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Weekend March 10-11, 2012 Vol XII, Edition 177

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Two new schools for San Carlos?


District now considering elementary schools on middle school campuses
By Heather Murtagh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Balancing growing enrollment with a desire to offer new programs districtwide has led San Carlos ofcials to consider changing the grade conguration and opening two new schools. Last year, San Carlos Elementary School

District ofcials said they must add capacity because of the growing number of children at all of its schools. On Thursday, the board discussed drawings of a possible solution: Building a new elementary school on each of the middle school sites. Such schools wouldnt be traditional but could support fourth and fth grade students. Doing so would lower the number of students at each site while offering an equal opportunity for all district students.

After the idea was introduced Thursday evening, trustees had many questions but were open to learning more. Superintendent Craig Baker explained the idea originally was to build a new elementary school at Central Middle School. Those in the community then asked how such a plan would benet their child. Putting schools at each middle school, Baker explained, would allow the district to keep current boundaries, lower

the student enrollment at all existing schools and create an academic program specically for fourth and fth grade students. Trustee Beth Hunkapiller had questions. A school serving only fourth and fth grade students was previously the rst to be vetoed when the district looked at reconguration, she said. Hunkapiller was also wary about

See SCHOOLS, Page 23

Indoor grow house busted in San Mateo


DAILY JOURNAL STAFF REPORT ANDREW SCHEINER/DAILY JOURNAL

More than 530 marijuana plants with a potential street value of $400,000 was seized by police in an undercover investigation at a house on the 1200 block of 31st Avenue in San Mateo, according to the San Mateo County Narcotics Task Force. Agents from the task force executed the warrant Thursday afternoon with the help of San Mateo police ofcers after a tip from a concerned citizen. One man, identied as Lin Tang, 62, was arrested at the residence without incident on charges associated with the cultivation of marijuana, according to police.

The Just Between Friends consignment sale is open 10 a.m.to 6 p.m.Saturday and 10 a.m.to 2 p.m.Saturday in the Redwood Hall at the San Mateo Event Center,2495 S.Delaware St.,San Mateo.Many items are marked down 50 percent Sunday.

See POT, Page 23

Finding a bargain
Consignment event a bonanza for parents of young children
By Heather Murtagh
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Number of supervisor candidates is a record


By Michelle Durand
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Nora Loza leisurely walked around the Redwood Hall at the San Mateo Event Center with her 10-month-old Nomar strapped to her front. Loza was excited. She had gone to the consignment sale Thursday hoping to

nd one thing a backpack to put Nomar in while hiking. She scored quickly nding one for $12 instead of about $100 she might otherwise pay. For the Fremont mom, that purchase alone made the trip worthwhile. Loza was one of many moms who visited the Just Between Friends of San Mateo sale that kicked off Thursday.

This is the third sale held by local franchise owner Angela Broxterman. Broxterman, a mother of two little ones, decided to bring the sale to the Peninsula after briey living in Texas and attending such a sale. While in Texas, Broxterman was preg-

An eight-person candidate pool for the open Fourth District county supervisor seat is a new high, beating out two other races with seven competitors since 1978. Some had declared their candidacy as far back as the fall while others didnt jump in until there was less than a week before the Friday deadline.

See FRIENDS, Page 23

See ELECTION, Page 31

Fighting for victims and their families


FREE CONSULTATION

(800) 308-0870

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

FOR THE RECORD

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Thought for the Day


He who knows,does not. He who speaks,does not know.
Lao Tzu,Chinese philosopher

This Day in History

1876

The rst successful voice transmission over Alexander Graham Bells telephone took place in Boston as his assistant heard Bell say, Mr. Watson come here I want to see you. In 1496, Christopher Columbus concluded his second visit to the Western Hemisphere as he left Hispaniola for Spain. In 1785, Thomas Jefferson was appointed Americas minister to France, succeeding Benjamin Franklin. In 1848, the Senate ratied the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ended the Mexican-American War. In 1880, the Salvation Army arrived in the United States from England. In 1906, about 1,100 miners in northern France were killed by a coal-dust explosion. In 1933, a magnitude 6.4 earthquake centered off Long Beach, Calif., resulted in 120 deaths. In 1948, the body of the anti-Communist foreign minister of Czechoslovakia, Jan Masaryk, was found in the garden of Czernin Palace in Prague. In 1949, Nazi wartime broadcaster Mildred E. Gillars, also known as Axis Sally, was convicted in Washington, D.C., of treason. (She served 12 years in prison.) In 1969, James Earl Ray pleaded guilty in Memphis, Tenn., to assassinating civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. (Ray later repudiated that plea, maintaining his innocence until his death.) In 1972, the three-day National Black Political Convention convened in Gary, Ind. In 1980, Scarsdale Diet author Dr. Herman Tarnower was shot to death at his home in Purchase, N.Y. (Tarnowers former lover, Jean Harris, was convicted of his murder; she served nearly 12 years in prison before being released in Jan. 1993.) In 1985, Konstantin U. Chernenko, who was the Soviet Unions leader for just 13 months, died at age 73. Ten years ago: Israeli helicopters destroyed Palestinian leader Yasser Arafats ofce in Gaza City, hours after 11 Israelis were killed in a suicide bombing in a cafe across the street from Prime Minister Ariel Sharons residence in Jerusalem.

REUTERS

A gaucho is thrown off an untamed horse during the Patria Gaucha Festival in Tacuarembo,Uruguay.
*** The Cub Scouts use The Jungle Book for motivation. *** The Jungle Book (1894) was a series of stories written by British writer Rudyard Kipling (18651936) while he was living in Vermont. The stories were originally published in serials in a childrens magazine called Saint Nicholas, published from 1873 to 1939. *** The 1967 movie The Jungle Book was Disneys 19th animated feature. Loosely based on the stories of Rudyard Kipling, the movie is about the abandoned man-cub Mowgli, raised by his animal friends in the jungle. Can you name the friendly panther, bear and orangutan in the movie? Remember the names of the villainous snake and tiger? See answer at end. *** The word jungle comes from the Sanskrit word jangala, which means wilderness. *** Sanskrit is an ancient language of India. Today the language is used primarily for religious purposes. *** Karma is a moral concept in the religions of Hinduism and Buddhism. It is the belief that a persons actions determine a persons destiny. There are three types of karma: sanchita karma is all actions from a persons past life, prarabdha karma is karma experienced in this life and kriyamana karma is karma being created in this life that will determine the future. *** The Hindu god of wisdom and prosperity is Ganesha. He is depicted with a chubby human body with four arms and an elephants head. *** Elephants have been domesticated in India since 6000 B.C. *** The oldest elephant ever recorded lived in captivity in Sri Lanka. The elephant, name Raja, lived to be 82 years old. The average lifespan of an elephant is 50 to 60 years. *** Sri Lanka is an island in the Indian Ocean, 140 miles across and 240 miles long, located 31 miles from the southern tip of India. Sri Lanka is separated from India by the Palk Strait. *** The worlds leading cinnamon exporter is Sri Lanka. *** Answer: The panther is named Bagheera, the bear is Baloo, the orangutan is King Louie. The snake is named Kaa and the tiger is Shere Khan. The Jungle Book was the last movie produced by Walt Disney (1901-1966), who died during the lms production
Know It All is by Kerry McArdle. It runs in the weekend and Wednesday editions of the Daily Journal. Questions? Comments? Email knowitall@smdailyjournal.com or call 3445200 ext. 114.

Birthdays

Actor Chuck Norris is 72.

Actress Shannon Tweed is 55.

Actress Sharon Stone is 54.

Talk show host Ralph Emery is 79. Bluegrass/country singermusician Norman Blake is 74. Playwright David Rabe is 72. Singer Dean Torrence (Jan and Dean) is 72. Actress Katharine Houghton is 67. Rock musician Tom Scholz (Boston) is 65. Former Canadian Prime Minister Kim Campbell is 65. Actress Aloma Wright is 62. Producer-director-writer Paul Haggis is 59. Alt-country/rock musician Gary Louris is 57. Pop/jazz singer Jeanie Bryson is 54. Rock musician Gail Greenwood is 52. Magician Lance Burton is 52. Actress Jasmine Guy is 50. Rock musician Jeff Ament (Pearl Jam) is 49. Music producer Rick Rubin is 49. Britains Prince Edward is 48.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Daniel Boones (1734-1820) .29 caliber rifle was named Ticklicker, because Boone could lick a tick off a bears nose with it. *** Fess Parker (1924-2010) starred as Davy Crockett in Walt Disneys Ballad of Davy Crockett (1954). Not afraid of being typecast, his next role was as Daniel Boone in the 1960s television series of the same name (1964-1970). *** In the early 1900s, the largest boys organization in America was the Sons of Daniel Boone, founded by Daniel Carter Beard (1850-1941). The groups name later changed to The Boys of Pioneers. The uniforms were fringed buckskin outts of the frontiersman. *** The Boy Scouts was founded in England in 1908. The program was an organization of boys aged 11 to 17 years that focused on character development and citizenship training. *** Boy Scouts have a three-nger salute. Cub Scouts have a two-nger salute.

Lotto
Mar ch 6 M ega M illions
20 24 31 33 36 44
Mega number

Local Weather Forecast


Daily Four
7 9 2 0

Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

BADIE
2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Mar ch 7 S uper L otto P lus


11 18 21 30 34 6
Mega number

Daily thr ee midday


2 2 8

SLELP

Daily thr ee evening


7 0 4

Fan tasy Five


4 8 9 25 38

YOLRUH

The Daily Derby race winners are No. 08 Gorgeous George in rst place;No.05 California Classic in second place;and No.01 Gold Rush in third place.The race time was clocked at 1:41.75.
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

Saturday: Mostly cloudy. Patchy fog in the morning. Highs in the mid 50s. West winds 5 to 15 mph. Saturday night: Mostly cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s. West winds 10 to 15 mph. Sunday: Mostly cloudy. A chance of rain. Highs in the mid 50s. South winds 5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 40 percent. Sunday night: Mostly cloudy. A slight chance of rain. Lows in the mid 40s. West winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 20 percent. Monday: Mostly cloudy. A chance of rain. Highs in the mid 50s. Monday night and Tuesday: Rain likely. Lows in the mid 40s. Highs in the mid 50s. Tuesday night: Mostly cloudy. A chance of rain.
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GENUTO
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Ans:
(Answers Monday) Jumbles: BRAWN FACET OUTFIT RODENT Yesterdays Answer: After the success of his Model T, Henry expanded his business because he could AFFORD TO

Find us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/jumble

As a public service,the Daily Journal prints obituaries of approximately 250 words or less with a photo one time on the date of the familys choosing.To submit obituaries,email 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 250 words or without editing,please submit an inquiry to our advertising department at ads@smdailyjournal.com.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

LOCAL

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

Many county races uncontested


By Michelle Durand
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Police reports
Ready and waiting
A vehicle was stolen after it was left running with the keys in the ignition on Poplar Avenue in Redwood City before 12:34 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 7.

While all eyes have been on who next is running in the District Four supervisorial race a total of eight by final count a number of other county candidates have been quietly preparing for their own re-election campaigns. Two other county supervisors and nearly a dozen Superior Court judges in San Mateo County are up for re-election in June and none are facing challengers. The lack of a contested race is not surprising; incumbent supervisors rarely get competition and judges even less so. The fierce interest in the District Four position being vacated by termed-out Supervisor Rose Jacobs Gibson is undoubtedly due to it being an open seat. Regardless, some of those other candidates say, despite a lack of competition, they are no less committed to convincing the electorate they remain the right people for the job. Its nice not to have opposition but at the same time Im working as hard as possible to get re-elected, said Adrienne Tissier, who is running for her third term on the Board of Supervisors. She joined in 2005, taking over the seat left by termed-out supervisor Mike Nevin, and has never faced a challenger. Her fifth district includes Daly City, Brisbane, Colma, Broadmoor Village and parts of South San Francisco west of El Camino Real. She is currently board president. Tissier held a campaign kickoff event last November then watched as the focus turned to the race for colleague Jacobs Gibbons seat. Even without the need for a large-scale

campaign, Tissier said she believes an elected official always has to be accountable to the electorate. Another term will give her almost 20 years in public office which, she said, seems to draw more contact from the community than her run for re-election. Another term keeps her in touch with her constituents and, she said, I feel like I can always do more. Supervisor Dave Pine joined the board last May in a special election to finish out the term of then-supervisor Mark Church. Church resigned mid-term after winning the elected role of chief elections officer and assessor-county clerk-recorder. Pines race was crowded, with six competing in an allmail ballot to represent the district encompassing San Mateo Highlands and the Baywood Park neighborhood, Burlingame, Burlingame Hills, Hillsborough, Millbrae, San Bruno, South San Francisco east of El Camino Real and the San Francisco Airport. That race just seems like yesterday, said Pine. Like Tissier, Pine said the lack of a contested race doesnt make him any less accountable to the public although admittedly he neednt launch the campaign of last spring. In my opinion, that was about as tough as it gets. There were numerous strong and active candidates so I think that was the equivalent of a couple campaigns, he joked. Pine said a new full term is another chance to continue his priorities fiscally responsible government, alternative approaches to criminal justice and supporting youth. He said he also really likes the work. Im just thrilled to have this job. Im for-

tunate to go to work every day and get the chance to do my best and contribute, he said. In the courthouse, judges seeking re-election are Donald J. Ayoob, Gerald J. Buchwald, Clifford V. Cretan, Leland Davis III, Susan Etezadi, Robert Foiles, Jack Grandsaert, Stephen M. Hall, Elizabeth Lee, Lisa Novak and V. Raymond Swope. The county also needs to fill a vacancy created by the resignation of Controller Tom Huening at the end of March. However, the board forfeited the chance to hold a June election by delaying a decision on whether to appoint or ask voters. They are expected to decide at Tuesdays meeting and with several leaning toward a public appointment process it looks likely that means it will be employed by the April deadline. Aside from elected leaders, county voters will also be asked to weigh in on three tax measures aimed at hotels, rental cars and parking. The transient occupancy tax would jump from 10 percent to 12 percent, generating an extra $200,000 annually. An 8 percent business license tax on parking facilities would draw in about $4.9 million and a 2.5 percent tax on the vehicle rental businesses is estimated to bring in about $7.75 million. In 2008, the county asked voters to pass taxes on rental cars and parking but both failed with just more than 52 percent of voters opposed. After the election, county supervisors blamed a lack of active campaigning.
Michelle Durand can be reached by email: michelle@smdailyjournal.com or by phone: (650) 344-5200 ext. 102.

MENLO PARK
Burglary. A window of a vehicle was broken and a cellphone was taken on the 600 block of Roble Avenue before 9:03 p.m. Wednesday, March 7. Petty theft. A petty theft occurred on the 700 block of Coleman Avenue before 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, March 7. Petty theft. Tools were stolen from an unlocked vehicle on the 900 block of Cambridge Avenue before 7:05 p.m. Wednesday, March 7. Burglary. A house was broken into on the 200 block of Market Place before 5:27 p.m. Wednesday, March 7. Petty theft. A rear license plate was taken from a vehicle on the 1100 block of Berkeley Avenue before 2:45 p.m. Wednesday, March 7. Petty theft. Copper piping was stolen from the roof of a residence on the 100 block of Alma Street before 11:20 a.m. Wednesday, March 7.

SAN BRUNO
Hit and run. A hit and run occurred on the 1300 block of El Camino Real before 4:08 pm. Tuesday, March 6. Petty theft. A petty theft occurred on the 1100 block of El Camino Real before 4 p.m. Tuesday, March 6. Stolen vehicle. A vehicle was stolen on the rst block of Buena Vista Avenue before 3:06 p.m. Tuesday, March 6. Petty theft. A petty theft occurred on the rst block of Scott Street before 8:39 a.m. Tuesday, March 6.

Obituary

Arthur Harmon Royce


Arthur Harmon Royce, born June 3, 1921, died peacefully March 4, 2012 at his home in South San Francisco in the company of his family. He is survived by his wife Virginia, his sons and daughterin-laws Gary and Jayne Royce and Randy and Yvette Royce and four grandsons Brian, Roger, Gregory and Todd. Arthur was a devoted husband, father and grandfather. There was never a day that passed that he was not sharing his love with his family. Born in Southern California, he met Virginia following his service in the Navy. As a resident of South San Francisco for 65 years, he and Virginia were active in numerous organizations within the community and established close personal relationships with many life-long friends. Arthur retired from the wholesale liquor business at the age of 62 and devoted himself to helping family and friends. He was an enthusiastic sportsman who enjoyed the outdoors and the comaraderie of his dear friends and members of the Montezuma Duck Club. A celebration of his life will be held on Friday, March 16 at the Basque Cultural Center. The family looks forward to sharing this celebration with his friends

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

LOCAL/STATE
By Terry Collins
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Man in court for allegedly raping girlfriends sister


DAILY JOURNAL STAFF REPORT

Video allowed in S.F. sheriffs trial


SAN FRANCISCO An emotional video involving the wife of San Franciscos sheriff can be used as evidence during his trial on domestic violence charges, a threejudge panel ruled Friday. Ross Mirkarimi, 50, has pleaded not guilty to misdemeanor domestic violence battery, child endangerment and dissuading a witness for allegedly grabbing his wife, Venezuelan actress Eliana Lopez, in front of their toddler son in their San Francisco home on New Years Eve. The couple has denied the incident. Mirkarimi could face up to a year in jail, if convicted. The decision by the San Francisco Superior Court appellate division panel means a jury can see the video in which Lopez, 36, tearfully describes the alleged incident and a bruise on her right bicep. Its also is a victory for prosecutors who have Ross Mirkarimi argued that the video is a key piece of evidence in their case against Mirkarimi. We are pleased with the courts ruling and look forward to moving ahead with the trial, said Stephanie Ong Stillman, a spokeswoman for District Attorney George Gascon. Lopezs lawyer, Paula Canny, argued that the video made by Ivory Madison, Lopezs neighbor and who she thought was a lawyer, should be withdrawn because it was made under the assumption of attorney-client privilege. Madison graduated from law school, but is not a licensed attorney. Im very disappointed, Canny said. I have to talk to my client and weigh what our options are. Canny said she likely will le a request for review with the state Court of Appeals. Her appeal on behalf of Lopez, a former telenovela star, came after Judge Garrett Wong ruled last week that those privilege rights did not apply because the evidence is not being used against Lopez. Mirkarimis attorney, Lidia Stiglich, filed a separate motion regarding the video, arguing its inadmissibility should Lopez decide not to testify during the trial because she cant cross-examine the allegations from the video.

The South San Francisco mechanic accused of raping his girlfriends half-sister for eight years and acting inappropriately with another half-sister and neighbor appeared in court Friday on several felony charges that could send him to prison for life. Kyle Clifton Vogt, 36, is charged with 11 counts including rape, continuous sexual abuse of a child, sending harmful sexual matter to a minor, six counts of lewd acts with a minor under 14 and two counts of lewd acts with a minor over 14 by someone more than 10 years older. He remains in custody without bail. South San Francisco police arrested Vogt a week ago after reportedly learning he had been carrying on a sexual relationship with his girlfriends half-sister starting when the victim was just 5. The girl told her mom what was going on when she turned 13, according to prosecutors. After being taken into custody, Vogt was also accused of molesting one of the girlfriends other half-sisters between 2000 and 2012 along with a neighbor girl who was the rst

victims friend. Those acts included sending inappropriate texts, kissing and groping, said Chief Deputy District Attorney Karen Guidotti. Guidotti wasKyle Vogt nt certain if the behavior extended to both girls. Vogt threatened some of girls with bodily harm to keep them from talking, police said. He split his time between homes in South San Francisco and Davis where he lived with his 30-year-old girlfriend. Her younger sisters often visited the couple and periodically lived with them in both cities, according to South San Francisco police. He has no prior criminal history in San Mateo County, according to court records. Police are still seeking the publics help in nding any additional potential victims. Anyone with information regarding the case is asked to call (650) 877-8910.

Facebook friendoffer exposes mans other wife


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE Facebooks automatic efforts to connect users through friends they may know recently led two Washington women to nd out they were married to the same man, at the same time. That led to the man, corrections

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officer Alan L. ONeill, being slapped with bigamy charges. According to charging documents led Thursday, ONeill married a woman in 2001, moved out in 2009, changed his name and remarried without divorcing her. The rst wife rst noticed ONeill had moved on to another woman when Facebook

suggested the friendship connection to wife No. 2 under the People You May Know feature. Wife No. 1 went to wife No. 2s page and saw a picture of her and her husband with a wedding cake, Pierce County Prosecutor Mark Lindquist told the Associated Press.

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THE DAILY JOURNAL

LOCAL
Local briefs
Man fatally struck by Caltrain
A man was fatally struck by a Caltrain in Menlo Park Friday morning, an agency spokeswoman said. The man was struck by a northbound train at about 9:30 a.m. on the train tracks at Ravenswood Avenue, Caltrain spokeswoman Tasha Bartholomew said. The man was identied by the San Mateo County Coroners Ofce as Eric Salvatierra, 39, of Palo Alto. The death prompted trains to use a single set of tracks through the area, causing delays of 30 to 40 minutes. All tracks reopened and trains were back on schedule as of 11:50 a.m., Bartholomew said. The incident is Caltrains fourth fatality of 2012. There were 16 fatalities on its right of way last year. The agency released a statement about this mornings death. It is always regrettable when a life is lost. Caltrain reminds everyone to be safe around train tracks. Caltrain would also like to thank our passengers for their patience while we deal with these sad incidents, the statement said. In an effort to reduce fatalities, in 1996 Caltrain installed no trespassing signs along its railroad. In 2001, signs with a crisis hotline number were also added. The signs are posted every 500 feet along the 55-mile length of the railroad, according to the agency.

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

Man, 27, reported missing


San Bruno police are asking for the publics help in nding a 27-year-old man who was reported missing earlier this week. Joseph McHenry was reported missing on Monday after last being seen at his home in San Bruno on March 2, according to police. McHenry had made statements about going Joseph rock climbing and campMcHenry ing overnight at a secluded beach in Pacica, and on Wednesday, his vehicle was found parked in a residential area near the Sharp Park Golf Course in Pacica, police said. Investigators believe the vehicle was parked there between 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. on March 2. Police do not know what he was wearing but he is described as 5 feet 10 inches, 170 pounds, with brown eyes and black hair. He has a USMC tattoo on his chest. San Bruno and Pacica police, the San Mateo County Sheriffs Ofce, the National Park Service and the U.S. Coast Guard have conducted an extensive two-day search of the water, beaches and cliffs in the area but have not found McHenry, police said. Anyone with information about his whereabouts is urged to call San Bruno police at (650) 616-7100.

Two Hillsborough homes burglarized


Police in Hillsborough are investigating two residential burglaries that took place in the city Thursday morning. Ofcers responded to a reported break-in at a home in the 700 block of Hillsborough Boulevard late Thursday morning, police said. Between 9 a.m. and 11 a.m., one or more suspects gained entry to the home through an unlocked sliding door and stole various items, police said. A second burglary was reported nearby in the 1300 block of Marlborough Road. The crime occurred between 8:30 a.m. and 11:40 a.m., according to police. Again, an unlocked door was used to gain entry to the home, police said. Anyone who witnessed anything suspicious in the vicinity of the two break-ins is asked to contact the Hillsborough Police Department at (650) 375-7470. Police are reminding residents to follow basic crime prevention tactics, including securing all windows and doors before leaving home.

Mothers lucky numbers lead to lottery win for son


A mothers lucky numbers helped one man win more than $500,000 in the lottery a year after her death, according to California lottery ofcials. Arnel C. discovered a list of his mothers favorite lottery numbers hidden under her bed while he was cleaning out her things after she died a year ago, said lottery spokeswoman Alex Elias. Since then, he has regularly been playing the numbers which included 31, 24, 20, 33 and 36. His loyalty to her memory paid off this week when those numbers matched the MEGA Millions draw, missing only the Mega number of 44. The ticket, purchased at the 99 Ranch Market in Foster City, won Arnel $542,032. MEGA Millions is a multi-state game played in California and 43 other states. The jackpot for Fridays draw was $148 million.

Roy R.McNaughton Jr.


Roy R. McNaughton Jr. died Sunday morning, March 4 at his home in Belmont at the age of 91 surrounded by his family. A star on his high school football team, he later attended the University of Texas where he earned his degree in business administration. During World War II, he serviced his country as a merchant marine. He met his wife Geneva at a dance, married and began a career in Texas as a certied public accountant before moving to San Mateo in the mid-50s where he enjoyed a successful career in the retail industry while he and Geneva raised a family of six children. He was the controller of the Emporium store chain for many years before becoming vice-president of Cable Car Clothiers, an upscale, mens boutique clothing store in San Franciscos Union Square. Roy is survived by Geneva, his wife of 59 years, children Patricia, Roy (Yasmin), Terry, Cheri (Dave), Tim (Joslyn) and Jim; grandchildren Keith, Megan, Geneva, Sean and Efe. He is also survived by his sister Rita Maciel and niece Ceci Ellis along with relatives in California and Texas. Roy had a marvelous, dry sense of humor that made us smile even in the nal days of his life. A funeral mass will be held 11 a.m. Monday, March 12 at Immaculate Heart of Mary Church in Belmont. Interment will follow at Skylawn Memorial Park. In lieu of owers, donations may be made to American Cancer Society. Friends may sign the guestbook at www.crippenynn.com.

Obituaries
Francesca was born Sept 23, 1957 in San Francisco to Barbara DeSantis and the late John E DeSantis. Mother to Jennifer Heafey and Michelle (Mike) DeLucia, grandmother to Michael and Marcus DeLucia, sister of Gina Hisel, Marianne Albretsen, Gianna DeSantis and John J DeSantis. Survived by Brian Heafey and Polo Morales and many aunts, uncles, nieces and nephew and many caring friends. A women of creativity and strength, Fran was successful in launching multiple companies. She attended Notre Dame in Belmont. Frans heart was always in helping others and never missed an opportunity volunteering at the American Cancer Society or Relay For Life. Fran enjoyed traveling. Friends are invited to a visitation 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 13 with a vigil service at 6:30 p.m. at Crippen & Flynn Carlmont Chapel, 1111 Alameda de las Pulgas in Belmont. A funeral mass will be held 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, March 14 at Immaculate Heart of Mary Church, 1040 Alameda de las Pulgas in Belmont. Friends may sign the guestbook at www.crippenynn.com. As a public service, the Daily Journal prints obituaries of approximately 250 words or less with a photo one time on the date of the familys choosing. To submit obituaries, email 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 250 words or without editing, please submit an inquiry to our advertising department at ads@smdailyjournal.com.

Francesca Marie Springer (DeSantis)


Francesca Marie Springer (DeSantis) died peacefully on March 7, 2012 surrounded by loved ones.

Weekend March 10-11, 2012


students from his classes. T h e STEMinar will be held from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. in room 20. Space is limited to the rst 30 registrants. To sign up email Bolt at rbolt@smfc.k12.ca.us. *** LEADERSHIP participants engage with the community through a 10-month program designed to identify and nurture existing and potential community leaders. Program Days are created to increase knowledge of the community and community issues while enhancing individual effectiveness through exposure to leadership characteristics and attributes. Class groups of 30 - 35 participants from the private, nonprot, community and public sectors meet one Friday each month from September through June learning about civic infrastructure. Program Days feature: Human services, education, police services and the judicial system, fire and emergency services; government, business and economic development, arts and media, health, environmental, and planning, housing and transportation. Applications for the Leadership Class of 2013 are available at www.LeadershipProgram.net. For more information contact Lory Lorimer Lawson at 401-2444 or LoryLawson@LeadershipProgram. net.
Class notes is a column dedicated to school news. It is compiled by education reporter Heather Murtagh. You can contact her at (650) 344-5200, ext. 105 or at heather@smdailyjournal.com.

