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Padres turn back Dodgers in extra innings again, 2-1 in 10th

Written By kolimtiga on Minggu, 31 Agustus 2014 | 12.18

KEY MOMENT: Jamey Wright gave up a leadoff single in the 10th inning to Will Venable, who stole second base. Venable scored the winning run on a single to center field by Alexi Amarista.

ON THE MOUND: Zack Greinke limited the Padres to a run and four hits over eight innings. He struck out eight and walked two. Greinke has pitched seven or more innings in five of his last seven starts. With the game tied, 1-1, J.P. Howell uncharacteristically allowed the first two batters he faced to reach base, as he gave up a hit to Abraham Almonte and walked Seth Smith. Howell forced Yasmani Grandal to line into a double play. Brian Wilson recorded the final out of the inning to send the game into extra innings.

AT THE PLATE: Adrian Gonzalez tied the game, 1-1, in the sixth inning with his team-leading 19th home run. The home run was Gonzalez's 61st at Petco Park, the most of any player in history. No other player has hit more than 38. The Dodgers had only one hit in the first five innings, a fifth-inning single by Carl Crawford. The left fielder stole second base and reached third on a fly ball to center field by Justin Turner. But Drew Butera struck out with Crawford on third base, setting up an inning-ending fly out by Greinke. Padres starter Ian Kennedy held the Dodgers to a run and four hits over seven innings.

EXTRA BASES: Yasiel Puig snapped a 0-for-22 skid with an eighth-inning single Former closer Trevor Hoffman was inducted into the Padres Hall of Fame in a pregame ceremony.

SPECIAL EVENT: Clayton Kershaw and his wife, Ellen, will host their second annual celebrity pingpong tournament Thursday at Dodger Stadium. The event will raise money for Kershaw's Challenge, a nonprofit foundation that works with low-income communities and underprivileged children in Los Angeles, Dallas and Zambia. For information on tickets and sponsorship packages, visit http://www.kershawschallenge.com/pp4p.

ON THE FARM: Outfielder Alex Verdugo, the Dodgers' second-round selection in the 2014 draft, was named to the Arizona League All-Star team. Verdugo, 18, batted .347 with three home runs, 14 doubles and 33 runs batted in.

UP NEXT: Hyun-Jin Ryu (13-6, 3.28 earned-run average) will face Eric Stults (6-14, 4.63) and the Padres at Petco Park on Sunday at 1 p.m. On the air: SportsNet LA. Radio: 570, 1020.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Focused Trojans romp past Fresno State in opener, 52-13

USC's new no-huddle offense moved up and down the field with speed and efficiency, veterans and talented freshmen adding spectacular accents.

The Trojans' new defense was mostly stout and created opportunities.

On Saturday at the Coliseum, the No. 15 Trojans looked nothing like an unfocused team after enduring a week of bizarre and inflammatory distractions.

Instead, they gave new Coach Steve Sarkisian his first victory, a 52-13 rout of Fresno State.

"That was fun," Sarkisian said. "Gosh."

Quarterback Cody Kessler passed for four touchdowns as the Trojans' no-huddle offense rolled up 701 yards in 105 plays, a Pac-12 Conference record.

Junior Nelson Agholor caught two touchdown passes and freshman receiver Adoree' Jackson and freshman tight end Bryce Dixon each caught one while freshman JuJu Smith amassed 123 yards in receptions as new players contributed in all three phases.

It should get decidedly more difficult next Saturday when the Trojans travel to Stanford for their Pac-12 opener.

But for a night anyway, the Trojans can bask in the glow of an impressive start.

"The best part," said Kessler, who passed for a career-best 394 yards, "was that it felt like we've been playing with Sark for years.

"It didn't feel like a new era."

Kessler torched Fresno State for a Las Vegas Bowl-record four touchdowns last December, but that was under an entirely different set of circumstances.

Sarkisian, hired earlier that month, had watched that game from the press box and the sideline, itching for his chance to coach the Trojans.

Preparations appeared interrupted this week after cornerback Josh Shaw's tale of sustaining ankle injuries while saving a potentially drowning nephew last Saturday came crashing down, putting NCAA sanctions-free USC back in the national limelight for another off-the-field controversy. Shaw was suspended indefinitely after his admission to school officials that the story was fabricated, and a police investigation into his involvement in an incident last Saturday at a downtown apartment complex that night continues.

A day after Shaw's admission, a post to former player Anthony Brown's Instagram account accused Sarkisian of racism, a charge denounced by several current and former Trojans players.

But the Trojans did not appear distracted Saturday.

"I maybe brought it up to them twice all week," Sarkisian said.

Kessler rushed for a touchdown and passed for three more as USC rolled to a 31-7 halftime lead.

Fresno State scored to start the second half. But for the second time in eight months the Bulldogs were no match for the Trojans.

Sarkisian had hoped that the high-speed attack he brought with him from Washington would allow the Trojans to push the pace and run more plays.

USC started the game with a 90-yard, 17-play drive that featured seven players touching the ball.

Unlike predecessor Lane Kiffin, who often seemed fixated on a laminated, menu-sized play-call sheet, Sarkisian moved freely about the sideline, sometimes taking a crouching position 25 yards behind the line of scrimmage.

The offense was not perfect — tailbacks Justin Davis and Javorius Allen lost first-half fumbles — but the performance had to give Stanford and the rest of the conference something to think about, especially with so many freshmen seemingly unfazed by the college stage.

It was also the debut of defensive coordinator Justin Wilcox's 3-4 scheme.

With the exception of the first series of the third quarter, the unit appeared aggressive and engaged.

Safety Gerald Bowman, defensive lineman Leonard Williams and linebackers Anthony Sarao and Michael Hutchings intercepted passes.

The Trojans were not distracted by the off-the-field incidents, players said.

"We pushed that to the side," cornerback Kevon Seymour said. "We were just focused."

Twitter: @latimesklein

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

USC opener is a Sark easy one for new coach

The swatch of cardinal flew down the sidelines, arms pumping, feet skipping, play card flapping.

In Saturday's brilliant homecoming parade, Steve Sarkisian was the prettiest of floats.

He hugged helmets, smacked shoulder pads, leaped into the thick air, crouched on the warm grass, fittingly rollicked along the Coliseum sidelines Saturday as if it were the backyard of his youth.

His USC players? They were the parade's high-stepping band, new and shiny, twirling and trilling, entertaining and, oh yeah, resounding in victory.

USC 52, Fresno State 13.... Sark-nado 3?

"It's great to be back, great to be home, great to be a Trojan, fight on," Sarkisian said afterward, bathed in sweat and hugs after the most lopsided Trojans coaching debut since Howard Jones beat Whittier, 74-0, in 1925.

The last few controversy-filled days were endless, but his debut was breathless. The questions were suffocating, but his answers were scintillating.

Sarkisian promised fast and, man, was that Trojans offense crazy fast and furiously effective, 702 total yards on a stunning Pac-12 record 105 plays.

Sarkisian promised tough, and, goodness, the Trojans defense was battering tough, creating four turnovers and holding the Bulldogs to 317 total yards.

Sarkisian also promised fun, and the entire evening was a blast, Trojans sprinting down sidelines, diving across the middle, flying into backfields and freshman tight end Bryce Dixon even leaping over an end zone barrier after catching a 22-yard touchdown pass.

"It's a new beginning for all of us," said freshman guard Viane Talamaivao.

Nobody partied harder than Sarkisian, whose sideline emotions peaked in the third quarter when he actually bumped chests with quarterback Cody Kessler, who perfectly fit the new offense with 394 yards passing, four touchdowns and zero interceptions.

"You better check our verts," Sarkisian said. "I might have been higher than Cody."

The players loved the emotion that has been missing from this program since Pete Carroll left town five years ago, even joking afterward about Sarkisian's young legs and endless energy.

They also loved the inclusion that led to eight different players carrying the ball and 10 different players catching the ball, and touchdowns by freshman Adoree Jackson and Dixon. It turns out, Sarkisian not only brought in a new offense, but unearthed a bunch of buried talent.

"Real recognizes real," said Talamaivao. "Players can tell which people are real, and Sark is real."

It was a game filled not only with a sense of renewal, but also relief, a party at the end of a week that felt like a wake.

The problems began Tuesday with the news that Sarkisian had been snookered by one of his captains and most trusted players.

Make no mistake, it was Sarkisian who bears the ultimate responsibility of USC believing and releasing Josh Shaw's story that he had injured his ankles jumping off a balcony in an attempt to save his 7-year-old nephew from drowning.

No sooner was Shaw suspended for the lie — the real story was that he jumped off an apartment balcony for reasons still unknown — then Sarkisian came under fire again when former Trojan Anthony Brown accused him of being a racist.

Those who have played for Sarkisian during his 15-year coaching career immediately exposed those accusations as absurd, but Sarkisian nonetheless bore the weight of their stress.

"I maybe brought it up to them twice all week," Sarkisian said of the distractions. "I wasn't going to let an external factor motivate us or not motivate us, it never will. We found out a lot about this team. We dealt with the week like professionals."

All of which led Sarkisian into the searing heat Saturday afternoon on sort of a homecoming mission, returning after a six-year absence to show fans the former offensive coordinator was the head coach who stalks the sidelines with his head up, his body language strong, his presence huge. Sure, he could have successfully followed Lane Kiffin by simply keeping air in the football, but still….

"Good to get a win, good to be home. I'm going to go to the band, guys, sorry," he said immediately, ending an on-field interview by running with his players over to the Coliseum corner to be serenaded by the Trojans marching band.

On the way, he jumped on the back of safety Su'a Cravens. Once there, he remained in the middle of the pack of players, pumping his arm with two fingers outstretched like everyone else, just another Trojan.

When the band finished, Sark walked over to a pack of Torrance neighbors and friends, hugging everyone as if they were meeting at a barbecue.

Then, finally, he met his family, hugging and posing for photos with his three children, kissing his wife, and then putting his arm around his 9-year-old son, Brady, and walking with the boy back to the locker room.

"Sark ... Sark ... Sark!" chanted fans.

Next week these new Trojans will face their first real test at Stanford, but Steve Sarkisian didn't seem to be thinking about that as he and Brady headed into the tunnel, heading for home.

