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$2.00 DESIGNATED AREAS HIGHER © 2016 WSCE D latimes.com MONDAY, JULY 18, 2016 ‘Madness’ in Baton Rouge 3 police officers are shot to death in a city already racked by racial unrest By Molly Hennessy-Fiske, Jenny Jarvie and Jaweed Kaleem Max Becherer Associated Press POLICE STOP a driver coming from the direction of a shooting in Baton Rouge that left three officers dead. He was allowed to leave. The gunman was identified as a 29-year-old Marine veteran and “black separatist.” NEWS ANALYSIS Law and order and politics Trump has a chance to show he can ‘make America safe again’ — if he can stop talking about just himself. By Cathleen Decker CLEVELAND — The day before Republicans were to open a convention meant to serve as a fresh opportunity to redefine Donald Trump, organizers had to delay their long-awaited preview of the gathering so as not to collide with President Obama’s remarks to the nation about yet another shocking act of violence. This time it was in Baton Rouge, La., where three police officers were shot dead Sunday morning. Evan Vucci Associated Press PRESUMPTIVE GOP nominee Donald Trump with his running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence. MORE CONVENTION COVERAGE Go inside the Republican convention with Times journalists for live coverage and analysis. latimes.com/trailguide When the GOP briefing began, the first topic was Baton Rouge. Across Cleveland, worries about violence led the head of the local police union to ask Ohio Gov. John Kasich to rescind the right of gun owners to openly carry weapons near the convention areas. Kasich said that under state law, he did not have the power to limit firearms, which were in evidence Sunday. Convention organizers, who had hoped to use the afternoon briefing to strike an optimistic tone, were forced to reassure attendees Sunday that the area outside the convention arena — inside is the one place guns will not be allowed — would be safe. Ohio has held several high-profile events under [See Trump, A9] Hilary Scheinuk Advocate POLICE SPRING into action as a man is detained. Officials said later that there was only one gunman. String of blunders doomed the coup For Baca, a legacy tainted by misdeed Case in point: The rebels pursuing the Turkish president had to ask for directions to his hotel room. By Joel Rubin Lee Baca was never an easy man to define. Throughout a remarkable, albeit flawed, career as sheriff of Los Angeles County, Baca defied toughguy police stereotypes with an affectionate, oddball style of leadership that earned him the nickname “Sheriff Moonbeam.” He was at once admired for his progressive ideals and criticized for failing to put his thoughts into action. He succeeded in building ties with minority communities, promoted programs to rehabilitate inmates and pushed for more services to help homeless and mentally ill people. But at the same time, many of the department’s [See Baca, A12] BATON ROUGE, La. — An Iraq war veteran identified by law enforcement as a “black separatist” fatally shot three police officers and wounded three others here Sunday, opening another chapter in the racial unrest that has swept some cities and exposed the vulnerability of police. The gunman, wearing black and carrying an assault rifle, shot the unsuspecting officers along a road that has been the scene of emotional protests sparked by the police shooting less than two weeks ago of a 37year-old African American man selling CDs outside a local business. Baton Rouge has been engulfed in racial protests since that shooting, and Sunday’s events plunged the Louisiana capital into further turmoil — even as it was revealed that at least one of the dead officers, Montrell Jackson, the 32-year-old father of a 4-month-old son, was black. “This is not so much about gun control as it is about what is in men’s hearts,” said East Baton Rouge Sheriff Sid J. By Roy Gutman Luca Bruno Associated Press A MEMORIAL of stuffed animals and toys honors the youngest victims of the truck attack in Nice, France. Authorities say 10 children were killed. In attack’s aftermath, a devastating question ISTANBUL, Turkey — Rebel commandos barged into an Aegean resort hotel with a key mission: capture Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. He had been vacationing there. At first, the soldiers couldn’t find his villa. When they finally did, the president was gone. The soldiers were an hour late. They took a top pres- As France grieves, many ask: Why the children? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times sentenced Monday. NICE, France — It is the seemingly endless piles of teddy bears, Minnie Mouse dolls, Bart Simpson puppets and stuffed animals — bunnies, donkeys, zebras, giraffes — that take your breath away, silent and heartbreaking reminders of why the terrorist attack in Nice was so different. French authorities say 10 children — the youngest 6 months old — were among the 84 people killed when a man drove a tractor-trailer at high speed into the crowds celebrating the national holiday late Thursday along the seaside prome- nade in the heart of Nice. Many of the victims were so badly crushed that 16 bodies have not yet been identified, authorities said Sunday. Among the wounded, five children were in critical condition, hospital officials said. “Pourquoi des enfants?” The question appeared on signs posted on walls and fences and left at memorials. Why the children? The senseless deaths of so many children, some attending their first Bastille [See Children, A4] Day celebra- idential aide hostage as well as two bodyguards. But Erdogan was already on a jet. His escape stands as the biggest blunder of the coup plotters who tried and failed to overthrow him. But it was far from their only one. The string of errors suggested a coup attempt that was poorly planned and coordinated. Despite a long history of frequent coups in modern Turkey, the rebels seemed to bumble through some of the most basic aspects of seizing power. To begin with, the dissident generals who organized the coup attempt also failed miserably at public relations. The plotters seized the two bridges over Istanbul’s [See Turkey, A6] Day of firsts for Swede at British Open By Erik Kirschbaum and Sarah Harvey LEE BACA ,74, will be Gautreaux III, appealing for the country to set aside its divisions and end the violence. “If we don’t do that, and this madness continues, we will surely perish as a people.” President Obama, in yet another address to the nation made necessary by a fusillade of bullets in a city split by race, had a similar message: “Only we can prove that we have the grace and the character and the common humanity to end this kind of senseless violence, to reduce fear and mistrust within the American family, to set an example for our children,” he said. “That’s who we are, and that’s who we always have the capacity to be. And that’s the best way for us to honor the sacrifice of the brave police officers who were taken from us this morning,” the president said. The gunman was identified as Gavin Eugene Long, a 29-year-old Marine Corps veteran from Kansas City, Mo., who a U.S. law enforcement official said had a history as a “black separatist.” Long’s service record included duty assignments at Camp Pendleton, San Diego and Twentynine Palms before his discharge from the Marines in 2010. [See Baton Rouge, A11] Peter Morrison AP Airport security, the Israeli way Officials debate whether Israeli-type measures would fly at LAX and other U.S. airports. MONDAY BUSINESS, A10 Henrik Stenson’s first Grand Slam title is also the first by a Scandinavian man. And his 264 total is the best ever in a major. SPORTS, D1 Weather Low clouds, then sun. L.A. Basin: 80/63. B8 7 85944 00200 5 A2 M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 S L AT I ME S . CO M Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times WHY DO people stick with their political party? “Even when they’re not thrilled by their own side, they’re much less thrilled by the other side,” one expert says. Above, a polling station in Venice in June. BACK STORY They’re just party animals Despite misgivings, most Democratic and Republican voters are loyal By Mark Z. Barabak brooksbrothers.com UNCONVENTIONAL COVERAGE OVERAGE Live from the 2016 Republican Convention Each day of the convention, our team brings you gavel-to-gavel coverage inside and outside of the arena, including live video and expert analysis at latimes.com/ TrailGuide. And join Los Angeles Times journalists at a free watch party July 21 in downtown L.A. RSVP at latimes.com/ConventionParty. latimes.com/politics This summer of discontent seems a perfectly awful time to hold a national political convention. The two presumptive White House nominees, Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, have record-high disapproval ratings. Polls show their respective parties are held in similarly low regard. Yet come November, as surely as summer turns to fall, the overwhelmingly majority of voters — probably 80% or more — will cast ballots for the two candidates marching beneath their respective party banners. Donald Trump or Donald Doe, it wouldn’t matter whom Republicans nominate this week in Cleveland. The same goes for Hillary Clinton and the Democratic convention next week in Philadelphia. Anyone with the “R” or “D” beside his or her name can count on the overwhelming support of fellow partisans. Indeed, for all the talk of fading political allegiances, about the two major parties dying off, about the rise of independent voters, party labels are still the single best predictor of voting behavior. They telegraph how an individual will cast a ballot far better than age, income, gender, education, sexual orientation, or whether someone lives in a big city, the suburbs or the countryside. “No matter what the race looks like, you’ve got about 2 out of 3 voters already predestined as soon as the nominees come out of their conventions,” said Peter Hart, a Democratic strategist who has been sampling voter opinion for decades. The level of party loyalty rises from there. About 9 in 10 Democrats voted for President Obama in his two White House campaigns, and 90% or more of Republicans backed the GOP nominee in both contests. Trump may struggle to achieve that level of support, given widespread disaffection within his party, but he undoubtedly will win the vast majority of Republican votes. Part of the reason is habit. Once individuals form their political views, usually sometime in their 20s and often based on how their parents voted, they tend to stick with that party and support its candidates for the rest of their life. Part of it is human nature; we tend toward likeminded individuals, and once we find them we stick together, warts and all. (When it comes to selfdescribed independents, most in fact habitually vote for one party or the other, though they prefer not to think of themselves as partisan.) A great deal of it owes to the country’s political polarization and how the two major parties are increasingly defined by their opposition to each other, which influences the way voters think and behave. “Even when they’re not thrilled by their own side, they’re much less thrilled by the other side,” said Gary Jacobson, a UC San Diego political scientist who has long studied Washington’s partisan divide. The sentiment is articulated in the oft-heard statement from people who can’t stand Trump but consider Clinton even worse. Or vice versa. The lesser-evil attitude is reflected in a spring survey taken by the Pew Research Center. Among Republicans, nearly 7 in 10 said a major reason they identify with the GOP is that “the Democratic Party’s policies are harmful to the country,” and fewer than two-thirds said it was because they believed Republican policies helped the country. Democrats were more positive. Just about 7 in 10 said a major reason for their party affiliation was because they thought Democratic policies helped the country. But more than 6 in 10 still cited negative feelings toward the GOP as one of their reasons for being a Democrat. “What was a line in the sand” between the parties “has become a chasm,” said Mark Mellman, a veteran Democratic pollster. “That’s increased animosity and negative feelings but also increased loyalty to one’s own group.” As partisan divisions have deepened, the old notion that seeing is believing has been inverted. In 2013, Mellman and Republican pollster Whit Ayres conducted a survey for USA Today and the Bipartisan Policy Center in which respondents were presented with two supposedly different education plans. The exact same elements were presented with identical wording, but as soon as one was labeled the Democratic or Republican plan, support and opposition rose or fell accordingly. Democrats who backed the Democratic plan rejected the Republican plan, and vice versa. The importance of issues in driving voter behavior may be overrated anyway. Donald Green, who teaches political science at Columbia University, has extensively researched partisan attachments and suggested that most voters aren’t like politicians, political consultants or, for that matter, political journalists. “The ordinary person doesn’t have a kind of wellarticulated ideological vantage point,” he said. Rather, he said, they rely on notions — some going back decades — of which party is, say, friendlier to business or working-class people, which attracts environmentalists, or Christian conservatives, or blacks, or Southerners, and then gravitate where they feel they best fit in. “What they know about the parties often has less to do with a detailed assessment of a platform vis-a-vis issues, and more about the sense of social stereotypes that go with the parties,” Green said. Trump, of course, has scrambled many of the conceptions surrounding the GOP, not least by challenging its orthodoxy on free trade and the party’s chummy relationship with Wall Street. But come election day, reflexive party loyalty is likely to overpower any doubts or concerns the overwhelming majority of Republican faithful have about their nominee, just as the overwhelming majority of Democratic faithful will snap into line and rally behind Clinton. Forget all the lofty talk of promise and principles flowing from the convention podiums. The reason, suggested Thomas Mann, a political scholar at the Brookings Institution, is downright primitive. “It’s much more tribal,” he said, “than philosophical.” mark.barabak @latimes.com 16COM015 Eat and drink your way through LA ` NYESHA ARRINGTON MICHAEL CIMARUSTI ROXANA JULLAPAT RAY GARCIA MARY SUE MILLIKEN KRIS YENBAMROONG An evening among the culinary stars Fresh tastes from LA’s best chefs Let the good times pour Summer’s last hurrah One city, countless tastes Fri., Sept. 2 7:30 – 10:30 p.m. Sat., Sept. 3 11 a.m. – 2 p.m. Sat., Sept. 3 7:30 – 10:30 p.m. Sun., Sept. 4 11 a.m. – 2 p.m. Sun., Sept. 4 7:30 – 10:30 p.m. Hosted by Noelle Carter, Jonathan Gold, Jenn Harris and Amy Scattergood Hosted by Amy Scattergood and Michael Cimarusti Hosted by Jonathan Gold, Jenn Harris, Ray Garcia and Michael Lay Hosted by Noelle Carter and Mary Sue Milliken Hosted by Jonathan Gold and Kris Yenbamroong GET TICKETS: LATIMES.COM/THETASTE Subscribers save $25 on Saturday and Sunday events Presenting sponsor #TasteLA Platinum sponsor L AT I ME S . CO M M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 A3 THE WORLD Attacker’s hometown in shock In Tunisia, the father of the man who killed 84 in Nice says his son had mental problems and was not religious. By Simon Speakman Cordall MSAKEN, Tunisia — In this nondescript Tunisian suburb, friends and family members of the man who drove a truck into a crowd of French revelers are at a loss to explain how one of their own could have been responsible for a deadly attack claimed by Islamic State. “We are not Daesh! We are not Daesh! You must write that,” neighbor Mohammed Dahmoul shouted at reporters outside the family home, using the Arabic acronym for the militant group. Msaken, an affluent community about six miles from the coastal resort city of Sousse, is not known as a hotbed of extremism. News that Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel, a 31-year-old Tunisian emigre, had been identified as the perpetrator of Thursday’s carnage in Nice came as a shock. The people here are more interested in socializing and making money than in remodeling the world according to a bloodily fundamentalist interpretation of Islam, said a government official who asked to be identified only as Mehjed, because he was not authorized to speak to the media. The suburb has wide boulevards and cafes accented in chrome. Many cars carry the number 06 license plates of Alpes-Maritimes, an indication of the number of locals who have found work in the French region to which Nice belongs. Those who knew Bouhlel say he showed no signs of radicalization before he left for France around 2005. “He was a normal boy, happy,” said Hedi Garmoul, who was among a group of friends and neighbors gathered Saturday at the family home, a two-story, white stucco house set amid a maze of narrow streets. “For his father, he was a treasure, but everything changed when he went to France.” Bouhlel’s father, Mohamed Mondher Lahouaiej Bouhlel, described a troubled young man, “always alone, always depressed,” but one with “no connection with religion.” “He did not go to prayer; Photographs by Fethi Belaid AFP/Getty Images THE FAMILY HOME of Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel in Msaken, Tunisia, where one government official said the people are more in- terested in socializing and making money than in forcefully remodeling the world according to a fundamentalist interpretation of Islam. he did not fast; he drank alcohol; he even took drugs,” the father told Agence France-Presse news agency. Between 2002 and 2004, Bouhlel suffered a mental breakdown that required medical treatment. “He screamed, he broke everything he found in front of him,” the father said. After he recovered, the young man moved to France, where the family hoped he would make a fresh start. He found work as a delivery-truck driver and married a Franco-Tunisian woman, with whom he had three children. But he was not on good terms with the woman, according to the father. The French authorities said there were charges of domestic violence. It remains unclear what, if any, ties Bouhlel had to the militants blamed for a series of high-profile attacks in Europe and elsewhere around the world. A news agency affiliated with the group claimed Saturday that Bouhlel was a “soldier” of Islamic State, but there is no evidence that it directed NEIGHBORS gather outside the family home of Bouhlel. Those who knew him said he showed no signs of radicalization before he left for France around 2005. Thursday’s attack. Before last week, Bouhlel was not known to have any links to terrorist groups and was not on the radar of the French intelligence services. “We know now that the killer was radicalized very quickly,” the French prime minister, Manuel Valls, told reporters Saturday. Msaken has reason to resent the association. It was near Sousse that Seifeddine Rezgui, a militant from the Tunisian interior, killed dozens of tourists on a beach in June 2015, dealing a blow to the region’s thriving tourism industry. After Thursday’s bloodshed, many here worry that there will be a backlash against the large North African community in Nice and other French Riviera cities. Ben Mohamed Ben Abdeljalil, who was drinking coffee with friends at one of Msaken’s popular cafes Saturday, is afraid for the safety of a brother in Nice. “This will make it bad,” he said. “This will make it very bad.” Still, those gathered outside the family home insist they will stand by the Bouhlels. “We are a close neighborhood. Everyone knows everyone. We are a family,” said Garmoul, gesturing toward the surrounding streets before drawing the fingers of each hand together. “We will support the family — but not what their son did.” Cordall is a special correspondent. Before attack, a text for ‘more weapons’ Assailant’s request hints at contact with local Islamic radicals. By Erik Kirschbaum NICE, France — French police arrested two more suspects Sunday in connection with a truck attack that killed 84 people in this southern French resort, amid new reports that the 31year-old assailant sent a mysterious text message asking for “more weapons” just before the rampage. French prosecutors in Paris said the arrests of a man and woman in Nice raised to seven the number of people detained and questioned after Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel drove a 19ton truck at high speed through a crowd along the city’s packed seaside promenade. After zigzagging along the road and sidewalk in an apparent effort to run over as many people as possible, he eventually was shot to death by police. Authorities at first believed Bouhlel, a deliveryman and father of three who was not on any terrorist watch lists, probably was acting alone. But French Prime Minister Manuel Valls suggested Sunday that the driver might have had accomplices. He said investigators piecing together the events leading up to the attack think Bouhlel recently may have become radicalized with jihadist ideology. Those who knew him have said he was not particularly religious. Ignoring Muslim codes of conduct, he was known to drink and smoke marijuana, did not attend mosque and often wore shorts. “We now know that the killer was radicalized very quickly,” Valls told the newspaper Journal du Dimanche on Sunday. Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said Bouhlel began attending a mosque in April. Islamic State issued an indirect claim of responsibility for the attack two days later, on Saturday, saying Bouhlel was a “soldier,” though French officials have not established any direct connection between him and the militant group. Investigators examining the records of Bouhlel’s cell- phone, which was found in the cabin of the truck he was driving, have found evidence that he may have had contact with known Islamic radicals in his neighborhood in Nice. According to French TV station BMF, they also found a cryptic text message — sent just minutes before he plowed the truck into the crowd — that read, “Bring more weapons, bring five of them to C.” The attack in the French Riviera, in France’s fifth largest city, came on the country’s Bastille Day national holiday at the height of tourist season. It was the third major act of terrorism in France in the last 18 months, after an assault on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo and a kosher grocery store in January 2015 that killed 20 people and a series of attacks in Paris in November that killed 130. Police studying closedcircuit TV images in Nice also have spotted Bouhlel at the seafront Promenade des Anglais twice in the two days before Thursday’s attack, according to a report by Europe1 radio. He was seen driving Anne-Christine Poujoulat AFP/Getty Images AUTHORITIES comfort people outside Pasteur Hospital in Nice, France, where some of the victims of last week’s deadly truck attack were being treated. through the area, the radio station said, presumably to case the broad palm treelined boulevard. Cazeneuve has rejected criticism that police were poorly prepared for such an attack, though only 60 officers were on duty to protect the crowd of 30,000 on the night of the killings. He said the attacker had evaded police patrol cars blocking access to the boulevard by driving the truck onto the sidewalk. Videos of the attack show people joyously celebrating the national holiday on the closed-off boulevard and the adjoining promenade, oblivious to the imminent danger before the white truck be- gins barreling through the crowd at a relatively high speed, swerving back and forth as it runs over groups of revelers. The promenade and adjoining beaches were reopened Saturday, creating an incongruous atmosphere with beachgoers frolicking in the turquoise waters of the Mediterranean and mourners paying silent tribute to the victims on the nearby promenade. Thousands, many in tears, gathered around dozens of piles of flowers, cards and candles marking the spots along the roadway where many of the victims were killed. Cazeneuve made an ex- traordinary appeal Sunday for “patriotic citizens” to volunteer to join the country’s security services and help provide relief for the security forces and reinforce security. The reserve force is made up of12,000 volunteers ages17 to 30. “I want to call on all French patriots who wish to do so to join this operational reserve,” he said. Valls said he feared terrorism would continue to beset France for a long time. “The terrorism threat will be a fundamental and enduring problem, and other lives will be wrecked,” he said. Kirschbaum is a special correspondent. A4 M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 L AT I ME S . CO M Olivier Anrigo European Pressphoto Agency TENS OF THOUSANDS of people have come to Nice’s Promenade des Anglais since Thursday’s attack, which killed at least 84 people and wounded more than 200. Fate of some unclear after attack [Children, from A1] tion to watch fireworks, might be one reason why throngs of mourners have made what seems to be a nonstop procession to the Promenade des Anglais. Tens of thousands have been milling about the boulevard next to the sea all day and late into the night in speechless sorrow. Someone erected a giant white poster, decorated with tiny child handprints in red and green around the word “justice.” Again and again, flowers, votive candles and stuffed animals were accompanied by notes reading “pour les enfants.” For the children. Memorials have taken shape on dozens of spots along the promenade that has been kept closed to traffic, marking the areas where victims were last seen or their broken bodies found. Occasionally, friends or family members of a victim could be seen simply sitting on the pavement and staring at the places where their loved ones perished, weeping or speaking softly to no one in particular. One man set up a small piano near a memorial and played Chopin’s solemn “Marche Funebre” — the fu- neral march. “It feels as though the ground has fallen away from beneath our feet,” said Ines Gyger of Switzerland, whose 6-year-old grandson was killed Thursday. She spoke outside the Pasteur Hospital in north Nice. Her son-inlaw and two other grandchildren, ages 6 months and 4 years, were also injured and still in the hospital. “My family is in shock,” Gyger said. “I want to know the truth. “The French authorities told us nothing. It was the Swiss authorities who told me that my grandson is dead. The French authorities? All they can do is arrange one minute of silence. We don’t need a minute of silence. We need two minutes of information.” An 11-year-old boy from Texas, Brodie Copeland, was also among the children killed. The avid youth baseball and football player died along with his father, Sean, 51, when they were hit by the truck driven by Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel. Three UC Berkeley students were injured in the attack. Of the 85 students participating in the university’s study abroad program, one student, 20-year-old Nicolas Francois Mori Associated Press “WHY THE CHILDREN?” a banner reads. “It feels as though the ground as fallen away from beneath our feet,” said one woman whose 6-year-old grandson was killed in the attack. “My family is in shock.” How to contact us: (800)-LA TIMES Home Delivery and Membership Program For questions about delivery, billing and vacation holds, or for information about our Membership program, please contact us at 1(800) 252-9141 or membershipservices@ latimes.com. You can also manage your account at myaccount.latimes.com. Letters to the Editor Want to write a letter to be published in the paper and online? E-mail letters@latimes.com. For submission guidelines, see latimes.com/letters. 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Times Store Search archives, merchandise and front pages at latimes.com/store. A Tribune Publishing Company Newspaper Daily Founded Dec. 4, 1881 Vol. CXXXV No. 228 LOS ANGELES TIMES (ISSN 0458-3035) is published by the Los Angeles Times, 202 W. 1st Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012 Periodicals postage is paid at Los Angeles, CA, and additional cities. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the above address. Home Delivery Subscription Rates (all rates include applicable CA sales taxes) Daily & Sunday:$12.00/week in most areas, $624.00 annually. Thursday and Sunday: $4.00/week in most areas. $208.00 annually. Weekend Plus: $6.50/week in most areas, $338.00 annually. Sunday Plus: $4.00/week in most areas, $208.00 annually. (includes 11/24). 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Unspoken was the question: Why would a father of three attack so many children? The collective mourning on the promenade and outside the city’s two hospitals seemed to be helping many cope with the trauma of so many children being hurt and killed. Carolina Villani, a nursing home worker, had been enjoying the Bastille Day fireworks with her family when the speeding truck killed her brother Bruno and a friend of her mother’s, Hugues Mismack. Her sister, Christine Fabry, was badly injured and her 14year-old son left in a coma. Villani said in an inter- FOR THE RECORD If you believe that we have made an error, or you have questions about The Times’ journalistic standards and practices, you may contact Deirdre Edgar, readers’ representative, by email at readers.representative @latimes.com, by phone at (877) 554-4000, by fax at (213) 237-3535 or by mail at 202 W. 1st St., Los Angeles, CA 90012. The readers’ representative office is online at latimes.com/ readersrep. view outside the Pasteur Hospital that what pains her most right now was the uncertainty about her nephew, Andre Raffaeli, who disappeared. “Nobody has any news about my nephew,” she said. “He’s still missing. We’re looking for help. Andre is 16 and turns 17 on Tuesday. Please help us find him.” Damane Neslib was also waiting outside the hospital for news about his sister-inlaw, Sarah. The 16-year-old girl who hopes to one day become a lawyer has been in a coma since she was run over by the truck. “We’re not sure of anything,” said Neslib, a 28year-old crane operator. “She has head injuries. The doctors are doing tests but we’re waiting for the results.” No one knows what the psychological effect will be on those who survived the attack, especially the children. Mhamdi Azouzi and his wife have four children, and the family, along with other relatives, was in the Bastille Day crowd. “We saw the panic and managed to get away,” he said. His family later learned, however, that his 27year-old cousin Bilel Labbaoui had been run over and killed. “We got home and we noticed our children were all in a kind of shock,” said Azouzi outside Lenval Hospital. “We thought they were OK at first, but then things didn’t seem right. So we brought them to the hospital to make sure they were OK. The doctors examined them and said they should be OK, even though this will all take a long time to digest.” Also outside Lenval Hospital was Tahar Mejri. His wife, Olfa Ben Souayah, was killed by the truck, and he had spent two days searching Nice and its hospitals for his 4-year-old son, Kylian. “I don’t know what happened to him,” Mejri told reporters outside. “We got separated on the promenade when the panic broke out, and I don’t know what happened to him. It was all so chaotic. “There’s no information, zero, zero. I don’t know if it’s OK or not. I’ve tried everywhere, the police, hospitals and Facebook. Where’s my son?” Later, outside the Pasteur Hospital, he was told that Kylian also was among the dead. Mejri began screaming before breaking down in tears. Kirschbaum and Harvey are special correspondents. LOS ANGELES TIMES MONDAY, JULY 18, 2016 Advertisement Stronger Than Ever People might tell you that opportunity is limited. That you must accept your lot in life. That value is only measured through standards set by others. At Herbalife Nutrition, we disagree. At our core, Herbalife Nutrition is about empowerment. We reward discipline and hard work. We fuel transformation and foster reinvention. 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Johnson Chairman & CEO www.herbalife.com/StrongerThanEver SAMANTHA CLAYTON Senior Director, Worldwide Fitness Education, Herbalife Former Olympian A5 A6 M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 L AT I ME S . CO M Chris McGrath Getty Images THE FACE of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan shines from an electronic billboard over a rally on Kizilay Square in Ankara, Turkey’s capital, after the failed coup. Turkish air base officials held 10 accused of aiding coup attempt from facility, which is also used by the U.S. By Umar Farooq ISTANBUL, Turkey — The top military official at Incirlik Air Base has been arrested, along with other officers at the base — a major U.S. air operations center in the Middle East — in connection with an attempt by a military faction to overthrow the government of Turkey, authorities said Sunday. The arrests came as huge crowds turned out for funerals of those killed in the uprising, with secular and nationalist leaders on Sunday joining military brass for prayers at mosques — a rare display of unity in a country riven by ideological divisions. Hundreds of thousands filled squares in cities across the country in a show of defiance after the failed military coup that left 104 soldiers and 161 civilians dead and at least 1,440 people injured. The Turkish armed forces issued a statement Sunday saying the uprising was engineered by “terrorist traitors embedded within the Turkish army who belonged to an illegal organization.” “The coup plotters … have been neutralized as of now and will receive the heaviest punishment permitted by law,” it concluded. Turkish officials said the organizers of the uprising received crucial aid from officers at Incirlik Air Base, a facility that hosts most of the 2,500 U.S. military personnel stationed in Turkey and is a key base for the U.S.-led coalition’s ongoing air campaign to defeat the militant group Islamic State in neighboring Iraq and Syria. Though the base reopened for air operations Sunday after a 24-hour closure, official media reported the arrest of the top Turkish military official at Incirlik, Gen. Bekir Ercan Van. Van was among 10 soldiers arrested at the base, part of an operation Turkish officials say provided air-toair refueling for F-16 fighter jets deployed by the leaders of the coup attempt Friday night and Saturday morn- ing. The F-16s were a crucial part of the coup attempt, used to intimidate government supporters in the streets. Turkish air force helicopters were used to shoot civilian government supporters and attack headquarters of police forces in the capital, Ankara, government officials said. The extent of the coup and who planned it are still largely unknown, although Ankara has blamed followers of Fethullah Gulen, an aging cleric in exile in Pennsylvania accused by the government of engineering the coup attempt and attempting to run a “parallel government.” President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has called for Gulen’s extradition from the U.S. and suggested parliament should lift a moratorium on the death penalty to deal with the cleric and those involved in the uprising. In a rally Saturday, Erdogan publicly addressed President Obama, saying Gulen must be turned over to Turkey, and another official, Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, said failure to do so was tantamount to an act of war. Labor Minister Suleyman Soylu said he believed Washington was behind the coup. On Sunday, Secretary of State John F. Kerry said, “We think it’s irresponsible to have accusations of American involvement, when we’re simply waiting for their request, which we’re absolutely prepared to act on if it meets the legal standard.” Speaking to CNN during a trip to Europe, he said he made it clear to his Turkish counterpart, Mevlut Cavusoglu, in three telephone calls since Friday night, that the U.S. was not “harboring anybody.” In one of those calls, Kerry also urged the Turkish government show “restraint” and “respect for due process” and international law as it pursues those who planned and staged the coup, according to the State Department. Among those killed during the clashes was Erdo- gan’s campaign manager, Erol Olcak, along with his 16year-old son, shot by soldiers as they held the Bosporus Bridge in Istanbul on Friday night. Ilhan Varank, the brother of one of Erdogan’s chief advisors, also was killed at the Istanbul municipality headquarters during a confrontation with soldiers that lasted more than four hours. Erdogan carried the coffin of Varank at a funeral ceremony for him and other victims in the Fatih mosque, about a mile from where they were killed. A crowd of thousands surrounded Erdogan, chanting for the execution of the coup plotters, and the president pledged that parliament would take steps to ensure a “heavy price” for the renegades. Gulen appeared before journalists at his compound in Pennsylvania to deny any involvement. “As someone who has suffered under multiple coups during the past five decades, it is especially insulting to be accused of having any link to such an attempt,” Gulen said. Gulen has lived in exile since the late 1990s, when a secular government allied with the military accused him of attempting to overthrow the government. Erdogan was at the time allied with Gulen, and Erdogan was jailed on similar accusations in 1999. Gulen’s movement, called Hizmet, includes hundreds of schools, banks, trade associations and news outlets, many of which were the largest in the country until a crackdown began against them three years ago. Gulen was accused of trying to take control of the judiciary, police and national intelligence association, and over the last three years, about 4,000 Hizmet associates have been detained, many accused of belonging to a terrorist organization. They include hundreds of journalists, such as Celil Sagir, who had been editor of the Today’s Zaman newspaper until the government seized the publication this [See Arrests, A7] A public relations disaster for coup plotters [Turkey, from A1] Bosporus strait and the control tower at the city’s main airport. They also attacked the MIT national intelligence agency, a major police headquarters, the parliament and the presidential palace in the capital, Ankara. But they forgot to say who they were and what they were up to. Binali Yildirim, the prime minister, beat them to it. Speaking to the news media at 11 p.m. Friday, about an hour into the coup attempt, as tanks sent by the wouldbe junta were rolling through Ankara toward his office, he said that a group in the Turkish military was attempting to topple the government but would fail. It wasn’t until 12:15 a.m. Saturday that the coup plotters took control of the state television broadcaster in Ankara, pointed guns at a news reader and forced her to read a statement declaring their armed takeover. The statement identified them for the first time by their preferred name, the “Peace at Home Council,” a reference to a famous phrase of Kemal Ataturk, the staunchly secularist founder of the modern Turkish republic, who spoke of “peace at home, peace in the world.” The name choice was the first indication that at least some of the coup leaders were unhappy about Erdogan’s moves to elevate the European Pressphoto Agency A MOURNER comforts a police officer during a funeral in Ankara for some of the victims of the failed coup that began Friday night. Turkey’s president had exhorted the public to take to the streets to oppose the coup. role of Islam in state affairs. Minutes after the statement was read, the president responded, possibly from his vacation villa. Blocked from state television, he called the private television network, CNN Turk, using Facetime on his iPhone and exhorted the Turkish public to take to the streets to oppose the coup. He said the coup attempt was being conducted by a “minority within the military” with links to with Fethullah Gulen, a Muslim preacher living in self-exile in the United States, and warned that the plotters would “pay the highest price at the end.” He said that he would return to Ankara. Erdogan got on a helicopter on the advice of a trusted military general, flew to Dalaman airport, near the Aegean coast, and boarded a business jet. But instead of returning to the capital, he flew to Istanbul. That carried its own risks because the control tower was still held by the coup plotters, who had turned off the runway lights and could have been using parked vehicles to block landings. The president discussed the dangers with the pilot, he later told his justice minister, Bekir Bozdag, asking: “Can you land with your own lights even if they don’t allow you to land?” With enough fuel to fly for four hours, the president and the pilot had many options. Finally, they agreed to circle the airfield before deciding whether to land using only the lights of the plane. They touched down in Istanbul shortly before 3 a.m. Back in the Aegean coastal town of Marmaris at the Turban hotel, where Er- dogan had been vacationing, the rebel commanders had just arrived. Three helicopters deposited more than two dozen soldiers in red berets and camouflage uniforms, according to Ali Gundogan, a journalist who had come on his motorbike and climbed over a hotel wall. “I came face to face with them,” he said. “Shoot him!” one of the men ordered. “I am a journalist,” said Gundogan, who added that he showed them his video camera and refused to leave. The soldiers circulated among the hotel guests and security staff, asking for directions to the president’s villa, “since they didn’t know the exact location,” he said. When they found the villa, they threatened to throw in a grenade. Fahri Kasirga, the secretary-general of the presidency, and two bodyguards were still at the hotel. The soldiers took all three hostage. As the night wore on and they were unable to find the president, the soldiers told Gundogan that they had no intention of harming him or anyone else. It seemed they intended only to capture the president and not kill him. The town mayor, Muhammet Ali Acar, said that the soldiers had fired in the air upon arriving at the hotel and that panicked guests called the police to report a takeover by armed men. When large numbers of police finally arrived about 4:30 a.m. and tried to arrest the renegades, a gun battle ensued in which a policeman and a bodyguard were killed, the mayor said. Eventually about 15 of the soldiers got back in their helicopters and flew off, while the rest fled on foot. “They left all their machine guns in the hotel rooms,” said Gundogan. “I guess they didn’t want to carry any heavy equipment with them.” Gutman is a special correspondent. L AT I ME S . CO M WSCE M O NDAY , J U LY 18 , 2 016 A7 GREAT RATES FOR HOMEBUYERS. AND EVERYONE ELSE. Tolga Adanali Associated Press A MAN IN MUGLA spits at a member of Turkey’s armed forces as he is taken 3 Yildirim, has said more than 6,000 coup supporters have been arrested, including 2,800 members of the military and top officers in charge of some of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization ally’s largest divisions. A military helicopter landed late Saturday at Greece’s Alexandroupoli airport carrying eight Turkish officers. Ankara has asked Athens to extradite the men, saying they were part of the coup attempt, and while the helicopter since has been returned to Turkey, the officers have not. It marked the first time Turkish military staff have sought refuge in Greece, a country with which Turkey has been at odds for centuries — they almost went to war in 1996 over an uninhabited islet in the Aegean and have been in contention for decades over the still-divided island of Cyprus. A lawyer for the officers said the men have been charged with illegal entry into Greece, knew nothing about the coup and were ordered to carry some of those injured in the uprising in their helicopter for medical .501 .375 U.S. not ‘harboring anybody,’ Kerry says [Arrests, from A6] year. “Erdogan blames Hizmet for the coup attempt because he wants to use this as an opportunity to prove that Hizmet is an armed terrorist organization. For almost three years, he claimed it, but no one has bought it. Now he probably believes he got the opportunity to persuade people,” Sagir said in an interview. He insisted that despite the years-long campaign against Hizmet, the group had not resorted to violence, and the idea it would do so now with a coup “makes no sense.” He said he and his Zaman colleagues have been publicly condemning the coup attempt and would have joined protesters in the street if not for the tense atmosphere. “If I go outside and someone recognizes me … if someone says they are Hizmet, they will almost certainly be lynched right now,” he said. Aside from Hizmet, Ankara is sifting through the military to find who was behind the coup attempt. The prime minister, 3 30-Year Fixed Conforming Mortgage away by police, along with others suspected of being involved in the coup attempt. % APR % RATE Buy or Refinance A New Car Rates as low as: 1 .49 treatment. The officers have applied for political asylum. Those arrested from the air force were just one part of a faction in the military identified by authorities as participating in the attempted uprising. Gen. 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New vehicles are where you are the original owner and the vehicle is a current (2016) or prior model year (2015). New vehicle payment example: $20,000 loan with rate of 1.49% APR, 36 monthly payments of approximately $568.41. Maximum used car loan advance will be determined by PenFed using a NADA value. Used car loan example: $20,000 loan with a rate of 1.99% APR, 36 monthly payments of approximately $572.76. In order to refinance an existing PenFed auto loan, the advertised rate must be equal to or greater than your current PenFed auto rate. Farooq is a special correspondent. Times staff writer Tracy Wilkinson in Washington and special correspondent Maria Petrakis in Athens contributed to this report. © 2016 Pentagon Federal Credit Union. DOOR & CLOSET SALES EVENT WHOLE HOME SPECIAL $ 129 REALIZE THE VALUE OF YOUR COLLECTION PER INSTALLED DOOR* Promo36 50% % LOWER PRICING Than Home Improvement Stores & Contractors Th he #1 Door Installatio on Company in The U.S S. 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By Lisa Mascaro CLEVELAND — Donald Trump’s climb to the top of the Republican ticket shattered the rules of presidential politics. Now, his nomination is promising to break with tradition like no other political convention in the modern era. Trump’s brash brand of reality-TV politics is expected to produce a crowdpleasing four days in Cleveland. It’s sure to capture the populist sentiment that propelled his rise, but will be absent the pageantry of party elders and statesmen giving approval to a presidential hopeful the Republican establishment has been slow to embrace. Many top officials, including both living former Republican presidents, opted to stay home, not that they were entirely welcome by Trump fans. In their place will be soap opera actors, Trump family friends and several billionaires who will attest to the candidate’s character and savvy. Party leaders are anxious for a display of political unity after the turbulent primary season. They hope the addition of conservative Indiana Gov. Mike Pence to the GOP ticket will comfort the naysayers. But a dogged antiTrump element threatens a high-profile floor fight inside the Quicken Loans Arena, home of the NBA champion Cleveland Cavaliers. Outside, police are bracing for unruly crowds of protesters — white nationalists and black power activists among them — with Ohio’s opencarry guns laws allowing firearms in the streets. “Donald Trump and his campaign know how to put on a show,” Reince Priebus, chairman of the Republican National Committee, said on “Fox News Sunday.” Priebus pointed to Trump’s address at the end of the convention as a crucial moment aimed at setting aside the chaos of the Republican primaries and the divisiveness Trump has wrought in favor of a strong message and a unified front ready to challenge Hillary Clinton and Democrats in an intense general-election battle. “Thursday night is a really big deal for our party: Trump delivering that consistent, measured, pointed message — the balloons drop, the band plays, Donald Trump running for president in the White House,” Priebus said. Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times REPUBLICANS will gather over four days in Cleveland starting Monday. “Don- ald Trump and his campaign know how to put on a show,” one party official said. “That’s where we need to be.” Conventions are normally an opportunity to introduce the presidential ticket to a wider audience of prime-time television viewers — and voters who will be needed on election day. But Trump’s convention, like so much of his campaign, carries a high likelihood of becoming something else. “He’s got to do more here than say, ‘You’re fired,’ ” said Tom Rath, a veteran GOP strategist from New Hampshire, referring to Trump’s signature line from “The Apprentice.” “This is a time to reach and talk to the broader electorate. If you play too much to the group that nominated you, you miss that opportunity to take that second step,” he said. “His acceptance speech has got to be something that people say, ‘Yeah, he could be president.’ ” Ahead of the convention, GOP officials worked frantically to tamp down a delegate uprising trying to block Trump’s nomination. Many longtime party volunteers and activists see Trump as insufficiently conservative and not representative of core GOP values. They prefer other candidates, including Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, and tried to change the rules to allow delegates to vote for the can- didate of their choosing, rather than for the winner of their state primaries. Last week, Priebus engaged in intense shuttle diplomacy, dispatched between Trump operatives and rebellious delegates during party organizing meetings, to quell the rebellion. Trump’s team emerged mostly victorious, but made clear it was no more interested in unity than the frustrated minority of delegates under the “Never Trump” banner. “We crushed them,” a triumphant Paul Manafort, Trump’s campaign chairman, assured to CNN. “ ‘Never Trump’ is nevermore. They’re just gone.” Guns a concern as protests begin Cleveland police union wants opencarry law suspended. By Matt Pearce and James Queally CLEVELAND — A top police union official asked Ohio’s governor to temporarily ban guns outside the Republican National Convention in downtown Cleveland after the shooting of several police officers in Louisiana renewed fears about the safety of this week’s political gathering. But a spokeswoman for Gov. John Kasich, a Republican, said Sunday that he did not have the power to suspend the state’s open-carry law. The city has banned a wide variety of potential weapons from the protest zone near the convention — including tennis balls, water pistols and bicycle locks — but cannot limit firearms. The dispute over the open-carry law, which is similar to statutes in most other states, came as protesters from a long list of organizations began to gather here for demonstrations that are expected to last at least until Donald Trump accepts the Republican presidential nomination on Thursday. On Sunday afternoon, a man with an AR-15 semiautomatic rifle, a handgun and ammunition stood in downtown’s Public Square saying he was there to exercise his rights and make a point. “What are you going to do, ban everything that kills people?” Steve Thacker, a 57-year-old information technology engineer from Westlake, Ohio, asked when someone criticized his decision to walk through Cleveland with the rifle. “The point is to protect yourself. This world is not the world I grew up in.” A local resident, Steve Roberts, 61, who was riding his bike through the square, stopped to acknowledge that Thacker was within his rights, but asked him to leave. “You’ve shown it. Why don’t you take it back?” Roberts, who was wearing a “Stand for Love” T-shirt, told Thacker. “I find it offensive.” The miniature drama between the men could be one of many that will play out as viewpoints collide in Cleveland this week — not just left versus right, but sometimes Photographs by Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times CHELSEA BYERS of Los Angeles and other members of the antiwar group Code Pink join anti-Donald Trump and Black Lives Matter protesters in a march. STEVE THACKER of Westlake, Ohio, walks through downtown Cleveland with a rifle. far left versus far right. In preparation, metal security fencing stands around the convention site, which is protected by the U.S. Secret Service. The rest is the responsibility of a police force including thousands of officers from agencies from California to Florida who have been sworn in with arrest powers in the city. Police officers with dogs have begun patrolling the streets. “It’s game time,” Cleveland Police Chief Calvin Williams said Sunday morning, “and we’re ready for it.” Black nationalists drew an escort of bicycle officers in helmets and shorts as they marched through the city Saturday. Planes towing banners opposing abortion and supporting the imprisonment of Hillary Clinton circled the city Sunday while hundreds of activists marched through the streets to protest Trump and killings by police. The names of Tamir Rice and Eric Garner, who were killed by police, were invoked as a small but raucous crowd began to chant outside the Cleveland Masonic and Performance Arts Center. “No Trump. No KKK. No fascist USA,” the crowd chanted, with many holding signs that read “Stop Trump” or “Black Lives Matter.” On Monday, one group of anti-Trump activists plan to hold an illegal march to the Quicken Loans Arena, the site of the convention, to have a “clash of ideas” with Trump supporters. The city granted the activists use of a public park but denied them a permit for the route they desired, said organizer Tom Burke, who said they wanted to get “as close as they possibly can” to the GOP delegates shielded behind the metal fencing. “We hope that they’ll hear us inside the convention,” Burke said. “We don’t expect any trouble.” Chelsea Byers, 26, of Los Angeles was dressed in a pink Statue of Liberty costume and said she traveled to Cleveland to protest the Trump and Clinton candidacies. A member of the antiwar group Code Pink, she thought it was important to rail against “war hawks.” “We felt like it was important to stand in solidarity to stop the hate,” she said. Cleveland natives said they were more worried about how out-of-town demonstrators might act as the week goes on. “It’s always a concern because it’s not their city. Whatever they do, they don’t care,” said David Allen, a biker and longtime city resident. “I’m just gonna try and stay away from downtown.” Mike Deighan, a 28-yearold restaurant employee in the downtown area, seemed to be enjoying the fanfare near the Quicken Loans Arena as he purchased a hat from one of several pop-up stands that were selling shirts disparaging Trump and Clinton. But his mood soured when the topic turned to the likely demonstrations later in the week. “I’m not really excited about it at all,” he said. “The only people who are going to destroy this city are the people who aren’t from here.” Along East 55th Street, Brian Lange waved a 2nd Amendment flag proudly as he stood near a vendor hawking pro-Trump paraphernalia. Lange, who is affiliated with the right-wing Oath Keepers group, said he had traveled from Lima, Ohio, to report for his radio show. Although he’d been in Cleveland for less than an hour, he said, someone had already driven by and hurled profanities at him for supporting Trump. Lange, an Air Force veteran, said he just smiled back. “They got the freedom to say whatever they want, as long as they don’t trample on my rights,” Lange said. “I just consider them ill-informed.” Steve Loomis, president of the Cleveland Police Patrolmen’s Assn., who called for the ban on guns outside the convention, said he was not “against the 2nd Amendment.” But recent killings of police in Texas and Louisiana, combined with volatile confrontations that could occur outside the convention, will create situations that are too risky for city police, he said. City officials canceled a security briefing for reporters Sunday night and issued a statement that extended condolences for the deaths of the three officers killed in Baton Rouge, La., but said nothing about whether the shooting would change the security plan. Jeff Larson, chief executive of the Republican National Convention, told reporters in a briefing that “I feel good about the security plan.” Cleveland police have had “a number of big events that have taken place with open carry without any issues,” Larson said. He added: “It is the constitution in Ohio. The governor can’t simply say, I’m going to relax it for a day or tighten it up for a five-day period of time.” matt.pearce@latimes.com james.queally@latimes.com Times staff writer Michael Finnegan contributed to this report. On Sunday, he added: “This is a Donald Trump convention.” The resistant delegates, though, have not gone away completely. Many have spent their adult lives volunteering for the party, and have promised a showdown once the convention is gaveled to order Monday. “It’s just beginning,” said Kendal Unruh, a mother from suburban Denver and organizer of the effort. Meantime, even Trump supporters were headscratching over the week’s lineup after Trump promised a “winner’s night” and A-list celebrities that had yet to appear. Some just wished they had a schedule to plan the week, as would normally be available days ahead of time. Even the theme of the event — “America First” — harked back to an isolationist era in American politics, though Trump’s campaign counsel, Donald F. McGahn, said it was simply an extension of Trump’s slogan, “Make America Great Again.” “You’re going to see a little bit of a different convention than years past,” McGahn said. “There are going to be some politicians speaking, but you’re going to see some sports figures, some celebrities, that sort of thing — and a number of people who know Mr. Trump personally.” Prime time kicks off with a “Duck Dynasty” star and Scott Baio, known to generations of TV viewers for his roles on “Happy Days” and “Charles in Charge.” Trump’s wife, Melania, will also speak. The lineup also includes speeches by Trump’s adult children, billionaire backers including Californians Peter Thiel and Tom Barrack, and Calvin Klein model Antonio Sabato Jr., the Italian-born soap star. To be sure, the convention will include traditions, with House Speaker Paul D. Ryan presiding as chairman. Also, each night will focus on core topics. Monday is devoted to national security, with an emphasis on the 2012 terrorist attack in Benghazi, Libya. Tuesday will be the economy, when Ryan, also the party’s 2012 vice presidential nominee, will deliver a prime-time address. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky will speak, as will Trump’s primary-season rivals, including Cruz and Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin. Sen. Marco Rubio, who is campaigning for reelection in Florida, will send a video message. But the 2008 and 2012 GOP nominees, Sen. John McCain of Arizona and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, are not expected to attend, nor are former Presidents George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush. Another glaring absence is Trump rival John Kasich, the Ohio governor, who will be in his home state but staying away from the convention hall. “Over the last couple of years, there’s been a lot of narratives about establishment and rebellions and everything like that,” said Trump top aide Bill McGinley. “One of the things that we’re going to be seeing over the next couple of days is going to be a very active floor that’s going to promote Mr. Trump, that’s going to nominate him as president and that we are going to come out of Cleveland unified.” Running short of cash after some corporate sponsors declined to back the event, Republican officials made an overt plea last week to billionaire casino mogul Sheldon Adelson to help cover the tab. Officials downplayed the shortfall as routine for producing a big event. The RNC’s chief strategist, Sean Spicer, told CNN that the convention would be “like nothing that has ever been seen.” Spicer said that security from more than 70 federal, state and local law enforcement entities would “make sure that this is the safest place on earth.” lisa.mascaro@latimes.com L AT I ME S . CO M WSCE A9 M O NDAY , J U LY 18 , 2 016 How Trump dilutes his message Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times POLICE BLOCK the street to Cleveland City Hall as anti-Donald Trump protesters march on the eve of the Republican National Conven- tion. Unrest there could help Trump portray himself as the “law and order” candidate, but he has also been accused of fomenting violence. George Skelton recalls when Ronald Reagan gave President Ford a strong challenge in 1976. B1 Watch a gavel-to-gavel live-stream of the Republican National Convention. latimes.com/conventions Join Times journalists on Thursday and July 28 in downtown L.A. for free convention watch parties. RSVP at latimes.com/conventionparty message. Trump demonstrated that at one of the highestprofile events of the generalelection campaign, the unveiling Saturday of his running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence. Typically, the presumptive nominee’s introduction speech plays heavily on the overarching goals and desires of the ticket, the feats the chosen person has accomplished, and how the choice expands the party’s reach into the electorate. Not Trump’s. His speech drove repeatedly into rhetorical cul-desacs that had one thing in common: They were about him. He spoke of the campaign he had waged and how definitively he had defeated adversaries. He went on at length about Hillary Clinton’s State Department emails, asserting that she had committed crimes for which she would be punished in November. He went on a long soliloquy about the Johnson Amendment, which bans churches from political activity. He talked about his opposition to the North American Free Trade Agreement and the Iraq war, both of which were supported by his new running mate, Pence. Worse, he stood in front of the podium alone, with Pence offstage as if to telegraph that the campaign was still, regardless of his new partner, all about Trump. The problem wasn’t Pence’s feelings — vice presidential candidates quickly get used to serving at the whim of the nominee. The problem was that Trump didn’t cast any of his remarks in the context of American voters. There was no outline of what this new ticket would mean for the lives of the people who will decide the presidency. American voters prefer their candidates to care about them, not themselves. President Obama, in 2012, trailed his opponent, Republican Mitt Romney, NEUROPATHY Frank Gehry in conversation with Christopher Hawthorne PHOTO / Los Angeles Times, Kirk McKoy, 7/27/2014 Mon., August 1 Walt Disney Concert Hall 111 S. Grand Ave., L.A. #IdeasExchange make Americans feel safe in the process. cathleen.decker @latimes.com BE A HOST TO AN INTERNATIONAL STUDENT Earn Up To $925.00 twitter.com/latimes Per Month GLOBAL STUDENT SERVICES, USA 424-204-5128 info@global-student-service.com U.S. COINS & CURRENCY WHAT ARE YOUR TREASURES WORTH? Free Verbal Appraisals Consign Now or Sell Outright Harry Metrano • 310-492-8659 9478 West Olympic Boulevard Beverly Hills, California 90212 Muscle Weakness or Paralysis? Numbness? Tingling? Sharp, Jabbing, or Burning Pain? CIDP? Diabetic Neuropathy? Always Accepting Quality Consignments in 40 Categories Immediate Cash Advances Available Paul R. Minshull #LSM0605473; Heritage Auctions #LSM0602703 & #LSM0624318. 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Download now: latimes.com/ReadingBy9 Refer A Friend GET TICKETS • Orchestra ticket $35 Natan Shaoulian, MD SOLD OUT USC trained neuromuscular specialist with over 15 years of experience • VIP ticket + tour + reception $150 • VIP ticket + reception $75 Cedars Sinai Attending latimes.com/IdeasExchange now under increased pressure to make the election less about his desire to quash Hillary Clinton and more about whether he can 1921-S Half Dollar, MS66 NGC Sold at Auction for $188,000 June 2016 - Long Beach CLINIC presented in association with The Music Center Join a master of contemporary architecture in one of his most acclaimed projects for a fascinating conversation with Los Angeles Times architecture critic Christopher Hawthorne about the future of L.A. Ticket options include a pre-event reception and a walking tour of Grand Avenue architectural landmarks led by Hawthorne. when it came to several qualities important to voters. Exit polls found that voters thought Romney had a better vision, shared their values and was a strong leader. Obama, however, overwhelmed Romney by a 4-1 margin when it came to which candidate was seen by voters as caring more about them. His victory showed the importance of that attribute. Trump now trails Clinton on that count — by 10 percentage points in a recent McClatchy/Marist poll. It’s not that Trump is unable to put himself in the place of voters and see the election options from their perspective. In June, in his first focused speech on Clinton, he directly took on the Democrat’s campaign slogan of “I’m with her.” “You know what my response is to that? I’m with you,” Trump said. That message held promise — but it has been repeated only sparingly since then. Much as Trump won’t stop repeating falsehoods that make him look good — he didn’t oppose the Iraq war initially, for example, even though he says he did — he also makes clear that his comfort zone is talking about himself and his accomplishments, not anyone else. At the very least, he is LAA4181666-1 MORE CONVENTION COVERAGE Member of Neuropathy Association Presented in association with 16EV112 www.NerveMD.org 877-88-NERVE 310-278-2525 Medicare and Most PPOs Including Covered California Accepted LAA3144976-1 [Trump, from A1] the so-called open-carry law, convention Chief Executive Jeff Larson said, “without any issues.” “There’s going to be plenty of law enforcement in downtown Cleveland,” he said. “I think it’s going to be fine.” The events put a fresh focus on the imperative pressing on Trump in coming days: to convince Americans that he can keep them safe, both domestically and abroad. That is a notion he has pushed repeatedly. But more often than not, his detours into other subjects have diluted his message. Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort indicated Sunday that he sees the convention as an unalloyed opportunity for Trump on that score. The convention’s first night, he said, will be focused on how to “make America safe again.” Whether the convention accomplishes that goal rests on two things that are uncontrollable by Manafort or event organizers: an outbreak of violence here or elsewhere, and Donald Trump. Under some circumstances, Trump could benefit from the environment of violence this year. Candidates who portray themselves as the “law and order” alternative have succeeded before; unrest has, if anything, amplified the message of candidates like Richard Nixon, who benefited from protests at his1968 convention. But Trump himself has been accused this year of fomenting violence with remarks aimed at protesters inside his events, so he could be seen in some quarters as lacking real concern for outbreaks. That possibility is magnified by his reactions to charged events, which have sometimes been layered with insouciance rather than sobriety. Trump dealt with Sunday’s Baton Rouge news on Twitter, his favorite communications vehicle. “President Obama just had a news conference, but he doesn’t have a clue,” he wrote. “Our country is a divided crime scene, and it will only get worse.” Minutes earlier, he alluded to his regular campaign assertions that only he can bring the required toughness to bear in the White House. “Our country is totally divided and our enemies are watching,” he said. “We are not looking good, we are not looking smart, we are not looking tough!” As is typical, Trump offered no details about what should be done. Further, his approach touched on one of the elements which has complicated his campaign: His personality and self-focus can get in the way of his 16RB9062 A10 M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 L AT I ME S . CO M MONDAY BUSINESS THE AGENDA: AIRPORT SECURITY Would Israeli-type security measures fly at U.S. airports? Facility near Tel Aviv has been free of hijackings, terrorist attacks since the ’70s By Hugo Martin In the wake of two grisly attacks on European airports, one name has been on the lips of U.S. lawmakers and airport executives: Ben Gurion International Airport. The airport near Tel Aviv, named for Israel’s first prime minister, David BenGurion, has a reputation as one of the world’s most secure airports, where layers of security measures have kept the facility free of hijackings and terrorist attacks since the 1970s. U.S. airport executives and lawmakers have increasingly debated whether the security measures used at Ben Gurion could prevent the kind of bloodshed that took place at airports in Brussels and Istanbul, Turkey, this year. Those measures include widely accepted passenger profiling based on appearance and behavior, multiple security screenings in the terminal and checkpoints in the general vicinity of the airport. Ben Gurion hosted a conference last month attended by airport officials from more than 40 countries to learn about the airport’s security tactics, and former Ben Gurion security officials have testified several times at U.S. congressional hearings over the last few years. “A lot of what the Israelis are doing has informed what we’re doing,” Peter Neffenger, administrator of the Transportation Security Administration, said during a Senate committee hearing on airport security last month. But to adopt most or all of Ben Gurion’s security measures at a facility like Los Angeles International Airport probably would mean higher ticket prices to pay for extra screening measures and longer wait times for more intense questioning by security agents, aviation experts say. At Ben Gurion, travelers are told to arrive at least three hours before any flight, while U.S. officials recommend fliers arrive two hours before a domestic flight. As it is, even a two-hour wait for security screening raises protests among U.S. travelers. Ariel Schalit Associated Press TO ADOPT most or all of Ben Gurion’s security measures at a facility such as LAX probably would result in higher ticket prices and longer wait times, aviation experts say. Above, a passenger at Ben Gurion in 2010. “In Israel, they have a security mentality,” said John Halinski, a security consultant and former deputy administrator at the TSA. “They are willing to accept a lot of things that American travelers are not willing to accept.” Several polls, including the annual J.D. Power airline satisfaction survey, show that passenger satisfaction levels drop significantly if travelers must wait 15 minutes or longer for a boarding pass. “It would be ideal to adopt the Israeli process for security, but it’s about risk versus return on investment,” said Johnathan Tal, a former anti-terrorism security specialist for the Israeli government and president and chief executive of Tal Global, a San Jose security firm. Another problem is sheer size: LAX served 74 million passengers last year, while 16 million travelers passed through Ben Gurion. Still, huge passenger numbers are not a barrier to adopting sound security measures, said Rafi Ron, president of New Age Security Solutions and former director of security at Ben Gurion airport. “That is one of the typical excuses that people use when they don’t want to go into greater investment or adopt a more far-reaching approach to security,” he said. “It’s not a valid excuse.” Oversight of airport security measures also differ. In the U.S., the responsibility for airport security is shared by local airport police and the TSA. At Ben Gurion International Airport, the responsibility for security falls under the airport manager and the airport’s security director, eliminating bureaucratic red tape when changes are needed and finger-pointing when problems arise. “Everything goes under that umbrella,” Ron said. Travelers also are questioned more often, starting more than a mile outside the Israeli airport, where all incoming vehicles are stopped and inspected for car bombs and other weapons. The drivers and passengers also are questioned. At LAX, police sometimes operate a vehicle checkpoint on the ramp leading into the airport, but the dates, times and duration of the checkpoint operation are determined randomly by a computer program to ensure terrorists don’t know when to expect the checkpoint. At Ben Gurion, armed security agents patrol the airport property and terminals with the authority to stop and question any passenger and demand to see identification and other documents. The security agents are typically former members of the Israeli military who have been known to ask travelers to show hotel receipts or even open their email accounts to prove they are who they say they are. Since 2007, the TSA has operated a similar program staffed by behavior detection officers, specially trained TSA agents who question passengers acting suspicious or looking nervous. But the program has been under attack by civil rights groups and members of Congress who question whether the tactics are effective and whether the officers target minorities. TSA officials defend the program, saying it does not profile travelers based on race or ethnicity. In the face of such criticism, the TSA reduced the number of behavior detection officers to 2,660 from 3,130 in the last year and cut the number of airports where they serve to 87 from 122. The program is still in place at LAX. But at Ben Gurion, security experts say race and ethnicity are among several factors used to determine who should undergo extra questioning. “It is absolutely true that you are profiling on risk fac- tors, and appearances are one of those factors,” Tal said. After questioning travelers at Ben Gurion, security agents affix a yellow sticker on each traveler’s passport, showing 10 numbers, with the first digit ranging from one to six. A one represents a low-risk traveler, and six represents an extreme threat. The higher the number, the greater scrutiny a passenger can expect, according to several travelers who have flown through Ben Gurion. Tal declined to comment on the 10-digit number system. Ben Gurion also puts luggage through extra screening. Passenger luggage at Ben Gurion is screened when travelers enter the terminal, even before getting a boarding pass, and again after travelers get their boarding passes and go through the security checkpoints. At LAX, luggage is screened only once, after passengers get their boarding passes. Adopting the Israelistyle security measures would increase the time it takes passengers to clear security screening in the U.S. unless airport fees are raised to pay for extra screening agents to perform the added measures, aviation experts say. Instead, the TSA has cut back on screeners in the last year, which explains why the wait times at airports surged at the start of the busy summer travel season, said J. David Cox, president of the American Federation of Government Employees, which represents TSA agents. The TSA now employs about 42,000 screeners, down from 47,000 in 2013. Meanwhile, the number of passengers flying through U.S. airports has jumped 15%, to 740 million a year from 643 million, in that same period. Congress has approved funding to speed up the hiring of 600 new TSA agents and convert hundreds more officers from part-time to full-time employees. “If you increase the security, you are going to have to increase the staff,” Cox said. “It goes hand in hand.” hugo.martin@latimes.com Twitter: @hugomartin Comparing security measures at LAX and Ben Gurion International BEN GURION INTERNATIONAL Vehicle checkpoint Security in checkpoint lines All cars are stopped by Passengers waiting in armed guards outside the checkpoint lines may be airport property to question questioned. Agents can also passengers and inspect the ask to open their email vehicle. accounts or Facebook pages for inspection. Luggage X-rayed before check-in All luggage is X-rayed before the check-in process, with suspicious items put in blast-proof containers and taken to a safe area for examination. Sticky notes Security agents affix a sticker with a set of numbers on each passport. The numbers start with one through six, with one representing very little risk and six representing a serious threat. 64 35 9 68 5 78 Luggage X-rayed after check-in All luggage is X-rayed again after check-in. Metal detectors Passengers go through a screening process without removing their shoes or throwing out bottles of water or baby formula. 50609 63847 LOS ANGELES INTERNATIONAL Cars checked randomly The roadside check for cars operates on a random basis. A computer program determines dates, times and duration of the program. Armed police with K-9 on patrol Armed airport police and K-9 units patrol the airport grounds and terminals on foot, bicycles, motorcycles and in cars. Behavior detection officers Specially trained TSA officers question passengers to try to spot potential terrorists, but only at 87 of the nation’s 450 major airports. Security checkpoints Passengers take off their shoes, belts and coats before undergoing a full-body scan. Luggage X-rayed after check-in Carry-on bags are screened by X-ray machines. Checked bags are screened by X-ray and CT scanners. Note: Graphic shows only a select few security measures disclosed to the public. Sources: Airport security experts from Israel and the United States. Graphics reporting by Hugo Martin Los Angeles Times L AT I ME S . CO M S M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 A11 ‘I’m hit, I’m right in front of it’ Scott Clause Daily Advertiser POLICE LOOK for a suspect in Baton Rouge. East Baton Rouge Parish Mayor Melvin Lee “Kip” Holden, a black Democrat, urged the public to support police: “We are one family, all seeking justice for all of our people.” ARK. LOUISIANA MISS. Baton Rouge New Orleans eH 110 . wy 10 Baton Rouge lin Mississippi River Gulf of Mexico Air [Baton Rouge, from A1] Long appeared to leave a vast, anger-laden online trail documenting his interest in black separatism, fury at police shootings of black men, experience in the Marines and advocacy for vegetarianism. Throughout his postings on social media, Long described violence as the solution to what he saw as oppression of black Americans. “One hundred percent of revolutions, of victims fighting their oppressors, from victims fighting their bullies, 100% have been successful through fighting back through bloodshed,” he says in one video. Sunday’s incident began just after 8:30 a.m. when Baton Rouge police officers and East Baton Rouge sheriff ’s deputies found themselves under sudden attack near a gas station and convenience store on Airline Highway, less than a mile from the Baton Rouge Police Department’s headquarters, an area that has been the scene of repeated protests since the July 5 police shooting of Alton Sterling. Police responded to a call of a suspicious person dressed in black and carrying an assault rifle, walking down Airline Highway near a beauty supply store. “Supposedly a lady came up and said there’s a subject walking with a coat and an assault rifle out here behind the store,” an officer could be heard saying in a recording of the police radio channel posted to Broadcastify.com. Within minutes, the gunman opened fire. “Shots fired, officer down!” another officer reports in the recording. “Shots fired, officer down! Got a city officer down! Shots fired! Shots fired on Airline!” “I’m hit, I’m right in front of it,” an officer replies shortly afterward. “By the carwash. “I’m hit,” he says. “Left arm. Argh.” By 8:48 a.m., emergency workers arrived, according to a timeline issued by the Louisiana State Police. Police then “engaged” the shooter, who died at the scene. Gillian Rose Triche, 31, an Army reservist and nursing student who lives near the scene of the attack, described gunshots — one shot, then more “cracking and echoing.” It sounded like an automatic rifle, said Triche, who served in the Army for 12 years. In the confusion that surrounded the immediate aftermath, some local officials said two other suspects might be at large. Later, officials said the dead gunman was the only person who shot at officers. “We do believe the person who shot and killed our officers, he is the person that we shot and killed,” said Col. Michael D. Edmonson, superintendent of the Louisiana State Police. “We don’t believe we have any shooters holed up.” Still, investigators were working to determine whether Long had help, Maj. Doug Cain, a spokesman for the state police, told reporters. “We are not ready to say he acted alone,” Cain said, noting that two “persons of interest” were picked up after the shooting and brought to the East Baton Rouge Violent Crimes Unit. He was apparently referring to a report that two men in black T-shirts and camouflage shorts had acted suspiciously at a Wal-Mart store in Port Allen. The men, who drove a car with Texas license plates, were detained at a gas station in Addis, southwest of Baton Rouge, but were later released. There was every reason for police to be wary: Four young people were arrested last week and accused of plotting to shoot and kill police officers, part of what authorities described as a “substantial, credible threat” to harm law enforcement officers in the Baton Rouge area. The incident is the nation’s fourth high-profile deadly encounter involving police in the last two weeks. The shooting of Sterling on July 5, captured in an agonizing video, triggered a Justice Department civil rights investigation. A day later, a police officer in Falcon Heights, Minn., fatally shot Philando Castile, a 32-year-old black man, during a traffic stop. BATON ROUGE POLICE DEPT Detailed 10 LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY 1 MILE 12 10 OUR LADY OF THE LAKE MEDICAL CENTER 1,000 FEET Gunman killed HAMMOND AIRE PLAZA Old Hammond Hwy. B-QUIK GAS STATION Multiple officers shot near plaza Sources: Times reporting, Mapbox, OpenStreetMap Los Angeles Times On July 7, a gunman who claimed he was seeking revenge for Sterling’s and Castile’s deaths killed five police officers during a Black Lives Matter protest in Dallas. Baton Rouge Police Chief Carl Dabadie Jr. choked up as he discussed Sunday’s shooting. “This is not going to tarnish this city or this department,” he said. “We will get through this.” East Baton Rouge Parish Mayor Melvin Lee “Kip” Holden, a black Democrat, urged the community to support law enforcement. “We are one family, all seeking justice for all of our people,” he said. The slain officers included two from the Baton Rouge Police Department: Jackson, who had worked on the force for a decade, and Matthew Gerald, a white, 41year-old officer who had been with the department for less than a year. East Baton Rouge Sheriff ’s Deputy Brad Garafola, 45, was also killed. The father of four had been with the sheriff ’s office for 24 years. The sheriff ’s office said Deputies Nicholas Tullier, 41, and Bruce Simmons, 51, were wounded in the attack. Tullier was in critical condition, and Simmons has nonlife-threatening injuries. The third injured officer has not been identified. Jackson, whose wife had given birth this year to their son, Mason, was a “great guy, one of the good cops,” said Marcus Brown, a family friend who regularly saw Jackson. Brown said his cousin was married to Jackson. “He would always throw events at his house for us married couples. We would go over and play games together,” Brown said. “Video games, ‘Madden,’ things like that. He loved basketball. We would talk about sports all the time.” Kristi Godal, a friend and Jackson’s next-door neighbor, said Jackson was the president of their neighborhood association and popular with residents. “He had the best yard. East Baton Rouge Sheriff ’s Office Baton Rouge Police Department Courtesy of Trenisha Jackson SLAIN Sheriff’s Deputy OFFICER Matthew OFFICER Montrell His house always stood out,” Godal said. “People are just flowing by the house, bringing food and in tears.” Since the shooting of Sterling and the ensuing protests, Godal had regularly chatted with Jackson in person and on Facebook about tension in the city. Their conversations grew after Jackson put up a Facebook post on July 8, lamenting the turn of events. “I’m tired physically and emotionally. Disappointed in some family, friends and officers … but hey what’s in your heart is in your heart. I still love you all because hate takes too much energy but I definitely won’t be looking at you the same. Thank you to everyone that has reached out to me or my wife it was needed and much appreciated,” Jackson wrote. “I swear to God I love this city but I wonder if this city loves me. In uniform I get nasty hateful looks and out of uniform some consider me a threat. I’ve experienced so much in my short life and these last 3 days have tested me to the core…. These are trying times. Please don’t let hate infect your heart.” The other day, Godal sent Jackson a message on Facebook encouraging him to stay positive. “You set the tone, I’m proud to know you…. You will be one of the legends, stay the course. God bless you,” she said. “Thank you! Lol!” Jackson wrote back. Within hours of the shooting, Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, took to social media to critique Obama’s leadership. “How many law enforcement and people have to die because of a lack of leadership in our country?” he posted on Facebook. “We demand law and order.” Local and federal officials pledged full support as the investigation unfolded. Agents from the FBI and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were on the scene, Atty. Gen. Loretta Lynch said in a statement, noting that the Justice Department would provide victim services and federal funding support, as well as investigative assistance. “Rest assured, every resource available to the state of Louisiana will be used to ensure the perpetrators are swiftly brought to justice,” Gov. John Bel Edwards said in a statement. As news of the shooting spread, police departments across the country — already on edge after the Dallas attack — were urged to remain cautious. “As we monitor the incident in Baton Rouge, our officers are reminded to use caution and remain vigilant in their patrols,” the Boston Police Department tweeted. The Los Angeles Police Protective League offered prayers and sympathies to Brad Garafola, 45, was a father of four. RETIRED COUPLE Has $$$$ to lend on California Real Estate* V.I.P. TRUST DEED COMPANY OVER 35 YEARS OF FAST FUNDING Principal (818) 248-0000 *Sufficient equity required- noloans consumer loans *No consumer Broker Real Estate License #01041073 CA Dept. of Real Estate, NMLS #339217 Private Party loans generally have higher interest rates, points & fees than conventional documented loans VEHICLE LIEN SALE Thursday July 21, 2016 10am. Inspect 8:30am Cash Only! All Sales, “As Is” 1015 N. Mansfield, LA Hollywood Tow 323-466-5421 Gerald, 41, was new to the Police Department. Jackson, 32, became a father this year. law enforcement officers’ families and friends, as well as pointed criticism of politicians and “anti-police activists.” “To the civic leaders of our nation, the platitudes and ‘rhetorical support’ for law enforcement must end and be replaced with action,” the league said in a statement. “Now that 10 law enforcement officers have been murdered in 10 days, what will you do to keep our communities safe? We need your actions, not your words.” Black Lives Matter activists involved in protests in St. Paul, Minn., Baton Rouge and elsewhere said that they mourned the police deaths but that the movement would carry on. “The movement began in response to violence,” said DeRay Mckesson, a prominent Baltimore-based Black Lives Matter activist who was arrested during protests last week in Baton Rouge. “It has been motivated by a call to end violence. That call to end violence is the same today as it was yesterday.” For Tanya Sterling, Alton Sterling’s cousin, a sense of normality had only slowly begun to return after his funeral Friday. She said she was shocked, angry and saddened when her mother told her of the police officers shot on Sunday. “So much chaos,” she said. “I hate that it was my cousin who passed. I hate that it was him who died and for all this to have happened. I wish that none of this happened.” molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com jaweed.kaleem @latimes.com Times staff writers Hennessy-Fiske and Kaleem reported from Baton Rouge and Los Angeles, respectively, and special correspondent Jarvie from Atlanta. Times staff writers Frank Shyong in Los Angeles and W.J. Hennigan and Del Quentin Wilber in Washington contributed to this report. A12 M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 L AT I ME S . CO M Downfall will define his legacy Mark Boster Los Angeles Times LEE BACA leaves court in February. The former L.A. County sheriff admitted that he lied in a 2013 interview with investigators in which he said he knew little about efforts to derail an FBI probe into county jails. with the U.S. attorney’s office that Baca struck after prosecutors made it clear to him that they were prepared to ask a grand jury to indict him on criminal charges. Monday’s sentencing hearing in U.S. District Judge Percy Anderson’s downtown courtroom is expected to be more tense and dramatic than most as it remains an open question how much prison time, if any, Baca will serve. Before sentencing Baca, Anderson must decide whether the terms of the plea deal Baca and prosecutors reached are acceptable. The agreement calls for Baca to receive no more than six months behind bars. Anderson, who has dealt harsh punishments to Tanaka and the others caught up in the obstruction case, could decide six months in prison is too lenient. If he Al Seib Los Angeles Times FORMER UNDERSHERIFF Paul Tanaka was sen- tenced last month to five years in prison. does, Baca would then have to choose between two unappealing options: Go ahead with the sentencing and accept whatever sentence Anderson has in mind, or withdraw his guilty plea and take his chances with Bothered by LOW BACK PAIN? A local clinical research study is enrolling now. Qualify and you will receive: Investigational medication or placebo for up to 56 weeks Study-related care from a local doctor Reimbursement may be provided for travel and other expenses related to participation. charges the government might decide to bring. The question of how Baca should be punished has grown more complicated in recent weeks after Assistant U.S. Atty. Brandon Fox and Baca’s attorney, Michael Zweiback, revealed in court filings that the former sheriff was in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease. Despite the diagnosis, Fox, who heads the public corruption and civil rights unit, argued to Anderson that Baca still should go to prison for six months. The former sheriff ’s cognitive impairment is “slight,” Fox wrote in court records, adding that there was no evidence Baca’s condition played a role in his lying to federal authorities. The lies came during an interview a year before Baca first consulted a doctor about “memory issues,” Fox wrote. And although Fox conceded Baca did not play as direct a role in the obstruction as the others who have been convicted, a six-month sentence was necessary not only to punish him but to send a message that no one in law enforcement was above the law, even a popular elected official atop one of the country’s largest law enforcement agencies. Zweiback did not deny his client’s misdeeds, writing in a court filing that Baca had “failed” the people he was elected to serve. “His life’s work has ended in a large scale breakdown of the Los Angeles Sheriff ’s Department at a time when he was its leader,” the attorney wrote. But Zweiback implored Anderson to take into account the good Baca did in the Sheriff ’s Department and spare him time in prison. It would be unjust, he said, to let Baca’s failures at the end of his career overshadow his accomplishments. Among dozens of letters filed in support of Baca — including ones from former California governors Gray Davis and Arnold Schwarzenegger, as well as former Mexican President Vicente Fox — was one from an ex-inmate who took education and rehab classes in county jail and said his “life was forever changed by the forward thinking and vision of one man … Sheriff Lee Baca.” Zweiback also raised concerns about whether Baca could receive appropriate medical care in a prison setting, saying his diagnosis of Alzheimer’s has left him in need of “consistent monitoring” and treatments that hope to slow the progress of the disease. Prosecutors rebuffed the questions about Baca’s care with a declaration from a ANNUITY OWNERS COULD PAY UP TO 40% TO THE IRS IN TAXES! Many annuity owners are positioned to lose a significant portion of their annuity’s value to taxes, and most are not even aware of the problem. 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LAA1557326-1 [Baca, from A1] deep-seated problems persisted or worsened under him. The elusiveness that marked Baca’s time in office will meet hard reality Monday morning when he is sentenced in federal court for lying to federal authorities who were investigating attempts by sheriff ’s officials to obstruct an FBI inquiry into abusive deputies working in county jails — an undeniable reckoning that will color his extensive career with disgrace. “Here you had somebody who had good ideals and who, on several important issues, like homelessness and the mentally ill, seemed capable of sounding different and being more understanding,” said Merrick Bobb, who monitored the Sheriff ’s Department for the county for more than two decades. “But after a while, all people will remember is that the sheriff resigned and pleaded guilty to a federal crime. Whatever else he did that was good will be lost.” Bobb and others who worked closely with the sheriff criticized Baca for taking a detached approach to running the department and ceding control to Paul Tanaka, his undersheriff. Tanaka, who was sentenced last month to five years in prison, is one of several sheriff ’s officials and deputies who have been convicted of playing roles in the scheme to obstruct the FBI. Baca, 74, admitted in February that he lied during a 2013 interview with investigators in which he maintained he knew little of the efforts by subordinates to thwart the FBI’s probe into the county jails. In fact, Baca conceded, he had known in advance of a plan to have deputies confront an FBI agent and threaten her with arrest. And he did not contest other allegations, including that he was aware an inmate working as an FBI informant had been hidden from agents. Baca retired months after the interview. The admission came as part of a surprise plea deal Bureau of Prisons medical director, who assured Anderson that Baca would be cared for adequately. Whatever the sentence, the sight of Baca standing before Anderson and being tagged as a felon will serve as an epilogue few could have anticipated during the 15 years Baca ran the Sheriff ’s Department. “I always thought of Baca as the anti-sheriff — thoughtful, philosophical, someone who cared as much about prevention as traditional policing,” said Fernando Guerra, who heads the Center for the Study of Los Angeles at Loyola Marymount University. “It’s still a shock for me to think that he got caught up in this.” To be sure, Baca never followed any conventional playbook for law enforcement leaders. A rail-thin man who rarely carried a sidearm, Baca often greeted other men at public events with a kiss on the cheek and a hug. In 2005, with Compton in the grips of a spasm of gang violence and homicides on a near-record pace, he sent deputies door-to-door in the city to deliver letters inviting gang members and their parents to meet with the sheriff to discuss the “ramifications” of their “decisionmaking process.” And determined to reform inmates during their time in his county jails, Baca created programs for drug addicts, domestic abusers and the mentally ill. He also launched a corporate-style training program for his deputies to tap employees’ potential. Baca’s unorthodox style and endeavors left many inside the department grumbling that he cared more about social work than police work — a charge the sheriff said he wore with pride. And in many ways, it was an attitude ahead of its time. The hard work Baca put in to make the department more inclusive and build ties with minority communities has become standard for police chiefs and sheriffs. But there was no shortage of outright failures and missteps. He was initially defiant in the face of allegations that inmates were being beaten, even though internal department memos had raised concerns about deputies meting out “jailhouse justice.” He came under fire for releasing thousands of inmates early, some of whom went on to commit violent crimes. Baca blamed budget cuts that he said gave him little choice but to close portions of his jails and freeze deputy hiring. Still, he drew worldwide notoriety in 2007 when he released hotel heiress Paris Hilton early from jail. In 2010, the Sheriff ’s Department hired nearly 300 officers from a little-known county police force, including some who had accidentally fired their weapons, had sex at work and solicited prostitutes. Nearly 100 had issues with dishonesty, including lying or falsifying police records, according to documents review by The Times. Baca said his top aide at the time was responsible for the hires. Baca also traveled the world relentlessly, making trips to Pakistan, Jordan and Europe to discuss international terrorism and other issues only tangentially related to the job of a sheriff. The wanderlust was a symptom of a larger shortcoming, said a former county official who worked closely with Baca for many years and considers him a friend. “Lee’s biggest problem was that he saw himself as more than sheriff to L.A., he really thought of himself as a sheriff to the world. He didn’t take care of the work he needed to do here,” the former official said. It was a flaw that ultimately led to Baca’s downfall as the distracted sheriff increasingly ceded control of the day-to-day operations to Tanaka and Bobb, said Guerra and others. “There was always the worry that when you have a philosopher king in charge that the people below him will run roughshod,” Guerra said. “Now, whenever I give a lecture to students about Lee Baca, the first thing I’ll have to say is, ‘This is how it ended.’ ” joel.rubin@latimes.com Twitter: @joelrubin L AT I ME S . CO M / O PI N I O N M O NDAY , J U LY 18 , 2 016 A13 OPINION EDITORIALS ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Leave Ginsburg alone Republicans’ smaller tent for Trump By Erwin Chemerinsky As the GOP’s national convention opens in Cleveland, the party ignores the lessons of 2012 A OP-ED ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- fter Mitt Romney lost the 2012 presidential election, an “autopsy” commissioned by the Republican National Committee concluded that the party needed to reach out to young people and minorities if it wanted to have any hope of regaining the White House. But the Republican National Convention that begins Monday — and the man on whom it will bestow its nomination — seems determined to double down on anger and exclusion. The post-2012 autopsy — officially, the report of the Growth and Opportunity Project — didn’t mince words. “Public perception of the party is at record lows,” it said. “Young voters are increasingly rolling their eyes at what the party represents, and many minorities wrongly think that Republicans do not like them.” The report advocated comprehensive immigration reform and warned that the party had to “make sure young people do not see the party as totally intolerant of alternative points of view,” including on the subject of gay rights. As Republicans convene in Cleveland this week to nominate Donald Trump, those recommendations seem like dispatches from an alternative universe. Not that the trends in voter demographics have dramatically improved for the GOP in four years; instead, the autopsy’s advice has fallen on a new set of deaf ears. With the failure of an attempt to release delegates from their obligation to support Trump on the first ballot, the convention will be a coronation. And the crown will be placed on the head of a candidate who has referred to Mexican immigrants as rapists, proposed a blanket ban on Muslims entering the U.S. and threatened suspected terrorists with treatment “a hell of a lot worse” than waterboarding. The platform set to be adopted at the convention is likely to be even more unappealing to women, minorities, gays and many young voters than Trump is. The document echoes his xenophobic call for a wall to prevent illegal Mexican immigration and specifies that it must cover “the entirety of the Southern border” and be “sufficient to stop both vehicular and pedestrian traffic.” And on social issues, the document actually tacks to Trump’s right. For example, while Trump has said he is anti-abortion (and fleetingly suggested punishing women who have the procedure) the platform recycles a proposal in the 2012 platform for a “human life amendment” to the U.S. Constitution prohibiting abortion. And while Trump has made various statements suggesting that he isn’t hostile to gays and lesbians, the platform is replete with anti-gay provisions, including a call for a constitutional amendment to let states ban gay marriage again. Nor are younger and minority voters likely to be swayed much by Trump’s running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence. Pence’s experience as a governor and member of Congress distinguishes him from Trump, who has never held public office, and so does his more restrained personality. But he is no champion of comprehensive immigration reform. In Congress he sought to require immigrants in the country illegally to deport themselves before seeking legal status; more recently he endorsed Trump’s proposal to temporarily bar all entrants from countries rife with terrorism, after having criticized Trump’s previous call for a blanket ban on Muslims entering the U.S. On social issues, Pence has been a consistent conservative. This year he signed a bill — later blocked by a federal judge — that would have prohibited abortion when the fetus suffered from a disability. Last year he signed a “religious freedom” bill that many feared would permit discrimination against gays and lesbians. (After an uproar he signed a revised version making it clear businesses couldn’t deny service based on sexual orientation.) As a member of Congress, Pence supported a constitutional amendment to limit marriage to a man and a woman and voted not to repeal the “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” policy that required gay service members to keep their sexual orientation secret. No doubt Trump, Pence and other speakers in Cleveland this week will appeal to Americans of all ages and backgrounds to vote Republican. But with this ticket and this platform those appeals are likely to result in a lot of eye-rolling. I magine that you are a person with great influence, highly respected and with a powerful voice that commands enormous attention. Imagine that you see the country heading down a potentially destructive and very dangerous path. Do you sit quietly and, if the worst happens, always regret your silence, or do you speak out even if doing so will subject you to criticism? That is the choice that Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg faced before she publicly criticized Donald Trump and, unlike most commentators, I applaud her decision. Nor do I think she needed to apologize, as she did on Thursday. In three interviews, with reporters from the New York Times, Associated Press and CNN, Ginsburg spoke on a wide array of topics. Much of what she said was unsurprising and not controversial. She expressed pleasure at the Supreme Court’s recent abortion and affirmative action cases, where she was in the majority. She praised President Obama’s nominee for the Supreme Court, Merrick Garland, and said that the court’s work is hindered by the Senate’s failure to consider him. I wish more of the justices would explain that the Senate’s refusal to consider this nomination, as well as nominations for lower federal court judgeships, is seriously interfering with the functioning of the courts. What attracted attention was her sharp criticism of Trump, whom she called a “faker.” She also said that her late husband would have wanted to move to New Zealand if Trump were elected. Ginsburg is 83 years old and has seen in her lifetime the great damage that can be done by a demagogic candidate who professes extreme nationalism and peddles unsubtle racist and anti-Semitic messages. I wonder whether it is a coincidence that Ginsburg criticized Trump soon after his campaign tweeted a six-pointed Star of David superimposed over $100 bills and a photo of Hillary Clinton, perpetuating the age-old offensive association of Jews and money. Ginsburg knows that too often bad things happen because — as the saying goes — good people do nothing. She knew she had a platform and she used it. Uninformed punditry to the contrary, her comments violated no law or ethical rule. The judicial code of ethics says that judges are not to endorse or oppose candidates for elected office. These provisions, however, do not apply to Supreme Court justices. (Whether that exception is reasonable is a separate question.) It’s true that, conventionally, justices steer clear of electoral politics. But that wasn’t always the case: In 1800, the members of the Supreme Court openly campaigned for the reelection of John Adams. This convention of silence, moreover, is inconsistent with one of the most basic underlying principles of the 1st Amendment: that more speech is better in a democracy because it leads to a better-informed population. Pete Souza Chicago Tribune JUSTICE Ruth Bader Ginsburg publicly criticized Donald Trump. Many have claimed that Ginsburg will have no choice but to recuse herself if a case involving Trump comes to the court. I don’t think so. She was not speaking about a pending case. Besides, Sandra Day O’Connor was widely quoted as saying that Al Gore would be “terrible” for the country, and she participated in Bush vs. Gore anyway. Whatever “should” happen, the reality is that Ginsburg will not recuse herself. It is left to each justice to decide whether to participate, and I cannot imagine that Ginsburg will see her comments as disqualifying. She will feel, rightly, that she can decide specific issues that she has not discussed publicly. Nor am I convinced that her comments tarnished the image of the court. Is anyone surprised that a liberal like Ginsburg perceives Trump as a threat to democracy? Did saying it aloud really change anything? On Thursday, Ginsburg tried to put the matter to rest. In a brief statement issued by the court, she said that “judges should avoid commenting on a candidate for public office,” and acknowledged that her remarks were “ill advised.” In the limited sense that her statements attracted criticism, who could disagree? Otherwise, she had nothing to repent. Erwin Chemerinsky is dean of the UC Irvine School of Law. The president is not a scientist By Alex Berezow and Tom Hartsfield T he Journal of the American Medical Assn. recently published a very unusual article: a scientific study authored by a sitting president of the United States. That’s never happened before. In a sense, it’s cool that President Obama cares enough about science to want to publish a paper in one of the world’s leading medical journals. But JAMA has set a bad precedent. The article, on healthcare reform in the United States, is problematic not only in its content but in the threat it poses to the integrity of scientific publishing. Let’s set aside the debate on whether the specific numbers in the article are factual. (Of course, there is certainly room to question Obama’s data. The president writes that “[t]rends in healthcare costs … have been promising,” even though healthcare spending per capita continues to increase.) Far more troubling is the president’s tone, which is often self-congratulatory. “I am proud of the policy changes in the [Affordable Care Act],” he writes, “and the progress that has been EDITOR-IN-CHIEF AND PUBLISHER Davan Maharaj made toward a more affordable, high-quality, and accessible healthcare system.” It would be difficult, if not impossible, to find another paper in any scientific journal in which a politician was allowed to subjectively analyze his own policy and declare it a success. This is a textbook definition of conflict of interest. Moreover, despite the scholarly nature of this academic journal, the president seems incapable of resisting political rhetoric. He glazes over contentious details of the ACA with poorly substantiated claims. For instance, he writes, “For most Americans … Marketplaces are working.” Are they? A majority of Americans want ACA repealed, while others would prefer a universal healthcare system. Worse, when it comes to those who disagree with his ideas, Obama responds with petty jabs. After denouncing “hyperpartisanship,” he then goes on to criticize Republicans for “excessive oversight” and “relentless litigation” that “undermined ACA implementation efforts.” One-sided commentary is perfectly fine for the campaign trail, but it has no place in a scientific journal, or in the scientific record alongside the discoveries of DNA and black holes. On the contrary, a good scientific paper devotes space to seriously considering the objections of other scientists. Failure to do so would often be grounds for rejection. Rather than ignoring or belittling opposing ideas, it is the author’s job to convince his readers that his data and ideas are superior. Obviously, JAMA held the president to a different, lower standard than it would an academic scientist. In fact, JAMA editor in chief Howard Bauchner admitted as much. In an interview with the Chronicle of Higher Education, he said that Obama’s article was peer reviewed, but that he was allowed “a bit more flexibility because of who he is.” He also acknowledged that “we don’t fact-check every fact.” That’s outrageous. Factchecking is integral to peer review. Scientific publications earn their reputations by publishing only studies that hold up under intense logical and empirical scrutiny. The referees who administer this process will often reject an article outright or ask for months of painstaking corrections if they find even a small error. It is neither ethical nor scientifically rigorous to bend the rules based on the identity of the author. Facts, not famous bylines, determine the quality and significance of a scientific study. The bottom line is that the president of the United States patted himself on the back and mocked his political opponents in a highly prestigious scientific journal. No scientist or doctor would have been allowed to publish what he published. It is difficult to fathom what JAMA was thinking. As a major voice in the medical community, it is within JAMA’s best interest to stay out of politics. Otherwise, people, including doctors and scientists, may begin to tune out. Alex Berezow is senior fellow of biomedical science at the American Council on Science and Health. Follow him on Twitter @AlexBerezow. Tom Hartsfield is a nuclear physicist living in Los Alamos, N.M., and a writer for RealClearScience. HOW TO WRITE TO US Please send letters to letters@latimes.com. For submission guidelines, see latimes.com/letters or call 1-800-LA TIMES, ext. 74511. latimes.com/opinion News MANAGING EDITORS Marc Duvoisin, Lawrence Ingrassia DEPUTY MANAGING EDITORS Colin Crawford, Megan Garvey, Scott Kraft ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS Christina Bellantoni, Shelby Grad, Kim Murphy, Michael Whitley Opinion FOUNDED DECEMBER 4, 1881 Nicholas Goldberg EDITOR OF THE EDITORIAL PAGES Juliet Lapidos OP-ED AND SUNDAY OPINION EDITOR OPINION L.A. BLOG BLOWBACK One group is responsible for America’s culture of violence, and it isn’t cops, black Americans, Muslims or rednecks. It’s men. Visit latimes.com/ blowback. Trump’s VP decision: One pirate or two? STAY CONNECTED Why Santa Monica is staying in drought mode. Jennifer Aniston should blame Hollywood, not the tabloids, for body shaming. 8 facebook.com/ latimesopinion 8 twitter.com/ latimesopinion A14 M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 WSCE L AT I ME S . CO M Killings of police echo other attacks TIME TO DOWNSIZE? 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They said only force could effectively counter a culture of white superiority and police abuse, and called on their supporters to kill cops. A spin-off group, the Black Liberation Army, did exactly that, launching numerous attacks in the early 1970s. Members were suspected in bombing a police officer’s funeral, and they were charged with killing four officers in New York, Atlanta and San Francisco. The next year, members shot two officers to death on a sidewalk in New York’s East Village. Slayings of officers peaked in 1973, when 134 died, according to a 1996 report, “Death on Patrol: Felonious Homicides of American Officers,” to the National Institute of Justice. The militant groups were never responsible for the bulk of the killings, which were committed by a variety of criminals. And although the racial animus toward police didn’t vanish with the disintegration of the black power movement, race wasn’t the prime motivator of violence in ensuing years. The report found that from 1980 to 1992, 54.6% of suspected cop killers were white, and 42.8% were black. George Brich Associated Press ASSISTANT CHIEF Daryl Gates of the LAPD with weapons found during Black Panther raids in 1969. By 2005, the number of officers murdered had dropped to 55, and the figure has hovered around that ever since, averaging 49 a year, according to the FBI. About 10 officers a year have been killed in ambushes — either premeditated or unprovoked attacks — between 2005 and last year. Motives for the attacks have been varied, along with the races of the killers. In 2012, in LaPlace, La., two deputies were killed by an anti-government group called the Sovereign Citizens. Of the six suspects arrested, five were white and one was black. In 2013, Riverside Officer Michael Crain was shot at a traffic light by Christopher Dorner, the disgruntled former LAPD officer, who was black. The next year in Las Vegas, a white couple with anti-government leanings shot police Officers Igor Soldo and Alyn Beck while they were eating pizza. A month later, an officer in Gary, Ind., was shot to death in his patrol car, and a 25-year-old black man was charged with the crime. In September, a white survivalist was accused of fatally shooting a Pennsylvania state trooper as he stepped out of his barracks. During a period of furious protest over the police shootings of black men, one attack in particular stirred fears among law enforcement that they could face retaliatory ambushes. On Dec. 20, 2014, Ismaaiyl Brinsley, an unemployed black man who reportedly told his exgirlfriend he wanted to commit suicide, walked up to a patrol car in Brooklyn and shot Officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu to death, then killed himself. Hours before, in a post on Instagram, he said he planned to kill two officers and referenced the police killings of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and Eric Garner in Staten Island, N.Y., as the reason, according to news reports. Anxiety heightened when an officer pumping gas in Texas was gunned down by a black man in August. Now with eight officers killed in 10 days in Dallas and Baton Rouge, many undoubtedly are bracing for 1973 again. joseph.mozingo @latimes.com FIVE DAYS ONLY! 7/20 - 7/27 MIRACLE EAR IS FIELD TESTING Ground Breaking New Technology “I love grandpa’s Try Before you Buy! new ears!” “The turning point for me was when one of the kids told my wife that they didn’t think I cared about them anymore. She said I just don’t listen to her, and that she thinks that I don’t want to play with her. That’s when I realized that I didn’t want to put this off any longer.” M. 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Schaben Los Angeles Times KEITH CHRISTIAN , center, works with Brennan Lamarra, 12, a blind sixth-grader at Clara Barton Elementary School in Anaheim. FULFILLING A VISION Keith Christian is named National Braille Teacher of the Year, the first completely blind educator to receive that honor By Joy Resmovits Open the door and announce yourself. That’s the rule for students entering Keith Christian’s classroom. They step inside and hear the pitter-patter of paws on the carpet as Whitney, a black Labrador, brushes against their legs. If they reach to the right, they feel thin cylinders bedecked with balls, the canes that help them sense objects instead of walking into them. They might also hear the scratch of a 3-D printer, the strum of a guitar, the gentle clacking of fingers on a Braille keyboard. This is a rare classroom, in which both teacher and students are blind or visually impaired. Christian has been teaching such students at Clara Barton Ele- MINA LAMARRA , 8, a blind second-grade student, reads a Braille American flag during Christian’s class at Barton Elementary. Her favorite part of the class has been woodworking. mentary School in Anaheim for more than a decade. He sees them between their regular classes, one on one or in small groups, and teaches them how to read, write, surf the Web, play video games in Braille. This year, the Braille Institute named Christian the National Braille Teacher of the Year, the first totally blind teacher to earn that title. He’s quick to change the subject. He’d rather talk about his students and his goals for them. “A lot of blind kids listen to radios,” Christian said. “I like to give them a craft, something they can do with their hands. I want to give the sense of ‘I can make it, I can build it, I can do it.’ ” He believes in a constant broadening of horizons, of which [See Braille, B7] CAPITOL JOURNAL Reagan was a spark in ’76 Ex-governor fought President Ford hard for nomination GEORGE SKELTON in sacramento Forty years ago, Republicans held a riveting, robust convention in Kansas City, Mo., where a rebel Californian nearly wrested the party’s nomination from a powerful sitting president. Compared to this week’s horror tale in Cleveland, the Kansas City story was like a Frank Capra feel-good movie starring a popular but underestimated former so-called B-movie actor. “I hated that expression,” says Stu Spencer, who was Ronald Reagan’s chief strategist for most of his winning election campaigns. In 1976, however, he was advising the other side: President Gerald R. Ford’s. “Back then everyone was taking Reagan too lightly,” Spencer recalls. “I was running around the White House saying, ‘This guy is tough. He’s serious. He can really win.’ ” The convention showed American politics at its best: rough but respectful, cutthroat but civil. Hip-hop artist the Game urged gang members from across Southern California on Sunday to stop the violence in the midst of the national focus on the recent police shootings of African American men. The Game, whose real name is Jayceon Terrell Taylor, told the hundreds gathered for a town hall-style meeting at a South Los Angeles community center that he was pushing a positive message because one day, he hopes his daughter will be able to walk the streets “a little safer.” “Your life should mean more to you,” he told the crowd. “Your life should mean more to you than what you’re showing.” Nation of Islam Minister Tony Muhammad, who helped organize the event, said it’s time for the black community to come together. “Come on, black community, it’s time for us to stand up and unite,” he said. At one point, Muhammad asked those in the crowd who have lost someone to gang violence to stand. Hundreds did. “Wow,” he said. In an Instagram post before the meeting, the Game, who grew up in Compton, extended his invitation “to all CRIPS, BLOODS, ESE's & all other gang members, major figures & GANG LEADERS from every hood in our city as well as the surrounding cities to our meeting.” The event, billed “Time To Unite: United Hoods + [See Game, B6] Berkeley junior missing in Nice confirmed dead News about Nicolas Leslie, among 84 slain in the Bastille Day terror attack, leaves school ‘heartbroken.’ By Jack Dolan David Hume Kennerly Getty Images RONALD REAGAN waves to the crowd on the last night of the GOP convention in Kansas City as incumbent Gerald Ford watches. In 1980, Reagan won it all. No Donald Trump-like “Lyin’ Jerry” or “Corrupt Ron.” “There was no anti-Ford animus in our meetings,” says Steve Merksamer, then a California delegate, later chief aide to Gov. George Deukmejian and since then a highly successful Sacramento-based political attorney. “Jerry Ford was a good man, well-respected and well-qualified to be president. It’s just that Reagan was exciting and he energized people. Ford didn’t.” Or, as I quoted California state Sen. H.L. Richardson at the convention in a Times story: “Reagan could get a standing ovation in a grave- yard. Ford puts you to sleep by the third paragraph.” Reagan and Ford had fought throughout the primaries. As the convention began, neither had enough delegates to clinch the nomination. But Ford led by an estimated 72, with 119 uncommitted. The former two-term [See Skelton, B8] A UC Berkeley student missing in Nice since Thursday’s terror attack has been confirmed dead, according to university officials. Nicolas Leslie, 20, was on a study abroad program and had gone to the city’s promenade to watch the Bastille Day celebration when a truck raced through the packed crowd, killing 84 and injuring more than 200. Three other UC Berkeley students were injured in the attack, two with broken legs and one with a broken foot. But Leslie was missing, prompting a frantic search by the university, local officials and family. French officials confirmed his death on Sunday, according to a statement released by the university. Leslie is the second UC Berkeley student killed in a UC Berkeley NICOLAS LESLIE, an environmental science student, was “adored.” terrorist attack this summer. Sophomore Tarishi Jain was killed in an attack on a restaurant in Dhaka, Bangladesh, about two weeks ago. “This is tragic, devastating news,” UC Berkeley [See Leslie, B6] Qualified critic of police tactics Cheryl Dorsey, an LAPD officer for 20 years, now advocates for justice reform. B2 B2 M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 L AT I ME S . CO M CALIFORNIA JOURNAL A qualified critic of police tactics Cheryl Dorsey, a 20-year veteran of the LAPD, now advocates for justice reform and accountability. ROBIN ABCARIAN Cheryl Dorsey faced a mirror in a Pasadena hair salon, at the beginning of an appointment that would eat up the whole morning and part of the afternoon. Her stylist, Ursula Simpson, carefully braided Dorsey’s locks before weaving in a spectacular lion’s mane of silver curls. These things take time. Dorsey could ill afford to spend half the day in a salon chair. She’s in demand now as a talking head on shows focused on the recent spate of police shooting deaths of black men and the hideous retaliation killings of officers in Dallas. Dorsey, 58, brings a rare set of credentials to the conversation. She is a black mother of four sons who also happens to be a 20-year veteran of the Los Angeles Police Department. She spent her career in uniform, rising to sergeant before she left in 2000. I heard her on KPCC the other day and thought she brought a lot of credibility to the table, particularly on the subject of the Los Angeles Police Commission’s controversial 3-0 vote to exonerate officers involved in last year’s killing of Redel Jones, a 30-year-old black mother of two who had just robbed a South Los Angeles pharmacy. Jones, who wielded a knife, was shot in an alley after an officer ran toward her, got closer than he intended and could not Robin Abcarian Los Angeles Times ‘We are progressive in our thinking. We want real change, and we have some ideas.’ — C HERYL D ORSEY, former LAPD officer and police reform activist back away when she raised her weapon. The officers violated a number of department rules — including engaging Jones while still in their car, failing to turn on their in-car camera, making simultaneous demands on her — but the shooting was ruled justified. This did not totally compute with me. How do you not follow policy and then not be held responsible, at least in some way, when mayhem ensues? Dorsey is less diplomatic: “They said the tactics were problematic, but the shooting was good. If the tactics are bad, everything that follows is bad. You knew she had a knife, you see her running down an alley. We are not taught to engage with a suspect when we are sitting in the car. We are not taught to run up on people who are armed. Had they not done that, Redel Jones would still be alive.” A similar set of missteps occurred, as she sees it, before officers shot Alton Sterling, the Baton Rouge, La., man whose death this month was caught on video. “Officers responding to a man with a gun?” she said. “Any rational officer would not run into a situation, tackle him, struggle with him and then say, ‘I had to shoot him because he was resisting.’ ” :: Before meeting Dorsey, I decided to read her 2013 memoir, “Black & Blue.” She was inspired to write after Christopher Dorner’s 2013 killing rampage across Southern California and the revelation of his “manifesto,” a chronicle of perceived mistreatment at the hands of the LAPD, which had fired him in 2009. Like many officers, Dorsey could relate — not to Dorner’s actions, but to his rage and sense of powerlessness. “I didn’t know him,” she said. “I don’t condone what he did. But I thought maybe I should speak about what’s going on so that nobody else gets there.” The Dorner tragedy, by the way, also occasioned a spasm of self-reflection in the LAPD. Chief Charlie Beck surveyed his troops and discovered a widespread perception that the LAPD dispensed discipline unfairly, based on skin color, rank and nepotism. Dorsey was the kind of cop who absolutely loved her job (“I loved to issue traffic citations,” she writes. “I really did. Don’t judge me.”) but had conflicts with colleagues and bosses because of her gender, her race, her attitude and the LAPD’s infamous culture of cronyism. She refused a captain’s demand, for instance, to cut her long fingernails because there was no department policy about nails. “I pride myself,” she writes, “in being totally responsible for the department adopting a policy on the length of officers’ fingernails.” Once the policy was on the books, she cut her nails. In 1998, she writes, she nearly lost her job when the LAPD’s internal affairs department discovered that she had called 911 in Altadena to report confrontations with her then-husband, also an LAPD officer. She was accused of “unnecessarily causing the response of an outside agency,” and of lying to the LAPD investigator. She believes her job was saved only because a respected mentor testified on her behalf. Two years later, almost to the minute she qualified, SCIENCE FILE she retired with a full pension. :: In the salon, I mentioned how befuddled I’ve been by all the calls for “hard conversations” about race relations and policing in this country. Haven’t we been talking ourselves hoarse? And haven’t the killings continued apace? “Yes, that’s disingenuous,” Dorsey said. “I think people are tired of talking about it. We want some action. We want accountability.” She belongs to a new group, the National Coalition of Law Enforcement Officers for Justice, Reform and Accountability, which is focused on rooting out the institutionalized or unconscious racism that affects how police departments interact with people of color. “We are not a group of disgruntled black police officers that are just bellyaching,” she said. “We are progressive in our thinking. We want real change, and we have some ideas.” The group, which supports Black Lives Matter, offers a counterpoint to what is often the knee-jerk defensiveness from police unions. “Police unions, a lot of times, say, ‘You have never put on the uniform; you are not qualified,’ ” Dorsey said. “We say, ‘Hold on. We do understand. And we see a better way.’ ” They were not included in the meeting President Obama hosted the other day with police chiefs across the country, who accused him of not appearing sensitive enough to the pressures police face. Nor were they invited to his prime-time town hall meeting Thursday with police supporters and black citizens whose lives have been upended by police shootings. Many critics felt the event focused too much on police hardship, not enough on police reform. But we cannot let the tragedy in Dallas, nor Sunday’s horrendous killings of police in Baton Rouge, obscure the larger issue this country is facing. “When we see white officers dealing with white suspects, they have conversations,” Dorsey said. “Those militia people are aggressive, and the officers will spend so much time explaining things to them. But they don’t extend those same courtesies to black people.” Why is that? Until we can answer that question honestly, all the talking and town halls in the world are not going to change a thing. robin.abcarian @latimes.com Lottery results For Saturday, July 16, 2016 SuperLotto Plus Mega number is Bold 5-24-31-39-43—Mega 24 Jackpot: $17 million Winners per category: Associated Press MIT’S MARGARET HAMILTON sits in an Apollo command module mock-up in 1969. Apollo 11’s code included pop culture references. Space for some cultural bits Shakespeare, ‘Wizard of Oz’ are among gems hidden in Apollo 11’s code DEXTER THOMAS Imagine that it’s the mid-1960s, and NASA has hired you to help put a man on the moon. Flying a spacecraft is incredibly complicated. If the trajectory is even one degree off during reentry, everyone on board could die. Human error is a serious risk. So what do you do? Simple: You write some software to fly it for you. And, because your team has a sense of humor, you call the ignition sequence “BURN, BABY, BURN,” and quote Shakespeare’s “Henry VI” in the code. These and other bizarre quirks are coming to light, thanks to a former NASA intern’s decision to post Apollo 11’s guidance computer code to the Internet, all 36 kilobytes of glory. But first, it might help to know a bit about the computer. Apollo 11’s onboard guidance computer had a processing speed of 1 MHz and had about 4 kilobytes of reusable memory. The original Nintendo Game Boy, released in 1989 a mere 20 years after the first moon landing, was four times as fast at 4 MHz and had double the memory. Or, put another way: The iPhone 6S is at least 1,800 times faster — and has 500,000 times more memory — than the computer that guided Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin on their history-making expedition. But for the time, Apollo 11’s computer was pretty sophisticated and compact, weighing in at a bit over 70 pounds. Now that the code has been released, its page on the software building platform Github has become a thread of endless Apollo 13 jokes. There’s also the occasional sarcastic technical support question (“Error: Cannot open pod bay doors”). But there’s no need to rely on the comments section for jokes. For example, the code that helped the Lunar Module land contains a request for the astronaut to “PLEASE CRANK THE SILLY THING AROUND,” then quotes “The Wizard of Oz.” There’s also a strange line from Shakespeare’s “Henry VI” about “such abominable words as no Christian ear can endure to hear” in the program for the interface, which is called “PINBALL_GAME_BUTTONS_AND_LIGHTS.” Why the name? Apparently, the programmers threw together some code for a demonstration unit that would impress tourists who visited the lab — perhaps like a pinball machine. But then, as a programmer explained, time passed, and “nobody got around to inventing an improvement for the user interface, so the coders simply built it into the flight software.” Then, there’s the master ignition routine, which is (naturally) called “BURN_BABY_BURN.” The annotated code says it’s a reference to the 1965 Watts riots. One of the original programmers has confirmed that it was also a reference to protest movements, noting that “the two biggest news stories were Viet Nam and Black Power, the latter including [black activist] H. Rap Brown and his exhortations to ‘Burn Baby, Burn’ — this was 1967, after all.” Which makes you wonder — if this code were written today, what kind of movements would get a name-check? dexter.thomas @latimes.com Twitter: @dexdigi 5 + Mega 5 4 + Mega 4 3 + Mega 3 2 + Mega 1 + Mega Mega only No. of winners 0 0 12 347 457 12,371 6,535 32,689 50,646 Amount of prize(s) — — $1,606 $92 $63 $11 $11 $2 $1 Powerball Powerball number is bold 11-17-40-50-62—Powerball 26 Jackpot: $333 million California winners per category: 5 + P-ball 5 4 + P-ball 4 3 + P-ball 3 2 + P-ball 1 + P-ball P-ball only No. of winners 0 0 2 78 192 5,313 4,471 34,261 82,580 Amount of prize(s) — — $35,359 $453 $191 $7 $8 $5 $4 Winning jackpot ticket(s) sold in other states: none For Sunday, July 17, 2016 Fantasy Five: 3-9-15-24-25 Daily Four: 8-3-2-3 Daily Three (midday): 8-6-5 Daily Three (evening): 9-4-2 Daily Derby: (11) Money Bags (9) Winning Spirit (4) Big Ben Race time: 1:40.89 Results on the Internet: www.latimes.com/lottery General information: (800) 568-8379 (Results not available at this number) L AT I ME S . CO M M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 B3 LOS ANGELES LAPD TAKES SOME SAFETY STEPS Department will increase helicopter patrols and screenings of 911 calls after killing of Louisiana officers. By Amina Khan Photographs by Harrison Hill Los Angeles Times FRIENDS Franco, left, and Kyle play “Pokemon Go” at Watts Towers last week. A guard has seen more visitors since the game launched. Neighborhood ‘Go’-getters Pokemon game adds new life to some areas by forcing players outside By Ruben Vives The little girl with chipped pink nail polish stopped short of a picnic table outside the Jordan Downs Recreational Center in Watts, scaring a cat as she approached — hands glued to a phone — in search of a magical creature. Visiting from South Gate, her babysitter, Julian Campos, 20, watched from a distance, reflecting on a neighborhood that he left two years before a game called “Pokemon Go” sent the young and not so young questing for digital beings. “Back in my day,” Campos began, sounding much older than his years, “I would’ve had to be right behind her.” A mile away, Kofi Washington, 23, of Inglewood and Jose Zapata, 16, a resident of the Jordan Downs public housing project, held tight to their phones beneath the iconic Watts Towers. In their hunt for Pokemon, they humorously wondered whether the game was delivering a cryptic message about the neighborhood. “Why do I only keep seeing snakes in the hood?” Washington said. “What are they trying to say?” “It’s rats, bats or snakes,” Zapata chimed in, who said he recently, without enough context, told his grandmother that he caught a snake. “Ay sacalo!” she screamed in Spanish, he said. “Get it out!” In the less than two weeks that the viral game “Pokemon Go” has been out, it has already produced a litany of odd doings and mishaps — including former KOFI WASHINGTON , 23, of Inglewood, hunting for Pokemon with Jose Zapata, 16, points to where a digital creature may be near the Watts Towers. “IT’S GOOD to be around a group of people” when playing, Washington says. Above, he displays a tattoo. Marines helping to capture an attempted murder suspect while playing the game in Fullerton and two men falling off a cliff in north San Diego County. But it is also provoking some people to get acquainted with their neighborhood by forcing them to get out into the streets if they want to play. In some of the neighborhoods of L.A. with tougher reputations, it’s also bringing a bit of extra life to places that oddly had more vibrant street scenes during the city’s more violent 1980s and early ’90s. Gustavo Garcia, 44, a longtime Boyle Heights resident, said there was a time in the years that followed when only a few people dared to stay out past sundown in his neighborhood. “You couldn’t even walk to the store,” he said. A few years ago, the neighborhood started to feel much safer. He saw more people jogging and walking around the 19th-century Evergreen Cemetery across the street from his home. Now, even more are showing up, he said, staring at smartphones as they scour for “that Pokemon Pikachu or whatever.” For Washington and Zapata, the game has made them reflect on where they’re willing to go — and at what time — to catch Pokemon. “I usually go out in the morning,” Zapata said. “It’s at night that I don’t go out at all.” “That’s why it’s good to be around a group of people,” Washington said. Ivan Gonzalez, 22, a security guard at a park that is part of the Watts Tower monument, said that since “Pokemon Go” launched, the park has seen more visitors — even on a recent Tuesday night. “The park was pretty packed,” he said. “It’s unique because a lot of people normally don’t show up. It’s the area. It’s Watts.” Sitting on a brown bench, Arthur Jenkins, 54, can remember the dark days. He said there were shootings, stabbings, robberies and rapes at the park at night. “Things have turned around,” Jenkins said. “You have people who can walk around here without worrying about getting robbed or crazy things like that. “It gives me a good feeling. The kids are bringing life to this park.” At Evergreen Park in Boyle Heights, Alma Miranda, 70, said she suddenly began noticing more children walking around with their phones, playing the game. “I thinks it’s great,” she said. “It’s funny to watch them. They’re willing to walk for miles for a little thing.” ruben.vives@latimes.com Twitter: @latvives Cost of Glendale sewer project rises A failure to identify underground boulders leads the city to OK additional $7 million for construction. By Arin Mikailian A Glendale wastewater treatment project will cost about $7 million more than initially planned after a consultant’s report failed to identify underground boulders that would get in the way of construction of a 4,300-foot sewer pipe. The City Council last week unanimously approved the allocation of the additional funds to redo parts of the Chevy Chase Sewer Diversion Project, which will treat wastewater locally instead of letting it flow to a treatment plant in Los Angeles. Last year, the city awarded a $14.1-million contract to Upland-based Mladen Buntich Construction Co., which in November informed city officials there were boulders in the way. Part of the project had to be redesigned, and the need for bigger machinery and bigger pipes arose, said Roubik Golanian, the city’s public works director. “There is going to be extra work, extra effort and extra cost involved to move forward with the work,” he said. The project’s completion will also be delayed by a year, with a target date now set for 2018. The borders of the construction are San Fernando Road, Elk Avenue, Chevy Chase Drive and Pacific Avenue. Fugro Consultants Inc., a geotechnical agency, didn’t identify the subsurface rocks in its soil survey, Golanian said. Golanian said that the experience has been disappointing and frustrating, and that the city is looking into whether Fugro could be held liable. Officials at Fugro’s Los Angeles office referred queries to its Houston office, which did not return calls for comment. The goal of the project is to divert wastewater initially heading for the Hyperion Plant for treatment in Los Angeles and instead send it to the Los Angeles Glendale Water Reclamation Plant. Another component of the project would have some of the wastewater be converted into recycled water for city vehicles, such as street sweepers, saving about 2.5 million gallons per year. Golanian said because of the savings, it was estimated the project would recoup its cost in 14 years, but with the delay and additional costs, it will probably take about 17 to 21 years for that to happen. But City Manager Scott Ochoa told council mem- bers that moving forward with the project would still be worthwhile because once costs have been recouped, the diversion project will save the city about $1 million a year. Council members elected to stay with Mladen Buntich Construction Co., although the option to terminate the contract and find another contractor to do the work was also on the table. The additional money will come from the public works department’s sewer fund, which had enough to cover the extra work. arin.mikailian @latimes.com Twitter: @ArinMikailian Mikailian writes for Times Community News. The Los Angeles Police Department will increase helicopter patrols and the screenings of 911 calls in the wake of the fatal shootings of three Baton Rouge officers, Mayor Eric Garcetti announced Sunday. Under the move, the LAPD will also shift Metropolitan Division officers to help back up patrol officers. “Today, we are adding resources to make sure that our Los Angeles Police Department and other public safety agencies are supported,” Garcetti said in a statement. The boost in resources comes after two Baton Rouge police officers and one East Baton Rouge sheriff ’s deputy were shot and killed Sunday morning. Several other officers were also injured before the suspect, identified as 29-year-old Gavin E. Long of Kansas City, Mo., was shot by police. “I condemn this violence in the strongest possible terms. There is no justification for the taking of the lives of officers who were in their communities doing their job today,” Garcetti said in a statement, calling the recent shootings targeting law-enforcement officers “a horrifying trend.” The Louisiana killings follow the death of Alton Sterling, a 37-year-old black man who was shot by police July 5. On July 6, Philando Castile, a 32-year-old black man, was shot by a police officer in Minnesota during a traffic stop. One day later, a gunman killed five officers during a Black Lives Matter protest in Dallas in apparent retaliation for the deaths of Sterling and Castile. The Los Angeles Police Protective League issued a statement decrying “the platitudes and ‘rhetorical support’ for law enforcement” and issued a call for more concrete action. “In just over one week’s time, this nation has seen its law enforcement officers targeted, hunted and murdered again,” the league said in the statement. “We cannot keep our neighborhoods safe if the men and women we ask to protect our communities face ambush around any potential street corner.” Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck called for more dialogue even as he condemned the violence against law enforcement officers. “The events that have triggered this national discussion about policing in America are necessary, but must be free of violence if meaningful change is to be achieved,” Beck said. Beck sent an internal video to officers Sunday after the deadly shooting in Baton Rouge, explaining the heightened safety measures the LAPD has taken to protect police as they respond to calls. amina.khan@latimes.com Al Seib Los Angeles Times LAPD CHIEF Charlie Beck points to a mourning band on his badge. MONDAY, JULY 18, 2016 SALES EVENTS Auctions Classic Cars 68 Dodge Coronet Hemi 426, 4-Speed, 1911 Pierce Arrow, 1911 Duro Car, 1911 Kissel, 1921 Ford Model T, 1979 Corvette & More. See Web or Call. www.gouldauction.com 661-587-3123 July 23rd Bakersfield, CA General Announcements DID YOU KNOW Newspapergenerated content is so valuable it’s taken and repeated, condensed, broadcast, tweeted, discussed, posted, copied, edited, and emailed countless times throughout the day by others? Discover the Power of Newspaper Advertising. For a free brochure call 916-2886011 or email cecelia@cnpa. com (CDCN) EVERY BUSINESS has a story to tell! 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Order now! 877-357-7486 (CDCN) NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that on Wednesday, August 3, 2016, a public hearing as required by Section 147(f) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the ``Code``) will be held by the California Health Facilities Financing Authority (the ``Authority``) with respect to the proposed issuance by the Authority of its revenue notes in one or more series in an amount not to exceed $36,400,000 (the ``Notes``). The proceeds of the Notes will be used by Casa Colina, Inc. (the ``Borrower``): (1) to refinance the acquisition, construction, equipping and improve-ment of certain health facilities, which were previously financed or refinanced by the Cali-fornia Health Facilities Financing Authority Variable Rate Revenue Bonds (Casa Colina), Series 2011, located at or on the Casa Colina campus, located gener-ally at 255 East Bonita Avenue, Pomona, California 91767, which campus is comprised of the area bound by North Garey Avenue and Bonita Avenue in Pomona; and (2) to pay certain expenses incurred in connection with the issuance of the Notes. The facilities referred to above are owned and operated by the Borrower or one of its affiliates, Casa Colina Hospital and Centers for Health Care, formerly known as Casa Colina Hospital for Rehabilitative Medicine, Casa Colina Centers for Rehabilitation Foundation, Casa Colina Centers for Rehabilitation, Inc., Casa Colina Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Services, Inc. and Padua Village, Inc., each a nonprofit public benefit corporation duly organized and existing under the laws of the State of California and described in Section 501(c) (3) of the Code. The hearing will commence at 10:00 a.m., or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard, and will be held in Suite 590, 915 Capitol Mall, Sacramento, California. Interested persons wishing to express their views on the issuance of the Notes or on the nature and location of the facilities proposed to be refinanced may attend the public hearing in person or by phone (888) 240-3210 (participant code 955669 or TDD (916) 654-9922 or, prior to the time of the hearing, may submit written comments to Diane Stanton, Execu-tive Director, California Health Facilities Financ-ing Authority, 915 Capitol Mall, Suite 590, Sacramento, California 95814. The Authority may limit the time available for persons attending the public hearing to provide comments while assuring such persons a reasonable opportunity to be heard. Dated: July 18, 2016. CN926962 Jul 18, 2016 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that on Wednesday, August 3, 2016, a public hearing as required by Section 147(f) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the “Code”) will be held by the California Health Facilities Financing Authority (the “Authority”) with respect to the proposed issuance by the Authority of its revenue notes in one or more series in an amount not to exceed $36,400,000 (the “Notes”). The proceeds of the Notes will be used by Casa Colina, Inc. (the “Borrower”): (1) to refinance the acquisition, construction, equipping and improvement of certain health facilities, which were previously financed or refinanced by the California Health Facilities Financing Authority Variable Rate Revenue Bonds (Casa Colina), Series 2011, located at or on the Casa Colina campus, located generally at 255 East Bonita Avenue, Pomona, California 91767, which campus is comprised of the area bound by North Garey Avenue and Bonita Avenue in Pomona; and (2) to pay certain expenses incurred in connection with the issuance of the Notes. The facilities referred to above are owned and operated by the Borrower or one of its affiliates, Casa Colina Hospital and Centers for Health Care, formerly known as Casa Colina Hospital for Rehabilitative Medicine, Casa Colina Centers for Rehabilitation Foundation, Casa Colina Centers for Rehabilitation, Inc., Casa Colina Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Services, Inc. and Padua Village, Inc., each a nonprofit public benefit corporation duly organized and existing under the laws of the State of California and described in Section 501(c) (3) of the Code. The hearing will commence at 10:00 a.m., or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard, and will be held in Suite 590, 915 Capitol Mall, Sacramento, California. Interested persons wishing to express their views on the issuance of the Notes or on the nature and location of the facilities proposed to be refinanced may attend the public hearing in person or by phone (888) 240-3210 (participant code 955669 or TDD (916) 654-9922) or, prior to the time of the hearing, may submit written comments to Diane Stanton, Executive Director, California Health Facilities Financing Authority, 915 Capitol Mall, Suite 590, Sacramento, California 95814. The Authority may limit the time available for persons attending the public hearing to provide comments while assuring such persons a reasonable opportunity to be heard. Dated: July 18, 2016. Lung Cancer? And Age 60+? You And Your Family May Be Entitled To Significant Cash Award. Call 844-828-8959 for Information. No Risk. No Money Out Of Pocket. (CDCN) Lowest Prices on Health & Dental Insurance. We have the best rates from top companies! Call Now! 855-7886539 (CDCN) Services For Seniors A PLACE FOR MOM. 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You have 30 CALENDAR DAYS after this summons and legal papers are served on you to file a written response at this court and have a copy served on the plaintiff. A letter or phone call will not protect you. Your written response must be in proper legal form if you want the court to hear your case. There may be a court form that you can use for your response. You can find these court forms and more information at the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www. courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), your county law library, or the courthouse nearest you. If you cannot pay the filing fee, ask the court clerk for a fee waiver form. If you do not file your response on time, you may lose the case by default, and your wages, money, and property may be taken without further warning from the court. There are other legal requirements. You may want to call an attorney right away. If you do not know an attorney, you may want to call an attorney referral service. If you cannot afford an attorney, you may be eligible for free legal services from a nonprofit legal services program. You can locate these nonprofit groups at the California Legal Services Web Site (www. lawhelpcalifornia.org), the California Courts Online Self-Help Center (www.courtinfo.ca.gov/selfhelp), or by contacting your local court or county bar association. NOTE: The court has a statutory lien for waived fees and costs on any settlement or arbitration award of $10,000 or more in a civil case. The court’s lien must be paid before the court will dismiss the case. іAVISO! Lo han demandado. Si no responde dentro de 30 dias, la corte puede decider en su contra sin escuchar su version. Lea la informacion a continuacion. Tiene 30 DIAS DE CALENDARIO despues de que le entreguen esta citacion y papeles legales para presenter una respuesta por escrito en esta corte y hacer que se entregue una copia al demandante. Una carta o una llamada telefonica no lo protegen. Su respuesta por escrito tiene que estar en formato legal correcto si desea que procesen su caso en la corte. Es posible que haya un formulario que usted pueda usar para su respuesta. Puede encontrar estos formularios de la corte y mas informacion en el Centro de Ayuda de las Cortes de California (www.sucorte.ca.gov), en la biblioteca de leyes de su condado o en la corte que le quede mas cerca. Si no puede pagar la cuota de presentacion, pida al secretario de la corte que le de un formulario de exencion de pago de cuotas. Si no presenta su respuesta a tiempo, puede perder el caso por incumplimiento y la corte le podra quitar su sueldo, dinero y bienes sin mas advertencia. Dry Cleaners For Sale in Downey, Ca. Serious buyers with dry cleaning experience please call Jose. Plant + Agency. In business since 2005. Jose Talamantes 562-508-5266 Floor Covering Business For Sale! Established 25yrs. Orange County. Owner retiring. 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NOTICE OF HEARING DATE: August, 31, 2016 TIME: 8:30 AM DEPT: D ROOM: The address of the court is: SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA County of Los Angeles County 600 East Broadway A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation, printed in this county. Dated: July 14, 2016 Darrell Mavis Judge of the Superior Court Published in the Los Angeles Times July 18, 25 & August 1, 8 DRIVER SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS $2000 SIGNING BONUS Experienced Route & Field Trip drivers 21 yrs old. $15-18/hr with $2000 signing bonus. Bring DMV H-6 printout. 401K, Med/Dental bnfts & holiday pay. Call Tumbleweed Transportation @ 310-444-3232. Directions www.tumbleweed transportation.com /bus-yard-directions MANAGEMENT Fuel Sales Manager Major jet fuel supplier seeks Fuel Sales Manager. 5 years sales mgmt. experience and travel required. Will manage National salesforce. 