LOCAL

THE DAILY JOURNAL

illsdale High School art students will showcase their work in a public gallery this month at Gallery North, 1790 Shattuck Ave., Berkeley. The exhibition Aspiring Artists Showcase is a collaboration between Hillsdale art teacher Cindy Lynch and the Firehouse Art Collaborative team of Tom Franco and Julie Lazar. The exhibition, on view through March 31, features 50 paintings and photographs by 17 Hillsdale sophomores, juniors and seniors. Students featured in the exhibition are Emmett Abrams, Camila Benavides, Chris Carroux, Sam Croop, Danielle Gaggero, Ricky Gonzalez, Alex Herzog, Chelsea Jackson, Eric Newgard, Ali Ryan, Callie Robertson, Lisa Raimondo, Rossalind Roomian, Rory Sarmiento, Shannon Song, Jesse Weissman and Jenna Yee. Gallery North is open 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. Fridays and 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturdays. *** The Bayside S.T.E.M. Academy will soon start a series of STEMinars. STEMinars are evening participatory classes designed to give the adults (parents and neighbors, for example) in the community an opportunity to experience rst-hand what happens in the classroom every day. Taught by members of the Bayside faculty, STEMinars are lively two-hour workshops highlighting how science, technology, engineering and math are creatively taught at the school. The rst in the series is introduction to robotics engineering taught by Rob Bolt. Attendees will learn how to program and test one of the schools Lego Mindstorms Robotics. Bolt will be assisted by

An investment in football
Reaching CSM football players by Writing in the End Zone
By Caitlin Alyce Buckley
DAILY JOURNAL CORRESPONDENT

Four English instructors and the football coaches at the College of San Mateo have invested in studentathletes through a unique program called Writing in the End Zone that links composition and the gridiron. Writing in the End Zone was initiated in 2003 to facilitate success of the lowest achieving students at CSM. African-Americans and Pacic Islanders were the lowest achieving students, according to a study conducted by John Sewart, dean of research. The groups were well represented on the football team, so Teeka James and James Carranza of the English Department developed the two-semester English curriculum that links composition and football. It seems like common sense, said Football Coach Bret Pollack. Its specic to football players. The key is taking the material and making it of interest to the students. Lets focus on the skills, something theyre interested in, something they have a passion for and something they will gravitate to. The skills are more important than the topic matter. Success rates of WEZ studentathletes rival success rates of the general student population and WEZ student-athletes substantially outperform their peers not participating in WEZ. The program is driven by investment in the players success by faculty and coaches. The objective of

Teacher Jon Kitamura with members of the College of San Mateo football team.
the program is to aid the transition from athlete-student to student-athlete by encouraging students to recognize that they belong in college, giving them a voice in the classroom and developing students pride in their work. I want you to succeed and heres how you do it, James tells students. They start seeing us not so much as the evaluators, but as the coaches. The viability of the program depends on collaboration of the students, faculty and coaches, said Carranza. Attempts to emulate the program at other colleges have failed because not all three spheres of influence were included, he added. Since 2003, the WEZ team has grown from James, Carranza and Pollack to include English faculty Jon Kitamura and Anne Stafford, occasionally Rob Komas from the math department and Assistant Football Coach Tim Tulloch. In the 2009-10 academic year, 26 of the 30 football student-athletes transferred to a four-year institution with scholarships, according to program data. School hasnt always been easy, said Rahsaan Vaughn, All-American wide-receiver, but the academic support I received at CSM helped me to develop the skills needed to earn my degree and move on to University of Oregon.

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NATION
Even more reliable are so-called longacting types, those IUDs or implants that can last years but can cost $600 to nearly $1,000 for the doctor to insert. Thats if you dont have insurance that covers at least some of the tab although many women do. And if those prices are too much, crowded public clinics offer free or reduced-price options. But it might take a while to get an appointment. Questions about cost and access to birth control have been swirling for weeks now, intensifying after a Georgetown University law school student testified before congressional Democrats in support of a new federal policy to pay for contraception that she said can add up to $1,000 a year, not covered by the Jesuit colleges health plan. Talk show host Rush Limbaughs verbal assault on her comments became the latest skirmish in the birth control wars. Soon, the new policy will make contraceptives available free of charge as preventive care, just like mammograms, for women with most employer-provided health insurance. Churches are exempt. But for other religious-afliated organizations, such as colleges or hospitals, their insurance companies would have to pay for the coverage, something that has triggered bitter political debate.

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

Wide price range for birth control


By Lauran Neergaard
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Corrections firm offers states cash for prisons


By Greg Bluestein
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON Birth control that you must take every single day? A more goof-proof option that costs a lot upfront but then works for several years? Or something in between? A womans choice may come down to her wallet: The price of birth control varies dramatically. Just the pill has a huge range, from $9 a month for generics to $90 a month for some of the newest brands, plus a yearly doctors visit for the prescription. Want a once-a-month option? The patch or ring could run you $55 monthly.

FDA clears third silicone-gel breast implant for U.S.


By Matthew Perrone
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON The Food and Drug Administration has approved a new silicone-gel breast implant from Sientra, making it the third company to

market the controversial products in the U.S. Santa Barbara -based Sientra won approval to market its implants for breast enhancement and reconstruction in women at least 22 years old. The company said it will offer implants in multiple shapes and sizes, in addition to the

round implants currently sold by Allergan Inc. and Johnson & Johnsons Mentor unit. Last year, plastic surgeons performed more than 307,000 breast augmentation procedures in the U.S., up 3.6 percent from the previous year, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.

ATLANTA The nations largest private prison company made an enticing offer to 48 states that went something like this: We will buy your prison now if you agree to keep it mostly full and promise to pay us for running it over the next two decades. Despite a need for cash, several states immediately slammed the door on the offer, a sign that privatizing prisons might not be as popular as it once was. Corrections Corporation of America sent letters to the prison leaders in January, saying it had a pot of $250 million to buy facilities as part of an investment. The company is trying to capitalize on the landmark deal it made with Ohio in the fall by purchasing a facility, the rst state prison in the nation to be sold to a private rm. Prison departments in California, Texas and Georgia all dismissed the idea. Floridas prison system said it doesnt have the authority to make that kind of decision and ofcials in CCAs home state of Tennessee said they arent reviewing the proposal. The states refused to say exactly why they were rejecting the offer. Knowing the state government, it has to have something to do with the potential political backlash, said Jeanne Stinchcomb, a criminal justice professor at Florida Atlantic University who has written two books on the corrections industry.

Enjoy fun time with Mom, Dad or your favorite grown-up. The across clues are for kids and the down clues are for adults.

Crossword Planet
Kids Across 1. Twinklers that seem to come out at night (or popular people on TV) 6. To revolve around the sun again and again (or a brand of chewing gum) 7. If you were an astronaut, through the galaxy youd roam, but when you got back down to _____ youd finally be at home. 10. Seven circles around Saturn (or O-shaped onion slices) 12. Words heard at a space shuttle launch: We have ____ off! 15. This tennis pro shares her name with a planet 16. Chewbaccas cozy covering 17. The giant dimples on the face of the moon 21. This occurs when the moon passes between the Earth and the sun 22. Its the largest planet in the solar system 23. The team that works on a spaceship Parents Down 1. Visible from your own, its the home of the 1A 2. Franco lm that soared at the box ofce in 2011: Rise of the Planet of the _____ 3. Those who, according to the oft-quoted relationship book title, are natives of 15A 4. Cosmic belief with universal repercussions (or CBS sitcom): The ___ Bang Theory 5. Hot invention that allows people to see mercury rising 8. In colorfully cosmic terms, if youre looking at 9D, youre seeing ____ 9. Candy maker named for a planet 11. Classic composition: Form in which Disney delivers a promise to wishful stargazers 12. There is no proof of ____ in outer space 13. Signature Star Wars farewell: May the ____ be with you. 14. As every earthling knows, its a real downer 18. System in which the 20D is central 19. Federal agency whose focus is above and beyond (abbr.) 20. Solar storms occur here
kris@kapd.com Visit www.kapd.com to join the KAPD family! 3/11/12

This Weeks Solution

2012 Jan Buckner Walker. Distributed by Tribune Media Services, Inc.

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

NATION

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Obama: America is coming back


By Ken Thomas
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

HOUSTON Raising campaign cash in Republican territory, President Barack Obama on Friday hailed a rebounding economy and accused Republicans of banking on voters having amnesia about the steps that led to a brutal economic collapse. The recovery is accelerating. America is coming back, Obama told 600 supporters at a Texas fundraiser. Bidding for re-election, Obama bounded between a rally-style event in a sprawling Rolls-Royce manufacturing plant south of Richmond, Va., to a pair of Houston fundraisers. Framing the trip: a new monthly jobs report showing employers 227,000 jobs in February, the latest sign that the economy is headed in the right direction. Every months jobs report is seen as a barometer of the economy and an important factor in the presidential race. The unemployment rate held steady at 8.3 percent, the result

of more Americans looking for work as job growth takes hold month by month. The jobs report and split loyalties among Republican voters assessing Mitt Romney, Rick Santorum and the rest of Barack Obama the GOP field give Obamas team renewed condence that the path he has forged could help him win re-election and rebuild the economy. But privately, his advisers know that outside factors in the United States and abroad from high gasoline prices to instability in the Middle East could still derail his political and economic ambitions in the months leading to the fall election. Pointing at Republicans, Obama said: They think you have amnesia. They think youve forgotten how we got into this mess. He spoke at Union Station at Minute Maid Park, home of the Houston Astros, with tickets starting at $500 per person.

Defending his health care law, Obama said preventive care for women was now covered, including checkups, mammograms, birth control. We fought for this because the top doctors and medical experts in the country said this kind of preventive care saves womens lives, he said, arguing too that it saves money. Obamas policy on access to contraception has faced criticism from Republicans and religious groups, who said the mandate that birth control be covered by insurance, even for employers whose faiths forbid contraception, was a violation of the Constitutions guarantee of religious freedom. So when you see politicians who are trying to take us back to the days when this care was more expensive and harder to get for women and I know youre seeing some of that here in Texas you just remember we cant let them get away with it, Obama said. We fought for this change. Were going to protect this change. Both in Houston and on the factory oor in Virginia, the president cautioned that too

many Americans still long for work. But he said the nations economy had made progress because of difficult decisions he made, including rescuing U.S. automakers. Romney, campaigning in Jackson, Miss., took a different view: The unemployment rate remains above 8 percent. This president has not succeeded; this president has failed and thats the reason were going to get rid of him in 2012, Romney said. Obama was stocking up on campaign cash as Republicans appear locked in a primary process that may not be settled for months. Republican Gov. Robert McDonnell of Virginia, who joined Obama at the factory and has been talked about as a potential vice presidential candidate, said he was heartened by Obamas recognition of the innovative Virginia plant. When the president is right, Im going to commend him and say hes doing things right, he said. If he really wants to get Americans back to work, he needs to look at cutting the taxes and the bureaucracy and the regulatory burden on American business, McDonnell said.

California jobless rate dips Strong hiring adds 277K U.S.jobs to lowest level since 2009
By Christopher S. Rugaber
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

By Don Thompson
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SACRAMENTO Californias unemployment rate fell below 11 percent in January for the rst time in nearly three years, signaling a continued gradual improvement in the states economy, ofcials said Friday. The jobless rate of 10.9 percent is threetenths of a percentage point drop from Decembers adjusted rate of 11.2 percent, according to the state Employment Development Department. Californias unemployment rate has not

been below 11 percent since April 2009, when it also was 10.9 percent. January was the fth consecutive month in which the employment rate has dropped. It fell a full percentage point during that period. It looks like were going in the right direction, department spokesman Kevin Callori said. It just looks like, overall, things are looking better. Nonfarm payroll jobs decreased by 5,200 in January, while December job growth was revised upward, from 10,700 to a revised 38,500 based on additional payroll data from that period.

WASHINGTON The United States added 227,000 jobs in February, the latest display of the breadth and strength of the economic recovery. The country has put together the most impressive three months of job growth since before the Great Recession. The unemployment rate stayed at 8.3 percent. It was the rst time in six months it didnt fall, and that was because a half-million Americans started looking for work. In the past two months, almost a million have started looking. I have more optimism, said Freda Bratcher, 54, who had worked as a substance

abuse counselor but has been unemployed 16 months. She had stopped searching, but showed up Friday at a Miami career center after some of her friends landed jobs. Theres something out there for me, she said. And if other people are getting hired, then why not me? The Labor Department, in its monthly jobs report, said Friday that December and January, already two of the best months for jobs since the recession, were even stronger than rst estimated. January job growth was revised higher by 41,000 to 284,000. December job growth was raised by 20,000 to 223,000. The overall job growth for February of 227,000 beat economists estimate of 210,000.

A strong backhand slap from end of solar storm


WASHINGTON The solar storm that seemed to be more zzle than fury got much stronger early Friday before fading again. At its peak, it was the most potent solar storm since 2004, space weather forecasters said. No power outages or other technological disturbances were reported from the solar storm that started to peter out late Friday morning.

Around the nation


Solar storms, which cant hurt people, can disturb electric grids, GPS systems, and satellites. They can also spread colorful Northern Lights further south than usual, as the latest storm did early Friday. And more storms are coming. The federal governments Space Weather Prediction Center says the same area of the sun erupted again Thursday night, with a milder storm expected to reach Earth early Sunday.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

OPINION

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

A silly debate
The Augusta (Ga.) Chronicle

Other voices
sional Democrats in favor of federally mandated birth control insurance. But the apology wasnt accepted, and Democrats now have another tool with which to divide the electorate and defeat Republicans in the fall. Democrats are winning this war of words over birth control, over Limbaughs intemperance in two ways. First, theyre making Republicans look like the Taliban. Somehow, Democrats and the left-leaning media have made this issue about womens health and access to birth control. The truth, of course, is there is no problem

heres a certain rich irony in the fact that ProFlowers pulled its advertising from Rush Limbaughs show after he called a birth control proponent a slut and prostitute. Sending owers was the least he needed to do. But neither his patently offensive remarks, nor their potential impact on the election, are laughing matters. Limbaugh has since apologized unlike his even-worse liberal counterparts for his gratuitous insult of Georgetown University student Sandra Fluke, who testied before congres-

with access to birth control. The only question is who should pay for it well, that, and whether health insurance providers should be forced by the government to offer it over their own moral objections. Democrats also win in this silly debate by changing the subject from the economy, the presidents dismal record, foreign policy storm clouds on the horizon, the national debt and more. Republicans have helped them do it, too from presidential Rick Santorums getting sucked into the discussion repeatedly, to Limbaughs disgusting rant. The latters ame-throwing has most people missing the point. Which, as has been pointed out, is just peachy with Democrats.

Limbaughs words and the 2012 presidential election


his is not about what Rush Limbaugh actually said in his three-day/nine-hour comments on his radio show about Susan Fluke, the 30-year-old, second-year law school student at Georgetown University. Those have been explored beyond boredom by the voracious appetite of media for trash to ll their empty pages and the 24 hours a day on radio and television. In fact, its not even about the actual political/social issue he was commenting upon in the show. Its about how I surmise Rushs verbal attack will play out in the upcoming 2012 elections. At this time, I believe they will be fatal to Republican Party hopes. Why? Because intended or not, Rush is looked upon as the voice of the entire Republican Party. This has been to the great dismay of such conservatives as the highly respected columnist George Will, who points out the truth that members of the party still fear Rush and run to apologize if they have criticized him or taken issue with his political positions. First, I would like to say, I believe this entire tempest will have little impact upon the survival of Rushs show. Why? Because its a huge moneymaker for Rush and the network upon which he broadcasts and they will be able to recruit conservative advertisers to ll any losses. I have learned in our economic system it is not always social values but almost always the bottom line that moves most business ventures. Outrage, advertiser withdrawals and boycotts will soon fade away and a chastened Limbaugh will move on still spinning his version of the liberal assault upon his humor-intended words. Back in Chicago in the 1960s, when I was an interior designer, there was a radio disc jockey host named Marty Faye brother to the then famous cabaret singer/comedienne Frances Faye who became one of my clients. He was one of the rst of the shock jock radio hosts in the country. Yet, as a client, he proved to be one of the most likable, friendly, politest people Id ever met. When I knew him well enough I asked about his insulting aggressive style on his program. You all knew about my sister Frances before, right? Ive been doing shows in Chicago since 1952. Had you ever heard about me before I pulled the chains on guests on my show? And, so, that was his contribution the birth of radio and television trash talk, protected by the grant of free speech in the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Right on, Marty! You were one of the rst to learn of the success in media ratings from potty mouth to outright verbal slander. In the early years of the Michael Savage talk show, I was naively appalled at what he called women and the vicious insults he rained down upon phone-in callers to his show. Since ABC, one of the three most respected networks in the nation, owned the station, I complained to the station manager. He responded Sir! Have you seen our ratings since Savage came on for us? We are now the most highly rated and profitable in the Bay Area. And Rush has become the master of that genre, enhanced beyond the 15 million listeners he claims, by other media frequently picking up text and visuals to expand the reach of his most outlandish comments. But there are consequences, however, when you push the limits of the First Amendment, maybe not in violation but in public outrage at the words, themselves. As Ive written before, Ive come to believe its rare that any media pundit of any political persuasion in print, radio, television or Internet actually changes the minds of more than a handful of voters, including my column. Most, as Rush rightly calls them dittoheads, nd ways to accept, forgive and to spin even the most outlandish and vulgar words of their favorite pundits. However, I believe this election will be the exception, because there will be, mostly likely, in addition to the normal sized pool of voters, women 30 and under, single, single mothers or married, greater than turned out for Obama in 2008. According to political scientists and political observers, these had not, yet, seen their physical health and private bodies so badly threatened before in the political arena. Thats why I am calling the failure for the Republican Party to regain the White House so early. Along with the cannibalizing of each other in primary debates, only a handful of major Republican gures have publicly denounced Limbaughs words. The others in the GOP will be looked upon as endorsing them. This could become a critical major issue with those agitated women voters who are sure to ask, Did you approve or disapprove of Limbaughs nine-hour verbal assault upon Ms. Fluke?
Keith Kreitman has been a resident of Foster City for 26 years. After degrees in political science and journalism and advanced studies in law, he retired after a 50-year business career in insurance, as a commodities options broker and with four major private corporations. His column appears in the weekend edition.

Letters to the editor


Response to Hell hath no fury like women voters scorned
Editor, Hell hath no fury like women voters scorned published in the Feb. 25-26 weekend edition of the Daily Journal was another insightful column by Keith Kreitman. I appreciated it so much that I shared it on my Facebook page. I urge every woman out there to follow the news and actively engage politically. Otherwise, we might wake up one morning and nd ourselves governed by homegrown Right Wing Christian Ayatollahs. I wish that were true. As a Holocaust survivor, I lived through a tragic period of history where I learned that we need to listen carefully to despotic dictators, such as Hitler and Stalin. They believe and mean what they say, and we risk our lives by ignoring serious and deadly threats. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has announced the possible closing to navigation of the Strait of Hormuz, an international waterway and has threatened the American military. Arab countries in the region feel threatened by Iran. Ahmadinejad has talked about the annihilation of Israel. It is the home of many Holocaust survivors and people who are related to the millions of innocent people who died during World War II. Israel takes this threat very seriously as it is an existentialist threat to them and also to us. Scafanis assertion that we need not fear the current leadership of Iran, even with nuclear weapons, is wishful and optimistic thinking but it is not sound. He is asking us to risk death of millions of people in the future and the nuclear poisoning of our planet. Nuclear weapons in the hands of a mad man will lead to world tragedy. Iran into committing some reckless act that would justify a massive military response. Far cheaper in lives and treasure for all concerned, I might add. Israels continued expansion of settlements is only placing it in the category of being tomorrows Mississippi rather than todays democracy.

Mike Caggiano San Mateo

Perspective or misrepresentation
Editor, The writer of Perspective on overpopulation in the Feb. 27 edition of the Daily Journal illustrates how difcult it is to carry on a meaningful dialogue with someone dead set on twisting around the facts and misrepresenting the issue(s) at hand. If you can turn a discussion about the need for access to health care for women (including family planning) into advocating abortion and putting all people on earth into Texas (including sick and starving children from around the world), Im at a loss for a response that may get through this letter writers logic barrier. I dont teach remedial math anymore, so Ill leave it to the obviously mathematically challenged letter writer to gure out his mistake. Even if you cover all lakes and rivers, atten all mountains and turn all agricultural areas, forests and pastures into livable land, his calculation isnt even close. So, back to your calculator and try again. Nevermind the nonsense of concentrating the world population in Texas, which already has a problem with inadequate social services and poorly educated leaders. Where this writer got his well-known facts from, I dont know. Perhaps from the same source from which Bush got his weapons of mass destruction facts.

Natalie Roth San Mateo

Iran is a threat
Editor, In regards to Frank Scafanis letter, Threat? in the March 2 edition of the Daily Journal, yes, Iran is a threat. Anybody who is listening or reading knows that Iran has called Israel a cancer, that must be wiped off the map. To wait for Iran to upgrade plutonium from 20 percent to 90 percent (weapons grade) is not a long process according to experts. So, to idly sit by and say or do nothing is out of the question. Israel wants to continue to exist rather than await a nuclear attack and the sympathy that would follow (those poor Israelis, isnt it a shame?)

Ralph Bernstein Los Altos

Tomorrows Mississippi
Editor, War with Iran is in the news every day lately. Now Mr. Netanyahu is visiting Washington to press his case for that war. If Israel and its supporters want a safer and less volatile region, they might as well abandon their push for a Greater Israel, withdraw from the settlements and respect the Palestinian nature of East Jerusalem. This would really get the ball rolling on normalization of relations with the Arab World as well as Iran, depriving it of its rallying call as advocate for the rights and cause of Palestinians. This is far more simple and direct than goading

Saul Eisenstat Los Altos

Take nuclear threat seriously


Editor, In his letter to the editor, Threat? in the March 2 edition of the Daily Journal, Frank Scafani asserts that the world has nothing to fear from Irans nuclear program.

Jorg Aadahl San Mateo

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10

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

BUSINESS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Dow 12,922.02 +0.11% 10-Yr Bond 2.038 +1.19% Nasdaq 2,988.34 +0.60% Oil (per barrel) 107.419998 S&P 500 1,370.87 +0.36% Gold 1,708.50

Stocks rise modestly


By Daniel Wagner
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Wall Street
The mornings gains were driven by news that employers added 227,000 jobs last month, nishing three of the best months for hiring since the recession began. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 8.3 percent because unemployed people started looking for work again, which increased the size of the labor force. The hiring was spread across a range of industries, including business and professional services, leisure and hospitality and health care. Later Friday, the International Swaps and Derivatives Association said it had determined that a massive bond-swap by Greece constituted a credit event, meaning that holders of credit-default swaps on their Greek bonds will be able to claim insurance payments. Traders sold stocks on the news, fearing big losses for banks that had sold the insurance. Greece convinced most of its private creditors to swap their bonds for new ones worth far less. The deal clears the way for a fresh bailout from Greeces neighbors. Fears of a disorderly Greek default have weighed on the market for two years.

Big movers
Stocks that moved substantially or traded heavily Friday on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq Stock Market: NYSE Ann Inc.,up $1.60 at $27.41 The womens clothing retailer said its scal fourth-quarter prot plunged 73 percent,but its full-year guidance met expectations. Aeropostale Inc.,up 60 cents at $19.55 The teen retailers fourth-quarter net income fell by two-thirds as expenses rose,but its results still beat analystsexpectations. Molycorp Inc.,up $4.91 at $30.89 The rare earth products company said it is buying rare earth processor Neo Material Technologies Inc.for about $1.31 billion. Quiksilver Inc.,down 34 cents at $4.26 The surfer-inspired clothing company posted a rst-quarter loss that was higher than what Wall Street analysts were expecting. Kohls Corp.,up $1.19 at $50.24 A Jefferies analyst upgraded the department store operators shares to Buy from Hold citing its more competitive pricing. Nasdaq Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc., down $9.81 at $52.59 Shares of the single-cup coffee machine maker fell after coffee company Starbucks said it will sell its own single-cup machine. Smith & Wesson Holding Corp.,up $1.29 at $6.95 Strong sales of its handguns and sporting ries helped the gun maker return to a prot in the companys scal third quarter. Coffee Holding Co.Inc.,up $2.75 at $10.60 The coffee roaster and distributer said that its scal rst-quarter prot rose 60 percent as its revenue more than doubled.

Stocks closed modestly higher Friday after the governments monthly report on employment bolstered hopes that the economic recovery is on track. The gains were tempered by news that a big debt write-down by Greece could cause big losses for banks. Three years after stocks hit bottom during the Great Recession, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 14 points and nished the week with a loss of 56. That was after a 203-point dive Tuesday, the worst drop this year. The Dow was up more than 60 points Friday morning but lost ground in the afternoon after the trade group that oversees nancial derivatives said Greeces bond-swap deal will trigger payouts on bond insurance. The Dow nished up 14.08 points, or 0.1 percent, at 12,922.02. The Standard & Poors 500 gained 4.96, or 0.4 percent, to 1,370.87. The Nasdaq composite average gained 17.92, or 0.6 percent, to 2,988.34. The Dow has nearly doubled in the three years since its bottom during the nancial crisis. On March 9, 2009, it closed at 6,547. The S&P 500 closed that day at 676.

Homeownership can translate into savings


By Eileen AJ Connelly
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Other tax benets


Renancing costs Homeowners who renanced their mortgage in 2011,and paid points or a fee based on the loan amount, may qualify for a deduction. However, unlike points paid on a new mortgage, those paid on a refinancing must be written off over the life of the loan. Each point is generally equal to 1 percent of the loan. Say for instance, you paid 2 points on a $150,000, 30-year loan, or $3,000. You may claim $100 of that fee each year you own the home. Mor tgage workouts and foreclosures When a lender forgives debt, the amount forgiven is usually considered taxable income. However, under a law passed in late 2007, taxpayers whose mortgage debt on their main residence was partly forgiven through a mortgage workout are generally able to exclude the forgiven debt from their income. The same goes for those who lost their homes through foreclosure and had some part of their debt written off because they owed more on the home than its market value. In certain cases, however, some cancelled debt may be considered taxable income. This can be a complex situation and its best to get professional advice.Guidelines are available on the Internal Revenue Service website, http://1.usa.gov/pv8sN . Taxpayers who lost money on a foreclosure generally may not claim a loss on their returns. Energy-efcient home improvements This will be the last year that homeowners may claim credits for installing energy-efcient exterior windows and doors, heat pumps, furnaces and insulation under a law that expired on Dec. 31. Up to 10 percent of the price of the improvements may be claimed, said Jay Safier, a certified public accountant and principal with Rosen Seymour Shapss Martin & Co. in New York.There is a lifetime limit of $500, of which only $200 may be used for windows. Homeowners who installed alternative energy equipment like solar water heaters,solar panels for electricity generation and certain wind or geothermal projects may receive a credit of up to 30 percent of the cost for the installation. There is no cap on this credit.Saer said you may include labor costs when guring this credit. Anyone who replaced an old household appliance like a dishwasher or refrigerator with a new energy-efcient unit may also be able to claim a small credit.The credits range from $25 to $225, and are based on the type of appliance and its energy efciency. Medical-related expenses A taxpayer or dependent who has a medical condition that requires renovation to a home may be able to claim the cost of that work as a medical expense. Medical expenses are only deductible to the extent they total more than 7.5 percent of adjusted gross income, which is a high hurdle. But if you installed a ramp, widened doorways or did other work such as, lowering countertops to accommodate a wheelchair, it may be far easier to reach that threshold. Thats because such work generally counts as a medical expense, and may be added to more traditional costs like doctor bills and prescriptions. One issue to watch out for, noted Jackie Perlman from the H&R Block Tax Institute, is that some improvements may add value to your home.A doctor may advise a disabled person to use a hot tub or swimming pool,for instance.The amount that could be claimed in such a case would be limited to the difference between the cost of the item and the value added to the home, she said. For instance, only $2,000 of a $7,000 hot tub installation that adds $5,000 to market value would qualify.

