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CONTEST NOT AS

OLD AS CLAIMED
WEEKEND JOURNAL PAGE 19

GUNMEN ATTACK

KRUGER IS TOO
GOOD TO IGNORE

SIXDEAD IN BANGLADESH RESTAURANT


WORLD PAGE 32

SPORTS PAGE 11

Leading local news coverage on the Peninsula


www.smdailyjournal.com

Weekend July 2-3, 2016 XVI, Edition 275

Brown strengthens gun laws


Governor signs six new measures to require background checks for ammo, no more high-capacity magazines
By Jonathan J. Cooper
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SACRAMENTO Gov. Jerry


Brown signed six stringent guncontrol measures Friday that will
require people to turn in highcapacity magazines and mandate
background checks for ammunition
sales, as California Democrats seek

Jerry Brown

to strengthen
gun laws that are
already among
the strictest in
the nation.
Brown vetoed
five other bills,
i n cl udi n g
requirement to
register home-

made firearms and report lost or


stolen weapons to authorities.
The Democratic governors
action is consistent with his mixed
record on gun control. Some of the
enacted bills duplicate provisions
of a November ballot measure by
Democratic Lt. Gov. Gavin
Newsom. Some of the vetoed measures also appear in Newsoms ini-

tiative.
My goal in signing these bills
is to enhance public safety by
tightening our existing laws in a
responsible and focused manner,
while protecting the rights of lawabiding gun owners, Brown wrote
in a one-sentence message to lawmakers.
Gun control measures have long

been popular with the Democratic


lawmakers who control the
California Senate and Assembly.
But they stepped up their push this
year following the December
shooting in San Bernardino by a
couple who pledged allegiance to
the Islamic State group.

See GUNS, Page 23

Renovation boom
brings community
character concern
Peninsula grappling with
new-look neighborhoods
By Austin Walsh
PHOTO COURTESY OF ANDREW MICHAEL

DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

The recent home building, rehabilitation


and renovation boom along the Peninsula
has given way to the construction of many
larger, more modern homes, changing the
face of neighborhoods throughout San
Mateo County and roiling some residents in
the process.
The home building project uptick in communities such as San Carlos, Belmont and
Burlingame brought forward questions
regarding the value of preserving the traditional look and feel of neighborhoods
amidst a broader shift in community character.
Some fear a growing preference for modern
architecture in Burlingame will threaten the
historic appeal of neighborhoods, while the
Belmont community continues to grapple
with proposed zoning amendments making
way for home expansions which some residents claim are too big.
In San Carlos, discussions are building
toward potentially restricting property subdivisions and home sizes. San Carlos Mayor
Cameron Johnson said in an email such frustrations are so widespread, officials have
started considering policy changes aimed at
reining in development of residences which
may not blend with their surroundings.
We have heard concerns from residents

See HOMES, Page 23

Donor Carol Hatch and Andrew Michael, of Half Moon Bay, finally got to
meet in person at the Gift of Lifes annual gala this year.

After years, Half Moon Bay


man meets stem cell donor
Gift of Life registry connects cancer patient, match
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

AUSTIN WALSH/ DAILY JOURNAL

The renovation and home building uptick in Burlingame has


brought on a discussion about a shift in architectural preference, as more modern, larger homes are constructed next door
to traditional residences like, at top, on Paloma Avenue. Center,
new home construction, like here on Mills Avenue in Burlingame,
has become increasingly popular. At bottom, bold, modern
homes are becoming more common in Burlingame.

Sheriff announces early retirement


By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

San Mateo County Sheriff Greg


Munks announced he will retire
from elected office effective July
16 citing a heart condition for
which hes been on medical leave.

Greg Munks

Munks would
have had two
remaining years
as the countys
top law enforcement
officer
after being reelected in 2014.

Undersheriff Carlos Bolanos has


been serving as acting sheriff and
will continue to do so while the
county Board of Supervisors determines how to fill his vacancy,
according to a press release.

See SHERIFF, Page 5

Andrew Michael and Carol Hatch


may have only met in person for
the first time in June, but their
story truly began more than a
decade ago as strangers living on
opposite sides of the country who
would forever change each others
lives.
The two have a lot in common,
more than shared hobbies or religious backgrounds, Michael now
carries Hatchs stem cells and Tcells as he continues to battle nonHodgkin lymphoma.

Michael, a 57-year-old Half


Moon Bay resident and seismologist for the U. S. Geological
Survey, was diagnosed with a
slow-growing form of cancer in
2003. After trying several forms
of treatments from experimental
drug trials to chemo, doctors recommended he try a bone marrow
stem cell transplant in 2013.
Flash back more than a decade
earlier at an East Coast temple,
Hatch joined the Gift of Life
Marrow Registry after a member of
her parents congregation hosted a

See DONOR, Page 24

Senator defends DUI interlock bill


Jerry Hill, MADD raise concerns about DMV report
By Samantha Weigel
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

State Sen. Jerry Hill and officials


with Mothers Against Drunk
Driving have raised concerns over a
recently released Department of
Motor Vehicles report that questions
the efficacy of DUI ignition interlock devices.
Hill, D-San Mateo, authored legislation to require those convicted of

We Smog ALL CARS


0JM$IBOHFt4BGFUZ$IFDL

drunk driving to
install the device
for between six
months and three
years depending
on their number
of
offenses.
Although
the
Jerry Hill
DMV announced
this week it wasnt ready to recommend the program

See DUI, Page 22

FOR THE RECORD

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thought for the Day


Courage is the price that life exacts for
granting peace. The soul that knows it not,
knows no release from little things.
Amelia Earhart (1897-1937?).

This Day in History

1937

Aviator Amelia Earhart and navigator


Fred Noonan disappeared over the
Pacic Ocean while attempting to
make the rst round-the-world ight
along the equator.

In 1 5 6 6 , French astrologer, physician and professed


prophesier Nostradamus died in Salon (sah-LOHN).
In 1 7 7 6 , the Continental Congress passed a resolution
saying that these United Colonies are, and of right ought
to be, free and independent States.
In 1 8 8 1 , President James A. Gareld was shot by Charles
J. Guiteau at the Washington railroad station; Gareld died
the following September. (Guiteau was hanged in June
1882.)
In 1 9 2 6 , the United States Army Air Corps was created.
In 1 9 5 5 , The Lawrence Welk Show premiered on ABCTV under its original title, The Dodge Dancing Party.
In 1 9 6 1 , author Ernest Hemingway shot himself to death
NICK ROSE/DAILY JOURNAL
at his home in Ketchum, Idaho.
Renderings and drawings show the renovation plans of San Francisco International Airports Terminal 1 during a press
In 1 9 6 4 , President Lyndon B. Johnson signed into law a conference at the airport Wednesday.
sweeping civil rights bill passed by Congress.
In 1 9 7 6 , the U.S. Supreme Court, in Gregg v. Georgia,
establish an institution of knowledge. mystery solving board game Clue. The
ruled 7-2 the death penalty was not inherently cruel or
other weapons in the game are the knife,
The nephew died in 1835 without heirs.
unusual.
candlestick, revolver, rope and wrench.
***
In 1 9 8 6 , ruling in a pair of cases, the Supreme Court
***
Congress passed an act that established
upheld afrmative action as a remedy for past job discrimithe Smithsonian Institute in 1846. The
The 1985 movie Clue, based on the
nation.
act was signed into law by President board game, was set in New England in
James Polk (1795-1849).
In 1 9 9 1 , actress Lee Remick died in Los Angeles at age 55.
1954.
***
***
A collection of lunch boxes from the
Actor Tim Curry, born in 1946 in
Smithsonians National Museum of Britain, starred as Wadsworth the butler in
American History was a traveling exhibit the movie Clue. He began his career as
at museums across the country two years the transvestite Dr. Frank-N-Furter in the
When SPAM first came on the market in ago. The Lunch Box Memories exhibit cult classic movie Rocky Horror Picture
1937 it was called Hormel Spiced Ham. displayed some of the most rare and Show (1975).
The Hormel company held a contest ask- expensive collectible lunch boxes since
***
ing people to submit a new name for the they were first made in 1860.
Movie actress Jayne Mansfield (1933***
canned meat. The winning name was
1967) was the National Hot Dog Queen in
The estimated value of an original 1950.
SPAM, a combination of the sp from
spiced with the am from ham. The prize Superman metal lunchbox from 1967,
***
with thermos, is $820.
was $100.
Prior to 1901, hot dogs were called
Actress/Model
NASCAR legend
Actress Wendy
***
***
dachshund sausages. Sports cartoonist Tad
Jerry Hall is 60.
Richard Petty is 79.
Schaal is 62.
Superman weighs 225 pounds, and is 6 Dorgan [1877-1929] coined the term hot
In 1998, the Smithsonian Institute
Former Philippine rst lady Imelda Marcos is 87. Jazz musi- added a can of SPAM to its pop-culture feet 4 inches tall. His hair is always parted
dog in a cartoon because he did not know
cian Ahmad Jamal is 86. Actor Robert Ito is 85. Actress Polly exhibit.
on the left.
how to spell dachshund.
Holliday is 79. Former White House chief of staff John H.
***
***
***
Sununu is 77. Former Mexican President Vicente Fox is 74.
Superman is faster than a speeding bulThe Smithsonian is the worlds largest
Dachshund translates to badger dog in
Writer-director-comedian Larry David is 69. Luci Baines museum complex. The 16 museums in let, more powerful than a locomotive, and German. The breed of dogs was originally
Johnson, daughter of President Lyndon B. Johnson, is 69. Washington, D.C., and two museums in able to leap tall buildings in a single bred in Germany in the 1600s to hunt for
Actor Saul Rubinek is 68. Rock musician Roy Bittan (Bruce New York that comprise the Smithsonian bound. Can you specifically name his badgers.
Springsteen & the E Street Band) is 67. Rock musician Gene have over 142 million objects in their superpowers? See answer at end.
***
***
Taylor is 64. Actor Jimmy McNichol is 55. Country singer collection.
Ans wer: Supermans powers have
One of Supermans enemies is Poison changed over the years, but he is usually
***
Guy Penrod is 53. Rock musician Dave Parsons (Bush) is 51.
There were over 24 million visitors to Ivy. She is able to manipulate plants and depicted as having flight, speed, X-ray
Actress Yancy Butler is 46.
she can make toxins from plants.
the Smithsonian museums each year.
vision and heat vision, super hearing,
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
***
***
super breath (he can extinguish fires) and
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Due to risk of lead poisoning, lead- freeze breath. He in impenetrable and he is
James Smithson (1765-1829), an
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
English chemist, stated in his will that if based paint was banned in the United immortal. The only thing that can hurt
one letter to each square,
Superman is Kryptonite, radioactive
his nephew Henry James Hungerford died States in 1978.
to form four ordinary words.
***
remains of Supermans native planet
without heirs, the Smithson estate would
DOYLD
A lead pipe is one of the weapons in the Krypton
go to the United States of America to
2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
All Rights Reserved.

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Local Weather Forecast

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The San Mateo Daily Journal


1900 Alameda de las Pulgas, Suite 112, San Mateo, CA 94403
Publisher: Jerry Lee
Editor in Chief: Jon Mays
jerry@smdailyjournal.com
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Saturday : Sunny. Patchy fog in the morning. Highs in the upper 60s to mid
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the afternoon. Saturday ni g ht: Mostly
clear in the evening then becoming cloudy.
Patchy fog after midnight. Lows in the mid
50s.
Sunday : Cloudy in the morning then becoming sunny. Patchy fog in the morning. Highs in the upper 60s to
mid 70s. Sunday ni g ht: Mostly clear in the evening then
becoming cloudy. Patchy fog after midnight. Lows in the 50s.
Independence Day : Cloudy in the morning then becoming
sunny. Patchy fog. Highs in the upper 60s to mid 70s. Mo nday
ni g ht:Mostly clear in the evening then becoming cloudy.
Patchy fog. Lows in the mid 50s.

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information along with a jpeg photo to news@smdailyjournal.com. Free obituaries are edited for style, clarity, length and grammar. If you would like to have an obituary printed
more than once, longer than 200 words or without editing, please submit an inquiry to our advertising department at ads@smdailyjournal.com.

LOCAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

San Mateo officers accused of groping woman


Two San Mateo police officers were sued in
federal court on Wednesday for allegedly
escalating a traffic stop over a broken tail
light to a search of the vehicle and occupants without cause, groping the woman
passenger in the process.
The suit, filed in U.S. District Court in
Oakland, alleges that the two San Mateo
police officers, identified as Officer Faysal
Abi-Chahine and Officer Derrick Jarvis,
pulled over Jose Galindo while he was driving on Aug. 26 last year with a woman passenger.
San Mateo police told the Daily Journal
the department immediately investigated
following the citizens Aug. 28, 2015, complaint about the incident, but did not find
sufficient evidence of the alleged misconduct.
According to the suit, Galindo complied
with officers and promptly turned over his
drivers license and vehicle registration
when asked. Abi-Chahine also asked the
woman for her drivers license, even though
she wasnt driving, but she could only pro-

vide her Costco membership card and provided her date of birth.
Abi-Chahine then ordered her out of the
car and accused her of being under the influence of drugs, according to the suit. He
aimed a flashlight into her eyes, asked her to
stick out her tongue and took her pulse.
He told her to go to the back of the patrol
vehicle and turn around. He said he was
going to search her from behind and then put
both his hands in her pockets and groped her
twice, according to the suit.
The woman loudly protested AbiChahines actions repeatedly. Meanwhile,
Galindo had been cuffed and told to sit on the
curb while Jarvis searched his car for drugs.
Searching the woman was not based on
reasonable suspicion and was clearly pretextual by Abi-Chahine who sought to gratify his perverted, depraved, illicit sexual
desire, attorneys for the plaintiffs wrote in
the suit.
After the 20-minute search, Galindo and
the woman were let go without even a citation, according to the suit.
Galindo and the woman are seeking
unspecified damages from the officers and

department for unreasonable search and


seizure, assault and battery, false imprisonment and the department failing to properly
supervise and investigate officers, among
other allegations.
The city of San Mateo had yet to be served
with the case as of Friday, and officials noted
while civil court filings are open to the public, the city could not legally provide further
details of the departments own personnel
investigation.
San Mateo Police Department immediately initiated an investigation into the complaint. After completing a comprehensive
and thorough investigation, San Mateo
Police Department did not find sufficient
evidence to sustain any allegations of inappropriate sexual touching nor an illegal
search by our officers, according to a statement from the department.
Both Jarvis and Abi-Chahine remain
employed and in good standing with the
agency, according to the department.
The case is the second case of possible
sexual misconduct by an officer to hit the
116-member San Mateo Police Department
in recent months. In May, San Mateo

County District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe


said his office had been investigating
Officer Noah Winchester since October for
assaults on women while on duty at the
request of San Mateo and Burlingame police.
Few details have been revealed about those
potential assaults, and repeated requests for
information have been refused, citing the
ongoing investigation. Winchester has
since resigned from the department.
Winchester is also under investigation by
Sacramento police and the Sacramento
County Sheriffs Office for incidents that
happened during a previous stint as a police
officer for the Los Rios College District.
Those investigations also remain open.
On Friday, the department reaffirmed its
commitment to the city and its constituents
stating it is important to emphasize that we
encourage feedback from the community,
and that we take complaints very seriously
and investigate them with great rigor and
detail. Our priority is to provide police services that are exemplary, and do so with the
utmost professionalism and integrity while
respecting the rights of all members of our
community.

Police reports

MILLBRAE

after attacking a vehicle and several people,


including a deputy, and being found in possession of methamphetamine near El
Camino Real and Murchison Drive before
9:05 a.m. Friday, June 17.

Into x i cati o n. Two people were seen refusing to leave a bar on California Drive before
1:58 p.m. Saturday, June 25.

STAFF AND WIRE REPORT

No piggy bank?
$30 in change was stolen from an
unlocked vehicle on Burlingame Avenue
in Burlingame before 10:11 p. m.
Sunday, June 19.

Vandal i s m. The screen door of a residence


was damaged on the 500 block of
Capuchino Drive before 2:30 a.m. Saturday,
June 18.
Hi t-and-run. A driver was seen sideswiping a parked vehicle and fleeing the scene
on the 700 block of El Camino Real before
2:20 p.m. Friday, June 17.
Arres t. A 56-year-old man was arrested

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BURLINGAME
Di s turbance. A man was seen yelling in a
store and broke a glass on Burlingame
Avenue before 11:07 a.m. Saturday, June
25.

As s aul t. The driver of a blue Prius was


punched by a pedestrian near Burlingame
Avenue and Primrose Road before 8:19 p.m.
Sunday, June 19.
Reckl es s dri v i ng . A dark green Honda
was seen speeding on California Drive
before 9:12 a.m. Sunday, June 19.

LOCAL

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

Obituaries

Carney. Contributions may be mailed to


UCSF, PO Box 45339, SF CA 94145.

Paula Michelle Carney

Betty Jean Page

Paula Michelle Carney, of Millbrae, died


peacefully at UCSF Hospital June 30, 2016,
surrounded by many family members.
Paula loved deeply and passionately: her
very caring husband, two beautiful sons,
adoring parents, protective brothers, darling
nieces and a special
nephew,
numerous
extended family members, as well as everyone
else with whom she came
into contact. A powerful
life force is now missing
in our universe and Paula
Paula Carney Carney will be sorely
missed.
A mass will be held at St. Ignatius
Catholic Church in San Francisco 10 a.m.
Wednesday, July 6. A celebration of her life
will be 1 p.m. Thursday July 7 at Green Hills
Country Club in Millbrae.
Condolences may be sent care of Chapel
of the Highlands, 194 Millwood Drive,
Millbrae, CA 94030.
In lieu of flowers donations in memory of
Paula can be made to support liver transplant research at UCSF. Please make checks
payable to UCSF Foundation. On the memo
line please include liver transplant
research B1503 in memory of Paula

Betty Jean Page, born June 11, 1947, died


June 26, 2016 at the age of 69.
She lived in San Mateo
most of her life until she
moved to the Central
Valley about 15 years
ago.
Visitation will be
Tuesday, July 5 at
DeYoung
Memorial
Chapel,
601
N.
California St. Stockton,
Betty Page
CA 95202 from 4 p.m.-7
p. m. Funeral services
will be Wednesday, July 6 at MayFair
Seventh-day Adventist Church, 6940 N. El
Dorado St. Stockton, CA 95207 at 11 a.m.
Graveside service at Cypress Lawn
Memorial Park, 1370 El Camino Real
Colma, CA 94014 11 a.m. Thursday, July 7.

Christopher Durand
Christopher Durand, 1951-2016, died
June 18.
Despite his illness, he lived his life
brimming with joy, fun and the call of the
great outdoors until shortly before his passing.
Chris was in love with flying since a
small boy and spent a career in the wild blue

THE DAILY JOURNAL

yonder, capping his


career as a captain for
American Airlines. His
life was typically in
high gear, spending his
leisure time enjoying
long-distance bike rides,
skiing and scuba diving.
He pursued his sports
Christopher across the Americas and
in Europe.
Durand
Until recently, he was
a member of Project Bay Cat, an innovative
program that humanely manages the large
group of community cats living along the
Foster City levee in the San Francisco Bay
Area.
A life-long resident of San Mateo County,
Chris is survived by his brother Michael of
Westchester, New York; Michaels wife,
Marlene and two nephews, Adam Durand of
Chicago and Matthew Durand of Arcata
California. He is also survived by his cat
Dexter and by countless friends who will
remember Chris now and always.
As a pilot he never lost his way. And his
lifes direction was always truth north.

Josephine B. Cancilla
Josephine B. Cancilla, ofSan Bruno, died
June 29, 2016 surrounded by her loving
family.
She was 96.
She was the wife of 66 years to the late

Salvatore Cancilla. She


is survived by her daughter Marlene Spano (her
husband Robert). Her
son Ronald Cancilla preceded her in death in
2003. Grandmother of
Robert Spano (his wife
Jona), Deborah Dollosso
(her husband Victor),
Josephine
Jeffrey Spano and cherCancilla
ished grammy of Sarah
and Lucca Spano and Victor and Dean
Dollosso; also survived by other relatives
and friends.
She was a native ofSan Francisco, graduated fromGalileoHigh Schooland moved to
thePeninsula41 years ago.
Many thanks to the Kaiser Hospice
teamfor their care and support and Millbrae
Skilled Nursing for all the years she was
there.
Visitation will begin at 9:30 a. m.
Thursday, July 7 at Chapel of the
Highlands, 194 Millwood Drive at El
Camino Real in Millbrae. The procession
will then leave the chapel at 10:30 a.m. for
Our Lady of Angels Catholic Church,1721
Hillside Drive in Burlingame where the
funeral mass will be celebrated at 11 a.m.
committal
will
follow
atHolyCrossCemeteryin Colma.
Memorial contributions to your favorite
charity in her memory would be appreciated.

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Serving the Peninsula Area Since 1981

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Fridays
this Summer!
Do your kids like to play Minecraft? Would
you like a night out without the kids?
If so, then bring your kids to Tech Rocks
Fridays this Summer where they can build,
explore, collaborate and have fun playing
Minecraft in our safe and secure location.
Advanced registration is required.
Tech Rocks (near Bel Mateo Bowl)
4208 Olympic Ave. San Mateo, CA
Fridays, 6-9pm
$45 or $35 for existing students
Dinner: Included! Pizza, Chips, and box
drinks.
Space is limited.
Reserve your spot today at
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entity owning or controlling righs in the Minecraft name, trademark or copyright

LOCAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Local briefs
Five-month investigation
leads to sexual assault arrest
East Palo Alto police were able to arrest a
suspect Friday morning in connection with
a sexual assault of a female victim after a
five-month investigation.
East Palo Alto man Victor Marquez, 21,
was arrested at 8:30 a.m. in the 100 block of
Azalia Drive, near the Palo Alto Golf
Course.
At 1:12 a.m. on Feb. 4, officers were sent
to Embarcadero and Greer roads in Palo Alto
to investigate a sexual assault, police said.
The victim alleged to officers that she was
walking home when Marquez offered her a
ride and she accepted.

SHERIFF
Continued from page 1
The board is expected to consider next
steps at its July 12 meeting, which could
include appointing someone to fill the
remainder of Munks term or hold a special
election, said Warren Slocum, president of
the Board of Supervisors.
[Munks] has a lot to be proud of and of
course, we all wish him and his family the
very best in this challenge, Slocum said.
Munks had announced earlier this year
that he would not be seeking re-election in
2018, prompting Bolanos to throw his hat
in the ring. But on Friday, Munks said he
would be stepping down in two weeks due to
an ongoing health condition.
After much thought and consultation
with my family and doctor, I have made the
difficult decision to retire. A heart procedure
scheduled for July 11th is the third time I
have attempted to correct a condition that,
while not life-threatening, does affect my
quality of life and my ability to maintain a
full-time work schedule, Munks said in a
statement.
Munks spent 14 years as undersheriff to

But when she got in the vehicle Marquez


allegedly did not drive toward her home,
according to police.
She asked to be let out but allegedly
Marquez refused. Instead, the victim
alleged, he drove her to an undisclosed location in East Palo Alto and sexually assaulted
her until she escaped from the vehicle.
After the assault, investigators were able
to recover the suspects DNA, which was
entered into the Combined DNA Index
System and a match was made, police said.
Detectives secured a $1 million warrant
for Marquez and he was arrested without
trouble.
Marquez was booked into the county jail
on suspicion of kidnapping and sexual
assault, according to police.
Any witnesses to the assault or anyone
with information about it is urged to get in
then-sheriff and now Supervisor Don
Horsley. Munks was elected as sheriff in
June 2006 and has been the top vote getter
during two subsequent elections. He has
been credited with revamping the countys
correctional system in response to overcrowding and in reaction to the states
Prison Realignment Plan. He also oversaw
construction of the countys new state-ofthe-art Maple Street Correctional Center,
which opened earlier this year.
The things that I really appreciated about
him where that he focused on reducing
recidivism and focused on getting people
back to productive lives rather than just
locking people up, Slocum said, noting
Munks oversaw the statewide implementation of the voter-approved Proposition 47,
which reduced many non-violent crimes to
misdemeanors. There was a major shift in
public policy in California and I think he
handled that transition with professionalism.
During Munks tenure, the Sheriffs Office
has also assumed policing responsibilities
for the cities of San Carlos, Half Moon Bay
and Millbrae.
It has been an honor and privilege to lead
the outstanding men and women of the
Sheriffs Office for the past nine and a half
years. I have tremendous respect for the

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

touch with East Palo Alto police anonymously at epa@tipnow.org or by sending a


text or leaving a voicemail at (650) 4096792 or calling Detective Steve Ong at
(650) 798-5958.

Minimum wage hike to


$13 takes effect in San Francisco
Starting Friday, the minimum wage in San
Francisco was increased from $12.25 to $13
an hour as part of a series of increases that
will see the citys hourly wages climb to
$15 by 2018, according to city officials.
Mayor Ed Lee celebrated the increase,
which comes ahead of the Fourth of July
weekend, this morning during a news conference at his office.
Calling the increase a milestone, Lee said
the pay hike would help working families
work they do every day to keep our community safe, Munks said.
Munks began his career in 1977 as a
deputy sheriff with the county and spent
time as an officer with the Palo Alto Police
Department between 1981 and 1993.
In 2007, Munks ran into some controversy after he was briefly detained at a massage
parlor, with Bolanos outside, during a Las
Vegas police sting labeled Operation
Dollhouse. Neither were ever charged and
Munks later admitted though he thought it
was a legitimate business, it was not.
County Manager John Maltbie thanked
Munks for his service and leadership, particularly during the Proposition 47 transition, and expressed continued confidence in
the department.
Sheriff Munks provided invaluable leadership as the county wrestled with significant law enforcement issues like absorbing
state prisoners and seeing through the
opening of a new program-focused jail that
goes beyond simply warehousing people,
Maltbie said in a press release. He has been
an asset to the Sheriffs Office and the county as a whole. While his departure is certainly a loss, his dedication has created a
stable framework for his department to continue thriving.

who are struggling in San Francisco.