Twitter: @billplaschke

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Ryan Palmer takes lead at Deutsche Bank Championship with a 63

Written By kolimtiga on Sabtu, 30 Agustus 2014 | 12.18

Ryan Palmer took only 21 putts Friday at TPC Boston in Norton, Mass., and birdied half of his holes. That gave him an eight-under-par 63 and a two-shot lead over Keegan Bradley after the opening round of the Deutsche Bank Championship.

Palmer didn't miss a putt inside 15 feet and closed out his round with a pitching wedge to 18 feet, making the downhill putt for his ninth birdie.

Bradley matched his low round of the season, though what meant more was the timing. This is the final week before U.S. captain Tom Watson decides which three players he will pick to fill out his Ryder Cup team. Bradley always seemed like a logical choice, though he wants to leave nothing to chance. He played bogey-free in a gentle breeze.

Webb Simpson, who also needs a pick to return to the Ryder Cup, and Jason Day of Australia were among those at 66.

Jordan Spieth recovered from a double bogey to start his round and, with his entire family in tow, turned it around with four birdies and an eagle for a 67. Also at 67 was Ian Poulter, who seems certain to be a Ryder Cup pick for Europe on Tuesday.

Rory McIlroy was brilliant at times and sloppy at other times in his round of 70.

Phil Mickelson had a 74. He wasn't sure what to expect and even Lefty had to be surprised by his card that had six pars, six birdies, four bogeys, a double bogey and a triple bogey.

I.K. Kim increases her lead at Portland Classic

I.K. Kim increased her lead to three strokes in the LPGA Tour's Portland Classic, shooting a five-under 67 to reach 12 under.

The South Korean player had seven birdies and two bogeys in her morning round in cloudy, calm conditions at Columbia Edgewater in Portland, Ore. She won the last of her three LPGA Tour titles in 2010, and had a victory this summer in a Ladies European Tour event in England.

Spain's Carlota Ciganda and South Korea's Mi Jung Hur shot 65 to join Laura Diaz at nine under. Diaz had a 68.

South Korea's So Yeon Ryu, the Canadian Women's Open winner Sunday in Ontario, is at eight under along with Mina Harigae, China's Xi Yu Lin and South Africa's Paula Reto. The fifth-ranked Ryu had a 66, Lin carded a 68, and Harigae and Reto each shot 69.

Defending champion Suzann Pettersen is at six under after a 67. The fourth-ranked Norwegian player also won the 2011 event.

Pernice, Bryant share Champions Tour lead

Tom Pernice Jr. and Bart Bryant matched the Canyon Meadows record at eight-under 62 to share the first-round lead in the Champions Tour's Shaw Charity Classic in Calgary, Canada.

The 54-year-old Pernice birdied his first five holes — Nos. 10-14 — and had 10 birdies and two bogeys on the rain-softened course. The two-time PGA Tour winner won the Principal Charity Classic in June in Iowa for his third Champions Tour title.

The 52-year-old Bryant, a three-time winner on the PGA Tour, birdied five of his last eight holes. He won his lone Champions Tour title last year.

They tied the course record set last year by Bill Glasson.

David Frost is a stroke back while Joe Durant and Joe Daley each shot 64.

Bernhard Langer opened with a 67, two days after turning 57. The German player has a tour-high five victories this season.

Fred Couples and defending champion Rocco Mediate shot 68. Mediate won the inaugural tournament by seven strokes, shooting 63-64-64 to match the tour record for fewest strokes in a 54-hole event.

Otto's 62 good for three-stroke lead at Italian Open

South Africa's Hennie Otto shot a 10-under 62 to take a three-stroke lead after the second round of the Italian Open in Fiano.

Otto, the 2008 winner at Castello di Tolcinasco, had an eagle, nine birdies and a bogey to reach 15 under at Circolo Golf Torino. Austria's Bernd Wiesberger was second after a 66.

Scotland's Stephen Gallacher, needing a top-two finish to earn the final automatic spot on the European Ryder Cup team, is tied for ninth at seven under after a 65.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

EPA staff recommends significantly lower ozone standard

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency staff said Friday that the nation should tighten smog rules significantly, a step that would improve air quality in California but force costly new requirements on government and industry.

The EPA staff recommendation is the final step before the rule goes to the agency's leadership and the White House. As a result of lawsuits by environmental and health groups, the agency must propose a new ozone rule by December and the final rule by October 2015.

Federal standards for ground-level ozone, the main ingredient in smog, have proved deeply contentious because they would compel many states, cities and industries to adopt new measures to cut air pollution at a cost of billions of dollars.

California would be particularly affected because much of the state does not meet the current, weaker standard for ozone that has been in place since 2008.

Ozone is a corrosive gas that forms when pollutants from vehicle tailpipes, power plants and factories bake in sunlight. The gas irritates lungs and airways and can cause asthma attacks, premature deaths, hospital and emergency room visits and millions of missed school and work days.

Pressure has been building for years from the scientific, health and environmental communities to reduce the federal standard for ground-level ozone to between 60 and 70 parts per billion. It is currently at 75 parts per billion, a standard set by the Bush administration that fell short of a recommendation for stricter limits from the EPA's advisory committee of independent scientists.

The EPA science advisory committee in June recommended strengthening the ozone standard to the 60-to-70-parts-per-billion range, which the agency's staff echoed in the findings issued Friday.

The committee said "ample scientific evidence" exists that ozone is harmful at lower levels than previously thought, citing studies showing it decreased lung function and increased respiratory symptoms and airway inflammation even at concentrations of 70 parts per billion.

The recommendations are part of a review the EPA is required to complete every five years under the Clean Air Act.

The Obama administration can choose to override the recommendations and adopt a weaker standard, including the current one. Facing enormous pressure from business in 2011, President Obama scuttled the EPA's more stringent ozone rule, delaying it until after the 2012 presidential election.

But such a move today would likely trigger new litigation, said Paul Cort, a lawyer for Earthjustice, which sued the EPA to order it to issue the new standard.

California will face considerable challenges meeting a tougher ozone limit. The state has 16 areas that do not meet the current ozone standard, said Stanley Young, a spokesman for the state Air Resources Board. Lowering the standard would put even more areas out of compliance, many of them in rural areas, he said.

In California's South Coast basin, which has the nation's worst ozone pollution, a tougher federal standard would delay compliance with air quality standards further into the future. To meet the existing ozone standard of 75 parts per billion by a 2032 deadline, local air quality officials calculate they will have to slash by more than 75% smog-forming gases called nitrogen oxides.

"We're going to need to have zero or near-zero emissions across the entire economy, from transportation to businesses, to residences and personal products," said Sam Atwood, a spokesman for the South Coast Air Quality Management District, which includes Los Angeles and Orange counties.

The San Joaquin Valley also has some of the nation's worst ozone pollution and is many years away from meeting existing standards.

Anticipating the recommendation, industry representatives and Republican members of Congress have launched a campaign focusing on the monetary costs of a tighter standard, which they argue would be ruinous to the economy.

The National Assn. of Manufacturers wrote "that a more stringent ozone standard from the Obama Administration could reduce GDP by $270 billion per year … increasing energy costs and placing millions of jobs at risk."

The EPA staff recommendations swiftly drew criticism from Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.). "With the economy already showing signs that it is losing ground under the administration's environmental regulations, now is no time to bow to the desires of the extreme environmental lobby here in Washington," Inhofe said.

Supporters of a tighter standard said industry has long argued that environmental limits would destroy the economy but such predictions have failed to materialize.

"We've heard that argument for 40 years," said Janice Nolen, assistant vice president of national policy at the American Lung Assn. "We have evidence showing it's not true: Since the 1970s, we've reduced major air pollutants by 70% and the economy has more than doubled."

neela.banerjee@latimes.com
Twitter: @neelaeast

tony.barboza@latimes.com
Twitter: @tonybarboza

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

EPA staff recommends significantly lower ozone standard

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency staff said Friday that the nation should tighten smog rules significantly, a step that would improve air quality in California but force costly new requirements on government and industry.

The EPA staff recommendation is the final step before the rule goes to the agency's leadership and the White House. As a result of lawsuits by environmental and health groups, the agency must propose a new ozone rule by December and the final rule by October 2015.

Federal standards for ground-level ozone, the main ingredient in smog, have proved deeply contentious because they would compel many states, cities and industries to adopt new measures to cut air pollution at a cost of billions of dollars.

California would be particularly affected because much of the state does not meet the current, weaker standard for ozone that has been in place since 2008.

Ozone is a corrosive gas that forms when pollutants from vehicle tailpipes, power plants and factories bake in sunlight. The gas irritates lungs and airways and can cause asthma attacks, premature deaths, hospital and emergency room visits and millions of missed school and work days.

Pressure has been building for years from the scientific, health and environmental communities to reduce the federal standard for ground-level ozone to between 60 and 70 parts per billion. It is currently at 75 parts per billion, a standard set by the Bush administration that fell short of a recommendation for stricter limits from the EPA's advisory committee of independent scientists.

The EPA science advisory committee in June recommended strengthening the ozone standard to the 60-to-70-parts-per-billion range, which the agency's staff echoed in the findings issued Friday.

The committee said "ample scientific evidence" exists that ozone is harmful at lower levels than previously thought, citing studies showing it decreased lung function and increased respiratory symptoms and airway inflammation even at concentrations of 70 parts per billion.

The recommendations are part of a review the EPA is required to complete every five years under the Clean Air Act.

The Obama administration can choose to override the recommendations and adopt a weaker standard, including the current one. Facing enormous pressure from business in 2011, President Obama scuttled the EPA's more stringent ozone rule, delaying it until after the 2012 presidential election.

But such a move today would likely trigger new litigation, said Paul Cort, a lawyer for Earthjustice, which sued the EPA to order it to issue the new standard.

California will face considerable challenges meeting a tougher ozone limit. The state has 16 areas that do not meet the current ozone standard, said Stanley Young, a spokesman for the state Air Resources Board. Lowering the standard would put even more areas out of compliance, many of them in rural areas, he said.

In California's South Coast basin, which has the nation's worst ozone pollution, a tougher federal standard would delay compliance with air quality standards further into the future. To meet the existing ozone standard of 75 parts per billion by a 2032 deadline, local air quality officials calculate they will have to slash by more than 75% smog-forming gases called nitrogen oxides.

