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Artist Tania Bruguera likely detained in Cuba over performance

Written By kolimtiga on Rabu, 31 Desember 2014 | 16.38

Cuban performance artist Tania Bruguera has been detained by authorities in Havana in advance of a controversial performance, according to statements issued by the artist's sister who resides in Italy. The piece consisted of installing a podium and an open microphone in Havana's Revolution Square, allowing any interested individuals the opportunity to speak their minds for exactly one minute.

Deborah Bruguera, who in the past has helped her sister manage her studio, issued a series of statements via her Facebook page stating that various law enforcement officials were seen taking Tania from their mother's home in Havana on Tuesday morning and that the artist had not been seen or heard from since.

"I'm making an urgent call to the national and international community to pressure the Cuban government to give us information on her location and condition," she wrote in one post. 

Neither news agencies nor the Cuban authorities have confirmed the artist's arrest. But the arrest of three well-known dissidents in advance of the performance has been reported by various news outlets, including the New York Times, NPR and the Guardian.

"I was able to speak with my mother [in Cuba]," Deborah told me via telephone from her home in Italy on Tuesday evening. "Two policemen and one military officer started banging on the door at about five in the morning. They banged on the door for five hours, until Tania finally decided to open the door. That's when they took her. They said they were going to take her to chat for an hour, that they would be back soon ... But it's been many hours and my mother is very worried."

Tania, a Cuban national who divides her time between Cuba, the U.S. and Europe, is an established performance artist whose politically-minded actions and installations have been shown at the Venice Biennale and the Tate Modern in London. In 2011, in collaboration with the Queens Museum of Art in New York and the arts non-profit Creative Time, she helped organize Immigrant Movement International, a long-term project intended to support immigrant communities around the world and examine some of the issues and challenges they face.

This past fall, one of her pieces was featured in the exhibition "Citizen Culture: Artists and Architects Shape Policy," at the Santa Monica Museum of Art. The piece, titled "The Francis Effect," consisted of a letter-writing campaign to Pope Francis to convince the pontiff to give immigrants citizenship to Vatican City as a gesture of protection.

Deborah said that her sister had returned to Cuba in the wake of the announcement about the resumption of diplomatic relations with the intent of re-creating one of her earlier works: "Tatlin's Whisper #6." The piece caused a sensation when it was first staged in 2009 at the 10th Havana Biennial. It consisted of an open podium and microphone which the public was invited to use as they wished for a period of one minute. Over the course of the performance, the stage was employed by a range of people — from a woman who weepily clutched the mic and said nothing to a dissident blogger who declared, "Cuba is a country surrounded by the sea, and it is also an island surrounded by censorship."

Tania had aimed to re-stage the piece on Tuesday afternoon at Havana's iconic Revolution Square, a popular site for political rallies. She had promoted the event on her website and via Facebook and other social media using the hashtag #YoTambienExijo (I Also Demand). But on Saturday she was informed by Cuba's National Mixed Media Arts Council (CNAP) that they would not be providing her with institutional support and that "the action would negatively impact public opinion, in a key time of negotiation between the Cuban government and the government of the United States."

Tania, however, stated that she would move forward with the performance regardless, telling the Miami Herald: "I'll be there. I'm not going to hide."

According to Deborah, however, Tania was taken into custody at 10 a.m., roughly five hours before the performance was set to take place. By 3 p.m., news crews and a small group of onlookers descended on Revolution Square in anticipation of seeing the work staged, but the artist never arrived.

Supporters of Tania's have taken to Twitter and Facebook to demand information on her whereabouts. At press time, the #YoTambienExijo page on Facebook had more than 10,000 followers. In addition, Guatemalan performance artist Regina Jose Galindo posted a photo of herself holding a sign that read, "Where is Tania? From Guatemala, I Also Demand."

Deborah says the whole experience has been quite emotional.

"I've been quite tested," she said, her hoarse raspy from lack of sleep. "But it's been quite beautiful, too. People have been so supportive. They are talking about my sister. I'm sure Tania will be heartened to know that."

Find me on Twitter @cmonstah.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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Boys' basketball: Fairfax (10-0) wins tournament title behind Lorne Currie

Fairfax Coach Harvey Kitani said weeks ago he truly liked his team, and after the first month of the season, his instincts have proven correct. The Lions ended 2014 with a 10-0 record won their division championship in the Torrey Pines tournament on Tuesday with a 56-51 win over No. 1-ranked Redondo.

Fairfax put together a third-quarter surge to overcome a halftime deficit. Lorne Currie was named tournament MVP and finished with 20 points and 12 rebounds. All-tournament selection Lindsey Drew had 12 points and Donald Gipson added 11 points. Redondo played without Billy Preston, who had been ejected in the semifinals. Leland Green led Redondo with 22 points.

St. Patrick defeated Corona Centennial, 68-39, in the third-place game.

Sonora won its division with a 71-60 win over Georgia Faith Baptist. Ben Rico scored 25 points and tournament MVP Josh Rodriguez had 19 points. Torrey Pines defeated Lawndale, 44-36. Mira Costa defeated Washington Roosevelt, 64-58. Poway defeated Aliso Niguel, 63-48. Cantwell-Sacred Heart defeated Santa Monica, 57-46, with Gligorije Rakocevic scoring 29 points.

Windward defeated Westchester, 40-36. Bellevue defeated Loyola, 68-61. Josh Lavergne had 22 points for Loyola (8-4). Taft defeated Temecula Valley, 50-48. Damian Wilson had 17 points. Crespi lost to St. Augustine, 59-56, in overtime. De'Anthony Melton had 15 points. Oak Park defeated Mayfair, 68-54. Freshman Riley Battin had 33 points and Michael Alvarez 21 points.

In the MaxPreps tournament, Sierra Canyon pulled out a 67-66 win over Pebblebrook in its division championship game when Devearl Ramsey made two free throws with less than one second left on a controversial foul call.

North (12-0) stayed unbeaten with a 70-61 win over Edison to win its division championship behind guard Dikymbe Martin. Santa Ana Mater Dei defeated Etiwanda, 54-41. Rex Pflueger had 22 points.

Alex Copeland scored 32 points and Wolfgang Novogratz 27 points but Harvard-Westlake fell to Nevada Foothill, 77-76.  Beverly Hills won its division with a 49-38 win over Germany Urspring. Chance Comanche was tournament MVP. Ountae Campbell was tournament MVP, scoring 16 points in Brentwood's 73-42 win over Washington Foss. Maxwell Kupchak had 29 points.

Bekim Djovic scored 39 points in Mission Viejo's 58-55 loss to Palm Springs. Capistrano Valley defeated Simi Valley, 58-53. Jeremy Hemsley had 27 points in Damien's 67-57 win over Wisconsin King. Alemany lost to Moreau, 64-60. Viewpoint won its division title with a 54-47 win over Crescenta Valley. Christian Juzang had 16 points. Miye Oni was named tournament MVP.

In the La Salle tournament, Bishop Montgomery won the championship game with a 61-55 victory over De La Salle. Stephen Thompson Jr. was named tournament MVP. Campbell Hall won the third-place game with a 69-58 win over Village Christian. Aaron Holiday scored 31 points. Kahlil Simplis led Village Christian with 21 points.

Sherman Oaks Notre Dame defeated Long Beach Millikan, 81-71. Chibueze Jackson had 19 points for the Knights (8-5). Price defeated West Ranch, 87-61. San Marcos defeated Calabasas, 60-57, in overtime. Justin Bessard had 21 points for the Coyotes. Lakeside defeated El Camino Real, 57-47. Palisades defeated Highland, 70-67. Desert Pines defeated South Pasadena, 69-57.

In the Katella tournament, Servite won the championship with a 62-58 win over Fullerton. Freshman Brendan Harrick had 24 points and tournament MVP Trevor Treinen added 20 points.

In the Orange tournament, Orange Lutheran won the championship with a 57-43 win over La Mirada. Rogers Printup was named MVP. Foothill claimed third place with a 58-52 overtime win over Anaheim Canyon.

In the Tustin tournament, Burbank Burroughs defeated Temescal Canyon, 54-53. Chris Hovasapian had 17 points.

In the Santa Barbara tournament, Thousand Oaks won the championship game with a 71-70 win over Santa Barbara. Tournament MVP Matt Hauser scored 24 points. North Hollywood received 26 points from Sean Fernandez in a 73-44 win over Canoga Park. Glendora defeated Newbury Park, 67-58. Vince Klein scored 18 points for Newbury Park. Flintridge Prep defeated Nordhoff, 58-43.

In the Chaminade tournament, the host Eagles won the title over Valencia, 73-55. Tournament MVP Michael Oguine finished with 30 points. Jake Porath added 20 points. Oaks Christian defeated Mercer Island, 52-46. Birmingham won the consolation title, defeating Golden Valley, 67-52. Serigne Athj had 28 points.

In the San Gabriel Valley championship, St. Francis defeated Ayala, 64-56. Michael Ibarra, who scored 24 points, was tournament MVP. Sylmar defeated Upland, 68-63, with CJ Williams scoring 15 points and receiving all-tournament recognition.

In the Ventura tournament, Westlake won the championship with a 61-55 victory over Oxnard. Michael Hayon was tournament MVP. Isaiah Brooks had 16 points. Ventura defeated Canyon, 56-53, for third place.

In the Hart tournament, Caleb Grisanti had 26 points in Saugus' 80-66 win over Camarillo for third place.

In the San Pedro tournament, Narbonne (11-3) won the championship with a 75-71 win over Rancho Dominguez. Jamal Hicks scored 23 points and was named tournament MVP. Gardena defeated San Pedro, 59-40.

In the Covina tournament, Bonita defeated Cajon, 56-40.

Trabuco Hills defeated Alhambra, 58-49, with Aaron Harris tying a school record with 39 points. He made 17 of 21 shots.

Twitter:@LATSondheimer

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
16.38 | 0 komentar | Read More

Boys' basketball: Fairfax (10-0) wins tournament title behind Lorne Currie

Fairfax Coach Harvey Kitani said weeks ago he truly liked his team, and after the first month of the season, his instincts have proven correct. The Lions ended 2014 with a 10-0 record won their division championship in the Torrey Pines tournament on Tuesday with a 56-51 win over No. 1-ranked Redondo.

Fairfax put together a third-quarter surge to overcome a halftime deficit. Lorne Currie was named tournament MVP and finished with 20 points and 12 rebounds. All-tournament selection Lindsey Drew had 12 points and Donald Gipson added 11 points. Redondo played without Billy Preston, who had been ejected in the semifinals. Leland Green led Redondo with 22 points.

St. Patrick defeated Corona Centennial, 68-39, in the third-place game.

Sonora won its division with a 71-60 win over Georgia Faith Baptist. Ben Rico scored 25 points and tournament MVP Josh Rodriguez had 19 points. Torrey Pines defeated Lawndale, 44-36. Mira Costa defeated Washington Roosevelt, 64-58. Poway defeated Aliso Niguel, 63-48. Cantwell-Sacred Heart defeated Santa Monica, 57-46, with Gligorije Rakocevic scoring 29 points.

