six decisions.

    Giants take down Cardinals

    By R.B. FallstromTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    ST. LOUIS — San Francisco Giants out-fielder Hunter Pence will undergo surgery fora right hamstring injury and is likely to beout eight weeks.

    “The good news is there’s going to be alot of season left to play when I comeback,” Pence said Friday before the NL West

    leaders played theCardinals. “So there’s alot to look forward to.That is exciting.”

    Pence said he felt thehamstring pop runningto first base trying tobeat out an infieldgrounder on Wednesday.He was helped off the

    field.Pence said he was toldhe had a 50-50 chance of returning if heskipped surgery and just did rehabilitationwork. But if he did that and re-injured him-self, t he recovery time would be longer.

    “It just makes sens e to be 100 p ercent cer-tain,” Pence said. “It’s also supposed to getyou back quicker.”

    The surgery has not yet been scheduled.Pence said three doctors weighed in on theinjury.

    The 33-year-old Pence was also told thesurgery was fairly routine. He said it was arelief to k now what was ahead of him.

    It’s the second right hamstring injury intwo weeks for Pence. He topped the teamwith 36 RBIs and was second with sevenhome runs going into the series at St.

    Louis.Jarrett Parker started in rig ht field and bat-ted eighth against the Cardinals. MacWilliamson also could get starts in right.

    Pence to havesurgery, outeight weeks

    Hunter Pence

    By Janie McCauley THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    OAKLAND — Shaun Livingston put upnearly 100 free throws at the end of Friday’sNBA Finals practice, and that is somewherearound his norm.

    Cleveland might have built the most

    expensive roster in theNBA. Way out West,Golden State developedarguably the league’sdeepest and best benchwith a group of hard-nosed guys likeLivingston eager to takethe pressure off startersStephen Curry, KlayThompson and DraymondGreen whenever their

    names are called.Or downright outplay the first unit when

    necessary on t he biggest stage.This close-knit band of backups regularly

    discusses how dependable they must be,telling each other to stay ready for any role.

    “When you see a guy down, you make sureyou pick him up and when you see a guy upmake sure you keep him level-headed because,you never know what’s going to be next inthis game,” Marreese Speights said Friday.“When we’re at the gym, i t’s, ‘Come on, let’sgo get some shots,’ or hanging out on theroad we sit down and talk about it, ‘We needeach and every one of these players on thisteam to win another championship.’ Lunch,dinner, brunch, all that, we talk.”

    The reliable reserves did just that in a 104-89 Game 1 Finals win Thursday night, and theCavaliers have to be at least a little bit con-cerned goin g in to Sunday’s Game 2 knowingthe Splash Brothers of Curry and Thompsonwill start sinking shots again soon enough.

    Livingston played nearly 27 minutes in theopener of the rematch with his formerCleveland team and made 8 of 10 s hots on th eway to a postseason career-best 20 points.

    Leandro Barbosa made all five of his shot sfor 11 points and 2015 Finals MVP AndreIguodala contributed 12 points, sevenrebounds, six assists.

    “We’re not coming in to just gi ve guys rest.

    We’re coming in to be productive and makeplays and make things happen. It’s all aboutthe mindset,” Livingston said. “It feels goodto come out of a g ame like that when our starsdon’t have it going and we still get the win.We believe in each other, and anybody canstep up.”

    Back to the drawing board for LeBron Jamesand the Cavs to stop Golden State’s bench.

    Livingston is the one who nine years agonearly needed his left leg amputated after agruesome knee injury. His comeback fromthat frigh tening 2007 fall suffered while withthe Clip pers has inspi red Coach of the YearSteve Kerr.

    Going for a layup, the guard’s leg buckledbackward, parallel to the court, when he fell i na freak accident. He screamed and writhed inagony.

    Livingston tore three major ligaments inhis knee — the anterior cruciate, posteriorcruciate and medial collateral as well as hislateral meniscus, then required extensive sur-gery.

    Warriors’ backups bring best in Game 1

    ShaunLivingston

    See WARRIORS , Page 14

    Giants 5, Cardinals 1

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    wore sunglasses and was hunched over at theannual Celebrity Fight Night dinner inPhoenix, which raises funds for treatment of Parkinson’s.

    His last formal public appearance beforethat was in October when he app eared at theSports Illustrated Tribute to Muhammad Aliat The Muhammad Ali Center in his home-town of Louisville, Kentucky, along withformer opponents George Foreman andLarry Holmes.

    Ali has suffered from Parkinson’s for threedecades, most famously trembling badlywhile lighting the Olympic torch in 1996 i nAtlanta. Despite the disease he kept up a

    busy appearance schedule until recently,though he has not spoken in public foryears.

    Doctors say the Parkinson’s likely wascaused by th e thousands of punches Ali tookduring a career in which he traveled the worldfor big fights.