"We're going to need to have zero or near-zero emissions across the entire economy, from transportation to businesses, to residences and personal products," said Sam Atwood, a spokesman for the South Coast Air Quality Management District, which includes Los Angeles and Orange counties.

The San Joaquin Valley also has some of the nation's worst ozone pollution and is many years away from meeting existing standards.

Anticipating the recommendation, industry representatives and Republican members of Congress have launched a campaign focusing on the monetary costs of a tighter standard, which they argue would be ruinous to the economy.

The National Assn. of Manufacturers wrote "that a more stringent ozone standard from the Obama Administration could reduce GDP by $270 billion per year … increasing energy costs and placing millions of jobs at risk."

The EPA staff recommendations swiftly drew criticism from Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.). "With the economy already showing signs that it is losing ground under the administration's environmental regulations, now is no time to bow to the desires of the extreme environmental lobby here in Washington," Inhofe said.

Supporters of a tighter standard said industry has long argued that environmental limits would destroy the economy but such predictions have failed to materialize.

"We've heard that argument for 40 years," said Janice Nolen, assistant vice president of national policy at the American Lung Assn. "We have evidence showing it's not true: Since the 1970s, we've reduced major air pollutants by 70% and the economy has more than doubled."

neela.banerjee@latimes.com
Twitter: @neelaeast

tony.barboza@latimes.com
Twitter: @tonybarboza

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

CiCi Bellis' teenage tennis success put in perspective by Pam Shriver

Written By kolimtiga on Jumat, 29 Agustus 2014 | 12.18

There was one especially understanding observer to the two-day CiCi Bellis sensation at the U.S. Open tennis tournament. Pam Shriver had been there, done that.

Certainly, when 15-year-old Bellis of Atherton, Calif., lost in three sets Thursday night to Zarina Diyas of Kazakhstan, 6-3, 0-6, 6-2, Shriver was watching somewhere, feeling empathy.

It was 1978. Shriver had just turned 16 — "I was a Fourth-of-July baby" — and was about to make the kind of run in the U.S. Open that shows the upheaval here and in the media over Bellis' first-round victory to be both shallow and overdone.

Hours before Bellis was to take the court Thursday, Shriver articulated the positives in Bellis' game.

"She's a really good young player," she said. "She attacks and has great energy."

Shriver also added perspective.

"It will be exceptional if she makes a big run here," Shriver said, speaking as if she hoped she would and knew she probably wouldn't.

"It's a different time now, a different kind of media," she said. "Everything is just bigger."

Shriver, 52, is part of that media. She is a broadcaster for ESPN. She has kids and lives in a world of iPhones, instant gratification and everything needing to happen right now. She understands why Bellis became an overnight sensation. She also understands the good and the danger in that.

Shriver came to the U.S. Open as an amateur, still a high school student, weighing the prospects of pro tennis or Stanford University. She was 6 feet tall, played with an oversized Prince racket and served and volleyed with it.

"That struck a lot of people as strange," she said. "It was supposed to be a racket for older people."

She had played in enough tournaments leading into the U.S. Open to actually be seeded.

"They only seeded 16 then, and I was No. 16," she said.

Still, she was far from a known quantity and her big game attracted immediate attention. But by the time she got to the semifinals, and beat Martina Navratilova, there was as much sensation as possible in a world before thumb-typing and Twitter.

"It still wasn't as big as it would be now," she said. "This was the age of teenage girls, making big moves in tennis. Chris Evert did it. And Tracy Austin."

Still, when 16-year-old Shriver rode the train from Baltimore and started running through the draw, it was a big deal. Her coach, Dan Candy, kept things low-key.

She stayed in a midtown hotel, took the subway's No. 7 train that goes to Flushing Meadows, as it still does. No limos, no official escorts. Just the subway with everybody else.

"I don't remember any offer of transportation from the tournament at all," she said.

Her mother, Margot, got nervous during her matches and usually spent the time doing needlepoint. Her dad, Sam, watched from the highest corner of then-center court, Louis Armstrong Stadium.

"I remember [famed tennis writer] Bud Collins climbing all the way up there to talk to him," Shriver said.

When she lost to Evert in the final, she was given an immediate mandate by her parents. Get home and get to school. The next day, that's where she was.

Her high school called an assembly to honor her, and on the way into school, a reporter from the National Enquirer stopped her and asked her whether she knew where Pam Shriver was. She said she was Pam Shriver and talked to the reporter for a couple of minutes. That got her in trouble with her parents.

"The family had agreed to get things back to normal. No talking to reporters," Shriver said. "My mother threw a couple of them from People magazine off the front porch."

Eventually, she decided to turn pro, rather than go to Stanford. Things calmed down.

"I went to take my driver's test," she said, "and I flunked it when I couldn't parallel park.

"That was my worst loss of the summer."

That summer of 1978 was the closest she ever came to a Grand Slam singles title. She got to six more major semifinals, and had a Hall of Fame career that included 21 Grand Slam doubles titles (20 in women's, one in mixed), most of them with Navratilova. She ranked in the top five in singles most of her career and won 21 tour singles titles.

Yet her toughest year of all was the year after her 1978 U.S. Open run.

"It was such a burden," she said.

So she watches with interest and concern as Bellis begins to spend her teenage years in tennis' bright spotlight.

In her three-set loss Thursday night, Bellis showed both talent and maturity.

She was properly grateful and happy in her on-court, post-match interview, as ESPN did its usual ugly American thing and bypassed the winner to get to the American first.

Her dad watched quietly from the seats in packed Court 17. Like Margot Shriver, Bellis' mother is too nervous to watch in person. Bellis is home-schooled and lives in an upscale Atherton neighborhood, with a swimming pool and tennis court in the backyard.

At her news conference, she was typically, and refreshingly, a teenager. She said she was surprised she could play with these pros, that she was excited to stay around and play in the juniors. And when told people had started to line up to get a seat on the court for her match starting at 10 a.m., she said, "That's crazy. It's an honor to have people doing that for me."

She also was asked about being the future of American tennis.

Shriver would have answered that easily: "Whoa, slow down there."

bill.dwyre@latimes.com

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

CiCi Bellis' teenage tennis success put in perspective by Pam Shriver

There was one especially understanding observer to the two-day CiCi Bellis sensation at the U.S. Open tennis tournament. Pam Shriver had been there, done that.

Certainly, when 15-year-old Bellis of Atherton, Calif., lost in three sets Thursday night to Zarina Diyas of Kazakhstan, 6-3, 0-6, 6-2, Shriver was watching somewhere, feeling empathy.

It was 1978. Shriver had just turned 16 — "I was a Fourth-of-July baby" — and was about to make the kind of run in the U.S. Open that shows the upheaval here and in the media over Bellis' first-round victory to be both shallow and overdone.

Hours before Bellis was to take the court Thursday, Shriver articulated the positives in Bellis' game.

"She's a really good young player," she said. "She attacks and has great energy."

Shriver also added perspective.

"It will be exceptional if she makes a big run here," Shriver said, speaking as if she hoped she would and knew she probably wouldn't.

"It's a different time now, a different kind of media," she said. "Everything is just bigger."

Shriver, 52, is part of that media. She is a broadcaster for ESPN. She has kids and lives in a world of iPhones, instant gratification and everything needing to happen right now. She understands why Bellis became an overnight sensation. She also understands the good and the danger in that.

Shriver came to the U.S. Open as an amateur, still a high school student, weighing the prospects of pro tennis or Stanford University. She was 6 feet tall, played with an oversized Prince racket and served and volleyed with it.

"That struck a lot of people as strange," she said. "It was supposed to be a racket for older people."

She had played in enough tournaments leading into the U.S. Open to actually be seeded.

"They only seeded 16 then, and I was No. 16," she said.

Still, she was far from a known quantity and her big game attracted immediate attention. But by the time she got to the semifinals, and beat Martina Navratilova, there was as much sensation as possible in a world before thumb-typing and Twitter.

"It still wasn't as big as it would be now," she said. "This was the age of teenage girls, making big moves in tennis. Chris Evert did it. And Tracy Austin."

Still, when 16-year-old Shriver rode the train from Baltimore and started running through the draw, it was a big deal. Her coach, Dan Candy, kept things low-key.

She stayed in a midtown hotel, took the subway's No. 7 train that goes to Flushing Meadows, as it still does. No limos, no official escorts. Just the subway with everybody else.

"I don't remember any offer of transportation from the tournament at all," she said.

Her mother, Margot, got nervous during her matches and usually spent the time doing needlepoint. Her dad, Sam, watched from the highest corner of then-center court, Louis Armstrong Stadium.

"I remember [famed tennis writer] Bud Collins climbing all the way up there to talk to him," Shriver said.

When she lost to Evert in the final, she was given an immediate mandate by her parents. Get home and get to school. The next day, that's where she was.

Her high school called an assembly to honor her, and on the way into school, a reporter from the National Enquirer stopped her and asked her whether she knew where Pam Shriver was. She said she was Pam Shriver and talked to the reporter for a couple of minutes. That got her in trouble with her parents.

"The family had agreed to get things back to normal. No talking to reporters," Shriver said. "My mother threw a couple of them from People magazine off the front porch."

Eventually, she decided to turn pro, rather than go to Stanford. Things calmed down.

"I went to take my driver's test," she said, "and I flunked it when I couldn't parallel park.

"That was my worst loss of the summer."

That summer of 1978 was the closest she ever came to a Grand Slam singles title. She got to six more major semifinals, and had a Hall of Fame career that included 21 Grand Slam doubles titles (20 in women's, one in mixed), most of them with Navratilova. She ranked in the top five in singles most of her career and won 21 tour singles titles.

Yet her toughest year of all was the year after her 1978 U.S. Open run.

"It was such a burden," she said.

So she watches with interest and concern as Bellis begins to spend her teenage years in tennis' bright spotlight.

In her three-set loss Thursday night, Bellis showed both talent and maturity.

She was properly grateful and happy in her on-court, post-match interview, as ESPN did its usual ugly American thing and bypassed the winner to get to the American first.