Windward defeated Westchester, 40-36. Bellevue defeated Loyola, 68-61. Josh Lavergne had 22 points for Loyola (8-4). Taft defeated Temecula Valley, 50-48. Damian Wilson had 17 points. Crespi lost to St. Augustine, 59-56, in overtime. De'Anthony Melton had 15 points. Oak Park defeated Mayfair, 68-54. Freshman Riley Battin had 33 points and Michael Alvarez 21 points.

In the MaxPreps tournament, Sierra Canyon pulled out a 67-66 win over Pebblebrook in its division championship game when Devearl Ramsey made two free throws with less than one second left on a controversial foul call.

North (12-0) stayed unbeaten with a 70-61 win over Edison to win its division championship behind guard Dikymbe Martin. Santa Ana Mater Dei defeated Etiwanda, 54-41. Rex Pflueger had 22 points.

Alex Copeland scored 32 points and Wolfgang Novogratz 27 points but Harvard-Westlake fell to Nevada Foothill, 77-76.  Beverly Hills won its division with a 49-38 win over Germany Urspring. Chance Comanche was tournament MVP. Ountae Campbell was tournament MVP, scoring 16 points in Brentwood's 73-42 win over Washington Foss. Maxwell Kupchak had 29 points.

Bekim Djovic scored 39 points in Mission Viejo's 58-55 loss to Palm Springs. Capistrano Valley defeated Simi Valley, 58-53. Jeremy Hemsley had 27 points in Damien's 67-57 win over Wisconsin King. Alemany lost to Moreau, 64-60. Viewpoint won its division title with a 54-47 win over Crescenta Valley. Christian Juzang had 16 points. Miye Oni was named tournament MVP.

In the La Salle tournament, Bishop Montgomery won the championship game with a 61-55 victory over De La Salle. Stephen Thompson Jr. was named tournament MVP. Campbell Hall won the third-place game with a 69-58 win over Village Christian. Aaron Holiday scored 31 points. Kahlil Simplis led Village Christian with 21 points.

Sherman Oaks Notre Dame defeated Long Beach Millikan, 81-71. Chibueze Jackson had 19 points for the Knights (8-5). Price defeated West Ranch, 87-61. San Marcos defeated Calabasas, 60-57, in overtime. Justin Bessard had 21 points for the Coyotes. Lakeside defeated El Camino Real, 57-47. Palisades defeated Highland, 70-67. Desert Pines defeated South Pasadena, 69-57.

In the Katella tournament, Servite won the championship with a 62-58 win over Fullerton. Freshman Brendan Harrick had 24 points and tournament MVP Trevor Treinen added 20 points.

In the Orange tournament, Orange Lutheran won the championship with a 57-43 win over La Mirada. Rogers Printup was named MVP. Foothill claimed third place with a 58-52 overtime win over Anaheim Canyon.

In the Tustin tournament, Burbank Burroughs defeated Temescal Canyon, 54-53. Chris Hovasapian had 17 points.

In the Santa Barbara tournament, Thousand Oaks won the championship game with a 71-70 win over Santa Barbara. Tournament MVP Matt Hauser scored 24 points. North Hollywood received 26 points from Sean Fernandez in a 73-44 win over Canoga Park. Glendora defeated Newbury Park, 67-58. Vince Klein scored 18 points for Newbury Park. Flintridge Prep defeated Nordhoff, 58-43.

In the Chaminade tournament, the host Eagles won the title over Valencia, 73-55. Tournament MVP Michael Oguine finished with 30 points. Jake Porath added 20 points. Oaks Christian defeated Mercer Island, 52-46. Birmingham won the consolation title, defeating Golden Valley, 67-52. Serigne Athj had 28 points.

In the San Gabriel Valley championship, St. Francis defeated Ayala, 64-56. Michael Ibarra, who scored 24 points, was tournament MVP. Sylmar defeated Upland, 68-63, with CJ Williams scoring 15 points and receiving all-tournament recognition.

In the Ventura tournament, Westlake won the championship with a 61-55 victory over Oxnard. Michael Hayon was tournament MVP. Isaiah Brooks had 16 points. Ventura defeated Canyon, 56-53, for third place.

In the Hart tournament, Caleb Grisanti had 26 points in Saugus' 80-66 win over Camarillo for third place.

In the San Pedro tournament, Narbonne (11-3) won the championship with a 75-71 win over Rancho Dominguez. Jamal Hicks scored 23 points and was named tournament MVP. Gardena defeated San Pedro, 59-40.

In the Covina tournament, Bonita defeated Cajon, 56-40.

Trabuco Hills defeated Alhambra, 58-49, with Aaron Harris tying a school record with 39 points. He made 17 of 21 shots.

Twitter:@LATSondheimer

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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Boys' basketball: Monday's scores

Written By kolimtiga on Selasa, 30 Desember 2014 | 16.38

Boys basketball

Chaminade tournament

Chaminade 75, Curtis 56
Valencia 60, Menlo 39

Birmingham 62, Marshall 52
Santa Clara 39, Kennedy 35

Hart tournament

Hart 89, Camarillo 65
Righetti 60, Saugus 38
Glendale 74, South Bakersfield 58
Grant 88, Golden Valley 79

Katella tournament

Servite 58, Irvine 42
Bolsa Grande 64, Kennedy 55
Fullerton 61, Katella 38

La Salle tournament

Championship semifinals

Bishop Montgomery 74, Campbell Hall 56
De La Salle 52, Village Christian 40

Consolation

West Ranch 63, San Marcos 45
Price 66, Calabasas 61
Lakeside 55, Highland 41
Chatsworth 88, Venice  79
El Camino Real 55, Palisades 50
LB Millikan 80, Trinity 66
Malibu 90, Bernstein 82
Bell-Jeff 62, St. Bernard 43

Las Vegas tournament

Cathedral 76, Basic 49
Valley 80, Cathedral 68

Lakewood tournament

El Segundo 54, Fremont 51

MaxPreps tournament

Sierra Canyon 72, Etiwanda 53
Pebblebrook 82, Santa Ana Mater Dei 79
North 56, Olympia 51
Beverly Hills 49, Cathedral Catholic 48
Urspring 49, Gardena Serra 41
Viewpoint 66, Mission Viejo 46
Damien 60. American Fork 40
Sonora 64, Oak Park 54
Brentwood 61, Chaparral 38
Rancho Cucamonga 67, Silverado 62
Harvard-Westlake 74, Diamond Bar 47
Ponderosa 62, Edison 59

Orange tournament

Orange Lutheran 59, Foothill 45
La Mirada 61, Anaheim Canyon 56
Yorba Linda 75, Orange 22
Amador Valley 62, San Juan Hills 35
Tesoro 57, LB Jordan 56
Arroyo Grande 69, Esperanza 65

San Pedro tournament

Narbonne 52, Gardena 47
Rancho Dominguez 64, San Pedro 43

Santa Barbara tournament

Thousand Oaks 54, Glendora 53
Santa Barbara 82, Newbury Park 48
Lompoc 73, Flintridge Prep 48

Torrey Pines tournament

Fairfax 69, Corona Centennial 62
Redondo 58, St. Patrick 54
Others
Crespi 49, Lynwood 42
Sonora 64, Oak Park 54
Georgia Faith Baptist 57, Mayfair 49
Knight 64, Murrieta Valley 57
Bishops 45, St. Genevieve 40
Great Oak 79, Arizona Highland 73
Torrey Pines 45, Westchester 36
Mira Costa 67, Mission Hills 54
Aliso Niguel 54, Spanish Springs 23
Lawndale 65, Windward 62
Bellevue 80, Cantwell-Sacred Heart 43
Loyola 86, Santa Monica 67
Washington Franklin 52, Temecula Valley 48
Horizon 71, Laguna Beach 62

Tustin tournament

Burroughs 60, LB Cabrillo 58

Ventura tournament

Westlake 73, Ventura 58

Twitter:@LATSondheimer

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
16.38 | 0 komentar | Read More

Boys' basketball: Monday's scores

Boys basketball

Chaminade tournament

Chaminade 75, Curtis 56
Valencia 60, Menlo 39

Birmingham 62, Marshall 52
Santa Clara 39, Kennedy 35

Hart tournament

Hart 89, Camarillo 65
Righetti 60, Saugus 38
Glendale 74, South Bakersfield 58
Grant 88, Golden Valley 79

Katella tournament

Servite 58, Irvine 42
Bolsa Grande 64, Kennedy 55
Fullerton 61, Katella 38

La Salle tournament

Championship semifinals

Bishop Montgomery 74, Campbell Hall 56
De La Salle 52, Village Christian 40

Consolation

West Ranch 63, San Marcos 45
Price 66, Calabasas 61
Lakeside 55, Highland 41
Chatsworth 88, Venice  79
El Camino Real 55, Palisades 50
LB Millikan 80, Trinity 66
Malibu 90, Bernstein 82
Bell-Jeff 62, St. Bernard 43

Las Vegas tournament

Cathedral 76, Basic 49
Valley 80, Cathedral 68

Lakewood tournament

El Segundo 54, Fremont 51

MaxPreps tournament

Sierra Canyon 72, Etiwanda 53
Pebblebrook 82, Santa Ana Mater Dei 79
North 56, Olympia 51
Beverly Hills 49, Cathedral Catholic 48
Urspring 49, Gardena Serra 41
Viewpoint 66, Mission Viejo 46
Damien 60. American Fork 40
Sonora 64, Oak Park 54
Brentwood 61, Chaparral 38
Rancho Cucamonga 67, Silverado 62
Harvard-Westlake 74, Diamond Bar 47
Ponderosa 62, Edison 59

Orange tournament

Orange Lutheran 59, Foothill 45
La Mirada 61, Anaheim Canyon 56
Yorba Linda 75, Orange 22
Amador Valley 62, San Juan Hills 35
Tesoro 57, LB Jordan 56
Arroyo Grande 69, Esperanza 65

San Pedro tournament

Narbonne 52, Gardena 47
Rancho Dominguez 64, San Pedro 43

Santa Barbara tournament

Thousand Oaks 54, Glendora 53
Santa Barbara 82, Newbury Park 48
Lompoc 73, Flintridge Prep 48

Torrey Pines tournament

Fairfax 69, Corona Centennial 62
Redondo 58, St. Patrick 54
Others
Crespi 49, Lynwood 42
Sonora 64, Oak Park 54
Georgia Faith Baptist 57, Mayfair 49
Knight 64, Murrieta Valley 57
Bishops 45, St. Genevieve 40
Great Oak 79, Arizona Highland 73
Torrey Pines 45, Westchester 36
Mira Costa 67, Mission Hills 54
Aliso Niguel 54, Spanish Springs 23
Lawndale 65, Windward 62
Bellevue 80, Cantwell-Sacred Heart 43
Loyola 86, Santa Monica 67
Washington Franklin 52, Temecula Valley 48
Horizon 71, Laguna Beach 62

