Month: November 2019

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WASHINGTON — 

Senate Republicans are beginning to strategize about how they might use an impeachment trial to reshape the narrative in the president’s favor.

Trump’s strongest allies in the Senate are considering ideas such as calling witnesses that might prove embarrassing to Democrats or trying to time the proceeding to interfere with the campaigning of 2020 candidates, particularly in the run-up to the first presidential contest in Iowa.

If impeachment moves from the Democratic-controlled House to the GOP-controlled Senate, the president’s party will have more control over the process. Many see it as an opportunity to allow the president’s lawyers to make a high-profile case to the public.

Some are speculating that they could call witnesses who could shift focus away from Trump’s alleged misconduct, such as former Vice President Joe Biden’s son Hunter, whom Trump has falsely accused of corrupt dealings in Ukraine.

And the Senate might even have influence on the 2020 contest. Assuming articles of impeachment are passed in the House by the end of the year, a trial held in January would keep the six senators who are vying for the Democratic nomination tied up in Washington instead of out campaigning in Iowa. That could be a boon to other Democrats seeking the nomination, including Biden and South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg.

“Once it comes over here, it’s in our lap,” said Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.). “We talk about those things and kind of snicker about it, I suppose: the possibility of it playing out that way, where we’re literally in the middle of voting [in the presidential race and] senators would be stranded here for six days a week.”

All of the senators running for president plan to remain in Washington for any trial, according to the candidates and their campaigns.

Many of the candidates have skipped Senate votes in recent weeks as the presidential contest has picked up steam. But bypassing the third presidential impeachment trial in U.S. history — particularly when many of the candidates were publicly calling for an impeachment inquiry before House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) — would be noticed and judged within the Beltway.

“I’ll be there,” said Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). “This is a constitutional responsibility. I swore an oath to uphold the Constitution of the United States of America.”

Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) said “of course” she is concerned that a trial would limit her chance to talk to Iowa voters, but that she would stay in Washington. “I will fulfill my responsibility. There’s no question,” she told reporters recently. “I take it very seriously.”

Clinton’s trial lasted five weeks — a length of time that GOP senators speculate is all but unfathomable in today’s political and news environment.

Any amount of time in Washington could put a significant damper on a campaign, particularly because impeachment is not a central concern of Democratic primary voters. That will be particularly true in Iowa, where voters have grown accustomed to face-to-face contact with candidates.

Republicans’ ability to control the timing of a trial may be limited, however. For example, current Senate rules require it take up articles of impeachment the day after they are forwarded from the House, giving Democrats some influence on the calendar. A trial could be delayed, but that might require Democratic support.

Republicans could simply use their majority to change the rules before the trial begins, though such a move has not been openly discussed.

Current rules and precedents are already not very conducive to a campaign schedule. They require the chamber to conduct the trial six days a week and begin at 1 p.m. each day. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) indicated Tuesday that he wants those rules to remain in place. That leaves little time to hop on a flight to Iowa.

Once the trial begins, senators are prohibited from speaking on the Senate floor; they are expected to sit at their desks and write their questions down to be given to the chief justice of the Supreme Court, who would oversee the trial.

Of course, candidates could — and certainly will — do cable television hits from the Senate office buildings to highlight their role in the process. So even though they may lose face time with Iowa voters, they’ll be at the center of a national story that is likely to dominate airwaves and headlines.

McConnell has downplayed how much Republicans can control the process, saying that once the trial begins, rulings will be made by Supreme Court Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. — not by a majority of the Senate. “This is not something that the majority can kind of micromanage like it can on almost any other issue,” he said Tuesday.

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During the Clinton impeachment trial, however, former Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist took a largely ceremonially role.

Many of the major decisions will be made before the trial. Senators will have to approve a resolution setting up the rules, including whether witnesses will be allowed and when the trial should begin. During the Clinton impeachment trial, the Republican and Democratic leaders wrote rules that were approved 100 to 0. McConnell suggested Tuesday that at some point, he will sit down with Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) to potentially draw them up.

But given the sharp partisan divide over how the House has conducted the process so far, it is far from certain whether the leaders can match the level of bipartisanship seen in 1999.

The Senate trial will give the president and his lawyers a high-profile opportunity to make their case to the American public. In theory, Republicans will have a chance to call witnesses who could undermine the Democrats’ case. But during Clinton’s impeachment trial, the bipartisan agreement limited witnesses and determined that video of a private deposition of Monica Lewinsky would be aired instead of allowing a House prosecutor to question her in the well of the Senate.

Republicans appear to be staying almost universally supportive of the president, suggesting there is little chance Trump will be convicted.