    An iconic figure who at o ne poi nt was per-haps the most recognized person in theworld, Ali has lived quietly in the Phoenixarea with his fourth wife, Lonnie, whom hemarried in 198 6.

    News of his hospitalization brought wellwishes from boxers and others on Twitter,including Sugar Ray Leonard, who modeledhis career after Ali’s.

    “Prayers & blessings to my idol, myfriend, & without question, the Greatest of All Time (at)MuhammadAli ! (hash)GOAT,”Leonard wrote.

    Continued from page 11

    ALIKuchar, Steele tiedfor lead at Memorial

    DUBLIN, Ohio — Two matches at homeagainst Phil Mickelson made Brendan Steelefeel inadequate. Two rounds at the Memorialgave him a share of the lead.

    Steele put in a little more work and it p aidoff over two days in soft conditions atMuirfield Village. He had a 5-under 67 on

    Friday and was tied for the lead with pastMemorial champion Matt Kuchar (66) goinginto a wide-open weekend.

    Steele, whose only PGA Tour victory wasin his rookie season five years ago, took thelast two weeks off to attend a wedding, gofishing with his father and venture over toSan Diego to play a few games withMickelson at The Bridges at Rancho SantaFe.

    The mathematical definition of gettingdrummed turned out to be 2 and 1 on the fi rstday, 5 and 4 on the second day.

    He made a quick fix with swing coach RickSmith, had time for a few more tweaks, and hetook t hat straight to t he course for solid playover the last two days. And while there wasnothing at stake, he has Mickelson by fiveshots at the moment.

    Steele and Kuchar were at 12-under 132, thesame score that led a year ago.

    The scoring was so g ood, however, t hat thecut was at 2-under 142, the lowest since Jack

    Nicklaus st arted this tournament in 1976.

    No. 1 Djokovic to faceNo. 2 Murray in French Open final

    PARIS — Novak Djokovic is on theprecipice of history once again at theFrench Open, reaching the final for thefourth time in five years at the only majortournament he hasn’t won.

    In addition to trying to complete a careerGrand Slam, Djokovic will be hoping toaccomplish something even more rare —winning a fourth consecutive major title,something that hasn’t been done by a manin n early a half-century.

    On court for th e fourth straight day at rain-logged Roland Garros, the No. 1-seededDjokovi c raced through his s emifinal Fridaywith a 6-2, 6-1, 6-4 victory over No. 13Dominic Thiem of Austria.

    After a welcome day of rest, he will faceNo. 2 Andy Murray in Sunday’s final.Murray became the first British man since193 7 to get th at far in Paris, o usting defend-ing champion Stan Wawrinka 6-4, 6-2, 4-6,6-2.

    Murray had lost hi s previo us three semifi-nals at Roland Garros, including a five-set-ter against Djokovic a year ago.

    Djokovic, meanwhile, is 0-3 in titlematches at the French Open, losing toRafael Nadal in 2012 and 2014, thenWawrinka in 2015, each time in four sets.That loss to Wawrinka was Dokovic’s mostrecent at a major.

    minute on an unseasonably warm nightwhen Zapata volleyed from about 10 yardsout off a corner kick from Edwin Cordona.With Bradley marking Daniel Torres, Zapatacircled around the pair to get away fromCameron, and the defender scored his firstgoal in 42 i nternational appearances.

    Mexican referee Roberto Garcia awardedthe penalt y when Yedlin, just insi de thepenalty area, jumped and turned to try toavoid a cross by Farid Diaz but left his righ tarm elevated as the ball hit.

    American midfielder Alejandro Bedoya,whose father was born in Colombia, arguedwith Garcia to no avail, and Rodriguez fireda left-footed penalty kick past Guzan, whohad dived the other way, for his 15 th go al in43 appearances. Guzan was picked byKlinsmann to start in the tournament overHoward, the Americans’ goalkeeper at thelast two World Cups.

    Dempsey had a shot from the top of thearea that went just wide in the 37th minute,and his header in the 60th minute off Bradley’s corner kick was cleared off theline by Sebastian Perez. Dempsey curled afree kick around a defensive wall in the 6 0thminute that was parried by goalk eeper DavidOspina.

    Golf/Tennis briefs

    Continued from page 11

    SOCCER

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    but athletic and nimble enough from playing water polo andsoccer for the Knights that she is able to scoot around thebases.

    “She’s a good base runner. She’s deceptively quick,”Zalba said.

    There is n o deception i n Doi’s quickness as the San Mateosenior was the quintessential softball leadoff hitter: greatbat control and can fly on the base paths. Her strengths inthe running game opened up things for her teammates tohave success.

    “One of her greatest things she brought were her intangi-bles, ” said San Mateo coach Brandon Robi nson . “When shegets on, the people behind her … get better pitches. …Those kinds of things were huge.”

    There were few who wreaked more havoc than Doi, who

    will play in college at Gettsyburg College in Pennsylv ania.She batted a robust .5 88, rapping out 50 hits in 85 at-bats.She struck out only three times and stole 13 bases in 14attempts. She scored 38 runs and drove in 22.