NEW YORK Mortgage interest is just the beginning. Owning a home can provide some significant advantages when its time to file your federal tax return. From green energy credits to deductions for damage from natural disasters, there are a number of items homeowners may be able to claim that could reduce a tax bill. Most homeowners know that they can deduct the interest paid on up to $1 million in mortgage debt for their primary home. The interest paid on up to $100,000 of a home equity loan for the same home may also be itemized. In most cases, its possible to deduct all of your mortgage interest, so long as you itemize your deductions. That opens up opportunities for other savings. For instance, local property taxes may also be itemized. Although property tax rates vary widely across the country, this item alone can be a big win for homeowners in areas with heavy tax burdens.

Market may be up,but the scars of 2008 are fresh


By Dave Carpenter
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO Cheryl and Jim Friedman, retirees in St. Louis, had twothirds of their retirement money in the stock market in 2008. When the nancial crisis struck that fall and stocks lurched up and down with nauseating speed, Cheryl, a former accountant, pulled the money out. Fearing that the next crisis was always around the corner, they have kept most of the money out. Its parked in a money-market account earning a meager 0.1 percent per year. The Friedmans watched in agony as stock prices doubled over the past three years. I have a whole lot of money sitting on the sidelines, because Im afraid, she says. The little guy is thinking, `Well, things are good again now, Ill get back in. And thats when they pull the rug out from under you. Three years ago Friday, the Dow Jones industrial average closed at 6,547,

its low during the Great Recession. Retirement accounts across the country had been devastated since October 2007, when the Dow hit a record of 14,164. Last week, the Dow closed above 13,000, although it has fallen back slightly. It has been one of the greatest three-year runs in the history of the stock market, exceeded only by the dotcom stock craze of the late 1990s and the recovery from the Depression. Some people gritted their teeth through the steep losses and poured more money into stocks while the market was still in free fall. That daring paid off in the returns of a lifetime. I felt that either the worlds going to end or its the smartest time ever to invest, recalls Harvey Bookman, 60, of Brooklyn, N.Y., who has made up his initial market losses many times over by buying when stock prices were low. Bookman bought shares of Avis stock for 41 cents apiece on March 4, 2009, ve days before the bottom. He sold

them in September 2009 for $11.92 apiece. Total prot, minus commission: $46,026. For many more, however, even a doubling of the market has not been enough to get them back in. The scars of the 2008 crash, when the Dow lurched up or down by 500 points or more in a day and people asked aloud whether the economy itself would survive, are that deep. Since the March 2009 low, there have been only two months in which individual investors put more money into stock mutual funds than they took out, according to EPFR Global, which tracks funds. The fuel for the markets ride higher since 2009 has come from big institutional investors instead. For small investors, there have been more than enough reasons to sit out. After the 2008 crash, there was the ash crash of May 6, 2010, when a large trade overwhelmed computer serves and the Dow plunged to a loss of almost 1,000 points in minutes.

BLOCKBUSTER: REDSKINS TRADE AWAY FUTURE FOR RAMS NO. 2 DRAFT POSITION IN APRILS NFL DRAFT >>> PAGE 15
Weekend, March 10-11, 2012

<< Posey, Sanchez make spring debuts, page 12 Watson shoots a 62 to lead at Doral, page 15

Quakes add firepower for 2012 season


By Julio Lara
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

Stop us if youve heard this one before: as the San Jose Earthquakes embark on another MLS season, the biggest question mark going into the year is the offense. Yes sir, if you go back through the Daily Journal archives, youll see that is the exactly what was said about the Quakes heading into the 2011 season. And while some things are more common sense than prophetic, the prediction turned out to be true as the Quakes limped through the year scoring 40 goals

only three teams in MLS scored less. San Jose nished seventh in the Western Conference and missed out on the playoffs a year after making it to the seminals. Perhaps it wasnt for a lack of effort and more like bad luck. San Jose did get 151 shots on goal in 2011 (good for fth in the league) and despite placing 14th overall in MLS, there were a lot of highlights to the year mostly, Chris Wondolowskis encore performance to the 2010 campaign that almost won him an MVP, and the seven straight home sellouts to end the year. But guess what? The Quakes are back to 00-0, with the season opener Saturday night at

Buck Shaw Stadium in Santa Clara against the New England Revolution. And while on paper San Jose appears to have made signicant strides in improving and trying to keep up with the rest of the Western Conference, the truth is they wont know just how good they can be until the ball gets rolling. One thing that if for certain is that San Jose is Wondolowskis team. And with the way No. 8 played in 2011, thats a good thing. Wondolowski followed his Golden Boot performance of 2010 with a 16-goal year in 2011. He was also third on the team in assists and that came with Wondolowski missing some time serving a stint with the United

States Mens National Team. With Wondolowski as the teams biggest proven commodity, general manager John Doyle went to work putting some pieces around his goal-scorer. San Jose brass went the international route, signing Tressor Moreno, a midelder from Columbia. Moreno is 33, but a proven offensive player through his years of international football. Hes expected to start right out of the gate. Hell be flanked by another off-season acquisition in Marvin Chavez, who comes to

See QUAKES, Page 16

Wild ending to rivalry game


Benches clear after Peluso is hit by pitch
By Nathan Mollat
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

With things already ugly on the scoreboard between the South City and El Camino baseball teams Friday afternoon, it spilled over onto the eld with a benches-clearing brawl, which ended the game in the bottom of the fth with two outs and El Camino leading 152. El Camino had already plated six runs in the inning and Colts catcher DJ Peluso represented the 11th batter of the inning. On the rst pitch, Peluso was plunked in the middle of the back. As Peluso headed to rst, El Camino manager Carlos Roman began yelling, which

drew a response from South City manager Daryl Semien. Both managers came onto the eld and had to be separated by the home plate umpire. A couple of players from both teams entered the fray, which then brought both teams off their benches to engage in a melee of pushing and shoving. When order was finally restored, the umpires called the game. I think it was intentional. I didnt at rst, Peluso said. I was walking to rst. It was just part of the game. Roman was still a bit red up several minutes after the fracas.
NATHAN MOLLAT/DAILY JOURNAL

See RIVALS, Page 16 El Caminos Emiliano Rios,left,gets tagged out by South City third baseman Maligi Maluia.

12

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

SPORTS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Tom looks to make good on potential


By Julio Lara
DAILY JOURNAL STAFF

With a skip of her feet, Maddie Toms heart skipped a beat. Tom, a gymnast at Peninsula Gymnastics in San Mateo, gets a little on the shy side when talking about the ankle injury that sidelined her last year just days before she was due to compete the states regional competition. So, to spare her a bit of the redness that comes with talking about freakish accidents that only happen to you once in a blue moon, well say that, more so than her leg, Toms heart was broken. At rst, I thought it was only one of those (injuries) where it hurts for like, ve minutes, Tom said. But then it was all swollen up and I was really worried. It was the last practice before Regionals, too. And then she sighs. It was a shock for me, said Toms gymnastics coach George Isuan, whos been at Peninsula for

three years. It was a shock for everyone. But I think shes very brave to ght through all her injuries and come back. Tom suffered what she called a broken growth plate. The injury forced her into a splint for a week, a cast for a month and then a boot for another two weeks. Still, the dream to get to the state competition never died for the Carlmont High School sophomore. We never gave up the hope that she would be back, Iusan said. Even with the casts, she was in the gym everyday working out, keeping up with the other girls, conditioning, she was always here, her heart and her mind were in the gym. Toms recovery has been slow and steady, and despite the occasional pain, almost a year later, she nds herself in a position to get back to the national level as Peninsulas lone Level 10 gymnast. I think Im stronger because of it, Tom said. I was really nervous

coming back from it because this year, its the most important year for colleges to look at you. So I was really nervous to get back to my full Maddie Tom strength. Toms skill will be on display Saturday and during Peninsula Sunday Gymnastics Pot of Gold meet. The two-day event will showcase gymnasts from all over the Bay Area, including Moraga, San Rafael, Emeryville and San Jose. The main thing is to promote the sport of gymnastics in our local area, said Peninsula program director Courtney Tate. Tate said the gym is expecting 250 athletes over the weekend, with gymnasts competing throughout every level particular emphasis will be put on the Xcel Program.

Its the largest in California, Tate said. We have over 60 kids. Its something that is new to the West Coast. (Basically), the kids dont have to train as many hours as they would at the junior Olympic program, but they can still compete they make up their own music, they own routines. This meet has a lot of Xcel kids coming. Pot of Gold will be a fun-lled event for all, and its been a busy time for Tate and the rest of Peninsula Gymnastics. Because of the success of last years Pot of Gold, attendance for the 2012 version doubled. I havent slept in like, three or four days probably, Tate said, jokingly. The event is unique in that it offers a fth rotation athletes compete in four gymnastics disciplines, then participate in games, arts and crafts and socially with other gymnasts. Those at Peninsula to have fun can, and those in the Optional level (Level 7-10) will have the

opportunity to post a qualifying score for Regionals and Nationals which happens in three weeks gymnasts like Tom. I remember when she started, running around with pig tails in the gym, Tate said of Tom. Shes denitely one of those focused, head-on, strong kids. There was a time when she would come in the morning, an hour and a half before school, work out and then go to school and then come back and work out. Shes a strong kid. She wants to do gymnastics. Shes very physically talented but her dedication to the sport is what has pushed her to go as far as she has. I think she is very disciplined, Iusan said of Tom. Shes an intelligent girl. Working with her is a pleasure. For Tom, a qualifying score vaults her into state competitions this year a place shes long wanted to compete. And shell skip all the way there.

Posey, Sanchez return as Giants beat Reds Giants agree on deals with 19 players
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. Matt Cain walked in from the bullpen and heard the roar of the San Francisco Giants fans at Scottsdale Stadium. I thought everybody really loved me, Cain said, and then I looked behind me and saw Buster. The return of Buster Posey was the story of the day for the Giants in Fridays 6-3 Cactus League victory over a Reds split-squad, with Freddy Sanchezs return a close second. Posey and Sanchez, both key cogs in the Giants championship run in 2010, missed most of 2011 with injuries. Posey tore ligaments in his left ankle in a home-plate collision on May 25, and Sanchez dislocated his shoulder June 10. Neither had played in a game until Friday. Posey caught two innings and hit a yout in his only trip to the plate, while Sanchez was 1 for 4. It was fun, Posey said. Ive put in a lot of work. Even though it was

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. The San Francisco Giants agreed to terms Friday on 2012 contracts with catcher Buster Posey, left-handed starter Madison Bumgarner and 17 others. Bobby Evans, Giants vice president of baseball operations, said the players agreed on one-year, nonguaranteed major league contracts. Others in the group with zero to three years service time are reliever only two innings, it was nice to be out there. Posey admitted to some anxiety before the game, but he felt better after passing the few tests the game provided. He had to drop to his knees to block a few balls, which he did awlessly. He had to pop out of his crouch to throw to second on

Dan Runzler, shortstop Brandon Crawford, catchers Hector Sanchez and Chris Stewart, pitcher Eric Surkamp, and first basemen Brandon Belt and Brett Pill. Posey is returning from a seasonending leg injury from a home-plate collision on May 25 with the Marlins Scott Cousins. He played in his rst Cactus League game Friday. The 22-year-old Bumgarner went 13-13 with a 3.21 ERA in 204 2-3 innings last year in his rst full seaMiguel Cairos steal attempt. Cairo was safe, but Posey said he was satised with the throw. It was good to see Buster back out there playing again, manager Bruce Bochy said. I know he was excited. It was great to see the ovation he got when he walked out to the bullpen. There was a little extra

son as a starter for San Francisco. He pitched eight shutout innings in Game 4 of the 2010 World Series against Texas as the Giants went on to capture their rst championship since moving West in 1958. The other players agreeing Friday were: pitchers Hector Correa, Steve Edlefsen and Danny Otero; inelders Ehire Adrianza, Charlie Culberson, Conor Gillaspie and Angel Villalona; and outfielders Tyler Graham, Roger Kieschnick and Francisco Peguero. energy in the crowd and in the dugout today than you normally feel in a spring training game. It was fun. Everyone was happy to see Buster playing again. Bochy said Posey will catch again on Sunday, playing four innings. As for Sanchez, the Giants were happy to get him back into the line-

up, but the true test of his surgically repaired shoulder will come when he is ready to play in the eld. Bochy said the plan is for Sanchez to DH again on Sunday and play second base on Monday. Playing defense will be a big steppingstone for me, Sanchez said. I feel like Im getting a little stronger each day. Cain picked up the victory with three scoreless innings, striking out four. He has not allowed a run in ve innings in his two starts this spring. Reds starter Aroldis Chapman pitched two perfect innings, striking out two. The Reds are looking to see if the 24-year-old Cuban can pitch in the rotation instead of the bullpen, where he spent his rst two major league seasons. Chapman is in the running for the No. 5 starter job with Homer Bailey. However, manager Dusty Baker told reporters this week that an injury to reliever Bill Bray could prompt the Reds to scrap plans to put Chapman in the rotation.

Burlingame School District Bond Oversight Committee Member Search


The Burlingame School District is seeking volunteers for its Measure A Bond Oversight Committee. Local citizens are needed to review and oversee Measure A Bond expenditures for the facilities improvements at all of the Districts six schools. This a great opportunity to get involved in a facet of public school nance not very well known. Selected volunteers will serve a vital role in the public oversight of the school districts use of public funds. The time commitment is fairly minimal with just four meetings a year, typically lasting one hour. Committee Membership is limited to two two-year terms with a representative needed from each of the following four categories: Member active in a senior citizens organization Registered Member of a bona-de tax organization Member active in a business organization representing the local business community Two Members of the community at-large For additional information, please contact Dr. Robert Clark, Assistant Superintendent / CBO at the District (650) 259-3800 or the Districts Program Manager Richard Terrones of Dreiling Terrones Architecture (650) 696-1200. For those interested in this opportunity, please mail a letter of interest to the District Ofce at 1825 Trousdale Drive, Burlingame, CA 94010, Attention Dr. Maggie MacIsaac, Superintendent. All letters of interest should be submitted by March 31, 2012 for Board review at the April 10, 2012 board meeting.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

SPORTS

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

13

RockiesNicasio continues remarkable return


By Arnie Stapleton
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. Juan Nicasio needs no reminders of the frightening line drive last summer that fractured his skull, broke his neck and nearly killed him. The Colorado Rockies stocky right-hander got one anyway. In his rst start since that game on Aug. 5, when Washingtons Ian Desmond scorched a fastball off his right temple, Oaklands second hitter, Eric Sogard, sent a heater whizzing by Nicasios head in the rst inning of the Athletics 6-4 win Friday. It was close. I said, Oh (shoot)! Nicasio recounted. Oh my God, it was close to me. But I dont think about it. After wiping his brow and taking a deep breath, Nicasio got back on the mound and seemed unfazed by the close call. He threw three impressive innings, scattering ve singles, allowing one unearned run, walking none and striking out two. Nicasio threw in an intrasquad game earlier in the week, his rst action without an L screen to protect him, and the Rockies were eager to see if

hed be shy Friday, recoiling or cutting off his follow through to protect himself because of what happened to him. I see no sign of that whatsoever, Rockies manager Jim Tracy said. Thats so encouraging to see. Tracy, himself, cringed at the comebacker, though. I cant really tell you how I felt about the baptism by re, if you will, when I saw that one line drive go back through the middle. I mean, it didnt take very long for that to happen, Tracy said. But, actually, maybe a good thing as we move forward. But I can tell you this, the ball was coming out of his hand big-time. The slider, its there. He threw rst-pitch strikes to 11 of the 13 batters he faced, and his fastball topped out at 94 mph. Nicasio, who went 4-4 with a 4.14 ERA and 58 strikeouts with 18 walks as a rookie last year before he got hurt, is trying to make the Rockies rotation just eight months after the accident that landed him in the hospital for 11 days and had doctors who usually see fractures of the C-1 vertebra in diving or auto accident patients

wondering if hed ever walk again, much less pitch in the majors. Nicasio, who never lost consciousness when he got hurt last summer, said he had no ashbacks, even when Sogard sent the screamer whizzing past him. Yeah, Im not thinking about what happened last year, Nicasio said. Im not thinking nothing about that. Now, its a new season, you know? I dont think about last year. Everyone around him still does. I think Im thinking about it way more than him, shortstop Troy Tulowitzki said. It seems like hes past it and moved on. It is a good story. I mean, its crazy to me. It was amazing, its nice to see that guy going back to the mound after all that stuff that he went through, slugger Carlos Gonzalez said. This guys a tough guy. Its not easy to do what hes doing right now. Hes a competitor. Hes unbelievable. Tulowitzki said he was awed by Nicasio even before the game. Today we started off with what we call ragsmash, its basically pitchers elding comebackers, and he made it to the nals, Tulowitzki said.

That was impressive to me. I was thinking for a guy to be last year on the eld just laid out on the mound from a line-drive comebacker ... it speaks volumes about how fearless of a kid he really is. And then to see him take the mound today, there was some balls hit hard back up the middle. Just to see him attack the strike zone even after those things happened is pretty impressive, Tulowitzki added. Brandon McCarthy allowed two earned runs on four hits in 4 2-3 innings for Oakland, and Jerry Blevins picked up the win by retiring the only batter he faced. Tulowitzki hit two doubles and scored twice off McCarthy to put the Rockies ahead 2-1 before the Athletics rallied for four runs off Tyler Chatwood in three innings. Oakland manager Bob Melvin said Cuban defector Yoenis Cespedes will make his rst start Saturday against Cincinnati. Hell bat second and play center eld in his spring training debut. Were just looking forward to seeing him out there and being part of the team and doing some things in the game, Melvin said. Thats all part of the camaraderie and chemistry. So, I think hes looking forward to that, too.

Longtime MLB umpire Wendelstedt dies at 73


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK Longtime umpire Harry Wendelstedt, who worked ve World Series and made a call involving Don Drysdale that became one of baseballs most disputed plays in the late 1960s, died Friday. He was 73. Wendelstedt died at Florida Hospital Memorial Medical Center in Daytona Beach, Fla., near the umpiring school he ran for more than three decades in Ormond Beach. He had been diagnosed several years ago with a brain tumor. Wendelstedt called seven NL championship series and four All-Star games, and was behind the plate for ve no-hitters. He was on the major league umpiring staff from 1966-98. His son, Hunter, is a big league umpire and wears the same No. 21 that his father wore. The Wendelstedts worked games together in 1998 it was Hunters rst year in the majors and Harrys last season. Hall of Fame manager Tom Lasorda has championed Wendelstedt for enshrinement in Cooperstown. Hes got as good a chance as anybody. He

deserves it, Lasorda told The Associated Press after learning of Wendelstedts death. Lasorda said he was scouting for Los Angeles and was in the stands when Wendelstedt made his most notable call on May 31, 1968, at Dodger Stadium. Drysdale was trying for his fth straight shutout and was heading toward setting a then-record of 58 2-3 scoreless innings when San Francisco loaded the bases with no outs in the ninth inning. Drysdale threw a 2-2 pitch that struck Dick Dietz on the elbow, and the shutout streak seemed to be over. But Wendelstedt, the plate umpire, immediately ruled that Dietz didnt try to get out of the way. Wendelstedt called the pitch a ball and told Dietz to get back in the batters box. Id never seen that call before in the big leagues, Lasorda recalled. Never had seen anyone make it. After a heated argument, the game resumed. On a full-count pitch, Dietz ied out and Drysdale wound up pitching a shutout. Orel Hershiser set the shutout record of 59 innings in 1988, pitching under Lasorda.

14

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

SPORTS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Broncos suspended for FIFA delays inspection trip violating NFL drug policy
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

wasnt from a human. We proved conclusively at the NFL hearing on this matter that the NFL and its specimen collector wholly failed in their duties to safeguard and process my specimen properly, Williams said. In fact, the specimen collector was red by the NFL after compromising my specimen as well as others. The hearing ofcer, an NFL executive, ignored the NFLs own policy, engaged in inappropriate communications with top NFL ofcials about this matter without my knowledge or approval, corrupted the system, ignored that my specimen had been compromised, and now has subjected me to humiliation as well as suspension. Williams lawyer Peter R. Ginsberg said the specimen collector, whose name he wouldnt disclose, has said he watched Williams void directly into the specimen bottle, so it wouldve been impossible for the specimen to be non-human.

NEW YORK The NFL suspended linebacker D.J. Williams, defensive tackle Ryan McBean and tight end Virgil Green of the Denver Broncos for violating the leagues policy on performance-enhancing substances. The league announced the suspensions on Friday. McBean and Williams are suspended for Denvers rst six games of the 2012 season. Green is suspended for the teams rst four games. All three are suspended without pay. The players are eligible to participate in all offseason and preseason practices and games. Williams issued a written statement calling his suspension unjust and vowing legal action. Green tweeted that he has now been approved for the medication for which he has been suspended. Williams said in his written statement that the NFL contends the urine sample he provided to an NFL specimen collector for testing

ZURICH FIFA postponed a 2014 World Cup inspection trip to Brazil next week by its top administrator, who sparked anger in the country by criticizing delays in preparations. FIFA President Sepp Blatter will rst visit Brazil and meet with President Dilma Rousseff, the governing body said. Blatter wrote to Rousseff on Friday and has requested a meeting in Brazil next week. FIFA said secretary general Jerome Valcke will resume his scheduled tour of 2014 host cities after the presidents meet. Valcke planned to join former Brazil playing greats Ronaldo and Bebeto in Recife, Brasilia and Cuiaba on the second of six tours this year. Ronaldo and Bebeto are members of the local World Cup organizing committee. Valcke rankled Brazilian officials last Friday by vulgarly saying they had to push themselves in dealing with preparations for the 32-nation tournament.

Brazil Sports Minister Aldo Rebelo described the comments as unacceptable, offensive and inappropriate. He demanded Valckes removal from the project before accepting written apologies from the French ofcial and Blatter. I dont know what FIFA thinks about keeping the secretary general as the interlocutor (with the government), Rebelo said Friday. I choose not to comment. Lets wait to see what happens. I reassure that Brazil desires to work with FIFA for the World Cup. Valcke is also responsible for overseeing the 2013 Confederations Cup, an eight-nation event designed to test Brazils infrastructure. It begins in June next year, although it is still unclear if Recife and Salvador will be ready to host matches. Despite the soured relations, FIFA ofcials continue to visit and work with Brazils local organizing committee. A team of nearly 40 people was in the city of Cuiaba on Friday.

Vonn clinches another title


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ARE, Sweden All season, Lindsey Vonn has been the picture of poise on the mountain, no matter what she was dealing with off it. This day was different. With a chance to clinch her fourth World Cup overall title more than any other U.S. ski racer in history Vonn felt the nerves steadily building, her heart racing, when she stepped into the starting gate Friday for the second run of a giant slalom in Are, Sweden. Leading after the rst run, Vonn knew all she needed was one last safe pass through a

bumpy course with at light. Only, thats not her style. So she attacked the entire way seizing the opportunity, she called it and put the nishing touches on yet another race victory and yet another season championship, both by wide margins. Vonns two-run time of 2 minutes, 28 seconds was nearly a half-second faster than runner-up Federica Brignone of Italy, and more than a second faster than Olympic champion Viktoria Rebensburg of Germany. She secured the overall title with ve races left.

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THE DAILY JOURNAL

SPORTS

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

15

Watson shoots 62,takes the lead at Doral


By Doug Ferguson
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DORAL, Fla. Bubba Watson and Justin Rose put on an amazing show of birdies in blustery conditions at Doral, making 17 between them while playing in the same group Friday at the Cadillac Championship. Their playful duel was decided by Watsons eagle, giving him a 10-under 62 and a one-shot lead. Watson belted a 3-iron that barely got over a palm tree, carried over the water into the wind and settled 6 feet away on the par-5 eighth for an eagle putt that gave him a one-shot lead over Rose. Mark Wilson, the third in that group, shot a respectable 70 and was just along for the ride. They did everything right, Wilson said. It was some of the best golf Ive seen collectively between them. Watson was at 12-under 132 and will get to play again in the nal group Saturday with Rose, who had to settle for a 64. Maybe theyve been cutting the hole a little bigger, Rose said. Despite the steady wind, there were plenty of low scores on the Blue Monster. The average score was 69.9, close to three strokes easier than the opening round. There were 12 scores in the 60s on Thursday, and 31 of them Friday. Tiger Woods played bogey-free for a 67 and actually lost ground. He moved up the leaderboard, but is seven shots behind going into the weekend, with 14 players ahead of him. This is the highest score I could have shot

today, for sure, Woods said. Rory McIlroy, in his rst tournament as the new world No. 1, managed a 69 and fell 10 shots off the lead. Perhaps most peculiar about Watson being atop the leaderboard at Doral is that he really doesnt like the course. Without many trees except for the waving palms, he cant gure out where hes supposed to be hitting the ball. But he kept hitting it long, had short irons into the greens and made his share of putts. That works just about anywhere. As always, there were a few shots that only Watson can see. He was so far left of the sixth fairway, that a tree was blocking his path to the green. Watson had only 135 yards to the hole, but instead of playing a sand wedge, he hit 9-iron and aimed it some 20 yards right of the green, slicing it back into the left-to-right wind beyond the hole until the wind pushed it back on the descent. It landed 6 feet from the cup. His caddie, Ted Scott, keeps notes in the yardage book of how Watson plays each hole in every round. Next to the 9-iron from 135 yards, he put in parentheses, Wow. There was another wow inscription two holes later. Watson was in the fairway on the par-5 eighth, but the best path to the green was around a palm tree near the ropes where the photographers were camped out. I took it right up the edge of that tree. Theres a little tree there and it actually nicked that limb a little bit, Watson said. I hit it as hard as I could, just a low, what everybody calls a stinger.

REUTERS

Bubba Watson shot a 10-under 62 to take the lead at Doral after two rounds.
Hit as hard as I could low and knew it wasnt going to slice. So all I was protecting was the draw and it went dead straight and came off perfect. And the rest is history. He went from one shot behind to one shot ahead of Rose, who had nothing to apologize about his 64. Rose, who contended last week in the wind at the Honda Classic, ran off four birdies in a ve-hole stretch around the turn, the exception coming on the 18th. Rose was among those caught up in the Bubba show. I dont let it inuence my game plan, the way I play the golf course, but denitely you keep one eye on him just out of interest, Rose said. Hes a fun guy to watch play golf. When he hits tee shots, theres a bit of disbelief and stuff like that, or he curves one, starts one in the trees and theres Ooohing and Aahhhing when it goes back into the fairways.

No one knows what to expect and I think its fascinating to watch. Even with the tees moved slightly forward and slightly less wind, the par-4 18th still played difcult. There were ve birdies, compared with only two birdies in the opening round. Adam Scott had one of them, holing a 20-foot putt for a birdie-birdie nish that allowed him to recover from a double bogey on the eighth hole. He shot a 68 and was at 10-under 134, two shots out of the lead. Right where I want to be, Scott said. The guys shot some unbelievably good scores out there today, so I knew on that back nine as I was kind of falling a long way behind, I needed to step it up, and I was happy the putter really came through for me. Tomorrow, Im just going to have to be really sharp, because theres no doubt again there are going to be low scores out there. Peter Hanson, who reached the quarternals of the Match Play Championship, took another step toward trying to secure a PGA Tour card. He had a 65 and was alone in fourth in this World Golf Championship. Thomas Bjorn has yet to make a bogey in 36 holes and had another 68. He was four shots behind, tied with PGA champion Keegan Bradley, who had a 67. The group at 7-under 137 included Masters champion Charl Schwartzel and former PGA champion Martin Kaymer. Youll take that any week, Bjorn said. Im not making a big number of birdies, obviously, but when you can keep big mistakes off your scorecard, thats the key to this golf course. Its very easy to make some big mistakes and its difcult to get it back.