“If it were today, I don’t think there’s any question,” McConnell said Tuesday. “It would not lead to a removal” of the president.


1/11

Clippers guard Lou Williams works to the basket against Bucks guard Eric Bledsoe during the first quarter of a game Nov. 6 at Staples Center. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

2/11

Clippers forward Montrezl Harrell goes to the basket and scores against the Bucks during the first quarter of a game Nov. 6 at Staples Center. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

3/11

Clippers guard Jerome Robinson goes to the hoop against Bucks guard Pat Connaughton in the second quarter of a game Nov. 6 at Staples Center. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

4/11

Clippers guard Patrick Beverley looks for an open teammate during the second quarter of a game against the Bucks Nov. 6 at Staples Center. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

5/11

Bucks guard George Hill steals the ball from Clippers center Ivaca Zubac during the second quarter of a game Nov. 6 at Staples Center. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

6/11

Clippers guard Lou Williams tries to pass the ball around Bucks forward Ersan Ilyasova in the second quarter of a game Nov. 6 at Staples Center. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

7/11

Clippers forward Maurice Harkless drives to the basket against Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo during the second quarter of a game Nov. 6 at Staples Center. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

8/11

Clippers guard Lou Williams drives to the basket against Bucks guard George Hill during the second quarter of a game Nov. 6 at Staples Center. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

9/11

Clippers defenders Montrezl Harrell and Patrick Beverley pressure Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo during the second quarter of a game Nov. 6 at Staples Center. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

10/11

Clippers coach Doc Rivers argues a call with an official in the second quarter of a game Nov. 6 at Staples Center. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

11/11

Clippers guard Jerome Robinson knocks the ball away from Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo as Clippers big man Ivaca Zubac defends during the second quarter of a game Nov. 6 at Staples Center. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

The Clippers missed their first seven shots Wednesday night.

They turned the ball over four times before scoring their first points.

Down nine, they rallied to lead Milwaukee before the first quarter’s end — only to trail by 17 eight minutes later.

Their best player was on the sideline in a blue sports coat, watching while Milwaukee’s best player was uncharacteristically sinking as many three-point shots as he’d made all season.

There were several reasons why the Clippers should not have been hanging with a contender to win the Eastern Conference. And yet, with 23 seconds remaining in a chaotic fourth quarter, they trailed by only two points and the entirety of Staples Center’s lower bowl seemed to be standing, waiting for the moment that seemed so distant only hours earlier.

It was a tantalizing prospect that felt straight out of last season — a star-less Clippers lineup grinding down an opponent boasting 7-foot league MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo.

But by removing Kawhi Leonard from the lineup — the second game this season he has missed for load management of his knee — the Clippers also eliminated any margin for error. And unable to rely on the NBA’s top fourth-quarter scorer, the Clippers closed the gap, but couldn’t catch up to their foe.

Instead it was Bucks 129, Clippers 124.

“That was great,” coach Doc Rivers said. “I want to win the game though.”

Montrezl Harrell (a career-high 34 points, plus 13 rebounds), Lou Williams (34 points) and Patrick Beverley (20 points, 10 rebounds) did everything possible to do just that, with their scoring offsetting the stretches in which the Clippers’ offense, down one of the league’s best shot-makers in Leonard, disappeared.

Harrell, in particular, at times resembled a 6-foot-7 bulldozer with braids as he bulled to the rim with a collection of dunks and floaters. “We just gave him the ball, spaced the floor and he went and got it,” Rivers said. “That tells you he’s a heck of a player. We needed every basket. He was phenomenal.”

Outside of that trio, however, the rest of the Clippers managed just 36 points. Their defense held Milwaukee to 42 points in the paint, four off their target. But they couldn’t keep the irrepressible Antetokounmpo out of the key forever, as he made three shots within four feet in the final quarter to finish with 38 points, to go with 16 rebounds and nine assists. He also made his impact felt beyond the arc, with four three-pointers.

In last season’s Eastern Conference finals, Leonard locked up Antetokounmpo defensively over the final four games while playing with Toronto, leading the Raptors to a berth in the NBA Finals. But he could not repeat the effort Wednesday, part of the team’s plan to increase their long-term playoff odds by incurring some short-term pain in the standings.

“Kawhi is gonna sit out for games, it’s going to happen, man, so we can’t put that all on him,” Harrell said. “He’s got to take care of his body just like every other athlete on this team, so, just because he’s sitting out of the game, that don’t mean we got the right to drop a game.”

The Clippers are now 0-2 in games Leonard has sat out and there will be more absences to come. The team’s medical staff has determined that Leonard is not yet healthy to play on consecutive nights, a determination the NBA’s medical staff agree with, a league spokesman said Wednesday in addressing the Clippers’ load management strategy.