We know that with our workforce, theres
still an affordability gap. A lot of people are
working two jobs to support their families.
So we must celebrate these moments where
we can get together to help them, Lee said.
The increase is the second in a set of
increases that will see the citys minimum
wage rise to $15 by 2018. In May 2015, the
citys wage increased from $11. 05 to
$12.25.
Its an honor to serve the city that supports some of the most aggressive and
strongest labor protections in the U.S.,
the citys Office of Labor Standards
Enforcement Director Pat Mulligan said.
Also Friday, the city of Sunnyvale will
see a minimum wage increase as well. The
wage will increase from $10.30 to $11,
according to city officials.

Around the state


Police: 3 deaths in wealthy
community were murder-suicide
SAN DIEGO The deaths of a teenage girl
and two women in a house in one of the
nations wealthiest communities were a murder-suicide, investigators confirmed Friday.
Michael Arya, who owned the home in
Rancho Santa Fe, north of San Diego, died of
cancer in April. This week, his sister fatally
stabbed his daughter and his business associate before killing herself, authorities said.
San Diego County Sheriffs Lt. Kenn Nelson
identified the sister as Sayeh Amini, 52. He
said she killed her 15-year-old niece, Hannah
Arya, and the associate, 56-year-old Ihnwon
Mia Shin. Amini then stabbed herself to death.
Deputies responding to reported child abuse
found the bodies Monday.
Nelson declined to comment further, saying
he wanted to first talk with the victims families.
Attorney Carl Starrett told reporters that
Amini was overwhelmed from handling her
brothers estate and seemed to be having a kind
of mental breakdown since his death. He said
Aminis husband had tried unsuccessfully to
get help for her, fearing she was suicidal.

Obituary

Vic Allen

July 6, 1924 - June 16, 2016

Vic Allen passed peacefully on June 16, 2016. The son of Victor
Lee Allen and Lena Hampton Allen. He was born on July 6 1924
and lived in San Mateo during his youth, graduating from San
Mateo High School in 1942. After high school he worked in the
San Francisco Kaiser Ship Yard welding on transport ships prior
to enlisting in the Army. He rose to the rank of Tech Sargent
and served in the Ordinance division repairing jeeps, trucks, tracks and tanks in the
European Theater.
Upon returning home he followed in his fathers footsteps becoming a journeyman lather
for 40 years. Vic worked on thousands of commercial building and houses in San Mateo
County including the rst homes to go up in Foster City.
Meeting his future bride Helen Bryant on a blind date, set up by friends, they were wed
on June 19, 1949. After several moves Helen and Vic and their three sons, Mark, Kent
and Grant settled down in Belmont in 1957. Vic is survived by his wife Helen, 3 sons,
Mark, Kent, Grant and their wives, 7 grandchildren and one great grandchild. Vics
Celebration of life will be at the Villa Capri at Varenna, Santa Rosa on July 22 at 2:00. In
lieu of owers donations can be made to Memorial Hospice 439 College Ave Santa Rosa,
CA 95401.

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Weekend July 2-3, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

The library at Garfi el d Co mmuni ty


Scho o l
in the Re dwo o d
Ci t y
El ementary Scho o l Di s tri ct received an
overhaul under the charitable contribution
of AbbVi e, a local pharmaceutical research
and development firm.
Volunteers renovated the librarys design,
installed new furniture and provided new
books and technology, among other efforts.
Ribbon cutting for the new facility was held
Thursday, June 23. The event marked the
second consecutive year the company has
offered such charity.
***

Heather Polcik, of Burlingame Intermediate School, and Bethany Lukash, of Burlingame High
School, received recognition as the Burlingame Rotary Clubs teachers of the year.
Jul i a Lund, of Menlo Park, graduated
from Uni o n Co l l eg e in New York. She
also won the schools Hans Hai nebach
Memo ri al Pri ze, which recognizes a student who has offered the best performance in
the field of Judaica.
***
Derek Azzo pardi , of Redwood City,
graduated from Ameri can Internati o nal
Co l l eg e.
***
Harri et Ro ths chi l d, of Portola Valley,
was named to the deans list at Co l by
Co l l eg e.
***
Nathan Mado ni ch, of San Bruno, graduated from Ohi o Wes l ey an Uni v ers i ty .
***
Bl ai r Jo hns o n, of Menlo Park, and
Natal i e Lo v el ace, of San Carlos, graduated from the Uni v ers i ty o f Vermo nt.
***
Whi tney Dammann, of Menlo Park,
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Adi b Farah, of San Mateo, graduated
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***
Jes s e Tho mas Cl ay , of San Carlos, was
named to the deans list at Cl e ms o n
Uni v ers i ty .
***
Cel es te Wo ng and Al ex andra Po rter,
of San Carlos, Ben Fi s her and Ethan
Do no g hue, of San Mateo, Hanna Hag l er,
of Belmont, Jo n Lang e and Betty Chen,
of Burlingame, Kel s y Wal l ace, of Foster
City, Heather Mel endez, of Menlo Park,
Ch e y e n n e Di c k e y , of Millbrae, were
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STATE

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

Violent crimes jump 10 percent in the state


By Don Thompson
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SACRAMENTO The number of violent


crimes jumped 10 percent across California
last year, reversing several years of declines,
the states attorney general reported Friday.
Homicides increased nearly 10 percent,
while robberies and aggravated assaults were
up more than 8 percent from 2014 to 2015,
Attorney General Kamala Harris said in a
series of crime reports. Aggravated assaults
with a firearm jumped 15.7 percent, while
assaults on peace officers increased by 10 percent.
The number of reported rapes increased from
9,397 in 2014 to 12,793 last year, though the
attorney generals office said the legal definition has changed so the two numbers cant be
directly compared.
The number of property crimes increased
more than 8 percent, led by double-digit
increases in vehicle and other thefts.
Burglaries dropped nearly 3 percent.
Harris, a Democrat who is running for the
U.S. Senate, did not comment on the reasons

Around the state


California proposal cracks
down on opioid doctor shoppers
SACRAMENTO A bill before the
California Legislature would make it more
difficult for addicts to obtain opioid prescriptions through so-called doctor shopping.
SB482 would crack down on the practice
by requiring providers to consult a database
of patient prescription histories before recommending the use of addictive drugs.
Advocates say a mandatory check would
identify at-risk patients and reduce opioids
in the marketplace.
Similar attempts have failed in the past,
but proponents hope the national opioid
epidemic and high-profile deaths such as
that of musician Prince will prompt action
this year.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention says more than 165,000 people
died from prescription opioid overdoses
from 1999 to 2014.
The California Medical Association is
opposed. It argues that lawmakers should
not control the practice of medicine.

Gov. Brown approves


$2 billion for homeless housing
SACRAMENTO California Gov. Jerry
Brown has approved spending $2 billion to
build permanent housing for homeless people with mental illnesses.
The Democratic governor announced
signing AB1618 on Friday.
The measure allows the state to sell bonds
for homeless shelters and repay the debt
with money from a 2004 voter-approved tax
on millionaires. It requires counties to provide supportive services for people housed
with state aid.
Legislative analysts expect the measure
to fund at least 14,000 units. Federal housing officials estimate more than 29,000
homeless Californians were living with
serious mental illness in 2015.
Senate Democrats proposed the idea, saying it will improve the quality of life for
people living in despair. It easily cleared
the Assembly and Senate last month.

Hospital association gives


$9 million to support tobacco tax
SACRAMENTO Californias lobbying
group for the hospital industry is giving a
$9 million boost for an initiative campaign
to raise tobacco taxes.
The California Hospital Associations
donation is the largest so far for the Save
Lives California committee. It says the
money will help the campaign sell its message against heavy-spending tobacco companies that oppose the tax.
California voters will decide in November
whether to levy a $2 tax on each pack of cigarettes. The initiative qualified for the ballot

for the increases. But her office noted in a


news release that violent and property crime
rates remain below 2010 levels.
Preliminary FBI crime figures for the first
half of 2015 also showed an increase in violent crime across many U.S. cities. Experts
have had difficulty pinpointing a cause or if it
is the start of an upward trend from historically low levels in recent years.
Year-to-year changes always have to be
taken with a grain of salt, said University of
California, Berkeley, criminologist Barry
Krisberg, formerly president of the National
Council on Crime and Delinquency. Increases
could be affected by surges in particular cities
or regions, he said.
Crime rates, particularly violent crime
rates, have just been dropping precipitously
for many years and this could be seen as a kind
of slight regression from that, Krisberg said.
The crime rate couldnt go down forever and
so youd expect to see an adjustment at a certain point.... It should cause us to take a closer look at whats going on and not assume
some simplistic answer to it.
Many factors could be to blame, from unem-

ployment rates to changes in sentencing patterns to fewer police on the streets, he said,
and it is difficult to isolate a particular one.
Criminal Justice Legal Foundation legal
director Kent Scheidegger said he blames the
crime increase on Californias shift in late
2011 to keeping lower-level offenders in
county jails instead of state prisons.
It confirms what weve been hearing anecdotally from law enforcement, reports from
individual cities, said Scheidegger, whose
organization advocates for crime victims.
However, experts studying the states
sweeping criminal justice realignment have
yet to find a related increase in crime.
Last year:
There were 1,861 homicides in
California, or 4.8 for every 100,000 residents.
That represents 164 more homicides
than 2014.
The rate is the same as in 2010 but up
from 2014.
Over the last decade, the homicide rate
has ranged from a high of 6.9 homicides per
100,000 in 2006 to a low of 4.4 in 2014.

Nearly 9 percent of the homicides were


deemed to be justifiable last year.
Of the 163 justifiable homicides, 130
were by police and the remaining 33 by citizens.
More than 70 percent of homicides were
committed with firearms last year, up more
than 9 percent from 2014.
The news came the same day that Gov. Jerry
Brown signed several laws increasing
Californias already strict gun regulations.
Voters will consider more gun restrictions on
the November ballot.
Hate crimes increased 10.4 percent last
year, with 837 reported statewide, Harris said
in a separate report.
The increase was led by a nearly 50 percent
jump in hate crimes involving a religious
bias, from 127 in 2014 to 190 in 2015. There
were 40 hate crimes involving Muslims last
year, up from 18 in 2014, while those targeting Jews increased from 80 in 2014 to 97 last
year.
The boost comes as presidential candidates
debate the wisdom of restricting Muslim
immigration into the United States.

Thursday and was assigned the title


Proposition 56 on Friday.
The tax revenue would go to state health,
tobacco prevention and control programs
and cancer research.
CHA previously donated $1 million to the
cigarette tax campaign.
Beth Miller, a spokeswoman for tobacco
giant Altria, says opponents also plan a
vigorous campaign.

Court: Southern California


water districts land buy cleared
SACRAMENTO Southern Californias
largest water supplier has been cleared to
buy sprawling farmland in the SacramentoSan Joaquin River Delta that could be used to
help build twin water tunnels.
The Sacramento Bee reported Thursday
(http://bit.ly/29hu1tr ) that Metropolitan
Water District can move ahead with the $175
million purchase, despite ongoing court
challenges.
A state appeals court lifted a temporary
stay that had stalled the sale.
Metropolitan says it might use the land
east of San Francisco to store earth and
equipment from a massive tunnel project
backed by Gov. Jerry Brown to send delta
water south.
Officials in San Joaquin and Contra Costa
counties sued, saying the deal should first
undergone
environmental
studies.
Metropolitan says it hasnt committed to
any plans.
The purchase may proceed as the lawsuit
plays out in court.

Dead whale stuck on popular


L.A.-area beach ahead of holiday
LOS ANGELES A dead humpback whale
was stuck on a popular Los Angeles-area
beach as the Fourth of July weekend got
underway Friday, with visitors urged to steer
clear of the huge carcass.
Small waves washed around the decomposing leviathan on Dockweiler Beach, a
long stretch of sand near the west end of Los
Angeles International Airport with an RV
park and extensive parking that usually
draws big crowds.
Unfortunately, its here on the Fourth of
July weekend when people want to go to the
beach, lifeguard Capt. Kenichi Haskett told
KABC-TV. We ask that people not go in the
water near here because you see the fluids are
seeping out of it now, and those fluids pose
a hazard.
Lifeguards posted yellow caution tape to
keep beachgoers away, but some children
dipped their feet into the waves nearby. The
whale, estimated to be some 40 feet long,
floated ashore Thursday night.
Biologists took tissue samples to determine how the animal died. Authorities
planned to wait for an evening high tide that
might help refloat the whale and allow it to
be towed well out to sea. A bulldozer stood
by to help.

Expires 11-30-2015

NATION

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

U.S.: Up to 116 civilians killed in drone strikes


By Deb Riechmann
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Peeling back some of


the secrecy of Americas drone strikes on
suspected terrorists, the Obama administration on Friday said it has killed up to 116
civilians in counterterror attacks in
Pakistan, Yemen and other places where the
U. S. is not engaged in active, on-theground warfare.
The first-ever public assessment is a
response to mounting pressure for more
information about lethal U.S. operations
overseas. Human rights and other groups
quickly complained that the administration
undercounted civilian casualties and called
on the White House to release far more
information.
The report by National Intelligence
Director James Clapper said the U.S. conducted 473 counterterror strikes, including
those by unmanned drones, between
January 2009 and December 2015. He did
not mention where the strikes occurred, but
the Defense Department and CIA have pursued targets in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia

Around the nation


Lawsuit: Disabled woman
injured by security at airport
MEMPHIS, Tenn. A disabled St. Jude
Childrens Research Hospital patient was
injured, and then arrested, by security workers at a Memphis International Airport
checkpoint, a lawsuit alleges.
News media outlets report that 19-year-old
Hannah Cohen was flying home to
Chattanooga on June 30, 2015, after receiving treatment at Memphis-based St. Jude.
Attorneys say Hannah Cohen has an impairment from radiation and removal of a brain
tumor, and she is limited in her ability to
talk, walk, stand, see and hear.
The lawsuit says an alarm went off as she
and her mother were going through a security checkpoint operated by the Memphis
International Airport Police Department and
the Transportation Safety Administration.
Hannah Cohen became disoriented by the
alarm and the security workers attempts to
search her, the lawsuit says.
The security personnel failed to recognize that she was confused because of her
obvious disability and was unable to cooperate with the search, Cohens lawyers, Kelly
Pearson and William Hardwick, wrote in the
lawsuit.

and Libya. The data didnt include strikes in


Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan, which the U.S.
considers areas of active hostilities.
The attacks killed an estimated 2,372 to
2,581 combatants in those seven years, the
report said. Between 64 and 116 non-combatants were killed.
The administration noted the much higher
estimates by non-governmental organizations, which go as high as 900 for the same
timeframe. Senior U.S. officials cited several reasons for the discrepancy, including the
governments access to sensitive intelligence that helps it more accurately identify
the deceased. Groups that have been tracking U.S. drone operations for years werent
convinced.
The numbers reported by the White
House today simply dont add up, and were
disappointed by that, said Federico
Borello, executive director of Center for
Civilians in Conflict in Washington.
Were concerned that as more countries
gain access to armed drone technology, its
more likely that drones will be used as a first
response in conflicts and more likely civilians will pay the price.
The Bureau of Investigative Journalism

U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen and


other hot spots have claimed up to 116
civilian deaths.
said the administrations number is a fraction of the 380 to 801 civilian deaths it
has tallied. It records such deaths on the
basis local and international journalists
reports, advocacy organizations, leaked
government documents, court papers and
field investigations. The London-based
group credited the administrations release
as a welcome step toward greater transparency, but said more information on
specific strikes was needed to reconcile

different assessments.
Seeking to enhance safeguards for civilian protection for the rest of his presidency
and beyond, Obama also signed an executive order Friday that details U.S. policies
to limit non-combatant casualties. It makes
protecting civilians a central element in
U.S. military operations planning.
The order requires the government to publicize the number of strikes each year, and
combatants and civilians killed. The 2016
report is due May 1, 2017.
But the directive isnt necessarily binding
on the next president, who could change the
policy with an executive order of his or her
own.
Bill Roggio of the Long War Journal,
which also tracks drone strikes, said the
administrations report will do little to
quell the criticism of those who want full
disclosure of civilian casualties. This would
include the names of those killed and dates,
locations and other details on the strikes.
Roggio, who has estimated 207 civilian
deaths over the same period in Pakistan and
Yemen alone, said discrepancies would narrow if the U.S. and observers agreed on the
details of several especially lethal strikes.

Traffic deaths surged in 2015 as driving hit new record


By Joan Lowy
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Trafc deaths surged


last year as drivers racked up more miles
behind the wheel than ever before, a result
of an improved economy and lower gas
prices, according to preliminary government data released Friday.
Fatalities rose 7.7 percent to 35,200 in
2015, the National Highway Trafc Safety
Administration said. That overall rate was
signicantly outpaced by non-motorist
trafc deaths: Bicycle fatalities were up 13
percent; pedestrian deaths rose 10 percent,
and motorcyclist deaths rose by 9 percent.
Last year was the deadliest driving year
since 2008, when 37, 423 people were
killed. It was also the year in which
American drove 3.1 trillion miles, more
than ever before.
The fatality rate for 2015 increased to
1.12 deaths per 100 million vehicle miles
traveled (VMT), up from 1.08 deaths in
2014.
The information comes as tens of millions of Americans were hitting the road for
the Fourth of July holiday, one of the
busiest and deadliest days on the year on the
nations roadways.

Historical data show that, after peaking in


the 1970s, trafc deaths have uctuated
quite a bit while generally trending downward, according to the Insurance Institute
for Highway Safety. Large dips in deaths
have corresponded to shocks to the economy: the oil embargo of the mid-1970s, the
recessions of the early 1980s and early
1990s and the more recent downturn that
began with the subprime mortgage crisis.
Its not just that Americans drive more
miles when the economy improves; its the
kind of miles they drive, said Russ Rader, a
spokesman for the insurance institute.
What comes back after a recession is the
optional driving thats riskier, like going
out on the weekends or taking long trips
different driving than the daily commute.
The national average price of gas in 2015
was $2.40 per gallon, which was the second-cheapest annual average of the past
decade, according to AAA. It was about 94
cents per gallon less than the annual average in 2014, which also saw the lowest
number of trafc deaths 32,675 since
Harry Truman was president.
The upticks (in deaths) were seeing correlate to lower fuel prices, but we dont want
to give ourselves that excuse so we are digging into different areas where we can have

an impact on this, Transportation


Secretary Anthony Foxx told journalists
earlier this week. The department, which
includes NHTSA, is looking at how
advances in automotive technology can
reduce the death toll, he said. NHTSAs
revamping last year of its safety rating system for new cars to include automated emergency braking technologies may help, he
said.
Motorcycle deaths have risen in part
because of weak state laws on wearing helmets, said Jonathan Adkins, executive
director of the Governors Highway Safety
Association, which represents state highway safety ofces. A majority of states no
longer require riders to wear helmets, he
said.
Motorcyclists are a bigger and bigger
percentage of deaths each year, Adkins
said.
Just because the state of the economy is a
signicant factor in the rise and fall of trafc deaths, it doesnt mean that policymakers are powerless, Rader said. If people followed a few simple measures like driving
more slowly, buckling up and wearing a helmet when riding a motorcycle, he said, the
increases were seeing now wouldnt be as
large.

NATION

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

Trump, Clinton eye different priorities in VPs


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Donald Trump wants a


running mate who has what he lacks
political experience. Hillary Clinton is putting a premium on diversity as she searches
for a No. 2.
Yet the presidential rivals are running
strikingly similar processes for tapping
their vice presidential picks: relying on
prominent Washington lawyers to comb
through the background of top contenders,
seeking guidance from a small circle of
trusted advisers and family members, and
weighing their personal chemistry with
prospects.
Trump, a wealthy businessman who has
never held public office, is mulling a small
number of political veterans. Hes seriously
considering former House Speaker Newt
Gingrich, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie,
Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions and Indiana
Gov. Mike Pence, according to people with
direct knowledge of the vetting process.
Were vetting a lot of good people and
we have a lot of interest in people that want
to leave high positions and do this, Trump
said Thursday.
The presumptive Republican nominee
appears less concerned about diversity. His
campaign chairman has said publicly that
Trump is not interested in choosing a
woman or minority for the sake of appealing to a particular segment of the electorate.
The confirmed contenders are all white men
over age 50.
Clinton has said she wants a running mate
who is well-prepared to become president.
But Democrats say shes also giving priority to diversity and has been weighing
women, Hispanic and black candidates a

Its rare that a running mate dramatically shifts the trajectory of a


presidential race. Yet its still among the most important decisions
nominees face during the general election and their choice is
viewed as a reflection of their priorities and values.
nod to the voting blocs
Democrats need to win
in presidential elections.
Top contenders for the
Democratic
ticket
include Massachusetts
Sen. Elizabeth Warren,
one of Washingtons
Donald Trump most prominent female
lawmakers; Housing and
Urban Development Secretary Julian
Castro, a telegenic 41-year-old Hispanic
politician; and Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine.
New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, one of two
black senators, was also being considered,
though its unclear whether he is still in the
running.
Its rare that a running mate dramatically
shifts the trajectory of a presidential race.
Yet its still among the most important
decisions nominees face during the general
election and their choice is viewed as a
reflection of their priorities and values.
Clinton has veteran Democratic lawyer
James Hamilton overseeing her selection
process, with input from longtime confidants John Podesta and Cheryl Mills.
Clinton is expected to begin meeting with
candidates herself next week, according to
two Democrats with knowledge of the
process.
Given Clintons decades in the public eye,

Attorney general
regrets meeting
with Bill Clinton
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Attorney General Loretta Lynch is


expressing regret that she sat down with Bill Clinton while his
wife is under federal criminal investigation, a chance encounter
she acknowledges cast a shadow on the publics perception
of a case bound to influence the presidential campaign.
I certainly wouldnt do it again, Lynch
said of the meeting. For Hillary Clinton,
the presumptive Democratic nominee, the
episode raised the risk that voters will see
her anew as half of a power couple that
makes its own rules.
Lynch hastened to add that she intended
to follow the recommendations of career
prosecutors on whether to file criminal
charges at the close of the investigation
Loretta Lynch into Hillary Clintons emails, indicating
that she would accept whatever decision is
presented to her.
The attorney generals remarks at a conference in Colorado were aimed at tamping
down concerns that the investigation could
be politically tainted or that Lynch, an
Obama administration appointee, might
overrule the findings of agents and prosecutors who have spent months looking
into the possible mishandling of classified
information on the private email server
Bill Clinton
Clinton used as secretary of state.
Lynch said she understood that her private meeting with
Clinton aboard her plane in Phoenix might be seen as compromising the neutrality of the investigation, even though
she said the chat was largely social and her departments probe
of Hillary Clinton was not discussed.
Asked what she was thinking in permitting the meeting to
occur, Lynch said: I completely get that question, and I think
it is the question of the day.
The outcome of the investigation is likely to shape the presidential campaign, whether to Clintons benefit if she emerges
unscathed or to Republican rival Donald Trumps advantage in
the event that she or anyone close to her winds up prosecuted.
Bill Clintons approach of the attorney general also could
aggravate questions of trust that already hang over Hillary
Clinton in the minds of some voters even if shes never
charged. She has struggled through the campaign to overcome
unease about her honesty even while she asserts that she is
more trustworthy than Trump on issues that matter most to
voters.

her advisers dont expect


her selection of a running
mate to change her electoral prospects significantly. But one Clinton
aide said it was important
that her running mate
help tell the story of
her candidacy.
Clinton has increasHillary Clinton ingly said her campaign
is about Americans being stronger together a phrase intended to convey the
importance of a diverse country fighting for
common goals.
Aides who have worked in senior White
House posts under President Barack Obama
and former President Bill Clinton have also
been emphasizing the need for personal
chemistry, noting that a strained relationship between a president and vice president
can be destructive in the West Wing.
Clinton and Trump face fast-approaching
deadlines as they evaluate their choices.
Trump has said he plans to announce his
running mate at the Republican National
Convention, which kicks off in Cleveland
in just over two weeks but the campaign
has also considered pushing up the date. A
person familiar with Trumps decision-making process said the one-time reality television star is weighing how to maximize the
suspense of his choice. He might do it

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Dr. Larry Wayne Ellis, Pastor

CHURCH OF CHRIST
525 South Bayshore Blvd. SM
650-343-4997
Bible School 9:45am
Services 11:00am and
2:00pm
Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm
Minister J.S. Oxendine
www.church-of-christ.org/cocsm

(650) 343-5415

217 North Grant Street, San Mateo


Sunday Worship Services 8 & 11 am
Sunday School 9:30 am
Wednesday Worship 7pm

www.pilgrimbcsm.org
LISTEN TO OUR
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showbiz-style at the convention.