Skins trade for Rams draft pick


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The trade moves the Redskins up four places from sixth in the April draft.

FOXSports.com is reporting the Washington Redskins have a deal in place to acquire the No. 2 pick in the NFL draft and plan to take Baylor quarterback Robert Grifn III. Under the deal reported by the website, the Redskins and St. Louis Rams will swap rstround selections this year. The Rams also will receive multiple future rst-round draft picks and other selections. ESPN.com reported St. Louis will receive Washingtons rst and second-round picks this year, and the Redskins rst-round picks in 2013 and 2014.

Jets extend QB Sanchezs contract by 3 years


NEW YORK Mark Sanchez is the Jets main man, not Peyton Manning. After acknowledging that New York looked into pursuing Manning, Jets general manager Mike Tannenbaum announced Friday night the team extended Sanchezs contract by three years. The move ended speculation the Jets could push him aside to make way for the former Indianapolis Colts star whos now a free agent.

16

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

SPORTS
incredibly strong. He scored ve goals before leaving the team in July on a personal leave of absence. Lenhart never returned, and his disappearance was the catalyst for a stretch of lowly soccer for the Earthquakes not really in terms of losses (3-6-5), but of falling continuous short in games and seeing their season drift away. Still, the Quakes decided to bring Lenhart back for the 2012 season, and according to San Jose head coach Frank Yallop, its like a new signing. Look for Lenhart to do most of his damage slightly in front of Wondolowski in the San Jose attack. Wondolowski has built his legacy by being in the right place at the right time. If Lenhart pressures up front and creates some havoc, Wondolowski can shine even brighter. But if he doesnt, waiting in the wings are players like Alan Gordon, who got hurt just after his San Jose debut. Back at full strength, Gordon gives Yallop some options up top. San Joses additions dont stop on offense. After Bobby Burling was swooped up in the expansion draft, the Quakes went out and signed Victor Bernardez, a Honduran National Team member who saw some time on the eld with the club during the Gold Cup last year. His presence presents an interesting dilemma for San Jose at the centerback position, considering that Jason Hernandez is expected to start and waiting in the wings is Ike Opara, who was hurt last year, but his talent and knack for goal on set pieces cannot be overlooked. Mr. Reliable Ramiro Corrales will man the left back spot and Steven Beltashour, arguably one of the best right backs in the MLS that you have yet to hear about, completes the backline. Jon Busch, fresh off his contract extension signed in the off season, returns for his second full season between the pipes. The 44 goals allowed isnt the prettiest number, but without some of Buschs eye-popping saves, the 2011 season would have been worse for San Jose. Changes in the MLS playoff system wont make things easier for the Quakes in 2012. Gone is the old format and in its place is a bracket in which the top ve teams from each

THE DAILY JOURNAL


division qualify for the playoffs. The L.A. Galaxy are the reigning league champions and heavy favorites in the Western Conference. And while San Jose has made various promising strides, so have teams like Real Salt Lake, FC Dallas and Seattle Sounders FC. The battle for the fourth and fth spots in the Western Conference will be more than formidable.

QUAKES
Continued from page 11
San Jose via trade with FC Dallas. Chavez has adequate speed on the outside and enjoyed a career year last season. Hell look to ll the void left with the departure of long-time Earthquake Bobby Convey. Quake fans are super excited to see Simon Dawkins back in blue and white. San Jose extended their loan of the electric winger. Sam Cronin rounds out the starting mideld. But the offense doesnt stop there. Shea Salinas returns, Jean Alexandre joins the Quakes and San Jose signed Sercan Guvenisik, a Turkish player with ashes of greatness. But just like in 2011, the biggest factor for the San Jose offense wont be Wondolowski but Steven Lenhart. Lenhart appeared to be the player the Quakes prayed for when he started the season

SAN JOSE EARTHQUAKES


LAST SEASON: 8-12-14 (7TH WESTERN CONFERENCE) ADDITIONS: M Shea Salinas; M Jean Alexandre; M Marvin Chvez; D Vctor Bernrdez; F Sam Garza; M Jacob Hustedt; G Chris Blais; F Cesar Diaz Pizarro; D David Tiemstra; D James Kiffe; D Tyler Krumpe; F Sercan Gvenisik; M Tressor Moreno; M Simon Dawkins. GONE: D Bobby Burling; M Bobby Convey; D Chris Leitch; M Andr Luiz. while Peluso, leadoff hitter David Jimenez and pinch hitter Kyle Mack each drove in a run as well. Jimenez did an excellent job at the top of the order for the Colts, reaching base four times with two ineld hits and two walks. He also scored a pair of runs. Rios reached base four times for the Colts, knocking out three hits, including a pair of doubles. The only question that remains is to decide if the game will go down as ofcial, given the way it ended. I dont know, Roman said. We played ve innings. It was a legal game. But Im not concerned with that. Said Peluso: Were all good friends. We put the pressure on them early, but its nothing personal. Semien said his schools athletic director told him the Warriors would forfeit Fridays game, as well as Mondays game against Terra Nova. The way it was explained to me by my AD, since everyone left the bench, everyone is thrown out, basically. When you are thrown out of a ball game, you have to sit out the next game (as well), Semien said. Semien said it was his understanding Fridays game would be a forfeit by each team. Applying that logic, El Camino may be forced to forfeit its next game as well.

RIVALS
Continued from page 11
It was much more of a misunderstanding between (Semien and I), Roman said. Well settle it. Semien said his biggest disappointment wasnt how his team played but how the game ended. It got crazy. The worst thing that happened was the benches emptying and the coaches going at each other. We arent those type of people (Roman and I). We could probably care less about the game, Semien said. The fact those benches emptied is heartbreaking. Before the dustup on the eld, the Colts were dusting the Warriors on the scoreboard. El Camino wasted little time in jumping on South City, scoring a pair of runs in the rst inning. The Colts added three more in both the second and third innings, scoring a single run in the fourth and added six more in the fth. Despite scoring 15 runs and banging out 16 hits, Roman wasnt satised with the way his team played. I dont think we played very well, Roman said. South City didnt play very well. We know they can play better than that. We got a lot of gifts.

It got crazy.The worst thing that happened was the benches emptying and the coaches going at each other.We arent those type of people (Roman and I).We could probably care less about the game.The fact those benches emptied is heartbreaking.
Daryl Semien,South City manager

The teams faced off March 3 in the Tim Kuehnert Memorial Tournament hosted by Menlo School with the Colts coming away with a 5-4 victory. South City killed itself Friday by committing seven errors for the game, which resulted in nine of the runs being unearned. It was just one of those things, Semien said. We didnt make the plays we usually make. Semien said hes missing three starters for various reasons, forcing him to call up some froshsoph players and putting them in the starting lineup. I think (the problems are related to) its just young kids trying to adjust to the varsity game. El Camino pitcher Josh Eclevea beneted from the offensive output. He allowed just two runs while scattering ve hits. The Warriors scratched out a run in the second inning on a Maligi Maluia ineld hit which plated Gregorio Jimenez. They added a second run in the top of the fth on Tyler Kehanes one-out double, which drove in Andrew Puzzle, who singled to

lead off the inning. Other than that, Eclevea cruised despite not having his best stuff. After a bit of a rocky start, he settled down and found his groove. He nished with seven strikeouts, including four in a row the nal two outs of the second and the rst two outs of the third inning. Hes done a good job, Roman said. His breaking ball wasnt working, but he threw it (and got strikes) when he needed to. El Camino third baseman Brett Bolentini had big day at the plate for Colts. He had three hits and reached base four times in his ve at bats. He drove in four runs and scored twice. He singled and scored in the rst inning before driving in a pair of runs with a secondinning single. He ended up scoring again on the back end of a delayed steal of home plate. The Colts ran the play three times and were successful twice. In the third, Bolentini drove in two more with a single. Right elder Emiliano Rios drove in a pair of runs with a two-run double in the fth,

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THE DAILY JOURNAL

SPORTS
3/10 3/12
@ Oilers 6:30 p.m. CSN-CAL

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

17

3/8
@ Dallas 5:30 p.m. CSN-CAL

3/13

3/15

3/17

3/19
vs.Ducks 7 p.m. CSN-CAL

MLB SPRING TRAINING


AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L
Detroit Seattle Toronto Oakland Baltimore Boston Los Angeles Kansas City New York Minnesota Cleveland Texas Tampa Bay Chicago 6 6 5 5 3 3 3 4 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 2 2 3 2 2 2 3 4 5 4 4 5 4

NHL STANDINGS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division W N.Y.Rangers 42 Pittsburgh 41 Philadelphia 38 New Jersey 38 N.Y.Islanders 28 Northeast Division W Boston 40 Ottawa 36 Buffalo 31 Toronto 30 Montreal 26 Southeast Division W Florida 31 Washington 33 Winnipeg 32 Tampa Bay 31 Carolina 25 L 18 21 21 24 30 L 23 25 29 30 32 L 23 28 28 29 27 OT 7 5 7 5 9 OT 3 8 8 7 10 OT 13 6 8 7 15 Pts 91 87 83 81 65 Pts 83 80 70 67 62 Pts 75 72 72 69 65 GF 184 214 218 189 156 GF 217 213 167 200 179 GF 164 178 178 189 177 GA 145 171 193 177 200 GA 155 202 191 209 192 GA 191 190 190 229 203

NBA STANDINGS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division W Philadelphia 23 Boston 20 New York 18 Toronto 13 New Jersey 13 Southeast Division W Miami 30 Orlando 25 Atlanta 23 Washington 9 Charlotte 5 Central Division W Chicago 33 Indiana 23 Milwaukee 15 Cleveland 14 Detroit 13 Southwest Division W San Antonio 26 Memphis 23 Dallas 23 Houston 21 New Orleans 9 Northwest Division W Oklahoma City 31 Denver 22 Minnesota 21 Utah 19 Portland 19 Pacic Division W L.A.Clippers 22 L.A.Lakers 23 Phoenix 17 Golden State 15 Sacramento 13 L 17 18 21 26 27 L 9 15 16 29 32 L 8 14 24 23 26 Pct .575 .526 .462 .333 .325 Pct .769 .625 .590 .237 .135 Pct .805 .622 .385 .378 .333 GB 2 4 1/2 9 1/2 10 GB 5 1/2 7 20 1/2 24 GB 8 17 17 19

@ Phoenix 5 p.m. CSN-CAL

@ Calgary vs.Nashville vs.Detroit 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. CSN-CAL CSN-CAL CSN-CAL

Pct
.857 .750 .714 .625 .600 .600 .600 .571 .429 .375 .333 .333 .286 .200

3/10
vs.Mavs 7:30 p.m. CSN-BAY

3/11
@ Clippers 6:30 p.m. CSN-BAY

3/13
@ Kings 7 p.m. CSN-BAY

3/14
vs.Boston 7:30 p.m. CSN-BAY

3/16
vs.Bucks 7:30 p.m. CSN-BAY

3/19
vs.T-wolves 7:30 p.m. CSN-BAY

3/21
@ New Orleans 5 p.m. CSN-BAY

3/10
vs. New England 7:30 p.m. CSN-CAL

3/17

3/24

3/31
@ Seattle 7 p.m. CSN-CAL

4/7
vs.White Caps 4 p.m. CSN-CAL

4/14
@Red Bulls 4 p.m. CSN+

4/21
vs.Real Salt Lake 7:30 p.m. CSN-CAL

vs.Dynamo @ Toronto 10 a.m. 2 p.m. CSN-CAL CSN-CAL

LOCAL SCOREBOARD
BASEBALL El Camino 15, South City 2 South City 010 01 2 5 7 El Camino 233 16 15 16 1 Game was called in the bottom of the fth with two outs WP Eclevea.LP Marcucci.2B Kehane (SC); Pastora,Rios 2 (EC).Multiple hits Jimenez 2,Bolentini 3, Rios 3, Moncada 2 (EC). Multiple RBI Bolentini 4,Rios 2 (EC).Records El Camino 4-21 overall; South City 1-6. St. Francis 4, Menlo School 3 Menlo 102 000 0 3 4 2 St.Francis 101 000 2 4 3 0 WP Cardinalli. LP Batchelder. 2B Avis, Diekroeger (MS). Multiple hits Diekroeger 2 (MS). Multiple RBI Diekroeger 3 (MS). Records Menlo School 3-3 overall; St.Francis 7-0. THURSDAY BOYS LACROSSE Sacred Heart Prep 14, Los Gatos 4 SHP 4 5 2 3 14 Los Gatos 1 1 0 2 4 SHP goal scorers Hatter 3, Hoskinson 3, Noah Kawasaki 3,White 2,Nic Kawasaki,Mayle,Morrison. Records Sacred Heart Prep 2-0 overall;Los Gatos 2-1-1. Menlo-Atherton 7, Burlingame 2 M-A goal scorers Jaggers 2, D.Uphoff 2, Kihira, McGinnis,OHara. GIRLS SWIMMING Burlingame 134, Terra Nova 34 200 medley relay Burlingame (Thomas, Gebhard, Brennand, Maxwell) 1:57.42; 200 free Brennand (B) 1:57.44, Girard (B), Christiansen (B); 200 IM Gebhard (B) 2:18.06, Saisi (B), Li (B); 50 free Hill (B) 27.01,Anderson (B),Dwyer (TN);100 y Thomas (B) 57.10,Saisi (B),Li (B);100 free Brennand (B) 55.45; Gubser (TN), Dwyer (TN); 500 free Maxwell (B) 5:14.75, Saisi (B), Morrison (B); 200 free relay Burlingame (Li, Saisi, Girard) 1:50.96. 100 back Christiansen (B) 1:11.18, Anderson (B), Hill (B); 100 breast Gebhard (B) 1:06.48, Reynolds (B), Fregosi (B); 400 free Burlingame (Brennand,Gebhard,Maxwell,Thomas) 3:53.76. BOYS SWIMMING Burlingame 109,Terra Nova 63 200 medley Burlingame (Tan, Pease, Yeager, Bakar) 1:47.09; 200 free B. Jacobs (TN) 1:46.84, Bakar (B), Butler (B); 200 IM Yeager (B) 2:08.35, Pease (B),Kemp (B); 50 free T.Jacobs (TB) 23.80, Snyder (B), Sfgard (B); 100 y Yeager (B) 57.32, Johnson (TN),Nguyen (B);100 free Tan (B) 49.83, Bakar (B),T.Jacobs (TN);500 free B.Jacobs (TN) 4:55.44,Popovic (B),Garibaldi (B); 200 free relay Terra Nova (T.Jacobs,Crosseld,Johnson,B.Jacobs); 100 back Tan (B) 56.23,Crosseld (TN),Nguyen (B); 100 breast Pease (B) 1:08.77, Popovic (B), Ribera (B);400 free relay Burlingame (Bakar,Yeager,Popovic,Tan) 3:26.60. BOYS GOLF Menlo School 194,Crystal Springs 214 At Palo Alto Muni,par 36;MENLO Buchanan 32; Dean 37; Petit 38; Wong 39; Huber 48. CRYSTAL SPRINGS Evans 40; Madding, Vought 41; Park 45; Rothbard 47.Records Menlo School 2-0 WBAL. Burlingam3 220, Carlmont 267 Medalist Carney (B) 39.Records Burlingame 3-1; Carlmont 1-1.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L
Los Angeles San Francisco Miami Milwaukee Cincinnati Houston Philadelphia Chicago New York St.Louis Washington Pittsburgh Arizona San Diego Colorado Atlanta 3 5 3 3 4 4 4 3 3 2 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 2 3 4 4 5 4 7

Pct
.750 .714 .600 .600 .571 .571 .571 .500 .500 .500 .500 .429 .333 .286 .200 .125

WESTERN CONFERENCE
L 12 15 17 19 30 L 8 18 19 19 20 L 15 16 21 21 26 Pct .684 .605 .575 .525 .231 Pct .795 .550 .525 .500 .487 Pct .595 .590 .447 .417 .333 GB 3 4 6 17 1/2 GB 9 1/2 10 1/2 11 1/2 12 GB 5 1/2 6 1/2 10

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division W L OT Pts GF GA St.Louis 43 18 7 93 177 133 Detroit 44 21 3 91 215 159 Nashville 39 21 7 85 192 173 Chicago 37 25 7 81 207 203 Columbus 22 38 7 51 159 217 Northwest Division W L OT Pts GF GA Vancouver 42 18 8 92 214 168 Colorado 35 30 4 74 180 185 Calgary 30 25 12 72 164 185 Minnesota 29 29 10 68 147 189 Edmonton 26 35 6 58 178 203 Pacic Division W L OT Pts GF GA Dallas 37 26 5 79 183 183 Phoenix 33 25 10 76 175 173 San Jose 33 24 9 75 184 170 Los Angeles 31 25 12 74 151 150 Anaheim 29 29 10 68 171 191 Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss or shootout loss.

NOTE: Split-squad games count in the standings; games against non-major league teams do not. FRIDAY N.Y.Yankees 3,Atlanta (ss) 0 Toronto 11,Houston 2 St.Louis 3,Minnesota 2 Philadelphia 7,Detroit 5 N.Y.Mets 5,Atlanta (ss) 3 Tampa Bay 3,Baltimore 3,tie,10 innings Milwaukee 12,Cleveland 2 Cincinnati (ss) 5,Kansas City 1 San Francisco 6,Cincinnati (ss) 3 Chicago Cubs 5,Chicago White Sox 1 San Diego 6,L.A.Angels 3 Arizona 8,Seattle 5 L.A.Dodgers 9,Texas 0 Oakland 6,Colorado 4 Miami 3,Washington 0

Wednesdays Games Utah 99,Charlotte 93 Toronto 116,Houston 98 Washington 106,L.A.Lakers 101 Philadelphia 103,Boston 71 Miami 89,Atlanta 86 Oklahoma City 115,Phoenix 104 Minnesota 106,Portland 94 Chicago 106,Milwaukee 104 New Jersey 101,L.A.Clippers 100

Sports briefs
First stop: Peyton Manning meets with Denver Broncos brass
DENVER Peyton Manning spent the day on Tim Tebows turf, meeting for nearly six hours with the Denver Broncos on Day 1 of his free-agent tour of the NFL. Two days after being released by the Indianapolis Colts, Manning got the star treatment Friday in the Mile High City own to town on a chartered plane from Miami and spending the day with Hall of Fame quarterback John Elway, who also serves as Denvers vice president of football operations. They spent the afternoon and early evening together; coach John Fox and general manager Brian Xanders were along, too, as Manning took a tour of the complex. When he left after the marathon meeting, Manning didnt talk to reporters and jumped into the same silver SUV he Peyton arrived in, then was whisked away. Manning His next stop? There are more than a half-dozen other suitors, with Arizona and Miami among those expressing interest. But spending the rst day in Denver certainly made for some entertaining conversation. This is a city wrapped up in the debate over whether Tebow is a long-term solution at quarterback or just a feel-good story for a season. The mere fact the Broncos had Manning in for a visit might speak volumes about which way theyre leaning.

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Weekend March 10-11, 2012

WORLD

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Syrian opposition rejects talks with regime


By Ben Hubbard and Zeina Karam
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

REUTERS

Syrians and Lebanese living in the area of Wadi Khaled near the border with Syria chant slogans against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad during a demonstration.

BEIRUT A high-prole international mission to end the Syrian crisis stumbled Friday before it began as the opposition rejected calls by U.N. envoy Ko Annan for dialogue with President Bashar Assad as pointless and out of touch after a year of violence. The dispute exposes the widening gap between opposition leaders who say only military aid can stop Assads regime, and Western powers who fear more weapons will exacerbate the conict. As the prospects for diplomacy faltered, Turkey reported the defections of three highranking military ofcers two generals and a colonel as well as two sergeants, a signicant development because until now most army defectors have been low-level conscripts. A deputy oil minister also deserted Assads regime this week, making him the highestranking civilian ofcial to join the opposition. The White House welcomed the reported defections as a sign the regime is cracking from within and that Assad will eventually fall.

Western and Arab powers are backing Annans two-day trip to Syria, starting Saturday, when he is to meet with Assad. The former U.N. secretary-general now a special U.N.-Arab League envoy for Syria has said he seeks to start a political process to end the crisis and warned against further militarization of a conict that appears headed toward civil war. I hope that no one is thinking very seriously of using force in this situation, Annan said Thursday in Cairo. I believe any further militarization would make the situation worse. He said he would present realistic solutions, but did not elaborate. Opposition leaders and activists rejected Annans plans Friday, saying they ignore the nature of Assads authoritarian regime as well as the thousands killed by security forces, many while peacefully calling for political reform. By phone from Paris, the head of the Syrian National Council told the Associated Press that Annan was overlooking what the opposition considers the root of the problem: The regimes use of overwhelming military force to crush dissent.

Greece secures biggest debt deal in history


By Elena Becatoros and Gabriele Steinhauser
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ATHENS, Greece Greeces private creditors agreed Friday to take cents on the euro in the biggest debt writedown in history, paving the way for an enormous second bailout for the country to keep Europes economy from being dragged further into chaos. Greece would have risked defaulting on its debts in two weeks without the agreement,

sparking turmoil in the nancial markets and sending shock waves through the other 16 countries that use the euro. Prime Minister Lucas Papademos called the deal which shaves some (euro) 105 billion ($138 billion) off Greeces (euro) 368 billion ($487 billion) debt load an important historic success in a televised address to the nation Friday night. For the first time, Greece is not adding but taking debt off the backs of its citizens. The country said 83.5 percent of private
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investors holding its government debt had agreed to a bond swap, taking a cut of more than half the face value of their investments as well as accepting softer repayment terms for Greece. The radical swap aimed to put the countrys debt-ridden economy on the road to recovery, and was a key condition to secure a (euro) 130 billion ($172 billion) rescue package from other eurozone countries and the International Monetary Fund. Charles Dallara, the managing director of

the Institute of International Finance, which negotiated the deal with the Greek government on large investors behalf, described the bond swap as the largest ever restructuring. This has been painful and the pain is not over yet. But I now can see light at the end of the tunnel for the Greek economy, Dallara told Greeces Mega television. He estimated Greece could return to the markets within a few years and said that if recovery continues, I think the risk for Greece and the risk on the eurozone will be very manageable.

North Korea vowing to keep its nuclear promises: Senator


By Matthew Pennington
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK A prominent U.S. senator met Friday with North Koreas nuclear envoy who promised to live up to commitments made in an agreement last week with the United States. Democrat Sen. John Kerry said that the North Korean also made a profound statement about wanting a different relationship and not wanting to ght with the United States. Kerry met the envoy, Ri Yong Ho, at an informal security conference in New York, a week after Pyongyang agreed to freeze uranium enrichment and allow in U.N. inspectors. The North also agreed to a moratorium on long-range missile and nuclear tests. They said that they will live by the agreement that they made last week, that we can count on that, Kerry, who chairs the Senate

Committee on Foreign Relations, told reporters. In return, the U.S. will provide its rst food aid to the impoverished communist nation in three years. That has contributed to an easing in tensions between the long-term adversaries, but is only a rst step toward restarting six-nation disarmament negotiations that the North withdrew from in 2009. We have been here before. We have come to these points that have been constructive and something breaks down. We need to try and change that dynamic, Kerry said. Despite warming U.S.-North Korean ties, tensions are still running high on the divided Korean Peninsula, and Pyongyang appears cool to Seouls offers of dialogue. Following U.S.-South Korean military exercises this week, the North called for a sacred war against the South and held military drills of its own near a disputed sea border.

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Museum gotta see um


Monet in Las Vegas SEE PAGE 24

Silent House will make you scream


By Christy Lemire
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Lets just get something out of the way off the top: Silent House creates the illusion that its a haunted-house thriller crafted in one long, continuous shot. The camera

follows Elizabeth Olsen around a creepy, creaky lake house thats under renovation and were right there with her for every bump, jump and thump of her heart. This isnt exactly the case, and husband-and-wife directors Chris Kentis and Laura

Lau acknowledge as much they actually pieced together several long takes to create one seemingly seamless feature-length lm, a process that must have required a great deal of planning, choreograSee SILENT, Page 22

High schools and colleges need to address the Study Drug


By Andrew Lyu

or many students in high school and college, caffeine is simply no longer cutting it. As students start to receive heavier workloads and feel more pressure to attain high grades to succeed, the abuse of Adderall, an amphetamine used to treat ADHD, has reportedly been on the rise. Although I had heard of the use of Adderall as a study drug before, I had never realized that it was a serious issue until I started talking to more college students about college life. When prescribed to ADHD patients, Adderall is supposed to help patients calm down and focus better. When taken by ADHD students, however, the drug is used as a tool for studying. Students say the drug

helps them attain a level of intense focus but also allows them to pull easy all-night study sessions. In the current academic climate, it is understandable why students want to get an edge in studying. In a society in which students are given the notion that a successful career is dependent on a successful education, students often do seek outside help to advance their educational means. At Aragon High School, many students seek college counselors, take SAT classes and cheat on tests. In this sense, the increase of Adderall abuse seems to follow the trend. To succeed, students will look for avenues by which they can succeed. I myself have on more than one

occasion brewed a late-night cup of coffee in preparation for cramming. Though reported to be more effective as a study drug than caffeine, Adderall has more severe side effects. An amphetamine, Adderall has the potential to become psychologically addictive. Moreover, it is even used as a recreational drug tantamount to speed. Adderall is a drug that high schools and

college campuses alike should spend more time to address. At Aragon, there were plenty of drug prevention programs against the use of recreational drugs such as marijuana, cocaine, crystal methamphetamine, ecstasy, etc.; however, I have yet to see any programs speaking out against the abuse of study drugs such as Ritalin and Adderall. A nice analogy for Adderall in the academic realm is the use of anabolic steroids in sports. The International Olympic Committee, Major League Baseball, National Basketball Association, National Football League and many other sporting bodies have all banned the use of anabolic steroids. Abusers of the drug are usually subject to revocation of any awards given during the period of use as well as suspension.

See STUDENT, Page 22 opera takes place at a Napa Valley county fair in 1915,complete with leatherhead football and a Model-T truck. The production is in English with English supertitles and includes a 15-minute live introduction.Event is free and RSVPs are requested,as refreshments will be served. Seating is rst-come,rst-served.AddisonPenzak JCC,14855 Oka Road,Suite 201,Los Gatos.(408) 357-7492 or lisacg@svjcc.org. Visit sfopera.com/familymovies for more information.

Consignment event
Just Between Friends Childrens and Maternity Consignment Event.Local families buy and sell their gently used baby and kids gear,clothing,toys and furniture. The event takes place from 10 a.m.to 6 p.m.Saturday and 10 a.m.to 2 p.m.Sunday at the San Mateo Event Center,2495 S. Delaware St.,San Mateo. For more information visit jbfsale.com/sanmateo.

Best bets
In Concert 2012
In Concert 2012 showcases 300 music students from Aragon,Burlingame, Capuchino,Hillsdale,Mills and San Mateo high schools who are formed into four groups:The Jazz Ensemble,the Orchestra, the Symphonic Band and the Choir. The event takes place 7 p.m.Saturday at the San Mateo High School Gymnasium,

500 N.Delaware St.in San Mateo. Tickets,$10 adults and $5 students and seniors,available only at the door.For information call 345-9543.

Elixir of Love for FamiliesThe Movie!