“There’s no concern here, but we want to make sure,” Rivers said of Leonard’s health. “I think Kawhi made a statement that he’s never felt better. It’s our job to make sure he stays that way. That’s important. But he played a lot of minutes in the playoffs last year.

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“So, it’s not a health thing, really. It is in some ways. We want him to just keep feeling better and getting better.”

The Clippers are set to get better soon. Injured forward Paul George is expected to take part in his first “live” drills of the season Saturday, a person with knowledge of the plans confirmed.

George, who underwent surgery on both shoulders in the offseason, will give the Clippers more offensive firepower and length defensively on nights when Leonard sits — and vice versa too. His return will give the Clippers the margin for error they lacked against the Bucks.

“There’s no moral victory in anything,” Beverley said. “But we took a step forward, for sure.”


SOUTHERN SECTION GIRLS’ TENNIS

OPEN DIVISION

Quarterfinals, Friday, 2 p.m.

#8 West Ranch at #1 Irvine University

#5 Palos Verdes at #4 Westlake

#6 Campbell Hall at #3 Mira Costa

#7 San Marino at #2 Peninsula

DIVISION 1

First round, Wednesday

San Marcos 11, Oak Park 7

San Clemente 16, Orange Lutheran 2

Murrieta Valley 16, El Dorado 2

Yorba Linda 14, Crescenta Valley 4

Huntington Beach 16, Oaks Christian 2

Palm Desert 10, Ayala 8

Troy 14, Santa Margarita 4

Camarillo 13, Chaminade 5

Calabasas 10, Cate 8

King 14, Dana Hills 4

Mater Dei 11, Foothill 7

Beckman 18, Santa Monica 0

Marlborough 15, La Canada 3

Aliso Niguel 12, Great Oak 6

Second round, Friday, 2 p.m.

San Marcos at #1 Corona del Mar

San Clemente at Murrieta Valley

Yorba Linda at Huntington Beach

Palm Desert at Troy

#3 Camarillo at Calabasas

King at Mater Dei

Marlborough at Beckman

Aliso Niguel at #2 Arcadia

DIVISION 2

First round, Wednesday

South Torrance 12, Burbank 6

San Juan Hills 13, Temecula Valley 5

Los Alamitos 12, Sage Hill 6

JSerra 14, South Pasadena 4

Santa Barbara 12, Simi Valley 6

Long Beach Poly 12, Sunny Hills 6

Pasadena Poly 13, Hart 5

Claremont 16, Corona Santiago 2

Woodbridge 17, Placentia Valencia 1

Laguna Beach 12, Long Beach Wilson 6

Valencia 14, Thacher 4

Harvard-Westlake 15, Brentwood 3

Los Osos 15, Glendale 3

Dos Pueblos 11, Foothill Tech 7

Elsinore 12, Redlands 6

Redondo 14, Cypress 4

Second round, Friday, 2 p.m.

#1 South Torrance at San Juan Hills

JSerra at Los Alamitos

Santa Barbara at Long Beach Poly

Pasadena Poly at #4 Claremont

#3 Woodbridge at Laguna Beach

Harvard-Westlake at Valencia

Los Osos at Dos Pueblos

Elsinore at #2 Redondo

DIVISION 3

First round, Wednesday

Portola 16, Garden Grove 2

Bishop Montgomery 11, Ventura 7

Archer 10, Oxford Academy 8

Temescal Canyon 14, Serrano 4

St. Margaret’s 9, La Serna 9 (St. Margaret’s wins on games, 74-65)

Diamond Bar 14, Maranatha 4

Walnut 15, Brea Olinda 3

Alta Loma 13, Keppel 5

Montclair 11, Rancho Mirage 7

Rancho Cucamonga 13, Hemet 5

El Segundo 12, North Torrance 6

Cerritos 11, Garden Grove Pacifica 7

Sherman Oaks Notre Dame 18, Warren 0

Mayfair 10, Mayfield 8

Malibu 12, Santa Fe 6

Riverside Poly 13, El Toro 5

Second round, Friday, 2 p.m.