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CO M M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 B5 THE STATE Homeless relieved by arrest San Diego homicide detectives say they have a suspect in the attacks that killed three this month. By Pauline Repard Nelvin C. Cepeda San Diego Union-Tribune NAT U RE I N D E C O M PO S IT I ON Allison Ruppert of Escondido and her daughters Desiree, 5, left, and Destiny, 7, get an up-close look at a dead whale that washed up on an Encinitas beach. The whale is believed to be the same one that beached itself and died in Huntington Beach earlier this year. San Diego schools chief placed on leave Randy Ward, who heads the county education office, was relieved of duty pending an audit. By Maureen Magee and Christine Huard San Diego County Schools Supt. Randy Ward will be placed on administrative leave as the school board launches a forensic audit to examine “concerns related to certain expenditures and compensation” for top education officials. “As elected officials statutorily charged with the oversight of public monies, we must act prudently and in the best interest of the County Office of Education,” the board said in a release last week, which announced that an independent party would conduct the audit. Turmoil has surrounded the San Diego County Office of Education for weeks. A lawsuit has been filed and another one threatened amid mounting accusations of fraud and mismanagement. Even with two lame-duck trustees — and a third headed for a November runoff election — the five-member board is proceeding with changes to its bylaws in an effort to assume more power over an agency where most decisions are made by the superintendent. What’s more, the board, with its fleeting members, is moving ahead with preparations to replace Ward, who announced he would retire next year. Before the announcement of Ward’s leave and the audit, Paulette Donnellon and Mark Powell, who unseated incumbents Mark Anderson and Gregg Robinson in June, both criticized the board for pursuing significant changes before the new trustees take office. A watchdog group is suing the superintendent and chief financial officer, accusing the two of taking raises illegally. On top of that, San Ysidro School District employees have filed a claim seeking wages and benefits they allegedly lost when the county office had financial oversight while the district was on the brink of bankruptcy. Ward, who was unavailable for comment, took a vacation day Thursday after a tense board meeting Wednesday night. Trustees emerged from a closed ses- SAN DIEGO County Schools Supt. Randy Ward will be on paid leave during a forensic audit of “certain expenditures and compensation” for top officials. sion Wednesday to announce that although no action had been taken, a news release would be issued the next day. The board released the information Thursday without comment. “I don’t think there should be action taken until the new board is seated,” said Donnellon, a member of the Escondido Union School District board who unseated Anderson with backing from charter-school advocates. “People are innocent until proven guilty, and due process needs to play out.” Attorney Cory Briggs, who is suing Ward and Assistant Supt. of Business Services Lora Duzyk for the California Taxpayers Action Network, said an audit and paid leave for Ward would be appropriate. “It protects the taxpayers, it protects the agency, and it protects the accused,” Briggs said. “You want a financial expert in there to trace the money — how was it supposed to be spent and how was it actually spent.” The lawsuit alleges the superintendent paid himself illegal retroactive increases without going to the board and accuses him of conflict of interest, self-dealing and abuse of public office. A least $100,000 should be paid back to taxpayers, Briggs said. According to the lawsuit, Ward illegally authorized salary boosts for senior managers, including Duzyk. Duzyk is accused of acting improperly in her role as chief financial officer. Ward was hired as county superintendent in 2006 and signed a $265,000-a-year contract, which has been amended over the years with retroactive salary increases that raised his base compensation to $331,736. In 2010, he took a 3.8% increase that the board had approved two years earlier but he opted to postpone. A separate claim filed July 1 by attorney Michael Aguirre seeks wages and benefits San Ysidro employees allege they lost from 2013 to 2015 when the county office had financial oversight of the district while it was on the brink of bankruptcy. At the time, Duzyk had been appointed by Ward to serve as San Ysidro’s fiscal advisor and was working with school officials to balance the district’s budget. A precursor to a lawsuit, the claim accuses Ward and Duzyk of hiding money from the district to cover up its true fiscal condition. Members of two employee unions — the San Ysidro Education Assn. and California School Employees Assn. — allege the two were intent on taking over the district. San Ysidro was in negative certification at the time, meaning it did not have enough money to pay its bills in the current and subsequent two fiscal years. The status is determined by the district and confirmed by the county office, which oversees the budget matters of the county’s 42 school districts. San Ysidro teachers went on strike in 2014 rather than accept pay cuts. They insisted there was money in a books-and-supplies account to prevent a strike and save the district’s finances. The claim alleges teachers have learned that San Ysidro district “officials have admitted they were directed by county Office of Education leadership to present the district’s budget in an extremely negative (an inaccurate) light during negotia- tions so as to mislead and deceive the association.” A grand jury report released in May found financial mismanagement that stretched back decades in the district and accused the county office of shoddy oversight. In turn, the county office issued a statement that said the grand jury misunderstands the laws governing its role in providing financial oversight to school districts and, as a result, came to the wrong conclusions in assessing the adequacy and appropriateness of its oversight and guidance. In the year since new San Ysidro board members hired a new superintendent, the district has balanced its budget and given its educators and support staff raises. The county board has been pushing for new bylaws that would give elected trustees more power to establish and fund programs, make personnel decisions and set salaries. Meanwhile, teachers, who represent about 10% of the agency’s workforce, are seeking more input in decisions. With an annual operating budget of nearly $600 million, the San Diego County Office of Education offers support services — in the way of budget oversight, curriculum development and teacher training — to the region’s 42 school districts. The office also operates schools for foster youths, severely disabled students, the homeless and those in juvenile hall. maureen.magee @sduniontribune.com christine.huard @sduniontribune.com Magee and Huard write for the San Diego Union-Tribune. Herman Quillion, an outof-work welder from Georgia, wasn’t worried about a serial killer striking homeless men in San Diego “until it was time to lay down to sleep.” “I was sleeping with a bat,” said Quillion, 41, who made his way to San Diego two months ago in hopes of finding work. “Sometimes I couldn’t sleep, when I first heard about it.” His was a familiar story of homeless men, several of whom expressed relief that a suspect was in custody. Homicide investigators on Friday arrested Jon David Guerrero, 39, of San Diego, saying he is the man behind the attacks. Kenneth Moyd, 62, resting on a trolley station bench, said the arrest meant “one less thing to worry about” on San Diego’s streets, where he has lived since 1980. One man stopped rummaging in trash cans at C Street and Fifth Avenue long enough to acknowledge he’d been using “the buddy system” for safer sleeping. “My hat’s off to SDPD for catching him,” he said before moving on. Joshua Jones, 22, spent three months traveling to San Diego from Maine, arriving about the time the killings started. He and six to 10 other homeless individuals have been bedding down near one another in a parking lot, with the business owner’s permission. “I’m really glad he got caught,” he said. He and scores of other homeless across the city were aware that a man was creeping up on people, some while they slept outdoors, and inflicting major wounds on them with some type of weapon that police won’t describe. Three of the five victims died. The attacks started July 3, when a man was killed and his body burned in Bay Park. The next day a man was killed in Ocean Beach and another man was critically injured in the Midway District. A fourth man was attacked in downtown San Diego on July 6 and died three days later. The last attack, in Golden Hill on Friday, was on a man who survived. Guerrero was caught about an hour later. Police said there is clear evidence linking him to the crimes. Guerrero’s father, Jose Guerrero, reached by telephone at his home on Saturday, took issue with the police view. “I think he’s innocent,” he said of his son, adding that his lawyer has advised him not to talk about the case. “I don’t want to make things worse. I think he’ll be released soon. Last night there was another killing, and my son was in jail.” A man was found dead about 10 a.m. Friday, not at night, along Kettner Boulevard. Homicide investigators called the death suspicious but have not said why, nor have they identified the man. Christopher Middleton, 33, who has been sleeping in a tent on an East Village sidewalk for a few weeks, said his girlfriend told him about the killer. “I thought, that’s nice, now I have to worry about ‘I’ve never been in a city that has a mass murderer. You don’t hear about that stuff in Pennsylvania — especially not in Erie.’ — Christopher Middleton, 33, who has been sleeping in a tent on an East Village sidewalk some crazy guy. I’ve never been in a city that has a mass murderer. You don’t hear about that stuff in Pennsylvania — especially not in Erie,” Middleton said of his hometown, where he once worked as a mechanic. Nearby, a 43-year-old man who identified himself only as Robert, an accountant from Phoenix who is hoping for work in San Diego, said he arrived in town a few days before the first attack. “For the first two or three nights, I was really worried about that,” he said. “Anytime anyone went by me, I’d sit bolt upright. After a few weeks — it’s weird — you get used to it.” pauline.repard @sduniontribune.com Pauline Repard San Diego Union-Tribune A MAN identified as Alex, 62, left, and Joshua Jones, 22, were relieved to hear a suspect had been arrested. DONATE YOUR CAR Wheels For Wishes Benefiting Make-A-Wish® Greater Los Angeles *Free Vehicle Pickup ANYWHERE *We Accept All Vehicles Running or Not *We Also Accept Boats, Motorcycles & RVs *Fully Tax Deductible WheelsForWishes.org Call: (213) 465-3770 * Wheels For Wishes is a DBA of Car Donation Foundation. B6 M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 L AT I ME S . CO M CALIFORNIA BRIEFING SOUTH LOS ANGELES Girl, 7, dies in car that strikes home Photographs by Harrison Hill Los Angeles Times RESIDENTS gathered outside a Church of Scientology center in Vermont Knolls take an oath to become united as a community. A call to end the violence [Game, from B1] Gangs Nation,” was supported by Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, according to advertisements. It was held at a Church of Scientology center in the Vermont Knolls neighborhood. Rapper Snoop Dogg, who was billed as a co-host of the event, did not attend. In his Instagram post Sunday morning, before news spread of the killings of three police officers in Baton Rouge, La., the Game wrote that the meeting would be a “much needed conversation” about how participants could do their part to stop urban violence. “Because the sad truth that no one wants to face is, before we can get OUR LIVES TO MATTER to anyone else … We have to show that OUR LIVES MATTER to US!!!!,” he wrote. The speakers Sunday included current gang members, former gang members who now work to help quell violence and Big Boy, a local radio personality. Ben “Taco” Owens, who supervises gang-intervention workers at a local nonprofit, told the group that he believes “that you’re here because you want to change.” “This is a very, very critical moment in our city and in our lives,” he said, adding that two people were killed in Gardena, where he is from, in one week. Michael “Big Mike” Cummings, a gang-intervention worker in Watts, said he is “sick and tired of losing our babies.” “The only thing that needs to be divided by colors is our laundry,” he said. After the event, Dom Black, a 22-year-old who was raised in the surrounding neighborhood of Westmont, stood outside the church. Black said he has been beat up and shot at in his community and wants to see a change. “I came out here because I feel like the change starts inside,” he said. Meanwhile, men and women gathered inside the church continued to sign a banner declaring a Bloods and Crips peace treaty. nicole.santacruz @latimes.com LANCASTER Pedestrian killed in hit-and-run Authorities are searching for the driver of a gold or burgundy GMC van involved in a fatal hit-and-run incident Saturday in Lancaster. A pedestrian was struck and killed as he crossed East Avenue I, near 28th Street East, about 9 p.m., said Lt. Joseph Fender of the Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department. The driver was headed east on the same road when he struck the victim, then fled the scene, Fender said. The pedestrian was taken to Antelope Valley Hospital, where he died of his injuries, Fender said. His name and age have not been released. The van appears to have front-end damage. — Amina Khan SAN DIMAS June 2015 killing may be solved HIP-HOP ARTIST the Game shares a laugh with Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti outside the Scientology center. “Your life should mean more to you than what you’re showing,” the L.A. native told the crowd. A suspect in a string of crimes across the state has allegedly admitted to being involved in the unsolved murder of a San Dimas sandwich shop owner, the Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department said. Sergey Gutsu, 24, was one of two men taken into custody in Sonoma County during a pursuit last week after an armored car robbery. While Gutsu was in custody, detectives learned that he Gutsu was involved in other crimes. During questioning, Gutsu allegedly admitted to being involved in the slaying of Pravin Raojibhai “Peter” Patel, 62. Patel died during an altercation June 2, 2015, when a man entered his store, brandished a handgun and took the contents of the cash register. Patel followed him outside and tried to detain him. The robber shot Patel in the abdomen; he died at a hospital. — Howard Blume WALNUT CREEK MEMBERS of the Black Panthers were among those at the event, billed “Time To Unite: United Hoods + Gangs Nation,” It was supported by Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, according to advertisements. ‘A wonderful, caring young adult’ [Leslie, from B1] Chancellor Nicholas Dirks said Sunday. “All of us in the UC Berkeley family — both here on campus and around the world — are heartbroken to learn that another promising young student has been lost to senseless violence.” Leslie’s Facebook page said he was from Milan, Italy. He had been living in Southern California and attended Torrey Pines High School in San Diego before heading to Berkeley. Leslie’s mother, who is Italian, dispatched family and friends in Europe to A 7-year-old girl was killed Sunday evening when the car she was riding in veered off the road and slammed into a house in South Los Angeles. Critically injured were a 30-year old woman and three young boys who were also in the vehicle. The sedan crashed through fence a and smashed into a brick exterior wall of the house in the 700 block of East 93rd Street. The woman was temporarily trapped in the wreckage, said Brian Humphrey, spokesman for the Los Angeles Fire Department. The girl was, “sadly, beyond our help,” Humphrey said. Rescuers pronounced her dead at the scene. The injured boys are approximately ages 6, 4 and 18 months, Humphrey said. — Jack Dolan check hospitals to try to find her son, according to a family friend who was with her at her Del Mar home Friday. The friend asked to be identified only by her first name, Antonella, to protect her privacy as well as the family’s. Leslie was an only child who was “adored by everyone” who knew him, said Antonella, who described him as “a wonderful, caring young adult, extremely motivated.” Leslie’s uncle and aunt searched the hospitals of Nice, with no luck, according to published reports. The 20-ton truck, driven by Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel, a Tunisian man living in Nice, plowed through the crowd at the city’s promenade for the Bastille Day celebration. The truck traveled nearly a mile, crushing people along the way, before police were able to shoot and kill Bouhlel. Identifying all of the victims has been a painstaking process. French investigators informed the FBI that Leslie was among the dead Sunday, according to the university’s statement. Leslie, a junior, had been studying environmental science. He was one of 85 Berkeley students participating in a summer entrepreneurship program in Nice. Two other students injured in the attack have been released from the hospital and returned to their dorms. A third injured student remains hospitalized with a broken leg. The school said a vigil will be held for Leslie on the Berkeley campus at 4:30 p.m. Monday. jack.dolan@latimes.com Times staff writer Veronica Rocha contributed to this report. Neilson Barnard Getty Images ANOTHER promising young student has been lost to violence, Chancellor Nicholas Dirks said. Driver held after string of attacks A man has been arrested after hitting a pedestrian, ramming a police SUV headon and seriously injuring an officer then stabbing a police dog, authorities said Sunday. Walnut Creek police said in a statement that Rolando Gonzalez, 33, tried to flee after striking the pedestrian Saturday night, then ran into the SUV. The pedestrian has a minor injury, and the officer was seriously injured but is expected to survive. Gonzalez hid in the bushes after the crash. Officers used bean bag rounds and Tasers on Gonzalez as he resisted arrest. Police say they also sent a dog after him that he repeatedly stabbed before he was subdued. Gonzalez was taken to a hospital for unspecified injuries. The dog is expected to survive. — associated press L AT I ME S . CO M M O NDAY , J U LY 18 , 2 016 B7 Where blind kids have no limits [Braille, from B1] understanding Braille is a part. But Christian’s honor comes at a moment when fewer blind or visually impaired students are learning Braille — only 8.5% of them — as the use of software that turns written material into audio soars. Some programs report having difficulty recruiting new instructors for blind students. Christian and organizations representing the blind say that without Braille, their students will never have the same tools as their sighted peers. They might not know how to spell their own names. Christian, who grew up in Garden Grove, was born with retinitis pigmentosa, a condition that as a child gave him low vision but enough sight to learn how to read big print. It was only in college, at Cal State Fullerton, that he realized he had to learn Braille. He was spending hours with his face pressed close to a video monitor as a video magnifier projected enlarged images onto a screen. His eyes had started burning badly. Something had to change. So he started to learn Braille. “It took a long time,” he said. “I think it has a lot to do with why I’m here.” He spent seven years teaching at Nobel Middle School in the Los Angeles Unified School District and moved back to Orange County when his parents got sick. Christian became a teacher, he said, because he hoped to help children avoid his steep learning curve. At Clara Barton, Christian’s students are mainstreamed, meaning they spend most of each day in classes with their peers, learning from the same curriculum. With younger students, he spends time teaching them to discriminate between shapes with their hands so they can figure out which dots are raised and what letters they form in Braille. Older children come to him when they need help with their Braille readers, or writing an essay. From the beginning, he has gone above and beyond to equip his students with skills. At Nobel, he got the idea to teach his students wood shop. Since then, Christian has built many things, guided by online blind woodworkers groups. Now, he has a table saw, band saw and lathe at home. After he cuts boards, his students use files and rasps to shape them. Christian’s classroom showcases their labor. Braille text takes up more space than print, and students had trouble fitting books inside their desks. To solve the problem, they built vertical wooden desk shelves. Later, they added legs underneath the shelves to make room for the Apex, a small black Braille keyboard that connects to the Internet. Students place their fingers atop the keys and feel pins move up and down against their skin, forming each line of text. Christian wishes he could have learned Braille earlier in life, as his students are doing. “It would have been an entirely different experience,” he said. It would have made reading easier as his vision diminished. According to the non- Photographs by KEITH CHRISTIAN has been Brennan Lamarra’s teacher since preschool, where he first taught the student the Braille alphabet. WHEN SHE FIRST started to do woodworking in Christian’s class, Mina Lamarra, 8, said, “I wasn’t sure what was going to happen.” Now, she is confident in her abilities, even recently creating a giraffe. ‘I want to give the sense of “I can make it, I can build it, I can do it.”’ —Keith Christian, teacher of blind and visually impaired students at Barton Elementary School profit American Printing House for the Blind, about 60,000 students in the U.S. were blind in 2014. Only 5,147 were primarily Braille readers. Fourteen percent of adults with visual disabilities had college degrees in 2013, according to the National Federation of the Blind, and 32% had a high school diploma or GED. Just over 40% of working-age adults with significant loss of vision were employed in 2013. It’s hard to find anybody who argues against teaching Four open fire at graduation party One man is killed and two others are hurt at an Artesia celebration. By Frank Shyong Four people crashed a backyard graduation party in Artesia on Saturday night and opened fire, killing one man and wounding two others, authorities said. The shooting occurred about 10 p.m. in the 18000 block of Alburtis Avenue, where authorities found three men suffering from gunshot wounds, said Deputy Lisa Jansen of the Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department. Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times One man was pronounced dead at the scene, and two other men were taken to a hospital, where they were in fair condition, Jansen said. Detectives still are investigating whether anyone at the party knew the men who opened fire, said Sheriff ’s Deputy Katrina Flores. All three of the gunshot victims were attending the party, she said. Authorities have not identified any suspects, and the motive for the shooting is unknown, Jansen said. Saturday’s homicide was the third in Artesia in the last 12 months, according to the Times Homicide Report. frank.shyong@latimes.com Braille. But many people now believe “the myth that current technology can replace Braille,” said Chris Danielsen, a spokesman for the National Federation of the Blind. He contends that students who have some vision should be taught Braille in school because, like Christian’s, their sight probably will decline. One reason for Braille’s current decline may be the growing number of students with multiple disabilities, said Yue-Ting Siu, a Braille educator and consultant. Siu is about to become director of San Francisco State’s program that trains teachers for the blind, one of two such training programs in California. Together, they produced 208 graduates from 2011 to 2015 in a state in which 3,670 students listed visual impairment as their primary disability in December 2015. “It’s an area that not a lot of people know about,” Siu said. The Braille Institute organized the teacher of the year competition in 2007 to try to get the field some attention, though offerings were lean when it solicited nominations. Most years, the average number of nominees was six, said national programs director Sergio Oliva. This year, 13 were nominated. And if it’s hard for districts to find qualified Braille teachers, it’s also hard for a Braille teacher to get enough time with students to teach them all they need to know. Christian wants his students to feel unlimited. Some are afraid to run because of the risk of bumping into things. Christian split a ski pole in half to make it easier to pound it to the ground. Then, he attached a tether and had students hold it while walking around the pole. They followed the circumference of a perfect circle. After walking became running, Christian added bases so students could better understand the arcs of their runs. Christian’s classroom bases are smoke detectors — shock absorbent, so stu- facebook.com/latimes Show Tracker What you’re watching dents can develop muscle memory. They emit a variety of beeps that help runners figure out which base they’re on. Bases in place, Christian joy.resmovits@latimes.com obituarY notices Place a paid Notice: latimes.com/placeobituary Search obituary notice archives: legacy.com/obituaries/latimes MettaM, Cosette Ogawa, Masao “Blackie” Cosette Mettam, beloved mother, grandmother, great-grandmother and friend, died peacefully in her home on December 14, 2015. She was 12 days shy of her 95th birthday. She was born in Indiana on December 26, 1920 to Germaine Dubief Thrasher and George Thrasher. She attended Eagle Rock High School, graduating in 1938. In May 1941 she married Charles Mettam. They were married for 49 years before his death in July 1990. They lived in Solana Beach, California for the early years of their marriage, then in Norwalk, California for a brief time before settling in Culver City, California in the mid 1950s. They raised their three children, Charles Jr., Vickie and Rocky in the house that was filled with happy memories for these three children, 6 grandchildren and 8 great-grandchildren to come. Cosette worked for 20 years as a Human Resources Manager. She loved sewing and embroidery, making all her own dresses, and gifting most who knew her with some beautiful treasures. She loved meeting her friends on Sunday morning at McDonalds for coffee. She loved eating at Roll and Rye. She loved reading the LA Times from cover to cover. She loved doing word search puzzles. When she was still able, she loved walking her neighborhood and waving at neighbors. But most of all, she loved and treasured her family. Masao “Blackie” Ogawa, born and raised in Maui, HI; beloved husband, father, and grandfather, passed away peacefully at his home in Gardena on June 15, 2016, at the age of 83. He is survived by his loving wife, Amy; and his two devoted daughters, Sandy (Gary) Nakashima and Stacey (Mark) Torii. He had five special grandsons: Kyle and Reid Nakashima, and Joey, Jared, and Jack Torii. He is also survived by a sister, Satsue Kanechika of Hawaii; brothers, Rex (Grace) Ogawa and Kats (Helene) Ogawa; sister-in-law, Teresa Ogawa; and many nieces, nephews, and additional relatives. A private service was held on July 17, 2016, at the Gardena Buddhist Church. www.fukuimortuary.com (213) 626-0441 December 26, 1920 - December 14, 2015 Cosette was preceded in death by her husband, daughter and grandson, Richard Homel. She is survived by sons: Charles Jr. and Robert (wife Trisha), grandchildren: Gregory Homel, Christopher Homel, Stacy Dempsey, Lindsey Canizales and Lauren Small; and great-grandchildren: Decker, Laurel and Maryn Dempsey, Halle and Max Homel and Gavin, Diego and Mateo Canizales. Cosette cherished her Aunt Leone and Uncle Jack who helped raise her. Her family is deeply grateful to Jane, Leoni and neighbor Inga, who surrounded and cared for her daily in the last years of her life. She will be deeply missed by all who knew her and loved her and will be remembered for her positive attitude and unconditional love and friendship. latimes.com/ShowTracker added a kickball. Eventually, some students dropped the tether. Brennan Lamarra, 12, a loquacious kid from Fullerton, said he benefits from Christian’s hands-on lessons. One recent day in Christian’s classroom, he dreamed up a design for a mahogany cheese board. Christian and Brennan go way back. Christian taught Brennan the Braille alphabet back when he was in preschool. “What other teacher would spend seven years with a student?” Brennan said. Brennan’s sister, Mina, 8, is also a disciple of Christian’s. Her favorite part has been woodworking. When she started shaping objects, she said, “I didn’t know what was going to happen.” Now she’s so sure-handed, she recently made a giraffe. When Mina grows up, she wants to be a secret agent, she says, as Whitney dozes by her feet. Because she’s stealthy. Because people will look at her and think she’s blind so she can’t do anything. Thanks to Christian, she knows better. To place an obituary ad please go online to: latimes.com/placeobituary May 28, 1933 - June 15, 2016 In Memoriam Dr. Joel D. Weisman February 20, 1943 - July 18, 2009 Beloved Physician, Partner & Friend Forever missing you... with much love--Bill To place an obituary ad please go online to: latimes.com/placeobituary or call 1-800-234-4444 B8 M O N DAY , J U LY 18 , 2 016 L AT I ME S . CO M Today in Southern California Today in North America 5-day forecasts Pressure: High/low temperatures are average forecasts for entire zone. Today L.A. Basin 80/63 Valleys 85/61 Low clouds, then sun Mostly cloudy 83/63 Tuesday Wednesday Clouds to sun 89/65 Thursday Turning sunny 92/66 Turning sunny 92/66 Friday Los Angeles Basin: Low clouds clearing off the coast for afternoon sun. Clear this evening, then low clouds return late tonight. Valleys/canyons: Low clouds clearing to sun. A clear evening; patchy low clouds return late. Orange County: Low clouds Air quality Mostly sunny Partly sunny Mostly sunny Sunny, warm Sunny Beaches 75/63 Low clouds, then sun Mostly cloudy 77/62 Afternoon sun 84/63 Afternoon sun 87/64 Afternoon sun 87/63 89/65 94/68 97/69 99/72 and fog in the morning followed by afternoon sunshine. Low clouds return late tonight. Ventura/Santa Barbara: Morning low clouds and fog clearing off the coast by noon. Sunny well inland. San Diego County: Low clouds clearing by noon. Good Moderate Mountains 79/50 Mostly sunny Partly sunny Mostly sunny Mostly sunny Sunny Sunny well inland. Local mountains: Mostly sunny with near-normal temperatures. Clear tonight. Sunny Tuesday. High desert: Sunny and turning windy in the afternoon. Clear skies tonight with diminishing winds. Unhealthful for: Sensitive people Temps Deserts 109/80 –0 Low H High Cold Front 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100+ Low desert: Sunny and becoming windy in the afternoon. Clear tonight with diminishing winds. San Francisco Bay Area: Low clouds and fog clearing by the afternoon. Otherwise, sunny. Jet Stream Rain T-storm Snow Ice Las Vegas 105/82 Denver 87/62 New York 93/72 Chicago 85/67 Houston 92/78 Not Available Miami 91/80 South Coast Air Quality Management District forecasts air quality SANTA BARBARA CO. Santa Clarita Hesperia 89/57 Santa Paula LOS ANGELES CO. 96/60 81/58 Santa Simi Valley Barbara Chatsworth SAN BERNARDINO CO. Burbank Monrovia 83/57 71/57 84/61 Camarillo Ventura 85/63 85/62 77/59 73/59 Yucca Valley Pomona/ UCLA 99/68 Fairplex Oxnard San Bernardino Westlake Ontario 78/63 LA Downtown 90/60 73/61 Woodland 94/62 80/63 Village 92/63 Hills Whittier Santa Barbara Co. 80/59 Chino 87/58 Height Period Direction Santa Monica Hills Riverside 93/60 RIVERSIDE CO. Fullerton 84/63 1-2’ 16 sec SSW 75/63 93/60 83/66 Torrance Santa Ana Ventura Co. 78/65 ORANGE CO. Palm Hemet Long Height Period Direction 77/65 Springs 93/60 Irvine Beach Newport 2-3’ 15 sec SSW 78/65 109/80 80/65 Beach Mission Viejo Los Angeles Co. 75/65 Temecula Height Period Direction 81/61 Laguna 87/57 2-5’ 16 sec SSW Beach San 75/63 Clemente Orange Co. Surf and sea 77/63 SAN DIEGO CO. Height Period Direction POINT CONCEPTION TO MEXICO Oceanside 1-3’ 14 sec SSW Inner waters: Wind becoming west at 79/61 10-15 knots. Wind waves 1-5 feet; mixed San Diego Co. west and south swells 1-3 feet. Ramona Escondido Height Period Direction 89/53 83/58 Surf zone: Potential for rip currents is 2-4’ 16 sec SSW moderate at Los Angeles and San Diego Poway County beaches. 80/62 VENTURA CO. Ojai 84/58 Tides UV index L.A. Outer Harbor, in feet. Station Morro Bay Santa Barbara Ventura Zuma Beach Marina del Rey Hermosa Beach Cabrillo Beach Hunt’n. Beach Newport Beach Dana Point San Clemente Oceanside Solana Beach Mission Beach Avalon Time 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p 4p Wind W6 SW4 SW4 SSW4 SSW4 SW4 SW4 SW4 SW4 SW4 WSW4 WSW4 W4 W4 SW4 Waves 6/9 1/16 1/15 1/14 1/16 1/16 1/16 1/14 1/14 1/14 1/16 1/16 1/16 1/16 1/16 Temp 58/66 66/71 67/72 70/70 71/73 70/73 69/73 68/74 70/74 71/74 73/75 74/71 74/75 74/72 70/74 Wind speed in knots; wave heights in feet/intervals in seconds; temperatures for sea/air Today 9:54a 8:54p Tue. 10:26a 9:30p Sunday Today Tuesday Hi Lo Prcp. Hi Lo Hi Lo Anaheim 85 Avalon/Catalina 70 Bakersfield 101 Barstow 108 Beaumont 95 Big Bear Lake 77 Bishop 101 Burbank 85 Camarillo 75 Chatsworth 90 Chino 94 Dana Point 71 Death Valley 118 Del Mar 71 Escondido 88 Eureka 61 Fallbrook 84 Fillmore 87 Fresno 99 Fullerton 84 Hemet 93 Hesperia 94 Huntington Beach 75 Idyllwild 84 Irvine 77 L.A. D’ntown/USC 80 L.A. Int’l. Airport 75 65 55 72 74 63 59 53 61 63 61 61 64 90 67 65 53 64 57 67 65 63 74 64 58 67 63 64 -- 83 63 88 63 -- 70 59 76 63 -- 96 67 96 67 -- 105 74 106 75 -- 91 61 94 63 -- 79 50 81 48 -- 99 53 100 53 -- 85 63 91 65 -- 77 59 78 59 -- 84 61 88 64 -- 93 60 98 61 -- 75 64 79 65 -- 114 77 114 78 -- 72 64 74 66 -- 83 58 86 60 -- 63 52 62 51 -- 82 59 85 61 -- 84 58 88 58 -- 96 63 95 63 -- 83 66 89 66 -- 93 60 97 62 -- 96 60 97 62 -- 75 65 78 66 -- 84 60 87 63 -- 78 65 82 64 -- 80 63 83 63 -- 74 64 76 65 3.9 Hi 6.2 Hi 4.1 Hi 6.3 Hi 3:30a 2:38p 4:03a 3:17p -0.4 Lo 2.1 Lo -0.6 Lo 2.0 Lo Almanac Minutes to burn for sensitive people Las Vegas, 25 Los Angeles, 25 Phoenix, 25 San Francisco, 25 Sunday Downtown readings Temperature Los Angeles Fullerton Ventura High/low 80/63 84/65 74/62 High/low a year ago 81/63 89/66 71/60 Normal high/low for date 83/64 83/65 74/58 Record high/date 98/1998 94/2013 86/1955 Record low/date 52/1894 59/2011 49/1966 Precipitation 24-hour total (as of 4 p.m.) 0.00 0.00 0.00 Season total (since Oct. 1) 6.88 5.26 8.43 Last season (Oct. 1 to date) 8.47 6.35 7.99 Season norm (Oct. 1 to date) 14.77 13.69 16.41 Humidity (high/low) 86/48 84/43 87/65 California cities City Trough Seattle 76/59 Los Angeles 80/63 All ▲ Warm Front Anchorage 75/64 Mostly sunny, warm Some sun 110/82 Sunny 111/84 Sunny 115/84 Sunny 115/86 81/48 81/49 83/51 84/50 L ◗ Northeast severe storms: Severe thunderstorms will target the Northeast and eastern parts of the Ohio Valley as a cold front slides through. Thunderstorms will also blanket the Southeast and the Rockies while central portions of the country dry out. Low clouds followed by sun: An upper-level trough of low pressure well to the north will be the driving force for the onshore flow across California. Low clouds and fog will stretch into some inland valleys in the morning. These clouds will clear to the coast by the late morning. Otherwise, sunny inland. Low clouds and fog return late tonight and last into the morning Tuesday. City Sunday Today Tuesday Hi Lo Prcp. Hi Lo Hi Lo Laguna Beach 77 66 -- 75 63 78 64 Lancaster 95 67 -- 96 65 99 66 Long Beach 81 65 -- 80 65 84 65 Mammoth Lakes 81 41 -- 81 42 83 42 Mission Viejo 85 63 -- 81 61 85 62 Monrovia 90 61 -- 85 62 89 65 Monterey 63 53 -- 65 53 64 52 Mt. Wilson 81 65 -- 79 58 83 60 Needles 110 91 -- 111 87 113 88 Newport Beach 72 66 -- 75 65 78 66 Northridge 89 60 -- 87 59 91 63 Oakland 68 57 -- 69 57 70 56 Oceanside 78 63 -- 79 61 82 60 Ojai 88 49 -- 84 58 87 58 Ontario 95 62 -- 92 63 97 65 Oxnard 73 63 -- 73 61 73 60 Palm Springs 109 81 -- 109 80 110 82 Pasadena 85 61 -- 84 61 88 63 Paso Robles 87 48 -- 88 52 92 52 Pomona/Fairplex 92 60 -- 90 60 94 62 Poway 87 63 -- 80 62 82 64 Redding 91 65 -- 88 63 89 62 Rialto 97 60 -- 93 62 97 64 Riverside 94 64 -- 93 60 96 62 Forecasts provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016 San Diego 74/66 Sun and moon Today’s rise/set Los Angeles County Sun 5:55a/8:03p Moon 7:04p/4:50a Full Moon July 19 Last Quarter July 26 Orange County Sun 5:54a/8:02p Moon 7:02p/4:49a New Moon August 2 Ventura County Sun 5:58a/8:08p Moon 7:09p/4:53a First Quarter August 10 City Sunday Today Tuesday Hi Lo Prcp. Hi Lo Hi Lo Sacramento San Bernardino San Clemente Pier San Diego San Francisco San Gabriel San Jose San Luis Obispo Santa Ana Santa Barbara Santa Clarita Santa Monica Pier Santa Paula Santa Rosa Simi Valley Tahoe Valley Temecula Thousand Oaks Torrance UCLA Van Nuys Ventura Whittier Hills Woodland Hills Wrightwood Yorba Linda Yosemite Valley 84 95 68 73 71 xx 80 77 77 71 91 75 87 79 84 78 88 76 77 75 88 74 85 91 82 87 92 56 64 55 66 55 xx 56 56 65 56 71 64 54 52 55 41 61 57 66 62 60 62 64 58 73 63 60 -----xx ---------------------- 83 94 77 74 69 87 74 75 77 71 89 75 81 78 83 74 87 82 78 78 89 73 84 87 86 86 86 56 62 63 66 56 62 56 53 65 57 57 63 58 51 57 41 57 58 65 63 63 59 63 58 59 62 53 85 98 81 78 69 92 74 78 81 74 92 77 88 78 87 76 91 85 80 81 95 75 88 92 89 90 87 55 64 63 67 55 64 55 54 66 57 59 62 58 48 61 41 60 59 67 63 66 59 64 61 61 62 54 U.S. cities High 118 in Death Valley, Calif. Low 28 in West Yellowstone, Mont. City Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo Burlington, Vt. Casper Charleston, S.C. Charleston, W.Va. Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Colo. Springs Columbia, S.C. Columbus Concord, N.H. Dallas/Ft.Worth Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth El Paso Eugene Fairbanks Fargo Flagstaff Grand Junction Grand Rapids Green Bay Hartford Helena Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville, Fla. Kansas City Las Vegas Little Rock Louisville Medford Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, Maine Portland, Ore. Providence Pueblo Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Juan, P.R. Santa Fe Seattle Sunday Hi Lo Prcp. 98 98 74 95 84 98 90 86 92 95 77 95 82 84 90 87 90 91 83 88 89 94 93 87 87 96 91 88 87 77 103 71 63 82 83 100 84 81 92 84 86 96 87 95 92 108 97 90 83 97 91 86 84 94 91 89 94 88 93 92 105 86 78 73 86 102 90 84 90 88 96 99 96 88 98 78 73 -72 -58 -72 .30 75 .05 71 -66 .01 54 Tr 73 1.11 58 -74 -78 -60 -65 -48 -75 .95 64 -69 -61 .30 64 -61 -66 .02 72 .23 60 -66 .07 79 -61 .08 67 .11 64 -60 .14 78 -51 -59 .18 64 .01 54 -68 -55 -59 .36 70 -51 -74 .01 76 Tr 65 .01 73 .04 76 -86 -77 -71 -55 -76 -83 .03 63 .31 65 .36 70 -80 .38 75 -74 -74 .06 76 .20 72 .05 90 Tr 63 -69 .22 60 -73 .47 62 -69 1.89 57 .07 55 -68 .17 76 -64 -77 -79 .29 68 .02 58 -- Today Hi Lo Sky 95 97 75 90 90 95 94 94 93 96 91 95 83 82 93 92 86 93 85 88 89 88 94 87 88 96 87 88 91 76 99 76 58 83 75 89 87 82 92 90 86 92 88 91 93 105 95 91 82 95 91 85 86 95 92 93 93 92 94 95 104 84 84 76 91 99 94 88 87 94 96 98 95 88 94 76 71 68 64 74 75 76 73 62 75 60 70 77 61 60 59 75 70 72 67 69 67 62 74 67 62 78 62 73 63 57 74 54 53 65 51 64 62 58 67 56 75 78 69 72 74 82 76 75 58 78 80 67 68 74 79 72 72 75 76 76 86 66 64 61 71 65 73 64 55 72 77 75 77 78 61 59 Ts Su Su Ts Su Su Su Su Ts Su Su Su Ts Ts Su Ts Ts Ts Pc Ts Ts Ts Ts Ts Ts Su Ts Pc Ts Su Pc Sh R Su Ts Ts Pc Su Su Su Sh Ts Ts Ts Su Su Su Ts Ts Su Su Pc Su Su Ts Ts Su Pc Ts Ts Ts Ts Ts Cy Su Ts Su Ts Su Su Su Pc Su Sh Ts Sh Taken at 3 p.m. Sunday Spokane 82 Springfield, Mo. 92 Tallahassee 92 Tampa 96 Tucson 99 Tulsa 96 Washington, D.C. 93 Wichita 99 Yuma 106 World Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Barbados Beijing Berlin Buenos Aires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Copenhagen Dublin Edinburgh Frankfurt Geneva Havana Ho Chi Minh City Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Kabul Kingston London Madrid Manila Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Mumbai New Delhi Oslo Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Stockholm Sydney Taipei Tehran Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Winnipeg Zurich 95 72 93 117 97 86 87 72 52 95 95 66 90 66 73 61 82 82 90 93 91 88 88 58 92 93 79 99 91 111 74 79 79 86 86 67 84 73 78 75 68 66 97 101 82 79 72 73 72 81 58 75 75 77 82 77 70 76 84 --.05 .03 .01 -Tr --- 82 92 94 91 96 96 96 98 108 58 73 74 77 78 76 73 74 82 Pc Su Ts Ts Ts Su Su Su Su 79 63 72 81 79 79 69 64 30 79 75 52 79 54 55 54 63 52 73 79 83 72 67 36 67 79 64 64 81 89 55 68 55 79 81 48 61 66 59 69 59 55 83 81 74 57 57 57 55 48 .10 .38 ---.03 -.12 ---.02 -.02 .01 .16 --.12 .14 .14 ---.09 .06 ----.10 .01 -.37 .17 .02 -.01 ------.01 --.30 .05 -- 89 75 91 117 95 86 90 72 53 92 93 72 90 66 75 71 82 85 87 90 92 85 84 63 87 91 83 102 94 110 75 83 81 85 91 71 87 69 85 82 70 70 92 98 87 85 70 78 78 83 81 56 76 85 78 78 73 55 38 77 74 51 77 56 57 58 59 60 70 76 84 74 66 38 59 77 64 69 77 81 53 58 67 77 78 54 65 60 65 68 50 56 78 75 74 59 60 59 62 59 Ts Pc Su Su Ts Pc Cy Pc Cy Su Su Ts Pc Sh Pc Sh Su Su Ts Ts Sh Su Su Su Su Ts Pc Su Ts Su Ts Ts Ts Sh Ts Pc Pc Pc Su Pc Ts Su Pc Su Pc Ts Ts Pc Su Su Key: Su sunny; Pc partly cloudy; Cy cloudy; Fg foggy; Prcp precipitation; Dr drizzle; Hz;hazy Sh showers; Ts thunderstorms; R rain; Sn snow; Sf snow flurries; I ice; Rs rain/snow; W windy; Tr trace. Notes: National extremes are for NWS stations; excludes Alaska and Hawaii. Missing data indicated by “xx”. Reagan gave Gerald Ford a big scare in 1976 [Skelton, from B1] governor with the uplifting message flew to the convention committed to stopping the president. That was one huge difference between then and now and why the #NeverTrump movement has been doomed from the start. He may be highly unpopular, but Trump has no rival fighting to be the party’s alternative standard bearer. “Trump has gotten this far because his opposition could never consolidate behind anyone,” says Robert Naylor, a California delegate in 1976, later the Republican leader of the state Assembly and now a veteran lobbyist. “One thing Trump has proven is that philosophical purity is not necessary to get nominated. I don’t find him charismatic at all, but he does have the ability to excite a lot of people.” Weak anti-Trump forces have banked on trying to repeal a convention rule that the Ford camp rammed through in ’76: a requirement that delegates, on the first ballot, be bound by the wishes of their states’ primary voters. No “conscience” voting. Strangely, Reagan’s strategists didn’t aggressively contest that rule. Instead, they staked their insurgency on trying to force a candidate to name his running mate before the nomination roll call. They figured if Ford did that, he would make enemies of several vice pres- Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times DONALD TRUMP appears on a television monitor announcing Indiana Gov. Mike Pence as his running mate on Friday. Preparations are underway at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland for Monday’s convention start. idential wannabes. And it might mitigate some of Reagan’s self-inflicted damage from having selected liberal Sen. Richard B. Schweiker of Pennsylvania as his veep three weeks earlier. Reagan was desperately trying to attract moderate Rust Belt delegates. But the surprise move angered many Southerners. I had followed Reagan on a damage-control trip to Mississippi, where one delegate, asked about Schweiker, told me: “I am still chewing on him. I can’t get him down.” In Kansas City, Californians were given daily assignments to lobby specific delegates from other states. The main organizer was Lyn Nofziger, an aggressive former chief political writer for Copley newspapers who had been Reagan’s first press secretary. “Lyn instructed us how to conduct ourselves,” Naylor recalls. “One of our delegates asked him, ‘What should be our demeanor?’ Lyn answered, ‘The meaner the better.’ ” In fact, one of my most vivid memories of that week was Nofziger grabbing a delegate from another state by the collar and shoving him into a tiny makeshift enclosure on the convention floor for a finger-jabbing, intimidating lecture. But the president had unmatched powers of persuasion — White House dinners, rides on Air Force One and barrels of pork. “A lot of people got flights, got hospitals in their districts, a few guys got pardons,” Spencer remembers, chuckling. The California delegation was relegated to the back of the hall by Forddirected convention planners. From there, they loudly cheered or booed, and stood on their seats, thumbs up or down depending on the situation. As the week progressed they became more disruptive and depressed. Reagan narrowly lost the test vote on the vice presidential mandate. That led to Ford’s first ballot nomination by a relatively small margin of 117 votes. California cast all 167 of its votes for Reagan. This week, all 172 California votes are in Trump’s column. Before Kansas City, there hadn’t been a tightly contested Republican convention in 24 years, since Dwight D. Eisenhower beat Sen. Robert Taft in 1952. And there hasn’t been anything close for either party since 1976. Spencer thinks Reagan strategists blew it by choosing a procedural rule for the test vote. If they’d voted on a philosophical question or just gone straight to the nomination roll call, he says, “I don’t think we could have held our delegates. Many loved Reagan.” The morning after the convention ended, Reagan thanked the California delegation. Reciting an English warrior’s ballad, he said: “I’ll lay me down and bleed awhile. Though I am wounded, I am not slain. I shall rise and fight again.” There weren’t many dry eyes. And the triumphant 1980 campaign was launched. george.skelton @latimes.com D SPORTS M O N D A Y , J U L Y 1 8 , 2 0 1 6 :: L A T I M E S . C O M / S P O R T S DODGERS LOSE ONE FOR THE GRIPPER THE BRITI SH OPEN A pressing Puig strikes out to snuff out rally, and Roberts says he’s ‘squeezing the bat.’ ARIZONA 6 DODGERS 5 By Andy McCullough Gerry Penny European Pressphoto Agency IT WAS A DAY OF FIRSTS for Henrik Stenson, whose first Grand Slam tournament title was also the first by a Scandinavian man. The Swede’s 264 total was best ever at a major, and his 63 on Sunday equaled the lowest final round at any of the four Slams. AN UNDER STATEMENT PHOENIX — The tying run rushed into third base, and after an afternoon of offensive futility, Dodgers Manager Dave Roberts allowed optimism to fill his mind. His team had pushed across five runs during the final two innings against Arizona, including three in the ninth. Now there were runners at the corners and only one out. Two days of miserable situational hitting could be erased in one moment. “I thought we were in a good spot,” Roberts said afterward, inside a clubhouse silenced by a 6-5 defeat. Into the batter’s box stepped Yasiel Puig. He faced Jake Barrett, a rookie searching for his second career save. Barrett opted to challenge his more experienced foe. Puig fouled off a fastball at the waist. He swung through a fastball at the knees, then laid off an offspeed pitch in the dirt. A fastball down the middle [See Dodgers, D5] Stenson sets major record with 264 total, 20 below par, to outduel Mickelson British Open leaderboard By Tod Leonard TROON, Scotland — Phil Mickelson can count the heartaches and disappointments in his 11 secondplace finishes in majors. He can second-guess himself for his shots on the 18th hole at Winged Foot in 2006 or his poor wedge play down the stretch at Merion in 2013. In his mind, those were U.S. Open titles that he frittered away. On Sunday in the British Open at Royal Troon, Mickelson shot a bogey-free six-under-par 65 and lost to the round of a lifetime by someone else. Henrik Stenson’s eight-under 63 tied Johnny Miller for the lowest final round in major championship history. The Swede’s winning total of 264 was the lowest 72-hole score ever in the majors, and his 20-underpar finish matched Jason Day's FINAL ROUND Royal Troon Golf Club, Troon, Scotland Par 71 | 7,190 yards Rounds Stenson Mickelson Holmes Stuart Franklin Getty Images FINISHING second at a major is nothing new for Phil Mick- elson. He’s done it 11 times — but never with a 17-under total. 2016 OLYMPICS 1st 68 63 70 2nd 65 69 70 3rd 68 70 69 4th 63 65 69 TOT +/264 -20 267 -17 278 -6 record for lowest under par, set at last year's PGA Championship. The two-man duel was scintillating stuff, a back-and-forth match that will go down as among the greatest in history. Stenson didn’t get the lead for good until the 14th hole, and then he emphatically seized the Claret Jug — and his first major title — with three straight birdies. [See British Open, D3] ROAD TO RIO 18 DAYS TO SUMMER GAMES Olympic golf field takes shape The men’s competition in Rio is short on winners of major events By Tod Leonard TROON, Scotland — In October of 2009, when the International Olympic Committee decided to bring golf back to the Olympics for the first time since 1904, the top four ranked male players in the world were Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Steve Stricker and Lee Westwood. Those guys must be wondering now: Is there an over-40 portion of the Rio Games? Woods hasn’t played a competitive round in 11 months; Stricker is semiretired; and though Mickelson, who played beautiful in a British Open loss, and Englishman Westwood have their flashes of strong play, none were in position to qualify for their respective country when the deadline arrived a week ago. Maybe that was predictable, given we’re nearly seven years removed from the official announcement, but the International Golf Federation might beg for those four under the circumstances. They could see the aging of the elite players coming, but not the Zika virus. The potential for getting the illness has been the spoken reason used to severely diminish the field before any golfer was in danger of a mosquito bite in Brazil. [See Olympic golf, D2] Matt Sullivan Getty Images U.S. FOURSOME for Olympics men’s golf includes Rickie Fowler, left, and Bubba Wat- son, right, who at No. 5 in the world is the highest-ranked player in the competition. Ross D. Franklin Associated Press STARTING PITCHER Kenta Maeda couldn’t finish the fifth inning and gave up five runs. Weaver, Pujols lead way in sweep Right-hander baffles White Sox over seven innings. Slugger hits two home runs. ANGELS 8, CHICAGO 1 By Pedro Moura Chicago White Sox Manager Robin Ventura watched Jered Weaver with a unique mix of amazement, bewilderment, and resentment Sunday afternoon at Angel Stadium. “You sit there,” Ventura said, “and you marvel at the fact that it’s not going very hard.” Sunday was the second time Ventura has scrutinized the Angels’ righthander this season. The results this time were the same as the last; in Chicago in April, Weaver soft-tossed seven innings of one-run baseball, striking out two and walking two. This time, Weaver struck out one and walked one, yet lobbed seven sharp one-run innings, as the Angels finished off their best weekend in months by routing the White Sox, 8-1. After the Angels’ April victory, Chicago third base[See Angels, D5] D2 M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 L AT I M ES . C O M / SP O RTS PRO CALENDAR MON. 18 WED. 20 THU. 21 FRI. 22 at at at at St. Louis Washington Washington Washington 5:15 4 4 9 a.m. SNLA SNLA SNLA SNLA DODGERS ANGELS TUE. 19 TEXAS 7 FSW TEXAS 7 FSW TEXAS 7 FSW at Houston 5 FSW SEATTLE 7:30* GALAXY Shade denotes home game. *-U.S. Open Cup SPARKS: Tuesday, at Indiana, 5 p.m. PDT, ESPN2 TODAY ON THE AIR TIME EVENT ON THE AIR BASEBALL 4 p.m. New York Mets at Chicago Cubs TV: ESPN 7 p.m. Texas at Angels TV: FS West R: 830, 1330 COLLEGE FOOTBALL 7 a.m. Big 12 media days TV: FS2 10 a.m. College football media days TV: ESPNU CYCLING 5 a.m. Tour de France, Stage 16 TV: NBCSN FIELD HOCKEY 3:30 p.m. Rio send-off series: India at U.S. TV: NBCSN HORSE RACING 1 p.m. Racing Coast to Coast TV: Prime PRO BASKETBALL, NBA SUMMER LEAGUE LAS VEGAS 6 p.m. Championship, Minnesota vs. Chicago TV: ESPN2 TENNIS 11 a.m. ATP, Citi Open, early round TV: Tennis TV programming subject to blackout. For TV channel questions and availability please contact your cable or satellite provider; Note: Times may be different for satellite TV users; consult your guide. Photographs by Another day at the beach Sixth-seeded Brittany Hochevar, above left, and Emily Day get a champagne shower to celebrate defeating top-seeded Summer Ross and Lane Carico, 21-16, 19-21, 19-17, for the AVP Manhattan Beach Open women’s title, and top-seeded Jake Gibb, left, and Casey Patterson return a serve on the way to beating thirdseeded Tri Bourne and John Hyden, 17-21, 21-18, 16-14, for the men’s title. Sparks fail to make history After tying 1998 Comets for best-ever start to WNBA season, L.A. is routed. ATLANTA 91 SPARKS 74 associated press ATLANTA — The Sparks fell short of the fastest start in WNBA history Sunday when they lost to the Atlanta Dream, 91-74. The Sparks (20-2) had tied the 1998 Houston Comets, who finished the regular season 27-3, for the fastest start. The loss also snapped the Sparks’ WNBA record nine-game road winning streak to open a season. Layshia Clarendon had 17 points, eight rebounds and six assists for Atlanta. Angel McCoughtry had 17 points, Bria Holmes scored a career-high-tying 15 and Tiffany Hayes added 14 points for the Dream (12-11). Elizabeth Williams had nine points and 12 rebounds as Atlanta outrebounded the Sparks, 42-34. It was Holmes’ second career start. McCoughtry scored five straight points during a 12-4 run to close the third quarter, giving the Dream their biggest lead to that point, 69-57, going into the fourth. After Candace Parker hit a three and Chelsea Gray made a layup to pull the Sparks within nine, Clarendon converted a three-point play to make it 78-66 with 5:56 left and Atlanta led by double figures the rest of the way. Nneka Ogwumike had 26 points on eight-for-11 shooting, and 12 rebounds for the Sparks. Parker added 22 points, nine rebounds and five assists. The Sparks, who came in allowing 75.1 points per game, gave up their secondhighest point total this season. All top women’s golfers to play at Olympics in Rio de Janeiro [Olympic golf, from D1] With 16 eligible men withdrawing, some shine has been taken off the competition, though it clearly created a golden opportunity for those remaining. “All these golfers who chose to withdraw, amidst legitimate concerns. ... I have a feeling that once the Olympics start and they watch the enormity of what’s going on, they’re going to wish they had made another choice,” said Brandel Cham- DEL MAR RESULTS 3rd day of a 39-day thoroughbred meet. Copyright 2016 by Equibase Company. 