Trump has spent weeks discussing his
options with his adult children, business
associates and even friends from his country
clubs. A.B. Culvahouse, a lawyer who has
overseen vice presidential vetting for previous GOP nominees, sent vetting paperwork to top contenders late this week.
While the businessman has made clear
hell tap a political veteran for the post,
those close to him say thats not the only
element.
Hes not going to pick someone he doesnt personally like, according to one person with knowledge of the process. Like
others who spoke to The Associated Press
on the condition of anonymity, they were
not authorized to discuss the vice presidential process publicly.
The businessman has a
close relationship with most of vice presidential finalists. Hes less familiar with
Pence, though the two plan to meet this
weekend, according to Marc Lotter, a
spokesman for the Indiana governor.
In choosing a political veteran, Trump
would not be sending a message only to
voters, but to the numerous GOP leaders
who are wary of his candidacy.
That would soothe some concerns but
not all of them, said Kevin Madden, a former adviser to Mitt Romney, the 2012
Republican nominee.
Clinton is expected to wait until after the
Republican convention to announce her
running mate, allowing her to use her pick
to distract from any boost Trump receives
from the GOP gathering. She and her running mate will be nominated at the
Democratic convention in Philadelphia the
last week in July.

Church of the Highlands


A community of caring Christians

1900 Monterey Drive (corner Sneath Lane) San Bruno

(650)873-4095

Adult Worship Services:


Friday: 7:30 pm (singles)
Saturday: 5:00 pm
Sun 7, 8:30, 10, & 11:30 am, 5 pm
Youth Worship Service:
For high school & young college
Sunday at 10:00 am
Sunday School:
For adults & children of all ages
Sunday at 10:00 am
Donald Sheley, Founding Pastor
Leighton Sheley, Senior Pastor
www.churchofthehighlands.org

10

BUSINESS

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Stocks finish strong week with tiny gains


By Alex Veiga

DOW JONES INDUSTRIALS

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

U.S. stock indexes marked their


fourth consecutive gain Friday, an
upbeat finish for a week that got off
to a turbulent start as investors fretted about Britains vote to leave the
European Union.
In the days since the two-day market tumble ended on Tuesday, the
U.S. stock market came close to
regaining all the ground lost since
the vote last week. It ended the week
up 3 percent, its biggest weekly
gain since November.
The main stock indexes in Europe
posted even bigger gains this week,
with British stocks recouping all
their losses along the way.
At the same time, demand for U.S.
Treasurys surged this week, driving
bond prices sharply higher. That
pulled down the yield on the 10-year
Treasury note to 1.44 percent
Friday, close to its record low.
Investors also bid up the price of
gold, another traditional safehaven.
Clearly there is still an underly-

High:
Low:
Close:
Change:

18,002.38
17,916.91
17.949.37
+19.38

OTHER INDEXES

ing sense of nervousness, said JJ


Kinahan, chief strategist at TD
Ameritrade. No reasonable economic theory would be telling you
to buy bonds with this kind of yield.
Its more I dont care if I dont make
yield, I want my money back.
The Dow Jones industrial average
gained 19.38 points, or 0.1 percent,
to 17,949.37. The Standard &
Poors 500 index added 4.09 points,

Business in brief
U.S. income gap widened last
year as top 1 percent gained most
WASHINGTON Financial inequality
became even wider in the United States last
year, with average income for the top 1 percent of households surging 7.7 percent to
$1.36 million.
Income for the richest sliver rose twice as
fast as it did for the remaining 99 percent of
households, according to an updated analysis of tax data by Emmanuel Saez, an economics professor at the University of
California, Berkeley.
Still, the incomes of households outside
the top 1 percent appear finally to be recovering from the Great Recession, which officially ended seven years ago. After accounting for inflation, their average income rose
3.9 percent last year to $48,768 the
strongest annual gain since 1998. Contrast

S&P 500:
NYSE Index:
Nasdaq:
NYSE MKT:
Russell 2000:
Wilshire 5000:

2102.95
10,515.76
4862.57
2426.32
1156.76
21739.07

+4.09
+26.01
+19.90
+14.10
+4.84
+27.69

10-Yr Bond:
Oil (per barrel):
Gold :

1.46
49.28
1344.90

-0.03
+0.95
+24.30

or 0.2 percent, to 2,102.95. The


Nasdaq composite rose 19.89
points, or 0.4 percent, to 4,862.57.
The major stock indexes in Europe
got a boost Friday as traders anticipated a coordinated central bank
response to soothe volatility in the
wake of Britains vote to leave the
European Union.
The British government said it
would abandon its goals of achiev-

that with the period from 2008 to 2011,


when the economy remained in a rut and
inflation-adjusted income for the bottom 99
percent of households was falling.
It is indeed the best growth year for the
bottom 90 percent and bottom 99 percent
since the late 1990s, Saez said. At the
same time, top incomes grow even faster,
leading to a further widening of inequality,
which continues an alarming trend.
Income inequality has been a rallying cry
of the 2016 election, with more Americans
turning fearful and angry about a shrinking
middle class. Donald Trump has pledged to
restore prosperity by ripping up trade deals
and using tariffs to return manufacturing
jobs from overseas. Hillary Clinton has
backed a debt-free college option and higher
minimum wages to help the middle class.
Much of the debate has been fueled by
research conducted over the years by Saez
and his collaborator Thomas Piketty.

ing a budget surplus by the end of the


decade, which would free up more
money for the economy. The
announcement came a day after the
Bank of England said it would likely
offer more monetary stimulus to the
British economy to help it cope
with the drop in business activity it
is experiencing in the days since
last weeks vote to leave the EU.
All told, Britains FTSE 100 rose

1.1 percent Friday, while Germanys


DAX gained 1 percent. Frances
CAC 40 added 0.9 percent.
In the U.S., consumer-focused
companies rose more than the rest of
the market Friday. Netflix climbed
$5.19, or 5.7 percent, to $96.67.
Harley-Davidson led the gainers in
the S&P 500 index, climbing
$8.95, or 19.8 percent, to $54.25.
Financial and utilities stocks were
the biggest laggard.
Several automakers reported
growth in sales for June, giving a
boost to shares in several auto-related companies. Ford Motor, which
posted a 6 percent increase in sales
for the month, rose 15 cents, or 1.2
percent, to $12.72. General Motors
added 59 cents, or 2.1 percent, to
$28.89, even though the company
posted a 2 percent decline in sales
due a large drop in rental sales. Auto
supplier BorgWarner also got a lift,
rising 77 cents, or 2.6 percent, to
$30.29.
Investors flocked to stocks in the
face of narrowing choices for investments amid low or negative interest
rates on many bonds.

Death sparks Autopilot car probe


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON The first American death


involving a car in self-driving mode presents a
dilemma: How aggressively to embrace the
potentially life-saving technology after a fatal
crash. The drivers history of speeding further
complicates the question.
The National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration is investigating the design and
performance of the Tesla Model S vehicles
Autopilot system after announcing the death
of a driver on Thursday. The system was
engaged at the time of the crash, but that is
only part of the story.
The driver, Joshua D. Brown, a 40-year-old
technology company owner from Canton,
Ohio, was so enamored of his sedan that he
nicknamed it Tessy and praised the
Autopilots safety benefits. Brown published
videos on Youtube of himself behind the wheel
with the system active.
He was killed May 7 in Williston, Florida,
when his cars cameras failed to distinguish the
white side of a turning tractor-trailer from a
brightly lit sky and didnt automatically activate the brakes, according to statements by the
government and the automaker. Brown didnt

take control and brake, either.


Browns family said in a statement that it
wanted to help the government and Tesla so
that information learned from this tragedy
will trigger further innovation which enhances
the safety of everyone on the roadways.
His death comes at an awkward time for the
U.S. government and car makers.
NHTSA Administrator Mark Rosekind was
expected later this month to announce guidelines on self-driving cars for states and
automakers. The transition to the new technology could radically transform how people travel in the future.
Rosekind has stressed the potential life-saving advantages. In theory, automated vehicles
will eliminate the human errors that are responsible for an estimated 94 percent of traffic fatalities. With more than 35,000 people killed on
the nations roads last year, the benefits could
be enormous. Still, experts say some crashes
and deaths will continue occurring.
Expecting defect-free, self-driving cars is
unreasonable, said Timothy Carone, a Notre
Dame professor and author of Future
Automation: Changes to Lives and to
Businesses.

COLTS CHAMP CROWNED: OLYMPIC LEGEND MICHAEL PHELPS QUALIFIES FOR FIFTH SUMMER GAMES >> PAGE 15

<<< Page 15, Wales pulls off upset


over Belgium in Euro quarterfinals
Weekend July 2-3, 2016

Kruger puts Woodside back on map


By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Choosing the Daily Journal Baseball


Player of the Year was the most difficult
selection the publication had in deciding
any of its individual awards this season.
While Serra, Sacred Heart Prep and
Carlmont each a perennial contending
program all had legitimate contenders
for the honor, Woodside senior Jamie
Kruger emerged from the pack by virtue of
putting the Wildcats on the map in 2016.
Woodside hadnt finished with an overall
record of over .500 since 2012, the year
before Kruger arrived on campus to embark
on an impressive four-year varsity career.
But this season in his last hurrah as a
two-way baseball standout before heading
off to Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo, where he
will focus primarily on pitching the
Peninsula Athletic League Ocean Division
Most Valuable Player led the Wildcats to a
15-10-1 overall record and their first outright league championship since 2007.
I think the fact that we won so many
games this year was something I never
would have predicted out of a Woodside
team after last year, Kruger said. I think
we established a new bar for Woodside.
Kruger who is indeed the Daily Journal
Baseball Player of the Year starred both
sides of the ball. A starting third baseman
on non-pitching days, he hit .480 with
three home runs and 20 RBIs.
He was even more dominant on the
mound, posting an 8-1 record with a 0.59
ERA; and after he got roasted in his first

See KRUGER, Page 16

Sharks tap FA market


for Boedker, Schlemko
By Josh Dubow
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN JOSE The San Jose Sharks wasted


little time adding some needed speed to a
roster that sometimes looked a step slow in
the Stanley Cup Final.
The Sharks opened free agency on Friday
by signing fleet winger Mikkel Boedker to
a four-year deal worth a
reported $16 million and
puck-moving defenseman David Schlemko to a
four-year contract worth a
reported $8.4 million.
We know where the
game is going. We want
to be ahead of the curve,
general manager Doug
Mikkel Boedker Wilson said. Mikkel
was obviously a high
first-round pick for a reason. His skill level and
talent and speed are off
the charts. David just
moves the puck quickly,
great poise with the puck.
It fits in with the things
we want to do.
David Schlemko After rolling through
the Western Conference
to reach the Stanley Cup Final for the first
time in team history, the Sharks were outclassed by Pittsburghs decided edge in
speed and fell in six games to the Penguins.
The Sharks hope adding Boedker to an
already talented group of forwards that
includes players like Joe Thornton, Joe
Pavelski and Logan Couture will give San
Jose the matchup advantages that helped
Pittsburgh so much when they were able to
use Phil Kessel on a third line.

See SHARKS, Page 14

Phelps takes down Lochte


By Paul Newberry
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

OMAHA, Neb. Matching each other


stroke for stroke, Michael Phelps and Ryan
Lochte surged to the wall in near perfect sync.
Phelps got there first, just ahead of the guy
whos pushed him hard for more than a decade.
It was like so many races theyve had
before. Theres one more to go in Rio.
In the latest epic of their longtime rivalry
and billed as the last showdown in their
home country Phelps edged Lochte in the
200-meter individual medley at the U.S.
Olympic swimming trials Friday night.
Ryan and I always have a great race with
one another, said Phelps, who plans to
retire again after his fifth Olympics. When
we race each other, we bring each other to a
different level.
Phelps led from start to finish, but Lochte
was right with him all the way. In fact, he
seemed to pull even midway through the final
lap, but the most decorated athlete in
Olympic history managed to get to the wall
in 1 minute, 55.91 seconds.
Lochte was next at 1:56.22 and had no
complaints about the consolation prize: his

ERICH SCHLEGEL/USA TODAY SPORTS

Michael Phelps and Ryan Lochte swim during the mens 200 meter individual medley final in
the U.S. Olympic swimming team trials at CenturyLink Center.
only individual race at the Olympics.
I knew going into this race it was definitely going to be a dogfight to the end, Lochte
said. Its been a long journey, but the journeys not over. We still have another month

to get ready and show the world that the U.S.


is number one.
Lochte, an 11-time medalist, injured his

See SWIM, Page 16

Giants come storming back in the desert


By Bob Baum

Giants 6, D-backs 4

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHOENIX Conor
Gillaspie fell a home run
shy of the cycle, Johnny
Cueto settled down after a
rocky start to earn his
12th victory and the
Giants beat the D-backs
6-4 Friday night.

Johnny Cueto

Trevor Brown doubled in two runs and


Grant Green singled in two more for the
Giants, who are 5-0 at Chase Field this season. San Franciscos Jarrett Parker added a
solo homer off reliever Randall Delgado in
the eighth.
Welington Castillo and Jake Lamb homered for the Diamondbacks. Lamb hit a home
run in his third consecutive game for the

first time in his career.


Cueto (12-1) gave up four runs in the first
three innings and blanked Arizona for the
next four. The right-hander allowed seven
hits in seven innings and struck out nine
with no walks while improving to 8-0 on
the road. Cueto joined Jake Arrieta of the
Chicago Cubs as the only 12-game winners
in the National League.

See GIANTS, Page 13

12

SPORTS

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Durant meets with Dubs Mudcats back on top with


Colt League championship

By Cliff Brunt
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

OKLAHOMA CITY The


Golden State Warriors want to lure
Kevin Durant and put even more
offensive firepower on the floor.
Durant, the top prize in this
years free-agent class, met with
the Warriors on Friday in the
Hamptons. A
person close to
the situation
said Warriors
owner
Joe
Lacob, general
manager Bob
Myers, coach
Steve Kerr and
Kevin Durant A l l - S t a r s
Stephen Curry
and Klay Thompson were among
those present. The person spoke
on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorized to
publicly discuss the matter.
Durant, the four-time scoring
champion and 2014 MVP with the
Oklahoma City Thunder, is scheduled to meet with the Miami Heat
on Sunday. Media reports say he
scheduled meetings with the
Boston Celtics, San Antonio Spurs
and Los Angeles Clippers.
It makes sense for the Warriors
to try to add Durant he averaged
30 points per game against them
in this years Western Conference
finals and torched them for a
career-high 54 points in 2014.
Durant could make a record-setting franchise even better. Golden
State set the NBA record with 73
wins and led the league in scoring.
The Warriors fell just short of a
repeat NBA title, however, losing
to Cleveland in seven games.
Adding Durant certainly would

By Terry Bernal
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

MARK D. SMITH/USA TODAY SPORTS

Free agent Kevin Durant, right, reportedly met with the Warriors Friday.
improve their chances of getting
back to the top next year while
dealing a blow to the Thunder, one
of their top rivals in the West.
Oklahoma City had a 3-1 lead on
the Warriors in the conference
finals before losing the next three
games. Durant has had to carry
much of the scoring load for the
Thunder over the years, but having
Curry and Thompson next to him
would open up space to operate
that he hasnt had during his tenure
in Oklahoma City.
Durant led the Thunder to the
NBA Finals in 2012, and to the
Western Conference finals in four
of the past six years and hes
only 27. He recovered from a broken bone in his right foot that cost
him much of last season to post
one of the best years of his career
this season 28.2 points, 8.2
rebounds and 5.0 assists per game.

Durant met with Thunder general


manager Sam Presti on Thursday,
the eve of free agency. If he stays
put, Oklahoma City appears to
have the tools to make a move in
the West. Hed still have dynamic
point guard Russell Westbrook by
his side, and Steven Adams and
Enes Kanter are emerging young
stars. The Thunder made a draft
night trade and sent forward Serge
Ibaka to Orlando for guard Victor
Oladipo, forward Ersan Ilyasova
and draft pick Domantas Sabonis,
improving the teams depth and
shoring up a question mark at
shooting guard.
Durant can maximize his earning
potential by signing a deal with
the Thunder that allows him to
become a free agent again next
year, then signing a longer deal
when the salary cap takes another
jump.

The C&L Mudcats are back on top


in the PAL Colt League.
Making their fourth consecutive
championship-game appearance
on the local 15-and-under Colt
League Circuit, the Mudcats captured their first title since 2013
with a 7-4 win over Pacifica
Monday night at Tom Lara Field.
The Mudcats won in dramatic
fashion, rallying for five runs in
the their final at-bat to overtake
Pacifica. Lorenzo Perez had the big
swing of the bat in the bottom of
the sixth, drilling a two-run triple
up the gap to give the Mudcats a 43 lead. They would send eight batters to the plate to run up the lead
and roll to the title.
Weve been the comeback kids
all season, Mudcats manager
Bobby Ingersoll said. There were
probably about five or six games
where we walked off or, in the bottom of the sixth, scored runs to
take the lead. Then pitching and
defense held it together.
C&L got a solid effort in the
championship game from starting
pitcher Carlo Lopiccolo. The righthander out of Burlingame High
School persevered a shaky third to
work 6 2/3 innings to earn the win.
Prior to the comeback rally in the
sixth, Ingersoll contemplated
going to the bullpen to start the
seventh. But the momentous swing
on the scoreboard changed the veteran coachs mind in a hurry.
When we took the lead in the
bottom of the sixth, there was no
way he was coming out, Ingersoll
said.

C&L was forced to turn to the


bullpen when Pacifica rallied in the
seventh though. Diani Shanahan
who was 3 for 4 with a triple and
three RBIs in the game generated an RBI single to cut the lead to 74. Then Ingersoll turned to righthander Uriel Prieto to nail down the
final out to earn the save.
Pacifica
left-hander
Tony
Zamagni worked five-plus innings
to take the loss.
The victory caps a near-perfect
season for the Mudcats, who posted
a 19-1 record. C&L had previously
dropped two straight championship games, falling to the San
Bruno Orioles in both 2014 and
15. The Mudcats last won the title
by knocking off the South City
Indians in 2013.
The Mudcats and Indians will
now join forces with the Colt
League sectional tournament
opening next Thursday at
Burlingames Washington Park.
The six-team tourney will feature
Burlingame, Daly City, Foster
City, Pacifica, San Bruno and
South San Francisco; the shuffled
squad comprised of Mudcats and
Indians players will comprise the
SSF roster.
Ingersoll is in his third season
as the Mudcats manager. He previously served as the teams assistant coach. He has had a busy summer, also working as an assistant
coach with the South San
Francisco Joe DiMaggio League
team, which took over sole possession of first place in the
Peninsula Division standings
with a double-header sweep of
reigning Joe D champion Pacifica
on Saturday, June 25.

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

MLB briefs
Big Papi passes Williams, McCovey on HR list
BOSTON (AP) David Ortiz homered for his 2,000th hit with
Boston to help the Red Sox beat the struggling Angels 5-4
Friday night. Ortizs solo shot in the fifth was his 522nd career
home run, moving into sole possession of 19th place on baseballs all-time list and breaking a tie he held with a trio of Hall of
Famers: Ted Williams, Frank Thomas and Willie McCovey.

Indians win 14th straight in 19 innings


TORONTO Carlos Santana homered in the 19th inning
off infielder Darwin Barney and the Indians set a franchise
record by winning their 14th straight game, 2-1 over the
Blue Jays Friday. Cleveland won 13 straight in 1942 and
again in 1951.

GIANTS
Continued from page 11
The Diamondbacks had runners at first and third with no
outs against closer Santiago Casilla in the ninth. But
Yasmany Tomas hit into a double play, Phil Gosselin
walked, pinch-hitter Peter OBrien struck out and Casilla
escaped with his 18th save in 22 tries.
Shelby Miller (2-8) allowed six runs and eight hits in six
innings and took the loss. He is 0-6 at home, where the
Diamondbacks are 13-29.
San Francisco took the lead with two runs in the sixth.
Parker and Gillaspie singled and, with two outs, Trevor
Brown doubled down the right field line to bring both home
and put the Giants up 5-4.
The Diamondbacks jumped on Cueto for three runs in the
first inning. Doubles by Jean Segura and Paul Goldschmidt
scored one, then Castillo hit Cuetos 3-2 pitch into the seats
in left center to bring home two more.
Gillaspie, making just his 12th start of the season, tripled
to right field in the second inning and was thrown out at
home by shortstop Nick Ahmed on Grant Greens grounder.
Gillaspie doubled and scored in the fourth and singled and
scored in the sixth.

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

Gray stumbles again in As loss to Pirates


By Michael Wagaman
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

OAKLAND Less than eight


months after finishing third in voting for the AL Cy Young award,
Athletics ace Sonny Gray is mired in
the longest slump of his career.
There is little indication that things
are going to get better any time soon,
either.
Gray lost his sixth consecutive
decision after blowing an early threerun lead and the Athletics offense was
held to one hit over the final seven
innings of a 7-3 loss to the
Pittsburgh Pirates on Friday night.
This hasnt been his best year and
hell figure it out and hell get better
as the year goes on, As manager Bob
Melvin said. Theres always going
to be a year thats as not good as other
years. So far this is the one for him.
Hes been good for us.
Gray was coming off two fairly
decent starts before blowing up
against Pittsburgh in the Pirates first

trip to the Oakland


Coliseum
since
June 27, 2010.
Gray (3-7) gave
up seven runs, hit a
batter and threw
two wild pitches in
six innings while
losing his sixth
consecutive deciSonny Gray
sion. The righthander, third in the 2015 AL Cy
Young voting, is winless since April
22.
Once I got to two outs, I just wasnt able to get them out, Gray said.
There were times, like in the sixth
where I got two quick outs, I have to
be able to shut that inning down and
get back out there for the seventh .
and not hit a guy and walk another. It
just escalated from there.
Jody Mercer homered and had an
RBI single to help Pittsburgh rally
from three runs down to beat. Matt
Joyce added two hits, Josh Harrison
drove in two runs while Andrew

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McCutcheon doubled and scored on a


wild pitch to help the Pirates to their
first win in their history at the
Coliseum and just their second in 13
games between the two franchises.
They did it by taking advantage of
another shaky outing by Gray (3-7).
We just stayed the course,
Harrison said. We just put together
some good at-bats as a team and it
wasnt easy on him.
Marcus Semien hit his 17th home
run of the season for Oakland.
Pirates starter Jeff Locke (8-5) also
struggled early but retired the final
nine batters he faced to win his third
straight. He gave up three runs over
five innings with three walks and
three strikeouts.
Three relievers combined to retire
the final 12 batters and complete the
four-hitter.
Mercer homered in the third and
added an RBI single as part of a tworun fifth.
Harrisons two-out, two-run double
in the sixth put the Pirates up 7-3.

14

SPORTS

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

MLS brief
Goossens lifts Chicago past Quakes
BRIDGEVIEW, Ill. John Goossens
scored his first MLS goal in the 58th
minute and the Chicago Fire beat the San
Jose Earthquakes 1-0 on Friday night.
San Jose failed to clear a cross after two
headers and Goossens hammered a loose
ball from distance.
Chicago (3-7-5) won for the first time
since May 21, and all three of its victories
have been by a score of 1-0. San Jose (5-57) had its winless stretch extended to six
games.
Chicago goalkeeper Sean Johnson made a
kick save of Alberto Quinteros close-range
shot in the 60th minute. He needed just two
saves to record his second shutout of the
season.

SHARKS
Continued from page 11
I play fast and hopefully I can get some
good chemistry with the guys that are there
now and use my skill and help them out the best
I can, he said. Hopefully they can help me out
the best they can and we can find a good partnership in the group. The biggest thing for me
is using my speed and thats something that can
maybe be a valuable key for our offense.
The 26-year-old Boedker tied a career-high
with 51 points last season, posting 17 goals
and 34 assists with Arizona and Colorado.
Boedker said he had offers for longer contracts and for more money but was attracted to
San Jose because the team is a Cup contender

THE DAILY JOURNAL

and because of his relationship with coach


Peter DeBoer.
Boedker played his junior hockey at
Kitchener of the Ontario Hockey League during
the 2007-08 season under DeBoer and Sharks
assistant Steve Spott. He helped the Rangers
win the OHL Championship and became the
eighth pick in the 2008 draft by Arizona.
Hes one of those players you coach over
your career where he makes an impression both
as a player and as a person, DeBoer said. I
understand what he can do. He has some
untapped upside that we havent seen yet. Im
really excited to get him and get to work with
him again.
The 29-year-old Schlemko posted career
highs with six goals and 13 assists in 67
games for New Jersey last season. He also
played more than 18 minutes a game.
Schlemko will likely slot in alongside
Brenden Dillon on the third pair but his ability

to play both sides gives San Jose the versatility to play with Dylan DeMelo or move up to
one of the top two pairs if needed.
That was a big thing for them, Schlemko
said. I can be a versatile player, move up and
down the lineup and play against anybody and
play in any situation. Thats how I feel about
myself as a player and was glad that they saw
that. Im kind of lucky that a Stanley Cup contender wanted me.
Schlemko has 15 goals and 54 assists in 298
career games with Arizona, Dallas, Calgary and
New Jersey. But he has only made the playoffs
three times in eight seasons and wanted to join
a contender on a long-term deal when he hit free
agency.
The Sharks also made two other smaller
moves, bringing back minor league goalie
Aaron Dell on a two-year contract to compete
to be Martin Jones backup on the big club and
forward Micheal Haley to a one-year contract.