Bishop Montgomery at #1 Portola

Archer at Temescal Canyon

Diamond Bar at St. Margaret’s

Walnut at #4 Alta Loma

#3 Montclair at Rancho Cucamonga

Cerritos at El Segundo

Mayfair at Sherman Oaks Notre Dame

Malibu at #2 Riverside Poly

DIVISION 4

First round, Wednesday

Westridge 17, Le Lycee 1

San Dimas 11, Costa Mesa 7

Alhambra 12, Oxnard 6

Yucaipa 13, Paloma Valley 5

Whitney 12, Bolsa Grande 6

Flintridge Sacred Heart 9, Torrance 9 (Flintridge Sacred Heart wins on games, 80-78)

Norte Vista 10, Ridgecrest Burroughs 8

Hacienda Heights Wilson 11, Arroyo 7

Webb 11, Laguna Blanca 7

Pasadena Marshall 10, La Mirada 8

Jurupa Valley 14, Rim of the World 4

Fullerton 10, Westminster La Quinta 8

Millikan 16, Magnolia 2

Coachella Valley 10, Beaumont 8

Quartz Hill 11, Rosemead 7

Buckley at #2 Rowland, score not reported

Second round, Friday, 2 p.m.

San Dimas at #1 Westridge

Alhambra at Yucaipa

Whitney at Flintridge Sacred Heart

#4 Hacienda Heights Wilson at Norte Vista

Pasadena Marshall at Webb

Jurupa Valley at Fullerton

Coachella Valley at Millikan

Quartz Hill at #2 Rowland/Buckley winner

DIVISION 5

Wild-card match, late Tuesday

Jurupa Hills 9, Citrus Hill 9 (tied 75-75 on games, Jurupa Hills won tiebreaker 12-6 on Wednesday)

First round, Wednesday

Segerstrom 12, Gahr 6

Edgewood 14, Villanova Prep 4

Immaculate Heart 14, Highland 4

Vista del Lago 12, Lakewood St. Joseph 6

Arroyo Valley 10, Patriot 8

Hueneme 11, Kaiser 7

Channel Islands 12, Duarte 6

Heritage 15, Western Christian 3

Canyon Springs 14, La Puente 4

Oak Hills 12, Victor Valley 6

Rancho Alamitos 15, Yucca Valley 3

Rubidoux 15, Jurupa Hills 3

Summit 15, Knight 3

Cerritos Valley Christian 13, Sierra Vista 5

Nogales 10, Aquinas 8

Western 13, Riverside Notre Dame 5

Second round, Friday, 2 p.m.

Edgewood at #1 Segerstrom

Vista del Lago at Immaculate Heart

Arroyo Valley at Hueneme

#4 Heritage at Channel Islands

#3 Canyon Springs at Oak Hills

Rubidoux at Rancho Alamitos

Summit at Cerritos Valley Christian

#2 Western at Nogales

Notes: Quarterfinals (Div. 1-5), Monday, 2 p.m.; semifinals, Nov. 13, 2 p.m. Championships, Nov. 15 at Claremont Club.


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Howdy, I’m your host, Houston Mitchell. Why is Cinderella lousy at sports? She’s always running away from the ball.

USC

Mike Bohn will be named USC’s new athletic director today, becoming the first to assume the post without any previous ties to the university since Mike McGee, who had been the only outsider ever to lead USC athletics.

USC had zeroed in on Bohn as its choice last week, but his hiring was delayed as the university conducted background checks.

Bohn spent the last five years at Cincinnati in the same position. McGee also came to USC from Cincinnati.

Bohn will be charged with the daunting task of restoring luster to a high-profile department scarred by scandal — and still dealing with questions of its own culpability.

Amid that fallout, Bohn’s hiring, the most significant yet for President Carol L. Folt, sends an unambiguous message from the university’s new leadership.

“There is a moment right now at USC,” Folt told The Times in October. “No one is happy about the things that have happened. If I have any opportunity right now, it’s to take advantage of people’s willingness to say, ‘OK, everything is not perfect.’ ”

As USC attempts to start anew, Bohn, 58, is the fourth athletic director at the school in a decade. Unlike the other three, he arrives at USC with considerable experience in collegiate athletics administration. Before taking the reins at Cincinnati, where he helped usher a middling program overlooked by conference realignment into relevance, Bohn served as athletic director at Colorado, San Diego State and Idaho.

Bohn’s first order as director could ultimately define his tenure.

With USC at 5-4, now trailing Utah by a game in the Pac-12 South Division, a decision on the status of embattled football coach Clay Helton looms large. Outside the program, calls for his immediate ouster reached a fevered pitch in the wake of last Saturday’s 56-24 loss to Oregon and haven’t abated.

Prominent boosters have already made clear their desire for USC and its new athletic director to pursue Urban Meyer, the three-time national title-winning former coach long coveted by disenchanted Trojans fans. But whether Folt and USC’s new leadership would even support that pursuit remains an open question.

Read more

Bill Plaschke: Mike Bohn brings USC integrity, which means he can’t hire Urban Meyer

CLIPPERS

The Clippers put up a furious rally, but couldn’t overcome Giannis Antetokounmpo‘s 38 points and 16 rebounds, in a 129-124 loss on Wednesday night.