7021-FIRST RACE. 6-furlongs. Maiden Special Weight. Fillies and Mares. 3 year olds and up. Purse $63,000. P# Horse Jockey Win Place Show 2 Brainspin Gnzalez 5.20 3.00 2.20 3 Vivacious Beauty Espnoza 3.60 2.40 5 Breathe T Baze 2.10 Also Ran: Floripa, English Queen. Time: 22.87, 46.94, 58.48, 1.10.17. Cloudy & Fast. Trainer: John W. Sadler. Owner: Doubledown Stables, Inc.. Scratched: Pragmatical. Exotics: $1 Exacta (2-3) paid $8.70, $2 Quinella (2-3) paid $10.40, $1 Superfecta (2-3-5-4) paid $55.00, 50-Cent Trifecta (2-3-5) paid $10.35. 7022-SECOND RACE. 11⁄16-mile. Claiming. 3 year olds and up. Claiming Prices $20,000-$18,000. Purse $31,000. P# Horse Jockey Win Place Show 5 Carlsbad Mountain Elliott 11.40 4.40 2.80 1 Thanksgiving Day (IRE) Delgadillo 3.80 2.60 4 Big Tire Gonzalez 2.40 Also Ran: Roman Tizzy, Dive Down, Valentine Boy. Time: 23.66, 47.64, 1.12.19, 1.37.67, 1.44.05. Clear & Fast. Trainer: Robertino Diodoro. Owner: Empire Racing Stables, LLC and Rollingson Racing Stable. Scratched: Iancol. Exotics: $2 Daily Double (2-5) paid $33.20, $1 Exacta (5-1) paid $17.80, $2 Quinella (1-5) paid $12.40, $1 Superfecta (5-1-4-7) paid $122.80, 50-Cent Trifecta (5-1-4) paid $23.65. 7023-THIRD RACE. 5-furlongs. Maiden Claiming. 2 year olds. Claiming Prices $80,000-$70,000. Purse $40,000. P# Horse Jockey Win Place Show 4 Mr. Louis Prat 7.20 3.80 2.60 7 Crime Boss Lezcano 7.20 4.00 8 Cammy’s Music Mldnado 2.60 Also Ran: Thirty Pepperonis, Supreme Giant, Vigorously Juan, Cash Driven, Declassified. Time: 22.45, 46.57, 59.41. Clear & Fast. Trainer: Doug F. O’Neill. Owner: Head of Plains Partners LLC. Scratched: none. Exotics: $2 Daily Double (5-4) paid $31.80, $1 Exacta (4-7) paid $22.80, $2 Quinella (4-7) paid $23.60, $1 Superfecta (4-7-8-5) paid $151.10, 50-Cent Trifecta (4-7-8) paid $33.40, $1 Pick Three (2-5-4) paid $44.30. 7024-FOURTH RACE. 5-furlongs. Maiden Claiming. Fillies. 2 year olds. Claiming Prices $50,000-$40,000. Purse $32,000. P# Horse Jockey Win Place Show 8 Sausalito Sunset Mldnado 6.40 4.20 3.20 3 Chocolate Goddess VanDyke 10.20 6.00 4 Victory Seeker Gonzlez 7.80 Also Ran: It’s Not So Easy, Cheers to You, Allan’s Baby, Champagne Elegance, Highly Classified. Time: 22.58, 46.42, 58.86. Clear & Fast. Trainer: Brian J. Koriner. Owner: Legacy Ranch, Inc.. Scratched: none. Exotics: $2 Daily Double (4-8) paid $30.00, $1 Exacta (8-3) paid $29.30, $2 Quinella (3-8) paid $38.40, $1 Superfecta (8-3-4-2) paid $1,783.00, 50-Cent Trifecta (8-3-4) paid $238.35, $1 Pick Three (5-4-8) paid $65.00. Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times Also Ran: Celebrity Status, Success Rate, Northern Iowa, Apollo Ten, Swiss Cheese, Duke of Doom, Outthink’em, Bananappeal, Forever Freedom. Time: 22.12, 44.86, 1.09.83, 1.16.64. Clear & Fast. Trainer: Gary Sherlock. Owner: Warren, Deanne and Craig. Scratched: Vartan, Tripski. Exotics: $2 Daily Double (4-2) paid $244.40, $1 Exacta (2-9) paid $90.50, $2 Quinella (2-9) paid $53.00, $1 Superfecta (2-9-10-5) paid $6,721.50, 50-Cent Trifecta (2-9-10) paid $812.40, $1 Pick Three (8-4-2) paid $532.20. 7027-SEVENTH RACE. 1 ⁄8-mile turf. ’Sandy Blue H.’. Stakes. Fillies. 3 year olds. Purse $75,000. P# Horse Jockey Win Place Show 4 Barleysugar (IRE) Stevens 22.20 6.80 5.60 3 DH-Cheekaboo Smith 2.40 2.80 5 DH-Mrs. Norris Espnoza 6.20 7.40 Also Ran: Riri, Friulian, Well Caught (IRE), Nine Point Nine, How Unusual, Dynamic Mizzes K, Olotta Shaken. Time: 23.36, 46.79, 1.11.43, 1.36.46, 1.48.70. Clear & Firm. Trainer: Edward R. Freeman. Owner: Red Baron’s Barn LLC and Rancho Temescal. Scratched: Kay Kay. Exotics: $2 Daily Double (2-4) paid $708.20, $1 Exacta (4-3) paid $17.20, $1 Exacta (4-5) paid $73.40, $2 Quinella (3-4) paid $12.80, $2 Quinella (4-5) paid $78.60, $1 Superfecta (4-3-5-2) paid $544.10, $1 Superfecta (4-5-3-2) paid $845.90, 50-Cent Trifecta (4-3-5) paid $61.45, 50-Cent Trifecta (4-5-3) paid $115.40, $1 Pick Three (4-2-4) paid $1,679.30. 1 7028-EIGHTH RACE. 5-furlongs. Maiden Special Weight. 2 year olds. Purse $63,000. P# Horse Jockey Win Place Show 8 Chasing Aces Baze 3.80 2.60 2.10 6 Straight Fire Dsrmaux 4.80 3.20 1 Law Abidin Citizen Smith 2.80 Also Ran: The Rule of King’s, Sorry Erik, The All Button, Lucky Bode, Balandeen. Time: 21.84, 44.49, 56.21. Clear & Fast. Trainer: Peter Miller. Owner: Rockingham Ranch. Scratched: Blame Joe. Exotics: $2 Daily Double (4-8) paid $58.60, $1 Exacta (8-6) paid $8.90, $2 Quinella (6-8) paid $10.40, $1 Superfecta (8-6-1-9) paid $409.70, 50-Cent Trifecta (8-6-1) paid $10.75, $2 Consolation Double (4-7) paid $27.40, $1 Pick Three (2-4-8) paid $731.50, $1 Consolation Pick Three (2-4-7) paid $289.70. 7029-NINTH RACE. 11⁄8-mile turf. ’Eddie Read Stakes’. 3 year olds and up. Purse $250,000. P# Horse Jockey Win Place Show 5 Midnight Storm Bejarano 5.40 3.40 2.60 1 Ashleyluvssugar Stevens 5.60 3.40 2 Flamboyant (FR) Prat 3.40 Also Ran: Si Sage (FR), Finnegans Wake, Patentar (FR), Texas Ryano, Ohio (BRZ), Bolo. Time: 23.82, 48.03, 1.12.18, 1.36.21, 1.47.88. Clear & Firm. Trainer: Philip D’Amato. Owner: A Venneri Racing, Inc. and Little Red Feather Racing. Scratched: none. Exotics: $2 Daily Double (8-5) paid $11.20, $1 Exacta (5-1) paid $11.30, $2 Quinella (1-5) paid $16.60, $1 Superfecta (5-1-2-4) paid $237.80, 50-Cent Trifecta (5-1-2) paid $20.75, $1 Pick Three (4-8-5) paid $83.10, $1 Consolation Pick Three (4-7-5) paid $46.80. 7025-FIFTH RACE. 11⁄16-mile turf. Allowance Optional Claiming. Fillies and Mares. 3 year olds and up. Claiming Price $62,500. Purse $68,000. P# Horse Jockey Win Place Show 4 Entrechat Prat 8.60 4.40 3.40 6 Frenzified (GB) Gonzalez 5.40 3.80 1 Flamingo Lane Desormeaux 3.80 Also Ran: Mangita, Bottle Blonde (GB), Hiking, Thermodynamics, Chati’s On Top, Charming Starlet, Hijra (IRE). Time: 24.42, 48.69, 1.13.16, 1.36.47, 1.42.29. Clear & Firm. Trainer: Neil D. Drysdale. Owner: Stepaside Farm, LLC. Scratched: none. Exotics: $2 Daily Double (8-4) paid $27.00, $1 Exacta (4-6) paid $22.70, $2 Quinella (4-6) paid $23.20, $1 Superfecta (4-6-1-2) paid $1,000.60, 50-Cent Trifecta (4-6-1) paid $50.95, $1 Pick Three (4-8-4) paid $52.60, 50-Cent Pick Five (2-5-4-8-4) 5 correct paid $603.15. 7030-TENTH RACE. 61⁄2-furlongs. Waiver Claiming. 3 year olds and up. Claiming Prices $16,000-$14,000. Purse $20,000. P# Horse Jockey Win Place Show 4 Kristi’s Copilot Bejarano 6.60 4.60 3.40 2 Wrightwood Theriot 11.00 7.60 12 It’s Just Bob Elliott 4.60 Also Ran: Que Chistoso, Fans On the Run, Proud Zoning, Steel Plank, Ebony Gold, Clude, Watchkeeper, Motoring Around, Ballado’s Banker (ARG). Time: 21.94, 44.94, 1.10.99, 1.17.56. Clear & Fast. Trainer: Thomas Ray Bell, II. Owner: Enterante, Frank and La Croix, David. Scratched: Redneck Crazy, What We Doing. Exotics: $2 Daily Double (5-4) paid $20.20, $1 Exacta (4-2) paid $30.90, $2 Quinella (2-4) paid $40.60, $1 Superfecta (4-2-12-11) paid $1,008.20, $1 Super High Five (4-2-12-11-3) paid $1,877.80, 50-Cent Trifecta (4-2-12) paid $103.15, $1 Pick Three (8-5-4) paid $17.10, 50-Cent Pick Four (4-7/8-5-4/13/14) 4 correct paid $126.70, $2 Pick Six (4-2-4-7/8-5-4/13/14) 105 tickets with 5 out of 6 paid $252.20, $2 Pick Six (4-2-4-7/8-5-4/13/14) 1 ticket with 6 correct paid $149,123.80, $1 Place Pick All 22 tickets with 10 correct paid $892.50. 7026-SIXTH RACE. 61⁄2-furlongs. Waiver Claiming. 3 year olds and up. Claiming Prices $8,000-$7,000. Purse $18,000. P# Horse Jockey Win Place Show 2 Pat the Bear Pena 43.60 16.40 10.60 9 Adair Mldnado 4.00 2.80 10 Justification Puglisi 13.00 On-Track Attendance-18,773. Mutuel handle-$1,883,893 Inter-Track Attendance-6,956. Mutuel handle-$4,601,314 Out of State Attendance-N/A. Mutuel handle-$8,033,379 Total Attendance-25,729. Mutuel handle- $14,518,586 ATTENDANCE / MUTUEL HANDLE blee, a Golf Channel commentator and former player. The format for the Olympic golf, which has been criticized by some players for not incorporating teams or something other than stroke play, will be 72 holes for 60 players in the men’s and women’s fields. The venue is the Olympic Course that was built on the edge of a nature preserve specifically for the Games and designed by American architect Gil Hanse. Two-time Masters winner Bubba Watson, at No. 5 in the world, is the topranked player in the tournament and has expressed patriotic enthusiasm for the Olympics, but the favorite ‘I think after a pretty long and successful career, it would be pretty cool to have an Olympic medal hanging next to some of the nice trophies I have at home. So I’m going to try my hardest.’ Gregory Shamus Getty Images LYDIA KO , the top-ranked player in the world in women’s golf, is representing New Zealand in the Olympics. She has won two majors. —Henrik Stenson, Swedish golfer and winner of this year’s British Open should be Sweden’s Henrik Stenson. Ranked No. 6 before he won the British Open on Sunday, Stenson is the hottest player in golf, having also won a European Tour event in Germany recently. “I think after a pretty long and successful career, it would be pretty cool to have an Olympic medal hanging next to some of the nice trophies I have at home,” Stenson said. “So I’m going to try my hardest.” Beyond Watson, the rest of the American contingent is Rickie Fowler, Patrick Reed and Matt Kuchar. They have combined for 14 PGA Tour victories, but none has won a major. Could a gold medal be Spaniard Sergio Garcia’s legacy beyond his Ryder Glyn Kirk AFP/Getty Images SERGIO GARCIA , of Spain, has 22 top-10 finishes in majors. Cup record? Garcia, who posted his 22nd major top 10 in the British Open, hasn’t been able to seize golf ’s biggest prizes, but Rio might be the perfect circumstance for him. The field is light on major winners, with only four: Stenson, Watson, Germany’s Martin Kaymer and Ireland’s Padraig Harrington. Contrast that to the women’s draw, for which all of the top players will be present, and that should make for a truly international battle, compelling for its youth versus experience possibilities. World No.1Lydia Ko, who is Korean born but will represent New Zealand, was 12 years old when Olympic golf was announced. She has won two majors and 14 LPGA Tour events. Canada’s Brooke Henderson is even younger, at 18, and recently outdueled Ko in the Women’s PGA Championship. Ko then blew a fourth-round lead in the U.S. Women’s Open, but responded by winning the Marathon Classic on Sunday. The American players are Lexi Thompson, Stacy Lewis and Gerina Pillar. At 31, Lewis is the most accomplished, with 11 victories, including two majors. tod.leonard @sduniontribune.com L AT I ME S . CO M / S P O RT S M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 D3 GOLF: BRITISH OPEN LEADERS’ SCORECARDS FRONT NINE KEY — Eagle: HOLE Yardage Avg Par Birdie: Bogey: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 367 390 377 555 209 601 401 4.1 4.2 3.8 4.6 3.3 5.0 3.8 4 4 4 5 3 5 4 Stenson Mickelson 5 3 3 4 3 4 4 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 8 9 OUT 123 422 3,445 3.2 4.2 36.2 3 4 36 2 3 4 4 32 32 BACK NINE HOLE Yardage Avg Par Stenson Mickelson 10 11 12 13 451 482 430 473 4.2 4.5 4.4 4.1 4 4 4 4 3 3 5 4 4 4 4 4 14 15 16 17 18 IN TOTAL 178 499 554 220 458 3,745 7,190 3.0 4.4 4.6 3.3 4.1 36.6 72.8 71 3 4 5 3 4 35 2 3 3 4 4 4 3 3 3 4 31 33 63 65 FINAL-ROUND SCORES At Troon, Scotland — Par: 71 — $7.74 million (FedEx Cup points in parentheses) 264 (-20)—$1,549,590 Henrik Stenson (600) ..........................68-65-68-63 267 (-17)—$890,190 Phil Mickelson (330) ...........................63-69-70-65 278 (-6)—$571,040 J.B. Holmes (210) ...............................70-70-69-69 279 (-5)—$444,436 Steve Stricker (150) ............................67-75-68-69 280 (-4)—$310,798 Rory McIlroy (110) ..............................69-71-73-67 Tyrrell Hatton ......................................70-71-71-68 Sergio Garcia (110).............................68-70-73-69 281 (-3)—$224,196 Andrew Johnston.................................69-69-70-73 282 (-2)—$178,477 Dustin Johnson (82) ............................71-69-72-70 Soren Kjeldsen (82) ............................67-68-75-72 Bill Haas............................................68-70-69-75 283 (-1)—$122,154 Matthew Southgate .............................71-71-72-69 Andy Sullivan......................................67-76-71-69 Emiliano Grillo (64) .............................69-72-72-70 Gary Woodland (64)............................69-73-71-70 Zach Johnson (64) ..............................67-70-75-71 Patrick Reed (64)................................66-74-71-72 284 (E)—$91,492 Miguel Angel Jimenez...........................71-72-70-71 Keegan Bradley (52)............................67-68-76-73 Charl Schwartzel (52) ..........................72-66-73-73 Tony Finau (52) ..................................67-71-72-74 285 (+1)—$69,113 Lee Westwood ....................................71-73-73-68 Jason Dufner (46) ...............................71-71-74-69 David Howell ......................................74-70-71-70 Justin Rose (46) .................................68-77-70-70 Jason Day (46) ...................................73-70-71-71 Thongchai Jaidee ................................71-74-69-71 Brandt Snedeker (46) ..........................73-73-68-71 Kevin Na (46).....................................70-69-73-73 286 (+2)—$51,489 Jordan Spieth (39) ..............................71-75-72-68 Russell Knox (39) ...............................72-70-75-69 Ryan Palmer (39)................................72-73-71-70 Darren Clarke (39) ..............................71-72-73-70 Thomas Pieters ...................................68-76-70-72 Haydn Porteous ..................................70-76-68-72 287 (+3)—$42,861 Padraig Harrington (34)........................70-72-73-72 Martin Kaymer ....................................66-73-74-74 Francesco Molinari (34) .......................69-71-73-74 288 (+4)—$37,091 Bubba Watson (31).............................70-76-72-70 Matt Jones (31) ..................................69-73-75-71 Rafa Cabrera-Bello ..............................68-71-75-74 Webb Simpson (31) ............................70-72-71-75 289 (+5)—$31,322 Adam Scott (27).................................69-73-76-71 Luke Donald (27)................................73-72-72-72 Jim Herman (27) ................................70-70-72-77 290 (+6)—$25,227 Harris English (22) ..............................73-73-73-71 Richard Sterne....................................68-74-76-72 Rickie Fowler (22) ...............................69-72-76-73 Ryan Moore (22).................................70-73-74-73 Alex Noren .........................................70-72-73-75 Matt Kuchar (22) ................................71-68-75-76 Nicolas Colsaerts ................................72-73-70-75 291 (+7)—$22,103 Danny Willet (16)................................71-75-74-71 Kevin Chappell (16) ............................71-75-73-72 KT Kim ..............................................70-71-77-73 Marc Leishman (16) ............................74-69-75-73 Justin Thomas (16) .............................67-77-74-73 292 (+8)—$21,364 Ryan Evans ........................................71-75-74-72 293 (+9)—$21,034 Daniel Summerhays (11)......................71-73-77-72 Jon Rahm ..........................................74-71-73-75 Jim Furyk (11)....................................74-72-72-75 Byeong Hun An ...................................70-70-76-77 294 (+10)—$20,573 Mark O’Meara (7) ...............................71-72-78-73 Paul Lawrie ........................................72-74-74-74 Graeme McDowell (7) ..........................75-71-72-76 295 (+11)—$20,244 Zander Lombard .................................69-76-74-76 Harold Varner III (5).............................71-72-75-77 296 (+12)—$19,848 Marco Dawson (2)...............................72-73-77-74 Patton Kizzire (2).................................76-70-75-75 James Hahn (2)..................................74-72-74-76 Anirban Lahiri (2)................................69-72-76-79 297 (+13)—$19,320 Scott Hend.........................................71-73-77-76 Yuta Ikeda..........................................68-74-78-77 Branden Grace (1) ..............................70-74-76-77 Jamie Donaldson (1) ...........................69-73-76-79 298 (+14)—$18,991 Kevin Kisner (1) ..................................70-72-80-76 299 (+15)—$18,859 Charley Hoffman (1) ............................71-73-78-77 301 (+17)—$18,726 Colin Montgomerie ..............................71-75-79-76 302 (+18)—$18,529 Kodai Ichihara ....................................69-77-78-78 Soomin Lee........................................68-77-75-82 305 (+21)—$18,331 Greg Chalmers (1)...............................72-71-77-85 FINAL ROUND AT A GLANCE WINNER: Henrik Stenson closed with a 63 to win by three shots. LEFTY'S LAMENT: Runner-up Phil Mickelson shot a bogey-free 65 and still finished three shots behind. It was his 11th runner-up in a major. RECORD BOOKS: Stenson set a major championship record at 264 and tied major records at 20 under and with a 63. SHOT OF THE DAY: Stenson holed a 50-foot birdie putt at No.15 for a two-shot lead with three holes to play. BEST OF THE REST: J.B. Holmes closed with a 69 to finish third, 14 shots behind. CONSOLATION PRIZE: Steve Stricker finished fourth, which will get him into the PGA Championship and next year's Masters and British Open. CANCER SUVIVOR: England's Matthew Southgate shot 69 to secure a place in the top 15, a year after he underwent surgery for testicular cancer. SWEDISH DELIGHT: Stenson is the first Swedish man to win a major. Four Swedish women have won LPGA majors, led by Annika Sorenstam's 10. KEY STATISTIC: Stenson and Mickelson had a better-ball score of 59 in the final group. NOTEWORTHY: This was the third time a major championship yielded two rounds of 63 for the week with Mickelson (first round) and Stenson (final round). The others were Riviera in the 1995 PGA Championship (Michael Bradley, Brad Faxon) and Royal St. George's in the 1993 British Open (Payne Stewart, Nick Faldo). QUOTEWORTHY: “A 65 in the final round of a major is usually good enough to win.” — Mickelson. Matt Dunham Associated Press ANDREW “BEEF” JOHNSTON acknowledges the crowd on the 18th green during the final round of the British Open. Johnston shot a two-over-par 73 but said of the experience, “I’ll remember it forever.” NOTES After strong start, ‘Beef’ finishes in eighth place By Tod Leonard TROON, Scotland — The roar could be heard for hundreds of yards on the grounds at Royal Troon. When Andrew Johnston holed a birdie putt on the first green of the British Open on Sunday, the gallery was stirred into a frenzy. “Beef ” was off to a roaring start, and there was a glimmer of hope that he might be the Open’s next Champion Golfer of the Year. It wasn’t to be, as Johnston struggled in shooting a two-over-par 73 that dropped him into eighth place with a three under total. Still, in the last 200 yards of his walk up the 18th, Johnston heard a rousing ovation and the chants of “Beef! Beef! Beef!” He took off his hat and raised his arms triumphantly. “I’ll remember it forever,” said the 27-year-old former mini-tour player from North London. Johnston birdied three of his first four holes, but couldn’t make another after that, and scored 38 on the back nine. “It was probably slightly disappointing the way I played,” Johnston said. “I started off pretty good, but I don’t think my short game was good enough today. I didn’t putt that well. “There was a better score to be had, but I gave it my best and that’s what I come off with — no regrets.” Facundo Arrizabalaga European Pressphoto Agency STEVE STRICKER tees off on the final day of the British Open. Stricker shot 69 and finished fourth. Stenson dedicates win to friend In his remarks at the awards ceremony, Henrik Stenson said he was dedicating his win to an American friend, Mike Gerbich, who died of cancer at age 74 on Wednesday in Scottsdale, Ariz. Stenson posted a picture on Instagram of himself, looking very young, posed with Gerbich at a golf outing. The two met in Dubai years ago. “He was a very keen golfer and a great man,” Stenson said in his news conference. “He’s always been there as a big supporter of mine, and in good days and bad days he always sent me messages and been out at some events.” Stricker rocks at 49 Steve Stricker may be playing a limited schedule at the age of 49, but he’s showing no signs of letting up competitively. He shot 69 in the final round — with a double-bogey on the par-three 17th — and finished in fourth place at five under. As a top-10 finisher, Stricker will be invited back to the British Open next year. It also ensures his return to the Masters. “It’s a lot of spinoffs,” Stricker said. “That’s the great thing about playing golf out here professionally. There are a lot of carrots dangling. When you’re playing well, you’re rewarded and you get to do some pretty cool things.” Stricker tied for second in June in the FedEx St. Jude Classic. His best finish in a major is second in the 1998 PGA Championship. Monty’s quick round Troon member Colin Montgomerie had a strange final round. Last in the field after Saturday, Montgomerie was the first off the tee on Sunday and played with a marker, Troon’s head pro. He had been honored to be the first player off the tee on Thursday morning. On Sunday, he played in 2 hours 50 minutes, shot 76 and finished at 17 over. “Everyone in the scorer’s tent and even our own scorer said that was refreshing, and it’s the way to play golf,” Montgomerie said. “I’m tired now, very tired,” the 53-year-old said. “I’ve been the leader in the clubhouse again — second time this week.” Notable Among the top-four ranked players in the world, Rory McIlroy fared the best. He closed with a 67 and tied for fifth at four under. Dustin Johnson (70) tied for ninth at two under. A year after coming within one shot of a playoff in the Open, Jordan Spieth tied for 30th at two over. He shot his best score of the week on Sunday with 68. World No. 1 Jason Day (71) tied for 22nd at one over. The “Postage Stamp” par-three eighth hole wasn’t such a beast. It ranked as only the11th-hardest hole for the week. There were 11 double-bogeys and 10 “others” scored in four rounds. Matt Kuchar’s seven in the fourth round tied for the secondhighest score at the eighth since 1997. tod.leonard@sduniontribune.com Stenson’s first major title is one for record books [British Open, from D1] Yet Mickelson, 46, was going to need time to process whether all that great play meant much since he lost, though his previous five major wins will no doubt be of some long-term comfort. Mickelson’s 17-under total would have won all but two Opens over the last century. In the first round, if his birdie putt on the 18th hole had not spun out of the cup, he would have been the first player in history to shoot 62 in a major. “Yeah, I’m not sure how I’m going to feel about that,” a subdued Mickelson said. “I’m proud of the way I played. I don’t look back on anything and say, ‘I should have done this differently or that.’ I played well enough to win this championship by a number of strokes, and I get beat by three strokes. “You know,” he reflected, “it’s not like I have decades left of opportunities to win majors, so each one means a lot to me. And I put in my best performance today. Played close to flawless golf and was beat.” The thought Mickelson said he was left with: “What do I need to do?” Maybe birdie every hole. Mickelson managed four birdies and an eagle Sunday, but Stenson overpowered him with 10 birdies. Once on each nine, Stenson had four birdies in a five-hole stretch. “I had about a 40-, 45footer on 15 and I'm thinking I've got to make that,” Mickelson said. “I had to make 30-, 40-footers just to try to keep pace with him, and wasn't able to do it there in the end.” Stenson, 40 and ranked No. 6 in the world, became the first Scandinavian man to win a major because he enjoyed the usual precision with his irons while finding a putting prowess he’d never quite displayed like this before. Moreover, he showed a resolve that he’d never tapped into this deeply. “It's not something you want to run around and shout, but I felt like this was going to be my turn,” he said. “. . . I think that was the extra self-belief that made me go all the way this week.” Facundo Arrizabalaga European Pressphoto Agency PHIL MICKELSON could only tip his cap to Henrik Stenson, left, who made 10 birdies to win an epic duel. In conditions that were tough and windy early, but turned benign and sunny on the back nine, Stenson and Mickelson laughably lapped the field. J.B. Holmes closed with a 69 and finished in third, 14 strokes behind Stenson. At the other end of the board, Greg Chalmers made the cut, and he lost by — count them — 41 shots. The Stenson-Mickelson match was being compared to the 1977 Open Championship showdown between Jack Nicklaus and Tom Watson at Turnberry, dubbed “The Duel in the Sun.” Watson prevailed by a shot over Nicklaus and by 11 over third-place Hubert Green. “I was thinking about that,” Mickelson said with a slight smile. “I know I wanted to be more of Tom in that case than Jack.” Down by one shot at the outset, Mickelson immediately reversed the score when he striped his approach to one foot at No. 1 and Stenson three-putted. Over the next nine holes, they halved with par only three times while combining to score eight birdies and an eagle, with no bogeys. Both birdied No. 10, but Stenson fell into a tie when he bogeyed 11 with a threeputt. It stayed that way until Stenson made an 18-foot birdie putt at 14. “That stung,” Mickelson said. Then came the crushing blow — Stenson putting from off the green, at least 40 feet, and making birdie at 15. “Absolute bomb,” Stenson said. Mickelson still had a chance to tie when he gave himself an eagle chance at16, but though his putt looked like it would hit the cup dead center, it broke off an inch from the target and hung on the edge. He had to settle for birdie, and Stenson matched him with a five-foot birdie. “I really thought I made eagle on 16,” Mickelson said. “I thought I’d get one back there and be only one down with two difficult holes to go. I don’t know how that eagle putt missed. . . . But it seems there have been a couple of putts like that this week.” He smiled, obviously referring to the Thursday putt on No. 18 for 62. It was that kind of week for Mickelson: Being great just wasn’t good enough. tod.leonard@sduniontribune.com D4 M O N DAY , J U LY 18 , 2 016 L AT I M ES . C O M / SP O RTS BASEBALL D’BACKS DODGERS NL STANDINGS GB L10 San Francisco West 57 36 .613 W L Pct. — 6-4 DODGERS 52 42 .553 5 ⁄2 Colorado 42 49 .462 5-5 1 14 5-5 San Diego 41 51 .446 151⁄2 6-4 Arizona 40 53 .430 17 3-7 GB L10 Central W L Pct. Chicago 55 36 .604 St. Louis 47 44 .516 8 4-6 Pittsburgh 47 45 .511 81⁄2 6-4 Milwaukee 39 51 .433 151⁄2 4-6 Cincinnati 34 58 .370 211⁄2 4-6 GB L10 — 6-4 East W L Pct. — 4-6 6 5 ANGELS WHITE SOX Streak Won 3 This month Home 19-26 Road Division 15-20 Interleague Next: Tonight vs. Texas, Angel Stadium, 7 TV/Radio: FS West/830, 1330 Streak Lost 2 This month 8-5 Home 30-18 Road 22-24 Division 23-18 Interleague 5-7 Next: Tuesday at Washington, 4 p.m. PDT TV/Radio: SportsNet LA/570, 1020, 1540 Dodgers Kendrck 1b Seager ss Turner 3b VnSlyke 1b c-Toles cf Puig rf Taylor 2b Ellis c Walters lf d-Utley Maeda p Howell p a-Grandl Hatcher p Colemn p e-Gnzlz Totals AB 4 5 5 2 2 4 4 4 3 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 37 R 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 H 1 3 2 1 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 BI 0 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 Avg. .270 .301 .261 .239 .286 .257 .320 .188 .000 .260 .097 .000 .208 .333 --.286 Arizona AB R H BI Avg. Segura 2b 4 1 1 0 .304 Bourn cf 4 1 3 1 .271 Gldsmdt 1b 3 1 1 0 .297 Lamb 3b 3 2 2 2 .302 Drury lf 4 0 1 2 .267 Freemn rf 3 0 0 0 .000 Gswsch c 4 0 0 0 .250 Ahmed ss 4 0 0 0 .222 Ray p 2 1 1 0 .250 b-Weeks 1 0 0 0 .239 Hudsn p 0 0 0 0 --Clipprd p 0 0 0 0 --Barrett p 0 0 0 0 --Totals 32 6 9 5 Washington 56 37 .602 New York 49 42 .538 6 5-5 Miami 49 42 .538 6 7-3 Dodgers Arizona Philadelphia 43 50 .462 13 6-4 a-struck out for Howell in the 7th. b-grounded out for Ray in the 7th. c-lined out for Van Slyke in the 8th. d-walked for Walters in the 9th. e-struck out for Coleman in the 9th. Walks—Dodgers 3: Kendrick 1, Taylor 1, Utley 1. Arizona 3: Goldschmidt 1, Lamb 1, Freeman 1. Strikeouts—Dodgers 12: Kendrick 1, Turner 1, Puig 2, Taylor 1, Ellis 4, Walters 1, Grandal 1, Gonzalez 1. Arizona 6: Freeman 3, Gosewisch 2, Ahmed 1. LOB—Dodgers 10, Arizona 5. 2B—Seager 3 (27), Van Slyke (5), Bourn (9), Drury (16), Ray (1). HR—Turner (15), off Hudson; Lamb (21), off Maeda. RBIs—Seager (43), Turner 4 (50), Bourn (20), Lamb 2 (65), Drury 2 (25). SB—Goldschmidt (13). Runners left in scoring position—Dodgers 5 (Van Slyke, Puig, Taylor, Maeda 2); Arizona 3 (Drury 2, Gosewisch). RISP–Dodgers 3 for 11; Arizona 3 for 10. GIDP—Seager, Taylor, Ahmed. DP—Dodgers 1 (Taylor, Van Slyke); Arizona 2 (Segura, Ahmed, Goldschmidt), (Segura, Ahmed, Goldschmidt). Dodgers.....................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Maeda L, 8-7............4 1⁄3 7 5 5 1 5 84 3.25 Howell .....................1 2⁄3 0 0 0 1 0 16 3.52 Hatcher .......................1 2 1 1 1 0 23 4.87 Coleman .....................1 0 0 0 0 1 10 3.78 Arizona ......................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Ray W, 5-8...................7 4 0 0 2 7 101 4.49 Hudson .......................1 3 2 2 0 2 19 5.14 Clippard......................1⁄3 2 3 3 1 1 18 3.53 Barrett S, 2-5 ..............2⁄3 2 0 0 0 2 14 3.06 Inherited runners-scored—Howell 2-0, Barrett 2-2. IBB_off Hatcher (Lamb). HBP_Ray 2 (Puig,Van Slyke). WP—Ray, Hatcher. U—Bob Davidson, Dan Iassogna, Stu Scheurwater, Tim Timmons. T—3:14. Tickets sold—29,459 (48,633). Atlanta 32 60 .348 23 ⁄2 Sunday’s results at Arizona 6, DODGERS 5 at Cincinnati 1, Milwaukee 0 New York 5, at Philadelphia 0 Pittsburgh 2, at Washington 1, 18 innings at Atlanta 1, Colorado 0 Miami 6, at St. Louis 3 Texas 4, at Chicago 1 at San Diego 5, San Francisco 3 4-6 1 AL STANDINGS West W L Pct. GB L10 Texas 55 38 .591 — 3-7 Houston 50 42 .543 1 4 ⁄2 7-3 Seattle 46 46 .500 81⁄2 3-7 ANGELS 40 52 .435 141⁄2 7-3 Oakland 40 52 .435 141⁄2 5-5 GB L10 Cleveland 54 37 .593 W — 5-5 Detroit 48 44 .522 61⁄2 4-6 Kansas City 46 45 .505 8 3-7 Chicago 45 46 .495 9 4-6 Minnesota 33 58 .363 21 6-4 GB L10 — 6-4 Central East W L L Pct. Pct. 000 000 023 —5 301 010 10x —6 11 9 0 0 SATURDAY’S LATE GAME: Diamondbacks 2, Dodgers 1 Dodgers Utley 2b Seager ss Turner 3b Gnzalez 1b Grandal c Kendrick lf Puig rf Toles cf McCarthy p Libratore p b-Walters Blanton p Jansen p Baez p e-Van Slyke Coleman p Fien p Totals AB 6 6 4 6 3 5 5 4 3 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 44 R 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 H 1 2 1 1 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 10 BI 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Avg. .260 .297 .259 .287 .209 .271 .257 .250 .000 --.000 ------.231 ----- Arizona Segura 2b Bourn cf Gldschmt 1b Lamb 3b Castillo c Tomas rf Drury lf Ahmed ss Bradley p a-Gosselin Curtis p Barrett p Hudson p c-Weeks Clippard p d-Herrmann Burgos p Delgado p Totals AB 5 5 5 5 3 4 4 4 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 39 R 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 H 0 1 1 3 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 BI 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 Avg. .305 .260 .297 .299 .264 .249 .268 .225 .091 .266 ------.241 --.290 --.000 10 8 0 0 Baltimore 53 37 .589 Boston 51 39 .567 2 8-2 Toronto 52 42 .553 3 7-3 New York 45 46 .495 81⁄2 5-5 Dodgers Arizona Tampa Bay 35 56 .385 Sunday’s results at ANGELS 8, Chicago White Sox 1 at Detroit 4, Kansas City 2 at Tampa Bay 5, Baltimore 2 Cleveland 6, at Minnesota 1 Texas 4, at Chicago Cubs 1 Toronto 5, at Oakland 3 Houston 8, at Seattle 1 at New York 3, Boston 1 181⁄2 2-8 No outs when winning run scored. a-lined out for Bradley in the 6th. b-lined out for Liberatore in the 8th. c-grounded out for Hudson in the 8th. d-struck out for Clippard in the 10th. e-singled for Baez in the 11th. Walks—Dodgers 8: Turner 2, Grandal 3, Kendrick 1, Puig 1, Toles 1. Arizona 4: Castillo 2, Tomas 1, Drury 1. Strikeouts—Dodgers 7: Utley 2, Gonzalez 1, Grandal 1, Kendrick 1, Toles 1, McCarthy1. Arizona16: Segura 2, Bourn 3, Goldschmidt 3, Castillo 2, Tomas 2, Drury 2, Bradley 1, Herrmann 1. LOB—Dodgers 15, Arizona 8. 2B—Utley (15), Seager (24), Kendrick (14), Lamb 2 (21). 3B—Lamb (8). RBIs—Turner (46), Lamb (63), Drury (23). SB—Turner (2), Toles (1), Bourn (8). CS—Puig (2), Goldschmidt (4), Ahmed (2). Runners left in scoring position—Dodgers 10 (Gonzalez, Grandal, Kendrick 2, Puig 2, McCarthy 4); Arizona 3 (Tomas, Drury, Weeks). RISP_Dodgers 1 for 15; Arizona 2 for 7. Runners moved up—Seager, Gonzalez, Turner, Castillo. Dodgers IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA McCarthy.....................6 3 0 0 0 8 77 1.69 Liberatore H, 9 .............1 0 0 0 0 2 11 0.59 Blanton H, 15 ..............1 1 0 0 1 1 21 2.05 Jansen BS, 4-31...........1 2 1 1 1 1 23 1.36 Baez...........................1 0 0 0 0 2 16 3.04 Coleman .....................1 0 0 0 0 2 13 3.89 Fien L, 1-1 ..................0 2 1 1 2 0 15 4.09 Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Bradley .......................6 6 1 1 3 3 106 4.37 Curtis .........................2⁄3 1 0 0 1 0 14 4.26 Barrett........................1⁄3 0 0 0 1 1 8 3.13 Hudson .......................1 0 0 0 1 1 17 4.76 Clippard ......................2 1 0 0 0 0 20 2.80 Burgos......................12⁄3 2 0 0 2 2 29 4.61 Delgado W, 2-1............1⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 5 4.24 Inherited runners-scored—Barrett 2-0, Delgado 3-0. IBB_off Bradley (Toles), off Jansen (Castillo), off Fien (Castillo), off Fien (Tomas). WP—Burgos. U— Dale Scott, Lance Barrett, Bob Davidson, Dan Iassogna. T—4:31. Tickets sold—38,899 (48,633). TODAY’S GAMES AMERICAN LEAGUE >>> MATCHUP TEX/Griffin (R) Angels/Tropeano (R) BAL/Gausman (R) NY/Nova (R) MIN/Nolasco (R) DET/Boyd (L) CLE/Kluber (R) KC/Volquez (R) HOU/Fiers (R) OAK/Graveman (R) CHI/Sale (L) SEA/LeBlanc (L) W-L 3-1 3-2 1-6 6-5 4-7 0-2 9-8 8-8 6-3 5-6 14-3 1-0 ERA 3.81 3.12 4.15 5.18 5.22 5.77 3.61 4.85 4.35 4.37 3.38 3.52 TIME 7 p.m. FSW 4 p.m. W-L 11-4 5-8 4-8 4-7 7-5 9-4 4-5 6-7 ERA 2.52 4.69 4.47 4.71 3.38 3.01 4.50 4.14 W-L 2-10 1-3 ERA TIME 5.47 5:30 p.m. 3.03 4 p.m. 5:15 p.m. 7 p.m. 001 000 000 000 —1 000 000 001 001 —2 7 p.m. TIGERS ROYALS NATIONAL LEAGUE >>> MATCHUP MIA/Fernandez (R) PHI/Nola (R) ATL/Wisler (R) CIN/Finnegan (L) NY/Matz (L) CHI/Lester (L) SD/Friedrich (L) STL/Leake (R) TIME 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. ESPN 5:15 p.m. INTERLEAGUE >>> MATCHUP TB/Smyly (L) COL/Anderson (L) Jarrod Saltalamacchia hit a two-run home run to right field in the bottom of the ninth inning against Joakim Soria (3-4). Detroit scored its first two runs on a balk and a wild pitch. Kansas City AB R H BI Avg. Detroit AB R Escbar ss 3 0 0 0 .259 Kinsler 2b 4 0 Hosmer 1b 4 0 1 1 .299 Maybin cf 40 Morales dh 4 0 2 0 .257 Cabrra 1b 4 0 Perez c 4 0 0 0 .282 Martnz dh 4 0 Gordon lf 4 0 1 0 .207 Cstllnos 3b 4 1 Orlndo rf 4 1 1 0 .315 Upton lf 40 Cthbert 3b 4 0 1 1 .283 Collins rf 41 Colon 2b 3 0 0 0 .244 Sltlmccha c 3 1 Dyson cf 2 1 0 0 .252 Iglesias ss 3 1 Totals 32 2 6 2 Totals 34 4 Kansas City Detroit AROUND THE MAJORS Indians’ Gomes suffers injury Cleveland catcher Yan Gomes was carted off the field during the fifth inning of Sunday's game against the Minnesota Twins because of a right shoulder injury. Running out a grounder to third base, Gomes stepped awkwardly on first base as he tried to avoid the swipe tag of first baseman Kennys Vargas, who was pulled off the bag on the throw from Eduardo Nunez. Gomes landed on his shoulder as he tumbled to the ground. Gomes’ right arm was put in a sling before he gingerly walked to a cart and left the field. He had ended a hitless streak at 27 at-bats with a third-inning double that went off the foot of starter Kyle Gibson and trickled into the outfield through a hole at shortstop. Etc. Oakland left-hander Rich Hill, the subject of trade speculation, left the game against Toronto after five pitches because of a blister on a finger. ... The Cincinnati Reds optioned pitcher John Lamb to triple-A Louisville and recalled outfielder Kyle Waldrop. Lamb is 1-7 with a 6.43 earned-run average. He gave up nine runs in two innings of the Reds’ 9-1 loss to Milwaukee on Saturday. Waldrop hit .313 in nine games in his previous two stints with Cincinnati. — associated press 4 2 H 2 2 0 0 3 0 1 1 2 11 011 000 000 —2 001 001 002 —4 BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 Avg. .296 .342 .289 .297 .304 .232 .161 .206 .258 6 11 1 0 No outs when winning run scored. Walks—Kansas City 1: Dyson 1. Detroit 1: Saltalamacchia 1. Strikeouts—Kansas City 6: Hosmer 1, Morales 1, Perez 1, Gordon 1, Cuthbert 2. Detroit 7: Maybin 1, Cabrera 1, Martinez 2, Upton 1, Saltalamacchia 2. E—Escobar (11). LOB—Kansas City 5, Detroit 7. 2B—Cuthbert (10), Castellanos 2 (21). 3B—Castellanos (4). HR—Saltalamacchia (9), off Soria. RBIs—Hosmer (51), Cuthbert (30), Saltalamacchia 2 (27). SB—Upton (6). S—Escobar. Runners left in scoring position—Kansas City 3 (Gordon, Orlando, Colon); Detroit 5 (Martinez 2, Upton, Collins, Saltalamacchia). RISP—Kansas City 1 for 5; Detroit 2 for 10. GIDP—Maybin, Cabrera. DP—Kansas City 2 (Colon, Hosmer), (Escobar, Colon, Hosmer). Kansas City................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Ventura .......................7 8 2 2 1 6 102 4.97 Herrera .......................1 1 0 0 0 1 19 1.73 Soria L, 3-4 .................0 2 2 2 0 0 4 3.60 Detroit.......................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Fulmer ........................8 6 2 2 1 5 95 2.13 Rodriguez W, 1-0 ..........1 0 0 0 0 1 14 2.76 WP—Fulmer, Ventura. U—D.J. Reyburn, Bill Welke, Greg Gibson, Vic Carapazza. T—2:22. Tickets sold—37,363 (41,681). RANGERS CUBS Texas Chicago AB 4 4 4 4 0 3 3 4 3 3 0 32 R 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 4 H 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 6 BI 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 4 Avg. .269 .315 .274 .214 .230 .269 .277 .290 .203 .167 --- Chicago Angels AB 4 3 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 32 R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 H 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 7 BI 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Avg. .279 .277 .272 .295 .211 .111 .255 .244 .333 Angels AB R H BI Avg. Escobar 3b 4 1 2 0 .322 Calhoun rf 3 1 0 0 .283 Trout cf 3 2 1 0 .316 Pujols dh 3 2 2 4 .248 Choi 1b 3 1 1 1 .156 Smmns ss 3 0 0 0 .262 Cnnnghm lf 4 0 1 1 .105 Bandy c 4 1 1 1 .264 Petit 2b 4 0 2 1 .282 Totals 31 8 10 8 001 000 000 —1 200 420 00x —8 Pittsburgh Washington 000 001 000 000 000 001 —2 000 000 001 000 000 000 —1 12 8 0 0 a-hit by pitch for Kuhl in the 7th. b-lined out for Papelbon in the 9th. c-homered for Revere in the 9th. d-popped out for Melancon in the 10th. e-grounded out for Petit in the 11th. f-grounded out for Hughes in the 13th. g-walked for Nicasio in the 16th. h-grounded out for Rivero in the 16th. Walks—Pittsburgh 4: Frazier 2, Marte 1, g-Fryer 1. Washington 4: Taylor 1, Harper 1, Ramos 1, Heisey 1. Strikeouts—Pittsburgh 17: McCutchen 2, Marte 3, Freese 2, Niese 1, Harrison 2, Mercer 1, Kratz 1, Kuhl 1, Rodriguez 1, Jaso 2, Kang 1. Washington 16: Taylor 1, Harper 1, Robinson 2, Drew 2, Espinosa 3, Scherzer 2, Rivero 1, Turner 4. LOB—Pittsburgh 12, Washington 7. 2B—Frazier 3 (4), Marte (20), Mercer (13), Harrison (14). HR—Marte (7), off Perez; Murphy (18), off Melancon. RBIs—Marte 2 (34), Murphy (67). SB—Marte (32), Turner (1). CS—Frazier (1), Espinosa (1). S—Kratz. DP—Ramos. GIDP—McCutchen, Werth, Drew. DP—Pittsburgh 3 ; Washington 1 . Pittsburgh..................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Kuhl ...........................6 1 0 0 0 5 85 4.19 Feliz H, 19...................1 2 0 0 0 0 17 3.28 Watson H, 19...............1 0 0 0 0 2 11 2.92 Melancon BS, 2-29 .......1 1 1 1 0 1 17 1.43 Caminero ....................0 0 0 0 2 0 8 3.28 Schugel.......................2 0 0 0 1 1 31 3.45 Hughes .......................1 0 0 0 0 1 17 3.13 Nicasio .......................3 1 0 0 0 4 47 5.10 Niese W, 8-6................3 3 0 0 1 2 41 4.89 Washington ................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Scherzer ......................7 6 1 1 1 7 103 2.94 Treinen ........................1 0 0 0 0 2 12 2.15 Papelbon.....................1 1 0 0 0 0 10 2.73 Kelley .........................1 1 0 0 1 1 21 2.60 Petit ...........................1 0 0 0 0 1 11 2.56 Belisle ........................2 1 0 0 0 1 25 2.14 Rivero .........................3 1 0 0 1 3 45 4.74 Perez L, 2-3 .................2 2 1 1 1 2 39 4.91 Caminero pitched to 2 batters in the 10th. Inherited runners-scored—Schugel 2-0. IBB—off Kelley (Marte). HBP—Kuhl (Espinosa), Scherzer (Rodriguez). WP—Schugel, Perez. U—Jerry Meals, Paul Nauert, Ron Kulpa, Chris Conroy. T—5:48. Tickets sold—32,775 (41,418). RAYS ORIOLES 5 2 Jake Odorizzi (4-5) earned his first victory at Tropicana Field this season, Evan Longoria hit two home runs and Tampa Bay won for the fourth time in its last 28 games. Baltimore AB R H BI Avg. Tampa Bay AB R H BI Avg. Jones cf 4 1 1 0 .262 Frsythe 2b 4 0 0 0 .279 Schoop 2b 4 0 2 0 .302 Miller ss 4 1 1 1 .243 Machdo 3b 2 0 0 1 .312 Longria 3b 4 2 2 2 .286 Davis 1b 4 0 0 0 .236 Mrrson 1b 4 0 1 0 .234 Trumbo rf 4 0 0 0 .287 SouzaJr rf 4 1 1 0 .251 Alvarez dh 4 1 1 1 .254 Dickrsn dh 4 0 0 0 .223 Hardy ss 4 0 2 0 .268 Krmaier cf 3 0 0 0 .221 Rickrd lf 3 0 1 0 .265 Arcia lf 1 1 1 2 .238 b-Flahrty 1 0 0 0 .234 a-Guyer lf 1 0 0 0 .250 Joseph c 3 0 1 0 .167 Casali c 0 0 0 0 .169 c-Wieters 1 0 0 0 .253 Totals 29 5 6 5 Totals 34 2 8 2 Baltimore Tampa Bay 100 001 000 —2 121 000 01x —5 8 6 0 0 a-lined out for Arcia in the 6th. b-struck out for Rickard in the 9th. c-struck out for Joseph in the 9th. Walks—Baltimore 1: Machado 1. Tampa Bay 4: Arcia 1, Casali 3. Strikeouts—Baltimore 14: Jones 2, Schoop 2, Machado 1, Davis 2, Trumbo 3, Alvarez 2, Flaherty 1, Wieters 1. Tampa Bay 5: Forsythe 2, Dickerson 1, Kiermaier 2. LOB—Baltimore 7, Tampa Bay 4. 2B—Schoop 2 (25). HR—Alvarez (11), off Odorizzi; Longoria (20), off Bundy; Arcia (2), off Bundy; Miller (15), off Bundy; Longoria (21), off Despaigne. RBIs—Machado (54), Alvarez (29), Miller (33), Longoria 2 (49), Arcia 2 (6). SF—Machado. GIDP—Forsythe. DP—Baltimore 1 (Machado, Schoop, Davis). Baltimore...................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Bundy L, 2-2.............3 1⁄3 5 4 4 3 4 70 3.70 Worley .....................1 2⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 16 2.87 Hart ...........................2⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 6 0.00 Despaigne................2 1⁄3 1 1 1 1 0 25 2.87 Tampa Bay .................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Odorizzi W, 4-5 .............6 7 2 2 1 7 100 4.39 Ramirez H, 10 ..............2 0 0 0 0 4 21 3.97 Colome S, 20-20 ..........1 1 0 0 0 3 23 1.64 Inherited runners-scored—Worley 2-0. WP—Odorizzi. U—Will Little, Ted Barrett, Lance Barksdale, Angel Hernandez. T—2:32. Tickets sold—16,161 (31,042). INDIANS TWINS 6 1 Josh Tomlin (10-2) pitched 72⁄3 innings and was backed by three home runs. The right-hander retired 11 consecutive batters before Max Kepler hit a home run in the sixth inning. Cleveland Minnesota AB 4 3 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 33 R 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 010 012 011 —6 000 001 000 —1 H 0 0 1 2 1 1 1 0 0 6 BI 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Avg. .313 .287 .379 .250 .229 .247 .259 .284 .246 13 6 0 0 Walks—Cleveland 3: Kipnis 1, Lindor 1, Almonte 1. Minnesota 1: Grossman 1. Strikeouts—Cleveland 4: J.Ramirez 1, Naquin 2, Almonte 1. Minnesota 5: Grossman 1, Vargas 2, Kepler 1, Escobar 1. LOB—Cleveland 7, Minnesota 7. 2B—J.Ramirez (22), Almonte (3), Gomes (11), Dozier (17). HR—Napoli (20), off Gibson; Naquin (10), off N.Ramirez; Kipnis (15), off N.Ramirez; Kepler (9), off Tomlin. RBIs—Kipnis (51), Lindor (46), Napoli (63), Naquin (23), Gimenez 2 (6), Kepler (34). SB—Kipnis (6), Chisenhall (5). CS—Lindor (4), J.Ramirez (5). GIDP—Lindor. DP—Minnesota 1 (Dozier, Escobar, Vargas). Cleveland...................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Tomlin W, 10-2..........7 2⁄3 6 1 1 1 4 107 3.34 Adams.....................1 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 16 3.86 Minnesota .................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Gibson L, 2-6...............6 10 4 4 1 4 97 5.12 N.Ramirez....................3 3 2 2 2 0 56 6.14 Inherited runners-scored—Adams 1-0. HBP—Tomlin (Suzuki). U—Dave Rackley, Alfonso Marquez, Larry Vanover, Chris Guccione. T—2:46. Tickets sold—25,692 (39,021). 1 0 BRAVES ROCKIES 1 0 Billy Hamilton scored on Jonathan Lucroy’s passed ball with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning. Hamilton walked, moved to second on a walk to Joey Votto and stole third base. Chase d’Arnaud had a walk-off single against Gonzalez Germen (2-1) and Atlanta ended a losing streak against Colorado at four games. The Braves are 14-36 at home. Milwaukee AB R H BI Avg. Cincinnati Villar ss 3 0 0 0 .302 Cozart ss Genntt 2b 4 0 1 0 .267 Hmltn cf Braun rf 4 0 1 0 .313 Votto 1b Lucroy c 4 0 1 0 .303 Bruce rf Carter 1b 4 0 0 0 .224 Duvall lf Nwnhuis cf 4 0 0 0 .201 Suarez 3b Smith p 0 0 0 0 --- Perza 2b Mddlbrks 3b 3 0 0 0 .167 Brnhrt c Flores cf 3 0 1 0 .222 Straily p Davies p 2 0 0 0 .067 Lrnzn p a-Wilkins 0 0 0 0 .000 Cngrni p Thrnbrg p 0 0 0 0 --- b-De Jesus Elmore lf 0 0 0 0 .100 Totals Totals 31 0 4 0 Colorado AB R H BI Avg. Blackmn cf 3 0 1 0 .307 LeMhieu 2b 4 0 0 0 .330 Arendo 3b 4 0 1 0 .289 Gonzlz rf 4 0 0 0 .316 Dsclso 1b 3 0 1 0 .333 Raburn 0 0 0 0 .242 Grmen p 0 0 0 0 .000 Admes ss 2 0 0 0 .206 Rynlds 1b 1 0 0 0 .275 Barnes lf 3 0 0 0 .231 Wolters c 2 0 1 0 .220 Gray p 1 0 0 0 .143 Story ss 0 0 0 0 .261 Totals 27 0 4 0 Atlanta AB R H BI Avg. Petrsn 2b 3 0 1 0 .277 d’Arnaud ss 5 0 3 1 .263 Freeman 1b 4 0 0 0 .277 Mrkkis rf 2 0 0 0 .252 Frncur lf 4 0 0 0 .256 Garcia 3b 4 0 2 0 .251 Inciarte cf 3 1 1 0 .238 Recker c 1 0 0 0 .500 Teheran p 2 0 0 0 .194 a-Snyder 1 0 0 0 .222 Bckhm 1 0 0 0 .267 Totals 30 1 7 1 Colorado Atlanta 000 000 000 —0 000 000 001 —1 Milwaukee Cincinnati AB 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 0 0 1 28 R 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 H 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 000 000 000 —0 000 000 001 —1 BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Avg. .264 .238 .261 .265 .247 .224 .237 .264 .000 .000 --.227 4 4 0 1 Two outs when winning run scored. a-walked for Davies in the 8th. b-popped out for Cingrani in the 9th. Walks—Milwaukee 2: Villar 1, Wilkins 1. Cincinnati 2: Hamilton 1, Votto 1. Strikeouts—Milwaukee 4: Gennett 1, Braun 1, Carter 1, Davies 1. Cincinnati 7: Cozart 1, Votto 1, Duvall 1, Suarez 1, Barnhart 1, Straily 2. E—Barnhart (6). LOB—Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 3. 2B—Flores (8). SB—Villar (33), Hamilton (24). CS—Peraza (1). RISP—Milwaukee 0 for 3; Cincinnati 0 for 3. GIDP—Bruce. DP—Milwaukee 1 (Carter, Middlebrooks). Milwaukee .................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Davies ........................7 4 0 0 0 5 92 3.79 Thornburg L, 3-3........1 2⁄3 0 1 1 1 2 28 2.70 Smith .........................0 0 0 0 1 0 8 2.12 Cincinnati ..................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Straily .........................7 3 0 0 1 4 99 4.07 Lorenzen .....................1 1 0 0 1 0 18 3.09 Cingrani W, 2-2 ............1 0 0 0 0 0 10 3.29 Inherited runners-scored—Smith 1-1. WP—Smith. U—Mark Carlson, Mike DiMuro, Brian Gorman, Quinn Wolcott. T—2:34. Tickets sold—23,085 (42,319). MARLINS CARDINALS 2 1 Pittsburgh AB R H BI Avg. Washington AB R H BI Avg. Frazier rf 6 1 3 0 .355 Revere cf 3 0 1 0 .222 McCtchn cf 8 0 0 0 .244 c-Mrphy 1 1 1 1 .350 Marte lf 7 1 3 2 .315 e-Taylor cf 2 0 0 0 .227 Freese 3b 5 0 0 0 .286 Werth lf 7 0 1 0 .244 Camnro p 0 0 0 0 .000 Harper rf 6 0 1 0 .252 f-Liriano 1 0 0 0 .278 Ramos c 6 0 1 0 .327 g-Fryer 0 0 0 0 .286 Robnsn 1b 7 0 0 0 .213 Niese p 1 0 0 0 .100 Drew 3b 7 0 1 0 .255 Joyce rf 3 0 0 0 .277 Espinsa ss 6 0 0 0 .236 Harrson 2b 4 0 1 0 .270 Scherzer p 2 0 0 0 .119 Mercer ss 7 0 3 0 .275 b-Heisy cf 1 0 0 0 .221 Kratz c 6 0 1 0 .107 Rivero p 1 0 0 0 .000 Kuhl p 2 0 0 0 .250 h-Lobtn 1 0 0 0 .188 a-Rdrgz 1b 4 0 0 0 .254 Turner 2b 7 0 2 0 .333 Jaso 1b 4 0 0 0 .271 Totals 57 1 8 1 d-Kang 3b 4 0 1 0 .240 Totals 62 2 12 2 020 100 010 —4 001 000 000 —1 a-grounded out for Lackey in the 8th. Walks—Texas 2: Rua 1, Mazara 1. Strikeouts—Texas 9: Odor 1, Desmond 1, Beltre 1, Fielder 2, Mazara 2, Andrus 2. Chicago 10: Baez 1, Bryant 3, Rizzo 2, Contreras 2, Russell 1, Heyward 1. E—Beltre (5). LOB—Texas 4, Chicago 3. 2B—Chirinos (4), Baez (13). HR—Desmond (16), off Lackey. RBIs—Desmond (56), Andrus (44), Chirinos 2 (14), Baez (32). SB—Baez (7). SF—Chirinos. Runners left in scoring position—Texas 3 (Odor 3); Chicago 2 (Bryant, Szczur). RISP—Texas 2 for 7; Chicago 0 for 3. DP—Heyward. DP—Texas 1 (Fielder). Texas.........................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hamels W, 10-2 ...........8 4 1 0 0 7 91 3.00 Dyson S, 19-21............1 0 0 0 0 3 16 2.53 Chicago .....................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lackey L, 7-6 ...............8 6 4 4 2 8 112 3.75 Richard .......................1 0 0 0 0 1 15 6.75 U—Cory Blaser, Jeff Nelson, Laz Diaz, John Tumpane. T—2:17. Tickets sold—41,213 (41,072). 0 0 Starling Marte hit a home run in the top of the 18th inning in a game that lasted nearly six hours. Pinch-hitter Daniel Murphy homered with two outs in the ninth inning for Washington. Cleveland AB R H BI Avg. Minnesota CSntna dh 5 1 1 0 .257 Nunez 3b Kipnis 2b 4 1 3 1 .280 Grssmn dh Gonzlz 3b 0 0 0 0 .000 Vargas 1b Lindor ss 4 0 1 1 .301 Dozier 2b Napoli 1b 5 1 1 1 .249 Kepler rf Ramirez 2b 4 0 1 0 .294 Rosrio lf Chsnhll rf 4 0 2 0 .299 Escbr ss Naquin cf 4 2 1 1 .314 Suzki c Almnte lf 3 1 1 0 .158 DSntna cf Goms c 2 0 1 0 .165 Totals Gmnz c 2 0 1 2 .188 Totals 37 6 13 6 1 0 7 10 PIRATES NATIONALS Chicago AB R H BI Avg. Baez 2b 4 0 1 1 .277 Richrd p 0 0 0 0 .000 Bryant 3b 4 0 1 0 .282 Rizzo 1b 4 0 0 0 .294 Contrrs c 4 0 1 0 .290 Russll ss 3 0 1 0 .238 Hywrd rf 3 0 0 0 .236 Szczr lf 3 0 0 0 .276 Almra cf 3 1 0 0 .256 Lackey p 2 0 0 0 .089 a-LaStlla 2b 1 0 0 0 .263 Totals 31 1 4 1 6 4 8-5 21-26 6-9 Walks—Chicago 1: Eaton 1. Angels 4: Escobar 1, Calhoun 1, Trout 1, Pujols 1. Strikeouts—Chicago 4: Anderson 2, Cabrera 1, Morneau 1. Angels 5: Pujols 1, Simmons 1, Cunningham 1, Bandy 1, Petit 1. LOB—Chicago 5, Angels 5. 2B—Eaton (16), Narvaez (1), Trout (22), Cunningham (2), Bandy (4), Petit (11). HR—Pujols (16), off Turner; Pujols (17), off Turner. RBIs—Eaton (30), Pujols 4 (64), Choi (1), Cunningham (1), Bandy (12), Petit (15). SB—Choi (1). SF—Choi. Runners left in scoring position—Chicago 1 (Abreu); Angels 3 (Escobar, Bandy 2). RISP—Chicago 1 for 3; Angels 4 for 9. GIDP—Frazier, Escobar, Calhoun. DP—Chicago 2 (Lawrie, Anderson, Abreu), (Lawrie, Anderson, Abreu); Angels 2 (Petit, Choi), (Simmons, Petit, Choi). Chicago .....................