    As much of an effect Doi had on the San Mateo offense,she had an adverse effect on opposing defenses with herspeed and defensively abilities at third base. Robinson saidDoi all but took the bunt away from opposing teamsbecause, with her speed, she could quickly pounce on b allsaround the plate.

    “Those kind of intangibles don’t really get noticed by alot of people,” Robinson said. “They don’t sho w up in thescorebook.”

    Amaya, who h elped lead Sequoia back to relevancy in t hePAL’s Ocean Divisio n as well as the divis ion crown, batted.538 during the regular season, with nearly half of her 28hits g oing for extra bases (eight doubles, three triples). Shedrove in 28 runs and scored 28 times. She walked 13 t imeswithout striking out and was perfect in the stolen basesdepartment, go ing 10 for 10.

    DAILY JOURNAL SPORTS FILE

    Hillsdale’s Lauren Quirke, the PAL Bay Division Player of the Year for the second year in a row, scores one of her 28 runs as shehelped lead the Knights to their first Bay Division title since 2011.

    Continued from page 11

    SOFTBALL

    BAY DIVISIONPlayer of the Year: Lauren Quirke,Sr.,HillsdalePitcher of the Year: Eryn McCoy,Sr.,Hillsdale

    First teamLauren Quirke (Sr., Hills); Eryn McCoy (Sr., Hills); BridgetNasir (So.,Hills);Isabella Zalba (So.,Hills);Mackenzie Driscoll(Sr., Hills); Kelsey Ching (Sr., Cmont); Mailey McLemore(So.,Cmont); Ashley Trierweiler (Fr.,Cmont); Allie Stines(Sr., Cap); Abbey Donovan (Sr., HMB); Grace Garcia (So.,HMB); Gabriella Zucchiatti (Sr., Mills); Kaitlyn Grech (Sr.,Wood)

    Second teamSoraya Frick (Jr.,Ara);Haley Crowell (Jr.,Bgame);CameronKondo (Jr.,Cmont); Michaela Spielman (Jr.,Cmont); Ka-rina Chavarria (Jr.,Cap); Allyson Sarabia (Jr.,HMB); Angela

    Brazil (Sr.,HMB); Riley Donovan (So.,HMB); Bailey McDo-nough (So.,Hills);Aubrie Businger (Jr.,Mills);Sara Cisneros(Sr.,Mills); Alexis Riccardi (Sr.,Wood); Paige Blackwell (So.,Wood)

    Honorable mentionAmelia Ung (Sr., Bgame); Adriana Picazo (Jr., Cap); LilyMoffitt (So.,HMB); Caitlin Ung (Jr.,Mills)

    OCEAN DIVISIONCo Player s of the Year: Taylor Doi (Sr.,SM)/Allison Amaya(Sr.,Seq)Pitcher of the Year: Emily McAdams (Sr.,Seq)

    First teamKarizma Bergesen (Fr.,SSF); Olivia Stubblefield (Jr.,Seq);Melina Coleman (So., TN); Ashly Deinia (Sr., EC); Delilah

    Kline (Sr.,M-A); Sonara Faeafine (Sr.,Jeff); Raisa Magro (Sr.,SM);Mackenzie Clarke (So.,Seq);Cameron Cosentino (Sr.,SM); Paige Stoveland (Sr.,SM)

    Second teamKiley Lubeck (Jr., Seq); Tori Jaques (So., TN); KendallRichards (Fr., SM); Natalya Cercedes (Jr., SSF); DanielleAmaya (So.,Seq); Jada Walker (Fr.,SM); Shelby Baxter ( Jr.,SSF); Megan Brotherton (Sr.,Seq); Janessa Cayabyab (Jr.,SSF),Leanna Cruz (Jr.,Jeff)

    Honorable mentionAngelina Gordillo (Sr.,Seq);Kela Kapuniai (Jr.,TN);MikaelaPelesauma (Fr.,EC);Jessic Bungos (Sr.,M-A);Isabelle Borges(Fr.,SM); Brianna Jimenez (So.SSF), Kathryn Chavez (Jr.,SSF); Taylor Goes (Sr., TN); Mirella Osuna (Sr., SM); MayaMontemayor (Sr.,Jeff)

    PAL all-league softball teams

    It was during hi s time with Cleveland at the end of the 2012-13 season th at Livingston began to truly trust his b ody again.It was a long road emotionally and physically to reach thatpoin t, so much so that Livingston s aid it was “almost like I wasa retired player.”

    Now, he’s on the court at Oracle Arena all smiles and gearingup for more in Game 2 when he gets his chance. Free throw after

    free throw.“Shaun shoots the most. That’s how he keeps his rhythm,”

    Kerr said. “I think part of that is his injury history. He can’tafford to put a lot of wear and tear on his legs by shoo ting a tonof jump sho ts, s o he sho ots a ton of free throws.”