Antetokounmpo just missed a triple-double with nine assists. He’s posted at least 10 rebounds and five assists in each of the first eight games of the season, the first player since at least 1972-73 to do so.

The Clippers were without Kawhi Leonard, who rested for the first half of a home back-to-back. He’ll play against Portland tonight.

Montrezl Harrell had a career-high 34 points and 13 rebounds in his first start of the season. Lou Williams added 34 points and 11 assists, and Patrick Beverley had 20 points and 10 rebounds.

Down nine, the Clippers rallied to lead Milwaukee before the first quarter’s end — only to trail by 17 eight minutes later. And yet, with 23 seconds remaining in a chaotic fourth quarter, they trailed by only two points and the entirety of Staples Center’s lower bowl seemed to be standing, waiting for the moment that seemed so distant only hours earlier. But it wasn’t to be.

“That was great,” coach Doc Rivers said. “I want to win the game though.”

Read more

Dylan Hernandez: Clippers stick to the plan with Kawhi Leonard, but fans aren’t happy

UCLA BASKETBALL

In their first game of the season, the Bruins exhibited flashes of new head coach Mick Cronin’s trademark tenacious defense but appeared completely adrift on offense before finally saving their coach from an inglorious introduction to the home fans by making the necessary plays at the end of a 69-65 victory over Long Beach State that was every bit as ugly as the score indicated. (Man, that was a long sentence. Everybody take a breath.)

UCLA finished the game on a 15-7 run that included some feistiness in the closing seconds when guard Chris Smith blocked a shot and forward Jalen Hill forced a jump ball that went back to the Bruins. Cronin said he saw value in winning a game in which his team struggled against an opponent that played five different defenses.

“If you can be in a dogfight and win it,” Cronin said, “you can get a lot more out of it than if you end up blowing somebody out.”

CHARGERS

The Chargers can recall being showered by debris, doused with beer and enveloped by the wafting smell of weed.

Now, they have the opportunity to play one final time in the home of the Oakland Raiders, in a game both teams desperately need — a game matching longtime AFC West rivals.

It’s also a game played at night, giving the fans ample time to elevate their levels of both excitement and blood-alcohol.

“It’ll be awesome,” Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers said. “The aura of what that place has meant over the years will be alive, for sure.”

The Raiders (4-4) will be moving to Las Vegas after the season, meaning the game tonight will be Rivers’ farewell to this place, unless the teams should meet in the playoffs.

It will serve as a fitting bookend for him, his first career start coming here on Sept. 11, 2006.

The Chargers (4-5) won that Monday night 27-0, with Rivers completing eight of 11 pass attempts for 108 yards and a touchdown — one of his least productive outings.

“Only threw it 11 times,” Rivers recalled this week. “I think I can talk [interim offensive coordinator] Shane [Steichen] into more than 11 attempts on Thursday.”

CHARGERS SCHEDULE

All times Pacific. Radio: KFI-AM 640, KFWB-AM 980

at Chargers 30, Indianapolis 24 (OT)

at Detroit 13, Chargers 10

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Houston 27, at Chargers 20

Chargers 30, at Miami 10

Denver 20, at Chargers 13

Pittsburgh 24, at Chargers 17

at Tennessee 23, Chargers 20

Chargers 17, at Chicago 16

at Chargers 26, Green Bay 11

Today at Oakland, 5:15 p.m., Fox, NFL Network

Nov. 18 vs. Kansas City, 5:15 p.m., ESPN (at Mexico City, counts as home game for Chargers)

Dec. 1 at Denver, 1:15 p.m., CBS

Dec. 8 at Jacksonville, 1 p.m., Fox

Dec. 15 vs. Minnesota, 5:15 p.m., NBC

Dec. 22 or 23 vs. Oakland, TBD

Dec. 29 at Kansas City, 10 a.m., CBS

TODAY’S LOCAL MAJOR SPORTS SCHEDULE

All times Pacific

Portland at Clippers, 7:30 p.m., TNT, AM 570

Kings at Ottawa, 4:30 p.m., FSW

BORN ON THIS DATE

1921: Golfer Jack Fleck (d. 2014)

1936: Basketball player/coach Al Attles

1938: Baseball player Jim Kaat

1944: Baseball player Joe Niekro (d. 2006)

1966: Jockey Calvin Borel

1970: NFL player Andre Hastings

DIED ON THIS DATE

1978: Boxer Gene Tunney, 80

2006: Baseball player Johnny Sain, 89

2011: Boxer Joe Frazier, 67

2012: Boxer Carmen Basilio, 85

AND FINALLY

Joe Frazier‘s greatest knockouts. Watch them here.