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SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Wales stuns
Belgium 3-1
at Euro 2016

15

Serena survives at Wimbledon,


racket doesnt; Djokovic down
By Howard Fendrich
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

By Graham Dunbar
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LILLE, France On the greatest


night in its soccer history, Wales
swept past the worlds No. 2-ranked
team
at
the
European
Championship on Friday.
Wales stormed back from a rough
start to beat Belgium 3-1 in a pulsating quarterfinal won by classy
goals from two unheralded forwards.
As usual, Gareth Bale was excellent and, of course, all the talk will
be of him and Portugals Cristiano
Ronaldo before the two teams meet
in a semifinal next week.
The two most expensive players
in soccer history. Real Madrid
teammates. Stars on overachieving
teams at Euro 2016.
Still, unlike Portugal, Wales and
Bale have been wonderful and a
truly refreshing surprise in reaching a first semifinal at a major tournament.
After 25 minutes on Friday, the
dream seemed far away against a
fast-starting Belgium side that was

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

CARL RECINE/REUTERS

Wales Gareth Bale celebrates a 3-1


upset of Belgium in the quarterfinals of the Euro Championships
playing almost a home game just
10 kilometers from its border.
The ferocity of Belgiums opening goal in the 13th-minute, a
rifled shot by midfielder Radja
Nainggolan rising into the net
from 25 meters, did not bode well.
But Wales captain Ashley
Williams hauled his team back into
the fight in the 30th when he
stooped to head in a corner.
Then, two forwards from secondtier clubs in England, Hal RobsonKanu and Sam Vokes settled the
game with goals in the 55th and
85th minutes. In Robson-Kanus
career-best moment, he deceived
three defenders with a Cruyff turn.

LONDON Dismayed at dropping the first set after being a single point from taking it, Serena
Williams sat in her Centre Court
sideline chair and cracked her racket
against the turf once, twice, three
times, four.
Then she casually flung the racket, hurling it so far behind her that
it landed in the lap of a TV cameraman filming her second-round
match
against
65th-ranked
American Christina McHale.
Williams recovered to force a
third set, only to fall behind yet
again Friday, perilously close to
what would have been the six-time
champions earliest exit in 17
Wimbledon appearances.
But as she herself declared afterward: Mentally, no one can break
me.
Eventually, the top-ranked
Williams did indeed come through,
edging McHale 6-7 (7), 6-2, 6-4 for
a thrill-a-minute victory at a tournament so rain drenched this week
that matches will be scheduled on
the middle Sunday for only the
fourth time in 139 years.
The dramatics of Williams

match, which
concluded with
the main stadiums retractable
roof
closed,
were equaled by
those of her
older
sister
Venus: She had
Serena Williams to wait out three
rain
delays,
including one of more than an hour
that arrived, of all times, right as
she held a match point. But Venus,
owner of five titles at the All
England Club, persevered, too,
barely getting past 29th-seeded
Daria Kasatkina 7-5, 4-6, 10-8 to
become one of only two women
already into the fourth round.
Serenas mood soured when she
had a set point in the first and
appeared to have converted it, until
McHale whos never been past
the third round at a major successfully challenged the call that
her shot landed out. From there,
McHale played aggressively, and
when she grabbed that set, 21-time
Grand Slam champion Serena took
out her frustration on her racket.
I was just really, really, really
angry. I had a lot of chances, said
Serena, who acknowledged she

faces a fine for her display and joked


that she needed to reach her racketsmashing quota for the season.
She got really lucky on some
shots.
Despite all that went on in the
siblings matches they overlapped, so their mother, Oracene
Price, hustled from No. 1 Court,
where she saw Venus win, across the
way to catch the end of Serenas victory the most shocking development Friday was what was going on
in Novak Djokovics third-rounder
against 28th-seeded Sam Querrey of
the U.S. before it was suspended
because of showers in the evening.
Djokovic, owner of a 30-match
Grand Slam winning streak that
includes the past four major titles,
allowed Querrey to seize the first
two sets 7-6 (6), 6-1 during their 72
minutes of action. Given the way
things were going for the No. 1seeded Djokovic, he had to be
thrilled that the match was halted,
giving him a night to rest and
regroup.
Only one man managed to move
his way into the fourth round:
Roger Federer. He got to play in the
main stadium, with the roof overhead, and easily beat Britains
Daniel Evans 6-4, 6-2, 6-2.

16

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Felix cruises, Richards-Ross says goodbye


By Eddie Pells
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

EUGENE, Ore. Allyson Felix blocked out


the knifing agony in her right ankle and made
her first run at Olympic Trials look like a jog
Friday night.
Sanya Richards-Ross felt a different kind of
pain.
On a night Felix cruised on auto-pilot in the
400-meter qualifying round to keep her
chance at a 200-400 double alive, RichardsRoss bid a tearful adieu to the fans, after
pulling up 250 meters into her lap around the
track her hamstring too tight to carry on.
Ive had an amazing career, RichardsRoss said. To have my last race be here, at
Hayward Field, in front of these fans, its
incredible.
In addition to her four Olympic gold medals,
including the individual title at the London

Games, Richards-Ross
holds the stadium record
in Eugene better known
as Track Town USA. It was
here, five weeks ago at the
Prefontaine Classic, that
fans got their first true
glimpse of what might be
coming. Richards-Ross
Allyson Felix finished seventh that day.
In this one, her first 15
steps out of the blocks were smooth, but she
went from a sprint to a trot. By the time she
hit the first curve on the backstretch, she was
slowing. And then she pulled up completely.
Lets be honest, I hurt my hamstring real
bad, she said. I worked with a great doctor
just to get out on the track today.
After she pulled up, she walked to the finish
line. Fans rose from their seats and RichardsRoss blew kisses.

ERICH SCHLEGEL/USA TODAY SPORTS

Lilly King adds a victory in the women's 200 meter breaststroke final, after previously
winning the 100 breast, in the U.S. Olympic swimming team trials at CenturyLink Center.

SWIM
Continued from page 11
groin on the very first day of the meet, struggled in his next few races and was down to his
final chance to get a swim of his own at the
Summer Games.
Now, thats out of the way, which means
Phelps and Lochte will get another crack at
each other in South America.
As a three-time defending gold medalist
in the 200 IM, Phelps will be the favorite.
But he knows Lochte wont be far behind,
especially with a month to get over the
groin issue.
Phelps and Lochte actually had their first
encounter on the way to the deck. Lochte,
walking out right behind Phelps, stepped
on the back of his sneaker.
I gave him a flat tire by accident,
Lochte said. Hes like, What are you
doing, trying to mess me up? I was like,
No, no, no.
All was forgiven when it was over,
Phelps and Lochte holding up their arms
together on the deck while the sellout crowd
roared.
It was the end for another defending
Olympic champion.
Tyler Clary finished third in the 200
backstroke and called it a career, having
missed out on a chance to defend the gold he
won in London. He finished behind
California Aquatics teammates Ryan
Murphy and Jacob Pebley, who earned the
two spots for Rio.
Murphy grabbed the lead on the second
lap and pulled away to win easily in
1:53.95, completing a sweep of the backstroke events.

Pebley held on for the second spot,


touching in 1:54.77 to earn his first trip to
the Olympics.
Clary was next at 1:55.33. He clung to a
lane rope while Murphy and Pebley celebrated, before swimming over to congratulate them both.
There was another sweep in the womens
breaststroke, where Lilly King added a 200
victory to her earlier triumph in the 100.
The 19-year-old from Indiana won in
2:24.08, while Molly Hannis claimed the
second Rio spot at 2:24.39, giving the
U.S. team yet another Olympic rookie.
Then again, it wasnt totally a night for
the upstarts.
Anthony Ervin and Nathan Adrian were
the top two qualifiers in the semifinals of
the 50 freestyle. The 35-year-old Ervin led
the way in 21.55, while Adrian was second
quickest in 21.60. Both men are already on
the team, with Ervin still seeking an individual event to go with his relay duty and
Adrian set to defend his 100 free title from
the London Games.
Dont forget Cullen Jones, a silver medalist in this event four years ago. The 32year-old was third quickest in 21.93.
Katie Ledeckys bid to add another relay
to her Rio program took a big blow when
she finished seventh in the 100 freestyle.
Abbey Weitzeil (53.28) and Simone Manuel
(53.52), a pair of 19-year-olds heading to
their first Olympics, earned the individual
spots. Olympic veterans Amanda Weir, Lia
Neal, Allison Schmitt and Dana Vollmer
took the next four spots to put themselves
at the head of the 4x100 free relay pool.
Ledecky will likely have to settle for
three individual events and one relay at
these games. Her sprinting still needs a bit
of work.
I wouldve loved to have gone faster, but
Ill take it, she said.

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

KRUGER

Hes one of the top three pitchers Ive


ever seen at this level.

Continued from page 11


outing against Sacred Heart
Cathedral one week after his
season with the Woodside basketball team ended he went on to
yield just one earned run for the
rest of the season, earning rave
reviews from Wildcats manager
Tim Faulkner in the process.
Im a pretty honest guy,
Faulkner said. And hes one of the
top three pitchers Ive ever seen at
this level.

CCS playoff pitching duel


Just to put into context how
funny baseball statistics can be,
Krugers best outing was his one
loss of the season. The stern 6-3
right-hander suffered the only
blemish on his record in the Central
Coast Section Division I opener
the first CCS game hosted by
Woodside in program history
when he went the distance, getting
dinged for one unearned run in a 1-0
loss to Branham-San Jose.
I had a really good team this
year; we had great players, we had
great hitting, Faulkner said. But
we probably dont host a CCS game
without him. ... You roll him out
there and youre getting seven
innings. Basically, you score two
runs and youre winning that
game.
Woodside couldnt muster any
offense against Branham ace Arman
Sabouri, a senior left-hander bound
for Cal next season, who surrendered just two hits en route to firing
a complete-game shutout. Not only
did Kruger lock up with Sabouri for

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

one of the best


pitching duels
in the CCS
postseason this
Jamie Kruger year,
Kruger
also accounted
for the only two hits by the
Wildcats in the contest.
Its the best Ive seen him pitch
ever, Faulkner said. The game was
like an hour and 10 minutes. It was
ridiculous.
The games only run came in the
fifth inning, when Branham saw its
leadoff batter reach on an infield
error. A stolen base and two sacrifice bunts later the latter bunt
being a squeeze play to push the run
across Woodside found itself in
dire straits.
We knew that the first team to
score was in the drivers seat,
Kruger said. We knew (once they
scored) it was going to be tough to
get out of it. And we just werent
able to.

Solidifying the battery


Still, to perform to that level on
that stage was quite an achievement
for a kid who contemplated not
even playing high school baseball
as a senior. Kruger was torn
between representing the Wildcats
for a fourth and final season because
he couldnt find the right chemistry
with any of the varsity catchers
slated to start the year, after losing
regular catcher Shane Stafford to
graduation following the 2015 season.
Prior to the season, I was debating whether I was going to play

Woodside manager Tim Faulkner


with Woodside because of the catching situation, but then we had a
really good guy step up and so it
worked out, Kruger said.
The catcher who stepped up was
Joseph King, a freshman call-up
from the junior-varsity squad midway through the year. King wasnt
your prototypical freshman. At 6-1,
the backstop showed flashes of a
cannon arm while proving he was
already attuned to the nuances of the
game like framing pitches and
blocking balls in the dirt.
He made a huge difference for our
season, Kruger said.
With Kings ability to adapt to
the varsity game at such a young
age, he shares a lot in common with
Kruger who, himself, emerged as a
6-1 varsity standout as a freshman.
I really saw a lot of myself in
him, Kruger said. Hes really
composed. Just really advanced for
a freshman on a varsity field. He
never looked nervous, not even
once.
As a freshman, Kruger was
already showcasing dominance,
throwing back-to-back one-hitters
against Sequoia and Jefferson.
He was already really polished
when he got here, Faulkner said.
He was like 6-1, 6-2 and was
probably low 80s when he got here.
So he gained about 10 miles per
hour and started throwing his offspeed more for strikes. But he was a
very effective pitcher when he got
here as a freshman.

No-no adds to legacy


This year, though, on April 21,

the kid finally realized the no-hit


dream, as Kruger dazzled by facing
just one over the minimum in a 7-0
win at Mills. The only blemish on
Krugers no-no was an infield error.
And while Woodsides standing
in the B-league PAL Ocean
Division took some of the sheen
off Krugers dominant numbers, he
also showed he could dominate
against upper-echelon opponents.
In addition to keeping Branham
in check in the CCS playoff opener,
he also shut down Menlo School
during the regular season, holding
the Knights who went on to win
the CCS Division II championship
fueled by a potent offense to one
run on four hits in an 11-1
Woodside win.
The victory capped Woodsides
two-game sweep of Menlo in league
play, and proved the difference in
the PAL Ocean Division standings,
with the Knights finishing in second place, one game in back of the
Wildcats.
It was these performances that
solidified Krugers Ocean Division
MVP honor. According to Faulkner,
it was a unanimous selection, with
the coaches not even holding a formal vote.
For Kruger, though, he sees his
legacy as bringing the Woodside
program back to respectability. The
Wildcats success was all about attitude, he said. In reality, Krugers
mound dominance had plenty to do
with it as well.
It was tough to toe that line
between confidence and arrogance
with some of the guys on the team
but, to be blunt, we were like we
had to go out and kick ass, Kruger
said. Thats what we had to do with
this team. And we really felt that
sense of urgency.

17

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST DIVISION

W
49
42
42
36
27

L
32
37
38
45
53

Pct
.605
.532
.525
.444
.338

GB

6
6 1/2
13
21 1/2

CENTRAL DIVISION
Chicago
51
St. Louis
41
Pittsburgh
39
Milwaukee
35
Cincinnati
29

28
38
41
44
52

.646
.519
.488
.443
.358

10
12 1/2
16
23

WEST DIVISION
Giants
Los Angeles
Colorado
Arizona
San Diego

31
37
42
46
46

.622
.549
.468
.439
.425

6
12 1/2
15
16

Washington
New York
Miami
Philadelphia
Atlanta

51
45
37
36
34

Fridays Games
Washington 3, Cincinnati 2, 14 innings
Philadelphia 4, Kansas City 3
N.Y. Mets 10, Chicago Cubs 2
Miami 7, Atlanta 5, 12 innings
St. Louis 7, Milwaukee 1
San Francisco 6, Arizona 4
Pittsburgh 7, Oakland 3
L.A. Dodgers 5, Colorado 0
San Diego 7, N.Y. Yankees 6

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST DIVISION
W
47
43
43
39
33

L
32
36
39
40
46

Pct
.595
.544
.524
.494
.418

GB

4
5 1/2
8
14

CENTRAL DIVISION
Cleveland
49
Kansas City
42
Detroit
42
Chicago
40
Minnesota
25

30
37
38
40
54

.620
.532
.525
.500
.316

7
7 1/2
9 1/2
24

WEST DIVISION
Texas
Houston
Seattle
As
Angels

29
37
39
45
48

.642
.538
.513
.438
.400

8 1/2
10 1/2
16 1/2
19 1/2

Baltimore
Boston
Toronto
New York
Tampa Bay

52
43
41
35
32

Fridays Games
Cleveland 2, Toronto 1, 19 innings
Philadelphia 4, Kansas City 3
Boston 5, L.A. Angels 4
Detroit 10, Tampa Bay 2
Houston 5, Chicago White Sox 0
Texas 3, Minnesota 2, 10 innings
Pittsburgh 7, Oakland 3
Seattle 5, Baltimore 2
San Diego 7, N.Y. Yankees 6

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18

NATION

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Teen who urged suicide by text to stand trial


By Denise Lavoie
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOSTON A teenager who sent


her boyfriend dozens of text messages encouraging him to take his
own life and told him to get back
in a truck filled with carbon
monoxide fumes must stand trial for
involuntary manslaughter, the
states highest court ruled Friday.
The Supreme Judicial Court ruled
Friday that a grand jury had probable cause to indict Michelle Carter,
then 17, in the 2014 death of Carter
Roy III, 18.
Carters lawyer had argued that

her texts were free speech protected


by the First Amendment and didnt
cause Roy to kill himself.
But the court, in a strongly worded decision, said the grand jury
heard evidence suggesting that
Carter engaged in a systematic
campaign of coercion that targeted
Roys insecurities and that her
instruction to get back in his
truck in the final moments of his
life was a direct, causal link to his
death.
In sum, we conclude that there
was probable cause to show that the
coercive quality of the defendants
verbal conduct overwhelmed what-

ever willpower the eighteen year


old victim had to cope with his
depression, and that but for the
defendants admonishments, pressure, and instructions, the victim
would not have gotten back into the
truck and poisoned himself to
death, Justice Robert Cordy wrote
for the court in the unanimous ruling.
The case drew national attention
after transcripts of text messages
Carter sent to Roy were released
publicly, showing her urging him
to follow through on his plan to
kill himself and chastising him
when he expressed doubts.

W. Virignia floods wreck 1,500


homes; $36M in road damage
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLENDENIN, W.Va. The


floods that ripped through West
Virginia late last week and killed 23
people also destroyed 1,500
homes, ravaged 125 businesses and
caused $36 million in damage to
roads, state officials estimated
Friday.
The state Division of Homeland
Security
and
Emergency
Management released the initial
damage assessments Friday. The
state is awaiting a more formal
assessment and damage dollar-figure from the Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
Another 4,000 homes were damaged in the floods, state officials
said. In some areas, homes were
swept off their foundations by rag-

ing flood waters, with some houses


even catching fire. Many homes
were filled with feet of muddy water.
The storm decimated roads to the
tune of $36 million in damage
across 18 counties. Clay County
was hardest hit, with $8.7 million
in estimated destruction to its roads.
Many roadways were peeled apart
and, in some spots, even washed
away completely.
FEMA already has approved millions of dollars to help individuals
recover from the devastation.
On Friday, the federal agency also
added two more counties, Lincoln
and Jackson, to their list of those
approved for individual assistance.
In addition to those counties, the
emergency declaration now includes
Kanawha, Greenbrier, Nicholas,
Fayette, Clay, Roane, Summers,

Monroe, Pocahontas and Webster.


People affected by floods in those
counties can apply for individual
aid, which covers emergency medical support, housing and other
immediate needs.
Also on Friday, all of the residents in one of the hardest-hit
towns got back their tap water.
They just cant drink it yet.
In a news release Friday, West
Virginia American Water said it has
restored tap water to all areas of
Clendenin.
About 3,000 people around
Elkview and Clendenin didnt have
tap water the day after the June 23
floods.
Although water has now been
restored to all households in that
region, residents are being advised
to boil it before using it.

I thought you wanted to do this.


The time is right and youre ready,
you just need to do it! Carter wrote
in one message.
You cant think about it. You just
have to do it. You said you were
gonna do it. Like I dont get why
you arent, she wrote in another
message.
The teens had met in Florida two
years earlier while visiting relatives. Their relationship largely
consisted of text messages and
emails. They hadnt seen each other
in more than a year when Roy died,
even though they lived only about
50 miles apart in Massachusetts,

Carter in Plainville, and Roy in


Mattapoisett.
Roys grandmother Janice Roy
said the family is happy Carter can
be put on trial.
He was very vulnerable at that
stage, she said.
Carters lawyer, Joseph Cataldo,
argued that Roy was a depressed
teenager who had previously tried
to take his own life and was determined to finish the job this time.
He also argued that Carter shouldnt
have been charged with manslaughter because Massachusetts doesnt
have a law against encouraging or
assisting suicide.

Around the nation Lawyer in church shooting


After 16 years, man in Serial
murder case to get new trial
BALTIMORE The family of a
murdered teenager is grieving again
after her accused killer, whose case
has become a cause celebre thanks
to a wildly popular podcast, was
granted a new trial.
Adnan Syed, now 35, was convicted in 2000 of strangling 17year-old Hae Min Lee and burying
her body in a shallow grave and
sentenced to life in prison. But on
Thursday, a judges decision to
order a new trial for Syed, whose
case is at the center of the Serial
podcast, is opening old wounds for
Lees family.
Baltimore Circuit Judge Martin
Welch ordered a new trial for Syed
on Thursday after determining that
his attorney failed in her duty when
she didnt challenge the testimony
of a state cell tower analyst whose

case calls prosecutor reckless


CHARLESTON, S.C. An attorney defending the man accused of
fatally shooting nine black parishioners in Charleston, South
Carolina, says a state prosecutor is
making reckless misstatements by
implying a federal death sentence
might not be carried out.
Twenty-two-year-old
Dylann
Roof faces death penalty trials in
state and federal courts in the shooting deaths of the parishioners at
Emanuel AME Church a year ago.
Prosecutor Scarlett Wilson wants
a judge to set the state trial before
the federal trial. She notes the last
federal execution was 13 years ago
and the state has no confidence a federal death sentence would be carried
out.
Attorney David Bruck says
Wilsons position could mislead
potential federal jurors to believe
that their sentencing verdict would
have no effect.

City Scene
Beauty and the
Beast at the
Orpheum;Carmen
at AT&T Park

SEE PAGE 23

Dreaming big
By Karan Nevatia

As a small child, I always had big, wild


dreams. I would make a cake using a Betty
Crocker mix and imagine that I would grow
up to be an amazing chef. Id attempt to
paint a flower, and imagine that I was going
to be the best artist in America. Id write a
short picture book, and dream of being the
next J.K. Rowling.
But as I grew up, those dreams seemed farther and farther away. I lost interest in art
and cooking, and it began
to feel like being as great
as J.K. Rowling was an
unrealistic goal. I still
had dreams, but they were
smaller dreams, like
dreaming I would get my
first piece of writing published. I was also cautious
about these dreams I
didnt want to be let down if I didnt achieve
my goals.
Go i n g i n t o my s en i o r y ear, I h av e
some dreams about my future. I think
ab o ut t h e dream co l l eg es Id l i k e t o
attend, or the dream jobs Id like to have.
But again, Im cautious with my dreams,
and I dont let them grow to be too big.
Im too scared that if I dont get that
dream job or get into that dream school,
Ill be disappointed in myself, and wont
be able to find happiness in another job
or school.
On the other hand, however, I often feel
that maybe I should be dreaming big. With
cautioned, small dreams, I wont be let
down, but I also wont be able to achieve
more, because I wont be striving to achieve
big dreams. With big dreams, maybe Ill be
let down hard, but theres also a better

See STUDENT, Page 21

Asian actors too


busy to fret over
white-washing
By Yuri Kageyama
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TOKYO The film world of Asia, known


for producing Akira Kurosawa, Satyajit Ray,
Brillante Mendoza and other greats, is too
busy making movies of its own to fret much
about the debate slamming Hollywood
the casting of white people in roles written
for Asians.
While hurt, irritated or dumb-founded perhaps about the so-called white-washing
syndrome, performers here arent expressing the level of outrage of a Margaret Cho,
George Takei or other Americans, the
Associated Press has found.
Many shrugged off the phenomenon as
inevitable, given commercial marketability
needs, noting Asian films also cast wellknown actors over and over.
Casting white people in non-white roles
is as painfully old as Charlie Chan and Fu
Manchu in American entertainment. That
kind of monolithic casting continues

See ACTORS, Page 21

A questionable return for Tarzan


By Jake Coyle
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tarzan has been dusted off, his abs polished and his vocabulary spruced up in
David Yates handsome but altogether
pointless The Legend of Tarzan, a chestthumping resurrection of the Ape Man that
fails to find any reason for the iconic characters continued evolution.
On the one hand, its easy to see why
Tarzan has yet again swung back into our
lives: Tarzan and Hollywood were born
almost simultaneously, like conjoined

twins of a new pop-culture machine. The


first Tarzan silent came just a few years
after Edgar Rice Burroughs initial novel.
More than 50 films have followed. But as
time has gone on, Tarzan has ceded his
mass-market turf to a new set of brawny,
questionably attired do-gooders, who swing
not from vines but webs and grappling
hooks. Monkey Men are out; Batmen are
in.
Tarzans relevance has also drifted. He
was originally conceived as a pulpy fable
for a society feeling nostalgic for nature as
it watched Model Ts roll off assembly

lines. Burroughs tale coincided with the


National Parks movement and the creation
of the Boy Scouts.
So if properly outfitted for todays backto-the-land trends, Tarzan probably should
be a thinner, bearded man who can brew a
hoppy IPA and lives off-the-grid in
Brooklyn coffee shops.
Can such a vestige of imperial-era imaginations one dreamed up by a man who
never set foot in Africa be updated to
today? The Legend of Tarzan suggests

See TARZAN, Page 22

Famed contest is built


on whopper of a legend
By Michael Valsamo
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Despite claims its been held since 1916, the


Nathans Hot Dog Eating Contest on Coney
Island was actually first contested in the 1970s
as a marketing ploy after the company
became publically traded.

NEW YORK Nathans Famous may be


in the hot dog business, but for decades
theyve been peddling a whopper.
Showmen behind Nathans annual Fourth
of July hot dog eating contest have long
claimed the tradition began in 1916 as a
showdown between patriotic immigrants on

the Coney Island boardwalk.


That would make this Mondays contest a
centennial, except for an inconvenient
truth: The contest and its backstory were
invented in the 1970s by PR men trying to
get more attention for Nathans, which had
just become a publicly traded company.
Our objective was to take a photograph

See CONTEST, Page 21

20

WEEKEND JOURNAL

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

By Susan Cohn
DAILY JOURNAL SENIOR CORRESPONDENT

MATTHEW MURPHY

HAPPILY EVER AFTER: DISNEYS BEAUTY AND THE BEAST FIND LOVE IN AN ENCHANTED
CASTLE. Sam Hartley as the Beast and Brooke Quintana as Belle discover their true selves and
find love in Disneys Beauty and the Beast at the SHN Orpheum Theatre in San Francisco
through July 10.