Tustin tournament

Burroughs 60, LB Cabrillo 58

Ventura tournament

Westlake 73, Ventura 58

Twitter:@LATSondheimer

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
16.38 | 0 komentar | Read More

Boys' basketball: Monday's scores

Boys basketball

Chaminade tournament

Chaminade 75, Curtis 56
Valencia 60, Menlo 39

Birmingham 62, Marshall 52
Santa Clara 39, Kennedy 35

Hart tournament

Hart 89, Camarillo 65
Righetti 60, Saugus 38
Glendale 74, South Bakersfield 58
Grant 88, Golden Valley 79

Katella tournament

Servite 58, Irvine 42
Bolsa Grande 64, Kennedy 55
Fullerton 61, Katella 38

La Salle tournament

Championship semifinals

Bishop Montgomery 74, Campbell Hall 56
De La Salle 52, Village Christian 40

Consolation

West Ranch 63, San Marcos 45
Price 66, Calabasas 61
Lakeside 55, Highland 41
Chatsworth 88, Venice  79
El Camino Real 55, Palisades 50
LB Millikan 80, Trinity 66
Malibu 90, Bernstein 82
Bell-Jeff 62, St. Bernard 43

Las Vegas tournament

Cathedral 76, Basic 49
Valley 80, Cathedral 68

Lakewood tournament

El Segundo 54, Fremont 51

MaxPreps tournament

Sierra Canyon 72, Etiwanda 53
Pebblebrook 82, Santa Ana Mater Dei 79
North 56, Olympia 51
Beverly Hills 49, Cathedral Catholic 48
Urspring 49, Gardena Serra 41
Viewpoint 66, Mission Viejo 46
Damien 60. American Fork 40
Sonora 64, Oak Park 54
Brentwood 61, Chaparral 38
Rancho Cucamonga 67, Silverado 62
Harvard-Westlake 74, Diamond Bar 47
Ponderosa 62, Edison 59

Orange tournament

Orange Lutheran 59, Foothill 45
La Mirada 61, Anaheim Canyon 56
Yorba Linda 75, Orange 22
Amador Valley 62, San Juan Hills 35
Tesoro 57, LB Jordan 56
Arroyo Grande 69, Esperanza 65

San Pedro tournament

Narbonne 52, Gardena 47
Rancho Dominguez 64, San Pedro 43

Santa Barbara tournament

Thousand Oaks 54, Glendora 53
Santa Barbara 82, Newbury Park 48
Lompoc 73, Flintridge Prep 48

Torrey Pines tournament

Fairfax 69, Corona Centennial 62
Redondo 58, St. Patrick 54
Others
Crespi 49, Lynwood 42
Sonora 64, Oak Park 54
Georgia Faith Baptist 57, Mayfair 49
Knight 64, Murrieta Valley 57
Bishops 45, St. Genevieve 40
Great Oak 79, Arizona Highland 73
Torrey Pines 45, Westchester 36
Mira Costa 67, Mission Hills 54
Aliso Niguel 54, Spanish Springs 23
Lawndale 65, Windward 62
Bellevue 80, Cantwell-Sacred Heart 43
Loyola 86, Santa Monica 67
Washington Franklin 52, Temecula Valley 48
Horizon 71, Laguna Beach 62

Tustin tournament

Burroughs 60, LB Cabrillo 58

Ventura tournament

Westlake 73, Ventura 58

Twitter:@LATSondheimer

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
16.38 | 0 komentar | Read More

Gunmen fire on LAPD patrol car in South L.A., prompting tactical alert

Written By kolimtiga on Senin, 29 Desember 2014 | 16.38

Two suspects fired on a police patrol car with a rifle in South Los Angeles late Sunday night, prompting a citywide tactical alert that resulted in the arrest of one suspect and a massive manhunt for the second individual, authorities said.

The shooting occurred about 9:30 p.m. as officers were driving southbound on Hoover Street near 62nd Street, said Deputy Chief Bob Green. The officers returned fire.

No officer was hurt.

Police arrested one of the suspects at the scene and recovered a rifle, Green said. A second suspect remained at large.

A three-block area around the shooting scene was immediately cordoned off as police scoured the area with search dogs. At least 60 officers were involved in the search.

A citywide tactical alert is when every available officer in the city is ordered to a specific crime scene.  

The LAPD advised residents to stay indoors. "Armed suspect in the area," the police station said on Facebook just before 11 p.m. "Please keep our officers in your thoughts and prayers!"

Twitter: @LACrimes

For more, follow @MattStevensLAT.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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Search for missing AirAsia Flight 8501 expands off Indonesian coast

Naval ships, small boats, helicopters and surveillance aircraft from four nations expanded the search Monday for a missing AirAsia jetliner in the waters off of Indonesia as investigators spotted the first potential clues to the flight's disappearance.

Air Force spokesman Hadi Tjahjanto told The Times that searchers had seen an oil slick about 105 nautical miles off Indonesia's Belitung island near the Karimata Strait, which connects the archipelago nation to Singapore.

"We're checking whether it's jet fuel or fuel from a ship," he said.

Bambang Soelistyo, the head of Indonesia's National Search and Rescue Agency, which was leading the effort, said investigators believed the plane carrying 162 mostly Indonesian passengers had crashed into the Java Sea north of Jakarta a day earlier.

"My goal is to locate it as soon as possible," Bambang told a news conference in Jakarta. "We're doing the best we can."

The search effort that began after Indonesia AirAsia Flight 8501 lost contact with air-traffic control during a two-hour flight to Singapore from the Indonesian city of Surabaya resumed at dawn after being halted Sunday evening due to darkness and poor visibility.

Bambang said teams searched an area comprising roughly 66,000 square miles in four sectors on Sunday, concentrating on a 250-mile-wide stretch of the Java Sea between the Indonesian islands of Sumatra and Borneo. On Monday the search expanded to the north to include the Karimata strait and the coasts of Belitung island and West Kalimantan province, he said.

Indonesia's armed forces had deployed transport helicopters and naval ships while Malaysia and Singapore had each sent C-130 Hercules transport aircraft and three ships to help ferry teams to and from the search site. Early Monday, Australia said it had deployed an Orion surveillance aircraft to join the effort.

By mid-afternoon, an Indonesian official told The Associated Press that an Australian Orion aircraft had spotted "suspicious objects" in the sea near Nangka island, northeast of Belitung, about 700 miles from where the plane lost contact.

Jakarta's Air Force base commander Rear Marshal Dwi Putranto told the AP that search teams did not know whether the objects were part of the missing plane but said, "We are now moving in that direction, which is in cloudy conditions."

Tjahjanto, the air force spokesman, said earlier that an Australian plane had detected a weak signal from an object in the ocean but that no related debris was found.

If wreckage isn't found at the water's surface, investigators likely would begin scouring the sea floor for the Airbus A330-200.

"If that's the case, we'll have difficulty determining the location because our equipment is not adequate," Bambang said.

Singapore civil aviation officials said they were preparing to send two teams of specialists andunderwater locator beacons to help find the missing jet's flight data recorders.

China offered to send airlines and ships to join the search and rescue efforts, foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said in Beijing. In Washington, Pentagon officials said they were ready to assist but had not been asked.

AirAsia executive chief Tony Fernandes defended his airline's safety record, saying it had carried 220 million passengers in 13 years and never had a fatal accident.

"Until today, we never lost a life," Fernandes told a news conference in Surabaya. "No airline can guarantee 100% safety to its passengers."

Indonesian transportation ministry Ignasius Jonan said the government would review AirAsia's operations "to ensure that in the future its activity will be better." The low-cost carrier, which is based in Malaysia and operates mainly short flights across Southeast Asia, has a strong safety record and is widely regarded as one of the world's most successful budget airlines.

It was the third air disaster this year involving a Malaysian airline. Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 vanished in March en route to Beijing with 239 people aboard and is still missing, while the same carrier's Flight 17 was shot down over eastern Ukraine, killing all 298 passengers and crew.

Investigators were hopeful that recovering the flight data recorder would offer clues into the AirAsia plane's disappearance. The aircraft departed Surabaya roughly on schedule at 5:35 a.m. Sunday but apparently encountered heavy clouds during what is normally the wettest time of the year in Indonesia.

Indonesian transport authorities said the pilot communicated with air-traffic controllers at 6:12 a.m. asking permission to take a left turn off the scheduled flight path and climb from 32,000 feet to 38,000 feet to avoid clouds.

According to multiple reports, the request to raise altitude was denied due to other aircraft in the area. The plane disappeared from radar at 6:18 a.m.

Families of the 155 passengers and seven crew members gathered at Surabaya's airport and Changi international airport in Singapore where AirAsia and government officials had set up crisis centers. Among those on board were 17 children and one infant, the airline said.

"AirAsia Indonesia's primary focus remains on the families," the airline said Monday. AirAsia Indonesia CEO Sunu Widyatmoko was in Surabaya meeting with families while other airline officials were doing the same in Singapore, it said.

Special correspondent Pathoni reported from Jakarta and staff writer Bengali from Mumbai, India.

For more news from Asia, follow @SBengali on Twitter

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

1:01 a.m. Tuesday: Updates with statement from Air Force spokesman Hadi Tjahjanto.

This story was originally published at 12:15 a.m. Monday. 


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Should a shoplifting conviction be an indelible scarlet letter? Not in California

What exactly is the appropriate punishment for someone who commits a low-level, nonviolent crime? Should a conviction for minor drug possession, shoplifting or writing a bad check result in a lifetime of stigma and denied opportunities, or do people with criminal records deserve a second chance?

In November, California voters took a clear stand on these issues when they passed Proposition 47 and reclassified eight nonviolent felonies to misdemeanors for people without prior serious convictions. Proposition 47 allows for the resentencing of many who have been convicted of such crimes, reducing the amount of time they serve, lowering state and county incarceration costs and chipping away at decades of overly punitive criminal-justice policies. But this common sense reform alone won't necessarily change the lifelong punishment experienced by many people with a criminal record.

Today, a criminal record — even for a low-level misdemeanor or infraction — acts like an indelible scarlet letter. Until relatively recently, employers, landlords and others rarely requested criminal records, which could be accessed only by sifting through physical files in a local courthouse. With the post-9/11 push for more background checks, the advent of online databases and the steep increase in the number of people with convictions, criminal records have become a serious barrier to employment, housing, education and other forms of civic participation for millions of Californians.

New fair-chance hiring laws help reduce discrimination against people with criminal records by removing conviction history questions from initial job applications and postponing background checks until later in the process. But California has an additional remedy. Laws long on the books allow judges to dismiss old convictions, a recognition that people who have successfully completed their sentences should be free to rejoin society without disabling consequences. The dismissal remedy doesn't erase the record completely, and it is not available in all cases, but it can restore rights and reduce barriers for many people.