That concludes the newsletter for today. If you have any feedback, ideas for improvement or things you’d like to see, please email me at [email protected]. If you want to subscribe, click here.


Chargers vs. Oakland Raiders: How they match up

November 7, 2019 | News | No Comments

HOW THEY MATCH UP

Chargers (4-5) at Oakland (4-4)

When Chargers have the ball

After going four weeks without even a walking game — never mind a running game — the Chargers rediscovered their legs Sunday in a 26-11 victory over the Green Bay Packers. They totaled a season-high 159 yards rushing in 38 carries, with Melvin Gordon (80 yards, two touchdowns) and Austin Ekeler (70 yards) both being productive. The Chargers were able to commit to their ground attack in part because they scored on three of their four first-half possessions and three in a row to start the second half. They went up early on the Packers and never trailed. Oakland, however, is “built to stop the running game,” Chargers coach Anthony Lynn said. “Their front seven is really big, powerful. It’s going to be tough to establish the run on this group.” The Raiders rank seventh in the NFL in rushing defense, yielding 92.5 yards per game. But Oakland has struggled to stop the pass. In fact, no defense in the league is worse, the Raiders at No. 32 with an average of 297.5 yards allowed per game. They have given up 400-plus yards passing twice — to Patrick Mahomes and Aaron Rodgers — and 383 yards Sunday to Matthew Stafford. Philip Rivers has topped 300 yards five times in nine games but not the past two weeks.

When Raiders have the ball

Running back Josh Jacobs is no Marcus Allen. He’s better — at least as a rookie. Jacobs already has topped Allen’s franchise record for rushing yards as a first-year player with 740 in 152 attempts. For the record, Allen appeared in nine games for the Los Angeles Raiders in 1982. Jacobs broke Allen’s old mark last week, in his eighth game. “If he two-steps a defensive back and it doesn’t work? He’s going through your chin, and that’s the end of it,” Chargers defensive lineman Damion Square said. “He boom-boom and coming right at your chin.” The Raiders are sixth in the NFL in rushing; the Chargers are 20th in stopping the run. But the Chargers’ defense is coming off a game in which it dominated Rodgers and Green Bay, thanks in part to the offense’s ability to use much of the clock. Defensive end Joey Bosa is putting together his finest, most complete season to date. He has 51/2 sacks and 17 tackles over the last three games. Oakland quarterback Derek Carr has been sacked once since the end of September. The Raiders have permitted only nine sacks all season, the second-lowest total in the league behind the Pittsburgh Steelers, with eight. Carr has nine touchdowns and one interception over his last five games.

When they kick

Since joining the Raiders in midseason a year ago, Daniel Carlson is 23 of 26 on field-goal attempts and 41 of 41 on extra points. He has found a home after struggling in Minnesota, which drafted Carlson in the fifth round in 2018. The Chargers also discovered their current kicker in the middle of last season. However, Michael Badgley missed the first eight games of 2019 because of a groin injury, returning Sunday with four field goals, and one miss, against the Packers.

Jeff Miller’s prediction

Both teams are coming off dramatic wins — the Chargers whipping Green Bay and the Raiders holding on in the final seconds to beat Detroit. Both also are desperate for wins to remain alive for a playoff berth. This is supposed to be the final time a Chargers team plays in Oakland, with the Raiders set to move to Las Vegas in 2020. And it’s a night game, meaning the Black Hole, despite its name, will be plenty lit.

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RAIDERS 23, CHARGERS 21


Earthquake: 3.5 quake strikes near Ridgecrest

November 7, 2019 | News | No Comments

A magnitude 3.5 earthquake was reported Thursday morning at 4:38 a.m. Pacific time four miles from Ridgecrest, Calif., according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

The earthquake occurred 32 miles from California City, 62 miles from Tehachapi, 64 miles from Barstow and 65 miles from Rosamond.

In the last 10 days, there have been four earthquakes of magnitude 3.0 or greater centered nearby.

An average of 234 earthquakes with magnitudes between 3.0 and 4.0 occur per year in California and Nevada, according to a recent three-year data sample.

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The earthquake occurred at a depth of 5.0 miles. Did you feel this earthquake? Consider reporting what you felt to the USGS.

Even if you didn’t feel this small earthquake, you never know when the Big One is going to strike. Ready yourself by following our five-step earthquake preparedness guide and building your own emergency kit.

This story was automatically generated by Quakebot, a computer application that monitors the latest earthquakes detected by the USGS. A Times editor reviewed the post before it was published. If you’re interested in learning more about the system, visit our list of frequently asked questions.