Created from San Franciscos Operas production,this one-hour lm is the perfect way for children to learn about the magic of opera.Donizettis whimsical

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pleased to share, once again, masterpieces from its renowned European collection with Bellagio Gallery of Fine Art, where visitors from around the world can enjoy them. These great works by Monet are technically innovative and extravagantly beautiful, illustrating the artists revolutionary vision spanning the 19th through 20th centuries. Bellagio Gallery of Fine Art is open daily from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Last admissions are sold 30 minutes prior to closing. Tickets are $15 for general admission and $10 for students, teachers and military with valid ID. Children 12 and younger are free. Audio tours are included in the price of admission and complimentary docent tours are offered daily, on a rst-come, rst-serve basis. Limited to the rst 25 attendees, each tour begins promptly at 2 p.m. and lasts approximately 45 minutes. For more information call (702) 693-7871 or visit www.bellagio.com/bgfa. The Bellagio Gallery of Fine Art is located within Bellagio, 3600 Las Vegas Blvd. S., Las Vegas, NV. Claude Monet: Impressions of Light is on view through Jan. 6, 2013. MONET IN SAN FRANCISCO. Monet is particularly known for his paintings of the reections in the lily pond at his Giverny garden. One of his Water Lilies, c. 1914-17, may be viewed in Gallery 19 of the Legion of Honor, 100 34th Ave., at Clement Street, in San Franciscos Lincoln Park. legionofhonor.famsf.org. *** SAN FRANCISCO MUSEUM OF MODERN ART AND YERBA BUENA CENTER FOR THE ARTS HOST MARK BRADFORD RETROSPECTIVE. Crafting abstract paintings from fragments of the urban environment permanent-wave end papers, billboard paper, posters, newsprint Mark

THE DAILY JOURNAL

MUSEUM GOTTA SEE UM


By Susan Cohn
DAILY JOURNAL SENIOR CORRESPONDENT

MONET IN LAS VEGAS. Bellagio Gallery of Fine Art in Las Vegas presents Claude Monet: Impressions of Light. Organized in partnership with the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), this landmark exhibition features 28 works that illustrate the height of Claude Monets engagement with color and light. Highlighting 20 pieces by Monet, the founder of French Impressionist painting, the show also includes eight additional canvases by the masters predecessors and contemporaries. All of these works are drawn from the MFA, which holds one of the largest collections of paintings by Claude Monet outside of Paris. Gallery Director Tarissa Tiberti said, Bellagio Gallery of Fine Arts mission has always been to present exhibitions that engage and excite lovers of all genres of art, from classical to modern to contemporary. Exhibiting Monet and the French Impressionists provides historical background to some of the more contemporary shows we have presented over the last three years. Spanning four decades of Monets career and featuring many of the artists most celebrated and recognized paintings, Claude Monet: Impressions of Light also showcases paintings by other masters of the genre including Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, Camille Pissarro, Eugene Louis Boudin, CharlesFrancois Daubigny, Constant Troyon and Paul Signac. It was from Monets collaboration with these painters, along with his solitary explorations of the French countryside, that his own signature style eventually emerged. Malcolm Rogers, Ann and Graham Gund Director of the MFA, said, The MFA is

2012 MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, BOSTON.

Claude Monet, Grainstack (Sunset), 1891, on display as part of Claude Monet: Impressions of Light,at Bellagio Gallery of Fine Art in Las Vegas through Jan.6,2013.
Bradford has built a body of work that is layered in both material and meaning. The MacArthur Award-winning artists works reinvigorate abstraction with social awareness: often resembling aerial views, they map the patterns of class, race, gender and sexuality that structure American life, especially life in Bradfords own South Central Los Angeles neighborhood. This retrospective has its only West Coast showing in San Francisco, with concurrent presentations at SFMOMA and Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. SFMOMA Senior Curator of Painting and Sculpture Gary Garrels said In its rened melding of materials, exquisite surfaces and exuberant physicality, Mark Bradfords work engages with the rich history of assemblage while achieving exceptional, painterly effects. His art offers an intensely personal vision that investigates the many contradictions inherent to life in contemporary urban culture. Concentrating largely on painting the

See MUSEUM, Page 22

THE DAILY JOURNAL

WEEKEND JOURNAL

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

21

CYCLING AROUND EUROPE

REUTERS

A man walks through a street in Tokyos Shinjuku district,in Japan.

Japan tourism recovering


By Beth J. Harpaz
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK A year after a tsunami and earthquake devastated parts of Japan, ofcials say tourism to Tokyo and other areas unaffected by the disaster is on track to recover to pre-tsunami levels, with business travel leading the way. In a conference call Thursday night, Shuichi Kameyama, director of the International Tourism Promotion Division at Japan Tourism Agency, said the number of visitors to Japan in 2011 was 6.2 million, down nearly 30 percent from the 8.6 million who visited in 2010. But arrivals have been picking up, with a surge in January due to Lunar New Year, and more tourists expected this spring for cherry blossom season and later in the year for summer festivals. Kameyama said foreign visitor arrivals in January 2012 were only 4 percent below January 2011, before the March 11 disaster. Kameyama said arrivals from Korea took the biggest hit in 2011, down 35 percent. Malcolm Thompson, general manager of The Peninsula Tokyo hotel, said that historically the hotels guests are 70 percent business, 30 percent leisure. Corporate business is 95 percent back, he said. Its really the high-end leisure traveler from America and Europe. Theyre the ones we are not seeing yet. Theyre the ones who are still very tentative about Japan. We here know that everything is ne and life is back to normal in most parts of

Japan, but thats not the perception. The World Travel and Tourism Council in December predicted that Japan tourism would make a recovery by early 2012 but added that there is still some work to be done in attracting previous levels of international visitors, particularly from long-haul markets where there may be residual nervousness regarding the nuclear situation. The tsunami and earthquake led to a meltdown at a nuclear power plant in Fukushima, about 180 miles from Tokyo. Efforts to counteract travelers fears include a Japan National Tourism Organization website at http://www.jnto.go.jp/eq/eng/04 recovery.htm showing radiation levels in Tokyo are similar to or lower than other places like New York and Paris. Thompson said at his hotel, occupancy levels are typically over 60 percent in the rst three months of the year, which tend to be the slowest. We are still 11 percentage points below what we would have been but it is dramatically improving now, he said. With cherry blossom season approaching, we are seeing within this month more inquiries from America, from potential American leisure guests, What time should I be there in Tokyo to see the blossoms? That is a very good sign. While bargains and promotions have helped lure some travelers back, others have been discouraged by the strong yen, which makes travel for foreigners expensive. Japan Tourism is launching new promotions this year in the U.S. and Canada targeting afuent, educated

leisure travelers from metro areas, as well as niche markets for visitors interested in everything from diving to pop culture to gay and lesbian travel. High-end tour companies will also be targeted in order to attract travelers who will spend more. Promotions in the U.S. will include celebrations of the 100th anniversary of Japans gift of owering cherry trees to Washington D.C. Cherry blossom season draws about a million people to the capital each spring. In New York City, a variety of events have marked Japan Week, including digital cherry blossom displays in Times Square and a Dine Out for Japan- Restaurant Week, March 7-11, with donations from participating restaurants going to disaster relief. Japanese tourism ofcials have also launched a Japan: Thank You campaign to welcome back tourists, with a logo showing a carp sh going upstream to symbolize Japan rising again. Kameyama said that according to legend, the carp turns into a dragon. This is the year of the dragon, Kameyama said. Its a good symbol for Japan to rebuild. At Japan Airlines (JAL), business travel has been leading a return in demand for Japan Airlines, according to assistant manager for overseas regional sales Chen Zhou Wen. We do expect a very good 2012. JAL promotions include the launch of Sky Manga, the worlds first airline manga (Japanese comics) reader. Travelers will have access to manga titles from a screen at every seat. Initially they will be available only in Japanese, Chen said.

n the last 10 years, the way visitors experience European cities has changed tremendously. The Euro went into circulation, allowing travelers to need only one currency within 15 of the countries comprising the European Union. Most travelers are now equipped with a smartphone and able to store maps, itineraries, and booking information electronically. When driving through a city, however, one of the most noticeable changes is the number of people on bikes. While some cities, such as Copenhagen and Amsterdam, have a long-established bicycle culture, many of Europes cultural capitals have created a bike culture through pioneering bicycle-sharing programs. Bike-sharing programs provide a number of benets to residents and the city: an improvement on the rst mile/last mile connection between various modes of transportation and ones destination, less environmental impact, more frequent use of public transportation and another option for daily commuters. Though Amsterdam and Copenhagen had the earliest incarnations of community bike sharing, it was Lyon, France, that originated the era of citywide bike sharing that we see spreading across Europe today. Lyons program, called Velov, was the rst to utilize technology to avoid vandalism and assist with tracking bikes. However, it is another French city, Paris, which gets most of the credit for spurring the bikesharing craze around Europe. With an initial 7,000 bikes, Paris Velib has grown to more than 20,000 bikes with sharing stations every 300 meters. The initial benets may be focused on commuters and residents, but the sharing systems are also advantageous for travelers. Wouldnt you rather see a city via bicycle, than traveling between landmarks underground in the Metro or Tube?

Michelle Rogers
Don't be left in the dark with regard to your loved one's medical conditions, medication schedule, doctor's appointments and more. Michelle Rogers of Home Instead presents "Leaving the Lights On," exploring the communication problems that arise as parents grow older and need more assistance. 10 a.m. Tuesday, March 13 at the San Carlos Adult Community Center, 601 Chestnut St., San Carlos. The Center can be reached by bus or train via the San Carlos train station. From the train station walk four blocks up San Carlos Avenue to Chestnut Street. The Center is on the corner of San Carlos Avenue and Chestnut Street. For information or to reserve a seat for this free

lecture call 802-4384.

Siah Fried and Georgie H. Ikuma


From athletics to academics, do parents put too much pressure on their children? Belmont resident Siah Fried and Georgie H. Ikuma, coauthors of Tales From Swankville: The Town May Be Fictional, but the Problem is for Real, tackle the issue head on. Fried and Ikuma share their thoughts and sign books at Barnes & Noble, 11 W. Hillsdale Blvd., San Mateo. Saturday, March 24 from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
All events are free unless otherwise noted. Please check before the event in case of schedule changes.

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Weekend March 10-11, 2012

WEEKEND JOURNAL
bloggers and others. For the 85-year-old Hagerty, the response was bewildering and it threatened to make her late for a bridge game. Hagertys column in the Grand Forks Herald focuses on local food, and in North Dakota that means chain restaurants that are shunned by big-city food critics. Shes reviewed Ruby Tuesday, Pizza Ranch, Applebees and Country Kitchen. Even fast-food joints such as KFC, Qdoba and Subway have undergone scrutiny. But it was her unfailingly polite prose about the Olive Garden complete with a detailed description of the bustling waiters that catapulted her to online stardom, at least briey. At length, I asked my server what she would recommend, Hagerty wrote in the column called Eatbeat published Wednesday. She suggested chicken Alfredo, and I went with that. Instead of the raspberry lemonade she suggested, I drank water. The Olive Garden is the largest and most beautiful restaurant now operating in Grand Forks, she concluded. It attracts visitors from out of town as well as people who live here.

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Review of Olive Garden becomes Internet sensation


By Dave Kolpack
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

FARGO, N.D. A North Dakota newspaper columnist sat down to review her towns hot new Italian restaurant, rhapsodizing about the chicken Alfredo, crisp greens and two long, warm breadsticks. But because the restaurant was the Olive Garden, Marilyn Hagertys earnest assessment swiftly became an Internet sensation, drawing comments both sincere and sarcastic from food

By Friday morning, her appraisal had received more than 290,000 hits on the newspapers website. The second most-read story a report about the University of North Dakotas Fighting Sioux nickname got a mere 5,500 views. Within hours of appearing, the piece was spreading rapidly across the Web. Residents of Grand Forks, N.D., are lining up for blocks to enjoy a one-of-a-kind European dining experience that nally puts the city on the culinary map with its unique brand

SILENT
Continued from page 19
phy, breath-holding and prayer to pull off in its own right. But once you realize that what youre watching is a trick albeit one thats beautifully executed from a technical standpoint with a nal twist thats really a gimmick, its novelty loses a bit of its luster. Still, Olsen always makes the movie watchable. She has to she appears in nearly every single frame and the fact that shes dressed in a imsy, cleavagebaring T-shirt and frequently photographed from above doesnt hurt. Following her star-making performance in Martha Marcy May Marlene, which yours truly picked as the best lm of 2011, Olsen continues to reveal a startling comfort and maturity in front of the camera for someone so young and relatively inexperienced. But the lms dexterous cinematographer, Igor

Martinovic, is just as much of a star behind the lens. In this Americanized version of the Uruguayan lm La Casa Muda, Olsen stars as Sarah, a 20-something woman helping her father (Adam Trese) and uncle (Eric Sheffer Stevens) x up the familys longtime, dilapidated summer home in hopes of selling it. The place is boarded up from the inside, so its pitch black even in the daytime, and anyone walking around must carry a lantern or ashlight to see where theyre going. This is crucial to creating a sense of tension and fear: We all feel like were wandering around in the dark together. Kentis and Lau, who previously directed the stripped-down, 2004 hit thriller Open Water, offer an unsettling vibe from the beginning. Its clear that something disturbing has gone on here; in particular, the conversations between Sarah and her uncle are just a bit off in tone. A long-lost friend (Julia Taylor Ross) shows up with fond memories of playing together as little girls but strangely, Sarah cant even place her.

So its no shocker that Sarah quickly comes undone in this claustrophobic setting as her paranoia escalates. It could happen to any of us, and heres a young woman who seems a bit shaky and lost already. Still, she reacts with relatable instinctiveness as things go from bad to worse, her breath creating a rhythmic soundtrack as she scampers through hallways and up and down stairs, trying to nd a way out. Silent House features several genuine scares and giggle-inducing jumps and, since this isnt your typically over-edited contemporary horror movie, they dont feel screechy or cheap. One sequence, in which the ashes from a Polaroid camera provide a rooms only light, offers a tantalizing, mounting feeling of fear. But once the ultimate twist is revealed, you may nd yourself feeling frustrated or even disgusted rather than frightened. Silent House, an Open Road release, is rated R for disturbing violent content and terror. Running time: 88 minutes. Two and a half stars out of four.

MUSEUM
Continued from page 20
artists primary activity the selection of works captures the development of Bradfords sensibility, which ranges from relatively modest-sized canvases to monumental public projects, and from purely formal investigations of material to engagement with sociopolitical questions. The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art is located at 151 Third St., near the Moscone Center. The Yerba Buena Center for the Arts is located across the street at 701 Mission St. at Third Street. After visiting SFMOMA, take your SFMOMA admission ticket or membership card to YBCA for one free admission through May 27. Learn about Mark Bradfords process and background through video and audio interviews, music, images and more in a special exhibition website, developed by the Wexner Center for the Arts. The website can be accessed at www.sfmoma.org. MARK BRADFORD runs through June 17.

STUDENT
Continued from page 19
Anabolic steroids are banned from these sporting associations based on the premise that they give athletes an unfair, competitive edge and can cause detrimental physical and psychological side effects. Though Adderall does many similar things for students, administrators at high schools and colleges have not done enough to combat study drug abuse. Perhaps the dependence and abuse of Adderall is a symptom of the competitive nature of our society; however, if school administrators do not put the prevention of Adderall abuse higher on their priority lists, the abuse will only continue to escalate.
Andrew Lyu is a senior at Aragon High School. Student News appears in the weekend edition. You can email Student News at news@smdailyjournal.com.

3/31/12

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WEEKEND JOURNAL
SATURDAY, MARCH 10 Food A ddic ts in R ec over y A non ymous. 8 a.m.Central Peninsula Church, 1005 Shell Blvd, Foster City. Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous is a 12-step program for people who want help in recovering from food addiction, overeating, under-eating and bulimia.For more information call 5040034. San Francisco Air line M emorabilia Show and S ale. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Best Western Grosvenor, 380 S. Airport Blvd., South San Francisco. $5 for admission. Free for children 12 and under. For more information visit SFOAirlineShow.com. P.A.L Panc ake B reakfast and Op en House. 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. PAL Community Center, 3399 Bay Road, Redwood City. Pancake breakfast, building tours and free PAL Program demonstrations. Cit y of South S an Francisco Climate Action Plan and Pedestrian M aster Plam Community Workshop. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Municipal Services Building, The Meeting Room, 33 Arroyo Drive, South San Francisco.Learn about ways in which South San Francisco can reduce greenhouse gas emissions and implement energy saving measures along with how to promote a pedestrian-friendly environment. For more information on the plans call 8296634. Just Between Friends Childrens and Mater nit y Consignmen t e ven t. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. San Mateo Expo Center, Redwood Hall, 2495 S. Delaware St., San Mateo. Sales event where local families can buy their gently used baby and kids gear, clothing, toys, furniture and more .$2 admission or visit their website to print a free admission pass. For more information visit jbfsale.com/sanmateo or call Angela (415) 710-3973. Book N ook Op en. Noon to 4 p.m. 1 Cottage Lane, Twin Pines Park, Belmont. Paperbacks are three for $1. For more information call 593-5650. A M utual Onus . 1 p.m. Lane Room, Burlingame Public Library, 480 Primrose Road, Burlingame. Celebrate International Womens Day and Marchs Womens History Month by attending this original play. $10 suggested donation. Proceeds will help provide global help for maternal health care and P.A.V.E. For more information call 697-6936. San Carlos Childrens Theater presen ts L ook ing G lass L and. 1 p.m. Barrett Community Center, 1835 Belburn Drive, Belmont. This wild adaptation of Lewis Carrolls original Through the Looking Glass highlights the pure fun of the story with a huge helping of unabashed silliness. $12 in advance. $14 at the door. For more information and tickets visit sancarloschildrenstheater.com. Bowl-the-Planet Par ty & Silent Auction. 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Serra Bowl. 3301 Junipero Serra Blvd., Daly City. Party for the planet, protect endangered ecosystems and support environmental education. For more information visit bowltheplanet.org. PJCC A nnual B enefit: With A Little Help From Our Friends. 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. College of San Mateo. 1700 W. Hillsdale Blvd.,San Mateo.With Beatles tribute band White Album Ensemble. Join us for good music, food, auction and rafe. For more information visit pjcc.org. In Conc er t 2012 . 7 p.m. San Mateo High School Gymnasium, 500 N. Delaware St., San Mateo.This premier event showcases nearly 300 music students from Aragon, Burlingame, Capuchino, Hillsdale, Mills and San Mateo high schools formed into four honor groups:The Jazz Ensemble, the Orchestra, the Symphonic Band and the Choir. Tickets are $10 adults and $5 students and seniors. Tickets only available at the door. For more information call 345-9543. San Carlos Childrens Theater presen ts L ook ing G lass L and. 7 p.m. Barrett Community Center, 1835 Belburn Drive, Belmont. This wild adaptation of Lewis Carrols original Through the Looking Glass highlights the pure fun of the story with a huge helping of unabashed silliness. $12 in advance. $14 at the door. For more information and tickets visit sancarloschildrenstheater.com. Nor th Star Academy presents Anything G oes . 7 p.m. McKinley Auditorium, 400 Duane St., Redwood City.Anything Goes is a high seas romantic adventure lled with mistaken identities and broken hearts. $12 online, $14 at the door. For more information go to northstartix.com. Woodside High Scho ol pr esen ts Elton J ohn and Tim R ices AIDA. 8 p.m. Woodside High School, 199 Churchill Ave., Woodside. Ancient Egypt comes to Woodside High School. The Theatre Arts Department presents Elton John and Tim Rices AIDA, a contemporary musical take on a grand classic tale of the tireless bond between a enslaved Nubian

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

23

Rapper Coolio arrested in unpaid Vegas ticket case


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Calendar
princess and an Egyptian soldier. The musical is under the direction of drama teacher Barry Woodruff and a cast of more than 40 students. Adults $20, Seniors 65+ $15 and students $10. Visit www.whsdramaboosters.com for ticket information or contact 3679750. Spring Chamber Concer t. 8 p.m.First Baptist Church, 305 N. California Ave., Palo Alto. Concert will include selections spanning four centuries and several musical periods. $20 general admission, $17 seniors, $10 students. Tickets available at paphil.org. For more information call (408) 395-2911. SUNDAY, MARCH 11 Just Between Friends Childrens and Mater nit y Consignmen t e ven t. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. San Mateo Expo Center, Redwood Hall, 2495 S. Delaware St., San Mateo. Sales event where local families can buy their gently used baby and kids gear, clothing, toys, furniture and more . $2 admission or visit the website to print a free admission pass. For more information visit jbfsale.com/sanmateo or call Angela (415) 710-3973. Bay A rea B igFoot R esear ch public meeting. 4 p.m. Round Table Pizza, 61 43rd St., San Mateo.Free admission, all are welcome. Join the discussion about research and sightings of bigfoot and sasquatch in California and elsewhere. For more information call (925) 858-9711. Book N ook Op en. Noon to 4 p.m. 1 Cottage Lane, Twin Pines Park, Belmont.Paper backs are three for $1.For more information call 593-5650. Projec t R ead M enlo P ar k pr es ents Sing Out For Literac y. 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Cafe Zoe, 1929 Menalto Ave., Menlo Park. Project Read will host an open mic event where community members will have the opportunity to showcase their talents in front of a live audience. Free. For more information visit menlopark.org. San Carlos Childrens Theater pres en ts L ook ing G lass L and. 1 p.m. Barrett Community Center, 1835 Belburn Drive, Belmont. This wild adaptation of Lewis Carrolls original Through the Looking Glass highlights the pure fun of the story with a huge helping of unabashed silliness. $12 in advance. $14 at the door. For more information and tickets visit sancarloschildrenstheater.com. Woodside High Scho ol pr esen ts Elt on J ohn and Tim R ices AIDA. 2 p.m. Woodside High School, 199 Churchill Ave., Woodside.The Theatre Arts Department presents Elton John and Tim Rices AIDA, a contemporary musical take on a grand classic tale of the tireless bond between a enslaved Nubian princess and an Egyptian soldier. The musical is under the direction of drama teacher Barry Woodruff and a cast of over 40 students.Adults $20,Seniors 65+ $15 and students $10. Visit www.whsdramaboosters.com for ticket information or contact 367-9750. Nor th Star Academy presents Anything G oes . 7 p.m. McKinley Auditorium, 400 Duane St., Redwood City.Anything Goes is a high seas romantic adventure lled with mistaken identities and broken hearts. $8 for youths and seniors online or at the door, $12 for adults online, $14 for adults at the door. For more information visit northstartix.com. Lynn Arriale Trio. 4:30 p.m. Douglas Beach House, Half Moon Bay. $35. For more information visit bachddsoc.org. MONDAY, MARCH 12 Samaritan H ouse Free Tax Preparat i o n f o r S a n M a t e o C oun t y Residen ts. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. 4031 Pacific Blvd., San Mateo, second floor. Samaritan House is providing confidential tax preparation with certied tax preparers for individuals and families with income in 2011 under $54,000. State and federal returns are available with e-ling.We are focusing on capturing the maximum Earned Income Credits for working individuals and families. Tax lers must bring paperwork including: photo ID, SS card, W-2 for jobs held in 2011, a copy of their 2010 tax return, childcare provider and landlord information for the Californias renters credit. Free. To make an appointment call 523-0804. Understanding and M anaging D ia bet es. 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. City of San Mateo Senior Center, 2645 Alameda de las Pulgas, San Mateo. Pharmacist Carthic Yaga will discuss various methods of prevention and treatments you can use to manage this condition as well as answer any questions you may have about your prescription.Free.For more information call 522-7490. Bur lingame M usic C lubs music al pr ogr am . 1 p.m. 241 Park Road, Burlingame.The program includes student musicians followed by Cabrillo Trio, Robert Shultz, piano; Bruce Yu, violin; Charles Calvert, cello. Free. For more information visit burlingamemusicclub.net. Geek Chic Jewelr y.3:30 p.m.Belmont Library, 1110 Alameda de las Pulgas, Belmont. Create your own fun and geeky jewelry using everyday objects. All materials will be provided, while supplies last. For ages 12-19. Free. For more information email conrad@smcl.org. The 2012 A nnual M emb ers S ho w Reception.5 p.m.to 7 p.m.Coastal Art League, 300 Main St., Half Moon Bay. Open March 2 through April 1, Friday through Monday from noon to 5 p.m. For more information email coastalartsleague@gmail.com. Vivek R anadive, Author of The Two Sec ond A dvan tage: How We S uc ceed by Anticipating the Future Just E nough. 6:30 p.m. Four Seasons Hotel, 2050 University Ave., Palo Alto. For tickets call (800) 847-7730. 100th A nniversar y of the first G ir l Scout meeting. 6:45 p.m. Burlingame City Hall, 501 Primrose Road, Burlingame. There will be songs, presentations, refreshments (cookies), photo ops with city officials and troops, a countdown to 7:12 p.m. and general revelry to mark this historic event.Concludes at 7:20 p.m.For more information call 515-7675. TUESDAY, MARCH 13 Food Addic ts in R ecover y. 9:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. Sequoia Wellness Center, 749 Brewster Ave.,Redwood City.Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous (FA) is a free 12-step recovery program for anyone suffering from food obsession, overeating, under-eating or bulimia. For mor einformation call (800) 6006028. Kiw anis C lub of S an M ateo. Noon. Poplar Creek Grill, 1700 Coyote Point Drive, San Mateo. Kiwanis Club is the worlds largest service organization for children. Membership drive in progress. Meetings are held every Tuesday. RSVP required. For more information call (415) 309-6467. Travel tours presentation. 2 p.m. to 3 p.m.SMCCD District Ofce,3401 CSM Drive, San Mateo. There will be a fun slide show presentation of upcoming trips like Tropical Costa Rica, Southern Charm and British Landscapes. Refreshments and prizes will be provided. Free. For more information visit smccd.edu. Sequoia High Scho ol Spring M usic Conc er t. 7 p.m. Carrington Hall, Sequoia High School,1201 Brewster Ave., Redwood City. $5. For more information contact jwoodman@seq.org. Close the Scho ol of the Americ as. 7 p.m. Unitarian Universalists of San Mateo, 300 E. Santa Inez Ave., San Mateo. Free. Screening of Somos Una America: Shut down the School of the Americasand a conversation with SOA Activist Bob Nixon and student participants of the Annual School of Americas Vigil in Fort Benning, GA.For more information call 342-8244. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14 Javaddictions Grand Opening Event with b o o k s i g n i n g w i t h a u t h o r Janet M cG over n. 6:30 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. Hillsdale Train Station, 3333 S. El Camino Real,San Mateo.Wake up early for Javaddictions Grand Opening Celebration for morning commuters at the Hillsdale train station. This event will feature local author Janet McGovern at a train station book-signing event to promote her new book Caltrain and the Peninsula Commute Service,a pictoral history. Sample the Eco-Delight Coffee and meet the roaster, Guillermo Moran. For more information call 863-3342. For more events visit smdailyjournal.com, click Calendar.

LAS VEGAS Rapper Coolio was arrested Friday on a warrant charging him with failure to appear in court on a traffic ticket almost two years ago. Coolio, 48, whose real name is Artis Leon Ivey Jr., was a passenger in a vehicle officers stopped about 2:20 a.m. several blocks east of the Las Vegas Strip, Officer Laura Meltzer said. No one else in the car was arrested. It was not immediately clear if Ivey had a lawyer. His manager Susan Haber said she had not heard about the incident and had no

comment. Ivey was sought on a warrant charging him with failure to appear on an illegal stop and driving without a license summons issued in June 2010. He was freed later in the day. A court date wasCoolio nt immediately known. Coolio is a musician, actor and record producer best known for the song Gangstas Paradise. Shortly after the sale, the seller receives a check for the items sold. Loza was not only a shopper, but she brought a lot of clothing that her little one had already outgrown. It was her first time participating, but Loza was already planning to start saving items for the next one. In the 15,000-square-foot San Mateo hall, shoppers will find a variety of items from furniture to bags of wooden alphabet blocks. There are aisles of clothing, strollers, a variety of toys and shoes, breast pumps, feeding pillows and even play areas. Each sale is different since the merchandise shows up days before the doors open to local shoppers. Even Broxterman takes advantage of the setup by selling her childrens clothing. This time she was particularly excited to grab shoes for her little ones. The Just Between Friends is open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday in the Redwood Hall at the San Mateo Event Center, 2495 S. Delaware St., San Mateo. Many items are marked down 50 percent Sunday. For more information visit www.jbfsale.com/sanmateo.
Heather Murtagh can be reached by email: heather@smdailyjournal.com or by phone: (650) 344-5200 ext. 105.