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DISNEYS BEAUTY AND THE


BEAST AT THE SHN ORPHEUM IN
SAN FRANCISCO: A TALE AS OLD AS
TIME, AND A DELIGHT FOR ANY
AGE. Based on the Academy Award-winning
animated feature film, Disneys Beauty and
the Beast tells of Belle, a young woman in a
provincial town, and the Beast, a young
prince trapped in a spell placed by an
enchantress as punishment for his thoughtlessness. Only by loving and being loved
will he be freed. Live orchestra music adds a
rich texture throughout, from the smashing
Las Vegas-scale production number of Be Our
Guest to the intimate first dance of Belle and
the still unredeemed Beast. Those familiar
with the film will enjoy seeing the whimsy
of the animated characters captured by a very
strong ensemble. Part of the joy of this
humor-filled romantic fantasy is watching
the youngest audience members react with
wide-eyed wonder as Belle, the Beast,
Gaston, Mrs. Potts, Lumiere, Cogsworth and
all the other well-known film characters
come to life. Music by Alan Menken. Lyrics
by Howard Ashman & Tim Rice. Book by
Linda Woolverton. Two hours and 30 minutes with one 20-minute intermission.
Through July 10.
STAGE DIRECTIONS: The Orpheum
Theatre, 1192 Market St., San Francisco, is
a five-minute level walk from the Civic
Center underground parking garage and is
directly above the Civic Center/UN Plaza
BART station.
TICKETS: Tickets at shnsf.com and 888746-1799. Early show times (noon, 2 p.m.,
5:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.) make it easier to
take younger children. Appropriate for all
ages, but no babes in arms are allowed. Also,
be wary of buying tickets from any third
party website. SHN has no way of validating
or replacing tickets that have been purchased
through any website other than shnsf.com.
A limited number of $40 Rush tickets will be
available for every performance beginning
two hours prior to curtain at the SHN

Orpheum Theatre Box Office. Tickets are


subject to availability. Cash only. Two per
person. Rush tickets are void if resold.
OH, AND DID YOU KNOW? This production uses 580 costume pieces and 81
wigs. There is a Hidden Mickey in the tavern set drop. Disneys Beauty and the Beast
ran on Broadway for 5,461 performances
over the course of 13 years between 1994
and 2007, becoming Broadways eighthlongest-running production.
***
CARMEN.
FREE.
SATURDAY
NIGHT, JULY 2 . AT&T BALLPARK.
San Francisco Opera partners with the San
Francisco Giants and presenting sponsor
Taube Philanthropies for Opera at the
Ballpark a free live simulcast of Bizets
Carmen at AT&T Park 7:30 p.m. Saturday.
July 2. Through state-of-the-art technology,
the performance of Carmen will be transmitted live from the stage of the War Memorial
Opera House to AT&T Parks high-definition
scoreboard. AT&T Park concessions will be
open for the simulcast, providing audiences
the rare opportunity to pair hot dogs,
peanuts and popcorn with world-class opera.
Free registration for early entry/best seating
and entry into a special prize drawing is
available at sfopera.com/simulcast. Opera at
the Ballpark is free.
Susan Cohn is a member of the San Francisco Bay
Area Theatre Critics Circle and the American
Theatre Critics Association. She may be reached at
susan@smdailyjournal.com.

WEEKEND JOURNAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Entertainment brief
De Havilland breaks
silence on sibling feud
PARIS Celebrating her 100th
birthday Friday, indomitable
actress Olivia de Havilland is finally breaking her silence on
Hollywoods most famous sibling
rivalry.
In a rare interview with The
Associated Press, one of the last
living remnants of Hollywoods

Golden Age has


disclosed her
true
feelings
about her late
sister
Joan
Fontaine,
revealing that
she calls her
Dragon Lady.
Posing on a
Olivia
chaise
longue in
de Havilland
a demure black
dress in her Saint James Paris residence, the still-glamorous two-time
Oscar winner quipped that only the

ACTORS

pearls are fake, before she agreed


to answer more detailed questions
via email her preferred mode of
communication because of her failing hearing and vision.
De Havilland said the legend of a
feud with her sister was first created
by an article entitled Sister Act in
Life Magazine following the 1942
Oscars, where both sisters were
nominated for an Academy Award.
Fontaine, who was then the lesser
known sister, won, for Suspicion
while de Havilland had been nominated for Hold Back the Dawn.

Landing roles in Asian movies is relatively


off-limits for Americans, usually relegated
to blatantly foreign roles.

Continued from page 19


recently with the tapping of Tilda
Swinton as a character that was originally Tibetan in the new Marvel Dr.
Strange movie.
Its also a sensitive topic. South
Korean actor Lee Byung-hun declined
to be interviewed through his representative, who noted Lee was set to
be in a Hollywood film.
Kaori Momoi, who appeared in
Memoirs of a Geisha, as well as
Russian
filmmaker Aleksandr
Sokurovs The Sun, suggested acting was ultimately about individual
talent, not skin color or nationality.
Momoi praised the devotion, skill
and professionalism of Scarlett
Johansson, whose starring in Ghost
in the Shell, based on a Japanese
manga, has stirred up an uproar as a
prime example of white-washing.
Momoi played the mother of
Johanssons character.
I felt blessed to have worked with
her, she said, urging actors to be
selective of the directors they choose
to work with. And so whats fantastic is fantastic. What fails just fails.

Like other actors with experience


in Asia, Momoi saw Hollywood more
as an opportunity. She was already a
superstar in Japan when she started
acting in movies abroad about a
decade ago. What she enjoyed was the
challenging novelty of it all, getting away from being Kaori Momoi,
as she described it.
Compared to Japan, there is so
much potential and recognition in the
U.S. for independent films, said
Momoi in a telephone interview from
Los Angeles.
She got to know film people at
international festivals, including
Berlin, which showed Fukushima,
Mon Amour, a film she was in. She
has become a director herself, having
two films to her credit, including
Hee, being released later this year,
in which she also gives a harrowing
rendition of an aging prostitute.
Claudia Kim, known in her native
South Korea as Soo Hyun, noted she
has been lucky to play independent
Asian women in most movies, such
as Dr. Helen Cho in Avengers: Age

CONTEST
Continued from page 19
and get it in the New York newspaper,
acknowledges Wayne Norbitz, who served
as president of Nathans for 26 years and
still sits on the board of directors.
Norbitz is careful to say that the companys source for the 1916 story is legend
has it. He says the first contest actually
happened in 1972, and the early chowdowns
were all small, sparsely attended affairs.
Wed honestly wait for a couple of fat
guys to walk by and ask them if they wanted

of Ultron, the 2015 movie based on


Marvel comics.
But she was baffled when she
learned a white actress was picked for
the Asian role in a Hollywood movie
she had auditioned for. She declined to
identify that film.
It is definitely not a pleasant
experience, she told the AP, calling
the choice ridiculous.
Vijay Varma, an India actor who
starred in Monsoon Shootout, a
crime story with multiple endings
that was shown at the Cannes Film
Festival, pointed out insularity was
prevalent in Bollywood as well.
Families dominate the business,
although he was an exception and
came from a family unrelated to
movies. Bollywood counts on mass
appeal, casting the familiar, just
like Hollywood, he added.
When an effort that defies boundaries turns out to be a great movie,
like Life of Pi, which starred an
Indian actor, combined live action
with computer graphics, and had a
Taiwan-born director Ang Lee, it

to be in a hot dog contest, he says.


The legend of the hot dog contest conveniently dates to 1916, the same year Polish
immigrant Nathan Handwerker opened his
Coney Island hot dog stand using a $300
loan from two friends.
As the story goes, an Irish immigrant
named James Mullen had been walking in
Coney Island when he challenged a group of
recent immigrants to prove who was the
most American. Of course, they decided to
settle it by eating hot dogs.
Mortimer Matz, one of the contests hype
men, unapologetically admitted to The New
York Times in 2010 that in Coney Island
pitchman style, we made it up.

Weekend July 2-3, 2016


A feud implies continuing hostile conduct between two parties. I
cannot think of a single instance
wherein I initiated hostile behavior, she said.
But I can think of many occasions where my reaction to deliberately inconsiderate behavior was
defensive, she added.
It is unclear what Fontaine, who
died in 2013, would make of the
analysis. Describing the 1942
Oscars in her 1978 memoir, No
Bed of Roses, she painted a somewhat different picture.
feels really good, Varma said.
While some Japanese may wonder
why Chinese actress Zhang Ziyi is
the heroine in Memoirs of a
Geisha, they also feel no qualms routinely casting Japanese to play
Chinese and other non-Japanese
Asian roles, feigning embarrassingly
phony accents and mannerisms.
Landing roles in Asian movies is
relatively off-limits for Americans,
usually relegated to blatantly foreign roles.
Koji
Fukadas
Sayonara starred Bryerly Long, an
American, as a dying woman in
Japan, but the film also starred a
humanoid robot as her loyal companion.
Gong Li, the star of Chinese auteur
Zhang Yimous films, such as Raise
the Red Lantern, characterized the
dilemma as a problem of marketability.
Asian culture has not meshed well
with U.S. film culture. Its not integrated. There are a lot of American Alisters who are making movies in
China right now, who have not done
well. So its the same whether you
cast a famous actor or not not-so
famous one. Chinese people dont
know who they are, she said as she
walked the red carpet at Cannes.

The winner of that first contest in 1972


was able to shove 14 hot dogs and buns
down in 12 minutes.
It remained on a small scale until the
1980s, when competitive eaters from Japan
began joining the contest, growing it
quickly into a full-fledged competition with
weigh-ins and elaborate introductions similar to those of a heavyweight championship
fight.
Joey Jaws Chestnut set the world record
in 2013 when he polished off 69 dogs in 10
minutes. His run of eight straight victories
ended last year when he lost the Mustard
Yellow International Belt in an upset.
Hell be vying to regain the title this year

STUDENT
Continued from page 19
chance Ill reach my goals my
bigger, better goals.
Living with caution makes life
boring. When I was young, and I
dreamed big, I would do crazy
things, in honor of my dreams. I
would draw for hours and hours, or
bake dozens of cakes. Even
though I would give up on the
dreams in just a couple of years,
the experiences I had pursuing
them were engaging and fun. With
small dreams, I wont go out of my
way to pursue them. My life will
be good, but it wont be any fun.
When I dream big, I work harder
to achieve my goals. Setting low
expectations for myself only
leads to me doing the minimum
required to meet those expectations. If I dream big, Ill do everything I can to make sure I achieve
the goal. While a lot of it is based
on luck, no one achieves their
dreams without working to make
their dreams possible.
So, Ive stopped dreaming with
caution. Im letting myself
believe that I can do anything,
that I can go far, get into my dream
school and get my dream job. If
Im let down, I wont be happy,
but Ill know that the steps I took
to try to achieve my dreams were
beneficial and will help me
achieve my future goals. My future
big dreams.

Karan Nevatia is a soon-to-be senior at


Aragon High School in San Mateo.
Student News appears in the weekend
edition. You can email Student News at
news@smdailyjournal.com.

before a huge crowd. Millions more will


watch on ESPN.
Organizers held their annual weigh-in for
the contest Friday in Brooklyn. The event
featured a stare-down between Chestnut and
the defending mens champion, Matt The
Megatoad Stonie, as well as between
defending womens champion Miki Sudo
and three-time champion Sonya The Black
Widow Thomas.
Its so popular that in certain parts of the
U.S. and certain parts of the world, people
know Nathans because of the contest,
Norbitz says. The first thing theyll say
many times is Nathans, thats the hot dog
eating contest.

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Weekend July 2-3, 2016

DUI
Continued from page 1
be expanded statewide, Hill argues his bill will
save lives.
The DMV reviewed an ongoing four-county
pilot program in which the devices are installed
in lieu of a convicted drunk driver having their
license suspended. The report found the ignition
interlock device a Breathalyzer linked to a
vehicles ignition is successful in reducing
recidivism, however, data showed a slight
increase in the rate of accidents.
Hill points to several factors he said show the
report is lacking as the DMV didnt thoroughly
review the crash data nor did it determine which
driver was at fault or if alcohol was involved in
the accidents.
Its concerning to me that they would do a
study and not do it scientifically and expect that
to be valid and credible, Hill said.
Although the report makes a blanket statement that those with ignition devices had higher rates of crashes during the pilot, the statistics
comparing those legally driving with a device
and those illegally driving on suspended licenses found only a minimal increase. The difference

TARZAN
Continued from page 19
not, and the films main source of suspense is
watching it twist and contort a century-old
property into something meaningful.
Craig Brewer and Adam Cozads script sets
the tale a decade after the discovery of Tarzan
in West Africa; seen only in flashback is
Tarzans origin story, including a more violent version of his famously loquacious introduction to Jane. Tarzan or John Clayton III
(Alexander Skarsgard) is living in London
with his wife, Jane (Margot Robbie). The jungle is far behind him: hes a Lord, polished and
serious but still with ape-like hands that
would impress even Donald Trump.

LOCAL/WEEKEND JOURNAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

is less than three percentage points; depending


on the number of convictions, those using
interlock devices had between a 4.32 percent to
about 7 percent chance of crashing. Those driving illegally had a 2.7 percent to 4.6 percent
chance of crashing, according to MADD and
Hills office.
Thats a very small difference and yet the
DMV is claiming that its statistically significant, said Frank Harris, MADDs director of
government affairs. The 74 percent reduction
in drunk driving arrests is whats significant.
The DMV affirms those using the devices
were less likely to reoffend, Harris and Hill said.
Adifferent report conducted by MADD found the
ignition interlocks prevented more than 1 million convicted offenders from driving after having any alcohol and prohibited 150,000 people
who were legally drunk from starting their car.
Hill contends suspending someones license
isnt a good enough deterrent and the interlock
system can prevent them from driving drunk
while allowing offenders to get to work, pick up
their children and not have their lives overly
disrupted.
When you get a DUI, your license is suspended. Thats automatic. And what happens is
50 percent of the people drive anyway, then you
can get arrested for driving with a suspended

license, and the spiral starts, Hill said.


Opponents to Hills Senate Bill 1046 emphasize the DMVs report did not recommend the
pilot program be expanded if theres a potential
increased risk to public safety due to the crash
data. Furthermore, the cost of expanding it to
54 counties has been estimated to range
upwards of $1.7 million, according to the
American Beverage Institute. The bill is slated
to be heard next in the Assembly
Appropriations Committee where the focus will
be its fiscal impact.
The California Assembly should reject SB
1046 in light of the DMVs new report showing
that mandatory ignition interlocks for firsttime offenders resulted in a higher crash risk
among the pilot programs participants. If the
CA DMV cannot recommend expanding the
pilot statewide, then the Assembly should take
their recommendations for further study seriously before spending millions of dollars on a program that had mixed results at best, Sarah
Longwell, managing director of the American
Beverage Institute, said in a press release.
The California Attorneys for Criminal Justice
is also opposed to the bill, noting that making
interlock ignition devices mandatory takes
away from a judges discretion in sentencing
and other studies have shown greater compli-

ance when theyre ordered on a case-by-case


basis. In a letter sent to the Assembly, the
organization also notes DMV statistics show
few drivers reoffend within the first six months,
which is the time period outlined in the bill for
first offenders.
According to the data, interlocks are 45 percent more effective than license suspension
alone between 180 days and a year after conviction, and are 58 percent more effective when
placed in vehicles of second-time offenders
between one year and about two years after conviction.
While the DMV does not explicitly state the
pilot program currently underway in Alameda,
Sacramento, Tulare and Los Angeles counties
should never be expanded, it suggests further
consideration on whether interlocks should be
used jointly with license revocation or suspension.
Harris noted 28 other states have similar programs in place, numerous studies have already
been done, and hopes California will catch on.
Interlocks are much more effective than just
hoping for the best with license suspensions,
Harris said. MADD welcomes further studies,
but that shouldnt be a reason to hold up a lifechanging bill and put forth a better policy for
society.

Hes coaxed back to Africa by George


Washington Williams (Samuel L. Jackson),
an American and veteran of the Civil War who
seeks to uncover what he believes is
Belgiums introduction of slavery to the
Congo. The character, loosely based on a real
historical figure, is the most intriguing if
awkward addition. A better, more realistic
movie could have been made about him.
In the Congo is Belgiums envoy, Capt.
Leon Rom, a linen-suited hunter of diamonds
to fill Leopolds coffers. For this symbol of
refinement and menace, the filmmakers naturally turn to Christoph Waltz.
The simplistic historical backdrop of late
19th century Congo here is more cartoonish
than even Tarzan, himself. But the atmosphere is richly exotic, full of majestic vistas
and vivid close-ups. Filming largely on sound
stages, Yates, veteran of later Harry Potter

films, has firm control of the films lushly


romantic imagery. You feel that Bogie and
Bacall could drift down the river at any
moment.
But the film, searching for a purpose and
some drama, doesnt deserve the grandeur
Yates gives it. Tarzan, played with sufficient
muscle and smarts by Skarsgard, leads an
uprising through his ability to communicate
with animals and the (largely faceless)
natives. Hes a Jungle Jesus returned to fight
colonial incursion, and among the more
ridiculous white saviors youre likely to see.
The wildlife is also comically over stimulated. The CGI gorillas appear like
Thanksgiving Day Parade balloons on
steroids. Effort has been made to make Jane
more than a damsel in distress, which she literally denies being at one point. The scenestealing Robbie breaks though the roles

stereotypes even while still being mired in


them.
Agility is the prime trait of Tarzan, but
Legend has little of it. The film strains to
juggle the characters baggage instead of
embracing the tales innate silliness and spirit of adventure. (Over the years Tarzan fought
dinosaurs and Roman gladiators.)
That this is merely another naked attempt to
profit from a well-known property is visible
even in the films title. There, not even hidden
by a loin cloth, is a little trademark symbol
next to Tarzan: King of the Franchise.
The Legend of Tarzan, a Warner Bros.
release, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture
Association of America for sequences of
action and violence, some sensuality and brief
rude dialogue. Running time: 102 minutes.
Two stars out of four.

LOCAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

HOMES
Continued from page 1
that building larger homes and subdividing lots has the
potential to change the cherished small town neighborhood
feel we have in San Carlos, he said.
Resident Ron Granville, in an email to San Carlos officials earlier this month, expressed his unease with the shifting look of his city.
In our neighborhood, but throughout San Carlos, the
huge size of many homes, or massive remodels, is changing
the character of the town and each neighborhood within the
town, he said.
San Carlos officials are committed to addressing the issue
over coming months, said Johnson, who anticipates a comprehensive discussion about appropriate home size with the
community.
I look forward to discussing this topic with residents and
my City Council colleagues at an upcoming council meeting to determine what kind of changes to zoning should be
made, if any, he said.
The changing community character issue is not unique to
San Carlos though, as a national study from online home
improvement resource Home Advisor shows massive home
renovations and overhauls are also on the rise throughout
the country.
Locally, Burlingame Planning Manager Kevin Gardiner
said the uptick in development proposals has been a burden
for city staff to process, and he has heard a similar sentiment expressed in conversations with colleagues from other
neighboring cities.
Brad Hunter, a chief economist with Home Advisor, said
the lack of available, relatively affordable homes in San
Mateo County has compelled many to complete large home
improvement projects, as they may be seeking to upgrade
their living space but cannot afford to make the leap to
another, bigger property.
People who are thinking about getting more space and
say let me sell my house and buy a different one, I think
they are finding that there is often good economic sense in
improving the home that they already have, he said.
Luis Wong, a mortgage broker in Burlingame, has said he
too observed an increase in property owners seeking a loan
to finance renovation projects for similar reasons.
That is the quagmire, said Wong. A lot of people want
to buy if they could, but the affordability gap is still wide
and it makes it very difficult.
Such a conundrum has taken hold in Belmont, as city officials have discussed amendments to zoning ordinances
which would ease the path for homeowners to remodel their
homes.
Some, such as Vice Mayor Charles Stone, have felt the
existing rules under the zoning ordinances are too onerous
and prohibit property owners from altering their homes in a
fashion which may be necessary to accommodate their
changing lifestyles.
As it becomes increasingly more difficult for locals to
enter the housing market, building onto homes may be a
necessity as the size of families may grow under one roof,
requiring more space, Stone has said.
I think as written and as enforced, the current zoning
rules are anti-family and that really troubles me. And family, for me, its not just the nuclear family, its grandma and
grandpa needing to come live with you; its adult sons and
family who suffered a job loss needing to come live with
you, Stone said, during a meeting addressing the issue last
year. Those are things that families face all the time and
the way our ordinance is currently written, they have a de
facto effect of making it impossible for anyone to add on.
Some Belmont residents though have vehemently
opposed easing the existing building restrictions, due to
concerns regarding the potential for allowing construction
of larger homes which could block views and scale up the
size and scope of residential communities.
The issue became so controversial that citizens launched
an initiative seeking to repeal zoning changes previously
approved by the council, which compelled officials to conduct more outreach and update one segment of the citys code
at a time.
In Burlingame, the crux of community concern is not so
much the size of homes, as it is gradual shift away from the
traditional look in neighborhoods, according to Jennifer
Pfaff, president of the archives for the citys Historical
Society.
Pfaff said trends have moved in Burlingame toward building more modern homes, which has resulted in a loss of
some of the citys classic architectural style as existing
properties are redeveloped.
She added the shift is especially apparent due to the relatively small property lot sizes in Burlingame, and the difference between new, modern homes sitting in near proximity to older, classic homes is clearly visible.
It may not change if you are looking at a house by itself
as a freestanding structure, it isnt quite as serious as when
you are looking at rows of houses very close together, she
said.
The effect of changing community character is cumulative, said Pfaff, which has increasingly taken hold over
recent years. She said the result has become large, bold
structures with flat faces toward the street which creates an
almost boxy look for neighborhood where many modern

homes sit together.


Requiring more setbacks toward the sides of properties,
leaving additional space for trees and landscaping, would
help prevent the increasingly popular aesthetic from overwhelming the community, said Pfaff.
Pfaff said she has heard concerns from fellow residents
regarding the potential of modern homes consuming neighborhoods which previously looked more traditional and featured a variety of interesting, classic architectural styles.
The comments tend to follow that as structures get larger
on the little lots there is concern about how they dominate
certain streets, she said.
Not all oppose the potential shift in the way neighborhoods look along the Peninsula though, noted money
lender David Herzer of Herzer Financial Services, who
finances the acquisition of properties by those interested in
demolishing existing homes in the interest of rebuilding
them for sale.
Herzer has said the redevelopment of older properties
should be considered an effective way of injecting new life
into housing stock which may otherwise grow stagnant and
decrepit.
As the neighborhood character shift gradually creeps
throughout the county, Pfaff said she believes judgment of
the how the trend ultimately serves a community depends on
who is asked their opinion.
Style, whether it is homes or clothes, is quite subjective, she said.

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

23

GUNS
Continued from page 1
Advocates on both sides of the gun-control debate say
California has some of the nations strictest gun laws. It is
one of six states to get the highest grade from the pro-gun
control Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence.
The states move to tighten them further comes amid
years of gridlock at the federal level, which spawned a tense
clash in Washington last week as Democrats camped out on
the floor of the U.S. House and shouted down Republicans.
The bills angered Republicans and gun-rights advocates
who say Democrats are trampling on 2nd Amendment
rights, creating new restrictions that wont cut off the flow
of guns to people intent on using them for nefarious purposes.
On the eve of Independence Day, independence and freedom and liberty in California has been chopped down at the
knees and kicked between the legs, said Sam Paredes, executive director of the advocacy group Gun Owners of
California.
Lawsuits challenging the new laws are likely once they
take effect next year, Paredes said.
Browns action will require people who own magazines
that hold more than 10 rounds to give them up. It extends a
1999 law that made it illegal to buy a high-capacity magazine or to bring one into the state but allowed people who
already owned them to keep them.