As a black woman, I knew that mothering three daughters meant a great deal of my time was going to be devoted to doing hair.

The rituals hadn’t changed much since my sisters and I were young. Our mother would spend hours washing, drying, detangling and straightening our hair with hot combs, oils and pomades.

It was the price that black girls had to pay in a Eurocentric world, where good grooming was synonymous with smooth, straight hair — “good hair” in our black vernacular of the day.

But black folks’ hair tends to grow out, like a halo, instead of down, like a mane. And all the work that goes into taming our kinks can be undone by the mere whisper of rain.

By the time my daughters were old enough to understand the challenge, hot combs had been replaced by relaxers, extensions and braids. And I had become my mother, spending hours weaving their hair into dozens of long sleek plaits.

It wasn’t the “slippery hair” of their white suburban classmates, and the style was sometimes mocked or misunderstood by nonblack friends. But it gave my girls the freedom to play soccer, run track and swim.

Now, almost two decades later, I have a baby granddaughter whose hair is a tall mound of fluffy spirals. They sprout like flowers from a field of stubborn ringlets that I hope one day she will love.

Natural styles — dreadlocks, twists, braids, Afros, Bantu knots — seem to be trending, from the red carpet to Capitol Hill. Even Michelle Obama, always carefully coiffured, is allowing her long thick hair to be its free-flowing self.

Black hair salons have felt the evolution; fewer customers today are asking for the traditional press-and-curl.

“It’s about practicality,” said stylist Kim Dafney, owner of Kim’s Touch of Class Hair Design in Northridge. “People want simplicity, something they can manage all week. … And not just black people. Whites come in for braids, twists and extensions — styles that blacks have worn for years.”

But for black women the choice can have broader dimensions. It’s a return to styles that our ancestors wore, a visible connection to the African diaspora, a way to untangle the complicated relationship many of us have with our hair.

Its texture, its fragility, its temperamental curls and kinks can be a burden one day, and the next a glorious mane. It can limit where we work and how we play. Its grooming rituals can take an entire day.

That sometimes feels like living under a dictatorship. I can’t … because my hair.

In the ‘60s, my generation responded with the Afro, signaling a revolution. But the natural hair movement of today feels more like a revival — a communal embrace of a trait that we’ve been conditioned to revile.

There’s something wrong when Kim Kardashian West gets 2 million likes on Instagram for the same hairstyle that gets black women labeled “ghetto” and locked out of professional jobs. She called it “Bo Derek braids,” but we know those “cornrows” have African roots.

Stories abound of black hair being a trigger for discrimination.

The issue drew national attention last year, when a black high school wrestler in New Jersey was humiliated by a white referee, who forced him to either forfeit his match or have his dreadlocks publicly lopped off. The young man lost his locks and won the match, but his tear-stained face fueled social media outrage.

Yet employers have for years, with the assent of the courts, been demoting, firing or refusing to hire black women who deign not to straighten their hair and choose natural styles instead.

And in predominantly white schools, black girls are being suspended for wearing their hair in Afros or braids, because the styles are deemed “inappropriate” or considered a “distraction” in the classroom.

The cascade of cases prompted state Sen. Holly Mitchell (D-Los Angeles) to sponsor legislation this year that made California the first state in the nation to outlaw discrimination in workplaces or public schools against black people who wear natural hairstyles. Several other states are in the process of following suit.

Mitchell has worn her hair in tiny dreadlocks, called sister locs, for the past 15 years. “I don’t have time for high-maintenance hair,” she said. “I’ve done it all — pressed, braided, cut it off for short naturals two or three times over the years.”

The new law pushes back against the perception that there is something inherently untidy about black people’s natural hair, something discomforting about its very appearance.

“The language they’re using,” Mitchell said, “is that if I braid my daughter’s hair and send her to school then that’s somehow inappropriate — that she has a responsibility to not be a distraction to others. That is so deeply offensive to me.”

Jasmine Hamilton learned the hard way why the new law is needed, though it came too late to help her.

She wore her hair straight for the interview that landed her first corporate job, with a giant retail chain. But when she came to work one day with her own natural halo of curls, her manager pulled her aside and asked what she’d done to her hair.

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“I tried to make a joke, but he didn’t laugh,” she recalled. “My colleagues were questioning me too.” Her boss began nitpicking her work and she was ultimately let go.

“I was devastated,” she told me from her chair at Kim’s Touch of Class salon, as Dafney expertly flat-ironed her long thick hair. Hamilton works in real estate now and she’s not going to take the chance that her hairstyle might turn people off.