    Continued from page 12

    WARRIORS

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    COYOTE POINTA R M O R Y

    WCALPlayer of the Year: Kacey Zobac,Fr.,Valley Chris-tianPitcher of the Year: Madison Augusto, So., St.Ig-natius

    First teamOlivia Geronimo (Sr.,OF,NDB); Sofia Magnani (Sr.,P,NDB); Bianca Magnani (So., INF, NDB); McKinsey Thorpe (Sr.,INF,Mitty);Julia Lucas (Jr.,C,Mitty);KaylinStewart (So.,OF,Mitty); Lauren Lopez (Jr.,OF,Mitty);Kayla Dominguez (Fr., P, VC); Lauren Hendrickson(So.,INF,VC); Taylor Beldi (Sr.,OF,VC); Kiana McCaul(Jr.,C,Pres); Carolyn Skotz (Fr.,INF,Pres); Claire Gun-ther (Sr.,INF,SI);Kiana Meriales (So.,INF,SHC);ClaudiaCostello (Jr.,OF,SF)

    Second teamDanica Kazakoff (Sr.,C,NDB);Chloe Stogner (Jr.,UTL,NDB); Lindsey Goubeaux (Sr.,INF,Mitty); Erika Yea-ger (Sr.,INF,Mitty); Korie Thomas (Fr., INF,VC); Sara

    Machardo (Sr., INF, VC); Kaia McCaul (Fr., P, Pres);Gabrielle Forbes (Jr.,INF,Pres); Mariel Palacio (Jr.,OF,SI); Maicie Levit (Fr.,C,SI); Carmel Gisslow (Jr.,P,SHC);Marisa Fujimoto (So.,INF,SHC); Kelsey Johnson (Jr.,INF,SF)

    Honorable mentionMadison Earnshaw (So.,P,NDB); Rebecca Ortiz (Sr.,INF,Mitty); Daisy Bradanini (So.,LF,VC); Ava Williams(So.,INF,Pres); Alana Locke (Sr.,OF,SI); Giselle Pani-agua (Jr., OF, SHC); Katherine Steffen-Brune (Jr., C,SF)

    WBALFOOTHILL DIVISIONMVP:Kris McIntyre,King’s AcademyPitcher of the Year: Tara Thakurta,Castilleja

    First team Mercy-Bur lingame only)Erin Dougherty; Kaylyn Sterling

    Second teamAmber Abugharbieh; Alexis Luciano

    Honorable mentionKesaia Langi

    SKYLINE DIVISIONMVP: Alicia Lopez, Mercy-SFPitcher of the Year: Natalie Leonard,Crystal Springs

    First team Crystal Springs/Alma Heights only)Jayla Aldridge (CS); Becky Berman (CS); PrisillaSanchez (CS); Emily Latu (AH); Denise Trinh (AH)

    Second teamEmily Jacobson (AH); Kira Sheley (AH)

    Honorable mentionNiyati Narang (CS); Loren Turnicio (AH)

    ALL-LEAGUE SOFTBALEAST DIVISION

    W L Pct GBBaltimore 31 22 .585 —Boston 32 23 .582 — Toronto 30 26 .536 2 1/2New York 25 29 .463 6 1/2 Tampa Bay 23 30 .434 8

    CENTRAL DIVISIONKansas City 30 24 .556 —Cleveland 29 24 .547 1/2Chicago 29 26 .527 1 1/2Detroit 26 28 .481 4Minnesota 16 38 .296 14

    WEST DIVISION Texas 32 22 .593 —

    Seattle 31 23 .574 1Houston 26 30 .464 7Los Angeles 25 29 .463 7A’s 25 30 .455 7 1/2

    Friday’s GamesBaltimore 6,N.Y.Yankees 5L.A.Angels 9,Pittsburgh 2Detroit 10,Chicago White Sox 3Cleveland 6,Kansas City 1 Toronto 5,Boston 2 Texas 7,Seattle 3Houston 12,Oakland 2 Tampa Bay 4,Minnesota 2Saturday’s GamesL.A.Angels at Pittsburgh,1:05 p.m. Toronto at Boston,1:05 p.m.Chicago White Sox at Detroit,1:10 p.m.Oakland at Houston,1:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at Minnesota,1:10 p.m.Kansas City at Cleveland,4:15 p.m.N.Y.Yankees at Baltimore,4:15 p.m.Seattle at Texas,6:05 p.m.Sunday’s GamesChicago White Sox at Detroit,10:10 a.m.Kansas City at Cleveland,10:10 a.m.L.A.Angels at Pittsburgh,10:35 a.m.N.Y.Yankees at Baltimore, 10:35 a.m. Toronto at Boston,10:35 a.m.Oakland at Houston,11:10 a.m. Tampa Bay at Minnesota,11:10 a.m.Seattle at Texas,12:05 p.m.