Our Community
As your local newspaper on the Peninsula it is important to be involved in the community and to support local
charitable organizations, fundraisers and events. We are proud to have supported the following events last year

Events supported by the Daily Journal in 2015


Jan.17 ........... Martin Luther King Jr. Day Celebration, San Mateo

Aug. 2............Tour de Peninsula, San Mateo

Jan. 31 ..........Senior Showcase Health & Wellness Fair, Millbrae

Aug. 6............Multi-Chamber Business Expo, South San Francisco

Feb. 21 ..........Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District African


American History Month Celebration, East Palo Alto

Aug. 22..........Today's Senior Showcase, Menlo Park

Feb. 24 ..........March 8 Cinequest Film Festival, San Jose

Aug. 30..........Endless Summer Community Walk/Run, San Mateo

March 7.........San Mateo Little League Opening Day, San Mateo

Sept. 130.....Library Card Month, San Mateo Main Library, San Mateo

March 28.......Health & Wellness Fair, Redwood City

Sept. 56 ......Millbrae Art & Wine, Millbrae

April 24-26 ....New Living Expo, San Mateo

Sep. 7............Spirit Run, a Fundraiser for Burlingame Schools, Burlingame

April 27..........Mills-Peninsula Women's Luncheon, Burlingame

Sept. 26.........Burlingame Pet Parade

May 6 ............Pacic Stroke Association Regional Stroke


Conference, Millbrae

Oct. 24 ........San Mateo Library Book Sale, San Mateo

May 28 ..........Skyline College Graduation, San Bruno

Oct. 1011 ....San Carlos Art & Wine Faire, San Carlos

May 29 ..........College of San Mateo Graduation, San Mateo

Oct. 16...........Community Gatepath Power of Possibilities


Event, Redwood City

May 30 ..........What's New Aging Conference, Redwood City


May 30 ..........Masterworks Chorale Concert, San Mateo

Aug. 29..........A Benet for the Fisher House Foundation, Redwood City

Oct. 10...........Bacon & Brew, San Mateo

June 614 .....San Mateo County Fair, San Mateo

Oct. 24...........Walk a Mile in My Shoes, St. Vincent


de Paul fundraiser, Burlingame

June 6 ...........Disaster Preparedness Day, San Mateo

Oct. 25...........Tiny & Tot Expo, San Mateo

June 6 ...........College of San Mateo Jazz on the Hill, San Mateo

Oct. 25...........San Mateo Rotary Fun Run, San Mateo

June 9 ...........Senior Day at San Mateo County Fair, San Mateo

Oct. 29...........CORA Speak Up! Luncheon, Burlingame

June 12 .........Seniors on the Square, Redwood City

Nov. 11 ..........Veterans Day Concert, Redwood City

June 28 .........Ryan's Ride, Burlingame

Nov. 13-15.....Harvest Festival, San Mateo

June & July....Central Park Music Series, San Mateo

Nov. 14 ........SSF Turkey Fun Run, South San Francisco

July 18 ..........Family. Fitness. Fun!, Burlingame

Nov. 20 ..........Todays Senior Showcase, Foster City

July 23 ..........Sports Hall of Fame, San Mateo

Dec. 5-6 ........Caltrain Holiday Train, throughout San Mateo County

July 25 ..........Cars in the Park, Burlingame

To inquire about Daily Journal event sponsorship call (650) 344-5200 ext 128

24

DATEBOOK

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

DONOR
Continued from page 1
drive specifically looking for Ashkenazi Jews to sign up.
On July 4, 2014, Michael received his first transplant
and, a few weeks ago, he and Hatch met for the first time during the Gift of Lifes annual gala. Although the two had corresponded via letters, email and even over the phone,
Michael noted how meeting Hatch changed his perspective
of what hed been going through.
A transplant is simultaneously the most scary, and hopeful thing you can do, Michael said. Im actually replacing
my blood that flows through every part of my body, with
someone elses cells and someone elses DNA. It just struck
me as a really strange thing to be doing. I knew it made
sense, but it was just surreal. Once I got to know Carol, it
just really changed things. It make it much more solid and
normal and made it feel different to me. And I think part of it
is that [meeting] went amazingly well.

Getting to know each other


Their in-person introduction took place on a stage in New
York, followed by spending several days and evenings getting to know each others spouses and family members. And
it turns out, they do have a lot in common. They share a love
for water sports, have similar values, and both of their parents founded liberal Jewish temples.
Hatch, a 61-year-old cook and teacher who raised two children in Massachusetts where she lives with her husband,
said their ancestry was likely the largest factor in them
being a match. As more than a decade passed between when
she first registered and when Michael began looking for a
donor, she recalled not having given it too much thought.
Eventually, her older sister called to say she herself was
about to age out of the program. A day later, Hatch got the
call.
I was just so excited, Hatch said, noting it gave her a
sense of purpose as her fathers health was ailing and he
ultimately died about a week later. Things happen to me in
my life for which Im very grateful, opportunities to live as
fully as a human being can. And that was one of those
opportunities.
She recalled it was a relatively easy process. She took
daily shots for about a week in advance, underwent a fivehour procedure to withdraw blood before the stem cells were
separated out, then was reinfused with the remainder. She
donated 500 million stem cells and was somewhat lethargic
for about a week, Hatch said.
Michael had strict orders for the 100 days following his
transplant, avoiding any raw foods, things as simple as
cooking or using knives, avoiding anything that could possibly lead to an infection. His immune system was intentionally weakened prior to the transplant to give Hatchs
cells a better fighting chance, he said.

The battle continues


Last year, he relapsed and they tried an immunotherapy

that hadnt been successful in the past. But this time it was
more successful, and he credits Hatchs immune system
courtesy of her stem cells. But, he said, her cells never
completely won the battle so doctors decided to try a Tcell transplant.
The first time the two spoke over the phone, Hatch quickly said her cells were his for the taking. When it came time
to donate again, Hatch recalled wanting to postpone a surgery she was scheduled to have so that she could help
Michael as soon as possible.
Its kind of like having another child, his welfare is
just really important to me, Hatch said, noting she gave 20
billion T-cells in May. Ill always feel that way about him,
protective.
Now, Michael is in the process of getting increasingly
larger batches of Hatchs T-cells infused and noted theres
still the risk of developing graft versus host disease. But
having lived with his cancer for nearly 13 years, its not a
question of how do you avoid risk, its a question of how do
you chose the right one, Michael said.
Although hes no longer in remission, Michael said
going through the transplant process and knowing that
Hatch is a match has been a tremendous relief.
Its a question of having hope that me and my wife would
grow old together. We have that again, Michael said.

It only takes one


Both Michael and Hatch urged people to learn more about
the Gift of Life registry and emphasized it only takes one
person to make a difference. They were pleased to attend the
organizations annual gala and noted its founder Jay
Feinberg spent nearly four years searching for a match.
More than 20 years after it was founded, it took Michael less
than three weeks.
Im hoping that introductions of this sort will motivate
others to take the initial step toward possibly saving a life.
All they need to do is add their name and information to a
marrow and stem cell registry like Gift of Life, Feinberg
said in an email.
Although Michaels family members werent a match, he
noted people of similar ancestry or ethnicity typically have
a higher chance of matching, and has heard Asian and
African-American minority groups arent as well-represented on the registry. Both the recipient and donor agreed it
may not be for everyone, but in their case, its been a truly
life-altering experience.
Most of us know someone that has one form of cancer or
another and I think thats why people think this is amazing.
I really think what they get from my story is hope. And its
nice to have hope and faith in human life, Hatch said.
Having a relationship with Andy [Michael], is just like
icing on the cake. To me, its not a big deal that I gave
the stem cells, what is a big deal is that Andy is doing well
and that I get to communicate with him and that well have
a friendship for life. And that its touched so many other
people.
Visit giftoflife.org for more information.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Calendar
SATURDAY, JULY 2
Overeaters Anonymous. 10:15 a.m.
to noon. 610 Elm St., San Carlos. Free
and open to the public. For more
information call 591-0341.
Adopt a Pet. Noon to 2 p.m. 60 31st
Ave., San Mateo. Looking for a new
best friend? The Peninsula Humane
Society is bringing animals from out
of their kennels and on the road, so
you can adopt pets at Hillsdale
Shopping Center. For more information call 571-1029.
Donation-Based
Yoga
for
Democrats. 4 p.m. to 5:15 p.m. 1601
El Camino Real, Belmont. Practice
yoga and support the Democratic
presidential candidate. All donations
will go to Hillary for America. For
more information call 264-9655.
San Francisco Banjo Bands Live
Concert and Sing-along. 6 p.m. to
8:30 p.m. Molloys Tavern, 1655
Mission Road, South San Francisco.
Listen and sing along to music for all
ages from the 1920s all the way up
to the 60s including standards,
show tunes, jazz, folk and country.
No cover charge. For more information call 544-3623.
Eugene ONeills Anna Christie. 8
p.m. 2120 Broadway, Redwood City.
Catch a performance of the 1922
Pulitzer Prize-winning play about
love and forgiveness, charting one
womans longing to forget the dark
secrets of her past and hope for salvation. Tickets are $25 for seniors
and students and $30 for adults. For
more information jesse@dragonproductions.net.
SUNDAY, JULY 3
The Refugees: Tome Petty Tribute
Band. 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Washington
Park, 850
Burlingame
Ave.,
Burlingame. Free. Beer, wine and
food for purchase. For more information call 558-7300.
Eugene ONeills Anna Christie. 2
p.m. 2120 Broadway, Redwood City.
Catch a performance of the 1922
Pulitzer Prize-winning play about
love and forgiveness, charting one
womans longing to forget the dark
secrets of her past and hope for salvation. Tickets are $25 for seniors
and students and $30 for adults. For
more information jesse@dragonproductions.net.
MONDAY, JULY 4
Annual Fourth of July Pancake
Breakfast. 8 a.m. Mac Dutra Park,
Half Moon Bay. Hosted by the Half
Moon Bay Lions Club. For more information call 726-5705 or visit miramarevents.com.
An Old-fashioned Fourth of July.
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 2200 Broadway,
Redwood City. Children will be invited to hand-crank homemade vanilla
ice cream and then take a taste. They
will
also
make
traditional
Independence Day crafts to take
home with them. Admission will be
$3 for adults and $2 for children. For
more information call 299-0104.
Woodside Junior Rodeo. 10 a.m. to
6:30 p.m. 521 Kings Mountain Road,
Woodside. Mounted Patrol of San
Mateo County hosts classic horse
events, pig scramble, food, jewelry
and hats. For more information call
851-8300.
46th Ol Fashioned Fourth of July
Parade. Noon to 1 p.m. Main Street,
Half Moon Bay. Featuring floats,
marching bands, horses, community
service groups and more. For more
information call 726-5705 or visit
miramarevents.com.
My Liberty annual picnic. Noon to
4 p.m. Central Park, 50 E. Fifth Ave.,
San Mateo. Setup starts at 11 a.m.
and food is served at noon. Free. For
more information email mylibertysanmateo@gmail.com.
TUESDAY, JULY 5
Computer Coach. 10 a.m. to noon.
610 Elm St., San Carlos. One on one
help for technical issues. For more
information call 591-0341.
E-book Coach. 10 a.m. to noon. 610
Elm St., San Carlos. One on one help
for downloading e-books to your ereader. For more information call
591-0341.
Job Help. 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. 1500
Easton Drive, Burlingame. Speaker
Randy Block will present on updated
strategies to win todays jobs.
Refreshments will be served. For
more information call 522-0701.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 6
Color Therapy for Adults. 11 a.m. to
noon. 610 Elm St., San Carlos. Color a
page or two and enjoy refreshments
and conversation. For more information call 591-0341.
Film Screening: Mean Girls. 3 p.m.
to 5 p.m. San Mateo Public Library,
55 W. Third Ave., San Mateo. Free. PG13. Popcorn provided. For more
information
contact
aspanbock@cityofsanmateo.org.
Music in the Park with Bean Creek.
6 p.m. to 8 p.m. 2100 Hopkins Ave.,
Redwood City. Come weekly for a
concert in Stafford Park. For more
information
go
to

redwoodcity.org/musicinthepark.
Support Group for Families with a
Loved One with Dementia. 6:30
p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Burlingame
Business Center, 1633 Bayshore
Highway Suite 130, Burlingame.
Express your frustrations and challenges, celebrate successes and gain
resources. First Wednesday of every
month. For more information or to
RSVP email lboyd@elderconsult.com
or call 357-8834 ext. 1.
Knitting with Arnie. 7 p.m to 9 p.m.
610 Elm St., San Carlos. Bring your
yarn and start knitting. For more
information call 591-0341.
San Mateo County Democracy for
America meeting. 7 p.m. Woodside
Road United Methodist Church,
2000 Woodside Road, Redwood City.
Speakers Sara Matlin and Mariam
Kelly offer legal options for undocumented community members and
how others can help. For more information
contact
asevans2002@aol.com.
THURSDAY, JULY 7
RethinkWaste Public Open House
Day. 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. also at
11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. 333
Shoreway Road, San Carlos. Free
tours include visiting the Transfer
Station, where garbage, food scraps
and yard trimmings are handled;
outdoor education area, with a
demonstration garden and composting system, rainwater harvest
tank and solar panel display; the
Environmental Education Center,
which includes museum-quality
exhibits, reuse art and a talking
robot, and more. For more information call 802-3500.
Peopleologie: Adinkra Stamping.
2 p.m. San Mateo Main Library (Oak
Room), 55 W. Third Ave., San Mateo.
Join us for a hands-on lesson about
West African and Adinkra Stamping
presented by Peopleologie. Ages 6
and over.
Sophies
World:
Cardboard
Arcade. 3 p.m. Community learning
center, South San Francisco Main
Public Library, 840 W. Orange Ave.,
South San Francisco. Make classic
arcade games from upcycled and
recycled material in this workshop.
For more information call 829-3860.
Medicare 101. 3 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Burlingame Library Tech Lab, 480
Primrose
Road,
Burlingame.
Discussion on what Medicare does
and does not cover. For more information call 558-7400.
How to Protect Your Portfolio in a
Down Market. 6:15 p.m. San Mateo
Library, 55 W. Third Ave., San Mateo.
Learn to protect your investment
portfolio with risk management
strategies. For more information or
to
register
visit
lfsfinance.com/events or call 4014663.
Movies on the Square featuring
Jurassic World. 8:45 p.m. 2200
Broadway, Redwood City. Experience
Redwood Citys high-definition surround sound 25-foot outdoor theater. Movies are shown in high definition Blu-Ray and Surround Sound
when available. For more information go to redwoodcity.org/movies.
FRIDAY, JULY 8
Friends of the Millbrae Library Big
Book and Media Sale. 2 p.m. to 5
p.m. 1 Libary Ave., Millbrae. $5
admission of Friends membership.
Twice yearly sale to benefit the
Millbrae Library. For more information, call 697-7607.
Taste for Trivia. 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. 55
W. Third Ave., San Mateo. Test your
knowledge of pop culture, history,
fun facts, and more. This event is for
adults 21 and over. For more information call 650-522-7818.
Jewelry on the Square. 5 p.m. to
8:30 p.m. 2200 Broadway, Redwood
City. ART on the Square features the
best in fine arts and jewelry each
month between June and AUG. at
Courthouse Square in downtown
Redwood City. For more information
email mhorrigan@redwoodcity.org
Music on the Square featuring
Tommy Castro & The Painkillers. 6
p.m. to 8 p.m. 2200 Broadway,
Redwood City. For more information
go to redwoodcity.org/musiconthesquare.
SATURDAY, JULY 9
Friends of the Millbrae Library Big
Book and Media Sale. 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. 1 Libary Ave., Millbrae. Huge
variety of books and media for all
ages and in a variety of languages.
Free. For more information, call 6977607.
Walk with a Doc. 10 a.m. to 11 a.m.
Anza Lagoon, Burlingame. Come out
and enjoy a stroll with physician volunteers and chat about health and
wellness topics along the way. All
ages and fitness levels welcome.
Free. Walkers receive complimentary
bottled water and a healthy snack.
Every Saturday through Oct. 15
(excluding May 28, July 2, and Sept.
3). Visit smcma.org/walkwithadoc
for more info and to sign up.

COMICS/GAMES

THE DAILY JOURNAL

DILBERT

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

25

CROSSWORD PUZZLE

HOLY MOLE

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

ACROSS
1 Snow boots
5 Bring
10 Not be rash (2 wds.)
12 Boring, as work
13 Marked down (2 wds.)
14 Flipped over
15 Cat scanners?
16 Back when
18 Meadow browser
19 Castle defense
23 Brooks or Gibson
26 out (relax)
27 Crane booms
30 Kid or sapling
32 Pleasant
34 Signs of spring
35 Gasoline rating
36 Lullaby
37 Quip
38 Vast expanse
39 Loathe
42 Tummy muscles
45 Amigo of Fidel
46 Lonely Boy singer

GET FUZZY

50
53
55
56
57
58

Graham of modern dance


Maroon
Respect
Steamy dances
Not on the up and up
Furtive whisper

DOWN
1 Johnnycake
2 Type of prof
3 Barrette
4 Earths star
5 Pendulum direction
6 Cave-dwelling sh
7 Fable
8 Type of sock
9 London park
10 Admin. head
11 Feet, to rugs
12 Globule
17 Judicial order
20 Exact retribution
21 Bounces
22 Windshield option
23 Dugout VIP

24
25
28
29
31
32
33
37
40
41
42
43
44
47
48
49
51
52
54

Love god
Timber wolf
One-sidedness
Playing with a full deck
Meander
Most gloppy
Grassy eld
Radar-gun info
Con game
Gains
Rag Mop brothers
Wild party
Mex. miss
Scolds
Pinewood feature
Unwanted pitches
Turner or Koppel
Jude
Drum, as ngers

7-2-16

PREVIOUS
SUDOKU
ANSWERS

SATURDAY, JULY 2, 2016


CANCER (June 21-July 22) Its a good day to make
home improvements or host a get-together. You will be
offered suggestions and help regarding a project you
want to undertake. Romance is featured.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Youll thrive on
change and the conditions that surround it. Your
enthusiasm may not please everyone, but the
results will be well received.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) It will be easy for you
to persuade others to do things your way, as long as
you realize you have to offer something in return. A
romantic encounter will improve your day.

KenKen is a registered trademark of Nextoy, LLC. 2016 KenKen Puzzle LLC. All rights reserved.
Dist. by Universal Uclick for UFS, Inc. www.kenken.com

FRIDAYS PUZZLE SOLVED

7-2-16

Each row and each column must contain the


numbers 1 through 6 without repeating.
The numbers within the heavily outlined boxes,
called cages, must combine using the given operation
(in any order) to produce the target numbers in the
top-left corners.
Freebies: Fill in single-box cages with the number in
the top-left corner.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Dont let a bad decision


cost you nancially. Listen to the voice of reason
when it comes to situations you face at home. A close
relative will help shed some light on a situation.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Make special plans for
you and someone you love to spend time with. A brief
vacation or constructive activity will bring good results.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Make the changes
you want to see happen at home instead of letting
someone else call the shots. Emotional manipulation
will not help solve disputes.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Question any
changes that someone wants to bring about that will
affect you personally. Be practical in order to stay on
the right track and convince others to join you.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) A personal


improvement can be made that will spur social plans
with someone special. Change will lead to greater
personal stability. If you share your dreams, youll get
help achieving them.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Have fun. Do things
with family or make special plans with a loved one to
do something very enjoyable.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Youll gain valuable
experience if you observe matters before you voice
your opinion. Time is on your side, so relax and let
others do what they are going to do.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Dont hang back when
you have so much to gain by participating. Show off
your skills and engage in whats going on around you.

Want More Fun


and Games?
Jumble Page 2 La Times Crossword Puzzle Classieds
Tundra & Over the Hedge Comics Classieds
Boggle Puzzle Everyday in DateBook

Romance is in the stars.


GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Remembering certain
experiences will help you deal with situations that
unfold now. Dont lose sight of your goals just because
someone wants you to follow his or her plans.
COPYRIGHT 2016 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

26

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

104 Training

110 Employment

TERMS & CONDITIONS


The San Mateo Daily Journal Classifieds will not be responsible for more
than one incorrect insertion, and its liability shall be limited to the price of one
insertion. No allowance will be made for
errors not materially affecting the value
of the ad. All error claims must be submitted within 30 days. For full advertising conditions, please ask for a Rate
Card.

CRYSTAL CLEANING
CENTER
San Mateo, CA

110 Employment

CAREGIVERS

NOW HIRING:
t Bartender t Cocktail Server
t Breakfast Cook t Dishwasher
t AM Housekeeper t PM Laundry Attendant
AM & PM Shifts Available
Employee Benets Package

Call Michelle D. (650) 295-6141


1221 Chess Drive Foster City 94010

127 Elderly Care

Do you have.Good communication skills, a desire for steady


employment and employment
benefits?

Immediate placement
on all assignments.

DUMP TRUCK DRIVER, SM, good pay,


benefits. Must have a Class A or B
License. (650)343-5946 M-F, 8-5.

Call
(650)777-9000

HOUSE CLEANERS NEEDED


Up to $15 per hour. Company Car.
Call Molly Maid at (650)837-9788.
1700 S. Amphlett, #218, San Mateo.

HOME CARE AIDES


Multiple shifts to meet your needs. Great
pay & benefits, Sign-on bonus, 1yr exp
required.
Matched Caregivers (650)839-2273,
(408)280-7039 or (888)340-2273

SALES - Telemarketing and Inside Sales


Representative needed to sell newspaper print and web advertising and event
marketing solutions. To apply, pleasecall
650-344-5200 and send resume to
info@smdailyjournal.com

Are you..Dependable, friendly,


detail oriented,
willing to learn new skills?

Please call for an


Appointment: 650-342-6978

110 Employment
RIGGER HELPER, full time, benefits,
will train. Clean DMV. Lifting 50
pounds. 415-798-0021

Customer Service

2 years experience
required.

SALES/MARKETING
INTERNSHIPS
The San Mateo Daily Journal is looking
for ambitious interns who are eager to
jump into the business arena with both
feet and hands. Learn the ins and outs
of the newspaper and media industries.
This position will provide valuable
experience for your bright future.
Email resume
info@smdailyjournal.com

110 Employment

FAMILY RESOURCE
GUIDE

The San Mateo Daily Journals


twice-a-week resource guide for
children and families.

Every Tuesday & Weekend

NEWSPAPER INTERNS
JOURNALISM

The Daily Journal is looking for interns to do entry level reporting, research, updates of our ongoing features and interviews. Photo interns also welcome.
We expect a commitment of four to
eight hours a week for at least four
months. The internship is unpaid, but
intelligent, aggressive and talented interns have progressed in time into
paid correspondents and full-time reporters.
College students or recent graduates
are encouraged to apply. Newspaper
experience is preferred but not necessarily required.
Please send a cover letter describing
your interest in newspapers, a resume
and three recent clips. Before you apply, you should familiarize yourself
with our publication. Our Web site:
www.smdailyjournal.com.
Send your information via e-mail to
news@smdailyjournal.com or by regular mail to 1900 Alameda de las Pulgas #112, San Mateo CA 94403

PT COOK NEED and CAREGIVERS,


San Carlos (650)596-3489

DRIVERS
WANTED

San Mateo Daily Journal

Newspaper Delivery Routes to businesses and newsracks,


and some apartment buildings. (No residential houses.)
Early mornings, six days per week, Monday through Saturday.
2 to 4 hour routes. Must have own vehicle, valid license and
insurance.
Pick up papers between 3:30 a.m. and 4:30 a.m.
Pay dependent on route size.
Call 650-344-5200
or email resume to info@smdailyjournal.com

GOT JOBS?
The best career seekers
read the Daily Journal.
We will help you recruit qualified, talented
individuals to join your company or organization.
The Daily Journals readership covers a wide
range of qualifications for all types of positions.
For the best value and the best results,
recruit from the Daily Journal...
Contact us for a free consultation

Call (650) 344-5200 or


Email: ads@smdailyjournal.com

Look for it in todays paper to


find information on family
resources in the local area,
including childcare.

203 Public Notices


FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #269586
The following person is doing business
as: Mosaic San Mateo, 3110 Casa De
Campo, SAN MATEO, CA 94403. Registered Owner: PPC Investments LLC, CA.
The business is conducted by a Limited
Liability Company. The registrant commenced to transact business under the
FBN on 4/6/2016
/s/Scott Posternack/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/08/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
6/11/16, 6/18/16, 6/25/16, 7/2/16.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #269584
The following person is doing business
as: Above Average Hoops, 1881 Rollins
Rd, BURLINGAME, CA 94010. Registered Owner: Lauren Bell, 120 Tehama
Court, San Bruno, CA 94066. The business is conducted by an Individual. The
registrant commenced to transact business under the FBN on N/A
/s/Lauren Bell/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/08/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
6/11/16, 6/18/16, 6/25/16, 7/2/16.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #269674
The following person is doing business
as: Advanced Window Systems, 1406
Old County Road,
BELMONT, CA
94002. Registered Owner: Donald Werney, 146 Patrick Way, HALF MOON
BAY, CA 94019. The business is conducted by aN Individual. The registrant
commenced to transact business under
the FBN on 1988.
/s/Don Werney/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/16/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
6/18/16, 6/25/16, 7/2/16, 7/916.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #269724
The following person is doing business
as: BEST BODY AND AUTO SERVICES, 5945 Mission St.,, DALY CITY, CA
94014. Registered Owner: Best Property
Investment, Inc., CA. The business is
conducted by a Corporation. The registrant commenced to transact business
under the FBN on N/A
/s/Jim Li/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/21/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
6/25/16, 7/2/16, 7/9/16, 7/16/16.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #269745
The following person is doing business
as: Peninsula Oil, 16 Cranfield Avenue,
SAN CARLOS, CA 94070. Registered
Owner: 1) Joe Darbonne, and 2) Sheri
Darbonne, same address. The business
is conducted by a Married Couple. The
registrant commenced to transact business under the FBN on 7-1-2011
/s/Sheri Darbonne/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/23/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
6/25/16, 7/2/16, 7/9/16, 7/16/16.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #269755
The following person is doing business
as: Animal Dental Clinic, 987 Laurel St.,
SAN CARLOS, CA, 94070. Registered
Owner: Nicodin Farcas, DVM, 1201 Geraldine Way, No. 7, Belmont, CA 94002.
The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the FBN on N/A
/s/Nicodin Farcas DVM/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/24/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
6/25/16, 7/2/16, 7/9/16, 7/16/16.
LIEN SALE 07/17/2016 @ 9am at 8181
LA HONDA RD LA HONDA, CA
'97 AIRSTREAM TX Lic# 5FZ281 Vin#
1STHVYU30VJ511654

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

203 Public Notices

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #269666
The following person is doing business
as:
PALMA & PALMA INVESTIGATIONS, 990 INDUSTRIAL ROAD STE
209, SAN CARLOS, CA, 94070. Registered Owner: Sylvia Palma, 1160 Lawrence Rd., Danville, CA 94506. The business is conducted by an Individual. The
registrant commenced to transact business under the FBN on 3/31/1992
/s/Sylvia Palma/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/15/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
6/25/16, 7/2/16, 7/9/16, 7/16/16.