These dismissal laws, however, are obscure and complex. The process can require a lot of paperwork and a court appearance, or even multiple appearances in more than one county. As a result, far too many Californians remain saddled with convictions that are otherwise eligible for dismissal.

The East Bay Community Law Center, a teaching law office affiliated with UC Berkeley School of Law, tries to address these problems. Since establishing its Clean Slate Clinic a decade ago, the center has helped several thousand people obtain record-clearing remedies with the aim of reducing the collateral consequences of convictions and lowering the risk of recidivism.

Under the supervision of attorneys, law students interview the clinic's clients, draft their declarations, prepare them for court hearings and, if necessary, later represent them in civil and administrative proceedings to redress unlawful discrimination in employment, housing and professional licensing. The process can be long and emotional. People with criminal records are grappling with painful episodes from the past and hopeful aspirations for the future. But the results can be equally rewarding.

While Berkeley law students have been serving clean-slate clients, University of California researchers have been studying the results. We already know that clean-slate interventions increase a person's ability to get a job and provide him or her with a profound sense of relief: No more skeletons in the closet.

But the benefits go far beyond that: In surveys, focus groups and in-depth interviews, people who've had their records cleared express a sense of accomplishment (increased confidence and self-esteem), a sense of hope (a focus on the future) and a sense of agency (control over their lives). Significantly, the clean-slate process itself — not just the outcome — appears to create a kind of status enhancement ritual, or rite of passage, helping people move from their old life into a new one.

Proposition 47 takes an important step toward addressing the consequences of mass incarceration in California. Tens of thousands of people will benefit from it. The Legislative Analyst's Office estimates that the state and counties will each save hundreds of millions of dollars annually as a result of lower incarceration rates.

But rebuilding lives and communities will not flow automatically from the new law. As we take additional measures to reverse the most damaging effects of our tough-on-crime policies, we will need to invest time and resources in clean-slate programs that help people with criminal records go through the challenging process of re-integrating into our families, communities and society.

Keramet Reiter is an assistant professor in the UC Irvine School of Social Ecology and the School of Law. Jeffrey Selbin is a clinical professor of law at the UC Berkeley School of Law, and faculty director of the East Bay Community Law Center. Eliza Hersh is director of the East Bay Community Law Center's Clean Slate Clinic.

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Lakers, without Kobe Bryant again, lose to Mavericks, 102-98

Written By kolimtiga on Sabtu, 27 Desember 2014 | 16.38

The Lakers played another game without Kobe Bryant and might have learned something about themselves.

Mainly, they're not that bad sometimes.

They played the Dallas Mavericks to a near-draw before falling Friday, 102-98, and were left to ponder a series of what-ifs afterward.

What if Nick Young hadn't started one for 10? What if Wesley Johnson hadn't finished three for 14? And the big one, as always, what if Bryant played instead of taking a third game off for rest?

It's a series of hypotheticals in a Lakers season as real as their 9-21 record.

If nothing else, there was progress, because the Mavericks hammered the Lakers here last month, 140-106, shooting 62.2% for the game and scoring 110 points through three quarters.

Dallas had a more reasonable 72 points going into the fourth quarter Friday and the Lakers almost stole one.

If — and there's that tricky word again — only they hadn't gone so cold after Young's three-pointer pulled them within five with 6:51 left. Dallas quickly re-established a 16-point lead and held on from there.

The night wasn't without its quirks, including another Young technical foul for arguing with the referees. He now has three this season, a surprising number for him.

"I'm the new Rasheed Wallace," he said afterward, and he'd have a ways to go until that would be true.

"I think sometimes the refs might need to take a look at film and they should get fined for fouls they just miss," Young said. "But we're all good. I like the refs. I like the NBA. I like [Commissioner] Adam Silver."

Friday marked another page filled with notes in the Bryant analysis book. Observers who say the Lakers are more efficient without him could point to parts of this game. But the Lakers shot 36.4% as a team, which wouldn't please any of their fans.

Bryant's biggest proponent said there probably would have been a victory with him in the lineup despite his 37% accuracy.

"Let's see, he averages 25 … yeah, probably," Lakers Coach Byron Scott said. "Yeah, obviously if you have him, that fourth quarter, the last three or four minutes …we couldn't throw it in the ocean. Obviously, he's a guy that can help. No doubt about that."

The date of Bryant's return is still in doubt but Sunday against Phoenix makes sense.

"Give it another day and a half and I think he feels pretty good about being ready for that Sunday game," Scott said.

This might not be the last time Bryant rests this season, however.

"It's so hard to predict. It all really just kind of goes down to how his body feels," Scott said.

At the very least, Bryant will now play fewer than the 35.4 minutes he has averaged so far this season.

Scott said Bryant's playing time was "maybe" a reason for his fatigue. Bryant will play closer to 32 or 33 minutes a game, Scott added.

The bizarre stat of the day belonged to the Lakers, who received double-doubles from all three starting frontcourt players. Johnson had 11 points and 10 rebounds, Ed Davis had 10 points and 11 rebounds, and Jordan Hill had 12 points and 10 rebounds.

Sure enough, the Lakers pummeled Dallas in rebounds, 63-40, at American Airlines Center.

But Rajon Rondo had 21 points, eight rebounds and seven assists in his fourth game with Dallas, and Dirk Nowitzki passed Elvin Hayes for eighth on the NBA's all-time scoring list.

Nowitzki had 14 points Friday and now has 27,322 in his career, almost 5,000 behind Bryant.

mike.bresnahan@latimes.com

Twitter: Mike_Bresnahan

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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Lakers, without Kobe Bryant again, lose to Mavericks, 102-98

The Lakers played another game without Kobe Bryant and might have learned something about themselves.

Mainly, they're not that bad sometimes.

They played the Dallas Mavericks to a near-draw before falling Friday, 102-98, and were left to ponder a series of what-ifs afterward.

What if Nick Young hadn't started one for 10? What if Wesley Johnson hadn't finished three for 14? And the big one, as always, what if Bryant played instead of taking a third game off for rest?

It's a series of hypotheticals in a Lakers season as real as their 9-21 record.

If nothing else, there was progress, because the Mavericks hammered the Lakers here last month, 140-106, shooting 62.2% for the game and scoring 110 points through three quarters.

Dallas had a more reasonable 72 points going into the fourth quarter Friday and the Lakers almost stole one.

If — and there's that tricky word again — only they hadn't gone so cold after Young's three-pointer pulled them within five with 6:51 left. Dallas quickly re-established a 16-point lead and held on from there.

The night wasn't without its quirks, including another Young technical foul for arguing with the referees. He now has three this season, a surprising number for him.

"I'm the new Rasheed Wallace," he said afterward, and he'd have a ways to go until that would be true.

"I think sometimes the refs might need to take a look at film and they should get fined for fouls they just miss," Young said. "But we're all good. I like the refs. I like the NBA. I like [Commissioner] Adam Silver."

Friday marked another page filled with notes in the Bryant analysis book. Observers who say the Lakers are more efficient without him could point to parts of this game. But the Lakers shot 36.4% as a team, which wouldn't please any of their fans.

Bryant's biggest proponent said there probably would have been a victory with him in the lineup despite his 37% accuracy.

"Let's see, he averages 25 … yeah, probably," Lakers Coach Byron Scott said. "Yeah, obviously if you have him, that fourth quarter, the last three or four minutes …we couldn't throw it in the ocean. Obviously, he's a guy that can help. No doubt about that."

The date of Bryant's return is still in doubt but Sunday against Phoenix makes sense.

"Give it another day and a half and I think he feels pretty good about being ready for that Sunday game," Scott said.

This might not be the last time Bryant rests this season, however.

"It's so hard to predict. It all really just kind of goes down to how his body feels," Scott said.

At the very least, Bryant will now play fewer than the 35.4 minutes he has averaged so far this season.

Scott said Bryant's playing time was "maybe" a reason for his fatigue. Bryant will play closer to 32 or 33 minutes a game, Scott added.

The bizarre stat of the day belonged to the Lakers, who received double-doubles from all three starting frontcourt players. Johnson had 11 points and 10 rebounds, Ed Davis had 10 points and 11 rebounds, and Jordan Hill had 12 points and 10 rebounds.

Sure enough, the Lakers pummeled Dallas in rebounds, 63-40, at American Airlines Center.

But Rajon Rondo had 21 points, eight rebounds and seven assists in his fourth game with Dallas, and Dirk Nowitzki passed Elvin Hayes for eighth on the NBA's all-time scoring list.

Nowitzki had 14 points Friday and now has 27,322 in his career, almost 5,000 behind Bryant.

mike.bresnahan@latimes.com

Twitter: Mike_Bresnahan

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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Ex-L.A. Unified teacher wins $3.35 million after firing from JROTC job

After Archie Roundtree and Gerardo Loera clashed at John H. Francis Polytechnic High School in Sun Valley, their careers quickly diverged. Roundtree lost his job and his teaching certification. Loera rose to become chief academic officer for the Los Angeles Unified School District, the nation's second-largest school system.

This month, however, Roundtree, 57, received a measure of vindication regarding the events that ended his career.

After a three-week trial, a Superior Court jury found that Loera had targeted Roundtree for blowing the whistle on problems with the Air Force Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps program at Polytechnic. Loera was the school principal at the time.

The verdict was $3.35 million in damages, including more than $1 million for Loera's conduct.

L.A. Unified has denied that Loera or anyone else did anything improper and may appeal.

The lawsuit arises from events that occurred three years ago, when Roundtree headed the JROTC at the San Fernando Valley campus. Loera had hired Roundtree in 2009, after the retired Air Force major left an Apple Valley school that had discontinued the program.

Roundtree said he taught students about drill and military ceremonies, the history and structure of the Air Force as well as government systems and the Constitution and Bill of Rights. He also taught ethics, fitness, ways to deal with stress and good conduct.

In the fall of 2011, Roundtree met with Loera to discuss the instructor's concern that the schedule allowed for only an introductory JROTC class, which he felt was not enough to build a program. He said he also believed Poly was not complying with two key rules.

For one, Poly failed to enroll at least 100 students for two full quarters. And too few students chose to be in JROTC; rather, they had been assigned involuntarily to the class, according to testimony.

Roundtree wrote a request to the Air Force that Loera signed, asking for Poly to offer the program temporarily with fewer than 100 voluntary cadets. And the letter talked of these students being enrolled for two quarters. The Air Force approved it, according to court documents.

"I thought he would shake my hand and be happy to stay in compliance with the law," Roundtree said. "I thought he would appreciate me bringing that to his attention."

But Roundtree reported that Loera did not abide by the commitment. The teacher also later raised concerns about the school's other JROTC instructor teaching geometry. The Air Force paid half the cost of its instructors and expected them to teach only JROTC, he said.

Scheduling more JROTC courses was challenging because they no longer counted toward a student's physical education requirement. The school system also was focusing more intensively on English and math.