Her dad watched quietly from the seats in packed Court 17. Like Margot Shriver, Bellis' mother is too nervous to watch in person. Bellis is home-schooled and lives in an upscale Atherton neighborhood, with a swimming pool and tennis court in the backyard.

At her news conference, she was typically, and refreshingly, a teenager. She said she was surprised she could play with these pros, that she was excited to stay around and play in the juniors. And when told people had started to line up to get a seat on the court for her match starting at 10 a.m., she said, "That's crazy. It's an honor to have people doing that for me."

She also was asked about being the future of American tennis.

Shriver would have answered that easily: "Whoa, slow down there."

bill.dwyre@latimes.com

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

CiCi Bellis' teenage tennis success put in perspective by Pam Shriver

There was one especially understanding observer to the two-day CiCi Bellis sensation at the U.S. Open tennis tournament. Pam Shriver had been there, done that.

Certainly, when 15-year-old Bellis of Atherton, Calif., lost in three sets Thursday night to Zarina Diyas of Kazakhstan, 6-3, 0-6, 6-2, Shriver was watching somewhere, feeling empathy.

It was 1978. Shriver had just turned 16 — "I was a Fourth-of-July baby" — and was about to make the kind of run in the U.S. Open that shows the upheaval here and in the media over Bellis' first-round victory to be both shallow and overdone.

Hours before Bellis was to take the court Thursday, Shriver articulated the positives in Bellis' game.

"She's a really good young player," she said. "She attacks and has great energy."

Shriver also added perspective.

"It will be exceptional if she makes a big run here," Shriver said, speaking as if she hoped she would and knew she probably wouldn't.

"It's a different time now, a different kind of media," she said. "Everything is just bigger."

Shriver, 52, is part of that media. She is a broadcaster for ESPN. She has kids and lives in a world of iPhones, instant gratification and everything needing to happen right now. She understands why Bellis became an overnight sensation. She also understands the good and the danger in that.

Shriver came to the U.S. Open as an amateur, still a high school student, weighing the prospects of pro tennis or Stanford University. She was 6 feet tall, played with an oversized Prince racket and served and volleyed with it.

"That struck a lot of people as strange," she said. "It was supposed to be a racket for older people."

She had played in enough tournaments leading into the U.S. Open to actually be seeded.

"They only seeded 16 then, and I was No. 16," she said.

Still, she was far from a known quantity and her big game attracted immediate attention. But by the time she got to the semifinals, and beat Martina Navratilova, there was as much sensation as possible in a world before thumb-typing and Twitter.

"It still wasn't as big as it would be now," she said. "This was the age of teenage girls, making big moves in tennis. Chris Evert did it. And Tracy Austin."

Still, when 16-year-old Shriver rode the train from Baltimore and started running through the draw, it was a big deal. Her coach, Dan Candy, kept things low-key.

She stayed in a midtown hotel, took the subway's No. 7 train that goes to Flushing Meadows, as it still does. No limos, no official escorts. Just the subway with everybody else.

"I don't remember any offer of transportation from the tournament at all," she said.

Her mother, Margot, got nervous during her matches and usually spent the time doing needlepoint. Her dad, Sam, watched from the highest corner of then-center court, Louis Armstrong Stadium.

"I remember [famed tennis writer] Bud Collins climbing all the way up there to talk to him," Shriver said.

When she lost to Evert in the final, she was given an immediate mandate by her parents. Get home and get to school. The next day, that's where she was.

Her high school called an assembly to honor her, and on the way into school, a reporter from the National Enquirer stopped her and asked her whether she knew where Pam Shriver was. She said she was Pam Shriver and talked to the reporter for a couple of minutes. That got her in trouble with her parents.

"The family had agreed to get things back to normal. No talking to reporters," Shriver said. "My mother threw a couple of them from People magazine off the front porch."

Eventually, she decided to turn pro, rather than go to Stanford. Things calmed down.

"I went to take my driver's test," she said, "and I flunked it when I couldn't parallel park.

"That was my worst loss of the summer."

That summer of 1978 was the closest she ever came to a Grand Slam singles title. She got to six more major semifinals, and had a Hall of Fame career that included 21 Grand Slam doubles titles (20 in women's, one in mixed), most of them with Navratilova. She ranked in the top five in singles most of her career and won 21 tour singles titles.

Yet her toughest year of all was the year after her 1978 U.S. Open run.

"It was such a burden," she said.

So she watches with interest and concern as Bellis begins to spend her teenage years in tennis' bright spotlight.

In her three-set loss Thursday night, Bellis showed both talent and maturity.

She was properly grateful and happy in her on-court, post-match interview, as ESPN did its usual ugly American thing and bypassed the winner to get to the American first.

Her dad watched quietly from the seats in packed Court 17. Like Margot Shriver, Bellis' mother is too nervous to watch in person. Bellis is home-schooled and lives in an upscale Atherton neighborhood, with a swimming pool and tennis court in the backyard.

At her news conference, she was typically, and refreshingly, a teenager. She said she was surprised she could play with these pros, that she was excited to stay around and play in the juniors. And when told people had started to line up to get a seat on the court for her match starting at 10 a.m., she said, "That's crazy. It's an honor to have people doing that for me."

She also was asked about being the future of American tennis.

Shriver would have answered that easily: "Whoa, slow down there."

bill.dwyre@latimes.com

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Thursday's TV Highlights: 'Rush' on USA

Written By kolimtiga on Kamis, 28 Agustus 2014 | 12.18

Customized TV Listings are available here: www.latimes.com/tvtimes

Click here to download TV listings for the week of Aug. 24 - 30, 2014 in PDF format

This week's TV Movies


SERIES

Great Performances Violinist Itzhak Perlman and cantor Yitzchak Meir Helfgot perform liturgical and traditional works in arrangements for chamber orchestra and klezmer settings in this new episode. 9 p.m. KOCE

MythBusters What's the most efficient way to board an airplane? 9 p.m. Discovery

Project Runway In this new episode, designers create unconventional wedding dresses. 9 p.m. Lifetime

Rush Rush (Tom Ellis) tries a hallucinogenic drug that drives him to a personal epiphany in this new episode. Larenz Tate and Sarah Habel also star with guest stars Laurie Fortier and Colin Cunningham. 9 p.m. USA

Welcome to Sweden Bruce (Greg Poehler) returns to New York to help Amy Poehler (herself) with her financial problems, 9 p.m. NBC. Then, in the season finale at 9:30 he's stuck in New York and gets in a compromising position after a night out with Aubrey Plaza (herself).9:30 p.m. NBC

Beat Bobby Flay New Jersey's Carlos Serrano, a.k.a. "the Empanada Guy," and L.A. chef Rina Younan battle for a chance to beat Bobby Flay, with the victor selected by Alton Brown and Daphne Oz. 10 p.m. Food

SPECIALS

The World's Wildest Commercials Chris Parnell counts down the choices for TV ads in several categories in this new special. 10 p.m. ABC

TALK SHOWS

CBS This Morning Michael Sheen. (N) 7 a.m. KCBS

Today Patricia Clarkson; Dean Cain; Timothy Simons. (N) 7 a.m. KNBC

KTLA Morning News (N) 7 a.m. KTLA

Good Morning America Daddy-daughter dance-off; Sabrina Soto. (N) 7 a.m. KABC

Good Day L.A. Theo Rossi ("Sons of Anarchy"); Jo Dee Messina; David Alan Grier. (N) 7 a.m. KTTV

Rachael Ray Regis Philbin; Dr. Travis Stork; chef Richard Blais; chef Robert Irvine. 8 a.m. KCAL

Live With Kelly and Michael Cameron Diaz; Steven Yeun. (N) 9 a.m. KABC

The View Sunny Hostin and Jason Biggs; Patricia Arquette and Ellar Coltrane; Piper Kerman and Larry Smith. 10 a.m. KABC

The Doctors A mystery illness paralyzes children; Loni Anderson. 11 a.m. KCAL

The Talk "The Love Boat" reunion; Jack Jones performs; chef Curtis Stone. 1 p.m. KCBS

The Queen Latifah Show Julie Bowen ("Modern Family"); women's issues; hip-hop artist Ja Rule. 2 p.m. KCBS; 7 p.m. KCAL

The Dr. Oz Show Wendy Williams; tests women should have done at age 50

Dr. Phil A man says he turns to gambling and other women for an adrenaline rush. 3 p.m. KCBS

Steve Harvey Meredith Vieira; Cat Cora. 3 p.m. KNBC

The Ellen DeGeneres Show Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone and Jamie Foxx ("The Amazing Spider-Man 2"); Dan & Shay perform. 4 p.m. KNBC

To the Contrary With Bonnie Erbé Child maltreatment: Dr. Rachel Clingenpeel, Arkansas Children's Hospital. (N) 5:30 p.m. KOCE

Charlie Rose (N) 11 p.m. KVCR; 12:30 a.m. KOCE; 1 a.m. KLCS

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Todd Glass. (N) 11 p.m. Comedy Central

Conan Jason Segel and Cameron Diaz; Matt Walsh. 11 p.m. TBS

The Colbert Report Photographer and street artist, JR. (N) 11:30 p.m. Comedy Central

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Halle Berry; Chris Colfer; Florida Georgia Line performs. 11:34 p.m. KNBC

Late Show With David Letterman Mike Myers; Bonnie McFarlane; John Fullbright performs. (N) 11:35 p.m. KCBS

Jimmy Kimmel Live Aaron Paul; Ed Sheeran performs. (N) 11:35 p.m. KABC

Tavis Smiley Joan Rivers. midnight KOCE

Late Night With Seth Meyers Clive Owen; Sarah Paulson; Chase Rice performs. 12:36 a.m. KNBC

The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson David Duchovny; Gloria Estefan performs. 12:37 a.m. KCBS

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Thursday's TV Highlights: 'Rush' on USA

Customized TV Listings are available here: www.latimes.com/tvtimes

Click here to download TV listings for the week of Aug. 24 - 30, 2014 in PDF format

This week's TV Movies


SERIES

Great Performances Violinist Itzhak Perlman and cantor Yitzchak Meir Helfgot perform liturgical and traditional works in arrangements for chamber orchestra and klezmer settings in this new episode. 9 p.m. KOCE