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Turner L, 0-1 ................4 7 8 8 3 2 80 18.00 Ynoa...........................1 1 0 0 1 0 17 3.86 Kahnle ........................1 1 0 0 0 1 16 4.26 Fulmer ........................2 1 0 0 0 2 21 0.00 Angels .......................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Weaver W, 8-7..............7 6 1 1 1 1 86 5.02 Guerra ........................1 0 0 0 0 1 13 2.63 Smith .........................1 1 0 0 0 2 29 4.64 Turner pitched to 2 batters in the 5th. Inherited runners-scored—Ynoa 2-2. HBP—Fulmer (Simmons). U—CB Bucknor, Fieldin Culbreth, Jim Reynolds, Manny Gonzalez. T—2:40. Tickets sold—36,834 (43,250). 4 1 Cole Hamels (10-2) struck out the first six batters he faced and gave up an unearned run in eight innings in his first game at Wrigley Field since throwing a no-hitter there last year. Texas Odor 2b Desmnd cf Beltre 3b Fielder 1b Mrlnd 1b Rua lf Mazara rf Andrus ss Chrnos c Hamels p Dyson p Totals Chicago Andrsn ss Eaton rf Abreu 1b Cabrra lf Frazier 3b Mrnau dh Lwrie 2b Shuck cf Narvaez c Totals REDS BREWERS 8 1 6 3 Giancarlo Stanton’s second double of the game drove in the go-ahead run in a two-run seventh inning against Jonathan Broxton (1-2). Christian Yelich drove in three runs for Miami. Miami AB R H BI Avg. Suzuki cf 4 1 3 0 .347 Prado 3b 4 1 1 0 .322 Yelich lf 4 1 2 3 .318 Stanton rf 4 2 2 1 .238 Dietrich 2b 4 0 1 0 .295 c-Rojas 2b 1 0 0 0 .259 Kelly 1b 4 0 0 1 .067 Mathis c 5 0 2 1 .203 Hchvrra ss 4 0 1 0 .243 Conley p 3 0 0 0 .059 Brrclgh p 0 0 0 0 --b-Gllspie 1 0 1 0 .245 1-Perez 0 1 0 0 --Totals 38 6 13 6 St. Louis Pham cf Diaz ss Pisctty rf Hollday 1b Peralta 3b Bowmn p a-McKnry d-Wong Grchuk lf Gyrko 2b Rosrio c Wacha p Garcia 3b Totals Miami St. Louis 000 120 210 —6 010 011 000 —3 AB 4 2 4 4 2 0 1 1 4 4 2 1 2 31 R 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3 H 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 BI 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Avg. .281 .313 .295 .244 .221 .000 .000 .231 .227 .238 .333 .031 .333 13 4 1 0 a-struck out for Bowman in the 6th. b-singled for Barraclough in the 8th. c-flied out for Dietrich in the 8th. d-lined out for Maness in the 9th. 1-ran for Gillespie in the 8th. Walks—Miami 3: Suzuki 1, Stanton 1, Hechavarria 1. St. Louis 3: Diaz 2, Rosario 1. Strikeouts—Miami 7: Stanton 2, Kelly 1, Hechavarria 1, Conley 3. St. Louis 15: Pham 3, Diaz 1, Piscotty 1, Peralta 2, McKenry 1, Grichuk 4, Gyorko 1, Rosario 1, Wacha 1. E—Hechavarria (6). LOB—Miami 11, St. Louis 4. 2B—Suzuki (8), Prado (21), Stanton 2 (14), Holliday (16), Garcia (4). HR—Holliday (16), off Conley. RBIs—Yelich 3 (48), Stanton (52), Kelly (1), Mathis (7), Holliday (53). SB—Suzuki (8), Prado (1), Perez (1), Diaz (4). SF—Yelich, Kelly. RISP—Miami 4 for 9; St. Louis 0 for 7. Miami .......................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Conley .....................5 1⁄3 3 3 2 3 9 92 3.61 Barraclough W, 5-2....1 2⁄3 0 0 0 0 3 20 3.11 Rodney H, 4.................1 0 0 0 0 2 15 3.38 Ramos S, 29-30...........1 1 0 0 0 1 15 2.13 St. Louis ....................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Wacha ........................4 7 3 3 2 4 101 4.44 Bowman......................2 2 0 0 0 2 22 2.94 Broxton L, 1-2 ..............1 2 2 2 0 0 14 4.17 Siegrist........................1 2 1 1 1 1 24 2.88 Maness .......................1 0 0 0 0 0 5 5.12 Wacha pitched to 3 batters in the 5th. Inherited runners-scored—Barraclough 1-0, Bowman 1-0. IBB—off Wacha (Hechavarria), off Siegrist (Stanton). HBP—Siegrist (Prado). WP—Wacha, Conley. U—Marvin Hudson, Chad Fairchild, Jim Joyce, Clint Fagan. T—3:04. Tickets sold—43,046 (43,975). ASTROS MARINERS 8 1 Jose Altuve had a home run among four hits and drove in three runs, Carlos Gomez hit his second career grand slam and Collin McHugh (6-6) won for the first time since May 30. Houston Sprnger rf Gonzlz ss Altuve dh Correa ss a-Reed 1b Gattis c Vlbuena 3b Gomez cf Worth 2b Marsnck lf Totals Houston Seattle AB 4 5 5 3 0 5 3 4 5 4 38 R 0 3 2 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 8 H 0 2 4 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 11 BI 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 7 Avg. .256 .257 .346 .261 .158 .215 .261 .212 .194 .200 New York Reyes 3b Grndrsn rf Cespdes lf Walker 2b Loney 1b Cabrra ss Lagres cf Rivera c deGrom p Totals R 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 5 H 1 1 0 0 2 1 1 1 1 8 BI 1 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 5 Avg. .222 .240 .299 .248 .284 .267 .269 .190 .071 R 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 3 H 2 2 2 0 0 0 2 2 0 1 11 100 000 000 —1 000 300 00x —3 BI 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 3 Avg. .260 .275 .297 .197 .214 .254 .299 .257 .267 .264 3 11 1 1 a-walked for Holt in the 8th. 1-ran for Ortiz in the 9th. Walks—Boston 3: Ortiz 1, Shaw 1, Brentz 1. New York 2: Rodriguez 1, Refsnyder 1. Strikeouts—Boston 9: Betts 1, Pedroia 1, Bogaerts 1, Ortiz 1, Ramirez 2, Bradley Jr. 1, Shaw 1, Leon 1. New York 2: Rodriguez 1, Refsnyder 1. E—Bradley Jr. (3), Castro (6). LOB—Boston 4, New York 11. 2B—Holt (8), Beltran (19), Gregorius (18), Castro (15). HR—Pedroia (9), off Tanaka. RBIs—Pedroia (38), Ellsbury (30), Castro (32), Romine (17). SB—Gardner (13). Runners left in scoring position—Boston 2 (Betts, Holt); New York 7 (Ellsbury, Beltran 3, Headley, Castro, Romine). RISP—Boston 0 for 2; New York 2 for 9. Runners moved up—Refsnyder. GIDP—Ramirez. DP—New York 1 (Castro, Gregorius, Refsnyder). Boston ......................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Price L, 9-7 ..............5 2⁄3 11 3 3 1 1 106 4.36 Ross Jr. .......................1 0 0 0 0 1 13 4.40 Hembree.....................2⁄3 0 0 0 1 0 9 1.96 Layne .........................2⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 7 3.51 New York....................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Tanaka W, 7-2 ..............6 3 1 1 1 7 87 3.15 Betances H, 22 ............1 0 0 0 0 1 11 2.60 Miller H, 15 .................1 0 0 0 1 1 18 1.34 Chapman S, 18-19 .......1 0 0 0 1 0 13 2.30 Inherited runners-scored—Ross Jr. 2-0, Hembree 1-0, Layne 1-0. HBP—Ross Jr. (Gregorius). U—Carlos Torres, Rob Drake, Sam Holbrook, Gerry Davis. T—2:57. Tickets sold—42,884 (49,642). Philadelphia Herrera cf Bourjos rf Asche lf Franco 3b Howrd 1b Rupp c Galvis ss Hernndz 2b Eflin p a-Pardes Stumpf p Bailey p Obrhltzr p b-Blanco Totals AB 4 3 3 3 2 3 3 3 1 1 0 0 0 1 27 R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 H 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 011 010 020 —5 000 000 000 —0 BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Avg. .287 .266 .256 .263 .159 .284 .229 .283 .231 .228 ----.167 .264 8 1 0 1 a-struck out for Eflin in the 6th. b-grounded out for Oberholtzer in the 9th. Walks—New York 2: Granderson 1, Cespedes 1. Philadelphia 1: Howard 1. Strikeouts—New York 5: Reyes 1, Walker 1, Lagares 1, Rivera 1, deGrom 1. Philadelphia 7: Herrera 2, Bourjos 1, Asche 1, Howard 1, Rupp 1, Paredes 1. E—Eflin (1). LOB—New York 5, Philadelphia 1. 2B—Reyes (3). 3B—Lagares (2). HR—Granderson (16), off Eflin; Cabrera (13), off Bailey. RBIs—Reyes (6), Granderson (28), Cabrera 2 (31), Lagares (8). SB—Reyes (2), Granderson (3). S—deGrom. RISP—New York 1 for 6; . GIDP—Galvis. DP—New York 1 (Walker, Cabrera, Loney). New York....................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA deGrom W, 6-4.............9 1 0 0 1 7 105 2.38 Philadelphia...............IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Eflin L, 2-3 ..................6 5 3 3 2 2 101 4.14 Stumpf........................1 1 0 0 0 0 12 10.12 Bailey .........................1 2 2 2 0 1 18 5.34 Oberholtzer ..................1 0 0 0 0 2 17 4.89 U—Pat Hoberg, Tim Timmons, Mike Everitt, Jordan Baker. T—2:21. Tickets sold—30,894 (43,651). PADRES GIANTS 5 3 Edwin Jackson (1-1), making his first start since 2014, held San Francisco hitless until Conor Gillaspie's threerun homer in the seventh inning. Two relievers helped complete a two-hitter. AB 3 3 4 4 4 3 3 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 1 30 R 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 H 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 Avg. .248 .285 .290 .289 .277 .249 .362 .156 .260 .067 .000 .000 .250 .225 .273 San Diego AB R H BI Avg. Jnkwski cf 5 0 1 0 .252 Myers 1b 3 0 0 0 .284 Kemp rf 4 1 1 1 .255 Solarte 3b 4 1 1 1 .290 Dckrsn lf 3 1 0 0 .265 Bthncrt c 4 2 2 1 .276 Schmpf 2b 3 0 2 1 .227 Ramrez ss 4 0 1 0 .241 Jacksn p 3 0 2 1 .667 Norris c 1 0 0 0 .211 Totals 34 5 10 5 000 000 300 —3 000 202 10x —5 2 10 1 2 Walks—San Francisco 7: Span 2, Pagan 1, Blanco 1, Pena 1, Tejada 1, Williamson 1. San Diego 3: Myers 1, Dickerson 1, Schimpf 1. Strikeouts—San Francisco 6: Belt 1, Posey 1, Crawford 2, Pena 1, Tejada 1. San Diego 8: Jankowski 3, Kemp 1, Solarte 2, Schimpf 1, Norris 1. E—Crawford (5), Schimpf (2), Jackson (1). LOB—San Francisco 7, San Diego 8. 2B—Jankowski (2). 3B—Ramirez (2). HR—Gillaspie (3), off Jackson; Kemp (18), off Cueto; Bethancourt (5), off Cueto; Solarte (9), off Strickland. RBIs—Gillaspie 3 (14), Kemp (61), Solarte (38), Bethancourt (14), Schimpf (10), Jackson (1). SB—Span (9). GIDP—Cueto, Myers. DP—San Francisco 1 (Tejada, Pena, Belt); San Diego 2 (Schimpf, Ramirez, Myers), (Bethancourt, Ramirez, Schimpf). San Francisco ............IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cueto L, 13-2 ..............5 6 4 4 3 4 95 2.64 Kontos........................1⁄3 2 0 0 0 0 6 2.96 Lopez .........................1⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 6 4.91 Law............................1⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 7 2.78 Strickland ....................1 1 1 1 0 1 23 3.12 Osich..........................1 1 0 0 0 3 23 3.95 San Diego ..................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Jackson W, 1-1 .........6 1⁄3 1 3 2 5 4 90 2.84 Hand H, 8 ................... 2⁄3 0 0 0 2 1 20 2.94 Buchter H, 15 ..............1 0 0 0 0 1 11 2.42 Maurer S, 3-7 ..............1 1 0 0 0 0 15 5.15 Cueto pitched to 2 batters in the 6th. Inherited runners-scored—Kontos 2-2, Lopez 2-0, Law 2-0. WP—Jackson. PB—Bethancourt (5). U—Gabe Morales, Ed Hickox, Mike Estabrook, Dana DeMuth. T—3:25. Tickets sold—35,784 (42,302). BLUE JAYS ATHLETICS 3 1 Masahiro Tanaka (7-2) won his fourth start in a row, and Starlin Castro keyed a three-run fourth with a run-scoring double against David Price (9-7), who gave up 11 hits in 52⁄3 innings. Boston AB R H BI Avg. New York AB Betts rf 4 0 0 0 .302 Gardner lf 5 Pedroia 2b 4 1 1 1 .300 Ellsbry cf 5 Bogaerts ss 4 0 0 0 .319 Beltran rf 4 Ortiz dh 3 0 0 0 .327 Hicks rf 0 1-Mrtnz dh 0 0 0 0 --- Rodrgz dh 3 Ramrez 1b 4 0 0 0 .279 Headly 3b 4 BrdleyJr cf 3 0 0 0 .296 Grgrius ss 3 Shaw 3b 2 0 0 0 .268 Castro 2b 4 Leon c 3 0 1 0 .452 Rfsyder 1b 3 Holt lf 2 0 1 0 .263 Romine c 4 a-Brntz lf 0 0 0 0 .302 Totals 35 Totals 29 1 3 1 AB 5 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 3 34 New York Philadelphia San Francisco San Diego YANKEES RED SOX 5 0 Jacob deGrom (6-4) threw a one-hitter, and Curtis Granderson and Asdrubal Cabrera homered. DeGrom gave up a third-inning single to pitcher Zach Eflin (2-3) and retired 27 of 29 batters. 102 010 400 —8 000 000 010 —1 a-walked for Correa in the 8th. b-grounded out for Lind in the 8th. Walks—Houston 4: Springer 1, Reed 1, Valbuena 2. Seattle 7: Smith 2, Martin 2, Cano 1, Lind 1, Sucre 1. Strikeouts—Houston 11: Gonzalez 1, Altuve 1, Correa 2, Gattis 3, Valbuena 1, Gomez 1, Worth 1, Marisnick 1. Seattle 12: Smith 2, Cano 2, Seager 3, Lind 2, Sucre 3. E—Smith (2), Martin (3), Seager 2 (12). LOB—Houston 9, Seattle 10. 2B—Gonzalez 2 (18), Gattis (10), Valbuena (17), Smith (8). HR—Altuve (15), off Montgomery; Gomez (5), off Karns. RBIs—Altuve 3 (54), Gomez 4 (27), Seager (62). SB—Gonzalez (9). Runners left in scoring position—Houston 6 (Springer 2, Gattis, Gomez, Worth 2); Seattle 5 (Martin, Lee 2, Gutierrez 2). RISP—Houston 3 for 13; Seattle 3 for 9. GIDP—Gonzalez, Martin, Lee 2, Marte 2. DP—Houston 5 (Worth, Correa, Gonzalez), (Correa, Valbuena, Gonzalez), (Valbuena, Worth, Gonzalez), (Gonzalez, Correa), (Gonzalez, Worth, Reed); Seattle 1 (Marte, Lee). Houston.....................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA McHugh W, 6-6 ............6 4 0 0 4 10 99 4.25 Devenski ..................1 2⁄3 2 1 1 2 2 25 2.35 Sipp ........................1 1⁄3 1 0 0 1 0 18 4.91 Seattle ......................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Montgomery L, 3-4 .......5 7 4 3 2 7 83 2.34 Wilhelmsen..................1 1 0 0 0 0 7 1.69 Karns..........................1 3 4 4 1 1 22 4.81 Benoit.........................1 0 0 0 1 3 22 4.37 Rollins ........................1 0 0 0 0 0 8 5.06 Inherited runners-scored—Sipp 3-0. HBP—McHugh (Cruz), Montgomery (Gomez), Karns (Correa), Devenski (Lee). WP—Montgomery. U—Ryan Blakney, Alan Porter, Jeff Kellogg, Brian O’Nora. T—2:55. Tickets sold—27,322 (47,476). Boston New York METS PHILLIES Seattle AB R H BI Avg. Smith lf 3 1 1 0 .274 Martin cf 3 0 0 0 .246 Cano 2b 3 0 1 0 .309 Rbrtsn rf 0 0 0 0 .250 Cruz rf 2 0 2 0 .281 O’Mlley 2b 1 0 1 0 .241 Seager 3b 4 0 1 1 .287 Lee 1b 3 0 0 0 .283 Lind dh 2 0 0 0 .227 b-Gutrrz dh 1 0 0 0 .242 Sucre c 3 0 0 0 .125 Marte ss 4 0 1 0 .273 Totals 29 1 7 1 0 4 0 0 Walks—Colorado 4: Blackmon 1, Raburn 1, Adames 1, Wolters 1. Atlanta 5: Peterson 2, Markakis 2, Recker 1. Strikeouts—Colorado 5: Blackmon 2, LeMahieu 1, Gonzalez 1, Gray 1. Atlanta 9: d’Arnaud 2, Freeman 4, Francoeur 3. LOB—Colorado 6, Atlanta 11. 2B—Descalso (3). RBIs—d’Arnaud (11). SB—d’Arnaud (7), Inciarte (9). S—Gray, Story, Inciarte, Recker. DP—Markakis. GIDP—LeMahieu, Reynolds. DP—Colorado 1 ; Atlanta 2 . Colorado....................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Gray ...........................7 5 0 0 3 8 115 4.33 Motte..........................1 0 0 0 1 1 18 4.50 Germen L, 2-1 ............. 2⁄3 2 1 1 1 0 21 5.29 Atlanta ......................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Teheran .......................7 3 0 0 1 5 101 2.79 Cervenka.....................0 0 0 0 1 0 5 3.00 Withrow.......................1 1 0 0 1 0 14 3.38 Alvarez........................1⁄3 0 0 0 0 0 5 2.38 Johnson W, 2-5 ............2⁄3 0 0 0 1 0 7 4.13 Cervenka pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Withrow pitched to 1 batter in the 9th. Inherited runners-scored—Withrow 1-0, Alvarez 1-0, Johnson 1-0. IBB—off Gray (Recker), off Withrow (Blackmon). HBP—Gray (Recker). WP—Teheran, Germen. U—Tripp Gibson, Hunter Wendelstedt, Jerry Layne, Scott Barry. T—3:22. Tickets sold—18,873 (49,586). San Fran Span cf Pagan lf Belt 1b Posey c Crawfrd ss Blanco rf Pena 2b Tejada 3b Gllspie 3b Cueto p Lopez p Law p Parker Willmsn Green Totals 11 7 4 7 5 3 Josh Donaldson hit a tiebreaking two-run double with two outs in the ninth inning against his former team and Toronto held on to avoid a threegame sweep. Toronto Travis 2b Donldsn 3b Encrncn dh Martin c Saundrs lf Tlwtzki ss Pillar cf Smoak 1b 1-Burns 1b Lake rf Totals Toronto Oakland AB 5 5 4 3 4 4 4 4 0 4 37 R 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 5 H 0 2 1 2 0 1 1 2 0 1 10 BI 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 4 Avg. .263 .302 .267 .231 .289 .239 .265 .239 .000 .261 Oakland Lowrie 2b Semien ss Reddck rf Valncia 1b Davis lf Butler dh a-Alnso dh Smlnski cf Healy 3b McBrde c Totals AB 4 4 4 4 3 2 2 3 4 4 34 R 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 100 200 002 —5 000 003 000 —3 H 2 1 0 2 0 0 1 1 1 0 8 BI 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 Avg. .282 .237 .291 .304 .256 .250 .255 .297 .273 .194 10 8 0 1 a-doubled for Butler in the 6th. 1-ran for Smoak in the 9th. Walks—Toronto 3: Encarnacion 1, Martin 1, Saunders 1. Oakland 1: Davis 1. Strikeouts—Toronto 9: Travis 2, Encarnacion 1, Saunders 2, Pillar 1, Smoak 1, Lake 2. Oakland 9: Lowrie 1, Semien 2, Reddick 2, Valencia 1, Davis 1, Healy 1, McBride 1. E—Davis (1). LOB—Toronto 9, Oakland 6. 2B—Donaldson (21), Martin (8), Alonso (15). HR—Tulowitzki (16), off Manaea; Semien (20), off Happ. RBIs—Donaldson 2 (66), Tulowitzki 2 (46), Semien (48), Alonso 2 (28). GIDP—Reddick. DP—Toronto 1 (Travis, Tulowitzki, Smoak). Toronto ......................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Happ.......................5 2⁄3 5 3 3 1 5 84 3.43 Chavez BS, 2-2 ............1⁄3 2 0 0 0 0 14 3.25 Cecil...........................1 1 0 0 0 1 12 5.17 Grilli W, 4-3 .................1 0 0 0 0 2 14 2.46 Osuna S, 19-21............1 0 0 0 0 1 13 2.16 Oakland.....................IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hill .............................0 0 0 0 0 0 5 2.25 Triggs ..........................1 2 1 0 0 1 18 5.83 Manaea ......................5 3 2 2 0 4 69 5.12 Rzepczynski ................. 2⁄3 2 0 0 0 2 12 3.34 Hendriks ..................1 1⁄3 0 0 0 1 0 20 5.40 Axford L, 3-3 ............... 2⁄3 3 2 2 2 1 27 5.21 Schuster ..................... 1⁄3 0 0 0 0 1 6 13.50 Hill pitched to 0 batter in the 1st. Inherited runners-scored—Chavez 2-2, Hendriks 2-0, Schuster 3-0. IBB—off Axford (Encarnacion). HBP—Triggs (Martin), Chavez (Smolinski). U—Paul Emmel, Marty Foster, Mark Wegner, Mike Muchlinski. T—3:12. Tickets sold—21,626 (37,090). L AT I ME S . CO M / S P O RT S M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 D5 BASEBALL DODGERS REPORT No return date for Kershaw By Andy McCullough PHOENIX — The story remained the same with Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw on Sunday morning. Dodgers Manager Dave Roberts declined to offer a date for his return from the disabled list. He spoke in generalities, as he has since Kershaw suffered a herniated disk in late June. Kershaw threw a four-inning simulated game on Saturday at Dodger Stadium. Roberts suggested the team would need some time before Kershaw is cleared to pitch. “With Clayton, it’s contingent upon these next couple days,” Roberts said before Sunday’s series finale against the Arizona Diamondbacks. “He exerted a lot of effort in that 60-pitch live session. So we’ll see over the next couple days how he responds, and what would be the next step.” The Dodgers have not listed a starter for Thursday’s game against the Washington Nationals. Kershaw would be on four days’ rest for that outing. The team could also opt to give him extra rest and start him Friday in St. Louis. “We’ve been reluctant to put any return date for Clayton,” Roberts said. “We’ve got to defer to his health, obviously.” Pederson is due back Tuesday The Dodgers’ outfield should stabilize on Tuesday when Joc Pederson is expected to return from the disabled list. Pederson sprained the AC joint in his shoulder when he crashed into a wall in Milwaukee on June 28. With Trayce Thompson also on the shelf because of lower back irritation, the team was forced to use Yasiel Puig in center field on Sunday. andy.mccullough@latimes.com Twitter: @McCulloughTimes Sean M. Haffey Getty Images MIKE TROUT congratulates Albert Pujols after Pujols hit a two-run home run during the fourth inning against the Chicago White Sox. It was Pujols’ second two-run homer of the game. ANGELS REPORT Christian Petersen Getty Images YASIEL PUIG ducks as Arizona shortstop Nick Ahmed throws to first for a double play in the sixth. L.A. is unable to gain on Giants [Dodgers, from D1] went foul. At last, Puig swung through a below-theknees slider. The end came soon after, when Chris Taylor struck out to strand two more runners, upping the team’s total to 10 on the day. Roberts reached out to pat Puig on the back as his outfielder descended into the Dodgers dugout. “He’s trying to do too much,” Roberts said. “When guys get in scoring position and it gets hot, Yasiel, you can see the tension. And he starts to squeeze the bat too much. I think it’s a case of trying to do too much.” The Dodgers (52-42) started the second half with a 13-run barrage Friday. But the team ended this series with a pair of defeats. During a weekend when the division-leading Giants were swept by lowly San Diego, the Dodgers gained only one game in the standings. The spotlight tends to find Puig, even on days like Sunday, when one of his teammates bore more responsibility for the defeat. Kenta Maeda could not complete five innings, unable to pacify the Diamondbacks lineup, and dumped his team in a fiverun hole. On the day before the AllStar break, Maeda authored his most dominant outing as a Dodger. He struck out 13 Padres during seven innings of one-run baseball. He displayed confidence in his fastball, a rare achievement during his rookie season, his first year away from Japan’s Central League. Maeda regressed Sunday. He could not bully the Diamondbacks and induce feeble swings on his slider. Arizona battered him for three runs in the first inning. Maeda struggled to recover. “I think the three runs in the first inning really took a toll,” Maeda said. “I couldn’t get into my rhythm after that.” Maeda played with an unorthodox group of defenders behind him. Roberts did not assemble his lineup by dropping names into a hat and plucking them out at random; it only appeared that way. He fashioned a batting order packed with right-handed hitters to face Diamondbacks lefthander Robbie Ray. Puig played center field. Puig wore a special pair of shoes for the occasion. A friend in Los Angeles designed cleats for him with broadcaster Vin Scully’s visage adorned on the side and the phrase “Win for Vin!” near the laces. “I play baseball, and I like the way he narrates,” Puig said through an interpreter. “After 67 years of work, he deserves his respect.” Puig had not started in center field since the final game of the 2014 regular season. He did not wait long for action. With two runners aboard, third baseman Jake Lamb hit a single into center. Puig dived for it, only to see the ball bounce in front of him for an RBI single. Up next, Arizona outfielder Brandon Drury smacked an 89-mph fastball into right-center. Puig could not cut the baseball off, and it rolled to the warning track. Drury received credit for a two-run double. Lamb struck again in the third when he walloped a hanging curveball for a solo home run. He devastated the Dodgers this weekend, hitting the tying double off of Kenley Jansen on Saturday and tripling and scoring the winning run three innings later. “When you make a mistake over the plate, he makes you pay,” Roberts said. “And he’s seeing the ball really well.” In the fifth, Maeda opted for five consecutive offspeed pitches to Ray. Ray took advantage of a flat changeup and doubled. Michael Bourn flicked a curveball into the left-field corner for an RBI double. Maeda exited, and the Dodgers drifted toward a defeat. The offense awakened in the eighth when Justin Turner hit a two-run homer. Corey Seager drilled his third double of the game to bring in a run in the ninth. Turner followed up with a two-run single. After another single by rookie outfielder Andrew Toles, it was up to Puig. He could not catch up to the fastballs of Barrett. And he could not handle his offspeed choices. He heard his manager’s rationale for his struggle, but did not agree. “It’s not that I’m squeezing the bat too hard,” Puig said. “It’s that I’m not connecting. But there are [68] games to go. We’ll be all right.” andy.mccullough@latimes.com Twitter: @McCulloughTimes Focus is on scoring runs, not on hitting homers By Pedro Moura The Angels entered Sunday’s game having hit only 84 home runs in 2016, the fifthfewest in Major League Baseball and the secondfewest in the American League. They had not launched one for seven games until Albert Pujols did so in Sunday’s first inning at Angel Stadium against the Chicago White Sox. It was a trait General Manager Billy Eppler recognized and accepted when assembling the roster over the off-season, opting for contact ability over power. Although it has not led to the sort of season that was envisioned, the Angels have struck out less than any other club. “We’re definitely a team that thinks we can score runs without a home run,” Angels Manager Mike Scioscia said. “We’re scoring runs without hitting home runs, and they’ll come. We have guys in our lineup with some power. “They’re just in a little dry spell right now. Those home runs will come, but until they do, you still have to generate offense. We’re doing a good job of that.” The Angels had homered more than the median major league team in each of the last four seasons, spanning Pujols’ tenure with the team. Pujols, who had two tworun homers Sunday, said their home run total did not matter, as long as the offense was scoring runs — and they are on pace to put up 77 more runs than a year ago. “You guys always focus on negative stuff,” Pujols said in response to a question about the homer-less stretch. “Who cares about homers? At the end of the day, who cares if we go deep or not?” Short hops The Angels scratched catcher Geovany Soto from their lineup 90 minutes before Sunday’s game and inserted Jett Bandy in his stead. Soto was experiencing left knee discomfort, the Angels announced. He tore the meniscus in his right knee in May and missed nearly two months. … Bullpen coach Scott Radinsky will travel with the An- gels on their upcoming trip to Houston and Kansas City, he said. Radinsky had been replaced by triple-A pitching coach Erik Bennett for recent trips after he experienced heart abnormalities after a game in Oakland in April. He underwent subsequent triple-bypass surgery. He resumed coaching while the team was at home last month. Outfielder Craig Gentry moved his rehab assignment to triple-A Salt Lake on Sunday and could rejoin the Angels shortly. He has been away from the team since May1, first because of a lumbar spine strain and then because of a “personal medical condition.’ pedro.moura@latimes.com Twitter: @pedromoura Weaver benefits from time off [Angels, from D1] man Todd Frazier said the key to facing Weaver was to approach him as a knuckleball pitcher: wait on everything, then wait some more. “Once you rush,” he said then, “he’s going to get you.” Weaver caught Frazier rushing Sunday. The man nearly fell down attempting to time a curveball clocked in the mid-60s, as Weaver adeptly mixed in slow offerings among his 86 pitches. He also fired his fastest fastball of the season — 87.5 mph — to Frazier, and averaged a season-high 85 mph overall. “The speed isn’t anything to alarm you,” Ventura said. “But he almost throws it under anything that’s a comfortable hitting speed.” Said Angels Manager Mike Scioscia: “He got a little frisky with his fastball, which was good to see. He was letting it hum a little bit. He was going after guys.” Twenty-four of the 26 batters Weaver faced hit into all sorts of soft contact as he lowered his 2016 earned-run average to 5.02. He has an 8-7 record and has contributed positively to the team, according to the wins above replacement metric. All the aforementioned achievements were considered improbable by scouts who observed him this spring. In one March start, Weaver’s fastball sat at an unserviceable 79 mph. He benefited Sunday, he said, from the 10 days of rest since his last start, before the AllStar break. “I don’t think I’ve ever had that much time off in the course of a season,” Weaver said In Sunday’s first inning, Weaver walked Adam Eaton, the only White Sox hitter who performed well Sean M. Haffey Getty Images JERED WEAVER struck out one, walked one and gave up one run in seven sharp innings against the White Sox. The Angels swept the three-game series. on the weekend, and then yielded a pop fly to Jose Abreu that appeared bound to drop. Gregorio Petit scampered out to short right field to corral it and unleashed a quick throw to erase Eaton. Weaver threw up his hands in elation and held them parallel to his head for several seconds, then faced little trouble thereafter. The lone run he gave up came in the third, when Eaton doubled in Omar Narvaez, a Chicago catcher making his major league debut. The Angels scored twice in the first inning, four times in the fourth, and twice more in the fifth inning. The last time Albert Pujols faced Jacob Turner, four years ago, he singled in a run in his first at-bat and homered in his second. Turner was removed before Pujols could face him again. On Sunday, facing Turner and feeling rejuvenated from what he described as one of the best All-Star breaks of his career, Pujols homered in his first at-bat and homered again in his second. The two drives, to center and then to left, traveled a combined 858 feet. Again, Turner was pulled before Pujols could bat a third time — this time just as he approached the plate in the fifth inning. His replacement, Michael Ynoa, walked Pujols to load the bases without an out, and Ji-Man Choi pushed in a run via a sacrifice fly. Todd Cunningham followed with a run-scoring, outcome-securing double. The Angels outscored Chicago by 15 runs over the three-game sweep. Even better for the club, reliever Joe Smith pitched a scoreless ninth inning Sunday and third baseman Yunel Escobar picked him up with a superb defensive play. Both players are primed to be dealt before the Aug. 1 nonwaiver trade deadline, and opposing scouts are observing them intently. Smith, perhaps the surest bet to leave as an impending free agent, cannot afford to fret about the probability because he has struggled so much this season. “I’ve got too much to worry about right now,” he said. “I’m worried about getting outs.” pedro.moura@latimes.com Twitter: @pedromoura D6 M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 L AT I M ES . C O M / SP O RTS THE DAY IN SPORTS Kenseth wins at New Hampshire staff and wire reports Matt Kenseth pulled away down the stretch Sunday to win the Sprint Cup race at Loudon, N.H. The victory was Kenseth’s second this season and the 38th in his career. However, NASCAR said his No. 20 Toyota failed a post-race laser inspection system test and will be brought to the research and development center in Concord, N.C., for more evaluation. Tony Stewart finished second and strengthened his bid for a spot in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship in his final Cup season. Joey Logano was third. Martin Truex Jr. and Kyle Busch each led more than120 laps before fading. Matt Kenseth Lydia Ko The Golden State Warriors resigned center Anderson Varejao, who averaged 2.6 points in 22 games after signing with them on Feb. 22, four days after he was waived by Portland. AUTO RACING NASCAR STOCK CARS Sprint Cup-New Hampshire 301 At Loudon, N.H. Lap length: 1.06 miles (Starting position in parentheses) 1. (18) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 301. 2. (12) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 301. 3. (6) Joey Logano, Ford, 301. 4. (8) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 301. 5. (28) Greg Biffle, Ford, 301. 6. (19) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 301. 7. (25) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 301. 8. (2) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 301. 9. (5) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 301. 10. (22) Ricky Stenhouse Jr, Ford, 301. 11. (14) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 301. 12. (1) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 301. 13. (15) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 301. 14. (29) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 301. 15. (9) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 301. 16. (3) Martin Truex Jr, Toyota, 301. 17. (17) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 301. 18. (24) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 301. 19. (26) Aric Almirola, Ford, 301. 20. (13) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 301. 21. (10) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 301. 22. (4) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 301. 23. (31) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 301. 24. (32) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 301. 25. (11) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 301. 26. (20) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 301. 27. (21) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 300. 28. (30) Landon Cassill, Ford, 299. 29. (35) Chris Buescher, Ford, 299. 30. (23) David Ragan, Toyota, 299. 31. (16) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 299. 32. (34) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 297. 33. (37) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 295. 34. (7) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 294. 35. (36) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 294. 36. (38) Eddie MacDonald, Ford, 293. 37. (40) Ryan Ellis(i), Chevrolet, 292. 38. (33) Brian Scott, Ford, 278. 39. (27) Michael McDowell, Chevrolet, Electrical, 191. 40. (39) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, Accident, 94. Race Statistics Avg. Speed of Race Winner: 107.416 mph. Time of Race: 02 Hrs, 57 Mins, 53 Secs. Margin of Victory: 1.982 Seconds. Caution Flags: 7 for 36 laps. Lead Changes: 13 among 6 drivers. CYCLING In the Bleachers by Steve Moore $512,000 SWEDISH OPEN At Bastad, Sweden Surface: Clay-Outdoor SINGLES (final)—Albert Ramos-Vinolas (3), Spain, d. Fernando Verdasco (5), Spain, 6-3, 6-4. DOUBLES (final)—Marcel Granollers and David Marrero (2), Spain, d. Marcus Daniell, New Zealand, and Marcelo Demoliner (4), Brazil, 6-2, 6-3. PRO BASKETBALL TOUR DE FRANCE At Culoz, France 15th Stage, A 99.4-mile ride from Bourg-en-Bresse to Culoz, with a Category 1 climb early and late and an “Hors categorie” climb to the Grand Colombier in the Alps in between, among six categorized climbs overall. 1. Jarlinson Pantano, Colombia, IAM Cycling, 4 hours, 24 minutes, 49 seconds. 2. Rafal Majka, Poland, Tinkoff, same time. 3. Alexis Vuillermoz, France, AG2R La Mondiale, 6 seconds behind. 4. Sebastien Reichenbach, Switzerland, FDJ, same time. 5. Julian Alaphilippe, France, Etixx-QuickStep, :22. 6. Serge Pauwels, Belgiu, Dimension Data, :25. 7. Pierre Rolland, France, Cannondale, same time. 8. Ilnur Zakarin, Russia, Katusha, 1:30. 9. Daniel Navarro, Spain, Cofidis, same time. 10. Tom Jelte Slagter, Netherlands, Cannondale, 2:08. Also 30. Tejay Van Garderen, U.S., BMC Racing, 4:35. 45. Peter Stetina, U.S., Trek-Segafredo, 13:49. 83. Brent Bookwalter, U.S., BMC Racing, 21:53. 119. Lawson Craddock, U.S., Cannondale, 26:32. 167. Alex Howes, U.S., Cannondale, 29:10. OVERALL STANDINGS (After 15 stages) 1. Chris Froome, Britain, Sky, 68:14:36. 2. Bauke Mollema, Netherlands, Trek-Segafredo, 1:47. 3. Adam Yates, Britain, Orica-BikeExchange, 2:45. 4. Nairo Quintana, Colombia, Movistar, 2:59. 5. Alejandro Valverde, Spain, Movistar, 3:17. 6. Romain Bardet, France, AG2R La Mondiale, 4:04. 7. Richie Porte, Australia, BMC Racing, 4:27. 8. Tejay Van Garderen, U.S., BMC Racing, 4:47. 9. Daniel Martin, Ireland, EtixxQuickStep, 5:03. 10. Fabio Aru, Italy, Astana, 5:16. Also 49. Peter Stetina, U.S., Trek-Segafredo, 1:07:40. 101. Lawson Craddock, U.S., Cannondale, 2:13:58. 124. Alex Howes, U.S., Cannondale, 2:32:08. 147. Brent Bookwalter, U.S., BMC Racing, 2:42:51. Chris Froome won the 15th stage of WNBA the Tour de France. Ahead of the final INDYCAR Western Conference G B GOLF Team................... W L Pct. week of racing in the Alps, the Briton Honda Indy Toronto At Toronto SPARKS ..............20 2 .909 — $3.5-MILLION BARBASOL CHAMPIONSHIP Will Power won the IndyCar race in retained his1-minute 47-second overall Lap length: 1.786 miles Minnesota ...........19 4 .826 11⁄2 At Opelika, Ala.—Par 71 Phoenix...............10 13 .435 101⁄2 Toronto, his third victory in the last lead over Dutch rider Bauke Mollema. (Starting position in parentheses) RTJ Trail—7,302 yards 1. (4) Will Power, Chevrolet, 85, Running; 2. Dallas ..................9 14 .391 111⁄2 Final 72-Hole Scores four races, and moved to within 47 Seattle .................8 14 .364 12 (2) Helio Castroneves, Chevrolet, 85, Running; 3. x-won on fourth playoff hole San Antonio ..........5 17 .227 15 (6) James Hinchcliffe, Honda, 85, Running; 4. $226,750 BUCHAREST OPEN 266 (-18)—$630,000 Borna Coric beat Jack Sock, 6-4, (12) points of Penske teammate Simon PaAt Bucharest, Romania Eastern Conference Tony Kanaan, Chevrolet, 85, Running; 5. x-Aaron Baddeley (300) .............70-66-64-66 Team................... W L Pct. G B 266 (-18)—$378,000 3-6, 6-3, 6-4, to give Croatia a stunning (20) Takuma Sato, Honda, 85, Running; 6. (10) Surface: Clay-Outdoor genaud in the season standings. SINGLES (final)—Simona Halep (1), Romania, New York.............17 7 .708 — Mikhail Aleshin, Honda, 85, Running;'7. (5) SeSi Woo Kim (165) .....................70-68-65-63 3-2 comeback victory over the U.S. in a bastien Bourdais, Chevrolet, 85, Running; 8. (1) d. Anastasija Sevastova (7), Latvia, 6-0, 6-0. 11 .522 41⁄2 267 (-17)—$238,000 DOUBLES (final)—Jessica Moore, Australia, Atlanta ...............12 Davis Cup quarterfinal at Portland, Scott Dixon, Chevrolet, 85, Running; 9. (3) SiChicago ..............10 12 .455 6 Michael Johnson .......................67-65-70-65 12 .455 6 Pagenaud, Chevrolet, 85, Running; 10. (22) and Varatchaya Wongteanchai, Thailand, d. Al- Indiana ...............10 269 (-15)—$137,813 Ore. Marin Cilic set up the deciding mon GOLF exandra Cadantu, Romania, and Katarzyna Piter, Washington ...........9 13 .409 7 Marco Andretti, Honda, 85, Running; Andres Gonzales (65) ................68-65-69-67 Connecticut ...........6 16 .273 10 fifth match by beating John Isner, 7-6 Richard H. Lee (65)...................68-68-68-65 11. (17) Charlie Kimball, Chevrolet, 85, Run- Poland, 6-3, 7-6 (5). Michael Thompson (65) .............72-64-68-65 12. (18) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Honda, 85, $226,750 LADIES CHAMPIONSHIP Sunday’s results (11-9), 6-3, 6-4, earlier Sunday. Sock and ning; Jhonattan Vegas (65).................65-60-72-72 Running; 13. (16) Graham Rahal, Honda, 85, At Gstaad, Switzerland Atlanta 91, SPARKS 74 270 (-14)—$101,500 Isner had given the U.S. a 2-0 lead Fri- Running; 14. (11) Luca Filippi, Honda, 85, Run- Surface: Clay-Outdoor New York 83, Connecticut 76 Graham DeLaet (45) .................71-69-67-63 ning; 15. (7) Conor Daly, Honda, 85, Running; Minnesota 98, Dallas 97, OT SINGLES (final)—Viktorija Golubic, SwitzerTop-ranked Lydia Ko outlasted day, but Cilic and Ivan Dodig beat Bob 16. (19) Alexander Rossi, Honda, 85, Running; Brian Harman (45)....................68-67-68-67 land, d. Kiki Bertens (3), Netherlands, 4-6, 6-3, Chicago 91, Seattle 88 Sam Saunders (45)...................68-69-65-68 Ariya Jutanugarn and Mirim Lee to and Mike Bryan in doubles Saturday. 17. (15) Carlos Munoz, Honda, 85, Running; 18. 6-4. Tuesday’s schedule 271 (-13)—$65,333 (14) Max Chilton, Chevrolet, 85, Running; 19. DOUBLES (final)—Lara Arruabarrena, Spain, SPARKS at Indiana, 5 p.m. win the Marathon Classic in Sylvania, Brendon de Jonge (32) ..............68-68-69-66 (21) Spencer Pigot, Chevrolet, 85, Running; 20. and Xenia Knoll (3), Switzerland, d. Annika Beck, Chicago at Phoenix, 7 p.m. Morgan Hoffmann (32) ..............70-67-66-68 In other tennis results, Ivo (9) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 84, Running; Germany, and Evgeniya Rodina, Russia, 6-1, 3-6, BOX SCORE Ohio. The 19-year-old New Zealander Boo Weekley (32) .....................70-67-68-66 (13) Jack Hawksworth, Honda, 80, Contact; 10-8. ATLANTA 91, SPARKS 74 Stuart Appleby (32)...................67-69-66-69 made a 10-foot birdie putt on the Karlovic won the Hall of Fame Cham- 21. 22. (8) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, 57, Contact Sparks—Beard 2-7 0-0 4, Carson 2-4 4-4 9, Roberto Castro (32) ..................67-66-69-69 fourth playoff hole to claim her fourth pionships on a grass court in Newport, Race Statistics Ogwumike 8-11 10-13 26, Parker 7-14 6-9 22, Robert Garrigus (32) .................68-69-72-62 PRO SOCCER Toliver 2-12 1-1 6, Belyakova 0-2 0-0 0, C.Gray Chesson Hadley (32).................67-66-69-69 LPGA Tour victory this season and R.I., beating Gilles Muller , 6-7 (2), 7-6 Winners average speed—88.739 2-6 1-1 5, Knight 0-2 0-0 0, Lavender 1-6 0-0 2, Michael Kim (32)......................66-68-68-69 MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER Time of Race—1:42:38.6925 the 14th of her career. (5), 7-6 (12). . . . Martin Klizan defeated Margin of victory—1.5275 seconds WEST ............W L T Pts GF GA Wauters 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 24-64 22-28 74. David Toms (32) .......................67-66-67-71 Atlanta—Clarendon 6-12 4-5 17, Hayes 5-11 272 (-12)—$32,455 Cautions—5 cautions for 16 laps FC Dallas......12 6 4 40 34 30 Pablo Cuevas , 6-1, 6-4, in the final of a Lead changes—6 among 6 drivers Colorado.......10 2 7 37 22 13 4-4 14, Holmes 5-10 4-4 15, McCoughtry 5-12 Luke Guthrie (26)......................68-68-69-67 Aaron Baddeley made a 24-foot clay-court tournament in Hamburg, GALAXY ..........8 3 8 32 32 18 7-8 17, Williams 3-10 3-4 9, Ajavon 0-1 2-2 2, David Hearn (26)......................68-68-69-67 Real Salt Lake .8 6 6 30 29 30 Cortijo 0-2 0-0 0, Gatling 3-6 3-4 9, Hollivay 1-1 Luke List (26)...........................70-66-69-67 putt on the fourth hole of a playoff with Germany. . . . Simona Halep won the Vancouver .......8 8 5 29 33 35 0-0 2, R.Gray 0-0 0-0 0, Simmons 2-4 0-0 6. Ben Martin (26)........................69-69-69-65 John Merrick (26)......................69-70-68-65 Si Woo Kim to win the Barbasol Bucharest Open on clay in her native TENNIS Portland .........7 6 8 29 32 31 Totals 30-69 27-31 91. Sporting KC.....8 10 4 28 24 25 Sparks............................20 20 17 17—74 Cameron Tringale (26) ...............68-71-68-65 Championship in Opelika, Ala. It was Romania, dominating Anastasija DAVIS CUP San Jose ........6 6 7 25 21 22 Atlanta ...........................21 22 26 22—91 Ryan Armour ............................69-65-70-68 WORLD GROUP Three-Point Goals—Los Angeles 4-14 (Parker K.J. Choi (26) ...........................72-67-70-63 the Australian’s fourth PGA Tour title. Sevastova, 6-0, 6-0. . . . Albert Ramos- Quarterfinals Seattle ...........6 11 2 20 20 24 Houston .........4 9 6 18 23 26 2-3, Carson 1-1, Toliver 1-4, C.Gray 0-2, Knight Troy Merritt (26)........................67-70-68-67 Vinolas won his first ATP Tour title, Winners to WG semifinals, Sept. 16-18 Darron Stiles (26) .....................71-66-67-68 United States 2, Croatia 2 EAST.............W L T Pts GF GA 0-2, Beard 0-2), Atlanta 4-12 (Simmons 2-3, Steve Wheatcroft (26)................69-69-67-67 Clarendon 1-2, Holmes 1-3, Hayes 0-2, Mcbeating Fernando Verdasco, 6-3, 6-4, At Portland, Ore. NYC FC...........9 6 6 33 34 35 Coughtry 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— ETC. at the Swedish Open in Bastad. . . . Surface: Hard-Outdoor Philadelphia....8 6 6 30 34 28 Los Angeles 41 (Ogwumike 12), Atlanta 48 LPGA TOUR REVERSE SINGLES—Marin Cilic, Croatia, d. New York ........8 9 4 28 32 27 (Williams 12). Assists—Los Angeles 15 (Parker $1.5-MILLION MARATHON CLASSIC Swiss player Viktorija Golubic beat John Isner, 7-6 (9), 6-3, 6-4. Montreal.........6 5 8 26 30 29 5), Atlanta 13 (Clarendon 6). Total Fouls—Los At Sylvania, Ohio —Par 71 Highland Meadows GC—6,515 yards Toronto FC ......6 7 6 24 21 22 Kiki Bertens, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, in a clay- Britain 3, Serbia 2 New England ...5 7 8 23 26 33 Angeles 22, Atlanta 19. Technicals—Los Angeles Final 72-Hole Scores At Belgrade, Serbia defensive three second, Los Angeles Coach Brian 270 (-14)—$225,000 court final at Gstaad, Switzerland. D.C. United .....5 7 7 22 18 21 Surface: Clay-Outdoor x-Lydia Ko................................68-66-67-69 22 30 33 Agler, McCoughtry. A—7,551 (18,047). REVERSE SINGLES—Kyle Edmund, Britain, d. Orlando City ....4 5 10 Former NFL coach Marion Camp270 (-14)—$120,105 18 24 30 Dusan Lajovic, Serbia, 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (5). Janko Columbus .......3 7 9 Mirim Lee ................................66-70-69-65 bell died July 13 in Plano, Texas, at age A letter drafted by U.S. and Canadi- Tipsarevic, Serbia, d. James Ward, Britain, 6-2, Chicago..........4 9 5 17 17 24 MINOR LEAGUE Ariya Jutanugarn .......................67-69-66-68 Three points for victory, one point for tie. BASEBALL 87. Campbell had two stints as head an anti-doping leaders urging Russia's 3-6, 7-5. 271 (-13)—$78,125 Hyo Joo Kim .............................66-68-64-73 Sunday’s results coach of the Atlanta Falcons and one removal from the Rio de Janeiro Argentina 3, Italy 1 PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE At Pesaro, Italy 273 (-11)—$62,882 Portland 3, Seattle 1 Sunday’s results with the Philadelphia Eagles. He was Olympics is circulating before the re- Surface: Clay-Outdoor Stacy Lewis..............................69-68-65-71 New York City FC 3, Montreal 1 Las Vegas 6, Iowa 2 274 (-10)—$47,257 REVERSE SINGLES—Federico Delbonis, Ar- New York Red Bulls 2, Philadelphia 2 defensive line coach of the Los Angeles lease Monday of a report expected to Salt Lake 6, Omaha 3 Beatriz Recari ...........................73-68-65-68 gentina, d. Fabio Fognini, Italy, 6-4, 7-5, 3-6, Tacoma 7, Colorado Springs 3 Rams from 1967 to 1968, coaching the detail a state-sponsored doping sys- 7-5. Andreas Seppi, Italy, vs. Juan Monaco, Ar- Friday’s schedule Alison Lee................................69-66-66-73 Fresno 2, New Orleans 0 San Jose at Real Salt Lake, 8 p.m. 275 (-9)—$37,730 “Fearsome Foursome.” tem that corrupted the entire Russian gentina, abandoned. Reno 6, Oklahoma City 2 U.S. OPEN CUP Ha Na Jang ..............................68-67-71-69 France 3, Czech Republic 1 El Paso 5, Nashville 2 Quarterfinals 276 (-8)—$32,394 sports program. Some IOC officials At Trinec, Czech Republic Albuquerque 7, Memphis 6 Wednesday’s schedule Azahara Munoz .........................69-68-72-67 Receiver Stedman Bailey, who was suggested word of the letter could Surface: Hard-Indoor Today’s schedule Seattle (MLS) at GALAXY (MLS), 7:30 p.m. Kelly W Shon............................67-70-70-69 REVERSE SINGLES—Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, Philadelphia (MLS) at New England (MLS), Sacramento vs. New Orleans, 4 p.m. 277 (-7)—$23,180 put on the Rams’ non-football injury compromise investigator Richard France, d. Jiri Vesely, Czech Republic, 4-6, 7-6 4:30 p.m. Fresno vs. Round Rock, 5 p.m. Maude-Aimee Leblanc ...............68-71-71-67 list in June, will join West Virginia’s McLaren’s findings. (3), 6-4, 7-5. Lukas Rosol, Czech Republic, vs. Fort Lauderdale (NASL) at Chicago (MLS), Las Vegas vs. Omaha, 5 p.m. Moriya Jutanugarn .....................69-70-70-68 Lucas Pouille, France, abandoned. Ayako Uehara ...........................71-68-69-69 Salt Lake vs. Iowa, 5 p.m. 5:30 p.m. staff as a student assistant coach. Alena Sharp .............................70-69-69-69 Memphis vs. El Paso, 6 p.m. FC Dallas (MLS) at Houston (MLS), 5:30 p.m. Kim Kaufman ...........................70-69-68-70 Bailey, a third-round pick by the Rams Midfielder Giovani dos Santos, Nashville vs. Albuquerque, 6 p.m. NATIONAL WOMEN’S SOCCER LEAGUE Celine Herbin ...........................67-72-68-70 Colorado Springs vs. Reno, 7 p.m. out of West Virginia in 2013, is attempt- who leads the Galaxy with seven goals, $1.53-MILLION GERMAIN CHAMPIONSHIPS ....................W L T Pts GF GA Hee Young Park.........................69-71-66-71 Oklahoma City vs. Tacoma, 7 p.m. At Hamburg, Germany Jenny Shin ...............................71-67-67-72 Portland .........7 2 5 26 19 12 CALIFORNIA LEAGUE ing to recover from gunshot wounds to is the team’s lone representative on Surface: Clay-Outdoor 278 (-6)—$17,836 24 19 10 Sunday’s results SINGLES (final)—Martin Klizan (7), Slovakia, Washington .....8 2 2 the head suffered last November near the 26-player Major League Soccer AllAngela Stanford ........................70-73-66-69 W. New York ....8 4 1 24 26 14 Rancho Cucamonga 10, Lancaster 7 d. Pablo Cuevas (3), Uruguay, 6-1, 6-4. Eun-Hee Ji ...............................68-70-69-71 21 12 12 Visalia vs. Bakersfield, late Miami. He attended the Rams' off- Star team announced Sunday. It is his DOUBLES (final)—Henri Kontinen, Finland, Chicago..........6 4 3 279 (-5)—$16,616 Orlando..........6 7 0 18 13 12 10, Stockton 7 season workout program but was not first MLS All-Star selection. The MLS and John Peers (2), Australia, d. Daniel Nestor, Sky Blue FC ....5 4 4 18 16 17 Modesto Haru Nomura ...........................66-71-71-71 High Desert 16, San Jose 6 Canada, and Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi (3), Paki- Seattle ...........4 4 5 Katherine Kirk...........................69-71-66-73 17 13 11 Lake Elsinore 8, Inland Empire 7 cleared for football activities. team will play Arsenal of the English stan, 7-5, 6-3. 280 (-4)—$15,702 FC Kansas City 3 6 4 12 10 13 Today’s schedule Lindy Duncan ...........................73-65-73-69 —Gary Klein Premier League in San Jose on July 28. Houston .........3 7 1 10 9 11 281 (-3)—$14,291 Boston ...........1 11 1 4 6 29 Lake Elsinore vs. Inland Empire, 7 p.m. — Kevin Baxter $515,025 HALL OF FAME CHAMPIONSHIPS Lancaster vs. Rancho Cucamonga, 7 p.m. Anna Nordqvist.........................70-72-69-70 Three points for victory, one point for tie. At Newport, R.I. San Jose vs. High Desert, 7 p.m. Cheyenne Woods.......................72-70-67-72 The Clippers waived forward BranSunday’s result Surface: Grass-Outdoor Modesto vs. Stockton, 7 p.m. Brittany Lang ............................70-69-68-74 SINGLES (final)—Ivo Karlovic (2), Croatia, d. Sky Blue 3, Boston 2 den Dawson, four months after he was The Tampa Bay Lightning reVisalia vs. Bakersfield, 7:45 p.m. Vicky Hurst...............................69-68-70-74 Muller, Luxembourg, 6-7 (2), 7-6 (5), 7-6 Saturday’s schedule 282 (-2)—$12,214 arrested on suspicion of spousal tained center Alex Killorn, signing Gilles FOOTBALL (12). Austin Ernst .............................71-71-72-68 FC Kansas City at Western New York, 4 p.m. EXHIBITION (first round)—Marat Safin, Russia, Washington at Sky Blue, 4 p.m. Karlin Beck ..............................71-72-70-69 abuse. Dawson appeared in six games him to a seven-year, $31.15-million deal ARENA LEAGUE Jennifer Song ...........................69-72-68-73 d. James Blake, 7-6 (3). Mark Philippoussis, Houston at Chicago, 5 p.m. Today’s schedule with the team last season, averaging and avoiding arbitration. Killorn, 26, Australia, d. Andy Roddick, 6-4. Lee Lopez ................................70-66-69-77 Orlando at Seattle, 7 p.m. Orlando at Arizona, 6:30 p.m. (Final)—Philippoussis d. Safin, 6-4. 0.8 points and 0.7 rebounds. had 14 goals and 26 assists last season. Ko wins in Ohio Ex-NFL coach dies SoCal Auto Dealer Marketplace New and used car dealer specials Visit latimes.com/DealerSpecials to view current new and used car specials from reputable auto dealerships throughout Southern California. Aston Martin Honda Jaguar Nissan Volkswagen Galpin Aston Martin Goudy Honda Galpin Jaguar Gardena Nissan New Century VW One of the largest Jaguar dealers in the country. 15500 Roscoe Blvd, Van Nuys (888) 580-4893 www.galpinjaguar.com Home of Low Payments 1670 W. 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The number shown above: “Here Comes the Sun.” A ‘Love’ renewed Cirque du Soleil’s Beatles show gets a revamp and special visitors By Randy Lewis LAS VEGAS — The performance of Cirque du Soleil’s “The Beatles Love” show ended as most of the 4,500 performances over the last decade have: A packed house of 2,000 gave a standing ovation for the dozens of cast members, who took bows while traversing the circular stage at the Mirage Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. Suddenly, however, the cheering grew even louder as ticket holders responded to an exceptionally rare coda to the show. Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr stepped onstage at the conclusion of Thursday’s official 10th-anniversary celebration of the hit collaboration between the French Canadian circus troupe and the band that famously “changed the face of pop music as we know it.” “Thank you all for being here,” McCartney, 74, said after a spotlight illuminated MJ Kim MPL Communications SPECIAL GUESTS at a 10th-anniversary celebration included the Beatles’ surviving members, Paul McCartney, foreground left, and Ringo Starr. him and his former bandmate, the surviving members of the Fab Four, accompanied for the event by John Lennon’s widow, Yoko Ono, and George Harrison’s widow, Olivia Harrison, as well as several other family members and friends who took in the performance. “This new version of ‘Love’ is beautiful.” He was referring to a recently revamped rendition of “Love” that now boasts technical and other enhancements that weren’t possible 10 years ago. Not to disappoint the numerous Beatles fans young and old in the house, McCartney and Starr bantered playfully with each other and with the fans. “I loved watching,” Starr, 76, said with an easy laugh, and both expressed their pride and gratitude to the performers who bring the show to life each night. “Love” spawned consistently laudatory critical re[See ‘Love,’ E3] COMMENTARY Woody Allen can’t outrun himself His past keeps pace with his obsessive output, and his legacy is in perpetual flux. By Mark Olsen Sometimes lately I wish Woody Allen would just go away. And other times I can’t imagine the world without him. Every new film from him forces audiences to confront again their feelings about Allen as both artist and person and to reexamine the evolution of those responses over time. He has gone from being the prototypical cool nerd and paragon of urbane, intellectual wit to a troublesome and for some villainous figure. Wrestling with all of that is an ongoing, uncomfortable process, made all the more tortured by Allen’s movie-a-year schedule and his restless creative im[See Allen, E7] Oscar Morales was working on a post for OKBaby, a vlog he and Kyra Sivertson began last year after they became parents, when his mother got the call from Nice. Morales’ sister Aimee, a recent graduate of Crescenta Valley High School, was on a monthlong European tour with her best friend. Now her mother, Korina McReynolds, was holding her hand to her heart. “They’ve been attacked,” McReynolds tells her son, as the camera angle falls, recording only the floor. “No,” Morales says. “How? No, you’re joking, Mom. How?” “I don’t know.” Into the dead silence of the home, Aimee’s tearful voice can be heard over speaker phone: “It was Fourth of July for them,” Aimee says, “and we went to see the fireworks and we were walking back and all I know Ahnyca grabbed my hand and everyone starts yelling and I look back and see my tour guide’s face and then I see people getting hit by the bus and I turn around again and there are a lot of people on the floor and then [See McNamara, E6] Showing some spirit ‘Ghostbusters’ is second at the box office but exceeds studio projections. By Tre’vell Anderson Who you gonna call? Maybe not “Ghostbusters.” Sony’s modern, bigbudget reboot of the classic franchise failed to take over the weekend box office. One of the most polarizing films of the summer movie season — even before it premiered — the picture took in an estimated $46 million in the U.S. and Canada, coming in below some analyst projections of $50 million. The studio projected a more conservative $38 million to $40 million. “We’re very happy with our results,” said Rory Bruer, Sony’s distribution chief. “It’s a terrific start for us. Everybody brought their A game, and it paid off.” Such a performance is respectable but not outstanding, as the Paul Feig-directed comedy holds a $144million price tag, after tax rebates, according to the studio. “Ghostbusters” stars Melissa McCarthy, Kate [See Box office, E6] UCLA refocuses on studio plan Wheels are moving on the effort to revamp graduate art studios. A gift got the project rolling again. E4 Getty Images WOODY ALLEN , center, at the Cannes Film Festival in May with Kristen Stewart, left, and Blake Lively. TV grid ...................... E7 Comics ................... E8-9 E2 MONDAY, JULY 18, 2016 LOS ANGELES TIMES L AT I ME S . CO M / CA L EN DA R M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 Photographs by E3 Matt Beard “THE BEATLES LOVE” remains popular after 10 years, but the creative team went back to incorporate new technology and make the Fab Four seem more present. More ‘Love’ sent into the world [‘Love,’ from E1] views at its opening in 2006 and over the past decade has been a commercial powerhouse as well: Nearly 8 million people have seen “Love,” according to Cirque officials, establishing an average attendance of about 88% capacity. The one big difference between “Love” and the rest of what the Beatles gave the world during their continually evolving eight-year recording career is that the Cirque show remained relatively stable during its first decade. That has changed with the new iteration of “Love,” the focal point of Thursday’s star-studded event that also drew Lennon’s son Sean Ono Lennon; Harrison’s son, Dhani Harrison; “Love” musical producer Giles Martin, the son of the Beatles’ longtime producer George Martin, who died in March; writer-director Dominic Champagne; actor-director Ron Howard, who is working on the forthcoming Beatles documentary “Eight Days a Week”; and various other celebs. “Love” has “evolved,” a word many of the show’s creators like to use, and today features more of the Beatles’ personalities themselves. The alterations to the show are musical, structural and technological and constitute a gamble for a production that “was not a broken show in any way,” as Martin put it in an interview with The Times. Chief among the changes: Audiences now see images of the Beatles incorporated into many numbers. There’s footage of McCartney singing “Yesterday,” Starr’s face floats in an air bubble during the rendition of “Octopus’s Garden,” Lennon’s face appears during “All You Need Is Love” and Harrison is reunited with his bandmates in different numbers. The collaboration between the Beatles and Cirque du Soleil that produced the “Love” show in Las Vegas was initially pegged for a 10-year run. But the production, much like the Fab Four themselves, has proved to be an enduring force. It was clear from the outset that “Love” wasn’t your garden-variety Las Vegas entertainment diversion focusing on glitz and spectacle. It premiered June 30, 2006, with many of the Fab Four’s most beloved songs often radically reimagined in mash-ups created by the father-son Martin team. Because the project originally was conceived in the late1990s by George Harrison and Cirque co-founder Guy LaLiberte as a way for the surviving members to collaborate one more time, the mission to see it to fruition took on extra emotional heft after Harrison’s death from cancer in 2001. “Strawberry Fields Forever” “STRAWBERRY Fields Forever,” top, and, above, a Ringo Starr apparition in “Octopus’s Garden.” “The refresh came from Dominic [Champagne, the writer-director of ‘Love’] and I saying we could make the show better,” Giles Martin said. “We don’t want to rest on our laurels. There were a couple of things in the pacing of the show we weren’t happy with, so we went back and looked at it very critically and came up with a list of things of changes we wanted to make.” The creative team felt that “this show needed to be revamped,” Olivia Harrison said in a separate interview, relaxing in a room backstage a few hours before the performance. “Ten years is a long time, especially today, when everything moves so fast.” She and Ono took on much of the heavy lifting of overseeing the creation and execution of “Love” and have closely monitored the show over the years. For Ono, the new version brings immediacy to the central message embodied in the Beatles song that still closes the production, “All You Need Is Love.” That message sounded that much louder to all concerned Thursday on the day of another deadly terrorist attack, this one in Nice, France. “This is a new step forward for the Beatles, not a repeat at all,” Ono, 83, said in another backstage interview. “It’s really showing how intelligent they are to bring love in this big, big way, because right now the whole world is suffering because of a lack of love. They have pointed out that the word ‘love,’ just like the word ‘imagine,’ is going to keep us going forward. I think it’s a beautiful turn.” “One thing we realized despite our criticisms,” Martin added, “is that we didn’t want to break the heart of the show. It still gets standing ovations most nights, so we don’t have a broken show in any way.” Keepers of the Beatles legacy said they have relaxed over the years from their initial reluctance to inject too much of the Fab Four’s personalities directly into the production. In the original version, that resulted in a more impressionistic creation. It still evokes the destruction the four lads experienced in their native Liverpool during World War II from bombing by the Germans, the harsh living conditions after the war into which they soon introduced their music after the serendipitous meeting of young rock ’n’ roll-loving musicians Lennon and McCartney at a church picnic in 1957. Rather than directly referencing the members of the band, the show has turned the spotlight on a multiplicity of characters from their songs: lonely Eleanor Rigby and Sgt. Pepper as well as creatures that might inhabit fanciful locations such as Penny Lane, Strawberry Fields and the Octopus’s Garden. Cirque created a world inspired but not populated by the Beatles, using the soundtrack created by the father-son Martin team, who were given carte blanche by the four Beatles “principals” — McCartney, Starr, Ono and Harrison — to explore and explode the group’s original recordings into new forms. “The thought process behind this was not to present the Beatles as they were then but to have Beatles in the room with you,” Martin said. “That was my intention, that was my dad’s intention. We knew we would have to be careful not to present a biopic of the show.” In the new iteration, “Yesterday” has become more of a showcase for McCartney stretching his musical wings, while Harrison’s “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” puts one of the Cirque dancers in a pas de deux with fluid lines of animated movement and shapes that are based on many of Harrison’s own drawings, Olivia Harrison said. “From a very personal perspective,” Champagne said in a separate interview, “I felt like who I was 10 years ago, to pretend I could be the captain of this flagship of Beatles and Cirque du Soleil putting a show together. There’s been so much trust. I think everyone felt we were intended to realize the dream of George Harrison, who wasn’t there to push the idea. I felt we had a mandate sent from an angel or a ghost somewhere. “I remember quite purely that in Paul’s mind, in Olivia’s mind, it was George’s show that we were doing. Slowly and slowly it became our show.” On a technical level, the evolved “Love” incorporates technological developments of the past decade to employ effects that didn’t exist in 2006, Martin said. “The Beatles were always ahead of themselves,” Olivia Harrison said, “and it’s the same with the show. We were trying to master something that wasn’t able to be mastered at that time. The tools that are available now have allowed the show to become what we all thought that it was going to be in the beginning. I think now it’s completely right.” randy.lewis@latimes.com E4 M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 L AT I ME S . C OM / CA L EN DA R Program Subject To Change Times for 07/18/16 only THE INNOCENTS (PG-13) 1:00, 3:30, 6:00, 8:30 THE NICE GUYS (R) 9:15 P.M. THE LOBSTER (R) 1:45, 7:00 P.M. INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) Digital 4:30, 9:40 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) Digital 1:10, 4:10, SWISS ARMY MAN (R) 4:45, 9:30 P.M. 7:10, 10:10 GHOSTBUSTERS: AN IMAX 3D EXPERIENCE (PG-13) 1:00, TICKLED (R) 5:15, 7:45, 10:00 P.M. 4:00, 7:00, 10:00 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) Digital 1:30, 4:30, 7:30, 10:30 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) Digital D-BOX 1:30, 4:30, THE INFILTRATOR (R) 1:30, 4:15, 7:15, 10:00 P.M. 7:30, 10:30 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) Digital 12:10, 2:40, 5:10, 7:40, 10:15 OUR KIND OF TRAITOR (R) 2:00, 4:30, 7:00 P.M. MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) Digital 12:30, 3:00, 5:15, 7:45, 10:00 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) Digital 12:20, 5:00, 9:30 ZERO DAYS (PG-13) 2:45 P.M. THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) Digital 2:45, 7:15 THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) Digital 12:10, 2:20, 7:20 HUNT FOR THE WILDERPEOPLE (PG-13) 2:30, 7:30, VIP TCL CHINESE THEATRE TOUR (NR) 10:15, 10:45, 11:00, 11:30, 11:45, 12:15, 12:30, 1:30, 1:45, 2:15, 2:30, 3:00, 3:15, 3:30, 4:00, 4:15, 5:00, 5:45, 6:30, 7:45, 8:30 9:45 P.M. TO ADVERTISE HERE CALL (213) 237-2184 WIENER-DOG (R) 5:00 P.M. tickets.landmarktheatres.com 10850 W. Pico at Westwood • West L.A. 3 Hours Free Parking. Additional 2 Hours $3 with Validation. Showtimes and Information: (310) 470-0492 THE WINE BAR HAPPY HOUR • Mon – Thur 4 – 6pm • $2.00 Off House Drinks HUNT FOR THE WILDERPEOPLE CAFÉ SOCIETY ▼●■ (PG-13) (PG-13) (12:30, 2:55, 5:20) 7:45, 10:05 (11:00, 12:20, 12:50, 1:20, 2:40, 3:10, 3:40, 5:00, 5:30) 6:00, 7:20, ●■ 7:50, 8:15, 9:35, 10:05, 10:30 FINDING DORY (PG) (11:40, 2:10, 4:40) 7:10, 9:35 GHOSTBUSTERS LOVE & FRIENDSHIP (11:30, 2:10, 4:50) 7:30, 10:05 (12:35, 2:55, 5:15) 7:40, 9:55 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS THE INNOCENTS (PG-13) ▼●■ (PG-13) ▼●■ (PG) ●■ (PG-13) (11:15, 1:55, 4:35) 7:15, 9:50 (12:30, 2:45, 5:00) 7:15, 9:25 CAPTAIN FANTASTIC ● (11:05, 1:50, 4:35) 7:20, 10:00 ▼● (R) (11:30, 12:40, 2:15, 3:20, 5:00) 7:45, 9:55, 10:25 THE LOBSTER (R) TONIGHT AT 7:00pm! REEL TALK WITH STEPHEN FARBER 11272 Santa Monica Blvd • West L.A. • (310) 473-8530 NORMAN LEAR: JUST ANOTHER VERSION OF YOU (NR) (12:30, 2:50, 5:10) 7:30, 9:45 1045 Broxton Ave • Westwood • (310) 208-3250 ■ OUR KIND OF TRAITOR (R) (4:30) 7:00, 9:30 GIFT CARDS Join FilmClub.LandmarkTheatres.com On Sale Now! Landmark strongly supports a NO TEXTING AND NO CELL PHONE policy. ( ) at Discount = No Passes = The Screening Lounge ● Closed Captioning ■ Descriptive Video Service VALID MONDAY~ JULY VÍ ONLY UCLA THE GRADUATE art studios are being reconceived by architectural firm Johnston Marklee. A vote is next. UCLA looks closely at art A plan to improve studios has a design and a recent big gift. Wheels are turning. By Carolina A. Miranda When famed Los Angeles gallerist Margo Leavin announced in May that she would make a $20-million donation to UCLA to remake the school’s grungy graduate art studios, the move was celebrated for the investment it brought to an important public educational institution. Now the project is moving forward, as the UC Board of Regents gathers Tuesday to approve the plan. “We’ve had these plans, but it sat fallow there for the longest time,” says Lari Pittman, a painter who has taught in the UCLA art department for two decades. “But Margo drove it. She asked questions. She wanted to know things. She wanted to meet the dean. That’s how it slowly got its legs.” “It’s crucial,” says Levin. “I don’t think public universities — or any university — has a problem raising funds for medicine, stem cell research, health, etc. But the arts do not have as wide of an audience. And UCLA is a jewel of a school.” The plan to remake UCLA’s graduate art studios first emerged in 2011, when feasibility studies were conducted to explore upgrading the existing facilities. The studios are on land owned by UCLA in Culver City — inside a central warehouse, with various additions, that has grown increasingly dilapidated over time. “There is not proper ventilation, clean air, light — it’s not a healthy building,” says Pittman. “If you turn off the electricity while you’re in there, the building becomes completely dark.” In summer it is broiling. In the rain, it leaks. “It’s in terrible condition,” says Leavin — and not in keeping with the art school’s status as the No. 2 ranked graduate fine arts program in the country. As part of the feasibility studies, L.A. architectural firm Johnston Marklee was enlisted to produce a design that would reconfigure the 55,000-square-foot parcel of land that sits near Warner Drive at Hayden Avenue just west of Ballona Creek. In their proposed design, the architects keep the World War II-era bow-andtruss warehouse building at the heart of the property but dispose of the ad hoc additions that have been made over the decades. They wrap the warehouse in a new, two-story structure with a translucent roof that would create a protected, light-filled, open-air courtyard. The new 38,000-squarefoot building would increase usable space by 40%, as well as add an exhibition area and an artist-in-residence studio. But the project, expected to run an estimated $31 million, stalled at the gate five years ago because of a lack of funding. Leavin’s donation, which covers almost two-thirds of the building costs, changed that. The university can now move forward with additional fundraising. The anticipated completion date is 2019 — which also happens to mark UCLA’s centennial. Leavin, the L.A. art dealer who operated an eponymous gallery from 1970 to 2012 — known for showcasing work by a who’s who of important artists, including Donald Judd, Martin Puryear, Lynda Benglis and John Baldessari — is thrilled that the project is moving forward. “Instead of giving just small amounts in different places,” says Leavin, “I thought it’d be better to have an impact on the community.” The remodel of the studios is also an opportunity for the art department to reconceive its art-making spaces at a time when the visual arts have embraced ideas-based practices such as social practice, as well as performance and digital culture. “We have a new genres area and we have an interdisciplinary area, and those particular focuses can require a different idea of spatial use,” says Pittman. “The model we had of studios was based on the making of physical works. Part of this is to upgrade to the practices that we have.” Sharon Johnston, who has led the design process for Johnston Marklee, says the new design has “a really informal and functional quality.” “They didn’t want to have, ‘This is where the photographers are and this is where the painters are,’” she explains. “They wanted fluidity, because people cross over and they want to have exchange.” The idea, she says, is to have a “variety of conditioned spaces where people could do performances, they could make film — not just be in their studios.” Pittman says what is most heartening about Leavin’s donation is that it represents an important investment in public educational infrastructure. “So much of philanthropy now is wealthy people giving money to congratulate themselves — by naming something after themselves,” he explains. “This is real philanthropy. It’s an investment in the systemic.” Leavin says it’s merely an attempt to support something that she cares about deeply. “What’s more important than the artists?” she asks. “Without them, there is no art world.” carolina.miranda@latimes .com © 2016 Landmark Theatres NOW PLAYING WESTWOOD ORANGE COUNTY EAST LOS ANGELES SAN FERNANDO VALLEY VENTURA COUNTY DIRECTOR’S CUT CINEMA NORWALK 8 VALLEY PLAZA 6 BUENAVENTURA 6 13917 Pioneer Blvd. Rancho Niguel Road 961 Broxton Avenue 310-208-5576 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES E (1:15), 4:15, 7:30, 10:00 948 Broxton Avenue 310-208-5576 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D B 4:30, 9:50 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B (1:30), 7:15 THE INFILTRATOR E (11:10, 2:00, 4:50), 7:40, 10:30 HUNT FOR THE WILDERPEOPLE C (12:00, 2:30, 5:00), 7:30, 10:00 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B (11:30, 2:00, 4:30), 7:00, 9:30 THE INNOCENTS C (11:00, 1:30, 4:10), 6:50, 9:20 OUR KIND OF TRAITOR E (11:45, 2:10, 4:45), 7:15, 9:45 SWISS ARMY MAN E 9:00 PM FREE STATE OF JONES E (12:30, 3:30), 6:45, 9:50 LOVE & FRIENDSHIP B (2:15), 6:40 THE MEDDLER C (11:35, 4:25) CHARTER CENTRE 5 ORANGE COUNTY 7822 Warner Ave. at Beach 714-596-3456 WESTMINSTER 10 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS C 11:55, 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS B 12:45, 3:45, 6:30, 9:10 X-MEN: APOCALYPSE C 9:00 PM THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B 11:40, 2:00, 4:20, 6:40 THE NICE GUYS E 12:00, 2:45, 5:30, 8:15 THE JUNGLE BOOK IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D B 2:20, 4:50, 7:20, 9:50 THE JUNGLE BOOK B 11:50 AM 6721 Westminster Ave. 714-893-4222 $5.50 All Day Sunday (Not Applicable in 3D) GHOSTBUSTERS C 11:35, 12:30, 1:30, 4:25, 6:20, 7:20, 9:15, 10:15 GHOSTBUSTERS IN 3D C 3:25 PM THE INFILTRATOR E 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:50 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES E 12:20, 2:50, 5:15, 7:40, 10:20 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B 11:30, 1:00, 2:00, 3:30, 4:30, 5:30, 6:00, 7:00, 8:30, 9:30 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN C 1:40, 4:35, 7:15, 10:00 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR E 12:00, 2:40, 5:20, 7:50, 10:20 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE C 2:20, 8:00 FINDING DORY B 11:40, 2:10, 4:40, 7:10, 9:40 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 26762 Verdugo Street 949-661-3456 ENJOY BEER & WINE IN ALL AUDITORIUMS $6.00 All Day Tuesday (Not Applicable in 3D & VIP) GHOSTBUSTERS C 9:15 PM GHOSTBUSTERS - VIP SEATING C 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 9:45 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B 11:30, 1:00, 2:00, 3:30, 4:30, 6:00, 7:00, 8:15 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN C 1:30, 4:15, 6:45, 9:30 HISTORIC LIDO THEATER 3459 Via Lido at Newport Blvd. 949-673-8350 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B (2:00, 4:30), 7:00 SOUTH COAST VILLAGE 3 At South Coast Plaza/Sunflower & Plaza Dr. 714-557-5701 HUNT FOR THE WILDERPEOPLE C (11:45, 2:30, 5:00), 7:30, 9:55 OUR LITTLE SISTER B (12:00, 3:15), 6:30, 9:15 ZERO DAYS C (2:00), 7:15 OUR KIND OF TRAITOR E (11:30, 4:45), 9:55 Bargain Showtimes in ( ) 16DM2032 949-831-0446 EAST LOS ANGELES COMMERCE 14 Goodrich & Whittier 323-726-8022 $5.50 All Day Tuesday (Not Applicable in 3D) GHOSTBUSTERS C (11:10, 2:00, 4:50), 7:40, 10:30 GHOSTBUSTERS (SPANISH SUBTITLES) C (12:10, 3:00, 5:50), 8:40 LUCHA MEXICO (DUBBED IN SPANISH) I (2:10), 7:20 LUCHA MEXICO (ENGLISH SUBTITLES) I (11:35, 4:45), 10:00 THE INFILTRATOR E (12:55, 3:55), 6:55, 9:50 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES E (11:50, 2:25, 5:00), 7:35, 10:10 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B (10:30, 11:30, 1:05, 3:30, 4:30), 6:00, 8:30, 9:30 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (DUBBED IN SPANISH) B (11:00, 1:30, 2:05, 4:00), 6:30, 7:00, 9:00 THE BFG B (3:55), 9:40 THE BFG (SPANISH SUBTITLES) B (1:00), 6:45 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN C (12:15, 3:00, 5:40), 8:25 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (SPANISH SUBTITLES) C (11:30, 2:00, 4:40), 7:25, 10:10 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR E (11:40, 5:00), 10:20 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (SPANISH SUBTITLES) E (2:20), 7:40 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE C (1:10), 7:05 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (SPANISH SUBTITLES) C (4:10), 10:05 FINDING DORY B (1:10), 6:30 FINDING DORY (SPANISH SUBTITLES) B (10:35, 3:50), 9:10 562-804-5615 FREE STATE OF JONES E (12:40, 4:00), 7:10 WARCRAFT C (12:10, 3:30), 6:40, 9:40 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS B (11:50, 2:30, 5:10), 7:40, 10:10 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE 3D B (11:40, 2:20, 4:40), 7:20, 10:00 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B (3:40 PM) NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING E (12:20, 2:50), 8:00, 10:15 BARBERSHOP: THE NEXT CUT C (12:00, 5:00), 10:30 THE JUNGLE BOOK B (11:30, 2:10, 4:50), 7:30, 10:20 BATMAN V SUPERMAN: DAWN OF JUSTICE C 6:45, 10:05 ZOOTOPIA B (11:20, 1:50, 4:30), 7:00, 9:50 SAN FERNANDO VALLEY GRANADA HILLS 9 16830 Devonshire Street 818-363-3679 GHOSTBUSTERS C (10:50, 1:40), 4:30, 6:00, 7:20, 9:00, 10:10 THE INFILTRATOR E (12:50, 3:50), 7:10, 10:00 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES E (11:40, 2:20), 5:00, 7:40, 10:20 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B (11:20, 12:10, 1:00, 1:50, 2:40, 3:30), 4:20, 5:20, 7:00, 8:00, 9:30, 10:30 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN C (11:10, 2:10), 4:50, 7:30, 10:15 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR E (11:50, 2:30), 5:10, 7:50, 10:40 FINDING DORY B (11:00, 1:30), 4:10, 6:50, 9:40 PLANT 16 7876 Van Nuys Blvd. 818-779-0323 GHOSTBUSTERS C (12:00, 1:40, 2:40, 3:25), 5:25, 6:05, 7:05, 8:05, 10:45 GHOSTBUSTERS - DBOX SEATING C (1:40), 7:05 GHOSTBUSTERS IN 3D C (11:00), 4:25, 9:45 GHOSTBUSTERS IN 3D - DBOX SEATING C (11:00), 4:25, 9:45 LUCHA MEXICO I (11:35, 2:05), 4:35, 7:15, 9:50 THE INFILTRATOR E (10:55, 1:50), 4:40, 7:35, 10:30 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES E (11:45, 2:25), 5:10, 7:40, 10:15 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D B (10:30), 6:00 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B (11:30, 1:00, 2:00, 3:30), 4:30, 6:55, 8:25, 9:30 THE BFG B (10:45, 1:30), 4:20, 7:20, 10:10 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN C (11:40, 12:40, 2:15, 3:15), 4:55, 5:55, 7:30, 8:30, 10:05 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR E (12:05, 1:35, 2:35), 5:15, 7:50, 9:35, 10:20 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE C (12:35), 9:10 THE SHALLOWS C (12:45, 2:55), 5:05, 7:25, 9:40 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE C (11:50, 2:30), 5:20, 8:00, 10:40 FINDING DORY B (10:35, 11:05, 1:05, 3:35), 4:15, 6:10, 7:00, 8:40 “Locally Owned, Proudly Operated” 6355 Bellingham Ave. 818-760-8400 $1.75 Sun. & Tue! 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WARCRAFT C 5:00, 7:45, 10:30 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS B 12:30, 3:30, 7:10, 9:50 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE 3D B 11:50, 2:20, 4:40, 7:00, 9:20 1440 Eastman Ave. at Telephone Rd. 805-658-6544 All Seats $3.50 • $1.50 Surcharge for 3D Movies $1.00 All Day Tuesday - 3D Surcharge Applies WARCRAFT C 7:00 PM ME BEFORE YOU C 11:20, 2:10, 4:50, 7:40, 10:15 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS C 11:10, 1:50, 4:20, 7:20, 9:50 NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING E 12:10, 2:30, 9:30 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS B THE NICE GUYS E 1:00, 4:00, 7:20, 10:00 11:40, 2:20, 5:00, 7:30, 10:05 THE JUNGLE BOOK B 11:30, 2:10, 4:50, 7:30, 10:10 ZOOTOPIA B 11:20, 1:50, 4:20, 6:50 CONEJO VALLEY X-MEN: APOCALYPSE C 12:30, 4:00, 10:00 THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B 11:30, 2:00, 4:40, 7:10 NEIGHBORS 2: SORORITY RISING E 9:40 PM THE JUNGLE BOOK B 11:00, 1:40, 4:10, 6:50, 9:30 AGOURA HILLS STADIUM 8 29045 Agoura Road SAN GABRIEL VALLEY 818-707-9966 $6 Wednesday all day for all 2D films (upcharge for DBOX & 3D) Now Offering Reserved Seating GHOSTBUSTERS - DOLBY ATMOS C (11:20, 2:10, 4:50), 7:30, 10:15 ACADEMY CINEMAS 6 1003 E. Colorado Blvd 626-229-9400 All Seats $2.00 before 6pm • $1.00 All Beef Hot Dogs FREE STATE OF JONES E (12:40, 4:00), 7:10, 10:15 GHOSTBUSTERS - DBOX SEATING DOLBY ATMOS C (11:20, 2:10, 4:50), 7:30, 10:15 WARCRAFT C 7:00, 9:50 GHOSTBUSTERS C 8:30 PM THE SHADOWS C (11:20, 2:00, 4:40), 7:20, 10:00 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE INFILTRATOR E (11:00, 1:50, 4:45), 7:40, 10:30 ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS B MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES E (12:00, 2:30), 5:10, 7:50, 10:20 (11:30, 2:15, 4:50), 7:40, 10:20 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B (11:45, 1:10, 2:20, 3:30, 4:40), 6:15, 7:15, 9:40 THE NICE GUYS E (11:40, 2:20, 5:10), 7:50, 10:30 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN C (11:10, 1:40, 4:10), 7:20, 9:50 OUR KIND OF TRAITOR E (11:15, 1:45, 4:30), 7:10 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE C 10:10 PM FINDING DORY B (11:05, 1:30, 4:00), 6:30, 9:00 WESTLAKE VILLAGE TWIN 4711 Lakeview Canyon at Agoura Rd. 818-889-8061 HUNT FOR THE WILDERPEOPLE C (11:45, 2:15, 4:40), 7:30 THE INNOCENTS C (12:30, 3:45), 7:15 VENTURA COUNTY THE ANGRY BIRDS MOVIE B (11:50, 2:10, 4:30) THE JUNGLE BOOK B (12:00, 2:30, 5:00), 7:30, 10:10 FOOTHILL CINEMA 10 854 E. Alosta Ave. at Citrus GHOSTBUSTERS C (10:55, 1:40, 4:20), 7:15, 10:00 THE INFILTRATOR E (11:00, 1:50, 4:50), 7:40, 10:30 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES E (11:50, 2:20), 5:15, 7:45, 10:40 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B (10:50, 12:15, 1:10, 2:30, 3:30, 4:45), 5:45, 7:00, 8:00, 9:15, 10:15 THE BFG B (1:15, 4:15), 7:10, 10:05 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN C (11:10, 1:45, 4:30), PASEO CAMARILLO 3 7:20, 9:55 HUNT FOR THE WILDERPEOPLE C (11:15, 1:55, 4:35), 7:15 8:05, 10:35 390 N. Lantana at Daily 805-383-2267 626-334-6007 All Seats $6.50 before 5pm THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR E (12:30, 3:00), 5:30, INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE C (1:55), 7:30 THE INNOCENTS C (11:00, 1:40, 4:20), 7:00 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE C (11:15, 4:40), 10:25 TICKLED E (11:30, 2:10, 4:50), 7:30 FINDING DORY B (12:00, 2:40), 5:10, 7:50, 10:20 Showtimes for July 18 L AT I ME S . CO M / CA L EN DA R M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 E5 Making progress the Americana way Parker Millsap has acknowledgment in music circles and a raw, bluesy album. By Randy Lewis For an unassuminglooking kid out of tiny Purcell, Okla., population 6,300, singer and songwriter Parker Millsap has attracted pretty impressive friends in cool places since the 2014 release of his debut album. This year, pop superstar and musical tastemaker Elton John dropped Millsap’s name when asked about contemporary musicians he admires, and in March, Millsap scored a slot at Nashville’s venerated Grand Ole Opry on the same night that country queen Loretta Lynn was on stage. He’s been tapped as an opening act for Americana stalwarts including Patty Griffin, Jason Isbell and Old Crow Medicine Show, among others. His sophomore album, “The Very Last Day,” is a raw and bluesy musical excursion that could provide the Coen brothers with subject matter for a half-dozen of their noir-ish, character-rich comedy-dramas. The March release has also earned the 23-year-old a coveted album-of-the-year nomination at the 2016 Americana Music Assn. awards to be handed out in September. Millsap played during the past week at the Casbah in San Diego, Don the Beachcomber in Huntington Beach and the fabled Troubadour in West Hollywood, and made his debut appearance on “Conan.” Noting that he was “so pumped” about playing the Troubadour, he said, “There are just so many people that you listen to that have played there, people who once worked the door there. It’s great to get to play that room. I’ve driven by a few times when I happen to be in L.A.” In one of his most striking songs on the new album, V Laura Partain SINGER-SONGWRITER Parker Millsap, center, whose album “The Very Last Day” has been nominated for an American Music Assn. award, with bassist Michael Rose, left, and fiddler Daniel Foulks. “Heaven Sent,” he sings from the perspective of the gay son of a preacher who yearns for his father’s acceptance. The new album’s opening number, “Hades Pleads,” also showcases the young artist’s songwriting skill. Millsap dives deep into mythological themes in a tune built on gritty slide electric guitar, thumping drums and ragged-edged fiddling behind his octavehopping vocal. He punctuates each observation with disorienting breathy interjections and barbed-war blues inflections. “That was the first song I wrote for this record,” Millsap said via phone while rid- GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE XD 10, 4, 7 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE XD 1, 10 FINDING DORY (PG) RESERVE 11:30, 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 FINDING DORY 3D (PG) RESERVE 9:40, 12:10, 2:40, 5:10 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) RESERVE 11:10, 1:55, 4:30, 7:05, 9:40 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) RESERVE 8, 10:45 THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) RESERVE 12:30, 5:50, 10:45 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) RESERVE 11:15, 1:55, 4:35, 7:15, 9:55 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 9:50, 3:10, 8:10 THE BFG (PG) RESERVE 11, 1:50, 5, 7:50 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) RESERVE 11:20, 2:10, 4:50, 7:30, 10:10, 10:40 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) RESERVE 9:40, 10:15, 12:05, 2:30, 3:05, 4:55, 7:20, 7:55, 9:45, 10:20 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) RESERVE 11:20, 12:40, 1:40, 4, 5:30, 6:20, 8:40 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) RESERVE 9:45, 12:15, 2:45, V ing shotgun as his girlfriend piloted their car back to Nashville from a quick vacation jaunt to Florida’s Gulf Coast. “I had been reading about Greek mythology as I was starting to work on this record and thought about doing some kind of a musical production about the story of Orpheus,” he said. “I wanted to read up more on Greek mythology, and the more I started learning about the story of Hades and Persephone, the more creepy and awful I realized it was. “As a songwriter, I thought I’d try to see if I can relate to that in any way,” he said with a laugh. GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE XD 11:20, 11:20 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE XD 2:20, 5:20, 8:20 FINDING DORY (PG) RESERVE 9:40, 12:10, 2:40, 5:10, 7:40, 10:30 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) RESERVE 9:20, 12:20, 3:20, 6:20, 9:20 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) RESERVE 7:50, 10:50 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) RESERVE 10:50, 1:50, 4:50, 8, 11 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN 3D (PG-13) RESERVE REALD 3D 9:50, 12:50, 3:50 THE BFG (PG) RESERVE 10:40, 1:40, 5 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) RESERVE 11:10, 2:10, 5:30, 6:50, 8:30, 9:50, 11:10 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) RESERVE 9:30, 10:10, 12, 12:40, 2:30, 3:10, 5, 5:40, 7:30, 8:10, 10, 10:40 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) RESERVE REALD 3D 11, 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) RESERVE 10:30, 1:10, 4:30, 7:10, 9:40 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE 10, 1, 7 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE REALD 3D 4:10, 10:10 THE ACHY BREAKY HEARTS (NR) RESERVE 10:20, 1:20, 4:20, 7:20, 10:20 5:15, 7:45, 10:15 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE 11, 2, 5, 7:50, 10:50 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 9:30, 12:15, 3, 6:10, 9 V W GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE XD 4:45, 10:15 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE XD 11:15, 2, 7:30 V GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE XD 5:10, 10:45 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE XD 11:40, 2:25, 7:55 FINDING DORY (PG) 11:20, 12:40, 2, 3:20, 4:40, 7:20, 10 THE CONJURING 2 (R) 12:45, 7:20 NOW YOU SEE ME 2 (PG-13) 4, 10:40 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 11:35, 2:20, 5, 7:40, 10:20 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 4:15, 7:15 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 1:15, 10:15 FREE STATE OF JONES (R) 12:40, 7:25 THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) 12:10, 2:35, 5:05, 7:25, 10 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) 11:25, 2:15, 3:35, 5, 7:45, 9:05, 10:25 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 12:50, 6:20 THE BFG (PG) 11, 1:55, 4:45, 7:45, 10:35 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) 11:45, 2:30, 5:15, 6:35, 8, 9:20, 10:45 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) 11:30, 11:50, 12:10, 12:30, 1:50, 2:10, 2:30, 2:50, 4:15, 4:50, 5:10, 6:35, 6:50, 7:10, 7:30, 8:55, 9:30, 9:50 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) REALD 3D 1:10, 3:30, 4:30, 5:50, 8:10, GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE D-BOX 10:10, 1:05, 3:50, 6:35, 9:20 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE D-BOX REALD 3D 12:10, 2:55, 5:40, 8:25 FINDING DORY (PG) 10, 11:20, 12:40, 1:55, 3:20, 4:40, 7:20, 9:25 THE CONJURING 2 (R) 10:05 P.M. CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 10:30, 1:15, 4, 7:05, 9:50 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 10:05, 1, 3:55, 6:55, 9:45 THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) 10:50, 1:50, 4:30, 7:10, 10 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) 11:45, 2:25, 5:05, 7:45, 10:25 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 6:25, 9:05 THE BFG (PG) 10:40, 1:30, 4:15, 7:15 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) 10:15, 1:20, 4:50, 7:50, 10:30 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) 10:20, 11, 12:20, 1, 1:40, 3, 4:20, 5:45, 6:20, 7, 8:15, 9:40, 10:10, 10:35 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) REALD 3D 11:40, 2:20, 3:40, 5, 7:40, 9 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) 10:55, 1:35, 4:35, 7:35, 10:20 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) 10:10, 1:05, 3:50, 6:35, 9:20 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 12:10, 2:55, 5:40, 8:25 9:10, 10:30 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) 11:45, 1:05, 2:20, 3:40, 4:55, 6:20, V 7:20, 10:25 THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) RESERVE 10:10, 12:35, 3, 5:25, 7:50 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) RESERVE 10:50, 4:30, 9:55 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 1:40, 7:10 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) RESERVE 11:35, 2:20, 5:15, 8, 11:10 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) RESERVE 10:15, 11, 12:45, 1:30, 3:15, 4:15, 5:45, 6:45, 8:15, 9:15, 10:45 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) RESERVE 11:45, 2:15, 5, 7:30, 10:10 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) RESERVE 10:05, 12:40, 3:10, 5:50, 8:20, 11 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE 11:30, 2:30, 5:30, 8:30, 11:25 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 10:45, 1:45, 4:45, 7:45, 10:45 THE INFILTRATOR (R) RESERVE 10:30, 1:35, 4:35, 7:40, 10:40 ShowtimeS Valid 07/18/16 ONLY GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE XD 10, 4, 10 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE XD 1, 7 FINDING DORY (PG) RESERVE 10:40, 1:25, 4:15, 7:10, 9:55 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) RESERVE 10:55, 4:45, 10:20 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) RESERVE 7:55, 10:55 THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) RESERVE 1:50, 7:30 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) RESERVE 1:40, 4:25, 7:15 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 10:45, 10:10 THE BFG (PG) RESERVE 11, 2, 5 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) RESERVE 11:15, 2:05, 4:55, 7:40, 10:40 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) RESERVE 10:05, 10:50, 12:40, 1:35, 3:25, 4:20, 6:10, 7:05, 9, 10:05, 11:30 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) RESERVE 9:30, 12, 2:35, 5:10, 8, 10:45 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) RESERVE 9:35, 12:05, 2:40, 5:15, 7:50, 10:35 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE 11:30, 5:30, 11:20 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 2:30, 8:30 THE INFILTRATOR (R) RESERVE 10:20, 1:30, 4:40, 7:45, 11 V THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) RESERVE XD 9:30, 12, 2:30, 7:30 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) RESERVE XD 5, 10 FINDING DORY (PG) RESERVE 9:40 A.M. FINDING DORY (PG) RESERVE 9:40, 11, 1:35, 4:25, 7, 9:40 FINDING DORY 3D (PG) RESERVE 12:30, 3:20 FINDING DORY 3D (PG) RESERVE REALD 3D 12:30, 3:20 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) RESERVE 10:30, 1:25, 4:30, 7:20, 10:15 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) RESERVE 10:30, 1:25, 4:30, 7:20, 10:15 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) RESERVE 11:10, 2, 4:40, 7:50, 10:40 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 6:30, 9:20 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN 3D (PG-13) RESERVE REALD 3D 6:30, 9:20 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) RESERVE 11:20, 2:10, 4:50, 7:40, 10:30 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) RESERVE 11:20, 2:10, 4:50, 7:40, 10:30 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) RESERVE 1:45, 6:45 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) RESERVE 1:45, 6:45 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) RESERVE 11:15, 4:15, 9:15 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) RESERVE REALD 3D 11:15, 4:15, 9:15 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) RESERVE 12:15, 2:50, 5:25, MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) RESERVE 12:15, 2:50, 5:25, FINDING DORY (PG) 10:50, 1:35, 4:10, 6:50 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) 1:50, 7:25 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 11:05, 4:35 THE BFG (PG) 10:30, 1:25, 4:20, 7:15 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) 11:10, 12:15, 2:40, 5:15, 7:45 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) REALD 3D 1:40, 4:10, 6:45 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) 11:45, 2:15, 4:50, 7:25 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) 11:30, 2:20, 5:10, 7:10, 8 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 10:40, 1:30, 4:20 THE INFILTRATOR (R) 10:20, 1:20, 4:30, 7:30 HUNT FOR THE WILDERPEOPLE (PG-13) 11:30, 2, 4:30, 7:20 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE XD 10, 1, 7 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE XD 4, 10 FINDING DORY (PG) RESERVE 10:40, 1:20, 4:10, 6:50, 9:30 THE CONJURING 2 (R) RESERVE 10:15 P.M. CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) RESERVE 11:15, 2, 4:50, 8:10, 11:05 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) RESERVE 10:25, 1:25, 4:25, V in church.” Opening his ears to the music from his native state made him aware of folk-protest music hero Woody Guthrie, rocker-pianist Leon Russell (whose music he was introduced to by fellow Oklahoma troubadour John Fullbright), and one of his biggest musical heroes, singer-songwriter J.J. Cale, writer of Eric Clapton hits including “After Midnight” and “Cocaine” as well as “They Call Me the Breeze.” Cale’s influence surfaces in the laid-back bluesiness and tasteful acoustic guitar accompaniment of Millsap’s song “Morning Blues,” while his version of Mississippi Fred McDowell’s “You Gotta 8, 10:45 7:40, 9, 10:25 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) 11, 12:20, 3:05, 4:25, 5:50, 7:10, 8:35 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 1:05, 1:40, 3:50, 6:35, 9:20, 9:55 THE INFILTRATOR (R) 1:20, 4:25, 7:25, 10:25 SWISS ARMY MAN (R) 4, 10:30 THE ACHY BREAKY HEARTS (NR) 11:05, 2, 4:55, 7:50, 10:40 GODHI BANNA SADHARANA MYKATTU (NR) 12, 3:15, 6:30, 9:45 Although “The Very Last Day” is just the second Millsap album most pop music fans have had access to, the young artist says he has quite the back catalog. “This is really like my fifth record,” he said. “This is just the second one that’s had any press. I’ve been writing songs since I was 13 or 14 and made my first record when I was about 16, with my high school band.” As much as he was immersed in music growing up in small-town Oklahoma, he said, “I wasn’t really aware of Oklahoma music history until maybe when I was in high school. Before that I was just listening to what my parents listened to and what we sang V GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE XD 4, 10 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE XD 10, 1, 7 FINDING DORY (PG) 10:30, 1:15, 4, 6:45, 9:30 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 11:10, 2, 4:50, 7:40, 10:30 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 10:10, 1:20, 4:10, 7:10, 10:10 THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) 10:15, 12:45, 3:15, 5:45, 8:15, 10:50 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) 10:45, 1:35, 4:25, 7:25, 10:15 THE BFG (PG) 10:20, 1:25, 4:15, 7:20, 10:20 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) 11:20, 2:10, 5, 7:50, 10:45 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) 11, 11:55, 1:45, 2:40, 4:30, 5:25, 7:15, 8:10, 10, 10:55 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) REALD 3D 10:05, 12:50, 3:35, 6:20, 9:05 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) 11:45, 2:25, 5:05, 7:45, 10:25 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) 11, 2, 5, 8, 11 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 12, 3, 6, 9 THE INFILTRATOR (R) 10, 1:10, 4:20, 7:30, 10:40 8, 10:45 SWISS ARMY MAN (R) RESERVE 12:45, 3:30, 6:15, 9 SWISS ARMY MAN (R) RESERVE 12:45, 3:30, 6:15, 9 Move” gets to the existential angst at the heart of that lament. The song also reflects the vocal role models he’s cited such as Howlin’ Wolf, Tom Waits and even Ray Charles, Ella Fitzgerald and Freddie Mercury. The new album delivers a stronger portrait of his concerts because much of it was recorded live in the studio with his touring band, which spotlights fiddle player Daniel Foulks and bassist Michael Rose, with whom he has been friends and playing music since they were in high school. “We’ve been touring a lot and I love live music, and I just wanted to capture that on record,” he said. “It’s fun to use the studio like an instrument, but you can just tell with a record when it’s made by a bunch of people playing at the same time. “Even when the Beach Boys were making those records with the really complex rhythm tracks,” he said, “you could tell there were people singing together over that. You can just tell — it’s a feel you can’t fake. I think our ears are smarter than maybe we think they are.” As for seeing his latest album nominated by the Americana group for top album honors alongside Chris Stapleton’s runaway hit “Traveller,” Lucinda Williams’ “The Ghosts of Highway 20” and Isbell’s “Something More Than Free,” Millsap chuckles. “On a professional level it’s great,” he said. “On a personal level, that’s not what I’m in it for. It’s always an honor, and I’m always grateful to be recognized. “But,” he added, expressing his admiration for the other nominees, “there’s no way I’m going to win, and I’m not really worried about it. It’s kind of wild — my manager texted me [when nominations were announced], and I saw the list of the other names and thought, ‘Wait a minute — somebody must have messed up.’ ” randy.lewis@latimes.com Twitter: @RandyLewis2 FINDING DORY (PG) 11:10, 1:50, 4:40, 7:20, 10 THE SANDLOT (PG) 10 A.M. THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) 11:15, 2:10, 4:50, 7:30, 10:10 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) 2:15, 5, 7:50, 10:30 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) 10:20, 12:45, 2, 4:30, 5:35, 7:10, 8:10, 10:35 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) REALD 3D 11:30, 3:10, 9:40 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) 11:55, 2:30, 5:05, 7:40, 10:20 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) 10:30, 1:20, 4:10, 7, 9:50 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 11:20, 2:20, 5:10, 8, 10:45 V W GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE XD 10:45, 4:35, 10:20 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE XD 1:40, 7:30 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE D-BOX 2:35, 5:30, 8:20, 11:10 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE D-BOX REALD 3D 12:40, 3:35, 6:30, 9:20 FINDING DORY (PG) 11:05, 1:45, 4:25, 7:05, 9:45 THE CONJURING 2 (R) 10:20, 4:30, 10:50 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 11:20, 2:10, 5, 7:45, 10:30 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 1:30, 7:50 THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) 10:35, 12:55, 3:20, 5:45, 8:10, 10:35 THE SANDLOT (PG) 10 A.M. THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) 11:45, 2:30, 5:15, 8, 10:45 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 1:10, 6:40 THE BFG (PG) 10:25, 1:15, 4:15, 7:10, 10 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) 10:30, 4, 9:20 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) RESERVE 11:35, 2:25, 5:10, 7:55, 10:40 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) 10:20, 12:40, 2:30, 3:10, 5:40, 7:40, 8:05, 10:35, 11:10 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) RESERVE 11:30, 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) REALD 3D 10:50, 12, 1:20, 3:50, 5, 6:20, 8:50, 10:05 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) 11:55, 2:25, 5:05, 7:40, 10:15 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) 11:40, 2:35, 5:30, 8:20, 11:10 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 12:40, 3:35, 6:30, 9:20 THE INFILTRATOR (R) 10:40, 1:40, 4:40, 7:40, 10:50 SULTAN (NR) 10:30, 2:15, 6, 9:55 V THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) RESERVE XD 9:40, 12, 2:40, 8, 10:50 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) RESERVE XD 5:30 P.M. GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE XD 10:30, 10:30 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE XD 1:30, 4:30, 7:30 W GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE D-BOX 9:50, 12:40, 3:40, 6:40, 9:40 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE D-BOX REALD 3D 11:20, 2:20, 5:20, 8:15 V EIGHT BELOW (PG) 1:15 P.M. IRON WILL (PG) 10:30 A.M. DISNEY'S A CHRISTMAS CAROL (PG) 7 P.M. COOL RUNNINGS (PG) 4 P.M. FINDING DORY (PG) 10, 12:30, 1:35, 3, 4:10, 5:30, 8, 10:30 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 10:50, 1:45, 4:35, 7:35, 10:15 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 10:35, 1:25, 4:25, 7:15, 10:05 THE SHALLOWS (PG-13) 12:30, 3:15, 5:50, 8:25, 10:45 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) 11:50, 2:30, 5:10, 6:40, 7:50, 9:20, 10:30 THE BFG (PG) 10:30, 1:20, 4:20, 7:10, 10 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) 11:30, 2:25, 5:05, 8, 10:40 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) 10, 11:10, 12, 12:45, 1:30, 2:20, 3:05, 3:50, 4:40, 5:25, 6:10, 7, 7:45, 8:30, 9:25, 10:05, 10:55 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) REALD 3D 10:45, 1:05, 3:25, 5:45, 8:05, 10:25 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) 11:45, 1, 2:15, 3:30, 4:50, 6, 7:20, 8:35, 9:50, 11 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) 10, 12, 2:45, 5:30, 6:45, 8:15, 9:30, 11 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 10:20, 11:15, 1:15, 2, 4, 4:45, 7:30, 10:15 THE INFILTRATOR (R) 11:05, 2:05, 5, 7:55, 10:50 SWISS ARMY MAN (R) 9:35 P.M. FINDING DORY (PG) 10:20, 1:20, 4:20, 7:10, 9:50 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE (PG-13) 10:35, 1:40, 4:45, 7:45, 10:35 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE (PG-13) 1, 6:50 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) 10:10, 4, 10:10 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN 3D (PG-13) REALD 3D 11, 1:45, 4:50, 7:50, 10:40 THE BFG (PG) 10:45, 1:50, 5:10, 8:10 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) 10:50, 1:25, 4:10, 7, 9:55, 10:55 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) 10:40, 1:10, 3, 3:50, 6:30, 8:30, 9:20 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) REALD 3D 10, 11:30, 12:20, 12:30, 2, 3:20, 4:40, 5:50, 6:20, 7:20, 9, 10 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) 11:40, 2:10, 5, 7:40, 10:20 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE 9:50, 12:40, 3:40, 6:40, 9:40 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE REALD 3D 11:20, 2:20, 5:20, 8:15, 11 FINDING DORY (PG) RESERVE 11:40, 2:10, 4:40, 7:20, 10 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN (PG-13) RESERVE 11, 4:30, 10:10 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 1:40, 7:30 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR (R) RESERVE 11:10, 2, 4:50, 7:40, 10:30 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS (PG) RESERVE 11:20, 1:50, 4:20, 6:50, 9:20 THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS 3D (PG) RESERVE 9:50, 12:20, 2:50, 5:20, 7:50, 10:20 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES (R) RESERVE 10, 12:30, 3, 5:30, 8:10, 10:40 GHOSTBUSTERS (PG-13) RESERVE 10:30, 1:20, 5:10, 8, 9:50 GHOSTBUSTERS 3D (PG-13) RESERVE 11:50, 2:30, 4:10, 7, 10:45 E6 M O N DAY , J U LY 18 , 2 016 Teen’s call from France [McNamara, from E1] they’re all dead.” At that moment, McReynolds knew nothing of the attack in France that left at least 84 dead after the driver of a refrigerated truck plowed through the crowd — it had not made the news. But in the video we see her attempt to calm her daughter, telling Aimee to “take a deep breath” and that she will have her on a flight home as soon as possible. Confining her own fear to a few choked sobs and anguished whispers to her son, McReynolds focuses on her daughter, talks her through a city she cannot see, a tragedy she doesn’t yet understand. She asks Aimee if she has a phone charger, if she can see a safe hotel, if her tour guide is alive. “Don’t hang up,” McReynolds says, at one point. “I need you.” The eight-minute video, which begins with happy scenes of Aimee setting off on her adventure, ends with a shot of her safe in a hotel lobby and a call to pray for those who were not as “blessed and lucky” as Aimee, her friend Ahnyca and their families. Morales put it together with transitional text and, when necessary, subtitles, but the footage is choppy, the camera frequently aimed at the ground, the wall, at table legs as Morales attempts to take in the news and comfort his mother — the camera on but forgotten. It is a different kind of “live report” television that’s become increasingly common in these troubled times, and it’s difficult to watch, even knowing that the young women are safe. In the best version of every parent’s nightmare, McReynolds’ desperate calm instantly collapses the enormity of the event into a single series of maternal directives, which days later emanated from my own phone as my own teenage daughter showed me the video. The world is a vast and confusing place until moments like these shrink it so it fits into the palm of your hand. And in this case, it quickly shrank even further. My daughter Fiona, who had herself been in Nice in June, follows OKBaby because Oscar and Kyra went to her brother Danny’s high school. It took me less than an hour to discover that Aimee Morales, whom I had just heard sobbing amid unimaginable carnage, and Ahnyca Quesada, who may have saved her life, had in fact been in my son’s class; one hot bright evening not that long ago, I had watched them graduate. One Facebook message later, I had McReynolds’ phone number. She was driving back to Los Angeles from Montana, where Oscar now lives, in time to meet Aimee, who was also on her way home from Florence, Italy, via London. “The attack had just happened,” McReynolds says of the moments captured in the video. “So we had no idea what she was talking about. Just that there had been an attack and people were dead. It wasn’t even on the news, there were only a few tweets. “I don’t even remember what I said when she first called. In my mind, it went on for hours, but my son says it was just a few seconds. All I heard was, ‘Everyone is dead.’ ” Some of McReynolds’ friends had expressed concern when Aimee and Ahnyca decided to go to Europe. The girls had originally wanted to backpack, but McReynolds decided an agency tour would be better. “A lot of the kids were older,” she says, “on gap year; [the girls] were the only Americans. But the tour and the guide were amazing.” In the immediate aftermath of the attack, she says, the group made its way to the beach and followed the shoreline to a hotel whereit stayed until the police activity died down. Aimee called her mother every 10 minutes while her father got in touch with the American consulate. Eventually the group, organized through Topdeck tours, made its way back to its hotel. The group was scheduled to leave for Florence in the morning; in Florence, counselors met with the group members, many of whom chose to continue their travels. Aimee and Ahnyca, however, chose to come home. “I left the decision to her,” McReynolds says, “though I really wanted her back. But she wanted to get home as soon as she could.” Home where her classmates, like my son, are going to the beach, working summer jobs, hanging out for a few more weeks with friends, attending college orientation. Where the attack is horrifying enough through the safety of a screen, where parents and families who watch count their blessings and look at school trips abroad with increasing wariness. Aimee is calmer now, McReynolds says, but still deeply affected. “It happened right in front of her; Ahnyca pulled her out of the way,” she says. “She heard the truck hit people. That’s what she keeps saying to me. That she cannot stop hearing the sound of the truck running over all those bodies.” mary.mcnamara @latimes.com Twitter: @marymacTV L AT I M E S. C O M /CA L E N DA R BOX OFFICE Hopper Stone Columbia Pictures / Sony Pictures MELISSA McCARTHY, left, Kate McKinnon, Kristen Wiig and Leslie Jones star in the new “Ghostbusters.” Earning a good grade [Box office from E1] McKinnon, Kristen Wiig and Leslie Jones as the team that must save New York City from an onslaught of paranormal activity. “Thor’s” Chris Hemsworth delivers a comedic turn as a hunky, dimwitted secretary. The film, a reboot of the 1984 picture starring Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis and Ernie Hudson, faced misogynistic criticism online for its new twist with an all-female cast. Additionally, the first trailer, when released in March, was widely panned on YouTube, where it reportedly became the most “disliked” movie trailer in the site’s history. People even flooded its International Movie Database page with poor ratings. Whether that had a negative effect on the film’s performance is too early to tell, Bruer said, opting for a long-game vision. “What you have to see is where does it end up,” he said. “I think certainly there were hurdles that we had to push through, and there was definitely challenges in regards to the naysayers of it all, but we always knew we were bringing it.” Audiences, 54% of which were female, and critics appear to like the movie, however — once they’ve seen it. Moviegoers gave “Ghostbusters” a B-plus CinemaScore (those younger than 25 gave it an A-minus), while 73% of Rotten Tomatoes critics rated it favorably. Still, the film will need to do strong business throughout the rest of the summer at home — as many of Feig’s films do — and overseas to justify the large budget and generate a sequel. That Estimated sales in the U.S. and Canada: 3-day Percentage gross change from Total (millions) last weekend (millions) Movie (Studio) 1 The Secret Life of Pets $50.6 -52% $203.2 10 Universal ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------2 Ghostbusters $46 N/A $46 3 Sony ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------3 The Legend of Tarzan $11.1 -47% $103.1 17 Warner Bros. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------4 Finding Dory $11 -47% $445.5 31̀ Disney ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------5 Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates $7.5 -55% $31.3 10 20th Century Fox ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------6 The Purge: Election Year $6.1 -51% $71 17 Universal ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------7 Central Intelligence $5.3 -34% $117.5 31 Warner Bros. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------8 The Infiltrator $5.3 N/A $6.7 5 Broad Green Pictures ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------9 The BFG $3.7 -52% $47.3 17 Disney ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------10 Independence Day: Resurgence $3.5 -56% $98.5 24 20th Century Fox ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Industry totals 3-day gross (in millions) Change from 2015 $162 -16.4% $6.3 able and you want it,” he said, but “you can’t count on it.” The original “Ghostbusters” eventually generated more than $240 million in ticket sales from the U.S. and Canada and was nominated for two Oscars (visual effects and original song). Maintaining the top spot at the box office was “The 310.478.3836 11523 Santa Monica Blvd. 8290 La Palma Avenue 714-826-SHOW (7469) * GHOSTBUSTERS C (11:45, 2:35, 5:25), 8:15 * GHOSTBUSTERS C F (10:45, 1:35, 4:25), 7:15, 10:05 * GHOSTBUSTERS C DOLBY ATMOS (11:15, 2:05, 4:55), 7:45, 10:35 * GHOSTBUSTERS IN 3D C (3:55), 6:45, 9:35 THE INFILTRATOR E (10:30, 1:30, 4:30), 7:30, 10:30 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES E (11:45, 2:15, 4:45), 7:25, 9:55 * THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B (10:55, 11:25, 11:55, 12:25, 1:20, 1:50, 2:20, 2:50, 4:15, 4:45, 5:15), 6:40, 7:10, 7:40, 9:05, 9:35, 10:05 THE BFG B (11:05, 1:55, 4:45), 7:35, 10:25 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN C (11:30, 2:15, 5:00), 7:55, 10:30 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN C F (10:45, 1:30, 4:15), 7:00, 9:45 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR E (11:45, 2:25, 5:05), 7:45, 10:25 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE C (10:30, 1:25, 4:25), 7:20, 10:15 THE SHALLOWS C (10:30, 12:50, 3:10, 5:30), 7:50, 10:10 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE C (11:10, 1:50, 4:30), 7:05, 9:50 FINDING DORY B (11:30, 2:05, 4:40), 7:15, 9:50 REDLANDS 340 N. Eureka St. 909-793-6393 * GHOSTBUSTERS C (10:30, 11:00, 1:15, 1:50, 4:00), 6:45, 7:20, 9:35 * GHOSTBUSTERS C F (11:30, 2:20, 5:10), 8:00 * GHOSTBUSTERS IN 3D C (4:35), 10:05 THE INFILTRATOR E (10:35, 1:30, 4:25), 7:20, 10:20 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES E (11:40, 2:25, 5:15), 7:50, 10:30 * THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B (10:30, 11:20, 12:30, 1:00, 2:00, 3:00, 3:30, 4:30, 5:30), 6:30, 7:10, 7:55, 9:15, 9:55, 10:30 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN C (10:45, 1:40, 4:25), 7:05, 9:45 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN C F (11:35, 2:15, 5:05), 7:45, 10:30 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR E (11:25, 2:10, 4:50), 7:40, 10:20 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE C (1:45), 7:30 THE SHALLOWS C (10:50, 4:40), 10:25 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE C (10:55, 1:35, 4:20), 7:35, 10:15 FINDING DORY B (10:40, 1:25, 4:05), 7:25, 9:55 MONROVIA Monrovia cineMa 12 & lfx 410 S. Myrtle Avenue 626-305-SHOW (7469) LFX LARGE FORMAT EXPERIENCE * GHOSTBUSTERS C DOLBY ATMOS (10:25, 1:15, 4:05), 7:00, 9:45 * GHOSTBUSTERS C (10:00, 10:55, 1:45, 4:50), 7:30, 9:00, 10:15 THE INFILTRATOR E (10:45, 1:35, 4:40), 7:35, 10:25 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES E (12:30, 2:45, 5:30), 8:00, 10:30 * THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B (10:15, 11:30, 12:30, 1:55, 2:55, 4:20, 5:20), 6:45, 7:45, 10:10 * THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B F (12:00, 2:25, 4:50), 7:15, 9:40 THE BFG B (10:20, 1:10, 4:00), 7:00, 9:50 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN C (10:50, 1:25, 4:10), 7:40, 10:15 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR E (11:50, 2:25, 5:00), 7:50, 10:30 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE C (1:30), 7:30 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE C (11:00, 4:30), 10:10 FINDING DORY B (11:15, 2:00, 4:45), 7:10, 9:35 DOWNEY doWney cineMa 10 THE CONJURING 2 E (10:30, 1:25, 4:25), 7:30, 10:25 8200 3rd St., Corner of 3rd St. and New Ave. 562-622-3999 SAN CLEMENTE * GHOSTBUSTERS C (11:00, 11:40, 1:50, 2:30, 4:40), 7:30, 8:05, 10:15 San cleMenTe cineMa 6 641-B Camino De Los Mares 949-661-SHOW (7469) * GHOSTBUSTERS C F (10:05, 12:55, 3:45), 6:35, 9:25 * GHOSTBUSTERS IN 3D C (5:15), 10:45 * GHOSTBUSTERS C (10:00, 10:50, 1:40, 4:30), 7:20, 10:10 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES E F (12:05, 2:35, 4:55), 7:45, 10:15 * GHOSTBUSTERS C F (3:45), 9:00 MIKE AND DAVE NEED WEDDING DATES E (12:20, 2:50, 5:20), 7:50, 10:20 * THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B (10:10, 10:50, 11:30, 12:30, 1:15, 1:55, 3:00, 3:40, 4:20, 5:25), 6:05, 7:00, 7:40, 8:30, 9:25, 10:05, 10:45 * THE SECRET LIFE OF PETS B F (11:00, 12:00, 1:20, 2:30, 5:00), 6:30, 7:30, 10:00 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN C (11:35, 2:10, 4:45), 7:25, 10:10 THE LEGEND OF TARZAN C (11:20, 2:10, 4:50), 7:40, 10:20 THE PURGE: ELECTION YEAR E (10:00, 12:20, 2:55, 5:20), 7:55, 10:35 FINDING DORY B (11:10, 1:50, 4:20), 7:00, 9:30 FINDING DORY B (11:20, 1:55, 4:25), 7:05, 9:35 *SPecial enGaGeMenT/no PaSSeS TiMeS for Monday, July 18, 2016 N/A Los Angeles Times looks to be tough, however, with reports that “Ghostbusters” may not get a China release because of the country’s ban on pop culture that promotes “cults or superstitious beliefs.” Bruer said that a China release is “still a work in progress” and that there is “still a chance.” Showing in the country is “very desir- ROYAL redlandS cineMa 14 2.3% Sources: comScore Info Line BUENA PARK Change in attendance from 2015 Change from 2015 Year-to-date gross (in billions) TM MeTroPlex 18 Days in release West L.A. The TenTh Man I 7:30 PM Men Go To BaTTle (1:50 PM 4:30 PM) 7:10 PM 9:45 PM our liTTle SiSTer B (1:00 PM 4:00 PM) 7:00 PM 10:00 PM The Kind WordS (4:20 PM) 9:50 PM MaGGie’S Plan E (1:40 PM) decorado I (12:55 PM) SPliT TicKeT I (1:10 PM) MONICA 1332 Second Street Santa Monica life, aniMaTed B (12:20 PM 2:40 PM 5:00 PM) 7:20 PM 9:40 PM hunT for The WilderPeoPle C (12:00 PM 2:20 PM 4:40 PM) Zero dayS C (4:00 PM) 9:30 PM The innocenTS C (1:20 PM 4:10 PM) 7:00 PM 9:50 PM c STreeT E (1:40 PM) 7:10 PM ovaTion E (12:00 PM 2:30 PM 5:00 PM) 7:30 PM 10:00 PM under The Sun (12:00 PM 2:30 PM 5:00 PM) 7:40 PM 10:15 PM naTional TheaTre live: a vieW froM The BridGe I SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT 7:30 PM MUSIC HALL 9036 Wilshire Blvd. Beverly Hills ouTlaWS and anGelS E (1:30 PM) 7:00 PM The MuSic of STranGerS: yoyo Ma and The SilK road enSeMBle C (2:30 PM) WienerdoG E (4:20 PM) 10:00 PM Tri 7:30 PM GeniuS C (12:00 PM 4:50 PM) 50 KiloS of cherrieS 9:45 PM Tony roBBinS: i aM noT your Guru I (1:00 PM 4:00 PM) 7:00 PM 10:00 PM AHRYA FINE ARTS 8556 Wilshire Blvd. Beverly Hills yarn I (1:50 PM) The loBSTer E (4:20 PM) naTional TheaTre live: a vieW froM The BridGe I SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT 7:30 PM PLAYHOUSE 673 E. Colorado Blvd. Pasadena life, aniMaTed B (1:00 PM 5:40 PM) 10:15 PM lucha Mexico I (1:40 PM 4:30 PM) 7:20 PM 10:00 PM hunT for The WilderPeoPle C (12:45 PM 3:00 PM 5:20 PM) 7:40 PM 10:00 PM our liTTle SiSTer B (1:00 PM 4:00 PM) 7:00 PM 10:00 PM The innocenTS C (1:20 PM 4:10 PM) 7:00 PM our Kind of TraiTor E (1:30 PM) 7:10 PM SWiSS arMy Man E (4:40 PM) WienerdoG E 9:45 PM MaGGie’S Plan E (3:20 PM) 8:00 PM The loBSTer E (4:20 PM) 9:55 PM love & friendShiP B (1:50 PM) naTional TheaTre live: a vieW froM The BridGe I SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT 7:30 PM BARGAIN IN ( ) NOOFTAFRAID SUBTITLES www.LAEMMLE.com NoHo 7 5240 Lankershim Blvd. No. Hollywood GhoSTBuSTerS C (1:40 PM 4:30 PM) 7:20 PM 10:10 PM The infilTraTor E (1:00 PM 4:00 PM) 7:00 PM 10:00 PM hunT for The WilderPeoPle C (12:40 PM 3:00 PM 5:20 PM) MiKe and dave need WeddinG daTeS E (1:50 PM 4:20 PM) 7:00 PM 9:30 PM The SecreT life of PeTS B (12:30 PM 2:50 PM 5:10 PM) 7:30 PM 9:50 PM our Kind of TraiTor E (1:50 PM 4:30 PM) 7:10 PM SWiSS arMy Man E 9:45 PM WienerdoG E (12:50 PM 3:10 PM 5:30 PM) 7:50 PM 10:10 PM TOWN CENTER 17200 Ventura Blvd. Encino life, aniMaTed B (12:45 PM 3:00 PM 5:15 PM) 7:30 PM our liTTle SiSTer B (1:00 PM 4:00 PM) 7:00 PM 9:55 PM The innocenTS C (1:20 PM 4:10 PM) 7:10 PM 10:00 PM our Kind of TraiTor E (1:50 PM) MaGGie’S Plan E (4:40 PM) 50 KiloS of cherrieS 9:45 PM raTed I (12:45 PM) H SulTan I NO DISCOUNTS; SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT 1:30 PM 5:00 PM 8:30 PM naTional TheaTre live: a vieW froM The BridGe I SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT 7:30 PM CLAREMONT 450 W. 2nd Street Claremont life, aniMaTed B (3:10 PM) 7:50 PM GhoSTBuSTerS C (1:20 PM 4:10 PM) 7:00 PM 9:50 PM hunT for The WilderPeoPle C (1:00 PM 3:20 PM 5:40 PM) 8:00 PM 10:15 PM The SecreT life of PeTS B (12:40 PM 3:00 PM 5:20 PM) 7:40 PM 10:00 PM our Kind of TraiTor E (1:50 PM 4:30 PM) WienerdoG E (12:50 PM 5:30 PM) 10:10 PM naTional TheaTre live: a vieW froM The BridGe I SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT 7:30 PM FOR 7/18/2016 ONLY Secret Life of Pets” from Illumination Entertainment and Universal Pictures. The computer-animated adventure added an impressive estimated $50.6 million in its second week. The amount, added to the film’s massive debut for a domestic gross, brings its total to $203.2 million. Though the film waits to open in 57 more countries over the next three months, including in China on Aug. 2., it already has grossed $50.8 million internationally. Coming in third was Warner Bros.’ “The Legend of Tarzan,” with $11.1 million in its third week. The live-action remake of the classic jungle tale has grossed an estimated $103.1 domestically. After taking in $22 million this past weekend internationally, the film has a $90.6million foreign gross. Disney-Pixar’s “Finding Dory” continues to break records. After landing in fourth for the weekend, with $11 million, the picture stands as the highest-grossing animated release domestically, with an estimated $445.5 million. It passed Shrek 2’s” longheld record, set in 2004, of $441.2 million. Internationally, the film has taken in an estimated $276.2 million for a global cumulative total of $721.7 million. This result has helped push the year-to-date for Walt Disney Studios past $2 billion domestically. It’s the fastest this mark has been reached in industry history. Twentieth Century Fox’s “Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates,” in fifth place, took home an estimated $7.5 million in its second week. The R-rated comedy has grossed $31.3 million domestically. The week’s only other new wide release, Broad Green Pictures’ “The Infiltrator,” pulled in an estimated $5.3 million for an eighth-place finish. Such a performance is continued bad news for the studio after a weak performance of “The Neon Demon.” “The Infiltrator” stars Bryan Cranston as an undercover federal agent attempting to infiltrate the trafficking network of a Colombian drug kingpin. As for notable limited releases, “Café Society,” a partnership between Lionsgate and Amazon Studios, grossed $355,000 on five screens in New York and Los Angeles. That per-screen average of $71,000 is the biggest for an opening weekend among all films in 2016. The film is the latest from Woody Allen, about love in 1930s Hollywood and New York. “We’re really pleased about the initial weekend of ‘Café Society,’ ” said Bob Berney, Amazon’s head of marketing and distribution. “Woody Allen’s romantic trip to Hollywood and Manhattan of the ’30s is a great film that audiences are adoring.” Next week, major new releases include Fox’s latest addition to the “Ice Age” franchise, “Ice Age: Collision Course”; Warner Bros.’ horror flick “Lights Out”; and Paramount’s “Star Trek: Beyond.” trevell.anderson @latimes.com Twitter: @TrevellAnderson L AT I ME S . CO M / CA L EN DA R M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 E7 It appears Woody Allen won’t let up [Allen, from E1] pulses. He never gives us a break. And yet his latest, “Café Society,” a comedy with dramatic underpinnings, reveals that as much as his films can seem blithely selfsame, there are shadings and distinctions that signal more dynamic shifts in his thinking. Always marked by a neurotic pessimism, his recent films have taken a darker, violent turn, verging on nihilism. His work has become a thorny conversation with himself, his past, his problems and his audience. Perhaps it always was. “Café Society,” a wistful story of romantic yearning set in New York and Hollywood in the 1930s, centers on a love triangle among Jesse Eisenberg, Kristen Stewart and Steve Carell, with supporting performances by Jeannie Berlin, Blake Lively, Parker Posey, Paul Schneider and Corey Stoll. Though Allen does not appear onscreen, he voices an ongoing narration, a not-so-subtle reminder as to who is the real guiding hand. One of the movie’s main themes seems to be that you can’t outrun your past and that things have a way of coming back around, whether people or crimes or feelings long compartmentalized. The specter of allegations that Allen had sexually molested his adopted daughter Dylan Farrow in 1992 roared back around the time of his piercing 2013 drama “Blue Jasmine” when she publicly spoke out. And a recent essay by Allen’s estranged son Ronan Farrow, timed to the Cannes Film Festival premiere of “Café Society,” questioned journalists for not continuing to ask “hard questions” of his father. Changing dynamics between men and women, evolving attitudes toward survivors of sexual assault and an accelerated media landscape have meant that these renewed allegations have played out differently than they did in the ’90s. This time, as in Allen’s latest movie, the past may not be so easy to leave behind. Cannes Film Festival WOODY ALLEN’S latest, “Café Society,” isn’t always a romance. Jesse Eisenberg and Blake Lively costar. At Cannes, journalists did confront Allen about Ronan Farrow’s essay. He deferred their questions by referring them to his 2014 op-ed in the New York Times. So where does that leave the rest of us? Would this all be made easier if Allen would just hit “pause”? I’ve always read Allen’s work ethic as an attempt to put his head down and push past any and all controversy, while I also wonder whether he now feels that slowing down would be a tacit acknowledgement that his presence had become so troubling. But rather than give his audiences a moment to process their complicated, conflicting feelings about the distinctions between life and art, the life of the artist and the work created, he defiantly insists on remaining visible. Because of his prolific output, there is often an unfiltered quality to Allen’s work, as if it’s an outpouring of his subconscious into the script and onto the screen. So the constant appearance of older men with younger women, the preoccupation with guilt and murder, class anxiety, a sense of existential futility, could all be read as signs that he genuinely can’t help himself. These truly are the things most on his mind. Allen maintains that he does not read any press about himself, good or bad, none of the reviews or interviews or think pieces. I don’t know that I entirely buy that line, as he frequently seems to be addressing what is being said about him through his work. Last year’s “Irrational Man” felt acutely aware of Allen’s critics, as a college T V HIGH LI GHTS Guilt When paparazzi bombard Grace (Daisy Head) as she exits the police station, a good Samaritan helps her, but she soon suspects his intentions. 9 p.m. Freeform Devious Maids Rosie (Dania Ramirez) stumbles on a big secret while Evelyn (Rebecca Wisocky) resorts to tricking Carmen (Roselyn Sanchez) to get what she needs. 9 p.m. Lifetime 12 Monkeys In the season finale, Cole and Railly (Aaron Stanford, Amanda Schull) adjust to living in the past, until a woman has apocalyptic visions of the future and warns Cole that it’s not over. Madeleine Stowe, who starred in the 1995 feature film that inspired this TV series, guest stars. 9 p.m. Syfy Rizzoli & Isles When a bicyclist appears to spontaneously combust, Maura (Sasha Alexander) proves his death was a murder. Angie Harmon also stars. 9 p.m. TNT professor engaged in an affair with a young student and attempted to get away with the murder of a family court judge. In “Café Society” a man leaves his wife of 25 years to take up with a 25year-old woman. (And then is seen staying with her for a number of years, longer than some passing fling.) Aside from that uncomfortably precise age differential, one of the more troubling elements in “Café Society” is that as part of a gangster subplot, a number of violent murders are shown that have little precedent in Allen’s work. A garish moment in which a man is shot while in a barber’s chair, blood staining the towel wrapped around his head, is especially jarring. Though there is (spoiler alert) comeuppance in “Café Society,” the movie’s flip at- titude toward these deaths is especially odd because Allen has so frequently turned to the notion of murder, and getting away with it, as the most elemental moral dilemma. In “Crimes and Misdemeanors,” “Match Point,” “Cassandra’s Dream” and “Irrational Man” he has returned again and again to whether a person can commit the ultimate crime and continue living a normal life. He has depicted murder in a comedic way before — “Manhattan Murder Mystery” comes immediately to mind — but the throwaway lightness with which he treats the subject here seems to further signal the ongoing darkening of his worldview. The romantic machinations and manipulations of Jesse Eisenberg’s character in “Café Society” might at a Monday Prime-Time TV rio Dawson, Aubrey Plaza, Justin Long, Ari Graynor, Scott Porter and Ron Livingston. 8 p.m. KTLA SERIES The Bachelorette JoJo travels to the hometowns of the four remaining bachelors. 8 p.m. ABC So You Think You Can Dance The top 10 dancers perform, and one dancer is eliminated. 8 p.m. Fox Cupcake Wars Gymnast Shawn Johnson, NeNe Leakes and Lamorne Morris and figure skater Johnny Weir wage a celebrity cupcake battle for the chance to have their creative cupcakes featured as a centerpiece at a massive party celebrating Hello Kitty. 8 p.m. Food The Fosters Callie’s (Maia Mitchell) senior project brings her to her former foster homes, where an unexpected encounter reveals shocking news about a former foster brother. 8 p.m. Freeform BrainDead Margo Martindale (“The Americans,” “Justified”) plays an entomologist recommended by Luke (Danny Pino) to Lauren (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) for a professional’s take on what’s happening in Washington, D.C. 9 p.m. CBS different time have seemed charming and the product of a plucky persistence. Today they read with an edge of obliviousness and selfish desperation. Likewise Carell’s Hollywood power broker wavers between an abrasive, earnest rawness and a steely calculation. If Woody Allen were to stop making movies what, really, would be lost? The free-flowing precision of “Annie Hall,” the bittersweet reveries of “Hannah and Her Sisters,” the angry agitation of “Husbands and Wives” and the sun-kissed psychopathology of “Vicki Cristina Barcelona” would all still exist. If he were to stop working it wouldn’t even much fix his legacy in place, as the regard for certain films is already in flux. “Manhattan,” long considered one of his greatest achievements, has of late seemed just a morass of cringing and bad vibes, not only for a fortysomething Allen romantically pursuing an underage high school girl but also for its general tone of smug, posturing self-regard. At the same time, an unassuming film like “Broadway Danny Rose” has an emergent tenderness and humanity that was once easy to overlook. With “Café Society,” Allen again signals his audience about what’s on his mind and that he knows what they think about him. He occupies a distinctly complicated, tangled position and now always will, regardless of whether the 80-year-old filmmaker stops working or not. These are not signs of an autumnal reconciliation of life’s contradictions but rather something intense and disturbing. Woody Allen does not make it easy to be a fan of Woody Allen. But as in his “The Purple Rose of Cairo,” where an actor steps out of a movie and into the real world only to cause chaos and a struggle to get him to return onscreen, any ongoing doubts and recriminations about Allen will not be easily put back. Toy Story (1995) 8:15 a.m. and 5:15 p.m. Disney XD Paddington (2014) 12:15 p.m. Showtime Blackboard Jungle (1955) 5 p.m. TCM TALK SHOWS Eric McCandless Freeform MAIA MITCHEL stars in the teen-oriented drama “The Fosters” on Freeform. The Making of the Mob: Chicago Gangster Al Capone is left in control of the Chicago crime organization when Torrio is forced to leave town in this new episode. 10 p.m. AMC UnReal Quinn (Constance Zimmer) sets out to torpedo the growing relationship between Rachel and Coleman (Shiri Appleby, Michael Rady) by dragging a few skeletons out of the closet. 10 p.m. Lifetime Major Crimes Det. Sanchez’s (Raymond Cruz) application to become a foster parent is jeopardized by his reaction to a gruesome murder. 10 p.m. TNT SPECIALS Republican National Convention Gavel-to-gavel coverage of the four-day event that will culminate in the nomination of the GOP presidential and vice presidential ticket, commences at 10 a.m. on CSPAN. Cable news channels, including CNBC; CNN; Fox Business; Fox News; Blumberg and MSNBC will incorporate coverage into their regular programming and as breaking news. Special programming will air on PBS (5 p.m.); CBS, NBC, ABC and Fox (7 p.m.) MOVIES 10 Years This 2011 comedydrama revolves around a reunion of high-school friends a decade after their graduation. Channing Tatum, Jenna Dewan Tatum, Chris Pratt, Kate Mara, Oscar Isaac, Rosa- CBS This Morning (N) 7 a.m. KCBS Today Benjamin Bratt; Teresa Palmer; Kathryn Hahn; Annie Mumolo; Karl Urban; David Nail. (N) 7 a.m. KNBC Good Morning America (N) 7 a.m. KABC Good Day L.A. Holly Holm, UFC; Director Paul Feig (“Ghostbusters”); L.A. County Sheriff Jim McDonnell. (N) 7 a.m. KTTV The Talk Wanda Sykes. (N)1 p.m. KCBS Rachael Ray Chris O’Donnell and his brother; Ali Wentworth. (N) 1 p.m. KABC Steve Harvey Aja Evans. (N) 2 p.m. KNBC The Dr. Oz Show Bizarre things people eat to lose weight. (N) 2 p.m. KTTV Full Frontal With Samantha Bee Republican National Convention. (N) 10:30 p.m. TBS Tavis Smiley (N) 11 p.m. KOCE Charlie Rose (N) 11 p.m. KVCR; 11:30 p.m. KOCE The Daily Show A look back at the unusual primary season. (N) 11 p.m. Comedy Central The Tonight Show Chris Pine; Joanna Lumley; Troye Sivan performs. (N) 11:34 p.m. KNBC The Late Show Zoe Saldana; Jennifer Saunders; Ron Suskind. (N) 11:35 p.m. KCBS The Late Late Show Zachary Quinto; Juliette Lewis; SWMRS performs. (N) 12:37 a.m. KCBS Late Night Simon Pegg; Maren Morris; Atom Willard with the 8G band. (N) 12:37 a.m. KNBC Nightline (N) 12:37 a.m. KABC SPORTS For today’s sports on TV, see the Sports section. 8:30 9 pm CBS Mom (TV14) 2 Broke Girls BrainDead (TV14) The CDC NBC ABC American Ninja Warrior (TVPG) (N) Å 10 Years ›› (2011) Channing Tatum. (PG-13) The Bachelorette (TVPG) JoJo travels to the hometowns of FOX So You Think You Can Dance (TVPG) The top 10 dancers per- News (N) KTLA (TV14) Å investigates. (N) Å 10 pm Movies Sports News (N) New Å Closed Captioning 8 pm Å 9:30 mark.olsen@latimes.com 10:30 Entertainment News (N) (TVPG) (N) Å Tonight (N) Å Dateline NBC (TVPG) Å News (N) Å News (N) News (N) News (N) News (N) the four remaining bachelors to learn more about the men by meeting their families and exploring their pasts. (N) Å KCAL News (N) News (N) News (N) Sports Central Mike & Molly TMZ (TVPG) form, and one dancer is eliminated. (N) Å TMZ Live (TVPG) (N) Å Hollywood Today Live (TVPG) Seinfeld (TVG) Seinfeld Å KVCR Masterpiece Mystery! (TV14) Endeavour: The Forsyte Saga (TVPG) So- Bare Feet: MickCoda. Å ames returns. Å ela Mallozzi KCET New Tricks (TVPG) Å Luther (TVPG) Å The Fixer Å UNI Un camino hacia el destino (N) Tres Veces Ana (TV14) (N) Por Siempre Joan Sebastian MyNt Å Law & Order Charlie Rose (N) Å Man & Beast Noticias (N) Munich ’72 and Beyond (TV14) Tavis Smiley KOCE Antiques Roadshow (TVG) KDOC Law & Order: CI (TV14) Å Raymond Å Raymond Å Family Guy Å Family Guy Å Seinfeld (TVG) The Appalachians (TVG) Å Live From the Artists Den The Kate (TVPG) Å Business The First 48 (TV14) Å The First 48 (TV14) Å The First 48 (TV14) Å The First 48 Gran Torino ››› (2008) Clint Eastwood. (7:30) (R) Å Making the Mob: Chicago Mob: Chicago Yukon Men (TVPG) Å Yukon Men (TVPG) Å Yukon Men (TVPG) Lone Star Law The Road Warrior (R) (7) Å Chris Harris Top Gear (TVG) Å Star Trek: TNG Hustle & Flow ››› (2005) Terrence Howard, Anthony Anderson. (R) Martin (10:57) Real Housewives of Orange Co. Real Housewives of Orange Co. Odd Mom Out Odd Mom Out What Happens America’s Choice 2016 (N) America’s Choice 2016 (N) CNN Tonight: Don Lemon (N) CNN Tonight South Park Å South Park Å South Park Å South Park Å South Park Å South Park Å Daily Show (N) Misfit Garage: Fired Up (TV14) Misfit Garage (TV14) (N) Å Fat N’ Furious: Rolling Thunder Misfit Garage Stuck in Middle Bad Hair Day (2015) Laura Marano. Å Girl Meets Best Friends KC Undercover Botched (TV14) Å Botched (TV14) Å WAGS (TV14) Å E! News (N) SportsCenter (N) Å SportsCenter (N) Å SportsCenter (N) Å SportsCenter Cupcake Wars (TVG) (N) Cake Wars (TVG) (N) Cake Hunters Cake Hunters Chopped Hannity From Cleveland. America’s Election HQ (N) The Fosters (TV14) (N) Å Guilt (TV14) (N) Å Dead of Summer (TV14) Å The 700 Club Ice Age: Continental Drift ›› (2012) Ray Romano. (PG) Ice Age: Continental Drift ›› (2012) (PG) Last Man Å Last Man Å The Middle Å The Middle Å The Middle Å The Middle Å Golden Girls Å Tiny House Å Tiny House Å Tiny House Å Tiny House (N) Tiny House (N) House Hunters Hunters Int. American Pickers (TVPG) Å American Pickers (TVPG) Å American Pickers (TVPG) Å Pickers Å ’70s Show Å ’70s Show Å ’70s Show Å ’70s Show Å ’70s Show Å ’70s Show Å ’70s Show Å Fun With Dick & Jane ›› (7) Devious Maids (TV14) (N) Å UnREAL (TV14) (N) Å Little Women All In With Chris Hayes The Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word Hardball Teen Mom OG (TVPG) Å Teen Mom (TVPG) (N) Å Are You the One? (N) Teen Mom Mick Dodge Mick Dodge Live Free or Die: Down & Dirty Live Free or Die (TV14) (N) Down & Dirty Kids’ Choice Sports (7:30) Å Full House Å Full House Å Full House Å Full House Å Friends Å Beaches ›› (1988) Bette Midler. (7) (PG-13) Soul Food ››› (1997) Vanessa L. Williams. Dateline on OWN (TVPG) Å Dateline on OWN (TVPG) Å Dateline on OWN (TVPG) Å Dateline Beyond Scared Straight (TV14) Beyond Scared Straight (TV14) Beyond Scared Straight (TV14) Beyond Scared Traffic ››› (2000) (6) (R) Jaws 2 ›› (1978) Roy Scheider, Lorraine Gary. (PG) Å John Carter ›› (2012) (6) 12 Monkeys (TV14) (N) Å Chronicles of Narnia: Lion, Witch Family Guy Å American Dad Angie Tribeca Family Guy Å Family Guy Å Full Frontal (N) Conan Å Touch of Evil (1958) (6:45) Å Lifeboat ››› (1944) (8:45) Å The Night of the Hunter ››› 40-Year-Old Child: A New Case Girls Who Don’t Age (N) Tallest Teens (TVPG) (N) Å Don’t Age Rizzoli & Isles (TV14) Å Rizzoli & Isles (TV14) (N) Å Major Crimes (TV14) (N) Å Rizzoli & Isles King of the Hill Cleveland Show American Dad American Dad Family Guy Å Family Guy Å Bob’s Burgers Delicious Delicious Bizarre Foods: Andrew Zimmern Hotel Impossible (TVPG) (N) Hotel Impssble Jokers (TV14) Jokers (TV14) Jokers (TV14) Jokers (TV14) Genius (N) Genius (N) Jokers (TV14) George Lopez (TVPG) (8:12) George Lopez Raymond Å Raymond Å Raymond Å King of Queens WWE Monday Night RAW (TVPG) (N) Å Queen, South Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta (TV14) T.I. and Tiny Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta (TV14) T.I. and Tiny Love, Hip Hop Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines ››› (7) How I Met Å How I Met Å How I Met Å How I Met Å What We Do in the Shadows Frequency ››› (2000) Dennis Quaid. A man communiOutcast ››› (2014) (7:30) (R) Å cates with his long-dead father via ham radio. (PG-13) Å (TVMA) Å Courage Under Fire ››› (1996) Denzel Washington. (R) Å Survivor’s Survivor’s Vantage Point Mr. Holmes ››› (2015) Ian McKellen. (PG) Stonewall › (2015) Jeremy Irvine. (9:45) (R) Å Wall Street ››› (1987) Michael Douglas. A broker courts a Absolutely Ballers The Night Of corporate raider with inside information. (8:10) (R) Å Fabulous (TVMA) Å (TVMA) Å Ray Donovan (TVMA) Ray vis- Roadies (TVMA) The crew Ray Donovan (TVMA) Ray vis- Roadies KLCS A&E AMC ANP BBC BET Bravo CNN Com Disc Disn E! ESPN Food FNC Free FX Hall HGTV Hist IFC Life MSN MTV NGC Nick Ova OWN Spike Sund Syfy TBS TCM TLC TNT Toon Travel Tru TV L USA VH1 WGN Cine Encr EPIX HBO Show Anaheim. Å Antiques Roadshow (TVG) 11 pm The Insider Cats & Dogs. Å New evidence. Å (N) Å its a power-player. Å falls victim to a curse. Å its a power-player. Å (TVMA) Å Power (TVMA) James preTransporter 2 ›› (2005) Jason Statham. An Power (TVMA) James prepares to leave Ghost behind. ex-soldier tries to save a kidnapped boy. Å pares to leave Ghost behind. TMC Pride ››› (2014) Bill Nighy, Imelda Staunton. (R) Å Walking on Sunshine (2014) Greg Wise. Å Starz E8 M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 L AT I M E S. C O M /CA L E N DA R COMICS BRIDGE SUDOKU By Frank Stewart “North-South got to 3NT,” a reader writes. “I was East, and my husband led a club. Declarer misguessed by playing the 10 from dummy, and my jack covered. “He played low. I returned a club to the king and ace, and declarer won the third club as I threw a heart. “South next led a heart to dummy and returned a diamond to his king. On the next diamond, my husband’s queen and my ace clashed, and South made an overtrick. “My husband said I should have discarded my ace of diamonds on the third club. His queen would become an entry to his good clubs. KENKEN Every box will contain a number; numbers depend on the size of the grid. For a 6x6 puzzle, use Nos. 1-6. Do not repeat a number in any row or column. The numbers in each heavily outlined set of squares must combine to produce the target number found in the top left corner of the cage using the mathematical operation indicated. A number can be repeated within a cage as long as it is not in the same row or column. 7/18/16 HOROSCOPE By Holiday Mathis Aries (March 21-April 19): Don’t be too worried about how the future will work out. All you have to know about that right now is that it will. Taurus (April 20-May 20): Your insistence on getting it right might be interfering with your ability to get it done. Finishing is more important than finishing perfectly. Gemini (May 21-June 21): You are receptive to other people’s news. You celebrate their stories. You listen to and remember the details of their days. Cancer (June 22-July 22): Ideally, a romantic partner is also a friend. Whether the friendship comes first or last is beside the point. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22): Your commitment to a project may be casual, unspoken, and private, but it’s there, it’s strong, and it will go honored. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You’ll give a magic send-off to a bad situation. As for the pain, guilt, regret and general negativity that it caused you, you can now firmly say, “buh-bye.” Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23): You’ll wonder when exactly it was that you wanted this. Try to remember your original vision. What about it is different now? Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21): There is no such thing as a perfect relationship, and some of your favorite ones have been far from perfect. What you’ve worked through continues to makes you better. Sagittarius (Nov. 22Dec. 21): That song you used to love and listen to often will come on randomly in your environment, reminding you of a certain someone. You’ll always have a special space in your heart for this person. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You are, at your core, forgiving, loving and selfless. That doesn’t mean you always have to behave in such a way to reflect this. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You don’t need to prove yourself. The one who makes you feel as though you do: Is this person really qualified to sit above you and judge? Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20): As for the struggle that’s eaten up so much of your time lately, what would happen if you gave it up? Today’s birthday (July 18): When they say, “the rest is history,” it’s a super-sized accomplishment they are referring to. However, it’s about to be eclipsed by something wonderful in the first half of this solar journey. Your lucky numbers are: 5, 40, 12, 22 and 14. Holiday Mathis writes her column for Creators Syndicate Inc. The horoscope should be read for entertainment. Previous forecasts are at latimes.com/horoscope. “I had to admit he was right, but I didn’t agree that I should have found such a bizarre play.” To discard the ace of South’s long suit might have blown a trick — vital at duplicate. Still, I would have tried it. I wouldn’t have passed up a chance for a once-in-a-lifetime play. Question: You hold: ♠ A Q 3 ♥ K J 4 ♦ K 5 4 2 ♣ K Q 8. You are the dealer. What is your opening call? Answer: South in today’s deal opened one diamond. No doubt his range for a 1NT opening bid was 15 to 17 points, as it is for many duplicate players. Even so, a case existed for downgrading the hand. It has only one ace, no long suit to serve as a source of tricks and no promising spot cards. Personally, I might have opened1NT even with a 15-to-17 range. South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH ♠J65 ♥AQ ♦J9876 ♣ 10 3 2 WEST EAST ♠ 10 9 8 2 ♠K74 ♥ 10 9 ♥876532 ♦ Q 10 ♦A3 ♣A9654 ♣J7 SOUTH ♠AQ3 ♥KJ4 ♦K542 ♣KQ8 SOUTH WEST NORTH EAST 1♦ Pass 2♦ Pass 2 NT Pass 3 NT All Pass Opening lead — ♣ 5 2016, Tribune Media Services ASK AMY Co-worker is a big pain Dear Amy: I have worked closely with a co-worker for five years. She can be warm and generous, is a hard worker and is always the first to volunteer for projects and committees. She is also incredibly sensitive and thin-skinned and often perceives slights in benign comments. When this happens, she flies off the handle. She has stormed out of meetings in tears and snapped at co-workers. She recently said something hurtful about a colleague (presumably meant to be funny) in a public forum. I have stopped defending her, both publicly and privately. But because I think her behavior is atrocious, now and then I still “run interference” for her to prevent her from melting down and to protect others’ feelings. She often wants to vent about how she has been mistreated and asks for advice about how to handle these imaginary insults, but she rejects any actual help and seems to only want to be told that she is right and others are wrong. Colleagues and I are constantly walking on eggshells around this person, and we resent it. I feel like I’m being emotionally bullied, but con- fronting her will likely mean making the workplace uncomfortable, possibly forever, as she tends to be unforgiving. She has experienced trying personal circumstances in the past few years, and we work in a setting that gives workers a lot of autonomy (i.e. behavior has to be really egregious for a supervisor to get involved). Any advice? Emotional Hostage Dear Hostage: You have kindly run interference for your co-worker for years, expertly reading her moods and smoothing things over for her so that she will be shielded from the natural consequences of her actions. No doubt you have done this for her because you are a genuinely good person who wants to protect her and others from her actions. Perhaps you’ve also done this for your own reasons. Her volatility makes you uncomfortable. You also sound a little afraid of her moods and behavior. Emotional bullies get the best of people by making others check their own reactions to try to protect themselves. Over time, this can make things much worse. If she is acting out, don’t offer help or advice. Never “protect” her from a melt- down. If she is venting to you and asks for advice, tell her, “You ask for advice, but you don’t seem to actually want it. I’m confident you can figure this out.” The loose environment at your workplace gives her a lot of latitude about her behavior, but this environment might not be the best fit for her. If her unhappiness and behavior at work interferes with her (and others’) ability to do your jobs, then it would be time for a supervisor to offer her a course correction. Dear Amy: “Quiet Neighbors” wondered if it was reasonable for their neighbors to use loud lawn mowers and leaf blowers in the morning. We asked our neighbors at our weekend house to limit and schedule their very noisy yardwork. They refused. So we waited until they had company and ran our mower (the way they routinely do). They were much more respectful after that. Done Dear Done: A little dose of “what’s good for the goose is good for the gander” is sometimes all it takes. Send questions to Amy Dickinson by email to askamy@tribune.com. FAMILY CIRCUS By Bil Keane DENNIS THE MENACE By Hank Ketcham ARGYLE SWEATER By Scott Hilburn MARMADUKE By Brad & Paul Anderson BLISS By Harry Bliss BALLARD STREET By Jerry Van Amerongen CROSSWORD Edited By Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis By Joel Mackerry ACROSS 1 Chicken piece 6 “Amazing!” 9 Vineyard picking 14 Reddish-orange salon dye 15 Cleanup hitter’s stat 16 More sick-looking 17 Fancy burger meat 19 Athlete on a Houston diamond 20 When repeated, an African fly 21 Gretel’s brother 23 Jumps on one foot 24 Opposite of NNW 25 Begin serving customers 27 Ristorante shrimp dish 32 Spoils, as food 35 Powerful northern cold front 38 “Messenger” molecule 39 Musical inadequacy 40 Underinflated tire’s need 41 Sch. east of Hartford 43 Bit of gel 44 “30 Rock” co-star 47 One throwing the first pitch 49 Art of “The Honeymooners” 50 Must have 51 Juvenile newt 53 Melville sailor Billy 55 Flowering 58 Happy hour place 61 Remove from the whiteboard 63 Color of a clear sky 65 Raring to go 66 “__ Abner” 67 Blackens, as tuna 68 Earnest requests 69 “__ Miz” 70 Hitter’s statistic, and, when abbreviated, a hint to the six longest puzzle answers DOWN 1 “How about __!” 2 Farm layers 3 “Picnic” playwright 4 Bearded antelope 5 Dish of chopped-up leftovers 6 Small songbirds 7 More than pudgy 8 Michelle, to Barack 9 Valedictorian’s 4.0, e.g.: Abbr. 10 Itchy skin conditions 11 “Good Eats” series creator 12 One sought by cops 13 Love deity 18 Army private’s training, familiarly 22 Johns, to Elton 26 “Downtown” singer Clark 27 Smooths in wood shop 28 Certain Balkan 29 Injury treatment brand 30 NYC subway org. 31 Stereotypical “Arrr!” shouter 32 Attire 33 Broadway title orphan 34 Boy in a classic Irish ballad 36 Boxer Max 37 State-issued driver ID 42 USN officer 45 Mother of Castor and Pollux 46 Stage performer 48 Watery obstacle for Moses © 2016 Tribune Content Agency 51 Popeye creator Segar 52 Tips caught by a catcher, e.g. 53 Honk cousin 54 Eurasian border river 56 Strike’s opposite 57 Flat-topped hill 58 Spill secrets 59 Vague emanation 60 Part of R and R 62 Ambulance destinations, for short 64 Gambling action ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 7/18/16 L AT I ME S . CO M / CA L EN DA R M O N DAY, J U LY 18 , 2 016 COMICS DOONESBURY By Garry Trudeau Doonesbury is on vacation. This is a reprint. DILBERT By Scott Adams LA CUCARACHA By Lalo Alcaraz BABY BLUES By Jerry Scott & Rick Kirkman CANDORVILLE By Darrin Bell CRANKSHAFT By Tom Batiuk & Chuck Ayers HALF FULL By Maria Scrivan PEARLS BEFORE SWINE By Stephan Pastis NON SEQUITUR By Wiley LIO By Mark Tatulli JUMP START By Robb Armstrong 9 CHICKWEED LANE By Brooke McEldowney BLONDIE By Dean Young & John Marshall GET FUZZY By Darby Conley ZITS By Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman BIZARRO By Dan Piraro TUNDRA By Chad Carpenter DRABBLE By Kevin Fagan PRICKLY CITY By Scott Stantis MUTTS By Patrick McDonnell FRAZZ By Jef Mallett PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz E9 E10 MONDAY, JULY 18, 2016 LOS ANGELES TIMES CONGRATULATIONS TO O UR 98 E MM Y NOM IN EE S ® T H A N K Y O U TELEVISION ACADEMY M E M B E R S F O R O U R N O M I N AT I O N S ©ROBERT MAPPLETHORPE FOUNDATION. USED BY PERMISSION. ©2016 Home Box Office, Inc. All rights reserved. HBO ® and CINEMAX® and related channels and service marks are the property of Home Box Office, Inc. An Advertising Supplement to the LOS ANGELES TIMES MONDAY, JULY 18, 2016 THE SOUNDS OF gatherings you’ve been looking forward to all year are near. This SSUMMERR don’t miss another moment of the fun, activity, and conversation at your favorite barbecue. Solutions ARE HERE for your hearing loss that are comfortable, effective, and designed specifically for you. Why wait when you can hear better today? FREE EDUCATIONAL SEMINAR ON HEARING July 26 • 12–2pm | Il Fornaio • Beverly Hills • 301 N Beverly Dr Please call to RSVP by July 22. Hearing Care Call today to schedule your complimentary consultation! 310.651.8979 Beverly Hills 414 N Camden Dr, Ste 975 PCHearing.com S1 S2 MONDAY, JULY 18, 2016 LOS ANGELES TIMES LOS ANGELES TIMES MONDAY, JULY 18, 2016 When you make your appointment, you’re eligible to TRY A DIGITAL HEARING SYSTEM “Being close to the ones I love means the world to me. Better hearing brought them back to me.” for a 75-day trial period We want you to experience all the benefits better hearing has to offer. Your satisfaction with your hearing technology solution and our services is important to us, so we’re happy to let you try out your new technology while discovering better hearing. YOU’RE COVERED BY THE AGX Protection Plan 3-Year Warranty* 3 Years FREE Batteries* 3 Years Loss and Damage Insurance* 75-Day Trial Period Unsurpassed Patient Satisfaction with Superior Results The Latest Emerging Technology, Including Invisible or Nearly Invisible Devices CHECK YOUR HEARING YES NO YES NO Do people seem to mumble or speak in softer voices than they used to? Do you often need to turn up the volume on your television or radio? Do you feel tired or irritable after a long conversation? Do you find it difficult to hear the doorbell or telephone ring? Do you sometimes miss key words in a sentence or frequently need to ask people to repeat themselves? Is carrying on a telephone conversation difficult? When you are in a group or a crowded restaurant, is it difficult for you to follow the conversation? When you are together with other people, does the background noise bother you? Do you find it difficult to pinpoint where an object is from the noise it makes (e.g., an alarm clock or telephone)? Better hearing is attainable. Call today to schedule your complimentary consultation! 310.651.8979 Has someone close to you mentioned that you might have a problem with your hearing? Beverly Hills 414 N Camden Dr, Ste 975 HOW DID YOU DO? Your answers to these questions can provide an early indication of whether your hearing is impacted. If you answered “yes” to any of these questions, you may be experiencing some hearing loss. We urge you to attend our special event. 3 steps for BETTER HEARING 1 2 3 Call today to schedule your FREE consultation. Meet with your local Pacific Coast Hearing Care professional to discover treatment options. Experience better hearing through a custom plan created specifically for your needs. Hearing Care PCHearing.com *Applicable with the purchase of an AGX5, 7, or 9 two-device system. FREE EDUCATIONAL SEMINAR ON HEARING July 26 • 12–2pm Il Fornaio | Beverly Hills 301 N Beverly Dr Please call to RSVP by July 22. Topics of Discussion to Include: • The Relationship Between Hearing Loss & Dementia • Understanding Common Hearing Issues • What to Look for in a Hearing Care Professional • The Truth About How Much Hearing Technology Costs • Enhancing Communication and Listening Skills Call today to schedule your complimentary consultation! 310.651.8979 S3 S4 MONDAY, JULY 18, 2016 LOS ANGELES TIMES Learn more at our EDUCATIONAL SEMINAR June 26 •12–2pm Call today to schedule your complimentary consultation! 310.651.8979 AUDIGYCERTIFIED™ and here for you The professionals at AudigyCertified practices are among North America’s most experienced practitioners of hearing and diagnostic services. Continuing education ensures that we can offer up-to-date diagnostics and technology to our patients. We are proud to have been selected and certified by our peers for upholding the highest standards of patient care. Hearing Care Beverly Hills 414 N Camden Dr, Ste 975 PCHearing.com Amanda Sweet, Au.D. Doctor of Audiology Better hearing is attainable. Call us today to schedule your appointment.