    AMERICAN LEAGUEEAST DIVISION

    W L Pct GBWashington 33 22 .600 —New York 30 23 .566 2Miami 29 26 .527 4Philadelphia 27 28 .491 6Atlanta 16 37 .302 16

    CENTRAL DIVISIONChicago 38 15 .717 —Pittsburgh 29 25 .537 9 1/2St.Louis 28 27 .509 11Milwaukee 25 30 .455 14Cincinnati 20 35 .364 19

    WEST DIVISION

    Giants 35 22 .614 —Los Angeles 28 27 .509 6Colorado 24 29 .453 9Arizona 24 33 .421 11San Diego 21 34 .382 13

    Friday’s GamesChicago Cubs 6,Arizona 0L.A.Angels 9,Pittsburgh 2Philadelphia 6,Milwaukee 3Cincinnati 7,Washington 2N.Y.Mets 6, Miami 2San Francisco 5,St. Louis 1Atlanta at L.A.Dodgers,lateColorado at San Diego,lateSaturday’s GamesArizona at Chicago Cubs,11:20 a.m.Milwaukee at Philadelphia,12:05 p.m.L.A.Angels at Pittsburgh,1:05 p.m.N.Y.Mets at Miami,1:10 p.m.Washington at Cincinnati,1:10 p.m.San Francisco at St.Louis,4:15 p.m.

    Atlanta at L.A.Dodgers,7:10 p.m.Colorado at San Diego,7:10 p.m.Sunday’s GamesN.Y.Mets at Miami,10:10 a.m.Washington at Cincinnati,10:10 a.m.L.A.Angels at Pittsburgh,10:35 a.m.Milwaukee at Philadelphia,10:35 a.m.Arizona at Chicago Cubs,11:20 a.m.Atlanta at L.A.Dodgers,1:10 p.m.San Francisco at St.Louis,4:05 p.m.Colorado at San Diego,6:10 p.m.

    NATIONAL LEAGUE

    Pittsburgh 2, Sharks 0Monday, May 30: Pittsburgh 3, Sharks 2Wednesday, June 1: Pittsburgh 2, Sharks 1Saturday,June 4:Pittsburgh at Sharks,5 p.m.Monday,June 6:Pittsburgh at Sharks,5 p.m.x-Thursday,June 9: Sharks at Pittsburgh,5 p.m.x-Sunday,June 12: Pittsburgh at Sharks,5 p.m.x-Wednesday,June 15:Sharks at Pittsburgh,5 p.m.

    STANLEY CUP FINALS

    Warriors 1, Cleveland 0Thursday, June 2: Warriors 104, Cavaliers 89Sunday,June 5:Cleveland at Warriors,5 p.m.Wednesday,June 8:Warriors at Cleveland,6 p.m.Friday,June 10: Warriors at Cleveland,6 p.m.x-Monday,June 13: Cleveland at Warriors,6 p.m.x-Thursday,June 16: Warriors at Cleveland,6 p.m.x-Sunday,June 19: Cleveland at Warriors,5 p.m.

    NBA FINALS

    BASEBALLMajor League BaseballCOMMISSIONER’s OFFICE —Suspended SanFrancisco minor league RHP Alvaro Diaz (Arizona)56 games following a positive test for Stanozolol.Suspended New York Yankees minor league COliver Cedeno,LHP Jean Carlos De Jesus and RHPsArikson Ramirez, Leyfer Ramirez and Jhostin Var-gas (Dominican) and Oakland minor league RHPOscar Tovar (Dominican) 25 games each for viola-tions of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program.American LeagueBALTIMORE ORIOLES —Recalled RHP MikeWright from Norfolk (IL).Placed RHP Darren ODayon the 15-day DL.BOSTON RED SOX —Reinstated OF Jackie BradleyJr.from the paternity leave list.Optioned OF RusneyCastillo to Pawtucket (IL).CHICAGO WHITE SOX —Placed OF Melky Cabr-era on the family emergency leave list. Recalled

    RHP Tommy Kahnle from Charlotte (IL).OAKLAND ATHLETICS —Recalled RHP J.B.Wen-delken Nashville (PCL).NBASACRAMENTO KINGS —Naming Elston Turner,Duane Ticknor, Bryan Gates, Corliss Williamson,Nancy Lieberman and Jason March assistantcoaches.National LeagueCOLORADO ROCKIES —Reinstated C Nick Hund-ley from the 15-day DL, Placed C Tony Wolters onthe seven-day concussion DL.LOS ANGELES DODGERS —Placed OF Yasiel Puigon the 15-day DL.Reinstated INF/OF Scott Van Slykefrom the 15-day DL.NEW YORK METS —Placed 3B n David Wright onthe 15-day DL,retroactive to May 30.Recalled INFMatt Reynolds from Las Vegas (PCL).WASHINGTON NATIONALS —Recalled INF Trea Turner from Syracuse (IL).Placed 1B Ryan Zimmer-man on the paternity list.NFLCHICAGO BEARS —Signed OL Nate Chandler.TENNESSEE TITANS —Placed OT Byron Bell oninjured reserve. Agreed to terms with WR ReeceHornon.COLLEGE