MythBusters What's the most efficient way to board an airplane? 9 p.m. Discovery

Project Runway In this new episode, designers create unconventional wedding dresses. 9 p.m. Lifetime

Rush Rush (Tom Ellis) tries a hallucinogenic drug that drives him to a personal epiphany in this new episode. Larenz Tate and Sarah Habel also star with guest stars Laurie Fortier and Colin Cunningham. 9 p.m. USA

Welcome to Sweden Bruce (Greg Poehler) returns to New York to help Amy Poehler (herself) with her financial problems, 9 p.m. NBC. Then, in the season finale at 9:30 he's stuck in New York and gets in a compromising position after a night out with Aubrey Plaza (herself).9:30 p.m. NBC

Beat Bobby Flay New Jersey's Carlos Serrano, a.k.a. "the Empanada Guy," and L.A. chef Rina Younan battle for a chance to beat Bobby Flay, with the victor selected by Alton Brown and Daphne Oz. 10 p.m. Food

SPECIALS

The World's Wildest Commercials Chris Parnell counts down the choices for TV ads in several categories in this new special. 10 p.m. ABC

TALK SHOWS

CBS This Morning Michael Sheen. (N) 7 a.m. KCBS

Today Patricia Clarkson; Dean Cain; Timothy Simons. (N) 7 a.m. KNBC

KTLA Morning News (N) 7 a.m. KTLA

Good Morning America Daddy-daughter dance-off; Sabrina Soto. (N) 7 a.m. KABC

Good Day L.A. Theo Rossi ("Sons of Anarchy"); Jo Dee Messina; David Alan Grier. (N) 7 a.m. KTTV

Rachael Ray Regis Philbin; Dr. Travis Stork; chef Richard Blais; chef Robert Irvine. 8 a.m. KCAL

Live With Kelly and Michael Cameron Diaz; Steven Yeun. (N) 9 a.m. KABC

The View Sunny Hostin and Jason Biggs; Patricia Arquette and Ellar Coltrane; Piper Kerman and Larry Smith. 10 a.m. KABC

The Doctors A mystery illness paralyzes children; Loni Anderson. 11 a.m. KCAL

The Talk "The Love Boat" reunion; Jack Jones performs; chef Curtis Stone. 1 p.m. KCBS

The Queen Latifah Show Julie Bowen ("Modern Family"); women's issues; hip-hop artist Ja Rule. 2 p.m. KCBS; 7 p.m. KCAL

The Dr. Oz Show Wendy Williams; tests women should have done at age 50

Dr. Phil A man says he turns to gambling and other women for an adrenaline rush. 3 p.m. KCBS

Steve Harvey Meredith Vieira; Cat Cora. 3 p.m. KNBC

The Ellen DeGeneres Show Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone and Jamie Foxx ("The Amazing Spider-Man 2"); Dan & Shay perform. 4 p.m. KNBC

To the Contrary With Bonnie Erbé Child maltreatment: Dr. Rachel Clingenpeel, Arkansas Children's Hospital. (N) 5:30 p.m. KOCE

Charlie Rose (N) 11 p.m. KVCR; 12:30 a.m. KOCE; 1 a.m. KLCS

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Todd Glass. (N) 11 p.m. Comedy Central

Conan Jason Segel and Cameron Diaz; Matt Walsh. 11 p.m. TBS

The Colbert Report Photographer and street artist, JR. (N) 11:30 p.m. Comedy Central

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Halle Berry; Chris Colfer; Florida Georgia Line performs. 11:34 p.m. KNBC

Late Show With David Letterman Mike Myers; Bonnie McFarlane; John Fullbright performs. (N) 11:35 p.m. KCBS

Jimmy Kimmel Live Aaron Paul; Ed Sheeran performs. (N) 11:35 p.m. KABC

Tavis Smiley Joan Rivers. midnight KOCE

Late Night With Seth Meyers Clive Owen; Sarah Paulson; Chase Rice performs. 12:36 a.m. KNBC

The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson David Duchovny; Gloria Estefan performs. 12:37 a.m. KCBS

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Thursday's TV Highlights: 'Rush' on USA

Customized TV Listings are available here: www.latimes.com/tvtimes

Click here to download TV listings for the week of Aug. 24 - 30, 2014 in PDF format

This week's TV Movies


SERIES

Great Performances Violinist Itzhak Perlman and cantor Yitzchak Meir Helfgot perform liturgical and traditional works in arrangements for chamber orchestra and klezmer settings in this new episode. 9 p.m. KOCE

MythBusters What's the most efficient way to board an airplane? 9 p.m. Discovery

Project Runway In this new episode, designers create unconventional wedding dresses. 9 p.m. Lifetime

Rush Rush (Tom Ellis) tries a hallucinogenic drug that drives him to a personal epiphany in this new episode. Larenz Tate and Sarah Habel also star with guest stars Laurie Fortier and Colin Cunningham. 9 p.m. USA

Welcome to Sweden Bruce (Greg Poehler) returns to New York to help Amy Poehler (herself) with her financial problems, 9 p.m. NBC. Then, in the season finale at 9:30 he's stuck in New York and gets in a compromising position after a night out with Aubrey Plaza (herself).9:30 p.m. NBC

Beat Bobby Flay New Jersey's Carlos Serrano, a.k.a. "the Empanada Guy," and L.A. chef Rina Younan battle for a chance to beat Bobby Flay, with the victor selected by Alton Brown and Daphne Oz. 10 p.m. Food

SPECIALS

The World's Wildest Commercials Chris Parnell counts down the choices for TV ads in several categories in this new special. 10 p.m. ABC

TALK SHOWS

CBS This Morning Michael Sheen. (N) 7 a.m. KCBS

Today Patricia Clarkson; Dean Cain; Timothy Simons. (N) 7 a.m. KNBC

KTLA Morning News (N) 7 a.m. KTLA

Good Morning America Daddy-daughter dance-off; Sabrina Soto. (N) 7 a.m. KABC

Good Day L.A. Theo Rossi ("Sons of Anarchy"); Jo Dee Messina; David Alan Grier. (N) 7 a.m. KTTV

Rachael Ray Regis Philbin; Dr. Travis Stork; chef Richard Blais; chef Robert Irvine. 8 a.m. KCAL

Live With Kelly and Michael Cameron Diaz; Steven Yeun. (N) 9 a.m. KABC

The View Sunny Hostin and Jason Biggs; Patricia Arquette and Ellar Coltrane; Piper Kerman and Larry Smith. 10 a.m. KABC

The Doctors A mystery illness paralyzes children; Loni Anderson. 11 a.m. KCAL

The Talk "The Love Boat" reunion; Jack Jones performs; chef Curtis Stone. 1 p.m. KCBS

The Queen Latifah Show Julie Bowen ("Modern Family"); women's issues; hip-hop artist Ja Rule. 2 p.m. KCBS; 7 p.m. KCAL

The Dr. Oz Show Wendy Williams; tests women should have done at age 50

Dr. Phil A man says he turns to gambling and other women for an adrenaline rush. 3 p.m. KCBS

Steve Harvey Meredith Vieira; Cat Cora. 3 p.m. KNBC

The Ellen DeGeneres Show Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone and Jamie Foxx ("The Amazing Spider-Man 2"); Dan & Shay perform. 4 p.m. KNBC

To the Contrary With Bonnie Erbé Child maltreatment: Dr. Rachel Clingenpeel, Arkansas Children's Hospital. (N) 5:30 p.m. KOCE

Charlie Rose (N) 11 p.m. KVCR; 12:30 a.m. KOCE; 1 a.m. KLCS

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Todd Glass. (N) 11 p.m. Comedy Central

Conan Jason Segel and Cameron Diaz; Matt Walsh. 11 p.m. TBS

The Colbert Report Photographer and street artist, JR. (N) 11:30 p.m. Comedy Central

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Halle Berry; Chris Colfer; Florida Georgia Line performs. 11:34 p.m. KNBC

Late Show With David Letterman Mike Myers; Bonnie McFarlane; John Fullbright performs. (N) 11:35 p.m. KCBS

Jimmy Kimmel Live Aaron Paul; Ed Sheeran performs. (N) 11:35 p.m. KABC

Tavis Smiley Joan Rivers. midnight KOCE

Late Night With Seth Meyers Clive Owen; Sarah Paulson; Chase Rice performs. 12:36 a.m. KNBC

The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson David Duchovny; Gloria Estefan performs. 12:37 a.m. KCBS

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Josh Shaw controversy at USC poses early test for Steve Sarkisian

Written By kolimtiga on Rabu, 27 Agustus 2014 | 12.18

Steve Sarkisian tried to smile, but it didn't come easy, the sweat beading on his forehead as he cooked in a campus patio chair while wearing a USC hoodie on a warm August afternoon.

"And it's only Tuesday," Sarkisian said with a grin.

There were still four days until Sarkisian's debut as USC's football coach, yet his honeymoon was over. His team had yet to take the stage, yet all eyes were upon him. The 2014 opening kickoff was in his hands, and that sucker was slippery.

What do you do when one of your team captains and best defensive players shows up with two badly sprained ankles and claims the injury occurred when he jumped off a balcony to save his nephew from drowning . . . then you receive information that it might not be the truth?

What do you do when you are so enamored with the original story you trumpet it on your team's website and shower him with public praise . . . and a day later make him unavailable for interviews while worrying he made everyone look like fools?

The issue here is about Josh Shaw, a respected senior cornerback who is facing serious questions about the veracity of his weekend account explaining his injuries.

But an equally big story is Sarkisian, because, if his hero crumbles, he's going to have to clean up the mess. The coach could have to make his first big decision before ever calling his first big play.

How do you discipline a player who possibly could have compromised the integrity of a program that is still recovering from integrity-attacking NCAA probation? How do you bench a player who has already sidelined himself with injuries? And does it matter that this cornerback might be your most important line of defense in the quarterback-strong Pac-12 Conference?

Welcome home, Sark. Don't let the door hit you in the face on the way in.

"There's a moral compass we have to operate with, that we represent this university with," Sarkisian said Tuesday afternoon, touching the USC logo on the front of his hoodie. "Every decision we make, this has to come first, and when it doesn't and we make a mistake, there's punishment that goes along with it."