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #269835
The following person is doing business
as: Mylo Hotel, 3211 Geneva Ave., DALY CITY, CA 94014. Registered Owner:
Town Concept, LLC., CA. The business
is conducted by a Limited Liability Company. The registrant commenced to
transact business under the FBN on
6/20/2016
/s/Bimal Patel/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/30/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
7/2/16, 7/9/16, 7/16/16, 7/23/16

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #269797
The following person is doing business
as: Critical Synthesis Security Training,
917 California Dr, BURLINGAME, CA
94010. Registered Owner: Hanley Chan,
80 Taraval St, SAN FRANCISCO, CA
94116. The business is conducted by an
Individual. The registrant commenced to
transact business under the FBN on
1/28/15
/s/Hanley Chan/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/27/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
7/2/16, 7/9/16, 7/16/16, 7/23/16

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #269793
The following person is doing business
as: Calderons Pool Service, 2376 Poplar Ave. EAST PALO ALTO, CA 94303.
Registered Owner: Estanislao Calderon,
same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the
FBN on N/A
/s/Estanislao Calderon/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/27/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
7/2/16, 7/9/16, 7/16/16, 7/23/16

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME


STATEMENT #269836
The following person is doing business
as: Lia Hotel, 950 El Camino Real, SAN
CARLOS, CA 94070. Registered Owner:
Mid-Peninsula Hotel LLC., CA. The business is conducted by a Limited Liability
Company. The registrant commenced to
transact business under the FBN on
4/20/2016
/s/Bimal Patel/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/30/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
7/2/16, 7/9/16, 7/16/16, 7/23/16
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME
STATEMENT #269833
The following person is doing business
as: Eddily, 425 Broadway, REDWOOD
CITY, CA 94063. Registered Owner:
Carett, Inc., DE. The business is conducted by an Corporation. The registrant
commenced to transact business under
the FBN on 6/15/2016
/s/Jorge Calderon/
This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 6/30/2016. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal,
7/2/16, 7/9/16, 7/16/16, 7/23/16

210 Lost & Found

Tundra

Tundra

Tundra

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

27

FOUND: LADIES watch outside Safeway Millbrae 11/10/14 call Matt,


(415)378-3634
FOUND: RING Silver color ring found
on 1/7/2014 in Burlingame. Parking Lot
M (next to Dethrone). Brand inscribed.
Gary @ (650)347-2301
LOST - MY COLLAPSIBLE music stand,
clip lights, and music in black bags were
taken from my car in Foster City and may
have been thrown out by disappointed
thieves. Please call (650)704-3595
LOST - Womans diamond ring. Lost
12/18. Broadway, Redwood City.
REWARD! (650)339-2410
LOST SMALL gray and green Parrot.
Redwood Shores. (650)207-2303.

PENINSULA VOLUNTEERS, INC.


in Menlo Park - Expanding its team
JOBS LISTED BELOW:

t.FBMT0O8IFFMT .08
QFS
EJFN%FMJWFSZ%SJWFST
t"DUJWJUZ-FBEFSTt.FNCFSTIJQ
BOE(VFTU4FSWJDFT$PPSEJOBUPS
t(SBOUT"ENJOJTUSBUPSBOE
.VTJD5IFSBQJTU
t1SPHSBN$PPSEJOBUPS
"TTJTUBOU0DF3FDFQUJPOJTU

TO APPLY SEND YOUR RESUME TO:


To learn more about these and other positions
go to the website:www.penvol.org

CAREGIVERS IMMEDIATE NEED!


No Experience Required
Paid Training Provided
FT/PT excellent FT benets
Evenings/weekends/vehicle/driving required
($250.00 Sign-on Bonus)
Dont wait come in TODAY Ask for Carol

(650) 458-2200
www.homebridgeca.org
1660 S. Amphlett Blvd. #115 in San Mateo

210 Lost & Found

296 Appliances

LOST CAT Our Felicity, weighs 7 lbs,


she has a white nose, mouth, chin, all
four legs, chest stomach, around her
neck. Black mask/ears, back, tail. Nice
REWARD. Please email us at
joandbill@msn.com or call 650-5768745. She drinks water out of her paws.

AIR CONDITIONER, Portable, 14,000


BTU,
Commercial
Cool
model
CPN14XC9, almost like new! All installation accessories included.
20 x 16-5/8 x 33-1/2 $345.
(650)345-1835

Books

CIRRUS STEAM mop model SM212B 4


new extra cleaning pads,user manual.
$45. 650-5885487

QUALITY BOOKS used and rare. World


& US History and classic American novels. $5 each obo (650)345-5502
STEPHEN KING Hardback Books
2 @ $3.00 each - (650)341-1861

BLACK & Decker Car Vac, Gd. Condition $8 650-952-3500

COLEMAN LXE Roadtrip Grill Red Brand New! (still in box) $100
(650)918-9847
ELEGANT ELECTRIC Fireplace on
wheels in white casing can see flames,
like new. $99 (650)771-6324

STEPHEN KING Hardback Books


2 @ $3.00 each - (650)341-1861

294 Baby Stuff


FISHER-PRICE HEALTHY Care booster
seat - $5 (650)592-5864.

295 Art
AWARD WINNING
(415)867-6444

Painting

$99.

AWARD WINNING
(415)867-6444

Painting

$99.

BOB TALBOT Marine Lithograph (Signed Framed 24x31 Like New. $99.
(650)572-8895
CLASSIC LAMBORGHINI Countach
Print, Perfect for garage, Size medium
framed, Good condition, $25. 510-6840187
COOL HOT Rod Print "Eddies Market "
Perfect for Garage, SExcellent Condition
$50. 510-684-0187
HONDA 750 Poster, Rare History of
Honda 750 by Cycle World, mounted on
Foam Board, $50. 510-684-0187

296 Appliances
AIR CONDITIONER 10000 BTU w/remote. Slider model fits all windows. LG
brand $199 runs like new. (650)2350898
CHEFMATE TOASTER oven, brand
new, bakes, broils, toasts, adjustable
temperature. $25 OBO. (650)580-4763

REFRIGERATOR WHITE Full sized 2


door Whirlpool Perfect condition .$98.
650 583-9901 650 678-0221
SANITAIRE QUICK Kleen Vacuum and
Host Dry Extractor Carpet Cleaning System Machine. $50. 650-871-1778.
TOASTER OVEN, Black & Decker, 4Slice, 1200W, Toast, Bake, Broil;
TRO480BS - $12 (650) 952-3500
UPRIGHT VACUUM Cleaner, $10. Call
Ed, (415)298-0645 South San Francisco

297 Bicycles
ADULT BIKES 1 regular and 2 with balloon tires $30 Each (650) 347-2356

298 Collectibles
1920'S AQUA Glass Beaded Flapper
Purse (drawstring bag) & Faux Pearl
Flapper Collar. $50. 650-762-6048
1940 VINTAGE telephone bench maple
antiques collectibles $75 (650)755-9833
LENNOX RED Rose, Unused, hand
painted, porcelain, authenticity papers,
$12.00. (650) 578 9208.
MILLER LITE Neon sign , work good
$59 call 650-218-6528
RENO SILVER LEGACY Casino four
rare memorabilia items, casino key, two
coins, small charm. $95. (650)676-0974

28

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend July 2-3, 2016


298 Collectibles

300 Toys

302 Antiques

303 Electronics

303 Electronics

304 Furniture

SCHILLER HIPPIE poster, linen, Sparta


graphics 1968. Mint condition. $600.00.
(650)701-0276

STAR WARS one 4 orange card action figure, Momaw Nadon (Hammerhead). $8 Steve 650-518-6614

STORE FRONT display cabinet, From


1930, marble base. 72 long x 40 tallx
21 deep. Asking $500. (650)341-1306

MOTOROLA BRAVO MB 520 (android


4.1 upgrade) smart phone 35$ 8GB SD
card Belmont (650)595-8855

VINTAGE G.E. radio, model c-442c $60.


(650)421-5469

ESPRESSO TABLE 30 square, 40 tall,


$95 (650)375-8021

SF GIANTS Messenger Bag - Stadium


giveaway. New. Great for laptop/business or school papers. $10 650-6549252

STAR WARS one 4 orange card action figure, Luke Skywalker (Ceremonial) $6 Steve 650-518-6614

303 Electronics

NEW AC/DC adapter, output DC 4.5v,


$5, 650-595-3933

VINTAGE G.E. radio, model c1470 $60.


(650)421-5469

INFINITY FLOOR speakers H 38" x W


11 1/2" x D 10" good $50. (650)756-9516

46 MITSUBISHI Projector TV, great


condition. $400. (650)261-1541.

NEW AC/DC adapter, output DC 4.5v,


$5, 650-595-3933

VINTAGE ZENITH radio, model L516b


$75. (650)421-5469

LAWN CHAIRS (4) White, plastic, $8.


each, (415)346-6038

VINTAGE ZENITH radio, model yrb-791 1948, $ 70. (650)421-5469

LOVE SEAT, Upholstered pale yellow


floral $99. (650)574-4021

304 Furniture

LOVESEAT Designer gray, beige,


white. Excellent condition. $89. 650-5736895

STAR WARS C-3PO mint pair, green tint


(Japan), gold (U.S.) 4 action figures.
$24 650-518-6614

STAR WARS SDCC Stormtrooper


Commander $29 OBO Dan,
650-303-3568 lv msg

302 Antiques

STAR WARS Hong Kong exclusive, mint


Pote Snitkin 4 green card action figure.
$15 650-518-6614

ANTIQUE ITALIAN lamp 18 high, $70


(650)387-4002

STAR WARS Lando Calrissian 4 orange card action figure, autographed by


Billy Dee Williams. $38 Steve 650-5186614

BEAUTIFUL AND UNIQUE Victorian


Side Sewing Table, All original. Rosewood. Carved. EXCELLENT CONDITION! $350. (650)815-8999.

299 Computers

BMW FORMULA 1 Diecast Model, Excellent Condition, 1:43 Scale 2007 Race
Team $80. 510-684-0187

MONITOR FOR computer. Kogi - 15".


Model L5QX. $25. (650)592-5864.

300 Toys

MAHOGANY ANTIQUE Secretary desk,


72 x 40 , 3 drawers, Display case, bevelled glass, $700. (650)766-3024

3-STORY BARBIE Dollhouse with spiral


staircase and elevator. $60. (650)5588142

OLD VINTAGE Wooden Sea Captains


Tool Chest 35 x 16 x 16, $65
(650)591-3313

ADMIRAL CD music player Deck /remote 4 box- speakers $25. (650)9924544


BAZOOKA SPEAKER Bass tube 20
longx10 wide round never used in box
$75. (650)992-4544
BLAUPUNKT AM/FM/CD Radio and Receiver with Detachable Face asking
$100. (650)593-4490
COMPLETE COLOR photo developer
Besler Enlarger, Color Head, trays, photo
tools $50/ 650-921-1996
FIRST ALERT CO600 Carbon Monoxide
Plug-In Alarm. Simple to use, New in
pkg. $18 (650) 952-3500
LEFT-HAND ERGONOMIC keyboard
with 'A-shape' key layout Num pad, $20
(650)204-0587

ONKYO AV Receiver HT-R570 .Digital


Surround, HDMI, Dolby, Sirius Ready,
Cinema Filter.$95/ Offer 650-591-2393
OPTIMUS H36 ST5800 Tower Speaker
36x10x11 $30. (650)580-6324
ORIGINAL AM/FM 1967/68 Honda Radio for $50. (650)593-4490
PIONEER HOUSE Speakers, pair. 15
inch 3-way, black with screens. Work
great. $99.(650)243-8198
SONY DHG-HDD250 DVR and programable remote.
Record OTA. Clock set issues $99 650595-8855
SONY PROJECTION TV 48" with remote good condition $99 (650)345-1111
VINTAGE G.E. radio, model c-430-a
$60. (650)421-5469

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
ACROSS
1 Prepares to
strike, in a way
6 Where many
leading males
may be seen?
15 Nocturnal
problem, usually
16 Source of some
sauce
17 Lets
18 Help
19 Chic modifier
20 Advertisers say it
sells
21 Mother of Huey,
Dewey and Louie
22 Service providers
24 Hall of Fame
NHL coach
Roger
26 Small power
source
27 Paragon
28 Took a shot at
29 Sticks
33 Google goal
34 Semper Fidelis
composer
35 I like that!
36 Encouragement
before a shot
39 Millions can play
it at once
41 Frequent
Greenstreet
co-star
42 Olympics
competitor since
1896
43 To the extent that
46 Quaint inn room
upright
47 Adjust ones
sights
48 Get even with
49 Pic Sans Nom,
par exemple
50 Pet identification
aid
53 Come up with __
54 Russian
Orthodox church
feature
55 Christie
Johnstone
novelist
56 Got back to ones
office?
57 Threw wide, say

DOWN
1 Courses around
courses
2 Bellinis Casta
diva, for one
3 Metropolitan area
4 Musers words
5 Nordic carrier
6 Agricultural units
7 Culmination
8 MDs employee
9 George
Washington
received an
honorary one
from Harvard U.
10 Prepared
11 Play that inspired
an opera
12 Grueling grillings
13 __ Park, Calif.
14 Impala, e.g.
20 Subj. of some
Bossypants
chapters
23 Like some timers?
24 Ominous oater
symbol
25 Hairspray mom
27 Logitech product
29 Transvaal settlers

30 It may have a bell


on it
31 Bag lady?
32 Cut
34 Shot contents
37 Maker of AgeDefy
products
38 Insulin, for one
39 Preceded
40 Theoretically
42 Lawyers charge
43 Defensive covering

2 TWIN MAPLE bed frames, Cannon


Ball construction **SOLD **
3-TIER
WIRE
shelves,
light
weight, wood top for writing $25.00 (650)
578 9208)

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

OAK SIX SHELF Book Case 6FT 4FT


$55 (650)458-8280

ANTIQUE MAHOGANY Bookcase. Four


feet tall. $75. (415) 282-0966.

OUTDOOR WOOD SCREEN - new $80


obo Retail $130 (650)873-8167

ANTIQUE MAHOGANY double bed with


adjustable steelframe $225.00. OBO.
(650)592-4529

PAPASAN CHAIRS (2) -with cushions


$45. each set, (650)347-8061

BEAUTIFUL QUEENSIZE BED/orthopedic/Paid $1500.Like New. $500 or b/o.


Must go fast! 650-952-3063
BEIGE CARPET. 12 1/2'x11 1/2'. Good
condition. Good for bedroom.$95.
(650)595-4617
BEIGE SOFA $99. Excellent Condition
(650) 315-2319
chair

$25

BROWN RECLINER, $75 Excellent Condition. (650) 315-2319


BROWN WOODEN bookshelf H 3'4"X W
3'6"X D 10" with 3 shelves $25.00 call
650-592-2648
CHAIR Designer gray, beige, white.
Excellent condition. $59. 650-573-6895
CHAIR WITH rollers, Sturdy chair, blue
seat, black rollers, $10.00 (650) 578
9208

QUEEN SIZE Sofa bed and love seat,


dark brown
and
beige.
$99
for
both obo 650-279-4948
RECLINER CHAIR blue tweed clean
good $75 Call 650 583-3515
RECLINING SWIVEL & high-back chair
(Hampton) exc condition $30 (650) 7569516 Daly City.
RECLINING SWIVEL chair almost new
$99 650-766-4858
ROCKING CHAIR fine light, oak condition with pads, $85/OBO. 650 369 9762
TEAK CABINET 28"x32", used for stereo equipment $25. (650)726-6429
TEAK-VENEER COMPUTER desk with
single drawer and stacked shelves. $30
obo. 650-465-2344
VINTAGE LARGE Marble Coffee Table,
round. $75.(650)458-8280
WALNUT CHEST, small (4 drawer with
upper bookcase $50. (650)726-6429

CHAIRS 2 Blue Good Condition $50


OBO (650)345-5644

WOOD - wall Unit - 30" long x 6' tall x


17.5" deep. $90. (650)631-9311

CHILDS TABLE (Fisher Price) and Two


Chairs. Like New. **SOLD**

WOOD FURNITURE- one end table and


coffee table. In good condition. $30
OBO. (760)996-0767.

COAT/HAT STAND, solid wood, for your


mountain cabin/house. $50. (650)5207045
COFFEE TABLE Woven bamboo with
glass top. $99. 650-573-6895
COMPUTER DESK $25 , drawer for keyboard, 40" x 19.5" (619)417-0465
COMPUTER SWIVEL CHAIR. Padded
Leather. $80. (650) 455-3409
COMPUTER TABLE, adjustable height,
chrome legs, 29x48 like new $30 (650)
697-8481

306 Housewares
CHRISTMAS TREE China, Fairfield
Peace on Earth. Complete Set of 12 (48
pieces) $75. 650-493-5026
COMPLETE SET OF CHINA - Windsor
Garden, Noritake. Four place-settings,
20-pieces in original box, never used.
$250 per box
(3 boxes available).
(650)342-5630
DECORATIVE LAMP & 8"x8" mirror, exc
cond $30 (650)756-9516.Daly City.

COUCH Designer gray, beige, white.


Excellent condition. $99. 650-573-6895

FREEZER, KENMORE Chest Type


20 cubic feet $50.00 650 368 0748

COUCH, CREAM IKEA, great condition,


$89, light-weight, compact, sturdy loveseat (415)775-0141

PLASTIC DUAL-LID Underbed Storage


Container with wheels, 31"x15"x5-1/2",
$7 (650) 952-3500.

CUSTOM MADE wood sewing storage


cabinet perfect condition $75. (650)4831222

PRE-LIT 7 ft Christmas tree. Three sections, easy to assemble. $50. 650 349
2963.

DINETTE TABLE with Chrome Legs: 36"


x58" (with one leaf 11 1/2") - $50.
(650)341-5347

SOLID TEAK floor model 16 wine rack


with turntable $60. (650)592-7483

DINETTE TABLE, 3 adjustable leaf.$30.


(650) 756-9516.Daly City.
DINING ROOM table Good Condition
$90.00 or best offer ( 650)-780-0193
DRUM TABLE - brown, perfect condition, nice design, with storage, $45.,
(650)345-1111
END TABLES Woven bamboo, offwhite. $89. 650-573-6895. (650)573-689
ENTERTAINMENT TV center, glass
door, shelf, drawersm 4'w x 5'H .exc
cond. $25. (650)992-4544

xwordeditor@aol.com

OAK BOOKCASE, 30"x30" x12". $25.


(650)726-6429

ANTIQUE DINING table for six people


with chairs $99. (650)580-6324

BLACK
OFFICE
(650)7569516 Daly City.

44 It flows through
Troyes and Melun
45 Prima __: selfevident
46 Ostrich, for
example
48 iPhone display
51 Agcy. concerned
with drugresistant bacteria
52 In
53 Equals

NEW TWIN Mattress set plus frame


$30.00 (650) 347-2356

308 Tools
3/ 8 Drive Air Wrench CP-720 never use
in box $35. (650)992-4544
ALUMINUM LADDERS 40ft, $99 for two,
Call (650)481-5296
BOSTITCH 16 gage Finish nailer Model
SB 664FN $99 (650)359-9269
CRAFTSMAN 9" Radial Arm Saw with 6"
dado set. No stand. $55 (650)341-6402
CRAFTSMAN JIGSAW 3.9 amp. with
variable speeds $65 (650)359-9269

07/02/16

LEGAL NOTICES

Fictitious Business Name Statements,


Trustee Sale Notice, Name Change, Probate,
Notice of Adoption, Divorce Summons,
Notice of Public Sales and More.
Published in the Daily Journal for San Mateo County.

Fax your request to: 650-344-5290


Email them to: ads@smdailyjournal.com

By Gail Grabowski
2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

07/02/16

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

308 Tools

311 Musical Instruments

318 Sports Equipment

CRAFTSMAN JIG Saw - 1/4 HP. Variable speed. Extra blades. Saw edge
guide. $25 650-654-9252

GULBRANSEN BABY GRAND PIANO Appraised @ $5450., want $1800 obo,


(650)343-4461

NEW 8" tactical knife, one hand open


$19 650-595-3933

CRAFTSMAN RADIAL Arm Saw Stand.


In box. $30. (650)245-7517

HAMMOND B-3 Organ and 122 Leslie


Speaker. Excellent condition. $8,500. private owner, (650)349-1172

CRAFTSMAN RADIAL SAW, with cabinet stand, $200 Cash Only, (650)8511045
DELTA CABINET SAW with overrun table. $1,500/obo. ((650)342-6993
DYNAGLOPRO
HEATER.
Phone: 650-591-8062

$40.00

HEAVY DUTY Mattock/Pick, Less Handle $5. (650)368-0748


OXYGEN ACETYLENE Heavy Duty
Complete
Welding
Set
$325.00
(650)873-6304

HARMONICA.
HOHNER Pocket Pal.
Key of C. Original box. Never used.
$10. (650)588-0842

TENNIS PRINCE Pro rackets (2) with


cover - $40. ea. (650)341-8342

YAMAHA PIANO, Upright, Model M-305,


$750. Call (650)572-2337

TENNIS PRINCE Pro rackets (2) with


cover - $40. ea. (650)341-8342

312 Pets & Animals

TREADMILL BY PRO-FORM. (Hardly


Used). 10% incline, 2.5 HP motor, 300lb
weight capacity. $329 (650)598-9804

BAMBOO BIRD Cage - very intricate design - 21"x15"x16". $50 (650)341-6402

VINTAGE SHOPSMITH and BAND


SAW, good shape. $1,000/obo. Call
(650)342-6993

WILLIAMS #1191 CHROME 2 1/16"


Combination "SuperRrench". Mint. $89.
650-218-7059.
WILLIAMS #40251, 4 PC. Tool Set
(Hose Remover, Cotter Puller, Awl, Scraper). Mint. $29. 650-218-7059.

ONE KENNEL Cab ll one Pet Taxi animal carriers 26x16. Excellent cond. $60..
650-593-2066
PARROT CAGE, Steel, Large - approx
4 ft by 4 ft, Excellent condition $300 best
offer. (650)245-4084
PET CARRIER, brown ,Very good condition, $15.00 medium zize leave txt or call
650 773-7201

316 Clothes
100% WOOL brown dress pants, 42X30
$8 650-595-3933
BOY SCOUT canvas belt with Boy Scout
Buckle. Vintage. Fair condition. $5.
(650)588-0842
FAUX FUR Coat Woman's brown multi
color
in
excellent
condition
3/4
length $50 650-692-8012

309 Office Equipment

HATS, BRAND New, Nascar Racing,


San Francisco 49ers and Giants, excellent condition, $10. 510-684-0187

ELECTRIC
TYPEWRITER
$40.00
Good condition
(650)367-1508

LADIES BOOTS size 8 , 3 pairs different


styles , $20/ pair. call 650-592-2648

HP DESKJET 5800 series Printer - wireless. Manuals included. $25. (650)5925864

LEATHER JACKET, New Black Italian


style, size M Ladies $45 (650) 875-1708

NEAT RECEIPTS Mobile Scanner new


in box $79, call 650-324-8416

310 Misc. For Sale


"MOTHER-IN-LAW TONGUES" plants,
3 in 5-gal cans. $10.00 each. 650/5937408.
8 TRACKS, billy Joel, Zeppelin, Eagles
,Commodores, more.40 @ $4 each , call
650-393-9908
DOLLAR BILL changer box, book unused 23" x 6" x 14" $100.(650)992-4544
GAME "BEAT THE EXPERTS" never
used $8., (408)249-3858
HARLEY DAVIDSON black phone, perfect condition, $65., (650) 867-2720
INCUBATOR, $99, (650)678-5133
LIONEL CHRISTMAS Boxcars 2005,
2006, 2007 New OB $90 lot 650-3687537

MEN'S ASICS Kayano used very good


condition size 10.5 new $159 ONLY $15
650 520-7045
MEN'S NIKE shoe in like new condition
Grey color size 11. $35. 650 520-7045
MEN'S SKI boots size 10, $75.
(650)520-1338
MEN'S VINTAGE Pendleton,100% virgin
wool, red tartan plaid, large,like
new,$25,650-591-9769, San Carlos
NEW JOCKEY Men's Classic Crew
white tshirts (L) 3pk $15/each (5 available) 650.952.3466
NEW WITH tags Wool or cotton Men's
pullover
sweaters
(XL)
$15/each
(650)952-3466
PARIS HILTON purse white & silver unused, about 12" long x 9" high $23. 650592-2648
PERRY ELLIS tan cotton pants 42X30,
$9 650-595-3933

LIONEL CHRISTMAS Holiday expansion Set. New OB $99 650-368-7537


LIONEL ENGINE #221 Rio Grande diesel, runs good ex-condition
$90.
(650)867-7433

VELVET DRAPE, 100% cotton, new


beautiful burgundy 82"X52" W/6"hems:
$45 (415)585-3622

LIONEL WESTERN Union Pass car and


dining car. New OB $99 650-368-7537

VINTAGE 1970S Grecian made dress,


size 6-8, $35 (650)873-8167

RMT CHRISTMAS Diesel train and Caboose. Rare. New OB $99 650-368-7537

317 Building Materials

SILK SAREE 6 yards new nice color.for


$35 only. C all(650)515-2605 for more information.
TASCO LUMINOVA Telescope.with tripod stand, And extra Lenses. Good condition.$90. call 650-591-2393
TWO OUTDOOR large Christmas
wreaths. One 41 inches and one 30 inches across. $25. (415)517-2909
ULTRASONIC JEWELRY Cleaning Machine Cleans jewelry, eyeglasses, dentures, keys. Concentrate included. $30
OBO. (650)580-4763

CULTURED MARBLE 2 tone BR vanity


counter top. New toe skin/ scribe. 29 x
19 $300 (408)744-1041
INTERIOR DOORS, 8, Free. Call 5737381.
NEW PRE-HUNG EXTERIOR Door, Fiberglass Panelled with Windows, Left
Hand open $100.00 Call (650)595-3831
SHUTTERS 2 wooden shutters 32x72
like new $50.00 ea.call 650 368-7891
WHITE DOUBLE pane window for $29
or Best offer. Call Halim @ (650) 6785133.