    CHARLOTTE —Named Ryan Potter women’s as-sistant golf coach.GUILFORD —Announced the resignation of men’sassociate head basketball coach Caleb Kimbrough.HAMPDEN-SYDNEY —Named Jason Rostanlacrosse coach.HOFSTRA —Named Lamar Barrett men’s assis-tant basketball coach.LIVINGSTONE —Announced the resignation of women’s basketball coach Anita Howard.NEBRASKA —Named Ali Farokhmanesh men’sbasketball director of player relations and devel-opment.

    TRANSACTIONSEASTERN CONFERENCE

    W L T Pts GF GAPhiladelphia 6 3 5 23 21 16New York 6 7 1 19 24 20Montreal 5 4 4 19 22 20New York City FC 4 5 6 18 22 29 Toronto FC 4 5 4 16 14 15D.C.United 4 6 4 16 14 16Orlando City 3 3 7 16 23 21New England 3 4 7 16 19 25Columbus 3 5 5 14 18 21Chicago 2 5 5 11 10 14

    WESTERN CONFERENCEW L T Pts GF GA

    Colorado 8 2 4 28 17 10FC Dallas 8 4 4 28 24 22Real Salt Lake 7 4 2 23 23 21Vancouver 6 6 3 21 23 25Los Angeles 5 2 6 21 27 16San Jose 5 4 5 20 16 16Portland 5 6 4 19 23 25Sporting KC 5 8 3 18 14 18Seattle 5 7 1 16 13 15Houston 3 7 4 13 20 22

    NOTE:Three points for victory,one point for tie.———Wednesday’s GamesPhiladelphia 3,Columbus 2Seattle 2,D.C.United 0Portland 1,San Jose 0Thursday’s GamesReal Salt Lake 3, New York City FC 2Houston 1,FC Dallas 1,tieSporting Kansas City 0,Los Angeles 0,tie

    MLS GLANCE

    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    RALEIGH, N.C. — Connor Owings drovein two runs and Coastal Carolina beat SaintMary’s 5-2 on Friday in their NCAATournament opener.

    Seth Lancaster added a run-scoringgroundout for the second-seeded

    Chanticleers (45-15). The Big South

    Conference champion s built a 5 -1 lead afterfive innings for their 11th straight win.

    Coastal Carolina will play the winner of Navy-N.C. State, an d Saint Mary’s will facethe loser in an elimination game, Saturday.

    Anthony Gonsolin hit a solo homer inthe first for the third-seeded Gaels (33-24)

    in the first NCAA Tournament game in

    school history.

    Owings , th e Big South player of th e year,hit a two-run single in the third that putCoastal Carolina ahead to stay. Lancaster’sRBI groundout came an inning later. TheChanticleers added two more runs in thefifth on wild pitches by Corbin Burnes (9-

    2).

    Nate Nolan added a run-scoring sing le in

    the sixth for Saint Mary’s, the West Coast

    Conference champs.

    Andrew Beckwith (11-1) struck out three

    with one walk in 6 2-3 inning s for Coastal

    Carolina.

    St. Mary’s baseball loses first game of regional p

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    16 Weekend • June 4-5, 2016 THE DAILY JOURNALSPORTS

    have won 33 of 36 series.But the Penguins kn ow better than to start

    planning any parades. Two of those threeteams to rally after losing the first twogames on the road have done it in the pastseven years, including Pittsburgh itself in2009 against Detroit. Boston also over-came a 2-0 deficit to Vancouver in 2 011.

    “We’ve talked about it,” said Penguinscaptain Sidney Crosby, who played on that2009 team. “You expect a really desperatehockey t eam. They’re only focused on win-ning one game. All their energy and every-thing is toward just tomorrow night. We’veall been in situations where you put all that

    energy and all that focus toward one gameand you know they will be at their best.”

    Outside of a strong second period in theopener and a good push late in regulation inGame 2 when San Jose tied the game andnearly scored the go-ahead goal, thePenguins have been the better team.

    They have a 71-48 edge in shots on goal,considerably more dangerous scoringchances and have fo rced the Sharks defenseinto the kinds of mistakes they didn’t makethe first three rounds.

    “They’ve done a good job keeping thepuck in their zone, using their forecheckand making it tough on us,” defensemanJustin Braun s aid. “We’ve had a litt le troublesustaining pressure. We’ve been one andout. They’ve had a couple o f chances. That’sbeen a bi g difference.”

    With Pittsburgh also doing a good jobstaying out of the penalty box, San Jose’s

    potent power play has had only threechances through two games and deliveredone of the team’s three goals.

    The Sharks say those lack of chanceshave been more about their play then thecalls by officials.