Sarkisian wouldn't discuss the Shaw controversy during this interview because the situation was still fluid. But he had already made one smart move by admitting during a news conference earlier Tuesday that he'd received phone calls contradicting Shaw's story. This shows Sarkisian's willingness to publicly tackle even the most embarrassing of issues. Now Trojans fans are waiting to see what he does when the truth hits.

"[Character] is a huge deal around here, especially because we're just coming off probation," he said. "What I always try to ask myself, was a player's mistake an indication of their character or was it out of line for them? Is this truly who this person is, or did he make a mistake that he's regretful for?"

By all accounts, Shaw, a Palmdale native, has been a character guy, even in the way he transferred to USC from Florida two years ago to help his ailing father run his landscape business. He once spent five days building homes in Haiti with teammates. He was one of the players who showed up to support Sarkisian last winter at his first news conference. He gave a stirring speech at the USC student-athlete commencement ceremonies this spring.

"I often remind myself, I'm here to develop these guys, and we shouldn't let one incident define us," Sarkisian said. "Some incidents are obviously more severe than others and they deserve punishment more than others."

This is a tricky situation, one that could set the tone for the Sarkisian era before it even begins. If there is any purposeful dishonesty here, folks are wondering how Sarkisian will react in comparison to his predecessor Lane Kiffin. Remember, he is replacing a coach who never really seemed bothered by illegally switched jerseys and purposely deflated footballs.

"This is probably the most high-profile university program in the country, our players are going to make some mistakes, and how we deal with those guys, people are going to be critical one way or another," Sarkisian said. "When you come to USC, you have to understand the water that you're swimming in."

It gets deep, quick.

Follow Bill Plaschke on Twitter @billplaschke

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Josh Shaw controversy at USC poses early test for Steve Sarkisian

Steve Sarkisian tried to smile, but it didn't come easy, the sweat beading on his forehead as he cooked in a campus patio chair while wearing a USC hoodie on a warm August afternoon.

"And it's only Tuesday," Sarkisian said with a grin.

There were still four days until Sarkisian's debut as USC's football coach, yet his honeymoon was over. His team had yet to take the stage, yet all eyes were upon him. The 2014 opening kickoff was in his hands, and that sucker was slippery.

What do you do when one of your team captains and best defensive players shows up with two badly sprained ankles and claims the injury occurred when he jumped off a balcony to save his nephew from drowning . . . then you receive information that it might not be the truth?

What do you do when you are so enamored with the original story you trumpet it on your team's website and shower him with public praise . . . and a day later make him unavailable for interviews while worrying he made everyone look like fools?

The issue here is about Josh Shaw, a respected senior cornerback who is facing serious questions about the veracity of his weekend account explaining his injuries.

But an equally big story is Sarkisian, because, if his hero crumbles, he's going to have to clean up the mess. The coach could have to make his first big decision before ever calling his first big play.

How do you discipline a player who possibly could have compromised the integrity of a program that is still recovering from integrity-attacking NCAA probation? How do you bench a player who has already sidelined himself with injuries? And does it matter that this cornerback might be your most important line of defense in the quarterback-strong Pac-12 Conference?

Welcome home, Sark. Don't let the door hit you in the face on the way in.

"There's a moral compass we have to operate with, that we represent this university with," Sarkisian said Tuesday afternoon, touching the USC logo on the front of his hoodie. "Every decision we make, this has to come first, and when it doesn't and we make a mistake, there's punishment that goes along with it."

Sarkisian wouldn't discuss the Shaw controversy during this interview because the situation was still fluid. But he had already made one smart move by admitting during a news conference earlier Tuesday that he'd received phone calls contradicting Shaw's story. This shows Sarkisian's willingness to publicly tackle even the most embarrassing of issues. Now Trojans fans are waiting to see what he does when the truth hits.

"[Character] is a huge deal around here, especially because we're just coming off probation," he said. "What I always try to ask myself, was a player's mistake an indication of their character or was it out of line for them? Is this truly who this person is, or did he make a mistake that he's regretful for?"

By all accounts, Shaw, a Palmdale native, has been a character guy, even in the way he transferred to USC from Florida two years ago to help his ailing father run his landscape business. He once spent five days building homes in Haiti with teammates. He was one of the players who showed up to support Sarkisian last winter at his first news conference. He gave a stirring speech at the USC student-athlete commencement ceremonies this spring.

"I often remind myself, I'm here to develop these guys, and we shouldn't let one incident define us," Sarkisian said. "Some incidents are obviously more severe than others and they deserve punishment more than others."

This is a tricky situation, one that could set the tone for the Sarkisian era before it even begins. If there is any purposeful dishonesty here, folks are wondering how Sarkisian will react in comparison to his predecessor Lane Kiffin. Remember, he is replacing a coach who never really seemed bothered by illegally switched jerseys and purposely deflated footballs.

"This is probably the most high-profile university program in the country, our players are going to make some mistakes, and how we deal with those guys, people are going to be critical one way or another," Sarkisian said. "When you come to USC, you have to understand the water that you're swimming in."

It gets deep, quick.

Follow Bill Plaschke on Twitter @billplaschke

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Josh Shaw controversy at USC poses early test for Steve Sarkisian

Steve Sarkisian tried to smile, but it didn't come easy, the sweat beading on his forehead as he cooked in a campus patio chair while wearing a USC hoodie on a warm August afternoon.

"And it's only Tuesday," Sarkisian said with a grin.

There were still four days until Sarkisian's debut as USC's football coach, yet his honeymoon was over. His team had yet to take the stage, yet all eyes were upon him. The 2014 opening kickoff was in his hands, and that sucker was slippery.

What do you do when one of your team captains and best defensive players shows up with two badly sprained ankles and claims the injury occurred when he jumped off a balcony to save his nephew from drowning . . . then you receive information that it might not be the truth?

What do you do when you are so enamored with the original story you trumpet it on your team's website and shower him with public praise . . . and a day later make him unavailable for interviews while worrying he made everyone look like fools?

The issue here is about Josh Shaw, a respected senior cornerback who is facing serious questions about the veracity of his weekend account explaining his injuries.

But an equally big story is Sarkisian, because, if his hero crumbles, he's going to have to clean up the mess. The coach could have to make his first big decision before ever calling his first big play.

How do you discipline a player who possibly could have compromised the integrity of a program that is still recovering from integrity-attacking NCAA probation? How do you bench a player who has already sidelined himself with injuries? And does it matter that this cornerback might be your most important line of defense in the quarterback-strong Pac-12 Conference?

Welcome home, Sark. Don't let the door hit you in the face on the way in.

"There's a moral compass we have to operate with, that we represent this university with," Sarkisian said Tuesday afternoon, touching the USC logo on the front of his hoodie. "Every decision we make, this has to come first, and when it doesn't and we make a mistake, there's punishment that goes along with it."

Sarkisian wouldn't discuss the Shaw controversy during this interview because the situation was still fluid. But he had already made one smart move by admitting during a news conference earlier Tuesday that he'd received phone calls contradicting Shaw's story. This shows Sarkisian's willingness to publicly tackle even the most embarrassing of issues. Now Trojans fans are waiting to see what he does when the truth hits.

"[Character] is a huge deal around here, especially because we're just coming off probation," he said. "What I always try to ask myself, was a player's mistake an indication of their character or was it out of line for them? Is this truly who this person is, or did he make a mistake that he's regretful for?"

By all accounts, Shaw, a Palmdale native, has been a character guy, even in the way he transferred to USC from Florida two years ago to help his ailing father run his landscape business. He once spent five days building homes in Haiti with teammates. He was one of the players who showed up to support Sarkisian last winter at his first news conference. He gave a stirring speech at the USC student-athlete commencement ceremonies this spring.

"I often remind myself, I'm here to develop these guys, and we shouldn't let one incident define us," Sarkisian said. "Some incidents are obviously more severe than others and they deserve punishment more than others."

This is a tricky situation, one that could set the tone for the Sarkisian era before it even begins. If there is any purposeful dishonesty here, folks are wondering how Sarkisian will react in comparison to his predecessor Lane Kiffin. Remember, he is replacing a coach who never really seemed bothered by illegally switched jerseys and purposely deflated footballs.

"This is probably the most high-profile university program in the country, our players are going to make some mistakes, and how we deal with those guys, people are going to be critical one way or another," Sarkisian said. "When you come to USC, you have to understand the water that you're swimming in."

It gets deep, quick.

Follow Bill Plaschke on Twitter @billplaschke

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Court hears arguments on voters having to prove citizenship

Written By kolimtiga on Selasa, 26 Agustus 2014 | 12.18

One day before Arizona's primary election, the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver heard arguments Monday on the constitutionality of voters having to prove citizenship through a passport or birth certificate before they can register to vote.

Arizona and Kansas have both passed laws requiring voters to prove citizenship before they can register. That is stricter than federal law, which requires a voter simply to affirm U.S. citizenship in writing.

On Tuesday, Arizona voters who have not proved their citizenship to the state's satisfaction will be able to cast ballots only for U.S. Congress — not for governor or any other state offices. Kansas held such a two-tier primary earlier this month.

"The Founding Fathers didn't want that," said Kansas Atty. Gen. Kris Kobach, who argued the case for both states. "They are using the federal form as a lever to displace the state's power," he said in an interview after the hearing.

Supporters contend such laws prevent voter fraud. Opponents maintain that the real motivation is to make it more difficult for minorities and the poor to vote.

The case hinges on "a narrow but important issue," said Dan Tokaji, an Ohio State University expert on election law and voting rights. "It's important because if Arizona and Kansas win, we could see a lot more states trying to make it more difficult to register."

Manipulating voter registration has an unsavory history, Tokaji said.

"If you look at the history of voting rights in this country, registration has often been used and manipulated ... to prevent certain groups of people from voting, most notoriously blacks in the South before the [1965] Voting Rights Act," he said.

But Richard Hasen, a professor of law and political science at UC Irvine, calls noncitizen voting "not a phantom problem," as Democrats often describe it. "But the number of noncitizens registered and voting is small....  The question is, how large a problem is it, and is it worth taking the risk of disenfranchising voters" who can't easily prove citizenship.

The case before the 10th Circuit comes from Wichita, where U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren ruled this year that the federal Election Assistance Commission must amend federal voting registration forms to conform with state rules.