FRIENDS
Continued from page 1
nant with her youngest child who is now 2. After attending, she only had one question: Why do we not have this on the Peninsula? Right away, she told her husband shed start one once they returned. She purchased the franchise in late 2010 and held the first sale in the spring. And the turnout has only grown since then. The consignment idea isnt new. People bring items and receive 60 percent of the sale during the weekend event. That percentage increases to 65 if a person is willing to donate four hours of their time to work the event. Volunteering also means early access to the sale. Before bringing the items, people print out tickets and tag items. They set the price, decide if the price is slashed on the last day of the sale, and also mark what happens to the item at the end of the sale. The seller can pick up the item or donate it to one of the nonprofit partners. This weekends event will benefit Shelter Network, Home and Hope and Family and Children Services. More often, Broxterman said, people choose to donate the item.

SCHOOLS
Continued from page 1
building two schools that would be built at the same time because of the expense. Others simply wanted more information as well as feedback from the community about changing the grade congurations. Board President Seth Rosenblatt welcomed the idea. The longer I sit with it, the more I like it. It solves an equity problem and also gives options for technology, he said. Trustee Adam Rak agreed, noting he was intrigued by the amount of positives such an option offered. Congurations prepared by architect Paul Byrne, which were rough ideas, showed Central and Tierra Linda middle schools and how the parcels could be split to add a new school. If new schools were to be built, the district would need to also study ways to cover the

costs. Thats often completed through a bond measure. Baker estimated the bond could cost between $29 million to $59 million, depending on the needs. The district is currently working with a polling company which should survey the community later this month about a possible bond measure. Should the district go for a bond measure it would most likely be on a November ballot, which would allow a lower passage threshold of 55 percent. At joint meetings between representatives of the school board and City Council, ideas for working together to solve the issue of growth emerged including using park space. Laureola School was an elementary school on the east side of El Camino Real built in 1951. It was closed in 1978 due to declining enrollment. Today, Laureola Park, located at 503 Old County Road, remains. Discussion of the topic doesnt appear to have gone much farther than throwing out the original idea.
Heather Murtagh can be reached by email: heather@smdailyjournal.com or by phone: (650) 344-5200 ext. 105.

POT
Continued from page 1
The single family residence, located in a relatively quiet neighborhood was being used to conceal an illegal indoor marijuana growing operation, according to police. Plants were in various stages of growth and police say the cultivating operation was a strictly for-prot endeavor. This year, the task force has seized more than 3,500 plants and 19 pounds of processed marijuana from ve grow locations, according to police. The last bust was in Half Moon Bay in early February when 1,500 marijuana plants, approximately 19

pounds of processed marijuana and several guns were seized from a Half Moon Bay warehouse complex that was being used to conceal an illegal indoor marijuana grow operation and a residence connected to the operation. In that bust, the value of the processed marijuana was $60,800 and the plants were approximately $1.2 million. The investigation into Thursdays bust is ongoing and agents are still actively gathering and analyzing evidence that may result in additional charges and/or the identication of co-conspirators, according to police. Tang was booked into San Mateo County Jail on charges of cultivation of marijuana and is scheduled to be arraigned Monday, March 12, according to police.

24

Weekend Mar. 10-11, 2012

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3-10-11 2011, United Features Syndicate

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.

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Jumble Page 2 La Times Crossword Puzzle Classifieds Tundra & Over the Hedge Comics Classifieds kids Across/Parents Down Puzzle Family Resource Guide

SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 2012 PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Someone who is indebted to you isn?t likely to clear up his or her obligation in the agreed-upon time without being prodded to do so. It will be up to you to provide the necessary reminder. ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Ignore any inclinations you have to postpone making a difficult decision. Nothing will change with time, and you?ll only be putting off doing what you must take care of eventually. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -- Substantial achievements can be made, provided you?re willing to face facts and pay the price. You?re going to have to earn

what you want the hard way: by doing it yourself. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Your energy, drive and luck all have their limitations, so don?t push any one of them too far. The results could end up being counterproductive. CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- When it comes to handling a delicate domestic development, be smart and use a featherlike touch. Heavy-handed methods are only likely to create additional rebellion. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Think before you open your mouth when conversing with your pals. If you don?t, there?s a strong chance that you could unwittingly blurt out some caustic remarks that won?t be readily forgiven. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- You should of course

look out for your own interests, but do so in ways that won?t hurt others in the process. If you steamroll people to get what you want, youll have very little to show for it in the end. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Even though you might have considerable reserves upon which to draw, it still might not be enough to accomplish your aims. However, don?t lose heart, you?ll have it all soon. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -- Usually it doesn?t take much to arouse your optimism, yet testy circumstances might cause you to think negatively. Don?t let gloom overshadow the light. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Don?t allow old objectives or friends to suffer neglect because of a

newfound enthusiasm on your part. Give each one the proper, adequate attention it deserves. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- This might be one of those days when the progress you make isn?t as rapid as you would like it to be. However, keep in mind that each and every step you make moves you closer to your goal. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Although your faith might be put to the test, remember that as long as you hold fast to the things you believe in, life will eventually work out to your satisfaction. COPYRIGHT 2012 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

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Weekend Mar. 10-11, 2012

25

104 Training
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.

110 Employment

110 Employment

203 Public Notices


CASE# CIV 512060 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN MATEO, 400 COUNTY CENTER RD, REDWOOD CITY CA 94063 PETITION OF Jose A. Villanueva and Maria B. Villanueva TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner, Jose A. Villanueva filed a petition with this court for a decree changing name as follows: Present name: Jancey Noemy Villanueva Villanueva Proposed name: Jancey Noemy Villanueva Villanueva Present name: Caterin Emperatriz Villanueva Propsed name: Caterin Emperatriz Villanueva Villanueva THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. A HEARING on the petition shall be held on May 1, 2012 at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ, Room 2E, at 400 County Center, Redwood City, CA 94063. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation: Daily Journal Filed: 02/23/2012 /s/ Beth Freeman/ Judge of the Superior Court Dated: 02/23/2012 (Published 02/25/12, 03/03/12, 03/10/12, 03/17/12)

203 Public Notices


CASE# CIV 512061 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN MATEO, 400 COUNTY CENTER RD, REDWOOD CITY CA 94063 PETITION OF Micah Eunice Malig TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner, Micah Eunice Malig filed a petition with this court for a decree changing name as follows: Present name: Micah Eunice Malig Proposed name: Micah Eunice Malig Dayag THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. A HEARING on the petition shall be held on May 1, 2012 at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ, Room 2E, at 400 County Center, Redwood City, CA 94063. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation: Daily Journal Filed: 02/23/2012 /s/ Beth Freeman/ Judge of the Superior Court Dated: 02/23/2012 (Published 02/25/12, 03/03/12, 03/10/12, 03/17/12) CASE# CIV 512188 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SAN MATEO, 400 COUNTY CENTER RD, REDWOOD CITY CA 94063 PETITION OF Kari Guy TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner, Kari Guy filed a petition with this court for a decree changing name as follows: Present name: Kari Guy Proposed name: Kari Chiara Galatolo THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. A HEARING on the petition shall be held on April 25, 2012 at 9 a.m., Dept. PJ, Room 2E, at 400 County Center, Redwood City, CA 94063. A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks prior to the date set for hearing on the petition in the following newspaper of general circulation: Daily Journal Filed: 03/07/2012 /s/ Beth Freeman/ Judge of the Superior Court Dated: 03/06/2012 (Published 03/10/12, 03/17/12, 03/24/12, 03/31/12)

203 Public Notices


FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #248506 The following persons are doing business as: Golden Coast Bee Collective, 545 Edison St., Montara, CA 94037 is hereby registered by the following owners: Catherine Farley, same address, Lesley Gilchrist, 511 Cypress Avenue, Moss Beach, CA 94038, Russ Morris, 48 Werner Ave., Daly City, CA 94014, Roberto Diaz, 741 Circlt Ct., So. San Francisco, CA 94080, Roel Funke, 668 Sierra Point Road, Brisbane, CA 94005, Peter Naranjo, Jr., 782 Sierra Meadow Dr., San Jose, CA 95116, Kelly Diedrich, 4205 Alpine Rd., Portola Valley, CA 94028, Teresa Butler, 800 Alsace Lorraine, Half Moon Bay, CA 94019, Cory Kostrub, 15 Kittie Lane, Belmont, CA 94002. The business is conducted by an Unincorporated Association other than a Partnership. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on N/A. /s/ Catherine Farley / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/19/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 02/18/12, 02/25/12, 03/03/12, 03/10/12).

SALES
Experienced, bilingual sales person wanted. Must have excellent customer service skills. Work on the Peninsula. Call (650)533-4424 Ask for Oleg

106 Tutoring

TUTORING
Spanish, French, Italian
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110 Employment
CAREGIVERS Were a top, full-service provider of home care, in need of your experienced, committed care for seniors. Prefer CNAs/HHAs with car, clean driving record, and great references. Good pay and benefits Call for Greg at (650) 556-9906
www.homesweethomecare.com
CASHIER - PT/FT, will train, Apply at AM/PM @ 470 Ralston Ave., Belmont. 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/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. Fax resume (650)344-5290 email info@smdailyjournal.com PROFESSIONAL THEATRE co. looking for articulate, enthusiastic people to join our team. 20 hrs p/w afternoon/evenings. Base + bonus. Call John 650-340-0359

JEWELRY STORE

127 Elderly Care FAMILY RESOURCE GUIDE


The San Mateo Daily Journals twice-a-week resource guide for children and families.

HIRING!!!
REDWOOD CITY LOCATION Assistant MGR.-Exp Required Top Pay, Benefits, Bonus, No Nights (714)542-9000, Ext. 147 Fax (714)542-1891 mailto: jobs@jewelryexchange.com

Every Tuesday & Weekend


Look for it in todays paper to find information on family resources in the local area, including childcare.

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 800 S. Claremont St #210, San Mateo CA 94402. THE UPS STORE IN BURLINGAME is hiring sales associates. Experience in copying/printing preferred. (650)430-3302

203 Public Notices


FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #248813 The following person is doing business as: Frausto Power Washing, 311 Semicircular Rd. #5, MENLO PARK, CA 94025 is hereby registered by the following owner: Alberto Frausto, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on. /s/ Alberto Frausto / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 02/08/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 02/18/12, 02/25/12, 03/03/12, 03/10/12).

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #248571 The following persons are doing business as: Shamele55, 300 Murchison Dr., #112, Millbrae, CA 94030 is hereby registered by the following owners: David S. Menard, same address & Donovan M. Boyle, 540 Edgemar Ave., Pacifica, CA 94044. The business is conducted by a General Partnership. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on N/A. /s/ David S. Menard / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/25/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 02/18/12, 02/25/12, 03/03/12, 03/10/12).

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #248937 The following person is doing business as: Solano Select Properties, LLC, 555 Laurel Avenue, Suite 501, San Mateo, CA 94402 is hereby registered by the following owner: 1711 Ventura Way, LLC, CA. The business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Philip F. Lesser / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 02/17/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 02/18/12, 02/25/12, 03/03/12, 03/10/12).

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #248472 The following person is doing business as: American Advanced Academy, 1338 Bayshore Blvd., Burlingame, CA 94010 is hereby registered by the following owner: World Learning Academy, CA. The business is conducted by a Corporation. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 07/01/2009. /s/ Eleanor Yu / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/18/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 02/18/12, 02/25/12, 03/03/12, 03/10/12).

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #248442 The following persons are doing business as: Get It Done Janitorial Services, 1530 Norton St., San Mateo, CA 94401 is hereby registered by the following owners: Hausia & Salome Nemani, same address. The business is conducted by Husband & Wife. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Hausia Nemani / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/17/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 02/18/12, 02/25/12, 03/03/12, 03/10/12).

26

Weekend Mar. 10-11, 2012


203 Public Notices
THE SAN Bruno Planning Commission will meet Tuesday, March 20, 2012 at 7:00 p.m., at the Senior Center, 1555 Crystal Springs Blvd., San Bruno, CA and take action on the following item. All interested persons are invited to attend. 237 Acacia Avenue. Request for a Use Permit to allow a large family day care operation in a single-family residential zone per SBMC Sections 12.84.200 and 12.96.060.C.6. Environmental Determination: Statutory Exemption Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, March 10, 2012.

THE DAILY JOURNAL


Tundra Tundra Tundra

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #2489026 The following person is doing business as: Burma National News, 397 Shipley, DALY CITY, CA 94015 is hereby registered by the following owner: Patrick Sue, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Patrick Sue / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 02/23/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 02/25/12, 03/03/12, 03/10/12, 03/17/12). FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #248577 The following person is doing business as: Bait and Switch Sportfishing, 15 Johnson Pier, Pillar Point Harbor, HALF MOON BAY, CA 94019 is hereby registered by the following owner: The Princeton Pantry, LLC, CA. The business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Elizabeth Knier / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 01/25/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 02/25/12, 03/03/12, 03/10/12, 03/17/12). FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #249066 The following person is doing business as: Taxi Cab Service Co., 1451 Tilia St, SAN MATEO, CA 94402 is hereby registered by the following owner: Paul S. Namini, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 02/01/2012 /s/ Paul Namini / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 02/24/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 02/25/12, 03/03/12, 03/10/12, 03/17/12). FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #249006 The following person is doing business as: Alex Mizuno Photography, 1157 Edgeworth Ave. #16, DALY CITY, CA 94015 is hereby registered by the following owner: Alex Mizuno, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Alex Mizuno / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 02/22/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 02/25/12, 03/03/12, 03/10/12, 03/17/12). FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #248857 The following person is doing business as: GDW Industries, 270 Redwood Shores Pkwy. #724, REDWOOD CITY, CA 94065 is hereby registered by the following owner: Adam L. Jastremski, 4436 Cristy Way, Castro Valley, CA 94546. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on . /s/ Adam L. Jastremski / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 02/10/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 03/03/12, 03/10/12, 03/17/12, 03/24/12)

203 Public Notices


FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #249128 The following person is doing business as: Rivera Realty, 260 Gateway Dr., PACIFICA, CA 94044 is hereby registered by the following owner: Trang Luu Rivera, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 03/01/2012. /s/ Trang Luu Rivera / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 02/29/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 03/03/12, 03/10/12, 03/17/12, 03/24/12) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #249168 The following person is doing business as: Limone, 619 Laurel St., SAN CARLOS, CA, 94070 is hereby registered by the following owner: Vesuvio Foods, INC., CA. The business is conducted by a Corporation. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on . /s/ Vincenzo Rosano / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 03/01/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 03/03/12, 03/10/12, 03/17/12, 03/24/12) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #249075 The following person is doing business as: Core Code Systems, 8 Howard Ave Apt. 4, BURLINGAME, CA 94010 is hereby registered by the following owner: Core Code Systems, INC., CA. The business is conducted by a Limited Liability Company. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on 01/02/2012 . /s/ Emad Eddin Omar El-Quran / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 02/27/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 03/03/12, 03/10/12, 03/17/12, 03/24/12) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #249157 The following person is doing business as: Organic Planet Cleaning Services, 410 Lincoln Ave., REDWOOD CITY, CA 94061 is hereby registered by the following owner: Diego Vargas, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on . /s/ Diego Vargas / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 03/01/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 03/03/12, 03/10/12, 03/17/12, 03/24/12)

203 Public Notices


FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #249311 The following person is doing business as: Macs Cleaning Services, 1540 Monte Diablo, SAN MATEO, CA 94401 is hereby registered by the following owner: Macario Enriquez, same address. The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Macario Enriquez / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 03/08/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 03/10/12, 03/17/12, 03/24/12, 03/31/12) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #248882 The following person is doing business as: Mens Wearhouse & Tux, 42 Serra Monte Center, #42, DALY CITY, CA 94015 is hereby registered by the following owner: The Mens Wearhouse, INC., CA. The business is conducted by a Corporation. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Claudia Pruitt / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 02/13/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 03/10/12, 03/17/12, 03/24/12, 03/31/12) FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #249237 The following person is doing business as: Mural Mural on the Wall, 25 Oak Creek Ln., SAN CARLOS, CA 94070 is hereby registered by the following owner: Lisa Marlene Ravella, same address The business is conducted by an Individual. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ Lisa M. Ravella / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 03/06/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 03/10/12, 03/17/12, 03/24/12, 03/31/12)

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

Over the Hedge

203 Public Notices


NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Pursuant to California StarStorage Facility Act, (B7P Code 2170 Et. Seq.) the undersigned will sell at public auction, on Monday, March 19, 2012, personal property including, but not limited to furniture, clothing, tools, and/or other household items located at: Start Self Storage 1241 Whitethorne Way Burlingame CA 94010 (650)344-4588 Time: 10:00 a.m. Stored by the following person(s): Mimi Suhl #1, 2, 15, 16, 17, 18, 47, 51 #All sales are subject to prior cancellation. Terms, rules, and regulations are available at sale. Dated this 29th day of February, 2012. San Mateo Daily Journal
ORDER FOR PUBLICATION OF SUMMONS CASE No.: 114193 In Re: Petitioner: JIM LOUIE vs. Respondent: YE CHEN Upon reading and filing evidence consisting of a declaration as provided in Section 415.50 CCP by Trudy Nicole LeDee, and it satisfactorily appearing therefrom that the Respondent, Richard Kennedy LeDee, cannot be served with reasonable diligence in any other manner specified in Article 3, Chapter 4, Title 5 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and it also appearing from the verified Petition that a good cause of action exists in this action in favor of the Petitioner, therein and against the Respondent, and that the said Respondent is a necessary and proper party to the action or that the party to be served has or claims an interest in, real or personal property in this State that is subject to the jurisdiction of the Court or the relief demanded in the action consists wholly or in part in excluding such party from any interest in such property. NOW, ON APPLICATION of Jim Louie, Petitioner in Pro Per, IT IS ORDERED that the services of said Summons in this section be made upon said Respondent, by publication thereof in the Daily Journal, a newspaper of general circulation publish in San Mateo County, California, hereby designated as the newspaper most likely to give notice to said Respondent; that said publication be made at least once a week for four successive weeks. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that a copy of said Summons and of said Petition in this action be forthwith deposited in the United States Post Office, postpaid, directed to said Respondent, if his address is ascertained before expiration of the time prescribed for the publication of this Summons and declaration of this mailing, or of the fact that the address was not ascertained, be filed at the expiration of the time prescribed for the publications. Dated: 02/17/12 Signed: Susan Greenberg Judge/Commissioner of the Superior Court Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal March 10, 17, 24, 31, 2012.

210 Lost & Found


LOST - 2 silver rings and silver watch, May 7th in Burlingame between Park Rd. & Walgreens, Sentimental value. Call Gen @ (650)344-8790 LOST - Small Love Bird, birght green with orange breast. Adeline Dr. & Bernal Ave., Burlingame. Escaped Labor Day weekend. REWARD! (650)343-6922 LOST: SMALL diamond cross, silver necklace with VERY sentimental meaning. Lost in San Mateo 2/6/12 (650)578-0323. LOST: Center cap from wheel of Cadillac. Around Christmas time. Chrome with multi-colored Cadillac emblem in center. Small hole near edge for locking device. Belmont or San Carlos area. Joel 650-592-1111.

300 Toys
BILINGUAL POWER lap top 6 actividaes $18 650 349-6059 RADIO-CONTROL SAILBOAT: Robbie model. Power: Futabas ATTAK, 75.750 mghz.Excellent condition, ready to use. Needs batteries. $60.00 650-341- 3288

302 Antiques
1912 COFFEE Percolator Urn. perfect condition includes electric cord $85. (415)565-6719 CHINA CABINET - Vintage, 6 foot, solid mahogany. $300/obo. (650)867-0379 VINTAGE FISHING LURES - (10) at between $45. & $100. each, CreekChub, Helin Tackle, Arbogast, some in original boxes, (650)257-7481

294 Baby Stuff


REDMON WICKER baby bassinet $25 OBO Crib Mattress $10 650 678-4398

FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #249145 The following person is doing business as: Common Brights, 1025 S. Claremont St., SAN MATEO, CA 94402 is hereby registered by the following owner: Common Brights, CA. The business is conducted by a Corporation. The registrants commenced to transact business under the FBN on /s/ James Seevers / This statement was filed with the Assessor-County Clerk on 03/01/2012. (Published in the San Mateo Daily Journal, 03/10/12, 03/17/12, 03/24/12, 03/31/12)

303 Electronics
18 INCH TV Monitor with built-in DVD with remote, $21. Call SOLD! 19" TOSHIBA (650)343-4461 LCD color TV $99

296 Appliances
CHOPPERS (4) with instructions $7/all. (650)368-3037 ELECTRIC HEATER - Oil filled electric heater, 1500 watts, $30., (650)504-3621 JACK LA LANNE JUICER USED $20 (650)458-8280 NEVER

3 SHELF SPEAKERS - 8 OM, $15. each, (650)364-0902 3 TVS 4 DVD players VCRs, ect. almost free. Nothing over $9 SOLD! 32 TOSHIBA Flat screen TV like new, bought 9/9/11 with box. $300 Firm. (415)264-6605 46 MITSUBISHI Projector TV, great condition. $400. (650)261-1541. BIG SONY TV 37" - Excellent Condition Worth $2300 will Sacrifice for only $95., (650)878-9542 FLIP CAMCORDER $50. (650)583-2767 LAPTOP. ACER Inspire One, 160 Gb HD. $75. SOLD PANASONIC TV 21 inch $25., SOLD! PRINTER. HP Office Jet All-in-One. New. $50. SOLD PS2 GAME console $75.00 (650)591-4710 SONY TRINITRON 36" TV with Remote Good Condition Sacrifice for $25. (650)596-9601. TOSHIBA 42 LCD flat screen TV HD in very good condition, $300., Call at (650)533-9561 TV 25 inch color with remote $25. Sony 12 inch color TV, $10 Excellent condition. SOLD TV SET Philips 21 inch with remote $40., (650)692-3260 ZENITH TV 12" $50 650 755-9833 (Daly City). (650)755-9833

RADIATOR HEATER, oil filled, electric, 1500 watts $25. (650)504-3621 SHOP VACUUM rigid brand 3.5 horse power 9 gal wet/dry $40. (650)591-2393 SUNBEAM TOASTER -Automatic, excellent condition, $30., (415)346-6038 VACUUM CLEANER excellent condition $45. (650)878-9542 VACUUM CLEANER type $40., SOLD! Oreck-cannister

297 Bicycles
INSTEP HALF bike for child, mounts onto adult bike. $15. Like new. SOLD!

298 Collectibles
1982 PRINT "A Tune Off The Top Of My Head" See: http://tinyurl.com/4y38xld 650-204-0587 $75 2 FIGURINES - 1 dancing couple, 1 clown face. both $15. (650)364-0902 200 1940 Baseball Cards $100 or B/O (650)481-5296 65 EUROPEAN Used Postage Stamps. Some issued before 1920. All different. Includes stamps from England, France, and Germany. $5.00 650-787-8600 ARMY SHIRT, long sleeves, with pockets. XL $15 each (408)249-3858 BAY MEADOWS (650)345-1111 bag $30.each,

304 Furniture
2 DINETTE Chairs (650)692-3260 both for $29

BEANIE BABIES in cases with TY tags attached, good condition. $10 each or 12 for $100. (650) 588-1189 COLLECTIBLE CHRISTMAS TREE STAND with 8 colored lights at base / also have extra lights, $50., (650)593-8880 COLLECTIBLES: RUSSELL Baze Bobbleheads Bay Meadows, $10 EA. brand new in original box. (415)612-0156 COLORIZED TERRITORIAL Quarters uncirculated with Holder $15/all, (408)249-3858 DECORATIVE COLLECTOR BOTTLES - Empty, Jim Beam, $8. each, (650)3647777 GAYLORD PERRY 8x10 signed photo $10 (650)692-3260 JACK TASHNER signed ball $25. Richard (650)834-4926 JOE MONTANA signed authentic retirement book, $39., (650)692-3260 ORIGINAL SMURF FIGURES - 19791981, 18+ mushroom hut, 1 1/2 x 3 1/2, all $40., (650)518-0813 PEDAL CAR 1950's vintage "No Rust" rare $100 obo. SOLD! PRECIOUS MOMENTS vinyl dolls - 16, 3 sets of 2, $35. each set, (650)518-0813

2 END Tables solid maple '60's era $40/both. (650)670-7545 ARMOIRE CABINET (415)375-1617 $90., Call

BEAUTIFUL ORIENTAL Table. 32" by 32" 12" legs, Rosewood, Lightweight, $75 650 871-7200 BOOKSHELF $10.00 (650)591-4710 BREAKFAST NOOK DINETTE TABLEsolid oak, 53X66, $29., (650)583-8069 CAST AND metal headboard and footboard. white with brass bars, Queen size $95 650-588-7005 CHANDELIER WITH 5 lights/ candelabre base with glass shades $20. (650)504-3621 COFFEE TABLE - 30 x 58, light oak, heavy, 1980s, $40., (650)348-5169 COUCH-FREE. OLD world pattern, soft fabric. Some cat scratch damage-not too noticeable. 650-303-6002 DINING ROOM SET - table, four chairs, lighted hutch, $500. all, (650)296-3189 DINING SET glass table with rod iron & 4 blue chairs $100/all. 650-520-7921, 650245-3661 DISPLAY CASE wood & glass 31 x 19 inches $30. (650)873-4030

210 Lost & Found


FOUND AT Chase Bank parking lot in Burlingame 3 volume books "temple" and others 650 344-6565 FOUND JAN 3: digital camera in parking lot near Pillar Point Harbor. If yours, contact me with description. FOUND!

