Two months after her husband received national attention for anti-President Trump comments, Ayesha Curry took issue this week with the Trump administration's proposed budget cuts. "For the budget cuts to affect a program like No Kid Hungry, where all these kids are able to go to school, learn better because they were hungry … that that could potentially be taken away, is so hurtful," Curry said. Curry, an ambassador for No Kid Hungry, a national nonprofit that works toward ending child hunger in the U.S., called it "devastating" that White House budget chief Mick Mulvaney recently asserted that there is no evidence that after-school programs that feed children improve their academic performance. A blog post on the No Kid Hungry website disputes Mulvaney's claim, saying that 1 in 6 U.S. children don't get the food they need, which hurts their development in "profound ways." Honoring "We Believe:" The Warriors have invited every member of their 2006-07 "We Believe" team to one of Golden State's Western Conference semifinal games to celebrate the 10-year anniversary of their first-round upset of Dallas, the first time in NBA history a No. 8 seed outlasted a No. 1 seed in a...