Loera complained to the Air Force about Roundtree, accusing him of undermining the program to force a transfer to another school. He also directed an assistant principal to compile student complaints, which, Loera testified, first surfaced without his prompting. Within L.A. Unified, Loera was regarded as a JROTC supporter, sometimes serving as the district's designated expert on the subject.

Loera, 41, did not respond to requests for an interview.

In a statement, L.A. Unified said that "each of the administrators' actions were taken with the students' interests at heart and were not done in retaliation against Major Roundtree."

In court documents and at trial, Roundtree's attorney, Renuka V. Jain, raised several issues with Loera's conduct. She offered evidence that Roundtree learned that a case was being made against him only after the military had already taken steps that led to his "decertification" as a JROTC instructor. That action can't be appealed.

Moreover, under the teachers contract, Jain said, Roundtree should have had a chance to address all of the accusations against him.

At trial, witnesses from the Air Force, relying on information from L.A. Unified, sided with the school district. The Air Force has declined to comment.

The jury, on Dec. 16, found that Roundtree proved that district employees retaliated for his report of a violation of a federal law or regulation. It also found that Loera and two other administrators made "one or more defamatory and untrue statements" with the intent to harm Roundtree.

Loera had never been under an obligation to keep Roundtree at Poly, but his actions against him ultimately prevented the instructor from teaching ROTC at any campus after he finished the school year at Poly, Jain said.

Loera left Poly for a senior management position later that same year.

The district's share of damages owed was more than $1.8 million. Loera was assessed $1 million, and assistant principal Adriana Maldonado-Gomez, $500,000. The district said it will pay these costs because the administrators acted within the scope of their duties.

"I respect the jury verdict, but that cannot replace what was taken from me," said Roundtree, who returned to Apple Valley and works as a part-time driving instructor and substitute teacher.

The Air Force closed its program at Poly last June. It hadn't attracted enough students.

howard.blume@latimes.com

Twitter: @howardblume

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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Clippers use warming trend in fourth quarter to beat Warriors

Written By kolimtiga on Jumat, 26 Desember 2014 | 16.39

All the Clippers wanted for Christmas in the first quarter Thursday was to make a shot.

They missed 16 consecutive attempts during one stretch at Staples Center, their futility taking Coach Doc Rivers' oft-repeated contention that the NBA is a make-miss league to a new extreme.

They would prove the other half of that catchphrase in the fourth quarter.

A hot shooting stretch carried the Clippers to a 100-86 runaway victory over the Golden State Warriors that qualified as their best triumph of the season.

Chris Paul and Blake Griffin shrugged off horrid starts in which they combined to miss all 10 shots in the first quarter, Paul finishing with 22 points and four assists and Griffin collecting 18 points and 15 rebounds.

"It really came down to mental toughness, the team that had the ability to hang in there, and we did that," Rivers said.

The Clippers turned a three-point advantage into a 20-point lead by making nine of their first 13 shots in the fourth quarter, creating a finish festive for fans who groaned when shots kept clanging off the rim during a first quarter in which they made four of 24 shots (16.7%).

The Warriors had their own shooting problems. Stephen Curry made five of 12 shots and scored 14 points while being constantly harassed by Clippers defenders, and Klay Thompson made only six of 18 shots and had 15 points.

"Our defense kept us in the game," said Paul, who finished making seven of 18 shots.

Jamal Crawford added a team-high 24 points off the bench for the Clippers.

Golden State (23-5) lost two games to the Staples Center tenants over three days after having lost only three games over the season's first seven weeks. Of course, the Warriors were missing big men Andrew Bogut and Festus Ezeli, who were both playing when they routed the Clippers and Lakers earlier this season.

"It shows great growth," said Rivers, who lambasted his team after its 17-point loss to the Warriors in November. "We're better than we were the last time we played them."

Paul was a one-man highlight show in the third quarter, his eight points coming on a three-pointer, a crossover move that led to a layup and foul on Curry for a three-point play and a stutter-step move past Justin Holiday for a buzzer-beating layup that gave the Clippers a 73-70 advantage going into the fourth quarter.

DeAndre Jordan started the game with a rim-rattling two-handed dunk and things went haywire for the Clippers on offense from there.

Their next 16 shots went miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss. Mercifully, Jamal Crawford put an end to a stretch as hideous as Spencer Hawes' red-and-green Christmas tree suit by making a 15-foot jumper.

Griffin's shooting struggles worsened in the second quarter. He was 0 for 8 from the field before he drove for a dunk to give him his first points with 4:01 left in the first half.

The Clippers made only 13 of 47 shots (27.7%) in the first half but somehow were down only 42-41 at halftime. They ended the game shooting 39.1%.

Not pretty, but more than good enough.

ben.bolch@latimes.com

Twitter: @latbbolch

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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Clippers use warming trend in fourth quarter to beat Warriors

All the Clippers wanted for Christmas in the first quarter Thursday was to make a shot.

They missed 16 consecutive attempts during one stretch at Staples Center, their futility taking Coach Doc Rivers' oft-repeated contention that the NBA is a make-miss league to a new extreme.

They would prove the other half of that catchphrase in the fourth quarter.

A hot shooting stretch carried the Clippers to a 100-86 runaway victory over the Golden State Warriors that qualified as their best triumph of the season.

Chris Paul and Blake Griffin shrugged off horrid starts in which they combined to miss all 10 shots in the first quarter, Paul finishing with 22 points and four assists and Griffin collecting 18 points and 15 rebounds.

"It really came down to mental toughness, the team that had the ability to hang in there, and we did that," Rivers said.

The Clippers turned a three-point advantage into a 20-point lead by making nine of their first 13 shots in the fourth quarter, creating a finish festive for fans who groaned when shots kept clanging off the rim during a first quarter in which they made four of 24 shots (16.7%).

The Warriors had their own shooting problems. Stephen Curry made five of 12 shots and scored 14 points while being constantly harassed by Clippers defenders, and Klay Thompson made only six of 18 shots and had 15 points.

"Our defense kept us in the game," said Paul, who finished making seven of 18 shots.

Jamal Crawford added a team-high 24 points off the bench for the Clippers.

Golden State (23-5) lost two games to the Staples Center tenants over three days after having lost only three games over the season's first seven weeks. Of course, the Warriors were missing big men Andrew Bogut and Festus Ezeli, who were both playing when they routed the Clippers and Lakers earlier this season.

"It shows great growth," said Rivers, who lambasted his team after its 17-point loss to the Warriors in November. "We're better than we were the last time we played them."

Paul was a one-man highlight show in the third quarter, his eight points coming on a three-pointer, a crossover move that led to a layup and foul on Curry for a three-point play and a stutter-step move past Justin Holiday for a buzzer-beating layup that gave the Clippers a 73-70 advantage going into the fourth quarter.

DeAndre Jordan started the game with a rim-rattling two-handed dunk and things went haywire for the Clippers on offense from there.

Their next 16 shots went miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss, miss. Mercifully, Jamal Crawford put an end to a stretch as hideous as Spencer Hawes' red-and-green Christmas tree suit by making a 15-foot jumper.

Griffin's shooting struggles worsened in the second quarter. He was 0 for 8 from the field before he drove for a dunk to give him his first points with 4:01 left in the first half.

The Clippers made only 13 of 47 shots (27.7%) in the first half but somehow were down only 42-41 at halftime. They ended the game shooting 39.1%.

Not pretty, but more than good enough.

ben.bolch@latimes.com

Twitter: @latbbolch

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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Makers of 'American Sniper' press ahead to tell a tale of war and home

Jason Hall had just turned in his first draft of a script about Chris Kyle, the deadliest sniper in U.S. military history. Bradley Cooper, who was producing the film and had agreed to star, was at a screening of "Silver Linings Playbook" for a group of veterans in Washington.

Kyle himself, still acclimating to life in Midlothian, Texas, after his fourth and final Iraq war tour, had just texted Hall an "LOL" in response to a raunchy joke.

It was Feb. 2, 2013, and their project together, "American Sniper," was lurching along in development at Warner Bros. Cooper and Hall had pitched it as a western with Kyle pitted against an equally gifted enemy sniper in the sandstorms of Iraq. But Kyle's story took a bizarre and devastating turn when he was killed that day at a gun range near his home, allegedly by a veteran he was trying to help.

"The gears just went off for a second," Cooper said, recalling the moment he learned about Kyle's death. "Everything just kind of stopped. Your brain takes in the information, but your body hasn't quite caught up. Chris and I, we're the same age, the same height, the same shoe size. You're just reminded anything's possible in life."

Less than two years later, "American Sniper" arrived in theaters Christmas Day. Instead of a straightforward tale about an elite warrior, it became, by necessity, a complex story about the heavy burdens a veteran carries home.

Clint Eastwood, perhaps Hollywood's greatest chronicler of male stoicism and its side effects, directs the film, which Hall adapted loosely from Kyle's bestselling autobiography written with Scott McEwen and Jim DeFelice. Hall's script deliberately borrows from Eastwood's "Unforgiven": The 1992 western's line, "It's a hell of a thing to kill a man" becomes, in a hunting scene in "American Sniper," "It's a hell of a thing to stop a beating heart."

The story toggles between the intensity of the battlefield, where Kyle earned the nickname "The Legend" for his 160 confirmed kills, and the bittersweetness of the home front, where his wife, Taya (Sienna Miller), emerges as the audience's proxy, both charmed by and worried for her husband as she feels him emotionally disengaging with each tour.

Even before Kyle's death, a contemporary war movie was not going to be an easy sell, particularly for Hall, whose two previous screenplays, the 2013 thriller "Paranoia" and 2009 sex comedy "Spread," cover very different thematic terrain. Hall had met Kyle through hedge fund manager Dan Loeb and established a relationship with the marksman on a hunting trip.

He wasn't having any luck with his pitch to studios until he reached out to Cooper, a friend who had established a box office track record as the Wolf Pack's chief charmer in the "Hangover" movies and was about to collect his first of two Oscar nominations for a vulnerable role as a bipolar man in "Silver Linings Playbook." That performance and another as permed FBI agent Richie DiMaso in "American Hustle" proved that he could handle neurotic, East Coast oddballs, but a drawling, Texas-born Navy SEAL was another kind of man entirely.

Still, Hall approached Cooper on a hunch, knowing he loved the 1978 Vietnam War movie "The Deer Hunter."

"The first question Bradley asked me about Chris was, 'Did [the war] mess him up?'" Hall said.

'Tremendous empathy'

Earlier this month, two days after he had opened on Broadway in a profoundly different but just as physically demanding role, "The Elephant Man," Cooper arrived at an interview in a pair of Merrell hiking boots of the type Kyle had worn in Iraq. He said that, since he'd started talking about the film to journalists, he had begun dreaming that he was Kyle, walking around his house in Midlothian.

"I always feel like I carry the character with me," Cooper said. "I just found tremendous empathy for him; I admired the sacrifice he made, his strength."