299 Computers
HP PRINTER Deskjet 970c color printer. Excellent condition. Software & accessories included. $30. 650-574-3865

THE DAILY JOURNAL


304 Furniture
DOUBLE BED mattress and box spring $25., (650)637-8244 DRAFTING TABLE 30 x 42' with side tray. excellent cond $75. (650)949-2134 DRUM TABLE - brown, perfect condition, nice design, with storage, $45., (650)345-1111 END TABLE marble top with drawer with matching table $70/all. SOLD END TABLES (2) - One for $5. hand carved, other table is antique white marble top with drawer $40., (650)308-6381 END TABLES (2)- Cherry finish, still in box, need to assemble, 26L x 21W x 21H, $100. for both, (650)592-2648 FOAM INCLINER for twin bed $40 650-692-1942 FOAM INCLINER for twin bed $40 650-692-1942 FOLDING PICNIC table - 8 x 30, 7 folding, padded chairs, $80. (650)364-0902 HAND MADE portable jewelry display case wood and see through lid $45. 25 x 20 x 4 inches. (650)592-2648. LOUNGE CHAIRS - 2 new, with cover & plastic carring case & headrest, $35. each, (650)592-7483 MATTRESS TOPPER chrome full size $15., (650)368-3037 MIRROR, NICE, large, 30x54, $25. SSF (650)583-8069 MODULAR DESK/BOOKCASE/STORAGE unit - Cherry veneer, white laminate, $75., (650)888-0039 OFFICE LAMP, small. Black & white with pen holder and paper holder. Brand new, in the box. $10 (650)867-2720 PAPASAN CHAIRS (2) -with cushions $45. each set, (650)347-8061 PEDESTAL DINETTE 36 Square Table - $65., (650)347-8061 TEA CHEST , Bombay, burgundy, glass top, perfect cond. $35 (650)345-1111 STORAGE TABLE light brown lots of storage good cond. $45. (650)867-2720 VANITY ETHAN Allen maple w/drawer and liftup mirror like new $95 (650)349-2195

Weekend Mar. 10-11, 2012


304 Furniture
ROCKING CHAIR - Traditional, full size Rocking chair. Excellent condition $100., (650)504-3621

27

307 Jewelry & Clothing


GALLON SIZE bag of costume jewelry various sizes, colors, $80. for bag, (650)589-2893 LADIES GOLD Lame' elbow lengthgloves sz 7.5 $15 New. (650)868-0436

310 Misc. For Sale


100 SPORT Books 70's thru 90's A's, Giants, & 49ers $100 for all 650 207-2712 100 SPORT Photo's A's, Giants, & 49ers $100 for all 650 207-2712 12 DAYS of Christmas vintage drinking Glasses 1970 Color prints Prefect condition original box $25 (650)873-8167 130 ADULT mags for sale, playboy, penthouse and foreign and over a dozen adult vhs movies.$25 for all, SOLD! 1970 TIFFANY style swag lamp with opaque glass, $59., (650)692-3260 2 AUTOMOTIVE MANUALS: 1) CHILTON'S Auto Repair Manual 1964 - 1971 2) MOTOR SERVICE'S Automotive Encyclopedia. Each: $5. SOLD! 2 TODDLER car seats, hardly used. Both for $75.00. (650)375-1246 21 PIECE Punch bowl glass set $55., (650)341-8342 21-PIECE HAIR cut kit, home pro, Wahl, never used, $25. (650)871-7200 29 BOOKS - Variety of authors, $25., (650)589-2893 3 CRAFT BOOKS - hardcover, over 500 projects, $40., (650)589-2893 3 FLOORBOARDS: for 8 INFLATABLE: Our boating days over. Spar-Varnish, very good condition; Stored inside. All:$10.00 SOLD 30 DISNEY Books $1.00 each 650 368-3037 4 IN 1 stero unit. CD player broken. $20 650-834-4926 5 CUP electric coffee marker $8.00 650 368-3037 5 PHOTOGRAPHIC CIVIL WAR BOOKS plus 4 volumes of Abraham Lincoln war years books, $90., B/O must see, (650)345-5502 7 UNDERBED STORAGE BINS - Vinyl with metal frame, 42 X 18 X 6, zipper closure, $5. ea., (650)364-0902 9 CARRY-ON bags (assorted) - extra large, good condition, $10. each obo, (650)349-6059 AMERICAN HERITAGE books 107 Volumes Dec.'54-March '81 $99/all (650)345-5502 ANGEL WITH lights 12 inches High $12. (650)368-3037 AREA RUG - 8x8 round, 100% wool pile, color ivory, black, SOLD! ART BOOKS hard Cover, full color (10) Norman Rockwell and others $10 each 650-364-7777 ARTIFICIAL FICUS Tree 6 ft. life like, full branches. in basket $55. (650)269-3712 BABY CAR SEAT AND CARRIER $20 (650)458-8280 BARBARA TAYLOR BRADFORD hardback books. 4 at $3.00 each or all for $10., Call (650)341-1861 BARBIE BEACH vacation & Barbie princess bride computer games $15 each, (650)367-8949 BBQ GILL with Cover 31/2' wide by 3' tall hardly used $49. 650 347-9920 BBQ KETTEL Grill, Uniflame 21 $35 (650)347-8061 BBQ SMOKER BBQ Grill, LP Coleman, Alaskan Cookin Machine, cost $140 sell $75. 650-344-8549 BBQ SMOKER, w/propane tank, wheels, shelf, sears model $86 650-344-8549 BBQ SMOKER, w/propane tank, wheels, shelf, sears model $86 650-344-8549 BEADS - Glass beads for jewelry making, $75. all, (650)676-0732 BEAUTIFUL LAMPSHADE - cone shaped, neutral color beige, 11.5 long X 17 wide, matches any decor, never used, excellent condition, Burl, $18., (650)3475104 BIRD FEEDER 3" high, free standing, sturdy, and never used $15 (415) 333-8540 BOOK "LIFETIME" (408)249-3858 WW1 $12.,

310 Misc. For Sale


CAMPING CUPS and plates (NEW)-B/O (650)591-4710 CANDLE HOLDER with angel design, tall, gold, includes candle. Purchased for $100, now $30. (650)345-1111 CEILING FAN - Multi speed, bronze & brown, excellent shape, $45., (650)5922648 COLEMAN PROPANE camp stove $25.00 (650)591-4710 COLEMAN PROPANE lantern $15.00 (650)591-4710 CRAFTMENS 15 GALLON WET DRYVAC with variable speeds and all the attachments, $40., SOLD! DOOM (3) computer games $15/each 2 total, (650)367-8949 DUFFEL BAGS - 1 Large Duffel Bag ,1 Xtra Lg. Duffel w Wheels, 1 Leather weekender Satchel, $75. (650)871-7211 ELECTRONIC TYPEWRITER good condition $50., (650)878-9542 ELVIS PRESLEY poster book $20. (650)692-3260 FOAM SLEEP (650)591-4710 roll (2)-$10.00/each Little

310 Misc. For Sale


TENT $30.00 (650)591-4710 TIRE CHAINS - brand new, in box, never used, multiple tire sizes, $25., (650)5941494 TIRE CHAINS - used once includes rubber tighteners plus carrying case. call for corresponding tire size, $20., (650)3455446 VASE WITH flowers 2 piece good for the Holidays $25 650 867-2720 VIDEO CENTER 38 inches H 21 inches W still in box $45., (408)249-3858 VINTAGE TV /RADIO TUBES - 100 of them for $100. total, (415)672-9206 WALGREENS BRAND Water Pitcher Royal Blue Top 2 Quart New in Box $10 Ea use all brand Filters 650-873-8167 WALKER - never used, $85., (415)239-9063 WALKER. INVACARE 6291-3f, dual release walker. Fixed 3" wheels & glider tips. Brand new. $50. (650)594-1494 WALL LIGHT fixture - 2 lamp with frosted fluted shades, gold metal, great for bathroom vanity, never used, excellent condition, $15., Burl, (650)347-5104 WINE CARBOYS, 5 gal. $5 ea., have 2 Daly City (415)333-8540

308 Tools
18 VOLT ROYBI circular saw & Sawall with charger both $40 650 593-7553 CIRCULAR SAW, Craftsman-brand, 10, 4 long x 20 wide. Comes w/ stand - $70. (650)678-1018 CLICKER TORQUE Wrench, 20 - 150 pounds, new with lifetime warranty and case, $39, 650-595-3933 CRAFTSMAN 3/4 horse power 3,450 RPM $60 (650)347-5373 CRAFTSMAN ARC-WELDER - 30-250 amp, and accessories, $275., (650)3410282 DAYTON ELECTRIC 1 1/2 horse power 3,450 RPM $50 (650)347-5373 DAYTON ELECTRIC 1 1/2 horse power 1,725 RPM $60 (650)347-5373 HAND DRILL $6.00 (415) 333-8540 LAWN MOWER reel type push with height adjustments. Just sharpened $45 650-591-2144 San Carlos MEDIUM DUTY Hand Truck $50 650 593-7553 TABLE SAW 10", very good condition $85. (650) 787-8219

306 Housewares
"PRINCESS HOUSE decorator urn "Vase" cream with blue flower 13 inch H $25., (650)868-0436 25 LOVELY Vases all sizes $1 to $3 each ( Florist Delight ) 650 755-9833 3 LARGE Blue Ceramic Pots $10 each 650 755-9833 CANDLEHOLDER - Gold, angel on it, tall, purchased from Brueners, originally $100., selling for $30.,(650)867-2720 CEILING FAN multi speed, brown and bronze $45. (650)592-2648 DRIVE MEDICAL design locking elevated toilet seat. New. $45. (650)343-4461 LAMPS - 2 southwestern style lamps with engraved deer. $85 both, obo, (650)343-4461 MIXER & CITRUS JUICE combo by Ham. Beach - sturdy model, used, c.70's $22.,SOLD! PERSIAN TEA set for 8. Including spoon, candy dish, and tray. Gold Plated. $100. (650) 867-2720 SOLID TEAK floor model 16 wine rack with turntable $60. (650)592-7483 SUSHI SET - Blue & white includes 4 of each: chopsticks, plates, chopstick holders, still in box, $9., (650)755-8238

FOOD SLICER. Oxo Mandolin. used. $15. (650)630-2329

FRAMED PAINTING - Girl picking daisies, green & white, SOLD! GAME "BEAT THE EXPERTS" never used $8., (408)249-3858 GEORGE Magazines, 30, all intact $50/all OBO. (650)574-3229, Foster City HANGING PLANTER. 2-black plasticcoated steel, 20" wide, 10" deep. With chains, hooks. Both for $35 (650)630-2329 HARDBACK BOOKS - Complete set, 6 volumes, by Winston S. Churchill, 2nd WW, published 1948-1953, great condition, dustjackets, $90.all, (650)347-5104 HARLEY DAVIDSON black phone, perfect condition $65 650 867-2720 JAMES PATTERSON BOOKS - 3 hardback @$3. each, 5 paperbacks @$1. each, (650)341-1861 JANET EVANOVICH (4) hardback books $3/each (8) paperback books $1/each 650-341-1861 JEWELRY DISPLAY CASE - Handmade, portable, wood & see through lid to open, 45L, 20W, 3H, $65., (650)592-2648 LARGE PRINT. Hard Cover. Mystery Books. Current Author. (20) $1 each 650-364-7777 LIMITED QUANTITY VHS porno tapes, $8. each, (650)871-7200 MAGNIFYING MIRROR. Swivel, wall mount, 5Xx1X. Satin nickel finish. New, in box. $20. (650)630-2329 MANUAL WHEECHAIRS (2) $75 each. 650-343-1826 MEN'S ASHTON and Hayes leather briefcase new. Burgundy color. $65 obo, (650)343-4461 MIRROR, ETHAN ALLEN - 57-in. high x 21-in. wide, maple frame and floor base, like new, $95., (650)349-2195 NATURAL GRAVITY WATER SYSTEM - Alkaline, PH Balance water, with antioxident properties, good for home or office, brand new, $100., (650)619-9203. NEW LIVING Yoga Tape for Beginners $8. 650-578-8306 OLD 5 gal. glass water cooler bottle $50 (650)593-7553 PICTORIAL WORLD $80/all (650)345-5502 History Books

311 Musical Instruments


2 ORGANS, antique tramp, $100 each. (650)376-3762 3 ACCORDIONS $110/ea. 1 Small Accordion $82. (650)376-3762. ELECTRIC STARCASTER Guitar black&white with small amplifier $75. 650-358-0421 GUITAR - Classical nylon strings, Suzuki, $85., (650)348-6428 HAMMOND B-3 Organ and 122 Leslie Speaker. Excellent condition. $8,500. private owner, (650)349-1172 HOHNER CUE stick guitar HW 300 G Handcrafted $75 650 771-8513 MAGNUS TABLE top Organ:: 2-1/2 octaves. Play by number, chords by letters Excellent condition, 5 starter books. All $30. (650)341-3288 PIANO ORGAN, good condition. $110. (650)376-3762

309 Office Equipment


ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER Smith Corona $60. (650)878-9542 OFFICE LAMP new $7. (650)345-1111

307 Jewelry & Clothing


BRACELET - Ladies authentic Murano glass from Italy, vibrant colors, like new, $100., (650)991-2353 Daly City

310 Misc. For Sale


10 PLANTS (assorted) for $3.00 each, (650)349-6059

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle


Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
ACROSS 1 Natural liniment 11 Beliefs 15 MacLeish work inspired by a treatise published circa 18 B.C. 16 The Grapes of Wrath traveler 17 Decent sort 18 Turner of records 19 Rubble creator 20 WWII leadership monogram 21 Picks up 23 Like many poll questions 25 Paradise Lost figure 28 Period in a sonnet 29 Without getting excited 31 Govt. benefits provider 32 Bleep 35 Saut 36 Golfers concern 37 Mexican salamander 39 The States, to Mexicans 41 Reunin attendees 42 Word of awe 44 Main arteries 45 Sudanese leader? 46 Age before beauty! 48 __-Julie: Montreal suburb 49 Media workers org. 50 Employ against, as tear gas 54 Develop canines, say 56 Welcome site 58 Jacuzzi setting 59 Last Stuart monarch 60 Participant in an annual event since 1951 64 Year of Alexander Vs death 65 Dude ranch problem 66 Nuisance 67 They require discussions DOWN 1 Toady? 2 Castle seen in The Whirl of Life 3 USAF E-6s 4 Apple core, briefly 5 Keep 6 Command 7 Idle 8 First half of an indirect course? 9 Antique French coin 10 Dylan hit originally written for Midnight Cowboy 11 Speck 12 Getaway that gives you a lift 13 Where Brooklyn Park is 14 Eel-like marine reptiles 22 Ethyl ending 24 Nobelist Bohr 26 Boxers cry 27 Weary 30 Basketball formation with numerous play options 32 Office gadget 33 Ontologists concern 34 Unfinished business 36 Falcon-headed god 38 Longtime Mississippi senator 40 Bad sign for one seeking a shortcut 43 Unnamed woman 46 That feels great! 47 Inn choice 51 These, in Tijuana 52 Bridget Riley genre 53 Nasal passages 55 Modern dialogue unit 57 One whos with you 61 Humanities degs. 62 Plugs 63 Helmsmans hdg.

312 Pets & Animals


SMALL DOG wire cage; pink, two doors with divider $50.00 (650) 743-9534.

315 Wanted to Buy GO GREEN! We Buy GOLD You Get The $ Green $
Millbrae Jewelers Est. 1957 400 Broadway - Millbrae

650-697-2685

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

316 Clothes
2. WOMEN'S Pink & White Motocycle Helmet KBC $50 (415)375-1617 49ER SWEATSHIRT with hood size 8 extra large $100 obo. (650)346-9992 5 LEATHER Jackets, used but not abused. Like New, $100 each. (650)670-2888 BLACK Leather pants Mrs. size made in France size 40 $99. (650)558-1975 BLACK LEATHER tap shoes 9M great condition $99. (650)558-1975 BOOTS - purple leather, size 8, ankle length, $50.obo, (650)592-9141 BOOTS. WOMEN'S Timberland, 6-1/2. Good. cond. $15. SOLD! BRIDAL PETTICOAT: Taffeta. Fitted waist-to-hip above bouffant crinolines; ruffled taffetas over and under crinoline Sz: 10 $20. (650)341-3288 BRIDAL PETTICOAT: Taffeta. Fitted waist-to-hip above bouffant crinolines; ruffled taffeta liners over + under crinolines. Sz. 10. $20.00 (650)341-3288 EUROPEAN STYLE nubek leather ladies winter coat - tan colored with green lapel & hoodie, $100., (650)888-0129 LADIES DOWN jacket light yellow with dark brown lining $35. (650)868-0436 LADIES FAUX FUR COAT - Satin lining, size M/L, $100. obo, (650)525-1990 LADIES JACKET size 3x 70% wool 30% nylon never worn $50. (650)592-2648 LADIES ROYAL blue rain coat with zippered flannel plaid liner size 12 RWC $15. (650)868-0436 LEVIS MENS jeans - Size 42/30, well faded, excellent condition, $10., (650)595-3933 MANS SUEDE-LIKE jacket, New, XXLg. $25. 650 871-7211 MEN'S SUIT almost new $25. 650-573-6981 MENS DESIGNER ties in spring colors, bag of 20 ties $50 (650)245-3661 MENS DRESS SHOES - bostonian casual dress tie up, black upper leather, size 8.5, classic design, great condition, $60.,Burl., (650)347-5104 MENS PANTS & SHORTS - Large box, jeans, cargos, casual dress slacks, 34/32, 36/32, Burl, $85.all, (650)3475104 Brown.

PR. MATCHED PEWTER GOBLETS by Wilton. Numbered. 7-1/2-in ht. Excellent bridal gifts or mantel vases. No polishing. $10/ea.or $18/pr. (650)341-3288 SESAME STREET toilet seat excellent condition $12 650 349-6059 SF GREETING Cards (300 w/envelopes) factory sealed $20. (650)207-2712 SHOWER POOR custom made 48 x 69 $70 (650)692-3260 SONY PROJECTION TV Good condtion, w/ Remote, Black $100 (650)345-1111 SPEAKER STANDS - Approx. 30" tall. Black. $50 for the pair, (650)594-1494 STUART WOODS Hardback Books 2 @ $3.00 each. (650)341-1861

xwordeditor@aol.com

03/10/12

BOOK - Fighting Aircraft of WWII, Janes, 1000 illustrations, $65., (650)593-8880 BOOK NATIONAL Geographic National Air Museums, $15 (408)249-3858

By Barry C. Silk (c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

03/10/12

NEW BROWN LEATHER JACKET- XL $25., 650-364-0902

28

Weekend Mar. 10-11, 2012


316 Clothes 318 Sports Equipment
YOUTH GOLF Bag great condition with six clubs putter, drivers and accessories $65. 650-358-0421

THE DAILY JOURNAL


381 Homes for Sale
OREGON VINEYARD, For Sale or Lease. 40 ac., with 28 ac. vineyard, 12 ac. Pinot Noir, 16 ac. Pinot Noir Gris. Above average fruit. Mature plants. 2,200 sq. ft. house, 3 car garage, Shop/ Barn, Fantastic view. Turn Key Operation. Call: (702) 755-1442 or (702) 558-2199

620 Automobiles
AUTO AUCTION The following repossessed vehicles are being sold by Patelco Credit Union on March 13, 2012 starting at 8am ---2008 Dodge Charger #107661, 2007 Jeep Liberty #717665, 2005 Saturn Ion #100737, 2006 Nissan Altima #322248, 2002 Mercedes Benz ML 320 #310227. Sealed bids will be taken starting at 8am on 03/13/2012. Sale held at Forrest Faulknor & Sons Auction Company, 175 Sylvester Road, South San Francisco. For more information please visit our web site at www.ffsons.com.

650 RVs
RV. 73 Chevy Model 30 Van, Runs good, Rebuilt Transmission, Fiberglass Bubble Top $2,450. Will finance, small downpayment. Call for appointments. (650)364-1374

670 Auto Parts


HOLLY FOUR barrel carborater, 650 vaccum secondaries. $60., SOLD! HONDA CIVIC FRONT SEAT Gray Color. Excellent Condition $90. San Bruno. 415-999-4947 RADIATOR FOR 94-96 caprice/impala. $75., SOLD! chevy

MENS SHIRTS - Brand names, Polos, casual long sleeve dress, golf polo, tshirts, sizes M/L, great condition, Burl, $83., (650)347-5104

NANCY'S TAILORING & BOUTIQUE Custom Made & Alterations 889 Laurel Street San Carlos, CA 94070 650-622-9439
NINE WEST. 3 black handbags. Very good condition. All for $10. (650)6302329 PUMPS. AMALFI, 6C, 2-1/2" heels. Peach-champagne tone. Worn once. $30. SOLD REVERSIBLE, SOUVENIR JACKET San Francisco: All-weather, zip-front, hood. Weatherproof 2-tone tan.; Inner: navy fleece, logos SF & GG bridge. $20.00 SOLD! SAN FRANCISCO SOUVENIR JACKET: Hooded, zip-front. Reversible, outer: tan all-weather; inner: navy plush. Each has SF landmarks' embroidery. Large: $20. (650)341-3288 SNEAKERS. WOMEN'S Curves, 9-1/2. New. $20. SOLD SNOW BOOTS, MEN'S size 12. Brand New, Thermolite brand,(with zippers), black, $18. (510) 527-6602 VINTAGE CLOTHING 1930 Ermine fur coat Black full length $35 650 755-9833 VINTAGE WOMEN'S hats various styles B/O, Daly City, (650)755-9833 WOMEN'S BLACK Motorcycle Jacket Size M Stella/Alpine Star $80. obo (415)375-1617 WOMEN'S VINTAGE clothing $5.00 & up, Daly City, (650)755-9833

322 Garage Sales

670 Auto Service HILLSDALE CAR CARE


WE FIX CARS Quailty Work-Value Price Ready to help

THE THRIFT SHOP


HALF PRICE SALE! ALL MENS CLOTHING
Open Thurs. & Fri 10-2:00 Sat 10-3:00 Episcopal Church 1 South El Camino Real San Mateo 94401

440 Apartments
BELMONT - prime, quiet location, view, Studio $1125, 1 bedroom $1450. New carpets, new granite counters, dishwasher, balcony, covered carports, storage, pool, no pets. (650) 592-1271 SAN MATEO $1200 Per Month. LG 1 Bedroom, AEK, 1 block from Central Park and Downtown, RENTED! SAN MATEO - Large 2 Bedroom, 2 bath. Next to Central Park. Rarely Available. Prestigious Location & Building. Gated garage. Deck, No pets, $2,200/mo. Call (650) 948-2935

TRUCK RADIATOR - fits older Ford, never used, $100., (650)504-3621

call (650) 345-0101 254 E. Hillsdale Blvd. San Mateo


Corner of Saratoga Ave.

672 Auto Stereos

(650)344-0921

BMW 02 325CI -fully loaded, black leather interior, auto, heated seats, new tires, much more! 112K miles. $9,400. (650)692-7916 CADILLAC 93 Sedan $ 4,000 or Trade Good Condition (650)481-5296 CHEVY HHR 08 - Grey, spunky car loaded, even seat warmers, $9,500. (408)807-6529. HONDA 10 ACCORD LX - 4 door sedan, low miles, $19K, (650)573-6981 MERCEDES 06 C230 - 6 cylinder, navy blue, 60K miles, 2 year warranty, $18,000, (650)455-7461 NISSAN STANZA 92 - 216K miles. $550. SOLD!

MB GARAGE, INC.
Repair Restore Sales
Mercedes-Benz Specialists

MONNEY CAR AUDIO


We Sell, Install and Repair All Brands of Car Stereos
iPod & iPhone Wired to Any Car for Music Quieter Car Ride Sound Proof Your Car

GARAGE SALES ESTATE SALES


Make money, make room!

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

2165 Palm Ave. San Mateo

(650)349-2744
MERCEDES BENZ REPAIR Diagnosis, Repair, Maintenance. All MBZ Models Elliott Dan Mercedes Master Certified technician 555 O'Neil Avenue, Belmont 650-593-1300

List your upcoming garage sale, moving sale, estate sale, yard sale, rummage sale, clearance sale, or whatever sale you have... in the Daily Journal. Reach over 82,500 readers from South San Francisco to Palo Alto. in your local newspaper. Call (650)344-5200

31 Years Experience

Rooms For Rent


Travel Inn, San Carlos

$49 daily + tax $294-$322 weekly + tax


Clean Quiet Convenient Cable TV, WiFi & Private Bathroom Microwave and Refrigerator 950 El Camino Real San Carlos

SUTTON AUTO SALES Cash for Cars


Call 650-595-DEAL (3325) Or Stop By Our Lot 1659 El Camino Real San Carols

2001 Middlefield Road Redwood City (650)299-9991

(650) 593-3136
Mention Daily Journal

QUALITY COACHWORKS

620 Automobiles 335 Rugs


IVORY WOOL blend rect. 3x5 Blue Willow pattern $50 firm, (650)342-6345 69 GTO weld wheels, frozen engine & transmission. $100 SOLD! 76 PORSCHE sportmatic NO engine with transmission $100 SOLD!

625 Classic Cars


DATSUN 72 - 240Z with Chevy 350, automatic, custom, $5800 or trade. (650)588-9196 NISSAN 87 Centura - Two door, manual, stick shift, 150K miles. Clean title, good body, $1,250., (415)505-3908 PLYMOUTH 72 CUDA - Runs and drives good, needs body, interior and paint, $8,000 /obo, serious inquiries only. (650)873-8623

& Paint Expert Body and Paint Personalized Service


411 Woodside Road, Redwood City 650-280-3119

Autobody

317 Building Materials


WHITE STORM/SCREEN door. Size is 35 1/4" x 79 1/4". Asking $75.00. Call (650)341-1861

335 Garden Equipment


(GALVANIZED planter with boxed liners 94 x 10 x 9. Two available, $20/all, (415)346-6038 BAMBOO poles 6 to 8 Ft, 30. $15/all, (415)346-6038 FLOWER POTS many size (50 pieces) $15/all, (415)346-6038 POTTED PLANTS (7) $5/each 650-207-0897 TABLE - for plant, $25., perfect condition, (650)345-1111

Dont lose money on a trade-in or consignment! Sell your vehicle in the Daily Journals Auto Classifieds. Just $3 per day. Reach 82,500 drivers from South SF to Palo Alto
Call (650)344-5200 ads@smdailyjournal.com

SAN CARLOS AUTO SERVICE & TUNE UP


A Full Service Auto Repair Facility

318 Sports Equipment


"EVERLAST FOR HER" Machine to help lose weight $40., (650)368-3037 13 ASSORTED GOLF CLUBS- Good Quality $3.50 each. Call (650) 349-6059. BASKETBALL RIM, net & backboard $35/all 650-345-7132 Leave message. BOYS BOXING gloves $8. 341-8342 DARTBOARD - New, regulation 18 dimeter, Halex brand w/mounting hardware, 6 brass darts, $16., (650)681-7358 GOLF BALLS (325) $65 (650)341-5347 GOLF BALLS (325) $65 (650)341-5347 GOLF BALLS in new carton Dunlop, Wilson, & Top Flight $9.00 650 341-8342 GOLF SET. 6 clubs with Sports bag and cart. $100. SOLD. Sun Mtn.