    “We’re not g ivin g ourselves that o pportu-nity, ” center Logan Co uture said. “We’re notplaying with the puck enough. We’re notforcing them to play in their zone tired.That’s when penalties usually happen, atthe end of long shifts. It’s up to us as play-ers to force them to play in their zone.”

    The Sharks did generate more chanceswhen coach Peter DeBoer shuffled his linesin the third period of Game 2, droppingPatrick Marleau from second-line wing tothird-line center and movin g Jo el Ward up t othe second line.

    He switched them back for p ractice but didnot say how he would utilize his lines in

    Game 3. Top-line winger Tomas Hertl alsomissed practice on Friday for what DeBoerdescribed as “maintenance” but he didn’tcommit to Hertl p laying Saturday.

    One change that will happen is the shiftin venues. Pittsburgh last played out of theEastern Time Zone on Jan. 18 in St. Louisand hasn’t been to the West Coast sinceDec. 6 in Anaheim before Mike Sullivantook over as coach.

    The Sharks will have last change and aloud crowd behind them for the first StanleyCup Final game ever in San Jose.

    “We expect a really hard start and a goodteam,” Penguins forward Nick Bon ino said.“These last two games have been decidedvery late, each one. They’re a great team.They’re going to come out really hard andwe’ll have to match that.”

    Continued from page 11SHARKS

    By Josh Dubow THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    SAN JOSE — San Jose center LoganCouture says Sidney Crosby isn’t the onlyplayer cheating in faceoffs in the StanleyCup Final.

    Couture said that he, teammate JoeThornton and just about every other playerwho gets in the faceoff circle tries for anysort of edge they can get, legal or other-wise.

    “Everyone cheats on faceoffs,” Couturesaid Friday. “I cheat, Jumbo cheats. That’show you try to win draws. He’s one of thebest at it. He wins a lot of faceoffs.”

    Couture caused a bit of a storm after Game2 when he accused Crosby of cheating onfaceoffs. It was a faceoff win by Crosby inovertime that s et up Pittsburgh’s game-win-

    ning goal by ConorSheary that gave thePenguins a 2-0 serieslead.

    Crosby said he was sur-prised when he heard theaccusation and said he

    doesn’t do anythingother pl ayers don’t do.“I think we are all

    doing the same thing inthe faceoff circle,” Crosb y said.

    Crosby and Couture both said they don’tthink this dispute will have any b earing onGame 3. Crosby said it won’t add any fuelfor him and Couture said he wasn’t tryin g tolobby linesmen to kick Crosby out of thecircle in future games.

    “Not at all,” he said. “These guys are thebest in the world at what they do. I have no

    complaints of the offi-cials throughout theseplayoffs. They’ve beenvery, very good.”

    Pittsburgh coach MikeSulliv an didn’t even wantto respond to Couture’s

    allegations on Thursdaybut does agree with theSharks center on oneaspect: Everyone is

    cheating t o an extent.“That’s all part of being a center iceman,

    tryin g to fig ure out a way to g et an edge andbe successful,” Sullivan said. “Sid isn’tdoing anything their guys aren’t doing.”

    Crosby won 26 of 40 faceoffs the first twogames, none more important than the cleanwin in the offensive zone against Joel Wardin overtime in Game 2 that set up Sheary’s

    goal.Couture wasn’t in the faceoff circle for

    that draw and Ward took t he bl ame on h im-self for the play.

    “I just have to be better is the bottomline,” he said.

    Couture is one of the few Sharks to hold

    his own against Crosby in the faceoff circlethis series, winning four of seven draws.But San Jose has struggled as a team ondraws th is postseason. After winning 50.7percent of faceoffs in the regular season forthe 10t h best mark in the league, the Sharksare last of all 16 playoff teams at 46.7 per-cent in the postseason.

    “You find better centermen out there,”Couture said. “It’s to ugh. It’s a littl e part of the game we want to improve at and be bet-ter at but there are bigger aspects of ourgame we want to get bett er at.”

    Couture: ‘Everyone cheats on faceof

    Logan Couture Sidney Crosby

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    CHICAGO — A federal judge ruled the worldchampion U.S. women’s soccer team does no thave the right to strike to seek improved con-ditions and wages before the SummerOlympics, seeming to end the prospect of anunprecedented disruption by one of the mostsuccessful American national t eams.

    The case pits the U.S. Women’s NationalSoccer Team Players Association against theU.S. Soccer Federation, which sued inFebruary to clarify the strike issue. U.S.District Judge Sharon Joh nson Coleman ruledFriday the team remains bound by a no-strikeprovision from its 2005-12 collective bar-

    gaining agreement.The federation warned a strike could have

    forced the women’s team, which is seeking itsfourth s traight Olympic gold medal in Brazil,to withdraw from the Games and said thatwould have damaged American soccer as awhole.

    The union wanted the option of striking,though it hadn’t said definitively that itwould.