The commission had rejected the states' request, noting that it had no commissioners because of Congress' political gridlock. Melgren ordered the commission to decide, then overruled its decision.

One of the three appellate judges hearing the appeal, Carlos Lucero, appeared hesitant about forcing a commissioner-less commission to act.

"Where in the record do we find sub-delegation?" he asked. Could a court clerk render judicial decisions if there were no judges on the bench, Lucero wondered.

Judge Jerome Holmes asked whether the matter was really a constitutional question. He told Kobach that no one was telling states they could not impose voter restrictions.

Lucero seemed irritated that what he sees as a wholly political issue had landed in his court. "All of a sudden the courts are asked to step into inherently political questions and make political decisions," he said.

Kobach has asked that the matter be fast-tracked because of the November general election.

But Arizona elections officials say they have little hope that the issue will be settled before November's midterm election. Even if the 10th Circuit renders its decision before then, its ruling almost certainly will be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Pima County Chief Deputy Recorder Chris Roads said he was concerned that confusion surrounding the citizenship requirement may further alienate the electorate as voter registration drives intensify.

The proof of citizenship aspect of voting in Arizona hasn't been settled by the courts for about a decade, which has led to rule changes in nearly every election, Roads said.

Some voter drives persuade people to register by telling them that all they have to do is show up and cast a ballot, he said. When it turns out to be more complicated, "It just ends up alienating that voter."

In practical terms, however, Kansas and Arizona registration limits have had little effect.

For Kansas' Aug. 5 primary, just 180 voters had registered as "federal only" out of 1.76 million registered voters, Kobach said, and only one person in that "federal only" group actually cast a ballot.

In Arizona, fewer than 1,000 of its more than 3.2 million voters had registered for a federal ballot because they could not meet the state's requirement, Secretary of State Ken Bennett said.

State efforts to tighten voting requirements have picked up steam since the 2010 midterm election, when Republicans boosted their clout in several statehouses. More than 20 states have adopted voter restrictions in the last few years, according to the Brennan Center for Justice, a policy and law institute at New York University.

Voting rights and access to the polls became a new front in the partisan fight between Democrats and Republicans after the fiercely disputed 2000 presidential campaign, in which an effective tie in Florida led to a decisive U.S. Supreme Court decision that put Republican George W. Bush in the White House.

cindy.carcamo@latimes.com

mark.barabak@latimes.com

@thecindycarcamo

@markzbarabak

Carcamo reported from Tucson, Deam from Denver and Barabak from San Francisco.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

9:38 p.m.: The story was updated throughout with new details and information.

The story was originally posted at 3:18 p.m.


12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Court hears arguments on voters having to prove citizenship

One day before Arizona's primary election, the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver heard arguments Monday on the constitutionality of voters having to prove citizenship through a passport or birth certificate before they can register to vote.

Arizona and Kansas have both passed laws requiring voters to prove citizenship before they can register. That is stricter than federal law, which requires a voter simply to affirm U.S. citizenship in writing.

On Tuesday, Arizona voters who have not proved their citizenship to the state's satisfaction will be able to cast ballots only for U.S. Congress — not for governor or any other state offices. Kansas held such a two-tier primary earlier this month.

"The Founding Fathers didn't want that," said Kansas Atty. Gen. Kris Kobach, who argued the case for both states. "They are using the federal form as a lever to displace the state's power," he said in an interview after the hearing.

Supporters contend such laws prevent voter fraud. Opponents maintain that the real motivation is to make it more difficult for minorities and the poor to vote.

The case hinges on "a narrow but important issue," said Dan Tokaji, an Ohio State University expert on election law and voting rights. "It's important because if Arizona and Kansas win, we could see a lot more states trying to make it more difficult to register."

Manipulating voter registration has an unsavory history, Tokaji said.

"If you look at the history of voting rights in this country, registration has often been used and manipulated ... to prevent certain groups of people from voting, most notoriously blacks in the South before the [1965] Voting Rights Act," he said.

But Richard Hasen, a professor of law and political science at UC Irvine, calls noncitizen voting "not a phantom problem," as Democrats often describe it. "But the number of noncitizens registered and voting is small....  The question is, how large a problem is it, and is it worth taking the risk of disenfranchising voters" who can't easily prove citizenship.

The case before the 10th Circuit comes from Wichita, where U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren ruled this year that the federal Election Assistance Commission must amend federal voting registration forms to conform with state rules.

The commission had rejected the states' request, noting that it had no commissioners because of Congress' political gridlock. Melgren ordered the commission to decide, then overruled its decision.

One of the three appellate judges hearing the appeal, Carlos Lucero, appeared hesitant about forcing a commissioner-less commission to act.

"Where in the record do we find sub-delegation?" he asked. Could a court clerk render judicial decisions if there were no judges on the bench, Lucero wondered.

Judge Jerome Holmes asked whether the matter was really a constitutional question. He told Kobach that no one was telling states they could not impose voter restrictions.

Lucero seemed irritated that what he sees as a wholly political issue had landed in his court. "All of a sudden the courts are asked to step into inherently political questions and make political decisions," he said.

Kobach has asked that the matter be fast-tracked because of the November general election.

But Arizona elections officials say they have little hope that the issue will be settled before November's midterm election. Even if the 10th Circuit renders its decision before then, its ruling almost certainly will be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Pima County Chief Deputy Recorder Chris Roads said he was concerned that confusion surrounding the citizenship requirement may further alienate the electorate as voter registration drives intensify.

The proof of citizenship aspect of voting in Arizona hasn't been settled by the courts for about a decade, which has led to rule changes in nearly every election, Roads said.

Some voter drives persuade people to register by telling them that all they have to do is show up and cast a ballot, he said. When it turns out to be more complicated, "It just ends up alienating that voter."

In practical terms, however, Kansas and Arizona registration limits have had little effect.

For Kansas' Aug. 5 primary, just 180 voters had registered as "federal only" out of 1.76 million registered voters, Kobach said, and only one person in that "federal only" group actually cast a ballot.

In Arizona, fewer than 1,000 of its more than 3.2 million voters had registered for a federal ballot because they could not meet the state's requirement, Secretary of State Ken Bennett said.

State efforts to tighten voting requirements have picked up steam since the 2010 midterm election, when Republicans boosted their clout in several statehouses. More than 20 states have adopted voter restrictions in the last few years, according to the Brennan Center for Justice, a policy and law institute at New York University.

Voting rights and access to the polls became a new front in the partisan fight between Democrats and Republicans after the fiercely disputed 2000 presidential campaign, in which an effective tie in Florida led to a decisive U.S. Supreme Court decision that put Republican George W. Bush in the White House.

cindy.carcamo@latimes.com

mark.barabak@latimes.com

@thecindycarcamo

@markzbarabak

Carcamo reported from Tucson, Deam from Denver and Barabak from San Francisco.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

9:38 p.m.: The story was updated throughout with new details and information.

The story was originally posted at 3:18 p.m.


12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Court hears arguments on voters having to prove citizenship

One day before Arizona's primary election, the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver heard arguments Monday on the constitutionality of voters having to prove citizenship through a passport or birth certificate before they can register to vote.

Arizona and Kansas have both passed laws requiring voters to prove citizenship before they can register. That is stricter than federal law, which requires a voter simply to affirm U.S. citizenship in writing.

On Tuesday, Arizona voters who have not proved their citizenship to the state's satisfaction will be able to cast ballots only for U.S. Congress — not for governor or any other state offices. Kansas held such a two-tier primary earlier this month.

"The Founding Fathers didn't want that," said Kansas Atty. Gen. Kris Kobach, who argued the case for both states. "They are using the federal form as a lever to displace the state's power," he said in an interview after the hearing.

Supporters contend such laws prevent voter fraud. Opponents maintain that the real motivation is to make it more difficult for minorities and the poor to vote.

The case hinges on "a narrow but important issue," said Dan Tokaji, an Ohio State University expert on election law and voting rights. "It's important because if Arizona and Kansas win, we could see a lot more states trying to make it more difficult to register."

Manipulating voter registration has an unsavory history, Tokaji said.

"If you look at the history of voting rights in this country, registration has often been used and manipulated ... to prevent certain groups of people from voting, most notoriously blacks in the South before the [1965] Voting Rights Act," he said.

But Richard Hasen, a professor of law and political science at UC Irvine, calls noncitizen voting "not a phantom problem," as Democrats often describe it. "But the number of noncitizens registered and voting is small....  The question is, how large a problem is it, and is it worth taking the risk of disenfranchising voters" who can't easily prove citizenship.

The case before the 10th Circuit comes from Wichita, where U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren ruled this year that the federal Election Assistance Commission must amend federal voting registration forms to conform with state rules.

The commission had rejected the states' request, noting that it had no commissioners because of Congress' political gridlock. Melgren ordered the commission to decide, then overruled its decision.

One of the three appellate judges hearing the appeal, Carlos Lucero, appeared hesitant about forcing a commissioner-less commission to act.

"Where in the record do we find sub-delegation?" he asked. Could a court clerk render judicial decisions if there were no judges on the bench, Lucero wondered.

Judge Jerome Holmes asked whether the matter was really a constitutional question. He told Kobach that no one was telling states they could not impose voter restrictions.

Lucero seemed irritated that what he sees as a wholly political issue had landed in his court. "All of a sudden the courts are asked to step into inherently political questions and make political decisions," he said.

Kobach has asked that the matter be fast-tracked because of the November general election.

But Arizona elections officials say they have little hope that the issue will be settled before November's midterm election. Even if the 10th Circuit renders its decision before then, its ruling almost certainly will be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Pima County Chief Deputy Recorder Chris Roads said he was concerned that confusion surrounding the citizenship requirement may further alienate the electorate as voter registration drives intensify.

The proof of citizenship aspect of voting in Arizona hasn't been settled by the courts for about a decade, which has led to rule changes in nearly every election, Roads said.

Some voter drives persuade people to register by telling them that all they have to do is show up and cast a ballot, he said. When it turns out to be more complicated, "It just ends up alienating that voter."

In practical terms, however, Kansas and Arizona registration limits have had little effect.