630 Trucks & SUVs


TOYOTA HIGHLANDER - 08, 2WD Sport, 38K miles, original owner, many extras, excellent condition, 3rd row seat, tow package, roof rack, back up camera, blue tooth, $23,750 obo, (650)255-1865 (2)

760 El Camino Real San Carlos (650)593-8085 670 Auto Parts


2 SNOW/CABLE chains good condition fits 13-15 inch rims $10/both San Bruno 650-588-1946 4 1996 aluminum lincoln rims, 16x7 inches $60., SOLD! CADILLAC CHROME factory wheels 95 thru 98 Fleetwood $100 SOLD! CAMPER/TRAILER/TRUCK OUTSIDE backup mirror 8 diameter fixture. $30. 650-588-1946 CARGO COVER, (black) for Acura MDX $75. 415-516-7060 DENALI WHEELS - 17 inches, near new, 265-70-R17, complete fit GMC 6 lug wheels, $400. all, SOLD! FORD SMALL block, high performance, aluminum manifold $75.,SOLD! FORD TWO barrel carborater, motorcraft. $30., SOLD! GOODYEAR EAGLE RSA tire. 225x70R15 brand new, mounted on 95 caprice rim $60., SOLD! HEAVY DUTY jack stand for camper or SUV $15. (650)949-2134

680 Autos Wanted Dont lose money on a trade-in or consignment! Sell your vehicle in the Daily Journals Auto Classifieds. Just $3 per day. Reach 82,500 drivers from South SF to Palo Alto
Call (650)344-5200 ads@smdailyjournal.com
DONATE YOUR CAR Tax Deduction, We do the Paperwork, Free Pickup, Running or Not - in most cases. Help yourself and the Polly Klaas Foundation. Call (800)380-5257. Wanted 62-75 Chevrolets Novas, running or not Parts collection etc. So clean out that garage Give me a call Joe 650 342-2483

635 Vans
NISSAN 01 Quest - GLE, leather seats, sun roof, TV/DVR equipment. Looks new, $15,500. (650)219-6008

340 Camera & Photo Equip.


SONY CYBERSHOT DSC-T-50 - 7.2 MP digital camera (black) with case, $175., (650)208-5598

640 Motorcycles/Scooters
AUTO AUCTION The following repossessed vehicles are being sold by SafeAmerica Credit Union-2003 Dodge Durango #539522. The following repossessed vehicles are being sold by Meriwest Credit Union-2002 Chevrolet Express 1500 #128324. Plus over 100 late model Sport Utilities, Pick Ups, Mini Vans, and luxury cars ---INDOORS--Charity donations sold. Sealed bids will be taken from 8am-8pm on 03/12/2012 and 8am-5pm on 03/13/2012. Sale held at Forrest Faulknor & Sons Auction Company, 175 Sylvester Road, South San Francisco. For more information please visit our web site at www.ffsons.com. BMW 03 F650 GS, $3899 OBO. Call 650-995-0003 HARLEY DAVIDSON 83 Shovelhead special construction, 1340 ccs, Awesome! $5,950/obo Rob (415)602-4535. VARIOUS MOTORCYCLE parts USED call for what you want or need $99 (650)670-2888

379 Open Houses

OPEN HOUSE LISTINGS


List your Open House in the Daily Journal. Reach over 82,500 potential home buyers & renters a day, from South San Francisco to Palo Alto. in your local newspaper. Call (650)344-5200

TENNIS RACKET oversize with cover and 3 Wilson Balls $25 (650)692-3260 TREADMILL - PROFORM Crosswalk Sport. 300 pounds capacity with incline, hardly used. $450., (650)637-8244 TWO YOGA Videos. Never used, one with Patrisha Walden, one by Rebok with booklet. Both $6 (650)755-8238 WATER SKI'S - Gold cup by AMFA Voit $40., (650)574-4586

645 Boats
BANSHEE SAILBOAT - 13 ft. with extras, $750., (650)343-6563 PLEASURE BOAT, 15ft., 50 horsepower Mercury, $1,300.obo (650)368-2170

BMW 530 95 WAGON - Moon Roof, automatic, Gray/Black, 165K miles, $3,850 (650)349-0713

PROSPORT 97 - 17 ft. CC 80 Yamaha Pacific, loaded, like new, $9,500 or trade, (650)583-7946.

Bath

Contractors RISECON NORTH AMERICA


General Contractors / Building & Design New construction, Kitchen-Bath Remodels, Metal Fabrication, Painting Call for free design consultation (650) 274-4484 www.risecon.com L#926933

Cleaning

Cleaning

Concrete

Construction

E. L. SHORT
Bath Remodeler
Lic.#406081 Free Design Assistance Serving Locally 30+ Years BBB Honor Roll

Cleaning Services

MENAS

BELMONT CONSTRUCTION
Residential & Commercial Carpentry & Plumbing Remodeling & New Construction Kitchen, Bath, Structural Repairs Additions, Decks, Stairs, Railings Lic#836489, Ins. & Bonded All work guaranteed Call now for a free estimate

(650)704-2496
Great Service at a Reasonable Price

(650)591-8378
K .A. Mattson Design and Construction
Where Kitchen and Bath Remodeling combine with the latest in technology. Natural stone and tile. Over 45 years experience. Lic# 839815

16+ Years in Business

Cleaning * BLANCAS CLEANING SERVICES


$25 OFF First Cleaning
Commercial - Residential (we also clean windows) Good References 10 Years Exp.

Move in/out Steam Carpet Windows & Screens Pressure Washing


www.menascleaning.com
LICENSED & INSURED
Professional | Reliable | Trustworthy

650-766-1244
Kevin@belmontconstructionca.com

650-652-9664 Building/Remodeling DRAFTING SERVICES for Remodels, Additions, and New Construction (650)343-4340

FREE Estimates

(650) 867-9969

POLY-AM CONSTRUCTION
General Contractor
Free Estimate Specializing in Concrete Brickwork Stonewall Interlocking Pavers Landscaping Tile Retaining Wall Bonded & Insured Lic. #685214

Ben: (650)375-1573 Cell: (650) 280-8617

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Weekend Mar. 10-11, 2012

29

Electricians
ELECTRICIAN For all your electrical needs
Residential, Commercial, Troubleshooting, Wiring & Repairing Call Ben at (650)685-6617
Lic # 427952

Handy Help

Hauling

Painting

RDS HOME REPAIRS


Quality, Dependable Handyman Service
General Home Repairs Improvements Routine Maintenance

Honest and Very Affordable Price


Excellent References Free Written Estimates Top Quality Painting

(650)573-9734
www.rdshomerepairs.com

(415)895-2427
Lic. 957975

KEITH A. DAVEY ELECTRICAL


(Your Current Connection)
Two Man Operation, Specializing in Recessed Lighting. All Phases of Electrical Lic. #767463 & Bonded

SENIOR HANDYMAN
Specializing in Any Size Projects

JOE RYANS PENINSULA PAINTING


Local residential painting experts for 25 years

Painting Electrical Carpentry Dry Rot


40 Yrs. Experience Retired Licensed Contractor

We Get It Right The First Time

(650)759-0440
Gardening
ANGEL TRUMPET VINE - wine colored blooms, $40., SSF, Bill (650)871-7200

(650)888-9305

(650)201-6854

JON LA MOTTE
Hardwood Floors

PAINTING
Interior & Exterior Pressure Washing Free Estimates

JOSES COMPLETE GARDENING


and Landscaping Full Service Includes: Tree Trimming Free Estimates

KO-AM
HARDWOOD FLOORING
Hardwood & Laminate Installation & Repair Refinish High Quality @ Low Prices Call 24/7 for Free Estimate

(650)368-8861
Lic #514269

Interior Design REBARTS INTERIORS


Hunter Douglas Gallery Free Measuring & Install. 247 California Dr., Burl. (650)348-1268 990 Industrial Blvd., #106 SC (800)570-7885 www.rebarts.com

(650)315-4011 Construction Decks & Fences Gutters

800-300-3218 408-979-9665
Lic. #794899

MTP
Painting/Waterproofing Drywall Repair/Tape/Texture Power Washing-Decks, Fences No Job Too Big or Small
Lic.# 896174

NORTH FENCE CO.


Lic #733213

Call Mike the Painter

Hauling

(650)271-1320 Plaster/Stucco

Specializing in:

Landscaping

Redwood Fences Decks Retaining Walls

650-756 0694
WWW N O R T H F E N C E C O .COM

JK PLASTERING Interior Exterior Free Estimates


Lic.# 966463

(650)799-6062

MARSH FENCE & DECK CO.


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

O.K.S RAINGUTTER
Gutter Cleaning - Leaf Guard Gutter & Roof Repairs Custom Down Spouts Drainage Solutions 10% Senior Discount
CA Lic# 794353/Insured

(650)556-9780
Handy Help DISCOUNT HANDYMAN & PLUMBING
Carpentry Plumbing Kitchens Bathrooms Dry Rot Decks Priced for You! Call John

MORALES
HANDYMAN
Fences Decks Arbors Retaining Walls Concrete Work French Drains Concrete Walls Any damaged wood repair Powerwash Driveways Patios Sidewalk Stairs Hauling $25. Hr./Min. 2 hrs.

AM/PM HAULING
Haul Any Kind of Junk Residential & Commercial Free Estimates! We recycle almost everything! Go Green!

Plumbing

(650)296-0568
Free Estimates Lic.#834170

Call Joe (650)722-3925

Free Estimates 20 Years Experience

J&K
CONSTRUCTION
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
Additions & Carpentry, Kitchen & Bath remodeling, Structural repair, Termite & Dry Rot Repair, Electrical, Plumbing & Painting.

(650)921-3341 (650)347-5316
Doors
30 INCH white screen door, new $20 leave message 650-341-5364

HONEST HANDYMAN
Remodeling, Plumbing New Construction, General Home Repair, Water Damage No Job Too Small
Lic.# 891766

CHAINEY HAULING
Junk & Debris Clean Up Furniture/Appliance Disposal Tree/Brush Dirt Concrete Demo

Moving

Bay Area
Relocation Services
Specializing in: Homes, Apts., Storages Professional, friendly, careful. Peninsulas Personal Mover Commercial/Residential
Fully Lic. & Bonded CAL -T190632

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

(650)740-8602
PAYLESS HANDYMAN
Kitchen & Bathroom Remodels Electrical, All types of Roofs. Fences, Tile, Concrete, Painting, Plumbing, Decks All Work Guaranteed

Electricians

ALL ELECTRICAL SERVICE

650-322-9288
for all your electrical needs
ELECTRIC SERVICE GROUP

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

Call Armando (650) 630-0424


Painting

(650) 548-5482
neno.vukic@hotmail.com
Lic# 728805

(650)771-2432

CRAIGS PAINTING
Interior & Exterior Quality Work Reasonable Rates Free Estimates

STANLEY S. Plumbing & Drain


Only $89.00 to Unclog Drain From Cleanout And For All Your Plumbing Needs (650)679-0911 Lic. # 887568

(650)553-9653
Lic# 857741

30

Weekend Mar. 10-11, 2012


Remodeling Tree Service
NORDIC TREE SERVICE
Large Removal Trim, Thin, Prune We do demolition and do waste hauls Stump grading

THE DAILY JOURNAL


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.

ALL WORK GUARANTEED

Buy 2 get 1 Free

FREE ESTIMATES Jorge Sr. (650) 465-6019 Jorge Jr. (650)518-2512


jorges_handyman@yahoo.com

Health & Medical

Jewelers

Massage Therapy
SUNFLOWER MASSAGE
Grand Opening! $10. Off 1-Hour Session!

Bath & Showers

Tile

PATRICK BRADY GENERAL CONTRACTOR


ADDITIONS BASEMENTS BATHS KITCHENS AND MORE!

CUBIAS TILE
Marble, Stone & porcelain Kitchens, bathrooms, floors, fireplaces, entryways, decks, tile repair, grout repair Free Estimates Lic.# 955492

REVIV
MEDICAL SPA
www.revivmedspa.com 31 S. El Camino Real Millbrae

MAYERS JEWELERS
We Buy Gold! Bring your old gold in and redesign to something new or cash it in!
Watch Battery Replacement $9.00 Most Watches. Must present ad.

1482 Laurel St. San Carlos


(Behind Trader Joes) Open 7 Days/Week, 10am-10pm

(650)508-8758

(650)697-3339
SLEEP APNEA We can treat it without CPAP!

PATBRADY1957@SBCGLOBAL.NET
License # 479385

TRANQUIL MASSAGE
951 Old County Road Suite 1 Belmont 650-654-2829 Needlework

650 868 - 8492


Attorneys

Mario Cubias (650)784-3079


Divorce Food

Jewelry & Watch Repair 2323 Broadway Redwood City

(650)364-4030
Legal Services LEGAL DOCUMENTS
Affordable non-attorney document preparation service Registered & Bonded Divorces, Living Trusts, Corporations, Notary Public

* BANKRUPTCY *
Huge credit card debt? Job loss? Foreclosure? Medical bills?

JACKS RESTAURANT
Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner 1050 Admiral Ct., #A San Bruno

Call for a free sleep apnea screening 650-583-5880 Millbrae Dental

LUV2 STITCH.COM
Needlepoint! Fiesta Shopping Center
747 Bermuda Dr., San Mateo

YOU HAVE OPTIONS


Call for a free consultation (650)363-2600 This law firm is a debt relief agency

Beauty

DIVORCE CENTERS OF CALIFORNIA Low Cost


non-attorney service

(650)589-2222
JacksRestaurants.com

STRESSED OUT? IN PAIN? I CAN HELP YOU


Sessions start from $20 Call 650-235-6761 Will Chen ACUPUNCTURE 12220 6th Ave, Belmont www. willchenacupuncture.com

(650)574-2087
legaldocumentsplus.com
I am not an attorney. I can only provide self help services at your specific direction

(650)571-9999
Pet Services

NEALS COFFEE SHOP


Breakfast Lunch Dinner Senior Meals, Kids Menu www.nealscoffeeshop.com

KAYS HEALTH & BEAUTY


Facials, Waxing, Fitness Body Fat Reduction Pure Organic Facial $48. 1 Hillcrest Blvd, Millbrae (650)697-6868

UNCONTESTED

DIVORCE

650.347.2500
520 So. El Camino Real #650 San Mateo, CA 94402

1845 El Camino Real Burlingame

TOENAIL FUNGUS?
FREE Consultation for Laser Treatment

(650)692-4281 SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE

(650)347-0761 BRUNCH

www.divorcecenters.com
Se habla Espaol
I am not an attorney. I can only provide self help services at your specic directions

Let the beautiful you be reborn at PerfectMe by Laser


A fantastic body contouring spa featuring treatments with Zerona, VelaShape II and VASERShape. Sessions range from $100$150 with our exclusive membership! To find out more and make an appointment call (650)375-8884

Crowne Plaza
1221 Chess Dr., Hwy. 92 at Foster City Blvd. Exit Foster City

Dr. Richard Woo, DPM 400 S. El Camino Real San Mateo

Insurance

We handle Uncontested and Contested Divorces Complex Property Division Child & Spousal Support Payments Restraining Orders Domestic Violence

Low Cost Divorce

BOOMERANG PET EXPRESS


All natural, byproduct free pet foods! Home Delivery
www.boomerangpetexpress.com

(650)989-8983
Real Estate Loans
REAL ESTATE LOANS
We Fund Bank Turndowns!
Direct Private Lender Homes Multi-family Mixed-Use Commercial WE BUY TRUST DEED NOTES FICO Credit Score Not a Factor PURCHASE, REFINANCE, CASH OUT Investors welcome Loan servicing since 1979

(650)570-5700 Food AYA SUSHI The Best Sushi & Ramen in Town 1070 Holly Street San Carlos (650)654-1212

SUNSHINE CAFE
Breakfast Lunch Dinner 1750 El Camino Real San Mateo (Borel Square)

AARP AUTO INSURANCE


Great insurance Great price Special rates for drivers over 50 650-593-7601 ISU LOVERING INSURANCE SERVICES 1121 Laurel St., San Carlos

Peninsula Law Group


One of The Bay Areas Very Best!

(650)357-8383
THE AMERICAN BULL

(650) 903-2200
Marketing

Same Day, Weekend Appointments Available Se Habla Espaol

650-348-7191
Wachter Investments, Inc. Real Estate Broker #746683 Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System ID #348268 CA Dept. of Real Estate

FIND OUT!
What everybody is talking about! South Harbor Restaurant & Bar
425 Marina Blvd., SSF

BAR & GRILL


14 large screen HD TVs Full Bar & Restaurant

BURLINGAME perfectmebylaser.com

www.theamericanbull.com
1819 El Camino, in Burlingame Plaza

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

Seniors
A NO COST Senior Housing Referral Service
Assisted Living. Memory. Residential Homes. Dedicated to helping seniors and families find the right supportive home.

(650)589-1641

(650)652-4908
Fitness

GOT BEER? We Do!


Holiday Banquet Headquarters

BARRETT INSURANCE
www.barrettinsuranceservices.net Eric L. Barrett, CLU, RHU, REBC, CLTC, LUTCF President Barrett Insurance Services (650)513-5690 CA. Insurance License #0737226

DOJO USA
World Training Center
Martial Arts & Tae Bo Training

Massage Therapy

Steelhead Brewing Co. 333 California Dr. Burlingame (650)344-6050


www.steelheadbrewery.com

www.dojousa.net
731 Kains Ave, San Bruno

ASIAN MASSAGE
$48 per Hour
New Customers Only For First 20 Visits Open 7 days, 10 am -10 pm 633 Veterans Blvd., #C Redwood City

(650)787-8292
STERLING COURT ACTIVE INDEPENDENT & ASSISTED LIVING

(650)589-9148

GOUGH INSURANCE & FINANCIAL SERVICES


www.goughinsurance.com

Furniture

(650)342-7744
CA insurance lic. 0561021

(650)556-9888

Grand Opening

Tours 10AM-4PM 2 BR,1BR & Studio Luxury Rental 650-344-8200


850 N. El Camino Real San Mateo

RED CRAWFISH
Dental Services
DR. SAMIR NANJAPA DDS
Family Dentistry & Smile Restoration UCSF Dentistry Faculty Cantonese, Mandarin & Hindi Spoken 650-477-6920 320 N. San Mateo Dr. Ste 2 San Mateo

Bedroom Express
Where Dreams Begin
2833 El Camino Real San Mateo - (650)458-8881 184 El Camino Real So. S. Francisco -(650)583-2221 www.bedroomexpress.com

CRAVING CAJUN?
401 E. 3rd Ave. @ S. Railroad
San Mateo 94401

GRAND OPENING
HEALTH INSURANCE
Paying too much for COBRA? No coverage? .... Not good! I can help.

sterlingcourt.com

ASIAN MASSAGE
$50 for 1 hour Angel Spa
667 El Camino Real, Redwood City

Seniors

redcrawfishsf.com

AFFORDABLE
24-hour Assisted Living Care located in Burlingame

(650) 347-7888 GULLIVERS RESTAURANT


Early Bird Special Prime Rib Complete Dinner Mon-Thu
1699 Old Bayshore Blvd. Burlingame

John Bowman (650)525-9180

(650)363-8806
7 days a week, 9:30am-9:30pm

Health & Medical BACK, LEG PAIN OR NUMBNESS?


Non-Surgical Spinal Decompression Dr. Thomas Ferrigno D.C. 650-231-4754 177 Bovet Rd. #150 San Mateo BayAreaBackPain.com

CA Lic #0E08395

Massage Therapy Jewelers

GRAND OPENING!
CRYSTAL WAVE SPA
Body & Foot Massage Facial Treatment

Mills Estate Villa & Burlingame Villa


- Short Term Stays - Dementia & Alzheimers Care - Hospice Care

General Dentistry for Adults & Children


DR. ANNA P. LIVIZ, DDS 324 N. San Mateo Drive, #2 San Mateo 94401

KUPFER JEWELRY We Buy Coins, Jewelry, Watches, Platinum, & Diamonds.


Expert fine watch & jewelry repair. Deal with experts. 1211 Burlingame Ave. Burlingame www.kupferjewelry.com

(650)692-6060 HOUSE OF BAGELS SAN MATEO


OPEN EVERYDAY 6:30AM-3PM Bagels,Santa Cruz Coffee, Sandwiches, Wifi, Kids Corner Easy Parking

1205 Capuchino Ave. Burlingame

(650)343-5555
--------------------------------------------------(Combine Coupons & Save!).

Health & Medical

(650)558-1199
HEALING MASSAGE

(650)692-0600
Lic.#4105088251/ 415600633

$69 Exam/Cleaning
(Reg. $189.)

$69 Exam/FMX
(Reg. $228.)
New Patients without Insurance Price + Terms of offer are subject to change without notice.

HAPPY FEET MASSAGE


2608 S. El Camino Real & 25th Ave., San Mateo

GRAND OPENING SPECIAL $50 ONE HOUR


Open daily 10:30am - 9pm 2305-A Carlos St., Moss Beach (On Hwy 1 next to Post office)

LASTING IMPRESSIONS ARE OUR FIRST PRIORITY

680 E. 3rd Ave & Delaware

(650)638-9399
$30.00/Hr Foot Massage $50.00/Hr Full Body Massage

(650)548-1100

(650) 347-7007

(650)563-9771

Cypress Lawn 1370 El Camino Real Colma (650)755-0580 www.cypresslawn.com

THE DAILY JOURNAL

LOCAL/WORLD
daunt Schmidt who was the rst candidate qualied for the ballot. In fact, he said, I love it! There is nothing negative about our voters having lots of options to choose from, its what makes our democracy great. Masur echoed the sentiDavid Woods ment. I think its great that so many candidates care enough about our county to throw their hat into the ring. Its a diverse eld with varying backgrounds and positions on the important issues facing San Mateo County, she said. Carlos Romero After announcing his candidacy just days before the Friday deadline, Slocum pointed out that voters had been asking for more contested county elections now they have one. If no one candidate receives more than 50 perErnie Schmidt cent of the votes in June 5 primary, the two top votegetters will square off in November. Although a supervisor represents his or her district, they are chosen by voters countywide. Supervisor Rose Jacobs Gibson is being termed out of the seat and has said she leans toward Warren Slocum endorsing Woods as her successor. District Four, the region each hopes to represent, includes Redwood City, Menlo Park and East Palo Alto and the unincorporated areas of North Fair Oaks and Oak Knoll.
Michelle Durand can be reached by email: michelle@smdailyjournal.com or by phone: (650) 344-5200 ext. 102.

Weekend March 10-11, 2012

31

ELECTION
Continued from page 1
The June ballot will include Menlo Park Councilman Andy Cohen and Mayor Kirsten Keith; County Board of Education Trustee Memo Morantes; Shelly Masur, trustee on the Redwood City Elementary School District Board, East Palo Alto Councilman David Woods and Mayor Carlos Romero; Ernie Schmidt, Andy Cohen Redwood City Planning Commission vice chair; and Warren Slocum, retired former chief elections ofcer and assessorcounty clerk-recorder. The Elections Office must still verify the signatures on the ling documents before declaring the candidates ofcially qualified although several Kirsten Keith already had been conrmed by the deadline. San Mateo County may have more hotly contested races in its past but Elections Office records dating back 34 years only show two even coming close the 1982 primary race in which Anna Eshoo Memo Morantes prevailed and the 1997 special election which sent Rich Gordon to the board. Both races had seven candidates. Also coming close was last years special election in which Supervisor Dave Pine won out of a six-candidate eld. This looks like it is going to be the biggest, Shelly Masur Tom said earlier in the day Friday. The large number of candidates doesnt

Records show Japan govt knew meltdown risk early


By Mari Yamaguchi
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TOKYO Just four hours after a tsunami swept into the Fukushima nuclear power plant, Japans leaders knew the damage was so severe that the reactors could melt down, but they kept their knowledge secret for months. Five days into the crisis, then-Prime Minister Naoto Kan voiced his fears that it could turn worse than Chernobyl. The revelations were in documents released Friday, almost a year after the disaster. The minutes of the governments crisis management meetings from March 11 the day the earthquake and tsunami struck until late December were not recorded and had to be reconstructed retroactively. They illustrate the confusion, lack of information, delayed response and miscommunication among government, affected towns and plant ofcials, as some ministers expressed the sense that nobody was in charge when the plant conditions quickly deteriorated. The minutes quoted an unidentied ofcial explaining that cooling functions of the reactors were kept running only by batteries that would last just eight hours. If temperatures in the reactor cores keep rising beyond eight hours, there is a possibility of meltdown, the ofcial said during the rst meeting, which started about four hours after the magnitude-9.0 earthquake and ensuing tsunami hit the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, setting off the crisis. Apparently the government tried to play down the severity of the damage. A spokesman for the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency was replaced after he slipped out a possibility of meltdown during a news conference March 12. The plant operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., acknowledged a partial meltdown much later, in May. Top government spokesman Yukio Edano,

who is now trade minister, urged other ministers to watch what they said to the public. We must provide information fast, but it must be accurate, Edano said on March 14. We must be clear about all our evaluations and judgment, and announce them only after we reach a decision. While then-trade minister Banri Kaieda suggested on March 11 that residents within a (6-mile) 10-kilometer radius might have to be evacuated, the government ordered 1,800-plus residents within a 1.2-mile (2-kilometer) zone to leave. Then that expanded to 5 miles (3 kilometers), then to 6 miles (10 kilometers) within two hours, and nally to 12 miles (20 kilometers) the next day. Kan said a 12-mile (20-kilometer) zone would sufce. After seeing a series of explosions and res at reactor buildings, Kan on March 16 cautioned his Cabinet about the possibility that the Fukushima crisis could be worse than the Chernobyl accident in 1986. Kan was particularly concerned about a spent fuel pool inside the No. 4 reactor building, which had the largest number of fuel rods and rising water temperatures. We should worry about the Unit 4 pool, whose temperature has been on the rise, he said, adding that other spent fuel pools at Fukushima Dai-ichi, as well as four others at the neighboring Dai-ni plant, could also deteriorate. The amount of radiation that could be released from those reactors could be larger than Chernobyl. We must keep cooling the reactors, whatever it takes. Its going to be a long battle, he said, according to the minutes dated March 16. It was nearly 10 days before one of his top nuclear advisers produced a worst-case scenario at his request. The March 25 paper, produced by the head of the Japan Atomic Energy Commission, warned that a disaster of that scale would require evacuating 30 million people from the greater Tokyo area.

HOPE EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH


600 W. 42nd Ave., San Mateo
Pastor Eric Ackerman

Worship Service Sunday School

10:00 AM 11:00 AM

Hope Lutheran Preschool admits students of any race, color and national or ethnic origin.
License No. 410500322.

Call (650) 349-0100


HopeLutheranSanMateo.org

Non-Denominational Buddhist
SAN MATEO BUDDHIST TEMPLE
Jodo ShinshuBuddhist (Pure Land Buddhism)

Congregational

FOSTER CITY
ISLAND UNITED CHURCH

Church of the Highlands


A community of caring Christians

Baptist
PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH Dr. Larry Wayne Ellis, Pastor (650) 343-5415 217 North Grant Street, San Mateo Sunday Worship Services at 8 & 11 am Sunday School at 9:30 am Website: www.pilgrimbcsm.org LISTEN TO OUR RADIO BROADCAST! (KFAX 1100 on the AM Dial) Every Sunday at 5:30 PM

Buddhist LOTUS BUDDHIST CIRCLE


(Rissho Kosei-kai of SF)
851 N. San Mateo Dr., Suite D San Mateo

2 So. Claremont St. San Mateo

Foster City's
only three-denomination Church Methodist, Presbyterian (U.S.A.), and United Church of Christ 1130 Balclutha Drive (at Comet) Worship/Child Care/Sunday School at 10am

(650) 342-2541
Sunday English Service & Dharma School - 9:30 AM Reverend Ryuta Furumoto www.sanmateobuddhisttemple.org

All are Welcome! Call (650) 349-3544 Church of Christ 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 Clases de Biblicas Y Servicio de Adoracion En Espanol, Si UD. Lo Solicita www.church-of-christ.org/cocsm

650.200.3755
English Service: 4th Sunday at 10 AM Study: Tuesday at 7 PM www.lotusbuddhistcircle.com

THE CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH OF SAN MATEO - UCC

1900 Monterey Drive (corner Sneath Lane) San Bruno (650)873-4095 Adult Worship Services: Friday: 7:30 pm (singles) Saturday: 7:00 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

Synagogues PENINSULA TEMPLE BETH EL


1700 Alameda de las Pulgas San Mateo at Hwy 92 (650) 341-7701
Friday Shabbat Services 6:30 pm Except the last Friday of the Month 7:30 pm We offer Tot Shabbat, Family Services, Adult Education and Innovative Education Programs for Pre-K thru 12th Grade Join Us! Serving the Peninsula for over 50 years A member of the Union for Reform Judaism Visit our website www.ptbe.org

225 Tilton Ave. & San Mateo Dr.

(650) 343-3694
Worship and Church School Every Sunday at 10:30 AM Coffee Hour at 11:45 AM Nursery Care Available www.ccsm-ucc.org

REDWOOD CHURCH
Our mission...
To know Christ and make him known.

901 Madison Ave., Redwood City (650)366-1223

Sunday services:
9:00AM & 10:45AM www.redwoodchurch.org

32

WE B BUY
Weekend March 10-11, 2012

THE DAILY JOURNAL

Coins

Dental Gold

Jewelry

Watches

Platinum

Diamonds

1211 Burlingame Ave 650-347-7007


Expert Fine Watch & Jewelry Repair

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Deal With Experts Quick Service Unequal Customer Care Estate Appraisals Batteries

KUPFER JEWELRY BURLINGAME

(650) 347-7007

Tuesday - Saturday 11:00am to 4:00pm www.BestRatedGoldBuyers.com

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