“I’m self conscious about wearing my hair curly because of that ordeal,” she said. “It’s not fair, but your hair affects the way you’re perceived even before you speak.”

In the chair next to her, LaShawnna Courtney, a natural hair stylist, was attending a stream of clients, parting their hair into small neat squares, a first step in the painstaking process of braiding in extensions that protect the natural hair as it grows.

There was the 12-year-old who opted for braids to end the daily battles with her hair. The middle-aged woman whose heat-damaged hair led her to switch from wigs and weaves to braids with gold highlights. And the nurse who needs a break from the ordeal of tending the Afro she’s been growing for years.

Every woman I talked to in the salon used the word “journey” to describe a styling evolution that began with a mind-set change.

It took Linda Jackson two years “to get comfortable with my natural self,” she said. “That’s how long it took for my hair to grow long enough for me to cut the damage off and start fresh.”

Lorraine Phillips, the nurse, began her natural hair journey in 2015, scouring websites and studying YouTube videos to learn how best to manage and style her dense locks.

The learning curve has been steep: “You have to find the right products to nourish the hair, loosen the curls, repair the damage done over the years. It takes a lot of practice. And a lot of patience,” she said.

She’s learning to love her hair, she said. “But I’m not quite there yet.”

And my three daughters have gone through their own hair journeys, from braids to twists, locks, Afros, buns or simply wild, curly and free.

They’ve discovered all their hair can do, made peace with its shortcomings, and realized that “good hair” doesn’t have to be “slippery.”


Police are searching for five men suspected of forcing their way into a home in Sherman Oaks late Wednesday, tying up the residents and ransacking the property.

At least one of the men was armed with a handgun when the group stormed the house in the 4500 block of Tyrone Avenue about 10 p.m., said Los Angeles Police Officer Drake Madison.

After tying up the residents, the robbers rifled through their belongings and took cash and jewelry, police said. It was not immediately clear how many people were home at the time, but one of the victims was able to untie himself and ran to a neighbor’s house for help, Madison said.

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“Suddenly we heard some banging on the door, and it was one of the victims. He was tied up. He had a tie around his wrist and was in his underwear. He was scared, obviously, so we called the police,” neighbor Craig Mayo told reporters at the scene.

Police said the robbers fled in a black Dodge Caravan. A description of them was not immediately available.


Earthquake: 3.4 quake hits in Ventura

November 7, 2019 | News | No Comments

A magnitude 3.4 earthquake was reported Thursday at 5:05 a.m. Pacific time in Ventura, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

The earthquake occurred two miles from Oxnard and 12 miles from Santa Paula.

In the last 10 days, there has been one earthquake of magnitude 3.0 or greater centered nearby.

An average of 234 earthquakes with magnitudes between 3.0 and 4.0 occur per year in California and Nevada, according to a recent three-year data sample.

The earthquake occurred at a depth of 8.0 miles. Did you feel this earthquake? Consider reporting what you felt to the USGS.

Even if you didn’t feel this small earthquake, you never know when the Big One is going to strike. Ready yourself by following our five-step earthquake preparedness guide and building your own emergency kit.

This story was automatically generated by Quakebot, a computer application that monitors the latest earthquakes detected by the USGS. A Times editor reviewed the post before it was published. If you’re interested in learning more about the system, visit our list of frequently asked questions.


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Laura Terruso’s “Good Girls Get High” debuted on the festival circuit in the fall of 2018, but it’s a shame that it’s not hitting theaters until late 2019, because, unfortunately, “Booksmart” scooped it. Written by Terruso and Jennifer Nashorn Blankenship, based on a book by Sarah Miller, one can’t help but note the similarities in the two films, which both involve a couple of goody two-shoes overachievers flirting with debauchery at the end of high school. The “good girls” in question are Sam (Abby Quinn) and Danielle (Stefanie Scott), who find they’ve earned a dreaded “good girl” superlative in the yearbook. So they spark a joint, hit a party, and all hell breaks loose. It’s standard issue “Superbad” stuff, but with a nerdy female twist.

This slight comedy follows a well-known teen party genre formula, with friendly teachers (Danny Pudi), oddball cops (Lauren Lapkus), and parents, absentee (Matt Besser) or helicopter (Anne Ramsey). At the center of the conflict is Sam’s secret that she got into and declined Harvard, a video entreaty to the storied university serving as a framing device.

While the rest of the film feels slightly juvenile, Quinn, who costarred in “Landline,” keeps “Good Girls Get High” afloat, with her wide-eyed combination of pathos and humor that vacillates from deadpan to goofy. You buy into the story because you buy into Sam’s plight, her awkward missteps and glorious triumphs, and Quinn makes that story take flight.

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