After Kyle's death gave his story a third act that was sadder than fiction, Cooper and Hall put the project on hold.

"Nobody wants to make an Iraq war movie," Hall said. "Nobody. ... But we didn't question so much whether the movie would go on as whether it should go on. For us to just continue like nothing had happened, it felt gross. It was heavy. It just didn't seem fair that someone could go through all that he did and come home and be murdered in his own backyard."

Cooper declined to define the politics of the film, which takes place between 2004 and 2008 but still feels current as ISIS has begun the process of undoing the democratic gains that U.S. troops painfully wrought.

"The whole reason we wanted to tell the story was to be as specific as possible about this guy and not make a comment about anything else," Cooper said. "That's for people to do who are watching the movie. I'm not saying this is a pro-war movie or an antiwar movie or a war movie, even. It's a character study about a soldier having to go from family life to battle and back."

With Taya's blessing and participation, Cooper and Hall resumed the project in the months after Kyle's death, but with a determination to get deeper under the layers of his character. Taya and Hall talked daily for hours, and she shared details of her husband's gentler side that had been omitted from the memoir, like how she knew Kyle was feeling better when he started ironing a crease in his jeans and wearing a flashy belt buckle.

"If you want to know who a man is, don't ask the man, ask his wife," Hall said. "Taya said, 'If you're still gonna do this, do it right. Cause this is how my kids are gonna know their father,' which sucker-punched me."

Steven Spielberg came aboard briefly to direct in the months after Kyle's death, before dropping out over budget concerns, but his interested stoked the studio's. Greg Silverman, Warner's president of creative and worldwide development, suggested Eastwood, who was making "Jersey Boys" for them, his latest in a nearly 40-year relationship with the studio.

"I had done war stories before, but this was more of a cross between his romantic life and his exploits in combat," Eastwood said in an email interview. "'American Sniper' is set in a war that is still fresh in the minds of the public and opinions are still divided. But regardless of how you feel about the war, we should appreciate the people who serve in the military and the families that support them. That's another thing that attracted me to the film."

Prepping to be Kyle

With Eastwood aboard, Cooper, who was about to earn his Oscar nomination for "American Hustle," began to prepare in earnest. He worked out while listening to Kyle's adrenalized playlist of Linkin Park and Staind songs, ate 6,000 calories a day to gain the 35 pounds of muscle that separated them and enlisted a dialect coach to perfect a particular West Texas accent. He watched videos of Kyle, adopted his habit of breathing loudly through his nose and learned a ridiculous amount of information about guns.

"At that time [before Kyle died] I felt I wasn't right for the role. Look at me, I'm from Philadelphia, I weigh 185 pounds. He was a huge [guy] from Texas. I thought maybe Chris Pratt. But in order to get WB to buy, I had to agree to star. I loved the story, though."

"I was fearful," Cooper added. "There's nothing worse than seeing an actor pretend he's from Texas, doing an accent. You're like, oh, shut the ... up. The hope is, two minutes into the movie you forget it's me."

This spring Eastwood shot the film in Rabat, Morocco, and in Southern California, where the Blue Cloud Movie Ranch in Santa Clarita stood in for urban Iraq and the Imperial Valley town of El Centro provided the setting for a climactic battle scene.

Cooper, Eastwood and Hall discussed multiple endings before deciding against actually showing Kyle's killing for reasons of both storytelling and taste.

"I considered ending the film at the shooting range," Eastwood said. "But that would have shifted the focus to his death and made it a different movie. We were telling the story of Chris Kyle's life and wanted to keep the focus there."

Instead, the movie ends with moving real-life footage from Kyle's funeral, some of which Hall recorded on his iPhone, as thousands of Texans waved at the procession from roadsides and overpasses.

Most critics agree that "American Sniper's" strengths lie in the naturalness of Cooper's performance and the immediacy of the battle scenes, but they tend to disagree on its political stripes. The Times' Kenneth Turan praised the film for showing that "heroism and being on the right side do not solve all problems for men in combat." LA Weekly's Amy Nicholson dismissed the movie as "unexamined jingoism." And the Hollywood Reporter's Tom McCarthy said, "The politics of the war are completely off the table here."

Hall said the movie's politics are deliberately as impenetrable as a dust storm.

"We went into Afghanistan and I got it," Hall said. "We went into Iraq and I was, like, I don't totally get it. But as soon as we had boots on the ground, I supported those guys. There are humans fighting this war, and the effect on them is singular and personal."

Cooper said he will be screening the film for veterans groups and hopes that, as with audiences who saw themselves in his bipolar character in "Silver Linings Playbook," soldiers take some solace in his portrayal of Kyle.

"I just want to show the movie to vets and hope they don't feel so alone," Cooper said. "Maybe people will relate to and empathize with Chris' story and maybe people like me and you, the next time we see a soldier in an airport we'll think for a minute about where they're coming from and what they've been through and have more understanding."

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

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Shawn Levy's 'Museum' debut had special effect on director

Written By kolimtiga on Kamis, 25 Desember 2014 | 16.38

The first time 20th Century Fox offered Shawn Levy the job of directing "Night at the Museum," he passed. And the second time. And the third. And the fourth. And the fifth.

Levy had directed the 2003 family comedy "Cheaper by the Dozen" for Fox, and that had proved successful. But for a director who had never done a single visual effect, the idea of taking the reins of a big-budget, effects-driven comedy — the story of an American Museum of Natural History security guard (Ben Stiller) who discovers that the exhibits magically come to life after dark — was, frankly, terrifying.

"I rejected it a half-dozen times because I was straight-up scared," Levy, 46, remembered on a recent morning in his office on the Fox lot. "Finally, I said, 'If I don't make some bold gestures, I'll never know what I can do.'"

Originally conceived as a one-off, 2006's "Night at the Museum" went on to gross nearly $575 million worldwide, spawning a trilogy that has now come to a conclusion with "Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb." The third film in the franchise — which brings the story to the British Museum in London — opened this past weekend to $17.3 million, less than the first two films but still strong enough to pull ahead of Sony Pictures' competing family film, a remake of the musical "Annie."

After years of development, the third "Night" film coalesced around the idea of saying goodbye. In "Secret of the Tomb," Stiller's character is struggling to accept that his college-age son is leaving the nest, even as the museum exhibits are facing their own possible demise. "The idea of letting go became the dominant theme," Levy said.

With the death in July of Robin Williams, who played Theodore Roosevelt throughout the three films, that theme, Levy said, "has become much more poignant."

"This movie was already about a farewell, and I genuinely didn't know how it would play in the aftermath of Robin's passing," Levy said. "I put it in front of some audiences two months after Robin's death, and I was relieved and moved at the extent to which they gave me the feedback that, while it was sad, it was a respectful, loving kind of sad."

For Levy, "Secret of the Tomb" caps a phenomenally busy year that also saw him direct September's dramedy "This Is Where I Leave You" — an adaptation of Jonathan Tropper's bestselling novel about a dysfunctional family that comes together after the father's death to sit shiva, the Jewish ritual of mourning — and produce October's Disney comedy "Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day."

"I could work a lot of years and not have a more frantic pace than this year," said Levy, who also has four daughters with his wife, Serena.

Despite his punishing schedule, Levy — who also has numerous projects in development, both large and small — radiates a restless, boyish, almost gee-whiz enthusiasm for filmmaking that's somewhat surprising to see in a director carrying the burden of a billion-dollar global franchise on his shoulders. Actor Owen Wilson, who has appeared in all three "Night at the Museum" films, marvels at Levy's stamina: "Shawn has really held on to his kid energy. You could imagine him at 80 and he'd still be youthful."

From early in life, Levy, who grew up in Montreal, Canada, displayed an unusual level of ambition and drive. "When I was 10 years old, I was taking a theater class, and I asked the teacher, 'What's the best university for theater?' " he recalled. "She said, 'Yale.' "

After graduating from Yale — where he cut his teeth directing a young Paul Giamatti in a production of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" — Levy attended USC film school while supporting himself as an actor with parts on TV series such as "Beverly Hills 90210" and "21 Jump Street." (Of one of his earliest roles, in the 1987 schlockfest "Zombie Nightmare," the less said, the better. "I play a bad boy with Duran Duran-style long hair who throws a fistful of spaghetti in his mom's face," Levy said.)

Making his studio directing debut with 2002's "Big Fat Liar," Levy quickly found his groove in the family-comedy genre. Ever since, in films like "Real Steel," "Date Night" and "This Is Where I Leave You," he has never strayed far from the often-fractious relationships between flesh and blood.

"Without question, I have some dysfunctional family dynamics in my past: an early divorce of my parents when I was 3, remarriages, step-siblings, half siblings," he said. "All of that is at play in the movies."

Still, Levy's films have tended to be fairly light, mainstream-friendly affairs, which may partly explain why he's never been a critics' darling. Not that he seems particularly troubled by that. "If you live by metrics of applause elsewhere, that's not a road to inner happiness," he said. "I'm not a dark guy, so unsurprisingly I'm never going to be drawn to dark material."

Following the success of 2009's "Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian," Levy wasn't certain he wanted to return to the franchise. "As long as it was simply about a new museum, Ben and I weren't compelled to make it," he said. "We had drafts that went to the Louvre, drafts that went to Cairo. It was when we came up with this notion of 'the end' that it really had a reason to be."

Levy was in the editing room cutting the film together when he got a call from his agent that Williams — who had worked on "Secret of the Tomb" for three months, far more than on either of the previous films — had committed suicide.

"I had a very weird reaction," he said. "I got very emotional but also angry in disbelief. My agent told me that it would be less than half an hour before the news became public, so I called Ben. It was an intense, horrible day."

On the set, Levy hadn't seen signs of the profound depression that drove Williams to take his life. "I saw a guy who certainly was weary because he had just shot a full season of a TV show," Levy said. "But he was Robin. He was prepared. He said to me repeatedly, 'Let's make this the best of the three.'"

Indeed, throughout the trilogy, Williams had always lifted the spirits of those around him, said costar Ricky Gervais: "I remember doing the junket for the second movie with Robin. Everyone knows junkets are soul-destroying, but honestly, with Robin it was a joy. You'd just watch him do his thing."

For Levy, "Secret of the Tomb" represents saying goodbye to Williams and to the franchise that launched him into the studio-tentpole big leagues. But in another way, it opens him up to pursue new avenues, some of which — like "This Is Where I Leave You" — are outside of his usual wheelhouse. Among other things, he is currently developing "Forty Thieves," a new take on the Ali Baba folk tale, and a comedy about a grown-up Tinker Bell to star Melissa McCarthy.

"Most directors have their thing, and they do their thing," Levy said. "I didn't need to go do a $19-million, R-rated shiva movie like 'This Is Where I Leave You,' but I needed to for me. It was an opportunity to use different muscles. And now I know I love that."

josh.rottenberg@latimes.com

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

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Lindbergh beacon atop L.A. City Hall shows Santa the way

The Lindbergh beacon, the revolving light atop City Hall that was turned on for the first time by President Calvin Coolidge in 1928, was lighted again Wednesday night in time for Christmas.