    The lawsuit focused on s trike right s is relat-ed to a complaint filed by five players inMarch with the federal Equal EmploymentOpportunity Commission that alleges wagediscriminatio n by the federation. Friday’s rul-ing does not directly impact that complaint.

    U.S. stars Hope Solo, Alex Morgan, CarliLloyd, Becky Sauerbrunn and Megan Rapinoesay they are paid far less than their counter-parts on t he men’s national team. U.S. Soccersays that claim is misleading, partly becausethe men and women are paid differently underseparate collective bargaining agreements.

    During oral arguments before Coleman lastweek, the federation said its collective bar-gainin g agreement remains in effect until Dec.31, while the union says any such agreementhas exp ired.

    The union didn’t immediately addresswhether it would appeal Coleman’s decision,but in a st atement to The Associated Press, theunion’s executive director, Richard Nichols,

    said the ruling didn’t affect wider grievances.“To be clear, the court’s ruling today does

    not negate the fact that U.S. Soccer does notfairly compensate the women’s national t eam,or in any way impact the players’ demands forequal pay for equal work,” he said.

    In her 13-page opinion, Coleman said theunion didn’t convince her terms of the 2005-12 col lective bargaining agreement — includ-ing a no-strike clause — did not carry overwhen the sides signed a memorandum of under-standing in March 2013 modifying the previ-ous deal with terms through 2016. Colemanwas dismissive of union arguments that a no-strike provision should have been spelled outexplicit ly in the memorandum.

    Judge: U.S. women’s soccer team has no right to str

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    WEEKEND JOURNAL20 Weekend • June 4-5, 2016 THE DAILY JOURNAL

    New RedwoodCity Location

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    Hero (Safiya Fredericks), who becomesengaged to Benedick’s friend, Claudio(Denmo Ibrahim). In their case, trick-ery almost tears them apart.

    The manipulator here is the villain-ous Don John (Patrick Alparone). Heconvinces Claudio that Hero isunchaste, causing him to reject her infront of everyone, including the Friar(Rami Margron), at t he altar.

    It takes a malaprop-prone nightwatchman, Dogberry (AnthonyFusco), and his pals, along with theFriar, to set things right.

    Kenneth Lin and Gay have adaptedthe play, with additional text by Lin,to streamline it to one hour and 45minutes with no intermission. Theirmost obvious change is the openingscene. In it, a catering crew and someservants are cleaning up after a wed-ding and talking about what led to it.

    This scene works well enough, but itcan’t compete with the realShakespearean text that follows.

    Besides Carpenter and Ross, who

    excel in any role they play, Fusco isoutstanding both as the well-meaningbut inept Dogberry and as Leonato,Hero’s digni fied father. He’s especiallymemorable when Leonato denouncesHero after Don J ohn’s accusation s.

    This is a fine way to start CalShakes’ 25th season in its beautifuloutdoor venue, the Bruns MemorialAmphitheater.

    “Much Ado About Nothing” willcontin ue through June 19 at the Bruns,100 California Shakespeare Way (off Highway. 24), Orinda. For tickets andinformation call (510) 548-9666 orvisit calshakes.org.

    Continued from page 19

    PLAY

    means I can put all of my past b addecisions behind me, and look towarda better future.

    And if I make bad decision s again,going in to college, I’ll know that I’llget another chance, in another fouryears, to close that chapter of my pastand move forward. The future holdsmany paths, and at first, i t feels like Ican only take one of them. But in

    reality, t he future holds a multit ude of crossroads, each giving you a chanceto take a new path, to put the pastbehind you.

    The story of Tsukuru Tazaki doesn’tend with the con sequences of hi s deci-sions. Much of the sto ry is aboutmoving past those consequences. Hemeets with each of his h igh schoolfriends, and ultimately finds clo sureover the ugly end to their friendship,allowing him to move forward, tolook toward a better future. He finds a(potential) new path, b ut is only ableto do so after he finally closes theother chapter of his life.

    When I look to the future, I knowthat I’ll make so me bad decisio nsalong the way. What’s important isthat I can move p ast tho se bad deci-sions, and not let them consume mefor 18 years, the way Tsukuru did.What’s important is that I celebratethe good decisions, and put the badones behind me.

    Karan Nevatia will be a senior at AragonHigh School in San Mateo. Student Newsappears in the weekend edition. You canemail Student News at [email protected].

    Continued from page 19

    STUDENT

    By Carla K. JohnsonTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    The report from the medical examinerwho conducted Prince’s autop sy i s tant aliz-ing for what it doesn’t say.

    The single-page document list s a fentanyloverdose as th e cause of death, b ut it offersfew clues to indicate whether the musicianwas a chronic pain p atient desperately seek-

    ing relief, a longtime opioid user whosehabit became an addiction or a combinatio n

    of both.Blanks for contribut-

    ing causes are marked“na” for “not appl