For Kansas' Aug. 5 primary, just 180 voters had registered as "federal only" out of 1.76 million registered voters, Kobach said, and only one person in that "federal only" group actually cast a ballot.

In Arizona, fewer than 1,000 of its more than 3.2 million voters had registered for a federal ballot because they could not meet the state's requirement, Secretary of State Ken Bennett said.

State efforts to tighten voting requirements have picked up steam since the 2010 midterm election, when Republicans boosted their clout in several statehouses. More than 20 states have adopted voter restrictions in the last few years, according to the Brennan Center for Justice, a policy and law institute at New York University.

Voting rights and access to the polls became a new front in the partisan fight between Democrats and Republicans after the fiercely disputed 2000 presidential campaign, in which an effective tie in Florida led to a decisive U.S. Supreme Court decision that put Republican George W. Bush in the White House.

cindy.carcamo@latimes.com

mark.barabak@latimes.com

@thecindycarcamo

@markzbarabak

Carcamo reported from Tucson, Deam from Denver and Barabak from San Francisco.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

9:38 p.m.: The story was updated throughout with new details and information.

The story was originally posted at 3:18 p.m.


12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

'Live bravely, and with passion': Town remembers James Foley

Written By kolimtiga on Senin, 25 Agustus 2014 | 12.18

For nearly 21 months after James Foley's capture in Syria in late 2012, his family held out hope for his safe return, keeping faith that they would never see a day like Sunday, with a Mass in his memory.

After all, the courageous photojournalist seemed to have nine lives as he reported from the most dangerous conflict zones around the world, his parents recalled last week. Once before, he had made it home safely: from Libya after being held in captivity there for 44 days.

But Foley's brutal killing by Islamic State militants in a beheading that was released on video last week brought his family, friends and neighbors together here in his hometown for a Roman Catholic Mass of healing, hope and peace.

As the close-knit parish tried to come to terms with what happened, the central theme of Sunday's service was forgiveness — even for Foley's captors.

Every seat was filled for the Sunday afternoon service at Our Lady of the Holy Rosary in Rochester. Foley's parents, Diane and John Foley, sat side by side in one of the first pews. Many parishioners stood, filling the long side aisles to the candlelit altar.

On their way in, mourners passed large black-and-white photographs of the journalist, wearing his ever-present sunglasses and training his camera on war-torn streets of Libya and Syria. Some people clutched cards bearing his image above the Prayer of St. Francis.

In his homily, the bishop of Manchester, the Most Rev. Peter A. Libasci, urged mourners to focus on the verses: "Lord make me an instrument of your peace. Where there is hatred, let me sow love; where there is injury, pardon."

Libasci asked the congregation to remember that Foley lived his life in St. Francis' example.

Some mourners wept as Libasci emphasized the prayer's final lines: "It is in pardoning that we are pardoned and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life."

Libasci noted that many close to Foley may be doubting their faith at this moment. He urged them to remember Foley's "gifts to the world" as a journalist and spoke of his death as a sacrifice to that mission.

"In a special way today, we are challenged to be mindful of needs of others," Libasci said. "We are challenged to be true to our faith, especially when most challenged to doubt. We are challenged to see the world through a different lens. To hear the world's voice as the voices of individuals, people, children, mothers, fathers. We are challenged to hear the cries that are a world away."

Foley's desire to shed light on the suffering of war-torn regions should inspire others to "live bravely, and with passion, the life of a true child of God," he said.

"Jim went back again [to Syria] so that we might open our eyes," Libasci said. He prayed for peace for Foley and "this fragile world."

Offering words of comfort to Foley's mother and father, Libasci reminded them of the blessings they received at James Foley's baptism, and how the priest had prayed at that time that they would "see hope of eternal life shine on this child."

"Rarely do we recall those words, but I bring them to mind for you, as they are more poignant and prophetic," he said.

Mourners sang "Amazing Grace" and the communion hymn "How Great Thou Art."

Then Diane and John Foley stood briefly at the front of the church and thanked the members of the congregation for their support and prayers.

"Thank you for loving Jim," Diane Foley said. Everyone in the audience rose and met them with sustained applause.

At the end of the service, the congregation also prayed for the remaining hostages in the region, including Foley's fellow captive Steven Sotloff — who was threatened on the video of Foley's slaying — and "those in unjust captivity around the world." They also prayed for Foley's "legacy of love" to continue.

Earlier Sunday, the British ambassador to the United States told NBC's "Meet the Press" that intelligence officials were closing in on the identity of the militant with the British accent who killed Foley. "We're not in a position to say exactly who this is," Peter Westmacott said. "I think we are close."

Foley's family and friends plan a more formal funeral on his birthday, Oct. 18, in part to give his friends from around the world the opportunity to attend. Foley's parents spoke at length to reporters during a news conference last week, but declined interviews Sunday. None of his friends or family members gave formal remarks during the traditional Catholic Mass.

Mourners waited in a long line after the service to speak with Diane and John Foley, who greeted them with smiles and hugs.

"They've been a profile in courage," said James Page, a family friend from Deerfield, N.H. "I think his family could probably forgive the killer, which is hard to believe, but I think they're that sort of people. If it meant forgiveness to bring people together, they would be the first ones to do that."

Kassandra Belcher of Milton, who cut James Foley's hair throughout his life, said the service had reflected the spirit of a "very faithful, prayerful, community-oriented" family and helped begin the healing process.

"A lot of us have been reading from the Bible and just trying to get our strength to go on as a community," Belcher said.

At times, Foley's father seemed to be the one comforting those who came to greet him. "Jimmy is free now," John Foley told one couple with a smile. "He's at peace."

Twitter: @MaeveReston

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

9:06 p.m.: This post was updated throughout, including adding comments from the British ambassador.

This post was originally published at 3:03 p.m.


12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

'Live bravely, and with passion': Town remembers James Foley

For nearly 21 months after James Foley's capture in Syria in late 2012, his family held out hope for his safe return, keeping faith that they would never see a day like Sunday, with a Mass in his memory.

After all, the courageous photojournalist seemed to have nine lives as he reported from the most dangerous conflict zones around the world, his parents recalled last week. Once before, he had made it home safely: from Libya after being held in captivity there for 44 days.

But Foley's brutal killing by Islamic State militants in a beheading that was released on video last week brought his family, friends and neighbors together here in his hometown for a Roman Catholic Mass of healing, hope and peace.

As the close-knit parish tried to come to terms with what happened, the central theme of Sunday's service was forgiveness — even for Foley's captors.

Every seat was filled for the Sunday afternoon service at Our Lady of the Holy Rosary in Rochester. Foley's parents, Diane and John Foley, sat side by side in one of the first pews. Many parishioners stood, filling the long side aisles to the candlelit altar.

On their way in, mourners passed large black-and-white photographs of the journalist, wearing his ever-present sunglasses and training his camera on war-torn streets of Libya and Syria. Some people clutched cards bearing his image above the Prayer of St. Francis.

In his homily, the bishop of Manchester, the Most Rev. Peter A. Libasci, urged mourners to focus on the verses: "Lord make me an instrument of your peace. Where there is hatred, let me sow love; where there is injury, pardon."

Libasci asked the congregation to remember that Foley lived his life in St. Francis' example.

Some mourners wept as Libasci emphasized the prayer's final lines: "It is in pardoning that we are pardoned and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life."

Libasci noted that many close to Foley may be doubting their faith at this moment. He urged them to remember Foley's "gifts to the world" as a journalist and spoke of his death as a sacrifice to that mission.

"In a special way today, we are challenged to be mindful of needs of others," Libasci said. "We are challenged to be true to our faith, especially when most challenged to doubt. We are challenged to see the world through a different lens. To hear the world's voice as the voices of individuals, people, children, mothers, fathers. We are challenged to hear the cries that are a world away."

Foley's desire to shed light on the suffering of war-torn regions should inspire others to "live bravely, and with passion, the life of a true child of God," he said.

"Jim went back again [to Syria] so that we might open our eyes," Libasci said. He prayed for peace for Foley and "this fragile world."

Offering words of comfort to Foley's mother and father, Libasci reminded them of the blessings they received at James Foley's baptism, and how the priest had prayed at that time that they would "see hope of eternal life shine on this child."

"Rarely do we recall those words, but I bring them to mind for you, as they are more poignant and prophetic," he said.

Mourners sang "Amazing Grace" and the communion hymn "How Great Thou Art."

Then Diane and John Foley stood briefly at the front of the church and thanked the members of the congregation for their support and prayers.

"Thank you for loving Jim," Diane Foley said. Everyone in the audience rose and met them with sustained applause.

At the end of the service, the congregation also prayed for the remaining hostages in the region, including Foley's fellow captive Steven Sotloff — who was threatened on the video of Foley's slaying — and "those in unjust captivity around the world." They also prayed for Foley's "legacy of love" to continue.

Earlier Sunday, the British ambassador to the United States told NBC's "Meet the Press" that intelligence officials were closing in on the identity of the militant with the British accent who killed Foley. "We're not in a position to say exactly who this is," Peter Westmacott said. "I think we are close."

Foley's family and friends plan a more formal funeral on his birthday, Oct. 18, in part to give his friends from around the world the opportunity to attend. Foley's parents spoke at length to reporters during a news conference last week, but declined interviews Sunday. None of his friends or family members gave formal remarks during the traditional Catholic Mass.

Mourners waited in a long line after the service to speak with Diane and John Foley, who greeted them with smiles and hugs.

"They've been a profile in courage," said James Page, a family friend from Deerfield, N.H. "I think his family could probably forgive the killer, which is hard to believe, but I think they're that sort of people. If it meant forgiveness to bring people together, they would be the first ones to do that."

Kassandra Belcher of Milton, who cut James Foley's hair throughout his life, said the service had reflected the spirit of a "very faithful, prayerful, community-oriented" family and helped begin the healing process.

"A lot of us have been reading from the Bible and just trying to get our strength to go on as a community," Belcher said.

At times, Foley's father seemed to be the one comforting those who came to greet him. "Jimmy is free now," John Foley told one couple with a smile. "He's at peace."

Twitter: @MaeveReston

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

9:06 p.m.: This post was updated throughout, including adding comments from the British ambassador.

This post was originally published at 3:03 p.m.


12.18 | 0 komentar | Read More
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