"I want to make sure  Santa will get to the children of Los Angeles tonight and that everyone  knows L.A. is a place that honors all traditions and all faiths," Mayor Eric Garcetti said.

The beacon will remain on through Jan. 5 to mark the 12 days of Christmas "and to signify that L.A. is a beacon of tolerance of the world's peoples, cultures and faiths," Garcetti wrote on his Facebook page.

After Charles Lindbergh flew across the Atlantic in 1927, receiving a bushel of gifts, the aviator suggested to civic leaders in Los Angeles that they contribute to the advancement of aviation rather than give him more presents.

The city decided to place the 1,000-watt light on the new City Hall to help pilots identify Los Angeles and also mark the 27-story building as a potential hazard to them.

When pilots complained that the light was too bright -- it could be seen in Pomona and Santa Monica --the federal Department of Commerce ruled its color must be changed to red.

The light sat out most of World War II and was turned off in 1947. It sat for a time in the basement of City Hall and then at the Tom Bradley International Terminal at Los Angeles International Airport.

When a refurbishment of City Hall was completed in 2001, the Lindbergh beacon was put back on top, to shine on special occasions, such as the first anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. 

Twitter: @gottliebjeff

jeff.gottlieb@latimes.com

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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The trip 'Into the Woods' is spooky, thoughtful, delightful

"Into the Woods," the deliciously arch, deceptively deep, fractured fairy tale with its soaring Sondheim showstoppers, has made it to the big screen virtually untouched by Hollywood's big, tall, terrible giants, whose meddling can so often make a mess of things.

As you'd expect, the woods have been partially repopulated by movie stars — Meryl Streep, Emily Blunt, Anna Kendrick, Chris Pine and Johnny Depp among them — who, thankfully, can actually sing.

Director Rob Marshall, who did a pretty swell job of bringing the "Pop! Six! Squish! Uh Uh!" of "Chicago" to film, wraps all of his love for Broadway musicals around his cast, pulling out performances that have already drawn awards nominations for Streep and Blunt.

The other major roles are filled by actors who have spent their share of time doing musical theater, in addition to their film and TV work. Among them are Tony winners Christine Baranski and James Corden, Tony-nominated Billy Magnussen and the young stage veterans Lilla Crawford, who starred as "Annie" on Broadway, and Daniel Huttlestone, whose credits include "Oliver!" and "Les Misérables," both in London.

I suspect James Lapine eased the transition from stage to screen. He won a Tony for the droll wit of the musical's book in the first place and took on screenplay duties for the film, ensuring that the way his words intertwined so tightly with Stephen Sondheim's Tony-winning music and lyrics on stage would remain intact.

While Marshall has taken care to not break the musical's magical spell, he hasn't materially changed it either. So if you are expecting an experience that feels as if it could happen only in the movies, the director's way through the "Woods" won't take you there.

The special effects are like showy accessories, fun but not fundamental, though the witch's comings and goings are a smoky, spooky blast. The overall look of the film is lush and storybook-like, with a lovely painterly touch and soft rich hues, heavy on the blues, that matches its sometimes-introspective mood.

Shooting on location does give the story visual depth. The trees, leaves and streams are beautifully real, as is the quaint village at the edge of the woods. England's countryside, villages and castles provide much of the raw material, all well used by director of photography Dion Beebe and production designer Dennis Gassner. John DeLuca proves facile in staging the musical numbers around all those rocks and trees; David Krane is respectful in adapting the score. Peter Swords King's work on makeup and tresses is top notch, with a special shout out to J. Roy Helland, who handled the witch's.

But what makes "Into the Woods" so entertaining is the cleverness of the tale itself and the way specific characters match the talents of its storytellers. A strong ensemble was assembled by those involved in casting — Francine Maisler, Bernard Telsey and Tiffany Little Canfield.

The foundation of the story begs, borrows and steals liberally from many favorite fairy tales: Cinderella (Kendrick) with her lost slipper, Prince Charming (Pine) searching to find her, the wicked stepmother (Baranski) and her daughters (Lucy Punch and Tammy Blanchard) in the way. Kendrick, Pine and Baranski all pitch-perfect, including their comic timing.

Then there's Red Riding Hood (Crawford) and her fated trip into the woods to visit an ailing Granny (Annette Crosbie) with the hungry Wolf (Depp) lurking. Rapunzel (MacKenzie Mauzy), locked in her tower, throws down that long golden braid to her prince (Magnussen), and others who do not wish her as well. Young Jack (Huttlestone) still trades in his cow for magic beans, enraging his mother (Tracey Ullman) and enraging a giant (Frances De La Tour) more.

All important to stitch the tales together is the Baker (Corden) and his barren wife (Blunt), whose efforts to break the witch's curse so they may have a child require a great many trips into the woods to find, as the witch requires, "a cow as white as milk [Jack's], a cape as red as blood [Red's], hair as yellow as corn [Rapunzel's] and a slipper as pure as gold [Cinderella's]."

Not surprisingly, the witch is key. In Streep's good hands she crackles with rage, resentment and revenge, but she also has a wicked sense of humor and never, ever forgets this is a fable.

Though all the performances are, like the prince, charming, Blunt as the Baker's wife is particularly good as a young wife trying to sort out her role in this life. The actress effortlessly moves through so many moods, it's as if her charisma is carried on the wind.

The film's youngsters are both great. Crawford makes a mischievous Red Riding Hood's munching and musing such fun. Huttlestone as the not-too-bright Jack delivers "Giants in the Sky" so well that of all the songs in the film, it's the one that keeps playing in my head.

In starting with fairy tales, Lapine and Sondheim were already dealing with layered stories. But in using the woods as the central intersection, there are any number of other ideas in play, other morals. Some serious, like those about parenthood — will the Baker be a fit father? Or whether the prince Cinderella wished for is really who she wants.

If anything, some of the darker themes are heightened. Cutting toes to make a slipper fit, the blood dripping; blinding both the bad and the good in revenge, a banishment, a death — may be too much for some little ones.

But mostly, it is delightful to stroll "Into the Woods" and get lost in this musical, magical world.

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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Lakers come to play while Kobe's away, stun Warriors without Bryant

Written By kolimtiga on Rabu, 24 Desember 2014 | 16.38

For the first time this season, the crowd's reaction to the Lakers' player introductions at Staples Center did not reach its normal feverish climax when Kobe Bryant steps on the court.

Bryant was not in the house Tuesday night.

But even as a fatigued Bryant was rested, the sold-out crowd of 18,997 still had reason to roar as Bryant's teammates defeated the high-flying Golden State Warriors, 115-105.

The Lakers led by 15 points at halftime, by 22 points at the end of the third quarter and simply outplayed league-leading Golden State through most of the game.

A three-point basket by the Warriors' Justin Holiday cut the Lakers' lead to eight points with 55 seconds left, but the Lakers' Jeremy Lin promptly answered with a three-pointer of his own to seal the win.

Carlos Boozer, who lost his starting job several games ago as the Lakers' losses piled up, led his club Tuesday night with 18 points and nine rebounds, both team-highs on a night the Lakers' reserves combined for 54 points, 19 rebounds and 12 assists. Ronnie Price, with 17 points, was the highest-scoring starter.

"That's exactly what we needed," Lakers Coach Byron Scott said. "It probably was our best game so far this year.

"We're still going to lean on [Bryant] but we don't have to as heavy as we are, that's kind of the message. You've got to let these [other] guys either succeed or fail."

The Lakers' record improved to 9-19 while the Warriors' fell to 23-4, still the best in the NBA.

With Bryant tired and struggling, and the Lakers playing upcoming games against the Bulls in Chicago on Christmas and then the Mavericks in Dallas the next day, Scott decided to rest Bryant.

Bryant is averaging a team-high 24.6 points a game but shooting a career-low 37.2% from the field.

"You can't replace a guy like Kobe, obviously, but I thought collectively we did a great job of helping each other out on both sides of the ball," Boozer said. "We just played with such energy, hopefully we can take that on the road up to Chicago for Christmas, and on to Dallas, too."

Scott said before the game that the goal was "just really trying to preserve him as much as possible so he can play at a high level."

"I didn't get much of a fuss" from Bryant, Scott said. "He had told me last night, anyway, 'Coach, whatever you want to do, just let me know.' So he's on board with it."

Scott was asked if Bryant also might sit out one of the two upcoming road games. "We haven't gotten to that point yet," Scott said. "We're just taking this game by game, day by day."

Reserve guard Wayne Ellington made his first start of the season in place of Bryant, and he scored 12 points, including two three-point baskets.

The victory snapped a three-game Lakers losing streak and their four-game losing streak against Golden State — including two losses earlier this season — which was the Lakers' longest winless streak against the Warriors in 20 years.

The Lakers shot 51.7% from the field while Golden State shot 46.4%.

The Lakers also kept in check the Warriors' backcourt stars, Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson, who led Golden State with 22 points and 18 points, respectively.

"It was a great team effort," Price said. "We all feel like we haven't been playing up to our standards. We were getting stops. That was key. We weren't just exchanging baskets."

Now the Lakers, Bryant included, head to Chicago for Thursday's game against the Bulls.

Said Scott: "I told Kobe to meet us at the plane tomorrow morning."

Follow Jim Peltz on Twitter @PeltzLATimes

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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Lakers come to play while Kobe's away, stun Warriors without Bryant

For the first time this season, the crowd's reaction to the Lakers' player introductions at Staples Center did not reach its normal feverish climax when Kobe Bryant steps on the court.

Bryant was not in the house Tuesday night.

But even as a fatigued Bryant was rested, the sold-out crowd of 18,997 still had reason to roar as Bryant's teammates defeated the high-flying Golden State Warriors, 115-105.

The Lakers led by 15 points at halftime, by 22 points at the end of the third quarter and simply outplayed league-leading Golden State through most of the game.

A three-point basket by the Warriors' Justin Holiday cut the Lakers' lead to eight points with 55 seconds left, but the Lakers' Jeremy Lin promptly answered with a three-pointer of his own to seal the win.

Carlos Boozer, who lost his starting job several games ago as the Lakers' losses piled up, led his club Tuesday night with 18 points and nine rebounds, both team-highs on a night the Lakers' reserves combined for 54 points, 19 rebounds and 12 assists. Ronnie Price, with 17 points, was the highest-scoring starter.

"That's exactly what we needed," Lakers Coach Byron Scott said. "It probably was our best game so far this year.

"We're still going to lean on [Bryant] but we don't have to as heavy as we are, that's kind of the message. You've got to let these [other] guys either succeed or fail."

The Lakers' record improved to 9-19 while the Warriors' fell to 23-4, still the best in the NBA.

With Bryant tired and struggling, and the Lakers playing upcoming games against the Bulls in Chicago on Christmas and then the Mavericks in Dallas the next day, Scott decided to rest Bryant.