318 Sports Equipment

VASE WITH flowers 2 piece good for the


Holidays, $25., (650) 867-2720

15 SF Giants Posters -- Barry Bonds,


Jeff Kent, JT Snow. 6' x 2.5' Unused. $4
each. $35 all. (650)588-1946 San Bruno

VINTAGE WHITE Punch Bowl/Serving


Bowl Set with 10 cups plus one extra
$30. (650)873-8167

ADIDAS ENGLISH Olympics sports bag


(very good condition) - $25, (650)3418342

WAGON WHEEL Wooden, original from


Colorado farm. 34x34
Very good
aged condition $200 San Bruno
(650)588-1946

CHILDS KICK sgooter by razor wiyh helmet $25 obo (650)591-6842

311 Musical Instruments


BALDWIN GRAND PIANO, 6 foot, excellent condition, $8,500/obo. Call
(510)784-2598

VINTAGE ENGLISH ladies ice skates up to size 7-8, $40., (650)873-8167

LADIES MCGREGOR Golf Clubs


Right handed with covers and pull cart
$150 o.b.o. (650)344-3104

620 Automobiles

GARAGE SALES
ESTATE SALES

GOT AN OLDER
CAR, BOAT, OR RV?

Make money, make room!

List your upcoming


garage sale,
moving sale,
estate sale,
yard sale,
rummage sale,
clearance sale, or
whatever sale you
have...

VINTAGE NASH Cruisers Mens/ Womens Roller Skates Blue indoor/outdoor sz


6-8. $60 B/O. (650)574-4439

Reach over 84,450 readers


from South San Francisco
to Palo Alto.
in your local newspaper.

WET SUIT - medium size, $95., call for


info (650)851-0878

Call (650)344-5200

WOMEN'S LADY Cougar gold iron set


set - $25. (650)348-6955
WOMEN'S NORDICA ski boots, size 8
1/2. $50 650-592-2047

345 Medical Equipment


BATH CHAIR LIFT. Peterman battery
operated bath chair lift. Stainless steel
frame. Accepts up to 350lbs. Easily inserted I/O tub.$250 OBO.
(650) 739-6489.
BEDSIDE COMMODE like new $15
650.952.3466
ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIR, great shape,
only 5 years old, $500 or best offer. Call
anytime, (650)713-6272
MEDLINE MEDSOFT Vinyl Pillows,
20"x26"
(15
available)
$5/each.
650.952.3466
NOVA WALKER with storage box &
seat; never used; already assembled;
$70.00 cash only. 415-298-4545

379 Open Houses

OPEN HOUSE
LISTINGS
List your Open House
in the Daily Journal.
Reach over 76,500
potential home buyers &
renters a day,
from South San Francisco
to Palo Alto.
in your local newspaper.
Call (650)344-5200

440 Apartments

GARAGE SALE

ROOM FOR RENT - MILLBRAE. Close


to Shopping Center. Newly Remodeled.
$1050 per month. (650) 697-4758

Sat 7/2 & Sun 7/3

470 Rooms

Used furniture, accessories,


art and home decor.

HIP HOUSING
Non-Profit Home Sharing Program
San Mateo County
(650)348-6660

Warehouse having
our
"Christmas in July"
sale

ROOM FOR RENT: Bright 1 bedroom


across bathroom. Conveniently located
by freeway. 1 level. For one nonsmoking person. $950. (650)576-6237
.

Great savings on all


items. Home staging
company has that piece
your looking for.

Voila Staging
and Design

20 North Railroad Avenue


(between 1st Avenue and Tilton)
San Mateo

JULY 4
9am to 4pm

2075 Fairmont
San Mateo

Houshold items,
furntiure, electronics,
kitchenware and more!

620 Automobiles

MERCEDES BENZ 02 SL500, both


tops, 50K miles, brilliant silver, Cherry
condition! Always garaged. $19,500.
(650)726-8623
MERCURY 09 Marquis. 4 Door 11,000
miles. White. Like new. $13,000.
(650) 726-9610.

625 Classic Cars


1955 CHEVY BEL AIR 2 door, Standard
Transmission V8 Motor, non-op $22,000
obo. (650)952-4036.
86 CHEVY CORVETTE. Automatic.
93,000 miles. Sports Package.$6,800
obo. (650) 952-4036.
CHEVY 65 Impala 2DR Coupe. 113K
miles. 4 BL Carb. $8,500.
(415) 412-1292.

FORD 63 thunderbird Hardtop, 390 engine, Leather Interior. Will consider


$4,500 /OBO (650)364-1374
FORD 64 Falcon. 4DR Sedan. 6 cyl.
auto/trans $3,500.00. (650) 570-5780.

630 Trucks & SUVs


CHEVROLET 2014 express 2500 cargo
van 31,000 miles excellent cond.
$24,000 or trade class B or smaller
camper (650)591-8062
MAZDA 04 Tribute, Limited, 175K miles,
$4,400. (650)342-6342

640 Motorcycles/Scooters
BMW 03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call
650-995-0003
MOTORCYCLE PARTS and Accessories For Sale. Shop Closing. Call
(650) 670-2888.

645 Boats
2003 P-15 West Wight Potter sailboat,
excellend
condition.
$7,200.
Call
(650)347-2559

670 Auto Service

AA SMOG

Complete Repair & Service


$29.75 plus certificate fee
(most cars)

869 California Drive .


Burlingame

(650) 340-0492

1993 CHEVY Station Wagon, 1 owner


64,000 miles $3,900 (650)342-0852.

LUXURATI AUTO REPAIR

2007 BMW X-5, One Owner, Excel. Condition Sports package 3rd row seats
$21,995 obo Call (650)520-4650

Smog Check
Repair Services
Collision and Body Work

2012 MAZDA CX-7 SUV Excellent


condition One owner Fully loaded Low
miles $19,950 obo (650)520-4650

Dont lose money


on a trade-in or
consignment!
Sell your vehicle in the
Daily Journals
Auto Classifieds.
Just $45
Well run it
til you sell it!
Reach 76,500 drivers
from South SF to
Palo Alto
Call (650)344-5200
ads@smdailyjournal.com
CADILLAC 99 DeVille Concours,
98,500 miles, $3,500 or best offer.
(650)270-6637
CHEVY 10 HHR . 68K. EXCELLENT
CONDITION. $8888. (650)274-8284.

$95.00,

CHEVY HHR 08 - Grey, spunky car


loaded, even seat warmers, $9,500.
(408)807-6529.

MENS NORDICA ski boots for sale, size


10, $60.00, 650-341-0282.

DODGE
99 Van, Good Condition,
$5,500, childs play three, call
(650)481-5296

MEN'S ROSSIGNOL Skis.


good condition, 650-341-0282.

Do the humane thing.


Donate it to the
Humane Society.
Call 1- 800-943-8412

CHEVY 69 CORVETTE 350 V/8 4speed


Flared Fenders-Retro Mod $16,500 obo
Call (650)369-8013

Garage Sales

9 AM to 3 PM

PRADA DAYPACK / Purse, Sturdy black


nylon canvas, like new, made in Italy,
$35 (650)591-6596

SAMSONITE 26" tan hard-sided suit


case, lt. wt., wheels, used once/like new.
$60. 650-328-6709

SET OF Used Golf Clubs with Cart for


$50. (650)593-4490

UPRIGHT PIANO. In tune. Fair condition. $300 OBO (650) 533-4886.

POWERMATIC TABLE SAW, heavy duty, excellent condition, perfect for contractor or carpenter. $750 or best offer.
Call anytime, (650)713-6272

VINTAGE CRAFTSMAN Jig Saw. Circa


1947. $60. (650)245-7517

$99

SOCCER BALLS - $8.00 each (like new)


4 available. (650)341-5347

AIRLINE CARRIER for cats, pur. from


Southwest Airlines, $25, 2 available. Call
(505-228-1480) local.

SHOPSMITH MARK V 50th Anniversary


most
attachments.
$1,500/OBO.
(650)504-0585

POWER PLUS Exercise Machine


(650)368-3037

MONARCH UPRIGHT player piano $99


(650) 583-4549

PAINTING TOOLS - hooks, stirrups 110


ropes, poles, 20 plank, 440 Graco Spary
Machine, $500, Asking (650)-483-8048

PRUNING SAW - Great condition. 24"


blade. Great for all your pruning needs.
$10 650-654-9252

OGIO GOLF bag travel cover soft with


roller wheels Very Good Condition.$40
Jeff 650-208-5758

Garage Sales

Burlingame & San Mateo Locations

(650) 340-0026

SEE OUR AD FOR DISCOUNTS!

MENLO ATHERTON
AUTO REPAIR
WE SMOG ALL CARS
1279 El Camino Real

Menlo Park

650 -273-5120

www.MenloAthertonAutoRepair

670 Auto Parts


BRIDGESTONE TURANZA RFT (Run
Flat) 205/55/16 EL 42 All Season Like
New $100. (650)483-1222
BRIDGESTONE TURANZA RFT (Run
Flat) 205/55/16 EL42 used 70% left $80.
(650)483-1222
FRONT END for 1956 Chevy 210 car,
complete! Rusty but trusty. $1,200. Call
(650)341-1306
NEW CONTINENTAL Temporary tire
mounted on 5 lug rim Size T125/70/R1798M $100. (650)483-1222
SHOP MANUALS for GM Suv's
Year 2002 all for $40 (650)948-0912

680 Autos Wanted


Wanted 62-75 Chevrolets
Novas, running or not
Parts collection etc.
So clean out that garage
Give me a call
Joe 650 342-2483

29

30

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

Cabinetry

Construction

Gardening

CALEDONIAN
MASONRY INC

LAWN MAINTENANCE

BBQ Season Coming!


We can design your
outdoor living
experience.
*BBQs *Pizza Ovens
*Patios *Flagstone
*Concrete/Foundation
Call For Free Estimate:

(650) 525-9154

Drought Tolerant Planting


Drip Systems, Rock Gardens
Pressure Washing,
and lots more!

Call Robert
STERLING GARDENS
650-703-3831
Lic #751832

AAA RATED!

INDEPENDENT
HAULERS

$40 & UP
HAUL

Housecleaning

Since 1988/Licensed & Insured


Monthly Specials
Fast, Dependable Service

CONSUELOS HOUSE
CLEANING

Free Estimates

Bi-Weekly/Once a Month,
Moving In & Out
28 yrs. in Business

(650)341-7482

Free Estimates, 15% off First Visit

Contractors

Hauling

EMERALD GREEN
PROJECT MAIDS
The Bay Area's
"True Eco-Friendly Services"
t-JDFOTFEt#POEFEt*OTVSFE
t3FTJEFOUJBMt$PNNFSJDBM
Call or book online:
www.egpmaids.com
650-206-0520

Free estimates

CHAINEY HAULING
Junk & Debris Clean Up

Furniture / Appliance / Disposal


Tree / Bush / Dirt / Concrete Demo

Starting at $40 & Up


www.chaineyhauling.com
Free Estimates
(650)207-6592

SEASONAL LAWN

MAINTENANCE
Drought Tolerant Planting
Drip Systems, Rock Gardens
Pressure Washing,
and lots more!

Painting

Tree Service

JON LA MOTTE

Hillside Tree

PAINTING

Interior & Exterior


Quality Work, Reasonable
Rates, Free Estimates

(650)368-8861
Lic #514269

CHEAP
HAULING!
Light moving!
Haul Debris!
650-583-6700

MICHAELS
PAINTING

Serving the Peninsula


since 1989

(650) 574-0203
lic#628633

Service

LOCALLY OWNED
Family Owned Since 2000
Trimming

Pruning

Shaping
Large

Removal
Grinding

Stump

Free
Estimates
Mention

PENINSULA
CLEANING

NICK MEJIA PAINTING

A+ Member BBB Since 1975


Large & Small Jobs
Residential & Commercial
Classic Brushwork, Matching, Staining, Varnishing, Cabinet Finishing
Wall Effects, Murals, More!

RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERICAL

BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

1-800-344-7771

Cleaning

Roofing

A+ BBB Rating

(650)219-4066
Lic#1211534

Landscaping

(415)971-8763
Lic. #479564

Gutters

Plumbing
BELMONT PLUMBING
Complete Local Plumbing Svc
Water Heaters, Drain Clearing
Faucets, Sinks, Bathtubs
Showers, Toilets, Gas Repair
Bonded & Insured
Lic #836489 C-36

The Daily Journal


to get 10% off
for new customers
Call Luis (650) 704-9635
Window Washing

WINDOW
WASHING

650-766-1244

MEYER
PLUMBING
SUPPLY

Mena Plastering
Concrete
CHETNER CONCRETE

Drywall and Plaster


Interior and Exterior
Window & Patchwork Repair

Free Estimates

(415) 420-6362

Lic#625577 Bonded & Insured

Lic. #706952

Driveways - Walkways - Pool Decks Patios - Stairs - Exposed Aggregate Masonry - Retaining Walls - Drainage
Foundation Slabs

Free Estimates

(650) 271 - 1442 Mike

Decks & Fences

MARSH FENCE
& DECK CO.

Electricians

ALL ELECTRICAL
SERVICE

650-322-9288

for all your electrical needs

LEMUS CONSTRUCTION
(650)271-3955
Dry-rot & Termite Repair

Deck Repair & New Construction


Staircase Repair & New Construction

Siding Installation
Bathroom Remodel & Painting
Free Estimates Fully Insured
Lic. #913461

Handy Help

2030 S Delaware St
San Mateo

CONTRERAS HANDYMAN
SERVICES

650-350-1960

Fences Tree Trimming


Decks Concrete Work
Kitchen and Bathroom
remodeling

Roofing

Free Estimates

State License #377047


Licensed Insured Bonded
Fences - Gates - Decks
Stairs - Retaining Walls
10-year guarantee
Quality work w/reasonable prices
Call for free estimate
(650)571-1500

Construction

Toilets, Sinks, Vanities,


Faucets, Water heaters,
Whirlpools and more!
Wholesale Pricing &
Closeout Specials.

ELECTRIC SERVICE GROUP

INSIDE OUT
ELECTRIC, INC

Residential/Commercial Service
Electrical Panel Upgrades
Remodels / New Construction
Trusted Owner Operated
since 2002.
Lic #808182

(650)515-1123

REED
ROOFERS

(650)288-9225
(650)350-9968

contrerashandy12@yahoo.com

SENIOR HANDYMAN

Serving the entire Bay Area


Residential & Commercial

Painting Electrical
Carpentry Dry Rot
40 Yrs. Experience

Call for Free Estimate

Specializing in any size project

License #931457

(650) 591-8291

Retired Licensed Contractor

650-201-6854
THE VILLAGE
CONTRACTOR

Licensed General and


Painting Contractor
Int/Ext Painting Carpentry
Sheetrock, Tile, Stucco & Remodels
Lic#979435
CALL FOR GREAT RATES!

(650)701-6072

Hauling

JONS HAULING
Serving the peninsula since 1976

FREE ESTIMATES

Junk and debris removal, yard/int


clearing, furniture, appliance hauling
www.jonshauling.com

(650)393-4233

Notices
NOTICE TO READERS:
California law requires that contractors
taking jobs that total $500 or more (labor
or materials) be licensed by the Contractors State License Board. State law also
requires that contractors include their license number in their advertising. You
can check the status of your licensed
contractor at www.cslb.ca.gov or 800321-CSLB. Unlicensed contractors taking
jobs that total less than $500 must state
in their advertisements that they are not
licensed by the Contractors State License Board.

Landscaping

NATE LANDSCAPING
* Tree Service * Fence
* Deck * Pavers
* Pruning & Removal
* New Lawn * Irrigation
* All Concrete * Ret. Wall
* Sprinkler System
* Stamp Concrete
* Yard Clean-Up,
Haul & Maintenance

Free Estimate

650.353.6554
Lic. #973081

ADVERTISE
YOUR SERVICE
in the
HOME & GARDEN SECTION
Offer your services to 76,500 readers a day, from
Palo Alto to South San Francisco
and all points between!

Call (650)344-5200
ads@smdailyjournal.com

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Computer

COMPUTER
PROBLEMS?

Viruses, lost data, hardware or


software issues? Contact Geeks
On Site! 24/7 Service. Friendly
Repair Experts. Macs and PCs
Call for FREE diagnosis.
1-800-715-9068

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

Food

Health & Medical

RED HOT CHILLI PEPPER

EYE EXAMINATIONS

The most authentic SoutheastAsian/Indo-Chinese cuisine in the Bay


Area, served family style!
Our dynamic menu offers
plenty of options to carnivorous,
vegetarian or vegan diners!
1125 San Carlos Ave, San Carlos

650-453-3055

Dental Services

THE CAKERY

COMPLETE IMPLANT
Dentistry Under One Roof

1308 Burlingame Ave


Burlingame
650 344-1006
www.burlingamecakery.com
Find us on Facebook

Same day treatment


Evening & Saturday appts available
Peninsula Dental Implant Center
1201 St Francisco Way, San Carlos
650.232.7650

A touch of Europe

Furniture

CALIFORNIA

STOOLS*BAR*DINETTES

I - SMILE

Implant & Orthodontict Center


1702 Miramonte Ave. Suite B
Mountain View

Exceptional.
Reliable. Innovative
650-282-5555

(650)591-3900

Tons of Furniture to match


your lifestyle

Peninsula Showroom:
930 El Camino Real, San Carlos
Ask us about our
FREE DELIVERY

579-7774

PANCHO VILLA
TAQUERIA

Because Flavor Still Matters


365 B Street
San Mateo
(650) 343-4123
www.smpanchovilla.com

LEGAL

REFINANCE
HARD MONEY
AT LOWER RATE

DOCUMENTS PLUS
Non-Attorney document
preparation: Divorce,
Pre-Nup, Adoption, Living Trust,
Conservatorship, Probate,
Notary Public. Response to
Lawsuits: Credit Card
Issues, Breach of Contract

SKIN TASTIC
MEDICAL LASER

Jeri Blatt, LDA #11

Cosmetic Spa Cool Sculpting


Laser&Cosmetic Dermatology
1838 El Camino Rl#130
Burlingame. 650 542-7055
www.skintasticmedicalspa.com

SLEEP APNEA
We can treat it
without CPAP!

Registered & Bonded

(650)574-2087

legaldocumentsplus.com
"I am not an attorney. I can only
provide self help services at your
specific direction."

Moving
RJ MOVING SERVICES

650-583-5880
Millbrae Dental

Do you need Packing,


Unpacking, Loading,
Unloading, Movers, Cleaning
Give us a call Free Estimate.
www.rjms.goodbarber.com
we can help.
209-587-3150

Insurance

Marketing

Call for a free


sleep apnea screening

DENTAL
IMPLANTS

LIFE INSURANCE

Call Millbrae Dental


for details
650-583-5880

CLU, RHU, REBC, CLTC, LUTCF


President
Barrett Insurance Services
(650)513-5690
CA. Insurance License #0737226

Save $500 on
Implant Abutment &
Crown Package.

Real Estate Loans

1159 Broadway
Burlingame
Dr. Andrew Soss
OD, FAAO
www.Dr-AndrewSoss.net

Health & Medical


Food

Legal Services

AFFORDABLE

Eric L. Barrett,

The Market is Open July 3!


Enjoy Local Wine & Craft Beer

Meet the Mayor

GROW

YOUR SMALL BUSINESS


Get free help from
The Growth Coach
Go to
www.buildandbalance.com
Sign up for the free newsletter

Massage Therapy

BEST ASIAN
BODY MASSAGE
$39.99/hr
Call (650) 787-9969
Free Parking Behind Building
Mon-Fri, 10am-9pm
Wknds-Holidays Call Ahead

1838 El Camino #103,


Burlingame

For more information, visit: SanCarlosChamber.org

DIRECT PRIVATE LENDER


ALL CREDIT ACCEPTED
Since 1979

WACHTER

INVESTMENTS, INC.

348-7191
Real Estate Broker
CA BRE#746683
NMLS #348288

Real Estate Services


*SALES * LEASING
* PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
Sales: 1.49% commission
Property Management: 4% fee
Personalized service

Peninsula Prime Realty


650-591-0119

info@peninsulaprimerealty.com

SALES LEASING
PROPERTY
MANAGEMENT
Serving the Bay Area
since 1980
First caller gets a special
3.25% sales commission
both sides of transaction
Real Estate Unlimted
(415)585-2233
luckyaltman@aol.com
CA BRE Lic# 00621471

Travel

FIGONE TRAVEL
GROUP
(650) 595-7750

www.cruisemarketplace.com
Cruises Land & Family vacations
Personalized & Experienced
Family Owned & Operated
Since 1939
1495 Laurel St. SAN CARLOS
CST#100209-10

31

32

WORLD

Weekend July 2-3, 2016

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Six found dead after hostage takeover in Bangladesh


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DHAKA, Bangladesh Bangladeshi


forces stormed an upscale Dhaka restaurant
where heavily armed militants held dozens of
people hostage Saturday morning, killing at
least six of the attackers and rescuing 13 captives including foreigners at the end of the
10-hour standoff.
About 35 people were taken hostage,
including about 20 foreigners, when gunmen
stormed the Holey Artisan Bakery in Dhakas
Gulshan area, a diplomatic zone, on Friday
night.
We have gunned down at least six terrorists and the main building is cleared but the
operation is still going on, Lt. Col. Tuhin
Mohammad Masud, commander of the Rapid
Action Battalion, told The Associated Press
three hours after the commandos launched the

rescue operation.
He said there were casualties among other
hostages, but did not provide details.
Masud said the rescued included a Japanese,
who was injured, and two Sri Lankans. He
said that some of the militants were captured.
The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the attack, according to the SITE
Intelligence Group, which monitors jihadis
activity online. A news agency affiliated
with the Islamic Group claimed that 24 people had been killed and 40 wounded, including foreigners, according to SITE. The figures could not be independently confirmed.
The Amaq news agency also posted photos
purportedly showing the bodies of hostages.
The authenticity of the pictures could not be
confirmed either.
With the sound of gunfire and explo-

REUTERS

An injured police officer is helped out of a


restaurant that was stormed by gunmen.
sions, local TV stations reported that the
rescue operation began at 7:40 a.m. It
included army personnel with automatic
weapons and at least seven armored vehi-

cles and ambulances.


Local media reported that an Argentine and
two Bangladeshis also were rescued from the
restaurant early Saturday, but details about
their condition were not immediately available.
Commandos storming the restaurant discovered five bodies lying in blood, a police
official who was not identified told Channel
24 TV station. It wasnt clear if they were
militants or hostages.
The attack marks an escalation in the
growing drumbeat of militant violence to hit
the traditionally moderate Muslim-majority
nation in the past three years, but with
increasing frequency in recent months.
Most attacks have been by machete-wielding men singling out individual activists,
foreigners and religious minorities.

UK shelves balanced budget goal


By Jill Lawless
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON Britains Treasury chief


on Friday abandoned the governments
long-held goal of balancing the
nations books by 2020, warning that
the countrys vote to leave the European
Union had sent shock waves and instability through the U.K. economy.
In a sign of that uncertainty, a leading
contender to become the countrys next
prime minister said he would not trigger
formal EU exit talks before next year
even as senior European officials urged
Britain to hurry up and go.
George Osborne, Britains finance
minister, said the referendum result is
likely to lead to a significant negative
shock for the British economy.
We will continue to be tough on the
deficit but we must be realistic about
achieving a surplus by the end of this

decade, he said in a
speech
in
Manchester, northwest England.
The Conservative
government elected
in 2010 has cut billions from public
spending in a bid to
eliminate a budget
George
deficit thats expectOsborne
ed to hit 75.6 billion pounds ($100 billion) this year.
Before the EU referendum last week, the
Office For Budget Responsibility had
forecast a budget surplus of 10.4 billion
pounds in 2019-20.
Osborne, who argued during the campaign that Britain should stay in the
EU, had estimated that a vote to leave
would hurt public finances to the tune of
30 billion pounds.
He said Britain must reduce uncer-

tainty by moving as quickly as possible to a new relationship with Europe


and being super competitive, open for
business and free trading. Thats the
plan and we must set to it.
Those who campaigned for a British
exit, or Brexit, say any economic pain
will be temporary, and that leaving the
EU will open up new trading possibilities with other regions.
But that could be a long way off.
Prime Minister David Cameron
announced his resignation after losing
the referendum and said his successor
should oversee EU exit talks. Five
Conservative lawmakers are vying to
replace him in a contest whose winner
will be announced Sept. 9
The new leader will be the person to
invoke Article 50 of the EU constitution the formal mechanism that
begins two years of divorce negotiations.

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