Friday,  May 30, 2014 • Vol. 16--No. 316 • 31 of 34

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Mark Zuckerberg, wife Priscilla Chan donate $120 million to SF Bay Area schools

• MENLO PARK, Calif. (AP) -- Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, are donating $120 million to the San Francisco Bay Area's public school system.
• The couple's gift will be spread over the next five years and is the biggest allocation to date of the $1.1 billion in Facebook stock the couple pledged last year to the nonprofit Silicon Valley Community Foundation.
• "Education is incredibly expensive and this is a drop in the bucket. What we are trying to do is catalyze change by exploring and promoting the development of new interventions and new models," Chan said in an interview Thursday at Facebook's Menlo Park, California, headquarters.
• The first $5 million will go to school districts in San Francisco, Ravenswood and Redwood City and will focus on principal training, classroom technology and helping students transition from the 8th to the 9th grade. The couple and their foundation, called Startup: Education, determined the issues of most urgent need based on discussions with school administrators and local leaders.
• Zuckerberg and Chan, a pediatrician, discussed the donation in an exclusive interview with the Associated Press. It was Chan's first significant step into the public spotlight and the couple's premier interview together. The two met while studying at Harvard and married in their Palo Alto backyard on May 19, 2012 -- the day after Facebook's stock began publicly trading in a rocky initial public offering that now seems a distant memory. In 2010, they joined Giving Pledge, an effort led by Microsoft founder Bill Gates and Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett to get the country's richest people to donate most of their wealth.
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Rangers eliminate Canadiens in 6 games, reach Stanley Cup finals for 1st time in 20 years

• NEW YORK (AP) -- Henrik Lundqvist was perfect on a night he needed to be.
• After one of the toughest games of his career, the New York goalie bounced back with a performance that put the Rangers in the Stanley Cup finals.
• Lundqvist wasn't overly busy in stopping all 18 shots he faced, but there was no margin for error as Dominic Moore's second-period goal was the only offense in

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