Bryant is averaging a team-high 24.6 points a game but shooting a career-low 37.2% from the field.

"You can't replace a guy like Kobe, obviously, but I thought collectively we did a great job of helping each other out on both sides of the ball," Boozer said. "We just played with such energy, hopefully we can take that on the road up to Chicago for Christmas, and on to Dallas, too."

Scott said before the game that the goal was "just really trying to preserve him as much as possible so he can play at a high level."

"I didn't get much of a fuss" from Bryant, Scott said. "He had told me last night, anyway, 'Coach, whatever you want to do, just let me know.' So he's on board with it."

Scott was asked if Bryant also might sit out one of the two upcoming road games. "We haven't gotten to that point yet," Scott said. "We're just taking this game by game, day by day."

Reserve guard Wayne Ellington made his first start of the season in place of Bryant, and he scored 12 points, including two three-point baskets.

The victory snapped a three-game Lakers losing streak and their four-game losing streak against Golden State — including two losses earlier this season — which was the Lakers' longest winless streak against the Warriors in 20 years.

The Lakers shot 51.7% from the field while Golden State shot 46.4%.

The Lakers also kept in check the Warriors' backcourt stars, Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson, who led Golden State with 22 points and 18 points, respectively.

"It was a great team effort," Price said. "We all feel like we haven't been playing up to our standards. We were getting stops. That was key. We weren't just exchanging baskets."

Now the Lakers, Bryant included, head to Chicago for Thursday's game against the Bulls.

Said Scott: "I told Kobe to meet us at the plane tomorrow morning."

Follow Jim Peltz on Twitter @PeltzLATimes

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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Lakers come to play while Kobe's away, stun Warriors without Bryant

For the first time this season, the crowd's reaction to the Lakers' player introductions at Staples Center did not reach its normal feverish climax when Kobe Bryant steps on the court.

Bryant was not in the house Tuesday night.

But even as a fatigued Bryant was rested, the sold-out crowd of 18,997 still had reason to roar as Bryant's teammates defeated the high-flying Golden State Warriors, 115-105.

The Lakers led by 15 points at halftime, by 22 points at the end of the third quarter and simply outplayed league-leading Golden State through most of the game.

A three-point basket by the Warriors' Justin Holiday cut the Lakers' lead to eight points with 55 seconds left, but the Lakers' Jeremy Lin promptly answered with a three-pointer of his own to seal the win.

Carlos Boozer, who lost his starting job several games ago as the Lakers' losses piled up, led his club Tuesday night with 18 points and nine rebounds, both team-highs on a night the Lakers' reserves combined for 54 points, 19 rebounds and 12 assists. Ronnie Price, with 17 points, was the highest-scoring starter.

"That's exactly what we needed," Lakers Coach Byron Scott said. "It probably was our best game so far this year.

"We're still going to lean on [Bryant] but we don't have to as heavy as we are, that's kind of the message. You've got to let these [other] guys either succeed or fail."

The Lakers' record improved to 9-19 while the Warriors' fell to 23-4, still the best in the NBA.

With Bryant tired and struggling, and the Lakers playing upcoming games against the Bulls in Chicago on Christmas and then the Mavericks in Dallas the next day, Scott decided to rest Bryant.

Bryant is averaging a team-high 24.6 points a game but shooting a career-low 37.2% from the field.

"You can't replace a guy like Kobe, obviously, but I thought collectively we did a great job of helping each other out on both sides of the ball," Boozer said. "We just played with such energy, hopefully we can take that on the road up to Chicago for Christmas, and on to Dallas, too."

Scott said before the game that the goal was "just really trying to preserve him as much as possible so he can play at a high level."

"I didn't get much of a fuss" from Bryant, Scott said. "He had told me last night, anyway, 'Coach, whatever you want to do, just let me know.' So he's on board with it."

Scott was asked if Bryant also might sit out one of the two upcoming road games. "We haven't gotten to that point yet," Scott said. "We're just taking this game by game, day by day."

Reserve guard Wayne Ellington made his first start of the season in place of Bryant, and he scored 12 points, including two three-point baskets.

The victory snapped a three-game Lakers losing streak and their four-game losing streak against Golden State — including two losses earlier this season — which was the Lakers' longest winless streak against the Warriors in 20 years.

The Lakers shot 51.7% from the field while Golden State shot 46.4%.

The Lakers also kept in check the Warriors' backcourt stars, Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson, who led Golden State with 22 points and 18 points, respectively.

"It was a great team effort," Price said. "We all feel like we haven't been playing up to our standards. We were getting stops. That was key. We weren't just exchanging baskets."

Now the Lakers, Bryant included, head to Chicago for Thursday's game against the Bulls.

Said Scott: "I told Kobe to meet us at the plane tomorrow morning."

Follow Jim Peltz on Twitter @PeltzLATimes

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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Kings collapse late in 4-3 overtime loss to Flames

Written By kolimtiga on Selasa, 23 Desember 2014 | 16.38

Frustrating and fascinating … often in the same game.

Yes, that might be the best way to describe the Kings after the first 35 games of this season, heading into their short Christmas break.

Exhibit A was unfurled Monday night at Staples Center.

They skated into the mini-vacation on a muted note, having blown a three-goal lead and losing, 4-3, in overtime to the Calgary Flames. For the Flames, it was their first victory in nine games.

Flames defenseman Mark Giordano, a Norris Trophy candidate, scored at 4:07 of overtime, going hard to the net and celebrating the comeback win. He leads all NHL defensemen with 10 goals and 34 points.

The stunned Kings were less than a minute from what would have been their third straight win. They held what looked to be a secure two-goal lead late in the third period.

That's when Flames rookie Johnny Gaudreau took over and put the finishing touches on his first career hat trick, scoring two goals just 1:13 apart.

His first came with 2:12 remaining and the game-tying goal with 59 seconds left. Both goals came with Flames goalie Jonas Hiller pulled for the extra attacker. Gaudreau's game-tying goal actually went in past Kings goalie Jonathan Quick via the left skate of Kings defenseman Drew Doughty.

"The score was really not an indication of the play. About halfway through the game I think they had a lot more desperation than our team," Kings Coach Darryl Sutter said.

Gaudreau scored his eighth, ninth and 10th goals of the season, a natural hat trick.

The game had similarities to the Kings' third-period collapse in St. Louis on Dec. 16. They allowed three third-period goals in that loss.

"We had control of the game from a scoreboard standpoint," Kings captain Dustin Brown said. "They started rushing, having a five-man rush, and found two goals. It's not something we normally give up."

Until the Gaudreau Show, the Kings appeared firmly in control. They led, 3-0, scoring two power-play goals, and the gifted hands of forward Marian Gaborik kept on giving.

Gaborik has scored seven goals in the Kings' last five games. He had a mere four goals until breaking loose, starting Dec. 14 in Toronto, mostly a byproduct of an injury-riddled start. His goal, coming at 17:50 of the first period, made it 2-0 as he converted his second attempt.

The other two Kings goals came from center Trevor Lewis (sixth of the season) and defenseman Jamie McBain (second of the season), on the power play. Lewis tied a career high for goals in a season, beating Hiller with a knuckler on the Kings first shot on goal, at 2:26 of the first period.

McBain, who got back in the lineup because of defenseman Robyn Regehr's hand injury, has turned into a power-play threat with one goal and two assists in the last two games. He took a slick pass from Brown and beat Hiller with a shot from the base of the right circle to make it 3-0 at 4:32 of the second.

The Flames' first goal came from Gaudreau, also on the power play, at 18:02 of the second period.

Fittingly, Giordano and Gaudreau stopped the losing streak.

The Flames have had problems scoring during this long run, except for Gaudreau, who had four goals during the losing streak and Giordano three.

"Yeah, it's really, really special for us," Gaudreau said. "The guys were clinching the sticks pretty tight throughout the two or three weeks we were losing games.

"It's great to get a comeback against a team like this and get the win."

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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Kings collapse late in 4-3 overtime loss to Flames

Frustrating and fascinating … often in the same game.

Yes, that might be the best way to describe the Kings after the first 35 games of this season, heading into their short Christmas break.

Exhibit A was unfurled Monday night at Staples Center.

They skated into the mini-vacation on a muted note, having blown a three-goal lead and losing, 4-3, in overtime to the Calgary Flames. For the Flames, it was their first victory in nine games.

Flames defenseman Mark Giordano, a Norris Trophy candidate, scored at 4:07 of overtime, going hard to the net and celebrating the comeback win. He leads all NHL defensemen with 10 goals and 34 points.

The stunned Kings were less than a minute from what would have been their third straight win. They held what looked to be a secure two-goal lead late in the third period.

That's when Flames rookie Johnny Gaudreau took over and put the finishing touches on his first career hat trick, scoring two goals just 1:13 apart.

His first came with 2:12 remaining and the game-tying goal with 59 seconds left. Both goals came with Flames goalie Jonas Hiller pulled for the extra attacker. Gaudreau's game-tying goal actually went in past Kings goalie Jonathan Quick via the left skate of Kings defenseman Drew Doughty.

"The score was really not an indication of the play. About halfway through the game I think they had a lot more desperation than our team," Kings Coach Darryl Sutter said.

Gaudreau scored his eighth, ninth and 10th goals of the season, a natural hat trick.

The game had similarities to the Kings' third-period collapse in St. Louis on Dec. 16. They allowed three third-period goals in that loss.

"We had control of the game from a scoreboard standpoint," Kings captain Dustin Brown said. "They started rushing, having a five-man rush, and found two goals. It's not something we normally give up."

Until the Gaudreau Show, the Kings appeared firmly in control. They led, 3-0, scoring two power-play goals, and the gifted hands of forward Marian Gaborik kept on giving.

Gaborik has scored seven goals in the Kings' last five games. He had a mere four goals until breaking loose, starting Dec. 14 in Toronto, mostly a byproduct of an injury-riddled start. His goal, coming at 17:50 of the first period, made it 2-0 as he converted his second attempt.

The other two Kings goals came from center Trevor Lewis (sixth of the season) and defenseman Jamie McBain (second of the season), on the power play. Lewis tied a career high for goals in a season, beating Hiller with a knuckler on the Kings first shot on goal, at 2:26 of the first period.

McBain, who got back in the lineup because of defenseman Robyn Regehr's hand injury, has turned into a power-play threat with one goal and two assists in the last two games. He took a slick pass from Brown and beat Hiller with a shot from the base of the right circle to make it 3-0 at 4:32 of the second.

The Flames' first goal came from Gaudreau, also on the power play, at 18:02 of the second period.

Fittingly, Giordano and Gaudreau stopped the losing streak.

The Flames have had problems scoring during this long run, except for Gaudreau, who had four goals during the losing streak and Giordano three.

"Yeah, it's really, really special for us," Gaudreau said. "The guys were clinching the sticks pretty tight throughout the two or three weeks we were losing games.

"It's great to get a comeback against a team like this and get the win."

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times
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